For Susan, with thanks for the long walks and
moral support
PRELUDE
At this hour of the night, the East Side of Providence was about as quiet as
city neighborhoods get. The people who could afford sedate charm and
architectural interest were dozing in front of their high-definition
televisions, while local newscasts alternated between self-promotion and
breathless promises of news and weather reports to come.
An unexpected downpour, the last April shower of the year, had just swept
through on its way northward. Sound traveled with uncanny clarity in the
rain-washed air, and the quick, light slap of feet against wet pavement rippled
through the silence like pebbles thrown into still water.
Two women ran full out along the deserted road, soaked to the skin by the
sudden shower. Both were dark-haired and both ran with single-minded
determination, but there the similarity ended. Kate Myers, the older of the two,
was a tall, rangy woman with a long-legged, mile-eating stride. A serious runner
since high school, she was built for speed and trained to win. She still ran
every day, and she played soccer on the weekends with women half her age.
Tonight she was running hard, yet her much shorter companion matched her pace
with ease. Kate wasn't sure whether to be impressed or annoyed.
They rounded a corner at the edge of Swan Point Cemetery and began to run
beside a stone wall, a staple of the New England landscape. This one, however,
was built of improbably large rocks. Huge boulders perched here and there atop
these walls, giving silent testament to the precarious nature of existence.
Kate glanced into the graveyard, a nervous habit she'd been trying without
much success to break. Fog was starting to rise from the rain-soaked ground,
only to be swept off by a quickening wind. This part of the cemetery was more
horticultural park than resting place, but Kate could envision the swirl of
earthbound clouds curling around nineteenth-century mausoleums and lending an
illusion of flight to angel wings of immovable stone or bronze. It was that sort
of night—one that H.P. Lovecraft, one of the more famous inhabitants of the
cemetery, would no doubt find inspiring.
Kate had scant appreciation for the macabre, which, given her line of work,
never failed to amuse people.
A soft, slightly husky alto chuckle snapped her attention back to the run,
and she realized she'd picked up the pace considerably. Cheeks flaming, she
dialed back her speed and glanced at her new running partner.
Gwen Gellman was at least a head shorter than Kate, and waif thin. Her slim
legs were bared to the butt by skimpy purple running shorts, and a tiny black
tank top contrasted with skin so pale it brought to mind fine porcelain. Kate
guessed Gwen to be about a hundred pounds soaking wet, which she currently was,
and though she wasn't more than a year or two younger than Kate, she didn't look
a day over seventeen. Despite all this, words like "delicate" and "fragile" just
didn't apply. Five kilometers of hard running, and the girl hadn't broken a
sweat. If there were any justice in the world, all that let's-go-clubbing makeup
rimming her eyes would be running down her face in dark rivulets. Her hair was
as wet as Kate's, but instead of hanging limp and lank, the girl's short, thick
locks reshaped themselves into glistening curls.
Kate could have forgiven Gwen for all that, had she not also been a former
cop with all the annoying traits of that breed. She was relentless and
cat-curious, with the usual arrogant disregard for her own safety. That last,
Kate would never understand. She dealt with death every day, but she was in no
hurry to experience it herself. But Gwen? Kate had yet to decide whether the
girl was too stupid to recognize the danger she was putting herself in, or too
driven to care.
They reached the end of the course and slowed to an easy trot. This was their
third shared run in as many days, and they'd fallen into a pattern: meet at
Brown Stadium, run a five-K loop through the quiet charm of Blackstone
Boulevard, cool down on the way to Kate's house. Her neighborhood was a tangle
of narrow side streets, with tall wooden houses painted in muted pastels and
cars parked on both sides of the road. The only place to run was down the middle
of the streets, but at this hour there was little competition from traffic.
Gwen waited until they'd slowed to a walk to bring up her personal crusade.
"I hate to nag—"
"But in my case, you'll make an exception?"
Kate's sarcasm was answered by a quick, fleeting grin. "Hey, you asked for
three days. Time's up. Did you find anything new?"
"Gwen, there isn't anything to find," she said patiently. "I reviewed all my
notes and test results, and found nothing to indicate that Frank Cross's death
was anything other than an accidental drowning. His blood-alcohol level was
nearly four times the legal limit. I'm not surprised he fell off his boat. It's
a wonder he managed to get as far as he did."
"Don't think that hasn't occurred to me," Gwen said darkly. "Any sign that
the alcohol was forced into him? An IV track, maybe?"
"Nothing."
They walked several paces before Gwen spoke again. "What do you know about
foie gras?"
Kate shot her a puzzled look. "Foie gras? It's a pate made from duck or goose
liver, usually served on crackers. I've never tried it, though I was tempted to
after watching this old James Bond movie. Sean Connery sneaks some foie gras
into a spa and feeds it to his physical therapist. Judging from her reaction, it
qualifies as fore-play. Before I get too distracted by that line of thought,
maybe you should tell me where this is going."
"Do you know how it's made?"
She ran an impatient hand through her wet hair. "With some sort of food
processor, I'd imagine. Cooking doesn't interest me."
"Me either. But I dated a chef once, and he went on and on. Apparently the
geese used for foie gras have to be fattened until their livers balloon up to
seven or eight times the normal size. Since no animals except humans and lapdogs
willingly fuck themselves up to that extent, people shove tubes down the birds'
throats and force-feed them."
Kate grimaced. "That sounds like torture."
"You think? I'm guessing anything that extreme would leave forensic evidence,
even after just one time."
"It would, yes. I wasn't specifically looking for… intrusion of that sort,
but nothing I saw suggested that consuming half a bottle of Scotch was anything
but voluntary."
"That's not what happened," Gwen said stubbornly. "There's got to be another
explanation."
"And I'm sure you have several."
"I'm only interested in the one that's true, and so far we haven't
found it," she said curtly. "Alcohol can be absorbed through the colon. Did you
check…"
"For evidence of an eighty-proof enema? C'mon, Gwen."
"Did you?" she persisted.
Kate suppressed a sigh. "Not specifically, no. But the contents of his
stomach helped establish time of death. There was enough alcohol present to
explain his state. You were at his house—did you see anything to indicate a
struggle?"
"No, but people have been known to clean up a crime scene. And maybe there
wasn't much of a struggle. You said Frank had a cut on his head. They could have
knocked him out."
"More likely he hit it when he fell. What about motive? Was anything taken
from his house?"
Gwen took a moment to think that over. "The investigating officer didn't see
any evidence of theft," she said carefully, "but that doesn't indicate absence
of motive. Frank was a cop for over thirty years. If you do the job right, you
can piss off a lot of people in three decades."
"Yes, I know."
Kate's voice was sharper than she'd intended. She softened her words with a
faint smile before turning away to prop one foot on the third step of her front
stairs. She took her time leaning into a hamstring stretch. When she could trust
herself to speak without emotion, she said, "Give me a minute, and I'll drive
you home. You shouldn't be running by yourself at this hour."
The girl flashed an angelic smile. "Like the man said, 'Yea, though I walk
through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil, because I'm the
meanest motherfucker in the valley.'"
"Why do cops think you're invincible?" she snapped, hearing the bitterness in
her voice but not particularly caring. "No job too sordid, no street too
dangerous, no risk too stupid."
Gwen's smile broadened. "Don't hold back on my account. If that's how you
feel about the job, I can see why you dumped Quaid." She cocked her head to one
side and considered. "Well, plus the fact that he's about as interesting as
white bread with mayo."
"Actually, I didn't mind that Gary Quaid was cautious and conservative."
"But…"
This wasn't a subject Kate liked to discuss, but she could see how it might
work to her benefit tonight. She straightened up, put her other foot on the
third step, and leaned back into the stretch, holding it while she gathered the
composure needed to recite the grim facts of her girlhood.
"My father was a cop. He was killed on the job when I was still in high
school, by a man he'd arrested years before. Knowing this, do you really think
I'd skim over Frank Cross's autopsy? Take the easy explanation without a good,
hard look at other possibilities?"
Gwen nodded slowly. "Point taken. Did they get the guy?"
That wasn't the response Kate would have expected from most people, but it
seemed typical of Gwen. She'd met the former cop about a week ago, just after
Gwen had fished the body of her mentor and best friend out of the Narragansett
Bay. From day one, Gwen had wanted answers, not sympathy. No doubt she thought
everyone processed grief in the same fashion.
"They got him," Kate said shortly. "But in Frank Cross's case, there's no one
to 'get.' You've got to let it go, Gwen."
"Gee, Kate, you don't seem to be very big on closure. Didn't you give the
same advice to Quaid when he was following up on the raid at Winston's?"
The memory was like an icy hand around Kate's throat. "You know about that?
And about the… warning?"
"Yeah. So?"
Kate huffed in exasperation. "So? Someone broke into the morgue and mutilated
the bodies of the two policemen killed in the raid. In my lab. Using my
equipment."
"Seems to me you'd want to find whoever did that, if for no other reason than
to keep your equipment clean."
Her gaze slid away. "The police are looking into it."
"Since when? Last I heard they were covering it up. Bad for morale, or some
similar pile of bullshit."
"You'll have to take that up with the department." She straightened up. "It's
getting late. If you're sure you don't want a ride…"
Gwen took the hint and trotted off. After a few paces she stopped and turned
back. "One more thing—did you ask about the fingerprints found in Frank's
house?"
"His prints were the only ones found on the glass of Scotch, but you knew
that."
"What about the bottle?"
"Same thing."
Gwen's eyes narrowed. "Only Frank's prints," she repeated.
"On a bottle that's probably been handled by at least a dozen people between
the distillery and the package store. That didn't set off any alarms?"
"What I meant was that his fingerprints were found on the bottle. I don't
know how many other prints were found," Kate said hastily, "but I'll
see what I can find out."
"Thanks. I wouldn't ask, but…"
She didn't elaborate, and didn't need to. Kate knew the story: Gwen had left
the force nearly two years ago under a cloud and set up a small PI business. A
few people on the inside were still willing to deal with her when no one else
was looking, but the investigating officer assigned to Frank Cross's case was
personally offended by any hint of tarnish on the badge, and he'd spitefully—and
effectively—blocked Gwen's attempts to follow up on her mentor's death. That,
apparently, was where Kate came in. A medical examiner known for her obsessive
habits on and off the job, she could ask the occasional odd question without
raising too many eyebrows.
She waved Gwen on her way and headed up the stairs. The screened porch on the
front of her house was deeply shadowed. That was strange, considering how much
attention Kate lavished on safety precautions these days.
Strange, too, that she hadn't noticed the darkness until now. But the nearest
streetlamp was just across the narrow road, and the light outside the house was
bright enough to distract the eye from the darkness within. Kate tested the
porch door and found it securely locked. Most likely the lightbulbs had burned
out, or perhaps she'd simply forgotten to turn on the light when she'd left. God
knows she had enough on her mind to justify a lapse or two.
She let herself in and flipped the light switch. Faint, yellow light filled
the small porch. She's just forgotten to turn on the porch light, something
people did every day. Most people, that is. For Kate, it was the
equivalent of a red-flag offense. When this was over, she was definitely going
to take some of that vacation time she had piled up.
After securing the dead bolt on the porch entrance, she unlocked the front
door. The heavy wooden door swung shut behind her as she stepped into the hall.
Here, too, the lights were off, and she palmed the wall for the switch.
It felt slightly sticky. Kate regarded her hand, and her eyes widened.
Blood, so thick and dark it was nearly black, smeared her hand. Her eyes
focused on the floor beneath her feet, and she noted that the sisal mat was
sodden with blood.
The familiar smells of death hit her in a sudden rush. Panic struck, and she
whirled toward the door—
And fell back, stumbling a little because she couldn't tear her horrified
gaze from the door. Her throat worked as she fought back waves of bile. She
desperately wanted to scream and run, but the nightmare quality of the ugly
little tableau stole her ability to do either.
A neighbor's dog—a squat, ugly little mixed breed that looked like a cross
between a Chihuahua and a footstool—had been duct-taped to the door. The little
dog had been gutted, and above the killing slash was an elaborate design, carved
into its broad, nearly hairless belly. Though somewhat obscured by blood, the
design was plain enough: a circular, mazelike pattern that looked like a spiral
and its mirror image.
The same design that had been cut into the bodies of detectives Tom Yoland
and Carmine Moniz.
Kate lunged for the doorknob. The door opened only an inch or two before
slamming shut. For a moment or two she tugged at the knob with both hands, then
fresh horror swept over her in an icy wave when she realized what this meant:
Someone was in the porch, holding the door shut. Someone was in her
porch. Toying with her. Taunting her.
For a moment, anger was stronger than fear, strong enough to clear Kate's
thoughts and prompt her to action. She quickly flipped the lock and raced up the
stairs, taking them two at a time.
Her bedroom was a minor fortress, with a solid wood door secured not only by
dead bolts but with two long metal bars that slid into braces secured to wall
studs on either side of the door. There was no way anyone could kick down that
door, unless they planned to take most of the wall out with it.
She dashed into the room and slammed the door, sliding the various locks into
place. A metal bat, a relic of her softball days, was propped against a potted
plant by the door. Kate hefted it as she moved cautiously through the room,
turning on lights, throwing open closet doors, checking under the bed. As soon
as she was certain she was alone in the room, she picked up the bedside phone to
call for help.
There was no dial tone. She slammed the receiver back into the cradle, picked
it up, and listened again. A soft, faintly husky chuckle mocked her.
The receiver fell from her suddenly nerveless hands. The intruder was in the
house. He'd left the line open, waiting for her to pick up the receiver.
She ran to the nearest window and fumbled with the lock. Alarms on the window
were connected directly to the police station. Opening the window was as good as
making a 911 call.
Her fingers felt thick and clumsy, frostbitten with fear. Finally she
disengaged the locks and pushed at the window. It raised a fraction of an inch
before it stopped dead. Kate peered out the window, and her heart sank as she
noticed the heavy nails driven into the outer frames, holding the lower window
sash shut. She checked the other windows, just to make sure, but as she
expected, she was thoroughly trapped.
A sudden flare of light drew her eye to the lone tree in her narrow back
garden. High in the branches, not more than twenty feet from her window, sat a
shadowy figure, holding something that appeared to be a small torch.
An eternity passed as Kate stood frozen, staring into that grinning face.
Then her tormenter dropped the torch. It fell into the bed of shredded garden
mulch she'd had delivered last week but had never found time to spread.
The flame flickered and died. Thank God for tonight's rain shower, she
thought fervently.
Even as the thought formed, a thin tendril of smoke began to rise from the
pile of wood shavings, carrying an acrid chemical smell. Small, bright flames
licked across the pile and slithered toward the house.
Kate sank down onto her bed and considered her options. She had a rope ladder
in her closet, and if she had to, she could break one of the windows and climb
out. But if she left the house by the bedroom window, the intruder would see
her. Going down through the house didn't seem any safer. Her best bet was to
stay where she was and hope the police response came in time.
If indeed the alarm had been triggered.
The jangle of the front doorbell brought her leaping to her feet. She was at
the door, throwing aside the first dead bolt, when it occurred to her that the
bell might not be a harbinger of rescue. For all she knew, it could be the
intruder's ploy to get her out of her bedroom.
She peered out the side window, looking for any hint of the strobing light
that might indicate a police response. Unfortunately, no light at all found its
way into the narrow side yard.
A loud thump came from the floor below. Startled, Kate jumped back from the
window. As she did, she realized the source of the noise—the back door had been
forcibly opened. She heard the faint sound of footsteps, and a familiar voice
called her name.
Weak with relief, Kate threw back the locks and cracked open the door. "Be
careful," she yelled. "There was someone in the backyard. He was in the house,
too."
"Stay where you are. I'll check it out."
Long minutes passed before she heard footsteps on the stairs. She peeked out
again, then swung the door open wide.
"Thank God it's you! Did you see him?"
"No. The sick bastard is long gone. There's no one here but you and me."
Maybe it was her strained nerves, but that observation struck Kate as more
ominous than comforting. Her eyes dropped to the gun in her rescuer's hand.
Of course there would be a gun. Who responded to an intruder alert unarmed?
On the other hand, who took time to add a silencer to their weapon?
Kate's gaze flashed up to that familiar face, and what she saw confirmed her
fears. The first bullet tore through her shoulder, spinning her around and
sending her pitching facedown onto the carpet. Oddly enough, she felt the impact
of the floor before her mind registered the pain of the gunshot wound. Then the
pain came in a screaming, blinding rush.
The second shot slammed into her, and the third. There might have been more,
but Kate was beyond the point where such things mattered. Her entire world began
and ended with the white-hot agony radiating from her chest into her useless,
twitching limbs.
Dimly she was aware of a cool pressure at the base of her neck, and in some
corner of her mind she understood what was about to happen.
A lifetime of fear and resentment fell away, and Kate welcomed Death with a
gratitude so vast it bordered on affection.
CHAPTER ONE
A sudden gust of wind blew in from the ocean, carrying the tang of salt and
the recent memory of winter's chill. It ruffled through the late-spring garden
and swept across the balcony of a white clapboard house built by some
prosperous, long-dead sea captain. The two men seated on the balcony broke off
their argument and reached to steady their wineglasses. A silence fell between
them, heavy with the windswept echoes of distant shores, distant times.
Ian Forest glanced at the sea, finding no pleasure in the spectacular view
his perch afforded. The ocean reminded him of a spiteful ex-wife, endlessly
reciting his secrets but reserving the right to keep a thousand of her own. He
swept an impatient hand across his forehead to brush aside his windblown hair
and wondered, not for the first time, why Salvadore Anselm kept a house on
Martha's Vineyard. Both men had roots in island cultures, and to Ian, this
scenic, tourist-infested hell was a reminder of the exile they shared.
Perhaps that explained why Salvadore called him here so frequently. Perhaps
he chose this place because it gave their meetings an unspoken subtext: Of
course you will serve me, for what other choice remains to you?
Ian stifled a sigh and turned his attention to his host, a lean, fit man of
indeterminate age. Salvadore's face was unlined, but he projected an aura of
experience and power that, along with his thick silver hair, tricked the eye
into seeing a man in his mid fifties. His ethnicity was equally elusive, though
few people moved past the Italianate name to ponder the slight tilt of his
sapphire-blue eyes and the sharp, angular lines of his face. Salvadore's origins
might not be betrayed by his face, but his character, more often than not, was
written across it plainly enough. At the moment, his gem-colored eyes held a
faint sheen of malice, and his decidedly unpleasant smile celebrated the dark
joys of privilege and position.
"Shall we move on to the item of business?" he suggested.
Salvadore's voice—a silky baritone that retained an indefinable Old World
accent—was a perfect match to his appearance. Their people aged slowly, but it
had always struck Ian as odd that their speech patterns were likewise unaffected
by the passage of time. Constant, conscious effort was required to keep from
lapsing into their native tongue—or for that matter, into some older version of
the languages spoken in their adopted homelands.
It suddenly occurred to Ian that their conversation had lapsed into the old
language as it grew more heated. Salvadore's return to English decreed an end to
their dispute. Ian acknowledged this with a slight nod that signified, if not
defeat, at least recognition of battle deferred.
"I've decided to put the clubs under new management," Salvadore announced.
"Tonight will be your last evening at Underhill, so enjoy it while you can."
Ian suppressed a wry smile. He'd spent years keeping the sleazy "gentlemen's
clubs" profitable, but insinuating that he enjoyed watching young girls undress
to bad music was deliberately insulting. So, for that matter, was the assumption
that he might actually rise to snap at such tawdry bait.
Instead, he lifted his wineglass. "Here's to the new manager's success."
Salvadore's cool stare acknowledged the irony in Ian's toast, but he drank to
it nonetheless. Among their kind, even the most superficial ritual words held
power.
"We'll need you to begin your new assignment right away." Anselm paused,
lifting one silver eyebrow in mocking inquiry. "Unless, of course, you intend to
observe the ritual mourning for your liege lord?"
Long years of practice enabled Ian to keep his expression pleasantly neutral.
In mourning? Not bloody likely. His only regret concerning Wallace Earl
Edmonson's passing was that he hadn't had the pleasure of watching the bastard
die.
No, make that two regrets: not knowing where the earl was buried
made it impossible to spit on his grave.
"I can begin at once," Ian said mildly. "Be assured that Edmonson's passing
will be marked with all due honor."
Salvadore responded with a knowing smile. "No doubt. And for your service,
you've been granted a singular honor: you are entrusted with untangling the
earl's affairs. Not the council's business," he cautioned. "He handled those
matters admirably, but a few of his side projects were… somewhat questionable."
Ian had few illusions concerning the boundaries of "council business." The
council would never openly admit to taking a monthly tithe of Edmonson's sex and
drug trade, but what other reason could they possibly cite for their
unquestioning support of the man, other than the substantial financial
contributions his dubious activities made possible?
"Define 'side projects,' if you will."
Anselm's expression darkened at this breach of protocol. Their business was
conducted under a strict code of law and tradition, with the understanding that
vague definitions, subtle evasions, and a highly selective version of the truth
would provide the necessary flexibility.
"You require specifics?" he demanded in a tone that mingled reproof with
incredulity.
"I do, yes. Edmonson's life was long, eventful, and thoroughly misspent. Give
me a place to start."
For a long moment, Salvadore sat in silence, his face eloquent with the
battle between pragmatism and custom. "The alliance with Dennis Walsh," he said
at last. "It seems unwise to involve the captain of a city's vice squad in our
affairs. He's in a position to learn too much about us, and it seems likely to
me that any man who can be bought by one person will eventually sell to
another."
Ian rolled the stem of his wineglass between his fingers as he chose his next
words. "We are in agreement concerning the man's character," he said carefully,
"but I understand Edmonson's reasoning in this matter."
"And you concur?"
"No, but I'd prefer to address my concerns as a separate issue."
Salvadore shifted impatiently and glanced down at the antique sundial in the
garden below. "Go on."
"Edmonson's recruitment of Captain Walsh was a response to changes in the
structure of local law enforcement. When the city had separate divisions for
drugs, gangs, and sex crimes, it was considerably easier to arrange for certain
things to fall between the cracks. Unfortunately, it occurred to some
enlightened official that crimes involving drugs, sex, and gangs were frequently
related, and not infrequently committed by the same individuals. An experimental
vice squad was put into place. When it started to prove too effective, Edmonson
thought it necessary to subvert some of the top people."
"How?" Before Ian could respond, Salvadore grimaced and shook his head.
"Never mind—I don't care to know. I find the appetites of such men…
distasteful."
"But profitable."
Salvadore nodded, either missing the subtle rebuke or choosing to ignore it.
He reached for a pottery decanter and refilled their wineglasses. They both
sipped, letting the honey wine slip across their palates.
The mead was exceptional—light, fragrant, and surprisingly dry. Under the
circumstances, however, Ian would have preferred a less civilized drink. The
sordid matters under discussion were hard enough to swallow without providing so
vivid a contrast.
Apparently Salvadore thought so, too, for he carefully placed his glass aside
before continuing. "Very well, you've presented the logic behind Edmonson's
decision. What is your opinion of this matter?"
"Our ties to Captain Walsh have become personal, and therefore dangerous,"
Ian said bluntly.
"Ah. You're speaking, of course, of our new foundling. How much of a problem
is she likely to be?"
Ian glanced meaningfully toward the glass doors that led into the upper floor
of Salvadore's house. In the room beyond was a wall safe, which held, among
other treasures, a blue crystal that magnified the owner's innate ability to
perceive things her eyes had never seen. Neither of them had any claim to the
gem, but they were agreed on the folly of placing so powerful an inheritance in
the hands of an untrained, untried changeling—especially one whose loyalties
were far from certain.
Anselm conceded the point with a slight nod, "Your recommendation?"
"We could remove the source of her grievance."
Dark blue eyes flashed reprovingly to Ian's face. "Killing a high-ranking
official might be an occasional necessity, but in this case, the benefit hardly
justifies the risk."
The hum of an approaching powerboat caught Anselm's attention. His eyes
focused on the driver, then took on a slightly malevolent gleam.
Ian followed the line of Anselm's gaze. A sleek white boat cut through the
wind-ruffled water and pulled up to a skillful stop by the dock. The driver
swung himself up onto the dock, moving with surprising grace for someone his
size. He was not much above medium height—perhaps an inch or two short of six
feet—but he was considerably broader and more muscular than either of the men
observing him. His hair was nearly as dark as Ian's, and his sun-browned face
proclaimed his Native American ancestry.
As if sensing the men's scrutiny, the newcomer looked up toward the balcony.
He shielded his eyes against the sun with one hand and lifted the other in
greeting.
Ian's jaw tightened in annoyance. He had not forgotten the beating he'd taken
from those hands, or the way those kind brown eyes could turn as flat and
focused as any attack dog's—an analogy, come to think of it, that lay entirely
too close to the truth.
Understanding crashed over Ian, and he turned incredulous eyes to his host.
"That man is an enforcer."
"So?"
"You assigned him to befriend Gwen. To watch her, yes, and to report
back any difficulties she might be having, but surely with the goal of helping
ease her way into her new life!"
Anselm's chuckle was as dry and cool as snakeskin. "It's not like you to be
so naive. Our new foundling—"
"Gwen," Ian interjected. "Gwen Gellman is the name she knows and
uses."
"Very well, Gwen is a potential problem. You know that as well as I
do. You also know problems tend to take root and grow if not swiftly eliminated.
As for friends, she has enough of those—too many, for that matter. She
has no need of another, and certainly not a man like Jason Cross."
That struck Ian as the best opening he was likely to get to reopen their
earlier discussion. "I couldn't agree more. The man you call Jason Cross—"
"Enough." Anselm's open palm struck the table, and his tone rang
with finality. "He has been thoroughly tested. For the last time, let it go."
Let it go? Ignore the fact that Edmonson's attack dog was trotting at Gwen's
heels? For several days now, "Jason" had been posing as the estranged son of
Gwen's mentor, a man recently murdered by Edmonson… or someone in his employ.
Ian had his suspicions about that, but Anselm shrugged off his concerns. He was
satisfied that Jason Cross had shifted his loyalty from Edmonson to the new
regime. As far as he was concerned, there the matter ended.
Unfortunately, Gwen had accepted Jason for who he claimed to be. By all
appearances, he'd already found a foothold in her life—a feat that Ian had been
unable to duplicate.
So he swallowed his protests and watched in glum silence as Jason Cross loped
up the wooden stairs to the balcony, making less noise than one might expect.
Whatever he saw in Ian's face seemed to amuse him.
"Am I late?" he said casually.
"Your timing is admirable." Anselm sent his companion a sly, sidelong glance.
"We were just discussing how best to clean up after your former master."
Jason's smile dimmed. "With all due respect, the Middle Ages ended about five
hundred years ago. I don't appreciate being referred to as if I were—"
"A rottweiler?" supplied Ian helpfully.
"I was thinking more along the lines of 'slave' or 'serf,' but sure, that
will do."
Anselm dismissed this exchange with an impatient wave of one hand. "I
understand that your… father, the late Frank Cross, assisted Gwen with her
investigations. Have you been able to replace him in this endeavor?"
"Not yet. In fact, I haven't suggested it to her."
"Really. What have you been doing?"
"Let's see," Jason began, "I've moved into my father's house, started a new
job, set up local accounts, and taken care of a hundred little things that make
an identity theft bulletproof."
Ian's eyes narrowed. "Such as making sure the real Jason Cross doesn't wander
onstage?"
"That won't be a problem," the man said flatly. To Anselm he said, "Gwen
trusted Frank Cross, and she's inclined to extend that trust his son. But how
far would this impulse go, if right out of the box I started prying into her
business?"
"A reasonable argument," Anselm allowed, "but the sooner you can start
monitoring her investigations, the better."
"I'm on it." Jason smiled fleetingly. "I signed up for a couple of
programming classes I could probably teach. Boring as hell, but it'll provide an
opening."
"Why not simply present yourself as a computer expert?"
"Anything that's too convenient and coincidental is likely to raise questions
in Gwen's mind, and I don't want to give her a reason to start looking into my
background. It's better if she thinks I started playing around with Frank's
equipment because it was there, and got interested in learning more."
Anselm conceded this with a shrug. "Is she likely to wonder why you're such a
fast learner?"
"I doubt it. If anything, she'll wonder why anyone would want to bother.
Another benefit of this approach is it allows me to screen information without
raising suspicion. Since Gwen isn't expecting too much from me, she'll be more
likely to assume that I'm passing along everything I know."
"I'll have to trust your judgment on this matter. When do you think you can
start?"
"Soon, I think. I'm playing it by ear."
"Very well. Now, what progress on Captain Walsh?"
"Gwen knows that Walsh was hooked up with Edmonson, but she hasn't started
focusing on that part of the puzzle. She's been obsessed with proving that Frank
Cross's death wasn't a drunken accident."
Anselm's gaze flicked to Ian. "That could be a problem."
"I'll see to it."
"And you, Jason, will work with Gwen to discover and eliminate connections
between Edmonson and Walsh."
A small, grim smile touched Jason's lips. "She's not going to cover for her
ex-boss, I'll tell you that right now."
"Did I suggest that? Walsh has criminal associates. Such men live dangerous
and uncertain lives."
"In other words, you want the middlemen eliminated before she's able to
connect all the dots," he surmised.
"Aptly put."
"What about Walsh? Hands off?"
"For the time being. Focus on the girl, and keep her from inquiring too
deeply into our affairs. We need to know what she knows, preferably before
she knows it."
Jason let out an incredulous huff. "Right. Since Gwen's an easygoing gal
without a shred of curiosity, that shouldn't be a problem. Anything else?"
"There are, in fact, two more things: You can spare me your sarcasm, and you
can stay out of her bed."
The young man smirked and glanced at Ian. "I wonder where this is
coming from."
"Wonder all you like, but do as you're told. Observe her closely, and keep us
informed of anything unusual. Anything. Your reports will help us judge whether
or not she's equal to the path ahead."
Hesitation flickered in Jason's eyes. "What happens if you decide she's not?"
Anselm's gaze dropped pointedly to Jason's hands, which were edged with
calluses formed through many years of training in a killer's arts.
"You were not chosen for this task simply because of your computer skills."
"Wait a minute—didn't Edmonson get carted off because he killed a couple of
you people? Isn't that against your laws?" he protested.
"Yes, but you are not, strictly speaking, one of 'our people.'"
Jason folded his arms and leaned back against the railing. His brown eyes
took on a decidedly unfriendly gleam. "That's an interesting distinction."
"I'm so gratified to learn we're not boring you," Anselm said coldly. "That
will be all."
For a moment Ian thought the young fool would attempt to argue, but he pushed
himself away from the rail and stalked off, making no effort to hide his
displeasure. It was not particularly judicious behavior, but Ian thought better
of him for it.
But not well enough to trust him with Gwen's life.
As soon as Jason was out of hearing range, Ian tried one last time. "Is it
really necessary to submit Gwen to such scrutiny?"
For a moment Anselm simply stared at him. "She is a changeling," he said,
giving each word exaggerated emphasis to point out that he was stating the
obvious.
"She is, yes, but the usual reasoning doesn't apply. There is no question
about her bloodlines."
"Nevertheless, she has spent more than three decades denying what she is.
Words have power, and denial can leave a taint not easily erased."
"She has come to accept that she is not human," Ian said quickly. "She knows
she is a changeling."
"But does she understand what that means?"
Ian hesitated. In truth, Gwen was a long way from an understanding of her
newfound heritage. The best he could offer was, "I heard her refer to herself as
one of the Elders."
The older man responded with a derisive snort. "At the tender age of
thirty-four? She's little more than a child. Teach her what she is, Ian, and
quickly, before she's lost to us."
"She'll be fine," Ian assured him. "In fact, this surveillance strikes me as
not only unnecessary, but risky."
That observation seemed to surprise Anselm. "Risky? How so?"
For a moment Ian considered giving his honest opinion: Edmonson had been a
sadistic fool, and any human who willingly served him was likely to be every bit
as twisted. But Anselm's icy gaze warned him not to revisit the Jason Cross
argument.
"Relying on humans always holds risks," Ian pointed out, approaching the
problem from a broader angle. "Those who perceive our true nature are usually
outside the accepted parameters of normality—someone with a psychic gift, a
great hunger for knowledge or power, even, occasionally, an unbalanced mind."
"Whatever the case, they are all tools," Anselm stated. "Of what consequence
are a hammer's hopes and dreams, so long as it drives the nail?"
The edge in his voice spoke of flagging patience. He picked up his half-empty
wineglass and shifted his gaze to the expanse of open sea.
Ian knew better than to ignore so pointed a dismissal. He rose and inclined
his head in deference to Anselm's position, if not to his opinion.
For he was mistaken: Ian was certain of that. Anselm had warned Jason away
from Gwen's bed, but that was a routine matter borne more of esthetics than
necessity. Bedding humans was usually a harmless enough pastime. But during his
long life, Ian had learned that bonds, true bonds, between elves and humans
could be dangerous.
Sometimes, they could be deadly.
If Ian was right about Gwen, she might become very important to the exiled
elves. They could not afford to lose her, as they had lost so many changelings
before.
CHAPTER TWO
Gwen Gellman walked swiftly through the dark basement, making her way toward
the faint red glow of the exit sign. All of her senses were on alert, so she was
already turning when she heard the first rubber-soled whisper of footsteps
behind her.
The man was close, and moving in fast. His dark face was shadowed by a hooded
sweatshirt, but the way he moved told Gwen he was young and reasonably athletic.
And he was big—he probably had half a foot and a good sixty pounds on her.
He was there before she could complete the turn, plowing into her like a
veteran linebacker. Gwen struggled for balance, but momentum and gravity swiftly
decided the outcome. As he rode her to the floor, she threw her left arm
straight out in front of her and curved her other arm up to shield her face.
They hit the floor with bone-jarring force. Gwen quickly shook off the impact
and took stock of her situation: facedown, no weapons within reach, heavy son of
a bitch sprawled on top of her. Not great.
She rolled toward her extended left arm, using her right arm to push their
combined weight away from the floor.
For a moment Gwen thought she might roll him off her, but he quickly
adjusted, moving with her so that she was still pinned beneath his body. Now
they were face to face, with her right arm trapped between them. The wolfish
grin on his face made it clear that he considered this situation an improvement.
His next logical move would be to seize her unfettered hand. Gwen offered a
distraction: she wriggled her legs out from under his, so that her legs were
spread wide and their lower bodies pressed intimately together.
That surprised him into immobility, if only for a moment. Gwen could almost
hear the blood rushing from his brain as he started thinking with the other
organ men used in decision-making processes. She wrapped her left leg around his
right, pulling them even closer. At the same time she moved her trapped arm a
little, so she could slide her palm up the side of his face—a movement that read
more like a caress than an attack.
Before he could make sense of all this, Gwen slapped her left palm against
the other side of his face and slid both thumbs into position over his eyelids.
She pressed in, hard.
A startled curse escaped him, and he reared back—not much, but enough to
create some space between them. Gwen seized his right arm with both hands. At
the same time, she raised her opposite knee and planted her foot, then pushed
her hips off the floor as hard and as high as she could.
The man lost his balance and started to fall forward. He tried to catch
himself with his free hand, but Gwen was already rolling them both toward his
trapped right arm and entangled right leg.
In less than a heartbeat, their positions were reversed. Gwen kept rolling
and scrambled off him. She came up on one knee, pulled one fist up to shoulder
height, and drove it down hard toward his groin.
She pulled up just short of her target, her knuckles brushing the rough
fabric of his jeans. Holding that position, she glanced toward the shadowy form
standing by the door.
"You can hit the lights now, Stan."
Long fluorescent bulbs flickered and hummed into life. Stan—a painfully thin
man clad in a gray janitor's jumpsuit at least two sizes too big for him—yawned
and picked up his broom. He drifted off, looking completely unfazed by the fight
he'd just witnessed. Business as usual, where he'd come from.
Gwen rose to her feet and extended a hand to her "attacker." He gave it a
light slap, turning her offer of assistance into a low five, then rose on his
own and ambled toward a folding chair over by the watercooler.
She turned to the nine women who sat on a semicircle of mats on the floor of
the church basement, their faces flushed and damp from the hour of rigorous
exercise she'd put them through. They regarded her with wide, uncertain eyes.
One woman looked to be minutes away from tears. Even though they all knew the
demonstration was coming, it had hit them hard.
It was supposed to.
"Let's thank Officer O'Riley for his help," Gwen said. She began to clap, and
the class joined in a short-lived, halfliearted bout of applause.
Damian O'Riley lifted one hand in acknowledgement, then went back to his
usual demeanor: both hands stuck in the front pocket of his sweatshirt, long
legs stretched out in front of him. In that pose, he looked like a bored
high-school kid, not a city cop with a college degree and the tenacity of a pit
bull.
It was a dichotomy Gwen could appreciate. She'd been the same kind of cop not
too long ago, and even though she had a good ten years on Damian, she still
looked like a teenager. Only recently had she started to figure out why. And
tonight, for the first time, she'd have to explain to someone else a mystery she
herself only dimly understood.
She forced that prospect into the back of her mind and focused on the seated
women.
"Before the last class, all of you will participate in staged attacks. Not
like that one, not at first," she added hastily, seeing panic flash across
several faces. "We'll begin with familiar exercises, like breaking holds, only
instead of working in pairs, you'll work with a male partner."
One hand went up uncertainly—a soft little hand belonging to a petite
brunette in her mid thirties. In her pastel pink tee shirt and matching yoga
pants, her shiny brown hair caught back in a neat ponytail, she looked like
someone who'd gotten lost on her way to a Mary Kay Cosmetics home party. Gwen
had a pretty good idea what was coming, and she stifled a sigh as she pointed to
the woman.
"But some of the techniques we're learning are meant to… hurt people."
"You don't need to worry about that," Gwen said briskly. "All the men I know
are used to taking abuse."
Damian let out an emphatic grunt. "She got that right."
This surprised a burst of laughter from the women, and some of the tension
slipped from their faces. Gwen didn't necessarily consider that a good thing.
"You've got to forget all about your nice-girl upbringing. When your life's
on the line, there's nothing wrong with inflicting a little pain, and there are
a lot of good ways to do it. If you can't go for the groin, you can break his
thumbs, crush his windpipe, or rip his ears off. That last thing is a lot easier
to do than it sounds, by the way.
"But," she interjected, holding up a cautioning finger, "you can't rely
on pain. Over sixty percent of sexual attackers are on some kind of intoxicant.
That can take the edge off whatever you dish out."
"Now she tells me," Damian interjected.
Gwen waited for the collective chuckle to die down. "Your best bet is usually
to make as much noise as you can, break free as fast as you can, and run like
hell. But you won't always have that option. What Damian and I demonstrated here
was pretty close to worst-case scenario: pinned, facedown, hands trapped."
"Why do we have to act out attacks?" another woman demanded, a shrill,
you-can't-make-me edge to her voice. "As long as we learn the techniques, won't
the training kick in when it needs to?"
"It might," Gwen allowed, "but one of the main reasons more women don't fight
off attackers is that they're frozen with shock. The whole 'this can't be
happening to me' thing. It's better to get past that emotional bullshit now
than in some parking garage the next time you have to work late."
