Sidney Sheldon & Tilly Bagshawe 3-Book Collection: After the Darkness, Mistress of the Game, Angel of the Dark. Tilly Bagshawe

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Sidney Sheldon & Tilly Bagshawe 3-Book Collection: After the Darkness, Mistress of the Game, Angel of the Dark - Tilly  Bagshawe

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I’ll wait.’

      

      Cora Budds left her job in the kitchen at ten of four and hurried over to the children’s center as arranged. Two mothers were saying good-bye to their kids while a single, bored guard looked on.

      Cora asked one of the mothers, ‘Where’s Grace?’

      ‘In lockdown. Denny dragged her off hours ago. She didn’t look well.’

      Cora thought, I bet she didn’t. That’s it, then. If Grace is in lockdown, the whole plan goes up in smoke.

      She walked into the storeroom alone. Maybe it’s for the best.

      Grace sat on her bunk, staring into space. She was too drained to cry. It was over. God knew when she’d have a chance to try again. Maybe not for years. Years in which whoever killed Lenny would be out there, free, happy, unpunished. The thought was unbearable.

      Mindlessly, she looked at the clock on the wall: 3:55 … 4:00 … 4:05 … The truck would be there by now. Cora would be loading it, alone, wondering what had happened.

      At 4:08, Grace heard the jangle of keys in the lock. Karen’s shift must have ended early. At least she’d be pleased the escape plan had failed. The door swung open.

      ‘Get up.’ Denny’s eyes blazed with spite. She’d been brooding all day over Sister Agnes’s words to Grace. Enjoy your afternoon off. As if this were some sort of summer camp! There were no afternoons off at Bedford Hills. ‘You missed four hours of work detail this afternoon, you sneaky little bitch. Thought you were on vacation, did you? A free pass?’

      Grace said meekly, ‘No, ma’am.’

      ‘Good. Because there are no fucking vacations in A Wing. Not while I’m in charge. You can make up those work hours, starting right now. Get your ass over to the children’s center and start scrubbing the floors.’

      ‘Yes, ma’am.’

      ‘When you’ve finished, do it again. And you can forget about eating tonight. You stay on that floor, scrubbing, till I come for you, understand?’

      ‘Yes, ma’am.’

      ‘MOVE!’

      Grace bolted out of the cell and started running down the corridor. Denny watched her go, a slow smile of satisfaction spreading across her face.

      She had no idea that Grace was running for her life.

      

      Cora Budds had almost finished loading the crates.

      The truck driver grumbled, ‘I thought there was gonna be two of yous? I’da brought another guy if I’d known.’

      Cora shrugged. ‘Life’s a bitch, ain’t it?’ It was already dark in the cramped courtyard backing on to the children’s center storeroom. The temperature was below zero, but the biting wind made it feel even colder. The boxes were small, about two feet square. Looking at them, Cora couldn’t imagine how Grace had ever thought she was gonna squeeze herself inside one. They were also heavy. Their weight, combined with the finger-numbing cold, made the work slow going.

      ‘Sorry I’m late.’

      Grace stood shivering in the lamplight. Still in her skirt and thin cotton, she was ridiculously underdressed for the winter evening. The wind sliced into her skin like razor blades. Cora Budds’s eyes widened in surprise but she said nothing.

      The driver looked pissed. ‘Are you kidding me? This is your number two? She couldn’t lift a cup of coffee, never mind a crate of clay.’

      ‘Sure she can,’ said Cora. ‘You can leave it to us now.’

      ‘Fine by me.’ The driver climbed back into the welcoming warmth of the cab. ‘One of you ladies give me the nod when you’re done.’

      Back in the storeroom, Cora and Grace worked quickly. Sister Agnes or one of the guards could come back any minute. Cora pulled Grace’s documents out of the pocket in her jumpsuit, stuffing them into Grace’s bra. There were four fake IDs with matching credit cards, a slip of paper with an anonymous Hotmail address on it and a small wad of cash.

      ‘Karen has a friend on the outside who’ll wire you more money with Western Union when you need it. Just e-mail an amount, the zip code you’re in, and the initials of the fake ID you’re using, and this person will do the rest. Take this, too.’ She handed Grace a silver stiletto. ‘You never know.’

      Grace stared at the blade in her palm for a second, hesitating, then slipped it into her shoe. Cora pried open the lid of one of the crates, emptying its contents at lightning speed. Somehow the box looked even smaller when it was empty.

      Cora said, ‘I don’ think it’s possible, Grace. A cat couldn’t fit in there.’

      Grace smiled. ‘It’s possible. I was a gymnast when I was younger. Watch.’

      Cora watched in awe as Grace climbed into the box, ass first, folding her tiny limbs around herself like a double-jointed spider. ‘Girl, that looks painful.’ She winced. ‘You sure you’re okay?’

      ‘It’s not exactly first-class travel, but I’ll live. Try the lid. Am I in?’

      Cora tried it. Easy. About an inch to spare. She levered it open again. ‘You’re in. I’m gonna load the rest of ’em now. I’ll put you three rows back, so you’re hidden at the checkpoint, but leave the lid loose so you got some air.’

      ‘Thanks.’

      ‘Sit tight till you get through the checkpoint. Once you’re outta here, soon as the truck stops, you jump.’

      ‘Got it. Thanks, Cora. For everything.’

       Good luck, Amazing Grace.

      Cora Budds replaced the lid and carried Grace out into the darkness.

      

      Warden McIntosh eyed Lisa Halliday suspiciously.

      ‘This had better not be some sort of scam.’

      ‘It ain’t.’

      ‘Grace Brookstein is in lockdown. She’s been in her cell since lunchtime. Besides, A-Wing prisoners never work on deliveries. Sister Agnes knows the policy.’

      ‘Sister Agnes don’t know her pussy from her paternoster.’

      ‘That’s enough!’ the warden snapped. ‘I won’t have you disrespecting our voluntary staff.’

      ‘Look. You don’t wanna check the truck? Fine. Don’t check it. Jus’ don’ say I didn’t warn you.’

      Warden McIntosh did not want to check the truck. It had been a long day. He wanted to finish up his paperwork and get home to his wife. But he knew he had no choice.

      ‘All right, Lisa. Leave it with me.’

      

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