Lisette and the Cyber Geeks

by

Brian Sands

 

 

Wildside, Brian Sands DiDcap

 

 

Chapter Eight Archival Search

"Don’t grumble, Don, my pride was all that was hurt! A few marks on my wrists are nothing to worry about."

Once she had rolled her way from the polished living room floor to her kitchen, it had in fact been relatively easy for Lisette to push herself to her feet by propping her back against the refrigerator. Only her wrists were bound. Her arms were not hampered in any other way, by elbow ties or being trussed against her body, so after hopping across to the ledge she easily reached the knife rack with a little stretching. She had chosen the best knife for the purpose, the short bladed one she used for cutting carrots and other small vegetables. It was a simple matter to slip the blade carefully between her wrists and the tight loops of the stocking and saw through the fibres. After pulling the gag out of her mouth, she cut the stocking that bound her ankles. The result was that she was free with only red marks on her ankles and wrists and at he corners of her mouth, and an expensive pair of stockings ruined.

"I’m glad you got free by your own efforts," said Donald Caisson, "otherwise you could have spent the night tied up. I wasn’t going to phone you until the morning."

"I was about to phone you just before I was tricked into opening the door."

"You changed your mind about me coming over?"

"Yes, but everything happened so fast."

Lisette related how the fat man, disguised as a Revenue courier, had bound her hand and foot and gagged her.

"He left my mobile phone in the middle of the living room floor. But when I reached it, the damn thing didn’t work. And, you know what? When I checked it after getting free, I found that the bastard had taken out the batteries! They were lying on the kitchen ledge."

"He has a sense of humour," observed Donald flatly. "And an element of integrity. He treated you chivalrously."

"Maybe. He mentioned doing away with me, but then he said that I would be more trouble to the ‘others,’ whoever they are, if I was left alive, and he chuckled."

"I think the ‘others’ are people you’ve already met."

"Kidd and Vellum?"

"Yers. Also your Miss Moons the florist service provider."

"I remember now ... she made a comment about Chérie Chalmers ... Don, Chérie was captured in that place!"

"So ... Vellum and Kidd and Moons are linked together."

"Hmm, one is just south of the city and the other is further south in Kent."

"Branches of the one tree."

"Don, every name on the list appears to be the member of a gang, but ..."

"But we have yet to confirm or deny whether they are all in a single criminal organisation, or working separately."

"Yes. That Kidd lookalike was certainly working on his own ... Don, he was looking for a disc of some sort. He was so agitated when he asked me that at first I thought he was Madame Vellum’s ‘Boompsie.’ But he’s far too intelligent. He thought I had taken it from that fellow Doc Legato."

"We did find some things on the little shit, but nothing like a disc."

"But he might know?"

"Oh ... yes. I’ve been tracking him down to question him anyway. Now it makes everything more urgent ... Lisa, what are you going to do?"

"Right now I’m going to take another hot shower and go to bed. And I’d love to have you over, even though it’s late, but a girl needs her beauty sleep, especially after being tied up with her own stockings - a lovely pair ruined that I was going to wear for you. But I’ll be up early tomorrow morning. There’s one more name on that list."

"The librarian?"

"Yes. I know the folklore about lightning never striking the same spot twice is false, but a librarian? I ask you!"

"Excellent cover. So be careful Lisette, my love."

"At least you’ll know where to look for me if I disappear."

*

Following the previous day’s adventures when she had been twice tied up and gagged, Lisette’s body had taken over when she fell asleep and, as it was almost midday when she awoke, she decided to give herself the rest of the day off. She phoned Don, who was out, and left a message on his answering machine. So it was not until the late afternoon when she found herself in the rooms of the Municipal Library of the little village of Lower Bodley.

Miss Dorothea Wimple appeared every inch the popular stereotype of a librarian. Mousy, she even wore oval horn-rimmed glasses and held a fixed smile of hopeful cooperation on her angular face.

"Well, you are a sweetie," the librarian drawled. "My employer said that she expected me to handle your problem as efficiently as for our other customers, even though the situation is very different, and somewhat delicate."

"Thank you so much," Lisette replied, hoping that the attempt at gushing in her turn did not appear too forced. "It’s routine really, a last-minute requirement from up top. Which explains this inconvenient hour."

I wonder which employer the woman means? thought Lisette uneasily, the local government administrator I phoned at lunch time to set up the interview, or a member of the gang, or cartel, or organisation, whatever it is.

Lisette had decided to revert to her occupational identity, considering how unsuccessful was her cover as journalist.

"No no, it’s better with all the other staff gone home. I can devote my time to your request quite undistracted ... Come."

The librarian rose and led Lisette to the other end of the long room past evenly spaced reading desks and chairs. She stopped at a small coffee table ringed with cushioned chairs which by their disarranged state showed that they had accommodated people earlier in the day. The librarian had not yet had time to apply her obviously obsessive neatness.

