Re: Spacesuit, Vol. 6: A Woman Scorned
Posted: Tue Nov 01, 2022 3:42 am
The morning dawned bright and early, and Bridget dawned with it. She was at the office before nine o'clock.
"Good morning, Mrs. Drake," she smiled at her editor.
"Hello, Bridget," Mrs. Drake responded. "Great work on that banking exposé. I'm amazed at how you manage to get so many good stories."
Bridget shrugged as she sat down at her desk. "Good old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting, I suppose. Nothing beats some classic investigative work."
Her boss nodded. "That's what I always tell people who ask for advice in journalism. Twenty years ago, I was something of an ace journalist myself. But you're one of a kind, Bridget. It takes some real talent to get the stories that you do."
Bridget smiled again as she turned on her computer. "Thanks, boss."
In fact, Mrs. Drake was closer to the truth than she knew. Bridget did have special talents, including an intelligence and resourcefulness that went beyond what the job entailed. But she also had other, more unorthodox talents, including her finely-honed skills of disguise, as well as the extralegal means by which she usually obtained the appropriate uniforms.
Bridget shuddered slightly as she recalled her recent encounter with Dr. Chen at Chrysalis Hall. The villainous woman had tried forcing Bridget to expose her trade secrets to her journalistic colleagues. Fortunately, that plan had failed, and Bridget had walked away with a trophy presented by her colleagues - that is, following a mix-up with Chloe and Robyn Cleary.
Bridget thought about the Cleary sisters again as she scanned her emails. The tickets to the Gosford ballet sounded tempting... but she had plans to work all day and into the night. It was hardly an ideal time for an extravagant show. But she recalled Chloe Cleary mention that she was a great ballet fan, and had been trying for weeks to earn tickets.
On a whim, Bridget decided to email Chloe and ask if she and her sister would be interested in some last-minute tickets.
Then, over the next few hours, Bridget worked steadily, typing up stories, researching sources, and double-checking her data. Although the fieldwork - the detective work and infiltrations - were her favorite part of the job, there was something refreshing and liberating about simply sitting at her desk and typing up a story.
It was just past noon when Bridget heard a voice behind her. "Hey."
She looked up to see Felicia standing over her desk.
"Hi!" She smiled at the young redhead. "What brings you here today?"
"Oh... just wanted to talk," Felicia responded, though her eyes seemed to lack their usual playful glow.
Bridget noticed. "Honey, is something wrong?"
Felicia sighed. "There is... I think there is." She looked around. "Can we talk... someplace private? There's something I need to tell you."
A concerned look crossed Bridget's face. "Of course. You can tell me anything."
She stood up from her desk. "Listen... why don't we grab some lunch and then meet in one of the private conference rooms? You can tell me what's on your mind there."
Felicia nodded. "Okay..."
**********************
Chandra tapped her foot impatiently as she stood waiting outside the gas station. This was getting ridiculous.
She wasn't asking for much. All she wanted was for a vehicle to pull up to the station for refueling, preferably with a woman at the wheel. A woman whose clothes did not naturally smell like gasoline. Was that so difficult?
But hardly any cars passed through this area - and even when they did, the drivers were usually men. So far, not a single patron at the station had been a woman.
Chandra checked her watch anxiously, then forced herself to keep calm. She was stressed, understandably, about Sonja's abduction. It had been several hours now, and she was still stranded in the middle of nowhere. But she had used the time wisely - resting, rejuvenating, and charting a course to the city. The city where - perhaps - she would find some help.
A cloud of dust appeared in the distance. Chandra squinted. A red pickup truck was cruising down the road, sputtering slightly from its hood. At the wheel was a woman who looked to be on the tall side. And she appeared to be in need of gas.
Chandra exhaled in relief. "Finally."
She put on her most professional smile as the pickup truck pulled up in front of the station.
The driver, a light-skinned woman with golden-brown hair and a dark brown cowgirl hat, rolled down the window. "Howdy," she smiled, a Southern twang in her voice. "So glad I found a fuel station out here. Think you can fill me up?"
Chandra's grin showed most of her teeth. "It would be my pleasure."
She was speculating over her next move when the driver made her choice easier. "You got a bathroom around here? I've been driving for hours."
Chandra nodded, and pointed a thumb behind her. "Just back there. You take care of business, I'll fill up your tank."
"Much obliged, ma'am." The woman opened the door and stepped out of the truck. Chandra checked her over. In addition to the hat, the brunette wore a brown woolen jacket over a plaid button-down shirt, blue denim jeans, and brown knee-high, low-heeled leather boots. And indeed, she appeared to be about the proper size.
Chandra watched the woman step past her and head to the rear of the station where the restrooms were.
The woman opened the door to the ladies' restroom and stepped inside. The room was small and not particularly clean, but it had the necessary accommodations. There were two bathroom stalls, though one appeared to be in use.
After washing up, however, the cowgirl frowned. It sounded like muted voices - some sort of moaning - was coming from the occupied stall.
She approached the stall and knocked on the door. "Everything okay in there?" To her surprise, the door swung open.
And to her greater surprise, the woman occupying the stall did not seem to be there willingly. She was stripped to her underwear, gagged and duct-taped to the toilet seat.
"For pity's sake," the woman gasped. "What happened to you, girl?"
"I can tell you that."
The woman whirled to see Chandra standing in the restroom entranceway, holding a roll of duct tape.
"Or better yet," Chandra continued as she tore off a long strip of the tape, "I can show you."
It wasn't much of a fight. Pretty soon Chandra was strolling out of the restroom, dressed in newly acquired garb, from her hat to her boots.
The real cowgirl sat on the toilet of the second bathroom stall, a confused expression on her face. She was stripped to her faded green T-shirt bra and matching hipsters, and secured to the toilet with liberal amounts of duct tape, with some leftover adhesive covering her mouth.
Chandra finished refueling the pickup truck and climbed inside. To her satisfaction, the truck came equipped with radio and GPS. She would be back at the city in no time.
Chandra started the engine and pulled the truck back onto the road, leaving the smell of gasoline behind. She was back in business.
**********************
Zuhal stirred, slowly, as consciousness returned to her.
It took only a few moments for her to realize her new situation. She was in some dimly lit warehouse, tied to a chair. The sounds and smells around her suggested she was near the beach.
"Ah, good. You're finally awake."
Zuhal looked around, and her eyes fell on the woman standing in the corner. At least, she sounded like a woman, though it was difficult to ascertain beneath the beekeeper's uniform and hat.
The woman approached Zuhal, who pulled against her bonds. "So good to see you again, dear friend."
Zuhal glared at her. "You have a funny way of treating friends... whoever you are."
"You don't recognize me? I'm offended." The woman's voice dripped with mockery. "Perhaps this will help."
She reached up and removed her hat, letting her long dark hair spill around her tan-skinned face. "How's this? Recognize me now?"
Zuhal's face went pale. "...Sabira?"
"Bingo," Sabira grinned, stepping closer to her captive. "Your old coworker, your partner in crime. Boy, those were the days, huh?"
"Not really," Zuhal deadpanned. "What's going on? Did you really miss me so much that you had to kidnap me?"
Sabira chuckled. "Funny girl. I guess you're trying to warm me over with your humor." Her face turned serious. "Well, it won't work, you traitor."
"Traitor?" Zuhal blinked. "Them's fighting words."
"Don't be cute," Sabira snarled. "You turned against us. You helped that Baxter bitch and her friends. It's because of you that Karima's in jail. I was nearly arrested myself, but I managed to escape before the police arrived."
She glanced out the window. "I've been on the run for weeks... No friends, no one to turn to. Karima's gone, and I'm stuck."
"How sad for you," Zuhal replied, without sounding all that sad. "So I suppose you want me to... what? Help you break Karima out of prison?"
"Nothing so dramatic," Sabira said, turning back to her captive. "Karima's locked away in maximum security, and I have no fantasies about setting her free. It would be virtually impossible, after all."
"So what do you want?" Zuhal was growing wary.
"I want Bridget Baxter dead," Sabira responded. "I'm going to kill her. And you're going to help me."
Zuhal laughed. "I'm past that part of my life, Sabira. Bridget's actually not a bad woman, once you get to know her."
"She ruined my life," Sabira said coldly. "So it's only fair that I end hers." She strolled over to the table. "I just need you to give me some information about her. About her job, her schedule, her personal life. Any information you may know that I can use."
"And why would I tell you any of that?" Zuhal asked.
Sabira placed the beekeeper's hat back on her head, letting the netting fall over her face. She hoisted a glass jar in her hands and approached Zuhal.
As she grew near, Zuhal could see that the jar was filled with over three dozen bumblebees. The steady buzz emanating from the insects was enough to send a chill down her spine.
"Because if you don't," Sabira said slowly, "I will open this jar, and let nature run its course."
Zuhal gulped.
"I'll be protected from any unwanted bites or stings by this uniform," Sabira continued. "But you, dear... That'll be a different story. As I recall from one of our old conversations, you're allergic to bee stings, aren't you? Perhaps one or two won't do much... but a dozen or more... I expect you'll die slowly, and very... very painfully."
Though Sabira's face was hidden by netting, Zuhal could see the icy cruel glint in her eye. This was not an idle threat.
She started to speak. "I can give you her home address... and the address of her workplace... but that's about it."
"That will suffice." Sabira placed the jar on a side table, perching it precariously on the edge. The she took out a pen and paper. "Speak quickly, though. That jar is liable to fall and shatter at any moment... I expect the little bees inside will be quite angry if that happens."
Zuhal couldn't help herself. She rattled off the address info and directions to a sneering Sabira.
Once finished, Zuhal hung her head in shame.
"You've done a great job," Sabira smiled. She pushed the jar away from the table's edge.
Zuhal felt herself growing calmer, until she heard Sabira's next chuckling words. "Unfortunately, you still have to die."
Without warning, she grabbed Zuhal by the hair, pulled out a hypodermic needle, and injected it into the side of her captive's neck.
Zuhal felt the strange liquid pulse through her body. She froze, and then her mind began to loosen. Her arms and legs slumped, her head lolled to one side.
