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A Night in Terror Tower Page 4
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Page 4
Eddie and I climbed into the back. It was warm in the taxi. It felt so great to sit down!
As we pulled away from the Terror Tower, I didn’t glance back. I never wanted to see that old castle again.
The car rolled smoothly through the dark streets. The taxi meter clicked pleasantly. The driver hummed to himself.
I shut my eyes and leaned my head back against the leather seat. I tried not to think about the frightening man who had chased us in the Tower. But I couldn’t force him from my mind.
Soon we were back in the crt of London. Cars and taxis jammed the streets. We passed brightly lit theaters and restaurants.
The taxi pulled up to the front of the Barclay Hotel and eased to a stop. The driver slid open the window behind his seat and turned to me. “That’ll be fifteen pounds, sixty pence.”
Eddie sat up drowsily. He blinked several times, surprised to see that we had reached our destination.
I pulled the big, heavy coins from my pocket. I held them up to the driver. “I don’t really know what is what,” I confessed. “Can you take the right amount from these?”
The driver glanced at the coins in my hands, sniffed, then raised his eyes to me. “What are those?” he asked coldly.
“Coins,” I replied. I didn’t know what else to say. “Do I have enough to pay you?”
He stared back at me. “Do you have any real money? Or are you going to pay me with play money?”
“I — I don’t understand,” I stammered. My hand started to tremble, and I nearly dropped the coins.
“I don’t, either,” the driver replied sharply. “But I do know that those aren’t real coins. We use British pounds here, miss.”
His expression turned angry. He glared at me through the little window in the glass partition. “Now, are you going to pay me in British pounds, or are we going to have some major trouble? I want my money — now!”
13
I pulled the coins away from him and raised them close to my face. It was dark in the back of the taxi and hard to see.
The coins were large and round. They felt heavy, made of real gold or silver. It was too dark to read the words on them.
“Why would my parents give me play money?” I asked the driver.
He shrugged. “I don’t know your parents.”
“Well, they will pay you the fifteen pounds,” I told him. I struggled to shove the big coins back into my pocket.
“Fifteen pounds, sixty — plus tip,” the driver said, frowning at me. “Where are your parents? In the hotel?”
I nodded. “Yes. They were at a meeting in the hotel. But they’re probably up in the room now. We’ll get them to come down and pay you.”
“In real money, if you please,” the driver said, rolling his eyes. ‘If you’re not down here in five minutes, I’ll come in after you.”
“They’ll be right down. I promise,” I told him.
I pushed open the door and scrambled out of the cab. Eddie followed me onto the sidewalk, shaking his head. “This is weird,” he muttered.
A red-uniformed doorman held the hotel door open for us, and we hurried into the huge chandeliered lobby. Most people seemed to be heading the other way, going out for dinner, I guessed.
My stomach grumbled. I suddenly realized I was starving.
Eddie and I made our way past the long front desk. We were walking so fast, we nearly collided with a bellman pushing a big cart stacked high with suitcases.
To our right, I could hear dishes clattering in the hotel restaurant. The aroma of fresh-baked bread floated in the air.
The elevator doors opened. A red-haired woman in a fur coat stepped off, walking a white toy poodle. Eddie got tangled in the leash. I had to pull him free so we wouldn’t miss the elevator.
We stumbled into the elevator. As the doors slid shut, I pushed 6. “What was wrong with that money?” Eddie asked.
I shrugged. “I don’t know. I guess Dad made a mistake.”
The doors slid open on six, and we hurried side by side down the long carpeted hall to our room.
I stepped around a room service tray on the floor. Someone had left half a sandwich and part of a bowl of fruit. My stomach rumbled again, reminding me how hungry I was.
“Here we are.” Eddie ran up to the door to room 626 and knocked. “Hey, Mom! Dad! It’s us!”
“Open up!” I called impatiently.
Eddie knocked again, a little louder. “Hey!”
