The theater was almost empty. The trailers were showing, and I had to stumble to a seat in the half dark. I slumped down. Pluto had told me to avoid looking around, but I couldn’t resist peeking over my shoulder to see if I recognized anyone. Nope. At least one lucky break. I checked my phone again. I had to wait another twenty minutes. I tried to focus on the movie, but I couldn’t keep the story line straight. It didn’t matter: I’d already looked up reviews and summaries of the plot so I could talk about it if I needed to.
When the time came, I slipped out of the row and headed for the exit. Nothing to see here, just someone going to the bathroom. I tried to walk casually, but my movements were jerky, like I was moving at one speed and reality was moving at another. I paused just outside the restrooms and drank out of the water fountain. The emergency exit door was where Pluto said it would be, next to the men’s room. I hoped he was right and that the theater staff had disabled the alarm so they could use this exit to take the trash out; otherwise, things were about to get real interesting.
I pushed the panic bar, half expecting buzzers and lights to go off, but it clicked open without a sound. I slid out into the night, shutting the door quietly behind me, wedging the tiny piece of cardboard I’d brought in the latch so I could get back in later. It took a moment for my eyes to adjust to the dim light. I was behind the theater next to three giant dumpsters with the sour smell of garbage wafting up. I could just make out the line of trees ahead that made up the back of the park, like tall black sentinels. I shook my head to clear away irrational thoughts. It was a park. There was nothing to be scared of.
I jogged over to the trees. The ground was spongy from the thick layer of fallen pine needles. My feet slid on the uneven path. I slowed down—?I didn’t want to fall. I fished through my bag and found the flashlight. The park was beyond dark; it was like I’d dropped into a vat of black ink. The beam bounced around until I spotted the path. I took one look over my shoulder at the back of the theater and then turned the flashlight off and hustled through the woods. Without a light, no one would be able to follow me.
Pluto told me it should take about ten minutes to come across the cabin, but it felt like I’d been walking much longer. Jesus, what if I got lost? Clammy sweat prickled under my arms, and I started to grow lightheaded. I stopped and counted to ten. I was forgetting to breathe. Classic anxiety mistake. I couldn’t afford to let my imagination get the better of me. I was fine. There was nothing out here. I clicked the light back on. I was still on the path. No monsters. I wasn’t going to get lost. It was a worn groove of pounded dirt. As long as I moved slowly, I’d stay on the trail. The park was only so big. It wasn’t like I was going to wander into Canada or something. Worst case scenario, all I had to do is turn around and go back the way I came.
I whipped around when I heard a sound, but there was no one. Adrenaline flooded my system like bees buzzing through my veins. I hated everything about this place. I couldn’t believe Pluto had talked me into meeting here. There was no way I’d missed the cabin, so that meant I must not have gone far enough. I pulled out my phone to check the time. I’d walk for another five minutes and then go back. And I’d keep the flashlight on too. At this point no one from the theater would see the light anyway.
I had to walk only a few more minutes before the cabin appeared out of the dim. I paused at the bottom of the stairs, listening to the wind whistling through the trees. I couldn’t hear anything coming from inside. Pluto had told me what to expect, but seeing was believing. The windows were boarded up, with only tiny slits left open. The building seemed to lean forward, like it was hungry. The cabin looked straight out of a horror movie. And I was the dumb girl wandering around.
The one who gets killed early.
A cough from my right made me spin around, dropping the flashlight, my heart lunging up my throat.
“Paige! Jesus, you scared the shit out of me.” I bent over to get my breath. My heart slammed against my ribs.
She whacked me on the shoulder. “Don’t call me that! What the hell is wrong with you?”
I stepped back, rubbing my arm. “Fine. Pluto. You scared the shit out of me.”
She bent over and picked up the flashlight, handing it back. “We talked about this a thousand times. It’s not just calling me Pluto—?it’s thinking of me as Pluto. It’s making your brain see me as that person. Different name, different gender, different everything. It has to be instinct, so if anyone ever overhears you talking, or if they surprise you into saying something, they won’t connect the two of us.” She snapped her fingers in my face. “Instinct.”
“I’ve done what you said. I just wasn’t expecting you to sneak up on me.”
Paige pulled the hood from her sweatshirt down. “That’s exactly why you have to do it all the time—?look how easy it was to throw you. Besides, I hid because I wanted to be certain it was you.” She looked down pointedly at the flashlight. “Since I told you to come with no light, I had to be sure.”
It creeped me out that she’d been standing there watching me the whole time I walked up. I could picture her peeking around the trees, tracking every move I made. This wasn’t about being careful; it was about Paige liking that I was scared.
“Did you bring me anything?” Paige looked at my empty hands. “Nothing? Not even M&M’s? Or those Sour Patch Kids? I love those things.”
I bit my tongue. “What’s happening with the ransom?”
“There’s been a hiccup.” She ran the zipper on her hoodie up and down.
I paused, waiting to see if she was going to say anything else. Each nerve in my body was lighting up with annoyance. “What kind of hiccup?”
Paige jammed her hands into the pocket of her sweatshirt. “You don’t need to worry about it. I’ve got it under control.”
“Really? Because it doesn’t look like it.”
“At least out of the two of us I can keep our names straight.” She blew her breath out in a huff. “I can’t believe you demanded a face-to-face meeting to tell me you don’t think I’m doing a good job. You couldn’t do that over the phone? This is a waste of time and a pointless risk.” She started to walk back to the cabin.
Oh hell no. I grabbed Paige’s elbow. “Listen, if you can’t control your dad, that’s not my problem.”
Paige’s hand whipped out and slapped me. I was so shocked I dropped her arm. I touched my face—?it was hot where she’d hit me. I’d never been hit before. Ever.
“I told you, we are not discussing the details. This is my plan; don’t you get it?” Paige’s nostrils were flared, and her breath came in fast pants. I was suddenly aware that no one knew I was out here. With her.
I nodded.
“You have one job, feed the info I give you to the cops. That’s it. And for that you’re being paid very well. You can use that money for whatever you want—?that’s not my business—?and how I get the ransom isn’t any of yours. You don’t need to worry about anything other than your role. It’s not your problem. Is that clear?”
“It is my problem if I’m not going to get paid.”