RENE SQUIRMED ON THE dirt floor and thumped his feet. The dank chill, and the diffused light from the kerosene lantern, reminded him of the ancient cave in the Loire Valley he and his mother had camped in one August holiday. With its thick walls it stayed cool despite the heat of summer. But he hadn’t had his ankles taped up then.
“Time for
He nodded and tried to talk but the tape over his mouth garbled his voice.
“Water?”
He nodded harder. The
“Let’s see, it’s been a while,” said the
A while . . . more like six hours!
The
“Little guys like you have an interesting sex life, eh?”
Rene snorted.
“What’s that?” he grinned. “Oh I forgot, you can’t speak.”
Rene’s cheeks burned with a searing pain as the
“Quiet!”
“Sick. I’m going to be sick,” Rene whispered, his voice hoarse.
“Watch the boots,” the
Rene gagged. “I’m dizzy,” he gasped, heaving. “Help me.”
“Hold the wall,” said the
“Can’t.” He gagged, spitting near the man’s boots.
“Not on the boots, dwarf, or I kick you with them.”
Rene heard the slow rip of duct tape and felt his wrists being freed. Numbed, tingly, but
If his hip hadn’t throbbed so much he’d have broken the
Rene flexed his short, swollen fingers, grabbed the duct tape and wound it around the
Phone, where was his phone? Not on the dirt floor where there were only men’s magazines and a small notebook. He grabbed the notebook with his numbed fingers and stuck it in his pocket. He took the kerosene lantern, the fumes making his nose itch, and searched the moaning
He heard several clicks, then ringing. But there were footsteps on the stairs.
“I’m underground in an
“Hey, the beer’s cold,
Rene ducked behind a rotting wood chair and felt something long, like a pole. He grabbed the end, slid it across the third to bottom step, and raised it. The chair blocked his view but he heard the whoosh of air and a loud
Stunned, the heavy-set red-haired man sprawled on the dirt floor. Rene reached for his thick neck, pinched the carotid artery, and gave it a twist. The man’s head sagged. Rene shone the lantern on him, took the roll of duct tape, and covered his mouth with tape.
Sweat dripped between Rene’s shoulderblades. After binding those thick wrists he had run out of tape. He undid the man’s belt, shifting and moving the inert body until it finally came free of the man’s waist. Then he looped the belt and knotted it several times around the man’s ankles.
Rene tried to ignore his throbbing hip as he hobbled upstairs. He felt along the pebbled wall in the dark, ran into a rough wooden door and tried the handle. Locked.
So close.
He had to think fast. The third man was bound to arrive at any moment.
He called Aimee.
“Rene . . . don’t hang up,” she said. “Are you all right?”
“Aimee, I’m in Paris, underground someplace.”
“I know. Stay on the line,” she said, breathless. “Whatever you do keep the phone on. We’re triangulating your position.”
“Hold on. Don’t talk,” Rene said.
He kept the phone in his pants pocket and inched his way back down the steps, fighting for breath. The key had to be on the big red-haired man. He felt around in the pocket of his down-filled jacket and pulled out a cheap pocket calculator. It took him two tries to turn the unconscious man over so he could examine his shirt pockets and his pants pockets. A wallet. Then a ring of keys jingled, and he pulled them out.
Rene made his way up the stairs again, in the dark. He took one of the long-handled old-fashioned keys, reached up, and slid it toward the keyhole, but the bunch of keys fell from his still swollen fingers and vanished in the darkness.
Below, Rene heard one of the men stir and groan. Rene ran his fingers over the stone step. Nothing. He panicked.
If only he could see!
Then his fingers grazed the top of the keys. He tried to grasp them but his fingers just pushed them down into a narrow crack.
He needed something with which to pull them up to him.
He slid down the steps once more, saving his legs for the climb back, and with the knife cut some excess duct tape from the man’s wrists. He climbed back, his legs and hip protesting. He lowered the tape into the crack, tamped it carefully around the bit of key sticking up and prayed the tape would hold. Slowly, centimeter by centimeter, he lifted the keys. By the time he had them in his hand, perspiration was running down his forehead in rivulets and dripping into his eyes.
More noises came from the big man, a knocking and rustling as he struggled against his bonds. Then there was a metallic clang.
A crackle and
He reached up, aimed for the keyhole, and willed his hand to be steady. He missed. He tried again, leaning his short arm against the door. The key didn’t fit. Smoke and kerosene fumes rose, choking him.
Rene tried the next three keys. The fourth was the right one. He turned it, but the key stuck. With all his might, he pressed and turned. And tried again. The old-fashioned lock clicked and he rammed the door open with his shoulder.
He fell on a wet floor by bags of cement, striking a small cement mixer. A worker, wearing overalls and a