"Make yourself comfortable, dear. I’ll put on some coffee and unlock the computer room. I’m afraid it’s closed by four-thirty, and the time now is ..."

"Nine o’clock, I know. I really appreciate your help."

Lisette knew that when a tax inspector used such words most people quickly became more cooperative than ever. That principle appeared to be at work now as Miss Wimple opened the adjoining door, revealing to Lisette’s careful gaze a section of white-tiled kitchen floor, cupboards, and cooking utensils hanging in the background. The librarian walked in and the door swung closed behind her. Lisette waited.

About two minutes later, another door set in the wall about twelve paces from the entrance to the kitchen was opened and the librarian reappeared with a plastic security key in her hand.

"This old place is a warren," the woman remarked. "Our kitchen opens into several different rooms, reading rooms, the acquisition room, the archives - there’s an up-to-date compactor that saves a lot of space - and of course the computer consoles."

Lisette began to rise from her chair.

"No no." Miss Wimple raised her hands. "First things first. In fact, a number of things first. Coffee’s on. And I have to check the server before we can log-on to the system."

The woman disappeared into the kitchen once more. Lisette heard the sounds of crockery, of cups being clinked together, and in a much shorter time the librarian returned. In her hands she carried a large tray, of the sort found in staff cafeterias the world over, on which stood two steaming mugs of coffee, a bowl of sugar and a miniature jug of milk. She lowered the tray carefully onto the coffee table, covering most of its top.

"I know you’re in a hurry dear, but please humour me. I normally take coffee at this hour before going home for the night, and I’m afraid your visit has made me somewhat apprehensive. You know, even when one has not done anything wrong one always feels a little guilty in the face of authority."

Such as myself, thought Lisette as she reached obligingly for the mug that was offered.

She added one sugar and milk, stirred them in, and sipped experimentally, holding the mug in both hands. The librarian matched movement with movement with the exception that she left out the milk in her own mug. The woman took a long sip and sat back in her chair with a blissful expression on her face. Lisette took a deeper draught. The coffee did taste good. It was very strong, like Turkish or Greek brew.

"This coffee tastes ... different," she said. "Something special?"

"I’m glad you noticed," said Miss Wimple with a smile. "It’s my own secret brew, made from Mediterranean blends with a light admixture of herbs. I find the herbs help to counter the stimulus of the caffeine. Together the caffeine and the herbs make a very pleasant-tasting drink, but this coffee won’t keep you awake. Although ... the herbs tend to make one feel sooo relaxed. It’s a luxury, especially at the end of a day after tedious accessioning ... Don’t you feel it my dear?"

Lisette did feel something. She took another long sip, placed the mug on the tray, and sat back in her chair. She had an uncontrollable desire to yawn.

"Don’t fall asleep," the librarian warned in a soft voice. "I have to go home soon."

The woman yawned widely.

"N-No, I have to see your files ... Then I-I’ll n-not trouble you further."

"No. I am sure you will not be any trouble. Come then."

Lisette saw Miss Wimple stand, the plastic security key swinging on its ribbon in her fingers, and she tried to follow suit. But her legs did not want to move. She tried to prop herself up with her arms, but they were rubbery, seemed to have no strength in them either. The room was growing darker and she could hear the librarian’s voice crooning, but she could not understand the words, and the sounds appeared to be coming from a long way off. Then Lisette knew no more.

*

It felt as though she was awakening from a deep sleep. Everything was dark. The light switch? Somehow she could not find it. She drifted back into sleep. The second time Lisette woke, she was a little more conscious of her surroundings. She was not lying on a bed. The surface felt hard against her shoulder and cold to the touch of her bare arms and nylon-clad legs. She was lying on her side. It was totally dark. She lifted her head, and immediately drifted back into unconsciousness. The third time, as she returned to wakefulness, Lisette gathered her wits about her.

Something’s wrong, she thought muzzily. It’s so dark! And cold! She lifted her head and became aware that something was wrapped about her face, a fold of bed sheet, or a scarf? She shook her head but the stuff, whatever it was, did not fall away. It’s ... tight, she thought dazedly. She made to raise her hand to her face, but her arms refused to move. What is it? What’s wrong with me? Lisette tried once again to move her hands but with the same lack of result as before.

She closed her eyes against the dark and breathed slowly to calm her rising panic. Breathing itself was difficult. She had a strange choking sensation. There’s something blocking my mouth, she thought. My nose ...? She tried, and found that she could breathe through her nose more easily.

But what was wrong with her? Had she been injured? Was she lying in a hospital somewhere, on some kind of life-support? She remembered seeing hospital scenes in daytime soap operas where the actor’s mouth held a tube. Carefully, in case she was in a hospital ward, Lisette explored with her tongue. With some relief she found that there was no plastic tube in her mouth and throat. However, at the same time she discovered that she could not open her mouth. Her lips were sealed tightly together.