"What..." She tried to speak. "What did you just... do to me..."
"Just a harmless paralytic agent," Sabira explained. "It freezes all your muscles and speaking abilities. It should wear off in about twelve hours."
Then she held up a black metallic device, about the size of a phone book.
Zuhal recognized it - a bomb!
"Unfortunately for you," Sabira continued, sliding the explosive device beneath Zuhal's chair, "this little contraption is set to go off in about ten hours."
She stood up and smiled at Zuhal, who by now had lost all motor functions in her arms and legs. "You have the rest of the day to make peace with yourself, and all the poor decisions in your life. Then, when the clock strikes ten - BOOM! It all goes out with a bang."
"Sabira... pl... please..." Zuhal's speech functions were slurring as well.
"Sorry, Zuhal, no time to chat. I have to go kill Bridget now," Sabira said coolly. "Goodbye... forever."
She turned and exited the warehouse, her cold laughter echoing in Zuhal's ears.
As the sounds of an engine faded into the distance, Zuhal sat motionless. All grew silent, save for the hum of the bomb beneath her chair, the buzzing of bees on the table, and and the slow ticking of the clock on the wall.
For the first time in as long as she could remember, Zuhal was truly afraid.
******************
It had been a busy and chaotic few weeks, to be certain.
Over the brief period, Prema had had her life threatened multiple times. She had been kidnapped on several occasions. She had gotten her clothes stolen and been tied up. She had attacked other women, stolen their clothes, and tied them up - a practice she was still uneasy about, even as more and more women were learning to embrace it.
But at last, things were looking up. Prema had a steady job and a relatively quiet few days. According to news reports, Meredith and Lucinda, who had tried on multiple occasions to kill her, had at last been captured and arrested. And she now was - potentially - in love.
So when Moira texted her with the opportunity to attend a ballet show at the Gosford theater, Prema felt a sense of joy she had not felt in a long while. She had been a lifelong fan of the ballet, after all - it was thrilling and romantic, particularly if she could share it with a woman she now felt rather attracted to.
At lunch break, she gave Moira a call.
"Hello?" Moira picked up on the third ring.
"Hello, Moira," Prema smiled. "I got your invite for the ballet. I need to move some things around my schedule, but... yes, I'd be happy to go with you."
"Great!" Moira sounded elated. "I can pick you up at eight o'clock tonight. Wear something fancy, it's a pretty posh establishment."
"I should have something in my closet," Prema responded. "This is so exciting. I used to love going to the ballet, but tickets have become so expensive... I haven't been able to go in years..."
She paused for a moment. There was a sound in the background on Moira's end. It sounded like a woman's voice, loud yet muffled.
"Moira," she asked. "What's that noise?"
There was a pause. "Nothing," Moira replied. "I must have left the TV on."
Prema sighed. "Moira," she said with a note of exasperation, "are you currently mugging another woman for her clothes?"
"Of course not," Moira replied. "How could I do that, particularly while on the phone with you? That's ridiculous."
Prema was silent for a moment. The muffled sounds continued.
"So, I'll pick you up at eight?" Moira asked cautiously.
"...Yes," Prema replied. "Eight o'clock. See you then."
She hung up the phone.
It had been good to hear Moira's voice, and it would be great to meet her at the ballet. But Prema now felt a bit uncomfortable.
"Just get used to it, girl," she murmured to herself. "This is just how the world is now."
*******************
Moira had been telling the truth to Prema - sort of. She had not been mugging another woman during the phone call.
In truth, she had mugged the woman before the phone call, and had been in the process of tying her up when Prema rang.
The woman in question was a maid at the hotel where Moira had been working undercover. Though her concierge disguise had provided her with access to Mr. Cambron's card, Moira decided to err on the side of caution and search his room for some condemning evidence. Thus, she had lured the maid into one of the linen closets, then used some chloroform to relieve her of duty for the day.
The maid, a tan-skinned Latina with a bun of dark brown hair, now sat on the floor of the linen closet, stripped to her lavender bikini bra and matching tanga panties. Moira had used strips of linen to bind her, while a smaller strip of linen had been used as a gag.
Moira had already dressed in the woman's light blue short-sleeve uniform and comfortable white shoes. She slipped her phone into one of the uniform's pockets.
The maid, stirred awake by the sounds of the phone call, moaned into her gag, struggling to get free. Moira reached down and stroked her hair.
"I'm sorry about this, dear... and I know I might seem callous in taking a phone call while tying you up... but I promise, this call was from a very special woman."
The maid drooped her head and sobbed. Moira felt a sting of guilt, and knelt down beside her.
"Hey... hey, listen to me. Don't feel sorry for yourself. You're not the only woman I've mugged at this hotel. Just try to relax... Someone will find you before long."
She wasn't usually so personal with the women she mugged, but speaking to Prema had reminded her that a lot of women were still uncomfortable by the prospect of uniform stealing, and a bit of sympathy couldn't hurt.
"Are you cold?" Moira asked. "Would you like a pillow or something? I promise, my intention was never to hurt you. I just needed your clothes for work-related reasons."
The maid didn't respond, but she looked quite sad. Moira took a blanket from one of the shelves and covered her with it, preserving her warmth and modesty.
She kissed the maid on the forehead. "Thank you... and I really do apologize."
She exited the closet, shut the door, and began pushing the maid's cart down the hall.
She knew the maid would probably stay tied up in that closet for several hours. And she knew how Prema was no fan of mugging innocent women for their clothes. But perhaps a polite and courteous demeanor had helped soothed some of the poor maid's fears.
********************
Bridget took a sip from her thermos and smiled at Felicia.
"So, honey... tell me what's on your mind."
Felicia fiddled with the cup of coffee that Bridget had poured for her, trying to think of the right words.
"Bridget," she began, "you now I love the work you do. The work that we've done, together, these past few years."
Bridget nodded.
"And I've had fun... lots of it," Felicia continued. "Investigative reporting, going undercover, wearing disguises and sneaking into restricted areas... It's all been thrilling, and of course it's given us a lot of opportunities to expose the corrupt and bring stories to light that would otherwise be ignored."
She paused for what seemed like an eternity. "But... I don't think I can do this anymore."
Though she had been braced for a "but," Bridget still looked surprised. "Felicia... what do you mean?"
"You know what I mean," Felicia said. "All these infiltrations - mugging women, tying them up, stealing their clothes. When I was younger, it was thrilling, but the longer it goes on... the less I like it."
She stared down at her coffee cup. "I'm a grown woman, Bridget," she continued. "At some point, I want to settle down with my life... Find a husband, raise a family. But I can't keep doing that if I keep putting my life in danger with these infiltrations, and I can't be a good family woman if I spend my time judo-chopping innocent women and tying them up in their underwear."
"There's no reason you can't do both," Bridget interjected. "I'm sure there are plenty of married women whose jobs require them to engage in infiltrative tactics."
"But that's not me," Felicia replied. "What we do, Bridget... it comes at a cost. The women we mug don't just lose their clothes - they lose their sense of normality. They're just tied up in their underwear, and abandoned for hours... while we just put on their clothes and go on our merry way." She looked up at Bridget. "Don't you feel sorry for them?"
"I do," Bridget said. "But I don't try to hurt these women intentionally. Like the saying goes, it's not personal... it's just business."
Felicia visibly winced.
Bridget set down her thermos. "Is this... about Bobbi?"
Felicia hesitated, then gave a nod. "That's part of it. Bobbi has... changed in recent weeks. She's become cold... callous. She enjoys mugging women for their uniforms and feeling superior to them. I've tried confronting her about it, but... she just won't listen."
She drew a breath. "I'm the one who introduced Bobbi to this world of infiltration and disguise in the first place... and I can't help feeling responsible for how she's changed."
"That's not your fault," Bridget argued. "Bobbi's an adult woman. She makes her own choices. You can't help that."
"But I could have," Felicia responded. "Life was much simpler before we started all these uniform stealing tactics. If I keep it up, I don't know what'll happen. If Bobbi can become the way she is, what's to stop me from becoming the same? Hell, maybe I already am the same..."
"Felicia..." Bridget began.
"Don't try to talk me out of this," Felicia continued. "I've made up my mind. I want a normal life, and that means no more infiltrations. No more attacking innocent women so I can play dress-up."
Bridget stayed silent for several long moments. Then she nodded.
"I understand, Felicia. I wish you'd reconsider... but I respect your decisions."
"Thanks... I knew you would." Felicia stood up and held out her hand to Bridget. "Thank you, Bridget... for everything. You really showed me the unlimited impact that we as women can have in the world."
Bridget shook her hand. "That's all I've ever wanted to do... Make an impact."
Felicia smiled at her friend. "I'll see you around."
"I'm sure you will," Bridget replied. "Goodbye, and good luck."
Felicia exited the room, leaving Bridget quietly rotating her thermos.
She was not shocked by this decision - Felicia's growing distaste with their line of work had become apparent in recent weeks - but it was still a lot to take in. And she would need some time to absorb it.
*******************
After a few hours of long and barren dirt roads, Chandra reached the city. The pickup truck sputtered over the bridge, only a bit worse for the wear.
Chandra was appreciative of the vehicle for getting her back on track, but she knew that it would not be the ideal transport to traverse the city. Besides, its bright red color would make it stand out among the crowd, and Chandra wanted to maintain a low profile.
She found a space on a quiet side road and pulled over, scanning the area for other opportunities.
Her eye fell upon a gleaming black-and-silver motorcycle leaning against a nearby post. One of the newer models, the type that moved fast without making too much noise. Chandra smiled.
Her smile broadened when she saw the cycle's owner exit a nearby pawn shop and approach the bike. The motorcyclist was a woman in her early thirties, with a dark grey leather jacket and matching pants, silver boots, and a black helmet tucked under one arm. She had light skin and hair that was dyed a lime shade of green, close-cut on the left side and shoulder-length on the right.
The woman knelt down beside her bike and began fiddling with the lock. Chandra stepped out of the pickup truck and made her approach.
"Nice bike," she commented.
The woman looked up at her and smiled. "Thanks... It's expensive, but it gets me where I need to go."
