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"Any chance they're bluffing?"
"Don't think so." He pointed. "That little red diode says it's hot."
G.o.d, she thought we've got to get out of here. "Maybe we could just make a dash for it?"
He looked at her and shook his head. "Like you're in shape to dash? No, what's called for is stealth."
He was pulling out his wallet. "The thing about these card readers, some of them, like those that get you into bank ATMs, sometimes will open for other cards. I've got four kinds of plastic. Might as well give them a try."
"Well, just hurry." She leaned against the wall. "I'm starting to get weak."
He slipped his Visa through and nothing happened. He immediately tried MasterCard. Again nothing.
"Maybe I should try my all-purpose bankcard." He slipped a Chase plastic through, but once more nothing happened.
"This isn't working, Stone." She sighed, feeling her legs weaken as she clasped the wall. "I think we're going to have to chance the elevator."
"Don't give up yet." He took out his American Express, kissed it and swiped it through. "One last shot."
The red diode blinked off.
"Never leave home without it," she whispered.
"We will now proceed very, very quietly." He carefully pushed open the door, inches at a time.
The stair had metal steps and was lit by a single fluorescent bulb. As he helped her up, Ally was wondering if there was any way to extract her mother too. She couldn't imagine how she could do it and besides, Nina might well refuse to go.
No, just get out and make Stone understand that no way was Winston Bartlett going to let him go free to tell the story of Kristen. He clearly wasn't thinking with all cylinders.
Stone Aimes was about to disappear, just like Kristen had.
The entry to the laboratory level was also alarmed, but American Express once again saved the day. When they pushed open the door, however, the lights were on in the office at the far end of the hallway.
Where's that door that Grant was going to use to get me out? she wondered. Then she saw a door marked EXIT next to Van de Vliet's office.
s.h.i.+t, it's all the way at the opposite end of the hall.
"Stone, we have to get to that door before anybody sees us. I don't know if it's alarmed or not, but that's the ball game." She reached for his hand. "If we can get there and get out, please come with me. We can make it to the highway. You can't stay here."
"Let's get you out. Then we'll talk."
"I'll drag you if I have to."
As they moved quietly along the wall, they could hear an argument under way. She recognized the voices as Ellen 'Hara's and Karl Van de Vliet's.
"I won't allow my staff to be part of this," Ellen was declaring. "I've seen Kristen. Any form of the Beta is dangerous. If you do anything involving that procedure again, you'll put everybody here at risk."
"Don't you think I've thought about that, agonized about it? We have one chance to turn all this around. This is it."
"I don't want to be involved and I don't want any of my people involved do you hear me?"
"Then keep them upstairs." He was striding out of his office, flipping on the lights in the hallway.
"Oh s.h.i.+t," Ally whispered. She opened a door and pulled Stone into the examining room, where her mother had first been admitted. Just as she did she heard the ding of the elevator and caught a glimpse of Debra and David Van de Vliet's senior researchers, getting off.
When she closed the door, the room should have been pitch black. But it wasn't. A candle was burning on a counter and there was a figure at the far end of the room.
He was sitting on the examining table, in the lotus position, his eyes closed.
"Are you ready?" Kenji Noda asked. "I think just about everyone is here now."
Oh my G.o.d, Ally thought. What are we going to do?
She watched helplessly as he reached over and touched a b.u.t.ton on the desk. A red light popped on above the door. A moment later, it opened.
"What are you doing here?" Debra asked, staring at them.
"Getting some exercise," Stone said.
Then Winston Bartlett appeared in the doorway behind her.
"How did they get up here?"
"Ally, I'm not going to let them do this to you," Stone declared, seizing her hand. "We're going to--"
"Ken, please get him out of here," Bartlett said. 'Take him back downstairs, anywhere."
"You shouldn't be out of your wheelchair," Debra was saying. She turned to Ellen. "Would you get--"
"I'm not getting you anything," Ellen O'Hara declared. "I've just submitted my resignation. Effective three minutes ago. I don't know a thing about what's going on here and, from now on, I don't want to know."
She got on the elevator and the door closed.
"Ken," Bartlett said, "first things first. Go after that woman. Don't let her leave the building."
Now Debra was rolling in a wheelchair. David had appeared also, deep disquiet in his eyes, and he helped her in.
"There's very little risk to this," he said. "Believe me."
She felt him giving her an injection in her left arm.
No, don't ...
As the room started to spin, she reached out and grabbed Stone's arm and pulled him down to her.
"Downstairs," she whispered. "Look around. There's--"
She didn't get to finish because Debra was whisking her out the door and toward the laboratory. Stone had just grinned confusedly, seemingly not paying any attention to what she was saying. Instead he ambled toward the open stair door and disappeared.