There’s a single dot in a separate part of the house, but that doesn’t make sense. Why would someone kidnap them and take them there?
I widen the map’s scope and find more dots. One appears to be circling the other.
“Here,” I shout over the engine’s roar. “This has to be them.”
I point to a right turn. Gallagher squeals the tires, barely making the corner, then we scream off toward the docks, and hopefully to Ari and the Prince.
X X
X
The fog lifts from Ari’s mind. Small flashes of consciousness. Lights and sounds. He can’t move. The tightness of ropes is cutting across his arms, chest, and ankles.
The light is dim. His head sways uncontrollably. He sees benches and machines. He’s in a warehouse, and by the look of the dirt, an unused one.
The Prince is tied to a chair beside him. His head is slumped forward. Behind him, there is movement. He feels a blow across the back of his head. His balance swims, and he screws his eyes shut.
“The tranquilizers are wearing off,” a voice says. A female voice.
Ari forces his eyes back open. There are men in military fatigues patrolling the room, watching from windows.
A woman has her back to Ari. She checks her watch. “Is the boat ready?”
It’s the same woman’s voice. A nagging memory swirls in his foggy mind.
“Ready for departure,” says one of the men.
The woman stands in front of Ari for a minute. He keeps his head low, avoiding eye contact, trying to get his brain to work. To figure out what happened. But then he remembers the sting in his neck. The realization that he was shot with something. He shakes the grogginess from his head while he tries to assess his situation.
The woman turns around and swings her arm at Ari, slapping him across the face. He jerks his head up, his eyes wide.
“You were snooping around my house,” she yells. “What did you see?”
Ari shakes his head. “I don’t know what you are talking about. Why do you have us tied up?”
She leans closer to him. “You’re lying. I’m going to ask one more time before I kill you. And if you don’t give me the right answer, I’m going to kill your airhead sister just for fun. What. Did. You. See?”
The Prince lifts his head. Ari can see him fighting against the drug in his system. The Prince rocks from side to side, trying to figure out why he can’t move, then the realization.
He sees his cousin yelling at Ari and says, “What’s going on? Why are we tied up? Why are you threatening him?”
His cousin moves to stand in front of him and gives his face a slap. “You, my cousin, are about to be put on a boat and taken out to sea, never to be seen again. Then
I
will rule Montrovia.”
She grabs two handkerchiefs and shoves them in their mouths, so no one will hear them scream when they are fed to the sharks.
X X
X
Spy Girl is directing Gallagher through the industrial area surrounding the docks.
“Does anyone ever call you Bill?” she asks.
“No,” he replies.
“How about Will?”
“No.”
“No nicknames? Nothing anyone calls you?”
“Nope.”
“Weird,” she says, but she’s disappointed. She wishes he would have told her the truth about who he is. She looks back down at her phone. “Oh, wait! Turn right, right here! Then a quick left. Okay, now stop.”
He draws the Jaguar up to a quiet halt and puts the car in park.
“I’ll walk the rest of the way,” she says.
“
You
are not going anywhere. It’s much too dangerous. Stay in the car.”
She doesn’t have time to persuade or argue. This is her mission, and she has no idea which side he’s really on. When the man known as Intrepid looks around, sizing up the area, she gets ready. When he looks back at her, she throws her arm out, violently driving the heel of her palm to his jaw. His head snaps back, bouncing off the headrest, and he slumps forward. Out.
“Sorry,” she says quietly as she jumps out of the car and tears down the street, checking the location app and slowing as she gets closer. She stays in the shadows to analyze her surroundings.
Old warehouse by the water.
Two men guarding the perimeter. No automatic weapons. Each armed with a pistol.
The roof is tinged with moonlight. She sees no sign of activity.
No snipers on the roof.
Dim light filters from a window. It flickers as figures pass by. Once. Twice.
Two more men inside.
At least four to one. Not great odds.
She takes a deep breath. This is what she trained for.
And she has the element of surprise.
Her mother’s voice echoes in her head. Karate. Ten years old. Trying to break through a board.
You can do it, Lee. Just focus on your hand already being through the board.
Through the board, she thinks.
You’re already through the board.
She searches the ground for a weapon, finding a discarded piece of metal wire, a broken brick, and a work glove. She hangs onto it while she pans the area for its match, finding it a few yards away. Then she deals with her gown, ripping the beautiful skirt up the front and then around at thigh length.
She puts on one of the gloves and wraps the wire around it, securing one end of a garrote then slips on the other glove.
One of the guards circles around to the northwest corner of the building. He cups his hand around a cigarette, struggling to light it in the breeze. He leans in close to the shelter of the building.
She moves quickly, crossing the space between them in seconds. His back is to her. He raises his head, the finally lit cigarette dangling from his mouth, his lighter still flickering in the wind. She throws the wire over his head, bringing it up close and tight under his chin. Forcing it into his neck, she pulls hard.
The guard twists and struggles for breath, the wire cutting into his skin. His hands thrash at the wire. He heaves back and forth, but she holds on. The guard is desperate for air, so he drops to his knees, hoping to catch her off guard.
She’s ready for him. She brings her knee up to his shoulder and presses down, holding him into place until he stops moving.
She takes the wire from his neck, and the guard crumples into a heap. Dead.
