
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA
Chapter 21
THIS LITTLE PIGGY WENT TO MARKET
Victoria Blake watched the Nation’s Capital shrink as the cab sped toward rural Virginia. At a stop, the driver leaned over the seat and brought a dose of droop-eyed ugliness back into her world.
“Where do you want out?”
“Isle of Paradise Spa.”
“You work there?” he grinned, revealing a row of rotting teeth. “You don’t seem like one of those girls who drown her blues in a hot tub. Maybe you’re the towel girl, huh?”
She hesitated, but he didn’t notice.
“Change towels? Right? Yup, I’m a great towel changer.”
“Lady, you’re nuts. That’s what you are.” She had to agree with him because this charade was a tricky thing for the First Lady to pull off.
She paid him and went into the spa. The same receptionist was still sitting at her desk, filing her nails.
“Hey,” the security guard suddenly appeared. “You can’t walk in here, lady. You’re not a member.”
“How do you know?” she asked, but she let him push her backward, out the front door.
“I see you here again, sister, and I’ll call the cops.” He left her on the curb.
Two senators’ wives came out complaining. They brushed past her without showing any recognition on their faces.
“Say, are you the new girl?” The man was the same one she’d seen in the sauna. “You need to use the back door. And pick up an ID in Personnel.”
“Oh, thanks,” she replied. “I’m a towel girl.”
He looked at her oddly. “Towel girl? That’s a new one. I thought we hired a reflexologist.”
“I’m definitely a towel changer,” she insisted.
“Must be the Linen Room. The rules are the same. You need a uniform and an ID. Follow me,” he said, and led the way to the back of the building. “You want to come in this way. They don’t like us to use the front entrance. That’s for the fancy, high-society wives.”
The back hallway wasn’t as upscale as the areas used by wealthy and famous clients. She followed the Sauna Guy into the locker room.
“You want to wear a clean uniform every day. They get mad if you don’t look spotless. So, if someone messes you up, just come back and grab some clean clothes,” he passed her a flamingo pink coat and lavender slacks.
“Thanks, this really is lovely.”
“Funny. Maybe you’ll last longer than they usually do here. At least you’ve got a goddamn sense of humor. Now take your sweet ass down to Personnel and get an ID badge.” And with that, he vanished.
A heavy woman with a sparse mustache and squeaky, sensible shoes entered. She examined Victoria.
“Where’s your name tag?” she hollered. “Who the hell are you?”
“I’m new,” Victoria stuttered. “I’m going straight to Personnel this minute.”
“Good. Say, you sure are cute,” the woman smiled, and Victoria turned beet red. She hurried down the hall, leaving the woman to entertain herself.
“Excuse me, do I know you?” Senator Ashton’s wife stopped her. Then she patted her silver-blue curls. “Are you the girl who does my pedicure?”
“Uh, no. I’m not,” and she wasn’t lying. “Have you seen Margreth Willson?”
It’s Mrs. Willson to you, sweetheart. She’s in the Tropicana Room. She was hobnobbing with Blake’s wife this morning and just breezed her way into the most prestigious room in the building. Showing off. Say, don’t I know you?”
Victoria lifted the stack of towels higher so that only her eyes were visible.
“No, I don’t think so.”
Then she rushed down the hall, away from danger. Or so she believed. After what felt like an eternity, she reached the Secret Service’s territory. That led directly to the highly secure Tropicana Salon.
A.J. Baldridge’s discarded magazine still lay on the chair. The blank faces of the monitors stared at her. The door to the Tropicana Salon was shut. Victoria could hear muffled voices on the other side. It wasn’t Margreth; the voice was too deep. It was a man. No— it was two men.
There was a bolt on her side of the door, and she thought for a long time before sliding it into place. Then she looked for the switch that controlled the bank of monitors. She’d seen it done a million times.
The monitor in the main hallway flickered on. The entrance was busy with employees and clients. The next switch turned on the sauna monitor, and there was Sauna Guy, large as life, handing out towels to women of different sizes, all wrapped in fluffy white terry robes.
The next two monitors watched the building’s front and back entrances. Nothing unusual was happening outside.
The final switch revealed the Tropicana. The camera was pointed at the far wall, and she could see a man’s head. He looked familiar, but she didn’t recognize him, so she used the joystick to pan the camera. First, it moved downward, showing black shoes standing in a sea of red soup. She pressed a button and captured a wide-angle shot.
Margreth lay on her back, helpless. A wad of cloth was jammed in her mouth. Her toes had been removed and littered the floor. The stumps spurted, shooting fluid across the room.