We pressed our ears close to the door and listened.
Silence. No footsteps. No voices.
“Hey — are you in there?” Eddie called. He knocked again. “Hurry up! It’s us!”
He turned to me. “They must be out of that meeting by now,” he muttered.
I cupped my hands around my mouth. “Mom? Dad? Are you there?” I called in.
No reply.
Eddie’s shoulders slumped, and he let out an unhappy sigh. “Now what?”
“Are you having trouble?” a woman’s voice asked.
I turned to see a hotel maid. She wore a gray uniform and a small white cap over her short dark hair. She had been pushing a cart loaded with towels. She stopped across from Eddie and me.
“Our parents are still at a meeting,” I told her. “My brother and I — we’re locked out.”
She studied us for a moment. Then she stepped away from the cart and raised a large key chain filled with keys.
“I’m not really supposed to do this,” she said, shuffling through the clattering keys. “But I guess it’s okay to let you kids in.”
She put a key into the lock, turned it, and pushed open the door for us. Eddie and I both thanked her and told her she was a lifesaver. She smiled and moved on down the hall, pushing her towel cart.
The room was dark. I clicked on the light as Eddie and I stepped in.
“They’re not here,” I said softly. “No sign of them.”
“They probably left a note,” Eddie replied. “Maybe they had to go out with people from the meeting. Or maybe they’re down in the restaurant, waiting for us.”
Our room was actually a suite. A front room and two bedrooms.
Turning on lights as I went, I made my way to the desk in the corner. A writing pad and pen rested in the crt of the desk. But the pad was blank. No message.
No message from Mom or Dad on the bed table, either.
“That’s weird,” Eddie muttered.
I crossed the room and stepped into their bedroom. I clicked on the ceiling light and glanced around.
The room had been made up. The bed was smooth and unwrinkled. There was no message for us anywhere. The dresser top lay bare. No clothes tossed over a chair. No shoes on the floor. No briefcases or notepads from their meeting.
No sign that anyone had even been in the room.
I turned and saw that Eddie had moved to the closet. He pushed the sliding door open all the way.
“Sue, look!” he shouted. “No clothes! Mom’s and Dad’s clothes — our clothes — they’re all gone!”
A heavy feeling of dread started in my stomach and weighted down my entire body. “What is going on here?” I cried.
14
“They wouldn’t just leave!” I exclaimed. I walked over to the closet and checked it out for myself. I don’t know what I expected to see. It was clear from across the room that the closet was completely empty.
“Are you sure we’re in the right room?” Eddie asked. He pulled open the top dresser drawer. Empty.
“Of course this is the right room,” I replied impatiently.
Eddie pulled out the rest of the dresser drawers. They were all empty.
We searched every inch of the room. No sign of Mom or Dad.
“We’d better go down to the desk,” I suggested, thinking hard. “We’ll find out what room the meeting is being held in. Then we’ll go there and talk to Mom and Dad.”
“I can’t believe they’re still at the meeting,” Eddie murmured, shaking his head. “And why would they
pack up and take all our clothes to the meeting with them?”
“I’m sure there’s a good answer,” I said. “Come on. Let’s go downstairs.”
We made our way back down the long hall and took the elevator to the lobby.
We found a crowd around the front desk. A large woman, dressed in a green pantsuit, was arguing angrily about her room. “I was promised a view of the river,” she screamed at the red-faced man behind the desk. “And I want a view of the river!”
“But, madam,” he replied softly, “the hotel is not located near the river. We do not have any river views from this hotel.”
“I must have a river view!” the woman insisted. “I have it right here in writing!” She flashed a sheet of paper in front of the man’s face.
The argument continued for a few minutes more. I quickly lost interest in it. I thought about Mom and Dad. I wondered where they were. I wondered why they hadn’t left us a note or a message.
Eddie and I finally got up to the desk about ten minutes later. The clerk tucked some papers into a file, then turned to us with an automatic smile. “Can I help you?”
