“I heard. Either that creep’s better at hacking than he is at administering drugs, or all that Red Bull I drank counteracted it. I still feel pretty wired.”
Amanda rose from the floor, her balance strangely affected by the total darkness.
“Watch it,” Charley warned. “Grant’s up too. He’s trying to get Dawson’s ropes undone.”
“You can see in this dark?”
“Of course I can,” Charley said. “Can’t you?”
“No,” Dawson replied in answer to Amanda’s question. “I can’t see a thing.”
“Neither can I, but I’ll be able to get these ropes loose by feel,” Grant said. “There’s only a couple of knots left. Amanda already got the hard ones.”
She stumbled to the back wall and made her way toward Dawson by touching the dusty, disgusting shelves along the way. Her motorcycle gloves would have protected her hands, but they were back with her bike and her knife. When she left home that morning, she hadn’t planned to be trapped in a dark cellar, sitting on roach bodies and groping along a dirty shelf while being held prisoner by psycho computer nerds. Next time the situation arose, she’d be more prepared.
“There’s an old lamp just to your left,” Charley said. “It looks like it might have a little kerosene left.”
“Great. Now all we have to do is find a match to light it.”
“Light what?” Dawson asked.
“Just thinking out loud. We could sure use a light right now.”
“Yeah,” Dawson agreed. “A light, a knife, an assault rifle.”
“You’ve got me,” Charley said.
Oh, yay.
“I’m free!” Dawson exclaimed. “Thank you, Grant. Now we need to figure out how to get out of this place.”
“We’ll dig out,” Charley said.
Again with the we. Digging out was easy enough to say when he could just fly out.
“Let’s try the door,” Dawson said. “Take my hand, Grant.”
“And mine.” Amanda fumbled in the general direction of Dawson’s voice and finally connected with a small hand. Grant wrapped his fingers around hers in a trusting manner that made her more than ever determined to somehow get them out of there…alive. “Head for those streaks of light.”
The three of them stumbled across the floor and up the first couple of steps. Dawson and Amanda lifted their hands to the door. Grant climbed up another step and did the same.
“On three.” She counted, and they pushed at the same time. The wood was rough and Amanda felt splinters digging into her palms, but she bunched her shoulder muscles and pushed harder. Later—assuming there was a later—she’d deal with a few splinters.
“It’s not moving,” Dawson finally said. “Maybe if we had a lever.”
Or a stick of dynamite. “Let’s try one more thing. Go up a couple of steps, turn around, stoop over and put your back against the door.”
They pushed with their backs. Grant grunted with the effort. The door seemed to lift a fraction of an inch, or maybe the bones in Amanda’s back lowered a fraction of an inch. The latter seemed more likely.
“I told you they put heavy stuff on it,” Charley said. “Forget the door. You can dig out. That crazy woman shot a hole in the wall, and it looks like the concrete grout around the rocks is loose anyway.”
Amanda sighed. “This isn’t working. We need to try something else.”
“The grout between those rocks is pretty old,” Grant said. “It’s probably loose and crumbly. The stones are big enough, if we could get a couple of them out, I could crawl through and open the door. Surely we can find something in here to dig with.”
That was a little freaky. If animals could see Charley, maybe kids could hear him on some level.
Amanda didn’t really believe they could dig out of the place, certainly not before Scott and his buddies came back for them, but they might as well be doing something while they waited, anything to divert them from thoughts of dying at the hands of those evil people. “It’s worth a shot,” she agreed.
Charley smiled. “Told you so.”
“I came in here with a piece of broken pipe. That might be a good tool.”
“The glass from your phone, gorilla glass, we could use that too,” Grant said. “It’s very strong.”
“Now all we have to do is feel around on this floor until we find all those things.” Amanda started to the spot where she thought she’d dropped the pipe.
Charley moved to her side and pointed downward. “It’s right there.”
She reached to the floor, groped and found it. “I’ve got the pipe.”
“Great!” Dawson said. “You really have a good sense of direction.”
“Or a good guide,” Charley said.
“Now we need to find the glass and the bullet hole in the wall.”
“My pleasure.” He crossed to where she’d thrown her phone and looked down. “It’s in two pieces. That was some throw, Amanda. I’m sure glad you never decided to punch me. Okay, I’m going to put my hands on the pieces and you can just saunter over, reach down casually and pick them up.”
Amanda stumbled through the darkness to where he squatted. She reached through his fingers and found the first piece of glass then the second. “Got it.”
“That’s incredible, Amanda,” Dawson said. “It’s almost like you can see in the dark.”
Charley was going to be impossible to live with after this. Not that he was actually living.
Dawson and Grant approached, and she gave each of them a piece of the jagged glass. “Now we just need to find that place in the rock where the bullet hit.”
“I saw where it went,” Grant said. “I can find it.” He pushed past Amanda to reach the wall.
“I’ll search too,” Amanda said, giving Charley a meaningful look.
He smiled, turned to the wall and laid his hand on a certain spot.
“Oh, that’s cold!” Grant said, and Amanda figured he’d found Charley’s hand.
