One
Desiree
Jacobs deadpanned a steady look below the eye of a security camera
in the world-famous Museo de Arte Mejicana, an ornate building embedded
in the heart of Mexico's capital city. Her gaze held on the
Alfredo Ramos Martinez painting in front of her, a colorful rural
scene depicting native women carrying sacks of produce on their
backs. That's it, Señor Camera. Take a good film of
this browsing turista, because mousy Myra is all you'll see.
"Señores
and señoras, we will move on to the work of Francisco Goitia,"
the tour guide said. "Not as well known as others, he was
still one of the great Mexican painters of the last century. Goitia
reflected the heart of his people with great love and passion."
The
guide went on with her spiel, and Desi trailed the group like an
obedient tourist. Her flat-footed, slump-shouldered gait helped
her fall farther and farther behind. The group disappeared around
a corner, and Desi stopped beside a custodial closet.
Heart
rate quickening, she glanced both ways. All clear. She pulled a
pin from beneath her gray wig and worked the lock. A moment later,
she stepped into the closet and shut the door. Standing in the dark,
she smiled. No one in the tour group would miss the dowdy little
nobody who never said a word and avoided eye contact.
Desi
shrugged out of her backpack, a big no-no for a visitor to haul
around in a museum. But a ruckus, caused by a street person only
too willing to earn a fistful of pesos, had helped her melt into
the tour group before anyone could demand she check her bag at the
door. Not even the tour guide had given mousy Myra a second glance
since. Hopefully the hungry-looking beggar she hired had made good
his escape from the irate museum staff so he could enjoy his well-gotten
gains.
Grinning,
Desi got to work removing her frumpy clothes, wig, and blue contact
lenses.
If
she and Max had miscalculated on the smallest detail, those dirty,
rotten Greybecks would score big again. Her jaw clenched. That couldn't
happen. Her future—and the futures of those who trusted her—depended
on success.
Dad,
I won't let you down. He wasn't alive to defend himself.
She was his legacy. His hope. Tonight's heist, and the aftermath,
would vindicate his reputation.
Desi
pulled her knees up to her chest and rested her chin on them. What
would Daddy have done while biding his time in the dark? She knew.
Pray.
*
* * * *
At
midnight, snug inside the ventilation duct, Desiree peered from
the vent through night-vision goggles that bathed the darkened museum
showroom in a surreal greenish glow. Her gaze focused on a display
case containing the golden headdress of Pakal, mightiest of the
ancient Mayan kings. This single item, dating from a few centuries
after Christ, was the pride and joy of the Museo de Arte Mejicana.
Not
for long.
"You
are mine, Your Majesty," Desi murmured in south-of-the-border
Spanish.
Behind
the mask over her mouth, the words echoed hollowly. She'd
practiced for hours to breathe right without the need to think about
it—inhaling through her nose and exhaling through her mouth.
Tubes from her mask trailed over her shoulders and sent the lung-warmed
air down the shaft, away from the vent opening.
In
the showroom, the Smart Sensor hunted for an infrared heat signature
larger than a mouse. She might be small, but a mouse she wasn't.
Her breathing apparatus allowed her within range to shut the system
down.
Desi
checked her watch. A few more seconds and… Okay, time. The
first of a series of stink bombs should have gone off elsewhere
in the museum, drawing the security guard from the control room
to check out the smell. Now she had ten, maybe fifteen minutes,
while he chased the elusive scent from one site to the next, like
an odorous animal scampering ahead of him.
Elbows
clamped to her sides in the enclosed space, she wiggled a thin box
out of the breast pocket of her jumpsuit. Max's Miracle, Desi
had dubbed the gadget, brainchild of the best accomplice a thief
could ever have. Clayton Greybeck, the electronics expert for Greybeck
and Sons Security Company, might consider himself a techno-god and
the Casanova of geekdom, but Desi knew a West Texas ranch girl named
Maxine Webb who could think rings around him. Too bad Max had to
sit this caper out. A sick kid and urgent damage-control projects
had kept her home in Boston. Desi was solo on this one, but their
plan was foolproof.
Maybe.
She swallowed. It had to be.
She
flipped the gadget on and pointed the lighted end at the dual-action
motion detector/heat sensor on the other side of the room. The pinprick
of light danced around the unit. Man, it was hard to aim in the
cramped conditions. Desi's breathing rasped, and a drop of
sweat filmed her vision. She set the gadget down, lifted her goggles,
and wiped her eyes with the back of her sleeve.
"You've
got one chance to hit the target spot on," Max had said. "Then
the lithium battery's dry, and you're toast."
Well,
she'd be toast anyway if she fooled around any longer. She
scooped up the gadget, pointed, and blasted. A pop and a little
puff of smoke came from the sensor box. No more heat or motion detector.
