Read Brush With Death Online

Authors: Hailey Lind

Brush With Death (16 page)

The window was out. The bathroom's floor was cement, the walls sturdy plaster. No help there. I always carried my keys in my overall pocket, but the master was of no use on the exterior lock.
My cell phone! I was becoming a true convert to technology. For the second time that day I dialed 911 and waited for the operator to answer and send the troops to my rescue.
And waited. I glanced at the readout:
No Signal.
I moved to another spot and I tried again. Still no go. I held it high, held it low. Cutting-edge cellular technology had been foiled by old-fashioned plaster walls, vast tile floors, and banks of metal compartments.
I pressed an ear against the bathroom door, but heard nothing. Maybe the ghoul had left and I could curl up in the corner and sleep until the cleaning crew showed up in the morning and let me out.
Or maybe the ghoul was summoning reinforcements to draw and quarter me. Did I really want to hang around and find out what a man who liked to wear Halloween masks at night—while running around graveyards and columbaria no less—was capable of?
There must be a way out of here. I looked up. The ceiling was composed of cracked glass tiles, similar in size and shape to acoustic tiles. A dim light illuminated the translucent ceiling from behind, suggesting open space beyond. It seemed a bit dicey, but what other options did I have? On the bright side, if I fell it would be a quick trip to the crematorium.
I stepped onto the toilet seat, took a deep breath, and hoisted myself onto the sturdy porcelain sink. I steadied myself with one hand on the tulip-shaped light fixture over the sink and slowly lifted my right knee onto the old-fashioned towel dispenser, the kind made of steel that housed a cloth towel on an endless loop. Balancing myself gingerly, I brought my left knee up to join the right. The towel dispenser groaned. Good thing I'd held off on that third slice of pizza.
From this precarious perch I was able to reach up to the glass tiles overhead. Pressing the fingertips of one hand against one of the larger tiles, I pushed it up and to the side. I poked my head through the hole and saw a large, open space formed by the columbarium's roof above and the glass ceilings of the alcoves below. A foot-wide metal beam separated the ceiling tiles of one room from those of its neighbor, and provided access to the overhead lights.
If I were careful I could crawl along the beam, remove a glass ceiling tile from another room, drop down through the hole, and escape.
If I weren't careful, I would crash through the glass ceiling tiles and die on the hard stone floor. Or be shredded by the broken glass, horribly disfigured, and forced to wear a Halloween mask for the rest of my life.
Reaching my arms and shoulders through the opening, I placed my hands, palms down, on the metal beam, lifted my left foot onto the tulip light above the sink, and hoisted myself up. My actions dislodged the glass lamp shade, which shattered loudly on the concrete floor. I slid the glass tile back into place and began to crawl.
The string of lights that illuminated the glass ceilings of the chapels below guided me along the beam. I moved swiftly, exhilarated at my acrobatic escape but uncertain where I was heading. As far as I could tell, I was somewhere in the vicinity of the Chapel of the Allegories when I heard voices. I peered over the edge of the beam and saw two human-sized shapes in the room below. The beautiful pastel-colored glass ceiling tiles obscured their masked faces, and try as I might I could not make out what they were saying. Fearful of attracting attention, I remained frozen, hoping they would soon leave.
Twenty minutes later, they were still there.
What are they waiting for?
I wondered. My knees started to ache, so I rested my weight on my elbows, my rear in the air.
My cell phone shrilled.
Aw, geez!
The figures below looked about. I pulled the phone from my pocket and threw it as far as I could. The vivid beats of Oakland's own Mistah F.A.B. bounced off the glass tiles and echoed through the empty space. The figures in the room below ran off in search of the sound.
Crawling as rapidly as I dared, I came upon a small ventilation window. I shoved it open and spied a flat roof about five feet below.
It was now or never.
Rolling onto my stomach, I backed out the window, feet-first, maneuvered my hips over the ledge, and lowered myself as far as I could to close the distance to the rooftop. Taking a deep breath, I let go, landing on the first-story roof. I stumbled a little, but remained upright, feeling absurdly pleased with myself. I was never any good at PE in school, but give me the proper motivation and I was Wonder Woman.
When the adrenaline dissipated, I realized that I might be less than Wondrous. I had escaped the columbarium but was now stuck on a roof with a sizable drop to the alley below. I psyched myself up and tried to ignore a sudden visual of my landing butt-first on the asphalt. Even
I
didn't have enough padding in my backside to prevent a broken tailbone. Maybe I
should
have had that third slice of pizza.
One thing was clear: I couldn't stay here. I lay down on my stomach, let my legs drop over the edge, and started to inch my hips and rear into space. Easing over the side, I held on to the rim with a death grip and hung by my hands.
Strong arms grabbed my legs from below and tried to pull me the rest of the way off the roof. I thrashed and kicked and, locating my hair spray in my pocket, reached behind me and spewed Lady Clairol for all I was worth.
“Aaargh!” my assailant yelled. He let go of me and we both fell backward, he on the hard concrete, I on top of him. I jumped to my feet, spraying my mace substitute with one hand and flailing with the other, kicking out and trying to land a blow to the groin but instead connecting with his thigh as he rolled into the fetal position at my feet. I couldn't help but notice that he wore no ghoulish mask.
“Goddammit, Annie, knock it off!”
Michael.
Chapter 8
Art is much less important than life, but what a poor life without it.
—Robert Motherwell (1915-1991), American painter
 
