Beethoven's Fifth â¦
Digital notes, more annoying than dramatic, woke Li from her deep sleep. It took a few seconds for her to realize where she was, what was happening. But suddenly she was sitting straight up, eyes wide with terror.
She couldn't believe it! She'd fallen asleep on her hallway couchâa
very
scary thought considering what she'd come home to a few hours before. She was still wrapped in her sleeping bag, still in her street clothes, pistol still in hand. But the couch itself had moved. It was no longer next to the back door where she had positioned it, intending to sit guard, with a clear means of escape, until morning. Instead, it was up against the wall, clear across the hallway.
How did that happen?
She froze now, truly realizing what a dangerous thing she'd done. Falling asleep while an intruder might still be in the house? As a highly-trained intelligence operative, she should have known better, should have at least retreated to her car. But then again, she was fairly new to all this, with exhaustion and the weirdness working against her. To make things worse, though, she'd left the back door open and the fog that had rolled into her yard had rolled right into her hallway as well, leaving everything covered with a sticky dew.
Beethoven's Fifth started playing again ⦠.
What was that?
She reached down to her ankle holster. Her cell phone was ringing with a newly programmed tune. She looked at the screen and groaned. It was a text message. From Nash. A glance outside told her it was still at least 90 minutes before dawn. What the hell was he doing buzzing her at this hour?
She tried to read his message through bleary eyes: “DGSE op term'd ex prej this PM west ave improv car bmb. Sht hits fan. Call me ths AM plz.”
Li collapsed back on the couch. The long message was in text-speak, a language she could barely understand when she was wide awake, never mind half-asleep. She had begun to attempt a translation when ⦠she heard a noise. It came from upstairs. A definite thud. A footstep, maybe. Or a window closing. Her gun was up, pointing toward the top of the staircase nearby. But then another noise came, this one from the front of the house. She looked down the hallway. A light was coming from her living room ⦠.
She'd always been prone to vivid dreams, especially ones about haunted houses, but Li had never sleepwalked before. That's what this felt like now, though. Everythingâfrom her troubles at work, to the troubles in the country, to what had happened earlier this nightâall seemed part of a bad dream that wouldn't go away. She stood up uneasily and felt as if she were floating on clouds, where it was really just the fog. Safety off, her gun ready, she glided down the hall to the living-room door. It was wide open this time. She took a half-step into the room. The lamp was still off, as she had left it; the light was actually coming from her kitchen.
She pinched herself to see if she really was awake. What was going on here? Was this old place haunted after all?
She took two more steps in. The light from the kitchen was flickering crazily. She could hear dull clinking noises. Glasses? Noâcups. And the sound of water boiling, the mild whistle of steam. Two more steps. Shadows, moving against her kitchen wall. A candleâshe could smell the burnt wax.
Two more steps. At the edge of the kitchen now. Her breath caught in her throat and stayed there. Two figures were sitting at her breakfast table, their backs to her.
She lifted the pistol up to eye level. Two more steps and she was suddenly right behind them. They were drinking tea.
Her
tea.
“Don't ⦠move â¦
” she said with as much gumption as she could muster.
Can a bullet kill a ghost?
she found herself thinking.
The figures went rigid at the sound of her voice. The fog from outside had somehow surrounded them, too, and Li half-expected them to disappear into itâand then finally she could wake up.
But the figures did not vanish. Instead, they turned around and smiled at her.
And they
were
ghosts.
It was Fox and Ozzi.
Â
The next thing she knew, Li was flat out on her back, a wet facecloth draped across her brow.
She'd never fainted before, and judging from the size of the bump on her head, she never wanted to again. Only slowly were her surroundings coming into focus, illuminated by the light of another candle. She was no longer in her kitchen. The walls around her now were painted cruddy green, the ceiling a hideous navy blue. There were two open windows off to her left, bare light and fog streaming through both. To her right, a painting of somebody's steamboat paddling its way up the Potomac. Spiderwebs covered the vessel's name.
That's when she realized she was still in her house. But she was upstairs, on the second floor, the place she always feared to tread.
And finally, she was aware of two worried faces looking down at her.
Fox and Ozzi
â¦
They really
were
alive ⦠.
She pulled them both down to her, as if she were going to smother them with kisses. That would have been very unlike her, though. She was glad, if totally flabbergasted, to see them but shocked that they were actually here. In
her
house. Going through
her
stuff.
The bastards ⦠.
She didn't kiss themâshe knocked their heads together instead, eliciting a painful
crack!
Both fell backward, stunned. Li started kicking at them, furious that they had scared her half to death. And these were not wild kicks, either. She'd dabbled in Tae Kwon Do. And she knew how to hurt a guy.
Both men tried to disentangle themselves from her, abandoning their effort to lift her up from the floor. Li tried to get to her feet ⦠but suddenly
many
hands were on her, grabbing her wrists and ankles, trying to hold her down. There were
more
people in the room besides these twoâat least three more. Li saw gloved hands, boots, black uniforms, face masks. Self-preservation took over now, her training really kicking in. She began to fight them viciously even though Fox and Ozzi were pleading with her not to. Somehow she knocked the candle over, causing the room to go black. She never stopped throwing punches, though, connecting with jaws, stomachs, knees, crotches. She was almost on the verge of winning the brawl when two
more
figures appeared, inexplicably climbing in through one of the open windows, inexplicably soaking wet. They quickly joined the fray. Only with their extra help was Li finally wrestled back to the floor.