Desi grinned. Amazing what a pulse of electromagnetic energy could
do.
Desi
tugged on a rope attached to her waist, and a cordless hot knife
slid into her fingers. She fired up the knife and sliced through
the bolts holding the vent cover in place. The grill clattered to
the marble floor, and Desi's heart kabumped. Easy now, girl.
The guard should be out of earshot, chasing smells at the other
end of the building. A museum ought to have two night guards, but
the board of directors liked to pinch pesos. Good deal for her tonight.
Hard to say whether that would hold true tomorrow.
She
lowered a nylon rope out the opening. A yank proved the line held
fast on a joint inside the duct. Desi squirmed onto her back, pulled
her torso out, and slapped a pair of short-handled suction cups
onto the wall on either side of the vent. She hauled the rest of
her body out of the duct, and then released the cup handles. Her
feet met the floor, impact flowing through her body, familiar as
a routine dismount from the parallel bars.
A
security camera in the corner watched every move, transmitting it
to the empty control room. Desi waved at the electronic eye. No
one would watch the footage until the theft was discovered, and
with her mask and goggles on, they couldn't make identification.
A
tug on another line brought her pack out of the vent. She removed
two wooden sticks an inch thick and eighteen inches long, one of
them fitted with a lever, and screwed them together. Next she took
out a square of plastic framed with cord, unfolded it to its full
three-foot by three-foot size, and attached it to the handle. The
resulting object resembled an oversized butterfly net, using plastic
instead of gauze, and with a cord and hollow tube sticking out at
the spot where the plastic joined the handle. But this was no insect
catcher. It was a history-maker.
Smiling
behind her mask, Desi took her net and her backpack and stepped
up to the case that displayed the bust of a dusky-skinned Mayan.
A skull piece of beaten gold hugged the statue's head, and
above it arched a golden cornhusk encrusted with jewels—a
tribute to the nourishing golden grain the Mayans had worshipped
more than the metal. Magnificent!
Desi
itched to step up and grab, but that would be a fatal mistake. Four
tiny red eyes guarded the case—wireless heat sensors. If a
gawker got too close, alarms went off. Desi tugged on neoprene gloves,
and then pulled a metal canister like a mini fire extinguisher from
her pack. She attached the nozzle to the tube on the net.
From
the safe distance, she lowered the plastic over the case and pulled
the lever on the handle. The net snicked shut like a noose over
the case. Desi turned a knob on the metal canister and released
gas at a temperature of ninety degrees below zero. The glass instantly
iced over. So did the heat sensors. They'd be out of commission
for just long enough.
Moving
quickly now, Desi released the lever, loosened the suction, and
pulled the plastic net off the case. She worked her pick in the
lock, and a click signaled release. The gloves protected her hands
as she took the cover from the pedestal. Pulse throbbing, she lifted
the headdress from the model Mayan.
Heavens!
The mighty Pakal would have needed mighty neck muscles to support
his crown. Hugging the headdress with one arm, she took a padded
bag from her pack and eased the antiquity inside. She put the bag
into her pack on top of her Myra disguise.
From
the looted case, the bare head of the Mayan pouted at her with thick
lips and cold eyes. A shiver darted down her spine.
"Sorry,
buddy," she whispered. "Let's see if we can fix
you up."
She
took a chip from her pocket, placed it on his head, and pressed
a button. The crown of Pakal appeared
on the model's head. Desi pulled her hand back through the
hologram. Quickly she fitted the cover on the pedestal and retreated.
Exhilaration sang in her veins.
The
headdress was hers!
Not
if she didn't skedaddle pronto. Was the guard still chasing
stink? She checked her watch, and her heart stuttered. He could
be headed back to the control room right now.
Desi
shoved her equipment into a corner out of sight of the security
camera, which was trained on the Pakal case. She slung her heavy
pack onto her shoulders and shinnied up the rope to the vent opening.
Grunting, she stuffed the pack into the hole and followed it fast.
She
plunged into the pitch darkness of the ductwork. Here, even her
night-vision goggles were nearly blind. Smooth metal passed beneath
her stomach, punctuated by seam bands.
Her
nose tickled. Ah-choo! The sound echoed, and she froze. Please God,
don't let the guard hear that. Clenching her jaw, she crawled
on.
Where
was that left turn? She passed her hand along the duct wall. She
was supposed to come to it before she reached the vent in the custodial
closet where she'd waited. If she missed the turn, she'd
have to push backward and find it. Not fun in this cracker box.
Good thing she wasn't claustrophobic.
Her hand passed into air.
Desi
stuffed the crown into the opening, and it jammed tight. Great!
