Blind Pursuit

Blind Pursuit by Michael Prescott Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Blind Pursuit by Michael Prescott Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Prescott
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers
waited, straining to hear, until faintly the growl of an engine reached her from far away. It grew slightly louder, perhaps as the vehicle pulled out of the garage, then quieter again; seconds later, it was gone.
    Her abductor didn’t live here, it seemed. His home was somewhere else, and this place was simply a holding pen for her.
    She stood, then sat again, surprised at the loose, watery trembling of her knees. Silently she counted to twenty, drawing slow, measured breaths. When she felt strong enough, she crossed the room to the door.
    No doorknob on her side. The smooth sheet of wood mocked her.
    On tiptoe she looked through the peephole. The fish-eye lens revealed only darkness.
    Crouching, she examined the clearance between the door and the jamb. It was wide enough to expose part of the bolt drawn into place by the turning of the key.
    A dead bolt? Or a latch bolt, the kind with a beveled edge?
    A latch bolt could be defeated with a credit card. There were some in her wallet. The cash had been removed, but not the plastic.
    She tamped her MasterCard out of its acetate pouch, then knelt by the door. Her heart kept up a hard, steady beat as she inserted the rectangle of plastic into the crack between the door and the frame.
    The MasterCard’s leading edge slipped past the gain of the faceplate and bumped up against the bolt. She pushed, trying to make the card flex. The trick was to snake it along the angle of the latch bolt, between the faceplate in the door and the striker plate in the jamb. Pop the latch, and the door would open.
    “Come on,” she breathed, jiggling the card. “Come on, please , just do this for me, and I’ll never complain about the finance charges again.”
    Nothing.
    The card wouldn’t do the job. She removed her laminated driver’s license from the wallet and tried that. It was thinner than the MasterCard, more flexible, but it had no greater success.
    Finally she gave up. The door must be secured either by a dead bolt or by a latch bolt with the diagonal edge facing away from her. Regardless of which was true, loiding the lock was impossible.
    She wasn’t surprised, really. The man holding her prisoner was smart—too smart, possibly, to leave the charge cards and license in her wallet if they could be useful in opening the door.
    There was a way of defeating a dead bolt, though. She had learned of the technique years ago, while living in a low-rent district near the university, earning her graduate degree. The other unit in her duplex had been broken into, her neighbors’ place cleaned out. She remembered the T.P.D. detective at the scene explaining how the dead bolt on the front door had been released.
    Simple enough , he’d said. They just pried the bolt open with an ice pick. Happens all the time .
    All she needed was an ice pick. Too bad she didn’t happen to have one available.
    Of course, any long, needlelike tool would do. She searched her purse, her suitcase, the box of foodstuffs.
    The item nearest to what she needed was the ballpoint pen. But it was too big to fit between the door and the frame.
    She unscrewed the pen’s metal casing, thinking that perhaps the ink cartridge inside might work, but although the tube was narrow enough, it was made of cheap, flexible plastic that would afford her no leverage.
    One last point of attack presented itself. The hinges. Could she lift the pivot pins out of the barrels and simply detach the door from the wall?
    The pins were in tight. Their caps were smooth and featureless, offering no grooves in which to fasten the tip of a screwdriver, even assuming she had one. If she could grip the caps with a pair of pliers, she might be able to tug the pins free. Pliers, however, were another item her abductor had neglected to leave in her possession.
    Could she smash the hinges? They were old and rusty, vulnerable to a sharp hammer blow. She searched the room for a blunt instrument, found none. The sillcock would make a powerful weapon, but she

Similar Books

Bite Me

Donaya Haymond

First Class Menu

Aj Harmon, Christopher Harmon

Tourist Season

Carl Hiaasen

All Good Women

Valerie Miner

Stiff

Mary Roach

Tell Me True

Karpov Kinrade

Edge of Eternity

Ken Follett

Lord of Misrule

Alix Bekins