Against the Dark (4 page)

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Authors: Carolyn Crane

Tags: #romantic suspense

BOOK: Against the Dark
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That was Macy’s cue to meet her for six minutes of diversion—a drunken girl fight in front of the movie screen to cover the light and sound from White Jenny slipping into the mechanical room and using a drill to open panels. They made it look good, shoving each other and calling each other whores, among other things. Jenny would use an interrupter to bypass the alarm, reset the cameras to stop filming the areas they’d go through, and crawl into the vent system to where Jocko had stashed the packs with their equipment. She would then position herself above the second floor bathroom and wait.

Once the six minutes were up, they left to head for the bathroom rendezvous point. Somebody was in there, so they waited their turn, then went in and locked the door. They knocked on the ceiling and White Jenny dropped down with the packs. The three of them changed into black cat suits, complete with black facemasks and boots and belts with a shit ton of hardware. White Jenny and Macy disappeared up into the vents. Angel cracked the door to see if anyone was out there. Luckily nobody was waiting. She left the door cracked, turned out the light and hoisted herself up into the vent, happy she’d kept up her gym workouts; thievery took some serious bursts of strength.

Mansion jobs had been a specialty of theirs. Condos, too. They particularly liked vacation condos, though Angel didn’t miss the nasty spiders and snakes you ran into when you were crawling around where you shouldn’t be in destination locations.

It was a lot of tight, dusty hell to get up to the sixth level. They dropped into a crawl space behind the master bedroom. Angel unwound her earbuds and put her attention on the wall that abutted the big man’s bedroom. It wouldn’t do to pop in if it was
occupado
.

She breathed in deeply, enjoying the exhilaration of crossing forbidden lines, of seeing and hearing everything from inside the shadows, of defying danger with nothing but skill and smarts. It was delicious to be back.

Her girls watched and waited, two sets of eyes through facemask holes, as Angel twisted the tiny dial on the tool, blood racing. This device was not your grandmother’s sonar; it could sense movement as well as topography. Nobody was utterly still; your heart gave you away if nothing else.

When she determined the bedroom stood empty she gave the thumbs up.

They skulked in through an access panel behind the master bath. Borgola’s bedroom was decorated much like the rest of the place, all velvet and gold. “Yo, Borgola,” Angel whispered. “Luxury is
so
1998.”

White Jenny snorted.

Macy headed toward a large oil painting, another erotic monster pin-up. The safe would be back there. Totally obvious. But merely lifting the thing off the wall could trigger the alarm. White Jenny crouched beside her and found the alarm lead. She went to work, adding a redundant long line in preparation for putting an interrupter on the original line. Angel exchanged glances with Macy, who smiled all sly and knowing there in the moonlight, like she knew Angel was enjoying herself.

Angel tipped her head, playing it nonchalant, and gazed out the window at the ocean in the distance with its brightly spangled surface hiding deep, dark danger. Her thoughts went to the man downstairs. She could still feel him on her skin. She’d wanted so badly to plunge into him.

“Psst.”

Macy. They were ready for her. Angel set a chair in front of the painting. It could take ten or twenty minutes to crack a safe; it was best if her stance was natural and comfortable. Angel got up on the chair, lifted off the painting, and handed it to White Jenny. And there it was. A Fenton Furst Mini.

Angel smiled and ran a finger over its stainless steel face. She smelled the dial. It hadn’t been lubed lately. She turned it to get a feel for the looseness. This model was small but chock-full of rabbit holes. Sonic interference. Magnets. Her old mentor, Fenton, had been one of the premier security men in the world, but he trained safecrackers on the side. Each and every one of them was bound by the promise never to crack one of his safes while he was living. This policy had done wonders for his brand—his safes were considered un-breakable, but he’d died last year. Fenton Furst safes were now fair game to the few Fenton Furst-trained crackers still alive and not in jail.

Angel had been his only female apprentice, and a Latina at that—she and Fenton always joked he was filling two quotas for the price of one with her, but she was one of his best and he knew it.

Angel hated the rush of pride she felt in her special talent. It was wrong—she’d left this behind! But you could love something like crazy and know it was wrong. Angel understood that better than most anyone.

