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AliNovel > Hot Revenge Box Set 4 > Chapter 30

Chapter 30

    Chapter 30


    Klempner


    In one hand, I hold a single copper strand. In the other, a thread of brown.


    My body freezes as my mind races through the possibilities.


    I left my hotel room several hours earlier, slicking a hair into ce over the crack between door and


    frame as I left. On my return, a hair was still in ce and I entered my room assuming all was normal.


    N?velD(ram)a.?rg owns this content.


    Now, however, in my left hand, I hold a hair just plucked from my own scalp: the mousy-brown shade of


    my current identity.


    In the right hand, I hold the hair which dropped from my hotel room door as I returned, and which on


    casual inspection, I had taken to be the one I slicked into ce as I left the room earlier.


    But the right-hand hair is red.


    And now I look at it, I recognise that shade: a deep burnished copper-auburn that many women aspire


    to, but few have.


    But Mitch has it. Jenny too;


    Could ite from one of them?


    Probably, yes.


    Jenny…


    Juliana, or at least her cat’s-paws Baxter and Finchby, had Jenny unconscious as a prisoner for some


    while. They even trimmed a lock of her pubic hair and sent it to James along with her underwear.


    Plucking a few hairs from her scalp would never have been noticed.


    So, this could be Jenny’s hair.


    On the other hand, it might just be the hair of some local woman lucky enough to have the shade.


    Does it matter? Where ites from?


    Or is it just the message that’s important?


    Juliana and her games…


    My hand is shaking, the copper hair vibrating between my fingers like a metronome.


    Calm down…


    Think…


    Breathing deliberately deeply, I let out air. Take it in again. And once more.


    My hand steadies once more.


    How long have I been standing here? Frozen by surprise and indecision…


    A minute? Two?


    Time to get the hell out of here…


    Making a sharp re-entry to my room, I sling essentials in a carry-bag: wallet, tablet, passport, that


    useless phone…


    Must contact Dakho…


    Get a recement…


    A nce around the suite…


    … Anything else important?


    Clothes, I abandon. Toiletries too. It’s all just stuff. Easily reced.


    I holster my Glock, check my knives are in ce in their sheaths, sling the bag over my shoulder…


    … That’s it, then…


    … And making a u-turn, I head for the door…


    On the threshold, I pause.


    Would Juliana really have stopped at that?


    A hair… A warning to me…


    Only that?


    It doesn’t ring true.


    There’s surely something else.


    Torn between the urge to leave and the desire to know… I vacite. It’s under five minutes since I


    made my discovery, and everything inside screams that I should leave…


    And Now…


    Fuck!


    I’ve got to know…


    Carry-bag still slung across my shoulder, gun in hand, I pace the lounge…


    … then the terrace…


    … the bedroom…


    … seeking… seeking what?


    Whatever my first hasty charge around the apartment might have missed.


    I find it in the bathroom.


    Juliana… She’s consistent at least. Rigged up in the same way as when she abandoned Baxter, the


    lavatory seat is wired.


    Hitching my pants at the knees to squat down, I peer in.


    It’s an amateur job, the wiring crude, but it would still work. Lifting the seat is the trigger for the


    explosion. The technique has long been used as a booby-trap in situations where, typically, the


    intention is not to kill, but to maim. A corpse can be buried with honours. But apanion on a


    stretcher, carrying what’s left of his genitalia in a paper bag; that’s a drag on resources and morale.


    On the other hand, the bowl, or maybe the cistern, could contain enough explosive to blow the room


    apart. I’m not about to put it to the test.


    Shaking my head, I leave.


    I make my way down the rear stairs, calling by theundries in the basement. Dumping my suit, a


    rummage through the baskets produces some sort of uniform; one-piece, in navy-blue, perhaps for


    a plumber or other maintenance man. Checking first that there’s no logo stitched in to link me back to


    the hotel, I put it on. It’s a little short in the arm but rolling up the sleeves hides that.