"I'll bet," Chandra replied. She tilted her head and a look of concern crossed her face. "Only... you may want to get that rear wheel checked out. It looks kind of low."
The cyclist glanced at the wheel, a look of confusion on her face. "It looks fine to me."
"I've seen that sort of thing before," Chandra continued. "Worked on a lot of motorbikes in my shop. The chassis is too low and the suspension is off-base. Could be dangerous at high speeds."
Chandra did not actually know anything about motorcycle repair, and wasn't sure the uniform she currently wore was convincing as a mechanic's garb. But she had often learned that the tone and manner of saying words could often carry more weight than the words themselves.
The green-haired woman now looked concerned. "Are you sure? I took it to my mechanic last week, he said it was fine..."
"I'm sure he did," Chandra continued. "A lot of these mechanics try to take advantage of customers, especially young women. But you seem like a fine girl... I can give you a quick inspection, free of charge."
The cyclist looked surprised. "Really?"
"Of course," Chandra smiled. "You deserve better than what other mechanics give you." She pointed to a nearby alley. "My garage is behind those buildings. We can fetch some new parts there. Won't take more than a few minutes."
"Wow, thanks," the cyclist smiled. She stood up and followed Chandra toward the alley.
Chandra's plan was working so easily that she almost felt sorry for the woman. But now was not the time to distract herself with emotion. She suppressed a grin as they stepped down the alley.
The cyclist frowned as they reached the end of the dimly lit alleyway. "I don't see a garage entrance... This looks like a dead end."
Chandra chuckled. "I was wondering when you would catch on."
The cyclist noticed the gleam in Chandra's eye. She started to back away in concern, then turned to run.
Chandra's fingers quickly seized the collar of the woman's leather jacket, pulling her backwards and off-balance. "What's your hurry, darling?" she cooed. "Don't you want an inspection?"
Before the cyclist could voice her protest, Chandra had begun her "inspection" with some thick knuckles against the woman's skull. A few more raps and punches, and the cyclist was down for the count.
Chandra then proceeded to "inspect" the girl's clothes, removing them from her unconscious figure before donning them herself.
The cyclist looked quite lovely in her crimson sports bra and checkered blue hiphuggers, and her figure was accentuated by an artistic snake tattoo that coiled up and around her upper left leg. The woman had style, even when she didn't have clothes.
Sonja would have loved this woman's underwear. The thought of her friend made Chandra's lip tremble in fear, but she steeled herself once again.
Chandra dragged the cyclist over to a nearby dumpster, using baling twine to secure her and an old cloth to silence her. She considered dropping the woman into the dumpster, but after a second thought, decided to simply stash her behind it.
"Maybe I'm getting soft," she chuckled to herself, returning to the alleyway entrance.
Chandra hopped aboard the motorcycle, donning the helmet and gunning the engine. The vehicle roared to life, and she was quickly speeding down the block.
Now to start searching. It was a big city, but she knew she could find Bridget before long.
********************
Following their meeting at Ms. Caldwell's mansion, Evelyn and Harper had wanted to begin their planning for the Gosford mission right away. However, Jenna had mentioned the need to run a few errands before the night, and asked them to discuss plans without her.
Harper had given her a strange look, but had said nothing. Which had been fortunate, as she would probably have mocked Jenna endlessly had she known where the young woman was going.
Jenna walked up to the large, stately building of City Hall. This was the mayor's office, the central conduit of the city and the place where all the most important issues were brought to the table. Jenna had interned at the building years ago, during her freshman year of college - it was the job that had first gotten her interested in politics, and given her the inspiration to make a difference in the world. To this day, she remained politically active and determined to get more women involved in higher office - she had donated to plenty of female candidates over the years, including in the most recent mayor's race.
The current mayor, however, was a man, and Jenna knew that he probably wouldn't be interested in hearing about her issue. Nevertheless, she was strong-willed and determined, and a sense of confidence washed over her as she walked up the large marble steps of the building.
The guard at the front desk was reading a newspaper. He looked up to see the professionally-dressed woman approached.
"Good afternoon," Jenna said. "I'd like to speak with the mayor, please." She had learned over the years to be assertive in her conversations and get straight to the point.
"Do you have an appointment?" the man asked.
"Not officially," Jenna replied. "But I have to discuss an issue of utmost importance."
The man chuckled. "You and everyone else."
Jenna frowned. No matter how often it happened, it always stung when a man laughed at her. "I'm serious," she said. "Over the last few years, there's been an alarming uptick in violent incidents committed against women by other women who intend to steal their clothes and uniforms. It's become widespread here and in several other cities, and it's time the mayor got involved."
The guard was by now ignoring her and had gone back to reading his paper. "Sweetheart, I'm sure you have some important things to talk about, but you need an appointment. That's the rules."
Jenna glared at the guard, but she knew there was no use convincing him. Men were impossible to persuade, especially if they were in positions of authority.
"Whatever," she grumbled, and turned to go.
As she reached the door, she had to step back as it swung open.
"Oh! Excuse me, honey." A woman entered the lobby, carrying two large packages under her arms. "Running a bit late with deliveries."
She quickly stepped past Jenna and approached the front desk. "Hey. I've got the new office equipment the mayor ordered. Where do you want them?"
The guard gestured behind him. "Right down the hall. Just leave it by the storage room door."
"Sure thing." The deliverywoman stepped past the desk and disappeared down the hall.
A minute later, she returned. This time Jenna got a better look at her. She was tall and broad-shouldered, with light skin and chin-length brown hair. She wore a dark brown delivery uniform of short-sleeve shirt and cargo pants, plus short thick brown boots.
"I've got a few more packages in my truck," the woman told the officer. "Will be back in a minute."
"Mm-hm." The guard nodded, but didn't look up from his paper.
Jenna watched as the deliverywoman exited the building again. She could see that the woman was approximately her equal in size.
Immediately, the idea formed in her head. A delivery uniform could be the access key she needed...
Jenna quickly pushed the thought from her mind. She was taking a stand against mugging women for their clothes! She did not want to partake in the practice herself.
And yet...
Jenna sighed. "Screw it," she muttered as she quickly stepped out the door.
The deliverywoman had parked her truck at the loading dock, located behind the building. She returned to it now, humming a jaunty tune, and opened the rear doors. She hoisted herself up and climbed inside, and began rummaging through the packages strewn about the floor.
Quietly, furtively, Jenna crept up on the truck. A glance around the area told her the coast was clear. Then she swiftly climbed up into the rear of the truck, shutting the doors behind her.
The words that followed - both the deliverywoman's confused "Who are you?" and Jenna's hastily mumbled apology in return - were muffled by the truck, as were the sounds of scuffling which followed. The vehicle rocked back and forth ever so slightly as Jenna did her best to subdue the woman as quickly and painlessly as possible.
Ten minutes later, the truck doors opened again. Jenna stepped out, now clad in the delivery uniform and boots. She carried a package under her arm and held a clipboard in her hand.
She allowed herself one last, guilty look at the real deliverywoman. The unconscious brunette lay on the dusty floor of the truck, stripped to her olive green sports bra and black hipsters. She had been bound and gagged with clear brown packing tape that Jenna had located in the van.
"I'm so sorry about this," Jenna said softly. "But if my plan works, you and millions of other women will never have to worry about getting mugged for your clothes again."
She shut the van doors, then headed around to the front of the building.
Jenna held the clipboard in front of her face as she entered the building, pretending to read it while also hoping it would help obscure her identity. The gamble worked - the guard offered her little more than a curt nod as she passed.
She was in! Jenna allowed herself a smile. Even if she had not personally approved of her own tactics, there was little doubt they had worked to her advantage.
She consulted a directory on the wall. The mayor's office was on the third floor. Jenna merely had to slip in, drop off her request, and get out.
However, while the delivery disguise had gotten her past the front desk, it would not be easy for her to wander around the upper floors dressed as she was. She would probably get thrown out of the building if she tried to enter the head office this way.
As Jenna considered her options, she heard footsteps echoing down the hall. Instinctively, she ducked into a nearby supply closet.
The footsteps belonged to another young woman, whose attire suggested she was a secretary. Tall, slender, and fair-skinned, with a blonde hairbun and horn-rimmed glasses. She wore a purple blouse over white cotton shirt, pleated black skirt, and brown kitten heels.
Like the deliverywoman, the secretary was similar to Jenna in height and build. And she was certainly the sort of employee who could wander around the building without fear of suspicion.
Jenna had already hurt one woman in her quest to reach the mayor's office, and did not want to hurt another. However, she had already come this far. There was no turning back now.
As the secretary passed the doorway, Jenna leaned out and clamped a hand over mouth.
"Forgive me," she whispered as she pulled the surprised woman into the closet.
Whether the secretary was in a forgiving mood or not ultimately proved beside the point. A quick and mostly painless neck chop was all it took to render her out of commission.
Jenna was relieved to see that the secretary carried an "all access" keycard in her pocket. That would make moving around the rest of the facility easier. She would still need this woman's clothes, but promised herself that no further disguises would be necessary.
The real secretary, now dressed only in an orange comfort bra and matching bikini briefs, sat unconscious in the corner of the room, wrists and ankles zip-tied and mouth covered with silver tape. Jenna felt sorry for her, though admittedly not as sorry as she did for the deliverywoman.
She works for the mayor's office... surrounded by obnoxious men all day. Even if she gets fired for this, I'm probably doing her a favor...
Jenna pushed the thought from her mind. She knew it wasn't right to speculate on the woman's work life. She just needed the clothes, no need to rationalize beyond that, and certainly no reason to make hurtful generalizations about another woman.
After locking the closet, Jenna headed down the hall to the elevator. A swipe of the keycard allowed her to ascend to the third floor.
It wasn't difficult to locate the mayor's office - it was the room with the heavy oak frame and gold-embossed lettering. The door was ajar; Jenna peeked inside.
The mayor was at his desk, talking away on the phone. His chair was turned away from the door. Jenna slipped inside, manila envelope in hand.
