Authors: Julie Kenner
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Romance, #General
What Ihave found is whats holding Blake to the sign. I can just see it as I stand below and shine the light up. A cord tied around the thick girders that support the sign and wrapped around Blakes waist. Cut that, and he should drop free. Its a long fall, but if I can unbind his hands and legsand if I can wake him upI know that hes got the training to make the jump.
The support girders form a sort of scaffolding to which each letter is attached. Every few feet, there are little wooden outcroppings, which I have to imagine are to hold cans of paint when the letters are in need of repair. Small cans, I think, since the ledges are tiny. They will, though, provide some foothold.
The letters themselves are seated into the ground with posts at the bottom, keeping them secure through wind, rain, earthquakes, and the like. I guess its worked. The sign has been here for decades.
I was a pro at monkey bars in my youth, so I leave my purse on the ground but tuck my knife in one back pocket and my gun in the other. Then I start climbing. It doesnt take too long to reach Blake, and for the first time in my life, Im truly glad that I dont experience vertigo. Because this is very high. And remarkably windy. As if were on a magnet for all the winds that blow from the ocean to the desert.
Blakes eyelids are fluttering, so I start talking to him. Basically narrating what Im doing as I use the knife to saw through the cord binding his ankles. When I move to his wrists, he opens his eyes. Good morning, I say, trying for light, but probably not managing. Im sitting on a girder, one arm hooked around a vertical bar for support and my legs hanging over another, as if I were sitting in a very small chair.
My free hand has the knife, and Im starting to work on the cords on his wrists.
Whereoh, God.
Do you remember anything? Ive got his wrists free, and now I start massaging them.
Devi, he says, his voice harsh and serious just as I shift back a bit to reach his waist. I was giving him a ride, and he stuck me with a needle. I was out in seconds. He meets my eyes, his expression grave. Devi, it was Andy.
Chapter58
His words shock me so much that I quit sawing at the cord around his waist. What? I say, but even as I voice the question, I can see how it has to be true. So many little things fall into place. The person from the movie who ordered the bags. Someone with access to Tobiass stationery. His intense crush on me.
I flash with a sudden memory of him on his Treo right after I spoke with Blake about the Greystone Mansion. Right before Mac was killed.
Oh, God. Is Andy the reason Mac is dead?
What do you think? comes the harsh reply from below. I turn and look down to see Andy staring up at both of us. Because you should know thatyoure the reason shes dead. You broke the rules, after all.
You son of a bitch. You played us.
Not at all. I played the game.
Played for me to lose, you mean, Blake says. The Hollywood Bowl. The carousel horses. All those were wrong, and you knew it. Yet you pushed for us to go there.
What do you expect? Andy says. You werent even supposed to be in the damn game. You brought it on yourself by eating the strawberry. If Devi had eaten it like she was supposed to, I promise you I would have interpreted those clues like a pro.
So instead you tried to slow us down, Blake said. Tried to make it take too long. So that Id die, and you could step in and help Devi work her way to the last clue.
Youre smart, Blake, Andy said. I dont think I gave you enough credit.
And Janus? I ask. Was he
Very real, Andy says. Ive loved you for years, Devi. And I had to prove I was worthy. So I did my homework. I saw how the protectors and targets who survived ended up together. Mel and Stryker. Jenn and Devlin. And I thought, why not me?
Because youre a damn freak? Blake says.
But Andy ignores him. Hes too lost in his tale. When Mel wanted to get word out about her project, the movie seemed the perfect way. I washelping you, Devi. Helping you get your career back. I insisted that we would only sell the rights if you were attached to the project.I saved your career. And I knew that I could save you, too.
No, I whisper, because its the only word I can manage.
Id met Janus online, years before. Not a difficult thing to realize he was susceptible. And when I began to investigatewhen I realized he was the one whod attacked you so many years agowell, I knew that he had to be punished. And what better way than for me to kill him in the context of the game? To beat fair and square the one other man who believed he loved you as much as I truly do love you.
Youput him in the game? But
I trail off as I remember Mels comment about how the body of Archibald Grimaldithe genius inventor of Play.Survive.Win.was never found. Oh, dear God. Andy, are you Grimaldi?
The one and only, he says with a little flourish. And I put Janus in as the assassin and myself in as your protector.
Save the girl, I say. The knight on the white horse. My stomach is churning, and Im having a hard time grasping everything he was telling us.
And Devi would end up with you, Blake finishes. Not me.
Never, I say, shaking my head. And to think I thought this man wasnice.
Why are you doing this? Blake asks.
Because I can. He looks only at me now. I wish it could have turned out differently.
I shiver and try to fight my fear. Were up on this scaffolding, trapped like rats, and certainly a clear target if he has a gun. Enough talk. Time to get the hell out of there.
For that matter, time to gethim the hell out of there.
Without second-guessing, I reach behind me and pull out the gun. I whip it around in record speed, but Im not nearly fast enough. A bullet whizzes by, embedding in the wood just beside my ear, the splintering crack loud enough to burst my eardrum.
Startled, I grasp for the nearest girder, managing to keep myself from falling. The gun, though, slips from my fingers, banging down a bit before landing on one of those little wooden ledges. I reach for it, but its too far. Not without engaging in some serious acrobatics. And I have a feeling that really isnt such a good idea.
Were sitting ducks up here, though, and Im not sure what to do next. Blake?
He could have killed us if he wanted to, Blake says. Go ahead and cut me down.