She pressed a sticker over the numbers on the dial for the tiny, ultra-precise increments she needed. White Jenny handed her the old magnetic magnifying glass, which stuck onto the safe. Then she pressed the metal body of the tool to the safe and it stuck on. She performed a sonic sweep to help her construct a mental map of the fence depth, wheels, and contact points of the mechanism. Every Fenton Furst safe was different. She listened to the pings, absorbing low points and high points, identifying false gates and electronic interference. She closed her eyes, sinking into it, blending mechanics and intuition.

And she lost herself.

As the minutes ticked by, the inner workings began to take shape in her mind.

A tap on her thigh. Macy heard somebody coming—Angel knew it by the way Macy’s eyes moved behind her dusty mask, a flick to the side, then to her.
Do it now or we ditch it,
that’s what Macy was saying. They didn’t need words to communicate that.

Angel delved deeper, letting the oblivion of the job take her, turning the spindle to the right, slow and steady, all the way around to the click.

Angel held up a finger. “
Sieben
,” she whispered in the dark. English was her first language, but she spoke somewhat fluent Spanish, and she cracked in bad German, the language of Fenton Furst.

Macy pulled a gun from her utility belt.

Angel turned the spindle again, slow and steady. You didn’t rush a safecrack. She breathed herself into the safe, as Fenton Furst had taught. Another drop.
Viersehn
.

Macy locked the bedroom door and shoved a chair up against it, then eased open the window.

Setting up the Plan B escape.

Angel lined up the gates inside the lock, slow and steady. A few minutes later, the safe swung open.

And the alarm blared.

“Fuck me!” Angel grabbed five velvet bags and stuffed them in her fanny pack.

White Jenny pulled a hammer from her holster and rushed to the window to pound in the anchor for the line they’d use to escape.

Angel pulled on her repelling gloves and followed White Jenny and Macy out the window, wishing they’d worn vests. Borgola’s men would shoot without a second thought, but not to kill. They’d shoot to wound, so they could fuck you while you died—White Jenny had heard that from a good source. Angel thought of the guard at the party. He hadn’t seemed the type to have cruelty in him, but guys came by cruelty in a lot of different ways.

They repelled down the three stories to the lower roof of Borgola’s mansion.

Macy led them scrambling across the tiles of the lower roof. She’d developed all three routes. Macy was strategy, the big picture-thinking general.

Shouts below.

The three of them crouched in a roof nook.

“What now?” White Jenny asked.

“Borgola rigs the safe. Unbelievable,” Angel grumbled. “To mess with a Fenton Furst.”

Macy pulled out a cellphone and punched in a code. “Paranoid motherfucker. Don’t worry.” She pointed the phone out at the dark lawn, at a gazebo, which promptly exploded, lighting the night.


Jihole
!” Angel whispered.

White Jenny snickered. “Rhonda came up with that. She’d heavy into fireworks.”

Her gang really had moved on. They each had a grenade on their utility belt—that was new, too. Another idea courtesy of Rhonda, her replacement, she guessed. Angel didn’t know how to feel about Rhonda putting her stamp on the group.

Macy dialed in another code, activating flashing lights and a siren out in the sea of parked cars.

“Rhonda?” Angel said.

“Switching up the m.o., dontchaknow,” Macy said. “It’s a diversion for this.” She tossed something over the side of the roof. A pop. Smoke bomb. “Plan C.”

Angel nodded. They were going back up.

White Jenny lassoed a rope over one of the chimneys. The smoke from the smoke bomb would cover their ascent from eyes on the ground.

Macy shimmied up into white haze. Angel heard a smash over the din of sirens—that would be Macy’s boot on the fourth floor window. White Jenny went next. Angel followed her up to the third floor, but White Jenny had trouble with the last few feet up to the fourth floor window.

“I’m sorry,” she huffed as Angel pushed on her ass to get her up there.

“Go, go, go.” The smoke was clearing. The men out there would see them.

Finally White Jenny heaved herself in.

Angel shimmied up, legs and arms pumping. She felt a sharp scrape as she hauled over the window. Macy was already in the elevator messing with the wires she’d yanked out of the panel.

White Jenny pulled an expensive vase off its pedestal next to the elevator and hurled it against the wall where it broke into pieces. “That’s for ebony morsel and chiquita taco, motherfucker,” she said.