“We’re trying to find our parents,” I said, leaning my elbows on the desk. “They’re in the meeting, I think. Can you tell us where the meeting is?”
He stared at me for a long moment, his face blank, as if he didn’t understand. “What meeting is that?” he asked finally.
I thought hard. I couldn’t remember what the meeting was called. Or what it was about.
“It’s the big meeting,” I replied uncertainly. “The one people came from all over the world for.”
He twisted his mouth into a thoughtful pout. “Hmmm …”
“A very big meeting,” Eddie chimed in.
“We have a problem,” the clerk said, frowning. He scratched his right ear. “There aren’t any meetings in the hotel this week.”
I stared back at him. My mouth dropped open. I started to say something, but the words just didn’t come out.
“No meetings?” Eddie asked weakly.
The clerk shook his head. “No meetings.”
A young woman called to him from the office. He signaled to me that he’d be right back. Then he hurried over to see what she wanted.
“Are we in the right hotel?” Eddie whispered to me. I could see the worry tighten his features.
“Of course,” I said sharply. “Why do you keep asking me these dumb questions? I’m not an idiot, you know. Why do you keep asking if this is the right room? If this is the right hotel?”
“Because nothing makes sense,” he muttered.
I started to reply, but the clerk returned to the desk. “May I ask your room number?” he demanded, scratching his ear again.
“Six twenty-six,” I told him.
He punched several keys on his computer keyboard, then squinted at the green monitor. “I’m sorry. That room is vacant,” he said.
“What?” I cried.
The clerk studied me, narrowing his eyes. “There is no one in room six twenty-six at the present,” he repeated.
“But we are!” Eddie cried.
The clerk forced a smile to his face. He raised both hands as if to say, “Let’s all remain calm.”
“We will find your parents,” he told us, leaving the smile frozen on his face. He punched a few computer keys. “Now, what is your last name?”
I opened my mouth to answer. But no answer came to mind.
I glanced at Eddie. His face was knitted in concentration.
“What is your last name, kids?” the clerk repeated. “If your parents are in the hotel, I’m sure we can track them down for you. But I need to know your last name.”
I stared blankly at him.
I had a strange, tingly feeling that started at the back of my neck and ran all the way down my body. I suddenly felt as if I couldn’t breathe, as if my heart had stopped.
My last name. My last name …
Why couldn’t I remember my last name?
I could feel my body start to shake. Tears brimmed in my eyes.
This was so upsetting!
My name is Sue, I told myself. Sue … Sue … what?
Shaking, tears running down my cheeks, I grabbed Eddie by the shoulders. “Eddie,” I demanded, “what’s our last name?”
“I — I don’t know!” he sobbed.
“Oh, Eddie!” I pulled my brother close and hugged him. “What’s wrong with us? What’s wrong with us?”
15
“We have to stay calm,” I told my brother. “If we take a deep breath and just relax, I’m sure we’ll be able to remember.”
“I guess you’re right,” Eddie replied uncertainly. He stared straight ahead. He was gritting his teeth, trying hard not to cry.
It was a few minutes later. The desk clerk had suggested that we go to the restaurant. He promised he’d try to find our parents while we ate.
That suggestion was fine with Eddie and me. We were both starving!
We sat at a small table in the back of the restaurant. I gazed around the big, elegant room. Crystal chandeliers cast sparkling light over the well-dressed diners. On a small balcony overlooking the room, a string quartet played classical music.
Eddie tapped his hands nervously on the white tablecloth. I kept picking up the heavy silverware and twirling it in my hand.
The tables all around us were filled with laughing, happy people. Three children at the next table, very dressed up, were singing a song in French to their smiling parents.
Eddie leaned over the table and whispered to me. “How are we going to pay for the food? Our money isn’t any good.”
“We can charge it to the room,” I replied. “When we figure out what room we’re in.” Eddie nodded and slouched back in his high-backed chair.
