nor the FBI could vet these foreign crimes attested to by unnamed witnesses. Furthermore, we still had no direct evidence that linked Petrović to throwing stars, or hanging anyone in the USA.
“It’s a mile short of probable cause,” I said.
“Exactly what Steinmetz said. But here’s what I say. We’re a step closer to landing this son of a bitch.”
CHAPTER 90
The pain nagged and pulled at Anna until she was forced to wake up and open her eyes.
She saw nothing but blackness and thought she was blind.
Panic raised a fine sweat over her whole body, and for a long moment she forgot to breathe.
What happened to me? Where am I?
The pain was excruciating. It radiated from the back of her head and seemed to spread everywhere. Her heart bucked as the pieces came together.
She was a prisoner again.
A bar of light coming from under a door showed her that she was on a bed in a small room.
How did I get here?
A feeling of flying came into her mind, then images of driving the Tesla, all speed and freedom. She’d parked outside Petrović’s house. And a void opened in her memory. Something had happened.
Anna’s head was killing her.
She must have taken a blow and lost consciousness. She didn’t remember any of that, but she tried to recall it, clawing at the fog wrapped around her memory. And then she was dragged into the present by the ragged sound of breathing beside her.
She looked around the small room for a way out. There were no windows, just one door and the thin bar of light.
It was enough to see that her clothes had been thrown around the floor. His clothes were in a pile by the side of the bed.
Her stomach was empty but she heaved, clamped her hand over her mouth. She told herself to just lie still and breathe and think. In time she looked at the man in the bed and assessed him. How strong was he, how drunk, how much of a threat.
He wasn’t big, but from what she could see, he was muscular, like the soldiers in the rape hotel in Djoba. Anna had survived the hotel because she’d focused on the future, when she would be free, and what she would do one day to her attackers.
To Petrović.
She sat up slowly, and the man shifted beside her, clacked his teeth, stopped breathing, threw his arm across her, and came awake.
He looked at her.
“What?” he said.
“Bathroom,” she said.
He pointed at the door, rolled over so that he was facing the wall, and resumed his sleep.
Anna dressed in the dark. She could not find her purse, her phone, but the door was unlocked. She stepped out into a hallway, holding her shoes. A night-light was on in the bathroom to her right, and she went in, closed the door. There was no lock.
She flipped the switch by the door and the ceiling light came on. Heart pounding, ready to spring up if the door opened, Anna used the toilet, then went to the sink.
There was a note taped to the mirror.
It was written in Bosnian in large, black block letters:
“ANNA. STARA PRAVILA JOŠ UVIJEK PRIMJENJUJU. ZNAŠ.”
It meant, “The old rules still apply. You know.”
It was signed “SP.”
CHAPTER 91
“Anna. The old rules still apply. You know. SP.”
She knew Petrović’s rules well.
Obey. If you don’t, we will happily kill you.
SP. Slobodan Petrović had made the rules.
Images flickered, faces of women she’d known from school and the market and from neighboring homes: Dalila and her mother, Amela; her best friend, Uma; and Zuhra, her husband’s younger sister. The girls who had defied the soldiers or had curled into balls and given up—they were killed.
The ones who learned fast, did as they were told, they didn’t even talk to the other women about what they’d endured. What good was it to complain? They had to live another day and hope for an opportunity to get away.
By being smart, she and Dalila and a few others had survived and gotten out at the end of the war. But this was America. There was no war here. And yet here she was in a rape hotel.
Anna washed her face with hot water, and kept washing as she remembered the hotel in Djoba. One indelible memory looped in her mind. The men berating Uma before they shot her to death. Uma hadn’t cried or even put up a hand. She had wanted to die.
Anna’s own hands shook as she dried off with the towel.
Then she