“Jenny, I’m cut,” Angel said. A rip in the sleeve of her cat suit exposed a long gash. Dots of blood shone like jewels against her skin.

White Jenny was there with a safety pin. She pulled Angel’s sleeve closed tight and pinned it.

Angel turned on her phone light and scanned the carpet for blood drips among the broken glass. Much to her horror, she found one. “Crap!” Angel pulled a knife out of her boot and cut out a circle of carpet.

The elevator car jerked up a few feet and jammed. Macy jumped down. “Jenny. Go.”

“DNA,” Angel said to Macy. “Help me look for more.”

“Damn.” Macy got on her hands and knees and helped Angel look.

White Jenny got onto her back and slid into the space underneath the elevator car with a rope. She was to tie it to the underside; they planned to disappear down the shaft, one of the only ways to access the basement.

White Jenny disappeared into the space below the elevator car.

“I think you got it all,” Macy said. “And we have to go.” She crawled through the gap after White Jenny. “Come on!” She grabbed the rope and disappeared.

Frantically, Angel scanned for more blood. Nothing. She knew there could be a tiny spatter. But then, even if Borgola could find it, he’d have to crack her juvenile records to match her DNA.

It wasn’t ideal, but time was up. It would have to do.

She stuffed the cut carpet pieces into her fanny pack, put her gloves back on, and shimmied through the space under the elevator car. She gripped the rope with her hands and legs and slid into the belly of the elevator shaft. Macy stood at the very bottom, partly illuminated by her cellphone light. She waited, holding the door open. “After you, chiquita taco.”

Angel popped through. White Jenny followed.

“Did you get all the blood?” White Jenny asked.

“Pretty sure,” Angel said.

“Who cares. They can’t tell dick from your blood,” Macy said. She flicked on a flashlight. “Damn.” They stood in an intersection of four tunnels.

It was nothing like the model.

“Jocko dies,” White Jenny said. “He made up this part of his map. Didn’t think we’d find out.”

“These could all be dead ends for all we know,” Macy said.

Voices sounded out from somewhere above them.

Angel felt a pang of fear. Trapped. “No,” she breathed.

“Bitches?” Macy put up her hands and slowly lowered them, as though she was closing something. Their old signal for calm, something she’d been doing since they were twelve. “Who gets the best of us?”

“Nobody, bitches,” White Jenny said.

Macy fixed on Angel fiercely.

Angel frowned. “Nobody, bitches.” Their old mantra.

“That’s right, girls.” Macy pulled out her tube of lucky lipstick, pink with silver flecks, and rolled it around her lips through the lip hole in her facemask.

Angel and White Jenny got out their lucky lipsticks, too.

Putting on lucky lipstick was a kind of group meditation, a signal to the world that they were in control no matter what it looked like. The careful application of lipstick in the face of the instinct to panic and run had always given their criminal minds the space in which to work.

Macy snapped the lipstick top on and rubbed her lips together. “Four hallways,” she finally said, stating the obvious. She pointed. “Mini HVAC. That’s the way to the mechanical.”

White Jenny pointed at another. “Wine cellar this way, probably with a delivery door in the middle of everything. One of these other two is likely designed for escape.”

“Agreed.” Macy pulled out her cellphone and flipped on the flashlight function. They searched the floor with their lights.

“Boot prints,” White Jenny whispered loudly.

“Go, go, go,” Macy said.

They ran down the tunnel, which stretched on and on, illuminated every few yards by a fluorescent bulb. This was good. The right choice.

They came to a metal ladder in the wall.

“Take it,” White Jenny panted. “Yes, yes, yes.”

Macy climbed up top, pushing up a cover. Cool air gusted in. “Supply road,” she whispered down. “East edge of the grounds.” She pulled herself up and disappeared. Angel went next, climbing the ladder and pulling herself up into the cool darkness. They were on the far lawn. Flashlights played around the grounds in the distance, nearer to the mansion. On the other side was the wall that ran all round the property.

Dogs barked.

White Jenny heaved herself up and over, and Angel replaced the cover. The three of them got up and ran like hell for the wall. White Jenny already had her rope out. She lassoed one of the spikes. Lassoing was a skill White Jenny had taught herself in juvie; it had seemed innocent enough to the counselors at the time.

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