“We are not going to hurt you!” Fox kept shouting at her. “Just let us talk to you ⦠.”
Finally, Li stopped struggling. She was on her back again, looking up this time at a sea of faces illuminated by the beams of two powerful flashlights. Her eyes darted around the room; she could see more of it now. In one corner, two M15A2 rifles, the civilian clone of the military M16, were leaning against the wall. Both had bayonets attached to their muzzles with thick rubber bands. Next to them was a large
hunting rifle, complete with an electronic gun sight. Next to the rifle, a jumble of laptops sitting atop a spaghetti pile of modem wires. More M15s were hanging off the coat stand beneath the big painting. And everywhere on the floor were junk food wrappers, soda cans, blankets, empty ammunition boxes, newspapers, and cigarette butts. Li was shocked. The room was a freaking mess, far worse than anything downstairs.
“Jesuzz!” she finally gasped. “How long have you people been up here?”
The embarrassed reply from Fox was: “Three days, going on four ⦠.”
Then she spotted another pile of refuse down near her feet. Empty packages of Jell-O gelatin. Bright red shotgun shells emptied of their gunpowder. A box of thumbtacks. An empty package of Ivory soap ⦠. Her mind went into overdrive. Suddenly Nash's text message was back in her head:
DGSE op term'd ex prej this PM west ave improv car bmb.
Translation? A French intelligence agent had been killed in D.C. last night by an improvised car bomb.
Li began fighting again. This time she was just plain scared. She knew what was needed to make an improvised car bombâand most of the ingredients were on the floor in front of her. The intruders held her down firmly, though, while Fox kept imploring her to take a deep breath and
just listen ⦠.
It took more than a minute, but she finally settled down a third time, exhausted and out of breath. Her mind was racing now, her heart beating right out of her chest. Ghosts in her house? A French agent killed? Was any of this real?
But then, for some reason, she started counting faces. Fox and Ozzi. And now five others.
Seven in all ⦠.
Something was beginning to come together here. Seven Americans killed in the supposed plane crash over the Caribbean, including Fox and Ozzi. Seven people now standing over her ⦠including Fox and Ozzi.
“How?” was all she could ask them. “How come you weren't all killed, like they said you were?”
Fox just shook his head wearily.
“Sorry, Li,” he said. “But that's top-secret ⦠.”
Â
They finally let her up. One of the masked men went downstairs to make her a cup of tea; another helped dust her off. Then Fox and Ozzi brought her into the next room, closing the door behind them. Outside, it had begun to rain.
They were in the master bedroom. Li had been here only once before, the day she first moved in. With its ancient four-poster bed, decaying lace curtains, and cobwebs everywhere, the place was just too creepy for her. Ozzi lit another candle as Fox led her to an old dilapidated divan, sitting her down with a plop. Then he and Ozzi pulled up chairs in front of her. For a long moment, the three friends just stared at one another in disbelief.
“I just can't accept this, Major,” Li finally said. “I mean, I
know
what's going on. You faked your own deaths somehow, and came up here to kill this Frenchman?
Why?”
“Because he deserved to go,” Fox responded coldly. Ozzi grunted in agreement.
“But you're
already
escaped prisoners,” she shot back at them. “Am I right? Now you've become murderers, too?”
“It's not like that,” Ozzi told her, adding. “not exactly, anyway.”
“You just ran a car-bomb attack
inside our own country,
for Christ's sake!” she cried. “How does that make you any different from a bunch of terrorists?”
Fox took her hands in his. She was on the verge of tears, and maybe so was he.
“I know it will be hard for you to get your head around this,” he said. “I have a hard time believing it myselfâand I lived it. But OK, yes, we managed to get out of Gitmo. And yes, we whacked the French guy. And he
did
deserve it. But that's
all
we can tell you. Not because we don't want you to know everythingâbut because if you
did
know, it would mean serious trouble for you down the line, guaranteed.”
“But Major,” she said soberly. “This can't be part of any
DSA operation. You've broken some serious laws and certainly some national security edicts ⦠.”
Fox just shook his head sadly. “We can't be concerned about those sorts of things, Li,” he said. “Not anymore. It's gone way beyond the DSA ⦠.”
Silence ⦠except for the rain thumping on the roof of the old house.
“You won't tell me how you got out of Guantanamo?” she asked them.
“We can't ⦔ Fox replied.
“Or how you got mixed up with the âspecial prisoners' down there?”
“I'm sorry, Li ⦠.”
She took her hands back from Fox and folded her arms across her chest. “OK, thenâwere you planning on living in my attic forever?”
Both men rolled their eyes.
“We knew we'd have to tell you eventually,” Ozzi tried to explain to her. “We just stayed quiet while you were here, and waited for you to go to work in the morning. But, I have to tell you, we didn't think you'd be coming back tonight. I mean, of all nights ⦔
Li took another moment trying to make some sense of this. Then it hit: they knew about her and Nash, and about her unused overnight bag.
“Damn! You've been
tapping my phone,
too?”
Neither man replied. They just hung their heads.
Guilty ⦠.
A very uncomfortable moment ensued. Li studied them by the dancing light of the candle. They looked so different, especially Fox. Unshaven, tired, eyes sunken in, he wasn't the sunny person who'd left on his last mission just a few weeks ago.
“Have you called your wife?” she asked him coolly.
It was like Li plunged a knife into his chest. Fox's face dropped a mile.
“No ⦠I haven't,” he replied softly. “I can't. Just like with you, this is simply too dangerous to involve her.”