Jenna had been prepping the envelope for several days now. It included multiple newspaper clippings of local stories - stories about women who had been found in closets and storage rooms, tied up and gagged in their underwear. Jenna had also included an "official" letter from the city police department - which she had typed up herself, on documents obtained from the police vehicle she and her friends had hijacked the night before - asking the mayor to deal with the new rise in female clothes thefts.
Jenna approached the pile of papers and envelopes in the mayor's inbox. She was about to slip her own addition into the pile when she noticed the name on the topmost envelope - "Gina Caldwell."
Didn't realize my boss had dealings with City Hall...
Though it made sense, given Caldwell's wealth, influence, and ability to keep her head above water.
Returning to the task at hand, Jenna slipped her envelope in midst of the inbox pile. Then she turned to go.
"Ahem!"
Jenna froze. Slowly, she turned around. The mayor was looking at her, an annoyed frown on his face.
"Just what do you think you're doing?" he asked.
Jenna gulped. "I... I was just..."
"Didn't the other girls teach you about the office?" he asked. "Whenever you come in, you gotta give me a smile!"
Jenna paused in confusion. "A...? Oh, of course."
She smiled, about as good a smile as he could muster.
"Very nice," the mayor nodded. "You're one of the prettier girls we've hired recently. Guess I'll see you around."
Jenna nodded, trying not to cringe. "Yes... sir."
She turned heel and walked out of the office.
"Men," she muttered to herself, giving a brief shudder. "Honestly..."
As she exited the building, her phone buzzed. She answered it as she stepped down the stair.
"Jen, where the hell are you?" Harper's voice did not sound happy. "You said you'd be done your work by five. It's a quarter to six."
"Sorry, sorry... took a bit longer than I thought." Jenna glanced back at the building as she headed for the sidewalk. "Where are you guys? I'll meet up with you."
"We're on our way to the Gosford now. Plan's all set."
Jenna glanced at her watch. "I'm across town. I can be there in an hour."
"Well, we're already behind schedule. Hustle your ass."
*******************
Sabira scouted the block around Bridget Baxter's workplace, confirming it was free of police or security cameras.
Engaged in this task, she wore a grey hooded sweatshirt and dark sunglasses. After all, she was still a wanted woman in connection to Karima.
Sabira sighed as she remembered Karima. Her old boss could have been moody and at times unstable, but the two women had formed a respectful bond over their years of collaboration. But now the team was gone, and Sabira was the only one still standing and ready to preserve its memory.
That was why, above all else, Bridget had to die. Sabira needed to preserve her friend's honor. No one took down Karima and got away with it.
Parked at the corner of the block was a mall green truck. The signage indicated it was the property of a phone tech company.
The truck was empty at the moment, but Sabira could see some work going on inside the adjoining building. There was a female technician working on the phone lines.
Through the foggy windows, Sabira could see that the technician was a light-skinned woman with shoulder-length sandy brown hair, dressed in olive green coveralls, rubber-heeled brown boots, and a black baseball cap. She also appeared to be about the right size, or at least a close approximation.
Sabira checked to make sure no one was watching her. Then she quietly stepped towards the parked truck.
The rear doors, thankfully, were not locked. Sabira quickly slipped inside and shut the door behind her. Then she crouched down between the tools and coils of electrical wiring, and waited.
After about fifteen minutes, the technician returned to her truck, job complete. She opened the rear doors, intent on depositing her tools before driving off.
As she bent down to secure her toolbox, Sabira made her move. She sprang up from her hiding place and quickly closed the gap between herself and her prey.
The technician was startled, and was about to scream, but one of Sabira's hands covered her mouth. The other hand closed the truck door, granting the women some privacy.
The technician started panicking, with muffled cries against Sabira's palm. Sabira quickly put a stop to that by withdrawing a small but sharp knife from her pocket and holding its tip an inch from the woman's neck.
"You seem like a smart woman," she said coolly. "Probably have some kind of degree to work in your field, eh? So I'll offer you a choice... Either hand over your uniform, or we'll see just how far I can stick this knife into your pretty little throat."
The technician stared at Sabira, eyes wide in terror. She was shaking, trying to maintain her composure.
"Tick-tock," Sabira said, a bare hint of menace in her voice.
Slowly, with trembling fingers, the technician reached up to her collar and began unbuttoning her jumpsuit.
"Atta girl," Sabira smiled. "I knew you were smart."
The technician's acquiescence had spared her her life - but not, as soon became clear, her dignity. Beneath her uniform, she wore a lavender triangle bra and matching bikini briefs - both decorated with bright yellow cheerful emojis.
"Don't you look adorable," Sabira mused a few minutes later as she donned the technician's uniform. "Wish Karima was here to chuckle at this."
The technician looked up at her assailant with frightened, pleading eyes. She wanted to speak out, but her mouth was gagged with black electrical tape, and her long limbs bound with thick green cables.
"Just relax," Sabira said, scooping up her equipment and carefully loading it into the technician's toolbox. "Someone will find you in about ten or twelve hours. And unlike some of the less intelligent women who tried to fight me in the past, you'll live to tell the tale."
Affixing the baseball cap over her head, she exited the truck and locked the door, leaving the softly sobbing technician to contemplate her fate.
Then she stepped gingerly toward the newspaper building, a sinister smile on her face.
***********************
Bobbi's brow furrowed. She glanced at her phone for perhaps the tenth time in the last hour.
Why wasn't Zuhal responding?
Bobbi had texted her first thing in the morning to set up their next training date, and Zuhal was usually quite prompt with responses. Yet it was now almost evening, and Zuhal had yet to respond to the text or its three follow-up messages. It wasn't even clear if she had seen them.
Could she be in trouble? It could be nothing, but knowing Zuhal... After all, the woman had made her fair share of enemies, on both sides of the law.
Bobbi started texting Felicia. Perhaps she could help sort out the mess.
Then she stopped herself. No, she did not want Felicia or Bridget to know that she had formed a close bond with Zuhal. Besides, the prior night's events at the lab compound told Bobbi that perhaps her friends needed a bit of space.
She would need to figure it out for herself.
Fortunately, Bridget had taught her all the tricks of phone tracing. She hopped on her computer and got to work. As long as Zuhal's phone was still on battery...
Bingo. She was registering a blip from Zuhal's number. It appeared to be coming from an island harbor, just off the coastland.
Suspicious... why would Zuhal be on a coastal island? She hated swimming, and had not mentioned any special jobs recently.
Bobbi grabbed her coat and headed for the door. She also scooped up her backpack. The pack contained her usual implements when venturing into the unknown - cables, duct tape, and chloroform pads.
It never hurt to be prepared.
*********************
Bridget finished her article, typing out a finely-worded conclusion. She leaned back in her chair and stretched.
Mrs. Drake walked over to her, a large smile on her face. "Still here, Bridget? You really are dedicated."
Bridget smiled back. "Just trying to earn my salary, boss."
Mrs. Drake chuckled. "I remember I was like that at your age... Strong, spirited, willing to do anything to finish a story." She glaced at Bridget's computer screen. "Speaking of which, is it finished?"
"Just about. I just want to go over it again for any errors, and then it'll be on your desk."
"Sounds good... I'm going to get a muffin downstairs. Want anything?"
Bridget politely shook her head. "Not very hungry. But thanks."
Mrs. Drake nodded again. "I understand. Keep up the good work."
She stepped away from Bridget's desk and past rows of other, empty desks. Nearly everyone else had gone home by now.
Needing to stretch her legs, Mrs. Drake passed the elevator and took the stairs down to the first floor.
As she stepped down the quiet hallway, she noticed another woman walking towards her. Dark hair, tanned skin, dressed in green coveralls, boots, and a baseball cap. She appeared to be a technician, carrying a toolbox in one hand.
"Hi," Mrs. Drake smiled at the woman. "Can I help you?"
The woman gave a curt nod as she stepped toward the elevator. "Just heading for the newspaper offices... We got a call that the Internet was down, so I'm here to give it a look."
Mrs. Drake's brow furrowed. "Internet down? It's been working fine all day."
Sabira froze, her finger inches from the elevator button. Shit.
"What's going on here?" Mrs. Drake placed a hand on Sabira's shoulder. "Are you really a technician? I don't..."
In a lightning-swift move, Sabira reached around and grabbed Mrs. Drake's wrist. She twisted as hard as she could.
Mrs. Drake let out a cry of pain, her knees buckling. Sabira quickly smacked a hand over her mouth and shoved her against the wall.
"Stupid bitch... you ask too many questions." Sabira pulled out her knife and held it against Mrs. Drake's neck. "I only came here to kill Bridget... but I guess you'll have to die too."
Mrs. Drake felt the cold steel of the knife against her neck. Her eyes filled with tears. "Nnmmpphhh... plmmmpphhh..."
Sabira let out a throaty chuckle. "Ah, my favorite part... I love when they beg for their lives..."
Thinking instinctively, Mrs. Drake lashed out, striking her fist hard against Sabira's waist. It was a sudden and direct hit. Sabira let out a cry of pain.
"You stupid..." Sabira grabbed Mrs. Drake by the shoulders and whirled her around, slamming her back against a nearby marble desk.
Pain shot up Mrs. Drake's spine. With a groan, she sank to the floor, nearly unconscious.
Sabira raised one of her boots, preparing to stomp down on Mrs. Drake's head. "Nice knowing you, bitch."
But at that moment, the sound of a dinging elevator alerted her. Someone else had descended to the lobby.
Shit shit shit. Sabira had already compromised her cover. She couldn't risk more trouble.
She scooped up the toolbox and headed for the nearest window. "Next time, Baxter," she muttered.
Sabira clambered out the window just in time. She was gone by the moment the elevator doors slid open.
Bridget exited the elevator, glancing around the lobby.
"Mrs. Drake? I changed my mind... maybe I'll join you for a muffin. Mrs. Drake...?"
Bridget turned the corner and gasped.
Her employer lay on the ground next to the lobby desk, her body bruised and motionless.
Bridget forced herself to stay calm as she knelt down and checked for a pulse. Mrs. Drake was alive... but badly hurt.
Bridget did not know what had happened, but she took a deep breath as she whipped out her phone and dialed a quick set of numbers.
"Nine-one-one, what is your emergency?"
