: Chapter 16
If You Could See the Sun
I knock once on Peterâs door and try to steady my erratic breathing.
Taking the lift was too riskyâthere are always security cameras on those things, and itâd be impossible to explain a button lighting up on its own if someone else were insideâso I ran all the way up the stairs instead. The entire back of my shirt is soaked through with sweat, but itâs hard to tell if thatâs because of the physical exertion, or the worry chewing a hole through my stomach.
After what feels like a lifetime, I hear the metallic click of the lock, and the door swings open.
Jake Nguyen squints into the hallway light, his hair a mess, one of those white hotel bathrobes draped over his bare shoulders like a villainâs cape. The room behind him is dark, the curtains drawn. Beside the empty single bed by the window, I can make out Peter Ohâs sleeping figure.
âWhat the hell,â Jake grumbles, staring straight through me. He scratches his head. âIs anyone there?â
He waits a full two seconds before moving to close the door again, and I duck inside just in time. But as I fumble my way further into the room, I trip over something hardâJakeâs foot. He tenses, the faint bathroom light outlining the crease between his brows.
My heart stops.
âWho was that?â Peter grumbles, his voice thick with sleep and muffled by the pillow.
Jake glances over again at the spot where I tripped, then shakes his head. âNo one. Probably the cleaning lady or some dude who got the wrong door.â
I stay completely still as he shuffles back to bed in his slippers, falling onto the covers with a loud yawn.
Only when he starts snoring do I creep over to Peterâs bed.
Heâs curled up on his side like a little boy, the corner of his blanket covering his stomach, an arm resting under his head. He looks peaceful. Unsuspecting.
Undeserving of whatâs about to happen.
Iâm so sorry, Peter, I think, as I set the prepared note down on his pillow, inches away from his nose.
Itâs been typed out on glossy, business cardâlike paper, containing only the lines:
Please come and visit me in Room 2005 as soon as you see this.
I have something important I want to tell you in person.
Andrew wanted to make sure that the message couldnât possibly be traced back to him, so there are no digital receipts, none of his fingerprints, none of his handwriting. Deciding on what to actually say in the message was the other issue. Iâd gone back and forth on a mock note from one of the teachers, or something with a more romantic tone, or mentioning someone he cared about.
But in the end I decided to go with something vague. Something that will hopefully pique his interest enough for him to follow the instructions.
Now Peter just needs to read it.
I take a deep breath. Flex my trembling fingers. Realize that this is my last chance to turn back, to retract everything, but Iâm already here and the note has been arranged and Iâve never quit anything halfway before, not if I can control itâ
So instead I shake Peterâs shoulders gently and wait for him to wake.
He opens his eyes slowly.
Blinks around in the darkness, disorientation washing over his face like the shadows from the curtains.
I watch him rub a sleepy hand over his cheek. Watch him turn just an inch on the pillow and freeze, his gaze landing on the note. Watch him pick it up carefully, still a little disorientated, and read through the lines.
He pauses. Clicks on the night-light.
Instinctively, I crouch down to conceal myself from view, even though of course he canât see me anyway.
âJake?â Peter calls, voice hoarse. âDid you⦠Did you see anyone come in here?â
But Jake is still snoring. He hasnât moved an inch.
Peter glances down at the note in his hands again, turning it over and over as if to make sure itâs real, and my heart is racing so loudly Iâm convinced itâs going to give me away. He doesnât hear it, though. He studies the note a beat longer, then stands up, shrugging on the denim jacket laid out on his bedside table. His eyes are more alert now, his body tensed.
The air feels impossibly still.
I donât dare breathe until Peter slides his phone and the note into his pocket and heads out the door.
I follow close behind him.
Out in the bright hotel hallway, Peter heads straight for the elevators. I knew he would, but itâs still inconvenient. As soon as he presses the glowing square button to go up, I press it too, turning it back off. For everything to go smoothly, Peter has to use the stairs. After my inspection of the area earlier tonight, thatâs the only place I know for certain where there wonât be any security cameras to catch his movements.
Peter frowns. Tries again.
And again, I hit the button right after him, careful not to brush against his hand in the process.
His frown deepens. He moves to the lift on the other end of the hall, where I repeat the motion the same number of times he does, until eventually he gives up and swears under his breath.
âStairs it is then,â he mutters.
Henry was supposed to patrol the area to make sure no student or teacher sees Peter, but heâs clearly still stuck in his room with Rainie and the others. Never mind, I tell myself as I follow Peter around the corner. I just have to avoid Vanessa, wherever she is now, and hope no one comes out for a midnight stroll through the corridors.
