"How's your phone?" he asked.
I glanced down at the battery meter. "It's fine. No problem. It has hours left. Stop worrying."
"You see Lucy sitting pretty anywhere around here? Until you do, I don't stop worrying."
A Denver patrol officer was pointing Sam down the sidewalk, indicating a stocky man with a starched blue shirt and a navy blue tie. The shirt was unbuttoned at the collar, the tie was far from tight, and the shirtsleeves were folded up near the man's elbows. The shoes were polished like a Marine's dress pair.
"You Purdy?" the man asked as we approached.
Sam said, "Yeah. This is Alan Gregory, the guy with the phone."
"That's the phone?" He pointed at my hand.
"Yes," I said.
Without asking permission he took it from my hand and plugged a small tape recorder into it. "It'll kick on automatically. It's a backup in case the phone company doesn't capture the call. Notify me the second it rings.
"I'm Rivera, by the way. You're not going to believe this, but we just took a nonemergency call from somebody warning us about some bombs at East High School."
Sam said, "East High School? Bombs? It's in session, right? The school's full of kids, right?"
"Yeah, it's full of kids. They've started evacuating the buildings. We're sending as many people out there as we can and we've asked the surrounding cities and counties for help from their bomb squads and SWAT teams. The way this morning is developing, we need five bomb squads."
Sam asked, "You getting all the cooperation you want?"
"Anything we need. Except from Boulder. They seem to need help almost as much as we do."
"Did you ID the caller on the warning?"
"The call came in on a nonemergency line, so we didn't get an automatic ID. Anyway, it was blocked, and it was too short a call to trace. We have a tape of the entire call; it's like ten seconds. I'm sure the RP was the kid. They played it for me over the phone. I'm sure it was the same kid. East High School. Damn."
Ramp was "the kid."
My phone rang. I almost dropped it. At first I gaped at it as though it had given me an electrical shock.
Sam stopped in his tracks. He looked at me like he'd just discovered he was standing in the center of a minefield.
Recovering my wits, I hit a button and listened for a count of two before I whispered, "Hello, this is Alan Gregory."
I didn't really expect a reply.
CHAPTER 53
Ramp's gesture as he climbed back into the truck after initiating the explosion at Coors Field was both nonchalant and innocuous, but it was sufficient to fracture the fragile skeleton of hope that Lucy had been constructing.
He removed the windbreaker he'd been wearing and tossed it over the center console of the truck, burying Lucy's cell phone below it.
She wanted to cry. She'd already noticed that her earlier call to Alan Gregory, although live for a while, had been dropped. She'd been waiting for an opportunity to hit the redial button once again. To get a chance, she knew that she'd have to wait for Ramp to make another sojourn from the truck. With the jacket covering the phone, she didn't know how she was going to get her bound hands to the button quickly and she wasn't at all confident that the phone's microphone would pick up sound through the insulation of the jacket's fabric, anyway.
She wondered if Alan had figured out anything from her earlier call. Maybe he hadn't even bothered to listen when he'd discovered that there wasn't anyone at the other end of the line.
Ramp headed down Blake across Broadway into the part of Denver's old warehouse district that hadn't yet been converted into lofts, restaurants, and galleries. He stopped the truck in the middle of a block that was swarming with trucks making pickups and deliveries. He told Lucy, "I have a little time to kill. Try to get some rest."
She watched him lean back in his seat and settle a baseball cap over his eyes. As though he could read her mind, he added, "Don't try anything, Lucy. I'm tense. Try to relax."
She yelled at him into her gag. He slid the hat away from his eyes and glanced down at her. She raised her bound hands as though she were going to remove the gag herself.
He said, "I told you, if you touch that, I'll move your arms behind your back. You won't like that."
She screamed again.
He stared at her for a moment, then lowered the gag so that it rested on her chin. The tape tore at the skin on her jaw. She spit fragments of cotton into the air and tried to speak. The first attempt came out in a rasp.
Finally, she managed, "Why are you blowing up those buildings?"
He didn't answer right away. "I used a lot of explosives to knock down the ride at Elitch's, but the rest of the bombs aren't that powerful. All I'm doing is creating chaos. When the dust settles, hopefully people will wonder why. Dialogue will fill that void. The more people care about the buildings, the more they will wonder why I blew them up. That's why I chose people who work in buildings that people might care about. That's why I didn't do it at their homes. Believe me, that would have been much, much easier."
"You're not just bombing buildings, though. You're killing people, too, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
"So that… some people, particular people… will know how it feels to lose someone they love to stupidity."
"You're not done?"
"No."
"Why?"
"So the people in power will care."
"I don't get it."
"For this to be effective, it has to get personal. People, especially powerful people, have to realize that they are just as vulnerable as I was. They have to believe that in their hearts. Deep in their hearts. There's no other way for me to be certain that I'm getting my message across and that they'll pay attention. You cause somebody enough pain, you get their attention. Trust me, I know. The people in power have to know that, too."
She fought a swell of compassion for him. She said, "Jason, stop. Please, stop now."
He scoffed. "Why?"
"I'll help you."
"I don't need your help, Lucy. Unless they catch up with me before I'm done, I don't need your help."
"I know a good lawyer."
He laughed. "I know you do. Your lawyer's the one who got Marin's rapist a slap on the wrist. For me, he's part of the problem, not part of the solution. Anyway, it's irrelevant. Your lawyer's dead, too. He was on Marin's list this morning. I set a charge against the counterweight cable in his building's elevator. Marin was supposed to wait until he climbed into the elevator, then she was going to set it off."
She vaulted to her knees. "You little-"
He raised his wrist, curling his fingers so that the tips rested on the switch that was taped to his arm.
She stilled. He pushed the gag back into place. "Why don't you get some rest? Please don't make me sorry I brought you along."
After twenty minutes or so, Ramp exited the truck without a word. Lucy couldn't see which way he went, and didn't know how long he would be gone. She fought the temptation to go for the phone, but suspected that he was testing her, so she remained in place.
He was back in a minute, maybe two. "Just a little diversion," he told her. "I'm sending the bomb squad over to East High School. I have some surprises planted there that should get everyone's attention for a little while. Oh shit, I left the number sitting by the phone. Be right back."
She screamed into her gag and almost choked with the effort. Not a high school. Please, God, not a high school. Not in Colorado. Not again.