Several heads nodded, and the woman who'd spoken acknowledged the point with
a grudging shrug.
"If this class is a statistical sample, some of you are here because you've
learned it can happen to you. Some stats say one woman out of ten is
sexually assaulted, some say one out of seven. Some go as high as one out of
four."
"Twenty-five percent? That seems way too high," objected a reed-thin blonde
who'd introduced herself earlier that evening as some sort of state bureaucrat.
She hadn't had much to say since, but hey—the woman was in a position to know
what lying bastards statistics could be.
Gwen nodded. "Yeah, but keep in mind that some women are raped more than
once." Because a few of them looked skeptical, she added, "Sexual assault can
happen to anyone, anywhere, but all of you in this class can take precautions
that simply aren't available to some women. It's hard to stay out of a bad
neighborhood if you live there. It's tough to avoid a rapist if he's your
mother's boyfriend, or even a family member. When I was in juvenile hall, I knew
girls who'd been raped three times or more, and one, an incest victim, who'd
lost count before she was out of middle school."
Several jaws dropped, and they all stared at her with the glazed eyes of
people who'd gone into information overload. Gwen wasn't sure if it was the
concept of multiple assaults or her casual reference to her delinquent past that
tipped the scales, but she figured it was time to call it a night.
A glance at the clock confirmed this. "That's all for this class. Next week
we'll work with legal weapons anyone can carry: keys, key chains, flashlights,
hiking sticks, and so on. We'll be working in pairs, so bring safety goggles to
protect your eyes. You can pick some up at Home Depot. Bike helmets would be
good, too. If that seems extreme to you, keep this in mind: The bad guys take
their work seriously."
As the somber-faced women filed out, Gwen walked over to the young cop. He
gathered his long legs under him and rose, pushing back the hood of his
sweatshirt to reveal close-cropped hair he'd recently dyed a reddish brown. Gwen
didn't particularly like this innovation, since the color didn't provide much
contrast to the rich brown hue of his skin, but hey—it was his hair.
"That went well, you think?"
"If you meant to scare the shit out of everyone, I'd say yeah, it went
great," Damian said dryly. "You think any of them will come back for the second
class?"
Gwen shrugged. "If they're serious about staying alive, sure they will. I'm
not getting paid to make them 'feel good about themselves,' or whatever happy
horseshit the community school had in mind when they named this class
'Self-Defense: Exercise and Empowerment for Women.' Fucking morons."
"Damn, Gellman—aren't you the perky little cheerleader tonight." He grinned
at her as he thrust his hands into his pockets and rocked back onto his heels.
"Now, pay up."
"Yeah, yeah. You want some coffee or something? I'm buying."
"Forget it, white girl—you're not getting off that easy. The deal was quid
pro quo: something for something. I let you kick my ass—"
"You let me?"
"Notice me ignoring that. Quid pro quo," he repeated. "One ass-kicking in
exchange for a follow-up on that kidnapping case."
Not an appealing scenario, since "that kidnapping case" had changed Gwen's
entire concept of reality, but Damian was one of the few people Gwen knew who
might be able to hear the story without concluding that she should check herself
into a rubber room.
"I'm going to pay up," she grumbled, "but I'm dangerously decaffeinated and
really, really hungry. You?"
"Missed supper," he said. "As usual. Yeah, I could eat."
The church janitor ambled back into the room and began to gather up the mats.
Gwen had known the man for years: Stan Domanski, an ex-junkie who owed his job,
and probably his life, to Gwen's friend Sister Tamar. Despite this common
touchstone, Gwen had yet to get more than a word or two out of him. True to
form, he returned her thanks with a noncommittal grunt and hoisted a stack of
mats, staggering a little under the load.
"Maybe we should help," Damian suggested, his gaze following the janitor's
unsteady progress.
"I've offered. He took it as an insult." Even so, Gwen took her time heading
for the exit and glanced back twice as she led the way up the back steps. But
Stan seemed to be managing okay, and as soon as he dumped the mats into a bin,
Gwen shouldered open the heavy door and stepped out into a damp spring evening.
A cold, soft mist was falling, and steam rose from the storm drains on the
much-patched streets as Gwen and Damian walked to a nearby sports pub.
Damian followed her to a back table, his face dubious as he took in the
scattering of patrons staring morosely at the grainy screen of the room's single
wall-mounted television. "You sure about this?"
"What? Since I'm buying, you want to hold out for the Cheesecake Factory?
This place isn't as bad as it looks."
It was, in fact, one of Gwen's favorite haunts in this part of town. The
interior was about as glum as the weather, and the wait-staff were reliably
surly. For some reason, the staff all seemed to be in the late stages of a Goth
phase. Gwen figured they were offended by the white stripes on the referee
shirts they were required to wear. But the food was cheap and reasonably good,
and the cook thought "portion control" meant that you stopped piling food on the
plates when it started to fall off.
Gwen raised her oversize coffee mug and waved it like a cast-away signaling a
passing ship. A waitress sporting bottle-black hair and multiple piercings came
over with a full pot of coffee. She rolled her eyes when Gwen told her to leave
the pot, but she set it down without argument and rattled off the night's
specials—no small feat, considering the size of the silver stud in her tongue.
Gwen ordered a burger and fries and Damian said he'd have the same. As the
waitress slumped away, Gwen poured coffee for them both and laced hers with five
little tubs of cream and two sugars. She stirred it slowly, tasted it, and added
another sugar. Achieving the proper balance was an important culinary ritual,
also known as "stalling."
During these preparations, a young Black man called Damian's name and came
over to the table. They touched fists and exchanged a little small talk,
street-style, before the conversation turned to Gwen.
"This your lady, man?"
"She's a PI," Damian said quickly. "I like to pick up some extra work, off
duty. Saving for a new car, you understand."
"Uh-huh. About damn time." He nodded amiably to Gwen and sauntered off.
An uncomfortable silence settled over the table. After a few moments, Gwen
said, "That raises an interesting point."
"I'm sorry, okay?" Damian said quickly. "That was rude, me not introducing
you and all. It's just that a lot of people I know don't exactly get behind the
interracial thing."
"Yeah, I got that, but it doesn't qualify as an 'interesting point.' The
thing is, you helped me with a case, and I usually pay people who do that. If
this gets to be a habit, we need to work out rates and so forth."
The chagrin faded from Damian's face. "How about we just keep it off the
books? I'll help out when you need me, and you return the favor."
"That's not going to get you a new car, but yeah, we could do that." Gwen
leaned back in her seat. "You have a specific favor in mind?"
"Maybe. You do prenups?"
"Prenuptial investigations? Sure. Are you looking to get married?"
He sent her a look. "My sister Shawna is thinking about it. She's a few years
older than me, has an MBA, works in a bank. Does real well for herself, except
when it comes to men. She can't pick 'em worth a damn. This guy talks the talk,
and he looks solid enough, but I get this weird feeling about him. It's
not just because he's sniffing around my sister. It's a family thing, but not
your average family thing. You see what I'm saying?"
Gwen nodded. According to Damian, his family tree included a voodoo
priestess, a medium, a couple of professional psychics, and the occasional water
witch. Dowsing—the ability to sense underground water with some sort of crooked
stick—cropped up every generation or so. The practice of folk medicine was
nearly a family-wide preoccupation. Damian was pretty open about all this, and
he seemed to take it in stride. He shared Gwen's pragmatic view of such things:
Like the man told Horatio, there were more things in heaven and earth, yadda
yadda.
"Your sister didn't inherit any of the family talents, I take it?"
"Hell no. She doesn't believe in any of that shit. But a private eye, that
sounds like something she could get behind. She likes this guy a lot, but you
can tell she's holding back. My guess is she lost faith in her own judgment when
her last fiance took out three Visa cards in her name and maxed them out. I
could probably talk her into meeting you."
Before Gwen could answer, a caressing wind swept over her—a psychic breeze
that raised goose bumps on her arms and made the hair at the back of her neck
rise. The tingling sensation swept down her body, setting nerve endings on edge
and leaving her feeling as if she'd spent the past fifteen minutes engaged in
innovative foreplay. She didn't need to turn around to know who was approaching.
A shadow fell across the table. Damian looked up, and his jaw dropped.
Figures, Gwen noted glumly. The young cop had known there was something weird
about her the first time he set eyes on her. Naturally he'd pick up vibes from
the Prince of Darkness.
CHAPTER THREE
"Sit down, Ian," she said resignedly. "Stop staring, Damian, and for
chrissake, shut your mouth. It makes you look like a goldfish. Or gay."
Damian shut his mouth with an audible click, but he continued to stare as the
newcomer dropped gracefully into a chair.
Gwen had to admit that Ian Forest was worth staring at: hair that was black
enough to pick up bluish highlights, eyes as large and blue as her own in a
narrow, fine-boned face that brought to mind fallen angels and doomed poets.
Surprisingly, Ian was regarding Damian with equal intensity. "A magus," he
murmured, not sounding entirely pleased by his conclusion.
The cop's eyes narrowed. "How's that again?"
"That's not an insult," Ian assured him. "Quite the contrary, in fact. The
word refers to someone who sees more than meets the common eye. You probably
know its plural form, magi."
"Three wise men. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh," Gwen elaborated. "Fancy
bathrobes, camels, big-ass neon star overhead. Stop me when this starts sounding
familiar."
Damian shot a quelling glance at her. "I know what the damn word
means. I just never heard it used to start a conversation before."
"That is not what's happening here," she said fervently. "Ian has to
rush off. Right now. No time to chat."
The newcomer ignored her and extended a hand to Damian. "Let's start with a
more conventional opening gambit. Ian Forest. Gwen was briefly in my employ. And
you are?"
"A little freaked out, but I'm adjusting." They shook, then settled back in
their chairs and continued to eye each other.
Ian was the first to break the silence. "So, Officer O'Riley, what is your
theory about our Gwen?"
The cop's eyes went wary, then turned flat and cool. "Since we're asking
questions, I got a couple. First: any particular reason why you should know my
name? Second: I should have a 'theory' about Gellman?"
"I would hope so, yes. But I'm answering your questions out of order, aren't
I? In response to the first, you came to my attention when you started
investigating a collection of DNA samples taken from people who attended a
certain club the night it was raided. It was suggested to you that one of those
samples was not human. If you are as intelligent as your college records
suggest, you have eliminated enough possibilities to suspect that this sample
was taken from Gwen. Assuming you are correct, what is she?"
Damian glanced at Gwen. When she shrugged, he said cautiously, "We were gonna
talk about that later tonight."
"Is there any particular reason to wait?"
"Privacy?" Gwen suggested pointedly.
Ian studied her for a moment. "You have no idea what you're going to tell
him, do you?"
"I'll figure it out as I go along," she muttered. "Not that this is any of
your business."
"I beg to differ, but that's a discussion that does require privacy.
Since the topic is up for discussion, allow me to get the ball rolling."
Ian reached out and tucked a strand of Gwen's dark chestnut hair behind her
ear. Instinctively she brushed it back. Her ears weren't her best feature, and
her hair, although short, was always cut to hide the top half of them—
Suddenly she knew what explanation Ian was going to give. Incredible as it
seemed, he was going to play the Elder Races card.
"Don't do it," she warned him.
"Oh, come now," Ian chided. "Young Damian here has seen you in the shower
with your hair slicked back, so he knows what your ears look like."
Damian choked on his coffee and set the mug down hard enough to slosh some of
the brew onto the table. "You got a peeper, Gellman? If he's stalking, say the
word and I arrest his ass."
"Now, there's a thought," Gwen said wistfully. A few years back, Rhode
Island's legislature had upgraded stalking from a misdemeanor to a felony, with
first-time offenders facing sentences of up to five years, a fine of up to ten
grand, or both.
Her sigh held genuine regret. Five years without Ian Forest hanging around
sounded pretty damn good. "He's not exactly a stalker. He just… knows things."
"Yeah? You don't get that kind of info off the fucking Internet. I look hard
enough, how much you want to bet we find out he bent some kind of law
all to hell."
"Gwen recently turned thirty-four," Ian said, undeterred by the younger man's
rant. "How old does she look to you?"
"Like there's a safe answer to that question," he sneered.
Ian smiled faintly. "I stand corrected. One final question: You fought Gwen
tonight. How would you describe that experience?"
"Like trying to hold onto a hundred pounds of Siamese cat," Damian snapped.
"If you got a point, make it."
"I think you know where this is going," Ian said softly. "Surely you remember
a certain weekend in upstate New York during your sophomore year of college?"
Up to this point, Gwen had been watching this odd conversation like a
spectator at a tennis match. Ian's last shot went right past her, but it was
pretty obvious that it'd hit Damian right between the eyes. His face fell slack
with astonishment, and his gaze shifted from Ian to Gwen and back. In the brief
moment Damian's eyes met hers, Gwen read in them a welter of emotions: surprise,
disbelief, speculation, denial.
"What's this about?" she demanded.
The young cop shifted uneasily in his chair. "It's not a big deal—at least
apart from the issue of how the hell he knows this stuff. Thing is,
back when I was in college, I was into fantasy books, online games—that sort of
thing. I even went to a few fantasy conventions, but I usually ended up feeling
like one dark sock in a washload of whitey-tighties. You don't meet up with a
lot of brothers at the cons, I can tell you that. Shoot, there's probably more
color at your basic Klan meeting, and—"
"This is fascinating," Gwen cut in. "In fact, I can hardly wait until we're
both retired and have time to sit on a park bench and swap memories."
"Yeah." Damian blew out a sigh. "Short version: There was this LARP
con—that's 'live action role-playing'—in upstate New York, and a friend of mine
talked me into trying it out. Everybody played a character all weekend, ran
around in costume."
A moment of silence passed before Ian asked, "And what were you?"
"Seems like you the man with all the answers tonight," Damian said coldly.
"You want that put on the table, you say the word."
"Very well. Our young friend here was an elf. A forest elf, to be
precise—a variety that apparently comes in green and brown camouflage."
Gwen shot a venomous look at Ian, then slapped both hands down on the table
and leaned over them to glare at the young cop.
"Step into reality, fanboy," she snapped. "Elves don't exist, and even if
they did, I'm not a freaking elf!"
"Did I say you were?" demanded Damian. He tossed his head toward
Ian. "That's his story."
"I'm just trying to understand your point of view," Ian said smoothly. "Given
your particular set of interests, I wondered if you might make that connection."
"Back in the day, I used to watch Star Trek reruns, too. Ooh, pointy
ears! How 'bout that? Gellman's ears are just a little bit pointy, so maybe I
should have pegged her for a Vulcan?"
Gwen threw up her hands in exasperation and prepared to launch into a tirade.
While she was still drawing breath, Ian caught her eye and asked, "An unexpected
conclusion, perhaps, but I doubt it's much stranger than those she grew up
hearing."
It was a surprisingly shrewd comment, and it hit the mark hard enough to
deflate Gwen's ire. Her hands dropped to the table, hard, as if weighed down by
her childhood memories.
The anger faded from Damian's eyes as he took in her response. "Tell it," he
said softly.
"Not much to tell," she said with a shrug. "I can't remember the first time I
picked up a book or toy and knew who had held it last, or walked into a room and
knew what had happened there last night. When you know things you shouldn't
know, people assume you're lying, crazy, or a nasty little snoop. When I was
nine, a foster family added a couple of new possibilities: I was either the
devil's little mouthpiece, or I was an innocent victim of evil—sort of like
Linda Blair in The Exorcist, I guess."
"No good options," Damian concluded. "So how did you explain what
you could do?"
"An interesting question," Ian put in. "What about it, Gwen? Any 'forest
folk' in your early experiences?"
She shrugged. "Santa's helpers, Keebler cookies. Nothing that rang any
bells."
"In other words, since you didn't share Officer O'Riley's interests, you were
never inclined to his… perspective."
"Hey, man, I know the difference between fantasy and real life!"
"Yet some might argue that you're unusually credulous. You accept as normal
all manner of occult and psychic phenomena."
Gwen caught Damian's eye. "I didn't tell him."
"Never thought you did," the cop replied grimly. "All right, here's the
thing, Mr. Forest: I don't waste time trying to convince myself that something
didn't happen, just because it doesn't fit into the way things are supposed
to happen."
"You accept alternative explanations," Ian suggested.
"Yeah, you could say that. We might not understand how and why something
works, but that doesn't mean it doesn't work."
Ian smiled faintly. "An admirable sentiment, if somewhat difficult to parse."
By this point, Gwen was starting to understand what Ian was doing. Obviously
he knew of Damian's slightly left-of-center childhood and the worldview that
went with it, and wanted to find out just how far that credulity went. By
mockingly pushing the pointy-eared E-word, he established the whole Elder Races
thing as way, way outside the edges of the envelope.
Which, quite frankly, was exactly where Gwen preferred to leave it.
"So, what did I think I was?" she repeated thoughtfully. "Different, I guess.
I never got much further than that, but it never occurred to me that I might not
be human."
"Could be the lab tech made a mistake," Damian suggested. "Or maybe there are
DNA variations among humans that we just haven't found out about yet."
His face grew more animated as he warmed to that idea. "Hey, why not? My
mother keeps bird feeders out back, and the little brown birds that show up all
look pretty much the same. With dogs, though, you get everything from the Saint
Bernard to teacup poodles. Turns out the birds are different species,
but the big-ass dog is the same species as the little white rat with the 'fro."
"Interesting point," Ian said. "So in your opinion, Gwen might be an as-yet
undiscovered variety of human?"
"You got a better theory, Einstein?"
"It makes sense to me," Gwen said quickly. "In fact, it makes a lot
of sense. If we're determined to slap a label on me, 'changeling' works as well
as any. In my case, it's literally true—I was switched with another baby. My
biological parents died before they could teach me how to deal with the psychic
shit that comes with being… whatever."
The waitress clumped over with two orders of burgers and fries, effectively
halting the conversation. Ian glanced at Gwen's meal, and his eyes widened with
something that looked very much like horror.
"You want to order something?" asked the waitress, sounding more than a
little put out by the idea.
"Nothing, thank you," Ian murmured, still staring at Gwen's plate.
A muffled ring came from the pocket of Damian's sweatshirt. He fished out his
cell phone and glanced at the number, then promptly pushed back his chair and
rose.
"I gotta take this." He glanced from Ian to Gwen. "You'll be okay?"
"Go," she told him as she reached for a French fry.
Ian seized her wrist before she got there. "No," he said adamantly.
Her eyes narrowed. "Why not? Do changelings have problems with high
blood pressure?"
"No, but there is salt on those fried potatoes," he explained. "Quite a lot
of it."
"Not enough, most likely." Gwen pulled her hand free and went for the salt
shaker.
Ian snatched it away before she could reach it. "Do you eat like this
frequently?"
"Constantly," she said. "I've got the metabolism of a fruit fly. I can eat
anything I want and it doesn't bother me. I never get sick, never gain a pound,
never had a zit in my life. In fact, the worse my diet gets, the better I feel."
His face cleared in understanding. "Better," he repeated. "By that I suppose
you mean more 'normal.'"
Gwen thought that over. Come to think of it, whenever "freak week" rolled
around—those occasional periods of heightened psychic sensitivity—she usually
went straight for the salt-and-vinegar potato chips.
"Yeah. I guess."
"And you never wondered why?"
"Not really. Now that you mention it, I can see that maybe salt takes the
edge off psychic ability. I mean, too much sugar makes it hard to concentrate,
right?"
"True, but you're not taking it far enough. It didn't escape my notice how
eagerly you latched onto young Damian's theory of variations within the species.
He's wrong, you know. You are most decidedly not human. Your metabolism
is different, as you've pointed out. Not just faster—different. So is
your brain and body chemistry. It's time you faced facts, Gwen: you are
precisely what I spent the past ten minutes convincing your friend that you are
not."
Gwen suddenly realized that she'd been shaking her head throughout most of
this litany. She stopped abruptly and sent him a narrow-eyed glare. "What I am
not is stupid. You're so full of shit it's a wonder your eyes aren't
brown."
"Would you care to test the truth of my claims?"
To her surprise, this notion held considerable appeal. Hell, she'd take just
about any challenge that would prove Ian wrong and get him off her back, or
better yet, out of her life.
"Maybe," she said cautiously.
"Repeat this: 'I will eat French fries no more. My oath on it, by moon and
star, wind and word.'"
Gwen burst out laughing. She quickly caught herself and dialed it down to a
grin. "That's got to be the most lame-ass incantation ever created."
"Nevertheless," Ian persisted.
Her smile faded, and she shook her head. "It sounds too much like a promise.
I don't make them often, but once they're made, they're kept."
"An admirable philosophy, and not at all surprising under the circumstances.
Just repeat the words, then, with the assumption that they are nothing more
than—what was it? A 'lame-ass incantation'? Don't consider it a promise to me. I
assure you, as far as I'm concerned you can eat as many of those culinary
horrors as you're able to."
"Or how about this," she countered: "You hand over the salt, we forget this
whole conversation ever happened, and everybody gets to live another day."
He smiled thinly. "As soon as you say the words, I'll leave."
"Oh. Well, in that case…"
She repeated the strange phrase, then glanced at Ian and lifted one eyebrow
in inquiry. He swept a hand toward her plate, indicating that she should help
herself.
Gwen picked up a particularly salty potato wedge and popped it into her
mouth.
An acrid stench filled her nostrils—most likely because her tongue had
inexplicably caught fire. Tears rolled down her cheeks, blinding her, and her
throat closed so tightly she couldn't draw breath. She palmed the table for her
napkin. Someone took her hand, turned it over, and slapped the napkin into it.
She spat out the offending morsel. Instantly the burning sensation disappeared
and the tension in her throat eased.
Gwen set down the crumpled napkin with shaking hands and backhanded tears
from her eyes. "What the hell was that?"
"An oath," Ian told her. "The Elder Folk are bound by them. Once spoken, they
are almost impossible to break."
They sat in silence for several moments as Gwen sorted through the
implications. Since the Big Issue was too weird to handle, she focused her
attention—and her ire—on the more manageable one.
"Listen, asshole, you said you wouldn't hold me to it! You said I could eat
as many fries…"
Her voice trailed off as realization hit.
"As you were able to," Ian finished for her.
Gwen eyed the greasy, golden pile with longing. "What the hell am I supposed
to do now?" she mourned. "I live on these things! Ah, son of a bitch!"
Ian rose, chuckling. "Call me, and soon. You have much to learn."
"Blow me," she invited coldly.
His eyebrows rose. "Apparently, you have more to learn than I thought."
With that parting salvo, he turned and wove through the gathering crowd. The
evening mist had turned into a downpour, and people were pushing their way into
the pub. Ian made his way through the standing-room-only crowd as easily as a
fish passing through water. Openings just seemed to happen as he approached.
"You didn't have to wait for me," Damian said as dropped back into his chair.
Gwen snapped her gaze back to her companion's face. "I didn't. Talking to Ian
made me lose my appetite."
"There's a first! You're not going to eat that?"
"Help yourself."
She barely had time to snatch up her burger before he took her plate and
dumped its contents onto his own. She tried not to glare as he started to munch
his way through the pile of fries.
"So, what's the story with that guy?"
"Pretty much what he said. I worked for him for a little while—long enough to
figure out that whatever I am, he's one, too. But you already picked up on
that."
Damian nodded, since his mouth was too full of fried potatoes to permit
speech. He hastily chewed and swallowed. "So he's teaching you about that
changeling stuff?"
"Something like that, yeah."
The cop considered this, then frowned. "I don't like it. I mean, I can see
how you'd want to know about this shit. I just don't like this Forest guy."
"Who does? And to tell you the truth, I don't want to think about him right
now." She reached for the ketchup and liberally anointed her burger. "You were
asking about a prenup investigation for your sister?"
With obvious reluctance, Damian resigned himself to a change of subject. "Shawm's
going to want details before she commits to the idea."
Gwen leaned back in her chair, relieved to be back on familiar, solid ground.
"For some people, it's not much different from the credit checks her bank does
every day. But if you're getting a bad feeling about this guy, your radar
probably isn't picking up on his credit report. Personality glitches usually
show up in how he relates to family and employees. I'll observe him, rind ways
to talk to people who know him. Ex-wives and old girlfriends are usually a good
source of information."
"I'll bet. Problem is, Shawna's not about to listen to gossip. She likes
data, you understand."
"And she'll get it. Tell your sister I confirm ID, check employment history,
confirm school records, look into family history, and check for a police
record."
"That last thing, I've already done."
"Yeah, I figured, but does Shawna know that?"
"Good point," he conceded. "Just so you know, she's also going to ask about
your experience, maybe check some references."
"No problem. Not all precommitment checks are run on future spouses. One of
my best clients is a corporate headhunter. She likes to run a thorough resume
check before she recommends someone for a high-ticket job. Your sister can call
her if she wants. I've also made 'discrete inquiries' for a university that
wanted certain professors checked out before they got tenure—apparently it's
pretty damn hard to get rid of them, afterward. I've even heard from a couple of
local politicians who wanted me to scope out the opposition."
This earned her an incredulous frown. "You do that?"
"You're kidding, right? The only time I worked for a politician was when some
guy hired me to look into his own past. He wanted to see what an
opponent might be able to dig up. Basically, he wanted me to test the locks on
the family skeleton closets."
He let out a long, low whistle. "Damn! I can't decide if that's really smart,
or really sleazy. He win the election?"
"He decided not to run. Let's just say my report made for interesting
reading." Gwen paused for a grim smile. "I might not vote, but I occasionally do
my civic duty."
"Why settle for 'occasionally'? You were on the job," he pointed out, "and
you could be again."
Gwen noted the fervor in his eyes and suppressed a sigh. Damian was gung-ho
about clearing her name and getting her back on the force. She'd put him off for
over a week, explaining that she needed time to get her head around recent
events. Since "recent events" included the death of Gwen's first partner, Damian
had made an attempt at patience. At the moment, however, he looked to be running
about a quart low on that particular virtue.
"I've got a job," she told him. "Or maybe you forgot hiring me a few
minutes back?"
Damian heaved a sigh. "Can you meet Shawna tomorrow morning before she goes
to work? Say, eight-thirty, at that coffee shop down by the waterfront walk?"
"That'll work."
"One more thing." A flush crept up his cheeks, adding an interesting richness
to the dark color of his skin—and cuing Gwen in on what was coming next. "My
sister doesn't know that we…"
"Danced the horizontal tango?" she suggested helpfully. "Had carnal knowledge
of each other? Got the sexual tension thing out of the way so we could get on
with the process of establishing a working professional relationship?"
"Yeah, that. No offense, it's just that my family's kind of…"
He trailed off again, obviously expecting her to understand and fill in the
rest.
But Gwen continued to regard him with wide eyes and a politely inquiring
expression. She didn't have much use for social conventions of any sort, and saw
no good reason to let him off the hook on this one—especially since this was the
second time tonight the issue had come up.
"The thing is," he said hesitantly, "Shawna thinks—actually, most of my
family thinks this way—that people should stay with their own kind."
"When you say 'own kind,' I assume you're talking about DNA?" Gwen inquired
sweetly. "Can't bring a changeling home to Mama?"
Damian's face fell slack. After a moment he let out a rueful chuckle. "Puts
an interesting new spin on that sort of thing, doesn't it?"
"I thought so." She leaned forward and whispered, "Oh, and Tyra Banks? Halle
Berry? Beyonce? They're all changelings, too. Sorry if that puts a dent in your
fantasy life."
His wry grin acknowledged the hit. "You just got to go for the takedown,
don't you? It must have damn near killed you to pull up short on that groin
punch tonight."
Gwen settled back in her seat. "It hurt," she admitted as she reached for her
burger. "But strangely enough, I'm feeling much better now."
CHAPTER FOUR
"Holy shit," Damian said as he stared at the elaborate wrought-iron gate at
the entrance to Sylvia Black's long gravel drive. His gaze flicked past it to
the stately brick house, the sweeping hedge of white lilacs behind a sea of
white tulips and irises. The rain had stopped, and a brisk wind was breaking up
the clouds and sending the pieces skittering seaward. Dark cloud ribbons slid
across a nearly full moon. Sylvia's white garden was luminous in the faint,
dappled light.
"'This is where you live?"
"Sort of. I have an apartment over the garage—that little building over
there. I help with security."
"How'd you score this gig?" he demanded.
"It's a long story, and not really mine to tell. Let's just say that my
landlady has a colorful past."
"Sounds like another tale for us to swap at the old cop's home. Before you
go, I got something for you."
Damian leaned over and popped the glove compartment. He fished out a computer
disc in a plain white paper sleeve and handed it to Gwen.
"Here's a copy of the files my friend recovered from your old hard drive.
We've got to talk about this someday real soon."
"Sure."
"Soon," he emphasized. "I know there's a lot on your mind, but cases get
colder as time goes by, not easier."
Gwen wanted to argue, but damn it, the kid was right. She slumped back into
her seat. "I'm listening."
"Quick recap," he said. "Captain Walsh said you'd requested a personal leave,
when he really assigned you to shadow Tiger Leone. The preliminary report you
sent him before you went undercover was deleted, but not gone, you
understand. When they tossed your old computer, I took it and had the hard drive
stripped. The files on that disc prove you were doing exactly what you were
told. Walsh is owned."
Gwen brandished the disc. "It won't be enough."
"It will get people asking questions," he argued. "The rest will come out."
"Yeah, but after how many more people get fucked over? If you like your job,
remember what happened to me and think long and hard before you take on Walsh."
Damian's face hardened. "You lost your job, sure, but two others died. Maybe
three, if you count Frank Cross."
For a long moment Gwen stared at the young cop, too stunned to comment. She
had good reason to know that Captain Dennis Walsh was a lying sack of shit, but
a cop killer?
As far as she was concerned, Wallace Edmonson had killed Frank. Walsh was
connected to Edmonson somehow, but she'd never considered the possibility that
the captain was responsible for Frank's death, or for the two cops killed in the
nightclub bust. She'd spent fifteen years as a cop, fifteen years taking part in
something she considered flawed but basically decent. No matter how badly that
had ended, a part of her didn't want to believe any cop, including Walsh, could
be that twisted. Cop-killing police captains were movie monsters—celluloid
nightmares about as likely as werewolves and zombies.
On the other hand, the official ruling on Frank Cross's death was bullshit.
Gwen would bet her life on that. Yet Frank's autopsy showed he was well over the
legal limit, and Kate Myers, the medical examiner, had a sterling rep. When Gwen
heard the results, she'd assumed that the killer had forced the alcohol into
Frank somehow, but maybe the explanation was a lot simpler: Maybe Kate had lied.
She had been pretty nervous the first time Gwen talked to her, and
totally freaked out by the B and E at the morgue that resulted in the mutilation
of two dead cops. Since the pattern cut into their bodies was identical to the
torture-tracks left by a trio of serial killers in Edmonson's employ, Gwen had
figured the threads all tied together. But maybe Kate Myers was a loose thread,
one left dangling when Edmonson disappeared.
And since the autopsy results and the fingerprint evidence were telling the
same story, maybe someone in the police department was attached to Frank's death
by yet another thread.
"If Walsh is dirty," she said slowly, "no one in vice is safe until this
thing is over."
"There you go. Why do you think I keep trying to get you in on this?"
She conceded that with a curt nod. "I assume you've been doing more than just
nagging me to get off my ass. Bring me up to speed."
"Now you're talking. That club that was raided? Winston's? Leone had two
other clubs, and someone's still running them. I know for a fact they're still
selling shit."
That didn't surprise Gwen. Tiger Leone had worked for Edmonson. Both men were
gone, but that didn't mean the operations would automatically shut down.
"I went to one of the clubs, checked out the local talent," Damian went on.
"You remember Jackie Teal?"
"One of Tiger Leone's girls. She snuck out the back the night Winston's was
raided. Pretty girl—a Janet Jackson type."
"Right down to the malfunctioning wardrobe. Jackie's dancing at Extreme, a
titty bar not far from the Foxy."
Something in his face set off warning bells in the back of Gwen's mind. "You
wouldn't happen to know if she's doing any private dancing on the side?"
His gaze slid away. "I figured, hey—if I could get her alone and talking,
maybe she'd say something I could use. A lap dance isn't my idea of a good time,
you understand—too many rules, not enough hands."
"You're oversharing," Gwen advised. "Get to the point."
"Jackie offered me a hit of something new. It was like X, she said, only it
started out mellow and worked up to wild."
Gwen sat bolt upright. "Please tell me you didn't buy some to test, not on
your own time."
"How stupid do I look?" he said indignantly. "I told her I didn't have the
money on me, but I could put some together. If this shit was as good as she
said, I could maybe put a lot of money together. She promised to set me up with
a guy who could get me all I wanted."
"A drug bust," she mused. "Not a bad way to jump-start an official
investigation."
"That's my thinking."
"And if you can nail this dealer, maybe he'll give up someone a notch up the
ladder. Keep at it long enough, you might eventually tie this to Walsh… if
you're still around by the time the leads link up."
He shrugged. "So I'll work other angles, too, and come at it from every which
way. You said Walsh was tied in with that attorney whose kid was snatched?"
"Ryan Cody, but that's a dead end. Walsh and Cody were only connected through
a third man. He's gone."
As she spoke, Gwen had a sudden image of Ian Forest dragging Carl Jamison's
body toward an ancient maple tree—and then simply vanishing. The police hadn't
found a trace of the Jamison brothers or the homicidal bitch the two freaks
shared. Ian was really, really good at making bodies disappear, and last time
Gwen had seen Edmonson, Ian's men were taking him away. She was willing to bet
Damian would find Hoffa before he found Edmonson.
Damian's eyes narrowed in speculation. "You know where this guy is, don't
you?"
"Haven't got a clue." Since he still looked skeptical, she added, "You
remember me telling you what Kate Myers said, about those three bodies that
disappeared from the morgue thirty-some years back?"
"Sure."
"Two of them were my parents, the other was the kid they'd swapped me for."
She sent him a warning frown to stave off sympathetic commentary and kept going.
"I don't know much about… changelings, but apparently we keep a low profile. To
the point where when one of us dies, the bodies don't get found."
Damian's eyes held a hundred questions, but he had the sense not to ask most
of them. "So you're saying this Edmonson was one of you people?"
"As much as I hate to admit it, yeah, that's what I'm saying."
"And he's dead."
"I never saw a body, but yeah, that'd be my guess."
"No one's filed a missing-person?"
"Not going to happen."
"And if someone wonders where he went?"
"They'll find out someone using his passport took a one-way flight to Greece.
I did some checking. Trust me, there's no finding this guy."
The cop blew out a long breath. "Okay, then I'll keep looking until I find a
better lead."
It was on the tip of Gwen's tongue to remind him that he could
disappear as easily as Jamison and Edmonson had. But why bother? He'd listen to
her about as well as she'd listened to Frank's words of caution when she
was a rookie. Of course, she'd had Frank looking out for her back then. Damian
just had Quaid, and Gwen hadn't been too impressed with the way Quaid had
watched her back. On top of that, there was the tie between Quaid and
Kate Myers. If Kate was dirty, that increased the chances that Quaid was also
tainted.
"What about your partner?" she asked. "What does Quaid say about this?"
"Not much. Be careful, watch your back. Keep me posted. Like that."
"Is he working with you?"
Before he could respond, the metallic purr of a high-ticket car caught his
attention. The vehicle slowed and pulled off the road to park directly behind
them. The headlights flared, brightly illuminating the interior of Damian's car.
Gwen's eyes had always adjusted quickly, so while Damian blinked and cursed,
she noted the silver gleam of a tidy little BMW sedan. Marcy Bartlett's car,
though what Marcy was doing here at this time of night was anyone's guess. Gwen
reached into the pocket of her battered leather jacket for her cell phone and
switched it on. Sure enough, there were two messages from Marcy's number.
"What now?" Damian complained, reaching under the seat for his weapon. "Can't
a man go off duty?"
She dropped a hand on his shoulder. "There's no problem. That's a friend of
mine. She was probably just checking to see who was in the car. I'll call you
tomorrow."
She got out of the car and slammed the door. The old hatchback took off,
leaving Gwen standing in a small cloud of exhaust fumes.
Damn, he really did need a new car! Not that she could talk. Her aging Toyota
was in the shop, and there it would stay until she came up with the ransom money
to pay for a new transmission.
Gwen went over to Marcy's car and tapped on the driver's window. The door
opened just enough to allow Marcy to slip out. She shut it quickly behind her.
Despite the late hour, Marcy was still in her lawyer clothes: a trim gray
pantsuit, a silk blouse in royal blue, low-heeled black pumps, sapphire studs in
her ears. But her usually sleek blond wedge was rumpled and her eye makeup
thoroughly smeared. Either she'd been running her hands through her hair and
rubbing her eyes—something she did only when her personal life went south—or
she'd thrown her clothes back on after a quick tumble.
No doubt Trudy, Marcy's live-in gal pal, would assume the latter. Calling
Trudy possessive was like calling George Dubya conservative—it was a good start.
"Don't you ever answer your phone?" Marcy demanded.
"Yeah, nice to see you, too. Who's in the car that you didn't want me to
see?"
Marcy glanced over her shoulder at the idling BMW. "I've got a client for
you. I wouldn't have brought him here before talking to you, but this is really
important. I want you to promise me that you'll listen to him before you start
cursing and throwing things."
A bizarre suspicion reared its head. Gwen folded her arms and studied her
friend intently. "You jumped out of that car like a bat out of hell, and now the
'listen before you start throwing things' speech? I can only think of one person
who'd need this much prep work, but your ex is the last person you'd bring
here."
The expression on Marcy's face was all the answer Gwen needed.
"Goddammit, Marcy!" she exploded. "Hasn't Kyle Radcliff done enough damage?
How long did it take you to get rid of his ass? How many times did he send you
to a doctor before you got rid of him? I didn't risk my career kicking the shit
out of him so we could get together later and talk about old times."
Marcy glanced back at the car. "Keep it down," she said urgently. "I had a
hard enough time convincing Kyle to talk to you without reminding him of that
scene."
"Give me a fucking break," Gwen retorted. "Face it, Marcy: Your bullshit
meter shuts down the minute that guy starts talking. If he came to you with a
problem and you ended up bringing him here, you can be damn sure that was his
intention all along."
The lawyer thought this over, then shrugged. "Whatever his method or
motivations, he's here. Look at it this way: he might be a complete bastard, but
he pays his bills religiously. You said business was slow right now."
"Not that slow."
Marcy seized Gwen's shoulders with both hands, and the expression on her face
forestalled Gwen's protests.
"I wouldn't ask you to do this if it wasn't important," she said with quiet
intensity. "His son is missing."
Anger and indignation slowly slipped away. In Gwen's corner of the world, a
missing kid trumped old grudges every time.
She hadn't heard that Kyle had remarried. He and Marcy had divorced about
eight years ago. Factoring in wife-hunting and baby-making time, she figured
Kyle's son would be very young. If he looked anything like his father, he'd be
fair-haired and too damn cute for his own good.
And that was a big problem. Blond boys, aged four and under, were a favorite
snatch. They were young enough to be attractive to adoptive parents trying to
bypass the system's red tape, and old enough to be of interest to the worst
class of pedophiles. Not that there was a good class of pedophiles, but
there were maggots out there who'd buy a preschooler and call him a "throw-down
piece." Same idea as an unregistered gun: use it and lose it.