“That’s probably the place,” she said. “Bullet exposed the layers of rock inside, and they’re colder.”
“Really? I never heard that about the inside of a rock being noticeably colder,” Dawson said.
“It must be true,” Grant said. “I think this is the place. There’s a hole in the rock, and the concrete is loose.”
“Okay, you dig out the grout on that side,” Amanda instructed. “I’ll work on the other side and Dawson can take the top.”
Charley moved through her and laid his arm along a straight line. “Dig here, Amanda. Go ahead. Don’t worry about hurting me. Just dig through my arm. For you, I can take the pain.”
“Can the melodrama,” she whispered then whacked the rock as hard as she could.
‘Ow, ow, ow!” Charley laughed. “Just kidding.”
Amanda began to dig at the grout between the stones. It came away with surprising ease.
“My side’s really crumbly,” Grant said. “It’s coming out in big chunks.”
“Here too,” Dawson replied.
For what seemed like hours but was, Charley assured her, only a few minutes, the three of them worked at the grout around their targeted rock.
“You should be able to pry it out now,” Charley said. “The space around the bullet hole is plenty big to get your piece of pipe in for leverage.”
“I think we’re ready to take out the rock,” Amanda said. “I’ll just stick this piece of pipe in the hole from the gunshot and we’ll lever it out.”
Guided by Charley, she found the hole on her first try.
“You’re going to owe me big time after this,” he said.
That comment actually made Amanda feel better. A Charley who helped her selflessly wasn’t the Charley she knew.
With the three of them pushing on the end of the pipe, the rock slowly began to move.
“Keep going,” Charley encouraged. “It’s stuck to the dirt behind, but it’s coming loose.”
“There’s dirt on the other
side?” Of course there was. She remembered the weed-covered mound.
“Yes,” Dawson said. “They cover cellars with dirt. A smooth, rounded structure allows the tornado winds to flow over without causing damage.”
Suddenly the rock came free of the wall and crashed to the floor.
“Yay!” Amanda groped for Dawson and Grant, hugging them both. Charley tried to join in the group hug but only succeeded in making them shiver and pull apart. Amanda astonished herself by feeling a little sorry for him.
He stepped back. “Now the dirt. It’s only about four inches thick right there.”
They took turns hacking at the substance that was harder than the concrete they’d just dug out. Four inches of solidly packed Texas earth entangled with the roots of weeds tough enough to survive in the rugged terrain.
“I see daylight!” Dawson exclaimed.
The hole was small, but after being in the dark so long, the glow was almost painful though completely wonderful.
“Keep digging!” she shouted exultantly. “Then all we have to do is get one more rock loose! The second should be easier!” Freedom was in sight. This might actually work.
The hole widened rapidly and the interior of the cellar became light enough to see each other. Amanda gave a punch with the pipe and took out another clod of dirt. She turned to look at Dawson and Grant and laughed from the sheer joy of the simple experience of sight. “You’re beautiful,” she said. “Both of you!”
“Both? What about me?” Charley sounded hurt, but he was good at doing that when the occasion called for it. Nevertheless, he had helped.
“You’re all beautiful!”
She leaned closer to the hole and drew in a deep breath, expelling the musty, rotting smells of the cellar from her lungs, drinking in the clean scents of dust and sunshine and open spaces.
“Destroying property? I believe that’s a criminal offense.” Scott leaned over and peered inside.
Chapter Nineteen
Amanda’s heart sank to the very ends of her toenails. She’d gone from thinking the plan of digging out had no chance, was something to keep them occupied so they wouldn’t think about what was going to happen, to believing freedom was within their reach. Then Scott’s grinning face had robbed them of that possibility of freedom.
A dark anger swelled inside her. The man had no right to be there, no right to keep them prisoner and certainly no right to terrify them by threatening their lives.
She lifted her rusty piece of pipe, took aim and stabbed through the hole as hard as she could. The pipe connected with a satisfying thud that shuddered up her arm. Scott fell backward, howled in pain and cursed.
Amanda felt a brief rush of exultation before the Glock appeared in the opening. Damn! She whacked the gun sideways with her pipe just as Alice squeezed the trigger. The bullet went somewhere outside, off to the left.
“Get down!” she shouted, shoving Dawson and Grant to one side of the opening and flattening herself against the other side. The crazy woman could start shooting wildly at any minute.
Charley huddled next to her against the wall. She looked at him, and he grinned sheepishly. “Habit.”
She wondered how many bullets he’d dodged in his lifetime that it had become a habit.
“Roger’s going to open the door,” Scott called, “and you three are going to walk out like compliant captives. If you bring whatever you hit me with, Alice will shoot you. If you do anything stupid, Alice will shoot you. If you anger me, Alice will shoot you. Alice has become quite fond of that gun and would really like to shoot you anyway, so I suggest you walk out with empty hands at your sides and pleasant expressions on your faces.”
Scott’s calm words chilled Amanda more than passing through Charley would have. If Roger was back and Scott was calm, that probably meant he hadn’t spotted Jake and Ross coming down the road, rushing to the rescue. Not good.
