I'd better be right about the girl, I thought, because if I was wrong, the horrors of this existence were
17.
'Sam, what the hell was that back there?'
Kate glared at me, her face flushed from anger and cold both. The abandoned munitions factory towered overhead, its long shadow hiding us from the damning glow of the street lights and protecting us from prying eyes. The lot beside the loading docks was cracked and overgrown, maybe four decades of detritus littering seemingly every inch – beer bottles, fast-food wrappers, yellowed scraps of newspaper. At the far end of the lot, a tattered baby carriage sat on its side, one wheel spinning in the chill breeze. The chain-link fence around the property had gone up long ago, topped with barbed wire, but the padlock on the gate was rusted through, and a few good whacks with the tire iron did the trick. Anders and Pinch were inside with our guest. Kate, it seemed, had other plans.
'Look, Kate, I don't have time for this right now.'
'The hell you don't. You said we were going there to watch, and instead we fucking snatch the guy? And what's with the kid? You make like you don't know what's going on, and next thing I know, he's in the goddamn van! You sent him, didn't you, you son of a bitch? You sent him, and you just decided not to tell me!'
'If I'd told you,' I asked, 'would you have let me do it?'
'Of course not,' Kate replied. 'He's just a kid, for God's sake!'
'You think I don't
'Still – you just sat there and
'I couldn't run the risk you'd wig out and botch the job. This isn't a
'Even if it means lying to me?' Kate asked.
'Yes.'
'And Anders? Did he know?'
I paused, considering a lie – before reluctantly settling on the truth. 'Yes.'
'So it's just
'That's not it at all, Kate. Anders knows the kid. I don't. For the plan to work, I needed Anders to go talk to him, get him on our side – and someone had to prepare this place ahead of time for our arrival. If I could have left them out of this, I would have. But this I couldn't do alone.'
'Hey, guys?' Anders said, poking his head out the door beside the loading dock. 'This really isn't the best time. You maybe wanna come inside and talk to the angry demon?'
'Just give me a minute,' I replied. Anders ducked back inside. 'Listen, Kate, I appreciate your objections – really, I do. But whether you like it or not, Merihem is the closest thing we've got to a lead, which means we've got to know what he knows. Now, if that means I've got to hurt him, then so be it. If you can't be around for that, I understand. But we're too deep in this to look back now.'
'You think he knows who killed my family?' Kate asked.
'He might.'
'You think he's gonna talk?'
'I'm not sure.'
'If he doesn't,' she said, 'I'll kill the bastard myself.'
Candles flickered in the cold expanse of the factory, throwing shadows – of girders and machinery too cumbersome to have been removed – across the dirtstreaked windows and graffiti-tagged walls that surrounded us. Merihem sat duct-taped to a wooden chair in the center of the room, his mouth still bound. The chair – which we'd, uh,
'Merihem,' I said, 'I'm going to remove the shard from your mouth, now. You so much as flinch, I swear I will end you, you hear me?' Merihem nodded once. 'Good. Anders?' Anders nodded as well, and coiled the rope once more around his hand, stretching the line tight between them. Just a twitch, and it'd be curtains for Merihem.
The tape wound around Merihem's head several times, and came off reluctantly, tearing flesh and hair free as it did. He winced, but did not move. The shard was still in place – the strain on Merihem's jaw was obvious as he struggled to keep it open to prevent the sharpened tip from plunging deeper into the soft tissue of his palate and sending him to oblivion. Gripping his jaw with one hand, I reached in with the other and yanked free the shard. Beside me, Anders tensed, but Merihem just flexed his jaw a moment, and then was still.
'I take it you found Wai-Sun, then,' Merihem said.
'What,