Chapter 30
I ran into the house, grabbed my phone and dialed 911.
"911," came the female voice on the other end of the line. "Please state your emergency."
"My wife has just been kidnapped by a bunch of drugged-out nuts in a weird cult!" I shouted into the phone.
"Sir, please calm down. Where is your wife now?"
"She's in the back of a black stretched limousine. They just grabbed her and took off with her. We're in a gated community, so if you hurry, you can catch them!"
"Sir, what is your name and where are you located? I'm also going to need your wife's name and physical description."
I gave her the information, then waited impatiently, pacing the floor. About fifteen minutes later, my phone rang. The call was from an unknown number. I answered.
"Hello?"
"Sir, this is Detective Longstreet, with the Police Department. Did you call 911 and report your wife kidnapped?"
"Yes! I did! Did you catch them? Is Jenny safe?"
"Sir, falsely reporting a kidnapping is a serious matter," he began, but I cut him off.
"Falsely reporting?" I snapped. "I didn't falsely report anything. They grabbed my wife and dragged her into their limo and took off like a bat out of Hell."
"Yes, Sir. Here's the thing. We spoke to your wife. She said she wasn't kidnapped and was there of her own free will. She claimed you were abusing her and keeping her prisoner. She said they were helping her get away from you."
"What?" I exclaimed. "Are you sure it was my wife?"
"Yes, Sir. She presented two forms of ID, including her passport. She had her luggage in the trunk and tickets for, uh, for Europe. She said she was going on tour with the band. She said that she was leaving you, and you couldn't take it, so you called 911 to report her kidnapped."
"That can't be right! I didn't know anything about it! They're controlling her! They use drugs and, uh, hypnosis to control her! They're manipulating her!"
"She said you would say that."
"This is insane!" I shouted.
"Sir, we're going to need you to come in and answer some questions."
That was the last thing I wanted to do. "If you need to talk to me, you can talk to my attorney." I gave him my lawyer's name and phone number, then hung up.
I sat down at the kitchen table with my head in my hands. Jenny was going to Europe.
Europe.
Chapter 31
Paris
July 1789
The stench was nearly unbearable as the six men trudged through the sewer's filth beneath the streets of Paris. An iron gate blocked the way before them, secured with a heavy padlock.
Guillaume d'Anville, his face concealed behind a cloth mask, intended to block the putrid smells, turned angrily to their guide, Arnoux de Saint-Maximin.
"It's locked!" d'Anville shouted. "You said it was open!"
"It was open! I swear it!" Arnoux responded. "I came out through this gate myself but a week ago."
The older man, Roman de Guerre, holding the lantern spoke, his voice gruff, "Well, it's locked now. We've no choice."
He pulled a pistol from his belt, pulled the hammer back, and pointed the barrel into the heart of the lock. "Stand back!" he declared, then pulled the trigger.
There was a bright flash of light as the black powder ignited and the report, so loud in the constrained space of the underground passage that the entire group was stunned and momentarily deafened. It worked. The shot destroyed the lock.
De Guerre recovered quickly and removed the shattered lock, then forced the rusty gate open.
"I can't believe we are breaking into the Bastille," he said, though no one could hear him over the ringing in their ears. "I spent eight years trying to get out of the place, and now I cannot wait to get back inside."
He stepped forward but was stopped by d'Anville's hand on his shoulder. "I cannot believe we are breaking into the Bastille," the younger man said. "You spent so long trying to get out."
"What?" de Guerre shouted, hands tapping his ears.
"What?" d'Anville shouted back.
"Come on," snapped Arnoux, "this way!" He took the lantern from de Guerre and entered the passage, quickly disappearing around a bend in the passage. The other men moved to follow him before the light faded altogether.
The passage rose gradually and became dry, leaving the sewers and their foulness behind, yet the stench remained, clinging to their boots and clothing as if they had been sprayed by the foulest of skunks.