She tugged the bag, but it didn't budge. Double great! The
duct she was supposed to take out of the building must be smaller
than the one she was in. The schematic she and Max had used to plan
the caper had shown it as older, but the drawing hadn't mentioned
that the older ductwork was also narrower. Even if she got the crown
loose, she wouldn't fit into the opening herself.
Triple
great!
Plan B.
Desi closed her eyes and concentrated on recalling
the building plans. If she continued down this passage, where would
she end up?
Her thoughts scurried like mice in a maze. What
was the matter with her? A sound like a rushing wind filled her
head, and the atmosphere closed in. Heavy. Dark. She could die here.
Never see light again.
Sucking air through her nose, her mind cleared.
She ripped the mask off and flung it away, along with the useless
goggles. No wonder she couldn't think. After that sneeze,
she'd started breathing in through her mouth, getting mostly
her own exhaled carbon dioxide from the tubes down her back. She
could have killed herself without realizing what she was doing.
Buckle down, woman. First order of business—get
the crown unstuck, and that would take old-fashioned elbow grease.
Desi jerked and tugged. How had she jammed the antiquity so tightly
into the small space? Poor judgment—no doubt a side effect
of her near asphyxiation. She gave a mighty yank. With a crack and
a rip, the pack sprang free. Her mouth went dry. She'd better
not have damaged the headdress.
No time to speculate. Now that her mind was clear,
she knew this duct would take her to the elevator shaft, where she
could climb to the roof and then leave the building via the fire
escape. Not as simple as a short crawl to the rear work room where
she could disable a simple alarm and walk out the back door, pretty
as you please, but it would have to do.
Thirty minutes later, Desi's feet left the
last rung of the fire escape and touched the packed dirt of a deserted
alley outside the museum building. Mexico City's cool January
air refreshed her lungs. Stillness enfolded her as she gazed toward
the velvet blackness of a sky populated with fading stars. This
was the magic time before dawn, when even the cantina music had
fallen silent.
Tension melted from her muscles. She was a walking
dust bunny and could stand under a hot shower for a week, but she'd
done it—beaten the Greybeck security system and grabbed the
greatest prize of her career.
But had she damaged the piece during her exit? Her heart hit her
toes. She pulled the padded bag from her pack and ran her hands
over the crown's outline. No obvious deformities. Maybe she
should get back to her hotel and check.
No, this couldn't wait. She was as private
here as anywhere. Desi placed the bag on a crate where a shaft of
light from a street pole reached into the alley. Her fingers trembled
on the drawstring, and her pulse throbbed.
If she'd harmed the headdress, she'd
run shrieking into the street. She'd turn herself in at the
nearest police station. She'd sell her home to pay for the
repairs. She'd bow and kiss Clayton Greybeck's feet.
Blech! She'd step down as head of HJ Securities. She'd…
Desi gaped at the flakes and chunks that slipped
from the bag along with the headdress, minus the tip of one cornhusk
leaf. Her jaw snapped shut. Flakes? She picked one up and tasted
it. Paint! Chunks? She cradled one in her palm and examined it.
Lead!
She gave a strangled cry. Those double-dealing,
dastardly cowards. She'd spent days of planning and a sleepless,
nerve-wracking night to pilfer a piece of junk. Not to mention just
about having heart failure when she thought she'd damaged
a priceless antiquity.
Those Greybecks…no, wait. Not them—the
museum board of directors. A tight smile stretched her lips. The
stuffed shirts suspected she might get away with it, and they'd
hedged their bets by making sure she wouldn't lay her hands
on the real deal. A backhanded compliment if she ever heard of one.
Worse, Greybeck and Sons must have been informed she was coming—a
violation of the provisional contract with HJ Securities.
Desi stuffed the leaden fake into the bag, then
swept the chunks and flakes into her palm and put them in the pocket
of her jumpsuit opposite the one that held Max's miracle gadget.
Let's see what the august gentlemen of the board had to say
for themselves tomorrow—er, today. She glanced at her watch.
A few hours remained to plan a suitable response, and—
"There she is!" a man grated in Spanish.
"Get her!"
Desi whipped around to find three large shapes
charging toward her up the alley. The menacing rhythm of booted
feet sent her heart into overdrive.
"Run!" Did she holler that out loud?
Yes, but it got her moving.
She grabbed the bag and backpack and tore up the
alley. The leaden crown weighted her steps. Why not fling it at
them? The worthless thing might do good damage. She clutched the
bag. Too stubborn for her own good. A slingshot swing would work
better if they got closer.
Desi burst onto the deserted street. To her right,
voices shouted from the other end of the museum, followed by more
galloping feet. She took off in the opposite direction. Canopied
adobe buildings flashed past.
"Don't let her get away!"
Desi made out the words from the garble of frenzied
Spanish behind her. What did these thugs want? Did they think she
had the real headdress? Well, duh! Her blood chilled. Men would
kill for the crown of Pakal.
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