“No!” said Margaret. She understood a moment before I explained it.
“Yeah,” I said, nodding slowly, remembering the blossoming walls of the maze. “They were rosebushes. And the guy in the maze was Rose. He was my ally. He was the one who told me about the device in my mouth, about how the Homelanders were going to break me out of prison. He was Waterman’s contact on the police department. It was Rose all along.”
“Are you sure, Charlie?” Margaret asked me. “He didn’t seem like any kind of ally when he was just here.”
I stood out of my chair to pull the sweatshirt down over my head. “I’m sure. I remember it now. It all makes sense. Just after I escaped from the Homelanders the first time, I was arrested. I was handcuffed and Rose and a bunch of deputies took me to a car to take me back to jail. But just before they put me in the car, someone unlocked my handcuffs and whispered in my ear, ‘Find Waterman.’ It was Rose. It must’ve been-he was the only one close enough to do it. I guess he couldn’t help me more than that without giving himself away. Later, I saw my chance and I escaped-but he must’ve given me that chance, must’ve let me do it. Where are my shoes?”
“What do you need your shoes for? You’re still sick. You’re too weak to go anywhere now.”
I looked at her for a moment, at her kind and tired face, her kind and tired eyes. I did my best to smile.
“I’ll be fine,” I told her. “Remember you talked about doing what you have to do? Now I know what I have to do.”
She hesitated another moment, then did her best to smile back. “I’ll get your sneakers.”
They were right there, against the wall by the computer table. She handed them to me. I sat down and put them on.
“What are you planning?” she asked me.
“I’m going to find him. Rose. He’s the only contact I have left, the only one I can get to anyway. Maybe he can set things straight once and for all.”
“Wait,” said Margaret. She went back to the alcove, back to the table. She picked up a small rectangle of cardboard lying next to the laptop. She held it up. “You don’t have to go anywhere,” she said. “He gave me his card. He said I should call him if I saw you. We can just call him and he’ll come. He’ll know what to do.”
She went to the phone.
“No,” I said. “Let me. I don’t want anyone to think you’re calling for help. If the other police think you’re in danger, one of them might shoot me or something. It would ruin my whole day.”
She nodded. She picked up the phone’s handset and gave it to me.
From the sofa, there came a short laugh. “‘Ruin my whole day,’” Larry repeated, getting the joke. He was listening to every word we said.
I laughed. Suddenly, I was feeling pretty good, pretty hopeful. If I was right-if Rose was on my side-if I had at least one friend in the police department-the situation might not be as bad as I thought it was.
Margaret read the phone number aloud off the card. I keyed the numbers into the phone. I held the phone to my ear. It was silent.
“I guess I didn’t do that right,” I said. “Read me the number again.”
She read the number again. This time, I pressed the Talk button first, then dialed the number. But when I held the phone to my ear, there was still nothing. It was still silent.
I pressed the Talk button. Listened. No dial tone.
“How do I get a dial tone?”
Margaret took the phone. Pressed the button. Listened. “Seems to be out. Maybe the battery…” She tapped the buttons, repeating Rose’s phone number out loud a third time as she did. She listened. Shook her head.
“You have a cell?”
She left the room to get it. I heard her footsteps on the kitchen linoleum. A moment later, she was back with her cell phone.
“The kitchen phone is dead too,” she said.
The first tremor of fear went through me. I opened her cell. Looked at it. “No signal.”
Margaret shook her head. “That’s impossible. There’s a cell tower just up the road. I always get full bars.” She took the phone. Stared at it. Stared at me. “How is that possible?”
I didn’t want her to see the fear in my eyes, but I knew she did. My voice was hoarse and tense as I said to her: “Get the boy out of here.”
It took only a second for Margaret to understand. It was the Homelanders. It had to be. They had cut her phone lines, jammed her cell.
Now I could see the fear come into Margaret’s eyes too. She gave a quick glance at her son, a quick shake of her head. When she spoke again, she dropped her voice low, hoping the boy wouldn’t hear.
“They must already be here. Outside.”
I turned to look at the window. Nothing visible out there but darkness; night. But I knew she had to be right. Why would they have cut the phones if they weren’t here, ready to make their move?
The boy went on staring at us over the back of the couch. I sensed his worried eyes on me. I tried to look relaxed. But I dropped my voice to a whisper too.
“We probably don’t have a lot of time.”
“No time, more like,” Margaret said.
“Is there a way out from upstairs?”
She thought for a second. Then she gestured at her son. “He’s light enough to climb down the drainpipe. He’s done it before.”
“Wait till they’re in the house,” I said. “Then tell him to go into the woods and hide.”
She was already moving to the sofa. She grabbed Larry’s hand.
“Come on,” she said.
“Where we going, Mommy?” Larry piped.
“Up to the attic.”
He dragged his heels. “But I want to see the end of the movie.”
Margaret gave his arm a good stiff tug. “Don’t you argue with me, boy. Come on!”
“But Mommy…!”
“Hurry!”
With her other hand, she took Sport by the collar and pulled him along as well.
They all went up the stairs quickly.
My eyes went back to the front window. Out there in the dark, looking in at us here in the lighted house, they’d be able to see every move we made.
I went to the light switch. I turned the top light off, then moved around the room, killing whatever lights I found-including the TV still showing the DVD. There were still lights in the hall, some in the kitchen. I turned those off too. Now the house was almost as dark as the night outside.
I waited in that dark. Long minutes went by. I looked out the kitchen windows. I saw nothing. I listened. The house creaked and settled, but there was no other sound.
I began to wonder if maybe I’d been wrong. Maybe the Homelanders weren’t here after all.
After a few more minutes, I felt my way through the dark house back into the living room. I took a step toward the front window, to see if I could get another angle on the outdoors, maybe spot something on the front drive.
Before I took a second step, the door burst open and the Homelanders came charging in.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Caught There were three of them. They had machine guns with flashlights mounted on the barrels. The effect of the lights was awful, like something out of a horror movie. All I could see in the darkness of the house were the crisscrossing white beams, and the black death-dealing bores of the gun barrels, and the gunmen’s twisted grimaces and hate-filled eyes half illuminated in the outglow of the light.
The deafening crash of the door bursting in stunned me. The moving light beams dazzled me. But in the instant before they spotted my location, I managed to make my move.
I leapt away from the window and dove for the living room floor.
“There he is!” someone shouted.
There was a coughing burst of gunfire. A stuttering flash of flame. I heard glass breaking as bullets flew through the room. I heard Sport barking wildly somewhere far away. I hit the floor and rolled beneath the crisscrossing beams of light.
I rolled to my feet and ran in the direction of the dining room archway. The light beams scanned the darkness. I saw the archway-the dark shape of it in the half-lit shadows. Then the lights found me. I dove again as the gunfire exploded behind me. I felt a terrifying breath of air as a bullet whistled past my ear.