Gwen took a steadying breath and stepped out of her friend's grasp. "How old
is the kid?"
"Patrick just turned five. He and his mother have been gone nearly two days
now."
The cold, sick feeling in the pit of Gwen's stomach disappeared, washed away
by a sudden flood of exasperation.
"The mother's gone, too? Jesus wept, Marcy, why didn't you say so!"
"Kyle is just as worried about his wife as he is his son," she said
defensively. When Gwen lifted an eyebrow in pointed challenge, she admitted,
"All right! I focused on the kid because I knew it would get your attention."
"Let's review the facts, shall we? Kyle Radcliff has a history of spousal
abuse. Wife number one divorces his ass. Good for you. Wife number two takes off
with the kid. Good for her. I hope she stays missing."
"Talk to him," Marcy urged. "He's changed, Gwen, I swear it."
"Oh yeah—this is the very first time you've heard that story!"
"It's not Kyle's fault that Erin and Patrick are missing," Marcy went on
doggedly. "He's frantic with worry. He loves Patrick. You know how much he
wanted kids. Especially a son…"
Her voice caught, and her gray eyes were suddenly brighter than they should
be.
Gwen, appalled and enlightened, bit back a heartfelt curse. So that's
what was behind this little ambush! Kyle Radcliff, the schmuck, still knew how
to push his ex-wife's buttons.
Marcy Bartlett was one of those rare people who were equally successful in
love and war, which wasn't a bad description of her work as an
assistant DA. Her cross-exam fell just short of vivisection. Professionally, she
was amazing, and her personal game was just as tight. She was in a mostly happy
relationship with a pretty and only moderately neurotic lit professor; she was
on speaking terms with her family; she had good friends, a new condo, a great
car, and a fat portfolio that had weathered the tech fallout.
Most people looking at the Marcy Bartlett package would find it hard to
understand how she could have put up with Kyle Radcliff. But they'd married
young, before Marcy had sorted out the lesbian thing. To complicate matters, she
was only twenty-six when she'd been diagnosed with ovarian cancer. They'd caught
it in time to save her life, but not her fertility. Unable to have children,
ambiguous about her sexuality, Marcy had believed the verbal abuse Kyle dished
out. Gwen had seen time and again how small a step it was from verbal abuse to
the ER. Marcy had probably bought into the notion that she'd earned her
"punishment" long before Kyle had landed the first blow.
Nearly ten years had passed since Gwen answered a neighbor's call regarding a
domestic disturbance. She'd been stunned to learn that the victim was the tough
young legal aide she'd run into at court two or three times. Gwen had decided
that Radcliff had resisted arrest. Fortunately, Radcliff didn't want anyone to
know he'd gotten his ass handed to him by a girl half his size. He didn't press
charges, and better yet, he finally agreed to give Marcy a divorce and leave her
alone.
The memory of his tenacity, even more than the pleading look in Marcy's eyes,
convinced Gwen to hear what Radcliff had to say. All things considered, she'd
rather have his attention focused on her than on Marcy.
"You go on home," she said at last. "The asshole can call a cab when we've
finished talking."
Marcy gave her a quick hug and tapped on the window of the driver's door. The
passenger door opened and a tall blond man climbed out.
Kyle Radcliff looked a lot older than he had the last time Gwen had seen him.
There were a few fine lines around his concrete-colored eyes, and his hair was
considerably thinner. As he rose from the car, she could see moonlight
reflecting on scalp. But he was still fit, perfectly groomed, and wearing a
couple thousand dollars worth of suit. Kyle was a corporate lawyer of some sort,
and very successful at his job—which was another reason he'd finally agreed to a
quick, no-fault divorce. Last Gwen heard, the man had some serious assets.
He strode around the car and extended his hand, as if she were another
attorney who'd agreed to a consult.
"Thank you for seeing me," he said with polite insincerity.
Gwen just looked at his hand, and after a moment it dropped to his side. She
turned her back on him and strode to the gate, punched the code into the
security box. The iron gates swung inward.
They walked in silence to the garage. Gwen unlocked the small, first-floor
room she used as an office, flipped on the light, and nodded toward one of the
wingback chairs.
Kyle hitched up his sharply creased trousers and sat, cautiously, as if he
suspected the chair was not only wired for high-voltage current but plugged into
a faulty outlet.
Gwen settled down behind the table that served as a desk and folded her
hands. "So, you have two missing persons."
He seemed relieved to be getting right to business. "My wife, Erin Westland,
and our son, Patrick."
"You have pictures?"
Kyle reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket and took out a
wallet-size photo of a pretty young woman and a dark-haired, solemn-faced little
boy.
A jolt of something very like recognition surged through Gwen as she studied
the woman's face. The features were delicate, her mouth rosebud small, but her
eyes were wide and very blue. The only time Gwen had seen eyes that big or that
blue was when she looked in a mirror.
But there the similarity ended. This girl was a model of Barbie-doll
femininity. Her makeup played up her pink-and-white coloring, and a soft blue
sweater clung to impressive curves. Glossy, dark-brown hair fell in soft layers
to her shoulders, framing a narrow, heart-shaped face. Her hair on the side
nearest little Patrick was tucked behind one ear—an ear that, like Gwen's, was
definitely not her best feature.
"How old is Erin?" Gwen asked.
A strange look slid across Kyle's face. "She was twenty-three when we met.
That was about eight years ago."
"Really. For someone on the downhill side of thirty, she's holding up pretty
well."
"Erin looked young for her age when we met," he said cautiously. "She hasn't
changed much since."
"You ever wonder about that?"
He nodded. "Yes, but it didn't become an issue until things started going
wrong."
Gwen put down the picture. "Let me guess," she said coldly: "Old habits die
hard?"
"As usual, you'd be wrong. I never laid a hand on Erin. She never needed it,"
he added nastily.
"Don't go there," Gwen warned. "Just tell me your story, so we can get this
over with."
Kyle took a deep breath and began to recite. "A couple of years ago, Erin
starting having terrible nightmares. She couldn't sleep. Depression set in, and
she was getting more and more withdrawn. She's an adopted child, and she became
obsessed with finding her birth parents. She wouldn't let me help her—she said
it was a personal thing, something she had to do alone. After a while her mood
passed. She developed new interests, including a little business of her own.
Then Sunday night, she and Patrick went out to pick up a pizza and never came
back."
"Two days ago."
"If you're implying I should have come to you sooner, what would the point
have been? You're not going to help me."
Ordinarily he would have been right. But three weeks ago she'd changed the
name of her business to "Changeling Detective Agency." This was not only an
acknowledgement of her identity, but a mission statement. There were other
changelings out there, and Gwen intended to find them. It was that simple.
"I'd do it," she said curtly. "But first I want to know why you came to me.
And don't try to sell me on 'Marcy talked me into it,' because we both know
that's bullshit."
Kyle Radcliff was silent for several moments. "I saw you in the courthouse
last week, when you came to testify in the Fergusson insurance case. You looked
exactly the same as you did ten years ago. I don't know what that means, but I
can't shake the feeling that it's important. That perhaps you and Erin are two
of a kind—whatever that means. I thought it might give you an edge of some
sort."
He shook his head and gave a short laugh, as if he'd just overheard his own
words and couldn't believe his ears. "The bottom line, I suppose, is I'm
desperate enough to try anything."
His litany sparked a connection Gwen hadn't yet made—a prospect that sent her
heart racing at near-panic pace.
What if Erin Westland knew far more about a changeling's life than Gwen did?
What if she had simply moved on, knowing she'd have to eventually? The
thirtysomething mother in Kyle's picture looked like a teenager. Chances were
she'd still look like that when her kid was in high school. Maybe she'd
figured out what Gwen was just beginning to grasp: she was aging so slowly that
she'd probably still look like jailbait in another five, ten, even twenty years.
She took a long, calming breath. "I'll need all the information you can give
me," she said briskly. "Start with that new business you mentioned, and a list
of Erin's friends. I'll also need her ID: driver's license, Social Security
number, and so on."
Kyle's eyes narrowed. "You're a PI. Can't you get that information yourself?"
"Yeah, but why waste my time and your money, when you could just tell me?"
He hesitated. "To be honest, I don't have much information to give you."
"Sure you do. There are tax returns, a marriage license."
"Erin doesn't have an income, and we don't file a joint return. In fact,
while I refer to Erin as my wife, we never actually married in a conventional
sense."
"Oh, so that's why we never got a wedding invitation!" Gwen said.
"Too bad—I'll bet Marcy and Trudy would have loved dancing with the bride."
She allowed herself a moment to enjoy the discomfiture in Kyle's eyes. A lot
of guys might fantasize about watching their wives do another woman, but an
ex-wife who'd sworn off men entirely? Not high on the list of macho turn-ons.
"What about Erin's bank accounts and credit cards?" she asked, getting back
to business.
"I handle the family finances. Erin gets an allowance for personal expenses,
and her credit cards are attached to my accounts."
Still the control freak, Gwen noted. "Okay. But you must have done some sort
of cohabitation agreement—common-law prenuptial, or whatever the hell people do
these days when they're shacking up long-term. If nothing else, you would have
made damn sure she couldn't just take the kid and leave—"
Suddenly Gwen realized why he was here. In custody cases, the courts usually
favored the mother. If the parents weren't married, the bias toward the female
parent was that much stronger. If Kyle didn't have legal custody over the child,
there was no reason why Erin Westland couldn't take her son and go whenever she
pleased—provided she could find a way out of the cushy cage Kyle had built
around them.
The expression on Kyle's face confirmed her suspicions. Gwen lifted one
eyebrow.
"I love Erin, and I love my son," he said. "I'll do whatever it takes to get
them back."
"Yeah, you made that point by coming here. I'll find Erin. Whether or not she
comes back is up to her."
"Fair enough."
For nearly half an hour, Gwen asked questions and jotted down information.
The more interesting questions, however, were the ones she didn't ask aloud.
Was Erin Westland simply moving on? Or had she, too, recently found out a
little more about herself than she could handle?
There was also the possibility that Erin was on the run. She'd been looking
for her family. Assuming she found them, how did they respond to Erin's son, who
was apparently a half-breed? Did they try to eliminate such children to keep the
bloodlines "pure"?
Gwen wouldn't put it past them. Judging from what she'd seen so far, the
"Elder Races" were a ruthless bunch. Ian Forest had hired her to investigate her
own parents' deaths, in hope that she'd get their killer—her uncle, who at the
time was looking for Gwen with murderous intent—to admit what he'd done.
Apparently Edmonson had been eliminating family members so he could deploy some
sort of magical trinket. It turned out he couldn't, but Gwen could, and
therein lay Ian's logic. He figured Edmonson needed her, and needed to explain
to her why she was needed. Ian had followed her around throughout and
made damn sure Edmonson's words were witnessed.
Gwen didn't understand all the ramifications of this, but using the newbie
changeling as a big, dumb tool? Yeah, she got that part. And the family
treasure? Ian wanted to put the trinket "somewhere safe, until she was able to
use it." Gwen figured she'd embrace that possibility the same day she
took up celibacy.
There was one more possibility, and Gwen gave voice to it as soon as Kyle's
store of information ran dry.
"Looking over the details on Erin, it occurs to me that someone made it
pretty easy for her to disappear."
A red flush crept up Kyle's face.
"If I was going to hurt my family, why would I hire you to find them?"
"You'd be surprised what people hire me to do. But rest assured, that's one
of the questions I'll be looking into," she told him. "If you can live with
that, my retainer is fifteen thousand."
"Agreed."
Gwen took a copy of her standard agreement and several release-of-information
forms from the file cabinet, filled in blanks, and handed them to Kyle to sign.
He pulled his chair closer to her writing table and set to work without comment.
It was a good thing he didn't haggle about the price, Gwen noted. If Kyle was
planning to set her up somehow, she'd need the bail money.
A month ago, that thought wouldn't have occurred to her. Kyle Radcliff wasn't
stupid, but Gwen was pretty confident he couldn't pull off a complicated sting.
But now, her pride still smarting from her unwitting part in Ian Forest's little
game, she wasn't about to overlook any possibility.
Being paranoid sucked, but Gwen figured it was a lot better than being dead.
CHAPTER FIVE
Shawna O'Riley looked a lot like her brother, right down to the dark auburn
hair. Gwen had no problem picking her out of the morning-glum crowd at Brewed
Awakenings. It helped that Shawna dressed like a bank exec. She looked very
polished and professional in a tailored navy coatdress trimmed with white,
matching navy pumps, and artful makeup—which meant that she'd spent a lot of
time to make it look like she wasn't wearing any makeup at all.
Gwen had taken the professional route herself this morning: a purple shirt
with at least half the buttons done up, black pants, and boots with a stacked
sole and chunky heel instead of her preferred stilettos. Her makeup wasn't
nearly as subtle as Shawna's. Lots of black mascara and dusky eye shadow rimmed
her eyes, a honey-beige foundation darkened her too-pale skin, and her full lips
were the color of juicy plums. For her, it was a conservative look.
She pushed her way to Shawna's table and got the introduction thing out of
the way. Her prospective client gave her the usual dubious once-over, but she
was nicer about it than most. Most likely Damian had told her enough to take the
edge off her surprise.
As Gwen sat down, she noted there were two cups of coffee on the table. Oh
yeah—definitely nicer than most clients.
"Extra cream, extra sugar," Shawna said with a faint smile.
"Perfect," Gwen assured her. "Your brother doesn't miss many details, does
he? Makes him a good cop."
"He speaks highly of you, too. It seemed important to him that you and I
meet. To be frank, that's the only reason I'm here."
"Damian said you'd probably have reservations."
"Of course I do. If you love someone, you're supposed to trust him, not have
him investigated."
"That's a good theory, but divorce statistics don't back it up. Taking a
good, hard look at a prospective spouse is smart. You wouldn't give a loan to
someone without checking his credit, right?"
"Of course not, but it's not the same thing."
"No, it isn't. Money is a lot less important."
Shawna smiled. "That's a good argument, but not the one I might have expected
you to use on a banker."
"I didn't come here to make any argument, good or bad. If you don't
want to do this, say the word and I'm gone."
The woman took a moment to think it over. She nodded toward Gwen's oversize
cup. "Go ahead and drink that. It'll be cold before too much longer."
It wasn't the first time a client couldn't bring herself to say outright the
words that would sic Gwen on a loved one. She took a sip of her coffee and
nearly moaned when it hit her taste buds. If Ian Forest had made coffee
off-limits instead of French fries, she would have had to kill him right then
and there, and to hell with the witnesses.
She set the cup down with reluctance. "Tell me about your fiance."
"He's not my fiance, at least not yet," Shawna corrected, "but things are
heading that way. Roy is a great guy. I couldn't begin to tell you why Damian
has a problem with him."
"So you think Damian is overreacting?"
Shawna hesitated. "I want to say yes, but my brother's instincts are usually
much better than mine. By the way, what did Damian tell you about Roy?"
"Nothing much. Tell me what you see."
The woman went into her spiel: Roy was smart, athletic, good-looking,
responsible, a good conversationalist, and a decent dancer. He had a good
education and a good job. They apparently had similar tastes, values, and
political opinions.
Ooh, similar political opinions! How hot was that? To Gwen's way of
thinking, this relationship was sounding about as interesting as fettuccine
without Alfredo.
"But?" she asked when at last the litany ran down.
Shawna bit her lip, a gesture that mingled reflection and consternation. "If
I had any worries at all, they wouldn't have to do with Roy."
Gwen steeled herself for a recitation of the usual feminine insecurities. It
seemed that every woman she met, no matter how smart and successful and
attractive, harbored a few self-doubts when it came to men.
"So what's the problem?"
"It might not actually be a problem. It's just that my family can be a
little… eccentric. Roy's pretty conventional."
"Has he met any of your family?"
"Yes, but only my parents, Damian, and our three younger brothers. We had
dinner together last weekend at a nice Italian place on Federal Hill. The boys
were on their best behavior, and the evening went very well. But it's hard to
get a feeling for how he'll react to my family in a gathering of only seven
people." Only seven people? That was an interesting perspective.
"So it's the extended family you're worried about," Gwen surmised. "How will
Roy survive the wedding, much less holidays, family gatherings, and the
occasional offer to read his fortune in chicken entrails?"
A strange look crossed Shawna's face, something that was equal parts chagrin
and relief. "I take it Damian has told you about our colorful clan."
"A little. Nothing that would make any difference to me, if I were in Roy's
shoes."
"That's what he says," Shawna agreed. "I've put out some hints about
eccentric family members, and he just smiles and shrugs. The way Roy sees it,
what we have is between him and me. No one else comes into it. It's just about
us."
Gwen was starting to see where the problem might lie. "Five kids is a big
family these days. How many siblings does Roy have?"
"None. His parents passed on a few years back. Roy is a few years older than
I am," she explained. "Well, more than a few. He's in his late forties."
"I guess that's not too old to be starting a family. Assuming he wants kids,
of course."
"Assuming we want children," Shawna corrected.
"No, you want kids, all right. Your face lights up when you talk about your
family, even the weirder members."
Grief slid into Shawna's eyes, and was quickly veiled. "Roy knows himself
well enough to realize there's no room in his life for children. He works long
hours. He likes to sail or play golf on weekends, and he enjoys travel. He wants
to marry a woman who's as serious about her career as he is about his. And he's
realistic enough to know that people can't have it all. What's the sense of
having children if you never see them?"
The argument sounded pretty well-rehearsed to Gwen. "And you're okay with
that."
Shawna nodded. "Roy and I want most of the same things. I don't think it gets
much better."
"You could be right. I don't have high expectations for relationships,
myself."
"That's not what I meant!" she protested.
"No offense. What I'm saying is that most women take men way too seriously.
It sounds to me like you're taking a realistic view to this monogamy thing,
which means you're less likely to make a mistake than some starry-eyed
romantic."
"I guess," she said hesitantly.
"One more question: What kind of things do you guys argue about?"
Shawna blinked. "Argue?"
Uh-oh. In Gwen's experience, that wasn't a good sign. No two people could rub
together for any length of time without finding a few rough edges. The lack of
any point of contention could mean that one person was deferring far too much,
and that went nowhere good. It could also indicate the inability of one or both
parties to confront problems. Or maybe there were deliberately hidden issues.
Whatever the case, perfect harmony was a myth, and an insidious one at that.
And Shawna, judging by the expression on her face, had bought shares in that
particular stock. "Why did you ask me that?"
"Answers can be surprisingly illuminating," Gwen said, keeping it cryptic.
"So, I take a closer look at this guy, set your brother's mind at ease, and
you're good to go."
"That sounds reasonable," she allowed. She was about to say more, but her
gaze settled on someone near the door, and a flash of panic shot through her
eyes.
Gwen wasn't surprised to see a tall, well-dressed Black man approaching their
table, coffee cup in hand.
"Shawna," he said, putting a bit of surprise into it. His gaze slipped to
Gwen and back, and his eyebrows rose. "This is your breakfast meeting?"
"It's not like a meeting meeting," Gwen said, her voice pitched a
few notes higher and several years younger than her usual husky alto tones.
"It's more like, community-service time."
She stuck out her hand, keeping it a little stiff and awkward, as if business
handshakes were new territory for her.
"GiGi Silver," she announced, giving one of her established teen personas.
"I'm a junior at Mount Hope, and Ms. O'Riley agreed to help me with a school
project. But you probably didn't hear about it. I sort of left it to the last
minute," she confessed.
He took her hand briefly. "School project."
"Yeah! We have to research three different careers, and her brother—he's a
cop, which is something I thought might be sort of interesting—told me to call
his sister the banker and see if she could talk to me, and maybe let me follow
her around for a few hours. You know—watch her at work, ask questions and
stuff."
As Gwen hoped, Shawna picked up her cue. "Roy, maybe you could help out,
too?"
A flicker of annoyance crossed his face, and he sent Gwen a smile that didn't
quite reach his eyes. "I'd be glad to. Call my office, and my secretary can set
something up."
"Great! Have you got, like, a business card?"
He fished out his wallet and handed her a card. His smile changed when he
turned it toward Shawna, turning warm and genuine. "Is dinner at nine still good
for you?"
"Absolutely."
He actually blew her a kiss before wading off into the crowd.
Shawna heaved a relieved sigh. "That was quick thinking, girl. It was
something, the way you changed the way you talked, even the way you moved. I
swear you dropped ten years just like that," she marveled, snapping her
fingers for emphasis.
"More like twenty," Gwen said. "I'm glad you're impressed, but like anything
else, it comes with practice."
Enough practice, she added silently, to suspect that any meeting Roy's
secretary set up would only be canceled later on. The man seemed to be genuinely
into Shawna, but Gwen was willing to bet he didn't have a lot of time for anyone
else.
"I don't expect to get much information from this career-day shtick, but it
will give me a chance to observe Roy for a couple of hours, pick up some
impressions."
"Pick up impressions," Shawna echoed, her expression suddenly more guarded.
"Damian said your instincts are very good."
"Don't worry—I always back everything up with completely unspooky data. I'll
get you a report within, say, two weeks?"
"That will be fine. What do I owe you?"
"Work that out with your brother. He helped me on a recent case, so this is
me paying him back."
Shawna's eyebrows flew up. "Keeping it off the books?"
"Oddly enough, that's the term he used."
"I'm not surprised. Actually, I suppose I am a little surprised,"
she amended, "but that's because 'keeping it off the books' is what we call our
in-family barter system."
"Oh."
Gwen couldn't think of anything to add to that. Family was a mystery to her.
If she'd ventured onto O'Riley turf, it was entirely by accident.
After a moment Shawna glanced at her watch. "I've got to run, but I'll look
forward to hearing from you."
"You go ahead." Gwen lifted her coffee cup. "I'm going to need a refill."
After her new client left, Gwen tossed back the cooling brew and went through
line for a takeaway cup. She walked a couple of blocks down a side street to
where she'd parked her car. Thanks to the check Kyle Radcliff had written her
last night, she'd been able to pick up her Toyota first thing this morning.
The rusting blue antique didn't look any better than it had, but at least it
didn't break down between the coffee shop and Gwen's apartment. She parked it in
the garage next to Sylvia's black Mercedes sedan, turned off the car, and
chugged her second cup of coffee while she listened to the engine sputter and
wheeze into silence. Thus fortified, she marched into the office.
It was time to face her computer.
Brushing the dust off the laptop took longer than it should have. So did
powering it up. The infernal machine seemed to be sulking about its long period
of neglect. After too damn long, Gwen pulled up her list of bookmarked Web sites
and got to work.
The information on Roy Williams's business card was enough to get her
started. It didn't take long to find his home address, phone numbers, Social
Security number, credit report, and over a dozen articles in local newspapers
that mentioned his name. Apparently he sailed competitively, attended big-ticket
charity events, and liked to hobnob with local politicians. A quick phone call
to one of the few Providence cops who still spoke to her confirmed that Roy had
no police record, other than a ticket for speeding four years back.
In fact, she couldn't find a single thing wrong with this guy.
Yet.
She sat up and stretched, catlike. The buzzer on her intercom sounded while
she was still in midstretch.
"It's Jason Cross," announced the disembodied voice. "I was driving back from
a computer class and got the impulse to stop by."
It occurred to Gwen that Jason had never been to her place. They'd gotten
together several times since Frank's funeral, but she'd never invited him here.
For that matter, she'd never told him where she lived. No mystery there—no doubt
he'd found her address among his father's things.
"Come on up. My office is in the garage at the end of the drive."
She buzzed him through and watched as he drove up. He'd ditched the rental in
favor of a used two-seater, and the day was warm enough to warrant putting the
top down. His new ride gave her a chance to study him. She'd done quite a bit of
that over the past week, but he still puzzled her.
For one thing, Jason Cross didn't look a thing like his father. Frank had
always reminded Gwen of a Kodiak bear: big, blond, and powerful in a way that
could be reassuring or intimidating, depending on which side of the law you
happened to be standing. Apparently Jason took after his mother, whom Frank had
described as small and dark, with more than a little Narragansett ancestry.
Frank's features had been bluff and broad, but Jason had high cheekbones and a
slight convex curve to his nose. His best feature was his eyes, which were a
warm chocolate brown. Gwen had always appreciated Frank's edgy energy, but there
was something to be said for the calm, kind, centered look in the younger man's
dark-eyed gaze.
The problem was, she couldn't get behind those eyes. Reading people
was a survival skill, one Gwen had learned early. For some reason, she couldn't
begin to figure out what made Jason Cross tick.
"Door's open," she called in response to his knock.
Jason came in and gave her one of his peaceful smiles. "You look busy. Should
I come back later?"
She pushed away from the table. "No, I'm glad you stopped by. I've been
hooked up to this damn machine all morning. I can't believe yon pay to
play around with computers."
"I've got the equipment, so why not learn to use it?"
Gwen propped her feet up on the table. "That's pretty much what Frank said
when the department issued computers. He figured what the hell—might as well do
it right. Somewhere along the line he crossed over from hobby to obsession, but
he had a good time with it."
"I can see why. The information on the Web is amazing. He bookmarked some
really interesting stuff."
A wave of trepidation swept through Gwen. She'd carefully gone through
Frank's files, deleting anything to do with his final case: the death of Gwen's
parents and the key to her identity. But the disc Damian had given her last
night was proof that computers didn't forget easily. How did Damian put it?
Deleted, but not gone.
She reminded herself that Jason was a beginner, probably a long way from
peeling secrets off a hard drive. Plus, why would he think to look? And even if
he did, it wasn't as if she could do anything about it. Frank's stuff rightfully
belonged to Jason.
An irrational surge of resentment followed that thought. Sure, Jason was
Frank's kid, but he was a stranger. She'd been the only family Frank had had for
fifteen years.
It occurred to her that the silence had stretched for too long, and that
Jason was watching her intently.
"Long morning," she said shortly, by way of explanation.
"Anything I can do to help?"
She shrugged and tapped her laptop with one boot-dad toe. "Not much more to
do here. I've pulled together some basic info, but these days I outsource most
of my electronic footwork."
His face brightened with interest. "Oh yeah? Who does that kind of work?"
"I use a public-information broker to collect info that's in the public
domain. He's not cheap, but my time is put to better use gathering information
in person."
"What about info that's not public domain?"
He sounded curious but not judgmental. This guy was definitely a computer
natural—after a couple sessions, he was already developing a hacker's mentality.
"I've got contacts who can find anything."
"Legally?"
Another question that didn't come with moral baggage, she noted. Interesting.
Most people had a truckload of it, even the ones who didn't let their moral
codes interfere with their own behavior.
Jason cleared his throat. "I wasn't implying that you were doing anything
illegal. Well, maybe I was, but I didn't mean to offend you."
"You didn't," she assured him. "My mind was wandering, that's all. The
contacts I mentioned strive to be legally bulletproof. Part of the job—they're
reporters for a tabloid."
He let out a long, low whistle. "You don't strike me as someone who'd be a
fan of the tabloid press."
"Who said I was? My friend Sister Tamar—she's a nun, which you probably
figured out from the name—claims there's a special layer of hell reserved for
the people who publish that crap. But you've got to admit they're damned good at
what they do."
His eyes twinkled. "Like the saying goes, 'It wouldn't be prudent to worship
the devil, but we should at least respect his talents.'"
"There you go," Gwen said approvingly. "Who said that?"
"Mark Twain, I think. Or Oscar Wilde. It's usually one or the other." He
settled one hip on the edge of her desk. "Do you have time to get some lunch?"
"I wish," she grumbled. "I've got another hour or so of work to do on another
case, then I'll be heading down to Tiverton to talk to some people."
"You have a lot of irons in the fire."
"Yeah, well. Life is full of unanswered questions. So is death, for that
matter."
Even to Gwen's ears, her words sounded bitter. A long moment of silence
stretched between them.
"Gwen, let it go," he said gently.
She didn't have to ask what he meant. It wasn't the first time Jason had
urged her to let the official story about his father's death stand: Frank Cross,
a recovering alcoholic, fell off the wagon and into the Narragansett Bay.
End of story.
In a way, Gwen couldn't blame Jason. He never knew his father, and all he had
to go on was what people had told him. Frank had been drinking pretty hard all
during their partnership, and Gwen was willing to bet that Jason's mother had
harbored some resentment.
Or maybe Jason was keeping it light because he was more interested in her
than in restoring his father's reputation?
Nah, that didn't play. Jason treated her like a buddy. In the week since
they'd met, he hadn't shown any inclination toward getting naked and sweaty.
And come to think of it, what was up with that? Just because a guy
wanted to be friends with a woman, it didn't follow that he wasn't also
interested in sleeping with her, if only just once. Since curiosity was one of
Gwen's defining traits, this impulse had always struck her as not only natural
but sensible.
"I've got to head down to Tiverton one of these days," Jason said. "Good
place to get a kayak, I hear. You ever try that?"
"No. I went out clamming with Frank from time to time, but his rowboat is
pretty much the limits of my ability."
"I'm glad you've been using it."
Gwen's only response was a curt nod. Since the funeral, she'd taken Frank's
rowboat out several times, hoping this familiar activity would jump-start her
capricious "gift" into doing something useful. But she hadn't been able to pick
up any images or impressions, no glimpses of how he had died. When it really
mattered, her visions deserted her.
"I've been thinking of selling the bigger boat," Jason said hesitantly. "What
would you think about that?"
"Why should what I think matter?"
He shrugged. "You were Frank's family."
Gwen averted her gaze, not wanting Jason to see her response to that central
truth. She swung her feet off her desk and rose, turning aside as she stretched.
"Listen, why don't you drive down to Tiverton with me? You're not working
until tonight, right? I could swing by your place around noon to pick you up."
"She can take a hint!" he said cheerfully. "And since I also have that
ability, I'll be leaving now. Noon works for me. I'll make a couple of subs to
eat on the way."
She glanced over her shoulder at him. "You should make one for yourself,
too."
"I've never seen anyone your size who could chow down like you do."
"What can I say? It's a gift."
His chuckle wafted back to her as the door swung shut. She watched his car
pull away, then got out the notes she'd taken last night during her meeting with
Kyle Radcliff.
Gwen found a Web site for Erin's place of business, a little shop in Tiverton
called The Green Man. But when she started digging, she found that the shop was
jointly owned by Alice Powers—the business partner—and Kyle Radcliff. Kyle
Radcliff, not Erin Westland.
So much for "her own little business." Gwen wasn't too surprised; Kyle had
always been a controlling bastard.
Come to think of it, he'd mentioned that Erin didn't have an income.
Nor did she have assets.
Her name wasn't on anything—not the mortgage on Kyle's house, not Kyle's bank
accounts, not even the car she drove.
How much of that was Kyle's choice, Gwen wondered, and how much of it was
Erin's? Was it possible that Kyle's desire to dominate and control harmonized
with Erin's need to be invisible?
According to Kyle, Erin had been born in Mystic, Connecticut. Her birthday
was in late March, so she'd recently turned thirty-one. But there was no birth
record for anyone by that name in or around Mystic. No school records, no voter
registration. A search for Social Security numbers yielded a few Erin Westlands,
but none of them were from Connecticut. There wasn't much on Patrick, other than
the SSI number. The kid wasn't in school yet, so he was too young to have left
many electronic footprints.
Gwen shut down her computer and was on her way out the door when the phone
rang. She lunged for it and hit the speaker button before the machine could pick
up.
"Changeling Detective Agency."
"You busy tonight?" inquired Damian without preamble.
Gwen glanced at her watch. "No, but I'm busy now. Talk fast."
"I set up a meet for tonight. The dealer is expecting me to bring a girl with
me. You want in, or should I bring another cop?"
"Yes to both. I want in, but you should still bring backup. When and where do
I meet you?"
He gave her the name of a little park on the East Side, a common meeting
place for drug deals despite its proximity to the police department.
"I can do that," Gwen said. "But with one slight change."
In a few words, she blocked out an alternate scenario. Damian heard her out,
then chuckled appreciatively.
"Damn! I'm glad you're one of us… So to speak."
Gwen's heart did a sudden free fall toward the pit of her stomach. "Geez,
thanks for the reminder. I've gone all morning without once thinking about the
whole not-human thing."
"Yeah? Sounds like your day's been more interesting than mine."
"That I doubt. I've been dragging my ass all over cyberspace."
"Don't let Forest hear you say that. He'd probably think you were spamming
for a porn Web site—'Elves on the Internet,' or some damn thing."
Gwen supposed she should be pleased that Ian had accomplished his purpose so
thoroughly, but she didn't want to hear the E-word from anyone, even
when it dripped with sarcasm.
"Ian likes to yank people's chains. Forget about him. Listen, I've got to
run. I'll meet you at the park tonight."
"As far as our guy's concerned, you're there to sample a new party drug.
Don't forget to dress the part."
She rolled her eyes. "And me with a closet full of plaid skirts and sensible
shoes."
"Huh. Good point."
He hung up without saying good-bye, just like Quaid always did. Apparently he
was picking up a few of his other partner's habits.
Gwen's grin faded abruptly. His other partner? Since when had she
started regarding Damian O'Riley as her rookie trainee as well as Gary
Quaid's?
Her gaze nicked to the disc Damian had given her last night. Some part of her
hoped she could clear her name, settle the books, and go back to her old life.
Maybe on some level she even believed it could happen. But c'mon—an elf on the
Providence vice squad?
Wait a minute—a what?
For a moment Gwen stood frozen with shock. She slumped into one of the
wingback chairs and dropped her head into her hands. It was a bit much, having
two nasty little pieces of self-knowledge hit her in the last five minutes.
The first was bad enough—what the hell business did she have training a
rookie cop?—but the second was a full-fledged paradigm shift:
She believed Ian Forest. Down deep inside, she knew he was right about who
and what she was.
And the funny thing was, Gwen suspected that she'd always known.
CHAPTER SIX
As Gwen drove down the long gravel driveway, she noticed something sticking
out of her mailbox.
The postal delivery wasn't due until afternoon, but a large manila envelope
had been bent into an inverted U and slid partway into the mailbox, with at
least a third of it exposed. Someone wanted to be sure to get her attention.
The vision hit her the moment her fingers touched the envelope. A lean, dark
face, with cheekbones so sharp they cast shadows on the hollows below. Dark eyes
studied her with a mixture of hunger and resentment, and the thoughts behind
those eyes flooded her with numbing clarity. Wallace Earl Edmonson, her father's
brother, had regarded her as both a necessity and a nuisance. He'd envied the
"gift" she'd inherited, but he'd reconciled himself to using her as a tool and
was eager to get on with it.
Edmonson's face dissolved, and the vision shifted into a smothering emotional
cloud, a dark miasma of dread and death.
Gwen quickly released the envelope and drew in a long, shuddering breath. She
reached into the pocket of her leather jacket for a pair of latex gloves and
snapped them on, not so much to preserve fingerprints on the envelope—she
doubted there would be any—as to mute the intense memories captured by whatever
was in the envelope.
She tore it open and pulled out two photos. One was a black-and-white picture
of Frank's fishing boat adrift on moonlit waters, just as it had looked the
night he'd drowned. The picture was carefully composed and beautifully printed,
mocking her grief with art.
Gwen quickly shuffled it behind the second photo, and her eyes widened.
The second picture was also black-and-white, but in this case a color shot
would have looked much the same. A small, ornate silver handgun was displayed
against black velvet. Gwen recognized the weapon immediately. Ian Forest had
given it to her as a gift—and taken it from her hand the last time she'd faced
down Edmonson.
The warning was unmistakable: Tie Frank's death to Edmonson, and we'll tie
Edmonson's death to you.
Her lips firmed around a small, cynical smile. How stupid did Ian think she
was? As warnings go, this one definitely lacked teeth. After all the trouble
they'd gone through to make sure no one missed Edmonson? They weren't about
to negate the effort by accusing her of his death. And even if they did,
what use was a weapon if you couldn't produce a corpse? After her parents died
in a car crash, their bodies had been stolen from the morgue to avoid close
scrutiny. Gwen didn't know much about the Elder Folk, but one thing was very
clear: when they died, they disappeared.
Her smirk faded as a new explanation occurred to her. They didn't need to tie
her to Edmonson's death. Her fingerprints were on the silver gun. If she stepped
out of line, someone would die. Almost certainly someone she knew. That she'd be
blamed for it was beside the point.
Gwen carefully set the photos aside. Ian had it right—she was an
idiot. He'd given her an unregistered gun, and she'd taken it. When he asked for
it back, she'd handed it over without question. That wasn't like her, and the
lapse bothered her almost as much as the threat.
She'd noticed that Ian was unusually persuasive, but it had never occurred to
her that his particular "gift" might enable him to override people's normal
reservations and inhibitions.
Muttering imprecations, she stripped off the gloves and dialed Ian's number
on her cell phone. He answered after the first ring.
"Hello, Gwen. I'm glad you called."
For once his silky baritone had absolutely no effect on her libido. "Like I
had a choice," she snarled. "Okay, you win. I won't challenge the official
ruling on Frank's death. If you want, I'll take an oath on it, but first you
have to give me back that little silver trinket and give me your oath
that it won't be used on anyone else."
"That sounds reasonable. Shall I bring the item by your apartment?"
"I'll be out late tonight. But then, that won't be a problem for you, will
it? You always seem to know where to rind me. Damian had it right when he called
you a stalker."
"Gwen—"
"Don't bother. Nothing you could say will change any of this. Overriding
people's judgment, clouding their ability to make their own choices? In my book,
that makes you no better than a rapist. Oh, and an extortionist. Let's not
forget that."
A long silence followed. "In time, you'll understand why certain precautions
were necessary."
She threw the cell phone into the passenger seat and yanked the gearshift
into first. Gravel spit from her tires as she spun out of the drive. By the time
she reached Jason's house in East Providence, her hands had stopped shaking.
Despite the bad start, the drive down to Tiverton ended up being surprisingly
pleasant. Jason drove his car, vowing that that bottom was due to fall out of
Gwen's any day now. That freed Gwen's hands to tackle the Italian subs Jason had
put together for the trip. He had filled bakery-fresh torpedo rolls with spicy
meats, provolone, onions, and hot peppers—enough good stuff to drown out the
requisite lettuce and tomatoes. The car's top was down, the sun was warm, and
jazz poured out of the sound system. By the time Gwen had worked her way through
the second sub, she was feeling, for lack of a better term, almost human again.
They drove along the Sakonnet River in companionable silence, passing scene
after scene ripped from the pages of the Scenic New England book on
Marcy's coffee table. The whole town had an out-of-the-way feeling, and The
Green Man, tucked as it was into a grove of beech and maple trees on a narrow
side road, wasn't exactly designed to pull in drive-by customers.
Gwen got out of the car and studied the carved wooden sign over the door—a
man's face surrounded by oak leaves, presiding over "The Green Man" carved in
Celtic-style lettering. The sign looked handmade, artsy, and expensive.
Apparently Kyle took his wife's hobbies seriously.
The setup was bigger than it looked at first glance. The storefront was
narrow, but the main room was surprisingly long. The ceiling was opened to the
rafters, giving the shop a lofty, spacious feel.
