“I’m not sure how much help I’m going to be,” Molly told her as she pulled on her damp pants. “I’m still really dizzy. And queasy. And bashing people over the head isn’t really my thing.”
“You should have something to eat.” Gina started for the cans of food.
Oh, urp. “No, actually, please, I shouldn’t,” Molly said.
“We better take it with us,” Gina decided. She took one of the pillowcases off the bed, loaded the canned goods inside. “I know you don’t like the idea of hurting anyone, but the alternatives—”
“I know what the alternatives are,” Molly told her friend as she tied the laces to her sneakers. Jones—dead. Or worse. The two of them, including her baby—dead. Or worse. “And I’ll bash if I have to. You better believe it. What I meant was I’m probably not very good at it.” She sat down again. “You still haven’t convinced me, though, that we stand a prayer of a chance against that gun.”
“Shhh!” Gina said, holding up her hand.
There were voices in the hallway. Oh, Lord.
“We should run for the garage—it was straight down the hall, to the left,” Gina instructed her, moving closer to the door, metal bed frame segment held up over her head, in prime bashing position.
Oh, Lord.
“Honey, please can’t we try something else first?” Molly said as quickly as possible, moving to back her up, but not quite sure where to stand. The idea was to bash the person coming through that door, not Gina. And, likewise, not get bashed by Gina in return. “Like, pretending to be really sick? Pretending one of us needs to go to the hospital? Maybe Emilio’ll—”
“He’s not just going to let us go,” Gina said. “You’re crazy if you think—”
“We should talk to him at least,” Molly said.
“Shhh,” Gina said again.
What was that noise out in the hall? It sounded like some kind of animal or . . .
A very young child?
The door opened and a little boy—he couldn’t have been more than two years old—stood teetering on the threshold.
“Don’t!” Molly shouted at Gina.
But Gina was not about to hit a toddler. In fact, she stepped in front of Molly, ready to block her blow.
Emilio appeared then. He took one look at them—Molly still had that piece of metal raised over her head—and scooped the child into his arms.
Although it was hard to tell if his goal was to protect the boy or use him as a shield.
“I see you’ve been busy,” he said to them in his charming accent. “May I introduce to you my grandson, Danjuma? I thank you both most humbly for not hurting him.”
C
HAPTER
F
IFTEEN
With the dawn came movement out on the street.
Max sat back from the window and watched as people hurried to work or the market. Children came out to play in the dusty square.
When Jules’s cell phone rang, Grady Morant—who wanted to be called Jones—got to his feet.
Like most operators Max had known through the years, Jones could go from asleep to completely alert in a heartbeat.
Of course, Max never had to worry about that. His solution was simply never to sleep.
At least he hadn’t slept since Gina had left.
“We got another e-mail,” Jules announced, phone to his ear. “It’s Yashi,” he told Max. “Joe Hirabayashi,” he told Jones. “Teammate back in D.C.” Back to Max. “I’ve had him watching that e-mail account, trying to trace . . . Yeah, Yash, go ahead. Wait, wait—you’re breaking up . . .” He turned, walking closer to the window. “That’s better. Go.”
Max and Jones were left standing there, staring at each other.
“You really should get some rest,” Jones said. “I heard you go out last night. After I got back. Did you sleep at all?”
Max just gazed at him. “It’s probably better if you limit what you say over the next few days to
yes, sir
and
no, sir.
”
“Fuck off.” Jones’s laughter was closer to bared teeth than true amusement. “You think you know me, asshole?” He stepped closer, lowered his voice, obviously aware that Jules was constantly monitoring the pair of them. “You think you have any idea who I am, and what I’m capable of?”
Max didn’t move. “You’re capable of putting two innocent women in danger, simply by association. What’s your next stupid human trick going to be?”
“I’m ready to go,” Jones said. “Right now. I’m rested—I’m ready to go in there and get them out. I came to you for help, but since you obviously can’t deliver, I’m just going to—”
“That’s a brilliant plan.” Max blocked his path. “Walk across the street, kick down the door and . . . What? How do you get off this island?”
“There’s an airstrip, about three miles up the road,” Jones told him. “I guess you didn’t make it that far. Lot of money on this island, in case you haven’t noticed that either.”
“So you help yourself to a plane and go . . . where?” Max asked.
“Does it really matter?”
“Considering your wife needs treatment for her cancer . . . You might want to work that little detail in somewhere.”
Jones bristled. “You think I’ve forgotten that for one second?”
“I think you’ve forgotten,” Max told him, “that whoever wants to find you had enough money to transport Gina and Molly here—without their passports—all the way from Germany. You really think they’re not going to invest, heavily, in tracking you down? Dream on.”
“There are ways to keep her safe,” Jones said. “There’s always a way.”
