Do you know someone who can hack into a phone?”
There’s a cautious pause from Zeke, during which all I can hear are the rowdy schoolkids spilling all around us. Finally, Zeke says, “I do. But it will cost you.”
“How much?”
“One thousand. That includes two hundred fifty for me, as a finder’s fee. The rest goes to my associate.”
I go numb. That’s an insane amount of money. Too much for me to afford on my own. Hearing the price almost makes me end the call. My thumb twitches against the screen, ready to hang up on Zeke and not answer if he attempts to call back.
But then I think about Dylan’s so-crazy-it-might-be-true theory that a serial killer is living within the Bartholomew’s walls. I think about how the apartment sitters who suddenly vanished—Megan, Erica, Ingrid—might have been his victims.
We could be next, Dylan and me.
I think Ingrid knew that. It’s why she arranged to talk to Dylan. It’s why she left me the gun and the note. She knew that we could also disappear just as suddenly as the others.
To avoid such a fate, we could leave.
Right now.
Flee in the night, just like I hope Ingrid did but am starting to believe she didn’t.
Or we could pay a thousand dollars to unlock Erica’s phone and possibly get answers about what happened not just to her but to all of them.
“You still there, Jules?” Zeke says.
“Yeah. Still here.”
“Do we have a deal?”
“Yes,” I reply, wincing as I say it. “Meet me in an hour.”
I end the call and stare at the animals in the diorama. The vultures and jackals and hyena. I feel a twinge of pity for them. What a cruel afterlife they have. Dead for decades yet still gnawing, still fighting.
Forever red in tooth and claw.
32
I now have only twenty-seven dollars to my name.
Dylan and I agreed that we should split Zeke’s asking price between us. Five hundred from Dylan, five hundred from me.
With the cash stuffed uneasily in our pockets, Dylan and I now sit at the spot in Central Park where we’re scheduled to meet Zeke in ten minutes. The Ladies Pavilion. A glorified gazebo with a cream-colored railing and gingerbread trim, the place exudes romance, which must confuse passersby who see Dylan and me inside. Sitting on opposite sides of the pavilion with our arms folded and scowls on our faces, we look like two mismatched people in the middle of a very bad blind date.
“How do you know this guy again?” Dylan says.
“I don’t. He’s a friend of Ingrid’s.”
“So you’ve never met him before?”
“We’ve only talked on the phone.”
Dylan frowns. Not entirely unexpected, seeing how he’s agreed to give a substantial chunk of cash to a complete stranger.
“But he knows someone who can hack into Erica’s phone, right?” he says.
“I hope so,” I say.
Otherwise we’re screwed. Me, in particular. Right now, I have nothing. No cash in my wallet. No usable credit cards. Until I get my first apartment-sitting payment in two days, I’m flat broke. Even thinking about it makes me feel faint.
To counter the panic, I look at the sky outside the pavilion. It’s an overcast afternoon, the clouds heavy and gray. Heather weather no more. Across from me, Dylan stares at a group of kids scampering up nearby Hernshead, a rocky outcropping that juts into the lake. Although his hoodie and angry-bull build should give him a vaguely thuggish look, his eyes betray him. There’s a sadness to them.
“Tell me something about Erica,” I say. “A favorite story or fond memory.”
“Why?”
“Because it reminds you of what you’ve lost and what you’re trying to get back.”
One of the detectives on Jane’s case told me that. She had been gone two weeks by that point, and hope was fading.
I told him about the time in seventh grade when a bully named Davey Tucker decided to make my bus ride to school a living hell. Each day as I boarded the bus, he’d thrust his leg into the aisle and trip me as others laughed. This went on for weeks until, one day, I tripped, fell face-first in the aisle, and got a bloody nose. Seeing the blood pouring down my face sent Jane into a rage. She leapt over two bus seats, grabbed Davey Tucker by the hair, and slammed his face into the aisle until he, too, was bleeding. From then on, she was my hero.
“Erica told me a story once,” Dylan says, smiling slightly. “About when she was a little girl. There was