The Green Man looked and smelled like a cross between a health supplement
shop, an old-fashioned country store, an herbalist's warehouse, and an English
tearoom. In the main room, pretty oak shelves lined with rows of small boxes and
pill bottles filled most of one wall. A long table held a couple of dozen small
wooden barrels of dried herbs, each with its own scoop and small stack of
prelabeled bags. Toward the back of the room, two newer wings jutted off to each
side. On the left was cozy tearoom, on the right, a greenhouse.
A smiling, ash-blond woman wearing a small fortune in beige linen separates
bustled over to greet them. Gwen figured her for another hobbyist, a woman who
enjoyed playing at running a business but didn't need to depend on it for a
living.
"Can I help you find something?" she asked, glancing from Gwen to Jason.
"Actually, I'm looking for someone. This is Erin Westland's shop?"
"That's right. I'm her partner, Alice Powers. Is there something I could help
you with? Or are you a friend of hers?"
"I've never met her. My name is Gwen Gellman, and I'm a private investigator.
I'm working for her husband, Kyle Radcliff. Erin hasn't been home since Sunday,
and he hired me to find her."
The woman's eyes widened, and the hand she lifted to her throat was more than
a little unsteady.
"Dear God. She's missing? Erin is missing?"
"I don't mean to be rude, but it seems like you would have noticed by now."
She gave a nervous titter. "You would think so, wouldn't you? But the shop
doesn't really need more than one person here at a time. We take turns, so I
didn't know—" Her voice trailed off, and she swayed on her low-heeled Italian
shoes.
Jason took the woman's elbow and steered her toward the tearoom. "Let's all
sit down."
She let him lead her to a chair, and sank gratefully into it. "Give me a
minute to absorb this. I was just about to make a fresh pot before you came in.
We have our own herbal blend here. It's very soothing, and I don't mind telling
you that I could use a cup."
Gwen took the seat across from the woman. "Since you're here today, I'm
guessing Tuesday is Erin's day."
"That's right. She works Tuesday and Thursday, from ten to five, as well as
an occasional half day on Saturday."
"Would you have any way of knowing whether or not Erin came in yesterday?"
"Oh, I'm sure she didn't. We're not open Sunday and Monday, so there are
usually quite a few messages on Tuesday morning. The messages were still there
when I came in this morning, so clearly Erin didn't pick them up yesterday. Come
to think of it, there were several calls from Kyle."
Either the woman was a complete flake, or Erin wasn't exactly the most
reliable partner. "Is skipping work a pattern for her?"
"Not really, no. She takes a day off from time to time, but she calls to let
me know, so I have the option of coming in or not. Our regular customers know
that our hours are flexible, and they call before making the drive."
"When was the last time you heard from Erin?"
"Let's see," she mused. "Thursday? Yes, that sounds right. She called me
about an order. We're running low on the chamomile citrus tea. And speaking of
which, let me get that tea going. Would you like some lavender shortbread with
it?"
"I'm sure she would," Jason told her, sending a small smile at Gwen. "Thank
you, Mrs. Powers."
"Alice, please." She lifted one hand to smooth her hair, a movement contrived
to show off a perfect pale-rose manicure and a couple of snazzy rings.
"Jason," he said, offering his hand.
An expression of mock exasperation crossed her face when she touched his
hand. "Another man who thinks skin cream is only for women! We have a very nice
lotion, all natural of course, with a lovely, woodsy scent. A very popular gift
for men."
"I'll take a look at it afterwards," he assured her.
She beamed at him. Her smile broadened when he stood up with her. "How nice.
You don't encounter many gentlemen these days." She gave Gwen an aren't-you-a-lucky-girl
wink and headed to the little morning kitchen at the end of the tearoom.
"Suck up," Gwen murmured.
He smiled complacently. "What can I say? My momma raised me right."
Alice turned on the electric kettle and measured dried herbs into a plump
white teapot, then piled a small silver tray with lightly golden wedges necked
with dried lavender. She brought the cookies to the table and returned for the
tea things.
Gwen took an experimental nibble. The shortbread was rich and buttery, the
lavender more ornamental than anything else. That was a relief. She'd expected
it to taste more… purple. Maybe she'd try the tea after all.
After Alice finished the pouring, Gwen asked, "Would you object to me looking
at the store's books?"
"Of course not! Anything I can do to help."
She got up and bustled off, returning in a few moments with a binder holding
a computer printout.
"We have a very simple system. Neither of us are financial wizards, so this
should be easy for anyone to follow. This is a copy. You can take it with you if
you like."
After Alice settled back down, Gwen handed her a business card and a copy of
the release form Kyle Radcliff had signed.
Alice flushed. "Oh my goodness. I didn't think to ask for your ID, or
credentials, or anything. And here I am, just handing over the books.".
"You're worried about your partner," Jason said soothingly. He lifted the
small cup. "This is very good."
"It is, isn't it? That's our biggest seller. People come from all over
southern New England for it, and you know how Rhode Islanders hate to drive any
distance."
"I'm finding that out," he said with a grin. "If someone has to drive more
than fifteen minutes to get to work, they start wondering whether they should
move closer to the office or start looking for a new job. Around here, anything
more than an hour away is a day trip."
She chuckled. "That's certainly true. And it's insidious! We moved here from
Connecticut. My husband used to take the train into Manhattan every morning, but
now he complains about driving from here to Providence."
The door chimes tinkled, and a trio of matrons walked into the store. Alice
glanced over. "I've got to see to the customers. Please help yourself to more
tea."
Gwen sipped hers while she looked through the records. "This is interesting.
Erin takes a lot of days off. And even when she's here, the receipts on Tuesdays
and Thursdays are significantly lower than on other days."
Jason poured himself a second cup. "Skimming, maybe?"
"I wouldn't be surprised. Hubby keeps a tight hold on the purse strings. This
business is technically his. Well, more than technically, I guess. His name is
on the lease, and he wasn't kidding when he said Erin didn't have an income.
This place isn't exactly turning a profit."
She glanced up at Jason and grinned. "I like it. Kyle pays the bills, Erin
pockets the cash."
"You don't care much for the husband, I take it."
"Hell, no. He was married to a friend of mine." Gwen closed the book and
pushed it aside. "I'm finished here. Is there anything you need to do around
town? Want to stop at that kayak place by the bridge?"
He glanced out of the window. The sky was clouding over in one of those
abrupt mood changes for which New England weather was famed.
"Another time, I think. Since the weather's turning, I think I'll head down
to the library. I've been meaning to start some sort of volunteer work in the
community. A lot of organizations post fliers on the library bulletin boards
looking for volunteers."
"I can save you a trip. Monday nights I teach a class in self-defense for
women. Interested in helping out?"
He nodded avidly. "I was thinking about doing some work with beach or
wetlands maintenance, but that's good, too. How are you running the class?"
"Not much talk, demos as needed, lots of drills. I've had them practicing in
pairs."
"But you want them to get used to employing these techniques against males.
That's smart."
"Problem is, they're just starting out. And they're, you know, girly."
He grinned. "You say that like it's a bad thing. Tell you what: Let's head
back to Frank's place, and you show me the holds and escapes you'll be using."
She consulted her watch. "I've got a little time. Sure, let's do that."
An hour later, Gwen was in Jason's backyard, barefoot and disheveled, and
grinning like a kid in a video arcade.
She circled, moving opposite Jason, her eyes on his. Usually she could tell
what an opponent was going to do by watching his face. Most people telegraphed
their intentions in a hundred little ways. But Jason was nearly impossible to
read, and Gwen had ended up flat on the grass a dozen times.
He lunged for her, cat-quick. Gwen slapped away his hand and pivoted on her
left foot, leaning away and snapping off a kick with her right foot.
She fully expected him to block. To her surprise, Jason grabbed her ankle and
tugged in the direction she was already moving. The added momentum threw off her
balance, and suddenly she was heading for the grass again. Twisting on the way
down, she caught herself with both hands and kicked out with her free foot—
And met only air. Jason had already released her and moved aside.
She flopped down on the ground and immediately flipped onto her back, pulling
her knees up to her chest. When Jason dove at her, she planted both feet on his
torso and pushed out hard. He soared over her.
It was a near-perfect throw. It would have been perfect if Jason hadn't
somehow managed to land on his feet rather than his back.
Gwen rolled up to a sitting position. Before she could scramble to her feet,
Jason dropped to one knee and got her in a headlock, pulling her in tight
against his chest.
Since she was several inches shorter than Jason, her butt fitted firmly
against his lower body. To her surprise, he was very happy to have her there.
Normally this sort of thing didn't surprise her. The male psyche held few
mysteries for Gwen. Men, in her observation, were driven primarily by a desire
for sex and territory. Modern life lent a veneer of complication to these basis
instincts, but most masculine responses boiled down to the three C's: curiosity,
competition, and conquest. The thing was, Gwen had never picked up even a hint
of sexual interest from Jason, not even during the physical contact of their
mock sparring. But something was definitely happening now.
Jason splayed his hand on her stomach and pulled her closer still, making her
aware that her tee shirt had ridden up, exposing everything that wasn't covered
by her skimpy excuse for a bra. His hand suddenly felt very warm against her
bare skin. A rush of pure, primal lust was coming off him in waves.
He relaxed his hold on her neck. Before Gwen could pull away, Jason turned
her to face him so they knelt together, thigh to thigh. He buried both hands in
her hair and tipped her head back for a kiss.
He lowered his head until they were nearly touching, until Gwen could see her
face reflected in his chocolate-brown eyes.
Jason stopped suddenly, a breath away from her lips. Chagrin washed over his
face. Apparently he'd glimpsed his reflection in her eyes, too, and didn't like
what he saw.
Even before he released her, the palpable sense of desire switched off, as
abruptly and completely as a door shutting between them. He eased away, then
rose and put several paces between them, hands thrust in his pockets as if he
didn't trust them to be out on their own recognizance.
"That wasn't planned," he said quietly, his back still to her. "In fact, I
have no earthly notion why I just did that."
"You Tarzan, me Jane?" she suggested.
"That's not it." He turned to face her. "It's not my style to jump a woman
just because she happens to be there and female. Especially not you."
Gwen rose to her feet. "Okay," she said cautiously. "But just out of
curiosity, what did I do to rate 'especially'?"
"We're sort of like family, once removed. I'm not saying I look at you as a
sister, but maybe—I don't know—a cousin or something."
"And as far as you're concerned, this isn't Appalachia."
"Not even close." He studied her face. "Are we on the same page with this?"
Gwen thought that over. "Being in a clinch felt a little strange to me, too.
I don't know about the cousin thing, though. Never having had any family, I
don't know how that works."
"Okay, scrap that analogy. You've got one that works better?"
"I'll give it some thought." She glanced at her watch. "Listen, I've got to
go."
"Are you sure you're okay with this? You're not pissed off at me for grabbing
you?"
He looked so contrite, even worried. Gwen sent him a reassuring smile. "We're
okay. Listen, you want to take the boat out this weekend? We might as well take
advantage of it before you sell it."
Jason greeted this suggestion with obvious relief. "Sure. How about Saturday
morning?"
"Sounds good. You make the coffee, and I'll bring a dozen donuts."
"Make sure you bring something for me, too."
Gwen paused in the act of putting on her boots and shot a sidelong glance at
him. "Smart-ass."
He chuckled, obviously reassured by this exchange. Gwen waved good-bye and
jogged to her car.
Rush-hour traffic clogged the streets as she drove toward Marcy's condo in
downtown Providence. Impromptu visits weren't usually their style, but Gwen
figured it couldn't hurt to check in. Marcy had been shaken by Kyle Radcliff's
reappearance in her life, and Gwen wasn't about to see her friend lose hard-won
ground.
She parked in the lot across from the condo and dashed across the street,
dodging a small crowd of canvas-toting art students released from late-afternoon
classes. When the intercom hummed into life, she gave her name and grabbed the
door when the buzzer sounded.
Trudy Wasserman met her at the door to the condo, a steaming mug in hand. She
was wearing a sleeveless tunic of some silky fabric in swirling, watercolor
shades of blue and green over black leggings—sort of an updated, upscale version
of a tie-dye tee shirt. It suited Trudy, who was one of those people who
definitely would have gone to Woodstock if she hadn't been in diapers at the
time. She'd done something different to her sleek red hair, crimping it so that
it fell nearly to her shoulder in a soft, wavy triangle. Her bangs were cut
straight across. To Gwen, the look said Cleopatra with a henna rinse and a bad
perm. Or maybe early Tina Turner.
"Marcy's not home," Trudy said without preamble.
Gwen rocked back on her heels, surprised by the edge in the woman's voice.
Trudy had always been a little wary of Gwen. Every now and then a little
jealousy showed through, but never had Trudy been so openly hostile.
"I'll come back another time," Gwen said.
Something flickered in Trudy's eyes, and the resentful expression dropped off
her face. In fact, her whole demeanor changed so suddenly that Gwen could
envision a switch being flipped.
"Don't go. I'm glad you're here, really. Please, come in." She seized Gwen's
arm and all but dragged her into the room.
Gwen disengaged and took a step back. "Let me guess: you want know what's
going on with Kyle Radcliff."
Her hostess blinked, clearly surprised by her own transparency. She quickly
gathered her composure and sank gracefully into one of the white leather chairs,
then took a sip from her mug before answering.
"Of course I'm concerned that Kyle has come back into March's life. I don't
trust him."
"Neither do I, but I'm a. private investigator, as in, no, I'm not
going to discuss the case with you."
"Did I ask you to?"
"I figured you'd get around it. Just like you pumped me for details about
Jeff Monroe, not to mention Marcy's three assistants before Jeff."
Trudy set aside her mug with exaggerated care. "Marcy is the single most
important thing in my life. Of course I'm interested in her job and the people
she deals with on a day-to-day basis. It's only natural."
"I don't know about that. It's 'only natural' for people to keep having a
life after they get a relationship. Not every aspect of Marcos life revolves
around you. Deal with it."
Trudy's gray eyes narrowed. "Really, Gwen, let me know what you really
think."
"Okay, I think it's insulting that you expect me to talk about a friend
behind her back. I think you need to get over yourself and get a life of your
own. And I think I should leave right now and come back when Marcy's home."
"And I think you don't know the first thing about a real
relationship," Trudy shot back. "Look at you—jumping into bed with anyone who
catches your eye, never willing to commit. Your vocabulary includes every
four-letter word but 'love.' You're—you're as bad as a man!"
In Trudy's lexicon, those were fighting words, but Gwen had to fight back a
grin. "Yeah, I can be a real bastard."
The redhead threw up her hands in exasperation. "Is it any wonder people talk
about you and Marcy? You're more of a man than that husband of hers ever was!"
"Yeah, but so are you," Gwen pointed out, "and you're the poster girl for
lipstick lesbians."
Without warning, Trudy launched herself from the chair and came at Gwen,
swinging a handful of manicure at her face. Gwen leaned out of reach, grabbed
her wrist, and yanked it hard to one side. When Trudy spun away, Gwen planted
one foot on the woman's rump and shoved her toward one of the sofas. She plunged
forward and sprawled facedown on the white leather.
Trudy scrambled up and tensed for another spring, but something in Gwen's
face froze her in place.
"You're just dying to haul off and punch me, aren't you?" she hissed. "You'd
just love that, would you?"
"Now that you mention it," Gwen said dryly. "But this isn't about you and me,
fingernails versus fists. Bottom line: Kyle Radcliff is a waste of skin. Marcy
knows that. You've got nothing to worry about from him, and your only problems
are the ones you're causing. Tell Marcy I was here, would you?"
She spun on her heel and left Trudy to fume and sputter. Enough time
wasted—Damian was expecting to meet her at the park in less than an hour.
Suddenly, the prospect of a drug bust was actually sort of inviting. People
were so much easier to deal with when you were allowed to kick their asses.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Later that evening, Gwen sauntered into the park on stiletto heels, one hand
tucked in the back pocket of Damian's jeans. The dealer would assume that Damian
had brought a girl along to help him test out the drug's supposed aphrodisiac
effect, so she figured she should start acting the part. They'd come early to
check out the area, but most likely their contact was doing the same thing.
After a quick stroll around the park they headed for the designated meeting
spot—a bench tucked back among several old maples. Once they sat down, Gwen
noticed that the trees blocked out the lamplight, leaving them in a deeply
shadowed alcove. No passersby would see what happened in this place.
The minutes ticked by. Unseen cars swished past. A big man with sheepishly
hunched shoulders skulked down the path behind a tiny dog, a toy breed of some
sort with a prancing, mincing gait and a pink ribbon on its head. Gwen wondered
if the sensitivity points the guy was racking up with his wife or girlfriend
outweighed the humiliation of being seen walking the little mutt. Moments after
the unmatched pair passed out of view, a shrill soprano yapping gave challenge
to some passerby.
Damian nudged an elbow into her ribs, warning her to be alert.
She saw the man approaching before he did, and her heart began to race.
She leaned in as if to nip playfully at Damian's earlobe. "It's one of the
blond kids who trashed the DNA lab," she whispered. "If he recognizes us, he'll
run. Don't let him see your face until he's close enough for me to grab him."
"Why do you get to do the grabbing? Whose bust is this, anyway?" he whispered
back. But he lifted a hand to play with her hair, shielding her face from view.
Gwen pulled her knees up so that her feet were braced against the edge of the
bench. She nuzzled at Damian's neck and murmured, "Give me an ETA."
"Counting down: ten, nine, eight."
She completed the rest of the countdown silently, trusting Damian's ability
to judge the timing of the blond man's approach. She didn't have much choice—the
guy approached with ghostly silence. When she figured the moment was right, Gwen
pushed off the bench with both feet, launching herself off into a flying tackle.
The blond guy went down with Gwen on top of him. Before he could move, she
had her gun out of her thigh holster and pressed against his temple.
"Remember me?" she inquired sweetly. "And surely you recall my friend,
Officer O'Riley?"
The young man's blue eyes darted toward Damian then returned to Gwen. "You're
the police?"
He spoke softly, but his light tenor voice had a resonance that suggested a
theatre background. His accent was more pronounced than Ian's, not to mention
crisper and harder to place. The closest thing Gwen had ever heard was the
accent of a short-term boyfriend, an Hungarian grad student whose English had a
slight British flavor.
"Are you going to arrest me?" continued Gwen's captive.
"That's the plan, yeah."
"You can't do that," he stated, more calmly than most people could have
managed under the circumstances. "Not if you expect to live until the next full
moon."
"Don't be threatening her," Damian warned. "That's a real bad idea."
Gwen sent the cop a quelling glance. She slowly rose to her feet and stepped
away, keeping her gun on the man.
"You know," she said conversationally, "not many people can pull off snooty
when they're flat on their backs. I admire your style."
"And I your speed and agility. May I rise?"
"Do it slowly," she warned.
He got to his feet in a fluid sweep of motion that was absurdly graceful and
impossibly slow: ballet played back half-speed.
"Damn," Damian muttered. "The man can move."
"As can you," the blond man told Gwen. "The first time I saw you, I knew what
you were from the way you moved. Given your heritage, surely you know that
turning me in to the authorities would mean a death sentence for me."
As much as she hated to admit it, there was a certain grim logic to that. It
would be hard to keep a collective low profile if the police started taking too
close a look at individuals. Most likely one of the Elder Folk who landed in
jail had about the same life expectancy as a Mafia informer.
"I've heard that killing each other is a big no-no," Gwen said. "So the deal
is, if you die because of me, I die, too?"
"You grasp the situation precisely."
"I grasp that it's supremely fucked up," Damian observed.
"This doesn't concern you," the blond man said coolly.
"Actually, I'd say it does." Gwen tipped her head toward Damian. "That guy
isn't one of us. Even better, he doesn't answer to me. I'm not his boss,
partner, wife, mother, or girlfriend. I am in no way responsible for what he
does, nor do I direct his actions in any way. In fact, at the moment it's the
other way around. This is his party, and I'm the tagalong."
The young cop knew a cue when he heard one. He pulled his gun and aimed it at
the man's kneecap.
"You think?" he asked Gwen.
She shrugged. "Let's see what he's got to say first. Start with your name,"
she told him.
"Adrian," he offered. "When I'm required to offer a surname, I use Archer."
"Okay, Adrian Archer, what's your gig these days, now that Edmonson's gone?"
"Much the same as before. I do whatever the earl's business affairs require.
At present I'm running the clubs until his heir steps forward to claim them."
Gwen suddenly had a bad feeling about this. "His heir?"
"The closest kin. In the earl's case," he said meaningfully, "his only kin."
"Oh, shit," she murmured.
Damian caught on fast. "Wait a damn minute," he demanded. "You're related to
this Edmonson guy? And you just inherited a couple of high-ticket titty bars?"
"She will come into a considerable amount of property," Adrian responded. A
tiny smile nickered at the corner of his lips. "Provided, of course, she meets
the terms of inheritance."
"Gee, I can't wait to hear those," Gwen said with heavy sarcasm. "You guys
have lawyers?"
"Of course. You would have been contacted once the official mourning period
ended."
"Since I've shed all the tears I plan to, why don't you just give me the
highlights."
He shook his head. "I am bound by certain oaths. I will turn the earl's
affairs over to you, but several days remain to the mourning period."
Gwen thought this over. "I suppose you know where I live?"
"Of course."
"All right, then, we'll let you go if you give me your oath that when the
mourning period ends, you'll contact me and lay out everything you know about
the earl's drug business. Swear it by moon and star, wind and word."
Adrian looked at Gwen as if she'd finally said something interesting. "That
is a most solemn oath."
"Yeah, it's a favorite of mine, too. Let's hear it."
When he said the words, Gwen returned her gun to its holster and gave him a
curt nod. "See you around, Archer."
He touched two fingers to his forehead and melted off into the shadows.
An angry crashing erupted from a stand of bushes behind them. Gary Quaid came
wading toward them, crumbled leaves in his brown hair and an angry scowl on his
face.
"What the hell's wrong with you two? You're letting dealers walk now?"
"He'll be back," Gwen stated.
Quaid's eyes narrowed. "And you know this how?"
"Because I can't eat French fries anymore," Gwen told him. She shrugged at
his puzzled frown. "Long story."
Quaid's breath hissed out in obvious exasperation. He sucked air in slowly,
through clenched teeth, clearly fueling up for a major ass-chewing.
"Hold on," Damian told Quaid as he stepped between the former partners.
"Before you two start throwing punches, there's something you need to see. We
came out here for more than one reason. Follow me, and keep it quiet."
He took off without waiting for a response. Quaid glanced at Gwen. When she
didn't offer any explanation, he shrugged and fell into step behind his rookie.
The three of them left the path and walked quietly to the other side of the
park and around behind a thick stand of trees. Damian motioned for them to get
down.
After a few minutes, three men slipped out of the shadows and off into the
night.
When they were out of earshot, Damian said, "See that bench there, right by
the trees? When I did the paperwork for this bust, that's the place I said we
were supposed to meet the dealer. Anyone at the station could have read it. But
I told you and the contact to come to another place, at a later time. Those guys
have been waiting here for maybe an hour."
"It's a freaking ambush," Gwen summarized.
Quaid nodded slowly. "And the only way those guys would have known where to
meet you is if someone in the vice squad told them. Smart move on your part."
His choice of words made Gwen wince. Quaid's chowder-thick Rhode Island
accent left him severely R-impaired. Sentences such as "Smot move on yoah pot"
were particularly painful.
On the other hand, Quaid's reaction answered an important question. He had no
idea about the ambush. It wasn't absolute proof that he wasn't dirty, but at
least he wasn't the one who'd betrayed his young partner.
"Switching the meeting place was Gellman's idea," Damian said. He sent her a
wry grin. "I gotta tell you, I'm pretty fucking glad I ran the plan past her."
His voice came out a little shaky. Gwen slid an arm around the young cop's
shoulders, but no reassuring words came to her mind.
"So what do we do now?" Damian demanded.
Quaid turned a cool, measuring stare toward Gwen. "We continue what Gellman
started: figure out who's feeding info to Walsh."
"What do you—" Damian stopped short as understanding hit. "Damn, Gellman—you
thought Quaid was the rat?"
"It's important to rule out possibilities," the cop said evenly. "In her
shoes, I would have done the same thing."
They walked several blocks in somber silence, coming to Damian's car first.
The rookie nodded good night and took off. Gwen batted away the resulting
exhaust fumes and turned to face her former partner.
"Since we walked past your car on the last street, I figure you've got
something to say to me."
Quaid folded his arms and returned her stare. "I saw Kate Myers last week.
She said the two of you started running together."
Gwen frowned. Quaid had never been much for small talk, but that was abrupt
even for him. "That's right. So?"
"If you don't mind me asking, how did that come about?"
She shrugged. "We both live on the East Side. We both run. It's convenient."
"But who initiated it?"
"Kate did," she said slowly. "What's this about?"
He thrust his hands into his pockets and stared moodily at the house across
the street. "I started dating Kate shortly after you and I were partnered up. A
week or two after I break up with Kate, I find out that you two are buddies? It
doesn't play right."
"You think she might be keeping an eye on me?"
"It crossed my mind."
"For whom?"
"Well, that's the question, isn't it?"
Gwen thought this over. The most likely culprit would be Dennis Walsh, but it
wouldn't be the first time Internal Affairs decided to observe a cop under
investigation through an unconventional angle. After the raid on Winston's, IA
had been all over her. It wasn't outside the realm of possibility that Kate
Myers had been recruited to pick up secondhand info from Gwen's partner, then to
observe Gwen herself.
Seriously sleazy, yes, but the Providence police force wasn't exactly a
hotbed of trust and brotherly love. Like the time a small silver disk with
flashing lights was found in an interrogation room, and the police department,
assuming IA was checking on the cops, had an outside company evaluate the
object. The hired geeks declared it a high-tech listening device. Local
newscasts were all over that, and eventually it came out that the "high-tech
device" had broken off a cheap piece of costume jewelry. An earring, to be
precise. Gwen had laughed herself silly over that one. For starters, you'd think
the thick shitheads at the station would think to ask why anyone would design a
"secret device" to look like a tiny disco lamp.
It just went to show how paranoid cops in the post-Buddy era had become. The
police force had often been described as Buddy Ciencia's private army, and the
former mayor's ouster on corruption charges made a lot of government employees
nervous. Gwen had experienced firsthand the let's-clean-house mentality that
could transform accusation into nightmare and turn long-term friends and
coworkers into cold-eyed strangers. Against that backdrop, Quaid's concerns
didn't seem quite so outlandish.
"Did Kate ask a lot of questions about your work?" she asked.
"Some," Quaid admitted. "I didn't think much of it. Since she's an ME, some
of her cases overlapped with mine."
"When Kate and I run, I'm the one asking questions, but I suppose that's
another way of gathering info. Asking questions gives a pretty clear picture of
what I know and where I'm thinking of heading. If someone wanted to find out my
thoughts concerning Frank Cross's death, Kate would be the person to ask."
"There you go," he said glumly.
"I asked Kate to do Frank Cross's autopsy," she reminded him. "When it comes
to coincidence, I'm as skeptical as the next guy, but that puts a dent in your
'let's keep an eye on Gellman' theory."
"Yeah, but did she bother to tell you that she was the only ME working that
week? She would have done the autopsy regardless."
"Hmmm. Must have slipped her mind," Gwen murmured. "Interesting theory you've
got going about your ex-girlfriend."
He shrugged. "You're not the only one crossing names off a list."
"You mind telling me why you thought to look at her? I mean, she's an ME.
That's related to the job, sure, but a corpse-cutter playing Mata Hari?"
"She started pressuring me to back away from the investigation of that
nightclub bust," Quaid said softly. "When I asked her where that was coming
from, she tells me about what was done to Moniz and Yoland in the morgue. Says
it was a warning to the cops to stay away. The weird thing was, no one else at
the station said word one about it. I figured she was making it up."
"No, it happened," Gwen told him. "Teresa Moniz confirmed. She insisted on
seeing her husband's body, and she made a sketch of the design cut into him."
Quaid looked genuinely shocked. "No way."
"In context, it made sense. The design was some sort of mystical symbol, and
she's into that stuff. It's also the same markings we found on the women the
Jamisons tortured and killed. When they weren't playing those games,
the Jamisons dealt party drugs for the guy who owned Winston's. It all ties in."
The cop's brow furrowed. "But Tiger Leone died in the raid."
Since Gwen was the one who'd killed him, this wasn't exactly news. "Tiger
wasn't the owner. The paperwork was set up to make it look that way. Tiger
worked for a guy named Wallace Edmonson. Him, we won't find—he's in the wind. As
of last week, he's out of the country. Last known destination, Athens."
Quaid took this in. "So Kate was telling the truth about what happened to
those cops. About the warning."
"Yes," Gwen said slowly, "but come to think of it, maybe the warning wasn't
directed at the police. Maybe the message was for Kate. That would
explain why no one at the station heard about it. Both men were cremated, so
there wouldn't be any buzz coming back from funeral directors. If Kate hadn't
said anything to you, it would have stayed with her."
"What about Teresa Moniz?"
"Psychic. She's the real deal, so you can stop rolling your eyes. I'm betting
she got a feeling that something had happened. If she came down to the morgue
and demanded to see her husband's body, there's not much Kate could do."
Quaid huffed out a long sigh and folded his arms. "For argument's sake, let's
say you're right. That means Kate would be tied in with this Edmonson guy,
right?" He shook his head in disbelief. "A drug dealer, a guy who owns sleazy
clubs, and Kate? How the hell did that connection happen?"
"Edmonson was really good at roping people in. You said you've been talking
to Kate. Did she by any chance know that we were coming out here tonight?"
"Not unless you told her," he said.
Gwen shook her head. "I haven't talked to her since Monday night. She knew I
had a class on Tuesday, and I left a message on her machine telling her I
couldn't run tonight."
A silence fell between them. "Can you look into possible ties between Kate
and Edmonson?"
"First thing tomorrow," she assured him.
"Good. I'd love to be proven wrong on this."
"But you don't think you are."
Quaid shrugged. "Gut feeling."
"Yeah, but your gut's been wrong before," Gwen said lightly, hoping to tease
some of the veiled sorrow from his eyes. "You thought I was one of the bad
guys."
He turned to her, and his bleak expression didn't brighten in the slightest.
"This Edmonson is in Athens, you say?"
"That's what his passport says. But by this time, I doubt you'd find him
there."
The cop nodded slowly, never taking his eyes from her face. "Yeah, I doubt
that, too."
A knot started to form in Gwen's throat. Had Damian passed along what she'd
told him about Edmonson? Surely not—he couldn't let slip that Edmonson was dead
without revealing what he knew of Gwen's odd heritage.
"You still don't trust me."
His smile was tight and humorless. "Let's just say I've noticed people you
don't like tend to disappear. As far as I can tell, the Jamisons dropped off the
face of the earth. Now you're telling me that Tiger Leone's boss is nowhere to
be found. I've got to admit, I'm a little concerned."
Gwen let a beat or two pass before asking, "Is this your way of asking me if
I like you?"
For several moments he simply stared. "Do you find this amusing?"
"No, but I do find it amusing that you're so worried about who's on
my shit list," she snapped. "If you'd been paying attention, you might have
noticed that my friends have more to worry about than my enemies. Tom
Yoland died in the raid on Winston's. Frank Cross is dead. Someone tried to
ambush Damian tonight. When I start liking you," she concluded grimly,
"that's when you should worry."
CHAPTER EIGHT
A tentative sunrise was experimenting with pastel pinks as Gwen jogged down
Sylvia's long gravel drive. She let herself out through the pedestrian door
beside the main gate and started down the road.
The door on a parked car swung open abruptly, swinging right into her path
with a timing that was too perfect to be accidental. She leaped out of range and
took a step forward. Pulling her gun from her thigh holster, she dropped to one
knee, using the open door as a shield.
When no further attack was forthcoming, she slowly rose, holding her gun in
front of her with both hands.
To her surprise, the driver was a fat man with a bad comb-over and a
who-shot-the-sofa plaid sport coat. Dennis Walsh, captain of the vice squad and
her former boss, slowly lifted his hands from the steering wheel and held them
up, empty.
Gwen glanced at the passenger seat for a ready weapon, then into the
backseat. Both empty.
She holstered her gun and sent a pointed glance at Sylvia's stately brick
home. "I hast got to get a better address. Any lowlife can wander into
this neighborhood."
Walsh hauled himself out of the car and leaned his arms on the top edge of
the open door. "It seems like you'd want people to find you, seeing that you're
in business for yourself now."
"Business," he repeated emphatically, "in a residential area. We have zoning
codes in this city, Gellman. You can't run a shop out of this place."
"Maybe not, but I can have a home office," Gwen countered. "I don't
have a principal place of business. I'm like a consultant; I meet most of my
clients off-site and do nearly all my work in the field."
"Yeah, but what address do you advertise?"
"You won't find me in the Yellow Pages. I work strictly on referrals."
"Smart," he approved. "I can see how you'd want to keep a low profile. This
state has some pretty hefty fines for people like you, doing business without a
PI license."
Gwen's laugh held more derision than humor. "People like me? Jesus, you're
really fishing. I'm completely legal, Walsh. My bond is paid, and my license
isn't up for renewal for another three months."
"And that's interesting, you having a PI license," he went on doggedly. "I
thought one of the requirements was good moral character. Good moral conduct,"
he emphasized. "Maybe the IA couldn't prove it, but everyone in the department
knows you were pretty friendly with a drug-dealing pimp. They sure as hell know
the two cops who were looking into your little game ended up dead."
Gwen had taken two quick steps toward him before she realized she was in
motion. She caught herself and clenched her fists at her side until her nails
bit into her palms.
"You do not want to go down that road," she warned, "because you won't like
where it's going to lead."
A mottled flush crept up Walsh's face. "Listen, Gellman, when you're not on
the job, you can't see the whole picture. Look what happened when you butted in
with the Cody girl."
"I didn't exactly crash the party. Meredith Cody's mother hired me to find
her missing daughter, and with good reason. The girl had been gone for four
days."
"And the kid would have been back at the end of those four days, if you
hadn't started nosing around." The chief held up a hand to cut her off. "Ryan
Cody filled me in on the details. After he brought me in, I insisted on it."
"Did he also mention that he was working for a sleaze peddler, and that his
daughter was snatched to keep him in line? But you'd know all about that,
wouldn't you? By that point you and Wallace Earl Edmonson were well
acquainted, and I got the very distinct impression that you weren't very happy
about that relationship."
His eyes narrowed. "Where is this going? All I know is Edmonson was Cody's
lawyer."
"Edmonson owned Ryan Cody. I guess Cody figured it wouldn't be too good for
his career if it got around that he gets off on kiddy porn. I'll bet a lot of
people would love to hear what Edmonson's holding oversow."
Walsh sent her a reptilian smile. "Don't take up poker, Gellman, because you
can't bluff worth shit. If you had something, you would have put it on the table
by now."
"I'm working my way around to it. Tiger Leone was also reporting to
Edmonson."
"Yeah? That wasn't in the reports you filed after the bust."
"I didn't know about it at the time. Since then I've learned all kinds of
interesting things."
"Like?"
Gwen suppressed a grim smile. Walsh usually wasn't so transparent. He stopped
by to lean on her a bit, hoping a few threats might persuade her to back off.
Barring that, he wanted info. Fine. She couldn't wait to see his reaction.
"Tiger Leone got a phone call the night Yoland and Moniz came to the club. An
old friend, he said—someone who'd been busted by Yoland and Moniz. Someone who
conveniently called when the cops were standing right there. That was Eddie
Davis, wasn't it?"
Walsh shifted one plaid-covered shoulder. "Might have been. Him and Leone
came up together."
"Davis got out just that day. You want to know why I know that? Because I'm
looking into every case handled by Edmonson's pet lawyers. Ryan Cody, of
Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye, handled Davis, and Edmonson handled him. I figure
you assigned me to Tiger before Edmonson sucked you in. You couldn't pull me off
the case or keep Yoland and Moniz from following their leads without raising
questions, but you could set us up. You expected all three of us to die
that night."
"That's bullshit."
"Maybe, but the truth frequently is."
He shrugged, proving he was still cop enough to concede her logic in this
matter. "Even if that was true, you couldn't prove it and you'd sound crazy just
saying it."
"It's amazing what people will believe. Like the IA buying your story about
the Tiger Leone paperwork disappearing, along with the forms for the leave of
absence I supposedly requested."
Walsh shrugged again. "One of those regrettable errors known to occur in busy
offices."
Gwen leaned in close. "You're an idiot, Walsh, and what's worse, you're a
fucking dinosaur. You know those little beige boxes sitting on all the
detectives' desks? They're called 'computers.' Tenacious little bastards. Once
they've got hold of some information, they hang onto it."
He had the sense to look wary. "What are you saying?"
"I sent you a preliminary report when you first assigned me to shadow Tiger
Leone. It might have been deleted, but when my old computer was scrapped, the
files were stripped off the hard drive."
For a long moment Wash stood very still. Then his eyes cleared, and a smile
crept over his face. "Even if that's true, it doesn't mean a damn thing. That
was just you covering your ass—"
He broke off and raked a scathing gaze over her outfit: good running shoes, a
custom-made thigh holster with straps at the top and bottom to keep her gun from
bouncing, and a black sports bra that matched her shorts.
"Covering your ass," he repeated, his gaze fixed pointedly on that portion of
her anatomy, "and, as usual, not doing a very good job of it. You didn't send me
this alleged report by e-mail, did you? If someone got into the guts of my
computer, would they find a copy of that report?"
Gwen's stomach suddenly took a nose dive in the general direction of her
Reeboks.
"There didn't seem to be a point," she said dully. "You never read e-mail. I
printed a copy and put it under your door."
"Then there's no record you actually sent that report." Walsh winked at her.
"Sometimes it pays to be a fucking dinosaur."
He swung his considerable bulk into the car and gunned the engine. As she
watched him spin triumphantly off, Gwen thought about Ian's claim that she had
some sort of ability to cause rain. Too bad that talent didn't extend to meteor
showers. If ever a dinosaur deserved to have his ass bombed into fossil fuel, it
was Walsh.
Two hours later, Gwen flicked on her computer and waited impatiently for the
files she'd stolen from Ryan Cody's computer to upload. They formed the basis
for a growing database into the activities of Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye, the
law firm that Edmonson owned—
No, that she owned. She was, after all, Edmonson's heir.
This had possibilities. She quickly dialed Cody's private line. He picked up
on the second ring.
"It's Gwen Gellman," she told him. "I'm looking for some information on Kate
Myers. There might be a connection between her and Edmonson. She's not the drugs
and dancing type, so I thought I'd start with his law firm."
The only sound for several moments was a faint static. "You were a police
officer. I shouldn't have to remind you about client privilege."
"But you could confirm whether or not she was ever a client?"
"I suppose," he said cautiously.
"How long would that take?"
"About fifteen seconds. The law firm has a searchable database. Spell that
last name?"
Gwen gave him the spelling and listened to the faint, rapid clatter of
computer keys.
"Kate Myers wouldn't by any chance be related to Sergeant Brendan Myers,
Providence city police?"
"Probably. She mentioned her father was a cop, killed in the line of duty."
