I sat down on the soft, fragrant grass. Anne joined me. “It was like a Buster Keaton reel. We started shouting and shooting, and running every which way. It wasn’t exactly how they trained us, but like I said, we were plenty scared. I guess we just panicked.
“They started pelting up on us with their knives out, one in each hand. In the split second before they reached us, I knew we were dead. There was no way we’d take one down before they killed somebody, much less both before they killed all of us. All that speed and strength and savagery. They could punch half a dozen holes in you before you could blink, and all the way to the hilt.
“We saw a German patrol go down once, died to a man fighting just one. We killed it from a distance while it was peeling the skin off the last one. Anyway, before I knew it, they were among us, slashing and stabbing. I barely managed to block the first hit. The second got me, down to the bone.
“Then all of a sudden they were flying past me. Shadroe had slammed into them from behind, one arm around each waist, and flung all three of them right past me into the minefield. Shad knew what he was doing, and his aim was good.
“He hit one of those AT mines square on top. Anti-tank mines take a couple of hundred pounds to set off. Turns out three grown men will do it. The whole fight was over in seconds. Even so, three of us were bleeding, Patrick bad enough for Henry to have to slap a field dressing on it. Just like that. If Shad hadn’t saved us, we’d have died right there.”
“Sounds like he was a hero.”
“I guess so. Frank and Don are here, too. Your grandfather soon, I suppose.”
She shook her head. “No, he wanted to be buried next to my grandmother. I already missed the funeral.” Her eyes glittered, but no tears fell.
“You didn’t have to.”
“It doesn’t matter, he’s already gone. Funerals are for the survivors. He always said that. I’m going to catch the people responsible for his death. That’s what matters.”
“Cake would have hated that. To lose his granddaughter for some kind of hollow revenge. It’s pointless.”
“You are so full of it. Why are you doing this then?”
“It’s not revenge.”
“Then what?”
“You know how Piotr got the blood for his big pit of blood? He hung people from hooks over the pit and bled them out. Hundreds of them. We saw a dozen or more hanging like meat over the pit, and a mass grave that had to be filled in with a bulldozer.”
“Taking revenge for other people is still revenge.”
“I’m not doing it for them! Piotr is here, in this country. He’s got new bags. He’s taking back the altar pieces.”
“He’s doing it again.”
“Yes. He’s doing it again. How do you think he’s filling his pit this time? I’m not doing it to avenge some ancient wrong, I’m doing it because somewhere there are people waiting in line to be hung from a hook and bled dry. All kinds of people, not just adults.”
Anne jumped when her phone went off in her purse, startled. “Then it won’t hurt to get some revenge at the same time we’re stopping him. Everybody wins.” She flipped open the phone and looked at the number.
“Hi, Henry. Sure, hang on.” She handed me the phone, but by the time it reached my ear, it wasn’t Henry anymore.
“Bring the pieces to the hospital where Leon is staying, or I’ll kill both of your friends.” The phone went dead.
18
It was a six hour drive from Arlington Cemetery in Virginia to Lexington Memorial in North Carolina. We were going to make it in five.
Anne had been quiet for most of the trip, but shortly after we crossed the North Carolina state line she turned in the passenger seat and frowned at me. “You know what? I’ve been sitting here all day long with my stomach tied in knots, but you don’t seem worried at all. That just seems kind of … wrong.”
I shrugged. “I’m not happy about Leon and Henry being in danger, but they should be perfectly safe until we show up with the altar pieces. So, I’m not too worried yet. Mostly I’ve been thinking about what a lucky break this is.”
“Lucky break? Let’s see. A man called you from out of the blue and threatened to kill your friends unless we hand over the altar pieces. And then he’s going to turn around and hand them over to Piotr, who will then have the full set. Which is exactly what we’ve been trying to prevent since my grandfather was killed. I fail to see how any of that is lucky.”
“Let me ask you a question. Piotr’s out there somewhere filling up his blood pit and turning regular people into monsters. We want to stop him. Why aren’t we putting an end to his whole operation right now?”
“Because we don’t know where he is.”
“Exactly. And time is on Piotr’s side. The smart thing to do would be to just keep creating bags and sending them after us over and over again. It didn’t work at Henry’s house, but I don’t think Piotr realizes what a close thing that was. He can afford to keep trying, but we can only lose once. I think Piotr is making a mistake sending a human agent to extort the pieces from us.”
“Because he has to know where Piotr is.”
“If not now, he will at some point. This isn’t just a lucky break, it’s our only break.”
“I don’t know, Abe. We’re giving up the last two altar pieces with no guarantee that this will lead us to Piotr. If this doesn’t work, we don’t have anything left.”
“All or nothing is better than just nothing.”
Anne chewed her bottom lip pensively. “Okay. Let’s give it a shot. What’s the plan?”
“Right now? I have no idea. I’ll think of something when we meet our mystery caller.”
Anne’s only comment was a disbelieving stare and a shake of the head, but I wasn’t worried. I’ve only had one talent in my life. I don’t paint or play an instrument, and I wasn’t a walking encyclopedia like Henry, but when it came to thinking on my feet under pressure, I was the best.
It was the only reason that I was assigned to lead our squad in the war, and the only reason that my men trusted me enough to keep chasing Piotr’s trail across Poland after the bags started hunting us. I won’t say that I don’t make mistakes, however. Remembering what happened to Shad and how Piotr turned the tables on me shook my confidence a bit, but what I said to Anne was still true. This was our only shot at finding Piotr, so I’d just have to do better this time.
We arrived at the hospital well past dark. The parking lot was only half full, which I guess is always a good sign at a hospital. “Are you sure this is the right place?”
“I’m sure,” she said. “It’s where Henry told me they were going when he called from the ambulance.”
We entered an antiseptic lobby where a busy lady with an automatic smile confirmed that Leon was a patient and gave us a room number. Anne was carrying the duffle with the pieces in it, I wanted my hands free.
The walk to the elevator was filled with harsh white light, the smell of disinfectant, and the continuous tock of shoes on linoleum. The halls were a maze full of identical hallways and painted stripes of different colors threading their way to various ominous destinations named after parts of the human body or famous diseases.
When we arrived at Leon’s room, I stopped Anne outside the door. “Listen, I’m going to need to push this guy pretty hard to have any chance of getting him to let something slip. If things go wrong in there, I want you to run. Don’t look back, don’t try to help, just bolt for the nurse’s station, okay? You’ll be safe around witnesses.”
“Okay.”
I blinked. “What? No angry tirade about how I think you’re a helpless girl?”
She gave me a wan smile. “Maybe tomorrow. I think I’m at my limit for brutalizing people today. You can have this one.”
I squeezed her hand for a moment, and then entered the room.
Leon dominated the small space, laid out on a hospital bed like an offering, surrounded by machines and tubing. His dark features were ashen and he appeared to be sleeping. Henry was slumped in a chair with a blanket in his lap. The corners of his mouth were turned down and he looked tired. He looked old.