“I’ll bet you nuked a pizza earlier tonight, too,” Jupe said. “We smelled it upstairs.”
“Unfortunately, cooking odors have been a problem,” Rome agreed as he happily made stacks of his loot. “That’s why I was forced to, ah, borrow some of my former colleagues’ food.”
“You’re the one stealing the junk food!” Branson accused him.
Rome slid the pizza out onto a tray and carried it back to his table. “They’re such idiots they’ll never figure it out.”
“Stupid like me,” Branson said. “Right, Nort? Well, look at it this way— we found you!”
“True. But that’s rotten luck for you. You’re dead meat.” Norton Rome grinned.
Suddenly Jupe had a vision of him and Branson hanging limply from meat hooks. His stomach went hollow with fear, but he wasn’t going to let Rome see it.
“You’re a real zero, Brannie. You never could see farther than a computer screen.” Rome liked the sound of his own voice, Jupe decided. The blackmailer’s eyes gleamed as he gestured with a fistful of thousand-dollar bills at the huge underground room. “I accidentally stumbled onto this secret room, and it was perfect. Some bootlegger built it to hide his Prohibition booze. It was empty and forgotten, but I saw its potential.”
“This warehouse dates from the 1920s?” Jupe asked, hoping to keep Rome busy. That was when the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution had outlawed making and drinking liquor in the United States.
Rome looked at Jupe, but fortunately he couldn’t see that Jupe was trying to loosen the ropes that tied his arms in back.
“Yeah,” Rome said cockily. “The bootlegger did it right — ventilation shafts and even an old-fashioned toilet. Add a TV, microwave, computer, and tons of food. I am, if I do say so myself, in genius heaven.”
“A guy could live here for weeks,” Branson said.
“Exactly!” Rome said confidently.
“I get it,” Jupe said. “The one place no one would ever think of looking for a blackmailer would be in the place he was blackmailing!”
Norton Rome’s pudgy chest expanded with pride. “I’ll lie low here until everyone gives up looking for me.” He picked up a piece of hot pizza, and the mozzarella dripped onto the tabletop next to the money. “I’ll escape with my dough, and none of the suckers around here will ever figure out how I did it. I’ll be a hero!” He took a bite of pizza and chewed with relish.
“Heroes are admired,” Jupe said. “Everyone will hate you.”
“That’s not the point,” Rome said. “Once he gets the antidote, Silas will call in the cops, the Feds, the Coast Guard, everyone he can think of… and I’ll bet I’ll even be on TV and in the papers. I’ll be famous! The one who gotaway.” He eyed Jupe. “Too bad you’re such a snooper, kid. But when I saw you with Ek yesterday, I knew I had to get rid of you. Bull’s-eye instincts, right?”
Jupe shook his head. “Wrong. As long as we’re missing, Oracle won’t give up.”
Rome’s fat face turned bright red with anger. He slammed a fist down on the table. “Anyone who works at Oracle’s a scumball loser! All Oracle does is grind talent down to the lowest common denominator. Lousy pay! No recognition! I’m not going to take it anymore! They can whistle for their antidote!”
“You’ll never get away with it,” Jupe stated. His voice sounded certain, but inside he was deeply worried. He’d pretended to stumble when Rome had ordered him and Branson through the hidden door to the underground hideout. As he’d stumbled, he’d dropped the little model Qute had given him. Jupe hoped fervently Pete and Bob would spot the little statue and come to the rescue! But just then Norton Rome reached inside his leather jacket and pulled out the gunmetal-blue Walther pistol. He laid it on the table next to Jupe’s walkie-talkie.
Rome smiled nastily. “You think somebody’s going to save you? Forget it.” He pointed to a red light bulb next to the staircase that led up to the door. “Anybody tries to get in, that red baby goes on.”
Rome leaned over the table toward Jupe and Branson. His insane eyes glowed. “The only way you two’ll leave here is in body bags.” He laughed loudly. “If your corpses are ever even found!”
Pete and Bob split up to explore the warehouse one last time. Bob was getting more and more discouraged. It seemed as if Jupe and Branson had simply evaporated. There wasn’t a trace of them anywhere. Bob was just heading out to the parking lot to check the delivery van for clues when he heard Pete’s voice.
It was low and urgent. “Bob! Come here. I’ve found something weird!”
Bob spotted Pete in one of the old-fashioned, wood-paneled office corridors. He was kneeling, holding something in his hand.
“I found it here,” Pete said, placing the likeness of Qute den Zorn on the floor on the other side of the arched alcove. “Do you suppose Qute dropped it yesterday?”
“Or maybe one of the publicity people had a box of them, and one fell out.” Bob scratched his blond head. “Wonder why the cleaning staff didn’t sweep it up.”
“Doesn’t make much sense,” Pete agreed.
“Wait a minute! What about Jupe?”
“Yeah! He’s been carrying his around since Qute gave it to him yesterday. I saw him looking at it this morning.”
“Maybe he’s trying to tell us he’s here somewhere!” Bob guessed, excited.
The guys prowled the corridor, listening at the doors and trying them again. But no luck. They wandered back to where Pete had found the tiny model.
“You don’t suppose… ” Pete said slowly as he ran his hands tentatively over the wood paneling.
“A hidden door?” Bob said as he joined Pete. “Why not!”
The guys felt the wood and the little grooves where the planks met, but there were no buttons or latches. Bob squatted down where Pete had found the replica. He looked around, and then up. Suddenly he noticed that where the wall met the ceiling a piece of crown molding was slightly darker in color, as if hands had touched it many times.
Bob leaped up and pulled on the molding. It slid down, and there was a quiet whirring as the back wall of the alcove inched inward.
“Amazing!” Pete said softly.
The guys stood back against the wall on either side of the moving panel. As the alcove opened wider, Bob’s heart pounded with anticipation. Once the whole secret entrance was open, they jumped inside.
“There’s stairs going down!”
But suddenly Norton Rome appeared at the top of the staircase. He pointed a big Walther straight at Pete’s heart! “Looking for somebody?” he snarled.
18
Taking a Byte out of Crime
Pete stopped so suddenly that Bob slammed into him, shoving him straight toward pudgy, crazed Norton Rome. Pete reacted instantly. Instead of catching himself, he let himself crash on into Rome and knock aside Rome’s aim.
Rome’s gun exploded accidentally, blasting a huge hole in the wall. Splinters bit into Bob’s face.
“Bob! Pete! We’re here!” Jupe shouted from somewhere below.
Pete lunged once again for Rome. But Rome was a lot faster than he looked. He twisted away, which threw him off balance. It made him drop the gun.
“I’ll get you!” he bellowed. “Just you wait!”
As Rome scrambled on the landing for his gun, Bob shouted, “Come on, Pete!”
They tore out of the alcove. They heard Rome’s feet thunder after them.
As they pounded along the corridor Bob panted, “I’ve got an idea. Separate! You keep Rome busy in Club Dead. I’ll double back and free Jupe and Branson!
“You’re on!”
They dashed into Club Dead, leaving the door open. Only the rectangle of hall light illuminated the vast, packed room. Pete raced down an aisle among props and models while Bob circled behind the big chrome robot next to the door.