"About twenty-five years ago, yes. His daughter Katherine received a full
scholarship through college and medical school."
"From the law firm?"
"That's right. Over the years, Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye has assisted
several promising students."
"Interesting. Survivor benefits to off-the-books employees? Or maybe an
investment in the future?"
Cody sighed heavily. "I wouldn't be at all surprised. But since Myers's name
only appears in the scholarship fund, I couldn't tell you what business Edmonson
might have had with the sergeant or his daughter."
"You're being unusually candid. Thinking of moving on?"
"If I could, I'd quit tomorrow," he said bluntly. "You know I can't."
Gwen knew. Cody had been recruited by Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye because his
personal flaws gave Edmonson a means of control. When that failed, Edmonson had
Cody's fourteen-year-old daughter snatched to remind the attorney who held his
leash.
"How is Meredith?"
"She's taking some time off from school. We felt she needed a change of
scenery. Dianne took the children to visit friends."
In other words, his family was gone. "Your choice or hers?"
"Does it matter?"
As a matter of fact, it did. If Dianne Cody wanted to dump her husband
because he was a sleaze, Gwen had no arguments. If the family was trying to put
things back together, that was another story. Her gut told her Cody genuinely
wanted change. He'd outgrown his hobby when he started realizing that the hot
young things he'd been watching onstage were kids, not much older than
his own daughter. To his credit, that had proved to be a major buzz kill. But
when he tried to leave the corrupt law firm, his daughter paid the price for his
rebellion. As long as Cody thought Edmonson had a hold over him, he wouldn't do
anything that might put his family at risk again. Knowing that Edmonson was dead
could make all the difference in the world to the Cody family.
On the other hand, Gwen had no reason to trust Ryan Cody. For now, a bit of
cautious optimism was the best she could offer.
"I'm working on something that might have an impact on your career plans. If
it pans out, I'll let you know."
Several beats of silence passed as he processed the possibilities. "If you
require representation, I'd be happy to recommend another attorney," he said
softly.
Another criminal attorney, Gwen noted, reading between the lines to
the phishing expedition. Cody suspected that she was taking a less-than-legal
approach to the problem of Edmonson, and his faintly eager tone suggested that
he more than approved.
Gwen made some noncommittal noises and ended the call, glad she'd gone with
her instincts about passing along information on Edmonson. Maybe Cody had
changed his mind about kiddy porn, but he was still a sleaze.
Shortly after noon, Gwen walked up the stairs of a state-run nursing home,
wearing a ball cap embossed with the name of a made-up florist and carrying a
cheap floral arrangement she'd purchased at the nearest grocery store.
She stopped at the front desk, a battered wooden relic heaped with medical
charts. A thin, tired-looking woman in an old-fashioned white uniform was
working her way through the stack. Gwen got the nurse's attention and asked for
Irma Williams.
The woman's ferret-eyed gaze took in the flowers. "Hmmph. About damn time, is
all I got to say."
Gwen blinked in feigned surprise. "Delivery was guaranteed by end of the day.
I'm actually a little earlier than I expected."
"Oh, I wasn't talking about you, honey. It's that son of Irma's. Son of a
bitch is more like it, no reflection on poor Irma. Haven't seen him around
here in maybe two, three years."
"Sorry to hear that."
"Be nice to your kids, I always say," the nurse went on. "Not that you're old
enough to have kids just yet, and don't you be in any hurry. Just remember,
someday those kids will decide where you end your days. Not that there's
anything wrong with this place," she added hastily.
Gwen managed a smile. "I'll keep that in mind."
"No, you won't," the nurse retorted. "You kids all think you're immortal."
"Not me," Gwen said fervently. "What could be more depressing than knowing
you were going to live forever?"
The nurse snorted in agreement and gestured toward her littered desk. "You
might as well take those flowers right down to Irma. God knows there's no place
to put them here."
Gwen got the room number and general directions, and set off down a series of
halls floored in cracked, yellowed linoleum. The walls were long overdue for
painting, and many of the rooms she passed were still the shade of institutional
green that was considered soothing fifteen or twenty years back. The unsavory
scent of lunch—liver and onions with a side of broccoli would be Gwen's
guess—competed with a strong undercurrent of unwashed bodies and unchanged
Depends.
Gwen couldn't help wondering what happened to her kind of people when they
got old—or for that matter, if they got old. She couldn't see the Elder
Races warehousing their oldest members. In her more facetious moments, Sister
Tamar claimed the Canadian government could afford a uniform health-care system
because they set their elderly adrift on ice floes. From what Gwen had seen of
the Elder Races so far, she suspected they'd employ some similar method.
She found room 321 and tapped on the open door. A tiny woman with skin like
thin, crumpled brown parchment was seated by the window. She regarded Gwen with
bird-bright eyes.
"Yes, dear?"
"Are you Mrs. Williams?"
The woman looked puzzled for a moment. Her expression cleared and her eyes
lit up. "Yes, that's me! Lord, I haven't heard that name in years. The people
around here are 'Irma this, Irma that.' Talking to me like I was a child. I'm
not, you know. I'm a married woman."
Gwen responded with a noncommittal hmm. "Where would you like me to put your
flowers?"
Irma Williams flashed a radiant, toothless smile and held out her arms for
the flowers. "Those would be from my Henry. He never forgets an anniversary.
We've been married for some time, you know."
Thanks to the report Gwen had received that morning from her information
broker, she knew that Henry had been Roy Williams's father. Roy had told Shawna
O'Riley half the truth: his father was long dead. His mother was alive, but when
her mind faltered under the weight of her years, she'd forgotten him and he'd
apparently decided to return the favor.
She placed the flowers on the peeling windowsill, right next to Mrs.
Williams.
"Enjoy them," she said as she backed out of the room. She swiftly retraced
her steps down the depressing halls, knowing that she'd completed the job Damian
had asked her to do: she'd found a reason for the vague unease the cop had felt
around Roy Williams.
Gwen had a fairly good idea how Shawna O'Riley would react to this news.
Knowing he'd warehoused his mother would be a deal-breaker.
She could picture Shawna's stunned indignation, but she couldn't understand
it. Yes, Roy Williams had dumped his mother in a state-run home, to an unknown
fate at the hands of strangers. That was no different from what had been done to
her, and Gwen couldn't manage to summon the same level of indignation. What she
had was questions. Lots of them.
She'd only recently learned that James and Ruby Avalon, not David and Regina
Gellman, were her real parents.
When her parents died in a car crash, another baby girl had been strapped in
Gwen's car seat—or whatever people used thirty-four years ago when they traveled
with small children. They'd taken that little girl from her crib and left Gwen
in her place. Apparently this was standard practice among her kind. What had
prompted her parents to do this, and what did it say about them?
It wasn't a pretty picture from any angle. At the very least, James and Ruby
Avalon had put another child at risk to save their own daughter's life.
According to Edmonson, they had brutally slaughtered the girls' parents and left
their own daughter, a changeling child, to be raised by the state.
And why were her parents running? What did they have that Wallace Edmonson
wanted? Was it just the blue crystal he'd shown Gwen, or something more?
Over the years, Gwen had never given much thought to her family. During her
childhood, practical matters—such as survival—had taken most of her focus, and
she'd never seen much sense in dwelling on the past. But all of a sudden family
was very, very important. There was no getting around it: to understand what she
was, she had to know more about where she'd come from.
Even if—no, especially if—those answers were hard to face.
CHAPTER NINE
The scent of cinnamon greeted Gwen when she walked into The Green Man later
that afternoon. Alice Powers hastened over, a steaming mug in hand.
"Any word of Erin?" she demanded before Gwen could speak.
"Nothing yet. In fact, I have a few more questions for you, if you don't
mind."
"Of course not. Would you like some tea while we talk? It's the same kind you
had the other day, only with a bit of cider and cinnamon added."
It sounded like one of the concoctions Trudy routinely made. She was always
drinking some sort of green-smelling brew laced with juice and spices and
god-only-knows what else. And she wasn't alone in this. You could actually buy
the stuff in bottles at otherwise respectable coffeehouses.
"No, thanks. I'm a degenerate coffee fiend, myself."
Alice clicked her tongue reprovingly. "A good herbal tea is much healthier,
not to mention far more soothing."
Who wanted soothing? Gwen was used to being tense and saw no reason to
change.
On the other hand, Trudy would probably love this stuff, and considering
their last exchange, perhaps a keep-the-peace offering was in order. Gwen picked
up a box that had a label similar to the shop's sign. "Is this it?"
"Yes. Those are loose tea leaves. It also comes in a condensed syrup that's
very convenient for making fruit-blend teas, warm or iced."
"I'll take one of each."
Alice's appraising gaze slid down Gwen, taking in her ancient leather jacket,
the dozen or so cheap silver rings on her hands, and the boots from
Payless, buy one pair get the second pair half-off.
"This particular tea isn't inexpensive."
What the hell, thought Gwen—it was on Kyle's dime. "In that case," she said
dryly, "I'll take two of each."
The woman gave her an uncertain smile, but she rang up the sale and led Gwen
into the tearoom. Alice sat down and pushed up the sleeves of her sweater in a
getting-down-to-business gesture not usually associated with lavender cashmere.
"Now, what can I tell you?" she asked briskly.
"Anything you can think of. Any names Erin might have mentioned—friends,
babysitters, her kid's friends, whatever. Any people who came here to see her
recently."
Alice shrugged. "We're seldom in the shop on the same day. When we are
together, Erin is pleasant, but very private. She really doesn't share much.
Funny," she mused, "but I've never really noticed that before."
Apparently sharing wasn't something Erin did. Kyle gave her a generous
household allowance, but he had no idea what she spent the money on. At Gwen's
request, he'd sent a disc containing a record of their household bills, which he
had scanned into a computer file and meticulously organized. Odd, that someone
who was that particular about his finances would let huge chunks of cash go
unaccounted for. Erin used one of Kyle's debit cards for mundane purchases—gas,
groceries, clothing, and so on—but apparently she paid cash for anything that
might leave a clue to her habits.
"Has she ever mentioned a favorite restaurant or shop? Or maybe where she
gets her hair done?"
The older woman brightened up. "Yes! She had some very nice reddish
highlights added about a month ago, and I asked her where she had them done. She
mentioned a day spa in Newport: Esprit. It's down on Belleview Avenue, not far
from the Tennis Hall of Fame."
In Gwen's opinion, that was a long way to drive to get a haircut. Usually
when people went that far out of their way, they were going to a familiar salon
or a longtime hairdresser.
That was good news. There seemed to be something about the fumes in those
girly places that made women want to tell complete strangers about their lives.
Maybe Erin had let something slip.
She thanked Alice and hit the road, heading back north to catch the bridge
leading to the bay's biggest island. The drive to Newport was decidedly unscenic,
winding as it did through streets lined with strip malls. Golden arches and
similar signs hinted enticingly of off-limit French fries, breaking Gwen's heart
every few blocks. It took her over a half hour to wind through this culinary
purgatory to the island's southernmost town.
Apart from a couple of visits to the summer jazz festival, Gwen had never had
much reason to visit Newport, but she figured Belleview Avenue couldn't be too
hard to find. All the Gilded Era mansions were along this street—the "summer
cottages" built by the Vanderbilts and their buddies back in the days before
income tax and minimum-wage laws cut into a robber baron's profits.
After doing a few circles on narrow, one-way streets lined with historic
clapboard houses and the occasional folksy tavern, Gwen found Belleview. She
parked at the small, upscale strip mall and walked the rest of the way to the
day spa, armed with Erin's photo.
Jason had scanned the photo Kyle had given Gwen into his computer and fooled
around with it until he managed to crop little Patrick out of the picture and
superimpose Erin's picture on a woody background. He'd made a good job of it.
That was no major surprise to Gwen. Some people just had the knack—god knows
Frank had taken to the computer like it was a new kind of donut.
Gwen showed the altered picture to the receptionist, a young woman with
honey-blond hair gathered back into an artfully careless knot. The blonde pursed
her lips and studied the photo.
"She looks familiar. Lisa? Take a look at this."
A thirtysomething woman with sleek black hair cut in an asymmetric wedge came
over and glanced at the photo.
"Sure, that's Helene. Helene Tremaine. I've been doing her hair for years."
Her eyes narrowed in sudden suspicion. "Why?"
Gwen gave a quick, fictitious explanation: she couldn't remember the name of
the day spa Helene had recommended, only that it was on Belleview Avenue. She'd
tried to call Helene to check, but she wasn't answering her phone.
Lisa cast a critical eye over Gwen's short hair, which had been styled only
moments before by a brisk wind and a few impatient passes of Gwen's hands.
"Unfortunately, I don't have any openings today."
"No problem—I'll call in later and make an appointment. What I was wondering
is, can you tell me what sort of styling products Helene uses?"
"I could, but your hair is… a lot different from hers."
Gwen grinned. "That's more tactful than I would have been! I like the way
hers looks—nice long layers, lots of shine—and I'm thinking of letting mine grow
out. I know I've got a ways to go, but what can I do to help bridge the gap?"
The stylist explained in considerable detail the virtues of various bottles
of overpriced hair goop. But where Erin/Helene was concerned, she sang pretty
much the same song that Alice Powers had: the woman was pleasant, but didn't
talk about herself very much.
"She's a very pretty woman," Lisa concluded, "but you shouldn't try to copy
her look. For one thing, she's quite a bit older than you. In fact, her
hairstyle is a little young for someone her age."
A jolt of surprise hit Gwen. She saw Lisa register the reaction, so she
decided to hide it in plain sight. "Wow. I thought she was close to my age!"
The stylist smiled. "Now you're just being nice. I remember what it was like
when I was a teenager. Anyone over thirty was ancient. Helene is a pretty woman
and I can help her look her best, but she'll never look seventeen again. That's
a nice photo, but it's years out-of-date."
That was interesting. The picture Kyle had given Gwen couldn't have been
taken more than a few months ago. In it, Patrick had looked around four or five,
and Erin looked like she was still in high school.
"How long have you been doing Helene's hair?"
Lisa pursed her lips and gazed toward the ceiling as she counted the years.
"Twelve, maybe thirteen years? Maybe a little longer."
"Well, she looks great. I'll bet you have a lot of customer loyalty."
The stylist beamed. "Thanks. Helene's a pretty woman, but it's important to
have your own identity."
Gwen didn't have to feign the rueful edge to her answering smile. Apparently
"Helene" didn't share that opinion.
Well, this was just great. Kyle's runaway wife had multiple identities, one
of which was established well before she'd met Kyle. Gwen had found missing
persons who'd had more than one identity, but something told her that finding
Erin Westland or Helene Tremaine or whoever the hell she was would be about as
easy as herding cats.
Gwen stopped to restock her fridge on the way home: milk for coffee, rolls
and meat for sandwiches, and lots of fruit. She was barely in the door of her
office when the front-gate buzzer rang. Grumbling, she dumped the bags on her
desk and stabbed the intercom button with her car key.
"Who is it?"
"Whoa! Snarl much?"
The light, humor-edged baritone was familiar, even through the crackle of the
intercom. Plus, she only knew one guy whose syntax was influenced by Buffy
the Vampire Slayer.
"Jeff?"
"She remembers me! Did you forget about our date, or are you just fashionably
late?"
She glanced at the calendar and suppressed a groan. The appointment was
clearly marked: "Jeff & Jazz, 7:00."
Jeff Monroe was Marcy's legal assistant, a pleasant-looking young man who
shared Gwen's taste in music. Three or four times a year, they went up to
Woonsocket, a mill town in northern Rhode Island and the home of Jimmy Chen's,
the only Chinese restaurant in the state that featured live jazz. Tonight was
supposed to be one of those nights. A few egg rolls, a little music, and a
friendly tumble to round out the evening. She'd been looking forward to it.
"I forgot," she confessed. "It's just that this case I've been working—"
"Say no more. When you didn't show, I picked up some takeout. We can put on a
CD while we eat. It's not the original plan, but it's close enough."
A smile played at the corners of Gwen's lips as she buzzed him in. Jeff was a
good-natured guy, and easy to be around. His face was pleasant rather than
handsome, he wore glasses to work, and he was thin enough and clean-cut enough
to look sort of nebbishy in a white shirt and tie. Thanks to an addiction to
racquetball, he looked a lot better when the business clothes came off. Nothing
too exciting, but he was the kind of guy that went well with jazz and lo mein.
He was definitely vanilla, but vanilla sex was a good flavor for a weeknight.
She reclaimed her bags and sprinted up the stairs. It took all of five
minutes to put the groceries away, and she was finished by the time she heard
his footsteps on the stairs.
Jeff had switched from office attire to his equally conservative casual look:
khaki Dockers and a polo shirt. Tonight's polo shirt was pale yellow, and over
it he wore a cotton sweater in forest green.
He greeted her with a quick kiss, then handed her a black leather CD case.
While Gwen flipped through the CDs for something interesting, he made himself at
home in her miniature kitchen. He quickly dished up two plates and brought them
to the coffee table.
"The chicken Hunan is way too spicy," he warned. "Do you have anything cold
to drink?"
Gwen glanced up from the stereo, CD in hand. "There's some herb-tea mix in
that little bottle and some cranberry juice in the fridge. You can mix it if you
want—there's a pitcher in the cabinet over the sink. Glasses, too."
Jeff stirred up the concoction and took an experimental sip. He made a "not
bad" face and drained the glass. He refilled his and poured another for Gwen,
and brought them over to the sofa.
A saxophone began a mournful exploration of lost love as Gwen settled down
beside Jeff. She took a mouthful of the chicken—Jeff hadn't been exaggerating
about the spices—and promptly reached for her fruit tea. Like Jeff, she drained
the glass. It took that much just to put out the fire. He refilled her glass
from the pitcher, and topped off his own.
As she took another sip, the flavor began to edge its way past her seared
taste buds. It wasn't anything like the bottled blends Marcy and Trudy were
always getting at Starbucks. Gwen couldn't figure out why anyone would enter
that cathedral of caffeine without taking Mass, but the fruit tea there wasn't
half bad. This stuff was so sweet and strong it was almost medicinal.
"Yikes! Didn't you add water?"
He took a considering sip. "I didn't know I was supposed to. Maybe it's a
little strong, but I like the taste."
She set her glass aside and tucked into her pork fried rice and the lo mein,
then went back to the kitchen for seconds on both. The Hunan chicken wasn't so
bad once she stirred in extra white rice. Jeff, however, continued to eat the
spicy stuff straight up, washing it down with the fruit tea.
"Good thing it's herbal," she observed as he poured his fourth glass. "If
that was regular black tea, the caffeine would keep you up all night."
Jeff responded with a sidelong glance and a decidedly masculine chuckle. "I
don't think I'm going to need caffeine for that."
It took Gwen a moment to catch the double entendre—she just didn't expect
them from Jeff. But neither did she expect that predatory gleam in his eyes.
Or his impatience.
He took the plate from her hands and tossed it like a Frisbee in the general
direction of the coffee table. Before she could comment, he pulled her into his
lap so that she was facing him, her knees straddling his lap.
Their first kiss was Hunan-spiced, and from there things heated up fast. He
devoured her, exploring with ravenous hands as they kissed. When they came up
for air, Jeff pulled off his sweater and polo shirt in one quick, impatient
motion, then reached for the top button on Gwen's shirt. His fingers fumbled in
their hurry. Grimacing in annoyance, he took hold of her shirt with both hands.
Buttons flew as he ripped it open.
"Why the rush?" Gwen's protest was slightly breathless, and more amused than
annoyed. "What's another minute or two?"
"An eternity," he murmured, his breath whispering against her neck as he
worked his way down.
She reached around to unclasp her bra, lest it meet a similar fate. Jeff
tossed it aside, then cupped her bottom with both hands to raise her to nuzzling
position. He teased her with his lips and tongue while his hands slid around to
tug at the leather thongs fastening her lace-up jeans.
Several minutes passed in this fashion. He wasn't making much headway with
her pants, but Gwen didn't mind. It slowed things down a bit, and besides, her
boobs were definitely enjoying the attention.
Finally he gave up. A groan of frustration escaped him as he dropped his head
to rest on her shoulder. "Ever think about wearing a skirt?"
She grinned. "I've been known to. Hang on."
Scooting off the sofa, she tugged the laces loose and shimmied out of her
jeans. He was diving at her when her cell phone rang.
Gwen stepped nimbly beyond reach of his grasping hands and walked naked
toward her kitchen.
"You're not going to answer that?" he asked, incredulous.
"I have to. I have several cases going. This could be important."
Damian's number flashed on the readout. She clicked on the phone. "What's
up?"
"I just came from the Extreme. You know, the place where Jackie Teal was
dancing? She was a no-show."
Guilt and concern hummed through his voice, but Gwen had no time for that
right now. "Are you insane? You went to the club to see her after what
happened last night?"
"Wanted to make sure she was okay, is all. When a cop turns up on the other
end of a drug deal, people get unhappy, you know?"
"Only too well."
Jeff came up behind her and nuzzled at her neck. He'd shed the rest of his
clothes, and it was obvious that the interruption hadn't seriously dampened his
mood—Gwen felt the hard evidence of that pressed against her.
First Jason, now Jeff. What was going on with the men in her life?
Not that she was complaining. She reached over her shoulder with one hand and
slid her fingers into his crisp, short brown hair.
"The guy from the park—he runs the club now," she reminded Damian. "You're
lucky you were able to walk out of there."
"Let's hope Jackie was that lucky," he said grimly.
Jeff slipped both arms around her waist. His hands skimmed up to cup her
breasts and he began to tease her with urgent, insistent fingers. Gwen's knees
suddenly felt less stable, and she leaned back against his chest.
"I'll help you look into it," she told Damian.
"Tonight? Can you come down to the club?"
"No, she can't," Jeff said coldly.
Gwen stiffened in surprise. She turned in his arms and stepped away. Her
hormones were still singing, but for a moment incredulity was stronger than
lust.
"What the hell is wrong with you? Listening in to my phone calls? Telling my
friends what I can and can't do?"
"Shit, you got company. Sorry about that. I'll call you tomorrow," Damian
said hastily, and the line went abruptly silent.
An expression of contrition crossed Jeff's face. "I don't know what came over
me. It's just the sight of you standing there naked, talking to another man,
made me feel like a green-eyed monster."
Gwen switched off the phone and placed it on the counter. "No strings, no
commitments, no possessive bullshit," she reminded him. "That's the deal, and
you've always been okay with it."
"I still am. A momentary aberration, that's all."
He pulled her to him and lifted her in one quick movement, his hands on the
back of her thighs. Gwen wrapped her arms around his neck and held his
smoldering gaze as he lowered her, pushing into her in one slow, extravagant
stroke.
Lust shimmered through her, chasing away her pique. Granted, jealousy could
be a problem. There was no way in hell she'd put up with the crap Marcy took
from Trudy, and she'd definitely have to do something about it.
But not right now.
She wrapped her legs around Jeff's hips as he carried her toward the bedroom,
reveling in the sensations that coursed through her with each slow, languorous
step.
By the time they got to the bed, the banked fire in Jeff's eyes had flamed
into something approaching madness. They fell together onto the bed, rolling
twice before they fell off the other side in a tangle of limbs and sheets.
Gwen had time for a small, breathless laugh before Jeff claimed her lips.
Their fingers met and entwined, and he raised her hands over her head, pinioning
her to the floor as they took each other in a ravenous frenzy.
Much later, Gwen crawled back onto the bed and flopped onto her back. Her
limbs felt like pasta that had been boiled way the hell past al dente, and her
ears were actually ringing.
"Where is Jeff," she demanded, "and what have you done with him?"
The only response was a faint groan from the tangle of bedclothes on the
floor.
Gwen glanced at her watch and barely kept from echoing the sentiment. Dawn
was less than an hour away—not much sense going to sleep now. She had an early
appointment and a long drive to get there.
She dragged herself out of bed and stumbled for the bathroom. Ian Forest had
told her that rain was restorative for her, which sounded as crazy as everything
else she'd heard from him over the past several days.
This tidbit of information, however, wasn't hard for her to accept. Not that
she was the type to dance in puddles and swing herself blithely around
lampposts, but for as long as she could remember, she'd always liked rain, and
she found that a shower was nearly as refreshing as sleep. It was the first
positive aspect to this whole changeling business. As the steaming spray beat
down on her, Gwen was almost willing to believe that there might be others.
All her life she'd had questions, but she'd grown up in a world where answers
were in short supply. Raised by the state, alongside other kids who'd been
abandoned, discarded, or just generally fucked with, she eventually stopped
asking and put her energy into surviving.
Then she'd met a chain-smoking, foul-tempered nun, who was and remained the
most inherently decent person Gwen had ever known. Sister Tamar had an Old
Testament viewpoint when it came to evil, and her approach to helping the
victims of evil had given shape and purpose to Gwen's personal brand of rage.
Becoming a cop allowed her to give back or get even—her priorities varied
according to circumstances. Finding lost kids had kept her from spinning
offtrack after her career was pulled out from under her. And now she had a new
shtick: seek out other changelings, help them find their place in the world. It
was work worth doing, and she was uniquely suited for it.
Optimism was a new flavor. Gwen liked it more than she expected to. It was a
nice balance to the voice in the back of her mind, the warning that no amount of
good sex and falling water could silence:
Once she found these changelings, what awaited them? Induction into the
hidden society of the Elder Folk, certainly, but what, ultimately, would be the
price of admission?
CHAPTER TEN
Gwen found her way into downtown Plymouth without much problem. She drove
along the harbor and pulled into the public parking lot around nine o'clock. She
got out of the car and stretched, catlike, working away the stiffness that came
of a two-hour drive.
Oddly enough, she'd never been to Plymouth before, even though she'd spent
her entire life in southern New England. It was a nice place if you liked this
sort of thing—a pretty seaside town with lots of old buildings and a couple of
nifty historical landmarks.
Gwen watched as a school bus disgorged its cargo. A trio of frazzled-looking
teachers tried without much success to interest their kids in the rock entombed
in a miniature Grecian shrine. As far as Gwen could tell, Plymouth Rock looked
pretty much like any other big hunk of stone. And the reproduction of the
Mayflower docked nearby was tiny. No wonder so many of the pilgrims had
died the first winter. It was a marvel any of them survived the sea crossing.
Hell, if Gwen had been forced to live in such close quarters, she would have
been responsible for most of the shipboard deaths.
Having gotten in touch with her national roots, Gwen left her car and walked
up a side street, following the directions on the Yahoo! map Jason had printed
out for her.
Jason Cross was really getting to know his way around cyberspace. He'd spent
the previous afternoon helping her search for Helene Tremaine. Between the two
of them, they'd pieced together a partial picture. Helene was born in 1944,
which meant she would be in her late sixties. Assuming Helene and Erin were one
and the same, that wasn't out of the realm of possibility, as long as Erin aged
as slowly as, say, Ian Forest.
Of course, that was a rather large assumption. Helene's stylist had
recognized Erin's picture, but she'd insisted that "Helene" looked considerably
older than Gwen. The photo was recent, and it showed a girl who could have been
in Gwen's high-school graduating class. The numbers didn't add up, so Gwen
decided to come to Helene's hometown for a closer look.
The only member of the Tremaine family Jason could track down was an older
brother, still living in the house he and Helene had grown up in. It had taken
some talking to get the man to agree to a meeting.
Clyde Tremaine sat on the step of a small porch, a rickety affair fronting a
tall, narrow house painted barn red. He was tall and rangy, with a craggy,
pitted face. Rheumy eyes regarded Gwen with a sour expression.
"You're the girl who's asking about Helene?"
"That's right."
"Don't see why. She died in a car crash way back in '61."
That date seized Gwen's attention. After 1962, lists of Social Security
numbers for the deceased became a lot easier to come by. Interesting
coincidence?
She showed him the picture Kyle had given her. "Is this Helene?"
The old man patted his shirt pocket for glasses, slipped them on, and leaned
in close.
"That's her," he said, his voice flat. "Pretty much as I remember her, too.
She was seventeen when she died."
"What was your sister like?"
The lines on his face deepened in disapproval. "Let's just say she died the
way she lived. She'd run off that night to meet some boy my parents said she
couldn't see. The boy, or what was left of him, was with her when the car
crashed—my car, by the way. She took my car, and when they
found her, she was wearing my mother's necklace. That was Helene. She helped
herself to any little thing she wanted."
"She wasn't adopted, by any chance?"
The man looked surprised, then thoughtful. "No, but come to think of it, I
once heard my folks talk about some sort of confusion at the hospital, a
possible switch. Me, I'd always thought it was wishful thinking on their part."
Gwen wasn't so sure about that. "I know this is a hard question to answer,
especially so long after the accident, but do you think there's even a remote
possibility that the girl who died was not your sister?"
He thought about that for quite a while. "You know," he confided, "down deep,
I never really felt that Helene was my sister."
Gwen returned to her car and switched on her phone to check messages. The
first one was from Quaid. She hit Return and waited through several rings.
"Did you find out anything about Kate?" he asked without preamble.
"Yeah. Apparently she went to college on full scholarship, courtesy of the
law firm Edmonson controlled. Anything happening on your end?"
"I called her at work. She hasn't been in since Monday."
An icy shiver danced down Gwen's spine. Jackie Teal didn't show up for work
after she set up the drug meet for Damian, and now Kate? Someone was very
serious about keeping people from looking too closely into Edmonson's business.
"Has someone gone over to her house to check on her?"
"I called, but she's not answering the phone. She was off Tuesday and
Wednesday, so she only missed one day of work. Enough to annoy people, but not
enough to worry them."
"Maybe you could drive by and knock on the door?"
"I stopped by last night. No answer."
"Was her car parked on the street?"
"Not that I could see, but I don't know what she's driving. She was shopping
for a car when we split up. Did she tell you what she bought?"
"It never came up." Gwen sighed in frustration. "Without a missing-person
report, you can't check her place out, at least not officially. How are you with
locks?"
"I'll pretend I didn't hear that."
"You do that. Maybe I'll swing by for a little girl talk later today."
"Let me know how it goes."
As usual, he hung up without saying good-bye. Gwen listened to the rest of
her messages and headed toward the nearest restaurant to refuel.
After a quick breakfast and several cups of coffee, Gwen headed for the town
library and asked to see the microfilm archives of the local papers. If there
was some sort of scandal about a possible baby-switching, it might have been
covered.
The hours rolled by more slowly than the miniature pages. Gwen finally found
the article around two o'clock that afternoon.
There were a few follow-up articles, too. She was not entirely surprised to
learn that the other baby's parents had dropped off the face of the earth
shortly after the birth, and the daughter had ended up in a foster home. The
little girl was one of the system's rare success stories—she'd been adopted.
After making a few phone calls and calling in a few favors, Gwen tracked down
the adoptive parents. John and Emily Meekins had spent most of their married
life in Dartmouth, Massachusetts. John Meekins, a retired professor, still lived
in Dartmouth. It was more or less on the way back to Providence, so Gwen decided
to give it a shot.
Dr. Meekins was even less interested in Gwen's search than Clyde Tremaine had
been. She had to play the missing-child card to convince him to give her five
minutes.
They met on the college campus, by the history department where, Gwen
assumed, he used to teach. Certainly John Meekins looked like a retired history
professor, right down to the tweed jacket with elbow patches. He was ancient,
his body worn down to a shadow and his voice to a whispery quaver, but once he
started talking it became plain that his mind was still very sharp.
"Vivian changed rather suddenly when she was seventeen," he told Gwen.
"Before then she was a sweet girl, a good student. Seemingly overnight she was
crazy about boys, and she started drinking and staying out all hours of the
night. She left home the day she turned eighteen and that was the last we saw of
her."
"Do you know where she went?"
"She moved to Providence. My wife tried to keep in touch, but Vivian couldn't
be bothered—not even when her mother was dying. I haven't heard from her since."
He glanced up at Gwen, a mixture of anger and resignation in his faded eyes. "I
suppose you have news."
For a moment, Gwen debated how much to tell him. She settled on the truth—or
at least, what she suspected was true. "I'm sorry, Dr. Meekins, but your
daughter is dead."
He nodded, accepting validation of an opinion he'd held for a long time. "I
suppose you have your reasons for asking about her, and I trust you won't mind
if I don't care to listen to them. Vivian has been dead to me for a very long
time."
The professor cocked his head as if listening to the echo of his own words.
"I know how that must sound to you. You must think me sadly lacking in family
feeling."
"Not really," Gwen said slowly. "I'm starting to understand just how
complicated family ties can be."
Kate Myers's car was parked right outside the narrow two-story building. Gwen
knew the gleaming black Passat was Kate's the minute she touched it—the mental
image of Kate behind the wheel was so real that she could almost smell the
woman's perfume.
She walked up the stairs to the screened-in porch and tried the doorbell. The
deep, sonorous tolling was clearly audible, but it didn't raise a response. Gwen
tried the door. It was securely locked.
No problem. She took her key-and-pick combo from her pocket and slipped it
into the lock on the doorknob. The lock popped in about five seconds. The door
bowed out a little when Gwen tugged on the handle, but it held secure. There was
no other lock on the outside, so she figured it had a dead bolt, one that could
only be locked from the inside. A little paranoid, maybe, but effective.
Gwen circled around the house. A pile of garden mulch was heaped against the
foundation. It smelled a bit odd, so she crouched down for a closer look.
The shredded wood was sodden, even though the last rain had been four days
ago. Some of the chips appeared to be blackened. She picked up one and sniffed.
There was a faint smell of lighter fluid.
She rocked back on her heels and stood, her gaze sweeping the backyard. There
was a flower bed with a few May-flowering tulips and a row of spent daffodils. A
clump of lilac bushes, the purple buds still tight, grew by the back stairs. The
yard was dominated by a single large tree. It grew close to the back fence, but
its branches spanned half the yard and shaded the neighboring property, as well.
Gwen checked the back door. Someone had kicked it in, splintering the old
wood around the various locks. Gwen glanced at the ruined door. A lock in the
doorknob, two dead bolts, one with a chain. Kate was definitely security
conscious. Much good it had done her. If someone was determined enough, no locks
could provide much of a deterrent.
Gwen moved cautiously into the kitchen, called Kate's name. There was no
response, but she hadn't gone more than a few steps when it hit her—the sickly
sweet, coppery smell of death.
Two doors led out of the kitchen, one into a small dining room, the other
into a central hall. Gwen headed down the hall. The front door drew her eye,
though for no reason she could ascertain. She laid her palm against the door and
was immediately flooded by sensations of mute terror and agonizing pain, and
behind it, a simple, alien mind numbed with the astonishment of betrayal.
Gwen snatched her hand away and rubbed it on the leg of her jeans, as if
doing so could erase the odd vision. She peered at the door but could see
nothing to explain her reaction, other than a slight tackiness that felt like
the residual gumminess a price sticker left on a hard surface.
The smell was stronger now, and definitely coming from upstairs. She climbed
the stairs and stood at the bedroom door only long enough to identify the body.
The woman had been shot several times. One bullet had gone into the back of
her head at close range, blowing off most of her face. Her hair was so thickly
matted with dried black blood that it was impossible to tell what color it once
had been. But it was Kate, all right—or at least, someone wearing the clothes
she'd worn for their Monday-night workout.
Gwen headed outside and took several long, cleansing breaths before pulling
her cell phone from her pocket. Quaid would be pissed at her for not calling him
first, but the farther he stayed away from this case, the better off he'd be.
She dialed the station and asked for homicide. After passing along the basic
details, she sat down on the front step to wait for the detective.
Her first instinct had been to make an anonymous call, but that struck her as
too risky. Judging from Kate's clothing and the state of her body, she'd been
dead since Monday night. That meant Gwen was one of the last people who'd seen
her alive. If she was going to get pulled into this, there could be no question
about where she stood.
Unfortunately, the responding officers were not inclined to think the best of
her. Ben Cerulo and Kimberly Jackson had been partners for years, reaching back
into the time before Frank's retirement. The four of them had gone out for a
beer from time to time, or to shoot a game of pool… but Tom Yoland had been
Kimberly's cousin, and she'd taken his death hard—and blamed Gwen for the mess
that had caused it.
Her plain, much-freckled face was hard as she regarded her former colleague.
"Let's hear your report," she said curtly.
Gwen went through the basic details, leaving out only her lock-picking
activities and the strange, painful memories haunting the front door.
"The back door was open when you got here," Kimberly repeated.
"It was unlocked and slightly ajar," she confirmed. "That, plus that fact
that Kate's car was here, seemed sufficient reason to check things out."
"Probable cause, yes, but that doesn't apply if you're not a cop."
"Like I told you, Kate and I started running together last week. She hasn't
been answering her phone, she didn't show up for work. I came over to see if she
was okay. That's what friends do."
"And you and Kate Myers were friends."
"Heading in that direction, yeah."
Kimberly sniffed. "Seems like you've been losing a lot of friends recently."
The snide, hateful tone in her voice snapped Gwen's patience. She rose and
took one step forward, looking the taller woman hard in the eye. "True enough,
but apparently not all of them were worth keeping."
A hand settled on her shoulder. Gwen spun toward Kimberly's partner, a ready
snarl on her lips, and was stunned by what she saw in his eyes.
Compassion.
Ben Cerulo squeezed her shoulder and then released her. "You've had a tough
time of it, Gellman. Go home, pour yourself a drink. We might have more
questions later on, so stay in town, okay?"
Gwen nodded, not quite trusting herself to speak. Kimberly's hostility she
could take and return in kind, but Ben's kindness simply undid her.
Sadly, she was cynical enough to wonder if he'd known it would, and had
chosen his weapons accordingly.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Shortly before closing time, Gwen walked into a pediatrician's office in East
Greenwich, the pretty, rural, and mostly upscale community where Kyle Radcliff
had lived with his family.
She went to the counter window and handed the receptionist a form letter Kyle
had signed, requesting a copy of his son's medical records.
The woman glanced at it. "Where do you want these records sent?"
"Could I, like, wait for it? My dad wants a copy." Gwen rolled her eyes in
silent commentary on incomprehensible adult demands.
The nurse smiled. "Usually Friday is our busiest day, but things are a little
slow. Let me see what I can find for you."
She turned her chair to face the computer keyboard, and her fingers clicked
busily for several moments. Her eyebrows drew together in a puzzled V.
"Are you sure you're in the right place, honey? We don't have any patient by
the name of Patrick Radcliff."
Well, if Erin Westland went by more than one name, it was possible her kid
had an alias or two. Gwen showed her the picture of Erin and Patrick.
"This is my brother. Maybe there's a problem with his records?" she
suggested. "You're sure you haven't seen him here?"
A younger woman, a ponytailed nurse wearing a lavender smock covered with
Scooby-Doo cartoons, noted the photo in the receptionist's hands and bent down
for a closer look.
"I don't recognize the little boy, but the girl looks familiar. I'll get
Jen—she'll know. She's been here forever."
Jen, it turned out, was an older woman with deep, parenthetical frown lines
framing her mouth. These lines deepened when she glanced at the picture. She
shoved it back across the counter at Gwen, her face stony.
"Wait, now I remember her," announced Scooby. "She was an office temp, but I
don't think she lasted more than a day or two."
