Why hadn’t the guard seen her?
The light had been directly on her. She glanced down at her stomach, recalling where the beam from his flashlight had hit her body.
Grey mottled with specks of black had blossomed across not only her midsection, but all of her torso, making her nearly invisible against the cinder-block wall.
She picked up her hand and stared at it. She couldn’t understand the current color of her skin any more than she could the forest hues which had covered her flesh the day before.
She focused on her hand until slowly the mottled color faded away, leaving behind the tones of normal human skin. But almost immediately after that, the odd vibrant colors reappeared, painting everything around her with a bold impressionistic brush.
She didn’t understand the colors on her skin, in her vision.
They weren’t right. She wasn’t right, she remembered.
She was sick. Only a sick person would hurt…
The memories pounded at her brain again, creating a crater of pain in the center of her skull.
So much blood on the floor and walls.
All over her and the pieces of Dr. Wells.
Soft wet pieces beneath her fingers.
Control
, she urged and leaned back against the wall to stabilize herself. Her fingertips sank into the cinder block, grounding her as she tried to focus.
Focus. Focus. Focus.
She repeated the word like a mantra until the reminders of blood and death receded, replaced by scattered recollections of people and pictures and music.
Music
, she thought, imagining the black and white of notes on a page. The rough bite of metal strings beneath her fingers. Smooth wood and cold varnish.
She loved music, she recalled, and with that came the picture of a building in her mind’s eye.
A building filled with welcome.
She had to get to that structure. The music would be there. Music and happiness.
Retracting her fingers from the cinder block, she carefully kept to the outside wall, following it around the edge of the building until she came to some lockers. Slightly rusty and battered, they nevertheless might hold what she needed.
She quickly found a grey T-shirt in one open compartment and slipped it on. It hung on her, overly large on her slender body. A musty smell clung to the thin cotton.
All the other lockers had locks dangling from their handles, sealing in their contents.
With a sharp twist of one lock, however, it sprang free. Inside she found a pair of men’s jeans and shoes. Both were immense. She effortlessly opened the other combination locks, the metal bending like putty beneath her fingers.
Within a short time she had scrounged together more clothing and a pair of sneakers she could wear. A candy bar as well. Her stomach had grumbled noisily, since Caterina couldn’t remember the last time she had eaten. Dressed, and with her hunger temporarily sated, she hurried toward the open back door, ever vigilant for the presence of others. She listened for a hint of any approach, the sounds of the night exceptionally loud.
No one came.
At the exit, she paused, hesitant. She felt surprisingly strong and energized, but still unfocused. Her vision drifted from the surreal colors which came unbidden to those familiar hues of reality.
A reality which she had struggled to maintain since escaping the lab. A reality which seemed to elude her more often than she cared.
As she escaped into the night, she knew she still had some distance to go until she reached anything familiar. Until she got to the building with the music, certain that once she arrived there, things would make more sense. Maybe even go back to normal, but more importantly…
Instinctively she knew that once she got there she would be safe.
M
ick stared at the bright yellow police tape and evidence seal on the door of Caterina’s townhome, which was located a block off trendy South Street. No matter how much Edwards wanted to avoid police involvement, they were clearly already on the job. Mick would have to hurry and locate her in order to curtail any further investigation. He wouldn’t try to guess why Edwards didn’t want the police poking around. His job wasn’t to question; only to acquire his target.
Or so Mick told himself, hating that the scruples he still possessed insisted that he had to find out why Edwards wanted Caterina so badly before turning her over.
As he examined the evidence seal, he realized that someone had carefully slit it open. The razor-fine cut wouldn’t be visible to a casual observer, but upon a more thorough examination someone would discover the break-in.
With a quick look down the street to make sure no one was watching, he easily turned the knob, slipped beneath the caution tape, and entered the townhouse.
He stopped short at the mess within.
Someone had knocked over bookshelves, tables, and
chairs, and knifed open the sofa and cushions. In the upstairs bedrooms, drawers and closets had been rifled, the contents strewn carelessly on the polished wood floors. The linens were tossed and the mattresses slashed.
The deception with the evidence seal and the devastation in the home were not the kind of action he expected from an everyday burglar. Damage of this nature was intended to deliver a personal message, a message that warned about either evening a score or scaring someone off.
He would put his money on the latter, he thought as he glanced out through the front windows to check the street outside before exiting into the night.
Shoulders hunched and head tucked down to conceal his face, he walked at a brisk pace toward South Street, where it would be more populated and he could get lost in the crowd just in case anyone was tracking him.
As he considered the wreckage of Caterina’s home, it was clear that someone didn’t want her to stay there—not that she would anyway if she had a lick of sense remaining in what was left of her tumor-laden, gene-invaded brain.
A common criminal would avoid any places they regularly visited, knowing that the police would look for them there first. But someone like Caterina might head to familiar things where she likely felt safe and would know where to hide. Maybe even to people she could trust, like her best friend, Elizabeth Rogers.
He contemplated immediately heading back to the Rogers residence, but didn’t believe Rogers was covering for her friend. She had let him into her home too quickly and there had been nothing suspicious in her manner, only concern.
If Rogers was not hiding her friend and Caterina had
already come by her home and seen the destruction, she would either head toward Rogers or another safe haven.
The Rogers home was a far walk from Caterina’s townhouse while his second targets were closer—the Kimmel Center and nearby Music Academy.
