waterlines on this side were unlikely.
He dug the sharp shard of mirror into the wall. He peeled back the wallpaper. Beneath the wallpaper, as he had thought, was drywall, not plaster and wood lath. He pushed on it. It felt thin. He set himself, reared back, lifted his leg at the knee, and kicked the wall. The drywall cracked, but did not buckle.
He checked his watch. The readout said 12:50.
He picked up the shard of silvered glass, and began to cut into the drywall. Because he could not get a firm grip on the sharp glass, it was slow going, but after five minutes or so he cut all the way through to the other side. After three more kicks he had a hole large enough to crawl through.
His watch read 3:50.
He walked back to the window, inched aside the blind. The blue Ford had not moved, nor had the red Saturn returned. He went back to the hole in the wall, looked through. The room was identical to his, save for the rollaway suitcase on the bed, opened.
He stood, turned, picked up the motel phone, being careful not to dislodge the handset. The cord barely reached the opening.
He kicked the rest of the drywall in, squeezed himself through the opening. He walked across the room to the closet, opened the door. Inside was a black raincoat, along with a pair of maroon golf slacks and a white Polo shirt. On the shelf was a tweed cap, a pair of sunglasses.
Before Michael could get the clothes off the hanger, the phone rang. His phone. He dashed across the room, reached through the hole in the wall. He barely got there before the third ring.
“Yes.”
Silence. He had gotten to the phone too late.
“Hello!” Michael shouted. “I’m here. I’m here!”
“You’re cutting it close, counselor,” Kolya said. “Where were you?”
“I was in the bathroom. I’m sorry.”
A long pause. “You’re gonna be a lot fuckin’ sorrier, you know that?”
“I know. I didn’t -”
“You get one ring next time, Mr ADA. One. Don’t fuck with me.”
Dial tone.
Michael reached through the wall, put the phone back in its cradle. He set his watch again. This time for twenty-eight minutes. He changed his clothes, putting on the golf slacks and the raincoat. They were both two sizes too large, but they would have to do. He put on the tweed cap and the sunglasses, checked himself in the mirror. He did not look anything like the man who Kolya had brought to the motel, the man being held prisoner in Room 118.
At the door, he made sure he turned the knob, unlocking it. He had no idea what he was going to do, but whatever it was, he needed to be back in this room in twenty-six minutes and six seconds.
THIRTY-FIVE
Kolya came down the stairs, closing his phone, a smug smile on his face. He had in his hand a sandwich. Abby could smell the hard salami from across the room. The smell nearly made her gag.
Kolya poked around the basement room, feeling the couch cushions, opening and closing the drawers on the old buffet. He flipped on the small television, ran through the channels, flipped it off. To Abby he looked like someone at a house sale, browsing the contents, seeing if things worked. Except, people like Kolya didn’t go to house sales.
He leaned against the washer, studied her, took another bite of the sandwich. His gaze made Abby want a shower.
“Your husband said something about money,” he finally said.
The words sounded strange. Money, after all this. “What are you talking about?”
He picked up a pair of crystal candlesticks Abby had been meaning to polish, looked underneath. He looked like a gorilla in a Waterford boutique. “He said he could get his hands on some serious money. You know anything about that?”
“No.”
He glanced around the basement again. “Now, not for nothin’, I mean, this is a nice house and all. More than I got. But you don’t look rich. Is there a safe in this place?”
Abby thought about the safe in the office. There was never more than two thousand dollars or so in there at any given time. Emergency cash. Abby could not imagine that such a small sum would be enough to make this all go away. Still, she had to try.
“Yes.”
“No shit. How much is in it?”
“I… I’m not sure. Maybe two thousand dollars.”
Kolya mugged, as if two thousand was beneath him. On the other hand, he didn’t turn it down. He turned to the corkboard next to the workbench. On it were calendars, greeting cards, family photographs. Kolya pulled out a push pin, studied a picture of Charlotte and Emily from the previous Halloween.
“So, the little girls are adopted, right?”
“Yes.”
He considered the photo for a while, push-pinned it back. “What, you couldn’t have kids?”
Abby didn’t say a word. Kolya continued.
“How old are you? I mean, I don’t mean to be rude or anything. I know you’re not supposed to ask a woman’s age. I was just wondering.”
“I’m thirty-one.”
“Yeah? Thirty-one? You don’t look it.”
Abby almost said thank you, but she soon realized who she was talking to, and what this might be leading up to. She remained silent.
“See, most women your age, they’ve got two or three kids. I mean, kids they actually had. Their bodies are a fucking mess. Stretch marks, saggy boobs. A woman your age, in pretty good shape, no stretch marks. You may not believe me, but that’s my thing.”
He smiled again and it made Abby sick. Kolya crossed the room, peeked out the basement window, returned, took out a pocket knife. Abby struggled to move the chair away from him. She nearly toppled over. He put a hand on her shoulder.
“Relax.”
He cut her loose.
Abby rubbed her wrists. The ropes had made a deep red welt. After a few seconds, she began to get the feeling back in her arms.
“Thank you,” she said.
Kolya sat on a bar stool. “What can I say? I hate to see a pretty woman suffer. I’m sensitive that way.”
Abby just stared. A pretty woman.
“Now take off your clothes.”
Abby felt punched, as if all the air had been sucked out of her lungs. “What?”
“I think you heard me.”
Abby wrapped her arms across her chest, as if she was suddenly freezing. She glanced out the high basement window. From this vantage she could see part of the driveway. “He’s going to be back soon.”
“He?”
“Yes. Aleks.”
“Aleks? You guys friends now?” Kolya laughed. “Don’t worry. It ain’t gonna take that long.”
Abby thought about making a break for the stairs. She shifted her weight in the chair. “Is that what this is all about?”
“Shit. For me it is. I’m just an employee. You know how it is. You take what you can get. You know what I’m