Cleveland , Ohio

Deb

Deb Dieter stared at the ringing phone.

Her mouth was dry, and she could feel her heart fluttering in her chest like a hummingbird was trapped in her ribcage. She began reaching for her husband to grip his arm, and then hesitated. Her walking legs—made of carbon and fitted with a microprocessor—were harder to get on than her other prosthetics, and she was torn between the need to be comforted by Mal and the need to get dressed and flee.

Flee from what? The phone? The door?

Is this what my life has come to? Letting fear dictate my every move?

Deb forced herself to look at the phone. She flinched when it rang again.

Just answer it.

Do it.

Now.

But Deb couldn’t do it. She couldn’t even reach for it. She’d run marathons, fought mountain lions, and survived the Rushmore Inn. She’d even been taking a karate course, and had just advanced to 3rd Mon Kyu; Purple Belt with Red Stripe. But she couldn’t get herself to answer a telephone.

Mal seemed equally paralyzed. In many ways, his ordeal had been even worse than hers. On the rare nights she was able to fall asleep, Mal often woke her up, in the throes of a night terror, whimpering in a way that never failed to raise the hair on her arms.

The phone rang again.

And again.

Then the answering machine picked up.

“You’ve reached the Dieters, please leave a message.”

“It’s the FBI. Open the door.”

Deb managed to look over at Mal, whose expression was somewhere between terrified and confused.

“This is about West Virginia.”

The Rushmore. Most of those responsible for the atrocities committed there had died.

But there was one man, who was currently in prison.

Could he have escaped?

Deb couldn’t imagine anything worse. Her mind went into overdrive, conjuring scenarios so fast they became one big blur in her head. He got out… he’s coming for her and Mal… he’s been seen in the vicinity… he’s…

He’s the one on the phone right now, impersonating the FBI.

More pounding on the door. Deb didn’t know what to do. She felt glued to the bed. Mal was shaking so badly he wouldn’t be able to hit anything with the gun he held.

“This is extremely important,” said the voice on the answering machine. “open the door. We know you’re in there. We can see you.”

Deb jerked her head from left to right, searching the bedroom, not understanding how someone could be watching her. There was no one there, nothing at all but—

The window.

The window, over the headboard of the bed.

Mal and Deb looked up, at the small, rectangular window directly above them. The venetian blinds were closed, but there were gaps and cracks. And they were on the first floor.

Someone could be standing right there.

“Open the blinds,” the voice said. “I’m holding up my badge.”

But what if he wasn’t holding a badge? What if it was the escaped psycho, and he was holding a brick, or a crowbar, or a—

Someone rapped lightly on the window.

Deb screamed.

A flashlight appeared behind the blinds.

“Put down the gun, Mr. Dieter. We’re not going to harm you or your wife.”

Sweat had broken out over Mal’s forehead, dripping down the sides of his face. He stared at his wife, and she sensed him fighting to be brave. Gun still in his hand, Mal slowly reached for the cord to the blinds—

—and yanked them open.

Standing there was a man. Not the psycho they remembered. But a tall man in a suit, holding a cell phone in one hand, the flashlight in the other, pointing at his own face.

“I’m going to take out my badge,” he said, and his words on the machine weren’t quite synced to his lips, due to the satellite delay. “We’re here to help you.”

Deb watched, transfixed, as he slowly reached into his pocket and took out an official-looking FBI badge and ID.

Trembling, she reached for the phone and picked it up.

“Help us wi…wi… with what?” she managed, teeth chattering.

The man smiled, but it was hollow and emotionless.

“Open the door and let us in. And we’ll tell you.”


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