“Like, what? Like taking her to the American Embassy? There’s one in Dili,” Max told him. “She’ll be safe there—except you won’t. So what’ll you do? Drop her off? Great, she’ll be safe while she’s within their walls. But the second she steps out of that building—like, to get into a car to be driven to the airport for a flight home?—she’s a target again. How are you going to keep her safe then? You going to trust her life to some embassy guards? Maybe a few extra nineteen-year-old Marines?”
“So I won’t take her to the embassy,” Jones said.
“Ah. You’d rather have her be at risk—”
“You goddamn know I didn’t want any of this to happen, you know I don’t want her to be at risk. But guess what? She is. She would have been, sitting at home in Iowa with her mother. I did everything right,” Jones told him. “I made goddamn sure she was safe before I went to Kenya. I waited
years
so she’d be safe. But shit, my mistake—I didn’t factor in the possibility of her getting sick. And then she fucking wouldn’t go to Iowa without me. She refused to leave—and believe me, I tried everything. I told her I was going to disappear, because then she’d be free to go, but she said she’d wait there for me—at the camp. That if I wanted to ensure that she
didn’t
get state-of-the-art medical treatment, that was the way to do it and . . .”
Jones’s anger temporarily spent, the emotion in his eyes made him look desperate and vulnerable. “I love her,” he told Max quietly. “I took a gamble, trusting Kraus. If I could, I’d go back and do it over, differently. The story of my life, you know?”
Max did know.
Years ago, back when Jones was Grady Morant, his unit had gotten ambushed in an ongoing silent war that the United States was waging against a powerful Southeast Asian druglord.
His entire team had been wiped out. At least that was what the official reports Max had seen all said.
Apparently Morant’s body had been found. Or—more accurately—some body parts had been recovered along with his dog tags. But there wasn’t enough of him left to verify his identity via fingerprints or dental records.
Rumors started, as rumors tended to do with the lack of identifiable physical remains for a soldier listed as KIA, but they were all written off as wishful thinking.
When the rumors persisted, rumors of an American being moved from prison to prison, there’d been a halfhearted investigation. It had cost too much time and too much money though, and eventually had been dropped. Results: inconclusive.
It wasn’t until recently, until DNA testing was established, that proof came to light that the body buried in Grady Morant’s grave was not, in fact, Grady Morant.
It was about that same time that stories of Chai’s new first lieutenant, allegedly an American and former Special Forces soldier, started circulating.
Grady Morant hadn’t died in that ambush. Instead, he’d spent years in a hellhole of a prison in Southeast Asia, tortured by his captors. Praying that someone would find him, that someone would come for him and bring him back home.
A few years ago, Max had felt sorry for Morant. It was clear, after meeting him, that those years in prison had been very real. He hadn’t sold out his unit, as everyone had assumed after hearing he was working for Chai. He wasn’t a deserter—on the contrary, his country had deserted him.
Life sucked.
But in Max’s eyes, all the bad shit in the world didn’t excuse what Morant did when the very drug lord he’d been fighting had finally come to his rescue and set him free.
Max would’ve rather died. He would’ve rather rotted in that prison than go to work for the enemy.
And here this piece of shit loser—at the very least a liar, smuggler, and thief—had found happiness. He’d found love. Molly Anderson had actually married the son of a bitch.
Okay, yeah, sure—life had thrown another suckbomb at them. But Max had absolutely no doubt whatsoever—once they got Gina and Molly safely home—that Molly would win her battle with cancer and live a long happy life.
As Mrs. Loser Morant or Pollard or Jones or Smith or whatever new alias he picked out for himself.
Shit, with his luck, Jones would probably go to trial for his various crimes, and get off on some technicality.
While Max lived on in misery.
While somewhere, hundreds of miles away from his personal hell, Gina raised a dead man’s baby.
“Life doesn’t give do-overs,” Max told Jones now.
“No,” the man agreed. “Just second chances.”
“Okay,” Jules said, coming back to join them, snapping his phone shut. “Here’s the deal. Our guy sent another e-mail. He wants a phone number so he can contact us and give us further instructions. Yashi’s setting up a number that Emilio won’t be able to trace back to us. The call will get forwarded to my cell.” He looked at Max. “I know you want to speak to Gina, but there’s no way to ask for that. We want the kidnapper thinking Jones is alone. And we don’t want to make too many demands—not at this point. After we get Testa on the phone—”
“I know,” Max said.
“I
did
ask Yash to make sure the last four digits of the fictional number is the same as your personal cell phone. I wanted Gina to know—if she somehow sees it—that we’re out here. It’s a long shot, but . . .” Jules shrugged.
“Thank you,” Max said.
“Yashi’s also calling the Jakarta CIA office,” Jules reported. “See if we can’t track down ol’ Benny. Either way, I’m trying to get that surveillance equipment.”
“How about military assistance?” Jones asked.
Jules shook his head. “Everyone in this area’s on standby. Terrorist threat level’s still high, and our case continues to be mega-low priority. I know this is driving you nuts, sweetie, but we’ve just got to sit and wait.”