At the corner, he turned onto South and walked toward Broad, all the time keeping an eye out for either a tail or anyone who fit Caterina’s general physical description, since she might have had the sense to try and disguise herself.
In the shiny windows of the Whole Foods Market on South Street, he thought he caught a reflection of unusual activity behind him and paused, seemingly to peruse the sign listing their specials. Instead, he focused on the reflection of the few people walking by, trying to pinpoint what had snagged his attention.
A minute or so passed, but whatever he had seen was long gone.
Or maybe he had only imagined it.
He continued onward, hurrying down past the more residential section of South Street until he hit Broad.
It was close to ten and a fair amount of vehicular traffic still traveled along the street, as well as some stray pedestrians, mostly twentysomething students by the University of the Arts. Heading down Broad, he crossed the street and hustled toward the Kimmel Center. The rounded arches of the center’s vaulted glass ceiling radiated shards of light into the murkiness of the night sky.
The marquee by the ticket office indicated there had been a performance of the philharmonic that night, but now only a few people lingered in and around the periphery of the building.
He had calculated that Caterina might return here because she would know where to hide within the performing arts complex. However, given the event that night, there would be too many people around for her to enter undetected.
He wouldn’t find his target here, but he also suspected she would not be far away.
He continued down the section of Broad known as the Avenue of the Arts until he stood in front of the plain redbrick facade of the Academy of Music.
The building was quiet tonight. Only the muted glow of the gas lanterns cast glimmering light onto the empty sidewalks surrounding the building.
The gated entrance near the front of the building was too conspicuous, even though the recessed stage door lay in the shadows, providing some protection from prying eyes.
Mick had downloaded the blueprints for the building from the Internet and knew just where to go. Turning onto Locust, he proceeded to a narrow alley behind the building. The light from the streetlamps illuminated the mouth of the alley, but beyond that only darkness lingered.
He looked around.
The cobblestoned street was empty of any pedestrians, so he slipped into the narrow alley and paused a few steps in to allow his eyes to adjust to the lack of light and to check for signs of anyone else.
The long slender alley was also empty.
Time for him to move in.
He stole down the alley while hugging the wall, the ground uneven beneath his feet, the area lit only by the small beam from a flashlight he pulled from his pocket.
He moved quickly, every action efficiently cautious, until he located the entrance shown on the blueprints.
Pointing the flashlight at the door, he prepared to jimmy the lock but found that someone had beaten him to it. And rather inexpertly at that. Large sharp gouges along the seam of the door and at the lock gleamed silvery bright in the beam from his flashlight.
He reached behind him, withdrew his 9-mm Glock from beneath his leather jacket and released the safety. With a gloved hand, he slowly opened the door and risked but a sharp glance inside before he cleared the entrance.
The interior was almost as gloomy as the night outside, but since his eyes had adjusted already, he could make out the tangle of shapes before him.
Large lockers and an assortment of equipment lined the edges of a hallway, but a fairly wide and navigable path existed down the center. Slowly he inched along, pausing well before the low light cast by an illuminated exit sign so that he would remain hidden.
He recalled from the building plans where the stairs would be that led to the manager’s office and dressing rooms, as well as the stairs to the basement level and trapdoor area. Crouching, he rushed past the dim circle of light cast by the exit sign.
As he did so, his foot brushed against a cable housing on the ground. It slithered and shook like an angry rattlesnake. The rattle bounced loudly off the walls in the quiet of the hall and he stilled, waiting to see if anyone would respond to the sound.
Only silence answered.
Mick released a low grateful sigh and proceeded, decidedly more careful of the objects littering the floor
and sides of the hall. More cables. A klieg light. A box brimming with colored gels for the spotlights.
Muscles tense, every inch of him on alert, he skirted all these items until he neared the stairs to the basement level. Pausing, he peered down the darkened stairway, vigilant for any signs of life. As before, the space was empty and the area down below was deadly quiet. He took the first step down the stairs.
A muffled thud sounded behind him.
He whirled on the stair, stepped back up, and took cover behind one of the large grey metal lockers lining the hall, his hand tight on his pistol grip.
Listening, he heard the squeak of a sneaker against the tiled floor. Soft footfalls immediately came, followed by the thud of heavier steps.
Two people.
Somewhere dead ahead in the dark.
Coming toward him as he hid by the stairway.
He picked up his gun, trained it on the area. Waited patiently for any additional movement. A sudden flash of muzzle fire erupted in the dark followed by the familiar pop from a silencer.
Cautiously he eased from behind the locker and made his way closer to the spot where he thought he had seen the flash, ducking in and out from behind the equipment along the hall for protection. He was several feet away from the location when he heard the sound of light footsteps racing away again, followed quickly by the flat-footed pounding of the heavier body.
Another silenced shot rang out and the shooter carelessly stepped into the dim light from the exit sign Mick had avoided earlier, giving him a clear view.
“Stop or I’ll fire,” he called out while sizing up the man in the illumination from the sign.
The shooter was middle-aged and dark-haired, with a pronounced scar above one brow. Tall and thickly muscled, the man was fairly fit, but with a midsection that was starting to turn to flab. His easy stance with the gun spoke of training, and the silencer on the weapon confirmed he was a professional. But he had made a totally careless mistake by exposing himself in the light from the sign.