"I... I need an ambulance," Bridget stammered out, glancing down again at her boss. "Please, hurry..."
"Good morning, Mrs. Drake," she smiled at her editor.
"Hello, Bridget," Mrs. Drake responded. "Great work on that banking exposé. I'm amazed at how you manage to get so many good stories."
Bridget shrugged as she sat down at her desk. "Good old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting, I suppose. Nothing beats some classic investigative work."
Her boss nodded. "That's what I always tell people who ask for advice in journalism. Twenty years ago, I was something of an ace journalist myself. But you're one of a kind, Bridget. It takes some real talent to get the stories that you do."
Bridget smiled again as she turned on her computer. "Thanks, boss."
In fact, Mrs. Drake was closer to the truth than she knew. Bridget did have special talents, including an intelligence and resourcefulness that went beyond what the job entailed. But she also had other, more unorthodox talents, including her finely-honed skills of disguise, as well as the extralegal means by which she usually obtained the appropriate uniforms.
Bridget shuddered slightly as she recalled her recent encounter with Dr. Chen at Chrysalis Hall. The villainous woman had tried forcing Bridget to expose her trade secrets to her journalistic colleagues. Fortunately, that plan had failed, and Bridget had walked away with a trophy presented by her colleagues - that is, following a mix-up with Chloe and Robyn Cleary.
Bridget thought about the Cleary sisters again as she scanned her emails. The tickets to the Gosford ballet sounded tempting... but she had plans to work all day and into the night. It was hardly an ideal time for an extravagant show. But she recalled Chloe Cleary mention that she was a great ballet fan, and had been trying for weeks to earn tickets.
On a whim, Bridget decided to email Chloe and ask if she and her sister would be interested in some last-minute tickets.
Then, over the next few hours, Bridget worked steadily, typing up stories, researching sources, and double-checking her data. Although the fieldwork - the detective work and infiltrations - were her favorite part of the job, there was something refreshing and liberating about simply sitting at her desk and typing up a story.
It was just past noon when Bridget heard a voice behind her. "Hey."
She looked up to see Felicia standing over her desk.
"Hi!" She smiled at the young redhead. "What brings you here today?"
"Oh... just wanted to talk," Felicia responded, though her eyes seemed to lack their usual playful glow.
Bridget noticed. "Honey, is something wrong?"
Felicia sighed. "There is... I think there is." She looked around. "Can we talk... someplace private? There's something I need to tell you."
A concerned look crossed Bridget's face. "Of course. You can tell me anything."
She stood up from her desk. "Listen... why don't we grab some lunch and then meet in one of the private conference rooms? You can tell me what's on your mind there."
Felicia nodded. "Okay..."
**********************
Chandra tapped her foot impatiently as she stood waiting outside the gas station. This was getting ridiculous.
She wasn't asking for much. All she wanted was for a vehicle to pull up to the station for refueling, preferably with a woman at the wheel. A woman whose clothes did not naturally smell like gasoline. Was that so difficult?
But hardly any cars passed through this area - and even when they did, the drivers were usually men. So far, not a single patron at the station had been a woman.
Chandra checked her watch anxiously, then forced herself to keep calm. She was stressed, understandably, about Sonja's abduction. It had been several hours now, and she was still stranded in the middle of nowhere. But she had used the time wisely - resting, rejuvenating, and charting a course to the city. The city where - perhaps - she would find some help.
A cloud of dust appeared in the distance. Chandra squinted. A red pickup truck was cruising down the road, sputtering slightly from its hood. At the wheel was a woman who looked to be on the tall side. And she appeared to be in need of gas.
Chandra exhaled in relief. "Finally."
She put on her most professional smile as the pickup truck pulled up in front of the station.
The driver, a light-skinned woman with golden-brown hair and a dark brown cowgirl hat, rolled down the window. "Howdy," she smiled, a Southern twang in her voice. "So glad I found a fuel station out here. Think you can fill me up?"
Chandra's grin showed most of her teeth. "It would be my pleasure."
She was speculating over her next move when the driver made her choice easier. "You got a bathroom around here? I've been driving for hours."
Chandra nodded, and pointed a thumb behind her. "Just back there. You take care of business, I'll fill up your tank."
"Much obliged, ma'am." The woman opened the door and stepped out of the truck. Chandra checked her over. In addition to the hat, the brunette wore a brown woolen jacket over a plaid button-down shirt, blue denim jeans, and brown knee-high, low-heeled leather boots. And indeed, she appeared to be about the proper size.
Chandra watched the woman step past her and head to the rear of the station where the restrooms were.
The woman opened the door to the ladies' restroom and stepped inside. The room was small and not particularly clean, but it had the necessary accommodations. There were two bathroom stalls, though one appeared to be in use.
After washing up, however, the cowgirl frowned. It sounded like muted voices - some sort of moaning - was coming from the occupied stall.
She approached the stall and knocked on the door. "Everything okay in there?" To her surprise, the door swung open.
And to her greater surprise, the woman occupying the stall did not seem to be there willingly. She was stripped to her underwear, gagged and duct-taped to the toilet seat.
"For pity's sake," the woman gasped. "What happened to you, girl?"
"I can tell you that."
The woman whirled to see Chandra standing in the restroom entranceway, holding a roll of duct tape.
"Or better yet," Chandra continued as she tore off a long strip of the tape, "I can show you."
It wasn't much of a fight. Pretty soon Chandra was strolling out of the restroom, dressed in newly acquired garb, from her hat to her boots.
The real cowgirl sat on the toilet of the second bathroom stall, a confused expression on her face. She was stripped to her faded green T-shirt bra and matching hipsters, and secured to the toilet with liberal amounts of duct tape, with some leftover adhesive covering her mouth.
Chandra finished refueling the pickup truck and climbed inside. To her satisfaction, the truck came equipped with radio and GPS. She would be back at the city in no time.
Chandra started the engine and pulled the truck back onto the road, leaving the smell of gasoline behind. She was back in business.
**********************
Zuhal stirred, slowly, as consciousness returned to her.
It took only a few moments for her to realize her new situation. She was in some dimly lit warehouse, tied to a chair. The sounds and smells around her suggested she was near the beach.
"Ah, good. You're finally awake."
Zuhal looked around, and her eyes fell on the woman standing in the corner. At least, she sounded like a woman, though it was difficult to ascertain beneath the beekeeper's uniform and hat.
The woman approached Zuhal, who pulled against her bonds. "So good to see you again, dear friend."
Zuhal glared at her. "You have a funny way of treating friends... whoever you are."
"You don't recognize me? I'm offended." The woman's voice dripped with mockery. "Perhaps this will help."
She reached up and removed her hat, letting her long dark hair spill around her tan-skinned face. "How's this? Recognize me now?"
Zuhal's face went pale. "...Sabira?"
"Bingo," Sabira grinned, stepping closer to her captive. "Your old coworker, your partner in crime. Boy, those were the days, huh?"
"Not really," Zuhal deadpanned. "What's going on? Did you really miss me so much that you had to kidnap me?"
Sabira chuckled. "Funny girl. I guess you're trying to warm me over with your humor." Her face turned serious. "Well, it won't work, you traitor."
"Traitor?" Zuhal blinked. "Them's fighting words."
"Don't be cute," Sabira snarled. "You turned against us. You helped that Baxter bitch and her friends. It's because of you that Karima's in jail. I was nearly arrested myself, but I managed to escape before the police arrived."
She glanced out the window. "I've been on the run for weeks... No friends, no one to turn to. Karima's gone, and I'm stuck."
"How sad for you," Zuhal replied, without sounding all that sad. "So I suppose you want me to... what? Help you break Karima out of prison?"
"Nothing so dramatic," Sabira said, turning back to her captive. "Karima's locked away in maximum security, and I have no fantasies about setting her free. It would be virtually impossible, after all."
"So what do you want?" Zuhal was growing wary.
"I want Bridget Baxter dead," Sabira responded. "I'm going to kill her. And you're going to help me."
Zuhal laughed. "I'm past that part of my life, Sabira. Bridget's actually not a bad woman, once you get to know her."
"She ruined my life," Sabira said coldly. "So it's only fair that I end hers." She strolled over to the table. "I just need you to give me some information about her. About her job, her schedule, her personal life. Any information you may know that I can use."
"And why would I tell you any of that?" Zuhal asked.
Sabira placed the beekeeper's hat back on her head, letting the netting fall over her face. She hoisted a glass jar in her hands and approached Zuhal.
As she grew near, Zuhal could see that the jar was filled with over three dozen bumblebees. The steady buzz emanating from the insects was enough to send a chill down her spine.
"Because if you don't," Sabira said slowly, "I will open this jar, and let nature run its course."
Zuhal gulped.
"I'll be protected from any unwanted bites or stings by this uniform," Sabira continued. "But you, dear... That'll be a different story. As I recall from one of our old conversations, you're allergic to bee stings, aren't you? Perhaps one or two won't do much... but a dozen or more... I expect you'll die slowly, and very... very painfully."
Though Sabira's face was hidden by netting, Zuhal could see the icy cruel glint in her eye. This was not an idle threat.
She started to speak. "I can give you her home address... and the address of her workplace... but that's about it."
"That will suffice." Sabira placed the jar on a side table, perching it precariously on the edge. The she took out a pen and paper. "Speak quickly, though. That jar is liable to fall and shatter at any moment... I expect the little bees inside will be quite angry if that happens."
Zuhal couldn't help herself. She rattled off the address info and directions to a sneering Sabira.
Once finished, Zuhal hung her head in shame.
"You've done a great job," Sabira smiled. She pushed the jar away from the table's edge.
Zuhal felt herself growing calmer, until she heard Sabira's next chuckling words. "Unfortunately, you still have to die."
Without warning, she grabbed Zuhal by the hair, pulled out a hypodermic needle, and injected it into the side of her captive's neck.
Zuhal felt the strange liquid pulse through her body. She froze, and then her mind began to loosen. Her arms and legs slumped, her head lolled to one side.
"What..." She tried to speak. "What did you just... do to me..."
