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Authors: Gretchen McNeil

Tags: #antique

3:59 (29 page)

BOOK: 3:59
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Suddenly, his hands gripped her again. Fiercer this time. The look of confusion vanished from his face, replaced by hardened features and a cold, dark stare.
“What’s wrong?” Josie asked. She could feel his fingers digging into the soft flesh of her arms.
“Your neck. Your face.”
“Yeah?”
“You weren’t attacked. In the warehouse. There are no wounds on you anywhere.”
It was true. She’d realized it after Tony led her down through the passage, but she’d put it out of her mind. The Nox hadn’t touched her. Moreover, when she’d been trying to protect Nick, she’d touched one of them, and its reaction had been surprise and fear. Like it didn’t realize she was there.
“How is that possible?” Nick growled.
“I don’t know,” she said, trying to stay calm. “But I’d think by this point, you’d actually trust me.”
Nick’s gaze faltered. “I—”
Brrrrrring!
Penelope’s phone. Josie still gripped it in her hand. She glanced down and saw the name of the incoming caller. Madison.
Nick snatched the phone from her hand and put it on speaker. “Who is this? What have you done with Madison and—”
“Listen carefully,” a woman said through the speakerphone. Her voice was familiar. “Are you ready?”
Nick glanced at Josie. She leaned in next to him and listened. “Yes.”
“Your friends are safe. For now. Whether or not they stay that way is up to you.”
Nick set his jaw. “What do you want?”
“You know what we want.”
“You killed Penelope,” Nick growled through gritted teeth.
“She wouldn’t tell us what we wanted to know.”
Josie realized how she knew the voice. “Dr. Cho,” she said out loud.
Dr. Cho was silent a moment. “I seem to have both of you on the line. How convenient.”
“You didn’t have to kill her,” Nick said.
“She didn’t give us a choice.”
Josie clenched her fists. First her mom, now Penelope. If she ever got her hands on Dr. Cho, she’d make a Nox attack look like a playground catfight.
“We’re wasting time,” Dr. Cho said. “You have the antidote. We are willing to exchange it for your friends.”
Nick covered the mic with his hand. “How did they know?” he whispered.
Josie cringed. “I told my mom. In her cell at Old St. Mary’s.”
“Damn.”
“Are you listening?” Dr. Cho said.
Nick scowled. “Yes.”
“Bring the vial to your warehouse. Tomorrow.”
“Bring my mom,” Josie blurted out. Nick looked at her.
What are you doing?
he mouthed silently.
But Josie realized this might be their only chance to get her mom out of the hospital. She had to risk it. “Bring my mom and all the others. Our friends
and
their families.”
Again, silence on the other end. Would Dr. Cho argue the point? Try to negotiate?
“Fine,” she said at last. “Tomorrow at nightfall. Do not be late.”
FORTY-EIGHT
12:05 A.M.
NICK SLOWLY LOWERED THE PHONE. “IT’S A trap,” he said simply. “No way they’d just let us all waltz out of there.”
“I know.”
Nick handed the phone to Josie and pulled down the garage door. Then he slowly walked around to the door of his car and climbed in. Josie followed, and they sat in Nick’s SUV, silently lost in their own thoughts.
Josie’s eyes were fixed on the phone. Something wasn’t right. How had it gotten inside the rim of the tire? Even in the chaos of a Nox attack, it couldn’t have bounced off the concrete and into the tire, especially since Penelope was right there, huddled against that side of the car.
Unless she put it there.
Of course. Penelope had been trying to hide her phone, a last act of defiance. But why? Josie clicked on the phone and scrolled through the recently opened applications. Phone. Messaging.
Camera.
Josie caught her breath.
“What?” Nick asked.
Josie opened the photo gallery on Penelope’s phone. There were three new photos, all of equations. “Holy shit,” she said.
Nick leaned over her shoulder and squinted at the photos. “Math equations. Any idea what they mean?”
Josie scrolled through the photos, a lump rising in her throat. “Yeah,” she said hoarsely. “Yeah, I do. This is what she was killed for.”
“I don’t understand.”
“We were trying to figure out a way to use the X-FEL laser to open a new portal, and Pen had an idea of how we could get it to work without killing us all. Then she had another idea. Long story short, she thought we might be able to apply the same principle to the antidote, using it to phase-shift the antidote itself,
before
the subject’s been inoculated. Which would make it about a million times easier to get rid of all the Nox.” She looked at the equations again and laughed. “It’s like crop-dusting on an epic, quantum level. And the only way the injectable might actually work. I can’t believe no one thought of it before.”