The reception's eyes widened. "Oh, she's the one who—"
She broke off abruptly and exchanged glances with the nurse. Jen marched off,
her jaw set and shoulders rigid.
As Gwen reclaimed the photo, her mind was flooded by a sudden image of a
short, balding man in a white medical coat, standing very close to the young
woman seated on the examining table. The ring on his left hand was a match to
the one Jen wore. His brown corduroy pants were in a puddle around his ankles,
and a pair of slim, feminine legs wrapped around him. Oops. That was more info on Erin Westland than Gwen wanted.
Gwen made a hasty retreat, leaving Nurse Scooby to deal with the metaphorical
pile of shit she'd inadvertently stepped in.
Friday afternoon was a lousy time to be on I-95, but for once Gwen didn't
mind the traffic. She had plenty to think about, starting with the question of
who had died in Clyde Tremaine's car, all those years ago.
Had it really been Helene Tremaine, or did people see the mangled female body
in her brother's car and make the logical assumption?
And what about Vivian Meekins? Her personality transformation had occurred
right around the time of Helene's death.
Was it possible that Helene and Vivian had switched places when they were
seventeen? Was the dead teenager in the car wreck Vivian, and did Helene take
her place? Surely the Meekinses would have noticed if a different girl was
living under their roof. Gwen could buy the theory of two teenaged girls who
looked enough alike that a body, post car crash, could muddy the waters, but the
girls would have to be damn near identical for Helene/Vivian to pull off a
switch.
Or would they?
Two people had identified Erin Westland's picture as Helene Tremaine:
Helene's brother and the stylist at Esprit. Clyde Tremaine said the picture
looked like Helene had when she died, but the hairdresser thought that Helene
was considerably older than seventeen. But Kyle Radcliff said the photo
was recent. Comparing the perspectives of Kyle and Clyde, Erin/Helene looked
exactly the same today as she had fifty years ago. According to Lisa the
stylist, Helene was an older version of Erin.
There were two logical conclusions: either Erin and Helene were two different
people, or they were two names for one person who could alter her appearance.
Well, make that one logical conclusion, and one conclusion that,
though illogical, might be compatible with Gwen's broadening definition of
reality.
If her theory was correct, the girl who died in the crash was in fact the
real Helene, the daughter born to the Tremaines, switched in the hospital,
and adopted by the Meekinses. The changeling child, a child of unknown heritage,
grew up as Clyde's sister, and was now Kyle Radcliff's wife.
His runaway wife. It looked as if "Erin Westland" was well on her way to yet
another identity. At least this time, no one had died to help smooth her path.
Was this common practice with the Elder Races? Did they routinely change
their identities by arranging the death of a substitute? It appeared that they
did, and in incredibly cold-blooded fashion. The amount of planning it would
take to pull off the double switch—first as infants, then as teenagers—was
mind-boggling.
The next question was whether or not Erin participated in Vivian's death, and
to what extent. These questions were of more than academic interest to Gwen. It
was always good to know whether you were tracking a scared rabbit or a cornered
wolf.
Erin was no innocent. The visit to the pediatrician had proven that. Kyle's
meticulous financial records showed a number of bills for Patrick's routine
checkups, but the pediatrician had no record of the child. The only explanation
was that Erin had finagled her way into the office as a temp and stayed long
enough to steal a stack of blank bills.
That was definitely thinking ahead. It covered Erin's ass in case Kyle
wondered about medical care for his kid, while neatly avoiding the possibility
that a doctor might find some medical anomaly. And most likely, it wasn't as if
the kid needed medical treatment. If he was anything like Gwen, he'd never been
sick a day in his life, and any type of medicine would work its way out of his
system fast enough to render inoculations a waste of time.
When Gwen got back to her office, she pulled up Kyle's file and studied the
electronic copies. As she clicked her way through them, her eye fell on the
numbers on the upper right corner. The invoice numbers didn't seem to be in any
particular sequence, but the numbers were within a fairly limited range.
Curious, she printed out the receipts and arranged the bills according to
number. The pattern that emerged brought a wry, almost admiring smile to her
face.
When the receipts from Patrick's five years of checkups were put in numerical
order, they were all sequential. Erin had put them out of order to make
detection less likely.
Her own medical bills were more sporadic than her son's. She seemed to have a
constitution similar to Gwen's. Her only medical expenses dated back to her
pregnancy, and there weren't many of those, either. Apparently she'd opted for a
midwife and a home birth.
Gwen glanced at the clock. It was well past seven. She'd have to wait until
Monday morning to start checking out Erin's medical situation, which was fine
with her. If Erin was willing to boink a balding pediatrician just to get her
hands on a stack of blank invoices, God only knew what she'd do for a copy of
her ultrasound.
Gwen trudged up the stairs to her apartment. Her bedroom door stood open, and
the covers from her bed were still heaped on the floor after last night's
marathon. She paused at the door and debated whether to remake the bed or just
flop facedown on the mattress.
"Don't let me stop you," announced an amused male voice. "In fact, I may
allow myself to be persuaded to join you."
Gwen jumped and whirled toward the sound. Ian Forest, damn his pointy little
ears, was lounging on her sofa.
"Christ on stilts! Don't do that," she snapped. "What the fuck are
you doing here? And come to think of it, why are your ears pointy all of a
sudden?"
He came to his feet in a graceful, fluid movement. "Your perceptions have
changed, that's all. People seldom notice ear shape unless the differences are
extreme. A slight point toward the back of the ear is easily concealed and
likely to go unnoticed. Only the jug-eared tend to draw attention."
"Like Ross Perot," she noted. "Or better yet, Prince Charles. That man could
hang glide over half of Wales without equipment."
Ian's blue eyes widened in surprise, and he burst into genuine laughter.
It was, in Gwen's opinion, a big improvement from his superior, smirking
humor. Against her better judgment, she felt pleased and even a little charmed.
She reminded herself that this was his gift—the ability to manipulate
emotions. She remembered the too-young girls who danced at the club he managed.
She reminded herself of the elaborate scheme he'd created to maneuver Edmonson
out of power, using her as an unwitting tool. And finally, the reason why he was
here. Ian Forost was a manipulator, a blackmailer, and quite possibly a
murderer.
"Kate Myers and Jackie Teal," she said coldly. "Do you know anything about
them?"
The amusement faded from his eyes. "The first name is familiar to me, but
only because you two have been together several times of late. Why do you ask?"
"Kate is dead and Jackie's missing. She used to be one of Tiger Leone's
girls. Lately she danced at the Extreme."
"I see," Ian mused. "That's one of Edmonson's establishments. I assume Kate
Myers also had some connection with the earl?"
"He paid her way through college. I'm guessing she covered for him every now
and then by fudging autopsy results."
Ian studied her. "You think those photos were a threat to frame you for
murder. Edmonson's, perhaps even this Kate's."
"Wouldn't put it past you. Where's the gun?"
He reached into the inside pocket of his suit coat and drew out the small
silver weapon. He placed it on the coffee table, which was still littered with
the remnants of last evening's takeout.
"I know this is difficult for you, Gwen," he said softly. "Your friend's
honor is important to you, and that's as it should be. But you must understand
that your first loyalty is to your own kind. Looking too closely into Frank
Cross's death would draw too much attention to us. We can ill afford that kind
of scrutiny."
"You have my oath," she snapped. "Now let me hear you say that you had
nothing to do with Kate's death and Jackie's disappearance."
"Easily done. I brought no harm to either of these women. This I swear."
Gwen felt some of the tension between her shoulders seep away. "Since you're
here, you might as well make yourself useful and answer a few questions. You
said I have two Qualities—"
"Three, actually. The ability to remember things you haven't seen, an
affinity for rain, and one that is as yet undiscovered."
Okay, that wasn't too disconcerting.
"Three, then," Gwen said, adding this new revelation to her growing list of
Things to Deal With. "What I need to know is, can some of you guys—"
"Some of us," Ian interjected patiently.
"Would you stop with the interrupting?" she snapped. "Okay, can some of
us change how we look?"
The supercilious little smile was back. "I assure you, Gwen, the apparent
change in the shape of my ears is nothing more than selective observation on
your part."
"Hate to be the one to break the news, buddy, but it's not all about you. I
need to know if this is something one of us can do."
His smile broadened. "Ahhh, finally she says 'us.' We're making
progress."
"Ahhh. Blow me." Gwen took a deep, steadying breath. "I used to go
out with a guy who was into Arthurian stuff, and he nagged me until I read this
book he was crazy about. Mists of Avalon. I wanted to bitch-slap most
of the characters—"
"Your namesake in particular, no doubt."
"Didn't we talk about this interrupting? But yeah, you're right. The book
made Gwenevere out to be a spineless simp. But the thing is, some of the magic
in that book sort of… made sense to me."
"I can see where this is going. You're speaking of the glamour cast by the
priestesses of Avalon."
"Well, yeah."
He leaned against the wall and crossed his arms. "The writer wasn't far off.
The ability to cast a glamour was one of the Old Gifts. There have been several
attempts to revive it, but too often that gift conflicts with another Quality.
And sometimes, it's the sole Quality the bearer possesses."
"If you have to be a one-trick pony, that's one hell of a trick. There
actually were people who could change what they looked like?"
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder," Ian said, "and perception is a
powerful thing."
Gwen bit back the impulse to comment on his sudden penchant for cliches. "So,
they didn't actually change how they looked, but how people perceived them."
"That's correct."
"How?"
Ian lifted one eyebrow. "You're asking for a scientific explanation?"
"Give it your best shot."
"All right, then. The mind functions on a sort of electrochemical energy.
When that chemistry is altered, the mind can be persuaded to change how it
interprets the data collected by the senses. Excessive alcohol, psychotropic
drugs, even pheromones can influence perceptions."
"Maybe pheromones can influence more than perception," Gwen mused. "Not long
ago a friend of mine gave me this article about prayer and healing. There was
this study done on people who believe in that sort of thing. Apparently they
give off this pheromone when they pray. Other people pick up on it without
consciously noticing it. If someone sick is in range, so to speak, prayer might
actually speed up the healing process through a sort of chemical jump start."
"An interesting point," Ian said. "Humans draw lines between magic, religion,
and the natural powers of the mind, but those boundaries keep shifting.
According to this study you mentioned, it would follow that people who have
exceptionally strong and varied pheromones could alter the perceptions—and, as
you have observed, perhaps even the physical realities—of the people around
them."
"And we have stronger and more varied pheromones."
"Surely you've noticed that your arousal is highly contagious. Men respond to
your sexuality because they perceive it physically. Chemistry, in your case, is
quite literal."
"And here I thought it was my ladylike charm," Gwen said dryly. "So it could
be done. Changing appearances, that is—making people see you differently."
"Theoretically, it's possible that this Quality might still exist," he
specified, "but it's unlikely. In fact, we no longer breed for that gift."
For a long moment, Gwen simply stood and stared. "You did say 'breed,'
didn't you?"
He nodded. "That will no doubt offend your human-instilled sensibilities, but
consider the situation: each of us has three Qualities, all of which ebb and
flow in certain predictable patterns. It's vital that these qualities be
compatible."
There was probably some sense in what he said, but Gwen was too tired to
care.
"Okay, I've officially gone into information overload. Why don't you let
yourself out the same way you got in—whatever the hellthatwas—and we'll talk
about this in, oh, another month or so."
Ian held his ground. "Don't let it wait, Gwen. If you have any reason to
believe this particular Quality is surfacing in you, you must let me know at
once. Me," he emphasized, "and no other."
His tone was serious, almost ominous. Gwen shrugged and headed for the
shower. "I suppose my life depends on it," she tossed back.
"For once," he said somberly, "you are most definitely right."
CHAPTER TWELVE
The disturbing conversation with Ian echoed through Gwen's thoughts as she
drove to Sister Tamar's safe house. Saturday night was their pizza-and-poker
night, weather permitting and if no major crisis contravened. Missing a night's
sleep simply didn't qualify as an excuse.
The safe house was a sprawling old Victorian located a few blocks from
Providence College. The proximity to the school allowed the dozen or so young
female residents to come and go without much comment, and the old-fashioned iron
fence around the property was easily dismissed as the remnant of the original
owner's pretensions.
Few people noticed the state-of-the-art security system, the bulletproof
windows, the guard dog. The latter, an English sheepdog, was certainly visible
from the street, but he looked more like an affable pet than a trained assassin.
Gwen noticed it was hard for people to take any long-haired dog seriously.
Dobermans, pit bulls, German shepherds, rottweilers—those clean-cut guys got all
the press.
The nun's dogs tended to be as unconventional as their mistress. All dogs
were pack animals, and any creature with functioning brain cells recognized
Sister Tamar as the resident alpha bitch. If her life was all about serving and
protecting, who were they to do otherwise?
The sheepdog's MO was to gamble over, his tongue lolling in a goofy canine
grin and his killer eyes shielded by long, shaggy fur. He looked like an
oversize stuffed toy, but he could take several chunks out of an intruder before
the guy realized that Fluffy liked to play rough.
Gwen parked on the street and walked over to the intercom. Because she knew
where to look for it, she glanced toward the camera in the old beech tree just
inside the fence long enough to let it get a good shot of her face. The gate
buzzed, and she walked through, making sure it clicked shut behind her.
The sheepdog greeted Gwen with a little woof, then followed her through the
small yard and around to the back door like a shaggy, four-legged shadow.
Sister Tamar had a small apartment on the first floor, three rooms that she
kept fiercely tidy and sparsely furnished. Her only luxury was a collection of
high-quality ionic filters, all of which were kept running constantly.
The reason for this hit Gwen as walked in. Tamar was sitting at her small
table, feet propped up on a second chair. As usual, she was smoking like a bad
chimney.
Gwen grimaced and swatted at a plume of menthol-scented smoke. "I thought you
were going to give up the habit."
The nun glanced pointedly down at her skinny, jean-clad legs and bare,
bunion-lumpy feet. " 'Give up the habit?' Since when did you start talking in
bad puns?"
"Seriously. Those things will kill you."
Tamar sucked at her cigarette and blew out a leisurely cloud. "Never happen.
Not in this business."
"What? Brides of Christ have a special dispensation against cancer?"
"No, but I figure I'll be shot by someone's irate husband, knifed by
someone's pimp, or run over by someone's stalker first. Something with a little
drama and pizzazz."
She had a point. Gwen had never been optimistic about her own life
expectancy, either.
Until recently, that is.
The nun's gaze sharpened. "Why so glum?"
"Maybe I don't like the idea of outliving you," Gwen said. And because that
was too close to the truth, she added, "Besides, who would take care of your
girls?"
Tamar glared, then ground out her cigarette in a deeply stained ashtray
someone had bought in Niagra Falls circa 1964.
"Not bad," she said grudgingly. "When results count, go straight for the
guilt button. Where'd you learn that trick?"
"Well, my best friend grew up Irish Catholic…"
One corner of Tamar's lips twitched. "Shut up and deal the cards."
They played a few hands of Texas Hold 'Em, but neither of
them had much luck concentrating. The pizza was more successful; between the two
of them, they demolished a deep-dish pizza piled with extra cheese, Canadian
bacon, green peppers, onions, and pineapple.
"You're playing worse than usual tonight," Tamar pointed out as she snagged
the last slice. "Something on your mind?"
"A lot of things," Gwen admitted. "But there's one thing in particular I did
want to discuss with you. I haven't made any progress finding Irena's friends.
If you think she's up to it, I'd like to talk to her."
Tamar looked dubious, and Gwen could see why. It had only been a week or so
since the teenage girl had escaped from enforced prostitution and made her way
into the nun's care.
"She doesn't speak much English, and you don't speak Russian or Polish.
Unless you plan to get out the hand puppets, I'm not sure what you think talking
to Irena is going to accomplish."
"It's hard to explain," Gwen said. That, she added silently, just might be
the largest understatement in the history of Rhode Island. How could she tell
Sister Tamar there was a chance that she might pick up a mental image from
Irena, something that might help her find the pimp who'd imprisoned Irena and
two other girls?
Even if pragmatic Tamar bought into the whole psychic thing, recent events
had added a whole new layer of weird. Gwen's psychic flashes, which had always
been capricious, had recently become even more problematic. A few days ago,
she'd had several vivid, hologram-type visions that anyone could see. It hadn't
happened since her showdown with Meredith Cody's kidnappers, but the risk was
there.
Still, when you considered the two girls still in the pimp's hands, the
biggest risk was doing nothing at all.
Since Tamar was obviously waiting for an explanation, Gwen shrugged and said,
"It's a long shot, but I'd like to try."
The nun rose and brushed crumbs off her gray sweatshirt. "I'll ask Irena if
she'll talk to you. She's come a long way this week, so I think she might be
ready. She has a hard time formulating her thoughts in English, but she should
be able to understand you if you speak slowly. If you like, I can stay and
translate."
"No, I think we'll be fine." If things went wrong, Gwen thought grimly, the
fewer witnesses, the better.
Several minutes later Tamar was back with a blond girl who looked to be about
sixteen. Irena was too pale and thin to be pretty, and her narrow face was
nearly overwhelmed by a large nose. She glanced at Gwen and said sometime to
Tamar in either Polish or Russian, something that made the nun snort with
laughter.
"Do I want to know?" Gwen asked.
"Probably not. I've explained to her that you find people, and that if she
answers your questions, you might be able to help Marina and Anya."
Gwen smiled reassuringly at the teenager. "Tell her I think she's very
brave."
Tamar's translation brought a faint smile to the girl's face. Even so, her
gaze followed the nun as she left the room and closed the door behind her. She
turned back to Gwen, her eyes wary.
"I need you to picture the man who kept you, Marina, and Anya in that house."
The girl frowned and pantomimed drawing. "Make picture?"
"No. Make picture here," Gwen replied, tapping her head.
Irena nodded and closed her eyes. Her desire to help her friends must have
been strong, because the picture that flooded Gwen's mind was vivid and
immediate.
A piercing shriek shattered Gwen's concentration. She opened her eyes—
And saw her vision reproduced in translucent colors and startling precision.
The ghostly form of a burly Latino was right there in the room with them.
Irena scrambled away from the apparition, screaming something in Russian.
The door flew open hard, slamming into the wall hard enough to send a thin
crack snaking up the old plaster. Tamar rushed in, wrath in her eyes and a small
bottle in one hand. Without a moment's hesitation, she pummeled the vision with
holy water and colorful curses. The situation might have been darkly amusing if
it wasn't for Irena's terror.
Gwen doubted the holy water had much effect, but her own guilt appeared to be
a real vision-quencher. The apparition faded quickly. While Tamar soothed the
sobbing child, Gwen called the last doctor in New England who made house
calls—most likely because he'd been one of Tamar's pupils back in the day, and
still had a lively fear of her.
It took more than an hour to restore order. Finally Irena went off to bed,
taking with her Tamar's favorite dog, a gaunt greyhound the nun had rescued from
his "retirement." The girls seemed to find comfort in the ugly guard dog. The
beast might not be able to race anymore, but he sure as hell remembered how to
bite.
When Tamar and Gwen were finally alone, the nun took a bottle of brandy from
the kitchen cupboard and poured generous three-finger portions into two glasses.
Gwen tossed hers back and waited for the nun to catch up.
Tamar took a sip and sank into her chair, holding her glass in both hands.
"Ugly son of a bitch, wasn't he?" she murmured. "I'd always had my doubts
about the whole 'fallen angel of light' crap, but the devil looks like some guy
who pumps gas in Cranston."
"I don't think that was a demonic visitation," Gwen said hesitantly. "In
fact, I'm sure it wasn't. Tamar, I've got a confession."
"Do I look like a fucking priest?" the nun snapped. "Besides, no sensible
person expects devils to look like Clark Gable. Evil works best when it's
mundane and banal and normal. That way, it can sneak up and bite you in
the ass. Every one of the men who tormented Irena is a devil, and how many of
them do you think are sexy, Hollywood vampire types?"
"Not too many of them were transparent, either."
The nun dismissed this with an impatient gesture that sent the contents of
her glass sloshing onto the table. "That… thing we saw. Is that the man
who has Irena's friends?"
"Yeah."
Tamar nodded—a single, decisive inclination of her head, then she tossed off
the rest of her drink and reached for the bottle. "Well, go find him."
Gwen stared at her. "Just like that. You don't want to know what happened in
here?"
Tamar poured herself another drink and regarded the smoky gold contents for a
long time. Her thin shoulders rose and fell. "I used to demand explanations.
Mostly about the sort of things you'd expect a young religious to contemplate:
the paradox of an all-powerful God and a profoundly imperfect world, the nature
of good and evil. In my business, answers are in short supply, so I stopped
asking certain questions a long, long time ago."
"Yet you never left the order."
The nun laughed shortly. "I didn't have a crisis of faith, kid. To the
contrary. Enlightenment isn't guaranteed. Useful work is. I just figured out I
have all the answers I need to do the work that's in front of me."
"Must be nice," Gwen murmured.
"So you don't have all the answers yet. Keep at it. You'll find this
bastard."
"I plan to." Gwen took a long, settling breath. "Actually, I was talking in a
more general sense."
__.
Tamar's shrewd eyes studied Gwen's face. "Looks like we need to have a long
talk… in a more general sense. But another time," she concluded briskly. She
held up the bottle. "You've got work, and I've got some serious drinking to do."
Gwen dialed Ian Forest's number while she was driving home.
"So you decided not to wait a month before contacting me," Ian said by way of
greeting. "I'm glad you changed your mind."
"Yeah, hello. You know those visions I told you about? The hologram things?
Well, they're back."
"What did you expect?"
"That's why I'm calling you! You're the guy with all the answers."
"I consider that admission a true sign of progress on your part."
"Whatever. Can we get back to the home-movie thing? I've got to get a handle
on this before someone drowns me in holy water."
For a long moment, the only response was the static on Gwen's cell phone.
"I'm sure there's a story there," Ian said in a slightly bemused voice, "but
it will have to wait for another time. I prefer to speak of this in person."
"Like anyone who overheard us would believe any of this," she scoffed.
"You might be surprised who listens to conversations, and why. Shall we meet
in Sylvia's moon garden in, say, ten minutes?"
Gwen's eyes narrowed. "How come you're so close? You're not still following
me, are you?"
"Not as such. It just so happens that I can walk from my home to yours in
that length of time."
"Great," she muttered. "Ring the intercom at the gate. I'll buzz you in."
"That won't be necessary. Meet me by the old maple tree in ten minutes."
"Make it fifteen. I'm still driving."
She shut off her phone and tossed it onto the passenger seat. The lights in
Sylvia's house were on, but that was because they were on a timer. Gwen's
landlady wasn't home and wouldn't be for another week or more. A bad shock had
sent her to the hospital. After her release, she'd decided to take a cruise. The
first one had gone so well she signed on for another. Most likely she'd found an
elderly admirer or two.
Or maybe she needed time away from the weirdness that Gwen had brought into
her life.
And that was something to think about. Gwen gazed wistfully at the calm,
green haven behind the black iron fence. She liked living here, but doing so was
putting Sylvia at risk. She really needed to find a different place.
Gwen pulled into the drive and stopped her car by Sylvia's garden. This
chapter of her life was drawing to a close, but for tonight she would enjoy the
heady sweetness of lilac, the luminous glow of the white flowers.
Ian emerged from the deep shadows under the maple and came to stand at her
side. He observed the garden for a long, contemplative moment. A cloud drifted
lazily over the moon, dimming the wattage coming from the flowers.
He glanced at Gwen. "Tell me this: what is the moon phase?"
"What phase?" Gwen huffed in exasperation. "Adolescent? Premenopausal? How
the hell should I know?"
"It's one of the things you must know," he said adamantly.
"You're obviously manifesting your moon-cycle Quality in the waning phase.
This is not a common pattern, but it does occur."
"How about repeating that in English?" she demanded. "Preferably as it's
spoken in the twenty-first century?"
"Very well. Each of us is capable of learning a number of… unusual skills,
but we're born with certain gifts, also known as Qualities. These abilities are
closely tied to the cycles of the year and the position of the moon and the
stars. Your ability to Remember—to powerfully envision things you yourself have
never seen—is apparently tied to your moon phase."
"So I'm… what? Like some kind of werewolf?" Gwen demanded.
Ian chuckled. "Hardly. Our cycles are far more subtle and complex. Your
ability to Remember wanes and waxes with the moon. You can call storms. That
Quality is tied to the turning of the year, so it's very powerful right now."
"Beltane," Gwen murmured, naming the old Celtic holiday that fell on the last
day of April.
"That's right," he said, sounding pleased. "It remains to be seen whether
your third Quality will manifest at the corners of the year—summer and winter
solstice, spring and autumn equinox—or on the dancing days: Beltane, Samhaim,
Lammas, and Imbolic."
"I've heard those names."
"No doubt. Some of the Old Ways have modern counterparts in this or that bit
of folklore or religion. Once you understand the pattern, you'll be able to
chart your path, and make decisions based on the ebb and flow of your
abilities."
Gwen thought this over. "Okay, what happens when all three lines intersect?"
"That depends, of course, on what these Qualities might be."
"And if they don't get along with each other? Or maybe they work well
together, but too well?"
Ian suddenly appeared to be very interested in the flight pattern of a
moon-white moth.
"Well?"
He sighed and turned to face her. "You needn't worry about that. Your
parents' bloodlines were carefully matched."
Gwen suddenly understood the resigned expression on Ian's face. The outburst
he clearly expected from her simmered just under the surface, but she feel too
numbed by informational overload to get at it.
The Elder Races had bloodlines, like stallions and champion dogs, carefully
matched to produce the right kind and balance of abilities.
She shook her head in utter bemusement. "As God is my witness, I don't know
what to say."
Ian's lips twitched. "If that is so, then ignorance truly is bliss."
Gwen's cell phone chirped. She glanced at the screen. The number took her
back—it was the number for Tiger Leone's cell phone. She glanced at Ian. "I need
to take this."
He swept one hand out, palm up, in an elegant "by all means" gesture.
"I'm a private investigator," she reminded him. "Notice the emphasis on
private."
He nodded and headed for the maple tree. "We've just begun," he warned her.
"I'll meet you again, soon."
She waved him away and walked toward her car. "Gellman," she said curtly.
There was a lot of background noise—voices and music—and it took her a few
moments to place the voice: Adrian, the blond kid who'd sworn to help her figure
out Edmonson's drug business.
"Where are you?" she shouted into the phone.
"Do you know Extreme, the dance club?"
"I know where it is."
"Come down. I have things to show you."
She clicked off her cell and jogged up to her apartment to get her gun out of
the gun safe. Adrian might be oath-bound, but she wouldn't put any bets on his
buddies.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Music thumped and throbbed, binding the gyrating crowd like a collective
heartbeat. A slim Black girl swayed lazily onstage, one hand moving slowly
across her body in a languorous caress. With some relief, Gwen recognized Jackie
Teal. She was barely dancing, and seemed almost unaware of the crowd. Gwen
averted her eyes from what appeared to be an intensely private moment.
She caught sight of Adrian's pale blond hair in the crowd. She pushed her way
over to him and used his earlobe as a handle to pull his ear low enough to shout
into it. "What's so important that I had to come to North Providence at this
godforsaken hour?"
Adrian pulled away and tipped his head in the direction of a nearby door.
Gwen followed him to it, then up a small flight of stairs to a small, glassed-in
room overlooking the club. Soundproofed, too. The relative silence washed over
Gwen in blissful waves.
"So, why am I here?" she repeated.
He gestured to the smoked window. "I thought you would want to see the clubs.
Since you are the earl's only heir, you should start learning about his
affairs."
"Why? I want to shut them down, not improve operations."
"You might want to reserve judgment until you know all the facts. Look at
that dancer."
Her gaze flicked back to Jackie. "Yeah, I noticed her. Kind of risky, putting
someone who's under the influence onstage."
"If she were arrested tonight, she would be released within the hour. There
are no intoxicants in her system."
Gwen raised an eyebrow. "Then whatever she's taking has one hell of a placebo
effect."
For no reason that she could fathom, that seemed to amuse him. Before he
could speak, sirens wailed outside, slicing though the din.
Adrian took her arm and led her to a wall panel. He rapped on it sharply, and
it swung open. "You have contacts in the police department. Ask them tomorrow
what happened here, and you will begin to understand. Now go."
He gave her a shove that sent her reeling into the darkness. She caught her
balance against a rough concrete wall, then looked around to get her bearings.
She was in a narrow stairwell, built into what appeared to be a double wall.
The narrow alley was open at the top, and faint city light filtered down.
Gwen walked down the stairs and through a narrow door. She emerged into a
basement stairwell in the alley behind the club. She waited until the noise died
down, then clicked on her phone and dialed Damian's number.
His sleepy voice came online, grunting something that might have been
"hello."
"There's a drug bust going down at the Extreme. I need to know everything you
can tell me about it. But be careful—Jackie Teal was picked up. You might not
want her to recognize you."
"She's okay?"
He put enough into that question to pique Gwen's interest. "You sure you
didn't play?"
"With a drug-dealing stripper? What are you smoking? The drug business coming
out of that titty bar is our best link to Walsh. If Leone's people get shut
down, we get shut down. And it's not like we've got a lot of time.
Quaid and me got ourselves on Walsh's shit list, remember? Or maybe I should
say bit list."
"I hate to interrupt someone who's got a good rant going, but listen up.
Jackie was on some sort of horny high. I've seen her dance before, and trust
me—she doesn't have that much juice. Adrian assures me she won't be held for
illegals. You and Quaid need to follow the evidence every step of the way. If
you can catch someone fixing things for Jackie—"
"We're that much closer to nailing Walsh," he finished. "I'm on it."
The dial tone hummed. Gwen clicked off her phone and listened to the clamor
in front of the club. Jackie's shrill protests rose above the murmur as she was
taken away.
Gwen quietly climbed the stairs and edged around the building. Four
black-and-whites blocked the street, red lights strobing into the night. A dozen
or so cops, both uniformed and plainclothes, hustled dancers and partygoers into
cars.
A faint smile curved Gwen's lips. For once, departmental politics would
actually accomplish something worthwhile. A lot of people in the law-enforcement
establishment hadn't been wildly enthusiastic about the vice squad. This
wouldn't be the first time a street cop called for backup without referring a
case to Walsh's department. With this many people involved, it would be harder
for Walsh to lay claim to his territory.
A profound sense of relief washed over her, easing some of the tension that
had kept her moving for too many hours. Suddenly Gwen's eyelids felt incredibly
heavy, and the prospect of crawling into bed had never been so appealing. She
slipped down a side street to the nearly deserted parking lot where she'd left
her Toyota.
To her relief, everything was quiet at Sylvia's house. No handsome but
irritating visitors lurked in the shadows of Gwen's apartment. She stumbled into
her bedroom and fell facedown on the bed, not even bothering to kick off her
boots.
But sleep proved elusive. After a few minutes of tossing and turning, Gwen
decided she might as well get some work done.
She grabbed a quick shower and dressed in jeans and a black tee shirt, then
padded downstairs to her office to type up her report to Shawna O'Riley.
Gwen's four-fingered technique wasn't designed for speed. She worked
carefully, listing the steps she'd taken and the information she'd uncovered.
Roy Williams was a solid citizen with a good job, money in the bank, a good
portfolio, no police record, and no interesting vices. He wasn't cheating on
Shawna, he didn't fudge his tax returns. He'd lied about one thing, but it was a
doozy.
Somehow Gwen doubted there would be a wedding invitation in her mailbox any
time soon.
She completed the report and sent it to Shawna as an e-mail attachment. Her
phone rang while the file was still uploading, and Quaid's number floated onto
the tiny screen.
Gwen took a deep breath and clicked on the phone. "Listen, about Kate: I
couldn't call you in on the murder of an ex-girlfriend."
"You did the right thing."
That wasn't what she'd expected to hear. "Do they have any leads yet?"
"They think they do," he said heavily.
Gwen blinked. "Does that mean what it sounds like?"
"Unfortunately. When I stopped by Kate's house the other night, one of the
neighbors saw me. She just can't remember exactly when that was."
"They can't charge you on something like that."
"It gets better. They found the murder weapon in the lilac bush behind Kate's
house. No prints—it was wiped clean—but it turns out the gun was taken from the
weapons locker over at vice. Naturally they like a cop for it."
"And because you and Kate have history…"
"You got it."
"Jesus, Quaid! What can I do to help?"
"Keep an eye on O'Riley," he said softly.
Gwen sat bolt upright. "What aren't you telling me?"
"I'm in holding now. They made the arrest late last night. I was arraigned in
night court. Bail was set at two hundred thousand."
"That's ridiculous!" she sputtered. "No cop has that kind of money. Not an
honest one, anyway."
"Yeah. Kinda like the Monty Python witch hunt, isn't it? Throw the witch in
water. If she floats, she's guilty. Burn her. If she drowns, she's innocent but
dead."
The analogy came too close for comfort. A convicted vice cop wouldn't be very
popular with the other inmates.
"Have you tried a bond?"
"The union rep wouldn't even make the calls. He figures at this hour, on a
Saturday, there wasn't much point."
"If and when the lazy bastard calls, tell him your new lawyer and your bond
money are on their way."
"Gellman—"
"Don't start with me. The lawyer and the bond agent owe me. And if you skip
out, I'll hunt you down and take out your kneecaps with a crowbar."
"Jesus, you say that like you're hoping I'll skip. Who'd you have in mind for
a lawyer?"
"Ryan Cody."
He whistled, long and low. "Talk about the devil's advocate. That'll get
their attention."
"That's the idea."
"Problem is, with the clients Cody represents, hiring him is second cousin to
an admission of guilt."
"Let's hope you stay alive long enough to worry about it."
Gwen hung up before he could embarass them both by thanking her. She dialed
Ryan Cody's home number, letting the phone ring until Cody picked up.
Gwen quickly described the situation. "I need you to call around right away
and assure everyone that Quaid is your client and that he'll make bail."
"Will he?"
Amazing how the mention of money brought Cody wide awake. "Write a check on
Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye. I'll meet you afterward at the breakfast place in
Barrington—that little diner on Old Country?"
"I know where it is."
"Good. I'll bring enough cash to cover the bail and your fee."
A long silence followed. "You can put that kind of cash together in an hour?"
"Sure, but you might have to pick up breakfast."
She hung up and dialed Ian Forest. "I need a quarter of a million, in cash.
How much do you think I could get on eBay for that big blue gem of mine?"
"That's nothing to joke about. When do you need the money?"
"Forty-five minutes?"
"I'll be there in thirty."
He made it in about twenty-five and handed her a small backpack of the sort
middle-school kids carried.
Gwen unzipped the bag and peered inside. Fat stacks of twenties filled the
backpack. She shook her head in astonishment and closed the bag. "I'll make sure
you get it back."
"No need. The money is yours—or will be, as soon as Edmonson's estate is
settled. Since that task has fallen to me, you can consider this an advance. Do
with it as you like."
She shouldered the bag. What she'd like to do is shove it up the ass
of every pervert who put the money in Edmonson's pocket. Keeping Quaid out of
jail was not quite as noble, but it'd have to do.
Later that morning, Gwen headed over to Jason's bungalow.
He met her at the door, grinning when he noted the size of the bakery box she
carried.
"That should do for both of us. I've already made coffee. Give me a minute to
put it in some travel cups. We can take it out on the boat, if you want."
She nodded and followed him to the kitchen. While Jason fixed the coffee, she
gazed over the backyard to the river. A light wind ruffled the water into a
shimmering silver blue, and the boat anchored a few feet offshore bobbed
invitingly. It was one of those spring mornings that made everything look bright
and fresh. And speaking of which, Gwen noted that Jason had made some repairs to
the small dock. As they approached, she was glad to note that Frank's old
rowboat was reassuringly unchanged.
She got into the backseat and took the oars. Jason deftly untied the mooring
rope and hopped in.
"You want me to row?"
"Kind of hard to do from where you're sitting."
He shrugged and settled down in the front seat. Gwen rowed out to the fishing
boat. She pulled up to the float that marked the second anchor line and tied the
rowboat, then scrambled up into the boat.
To her surprise, the temperamental motor turned over for Jason at the first
try. Most likely he had tinkered with that, as well.
"What's wrong?" he asked her.
Gwen smoothed the frown from her face. "Caffeine deprivation. Hand me one of
those cups."
Jason didn't look convinced, but he refrained from further questions. He
steered the boat down the river and into the bay. The wind was brisk enough to
entice early morning sailors, and he moved among the slower crafts with ease and
skill.
"I forgot to ask you if you could drive this thing," Gwen said, "but you've
sort of covered that. Where'd you learn?"
"My stepfather liked to fish. Hunting, too. He took me out quite a bit.
Growing up in Florida, you can do both year round. In fact, I spent a lot of
summers working as a guide down in Big Cypress, the Seminole reservation." He
grinned. "You look appalled. Are you one of those people who frown on hunting?"
"Hell, no. I'd whack a cow any day, if that was the only way to get a burger.
It seems to me that if you're going to eat meat, it's more honest to kill your
own."
"So…"
"It's just that I've never met a real country boy before. Won't you miss all
that, if you settle down here?"
He sent her a quizzical look. "If? I'm pretty settled already."
"You're really diving into the computer stuff. Thinking of changing careers?"
"What, and give up the lucrative lifestyle of a martial-arts instructor and
occasional carpenter?"
Gwen grinned. "You don't seem to care much about lifestyle. Except for the
car. That's a sweet little ride."
"It's a Miata," he told her. "They're about the same price as an econobox,
and a lot more fun. You can get some great deals on used cars. If you want, I'll
help you look around."
"Why not? I've got nothing better to do than go car shopping."
Her sarcasm prompted a quick smile. "I can see that. You must have searched
high and low for that heap of blue scrap metal."
"It runs. Most of the time."
She helped herself to a cinnamon donut. "So, you still up for that
self-defense class Tuesday night?"
"I'll be there. I've been meaning to ask how you got started teaching."
She swallowed a sugary mouthful and chased it with a gulp of coffee. "It's a
community school. Several classes are held in a local church. A friend of mine
goes there. She heard about the program and talked me into doing a self-defense
class."
"Do you like teaching?"
Gwen shrugged. "None of the women are all that serious about it. I'm guessing
none of them have had to be."
"Not like you."
She sent him a quick, sidelong look. "I was a cop, for chrissakes."
"But you started learning martial arts when you were, what? Around twelve?"
"You've got a good memory. Yeah. I was small for my age and I got beat up a
lot."
He shook his head. "Somehow I have a hard time seeing you as anyone's victim,
no matter what your age and size."
"Who said I was a victim? I said I got beat up a lot. The other people didn't
walk away without a scratch." And some of them, Gwen added silently, didn't walk
away at all.
Jason throttled down and settled the boat into a more leisurely pace. "I've
been meaning to ask how you're doing. You know, with Frank gone."
Gwen's throat tightened. "I miss him. Other than that, I don't know what to
tell you."
"So you're content to let the official version of his death stand?"
"Actually, I'm a long fucking ways away from 'content,' but it's out of my
hands. The man who killed Frank—or at least, the guy who was responsible for
it—is dead."
"The guy who ordered the Cody girl's kidnapping."
"That's right."
"Aren't the police still looking for the kidnappers?" he asked cautiously.