I admire the idealism of the American abstract expressionists. I especially enjoy how easy it is to forge their work.
—Georges LeFleur
 
I punched him as hard as I could, but only made contact with his bicep. Protecting his head with his arms, Michael looked up at me, his eyes streaming tears. “Annie! It's me!”
“I
know
who it is! You scared the
crap
out of me!”
I kicked at him again, but he grabbed my leg so that I was forced to hop on one foot.

Knock it off!
” Michael scrambled to his feet and hoisted me over his shoulder, carrying me down the alleyway to the street. His shoulder dug into my stomach as he jogged, each jarring step forcing the air out of me. My attempts to inflict bodily injury gave way to the pressing need for oxygen, something that seemed to happen with disturbing frequency whenever I was around Michael, though usually for different reasons.
He opened his truck door, dumped me in, shoved himself in next to me, fired up the engine, and screeched away from the curb.
“You good-for-nothing, two-timing, son of a—”
“Calm down, Annie.”
“What the
hell
do you think—”
“I said
calm down
!”
Michael's voice was sharp and his countenance so grim that I was shocked into silence. In the sporadic illumination of the passing streetlights I noticed his eyes were red and swollen, his elbows were bloodied, and he was breathing as hard as I was. The palms of my hands smarted, I had scraped one knee, and my butt felt bruised.
The ringside judges awarded me this round by a split decision.
Michael sped through a maze of quiet residential streets and into the hills of nearby Piedmont. Glancing frequently in the rearview mirror, he finally came to a stop in a pool of light near a pair of closed iron gates that hinted at a large estate beyond. His damp, red eyes scanned the length of the silent street before he turned off the engine and turned on me.
“What in the
hell
is going on at that place?” Michael demanded, draping one long arm on the steering wheel.