A waiter in a black tuxedo appeared beside the table. He smiled at Eddie and me. “Welcome to the Barclay,” he said. “And what may I bring you this evening?”
“Could we see a menu?” I asked.
“There is no menu right now,” the waiter replied, without changing his smile. “We are still serving tea.”
“Only tea?” Eddie cried. “No food?”
The waiter chuckled. “Our high tea includes sandwiches, scones, croissants, and an assortment of pastries.”
“Yes. We’ll have that,” I told him.
He gave a quick bow of his head, turned, and headed toward the kitchen.
“At least we’ll get something to eat,” I murmured.
Eddie didn’t seem to hear me. He kept glancing at the doorway at the front of the restaurant. I knew he was looking for Mom and Dad.
“Why can’t we remember our last name?” he asked glumly.
“I don’t know,” I confessed. “I’m very confused.”
Every time I started to think about it, I felt dizzy. I kept telling myself I was just hungry. You’ll remember after you’ve had something to eat, I kept repeating.
The waiter brought a tray of tiny sandwiches cut into triangles. I recognized egg salad and tunafish. I didn’t know what the others were.
But Eddie and I didn’t care. We started devouring the sandwiches as soon as the waiter set them down.
We drank two cups of tea. Then our next tray arrived with scones and croissants. We loaded them up with butter and strawberry jam, and gobbled them down hungrily.
“Maybe if we tell the man at the front desk what Mom and Dad look like, he can help us find them,” Eddie suggested. He grabbed the last croissant before I could get it.
“Good idea,” I said.
Then I let out a silent gasp. I had the dizzy feeling again.
“Eddie,” I said. “I can’t remember what Mom and Dad look like!”
He let the croissant fall from his hand. “I can’t, either,” he murmured, lowering his head. “This is crazy, Sue!”
I shut my eyes. “Shhh. Just try to picture them,” I urged. “Force away all other thoughts. Concentrate. Try to picture them.”
“I — I
can’t!” Eddie stammered. I could hear the panic in his high-pitched voice. “Something is wrong, Sue. Something is very wrong with us.”
I swallowed hard. I opened my eyes. I couldn’t conjure up any kind of picture of my parents.
I tried thinking about Mom. Was she blond? Red-haired? Black-haired? Was she tall? Short? Thin? Fat?
I couldn’t remember.
“Where do we live?” Eddie wailed. “Do we live in a house? I can’t picture it, Sue. I can’t picture it at all.”
His voice cracked. I could see he was having trouble holding back the tears.
Panic choked my throat. I suddenly felt as if I couldn’t breathe. I stared at Eddie and couldn’t say a word.
What could I say?
My brain spun like a tornado. “We’ve lost our memory,” I finally uttered. “At least, part of our memory.”
“How?” Eddie demanded in a trembling voice. “How could that happen to both of us?”
I clasped my hands tightly in my lap. They were as cold as ice. “At least we still remember some things,” I said, trying not to despair completely.
“We still remember our first names,” Eddie replied. “But not our last. And what else do we remember?”
“We remember our room number,” I said. “Six twenty-six.”
“But the desk clerk said we don’t belong in that room!” Eddie cried.
“And we remember why we came to London,” I continued. “Because Mom and Dad had these important meetings.”
“But there are no meetings at the hotel!” Eddie exclaimed. “Our memories are wrong, Sue. They’re all wrong!”
I insisted on figuring out what we did remember. I had the feeling if I could list what we did remember, we wouldn’t feel so upset about what we had forgotten.
I knew it was a crazy idea. But I didn’t know what else to do.
“I remember the tour we took today,” I said. “I remember everywhere we went in London. I remember Mr. Starkes. I remember —”
“What about yesterday?” Eddie interrupted. “What did we do yesterday, Sue?”
I started to reply, but my breath caught in my throat.
I couldn’t remember yesterday!
Or the day before. Or the day before that.