Though the rest of the hotel is all spotless marble surfaces, elaborate flower decorations and well-lit carpeted halls, the stairs are dark and steep and slightly uneven, everything coated in a thin layer of dust. The shadowy corners reek of garbage and disinfectant.
Peter climbs up the steps with surprising, enviable ease; I have to hurry just to keep up with him, but soon I have an awful stich in my side and a thousand small, protesting aches in my legs and lungs.
Times like this almost make me wish Iâd devoted as much effort to PE class as my academic subjects.
Then again, I doubt any number of burpees and torturous basketball warm-up exercises couldâve prepared me for a covert kidnapping operation in one of Suzhouâs tallest hotels.
By the time weâve reached the twentieth floor, an obscene amount of sweat has dripped down my back, plastering my shirt to my skin, and I canât quite tell if itâs from the sheer physical exertion of the climb or my nerves.
Weâre so very close now. The door is just up ahead of us, down the first corridorâI can see it. And Peter doesnât have the faintest clue whatâs about to happenâ
No.
I give myself a mental shake. This isnât so different from a prank. Just a higher-stakes versionâ¦with corporate executives involved.
Besides, Andrew Sheâs men arenât actually going to lock him up forever or abuse and murder him. Andrew even promised me Peter would be well-fed and cared for until the promotions were announced, which should be in less than a week from now.
Itâll be fine. Peter will be fine. Iâm doing the right thing.
Right?
Peterâs stopped outside the room now, the numbers 2005 gleaming bright gold in the light, like some kind of sign. An invitation. Andrew Sheâs men are waiting for him on the other side of the door.
And one million RMB is waiting for me. A future at Airington. A better future, period.
All I have to do is see Peter through it.
He clears his throat softly, adjusts the collar of his jacket, and I wonder if he can sense that somethingâs wrong. If heâs thinking about turning around, running away to the safety of his own hotel room.
I donât realize just how much I want him to do exactly that until he raps the door once, shoulders braced.
And everything happens very quickly.
Too quicklyâso quick that itâs almost anticlimactic.
The door swings open and I think I catch a glimpse of a gloved hand reaching out, pulling him in, and I manage to grab Peterâs phone from his pocket just in time for the door to slam shut again, with Peter trapped behind it.
Thereâs a rustling sound from inside, a series of thuds, and Peterâs voice, more confused than afraid: âWhat are youââ
Then it cuts off into silence. Just like that.
It isnât violent. It isnât anything.
If I werenât gripping Peterâs phone so tight my knuckles bled white, Iâd think he was never here at all.
I stare at the door for a long time, as though in a dream, a nightmare, until a small voice in the back of my head urges:Â Leave.
Get out of here. Your job is done.
I tear my eyes away and move, but the second I turn the corner, my legs give way beneath me.
I sink straight to the floor as if someoneâs removed all the bones from my body. I gasp for air that doesnât seem to be there, wait for the sick feeling in the pit of my stomach to go away because Iâm safeâI did what I had toâI succeededâ
But the sick sensation only grows. Nausea rises up my throat, filling my mouth with saliva, the sour taste of regret.
God, I must be the worst criminal in the world.
I should be celebrating. I should be thinking about all the money thatâll be added to my bank account. One million RMB. Enough for me to never have to stress about being sent off to Maine or a local school again. I wonât even have to stress about college.
But instead, all I can focus on is whateverâs happening on the other side of that door. Peter had stopped talking midsentence. Does that mean theyâd gagged him? Hit him? Surely I wouldâve heard it if they didâ¦
Peterâs phone beeps.
I almost jump out of my skin. My hands are shaking as I hold up the screen, expecting to see some kind of criminal alert or imposter warning or a message from the police.
But itâs none of that. Itâs worse.
Itâs a Kakao message from his mom.
Thereâs a somewhat blurry photo of a half-eaten grilled fish dish below, a pair of chopsticks lying casually beside the plate, and the hunched-over silhouette of a man in the background. Peterâs father, most likely.
My chest tightens, tightens until I canât breathe. The back of my eyes burn.
But more messages are coming in.
I turn the screen down, my stomach in knots.
I should throw Peterâs phone away. Now. Crush it and destroy all the evidence, make sure no one can track him or contact him, just like I was told to do. This is the last stage of our plan. Once Iâm rid of his phone, Iâll be able to go back to my room and forget about this whole task for good. Butâ
God, his parents are going to be so worried. And they have every reason to be.