But she wasn’t going to give up without a fight. She considered hiding the piece of pipe on her person, but that was the downside of wearing tight jeans. No room to hide weapons.
From outside metal scraped and clunked across the wooden door. Abruptly it lifted, allowing the evening sunlight to flood the room.
Dawson and Grant blinked in the sudden glare and looked at Amanda as if expecting her to tell them what to do. Great. When had they held a meeting and elected her the leader? Of all the things she was not qualified for, taking charge of a life and death situation ranked right up there with singing for the Metropolitan Opera.
However, she didn’t seem to have much of a choice other than to try.
“We’re coming out quietly,” she said. “I’m putting down my weapon.” She laid the piece of pipe on the floor then walked as steadily as possible toward the light of the open door, pretending to be brave and hoping to give Dawson and Grant courage by her phony example.
If Scott was using the threat of Alice shooting them to make them come out rather than just killing them in the cellar, that must mean they believed her story that Dawson knew the location of the program they wanted so badly. Of course, since he didn’t know, they were only buying time.
She straightened her spine and met Roger’s gaze unflinchingly as she moved up the steps. So they were buying time. Every minute they delayed gave them a chance to figure a way out. This wasn’t over until the crazy woman actually hit somebody with that Glock.
“Check her to be sure she doesn’t have any more sharp objects,” Scott said.
Amanda turned to look at him and smiled. She’d given him an ugly, bloody wound in his cheek. “You might want to check into getting a tetanus shot. That pipe was really rusty.”
Scott’s eyes narrowed to slits and Amanda thought—hoped—she could see the blood pulsing angrily and painfully behind his injury.
“You really need to keep your mouth shut and back off,” he said. “Your friend has something I need. You don’t. You’re expendable.”
“And you’re—”
“Amanda!” Charley interrupted. “For once in your life, think before you open your mouth!”
Dawson moved up beside her. “Do what he says.”
At first she thought he was telling her to take Charley’s advice but then realized he was referring to Scott’s orders. She lifted her arms and held her hands out to show Roger she had no weapons.
He made a tentative move toward her as if he was thinking about doing a pat-down. Charley punched him in the face.
Roger looked startled, lifted his hand to his nose and backed up. “She doesn’t have anything,” he assured Scott.
Scott nodded toward the back porch. “Inside.”
Making a determined effort to stomp along in her boots rather than shake in them, Amanda led the way up the rickety wooden steps, through a door that dangled from one hinge and into what had once been a kitchen. It still held a stained sink under a broken window, another ladder back chair with only three legs and a drop leaf table with one leaf. Straw, dirt and bird droppings littered the floor, but light streamed in through the dirty, broken windows. For that reason, it was a better place to be than the cellar.
“Keep going,” Scott ordered. “We’ve got the laptops set up in the living room.”
That room was slightly cleaner than the kitchen. A dilapidated sofa and chair had been shoved against one wall and the middle of the floor had been swept. Three sleeping bags were rolled and waiting along the wall. Four laptops were set up on a new, clean folding table with three folding chairs.
Dawson would be expected to produce the program, and then they’d all be killed like his parents had been. Actually, they’d probably die slow, horrible deaths with Alice taking several shots to kill each of them. Amanda wondered if the woman had enough bullets to finish the job considering how bad her aim was. Maybe they’d just bleed to death in excruciating pain.
As unofficial leader, she had to come up with some way to keep that from happening, but at the moment she was fresh out of ideas.
Scott waved a h
and toward the table where the laptops sat surrounded by soda cans and fast food wrappers with a brown purse on the far end. “Come up with that code or you belong to Alice.”
Dawson and Grant sank down onto two of the chairs and looked at each other then at Amanda. She didn’t see much in the way of weapons. An empty aluminum can didn’t have the same potential as a broken beer bottle. The purse which probably belonged to Alice might contain something she could use, but the woman would shoot her before she had a chance to empty its contents and look.
“Now would be a good time to come up with a new plan,” Charley said. “Don’t think of them as crazed murderers. Think of them as your dad when you get in trouble and he’s about to punish you.”
Amanda had usually been able to wrap her stern father around her little finger, but her mother had been a whole other story. Her best defense against that woman had always been a good offense.
“Go ahead, Dawson. Give them the code. I know you don’t want to, but we don’t have a choice.” With no enthusiasm Dawson pulled one of the laptops over to him and cast Amanda a terrified glance. She turned her attention back to Scott and gathered her courage, determined to be offensive. “I am sick to death of hearing about this stinking code. What does this program do that’s so freaking important you’ve killed people and ruined lives to get it? What the heck is Project Verdant? Pardon me if I don’t buy into this business of your being skilled programmers. If you’re so great, why don’t you just write your own program? What’s so special about this one?”
“Doesn’t your friend here know all about it? Didn’t his father leave him a letter?” Scott asked. “Or was that another lie?”
Oops. “He knows where the code is. That’s all that was in the letter. He doesn’t know what it does. You have put us all through hell and you’re going to kill us because of this stupid program. The least you can do is tell us what the heck is so special about it.”
The Ex Who Glowed in the Dark (Charley's Ghost) Page 16