“Step back,” a muffled voice said. It was male, and not sympathetic.
She shuffled backward and almost tripped over the mattress.
There were several clicks along the right edge of the door, then the distinct sound of a latch opening. Light streamed into the room, stinging Marion’s eyes and forcing her to cover them with her hands.
She heard steps, more than she could count, enter the room and approach her. She blinked again and peeked between her fingers. The light coming from behind her visitors was still too bright to make out anything more than several silhouettes. Three? Four?
She never saw the hand that slapped her cheek. It rocked her to the left. Her foot caught on the mattress and she went down to her knees. One of her hands grazed the wall as she tried to stop her fall, but she only bruised her palm and scraped the flesh at the base of her thumb.
Someone reached down, grabbed her, and pulled her to her feet. She tried to cover her face with her hands, not wanting to be slapped again, but her hands were shoved away.
She could see them now. Three, not four. All men. The two nearest her were big and unsmiling and unfamiliar. But the one behind them she had no trouble recognizing. It was the man from the parking garage, the one who had taken her.
He stared at her for a moment, then looked at the man nearest him. “Let’s go,” he said.
The two larger men grabbed Marion by the arms and pulled her toward the door.
“What do you want with me?” she said, voice trembling. “What are you going to do?”
No one even looked at her.
“Where’s Iris?”
She’d aimed her words at the man from the parking garage, but he remained silent.
“Where is she?”
She tried to plant her feet just short of the doorway, not wanting to go anywhere with them until they answered her questions. But it took only a halfhearted shove from the guy on her left to keep her moving across the threshold and into a narrow hallway.
The corridor was only wide enough for one man to walk beside her, so one of the brutes moved behind her, while the garage man took the lead. There were two light fixtures hanging from the ceiling, metal reflectors with dome wire cages on the bottom. Above them several pipes ran the length of the hallway, covering most of the actual ceiling. As they walked, she kept being bumped into the wall. It was hard and cold like the door of her cell. Metal, she realized.
The garage man opened the door at the end of the hallway, then stepped through. Marion and her escort followed.
They were in another corridor, this one considerably wider. Its walls were also gray and made of metal.
The doorways, that was it.
A door ahead opened and two men dressed in military fatigues and armed with rifles stepped out. As Marion and her escort neared, the men moved to the side of the hall, and nodded at the garage man like he was someone important.
Farther down the corridor, another soldier appeared, then another behind him.
Marion could feel her hands and feet go cold.
Whatever hope of escape she’d been clinging to slipped away like it had never been there at all.
“Who have you told?” Mr. Rose asked again.
The Dupuis woman was crying now. Tears poured down her cheeks as she wordlessly pleaded with Tucker’s boss to stop.
“Who have you told?”
She sobbed. Tucker could see she was trying to get words out, but nothing was coming. Mr. Rose nodded at him.
Tucker turned to one of his men, Linden. “Give her another.”
Linden touched the controller, and sent another jolt of electricity down the wires attached to the woman. She grew rigid as her muscles contracted, the restraints the only things keeping her from falling to the floor.
When the sequence ended, she slumped in the chair.
“Who have you told?” Mr. Rose asked again.
“Just Henrick Roos,” she said, naming her friend at the UN.
“Who else?”
“Noelle. Noelle Broussard in Cote d’Ivoire. That’s all.”
“I don’t believe you, Ms. Dupuis. Someone else knows. Someone else has been trying to help you. Who are they?”
She tried to look at him, her eyebrows furrowed. “I… I don’t know … who you mean. I’ve been alone. No one has …”
Her last words were lost as her head fell forward.
“Who have you told?” Mr. Rose said.
Her shoulders began moving up and down as her tears returned.
“More?” Tucker asked.
Mr. Rose stared at the woman. His face was scarred and wrinkled, his slicked-back hair pure white. On bad days his hands shook so much he had to drink from a straw. But his eyes were always like laser beams, cutting into whatever he was focused on. And his voice, that was the clincher. Strong, manipulative, and unrelenting.
“Who have you told?”
But Marion Dupuis seemed unable to respond.
The laser eyes turned to Tucker. “Again.”
The woman looked up, her eyes growing wide in fear.
“No. No. I’ll—” But the renewed current cut her off.
This time when the cycle ended, she fell forward against the restraints, unconscious.
“Goddammit,” Mr. Rose said.
Tucker moved in and checked the woman’s pulse. She still had one, which was almost a surprise. They’d been at this for a while now. He’d seen others who hadn’t lasted as long, needing to leave in a body bag instead of on their own feet.
And with all they’d given her, she hadn’t broken. Whoever the others at her house in Montreal had been, she wasn’t telling. The only ones she had given up were her two colleagues at the UN, people who had been easy to trace through other means so were no real revelation. Neither of them had lasted as long as Marion when Tucker had interrogated them.
It was the people in Montreal. If she
“You want me to wake her?” Tucker asked.
Mr. Rose looked at his watch. “Take her back to her room.”
Tucker nodded at Linden and his partner, Petersen. Both men stepped forward and picked the woman up.
As soon as they were gone, Mr. Rose said, “I need to get down to the lab to supervise the final preparations.”
“All right,” Tucker said. “When do you want her back here?”
“Walk with me.”
“Of course,” Tucker said.
Mr. Rose was one of those people who got annoyed if you didn’t read his mind, and got even more upset if he changed his mind about a task and you hadn’t anticipated it. Tucker didn’t like it, but he’d grown used to it. It was the pay that kept him around. Nothing else.
Tucker followed Mr. Rose out of the interrogation room, through a short maze of hallways, then back into the