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"That's bullshit," Derrick said.  "Tim tells me you been holding out on

him.  He couldn't find the files in your office and tells me you've

been hiding them at home.  Only way he knew you indicted me was a

secretary.  Ain't that right, Tim?"

I looked over at O'Donnell.  The right side of his face was swollen and

bloodied.

"Alice mentioned it to me," he said by way of explanation.  "She

recognized the name and thought I should know about it."

In an office where I could never find anyone to help me, I'd managed to

find someone who was too competent.  I should've known Alice Gernstein

wouldn't miss a beat.

It was clear that O'Donnell was losing his resolve to fight.  It was

also clear that I wasn't digesting the new information quickly enough.

My first impulse was to be pissed at him for snooping through my

office, but then I remembered that this was a man who had helped kill

Jamie Zimmerman, sent an innocent man to death row, and led the

Derringers to me to save his own ass.

Derrick was behind me now, running the head of his gun along my

collarbone, pushing aside my hair to graze the back of my neck.  "Tell

us where the transcript is, Sam, or I'm gonna have one hell of a time

on your buddy Kendra before she dies."

I resisted the urge to tell him I wasn't as stupid as O'Donnell.  I

knew they were going to kill us and do horrible things to Kendra before

they killed her, whether I was helpful or not.  I also knew that the

promise of those transcripts was the only leverage I had at this

point.

Luckily, I'd left my case file in the trunk of my car.  "I've got them

locked in a safe," I said.

"Good girl," Derrick said.  "Now where's the safe?"

"Upstairs," I said, "in the master bedroom."

"Aangh," he responded, like a buzzer on a game show, "wrong answer.  I

personally tossed this place looking for your little friend's peepshow

pictures, and there ain't no safe."

"It's an old wall safe.  It's hidden in the baseboard.  There's no way

you'd see it."

I could picture Derrick searching his memory for the ransacking of my

bedroom, doubting whether he would have noticed an irregularity in the

oversized baseboards.  He threw a note pad and pen at me from the

dining room table.  "The combination," he said.  "Where is it in the

baseboards?"

"Directly behind the bed," I said, as I scrawled down three numbers

that were all slightly off.  If my guess about what was going to happen

was wrong, I could always tell them that the safe stuck sometimes.

Derrick snatched the paper from my outstretched hand and gave it to his

brother, gesturing with his head toward the stairs.  "Here, take

these," he said, throwing him a pair of gloves from his jacket pocket.

Frank took the stairs two at a time.  I heard a few thumps from

upstairs, followed by silence and a few more thumps.  I tried not to

think about Frank Derringer being in my bedroom.

After a few more rounds of thumps, Frank scrambled back down the stairs

to the landing.  "That bed is fucking heavy, man.  I can't budge it."

I had sworn at myself many times for buying a solid maple bed that I

couldn't move without the help of a strong friend.  But it had just

been added to the very short list of things I'd never get rid of.  That

is, if I lived past eight o'clock.

Derrick was less happy with the news.  "Jesus Christ, man.

Can't you do a fucking thing by yourself?"  Then he looked around the

room, in search of Plan B. C'mon, pea brain, I thought, watching him

ponder the possible combinations.  There's only one right answer

here.

His eyes eventually fell on me.  He gestured toward the stairs with his

head and said, "You, go up and help."  Yes!  Good answer, Derrick, good

answer!  "Try anything, and Ken-dra will pay the price," he yelled as I

went up the stairs, Frank behind me.

Frank was a lightweight.  The bed was approximately four centimeters

from where I'd last left it.  I walked around to the far side, saying,

"If we each take one leg of the.  headboard and pull back, it's usually

the best way to move it."

I watched Frank take his position on the other side of the bed, and

then I crouched to my knees to reach beneath the bed ruffle and grab

the headboard.  As Frank pulled against his side of the bed, I pulled

on my side with my right hand.  With my left, I reached inside the top

shelf of my nightstand and pulled my .25-caliber automatic loose from

the tape that held it to the bottom of my drawer.  I slid it onto the

floor next to me and then pulled on the bed hard with all my weight.

The bed jerked a few feet away from the wall.  Frank rose from his side

of the bed and saw my gun aimed on him before I'd fired off the shot.

If he could've just stood still, the bullet would have hit him dead

center in the chest.  Instead, he ran for the door quickly enough that

it caught him in the right shoulder.

I fired off a second shot but missed and hit the doorframe.  Damn.  Too

much time on the firing range, not enough chasing down wily targets.

Two quick shots rang from downstairs as I followed Frank to the door.

By the time I got there, he was almost to the end of the hallway

leading to the stairs.  I fired another shot.  I must've hit him,

because I heard a low grunt.  I must not have gotten him good, though,

because he turned down the stairs, and my next shot ripped through the

shameless Warhol knockoff on my wall.

Assuming that Derrick would be waiting for me at the bottom, I took the

stairs with my back pressed against the inner wall.  I stopped at the

last step before the landing, steeling myself to make the turn.  The

pressure of my heart pounding against my chest was fierce, and I fought

to catch my breath.

I poked my head around the corner and then retreated to the safety of

the wall again.  Keeping my back against the wall, I began moving down

the second half of the stairs.  Tim O'Donnell was still in my Mission

chair, but now blood was oozing from a dark hole in his forehead.  From

the looks of things, a second bullet had been fired into his groin.

As much as I'd practiced shooting, I'd never made a sweep through a

house before, and I didn't know what I was supposed to do next. Without

any other basis of information, I instinctively relied upon that most

reliable of sources, television.

From the landing, I could see that the front entrance and living room

were clear.  I swung off the stairs in a half circle to face the back

of the house, my gun outstretched in front of me.  Still clear.

The living room and Tim's dead body were to my left now as I faced my

dining room and kitchen.  I reached down slowly, keeping my gun pointed

in front of me, and grabbed my purse.  If I could just make it out the