Mai Mingle thanked her again and again. Even after Huangli got in the car, Mai Mingle waved vigorously, watching her leave. ’Who says young people are apathetic these days? I just t a good kid, didn’t I?’
But Mai Mingle never expected that after obtaining the Hunter Family Faction’s contact information with relative ease, her next objective would be even harder to find than the Morgan Family: a public phone booth.
’Weren’t they all over the place before?’
But now, she could walk for what felt like hours and not see a single one. When she finally spotted one and went inside, she didn’t see a telephone, but rather the word "WI-FI"—next to a fan-like symbol made of three curved lines.
’What’s this for?’
Mai Mingle wandered the streets for at least thirty minutes before she finally accepted the reality: public phone booths had, it seed, been rendered obsolete.
After resting for a bit, she decided she couldn’t take it anymore. Hoping to get lucky, she walked into a small Chinese restaurant that looked like it had been there for ages. And sure enough, behind the cash register, she spotted a familiar, old-fashioned telephone.
"Could I please use your phone for a mont?"
Mai Mingle grew excited. She knew she looked a ss and, afraid of being thrown out, quickly added, "I’ll order a chow in, too."
"You have money for the chow in?" the owner asked, sizing her up with a suspicious gaze. "One dollar a minute."
’Thank goodness for Huangli Roslin’s money... I have to find a way to find that kid later, pay her back, and write her a thank you letter.’
Mai Mingle pressed her ear to the receiver, listening to the phone ring. The past twenty-four hours felt like a strange, dark play that was finally approaching its finale, the curtain about to fall.
Through her clothes, she touched the Snake Belt.
Mai Mingle had long grown used to its presence. If she didn’t touch it, she would even forget that the Illusion was still wrapped around her.
She hadn’t forgotten, of course, that the Snake Belt was the Morgan Family’s target.
That was why Mai Mingle had no intention of revealing herself. Not letting anyone from the Morgan Family see her was the safest approach.
"Hello?" a woman’s voice answered on the other end.
"Hello," Mai Mingle said, glancing at the owner in the distance. She turned around, cupped her hand over the mouthpiece, and whispered, "Is this the Morgan Family?"
"Who is this?"
"Soone just gave so money to call you and pass on a ssage."
The person on the other end imdiately grew wary. "Who exactly are you?"
Mai Mingle ignored the question and continued, "She told she just ca back from a place called a Nest. She saw one of your people there, a little... a man nad Jonah. She wanted to tell you—are you listening?"
The other end of the line was silent. But for so reason, the silence felt tense to Mai Mingle, unnatural, as if it were concealing a flurry of movent and sound.
"I’m listening," the woman’s voice finally said, and a burst of noise erupted in the background along with her words. The mont she finished speaking, the line went dead silent again.
If Mai Mingle had been more experienced with cell phones, she would have realized the person on the other end had just hit the mute button.
But she lacked that experience.
"She told to tell you that Jonah is at Saint Louis Hospital and needs to be rescued urgently."
’Just saying that might not be enough. Maybe I should explain more about Jonah’s condition... What if they bring that bug back with him?’
While Mai Mingle was thinking, the woman on the other end asked a few more questions, none of them very important. Not sensing anything amiss, she answered them all.
But the woman’s next words made every hair on her body stand on end.
"I have your location now," the woman said, then hung up with a sharp CLICK.
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