39 Clues _ Cahills vs. Vespers [03] The Dead of Night

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39 Clues _ Cahills vs. Vespers [03] The Dead of Night Page 14

by Peter Lerangis


  “I’m just happy that we’re getting off this bus,” she snapped.

  “Right,” Dan said.

  They found their rented Mercedes SUV deep inside the parking structure.

  “I’ll drive,” Dan said.

  “In your dreams, Frederick,” Amy said. “You don’t have a license.”

  “Shotgun!” Atticus said, jumping into the passen-ger seat.

  “I didn’t want to sit up there anyway,” Dan claimed, climbing into the backseat next to Amy.

  Jake settled into the driver’s seat and started the engine, but before he could adjust his mirrors, flashing blue lights appeared behind them. A police car was blocking them in.

  Amy’s stomach lurched. Interpol? They were caught already. She met Jake’s eyes in the rearview mirror.

  “Maybe they’re just checking out the rental cars leaving the parking lot,” he suggested.

  “And maybe they’re not,” Amy spat. “If we get arrested, a hostage will die!”

  Two gigantic policemen got out of the car. “Exit the vehicle!” one of them shouted. “Schnell!”

  “Remember, your name is Fred Wimple,” Amy whispered to her brother as they climbed out of the SUV and lined up beside it.

  “Passports!” the larger policeman snapped.

  “They’re in our bags,” Jake said, keeping his voice calm and steady.

  “Get them!”

  “Sure. No problem. No need to shout.” Jake popped the back hatch open, but as he reached in to grab his pack, the second policeman pushed him roughly aside.

  “Hey!” Jake balled his hands into fists.

  Amy signaled him with a small shake of her head. Something wasn’t right about the two cops. If they know, why don’t they just arrest us? Why are they hassling us like this?

  Jake took a deep breath.

  The second policeman pulled their things out onto the ground and turned to Amy. “Which one is yours?”

  Amy pointed at a small blue backpack.

  The policeman grabbed it, turned it upside down, and shook everything out.

  Jake stepped forward, but Amy gripped his arm.

  “Let it go,” she whispered.

  The policeman found Amy’s fake passport, then rummaged through the other packs until he held all four in his hand.

  “Your business in Berlin?”

  “We’re tourists,” Amy stammered, her knees going weak.

  “Name of your hotel?”

  “We . . . we were just on our way to find one.”

  The policeman looked at Dan. “Frederick Wimple?”

  “Right,” Dan answered.

  “Wrong,” the policeman said. “Your passport is a forgery. Your name is Dan Cahill.” He pulled his pistol from its holster. “And you are all under arrest!”

  Amy let out a gasp of horror. Dan’s head jerked toward the nearest exit. She followed his gaze. It was a hundred feet away. They’d never make it.

  The second policeman pulled four sets of flex-cuffs off his belt. “Turn around and put your hands on your heads.”

  Jake stepped in front of the pistol, shielding the others.

  “There’s some kind of mistake,” he said, trying to stall for time.

  “No mistake. Turn around. All of you!”

  There was an agonizing pause as they calculated their options and realized they didn’t have any.

  “We better do what he says,” Amy said in defeat.

  Reluctantly, Jake turned around with the others. Amy leaned against her brother, waiting for the plastic cuffs to squeeze around her wrists. Barely two steps into Berlin, and they’d already failed.

  Which hostage will die? Which hostage have we just killed?

  “Something’s not right,” Jake whispered.

  “I’ll say,” Dan hissed back. “We’re in a parking structure with two giants with badges, guns, and no witnesses. We need to get —”

  Two doors slammed behind them, followed by the screech of rubber on cement. Amy whipped her head around to see the police car barreling through the exit. For a second, the four kids were too stunned to move.

  “Quick! Let’s get out of here!” Amy said.

  Just then, the Vesper phone chimed.

  Ha-ha. Scared you! A bag within your bag. Replace the paste with the real one at the Pergamon Museum. Because of your late arrival you only have a couple hours before closing time. If you fail, it’s Death-Oh-Clock for Uncle Alistair (per Dan’s request), and perhaps I’ll include the youngest as a special bonus . . . Cousin Phoenix. Oh, and speaking of dead things, I’ve wiped the phone you swiped from Luna. You can no longer get in touch with me. I’m very unhappy with you. I’ll let you know what your punishment will be. Have a nice day.

  Vesper One

  Dan slammed his fist into the car. “He’s going to punish us through Alistair!”

  Amy put a hand lightly on her brother’s shoulder. “We don’t know that.”

  “Amy’s right,” Jake said. “He’s just messing with us. The only way to keep our heads straight is to ignore him and stay on task.”

  Amy didn’t like the look on Dan’s face as he turned on Jake. “Easy for you to say. You don’t even know Alistair!”