And then it all flooded back to her. The library. Miss Wimple, the fastidious librarian. The coffee. Drugged. Trapped by an old trick. Never accept a drink from a mousy librarian after hours when one is on a case, especially a case that might involve taxation fraud.

I’m gagged, thought Lisette. My lips are stuck together. And that must mean ... yes, I’m bound. She stretched and flexed her fingers. Her wrists ground against what felt like rough cord. Her arms were pulled back well behind her, tied at the elbows, more scratchy rope against the unprotected skin. She could have kicked herself for choosing such a light revealing dress. But she could not even do that. Her legs were also tied together. She could feel the pressure of the ropes around her ankles and around her thighs. She was lying on her side with her knees bent, with her feet - bare, her shoes removed - pressing against a wall that felt cold to the touch like the rest of her surroundings.

Where am I? she wondered. Have I been stowed away in a tin trunk? First the boot of a car, then a narrow storeroom, and now a tin trunk? There must be a better way of earning a living. Do I need all this excitement?

Lisette had never awakened in a drugged state to find herself bound, and she was still disoriented. She tried to push at the metal against her feet, then to kick at it. And then she found that her ankles were tied back so that she could not kick her legs out. A little exploring with her fingers told Lisette that a piece of rope connected her ankles to the cord between her elbows. That was one reason why her arms hurt so much. I’m hog-tied. It was a half hog-tie but very effective all the same.

All right, said Lisette to herself, I’m not only bound hand and foot like some amateur would do. I’ve been trussed-up, and pretty efficiently too, the way it feels. And the gag, whatever it is, has my mouth shut really tight. Her lips were pursed and squashed hard together. No amount of straining in her jaw succeeded in separating them. In fact, she could scarcely move her jaw at all. Her cheeks felt as though they were bulging over the sticky cloth. Lisette raised her head and shook it experimentally from side to side. It’s adhesive tape of some sort, was her conclusion. It’s very tight. And it’s been wound round and round my face and neck, impossible to get off!

A wave of panic swept through her and threatened to carry her with it to a destination she did not wish to contemplate. She fought back the choking feeling that came with a desire to breathe through her mouth, and sweat broke out on her brow although she was lying entombed within cold metal walls. She wanted so much to be out of there, wherever it was, and to have the horrible tape off her mouth. But she knew this was an impossible hope. She was trapped as securely as a butterfly in amber.

In a situation like this, she knew that all she could do was to wait until someone came to remove her from the tin coffin. But that would probably be her captor, Miss Mouse. If someone was going to come at all! For a fearful moment she thought that she was buried alive inside the thing. Oh-my-god! But her air would have run out by now and, although it was growing stuffy as she struggled, there must be air holes, otherwise she would be dead already and not wriggling about in roped discomfort. Lisette managed to bang one foot against the metal casing and the dull hollow sound told her that there must be space on the other side. She sank back to the floor and lay still, trying to conserve her energy, fighting against the combined restriction of her bonds and the claustrophobic dark. She only partly succeeded, and her shivering was not due to the cold alone, or to the thin silk dress she was wearing.

Gradually, Lisette calmed down. Let’s reason this out, she thought. I’m very securely bound - more tightly than any of those other times - and tucked away somewhere, so that means I’m being held for a purpose. They’ll want to learn how much I know about their criminal activities, so I can expect to be taken out of here and interrogated. Maybe I’m still somewhere in the library, maybe put away in a trunk while that librarian figures out how best to get me out of the building without people noticing. But it’s already nighttime, or at least it was when I was drugged. There probably would not be a better time. That could mean that this is a temporary hiding place for me and that I’ll be taken out soon and whisked away somewhere else, which means that I might reasonably expect someone to come for me soon, at least before morning and the office crowds.

It also meant that she and Don must really be on to something big. Her inquiries could have been deflected easily, without the dead giveaway of drugging her and tying her up. Lisette shivered. She might have been sent away empty handed and none the wiser. Instead, they had showed their hand by depriving her of liberty, putting her in restraints.

They’ll want to find out how much I know, she decided. Otherwise, why hold me like this? Perhaps, when she was taken out of this dark unknown place, there would be an opportunity to escape. It was a thin hope. She would no doubt be held bound and gagged just as she was, and there was no way she was going to get herself out of these ropes unaided. On the other hand, they’ll have to take the gag off if they want me to tell them things. And if she was left alone with a convenient knife handy, or something else with a sharp edge ... Or if her knight in Versace armour arrived on the scene ... Dream on, girl. There’s no likelihood that Don can find me here, even if he comes to the library.

