“Kill us? Why would they—”
“Liz! You’re running out of time. Once my friends get you someplace safe, I’ll explain everything to you.”
The stunned look on her face turned defiant.
“Why should I believe you?” she said. “You haven’t cared about me for twenty years.”
“Liz! You can hate me all you want, but you still need to get the hell out of there. Please, listen to Andrew.”
“Ah, yeah,” Nate said. “About that. She already knows my name.”
“I don’t care what she knows! You all need to leave right now!”
Julien’s phone beeped.
“What’s that?” Quinn asked.
Julien looked at the display. “It’s them. I think they’re here.”
Chapter 30
Julien turned off the speakerphone function, then switched to the incoming call.
“Oui? … There’s a café at the corner,” Julien said, switching to English. “I’ll meet you there in five minutes.” The Frenchman listened. “Because I’m checking her floor right now.… No, it’s better that we meet there. I can give you the layout.” He glanced at Liz. “Yes, she was alone last I checked.… I’ll be right there. Four minutes now.”
Julien switched the call back to Quinn and reengaged the speaker.
“They’re outside,” he said. “We have five, maybe six minutes before they become suspicious.”
“Then get moving, and don’t call me until you’re someplace safe,” Quinn said.
The phone went dead.
“All right, come on,” Nate said.
He grabbed his backpack and slung it over his shoulders, but Liz didn’t move. He put his hand on her arm and yanked her to her feet. “Come on. We don’t have any more time.”
“Is there really someone downstairs who wants to hurt me?”
“Yes,” Nate said, leading her toward the door.
“Wait. How long are we going to be gone?”
“I don’t know.”
She tried to pull her arm out of his grasp. “I need some clothes.”
He gripped her harder. He didn’t want to hurt her, but at the moment it was better than delaying their departure. “We can buy what we need. Now let’s go.”
“My purse at least,” she said.
It was on a small table along the back wall of the living room. Nate steered their course so she could grab it, then hurried her out of the apartment.
As they ran down the corridor, Nate said, “There’s got to be a back way out of the building. Where is it?”
Liz didn’t seem to hear him.
“Liz.” He gave her a gentle shake. “You need to help us. Back exit. Where?”
“There’s a door to the alley. But you can only get to it through the lobby.”
“That’s what I was afraid of,” Nate said.
“Stairs, yes?” Julien asked as they neared the end of the hallway.
“Stairs,” Nate said.
Julien raced down, agile for such a large man. On his own, Nate would have been able to keep up with him, but he knew if he let go of Liz she’d fall back, so he slowed his pace and kept a hand on her.
When they reached the final flight, they found Julien three risers from the bottom standing rock still.
“What is it?” Nate whispered.
“I saw someone through the window outside.”
“Did he see you?”
“He was turned the other way.”
“One of them?”
“I’m not sure.”
Could be anyone, Nate thought. But Quinn had taught him to always assume the worst. He looked at Liz. “Which way to the alley door?”
“It’s across from the elevator at the back of the lobby,” she said. “There’s a hallway that leads to the exit.”
They would have to cross through the center of the lobby. If someone looked through the window while they did, they’d be spotted.
“I’ll check,” Nate said.
The men outside might have descriptions of both Liz and Julien, but they would have no idea who Nate was.
“Stay with Julien,” he said as he let go of her arm.
He moved around Julien and entered the lobby. Then, as if he’d done it a million times before, he strolled toward the entrance of the rear hallway. He was only a few feet from it when someone rapped against the window on the front door.
“Monsieur, s’il vous plaît. Pouvez-vous me laisser entrer?” The voice was male, most likely the same person Julien had seen.
Not even flinching, Nate continued on as if he hadn’t heard a thing.
“Monsieur? S’il vous plaît.”
The rapping on the glass didn’t stop until Nate disappeared into the back hallway.
That’s a problem, he thought.
He looked at his watch. Julien was due at the café in one minute.
“Julien,” he whispered as loud as he dared.
“Oui?”
“You’re going to have to go out and pretend like everything is okay. You need to get that guy away from the door long enough so I can get Liz out the back.”
“D’accord,” Julien said. “I’ll do what I can.”
Nate angled himself so he could see as much of the lobby as possible without coming into view of the door. Fifteen seconds passed, but the Frenchman hadn’t appeared.
“Julien. Now would be good.”
Ten more seconds went by before Julien emerged from the staircase. The Frenchman stutter-stepped, glanced back over his shoulder in the direction he’d just come, then recovered and headed to the door.
He whispered something, but Nate couldn’t make it out.
As Julien opened the door, the man who’d been standing there backed up a few steps. He looked at Julien, and they exchanged a few words. As this was happening Julien let the door close behind him, then moved in front of the window to block the view.
Nate sprinted across the lobby and turned onto the stairs. “Come on, we—”
He didn’t finish, because no one was there to hear him.
Quinn looked stunned as he disconnected the call from Julien.
Orlando already had her own phone up to her ear. “Steven? I know it’s early there. But there’s been an escalation. What’s your situation? … Have the others seen anything unusual? … Okay, I’ll hold.” She moved the cell away from her mouth and looked back at Quinn. “Everything’s quiet at your mother’s house. He’s calling Rickey to see if he’s seen anything.” She suddenly swung the phone back. “Yeah, I’m here.… Okay … good.” To Quinn, she said, “Everything’s quiet.”
“Let me talk to him,” he said.
Orlando handed him the phone.
“Steven? It’s Quinn. We have reason to believe that someone might make a move on my mother at any time. I need you to get her out of there.”
“Okay, sure,” Steven Howard said. “Anyplace specific?”
Quinn thought for a moment. “If they do come looking and see that she’s gone, they’ll think she headed to either Winnipeg or Minneapolis.” They were the two closest cities of any size, and would be obvious destinations. “Go west into North Dakota. Stay on Highway 2. When you reach Montana, find a motel somewhere out of the way. Use precautions.”
“Got it,” Howard said.
“I should probably talk to my mom,” Quinn said.
“I’m going to have to wake her.”
Quinn looked at his watch, then did a quick calculation. It was 4:27 a.m. in Minnesota.
“Do it,” he said. First he had to convince his sister, and now his mother. This was a day he never saw coming.
On the other end, he could hear Howard moving through the house. There was a gentle knock. “Mrs. Oliver?” A pause. “Mrs. Oliver, are you awake?” Then in a whispered voice, “She’s coming.”