  “Stop!” Amy ordered. “I’ve had enough testosterone in the past five minutes to last me a lifetime. We need to focus.”

  She picked up Luna’s pink cell phone and tossed it to Dan. “Check the phone.” She looked at Jake and Atticus. “Help me get this stuff back in my pack.”

  “Phone’s toast,” Dan said after a second. He threw it against a cement pillar and it burst into a hundred pink pieces.

  “Was that necessary?” Amy asked.

  “Probably not,” Dan answered, “but it felt good.”

  Amy shook her head, then noticed something in the pile that hadn’t been in her backpack earlier. It was a small black velvet bag. She picked it up.

  “What’s that?” Dan asked.

  “‘A bag within your bag,’” Atticus said.

  Amy loosened the drawstrings and dumped a diamond the size of a marshmallow into her palm.

  Pompeii, Italy

  V-1: Contact established with the Cahills. Exactly where you’d expect. Will track. Can kill. Awaiting instructions.

  — V-4

  V-4: The trap is baited. V-5 is in place. Proceed.

  — V-1

  Erasmus Yilmaz sat on the edge of a stone fullery in the city of Pompeii, wishing he didn’t know that in ancient times, slaves used fulleries to wash their masters’ clothes. In urine.

  The fullery was indoors, but it gave him a good view of the square outside. Across from him was a large opening. He’d picked the spot so he could watch the crowds without being seen.

  Pompeii is a dead city, he thought. And coming here was a dead end. But where do we go next?

  Erasmus felt a rare grin cross his face.

  We.

  He hadn’t thought in terms of a team since he was a boy.

  On the run with Mom . . . The grin vanished.

  When Erasmus was just three years old, his father was murdered by Vespers. Japan, Russia, India, Canada. Erasmus and his mom never spent more than a few months in any one location. Erasmus did not go to school, but he learned nine languages and read a thousand books during their run.

  We.

  They had almost started to believe the threat had faded when the Vespers finally struck. He was at his dojo when the fire broke out at their apartment complex. Several people had died, including Erasmus’s mom. The Vespers were only too real.

  Erasmus turned his attention back to the crowd on the square where at least a hundred people had gathered. A smoking Mount Vesuvius loomed above them, but no one was looking at the volcano. Their attention was focused on the Disaster Watch! television van and its famous meteorologist, Sandy “the Breeze” Bancroft.

  Erasmus had no problem picking his partners out of the crowd. Hamilton Holt was a foot taller and wider than anyone else there. Jonah Wizard was wearing a b
lack hoodie, even though it was a beautiful day. He had to be hot with the hood pulled over his famous head and the fake beard Erasmus was making him wear.

  Erasmus hadn’t been pleased when Amy teamed two teenagers up with him, but to his surprise he’d grown fond of them. They were both dedicated to the fight and willing to do anything — even travel with each other. The two boys were completely different. Erasmus grinned again. Jonah has rap playing in his head, Hamilton wants to rap people on their heads.

  Erasmus had sent them into the crowd and told them not to speak to anyone. Their job was to mingle and listen. He knew that they wouldn’t hear anything worthwhile, but that wasn’t the point. He was training them, thinking that maybe one day, one of them would take his place.

  He was about to call the boys in when a text came from Jonah.

  Luna Amato is here.

  What’s she doing? Erasmus typed back, feeling a tide of anger well up in his chest.

  Watching the weather dude.

  Did she recognize you? Erasmus asked.

  The response came immediately. Nope. And I’m standing five feet away.

  What about Hamilton?

  He’s standing right next to me. He’s hard to miss. She hasn’t even looked at him.

  Another text flashed across the screen. Wait! She’s on the move.

  Just five days before, William McIntyre, an important Cahill adviser and one of Erasmus’s few friends, had been murdered in Rome. Luna was either in on the murder, or knew who did it. And Erasmus was determined to squeeze every bit of information out of her.

  Follow her. Like I taught you.

  Erasmus pulled a pair of binoculars out of his leather jacket and watched. Sure enough, it was Luna Amato. His jaw clenched as he zoomed in. The Vesper spy appeared harmless — she looked like a retired schoolteacher on a tour. But that’s what made her so deadly. What allowed her to bring down people like William.

  Erasmus lowered the binoculars and narrowed his eyes. All that was about to change.

  He wasn’t going to let the Vespers get away with murder again.

  Copyright © 2012 by Scholastic Inc.

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  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011937771

  ISBN 978-0-545-29841-4

  e-ISBN 978-0-545-34469-2

  Book design by SJI Associates, Inc.

  Book illustrations by Keirsten Geise, Charice Silverman, and SJI Associates for Scholastic.

  Lizard p. 131: © Lana Langlois/Shutterstock; hostages p. 131: Ken Karp and James Levin for Scholastic; astrolabe p. 170: © Ivy Close Images (RF)/Alamy.

  First edition, March 2012

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