Chapter Twenty-Four
That night, Diana tried to fall asleep on Ashley’s pullout couch. What could GROB have to tell her? That Ashley hadn’t been sick at all? Or that she had something more serious wrong with her, like HIV/AIDS or MS? Or—and now Diana knew she was being paranoid—that she’d been exposed to some highly contagious viral infection or deadly toxin that would panic the public. And what did Pam, aka PWNED, have to do with all of this? Diana’s mind churned the possibilities.
She took a pill and finally fell asleep. But an hour later she was awake again, bathed in anxiety. She’d been dreaming that she had to pack her clothes and meet Ashley at the airport, only she couldn’t find her suitcases, then she couldn’t find Ashley’s car. She fell back to sleep, only to wake up terrified by the kind of mountain-climbing nightmare she hadn’t had for months.
The next morning she felt more exhausted than she had when she’d gone to bed. Before Ashley left for work, she insisted that Diana take her GPS tracker, loaded with the coordinates of her destination. Ashley’s parting shot had been “I can’t get used to that hair,” followed by “Call me. Because I’m calling the police if I don’t hear from you by five o’clock—”
“Eight,” Diana said.
“Six,” Ashley said. “And not a minute longer. And if the police don’t get on the stick fast enough, I’m coming up there to find you myself.”
“You have reached your destination,” announced the robotic, British-accented female voice on Ashley’s GPS. The screen told her it was 11:50 A.M. She was ten minutes early. The drive had been easy, any remaining rush-hour traffic having dissipated by midmorning. The sky had gone from clear to overcast.
WELCOME TO MILL VILLAGE announced a cheery sign. Diana was stopped in traffic bunched up at the one stoplight in the center of town. The borders of the Hummer’s broad windshield framed her surroundings. There was the town green with storefronts surrounding it. The gazebo. The center of Mill Village was exactly like the town green in OtherWorld, where GROB had transported her after they’d been attacked on the beach.
She checked her rear- and sideview mirrors. GROB had to be here, somewhere. In a parked car. Inside one of the businesses lined up along the street. Walking on the town green. Was he dressed like his avatar, as she was like hers?
An elderly couple strolled by, the woman in a summery straw hat and white parka and the man in starched tan trousers and windbreaker. They stopped in front of Tweets, a pet store, and looked in at a person-size birdcage in which a bright green parrot hopped about. They both carried umbrellas, and Diana smiled to herself, imagining the bird checking them out: a pair of winter birds that had returned prematurely to New England.
A man strode down the sidewalk toward her, a knitted cap pulled down over his forehead and a plaid muffler around his face. GROB? Diana gripped the steering wheel and her heart lurched. She ducked down as he hurried past without even glancing at the Hummer. She watched, breathless, as he ducked into what looked like a luncheonette.
Diana sat forward and unstuck her T-shirt from her sweat-slicked back. She tried to swallow. She’d taken a pill before leaving Ashley’s apartment. She didn’t want to think about what she’d be feeling if she hadn’t.
A car behind her tooted. The light had changed.
Diana continued slowly up the block, looking for a place to park. Finally she pulled into the lot of a motel. Its black sign with RITZ in bold white letters outlined in neon tubing welcomed cars to a deserted parking lot. The proprietor must have had a flare for irony because the place looked a whole lot more like the Bates Motel than the Ritz-Carlton. Diana didn’t need anyone to cue the scary music.
“Turn around when possible.” It took her a moment to realize that the GPS had picked that moment to put in its oar. It told her she’d overshot her destination, and that it was now 11:58.
She turned off the GPS and slipped it into her jacket pocket. Then she waited for a break in the traffic, pulled out, and drove back the way she’d come in. She found a parking spot in front of the luncheonette. Painted in yellow letters across the plate glass, it said THE SUNNY SIDE UP. As she watched, unseen hands pulled from the window a sign advertising Full Breakfast for $3.99 and replaced it with one advertising Meatloaf Plate for $6.99.
Now what? She was here, but where was GROB? He’d never find her behind the Hummer’s dark tinted windows. She rolled down her window an inch. Chilly air seeped in. No matter what the calendar said, this late March felt wintry.
Across the street a woman wearing a short puffy jacket, a long skirt, and boots biked across the town green. Its empty gazebo was large enough to double as a bandstand. The structure was set, like a wedding-cake topper, on a little rise at the center of the grass with six footpaths radiating out from it. It offered a perfect vantage point, an unobstructed view of the storefronts and houses and, more important, GROB could see her.
Diana zipped her jacket and turned up its collar. In her rearview mirror, her dark-rimmed eyes looked back at her, wide and frightened. She found the sunglasses in her jacket pocket and put them on. Ran her fingers through those blond curls. Ashley wasn’t the only one who found her new hair jarring.