You
tell
me,
Mr. Art Thief.”
“I told you I wasn't in the business anymore.”
“Then what were you doing at the columbarium?”
“I was
trying
to do a good deed. Mary called and said she was worried about you working there all by yourself. She asked me to make sure you got home.”
“How did she get your phone number?” I didn't know Michael's number; why did Mary?
“I gave it to her the other day, for emergencies.” Michael leaned his head back against the headrest. “She said you'd gotten yourself involved in a bit of a mystery. Something about a metal box.”
“And you raced to my rescue, is that right?”
“As a matter of fact, yes. I was afraid you were in danger.”
“Well, I'm not.”
“Oh, really? Do you always leave the building by jumping off the roof?”
I glared at him.
“I suppose Mary might have been matchmaking again,” Michael mused. “She's not wild about this Josh person.”
“Don't call him that,” I snapped, annoyed because what he said was true. Mary thought Josh's earnest approach to life was at odds with my suspicious take on the world. “What were you doing in the alley?”
“Looking for you, what do you think?” he groused. “I tried your cell phone but the first call didn't go through, and you didn't answer the second. I was looking for a way to break in when I saw two men in masks running around inside, and then all of a sudden you were climbing out the ventilation window. I was trying to
help
you, Annie. Is that so hard to believe?”
“I guess not,” I sighed. Michael X. Johnson had complicated my life on many occasions, but had also saved my neck a time or two at no small risk to his own. “Thank you.”
“You're welcome.” He fixed me with a steady look. “I don't know what's going on here, and I have a sense you're not about to tell me. May I suggest that you at least consider finishing your work at the columbarium during the day, when people who don't wear masks are around?”
“I need you to do something for me,” I said, changing the subject.
“You want a
favor
? After you sprayed me with toxic chemicals?”
“It was just hair spray.”
“And then you
kicked
me! In a rather private place, too. And don't tell me you didn't know what you were doing.”
“I kicked your thigh. That's not private.”
He snorted.
“I'm sorry if I hurt you. Now, will you do something for me?”
“Why should I?”
“I need your help.”
Curiosity got the better of him, as I suspected it would. “With what?”
“I want you to find Raphael's
La Fornarina.

“It's in Rome. I forget which museum—maybe the National Gallery? There, all done. Happy to help.”
“I think it might be here somewhere.”
“Impossible.”
“I wouldn't be so sure.”
“If you know so much, what do you need me for?”
“I want you to steal it.”
Michael gaped at me, his mouth opening and closing wordlessly. He shook his head and started up the truck, his expression grim. “You're certifiable, you know that? I don't know why I even try.”
“I'm serious, Michael.”
“I'm sure you are,” he said as we headed down the posh winding streets of Piedmont. “That's what scares me.”
“If the painting's at the columbarium it would be a cinch for you to abscond with it,” I pointed out.
“What about the guard dogs and the silent alarms you told me about?”
“I made those up.”
“No! You mean there
isn't
a pack of vicious hounds waiting to rip my throat out?”
“Sarcasm doesn't suit you, Michael,” I lied. “Besides, that was when I thought you were going to steal something.”
“And now you
want
me to steal something?”
I nodded. “Now that I know you're not after it.”
Michael took a deep breath and let it out forcefully. “Before I agree to anything I want you to tell me who those guys in the masks were, and why you felt compelled to leave the columbarium by way of the roof.”
We halted at the stoplight in front of the Grand Lake Theater. The venerable old movie house featured an enormous 1920s neon sign with a marquee that listed the films showing on one side, and political statements on the other.
“I don't know,” I said, distracted by this week's posting exhorting the citizenry to rise up and demand paper-ballot voting. Paper ballots seemed like a good idea, I thought. It worked for the French. I yawned, suddenly tired.
“Annie?” Michael prompted.
“It might have something to do with a box that one of those ghouls stole from a crypt . . .” I trailed off.
As we skirted Lake Merritt I realized Michael was taking me home. My truck was at the columbarium, I had not packed up my painting supplies, and I had told management to dismantle the scaffolding in the morning. “Hey! I can't go home! I have to go back!”
“Sorry, sweetie. That train has left the station.”
“How am I supposed to get to work tomorrow?”
“Walk. The exercise'll do you good.” Michael pulled into the gravel parking area behind my apartment. “Wait until the office opens, gather your stuff while others are around, and
don't go back.

Other books

Deliverance by Katie Clark
Appalachian Galapagos by Ochse, Weston, Whitman, David
No One Writes to the Colonel by Gabriel García Márquez, J. S. Bernstein
Swansea Girls by Catrin Collier
Crusader by Sara Douglass
The Fall of Saints by Wanjiku wa Ngugi
The War Across the Stars by Pennington, Alex