"Just a harmless paralytic agent," Sabira explained. "It freezes all your muscles and speaking abilities. It should wear off in about twelve hours."
Then she held up a black metallic device, about the size of a phone book.
Zuhal recognized it - a bomb!
"Unfortunately for you," Sabira continued, sliding the explosive device beneath Zuhal's chair, "this little contraption is set to go off in about ten hours."
She stood up and smiled at Zuhal, who by now had lost all motor functions in her arms and legs. "You have the rest of the day to make peace with yourself, and all the poor decisions in your life. Then, when the clock strikes ten - BOOM! It all goes out with a bang."
"Sabira... pl... please..." Zuhal's speech functions were slurring as well.
"Sorry, Zuhal, no time to chat. I have to go kill Bridget now," Sabira said coolly. "Goodbye... forever."
She turned and exited the warehouse, her cold laughter echoing in Zuhal's ears.
As the sounds of an engine faded into the distance, Zuhal sat motionless. All grew silent, save for the hum of the bomb beneath her chair, the buzzing of bees on the table, and and the slow ticking of the clock on the wall.
For the first time in as long as she could remember, Zuhal was truly afraid.
******************
It had been a busy and chaotic few weeks, to be certain.
Over the brief period, Prema had had her life threatened multiple times. She had been kidnapped on several occasions. She had gotten her clothes stolen and been tied up. She had attacked other women, stolen their clothes, and tied them up - a practice she was still uneasy about, even as more and more women were learning to embrace it.
But at last, things were looking up. Prema had a steady job and a relatively quiet few days. According to news reports, Meredith and Lucinda, who had tried on multiple occasions to kill her, had at last been captured and arrested. And she now was - potentially - in love.
So when Moira texted her with the opportunity to attend a ballet show at the Gosford theater, Prema felt a sense of joy she had not felt in a long while. She had been a lifelong fan of the ballet, after all - it was thrilling and romantic, particularly if she could share it with a woman she now felt rather attracted to.
At lunch break, she gave Moira a call.
"Hello?" Moira picked up on the third ring.
"Hello, Moira," Prema smiled. "I got your invite for the ballet. I need to move some things around my schedule, but... yes, I'd be happy to go with you."
"Great!" Moira sounded elated. "I can pick you up at eight o'clock tonight. Wear something fancy, it's a pretty posh establishment."
"I should have something in my closet," Prema responded. "This is so exciting. I used to love going to the ballet, but tickets have become so expensive... I haven't been able to go in years..."
She paused for a moment. There was a sound in the background on Moira's end. It sounded like a woman's voice, loud yet muffled.
"Moira," she asked. "What's that noise?"
There was a pause. "Nothing," Moira replied. "I must have left the TV on."
Prema sighed. "Moira," she said with a note of exasperation, "are you currently mugging another woman for her clothes?"
"Of course not," Moira replied. "How could I do that, particularly while on the phone with you? That's ridiculous."
Prema was silent for a moment. The muffled sounds continued.
"So, I'll pick you up at eight?" Moira asked cautiously.
"...Yes," Prema replied. "Eight o'clock. See you then."
She hung up the phone.
It had been good to hear Moira's voice, and it would be great to meet her at the ballet. But Prema now felt a bit uncomfortable.
"Just get used to it, girl," she murmured to herself. "This is just how the world is now."
*******************
Moira had been telling the truth to Prema - sort of. She had not been mugging another woman during the phone call.
In truth, she had mugged the woman before the phone call, and had been in the process of tying her up when Prema rang.
The woman in question was a maid at the hotel where Moira had been working undercover. Though her concierge disguise had provided her with access to Mr. Cambron's card, Moira decided to err on the side of caution and search his room for some condemning evidence. Thus, she had lured the maid into one of the linen closets, then used some chloroform to relieve her of duty for the day.
The maid, a tan-skinned Latina with a bun of dark brown hair, now sat on the floor of the linen closet, stripped to her lavender bikini bra and matching tanga panties. Moira had used strips of linen to bind her, while a smaller strip of linen had been used as a gag.
Moira had already dressed in the woman's light blue short-sleeve uniform and comfortable white shoes. She slipped her phone into one of the uniform's pockets.
The maid, stirred awake by the sounds of the phone call, moaned into her gag, struggling to get free. Moira reached down and stroked her hair.
"I'm sorry about this, dear... and I know I might seem callous in taking a phone call while tying you up... but I promise, this call was from a very special woman."
The maid drooped her head and sobbed. Moira felt a sting of guilt, and knelt down beside her.
"Hey... hey, listen to me. Don't feel sorry for yourself. You're not the only woman I've mugged at this hotel. Just try to relax... Someone will find you before long."
She wasn't usually so personal with the women she mugged, but speaking to Prema had reminded her that a lot of women were still uncomfortable by the prospect of uniform stealing, and a bit of sympathy couldn't hurt.
"Are you cold?" Moira asked. "Would you like a pillow or something? I promise, my intention was never to hurt you. I just needed your clothes for work-related reasons."
The maid didn't respond, but she looked quite sad. Moira took a blanket from one of the shelves and covered her with it, preserving her warmth and modesty.
She kissed the maid on the forehead. "Thank you... and I really do apologize."
She exited the closet, shut the door, and began pushing the maid's cart down the hall.
She knew the maid would probably stay tied up in that closet for several hours. And she knew how Prema was no fan of mugging innocent women for their clothes. But perhaps a polite and courteous demeanor had helped soothed some of the poor maid's fears.
********************
Bridget took a sip from her thermos and smiled at Felicia.
"So, honey... tell me what's on your mind."
Felicia fiddled with the cup of coffee that Bridget had poured for her, trying to think of the right words.
"Bridget," she began, "you now I love the work you do. The work that we've done, together, these past few years."
Bridget nodded.
"And I've had fun... lots of it," Felicia continued. "Investigative reporting, going undercover, wearing disguises and sneaking into restricted areas... It's all been thrilling, and of course it's given us a lot of opportunities to expose the corrupt and bring stories to light that would otherwise be ignored."
She paused for what seemed like an eternity. "But... I don't think I can do this anymore."
Though she had been braced for a "but," Bridget still looked surprised. "Felicia... what do you mean?"
"You know what I mean," Felicia said. "All these infiltrations - mugging women, tying them up, stealing their clothes. When I was younger, it was thrilling, but the longer it goes on... the less I like it."
She stared down at her coffee cup. "I'm a grown woman, Bridget," she continued. "At some point, I want to settle down with my life... Find a husband, raise a family. But I can't keep doing that if I keep putting my life in danger with these infiltrations, and I can't be a good family woman if I spend my time judo-chopping innocent women and tying them up in their underwear."
"There's no reason you can't do both," Bridget interjected. "I'm sure there are plenty of married women whose jobs require them to engage in infiltrative tactics."
"But that's not me," Felicia replied. "What we do, Bridget... it comes at a cost. The women we mug don't just lose their clothes - they lose their sense of normality. They're just tied up in their underwear, and abandoned for hours... while we just put on their clothes and go on our merry way." She looked up at Bridget. "Don't you feel sorry for them?"
"I do," Bridget said. "But I don't try to hurt these women intentionally. Like the saying goes, it's not personal... it's just business."
Felicia visibly winced.
Bridget set down her thermos. "Is this... about Bobbi?"
Felicia hesitated, then gave a nod. "That's part of it. Bobbi has... changed in recent weeks. She's become cold... callous. She enjoys mugging women for their uniforms and feeling superior to them. I've tried confronting her about it, but... she just won't listen."
She drew a breath. "I'm the one who introduced Bobbi to this world of infiltration and disguise in the first place... and I can't help feeling responsible for how she's changed."
"That's not your fault," Bridget argued. "Bobbi's an adult woman. She makes her own choices. You can't help that."
"But I could have," Felicia responded. "Life was much simpler before we started all these uniform stealing tactics. If I keep it up, I don't know what'll happen. If Bobbi can become the way she is, what's to stop me from becoming the same? Hell, maybe I already am the same..."
"Felicia..." Bridget began.
"Don't try to talk me out of this," Felicia continued. "I've made up my mind. I want a normal life, and that means no more infiltrations. No more attacking innocent women so I can play dress-up."
Bridget stayed silent for several long moments. Then she nodded.
"I understand, Felicia. I wish you'd reconsider... but I respect your decisions."
"Thanks... I knew you would." Felicia stood up and held out her hand to Bridget. "Thank you, Bridget... for everything. You really showed me the unlimited impact that we as women can have in the world."
Bridget shook her hand. "That's all I've ever wanted to do... Make an impact."
Felicia smiled at her friend. "I'll see you around."
"I'm sure you will," Bridget replied. "Goodbye, and good luck."
Felicia exited the room, leaving Bridget quietly rotating her thermos.
She was not shocked by this decision - Felicia's growing distaste with their line of work had become apparent in recent weeks - but it was still a lot to take in. And she would need some time to absorb it.
*******************
After a few hours of long and barren dirt roads, Chandra reached the city. The pickup truck sputtered over the bridge, only a bit worse for the wear.
Chandra was appreciative of the vehicle for getting her back on track, but she knew that it would not be the ideal transport to traverse the city. Besides, its bright red color would make it stand out among the crowd, and Chandra wanted to maintain a low profile.
She found a space on a quiet side road and pulled over, scanning the area for other opportunities.
Her eye fell upon a gleaming black-and-silver motorcycle leaning against a nearby post. One of the newer models, the type that moved fast without making too much noise. Chandra smiled.
Her smile broadened when she saw the cycle's owner exit a nearby pawn shop and approach the bike. The motorcyclist was a woman in her early thirties, with a dark grey leather jacket and matching pants, silver boots, and a black helmet tucked under one arm. She had light skin and hair that was dyed a lime shade of green, close-cut on the left side and shoulder-length on the right.
The woman knelt down beside her bike and began fiddling with the lock. Chandra stepped out of the pickup truck and made her approach.
"Nice bike," she commented.
The woman looked up at her and smiled. "Thanks... It's expensive, but it gets me where I need to go."
"I'll bet," Chandra replied. She tilted her head and a look of concern crossed her face. "Only... you may want to get that rear wheel checked out. It looks kind of low."