Victoria gagged. She was so terrified that she was tearless. Then she panned the camera to the other side of the room and captured the other tormentor.
“You might wonder why we’ve gone to such trouble to gather information from you.” The man’s back was to the camera, but she knew he must be sneering by his tone. “We need to determine how much you know and who you’ve told. You will, of course, forgive me.”
Victoria looked at the phone. It felt miles away from her. She was frozen with fear as she watched the horror her friend was going through. The man turned. The face was that of someone she saw every day. Someone her husband trusted.
“So, you told Victoria Blake nothing? Is this true?” Margreth nodded weakly yes.
“And Victoria Blake doesn’t know her child is part of a top-secret government research project and is actually a clone?” Margreth made a gurgling sound.
“Was Jake Barnes the only person to whom you divulged everything?” Margreth nodded, “Yes.” Her eyes reflected stark, naked pain.
Victoria felt a wave of dizziness and collapsed into the chair.
“Neither the President nor Mrs. Blake knows anything about the Government’s involvement in the cloning project? You didn’t tell her this morning?” Another shake of the head indicated no.
“Good job. I’ll finish you off and do you a favor. Sorry for the inconvenience of our little visit. But you should have known better than to poke your nose where it didn’t belong.”
Victoria didn’t want to watch the rest, but her eyes were glued to it. This couldn’t be real. And what about Margreth’s nose? How could she breathe?
As Margreth’s life ebbed onto the spa floor, Victoria sat in the pitch-black room, watching. When she realized she was tilting dangerously in the chair, she lowered herself to the cold tile floor and hugged her knees. As the men tore Margreth apart before Victoria’s eyes, her resolve hardened like a rock against her heart.
Arthur Holmstead, the Associate Director of the CIA, was covered in Margreth’s blood. He worked feverishly, trying to dismantle his victim. The other man assisted.
Holmstead wiped his knife on the sheet. The two men looked toward the door, as if they’d heard something in the outer room. The stranger tried the door, then turned to Holmstead in a panic.
“It’s locked. Someone’s outside.”
“Find a battering ram, you horse’s ass,” Holmstead spat. Then he looked up at the camera’s eye, and she felt him peer into her heart. “You’re dead, whoever you are.”
Victoria grabbed her pile of towels and hurried away, not bothering to turn off the monitors. In the locker room, she found a storage area filled with boxes of cleaning supplies. She huddled behind an industrial drum containing floor wax.
Afternoon turned into evening, and the building grew silent. She slipped from her hiding spot and headed straight for the front door, but there was no way out. The outer door was locked with a deadbolt, so she needed a key. She grabbed the phone from the snotty receptionist’s desk to call her husband’s private line.
“Hello, Vic. Is that you?”
“Yes, it’s me.”
“Where are you? We’ve been worried sick.”
“I know. It was stupid of me.” The truth was dangerous turf. “I have something to tell you.”
“It better be a good story. You gave the Secret Squirrels a heart attack. Baldridge is interrogating anyone who moves. He even threatened Troast with the rack. Art Holmstead even offered to look for you. Isn’t that nice?”
“I’ll get there as quickly as I can.” She hung up before he could say more.
She sneaked down the hallway, just in case one of Margreth’s killers was still there. The colorful sign on the back door told her what she needed to know.
Reminder: Third shift coming up!
Mr. Safety advises using the front entrance after 10 PM!
The schedule was posted near the time clock, and Victoria checked it. Betty was expected to arrive at any minute for her late evening cleaning shift.
“Betty, you’re my ticket to freedom,” Victoria muttered. “Get your sorry ass to work, girl. I’ve got to get out of here.”
She crouched behind the receptionist’s desk, still shaken from Margreth’s ordeal, when she heard a key turn in the front door.
“Hell’s Kitchen,” Betty growled. “This place is like a mausoleum at night. My mama warned me I’d end up in a dead-end job.”
The woman shuffled down the hallway and disappeared. Victoria headed straight for the door. The woman’s keys still dangled in the lock. Seconds later, she was sprinting across the porch, only to be stopped short. An Arlington Police cruiser idled at the curb.
The urge to run into the officer’s safe arms was strong, but something held her back. She slipped around the side of the building and crouched in the bushes. The cruiser pulled away from the curb, slowly moving down the street. Ten ragged breaths later, siren wailing, the patrol car returned.
Victoria peered at the squad from her hideout. She could see the officer’s face as he approached the building. It was Holmstead’s assistant—Margreth’s tormentor.
Deep in Victoria’s mind, a crucial part of her suddenly snapped like a twig. It was as if a mysterious switch had been flipped, causing her feet to freeze and her pounding heart to slow. I must live—I have a child.
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