The worst part is that Iâve met his parents before. Theyâd volunteered to help out at the Global Community Day festival a year ago. His father had bragged to everyone who came within a five-foot radius of him about his genius, hardworking son, beaming so wide the entire time it mustâve hurt his face, and his mother, with her sharp tongue and small frame, the way sheâd scolded Peter for not wearing a warm-enough jacket, had reminded me of Mama.
And if someone were to call Mama up in the middle of the night to tell her Iâd disappeared in a city far away from homeâ
No.
Stop it.
Itâs too late. I just have to get up. Move. Put as much distance between me and this placeâthis memoryâas possible.
After who knows how long, I finally manage to pull myself back up into a standing position. My feet move obediently toward the stairs, in the same direction I came from. I take one step. Then another. Somehow, itâs more exhausting than climbing up a mountain.
I canât stop thinking about Peter in that room.
About his mother, whoâs still waiting to welcome him home with his favorite dish. Who wonât be able to sleep once she finds out heâs gone.
Whatever you do, do not turn around, I command myself, even as my feet drag against the carpet. Do not turn around. Do not fucking turn arouâ
I turn around.
Without even fully realizing what Iâm doing, I run back to Room 2005 and pound on the door.
âR-room service for two.â My voice is a terrible, breathless squeak. It occurs to me too late how utterly unprepared I am. My own phoneâs battery is running low, and Henry has no idea what Iâm planning to do, and the only weapon I have on me is a fruit knife I took from my hotel room. But itâs also too late to go back now. âClub sandwich with truffle fries.â This is the code Andrew and I agreed upon in case I needed to speak to his men directly. I can only pray it works.
At first, thereâs nothing but deafening silence on the other end. Then footsteps approach, slow and cautious. After a few seconds of just-audible murmuring and shuffling around, the door creaks open.
I glance up.
Three men tower over me. Theyâre dressed in identical business suits, their striped ties straight and well ironed, all wearing dark pollution masks that cover most of their faces and fitted, surgical gloves. They donât look anything like the kidnappers Iâd been imagining. In fact, if I didnât know any better, Iâd think I had accidentally stumbled into a private business meeting.
The tallest of the three stares into the space behind me. âHello?â He cranes his neck, opens the door wider. âAnyone there?â
I creep in past him.
The first thing I notice is that the TV is on, the sound turned off, and the other menâs eyes are glued to a basketball game playing over the large flat screen. I guess holding a kid hostage can get pretty boring after a while.
The next thing I notice is Peter, and my heart drops to the pit of my stomach.
Heâs been pushed into the farthest corner of the room, blindfolded and gagged, the ropes still secured firmly around his wrists, feet, and waist. Andrew She had made it sound like Peter would be resting in a nice little resort until the company campaign was over, but thisâthis is too much.
Thereâs no way in hell I can leave him here like this.
As I rush toward him, I hear the tall man mutter, âSo strange.â Then: âWho did She Zongâs son hire for the job again?â
The man standing closest to the TV shrugs. âPerson from some kind of black market app. Apparently itâs built a solid reputation around their school for doing whatever people want.â
âBut no one knows who it is? Or how they managed to drop this kidââthe tall one jerks a finger at Peter, and I freeze, careful not to give my presence awayââright off at our door?â
âNope.â
When the three of them have turned back to the TV, I crawl forward, shaking violently all over. My fingers fumble for the ropes behind the chair, and I feel Peter stiffen.
Please act normal. Iâm trying to help you, I think desperately.
If only my powers included telepathy as well.
As Peter twists his head around, I yank hard at the final knot, ignoring the burn of the ropes against my skin.
Please, pleaseâ
The ropes drop to the floor with a soft thud, like a dead snake, and Iâve barely had time to breathe out in relief when three things happen at roughly the same time:
One, Peter rips off the blindfold, stumbles out of the chair and looks wildly around before staring at me. Right at me. His mouth drops open, then closes over the unspoken word: Alice?
Two, Andrew Sheâs men spin toward me and Peter with varying expressions of shock. The tall one moves first, leaping over the bed and yelling at us to stay right where we areâ
Three, I throw the closest thing I can find to stop him. Which, unfortunately, happens to be a pillow.
A fucking pillow.
The pillow bounces off the seven-foot kidnapperâs shoulder as he growls and swipes at us, undeterred. I shove Peter in front of me and try to run after him to the door, but Iâm too slow. A rough hand closes over my wrist, yanking me back so hard I wouldnât be surprised if my armâs been dislocated.