    Then, carry-bag back in ce, whistling a merry little tune, I exit the hotel via the service entrance.


    Following the side-road brings me to an alley, then another alley. Finally, I spot a shady niche. There’s


    space for a dozen trash bins, but not all are taken. Ducking into the gap, I’m out of sight. One of the


    bins serves as a seat while I grab my breath and assemble my thoughts.


    Now what?


    Caught with my trousers down…


    … like aplete fucking amateur…


    I believed I was safely hidden behind my fake ID. Now I’m going to have to change again. When the


    hotel discovers ‘Harry Hughes’ has an explosivevatory, the police are bound to investigate.


    I’m still not far from the hotel. I need to get further away than this, but there’s no point running at


    random.


    Somewhere to stay?


    To hide?


    To think…


    And I’m still faced with the obvious, and unpleasant, question.


    How did Juliana know where I was?


    Perhaps she made the link to Antonio’s? I was eating there regrly. Was I careless? Building up a


    habit I shouldn’t have?


    She could have had me followed back from there? After all, I picked up on her messenger boy at the


    restaurant, when he was squeezing the old man for protection money.


    Sauce for the goose? Sauce for the gander?


    It still doesn’t feel right.


    Antonio…


    She wouldn’t go for him would she?


    Just an innocent bystander that sold me a few meals?


    Would she…?


    My meandering thoughts are cut short…


    Shattering noise ricochets down the alleyway, echoing and reverberating. Lids tter on the bins


    around me. The bin I’m sitting on Whumphs! under me with the shockwave and reflexively, I drop to the


    ground, hands mming over my ears, curling in on myself against the explosion,


    Then catching up with my thoughts, I coil, springing up to dash back the way I came, towards the


    source of the sound.


    I’m fighting against a stream of shrieking, panicking, fleeing people. Men and women alike, some


    carrying children in their headlong dash for escape. Some stopping to help others. Others simply pelt


    away.


    And I know what they’re running from.


    The st wasn’t huge on the scale of things. But what was, only minutes ago, my hotel apartment, is


    history. So is the next apartment. A brick and ster hole gapes where my bathroom window once


    looked out. The lounge window is the same along with several windows further along.


    Broken debris lies scattered all around. ss shards like daggers, propelled three stories, down into


    the unknowing crowd below, shing and maiming as they went. Bricks, concrete and chunks of


    ster, ejected to rain down on the heads below.


    People are screaming and running. Some sit, dazed, cradling wounds where the ss and metal


    shrapnel stabbed down. Others cough and choke, trying to clear airways of billowing dust. One woman


    lies still, a stic carrier bag still clutched in her hand, but the contents burst free: tin cans and stic


    bottles roll loose in the blood which pools around her,


    A crazed ss jigsaw crunches under my feet, pocked with fragments of brick, cement and twisted


    metal. Above me, a plume of smoke, thick and ck, chimneys up out of what was my bathroom,


    powering skyward, mes licking at its base.


    rms are madly ringing. People pour out from the hotel, spilling down the steps, some in


    businesswear, others in casual holiday clothes. One woman tumbles out from the door with only a


    towel clutched around herself. Another sits on the steps, by the prone body of a man. Arms hugged


    around herself, her make-up streaked with soot and dust, she rocks to and fro.


    I can only watch Hell’s drama unfolding.


    I should have disarmed it…


    I could have done it. There was nothing sophisticated about thesh up of wiring. A simple tug on a


    connection or two, and the explosive would have been so much sticine. But I was too fucking self-


    absorbed to consider the consequences of abandoning a primed bomb behind me.


    The column of smoke is growing, mes rising and brightening…


    How much fucking explosive did she use?


    From somewhere out of sight, sirens are sounding, the wail drawing nearer.


    There’s nothing I can do here. I missed my chance to help. As blue lights sh into view, I merge with


    the fleeing crowd and run.


    *****
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