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“No. The phone company will shut it off if they can’t tell where the phone signals are coming from. I think it prevents phone fraud.” Victor smoothed his fingers through his hair. “But we could change course. I could make it look like she’s at her house. Or at school. That way if he has the ability to track it, she wouldn’t be there if he goes to find her.”

“How do we get him to respond back?” I asked.

“I could reply to that email.” Victor tapped his chair, twisting his lips as he thought. He stood up, starting to pace. “We need something to draw him out somewhere we can control.” He raked through his wavy hair, turned around and started to jog down the hallway.

I bounced up, following after him, excited to see him enthusiastic again. Did I do good?

Victor was in his office, collecting our phones and a laptop. He went to the closet door, opening it. It was dark inside so I couldn’t see much from where I was, but he only leaned in a moment, dragging out a satchel. He closed the door again, shut the doors to the balcony, and scanned the room before he dropped the phones and the laptop into the bag.

“What are we doing?”

“We’re going out,” he said. He fished into his pocket for keys.

VICTOR, TALENTED

Victor swung the BMW into the parking lot at a McDonald’s.

“Dinner time?” Silas asked. He sat in the back this time, giving me the passenger seat to myself.

Victor’s eyebrow arched. “You’re hungry?”

“I thought you were and that’s why you stopped. But I could eat.”

“No, I’m here for the Wi-Fi.” Victor parked the car. He leaned over to pick up the satchel he’d brought. “What I’m doing might not be legal.”

“It’s your phone,” Silas said. “I’m pretty sure you can break your own phone.”

“Not sure if they want people knowing about how to do it.”

Silas grunted, folding his arms across his chest and sitting back. “Should I take her somewhere else for this? Should I take her inside for something? If you’re that worried—”

“I’m more worried about the cameras inside,” Victor started up his laptop, and took out my phone, opening the back.

I kicked my sandals off, putting my bare feet up and drawing my knees into my chest. “Do we not like cameras?” I asked quietly.

“I don’t want any witnesses to where you are right now.”

Silas chuckled. “Yeah. I see what she means when she says we’re overprotective.”

Victor shot him a look through the rearview mirror. “I don’t want us trying to prove she’s at her house, and someone inside just happens to go to our school and informs the guy we’re here instead. I don’t want any chance of him figuring out we’ve gotten ahead of him if we can trick him this way.” He grunted. “Or fine. I’m paranoid. We’re only going to be here for a minute. Will you guys just chill out?”

Silas held up his hands. “I’m kidding, Vic.”

Victor focused on the laptop. I leaned against the door, watching cars drive through, and the people inside eating and moving around. It reminded me of when my father would sometimes have to drive us somewhere, and we’d see all these people doing normal things and still feel like an outsider. Here I was with Academy guys, on what should be a normal evening. Instead, we were doing possibly illegal hacking to track down a stalker who may try to hurt us. I’d gone from being simply awkward to being completely weird. Like I’d traveled a long way, only to feel like I was stuck in the same place.

“Okay,” Victor said. “Let’s turn this on and see if we get anything.”

Silas sat up, leaning over the center console. I stayed where I was, kind of afraid to see, afraid to jinx the plan.

Victor pressed the phone’s button. The screen illuminated, started up.

Nothing.

“Is it getting a signal?” Silas asked.

Victor tapped the top of the screen. “It should be.”

“Is hooking it up to your laptop messing it up?”

“I don’t think so.”

“Should I turn my phone on and try to send her a message?”

Victor huffed. “We can’t turn on your phone now unless you want to give away your location.”

“So?”

“So we’re not supposed to be letting this guy know where any of us are. I’d have to rig your phone, too, and I can only do one at a time.”

“What if I’m not in one location?” Silas asked.

Victor focused on him. “What?”

“What if I walked around downtown? Or drove? The signal would go out but I wouldn’t be in one location. I mean he could track it, but he can’t keep up if I’m driving at random.”

Victor stared quietly, as if contemplating this strategy. He snapped his laptop shut. “Silas, I love you.”

???

Victor had us drop him off at the college a couple of miles away. He waved us off after we both offered to go with him.

“Drive around town,” he said. “I’ll be okay here. No one’s going to notice a guy with a laptop walking around on campus.”

Silas took over driving the BMW. The city soon disappeared behind us. Silas weaved his way through small boroughs until he found the nearly abandoned highway he wanted. After a few miles, there was nothing around us except for trees and the occasional farm to break up the monotony.

“So how do you know about this road?” I asked.

“I go out driving by myself a lot,” he said. His eyes zeroed in on the road, and his face took on an almost eerie green glow from the dashboard gadgets around him.

“Without any reason?”

“Sometimes,” he said. He stole a quick glance at me. “Sometimes on purpose.”

“You like driving?”

“I like getting away. Thinking.”

“You have to drive far away to think?”

“Or fly,” he said. “I go back to Greece every once in a while.”

“Does Greece help you think?”

His smile lost some spark. “Going to Greece helps me remember who I am.”

I blushed. “Because it’s home. Do you have relatives there?”

“A few.”

I thought of something I’d once asked him. So much had happened since, I’d forgotten about that day on the roof when he had called me and I was too scared to answer the phone in hearing range of my mother. Now thinking about it, it felt like a lifetime ago. “Do you miss it now?”

He gazed at me again, as if wondering my meaning. A spark lit up his eyes when it sunk in. His grin returned. “I’ll only go back right now if you come with me. I wouldn’t leave if you’re in a mess.”

I giggled shortly, unsure of if he meant it. “I don’t know if we should run away from this guy. Tempting.”

“I don’t really like running away from problems like this, either,” he said. “But sometimes I like to take a step back and think.”

I wanted to say something encouraging, but I couldn’t think of anything to say quickly enough and soon was lost in staring out the window.

“Here,” he said. He fished out his cell phone, passing it to me. “Find your number and send a text message to yourself.”

I pressed the button. The screen illuminated, flashing a logo before starting up. “What should I write?” I asked.

“Make it sound natural. Like I’m talking to you. Just in case.”

My lips twisted as I tried to think up something Silas would text to me.

Silas: Aggele mo, are you busy?

I showed Silas the message before sending it out.

“There’s a u at the end of mou,” Silas said.

I hadn’t known, and I supposed couldn’t have guessed, since he always said it and never really wrote it down. “You’ll have to teach me proper Greek,” I said. I fixed the message and sent it on to my phone as a test for Victor.

“Any time you want. You’re going to learn Japanese and Greek?”

“Why not? Can you

teach me? How do I say hello in Greek?”

Silas grinned. “Yup. You belong with us. You sound like a real Academy girl.”

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