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The call ended abruptly, then there was a jostling noise, and then silence.

It sounded like the phone had been grabbed out of her hand.

I stood there a moment, dripping water, trying to make some sense of what had just happened. The girl had sounded genuinely in distress, but why would she be calling me? I found the call in my Recents and hit the button to call it back. It rang and rang and then went to voice mail: “Hi, this is Kayla. You know what to do.” It was the same number I’d used when I’d spoof-texted her, pretending to be Mandy Seeger.

I dried myself off and dressed quickly, thinking all the while. What was the girl up to? My phone showed two voice mails, both from her. I played them.

The same whispered voice. “Is this... Nicholas Heller? It’s... Kayla... Pitts, you know... I need your help. I’m... I’m in a van, I don’t know where they’re taking me... please help me.”

And then the next message: “It’s Kayla again. If you get this... just, please, you’ve got to help me. They won’t tell me where I’m going and... just call me, please, I’m scared.”

The two messages were fragmentary and frantic enough to sound genuine. But were they? I picked up the hotel phone and called Dorothy’s room.


“It’s obviously a setup,” Dorothy said, once she’d listened to the messages.

She’d just come out of the shower herself and smelled of shampoo or conditioner. Her close-cropped hair glistened with tiny droplets of water. She wore a white T-shirt and gray sweatpants.

“They hired this girl because she can act, right? She could say she had sex with a Supreme Court justice she never met and be convincing at it. Now they’re using her to draw you out somewhere so they can...” She fell silent, thinking.

“So they can what?”

“Whoever’s trying to set up Claflin is probably royally pissed off that you screwed up their plan. And they...” She paused again. “I don’t know, Heller, I don’t like this. It’s a trap of some kind.”

“The girl sounds terrified. Like she’s been abducted.”

“But why would she be calling you? You work for the other side.”

“I don’t know. It sounds genuine to me.”

“So what do you want to do about it?”

“Can you locate her phone?”

She looked at me, eyes wide, shrugged. She did not like to disappoint. “Not without physical access to it.”

“How about the Find My iPhone thing you used to locate my stolen phone?”

She shook her head. “I can’t think of a way. We don’t know her Apple ID. Her — what about the GPS tracker?”

I nodded. “It’s in her laptop bag. If she was really abducted, she’s not going to have her laptop with her, right?”

“Who knows. Let me get my laptop and we’ll see.”

She went to her room and was back a minute later with her laptop and her iPad. She set them both down on the suite’s dining table, which we’d been using for work. Both machines had been preloaded with the GPS program.

“It’s still in Arlington,” she said. “Hold on. It’s moving.”

I came over and looked at her laptop screen. A green dot was inching slowly over a map of northern Virginia, along a road identified as Route 66.

“Let’s go,” I said.

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