Thinking about the case took Lisette’s mind off her own misery for awhile, but eventually the pain in her arms and shoulders from having them tied behind her so tightly brought her back to reality. In desperation she tried to call for help but, like all the other times, all that came out was a faint hum that was cut off almost as soon as it began. Instead, she had to fight to breathe through her nose every time she attempted it, the effort to call for help making her dangerously breathless. She kicked again at the metal sides of her metal tomb, producing the same dull hollow sound and nothing more.

Lisette fought back tears. There’s no point in crying, girl, she told herself sternly, and it’s definitely not wise to give way to hysterics with my mouth sealed up. She blinked and felt a single tear run down the side of her face, eventually to be absorbed, she supposed, by the tape across her cheek. Nothing to do but wait and tough it out. I hope I can. She had never been as helpless as this in her life, or as frightened. The tightness of the gag, the restriction of the ropes, and the complete darkness in which she lay had her teetering on the brink of hysteria.

*

Donald Caisson looked up at the dimly lit window of the Palais Hotel from the narrow alley where he had been standing for the past hour. The light had only just come on. His informant, Willie the Slush, had positively identified the one-star hotel as the present hangout of Doc Legato.

Willie was a professional informer who had lived so long because his cover as an alcoholic derelict had never been blown. This was partly due to the double life he led, because when he was not sitting in the gutters outside sleazy bars he was resting in comfort in a small white cottage covered with ivy and roses on the sea coast two hours away by train. And he only did special jobs, like the service he had just performed for Donald that would keep him in champagne and caviar for the next month.

Donald hefted the big automatic that had once been Doc’s pride and joy. Its clip was empty, as was the chamber, but Doc would not know that. The pistol’s twin lay hidden in Donald’s alternative apartment. He had offered it to Lisette but the young woman had politely but firmly declined. He wondered whether she was safe at the library of Lower Bodley. That was the other issue he had to deal with, after he paid a brief visit to the little spiv in the room above.

The hotel desk clerk was preoccupied with the racing form and television in the room behind the desk when Donald slipped quietly through the empty lobby and up the stairs. He kept to the side to avoid any creaking step that might disturb the hopeful gambler below, crossed the narrow and somewhat dank hallway, and made his way along it until he was opposite Doc’s room. He knocked.

"Yeah?"

"More grog?" asked Don in a fair imitation of a passing drunk.

"Piss off."

"But itsh goo’ grog. Li- ler- liqueur."

"Yeah?"

Doc was partial to a drop of fortified spirits and cocktails. The door opened, which was all that Don needed. Doc Legato found himself staring down the barrel of his own gun.

"Hullo, Doc. I was in the neighbourhood and thought I’d make a house call."

*

There were tears. She could not help it. Unable to move, able to make scarcely a sound through lips tightly stuck together beneath the layers of tape, hardly able to breathe, trapped in impenetrable darkness, arms, legs and wrists on fire because of the ropes cutting into them. Lisette could not remember a time in her life in which she had felt so miserable. Oh Don, I need you. Please come and rescue me! But how could he find her when she did not know where she was herself? She tried to kick at the tin wall but now her legs would not move. They were numb with the cold and the restricted circulation. Lisette cried bitterly in silence.

There must have been a period, of indefinable length, during which Lisette lost hold on consciousness and felt herself floating. Then she returned abruptly to full awareness of the pain, the tape pulling on her lips as she fought again uselessly against the sticky unyielding substance that bound her jaws.

A sound had startled her into wakefulness. It was an unpleasant, rasping sound, and it seemed to penetrate her body. The grinding noise continued. And then she felt movement. Her narrow cell appeared to be vibrating and sliding at the same time. A narrow wedge of bright light lanced into the alcove where she lay. Lisette had to close her eyes against it as it widened. Her eyelids fluttered. She tried to see where she was while at the same time she attempted to filter out the bright light through her long eyelashes. She found herself lying on a platform of some sort, a shelf.

That was all she had time to register before an arm reached in, a hand grasped her by her ankles, and she was pulled roughly off the shelf and onto a hard, cold concrete floor. She was in a large room, dazzled under the ceiling lighting. Through her tears, the image of Miss Wimple the librarian wavered into view and then drifted out of sight almost immediately.

"I hope you’re learning the lesson about being a nosy little busybody investigator," came Wimple’s voice. "My orders are to make absolutely sure that you are secure. You see, Miss Lisette Ruisseau - oh we know your real name - your reputation as a lady escapologist has preceded you. But I will not make the same mistakes as my colleagues."

"Mmmmmm!"

"There, you see, no real sound to speak off, ha haa. And it’s going to remain that way. You and I are taking a little ride into the country. But I’m afraid that you shan’t be seeing much of the scenery."

A heavy black silk hood was pulled down over Lisette’s head and face and fastened by drawstrings around her throat. She was once more in suffocating darkness.

 

Chapter Nine

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ã Brian Sands 2004

 

 

ã Brian Sands 2004