She finds his gun and steals his holster, slinging it over her shoulder and tucking in the weapon.
The man made more noise than she would have liked, but hopefully not enough to be heard over the lap of water against the docks. She rounds the next corner, flat against the building to see the other guard pacing.
She waits for him to come closer then lunges, brick first, her arm swinging hard. She connects with the side of his head and hears a crack. The man goes down, stunned but not dead.
She drops her knee onto his back, wraps her gloved hand around his face, and finishes him off with a quick twist, breaking his neck then relieving him of his gun.
With the perimeter guards taken care of, there’s no point in being subtle now. Once inside the building, it will be all or nothing.
She finds a door and eases it open. The warehouse is large and stinks of decaying fish. At the far end of the building is an office area with the lights on. She sees Ari and the Prince tied to chairs in the center of the room. The chairs are secured to the ground with bolts. No way for Ari to help her.
Three guards follow a woman into the office, and two more men are surrounding the captives.
Five more guards, not two.
She pushes the barrel of the gun around the doorjamb and peeks out, once again, and fires a single shot to the head, taking down one of the guards.
Then a second.
Her odds are getting better.
Her heart should be racing, but it’s not. She’s calm—in her element. She trained until her skills became second nature. And while the actions are the same, the stakes are different. She’s not playing for a top score or bragging rights, she’s playing for Ari’s life and the Prince’s life, as well as her own.
She hears someone yell, “Go out there and see what the hell is going on.”
A guard comes out of the office, sees her, and fires errantly—missing her by a foot. She takes aim, but he runs behind the captives for cover and is preparing to fire again. Knowing she doesn’t have much time, she immediately takes off, runs up Ari’s shoulder, and catapults herself into the guard, knocking him down.
While he clutches his chest trying to breathe, she fires a round into his head.
The other two guards come out of the office, and a shot rings out as one shoots his pistol toward the ceiling and says, “Stop where you are.”
Except the shot doesn’t have his desired effect of scaring her, rather it only causes ceiling tiles to rain down on he and his partner.
This is her chance.
She ducks down behind the captives, grips one pistol in each hand, then somersaults out, twisting and firing a gun at each of her two next targets.
Bang. Bang.
Two more down.
She crouches low, quickly scanning the area for further threats.
Ari and the Prince are in shock. They both know it’s Huntley, but what she’s doing—the way she flew through the air, the way she tumbled across the floor with a gun in each hand and shot two targets—is like watching a different person. A killer. A good one.
Ari is yelling against his gag, trying to tell her something. She gets the cotton out of their mouths, and he yells, “Ophelia!”
“Did they take her, too? Where is she? Where’s Clarice?”
“What the hell?” asks a female voice.
Spy Girl turns. Ophelia is rushing into the room, looking around and trying to figure out what’s going on.
“Ophelia, I’m here to help. Stay down while I clear the rest of the building.”
“Clear the building?” She laughs as she surveys the bodies on the floor. “It looks as if you have already cleared the building. But no matter, I can hire more where they came from.”
Spy Girl swings into a tactical position. “You did this? I thought it was Clarice.”
“Clarice? You think my sister could have done all this? Oh no. My sister is clueless. She’s probably at home, jumping the bones of that idiot boy she thinks she’s in love with.”
“Where is Viktor?”
“He got a tranquilizer dart to the neck like the others. He’ll wake up and assume he had one hell of a night. And then he will become King. With his father’s world wide connections, there is nothing I won’t have,” she says, pulling a gun from her jacket and pressing it against the Prince’s temple. “Drop your weapons, or I kill him now. Although, he will die soon enough. You all will.”
Spy Girl has no choice. Although she’s a good shot, the chance of Ophelia shooting the Prince before a bullet could kill her is too great.
She reluctantly places the guns on the floor in front of her and holds up her hands.
“You ruined your dress,” Ophelia comments. “Which is fitting and slightly poetic. I can hear the account in the papers.
A torn ball gown covers the dead, would-be Princess on the night the Montrovian monarchy dies.
”
“How will you end the monarchy, Ophelia?” She knows the longer she keeps her talking the more time she has to figure out how to kill her.
“We get rid of this worthless excuse for a prince, for starters. Sorry about that. You seem to really like him. And you’re nice and surprisingly good with a gun. Something that would be valuable in the new world order of Montrovia.”
“If you kill the Prince, then you could be Queen.”
“Absolutely. Allowing me to do whatever the hell I want. And what I want is to systematically dismantle this farce of a monarchy, starting by selling the Strait of Montrovia to the highest bidder. Once that’s done, we close down our borders to these wretched tourists, shut down our port, sink all the yachts, and abolish gambling. We will ruin the country that shunned us all because—”
“All this because Daddy didn’t love you?”
The Prince winces as Ophelia digs the barrel of the gun into the side of his head. “Shut up!” she says, becoming agitated. She turns her gun away from the Prince and waves it in the other direction. Exactly what Spy Girl wants.
“You don’t know anything,” Ophelia rants, taking a few steps toward her. “You don’t know what it’s like to be treated like a nobody in France when your blood is royal. If it weren’t for my father’s philandering ways, my mother wouldn’t have taken us away to live like paupers.”