I gasp. Tears jump to my eyes.
âWhere did you come from, little girl?â the man demands. His grip tightens, crushing my bones to dust. The pain is unbearable, but still I pull against him, my feet kicking out wildly, my eyes darting over the room.
In my blurred, peripheral vision, I see Peter duck past the two other men, unlatch the lock with shocking speed and fling the door openâjust as they tackle him from behind. Thereâs a terrible crack as his head hits the wall.
The world seems to flip upside down, my stomach flipping with it.
âNo!â I scream.
The tall man follows my gaze, and in the split second heâs distracted, I sink my teeth into his hand.
He releases me with a high-pitched cry and I bolt. The two others still have their attention fastened on Peter, whoâs slouched against the wall, and Iâm panicking about how the hell Iâm meant to get around them when I rememberâ
The knife.
My fingers dig into my pockets, finding the cool, smooth hilt at once.
âStand back orâor Iâll cut you,â I warn the men as I step forward, brandishing the fruit knife before me like a proper sword, praying they canât see how badly my hands are trembling. How much I feel like a little kid playing pretend.
The two men falterâmore out of surprise than fear, it seems, but whatever works.
I seize the opportunity to grab Peter and shake him. His face has gone scarily pale, and his hairline is wet with blood, but his eyesâhis eyes are open. With a low groan, he rises back to his feet, and I donât think Iâve ever felt such acute relief in my life.
âA-Alice,â he chokes out. âWerenât youâwhatââ
This kid canât seriously think now is the time for a conversation.
âTalk later,â I snap, gripping his sleeve and pulling as hard as I can. God, heâs heavy. âGet up. Come on.â
But before Peter can stand, I notice a flash of movement out of the corner of my eye. Iâm too slow to react. With a grunt, the first kidnapper lunges at me, knocking me headfirst to the ground.
Pain explodes over my body.
I try to move, to fight, but a sharp knee digs into my back, the kidnapperâs full weight pinning me into place. The knife is ripped from my hand.
No, no, no.
This canât be happening.
A shrill ringing sound fills my ears, so loud I can barely hear what the kidnapper is barking at the two other men. Something about taking Peter. The car. Transferringâ¦
The men obey immediately. Together, they trap Peter between them and roughly hoist him up by the arms. Peter doesnât even resist; he seems to have gone into shock, his eyes wide and his jaw hanging open as they drag him toward the door.
This cannot be happening. This canât beâ
But it is.
All I can do is watch in horror, the hotel carpet scratching the side of my cheek.
And just when I think things couldnât possibly get any worse, the first kidnapper starts to tie up my hands, with the same kind of rope he mustâve used to tie Peter up earlier. Fuck, how much rope do these people have? Heâs fumbling with the endsâhe probably knows he doesnât have much time leftâand heâs distracted, but heâs also strong. I feel him wrap the rope once, twice, pulling it hard enough to cut my circulation off.
My arms go numb.
Then the pressure eases off my back, and the kidnapperâs leaving. Heâs leaving with the two masked men and Peter, whoâs bleeding, and Iâm still here on the floor with my hands tied, and everything hurts, and I canât believe I landed myself in this situation.
I count the kidnapperâs footsteps as they get farther and farther away from me.
One. Two. Three.
The door whines open, then shuts, leaving me alone in total darkness.
Thereâs no time to panic.
As soon as the kidnappers are gone, Iâm half rolling, half wriggling across the floor until I bump into something hard. A desk corner, maybe.
Good enough.
I turn around awkwardly, blindly, so that my bound hands are pressed tight against whatever the sharp edge is. Then I begin to move them back and forth like a saw, praying for the ropes to snag.
âCome on,â I mutter, and the sound of my own voice, low and much steadier than I feel inside, helps ground me a little. âCome on, come on.â
Itâs working, I think. I hope. Already, it feels like the ropes arenât digging into my skin as much as before. Maybe if I just apply more pressure here, and twist my wrists this wayâ
Yes.
The ropes come loose after the ninth try; some combination of finding the right angle, the disgusting amount of sweat slicking my hands, and the lucky fact that the kidnapper didnât have time to double knot.
I toss the ropes aside and scramble toward the door, ignoring the weakness in my knees, the tingling in my fingers. The tightness in my lungs.
Save Peter. Thatâs all that matters right now.
As I flip the lock and burst through the doorway, squinting into the sudden light, I try to figure out where the kidnappers would go.
It seems unlikely theyâd hang around an area where Peter could easily be recognized. And theyâd mentioned something about transferring Peter, about a carâ
The parking lot.
