"Why?"
"Just do what you're told!"
"What's wrong?" JD asked. Then he saw the professor's blood-soaked, headless torso on the sofa and groaned.
"Ronnie," Amanda whimpered.
Vinnie and Cora turned away in shock.
"Ronnie's here," Amanda said.
"How?" Tod demanded.
"We were all in the passageway." Balenger fought his dizziness. His arms and legs were numb with mounting panic. Emotions from Iraq threatened to overwhelm him. No! he told himself. If you let it take charge, you die. Passive gets you killed. "We left the door open." Thunder roared. Rain pelted the balcony. "Somebody came in while we were distracted by opening the vault and finding Amanda."
"Ronnie," Amanda said.
"He stood outside in the dark. He listened for a long time." Balenger's voice was unsteady.
"A long time?" Tod stared at the gloom beyond the open door. "How do you know?"
"Twenty minutes ago, I told you about Iraq, about the guy who threatened to cut off my head, and now we find the professor with his head-"
Mack rushed from the bedroom, hurried to the sofa, and threw a sheet over the professor's body. Blood soaked it. The headlamp between the professor's legs shone dully upward through the fabric. "It stinks," Mack said in disgust. "I never realized how much…"
"Yeah," Balenger said. "Blood stinks. Mutilated bodies stink."
"Ronnie," Amanda repeated. It seemed the only word she knew.
"He might still be here!" JD scanned his flashlight into every corner.
"Shut the door," Tod ordered. "Lock it."
"Lock it how? The crowbar broke the door frame."
"Cram furniture against it."
JD dragged the bookcase toward the door. "Somebody give me a hand!"
Vinnie helped him. Balenger rushed to a heavy-looking table. Cora was next to him, sobbing, helping him push the table against the door. Mack lifted a chair on top.
"Nobody's coming through there." Mack grabbed the crowbar.
"But what if he's still in the room?" Again, JD scanned his flashlight toward the corners. Its trembling beam made shadows dance.
"Ronnie's here," Amanda said.
"Check the bedroom, the bathroom, and the closet!" Tod shouted. He hurried toward the bedroom, then turned and aimed at Balenger. "Don't go anywhere."
"I'm not planning on it. Right now, I'd sooner be with you." Balenger grabbed a hammer from a pile of equipment dumped from a knapsack. He entered the exposed passageway, turned off his headlamp to hide himself, and stood near the staircase, ready with the hammer, listening for the sound of anyone climbing the stairs. What he heard instead were the pounding of his pulse and thunder rattling the walls.
He became aware of Cora and Vinnie next to him, shutting off their lights, guarding the staircase. Each held a lamp as if it were a club. He glanced toward Amanda, who cowered in the living room, whimpering Ronnie's name. "Cora, maybe you should stay with her. Try to calm her down."
Cora wiped tears from her face. "Do I look like I can calm anybody?" Nonetheless, she went to Amanda.
Balenger watched Cora touch Amanda's arm and talk softly to her. Then he returned his attention to the black mouth of the spiral staircase. For all he knew, someone was down there, watching him.
"He's not in the closet, the bedroom, or the bathroom,'' Tod said, returning with Mack and JD.
Mack grabbed a water bottle from the floor and drank half of it.
"We might need to ration the rest of the bottles," Balenger said.
"We?" Tod asked.
"I need to…" Amanda said.
"What?"
"Relieve my…"
"So do I," Cora said.
"What's keeping you?"
"You took away the bottles we use for-"
"Go in the bathroom. You won't have water to flush it, but so what?"
"I don't want to be in there alone."
"I'll go with you." Mack grinned.
"J will," Vinnie said. He turned on his headlamp and motioned for the women to follow him into the bedroom. "I'll be right outside the door."
Cora put an arm around Amanda and led her toward the bedroom. Balenger noticed Mack staring toward the back of Amanda's nightgown. The two women and Vinnie disappeared into the darkness.
Watching them leave and then scanning the wreckage of the living room, the broken furniture, the destroyed walls, Balenger thought, Leave nothing but footprints? Take nothing but photographs? There's not much left to ruin.
"What now, hero?" Tod asked. "Any suggestions?"
"Use a cell phone to call the police."
"Don't you remember the local emergency number isn't working? And the regular police number has a long wait."
"Then phone the police in another city."
"Yeah, right. So instead of facing this Ronnie jerkoff, we get charged for killing your pal, not to mention kidnapping the rest of you. Somehow, I think our odds are better against Ronnie."
"Not so far."
"Yeah, well, we weren't organized a little while ago. We didn't know what we were dealing with."
"You still don't."
"We will when the woman comes back and we get some information out of her."
JD took an empty knapsack into the vault. "Man, does it ever stink in here." He threw coins into the knapsack. They made a dull clinking sound.
"Here's another suggestion," Balenger said. Keep making them feel we're together, he thought. "Collectors won't pay seven hundred dollars for coins that are scratched. Those are perfect, and he's ruining them."
"Hey, asshole," Tod called. "Be careful with those. Don't scratch them. Use the trays. Put the coins in, trays and all. I was confused a minute ago," he told Balenger. "Needed to think. But now I've got everything covered. With our goggles, we'll see Ronnie before he sees us."
"Has it occurred to you that he might have goggles, too?"
Tod frowned, his furrowed brow twisting his tattoos. Footsteps made him turn toward Vinnie, Cora, and Amanda coming back. "Tell us about Ronnie," he demanded.
Amanda's face tightened. Shaken by memories, she took a deep breath. "He…" She bit her lip and forced herself to continue. "I work in a bookstore in Manhattan. He came in a couple of times. Friendly." She hugged herself. "He must have followed me home to Brooklyn and figured where to park a car, where to hide. A few days earlier, my boyfriend moved out. I was living alone in an apartment I couldn't afford by myself. I was so worried about paying the rent, I didn't pay attention when I got off the subway and walked home."
"When was this?" Mack asked.
"I have no idea." Amanda shivered. "What date is it?"
"October twenty-fourth."
"Oh." Amanda's voice dropped. She sank into a chair.
"What's wrong?" Balenger asked.
"The night he grabbed me was June fourteenth." Amanda's eyes communicated her dismay and loss. "The store stayed open that night until ten. An author signing. I didn't get home until midnight. He had a cloth with some kind of chemical in it, something that he pressed over my mouth when I passed an alley." She took another deep breath. "When I woke up, I was on the bed upstairs. He was sitting next to me, holding my hand." She closed her eyes, lowered her head, and quivered as if she tasted something disgusting. "That's when he explained the facts of my new life."
"What does he look like?" Tod demanded. "Does he have a gun? If we end up fighting him, what do we need to expect?"
"Old."
"What?"
"Much older than me. Older than you." Amanda looked at Balenger, who was thirty-five.
"How old?" Tod asked.
"I'm no good at judging that. Anybody over forty looks-"
"You think he's over forty?" Balenger asked.
"Yes."
"Is he real old? He can't be if he overpowered you."
"Maybe in his fifties. Tall. Thin. Nervous thin. He has a neutral expression on his face. Even when he smiles, it's neutral."
"A thin guy in his fifties?" Tod began to look confident. "I think we can handle him just fine."
"He's very strong."
"Stronger than this?" Tod held up the pistol.