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Locke gripped the balcony railing with his ruined hand. It seemed to catch fire. The pain brought floods of tears to his eyes and the swelling made a sure grip impossible. He did the best he could, lowering himself until his legs were stretched toward the ground six stories below, hands supporting his entire weight.

The pain in his broken fingers was worse than he could have imagined and he grimaced against it, starting to sway back and forth, trying for enough impetus forward so that when he dropped, the angle would carry him to a safe landing on the balcony below. Incredibly, it seemed to be working, each sweep bringing him closer over his target.

Then a massive hand reached over the railing.

Locke looked up and saw the Chinese giant. Six bullets in the gut and still alive! Black powder burns dotted his white suit jacket but no splatters of blood surrounded them.

Why didn‘t you die? Locke wanted to scream.

But he couldn’t waste the effort. His final swing was almost complete when the giant’s hand found his hair.

Chris’s legs carried him well beneath the balcony, and out of reflex he let go his hands an instant before Shang’s grasp on his hair became firm. Then he was falling, unsure in that drawn-out moment whether his movement had carried him far enough or if he would drop sixty feet to oblivion.

He landed hard on the balcony tile below, breaking the fall with his left side and sending bolts of electric agony right through to his brain. His eyes dimmed and he felt himself hitting a wrought-iron table. But he couldn’t give in to the pain or the force of impact, couldn’t let himself forget Greg and what they had done to him.

Chris pushed himself back to his feet and staggered to the glass doors of the room directly beneath the one he had escaped from.

They were locked.

He picked up one of the wrought-iron balcony chairs, taking as much of its weight as he could in his right hand, and smashed it against the glass door. It shattered into a spider-web pattern on the first thrust and gave way on the second. Locke reached inside, unbolted the door, and slid it open.

He rushed through it into the darkness of the room without stopping. Shapes were indistinct, and he did his best to avoid them. A footpost of the bed nearly tripped him up and he wondered madly if someone there might be asleep. No matter. He was in the corridor an instant later holding his breath against the very real possibility that Shang and Mandala would smash into him around the next turn.

Footsteps pounded the floor in the corridor immediately ahead of him. Locke turned onto another hall and bolted for the first exit sign he saw. He wasn’t sure if his pursuers saw him as they passed and didn’t bother thinking about it. Instinctively his feet carried him up to the floor he had just left. They wouldn’t expect that. An amateur’s move would have been to make a straight line for the lobby and a desperate escape. But he wasn’t an amateur any longer. They would still consider him one, and that was the best thing he had working on his side.

He emerged back on the sixth floor with no plan of what to do next. He couldn’t stay in the open. The dark man could have people scouring the hotel even now. He would be spotted too easily. A room, he had to get into a room. But how?

If you‘re in trouble, contact the hotel manager. Tell him you work for the Grendel Corporation and your room isn‘t satisfactory.

Some of Dogan’s last words to him. But to get to a phone he had to first get into a room, which put him back where he started. Locke kept himself moving. There had to be something, some way to—

He saw a maid with a towel cart close a door behind her. She was doubtless on her nightly rounds to turn down beds and replenish bathroom supplies. That was it!

Locke started to tuck his shirt back tight into his pants, briefly forgetting about his swollen hand. The agony bit into him like a sharp knife. He withdrew his left hand from his pants slowly and set about tucking the rest of his shirt in with his right. Satisfied, he started down the corridor whistling, his pace that of a contented tourist.

The maid had just stopped her cart in front of another room and was sliding her passkey into the door.

“What timing,” Locke announced buoyantly, pretending to tuck a nonexistent key back into his pocket. “I need two glasses.”

Startled, the maid looked at him. She didn’t speak English well, if at all.

“Glasses,” Locke said slower, pointing to a tray of paper-wrapped ones on her cart and stealing a glance back down the corridor.

The maid nodded her understanding and handed him two.

“Anything else?” she tried to say in English.

Chris shook his head and thanked her, already inside the room and closing the door behind him. He glanced quickly about to assure himself he was alone, then hurried over to the phone. His left hand was still ravaged by pain and he could feel the sweat dripping from his brow.

“Front desk.”

“I’d like to speak to the manager please.”

“I’m afraid he’s busy at the moment. Is there something I can help you with?”

“No. I need the manager,” Locke insisted.

“If you leave your name and room number, I’ll—”

“This is an emergency, goddammit!”

The clerk hesitated. “Hold for a moment please.”

Seconds passed with agonizing slowness. Chris’s eyes fixed themselves on the door, expecting Shang to burst through it any moment.

“This is the manager” came a male voice in Italian-laced English.

“This is Mr. Locke. I work for the Grendel Corporation and my room isn’t satisfactory.”

A short pause.

“What room are you in, Mr. Locke?”

Chris eyed the number on the phone. “Six twenty-seven.”

Another pause, longer this time.

“My records show that is not the room you checked into.”

“Circumstances forced me to move.”

“Very well. Stay where you are. I’ll be up presently.”

The phone clicked off. Locke tried to steady himself with a series of deep breaths. The throbbing in his hand was incessant. His gaze fell on his mangled fingers. They made him think of Greg, of what the bastards had done to him.

Show him, Shang.

Locke’s mind filled with a picture of the championship ring caked with dried blood. He fell backward on the bed and stared mindlessly at the ceiling. He wanted so much to cry, as if tears might purge his emotions. But no tears came. He was beyond them, beyond everything.

They had mutilated his son!

Chris felt himself about to pass out when the knock came on the door. He swung it open without checking the peephole.

A gaunt man with olive features and dark hair, in his late thirties probably, stepped in. One foot dragged behind the other in a slight limp.

“My name is Forenzo, Mr. Locke,” the man said, closing the door behind him. “I am the hotel manager. You must tell me what has happened.”

“When I got to my room less than an hour ago, two men were waiting inside. They … tortured me in an attempt to gain certain information I possess.”

“And you are working with Mr. Dogan on this?”

“Yes.”

“What did these men do to you?”

Locke held up his swollen hand.

Forenzo’s eyes bulged. “We must have the hotel doctor look at that immediately. There will be time to finish your story later.”

Chris shook his head. “No doctors. I’ve had my fill of strangers for one night.”

“Please, Mr. Locke, I have had experience in these matters before. The doctor is a man to be trusted and your hand must be treated. If the bones are set wrong, the damage will be permanent. We have splendid facilities within the hotel. Everything can be handled here, I assure you.”