Nick whistled. “That’s enough to kill for.”
“Yeah.” Josie paused, thinking about the various pieces of this conspiracy: Dr. Byrne and the Grid, Tony’s formula, everyone’s missing family members. A plan was forming in her mind. “If we go to the warehouse, we’re dead, right?”
“Pretty much.”
“Nox again, would you guess?”
Nick nodded. “Most likely.”
“So what if,” Josie said slowly, “what if we’re ready for them?”
Nick looked at her sidelong. “What do you mean?”
“We have Penelope’s equations. We have the formula. Why not just zap the Nox right out of the universe?”
Nick scratched the back of his neck. “We’ll need a laser,” Nick said. “You heard my brother. The one in the storage shed isn’t powerful enough.”
“Then we get him a laser. There’s one up at Fort Meade?”
“Josie,” Nick said, eyeing her cautiously. “We cannot break into Fort Meade. No way.”
“Of course not.” Josie smiled. “But Mr. Byrne has security access, right? You two can go borrow it.”
“Mr. Byrne?” Nick looked skeptical. “I don’t know if we should get him involved.”
“What choice do we have?”
Nick was silent for a moment, mulling over the idea. “We don’t,” he said at last. “Make the call.”
Josie pulled out her phone and powered it up. She’d turned it off at the warehouse and completely forgotten about it. As soon as the network connected, the phone beeped a dozen times in rapid succession. Voice mails, all from Mr. Byrne.
“Dammit,” she said. “He’s probably scared out of his mind wondering where I am.”
“Well,” Nick said with a sly grin, “maybe he’ll be so relieved you’re alive he’ll do whatever you ask?”
Josie dialed Mr. Byrne’s cell phone. “Or ground me for the rest of my life and ban me from ever laying eyes on you again.”
“Josephine!” Mr. Byrne gasped, picking up a half second into the first ring. “Are you okay?”
“I’m fine,” she said.
“Oh, thank God. I had no idea where you were.” His tone changed from relief to anger. “Why was your phone off? Do you have any idea what time it is?”
“Daddy, I’m so sorry. Something happened and—”
He gasped. “Something happened? Where are you? Where’s Nicholas?”
“Is he pissed?” Nick whispered.
“He’s here with me,” Josie said, smiling weakly at Nick.
“Well,” Mr. Byrne said, his voice stern. “I’m seriously questioning his decision to keep you out this late. I thought he was more responsible than this. My phone has been ringing off the hook tonight with reports of elevated Nox attacks, and I can’t get a hold of you; I don’t have Nicholas’s phone number. We’re going to have a long talk when you get home tonight.”
Josie looked up at Nick. “Yeah, he’s pissed.”
“I have every right to be pissed,” Mr. Byrne said, laying special emphasis on the last word.
“I know. Daddy, let me explain.”
“Where are you right now? Where are you calling from?”
Nick made a circle movement with his hand, motioning for Josie to get on with it. Right. They were running short on time.
“Daddy,” she said, her voice crisp and businesslike. “I need your help.”
“I knew something was wrong. Where are you?” She heard a jangling of car keys on the other end of the line. “I’m coming to get you.”
“Daddy,” she said slowly, trying to calm him down. “Daddy, you need to listen to me, okay? This is important.”
Something about her tone must have struck a chord with Mr. Byrne. He paused, and when he spoke again he seemed calmer. “What is it, princess?”
Josie took a deep breath. She wasn’t exactly sure how to say it gently, so she just blurted it out. “Mom needs our help.” Well, at least that wasn’t a lie. “But what I’m going to ask you to do could get us all in a lot of trouble.”
“Princess, what is going on?” Mr. Byrne said slowly.
“It’s about Project Raze,” she said. Nick nodded, encouraging her to go on. “And the experiment Mom was working on when the accident happened.”
“Okay.”
“Well, long story short,” she said, glancing over certain details like
your real wife’s in a parallel dimension
and
she might be a traitorous fugitive
, “the explosion wasn’t an accident. It was sabotage and . . .” Oh man, was she really going to lie to Mr. Byrne about this? The truth was stranger than anything she could make up.
“Yes?” Mr. Byrne prompted.
“And she needs us to prove that she didn’t do it.”