Gwen met his tentative gaze squarely. "They'll stop eventually."
He gave that some thought, then nodded slowly. "I can live with that."
It suddenly occurred to Gwen what he thought she was telling him. "You think
I killed those guys!"
He studied her face for a moment before answering. "You never told the police
Frank's laptop was missing. When you gave it to me, I figured that was your way
of letting me know the score had been settled."
"And you were okay with that."
"It's one solution. In fact, I can't think of a better one."
"Some people could. Most of my former colleagues, for example."
"I'm not going to run to the police, Gwen," he told her. "You seem surprised
by my attitude. Keep in mind that I grew up as a citizen of the Seminole Nation.
I never went out of my way to break American laws, but I didn't hold them in
high regard, either. My mother's influence, in part."
"Cops' ex-spouses are seldom crazy about the system," she admitted.
"Add to that the fact that I'm a Southerner and a male. Our motto is 'Deal
with it.' To be honest, I'm glad Edmonson is dead."
Gwen jolted in surprise, sending coffee sloshing onto the deck. Her hands
were shaking as she put down the cup. "Edmonson?"
Something nickered in his eyes. "You mentioned him when you told me about
Meredith Cody's kidnapping. I put the pieces together from what you said and
figured he was the guy in charge. Was I wrong?"
She didn't remember mentioning Edmonson's name, but Jason's explanation was
plausible. With all she'd had on her mind, it was no surprise she'd let
something slip.
The conversation switched to general topics: movies, music, the Red Sox.
Gwen liked football and couldn't give a rat's ass about the Bambino and his
curse, but it turned out that Jason was a lifelong Sox fan, and still damn near
giddy over the 2004 World Series. Morning ran into afternoon, and they docked at
the Wharf Tavern in Warwick for a bowl of chowder.
Her first creamy spoonful triggered a memory, and a profound sense of loss.
She swallowed hard, forcing the soup past the lump in her throat.
"You look sad," Jason observed.
She shrugged. "Frank used to make chowder about once a week. It was sort of a
tradition."
"Sorry I missed it."
"Me, too."
She would have said more, but suddenly yawning seemed much more imperative.
She noticed Jason's stare and stopped in mid yawn. "Sorry."
"When was the last time you slept?" he demanded.
"What day is this?"
"Very amusing. I'm serious."
"And you think I'm not? I don't sleep a lot. Sometimes I go a night or two
without bothering to sleep, but it catches up with me eventually."
"Apparently." He nodded to her chowder. "Eat up, then I'll take you home.
You're going to fall face-first into that bowl."
Because Gwen couldn't argue with that assessment, she finished up her soup
and didn't complain when Jason drove the boat back to Riverside at a
less-than-leisurely pace. But she put her foot down when he tried convincing her
to let him drive her back to her apartment.
She made her way home and headed for the bed. No need to set an alarm—she
always woke up the moment the sun hit her.
Cycles of nature, she thought as she drifted off to sleep. Maybe Ian was on
to something.
First thing Monday morning, Gwen went to the office of the obstetrician Erin
Westland had seen when she was pregnant with Patrick. Thanks to yet another form
Kyle had signed, she was given access to Erin's chart.
It wasn't strictly legal, but fortunately for Gwen, the medical profession
was still sorting through the do's and don'ts of the Privacy of Information
legislation. Medical-office workers spent a lot of time shuffling papers.
Handing them something that looked offlcial was like ringing a bell around
Pavlov's dogs: they automatically went with familiar patterns.
According to the records, Erin had come in only once, just to get a referral
for a sonogram. She preferred a home delivery, so the doctor had referred her to
a midwife.
Gwen went back to her car and fired up her cell phone. After a few calls, she
tracked down the midwife, who'd apparently taken up organic vegetable gardening
in Vermont. She introduced herself and explained briefly why she was calling.
"I remember Erin very well," the woman said. "It's hardly something I'm
likely to forget."
"Why's that?"
"For one thing, the baby was born very late."
"Is that really so unusual, especially for first babies?"
"I'm not talking about a few days, or even a week or two," the midwife said.
Gwen took a moment to absorb that. "Was the baby normal?"
"Yes, he appeared to be fine, if somewhat small. Erin had a remarkably easy
delivery, considering that it was her first child."
"What about Erin's ultrasound? Did that show anything strange?"
"I didn't actually see the ultrasound, but I received a report. Apparently
the baby was developing normally. The test showed a fetus in the sixth week of
development."
"You say that as if it's a problem."
"Well, the dates just don't add up, not on either end. Patrick was born more
than nine months after that ultrasound was taken. And the date on the test
report was nearly two months after Erin's appointment with her obstetrician."
"So when you do the math, it turns out that Erin wasn't pregnant when she
went to her doctor."
"Yet her pregnancy was confirmed by physical exam. The doctor estimated that
she was nearly two months along."
"Don't they usually do blood tests to confirm?"
"Erin said she had a phobia about needles. That's why she insisted on a home
birth. The idea of giving birth in a hospital terrified her."
Smart girl, Gwen noted. Most likely members of the Elder Races who checked
into hospitals met the same fate as those who ended up in jail. Keeping a low
profile was very high on the priority list.
"Was there anything else unusual about Erin's pregnancy?"
"You'd think that would be enough," the midwife said, "but actually, there
was. The report noted that although the the fetal development was normal, there
was some concern about the mother. It showed what appeared to be three ovaries,
raising questions about the possibility of a tumor. The report strongly advised
that she have another test."
"Did Erin follow up?"
"She told me she did, and that everything was fine."
"You don't sound convinced," Gwen observed.
The midwife was silent for several moments. "I asked questions. After all, I
was responsible for two lives. After a while, I stopped asking."
The tone of her voice suggested that lack of interest was not the reason she
stopped seeking answers.
"What happened?" Gwen asked softly.
"A lot of things. Harassment. Hang-up phone calls late at night, slashed
tires. Nothing I could trace to Erin—not that I thought there was any
connection. Then my dog was killed. Hannah, a beautiful golden retriever. She
was pregnant at the time. She was left by my door. Her belly was slit open, the
puppies left to die."
"And you think Erin had something to do with this?"
"Hannah always barked when Erin came in for her checkups and prenatal
classes. She was a lovely dog, very friendly, but she didn't like Erin at all."
Gwen heard the faint sigh of a long, steadying breath as the woman prepared
to spill the rest.
"One night Hannah set up an awful racket. She was outside—she had a doghouse
in the yard. I went downstairs and looked around, but there was no sign of any
intruder. Hannah calmed down, or so I thought at the time, and I went back to
bed. The next morning I… found Hannah. I was terribly shaken, but I had several
appointments that afternoon. One of them was with Erin. When I went to get her
chart out, I found that all of my notes were missing."
"So you think Erin was responsible?"
"I know she was." The woman's voice broke, and she cleared her throat. "She
didn't say anything, but the look in her eye when she came in that day was… like
nothing I've ever seen before. Malevolence came off her in waves."
"I'm surprised you kept her as a patient."
"Oh, I tried to drop her, but she let me know in no uncertain terms that
wouldn't be a good idea."
Gwen thought this over. It didn't seem very smart to piss off the person
who'd have your life and that of your unborn child in her hands—unless you had
some sort of guarantee.
"What else did she do?"
"Again, nothing I could trace to her. I received some pictures in the
mail—pictures of Hannah, after…" Again she broke off and cleared her throat.
"And in the same envelope, a picture of my daughter. She's going to college in
North Carolina. The picture was taken in her dorm room, while she was asleep.
There was a newspaper lying on her quilt, showing the date, and her alarm clock
was placed beside it."
"The picture was taken around the same time that Hannah died," Gwen
concluded.
"Yes."
Well, that message was clear enough.
"Your name won't come into this investigation," Gwen assured her.
"It doesn't matter." The dullness of old grief colored the woman's voice. "I
really don't care what happens to me, and my daughter's dead."
"I'm sorry," Gwen murmured. "Was it—"
"Erin Westland? No. Oddly enough, I think that would have been easier for me
to deal with. Sometimes it helps to have someone to hate. My daughter died in
childbirth, in a hospital. She went that route on my advice because she was
having mild symptoms of preeclampsia. The doctors did nothing wrong. But Sarah
had a congenital heart problem, something we'd never picked up. It was
asymptomatic until the strain of childbirth…" Her voice trailed off.
"I'm sorry," Gwen repeated. "Thank you for taking the time to talk to me. It
has been a big help."
She ended the call and drove in silence, thinking through this new
information.
The most logical conclusion was that Elder Folk had longer pregnancies, with
the extra time most likely in the early stages. Women who walked around with a
bump for a year or so would draw attention, but who the heck could tell if a
woman was six weeks pregnant? If Erin was figuring this out as she went along,
it was possible that she'd been to more than one doctor, and had had more than
one ultrasound taken.
Thanks to the whole Privacy of Information thing, getting that information
wouldn't be easy. Gwen was lucky to have gotten as far as she had with signed
releases from Erin's "husband." It was definitely time to bring in a heavy
hitter.
She pulled into the parking lot of a fast-food joint and dialed Harley Faden.
His voice-mail announcement told her to leave a message. She followed the drill
and hung up.
Her cell phone rang almost immediately. "This is Harley," announced a nasal
tenor voice. "What have you got for me?"
"No story. Sorry about that. I'm working on a case. Thanks for calling back
so soon."
"You don't need to thank me," he said. "You need to pay me. The clock starts
now."
"I need you to check on some medical records for me. One person with at least
three names: Erin Westland, Vivian Meekins, Helene Tremaine. There might be
more."
"I'm getting it down," Harley murmured. "What else?"
"She'd have to go to someone specializing in obstetrics and gynecology to get
referrals for ultrasounds. Several of them. I need those tests. The actual
films, if you can get them, not just the reports."
"You don't like to make things easy, do you?"
"What fun would that be? Here's something that might help: this woman might
have three ovaries rather than two."
"Cool. How many tits?"
"Standard issue, as far as I know."
"Just checking. These tests—what's the time frame?"
Gwen considered this. Patrick Radcliff was born about six years ago. "Go back
eight years," she suggested, "and cover a period of at least two years."
"Wait a minute—one woman, two years, three egg crates, multiple names, and a
photo album of ultrasounds? What's going on here?"
"This woman gets pregnant a lot," Gwen said blandly. "She's supplying a lab
doing illegal stem-cell research. One of the researchers is knocking up the
volunteers himself, and selling the videos as Internet porn. You think there
might be a story in that?"
His moan sounded faintly orgasmic. "Damn it, Gwen, it's not nice to tease."
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
On her way through the East Side, Gwen stopped at an art-supply store near
the school of design and picked up a roll of white paper and several drawing
pencils. She tossed her purchases into her car and called Damian about last
night's bust.
"Got anything for me?"
"Not a damn thing," he grumbled. "Archer told it straight; Jackie Teal was
clean."
"You followed the evidence?"
"I met the beat cops at the station, followed our girl through the whole
routine. Stuck to her like a tick. I took her over to the lab myself, stood
right there while they ran a tox screen. That came up negative for all known
illegals. You sure she was using?"
"I'd put good money on it." Gwen hesitated. "You talk to Quaid since then?"
"Hell, no. It was past midnight by the time they were finished."
"You should call him."
"Tried to. He's not answering his cell."
"Then call his home number. If he doesn't answer that, stop by his place."
A couple beats went by as Damian took this in. "What's going on, Gellman?"
"It's not my place to tell you. Quaid's okay, or was when I talked to him
last night."
"I'm on it. Anything else?"
"How are your art skills?"
"Not worth a steaming purple crap. Why?"
"I need you to help me do a drawing of someone."
"Huh. Something tells me you don't want to sit down with a sketch artist."
"Good call. I'm heading to my apartment. How soon can you be over?"
"Give me an hour. I'll talk to Quaid, come right over."
"Thanks. I'll leave the gate open. Park by the garage, and come right
upstairs."
She drove home and set to work, cutting long sheets of the paper and taping
them to her bedroom wall. She was just finishing up when she heard footsteps on
the stairs.
Damian ambled in and regarded her handiwork. "I'm tempted to make some
comment about needing to see the big picture."
"Fortunately, you're man enough to resist temptation."
"Not that I've noticed. Okay, what now?"
"Watch. And try not to talk too much. It's hard to hold onto the image if I
get distracted."
Gwen took a deep breath and called to mind the man she'd pulled from Irena's
memory. The translucent image began to take shape as Gwen projected it
powerfully onto the papered wall.
"Holy shit," Damian murmured. To Gwen's relief, he sounded impressed, not
freaked out. "I get it. It's like one of those lame light projectors teachers
used back in the day."
"Less taking, more drawing."
He picked up a pencil and started to trace the image. By the time the vision
faded, he had a reasonably good sketch. He stepped back, pursed his lips, and
considered.
"Not exactly wallet-size."
"I know a RISD student who can scale it down for me."
"Sounds like a plan. In the meanwhile, I'll take a look at the books, see if
I can find this guy's mug shot."
"Are you sure that's a good idea? Showing up on the weekend is the sort of
thing that'll put you on Walsh's radar."
His face hardened. "Do you want to catch this guy, or not?"
"But Quaid—"
"He'd be there, too, if he could. So would you, if you were still on the
job."
Since Gwen couldn't argue with that, she gave Damian a see-you-later wave and
reached for her cell phone. She'd switched it off to avoid interruption. During
that brief blackout, she'd missed three calls, all from the same number.
Harley Faden answered on the first ring.
"Where the hell have you been)" he demanded "And I'm not talking
about your physical location. I don't know what parts of cyberspace you visited,
but something really big and ugly followed you home."
"What the hell are you talking about?"
"I found those sonograms for you, and tried to send you a scanned copy. No
can do—there's spyware on your computer, and fairly sophisticated stuff. When I
send you something, it tries to follow the path back to me. Wait a minute."
Gwen heard a brief clicking of keys, and he let out a low whistle. "It did
better than just try—it got past my first firewall. Hang on."
This time the clatter of his keyboard went on for several moments.
"Ha! Got the little bastard nailed down—nope, there it goes. Holy shit, Gwen!
Seriously, where have you been recently?"
"Online? Nowhere exotic."
"Well, whatever you've been doing has attracted some high-powered attention."
Gwen thought back to Winston's, and the pictures taken of everyone who came
to the club. Someone had used those pictures to identify and locate everyone
who'd been there the night of the raid. Yeah, someone on the sidelines of her
game definitely had some megageeks on the payroll. It was disturbing to know
that these guys were still working even though Edmonson was out of the picture.
"Got any advice?" she asked.
"Give me your address. Real world, not e-mail. I'll come right over with a
software program that'll hunt down and kill most spy-ware. Once your system is
clean, we can go over my reports."
She gave him the address and hung up, then carefully took down the life-size
sketch and rolled it up. She left a message on the phone machine of the art
student who did an occasional odd job for her, telling him to pick up the scroll
at the gate and have the eight-by-ten version back as soon as he could possibly
swing it.
She left the scroll where she'd said it would be and opened the gate for
Harley's little red two-seater.
Harley was one of those people whose voice didn't match the visual. His
nasal, slightly whiny voice suggested a geek stereotype—a scrawny,
twentysomething, low-budget Bill Gates. In the flesh, he resembled an
out-of-shape lineman, from the big cubic-zirconium studs in his ears to the
flabby remnants of once-heroic biceps to the belly that hung over his belt and
stretched the faded Patriots jersey to the limits of the fabric's tensile
strength. His head was bald, his black beard was sprinkled with gray, and rumor
had it he'd worked in military intelligence toward the end of Vietnam.
Apart from the inherent oxymoron in "military intelligence," Gwen was willing
to buy that. Harley definitely knew his shit. The fact that he was also a
church-lady gossip with less moral backbone than your average squid made tabloid
reporting a natural career choice.
She hopped into his car and rode up to the garage with him. He inserted a
disc into her laptop's drive and tapped a few keys. While his spyware hunted
down invaders on Gwen's computer, he spread a series of seven fuzzy
black-and-white pictures on the desk.
"These are the sonograms for Erin Westland, Helene Tremaine, and Vivian
Meekins. These were taken over a period of three years, but they're all the same
person."
Gwen squinted at the blur, trying to make sense of it. "How can you tell?"
"How can you miss it? Look here; see these three small blobs, with the tubes
running down from them? Those are the ovary triplets. Same in all seven
ultrasounds."
"So they're the same person."
"I'll go you one better," said Harley. He gathered up the photos, fanned them
like a deck of cards, and brandished them with a read-'em-and-weep flourish.
"These are all the same pregnancy."
"How can you tell?"
"What's the first thing new parents look for?"
"How the hell should I know?" A terrible thought occurred to her. "Sweet
Jesus! Don't tell me you've reproduced."
"Ha. Much laughter on my part. C'mon—ten fingers and ten toes? It's a
cultural cliché, chickie. If you look very, very closely, you'll see that this
little dude has an extra digit. Check the piggies on this shot—it's the one with
the best angle."
Gwen took one of the pictures and studied the blurred squiggle that looked
more like a chicken embryo than a future child. Sure enough, there was an extra
tiny stub on one of the little feet.
Erin Westland had been pregnant for almost four years. Which meant, among
other things, that Kyle Radcliff was not Patrick's father.
An hour later, Gwen was sitting in Kyle's downtown office and none too happy
about being there. Sure, he was a son of a bitch, but she wouldn't wish the news
she carried on any living soul.
"Did you find them?" he demanded.
"I've learned a few things," she said cautiously, "but mostly everything I've
found just leads to more questions."
"Great. That's just great." He slumped into his chair and gave her a resigned
look. "What do you need to know?"
Gwen settled down in one of the wing chairs opposite his desk. "For starters,
does Patrick have an extra toe on one foot?"
He looked startled. "No. He was perfectly normal. In fact, he was a beautiful
baby."
"Were you right there in the room when he was born?"
He shook his head. "I know that's the fashion these days, but neither Erin
nor I wanted that. As I've said before, she was very private about certain
things. She just wanted the midwife, no one else."
Gwen made a mental note to place another call to Vermont and steeled herself
for the hard part.
"Tell me about Erin's sex life. Leave out the boring parts, which would be
anything including you."
He let out a short bitter laugh. "So, you did manage to find out a thing or
two about Erin."
"You knew she was fooling around?"
"She was a slut," he said flatly. A bitter smile stretched his lips. "Well,
what do you know. I finally figured out what you two have in common."
Gwen folded her arms. "Real nice. You're talking about the mother of your
child, right?"
"As far as I know," he said glumly.
"You have any reason to doubt paternity?"
"I always assumed Patrick was my son, even though he looks so much like Erin.
Now I'm not so sure."
"When did you find out she was involved with other men?"
His jaw clenched so hard that a muscle twitched alongside his mouth.
"Yesterday," he admitted.
"I'm going to need a name." Something flickered in his eyes that prompted her
to add, "Or a list."
"I can do better than that. I can get you pictures."
He reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a manila envelope, which he
threw into Gwen's lap.
She slid out a sheaf of eight-by-ten prints and began to leaf through them.
The pictures caught Erin in a wide variety of compromising positions—the girl
was nothing if not flexible—with several attractive partners. Gwen shuffled
through them until one caught her attention. He was young, blond, and very
familiar.
Gwen knew this man—or more accurately, this changeling—as Adrian
Archer.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The rest of the weekend passed quickly. Gwen left a message at Extreme for
Adrian Archer, making it plain he needed to call her immediately. She called
Jason and left a message warning him about the spyware that had shown up on her
computer and letting him know there was a good chance his system had also been
infected.
She stuffed three twenties into an envelope to mail to the artist who'd
scaled down the sketch. It was a quick job, but he'd faithfully translated the
big sketch, and even added some depth and shadow without changing the subject's
appearance. Gwen fed the original into her scanner and sent a copy to Tamar. By
sunset, the nun's contacts would have it all over the streets.
After a brief hesitation, she dialed Ian's number. She had a lot of balls in
the air right now, but Ian was right—she needed to explore and master her
"Qualities" as soon as possible.
For the first time she was actually looking forward to it. After all, look at
how successful she'd been with Irena. Granted, she'd scared the crap out of the
poor kid, but the end result was a damn good lead on the girl's former captor
and her friends' current location.
Ian answered on the first ring. "Ready to resume the lesson?"
"As a matter of fact, that's why I called. Can you come over again tonight?"
"Let's see—moonrise is around seven tonight. I can meet you in the same
place, shortly before."
"I'll be there."
She hung up and dialed Marcy's work number. Jeff Monroe answered with a
crisp, "District attorney's office, Ms. Barlett's line."
"Hey, there. Is your boss around?"
"Gwen," he said, suddenly sounding much more tentative. "I've been meaning to
call you."
Her brow furrowed. "Problem?"
"I'm… not sure."
"Just spit it out," she said impatiently.
"Not easily done during work hours," he said softly. "And speaking of which,
I was late to work the night after our date. Marcy wasn't very happy with me."
"What? You want me to put in a good word for you with the boss?"
"No!" he said sharply. In a lower voice, he added, "I don't think the
assistant DA needs to know I was sleeping with her best friend."
She still wasn't following, but she did catch his use of past tense, as in
was sleeping.
Damn. A good man was hard to find, and vice versa.
"I get it," she said, letting him off the hook easy. "One of those
office-politics, conflict-of-interest things."
"I really can't talk about it right now. I'll call you."
The phone went dead. Gwen shook her head in bemusement and dialed the number
again. Jeff reprised his spiel.
"Marcy?" she requested.
"Oh. Sorry. I'll put you through."
Marcy answered her phone in the same brisk tone her assistant had used.
"Not much news on the investigation yet," Gwen said. "I'm just calling to see
how you're doing."
"No news," Marcy said slowly. "But you have no reason to think they might
be…"
"None," Gwen assured her. "But I've got to tell you, Kyle's luck with women
went straight downhill after you showed him the door."
"You know, that should brighten my mood considerably. The fact that it
doesn't worries me a little."
"No shit. What's going on?"
Marcy sighed. "Kyle's not the only one who's having problems at home. Trudy
has been… I'm not sure how to put this."
A human leech? An insecure little bitch? A spoiled, moody daddy's girl? A
contender for the Jewish-American Princess crown? Hell, Gwen could take that
ball and run with it in any number of directions.
"Take a stab at it," she suggested.
"She seems distracted, and more than a little disconnected. She's more
jealous, sometimes to the point of paranoia."
This sounded fairly serious. Until this moment, Gwen had had no intention of
telling Marcy about her encounter with Trudy. But if there was a pattern
happening, it might be an important piece of information.
"I guess I should tell you that Trudy took a swing at me the other day."
"Seriously?"
"As serious as a bitch slap is ever going to get. One of these days you
should let me show you two how to throw a decent punch."
She could almost hear Marcy's shudder over the phone. "Oh yeah—that's exactly
what Trudy needs right now. But we all have our moods," she added hastily. "This
will pass."
"Okay," Gwen agreed. "Moving on?"
"Please. And may I say, you showed remarkable restraint."
"I thought so. About Kyle—has he contacted you recently?"
"No. Why do you ask?"
The wary sound in Marcy's voice suggested that this hadn't been an unfamiliar
question of late. "Just so you know, I'm going to be taking a close look at your
ex. It seems his wife was fooling around. A lot. There's some question of
paternity."
"Kyle knows this?"
"Yeah. He said he just found out yesterday, but with Erin and Patrick gone,
the timing doesn't look good."
Marcy blew out a long breath. "Kyle's not stupid enough to do a Scott
Peterson imitation. A wife and child are not easily discarded."
"It's not a question of stupidity; it's a question of arrogance."
"Is there really much difference?"
"Good point. Listen, I just wanted to let you know how this might go."
"Thanks. Keep me posted, okay?"
Gwen clicked off her phone and started to look toward the clock. She caught
herself in time and turned toward the office window, instead. If she was going
to do this "cycles of nature" thing, she'd better start paying attention to what
was going on.
Daylight was fading, and the velvety green shadows that gathered under the
old trees were venturing out to welcome the coming night. The moon would soon be
rising. The scene was very pretty and possibly even poetic, but it didn't do a
damn thing for her.
She gave up and looked at the clock. It was a quarter of seven. So much for
being at one with the rising moon.
Gwen shut down her computer and headed for the garden.
Ian Forest was waiting for her under the old maple. One of these days, she'd
have to ask him how he got around.
He greeted her with a smile that did interesting things to her heart rate.
"Can you tell me where the moon will rise tonight?"
She shook her head. "I have no idea when and where the moon plans to rise, or
what phase it's in. I don't feel a damn thing. But I can tell you the names of
the astronauts who landed on it, if that's any help."
A frown flickered across his face. "I suppose a certain lack of awareness is
to be expected. Until just recently, you haven't been among others of your
kind."
"That makes a difference?"
"Of course. Qualities get stronger in proximity to others."
Gwen thought about that. "Then why are some of us left among humans as
changelings? You'd think kids would grow up stronger if they were with their
families, or at least with other people like them."
"You've just answered your own question. Not all Qualities are desirable in
and of themselves, and some combinations can be dangerous. That's why we pay
careful attention to genealogy."
"Except when you don't," Gwen said, suddenly understanding where this was
going.
"Except when we don't," Ian agreed. "Sometimes we get… careless, and children
are born of incompatible bloodlines. These children are put into fosterage with
humans until their gifts begin to emerge. At that time, a determination is
made."
"And then what?"
"It would depend, of course. Most often the young ones are brought in, taught
what they are, and given a place among us."
"What about the rare exception? And what happens to the human babies?"
He hesitated. "Each case is decided separately."
"Yeah? Who decides?"
"That's not something of immediate concern to you. It's more important for
you to concentrate on learning and controlling your abilities."
There was a strange note in his voice, and Gwen didn't think it was remorse
over those lost young lives. "You're worried about this third Quality, the
starlight thing."
"These gifts usually begin to manifest in adolescence. Yes, I'm concerned
that you have shown only two of the three." He gave her a slow, devastating
smile. "Perhaps if we spend more personal time together, this gift will emerge."
"Nice try," she said dryly. "But if this works on a the-more-the-merrier
basis, I know this guy who used to work for Edmonson. Adrian Archer. Maybe we
should call him over, join hands, sing 'Kumbaya.'"
Ian reacted like a clap of thunder.
"There's another?" he demanded, seizing her arm. "Here in Providence?
Describe him."
"Jesus, dial it down a notch or two, would you? He looks sort of like a young
Brad Pitt, minus the stubble. Taller, thinner, blonder. What's the problem?"
He dropped her arm and began to pace. "I don't know this Adrian Archer. To
the best of my knowledge, I was the only one of our kind in Edmonson's… employ.
What were the circumstances of your meeting?"
"Meetings. Plural."
She described the theft in the lab out in Lincoln, the recent drug meet on
the East Side, the recent meeting at the Extreme, and the strange result of the
drug testing of one of the dancers.
Ian nodded thoughtfully. "Of course I knew that drugs were available at
Underhill and the other clubs, but it was my understanding that the humans—Tiger
Leone, the Jamisons, and a few like them—handled that end of the business."
"Does it make a difference?"
"It might. It would certainly explain the results of the tests conducted on
that dancer, and might also explain why your Captain Walsh was involved with
Edmonson."
"They're selling something new, something law enforcement hasn't seen
before."
"Not for several hundred years, certainly. Our people have long made potions
from rare herbs, things that can have a rather profound effect on humans and
none at all on us."
"What's the effect?"
"It would depend on the herb, and also its preparation. A mild infusion can
be soothing. In stronger doses, these herbs usually act as some sort of
stimulant."
"A mild infusion, you said," Gwen murmured. "Like a tea."
"Yes, that's right."
She considered the soothing herbal brew Alice Powers offered them at The
Green Man. It did seem to have an effect on the woman—she calmed down as quickly
as someone who'd popped a Valium. It had had a somewhat different effect on
Jason, but then, he'd had about four cups of the stuff. And Jeff…
Suddenly the explanation for their two-person orgy became abundantly clear.
Ditto his reserve on the phone. People coming off Ecstasy had one hell of a
drop. Since Jeff was sufficiently hung-over the next morning to miss work, he
probably thought she'd slipped him something.
Which, in effect, she had.
"How could you make sure this drug is what you think it is?"
"I'd need a sample."
"I'm pretty sure I've got some."
A peculiar expression flitted over his face. "Have you tried it?"
"Yeah, when I thought it was some kind of herbal tea. It didn't do a thing
for me, but a friend of mine had some. A lot of it, actually. It definitely had
an effect on him."
"Is he still alive?"
She laughed shortly. "Yeah. It wasn't quite that good."
"I'm not sure I'm following you."
"This friend was over at my place. He mixed some concentrated tea with juice.
He should have added water, but he didn't, and he drank a lot of it. It made him
really frisky."
Ian's eyebrows rose. "The tea acted as an aphrodisiac?"
"That's right. The effect was fairly similar to how someone might act after a
hit of X. The weird thing is, a normal cup of tea seems to have a calming
effect."
"I know this herb," Ian said. "In different doses and manner of preparation,
it mirrors the effect of popular street drugs: marijuana, amphetamines, and, as
you have observed, Esctasy. Like marijuana, it is a completely natural
substance, but the intoxicants it contains are quite different from any of the
known illegal substances."
"So if this stuff was tested, it would look like herb tea."
"Or a capsule of powdered herbs, or even a small tablet," Ian concluded.
"So in any form, it's virtually undetectable," Gwen mused. "Is there a lot of
this stuff around?"
"That seems unlikely."
"Then I can see why Edmonson wanted Walsh in on this. If one of his people
got picked up for distribution, Walsh could arrange a switch. The tea leaves
look and act like weed. I'm guessing the pills and capsules are made to look
like street drugs."
"I would assume so, yes."
"So the dealer's lawyer has the stuff tested, and it looks like the only
thing his client is guilty of is scamming a bunch of party people."
"Yes."
Gwen shook her head. "It's a lot of trouble to go through just to avoid a
routine bust for weed and speed."
"That would depend. Most low-level dealers are expendable. Few are
sufficiently well informed to implicate their suppliers. The police can arrest
as many street dealers as they like, and no one sheds tears over the death of a
Tiger Leone. But what of the people who use the drugs? For some, the penalties
can be inconvenient."
"A sting, then? Extortion?" She turned the possibilities over in her mind.
"Edmonson's people could sell the herbal drugs to rich college kids,
professionals, politicians—anyone who'll pay to avoid a drug conviction. If
they're picked up, arrange the switch with Walsh, resell the original drugs,
pocket the cash. A lot of people would pay good money for that kind of service.
If they had enough chutzpah, they might even threaten the arresting officers
with a lawsuit for false arrest. Edmonson would profit from that, too—he had his
own law firm."
"All of this sounds plausible."
"Of course, you couldn't go to that well too often. If the ability to switch
the drugs depends upon Walsh, the department couldn't screw up too often or he'd
lose his job."
"Unless he was seen as a crusading, incorruptible police chief because he
weeded out tainted members of the force."
"Like me," she said bitterly. "Son of a bitch."
Rage rose in her like black mist, dimming her vision. A moment passed before
she realized that the dwindling clouds had reformed into a dense blackness that
blocked out the stars. In the back of her mind, a small traitorous voice
suggested that Gwen was responsible for this, as well.
She turned her back on Ian and drew a long, shuddering breath.
"We can do nothing more tonight," he said quietly. "Whatever the starlight
holds for you is blocked by your anger."
Gwen whirled back toward him. "Then unblock it. Let's put all the cards on
the table."
"Can you dance?"
For a long moment she stared at him. "Jesus Christ on stilts. You're
serious."
"Of course."
"C'mon! Dancing in the starlight? How Tolkien is that?"
"Mind and body are closely related. Movement frees the flow of power. You can
probably accept that humans can treat depression through exercise, that yoga and
tai chi make their practitioners more centered and connected, that martial arts
develop the ki. Given your background, you may believe that prayer is more
powerful when focused by the movement of rosary beads through the fingers of a
penitent. If these things are plausible, why is it so difficult to believe that
dance, particularly in the company of others of our kind, strengthens our
Qualities?"
"You make it sound almost reasonable," she grumbled.
"It is reasonable. Moreover, it works. Come." He extended a hand to her.
Gwen shook her head. "They didn't exactly have cotillions where I grew up. I
can shake my stuff, but I don't think that's what you've got in mind. Is there
another option?"
He lifted one eyebrow. "Now that you mention it." He pulled her to him and
claimed her lips before she realized his intention.
The kiss was different than those she'd recently shared with Jeff. Her senses
filled with the scent of woodsmoke and green forests, and the lure of darker,
unknown places. Any thought of resistance faded.
They sank together to the grass. Gwen stripped off her shirt, hungry to feel
his skin on hers. But in her building sexual excitement was another
note—something dark and fierce, alien yet disturbingly familiar. She got the
impression that every nightmare she couldn't quite remember was trying to push
through a wall in her mind.
If this was the Quality, she wanted no part of it.
Gwen pulled away, chilled in a way that had nothing to do with the evening
breeze on her skin. She rolled up into a sitting position and wrapped her arms
around her knees. If she hugged herself hard enough, she could almost control
the shaking.
Ian rolled to one side and propped his head up on one elbow. A casual pose,
but Gwen detected a hint of worry in his eyes.
"Something was happening. Tell me about it."
"It wasn't good, but it was big."
"Perhaps a bit too much for a first manifestation. Our Qualities tend to
manifest more powerfully around others of our kind. That's one of the reasons
why we're rather widely scattered."
"Put too many in the same room, we reach critical mass and blow up?"
"Not as such. But yes, it can be dangerous. That's why some of the young
whose bloodlines are in questions are placed among humans."
Gwen's phone rang. Ian shook his head in resignation and got to his feet.
"I know," he said. "You've got to take this."
He picked up his discarded coat and shirt when did that come off, anyway?—and
melted into the shadows beneath the old tree.
Gwen snapped her gaze away from Ian and clicked on the phone. "Talk."
"It's Tamar. That picture you sent to me rang a bell. Can you meet someone
tonight? Right away?"
She reached for her tee shirt and rose to her feet.
"Just tell me where, and I'm on my way."
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Gwen sashayed into the pool hall down by the river and presented her GiGi
Silver ID at the door. The bouncer glanced at it and gave a skeptical grunt—most
people thought twenty-one was a bit of a stretch for her—but he handed back the
card and waved her into the room.
There was only one man in the room wearing a bright yellow shirt. He was a
big guy, Latino. According to Tamar, he was on the same kind of hunt as Gwen.
Two young cousins had disappeared and he'd followed their trail from Mexico to
California, and from there to Providence.
The man gave Gwen an appreciative once-over as she strode over to his table,
but his jaw dropped when she mentioned her name.
"You are she the holy sister sends?"
"That's right. You got a problem with that?"
He spread both hands, palms up, in an almost courtly gesture. "Forgive me,
chica, but I was not expecting…"
His eyes slid over her, taking in her gel-spiked hair, her heavily made-up
eyes and her crimson mouth, the snug black top and the even tighter black jeans
(not to mention the wide strip of skin in between), the garnet stud on her
belly-button ring, the stiletto-heeled ankle boots.
"Me," Gwen summed up.
"Truly. The sister spoke of an… ángel que se venga?"
An avenging angel? That was a little dramatic, even for Sister Tamar.
"My wings are at the cleaners. Sorry about that," Gwen said dryly. "And if I
come as a shock, you're lucky the 'holy sister' isn't riding shotgun tonight."
His dark brows met in a frown of puzzlement. Idiom overload was Gwen's guess.
Since he seemed a little uncomfortable with English, Gwen dropped into the
street Spanish she'd picked up from the girls in juvenile. "Sister Tamar said
you recognized the man in the sketch. Tell me where I can find the motherless
fuck."
"Mierda! This is how the Spanish is taught in American schools?"
"Depends on where you went to school. This guy, did he have any girls with
him? Two of them, blond. Probably Russian girls, and about the age of the kids
you're looking for."
"If I found any girlchild in the possession of such a man, would I leave her
with him?" he demanded.
Gwen shrugged. "Some would."
His offended expression melted into something very much like sorrow. "That is
truth. You don't know me, so how else could you answer such a question?"
"Glad we cleared that up. Where can I find this guy?"
"Do you know Atwell Avenue?"
Gwen nodded, and he gave concise directions from that main road to one of the
less savory neighborhoods on the west side of I-95. When he finished, he gave
her an uncertain stare.
"This man is a wolf who preys upon young girls. You will not go to him
alone?"
"I'm thinking he'll be more likely to open the door to a client."
He nodded, clearly relieved by what he thought she was saying. "I would go
with you, but this man, he knows my face."
Gwen saw no reason to point out that she could pose as a client as
well as any man. A guy who sold sex—especially someone who wasn't peddling his
own ass—usually wasn't too picky about whom he sold to.
"Thanks for the offer. I hope you find the girls you're looking for."
"And you as well, chica." He gave her a quick smile, little more
than a baring of teeth. "Buena caza."
Good hunting.
Their eyes met, and a moment of perfect understanding passed between them.
The city was full of predators, but tonight, some of them would take a step or
two down on the food chain. And neither of them saw a damn thing wrong with
that.
Gwen got to the pimp's house about five minutes too late. As she killed the
lights on her Toyota, she noticed a skinny, furtive man climb the front stairs.
The front door swung open and the Latino she'd seen in her vision ushered the
client inside.
The next half hour passed in frustration and fury as Gwen waited for the man
to complete his purchase. As soon as he sauntered out, she was out of the car
and heading for the front door.
The pimp stared at her, first in surprise, then calculation. "What do you
want?"
Gwen tossed her head in the direction the John had taken. "Same thing he
wanted."
A leer spread across the man's face, and he cupped his groin with one hand.
"I can help you with that."
"Chicks, not dicks," she said succinctly. "Are you selling, or aren't you?"
"A little girl like you is buying?" he said, eyeing her skeptically.
"It depends. Do you have a girl who does hard tricks?"
His eyes widened. "How hard?"
"No bruises, no blood." Gwen shrugged. "Or very little."
"No problem. For that, two hundred for an hour."
She pulled several fifties from her leather bra. When he reached for it, she
snatched it away. "An hour," she said coldly. "In an hour's time, I'm coming
down the stairs and walking out of this house. If I don't, some very bad boys
will be coming in to get me."
His eyes lifted over her shoulder, scanned the street. No watchers were in
evidence, but then, they wouldn't be.
"An hour," he agreed, and reached for the money. This time, Gwen let him take
it.
She walked up the stairs and into the door on the left. A pale-haired waif
sat on the edge of the bed, looking at Gwen without surprise. Without emotion of
any kind. But when their eyes met, Gwen got a vivid mental image: The blond girl
down in the basement of this house, tears streaming down her cheeks as she
struggled to dig a grave in the hard-packed earth.
Gwen looked around for something to write on. There was no paper anywhere,
but a big oval mirror was strategically positioned by the bed.
Sick bastards.
She took her lipstick from her purse and drew a simple picture of a nun—just
a smiley face surrounded by the folds of an old-fashioned wimple, shoulders, and
a necklace with a cross. She sent a questioning look at the girl. After a
moment, she nodded.
Gwen drew three small stick figures with skirts. She pointed to one of the
figures, then to the girl, signaling This is you.