Im a little nervous, but I scoot over again. I still have the knife, and I start sawing at the cord around his waist. It only takes a few good whacks, and then its free. Ive pressed my back up against the wood, and Ive got my hands on his waist. Hes heavy, but Ive got leverage, and only need to help him ease down until his feet can touch.
Im almost there when Blake yells for me to stop.My throat, he croaks, his voice hard and pinched.
Oh, right, Andy calls up. I forgot to mention. If you cut the cord around Blakes waist, his weight will bear down on the garrote around his neck. Should kill him almost instantly once the right pressure point is hit.
Damn you! I scream.
You move, and he slides down. Even half an inch is going to kill him.
I look around and realize hes right. Ive got Blakeand right now, his feet are balanced on my thighsbut theres nowhere else for him to go.
I move, and he dies.
Dear Lord, what are we going to do?
Give me the knife, Blake says. Ill just cut through the damn garrote.
Since thats a perfectly brilliant plan, I reach the knife up, my fingertips brushing his as I pass it off.
Not a bad plan, Andy says. Except I should probably mention the C-4 I packed around this letters support beams. And that cord around your neck is part of the detonation system. Cut it, and three seconds later youre falling through space.
Youre bluffing, Blake says.
Could be, Andy retorts.
And there it is. Stalemate.
I really, really, really want that man dead.
Blake must be having similar thoughts, because he whispers to me, If Im holding your wrist and dangling you, can you reach the gun?
You mean if I werent in a thousand little pieces because of the explosion? Yeah, probably.
I dont think he intends to blow us up, Blake says. He said wed be falling through space, remember?
Either way, were dead at the end.
Maybe not.
Blake
Were talking low, and I see Andy shifting toward us. I dont know if he can hear us or not, but I can tell that he wants to.
He said three seconds, Blake said.
I say numbers all the time. That doesnt mean Im being literal.
Do we have another chance?
That one, I dont have an answer for.
Do you trust me?
Yes, I say, without hesitation.
Then take my hand. Im cutting the cord.
And then, before Andy can figure out what we are up to, Blake does just that. As soon as he does, he starts falling, taking me with him. His hand is tight around my wrist, but otherwise Im free-falling. The gun is right there, and I grab it. The odds of actually hitting Andy are slim, but I fire anyway. And as I do, the mountain below us seems to explode. I slam back into something hardand the skin on my arm feels like its being ripped offbut Blake never lets go.
And then we really are falling, the sign crashing down above us. Everything happens in a haze of dust and soot and debris. And when everything clears, I find myself dangling over a mountain, tethered to earth only by Blakes hand on my arm. His hand, I see, is tight on one of the straining girders from the now collapsedD inHollywood.
I cant hold you much longer, he says. I need you to climb up to me.
Im trying, I say. But hes holding my injured arm, and the pain is too great. I cant move. I cant do anything.
I feel myself start to slip, and cry out for Blake. I have an image of myself splatting on the ground hundreds of feet below us, and that is a reality I really want to avoid.
Take that, Blake says, and I look up to see my black Prada tote dangling right in front of me.
I tilt my head more, and see Mel among the debris at the base of the sign. Shes holding fast to a rope to which she tied my purse. Use it as one of those firefighter lifts, she says. Get your free arm and head through it.
She lowers it down a little bit more, and I squirm through, never letting go of Blake in the process.
Slowly, she helps us work our way up, until we collapse on the dirt. Solid ground never felt so good.
What was it you were saying about not wanting to doNorth by Northwest ? Blake asks, and I have to laugh. Because, really, the idea of hanging off of Mount Rushmore is nothing compared to this.
Chapter59
Blake couldnt keep his hands off her. He was amazed she was alive. And humbled that she was his. That shed risked so much to save him, and that theyd finally won so completely.
Andrew Garrisonborn Archibald Grimaldiwas dead. And that was the big news of the day.
How did you find us? Blake asked Mel as the police took charge of the scene.
Stryker called me a few hours ago. He found out that the building where Janus lived had been owned by Grimaldi years ago. Okay, thats fine. But now its owned by a trust. And that trust is controlled by Andy. She sighed. I tried to get a hold of Devi right away, then got worried when I couldnt reach either one of you. Lucas let me in the house, and I saw the computer. After that, it didnt take long to figure out where you were.
Remind me to give Lucas a raise, Devi said.
Mel laughed. Well, he only did it because youd told him who I was and what was going on.
I still cant believe he was Grimaldi, Devi said.
I know, Mel agreed. But once we started to look at it, it made sense. Hed gotten poisoned when he helped Jenn, for example. But in retrospect, I think he did it to himself. She made a show of slapping her neck. Bam. A poisoned dart.
And he did the same thing with the knife and Janus, Devi said. Its really unbelievable. He seemed so normal.
He was brilliant, Mel said. But he was fucked up, too. And obsessed. Obsessed with his game. With making it harder, wilder, better. I think he faked his death so that he could bring it into the real world. No one could argue with his decision if he wasnt around to fight with. And no one would be looking to lay the blame on him if he was dead.
And he was obsessed with Devi, Blake said.
Yeah. In a big way. And since he was a risk-taker by nature, he took a big one to try to get her.
Blake turned to her. Another crazed fan. Are you okay?
She smiled and nodded. Yeah. Im actually fine. The smile widened. We really won, Blake. Its over.
Somehow, he knew that she meant more than just the game. The fear, he knew, was over, too.
If we won, he said, shouldnt we get a prize?