Molly pretended to faint.
Gina wanted to applaud, it was done with such perfect timing, but Emilio didn’t leap to assist her. Instead, his squirming grandson still in his arms, he stepped back, well out of whacking range, barking out a command in what sounded like Italian.
Tiny Angry Crowbar Guy came into the room. He stopped short at the sight of the Molly doing her Swan Lake finale imitation. But then he quickly hopped to it, helping Gina put the mattress back down on the floor. The entire time, however, he eyed her makeshift weapon, now leaning against the wall.
As Gina rearranged the sheets and blankets, the vertically challenged man showed his stuff by effortlessly lifting Molly into his arms and carrying her to the bed.
Molly secured her spot in the race for the Best Actress Oscar by making the journey without shrieking or even opening her eyes.
In fact, it wasn’t until she was on the bed, Gina leaning over her, that her eyelids even started to flutter.
Bravo.
Emilio was again shouting down the hall, and a dark-haired woman appeared, head down and shy, handing him several bottles of water before she again vanished.
“She needs to go to the hospital,” Gina told Emilio, because they might as well try Molly’s idea now that fighting their way out was no longer an option.
He gave the bottles of water to Crowbar Guy, who angrily held them out to Gina. She took them, mostly so that he wouldn’t end up throwing them at her.
God, he scared her.
“As you can see,” Emilio told her, “these, like the food, are sealed.”
Gina opened one bottle, helped Molly sit up, helped her take a sip.
“She’s burning up,” she lied to Emilio, although, damn, Molly’s skin did feel warm. As a matter of fact, she was showing signs of dehydration. “Are you okay?” she asked Molly, suddenly realizing that her entire Meryl Streep-worthy performance hadn’t been a performance at all.
Molly was pulling away from the water with a grimace, pushing away Gina’s hand. “Bathroom,” she said, and Gina helped her up and into the tiny tiled room as quickly as humanly possible.
Urp. She closed the door on Molly’s intimate conversation with the toilet, letting her very real concern for her friend color her voice. “She’s been doing this for hours.” Another lie, but why not? “She’s severely dehydrated, with a high fever. Last time she was this sick, she started having seizures.”
Emilio looked shaken at that news, although his dismay was probably also an act.
“She needs to go to the hospital,” Gina said again.
Emilio shook his head. “That’s impossible.”
“Are you really prepared for her to die?”
From the bathroom came the sound of running water. Gina opened the door a crack, peeked in. Molly was at the sink, splashing water onto her face. Now was not the time for her to emerge, saying what she usually said after her rare bouts of morning sickness, “Wow, I feel
so
much better now.”
Gina took the now-open bottle of water with her as she slipped into the bathroom. No point leaving it out there for them to monkey with.
“I’m going to help you get back out there, and into bed,” she whispered to Molly. “I told them you need a hospital, so act like it, okay?”
Molly dried her face with a towel. “I don’t want them to know that I’m pregnant,” she whispered back.
“I know,” Gina said. “I told him you were running a fever. Make it look good.” She opened the door as Molly leaned on her.
Emilio was still out there, his grandson now on the floor, playing with their extra cans of food. The man moved, so that he was standing between them and the child as Gina helped Molly back into bed.
Like what? Gina was going to grab the little boy and threaten to break his neck?
God, what an awful idea. Would she do it—if it meant getting her freedom? What a twist—the hostage taking a hostage. She could demand Emilio surrender his gun. And once they had that gun . . .
Except what if he called her bluff? There was no way she would ever actually hurt a helpless little child, and surely Emilio would know that just by looking into her eyes.
People who take hostages, Max had told her once, had to be prepared to kill them. They had to be willing to end at least one human life. If they weren’t, the negotiators would sense it, and they’d send in the takedown teams. They’d just kick in the doors and end the standoff without any bloodshed.
At least, without any innocent bloodshed.
“Your grandson is beautiful,” Molly told Emilio as Gina handed her the bottle of water and opened a second one. “His name is . . . Danjuma?”
The boy looked up at his name, then laughed as one of the cans rolled away. He crawled after it.
“The resilience of children amazes me,” Emilio murmured as he, too, watched the little boy. “Just last month, his father—my son—was executed, right in front of him.”
Oh, God.
“I’m so sorry,” Molly said.
“His mother,” Emilio continued. “My daughter-in-law—you met her a few moments ago—was certain they would kill him, too. They do that, sometimes. Kill children, particularly our boys, so they don’t grow up and become soldiers for the opposition. Instead, he was spared. Instead, he was thrown into prison. All three of them were—my wife was with them, you see. She watched her only son die.”
Molly was buying this story, completely. She had tears in her eyes. Gina wasn’t sure why he was telling them this. Was it to win their sympathy? To make them understand why they were here, as his hostages?
“Who are
they
?” she asked.