But not just any parking lot. A secluded spot, connected to the stairs instead of the lift, a place without security cameras to catch suspicious activity.
I run down the stairs, taking two steps at a time, my mind reeling. Iâve spent so long committing the map of the hotel to memory that I can see it as clearly as if someoneâs holding it in front of me: all the labels marking out cameras and exits, the lines intersecting at corridors and staircasesâ¦and the diagram of the abandoned lot two levels underground.
Thatâs where theyâre taking Peter. It must be.
Now I just have to find them before they leave.
I move faster. My feet slam over the concrete, my heart beating so hard Iâm scared itâll explode. I wish I were an athlete. I wish I had been quicker to unfasten the ropes, or to escape with Peter when I had the chance. I wish Iâd never agreed to kidnap Peter in the first place.
Numbers flash by me as I make my way down flight after flight of stairs.
Level Fifteen.
Level Twelve.
Ten.
Seven.
âAlice!â
I stumble to a stop. Whip my head around, half certain Iâm hallucinating.
But thereâs Henry, standing only a few steps above me, the neon exit sign casting a red glow over his features. His eyes are dark with concern.
âI was looking everywhere for you,â he says, coming down toward me, his footsteps light and swift. âI managed to get away from Rainie andâ¦â He pauses, his gaze raking over my face. âWhat happened? Did they hurt you?â
I shake my head, too winded to speak at first.
My lungs and legs feel like lead, and thereâs an awful knife-sharp stitch in my side. It takes everything I have not to double over.
âTheyâthey took Peterââ I finally manage, my voice a dry croak. âWe have toâsave himââ
I wait for the barrage of questions, the moment of disbelief, but Henry doesnât even look surprised at this dramatic turn of events. He simply rolls up his sleeves and says, âOkay. Letâs go.â
I canât believe I ever wanted to push this boy off a stage.
Somehow, with Henry by my side, itâs a little easier to run down the remaining stairs. And by easier, I mean it doesnât feel quite like Iâm dying a slow, excruciating death. Still, white dots have started to dance over my vision by the time we reach the entrance to the parking lot.
The air is colder underground, wet and dense with the stench of petrol fumes. I try not to choke as we hide behind a half-open door, our backs to the wall, and listen. I try not to entertain the possibility that we might be too late.
But then I hear itâ
The angry squeak of shoes, of rubber against concrete. Male voices bouncing off the walls, amplified by the open space. The loud slam of a car trunk.
Henry and I exchange a quick look.
Weâve pulled off enough Beijing Ghost tasks together to know what needs to happen next.
I watch as Henry adjusts his posture, straightening so that he looks even taller than usual, fixes his shirt collar, and smooths his hair with one hand. In an instant, heâs no longer just Henry, but Henry Li, son of a self-made billionaire, someone who wears their privileged upbringing and powerful connections like a badge. Someone untouchable.
But that doesnât stop my stomach from knotting over and over with worry when he strides out the door.
âHey,â he calls in flawless Mandarin. Even his voice sounds deeper, older, which is good. If the kidnappers donât take him seriously, weâre pretty much screwed.
His appearance is met with abrupt silence.
The tension makes my skin itch.
I hold my breath and count to fourteen before someone grunts, âWho are you?â They sound closer than I expectedâno more than twenty feet away from the door.
âI should be asking you that,â comes Henryâs smooth reply. âWhat are you wearing masks for?â
âNone of your business.â
âIt is my business, actually,â Henry says, and I imagine him tilting his head to the side, his brows raised, condescension written all over his face. âMy father owns this hotel, see, and Iâm sure heâd like to know why there are three strange, masked men sneaking around our unused parking lot in the middle of the night. If you donât want to tell me, maybe I can invite him or the hotel manager over toââ
âFine,â the man snaps. âIf you must know, weâre headed to a nightclub, thatâs all. Didnât want our wives catching us.â
Despite myself, I almost roll my eyes. Even their excuses make them sound like complete assholes.
âCan we go now?â another one of the kidnappers demands.
âNo, you cannot,â Henry says. âSince your car is here, you need to pay for parking.â
âButââ
âPayment is nonnegotiable. Of course, you can use WeChat Pay if youâd prefer, or scan this QR code on my phone, or get a discount by signing into your hotel account, then registering through one of our five affiliatesâ¦â
While Henry rambles on about hotel policies and bank sponsors and viable memberships, I sneak out through the door. The scene that greets me looks like something out of a low-budget action film: the parking lot is empty, save for an old dust-covered van rotting away in the far corner and a sleek black vehicle thatâs surrounded by three men. All of them have their backs toward me, their attention on Henry.