“Princess, how do you know all this?”
“Tony Fiorino,” she said.
“Dr. Fiorino passed away,” he said slowly, like he was talking to a three-year-old. “Remember?”
“No, he didn’t.” Time to go for broke. “Okay, I know this sounds crazy, but Tony isn’t dead. He survived the explosion, but he’s altered. Atomically altered. We saw him tonight, Nick and I. He saved us from a Nox attack and—”
“A Nox attack?” Mr. Byrne roared.
“Yeah, we’re fine. I promise. But Daddy, I think the Grid sent the Nox. I think they knew we were going to try and help Mom. Tony saved us and he says he knows a way to help Mom too.”
Silence on the other end.
Nick gave Josie a thumbs-up, but guilt ate at her conscience. Here she was, asking Mr. Byrne for help with something that might get him into a ton of trouble, and she was lying to him. She’d told him part of the truth. The important parts, more or less. It was true that they needed his help to save Josie’s mom, and it was true that the experiment had been sabotaged. It was even true that Tony was still alive. Leaving out the other details was just her way of saving him a tremendous amount of confusion and grief. Wasn’t it?
“What do you need me to do?” Mr. Byrne said at last.
“We need to use the X-FEL laser. The one up at Fort Meade.”
“When?” Mr. Byrne asked.
“As soon as possible.”
She heard Mr. Byrne let out a slow breath. “All right, princess. Whatever you need. I can probably get them access for a few hours.”
“Actually,” Josie said, wincing at what she was about to ask, “we need to get the laser out of Fort Meade.”
Mr. Byrne cleared his throat. “You want me to
steal
the X-FEL prototype from a highly secure military base?”
“Um, yeah.” It sounded so awful the way he said it.
“You realize I could be charged with treason if we’re caught.”
Josie sighed. “It’s the only way to save Mom.”
More silence. Josie bit her lip. Her entire plan hinged on whether or not Mr. Byrne could help them. What was she thinking? There was no way in hell he was going to help them smuggle a top secret laser out of Fort Meade. This was the stupidest idea she had ever had and now they’d have no way to—
“Okay, princess. Just tell me when.”
Josie’s heart raced. “We’ll be there in ten minutes. I . . .” She hesitated. “I love you, Daddy.”
And she meant it.
FORTY-NINE
3:57 A.M.
JOSIE GRIPPED THE VIAL IN HER HAND. SHE wasn’t sure what to expect. Clearly, Jo and her mother had no intention of letting Josie just waltz back into her own life. They wouldn’t be going back to their own world willingly, so Josie was just going to give them no other choice.
She checked the time on the bedside alarm clock. Another minute clicked by. Any moment now. Josie curled her toes inside her reclaimed pink tweed Converse. She took a deep breath and tried to calm her racing pulse. This was it.
By now, Mr. Byrne, Nick, and Tony were smuggling a multimillion-dollar experimental laser out of Fort Meade.
But Josie wasn’t with them. Mr. Byrne had insisted she stay behind out of fear for her safety—which was just fine. She had no intention of going up to Fort Meade that night.
Josie had a date to keep.
She stared at her reflection in the mirror as it began to ripple. The portal was opening. She had to play this perfectly, not let Jo suspect what she was really up to. She knew from experience that Jo was an excellent manipulator, but Josie wasn’t the same girl she was a few days ago. She was smarter, wiser, and most important, she had something to fight for.
All she had to do was keep track of the seconds. Sixty of them. If she timed it perfectly, she’d have the advantage. Finally.
As soon as Jo’s face came into focus, she gestured for Josie to pass through the mirror. Perfect. Much easier to stall when you could actually have a conversation. Josie reached her free hand before her and forcefully pushed her way through the gelatinous substance of the portal.
“Where is it?” Jo said the moment Josie’s feet were firmly planted in her old bedroom.
Josie pursed her lips. “I’m doing well, thanks. How are you?”
Ten, eleven, twelve.
“Funny,” Jo said.
Josie surveyed the room. She’d expected Dr. Byrne to be there with her daughter, but instead, Jo stood alone in Josie’s old bedroom. It looked pretty much the same, though Josie’s eye immediately noticed that the objects on top of her bureau had been rearranged: perfume bottles aligned by height, unused jewelry organized by type and size, and the loose photos that had been shoved into a dresser drawer had been put into an array of matching frames, clustered together.
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