She pictured Nadia getting out of the Hummer. Crossing the street and walking decisively across the green, and stepping into the shadow of the gazebo. She could do it too. Diana grabbed Daniel’s walking stick before opening the car door a crack. When there was a break in the traffic, she opened the door farther and stepped into the street.
Fighting the impulse to dive back into the car, she slammed the door, pressed the remote to lock it, and crossed the street. She could feel the vibrations traveling up her legs as her boot heels connected with the brick walk with each deliberate stride toward the gazebo. She climbed the steps and stood on the platform, as tall and straight as Nadia might have stood in OtherWorld, waiting for GROB to show himself.
She checked her watch. It was 12:05. Cars drove by. There were plenty of pedestrians, but no one was coming her way.
She sat down on a bench in the gazebo and picked up a newspaper that had been left there. She settled back and waited. Made a futile attempt to read the news.
12:11. Still no one had approached her.
A week ago she could never have contemplated doing what she was doing, sitting alone on the town green of a village that, until an hour ago, had been nothing more than a dot on the map. To new beginnings. That’s what Daniel had said the night before their last climb.
The three of them had rented a one-room condo at the foot of the Eiger to use as their base camp. Over a dinner of spaghetti, warmed in a microwave oven, Daniel had raised a paper cup with an inch of brandy in a toast to their future.
“You guys sure you want to do this?” Diana had said, or words to that effect. “Leave behind your checkered past? No more free Hummers, you know.”
Daniel had laughed, snorting brandy.
“And what will NASA do without our drawing attention to their security lapses?” Jake added.
Daniel drew a little hash mark in the air and poured another inch all around. “Here’s to the time we turned that bank’s Web pages upside down—”
Jake broke in, “And replaced their surveillance camera feeds.”
That had been Daniel’s brainstorm. He’d hacked in and replaced South Savings Bank’s video surveillance feeds with a continuously looping five-minute Three Stooges clip. Before the bank could fix it, another hacker replaced the Stooges with continuous porn.
Jake and Daniel went on, passing their escapades back and forth like they were kicking a soccer ball downfield. Diana had prepared for just that moment. She pulled out a narrow scroll of paper on which she’d listed all the hacks she’d heard Jake and Daniel talk about and all the ones they’d pulled off since she joined up with them. She struck a match and offered it to Daniel. He lit the end of the paper.
“To starting over,” Diana said as she dropped the burning paper into a garbage can and they watched for a few moments in silence. When just curls of ash were left, Daniel and Jake exchanged a look. They both grinned.
“This is gettin’ on my noives,” Daniel said.
“Shut up,” Jake shot back.
Daniel poked a finger at Jake’s chest. “You talking to me?”
“Nah. I’m talkin’ to the fish.”
It was another of their endlessly recycled Three Stooges routines, and Diana had heard it so many times that she could intone the reply at the same time as Daniel.
“Don’t call me a fish!”
Daniel reached across and smacked Jake in the back of the head, and a minute later he and Jake were rolling around on the floor together like a couple of overgrown puppies.
When it was time to go, Jake had paused in the doorway, his hand up for Daniel and Diana to hold on to. “All for one!” he said. It was the start of yet another Three Stooges routine.
“One for all!” Diana said, joining her hand to theirs.
“Every man for himself!” The three of them chorused the punch line.
That had been a lifetime ago. A fat tear fell on the front of her jacket and she smeared it across the black leather.
12:25. Still, no one had approached her in the gazebo. The air turned a notch cooler, and she realized the sound she heard was light rain falling on the roof. Was there really some big secret about Ashley’s medical condition? Or was it just a ploy to get Diana out there?
Diana fished the cell phone out of her pocket, turned it on, and called Ashley. The call went immediately to voice mail.
“It’s me,” Diana said. “I’m here and I haven’t been kidnapped by the Ripper.” She paused. She couldn’t bear to deliver the pathetic news that she’d come all this way only to be stood up. “I should be heading home soon.”
She was about to put the phone back when the message-waiting alert went off. Had to be Ashley, seeing the missed call. But when Diana went to retrieve the text message, she saw it was from a number she didn’t recognize.
She nearly dropped the phone as she started to read.
Sorry. Car crapped out. Sunoco on 3A at I89. Meet me? GROB
She didn’t know what to feel. Dread that there was still, at the very least, unsettling news about her sister? Relief that she hadn’t placed her trust in a creep who was just out to make her look like a fool? Guilty excitement that he was waiting for her?
She pocketed the phone and used the newspaper to cover her head as she sprinted back to the car. She opened the door, tossed the walking stick into the back, climbed into the driver’s seat, slammed the door shut, and jammed the key into the ignition.
“Hello, Diana.” The familiar voice walloped her.