Henry, whoâs positioned his body directly in front of the car, has rested both hands on the hood, so theyâd have to run over him just to drive away.
Itâs a good strategy, I reason with myself, fighting the strong compulsion to push Henry out of the way, to protect him. They wouldnât want toâwouldnât dareâkill the son of the hotel owner. Itâd get far too messy.
I just have to rescue Peter before the kidnappers lose their patience, and their ability to think rationally.
Careful not to make a sound, I duck my head and creep closer to the car trunk, heart pounding in my throat. Then I get a good look at the license plate: N150Q4. Sear it into my brain.
Henry is still talking. ââ¦Bank of China is actually offering a limited-time promotion on the appââ
âWait,â the man at the front interrupts, and the shift in his toneâfrom annoyance to something else, something like suspicionâleaves my mouth dry. I glance up.
Henry doesnât move, though his eyes are wary. âWhat?â
âI think I recognize you,â the man says, and everything seems to freeze. Blur at the edges. The lights overhead flicker and the low parking lot ceiling threatens to collapse on me. âYouâyou were in that magazine article. And that China Insider interview⦠Youâre the son of the SYS founder, arenât you?â
For a split second, panic flashes over Henryâs features.
Only a second. But itâs enough.
âWho sent you?â the kidnapper growls, stepping around the carâs blazing headlights, his shadow stretching out menacingly over the concrete. He advances on Henry. âWho?â
Before I can react, Henry raises a fist and swings it into the manâs face. Hard. I swear I hear the crack of bone as the man hisses and stumbles backward, hands covering his nose, and all my thoughts fractureâ
Henry punched somebody.
Henry punched somebody.
Henry Li just punched somebody.
Nothing about this night feels real.
Henry looks almost as stunned as I am; he stares at the hunched-over man, then at his own clenched fist, as if some unknown force might have possessed him. Which would honestly make more sense than what just happened; I doubt Henry has even given anyone a fist bump before.
But then the two other men rush over, and Henry tackles the first kidnapper to the ground with a resounding thud, and everything descends into utter chaos.
I canât see whatâs going on from where Iâm hiding, can only hear the muffled grunts of pain and repeated collision of limbs, of bodies pushed onto the floor, and Henryâs voice when he yellsâ
âCatch.â
Something small and silver flies through the air in a perfect arc. I donât even think; I just spring up and reach for it, my fingers closing over the metallic object. Car keys.
Of course.
Pulse speeding, I unlock the car and yank open the car door.
Peterâs curled up in the back seat, next to an opened pack of bottled water. Horror and relief crash through my chest at the sight of him. Heâs alive. Heâs alive and awake and staring at me like I might be a ghost as I free his arms, help pull him out. His knees wobble violently, but he manages to stand.
Ahead of us, the sounds of the struggle intensify.
Henry.
âGo inside,â I order Peter. âWait for us by the door.â
He doesnât protest.
While he hurries off, I seize one of the water bottles from the trunk and hold it like a baton, feeling its weight in my hand. Itâs not heavy enough to kill someone, I decide, which is all I need to know before stalking forward.
The men donât notice me. Theyâre too busy forming a kind of human sandwich: Henryâs got two of the kidnappers pinned under him, but heâs been held down by the tallest one. The same one who tied me up.
Iâm more pissed off than terrified now, and I let my anger guide my aimâ¦
The plastic bottle smashes into the back of the manâs head with a satisfying thunk.
As the man lurches sideways, I bend down and grab Henryâs hand. His knuckles are dark red, a thin bloody cut running down his thumb. My heart twists, but I know itâs not the time to apologize, or to thank him, or to voice the million other things Iâm feeling in this moment.
âRun,â is all Henry says as he jumps to his feet.
And we do. We sprint through the narrow exit, where Peterâs waiting, and bolt the door behind us, then race up the stairs in a mad blur of pounding hearts and feet. Henry reaches his floor first, and then itâs just Peter and me, my hand secured around his wrist to keep him from falling. We keep going. We have to keep going. I donât know if Andrewâs men have found their way inside or alerted someone else or if weâll ever make it out of this mess okay. All I can do is urge my legs to move faster, faster still, mouth parched and knees sore, my lungs aching, dying for air as I cut the corner, pull Peter into the open hall of the ninth floorâ
And crash straight into Mr. Murphy.