The cyclist glanced at the wheel, a look of confusion on her face. "It looks fine to me."
"I've seen that sort of thing before," Chandra continued. "Worked on a lot of motorbikes in my shop. The chassis is too low and the suspension is off-base. Could be dangerous at high speeds."
Chandra did not actually know anything about motorcycle repair, and wasn't sure the uniform she currently wore was convincing as a mechanic's garb. But she had often learned that the tone and manner of saying words could often carry more weight than the words themselves.
The green-haired woman now looked concerned. "Are you sure? I took it to my mechanic last week, he said it was fine..."
"I'm sure he did," Chandra continued. "A lot of these mechanics try to take advantage of customers, especially young women. But you seem like a fine girl... I can give you a quick inspection, free of charge."
The cyclist looked surprised. "Really?"
"Of course," Chandra smiled. "You deserve better than what other mechanics give you." She pointed to a nearby alley. "My garage is behind those buildings. We can fetch some new parts there. Won't take more than a few minutes."
"Wow, thanks," the cyclist smiled. She stood up and followed Chandra toward the alley.
Chandra's plan was working so easily that she almost felt sorry for the woman. But now was not the time to distract herself with emotion. She suppressed a grin as they stepped down the alley.
The cyclist frowned as they reached the end of the dimly lit alleyway. "I don't see a garage entrance... This looks like a dead end."
Chandra chuckled. "I was wondering when you would catch on."
The cyclist noticed the gleam in Chandra's eye. She started to back away in concern, then turned to run.
Chandra's fingers quickly seized the collar of the woman's leather jacket, pulling her backwards and off-balance. "What's your hurry, darling?" she cooed. "Don't you want an inspection?"
Before the cyclist could voice her protest, Chandra had begun her "inspection" with some thick knuckles against the woman's skull. A few more raps and punches, and the cyclist was down for the count.
Chandra then proceeded to "inspect" the girl's clothes, removing them from her unconscious figure before donning them herself.
The cyclist looked quite lovely in her crimson sports bra and checkered blue hiphuggers, and her figure was accentuated by an artistic snake tattoo that coiled up and around her upper left leg. The woman had style, even when she didn't have clothes.
Sonja would have loved this woman's underwear. The thought of her friend made Chandra's lip tremble in fear, but she steeled herself once again.
Chandra dragged the cyclist over to a nearby dumpster, using baling twine to secure her and an old cloth to silence her. She considered dropping the woman into the dumpster, but after a second thought, decided to simply stash her behind it.
"Maybe I'm getting soft," she chuckled to herself, returning to the alleyway entrance.
Chandra hopped aboard the motorcycle, donning the helmet and gunning the engine. The vehicle roared to life, and she was quickly speeding down the block.
Now to start searching. It was a big city, but she knew she could find Bridget before long.
********************
Following their meeting at Ms. Caldwell's mansion, Evelyn and Harper had wanted to begin their planning for the Gosford mission right away. However, Jenna had mentioned the need to run a few errands before the night, and asked them to discuss plans without her.
Harper had given her a strange look, but had said nothing. Which had been fortunate, as she would probably have mocked Jenna endlessly had she known where the young woman was going.
Jenna walked up to the large, stately building of City Hall. This was the mayor's office, the central conduit of the city and the place where all the most important issues were brought to the table. Jenna had interned at the building years ago, during her freshman year of college - it was the job that had first gotten her interested in politics, and given her the inspiration to make a difference in the world. To this day, she remained politically active and determined to get more women involved in higher office - she had donated to plenty of female candidates over the years, including in the most recent mayor's race.
The current mayor, however, was a man, and Jenna knew that he probably wouldn't be interested in hearing about her issue. Nevertheless, she was strong-willed and determined, and a sense of confidence washed over her as she walked up the large marble steps of the building.
The guard at the front desk was reading a newspaper. He looked up to see the professionally-dressed woman approached.
"Good afternoon," Jenna said. "I'd like to speak with the mayor, please." She had learned over the years to be assertive in her conversations and get straight to the point.
"Do you have an appointment?" the man asked.
"Not officially," Jenna replied. "But I have to discuss an issue of utmost importance."
The man chuckled. "You and everyone else."
Jenna frowned. No matter how often it happened, it always stung when a man laughed at her. "I'm serious," she said. "Over the last few years, there's been an alarming uptick in violent incidents committed against women by other women who intend to steal their clothes and uniforms. It's become widespread here and in several other cities, and it's time the mayor got involved."
The guard was by now ignoring her and had gone back to reading his paper. "Sweetheart, I'm sure you have some important things to talk about, but you need an appointment. That's the rules."
Jenna glared at the guard, but she knew there was no use convincing him. Men were impossible to persuade, especially if they were in positions of authority.
"Whatever," she grumbled, and turned to go.
As she reached the door, she had to step back as it swung open.
"Oh! Excuse me, honey." A woman entered the lobby, carrying two large packages under her arms. "Running a bit late with deliveries."
She quickly stepped past Jenna and approached the front desk. "Hey. I've got the new office equipment the mayor ordered. Where do you want them?"
The guard gestured behind him. "Right down the hall. Just leave it by the storage room door."
"Sure thing." The deliverywoman stepped past the desk and disappeared down the hall.
A minute later, she returned. This time Jenna got a better look at her. She was tall and broad-shouldered, with light skin and chin-length brown hair. She wore a dark brown delivery uniform of short-sleeve shirt and cargo pants, plus short thick brown boots.
"I've got a few more packages in my truck," the woman told the officer. "Will be back in a minute."
"Mm-hm." The guard nodded, but didn't look up from his paper.
Jenna watched as the deliverywoman exited the building again. She could see that the woman was approximately her equal in size.
Immediately, the idea formed in her head. A delivery uniform could be the access key she needed...
Jenna quickly pushed the thought from her mind. She was taking a stand against mugging women for their clothes! She did not want to partake in the practice herself.
And yet...
Jenna sighed. "Screw it," she muttered as she quickly stepped out the door.
The deliverywoman had parked her truck at the loading dock, located behind the building. She returned to it now, humming a jaunty tune, and opened the rear doors. She hoisted herself up and climbed inside, and began rummaging through the packages strewn about the floor.
Quietly, furtively, Jenna crept up on the truck. A glance around the area told her the coast was clear. Then she swiftly climbed up into the rear of the truck, shutting the doors behind her.
The words that followed - both the deliverywoman's confused "Who are you?" and Jenna's hastily mumbled apology in return - were muffled by the truck, as were the sounds of scuffling which followed. The vehicle rocked back and forth ever so slightly as Jenna did her best to subdue the woman as quickly and painlessly as possible.
Ten minutes later, the truck doors opened again. Jenna stepped out, now clad in the delivery uniform and boots. She carried a package under her arm and held a clipboard in her hand.
She allowed herself one last, guilty look at the real deliverywoman. The unconscious brunette lay on the dusty floor of the truck, stripped to her olive green sports bra and black hipsters. She had been bound and gagged with clear brown packing tape that Jenna had located in the van.
"I'm so sorry about this," Jenna said softly. "But if my plan works, you and millions of other women will never have to worry about getting mugged for your clothes again."
She shut the van doors, then headed around to the front of the building.
Jenna held the clipboard in front of her face as she entered the building, pretending to read it while also hoping it would help obscure her identity. The gamble worked - the guard offered her little more than a curt nod as she passed.
She was in! Jenna allowed herself a smile. Even if she had not personally approved of her own tactics, there was little doubt they had worked to her advantage.
She consulted a directory on the wall. The mayor's office was on the third floor. Jenna merely had to slip in, drop off her request, and get out.
However, while the delivery disguise had gotten her past the front desk, it would not be easy for her to wander around the upper floors dressed as she was. She would probably get thrown out of the building if she tried to enter the head office this way.
As Jenna considered her options, she heard footsteps echoing down the hall. Instinctively, she ducked into a nearby supply closet.
The footsteps belonged to another young woman, whose attire suggested she was a secretary. Tall, slender, and fair-skinned, with a blonde hairbun and horn-rimmed glasses. She wore a purple blouse over white cotton shirt, pleated black skirt, and brown kitten heels.
Like the deliverywoman, the secretary was similar to Jenna in height and build. And she was certainly the sort of employee who could wander around the building without fear of suspicion.
Jenna had already hurt one woman in her quest to reach the mayor's office, and did not want to hurt another. However, she had already come this far. There was no turning back now.
As the secretary passed the doorway, Jenna leaned out and clamped a hand over mouth.
"Forgive me," she whispered as she pulled the surprised woman into the closet.
Whether the secretary was in a forgiving mood or not ultimately proved beside the point. A quick and mostly painless neck chop was all it took to render her out of commission.
Jenna was relieved to see that the secretary carried an "all access" keycard in her pocket. That would make moving around the rest of the facility easier. She would still need this woman's clothes, but promised herself that no further disguises would be necessary.
The real secretary, now dressed only in an orange comfort bra and matching bikini briefs, sat unconscious in the corner of the room, wrists and ankles zip-tied and mouth covered with silver tape. Jenna felt sorry for her, though admittedly not as sorry as she did for the deliverywoman.
She works for the mayor's office... surrounded by obnoxious men all day. Even if she gets fired for this, I'm probably doing her a favor...
Jenna pushed the thought from her mind. She knew it wasn't right to speculate on the woman's work life. She just needed the clothes, no need to rationalize beyond that, and certainly no reason to make hurtful generalizations about another woman.
After locking the closet, Jenna headed down the hall to the elevator. A swipe of the keycard allowed her to ascend to the third floor.
It wasn't difficult to locate the mayor's office - it was the room with the heavy oak frame and gold-embossed lettering. The door was ajar; Jenna peeked inside.
The mayor was at his desk, talking away on the phone. His chair was turned away from the door. Jenna slipped inside, manila envelope in hand.
Jenna had been prepping the envelope for several days now. It included multiple newspaper clippings of local stories - stories about women who had been found in closets and storage rooms, tied up and gagged in their underwear. Jenna had also included an "official" letter from the city police department - which she had typed up herself, on documents obtained from the police vehicle she and her friends had hijacked the night before - asking the mayor to deal with the new rise in female clothes thefts.
Jenna approached the pile of papers and envelopes in the mayor's inbox. She was about to slip her own addition into the pile when she noticed the name on the topmost envelope - "Gina Caldwell."
Didn't realize my boss had dealings with City Hall...
Though it made sense, given Caldwell's wealth, influence, and ability to keep her head above water.
Returning to the task at hand, Jenna slipped her envelope in midst of the inbox pile. Then she turned to go.
"Ahem!"
Jenna froze. Slowly, she turned around. The mayor was looking at her, an annoyed frown on his face.
"Just what do you think you're doing?" he asked.
Jenna gulped. "I... I was just..."
"Didn't the other girls teach you about the office?" he asked. "Whenever you come in, you gotta give me a smile!"
Jenna paused in confusion. "A...? Oh, of course."
She smiled, about as good a smile as he could muster.
"Very nice," the mayor nodded. "You're one of the prettier girls we've hired recently. Guess I'll see you around."
Jenna nodded, trying not to cringe. "Yes... sir."
She turned heel and walked out of the office.
"Men," she muttered to herself, giving a brief shudder. "Honestly..."
As she exited the building, her phone buzzed. She answered it as she stepped down the stair.
"Jen, where the hell are you?" Harper's voice did not sound happy. "You said you'd be done your work by five. It's a quarter to six."
"Sorry, sorry... took a bit longer than I thought." Jenna glanced back at the building as she headed for the sidewalk. "Where are you guys? I'll meet up with you."
"We're on our way to the Gosford now. Plan's all set."
Jenna glanced at her watch. "I'm across town. I can be there in an hour."
"Well, we're already behind schedule. Hustle your ass."
*******************
Sabira scouted the block around Bridget Baxter's workplace, confirming it was free of police or security cameras.
Engaged in this task, she wore a grey hooded sweatshirt and dark sunglasses. After all, she was still a wanted woman in connection to Karima.
Sabira sighed as she remembered Karima. Her old boss could have been moody and at times unstable, but the two women had formed a respectful bond over their years of collaboration. But now the team was gone, and Sabira was the only one still standing and ready to preserve its memory.
That was why, above all else, Bridget had to die. Sabira needed to preserve her friend's honor. No one took down Karima and got away with it.
Parked at the corner of the block was a mall green truck. The signage indicated it was the property of a phone tech company.
The truck was empty at the moment, but Sabira could see some work going on inside the adjoining building. There was a female technician working on the phone lines.
Through the foggy windows, Sabira could see that the technician was a light-skinned woman with shoulder-length sandy brown hair, dressed in olive green coveralls, rubber-heeled brown boots, and a black baseball cap. She also appeared to be about the right size, or at least a close approximation.
Sabira checked to make sure no one was watching her. Then she quietly stepped towards the parked truck.
The rear doors, thankfully, were not locked. Sabira quickly slipped inside and shut the door behind her. Then she crouched down between the tools and coils of electrical wiring, and waited.
After about fifteen minutes, the technician returned to her truck, job complete. She opened the rear doors, intent on depositing her tools before driving off.
As she bent down to secure her toolbox, Sabira made her move. She sprang up from her hiding place and quickly closed the gap between herself and her prey.
The technician was startled, and was about to scream, but one of Sabira's hands covered her mouth. The other hand closed the truck door, granting the women some privacy.
The technician started panicking, with muffled cries against Sabira's palm. Sabira quickly put a stop to that by withdrawing a small but sharp knife from her pocket and holding its tip an inch from the woman's neck.
"You seem like a smart woman," she said coolly. "Probably have some kind of degree to work in your field, eh? So I'll offer you a choice... Either hand over your uniform, or we'll see just how far I can stick this knife into your pretty little throat."
The technician stared at Sabira, eyes wide in terror. She was shaking, trying to maintain her composure.
"Tick-tock," Sabira said, a bare hint of menace in her voice.
Slowly, with trembling fingers, the technician reached up to her collar and began unbuttoning her jumpsuit.
"Atta girl," Sabira smiled. "I knew you were smart."
The technician's acquiescence had spared her her life - but not, as soon became clear, her dignity. Beneath her uniform, she wore a lavender triangle bra and matching bikini briefs - both decorated with bright yellow cheerful emojis.
"Don't you look adorable," Sabira mused a few minutes later as she donned the technician's uniform. "Wish Karima was here to chuckle at this."
The technician looked up at her assailant with frightened, pleading eyes. She wanted to speak out, but her mouth was gagged with black electrical tape, and her long limbs bound with thick green cables.
"Just relax," Sabira said, scooping up her equipment and carefully loading it into the technician's toolbox. "Someone will find you in about ten or twelve hours. And unlike some of the less intelligent women who tried to fight me in the past, you'll live to tell the tale."
Affixing the baseball cap over her head, she exited the truck and locked the door, leaving the softly sobbing technician to contemplate her fate.
Then she stepped gingerly toward the newspaper building, a sinister smile on her face.
***********************
Bobbi's brow furrowed. She glanced at her phone for perhaps the tenth time in the last hour.
Why wasn't Zuhal responding?
Bobbi had texted her first thing in the morning to set up their next training date, and Zuhal was usually quite prompt with responses. Yet it was now almost evening, and Zuhal had yet to respond to the text or its three follow-up messages. It wasn't even clear if she had seen them.
Could she be in trouble? It could be nothing, but knowing Zuhal... After all, the woman had made her fair share of enemies, on both sides of the law.
Bobbi started texting Felicia. Perhaps she could help sort out the mess.
Then she stopped herself. No, she did not want Felicia or Bridget to know that she had formed a close bond with Zuhal. Besides, the prior night's events at the lab compound told Bobbi that perhaps her friends needed a bit of space.
She would need to figure it out for herself.
Fortunately, Bridget had taught her all the tricks of phone tracing. She hopped on her computer and got to work. As long as Zuhal's phone was still on battery...
Bingo. She was registering a blip from Zuhal's number. It appeared to be coming from an island harbor, just off the coastland.
Suspicious... why would Zuhal be on a coastal island? She hated swimming, and had not mentioned any special jobs recently.
Bobbi grabbed her coat and headed for the door. She also scooped up her backpack. The pack contained her usual implements when venturing into the unknown - cables, duct tape, and chloroform pads.
It never hurt to be prepared.
*********************
Bridget finished her article, typing out a finely-worded conclusion. She leaned back in her chair and stretched.
Mrs. Drake walked over to her, a large smile on her face. "Still here, Bridget? You really are dedicated."
Bridget smiled back. "Just trying to earn my salary, boss."
Mrs. Drake chuckled. "I remember I was like that at your age... Strong, spirited, willing to do anything to finish a story." She glaced at Bridget's computer screen. "Speaking of which, is it finished?"
"Just about. I just want to go over it again for any errors, and then it'll be on your desk."
"Sounds good... I'm going to get a muffin downstairs. Want anything?"
Bridget politely shook her head. "Not very hungry. But thanks."
Mrs. Drake nodded again. "I understand. Keep up the good work."
She stepped away from Bridget's desk and past rows of other, empty desks. Nearly everyone else had gone home by now.
Needing to stretch her legs, Mrs. Drake passed the elevator and took the stairs down to the first floor.
As she stepped down the quiet hallway, she noticed another woman walking towards her. Dark hair, tanned skin, dressed in green coveralls, boots, and a baseball cap. She appeared to be a technician, carrying a toolbox in one hand.
"Hi," Mrs. Drake smiled at the woman. "Can I help you?"
The woman gave a curt nod as she stepped toward the elevator. "Just heading for the newspaper offices... We got a call that the Internet was down, so I'm here to give it a look."
Mrs. Drake's brow furrowed. "Internet down? It's been working fine all day."
Sabira froze, her finger inches from the elevator button. Shit.
"What's going on here?" Mrs. Drake placed a hand on Sabira's shoulder. "Are you really a technician? I don't..."
In a lightning-swift move, Sabira reached around and grabbed Mrs. Drake's wrist. She twisted as hard as she could.
Mrs. Drake let out a cry of pain, her knees buckling. Sabira quickly smacked a hand over her mouth and shoved her against the wall.
"Stupid bitch... you ask too many questions." Sabira pulled out her knife and held it against Mrs. Drake's neck. "I only came here to kill Bridget... but I guess you'll have to die too."
Mrs. Drake felt the cold steel of the knife against her neck. Her eyes filled with tears. "Nnmmpphhh... plmmmpphhh..."
Sabira let out a throaty chuckle. "Ah, my favorite part... I love when they beg for their lives..."
Thinking instinctively, Mrs. Drake lashed out, striking her fist hard against Sabira's waist. It was a sudden and direct hit. Sabira let out a cry of pain.
"You stupid..." Sabira grabbed Mrs. Drake by the shoulders and whirled her around, slamming her back against a nearby marble desk.
Pain shot up Mrs. Drake's spine. With a groan, she sank to the floor, nearly unconscious.
Sabira raised one of her boots, preparing to stomp down on Mrs. Drake's head. "Nice knowing you, bitch."
But at that moment, the sound of a dinging elevator alerted her. Someone else had descended to the lobby.
Shit shit shit. Sabira had already compromised her cover. She couldn't risk more trouble.
She scooped up the toolbox and headed for the nearest window. "Next time, Baxter," she muttered.
Sabira clambered out the window just in time. She was gone by the moment the elevator doors slid open.
Bridget exited the elevator, glancing around the lobby.
"Mrs. Drake? I changed my mind... maybe I'll join you for a muffin. Mrs. Drake...?"
Bridget turned the corner and gasped.
Her employer lay on the ground next to the lobby desk, her body bruised and motionless.
Bridget forced herself to stay calm as she knelt down and checked for a pulse. Mrs. Drake was alive... but badly hurt.
Bridget did not know what had happened, but she took a deep breath as she whipped out her phone and dialed a quick set of numbers.
"Nine-one-one, what is your emergency?"
"I... I need an ambulance," Bridget stammered out, glancing down again at her boss. "Please, hurry..."