Again the girl nodded, and interest began to replace the dull, dead look in
her eyes.
Using a corner of the sheet, Gwen erased the second stick figure. She drew it
again, close to the smiley-face nun, then drew a circle around them both. She
added a pair of vertical lines coming down from the circle, and connected them
with a curved base. The drawing was crude, but it was recognizable as a tower. A
safe place.
Gwen tapped the stick figure who'd found safety with the nun. "Irena."
A smile burst over the girl's face like a sunrise, and she said something in
Russian that sounded like a brief, fervent prayer of thanksgiving. She touched
her heart, then reached for the stick figure that represented her.
"I am Marina," she said carefully.
"Hello, Marina. My name is Gwen. How much English can you speak?"
The girl considered. "Some of it."
"Fair enough. Listen, I'm going to take you to Irena. Somewhere you'll both
be safe."
Marina tapped her ear and shrugged helplessly.
"Great," Gwen muttered. She regarded her lipstick. It was getting
low—definitely long past time to wind up this conversation.
She drew an arrow from the Marina figure to the tower, then stood and held
out her hand.
The girl rose slowly and took the lipstick from Gwen's hand. She smeared the
third figure, added a pair of triangles to represent angel wings, and turned
mournful eyes to Gwen.
"I know," she said softly. She erased the picture with the sheet, then held
out her hand again. "Let's go."
Marina's small fingers curled around hers, and she followed Gwen down the
stairs.
The man met them at the foot of the stairs, his face twisted in a scowl. "You
rented the little bitch, that's it. You thinking about buying, I'm gonna need to
see a lot more money than you put down."
Without letting go of Marina's hand, Gwen leaned to one side and snapped off
two quick kicks—the first into the pimp's face, the second catching him in the
solar plexus. He folded, clutching his gut and wheezing.
A cry burst from Marina—a banshee howl of rage and pain. Suddenly she was on
him like a small fury, pounding him with her fists. Gwen let her get in a few
satisfying shots, then stepped in and delivered a roundhouse punch to the side
of his jaw. He went down and showed no sign of getting up anytime soon.
Gwen crouched beside him and took out his wallet. It held several hundred,
including Gwen's fifties. She took out the wad and handed it to Marina.
"For you and Irena."
The girl was still trembling with wrath. It took a moment for her to focus on
the money, and on Gwen's meaning. Her face hardened, and she shook her head
adamantly.
Gwen could respect that. Come to think of it, she wouldn't have taken it
either. She pocketed her two hundred and put the rest back.
She led Marina to the front door and pointed to the battered Toyota. "You go
ahead. Lock the door. You'll be safe, and I'll be there in just a minute."
Maybe the girl understood, maybe she was only too happy to leave her captor.
She ran out to Gwen's car and flung herself into the backseat.
Gwen looked around for something resembling a rope. The room on her right was
a sitting room, furnished decades ago with a cheap pair of chintz-covered chairs
and a sagging sofa. Faded drapes framed each of the two windows, tied back with
a triple tier of satin ropes ending in unraveling tassels.
Gwen yanked off the satin ropes and dragged the pimp over to the banister.
She propped him in a sitting position and tied him securely in place.
That accomplished, she slapped his cheeks until his eyes fluttered open. When
they focused, Gwen rose and stepped away from him.
And Remembered.
She brought to mind Marina's last memories of Anya, and willed them to fill
the room.
A shadow moved at the top of the stairs. Gwen looked up and smiled.
Something in her face brought a look of alarm to the pimp's eyes, and he
craned his head toward the source of that malevolent satisfaction.
And started screaming.
Anya's ghostly body tumbled down the stairs in eerie silence. She landed at
the pimp's feet, one limp, translucent arm flung out wide in such a manner that
it seemed to go through him.
He kept screaming even after the vision faded away, and his eyes were wild as
they tracked something moving about the room. Something only he could see.
For just a moment, fear shimmered an icy path down Gwen's spine. Maybe
memories this painful and powerful left more than a psychic echo. Perhaps there
really was something else in the room.
She shrugged away that thought and left the man alone with his ghosts or his
guilt. It didn't particularly matter to her which.
Once outside, she pulled her phone from her pocket and dialed Damian's
number. After all, she'd cheated him out of a drug bust, so she owed him. This
ought to pay off the debt with interest.
Gwen dropped off Marina at Sister Tamar's safe house and called Adrian from
her car. He agreed to meet her in the park where Damian had set up the drug
bust.
He was waiting when she got there. Instead of speaking, Gwen held up the
picture of Erin.
"I know this girl," he readily admitted. "She is one of us."
"Tell me."
"We met years ago. When we became intimate, her powers started manifesting.
Two years ago, I brought her to the earl. She agreed to work for him in
distribution."
"That herbal store down in Tiverton. The Green Man."
"Yes."
"But that's not your only means of distribution."
"Of course not. We offer something for everyone. The drugs were sold in all
of Tiger's clubs. We have people working the schools. And, of course, street
deals."
"Do you have some on you?"
He handed her a capsule. She pulled it apart and spilled the finely ground
powder into her hand. An image of a rocky, almost lunar landscape flashed into
mind.
"What is this stuff?"
"A very rare plant. It was found in a place in western Ireland called the
Burren."
"It grows there?"
He hesitated. "It was found there. The Burren is one of the
strangest ecosystems on earth. There are many plants among all those rocks that
have no business being there: alpine plants, plants from the Mediterranean
coast."
"Where is this one from?"
"That is hard to say," he replied carefully. "But it's being grown here,
locally."
"Show me."
Moonlight sifted through the purposefully stunted limbs of apple trees,
glinting on the tiny green globes that promised future fruit. Gwen walked down a
row of trees, but saw no other fields beyond. As far as she could tell, this
place looked like any other farm in rural Smithfield.
"Okay, where is it?"
Adrian pointed to a low-growing meadow flower in the grasses, a dainty blue
flower growing above fernlike foliage.
"That's it?" Gwen marveled. "You're growing organic Ecstasy in a
freaking apple orchard?"
"Yes. This is the only place in the world where it is grown."
"Who owns this place?"
His smile was faintly mocking, and his eyes searched her face as if greedy
for her reaction. "It would appear that you do."
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
"I own hell's happy acres?" she demanded. "Is there any sleazy real estate in
Rhode Island that Edmonson didn't own?"
Archer's smile broadened. "Actually, this farm belonged to your parents."
Gwen waited for some emotional response to this. Something was there, right
under the surface, but she just couldn't get to it. Or perhaps she didn't want
to.
"Is that the reason Edmonson killed them? To get control of this drug?"
"In truth, I don't think Edmonson wanted them dead. He wanted to know where
the plants were originally found."
"But they died in the car crash."
Adrian's only response was an eloquent shrug.
"Why would he admit to killing them?"
"Because he was ultimately responsible. He started a course of action that
could only result in their deaths. By our laws, there is only a slight
difference between responsibility and murder. How could it be otherwise, when
you're talking about a people who can influence others to do their bidding?"
Like Ian Forest. Despite everything he'd done, Gwen still felt the man's
magnetic pull.
Gwen scanned the rows of trees. "So how does this work?"
"The herb is picked in midsummer. Bunches are hung in that barn over there.
Once they are dry, they are sent away for packaging or processing."
"Where?"
"No one particular place. The scope of this business is still fairly small,
and it's operated as a cottage industry. This is a precaution, as well as a
practicality."
"I'll need the addresses of those cottages."
"Of course."
She turned a narrow-eyed gaze toward him. "You're being very helpful."
"Of course," he said again. "After all, you have my oath."
"Sure, but that doesn't mean you have to be so happy about it. You really
don't seem to mind selling out your boss."
"Technically, I'm not selling him out. You are, after all, the earl's only
heir."
Gwen nodded as if she actually bought that. For the time being, it was better
to let this lunatic think she was ready to climb onboard.
"Is there anything in the barn?"
"No. Last year's crop has been processed. There is still some of the product
in distribution channels, but the new harvest is only weeks away."
"Is this profitable?"
"Not particularly. It will be in time, perhaps."
"Then why are you doing this?"
He smiled faintly. "Why not? Haven't you ever used your Qualities to toy with
the humans?"
She was about to say no when the image of the pimp's chalk-white face and
quite literally haunted eyes came to mind.
"Only in a good cause," she said grudgingly.
"You don't consider simple entertainment sufficient reason?"
"That's sick," she said flatly.
"I don't see why."
"Because they're people?"
"They are vermin," he hissed. His face darkened, and suddenly he no longer
looked like a cute blond singer from a particularly vapid boy band.
"The humans breed like rabbits. They control the planet's resources and
destroy the environment in the process. Every year more species disappear,
squeezed out by 'human progress.' There is a very real possibility that we, the
Elder Races, might join them. What harm is there in indulging those few small
pleasures that remain to us?"
"Like fucking with the humans."
Her sarcasm found no foothold in Adrian's worldview. In fact, he looked
pleased that she'd grasped the concept so readily. "In a word, yes."
Gwen took a deep breath. "How many of us are left?"
He waved aside this question. "Our diminishing strength has less to do with
our numbers than with our Qualities. The Old Gifts are disappearing or changing.
Our birthrates are down, and acceptable powers seldom manifest with real
strength."
"Okay, but what does selling drugs to humans have to do with any of this?"
"It proves that they are weak," Adrian said flatly. "They are driven by their
appetites, eager for any chance to shrug off personal responsibility. They find
the mildest chemicals and herbs debilitating."
He stooped and plugged a spring of lacy foliage. "You and I could eat a large
bowl of this herb with sliced tomatoes and Italian dressing, and feel no ill
effects whatsoever."
"Unless there was a lot of salt in that dressing," Gwen retorted.
Adrian rocked back on his heels, looking as if she'd struck him across the
face.
"It is hardly the same thing," he said stiffly.
Gwen let the point go. "So you get your jollies from watching people make
fools of themselves."
"By exploiting their weakness," he emphasized. "Those of us who are strong
suffer no ill effects. Those who are weak sink ever deeper into their pitiful
little swamps."
"I don't like it. In fact, I want this stopped," she said, sweeping one arm
wide to indicate the field.
His smile was cold. "That may not be your decision to make."
"Why not? I thought you said I owned this place."
"True, but I also said the earl's property would fall to you if you met
the terms of inheritance. Have all three of your Qualities manifested?"
Gwen shrugged. "Ian Forest is working on that."
One corner of Adrian's mouth twitched into a sneer. "In that case, I wouldn't
plan to collect your inheritance anytime soon."
Gwen parked Sylvia's black Mercedes beside the road, around the corner from
The Green Man and beyond sight from the parking lot. Her landlady didn't mind if
Gwen used the car from time to time. Not many people would associate the elegant
vehicle with Gwen, but you never knew who might stop by for a cuppa and wonder
why she was skulking around the shop.
She found a fairly comfortable spot among the trees to the west of the shop
and settled in, lying on her stomach to keep out of view. It was a little damp,
but she'd been on worse stakeouts.
Alice Powers drove up shortly before ten. The lights flickered on in the
shop, and the tearoom lights quickly followed. Had to have that morning hit,
Gwen thought. Most likely the shop owner was thoroughly hooked on her own
products.
Within moments, a white Lexus pulled up in front of the shop. Gwen sat bolt
upright, startled by the familiar vehicle. She quickly caught herself and
dropped down out of sight.
A small, slim woman got out of the car and tucked a strand of her crimped red
hair behind her ears.
"Trudy Wasserman," murmured Gwen. "Why am I not surprised?"
What she was was pissed. What with one thing and another, Gwen had
enough to deal with without tripping over Trudy.
She waited until the redheaded woman returned to her car and pulled away. She
marched into the store and grabbed two boxes of the Green Man tea. Alice Power's
face darkened with dread when she took in the grim look on Gwen's face.
"Have you found Erin?"
"Not yet. Sorry, but I don't have time to chat," Gwen said, throwing a twenty
on the counter. She left without waiting for her change and ran to the Mercedes.
Fortunately, there weren't too many ways to get from Tiverton to Providence.
Gwen followed at a distance until she ascertained that Trudy was going to take
highways: Route 24 north to I-195, then west to Providence. All the better. It
was easy to tail someone in a crowd.
Trudy drove straight home. Gwen parked beside the Lexus in the lot across
from the condo. She jogged over to the building and rang the bell a couple of
times before Trudy responded.
"Hey. It's Gwen. I've got something for you."
"What is it?" Even through the intercom, Trudy's voice sounded suspicious.
"There's one way to find out."
The buzzer sounded, and Gwen yanked the door opened and took the stairs two
at a time. She pushed past Trudy and shut the door behind her, then tossed the
box of Green Man tea at the woman.
Trudy instinctively caught the box, bobbled it for a moment. When she
realized what she held, her eyes widened into limpid pools of guilt.
"Don't bother trying to sell me on coincidence," Gwen advised her.
The redhead tossed back her head and faced Gwen down. "All right, then, I
admit it: I've been watching Erin Westland for some time now."
"Why?"
"She's married to Kyle," Trudy said, her tone suggesting that this should be
self-evident.
"Again, why? Not why Erin married Kyle," she clarified, "although
that's definitely a question to ponder another day, but why are you so
interested in all the details of your girlfriend's ex?"
"Marcy was married to Kyle Radcliff for years. They have a history, and that
can be a powerful thing. You saw how she came running to you with his problems."
"So you decide to start following the second wife? That sounds dangerously
like obsession to me. How long has this been going on?"
"A few weeks," she admitted.
Gwen raised one eyebrow.
"Okay, maybe a few months. Four or five."
"So how does this work? You follow Erin Westland down to her place of
business, and decide to become a regular customer so you can keep an eye on the
new missus?"
Trudy sighed heavily. "You're not going to believe this."
"That's probably true, but tell me anyway."
"I went down to The Green Man the first time not knowing Erin worked there. A
friend of mine gave me a box of this herb tea. I really liked it, and
asked her where I could buy it. She sent me down to Tiverton. It's the only
place that sells it."
"What's your friend's name?"
"Sally. Sally Lyons."
That name sounded familiar, but Gwen couldn't quite place it. "Describe her."
"Well, she's about my age—late thirties—and about my height and build,
although she's slimmer, I'm sorry to report. She has long brown hair, lovely
hands. She's a very pretty woman. Very feminine."
That could describe a lot of people Gwen had seen around. "Do you have a
number for her?"
Trudy went off for her phone book, and came back from the bedroom with a slip
of paper in her hand. "Here's her home phone, though frankly, I don't know what
you expect to learn from her. Just because she buys tea at Erin Westland's shop,
it doesn't follow that she'd know something about the woman's disappearance."
"Couldn't hurt to ask. Can I give you a word of advice?" Trudy nodded
cautiously.
"Stop drinking that stuff. It doesn't exactly bring out the best in you."
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Gwen spent a good chunk of Tuesday at the station, going over her statement
about Kate Myers. She got to the church five minutes after her self-defense
class was supposed to start.
Damian and Jason were already there, avidly discussing the merits of Jason's
two-seater. The Miata and Damian's wreck were the only vehicles in the parking
lot.
"I called it right last week," Damian told her. "Looks like you scared them
all off."
"Looks like," she agreed. "Wait a minute—looks like we've got a couple of
takers."
A blue SUV pulled into the lot, and two women got out. One was the blond
political aide, and the other was the woman who had been so disturbed by last
week's demonstration.
Gwen herded everyone into the basement and pulled the attendance list out of
her file. As she went down it to check off the names of the women who showed up,
she noticed the name of one who hadn't: Sally Lyons.
That was the name Trudy had given her—the friend who'd turned her on to the
funny herbals.
Gwen got the two women started practicing the holds and escapes they'd
learned last week. Then she stepped into the stairwell and shut the door. She
called Sally Lyons's number and got a recording.
As soon as the voice message was finished playing, she dialed Kyle Radcliff.
"Have you got a recording of Erin's voice?"
"I don't think so," he said hesitantly. "She never liked video cameras, and
my voice is on our phone machine at home."
"Figures. What about the shop?"
He thought about that. "I'm pretty sure Alice left the voice message. But
come to think of it, Erin probably left her own message on her cell phone."
"I'm not in my office and don't have her file handy. Give me the number."
He recited the number. Gwen hung up on him and dialed it. Sure enough, a
young female voice invited her to leave a message. She hung up and dialed Sally
Lyons's number again.
The voices were the same.
First thing the next morning, Gwen was at the address given on Sally Lyons's
class-registration form. A little boy was in the front yard, absently kicking at
a Spider-Man backpack. He was definitely the kid in the photo Kyle had given
her.
"Hey, Patrick," she called, feeling a stab of guilt over using one of an
abductor's favorite ploys. Call a kid by name, chances are he'll assume he
should know you. Why parents insisted on displaying their kids' names on their
shirts and hats and backpacks was a mystery to Gwen.
He looked up and waved at her. "Hi!"
"Is your mom home?"
"Yeah, but she's making faces today."
"Making faces," she repeated.
"Uh-huh. She's coming right out. You'll see."
At that moment Sally Lyons opened the front door, and Gwen definitely saw.
The woman with Erin Westland's child was one of the women from Gwen's
self-defense class, the suburban mom in pastel pink who'd been worried about
hurting her workout partner.
Suddenly Sally Lyons was gone, and Erin Westland stood her in place. "Get
away from my son!" she shrieked.
The woman unsheathed her claws and came at Gwen in a sudden rush, swiping a
handful of manicure at Gwen's face.
Gwen leaned away from the blow and came back with a punch to the jaw. The
woman staggered back three steps, then dropped straight back onto her ass.
The little boy ran to her. She put her arms around him and glared over his
head at Gwen.
"I'm not going back," she insisted.
"Well, that proves you've got some sense. I don't plan to take you and
Patrick back to Kyle."
Erin sniffed. "I'm not afraid of him."
"Then what's this about?"
The woman gently moved Patrick away from her and put a hand under his chin,
turning his face to hers. "Go inside, honey. Mommy will be with you in just a
minute, okay?"
The child's gaze flashed to Gwen.
"I won't hurt your mother," she said.
"You promise?"
Acting on impulse, Gwen said, "I swear it by moon and star, word and wind."
The little boy's face lit up. "Hey! Can you make faces, too?"
Gwen obliged by crossing her eyes and sticking out her tongue. Patrick
giggled. "Not those kind of faces!"
"Patrick," Erin prompted in one of those no-nonsense mother tones. He turned
and scampered for the house.
"What didn't you want him to hear?" Gwen asked.
"He's in danger," Erin confided. "It's the others. They found out about
Patrick."
"So?"
"According to the Elders, he can't exist." A bitter smile twisted Erin's
face. "My son is a half-breed."
"Nice try. I know about your pregnancy. It lasted close to four years.
Patrick isn't Kyle's son."
"My relationship with Kyle goes back several years. I started seeing him when
he was still married to your friend Marcy."
"Wouldn't surprise me. But what about the other men?"
"What other men?" Erin demanded.
"Kyle had quite a photo album."
"Oh, that. Do you have any idea how easy it is to alter photos? Anyone who
worked for Edmonson had access to a lot of pornography. It wasn't hard to find a
photographer who could shoot me in similar positions and impose my face on some
other woman's body."
"Kyle was pretty pissed off."
"That was the whole idea," she retorted. "I didn't want him looking for me.
The man has an ego the size of Texas. If he thought I was fooling around, he
wouldn't want me. If he thought Patrick wasn't his, he wouldn't waste another
moment on him."
That also rang true with what Gwen knew of Kyle. "And what about Trudy
Wasserman?"
Erin huffed. "What about her? I was tripping over her every time I
turned around, so I decided to give her another hobby."
"An addiction."
The woman shrugged.
"You're deliberately getting people hooked on this stuff. And not just
Trudy."
"I need the money," Erin stated. "I've stretched my local identities to the
breaking point. It's time to start over, somewhere far away. The Green Man was
giving me a chance to build up a nest egg—"
"So why aren't you gone?"
"I can't get at the money without giving myself away," Erin said. "That's
where you come in."
Gwen lifted one eyebrow. "You're looking to hire me?"
"I figured Kyle might end up coming to you when I left. So I signed up for
your self-defense course to see what you had. I figured, if you could find me,
you were probably good enough to help me disappear."
"Glad to know I passed your little test," Gwen said dryly. "As much as I hate
to admit it, I'm being shadowed fairly closely by one sneaky pointy-eared son of
a bitch. If I can find you, chances are he can, too."
Erin's face fell. "I hadn't thought of that."
"I know where you can go. A friend of mine runs a safe house. There's
excellent security, police protection. They won't bother you there—keeping a low
profile is a high priority to these people."
"Our people," Erin corrected. She conceded with a shrug. "Very well.
I'll go to this safe house."
"You're welcome."
She shrugged again and started toward the house. Gwen fell into step. "I hope
it won't come as a shock to hear that I don't exactly trust you."
Erin darted a surprised glance in her direction. "Why should you?"
"Just so you know, I'm going to be very unhappy if anyone at Sister Tamar's
place is hurt because of you."
"I'll keep a low profile." Erin smiled sweetly. "Like you said, that's what
we do best."
Much to his dismay, Ian found himself obliged to pay a call on the man who
called himself Jason Cross. An unannounced visit, of course. Unfortunately,
Jason wasn't even slightly startled by the sudden appearance.
The man leaned against the kitchen counter in his "father's" bungalow and
crossed his arms. "So. To what do I owe the honor of this intrusion?"
"You haven't contacted me with your findings on Gwen."
"What findings? If you told me what you were looking for, I'd have a better
chance of noticing it."
"Selective observation? No, thank you. Tell me what you have managed to
discover."
Jason gave a concise report of her online activities, as well as those of
people who did her more complicated Internet work for her.
"Anything she knows, I know," he concluded. "She's working on a number of
things. Some background checks, a missing woman."
"Tell me about them."
"Aren't we supposed to be following a drug connection and erasing ties to
this Captain Walsh?"
"We must know everything she's working on." Ian gave him a keen look. "It
could be particularly uncomfortable if she starts looking too closely into Frank
Cross's death."
The man returned his stare. "Yes, I can see how that would be a problem for
you."
Doubt flickered in Ian's mind. He was certain that this man had killed Frank
Cross, but he couldn't pick up any inkling of guilt from the young man. Perhaps
he was a sociopath who knew no such emotions?
"Tell me about this missing woman."
"Her name's Erin Westland, aka Helene Tremaine. She's married to Kyle
Radcliff, the ex-husband of Gwen's friend Marcy Bartlett. She has a son. They're
both gone."
Ian's heart seemed to leap into his throat, then thud painfully back into
place. This was a most disturbing development. Especially now that Jason Cross
was involved.
"What progress has Gwen made?"
"We've visited the woman's shop. An herb shop down in Tiverton called The
Green Man."
This, too, was disturbing news.
Shaken, Ian left the little house and hurried to his car.
He drove to Erin Westland's shop and bought a box of the store's tea.
As soon as he got back to his car, he spilled some of the dried herbs into
his hand. He sniffed them, then touched a pinch to his tongue. The taste was
unmistakable.
It was true, then. These herbs, banished for centuries, must have blown into
the Burren from a gate that led into the Hidden land. And that could mean only
one thing:
James Avalon, Gwen's father, had figured a way in.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Gwen decided to take Sylvia's car to East Greenwich. In Kyle Radcliff's
neighborhood, a black Mercedes was the next best thing to camouflage. And unlike
her aging economy car, the Mercedes could exceed the speed limit. She drove with
grim concentration, weaving around slower vehicles and pushing the sedan to its
limits. The sooner she got to Kyle's place, the sooner the coming confrontation
could be done and over.
She'd never seen his house in East Greenwich. The home he'd shared with Marcy
in Providence had been pretty spiffy, but this place was obscenely huge. A
sprawling French colonial, all steeply peaked rooflines and small gables, was
set in at least an acre of manicured lawn and carefully landscaped beds. The
circular drive curved around a sea of late tulips, and azaleas bloomed amid the
foundation plantings. A fenced area behind the house suggested an in-ground
pool. Erin Westland was escaping a very posh cage.
Gwen pulled up at the front and rang the bell. No answer. She tried a couple
of times before deciding that Kyle had missed their appointment, probably just
to be a pain in the ass.
She was turning to leave when a fluttering curtain caught her eye. The
movement drew her gaze to the open window—and the grim scene beyond.
A tall, fair-haired male lay faceup on the carpet, his arms flung out wide.
Gwen went over to the window for a closer look.
It was definitely Kyle. His cable-knit sweater, once a natural sheep-colored
beige, was dark with blood. His face was unmarked, and his cold gray eyes were
open and staring.
Gwen reached for her phone to call it in. On impulse, she stopped, stuck the
phone back into her pocket, and climbed through the open window.
The room was remarkably tidy and very, very beige. The carpets, walls, and
furniture were all shades that could be found in a bowl of oatmeal. The only
color in the room was the pool of blood seeping into the carpet around Kyle
Radcliff's body.
As far as Gwen could tell, there was only one wound, but it had done the job.
Someone with remarkable aim had gotten him right in the heart. Judging from the
angle of the body, he'd been facing the open window and had fallen straight
back.
Gwen crouched beside the body. Her brow furrowed as she studied the wound.
The placement was perfect, but it was like no gunshot wound she'd ever seen.
Both his clothes and the flesh beneath had been torn, as if he'd been stabbed
with some sharp but strangely shaped object.
A glance at his hands discouraged that theory. Kyle lay with his arms flung
out wide and his palms turned up. There were no defensive wounds on his hands.
There probably would have been, if someone had come at him with a knife.
She picked up one hand and turned it to study the nails. They were neatly
trimmed and buffed, so her eyes went at once to the single imperfection: caught
under one nail was a single wavy, bright auburn hair.
Trudy's hair.
Gwen sat back on her heels, stunned into immobility. True, the woman was
ridiculously jealous. Marcy had said Trudy had been acting strangely, and yes,
she'd taken a swing at Gwen, but murder? It didn't seem possible.
She rose and walked over to the window. The angle was too perfect. Whatever
had hit Kyle had come through the open window. And the red hair? It was Trudy's,
Gwen had little doubt of that, but that didn't necessarily mean that Marcy's
lover had been in this room. Someone was manipulating the scene.
Gwen pulled out her phone and dialed Sister Tamar's private line. "Is Erin
still there?" she demanded.
The nun sniffed. "Yes, and she's quite the princess. Why? What's happening?"
"Her husband's dead. There's a chance that whoever killed him might come
after Erin. Lock the place down. Don't let anyone come or go."
"Done," Tamar said. "Do you know who did this?"
"Not yet. I've got to go."
She went to work on the body, searching for more telltale hairs. There were
three, two on the sleeves of Kyle's sweater and one entangled in his hair. None
were on the blood-soaked torso, which, to Gwen's way of thinking, argued
strongly for their placement after Kyle's death.
Her next stop was the kitchen, where she denuded a roll of paper towels. She
set to work wiping clean every surface in the room, including the windowsill and
the doorknobs, inside and out.
When she was reasonably satisfied that she'd obliterated every false trace of
Trudy's presence, she picked up her phone to call it in. She started to dial
Quaid's number before she remembered he was on leave, pending investigation in
Kate's murder. After a moment's thought, she dialed the station and asked to be
patched through to Ben Cerulo.
"It's Gellman," she told him. "I'm working on a missing-persons, and I just
got to a client's house for a meeting. Instead of a client, I have a body."
"I'll be right there," he said without hesitation. "Give me the address."
"Well, that could be a problem. It's in East Greenwich."
He huffed in exasperation. "Why are you calling me instead of the townies?"
"He has an estranged wife. She's not a suspect—she's been in Sister Tamar's
safe house since this morning. But she might be in danger. Can you get someone
over there? Preferably plainclothes?"
"You got it. Do you have any idea who might have killed your guy?"
Gwen's eyes slipped to the telltale red hairs she'd placed in a Ziploc
sandwich bag. "I'll leave that to the East Greenwich people. Thanks."
On her way out, she left a fresh set of prints on the windowsill, the front
doorknob, and the doorbell. The town cops would know there'd been a
housekeeping, and her prints would suggest that it had happened before her
arrival.
Before she called the townies, she did a circle of the property, looking for
weapons conveniently stashed in the landscaping. When she was confident there
was nothing to find, she sank down on the front step and dialed 911.
After the East Greenwich police were finished with her, Gwen drove straight
to Marc's condo. Her friend's little silver BMW was not in the parking lot, but
Trudy's Lexus was.
Gwen entered the building by following two male tenants and took the stairs
up to the third floor. She knocked on the door for a while before Trudy swung it
open.
The redhead was dressed—barely—in a sea-green teddy and a matching short
robe. She looked rumpled and sexy, as if she'd been called from her bed, but not
from sleep.
Trudy regarded Gwen with a beatific smile. "Hello gorgeous," she said in a
cheerfully awful imitation of Barbra Streisand imitating Fanny Brice.
Gwen cast her eyes toward the ceiling. "Forget it," she advised. "You don't
have the nose for it."
The woman actually giggled. "I did, once," she confided. "I had it bobbed.
See?" She presented her profile.
"Yeah, whatever. Where were you this afternoon?"
"Oh, who cares?" Trudy swayed closer and draped her arms around Gwen's neck.
"Hold still, will you?"
"I'm not moving," Gwen pointed out as she tried to disentangle herself. It
wasn't easy—the woman looked as boneless as a lap cat and twice as blissful, but
she clung to Gwen with surprising strength and rapidly increasing passion.
"Jesus, how much of that stuff did you drink?"
"What the hell is going on in here?" demanded Marcy.
Gwen glanced over her shoulder. Her friend stood in the open door, looking as
if she'd just been whacked between the eyes with a two-by-four.
"Don't just stand there," she snapped. "Help me get Trudy into bed."
"Why? It looks to me like you're doing just fine on your own."
Just then Trudy managed to plant a wet one squarely on Gwen's mouth. Gwen
seized two handfuls of wavy red hair and held her off. "A little help? She's
higher than a weather satellite."
"Impossible," Marcy stated flatly. "Trudy doesn't take drugs."
Gwen raised an eyebrow.
"Okay, she'll smoke some weed once in a while, but other than that she is
extremely health conscious. Annoyingly so."
Trudy started to sag as euphoria gave way to stupor. Gwen staggered under the
sudden deadweight. "Give me a hand, would you?"
Finally convinced, Marcy kicked off her heels and came over to help. Between
the two of them, they got Trudy into bed. She promptly rolled over to her side,
curled up, and started snoring.
They slipped out of the bedroom. Marcy closed the door and walked over to the
liquor cabinet. She poured herself a glass of wine with shaking hands.
"Has she been acting like this a lot recently?"
Marcy slumped into a chair. "If you mean has she been dry-humping my friends
and associates, no. But she's been having mood swings. She has definitely been
more insecure and possessive."
"The weaknesses grow stronger," Gwen murmured, remembering Adrian's screed in
the orchard.
"What is she taking? Do you have any idea?"
"An herbal blend. Something new. It's powerful stuff, but it hasn't found its
way onto the list of illegals yet."
Marcy shook her head in sorrow and astonishment. "How long has this been
going on?"
"The best I can figure, four or five months."
She was silent for a long time. "So it's gotten to be an addiction."
"I'd say so, yes."
She set down her glass and covered her face with both hands. "I don't know
what to do with this." Her voice sounded muffled and shaken, as close to tears
as Gwen had ever seen her.
"Take your time. This has got to be a shock."
Marcy took a long breath and lowered her hands, folding them in her lap. "If
this isn't a recognized substance, can she go into rehab?"
"It probably wouldn't be covered by major medical, but I don't see why not."
Marcy waved that obstacle away. "I can afford to pay for treatment. The thing
is, what happens after? I don't know if I'm up to dealing with this. You know
about my father."
Gwen nodded. Marcy had been raised by her maternal grandmother because her
father was usually too drunk to pay much attention to his kids. The experience
had left Marcy with an extreme aversion to any kind of overindulgence. That was
one reason super-healthy, squeaky-clean Kyle had appealed to her. It was one of
the reasons she'd gravitated toward health-conscious Trudy. There was something
ironic in the fact that Trudy was probably an addict before she discovered the
herb. The fact that she was addicted to a person just made it harder to
recognize.
"Would it help to know that she didn't realize what the herb was when she
started taking it?"
Marcy nodded slowly. "I hate to admit it, but yeah, that does help."
"Good, because you've got a lot of hard decisions ahead of you. I hate to
dump this on you right now, but it won't wait. Marcy, Kyle is dead."
"What? When? How?"
"He was stabbed or shot once, right through the heart. I found him at his
house."
"How awful." Marcy reached for her hand. "I'm so sorry you had to deal with
that."
Gwen squeezed her friend's hand and released it. "There's more."
She took the little plastic bag containing Trudy's hairs from her pocket and
tossed it onto the table beside Marcy's chair. The woman glanced at it and
looked up, her face ashen.
"Where did you find these?"
"I think you know."
Marcy exploded to her feet and began to pace like a caged panther. "Damn it,
Gwen, please tell me you didn't tamper with a crime scene!"
"Would you rather I left evidence incriminating Trudy?"
"Yes!" She whirled away, and her shoulders slumped. "No. But it doesn't
matter what I think. If Trudy killed Kyle, you've just made both of us
accessories after the fact."
"Do you honestly think Trudy is capable of stabbing a guy through the heart?"
"No, but I never expected to come home and find her trying to drag you into
bed, either. She can't stand you."
"That's the cross I have to bear," Gwen murmured. "For what it's worth, I
don't think Trudy killed Kyle."
"I don't either, but I trust the system to prove her innocence. You did, too,
once upon a time."
"As in, before I was framed and pushed off the force?"
Marcy came back over and sat down across from her. "Gwen, I'm sorry as hell
about what happened to you, and I won't argue that the justice system is
infallible, but I can't ignore all the rules just because someone I care about
is involved."
"And that's the problem: I'm involved. Walsh is gunning for me. If he finds
any connection at all between me and Trudy, you'd better believe the evidence
will turn against her."
Marcy studied her face. "Walsh would do that? You're sure?"
"Very. He's involved with the people who held Tiger Leone's leash. They have
something on Walsh—what, I haven't been able to find out. But I'm pretty sure he
ordered the call that turned Tiger Leone onto Tom Yoland and Carmine Moniz the
night Winston's was busted. Just last week, someone in vice set up a couple more
cops who were looking into that mess. That didn't work. Now one of those cops is
trying to work his way out of a murder frame-up."
"Can you prove any of this?"
"It may take a while. Until then, I'd like to keep Trudy out of the line of
fire."
For a long moment, Gwen watched the struggle on Marcy's face. She felt as
guilty as hell about dumping this on her friend, but she didn't see a better way
to play it.
"What if Trudy…"
"One way or another, I'll find out who killed Kyle," Gwen said. "You have my
word on that, by moon and star, wind and word."
Marcy looked puzzled. "What's all that about?"
"It means," Gwen said quietly, "that you can be extremely fucking certain the
truth will come out."
CHAPTER TWENTY
Gwen's phone rang as she emerged from the building.
"There's a problem at the safe house," Tamar announced.
The nun sounded more rattled than Gwen had ever heard her. "What happened?"
"It's Oscar, our English sheepdog. He was killed last night."
An unexpected wave of nausea roiled through Gwen even before Tamar's memories
hit her. She swallowed bile and tried to blink away the image of a gutted
sheepdog, his long fur matted with blood. She hadn't quite believed the tale the
midwife told—at least, not until this moment.
"You're sure Erin didn't leave last night?"
"Absolutely. What does that have to do with Oscar?"
"Did anyone else leave?"
"Yes," Tamar said slowly. "We have another young mother here. Rita. She left
earlier that evening, before you called. But she doesn't look anything like
Erin—she's blond and a little plump."
"What about her kid?"
"A little girl, about four years old."
"Did the kid walk out with her mom?"
"No. She was sleeping and wrapped in a blanket. Rita carried her out. Where
is this going?"
"Go check on Erin and call me back."
Gwen reached for the electronic gate opener clipped to her car's sun visor
and pulled into Sylvia's drive. A green Civic followed her in. She recognized
Jeff's car and groaned. The last thing she needed right now was a confrontation
with an irate fuck buddy.
He came out of the car like a well-groomed thunderstorm and followed her into
her office. "We need to talk."
The phone in Gwen's hand sounded, and she held up a finger to indicate Jeff
should wait.
"Erin's here," announced Sister Tamar.
Her voice didn't sound any steadier than it had during her last call. "You're
sure?"
"Yes! Why do you keep asking that?"
"What about the blond woman and her kid?"
"That's where things get strange. Rita came in shortly after you last called,
only she didn't have her daughter with her."
"Was this before or after you checked on Erin?"
A long silence greeted her question. "Someday you're going to tell me what's
going on." "Before or after?"
"Shortly before."
Whatever Tamar said next was drowned out by a woman's scream, shortly
followed by the sound of angry voices raised in accusation and protest.
"I've got to check on that," Tamar said.
"Call me back."
Gwen clicked off the phone and turned to Jeff. The cool-off time seemed to
have done him some good. The expression on his face had dialed down from furious
to merely agitated.
"You were saying?" she said resignedly.
Jeff pointed to the photo of Erin on Gwen's desk. "Who is that?"
She picked it up and handed it to him. "Someone I was hired to find. You know
her?"
"No, but I've seen her around. A lot."
"Tell me."
Jeff put the picture down. "I saw her several times around the courthouse,
near the office. Once or twice when I went out to lunch with Marcy, she'd be in
the restaurant. I saw her once in the health club where Marcy and I worked out."
"Did you ever point this out to Marcy?"
His face turned red. Gwen caught on, and suppressed a smile. "You thought she
was following you."
Jeff shrugged.
"Hey, it was a logical assumption, especially if she'd seen you in your
racquetball shorts."
His grin was faintly sheepish. "Thanks. I guess. So she was following Marcy?"
"Well, since she was living with Marcy's ex-husband, that seems like a
reasonable assumption. When did all this happen?"
"Not for a while. Four or five months ago. I haven't seen her since."
Gwen could understand why. If Erin was planning Kyle's death and needed
someone to pin it on, she'd probably decided that Trudy was a better candidate
than Marcy. Erin certainly wouldn't be the first among the Elder Folk to
recognize and exploit a human weakness.
And they didn't stop with humans. Obviously Erin had made a point of learning
about Marcy's friends. She knew enough about Gwen to sign up for her
self-defense class. Quite likely, she knew a few things about Gwen's
friends—including Sister Tamar. All that bullshit about protecting her
half-breed son was a way to get into Tamar's safe house. That gave her an
airtight alibi for the time of Kyle's death.
Gwen's phone rang again. "Put Erin on the line," she said by way of greeting.
"I don't think that's a good idea," Tamar said. "She's extremely upset."
"Let me guess: She woke up and went to check on her kid, and found out that
Rita's blond daughter was in the bed. Patrick is nowhere to be found, but Rita
denies leaving the safe house, much less absconding with Patrick."
"How the hell did you know that?"
"Lucky guess. Put her on."
A ragged snuffle announced that the grieving mother was on the line. "Nice
touch with the dog," Gwen said softly. "You just had to rub my nose in it,
didn't you?"
"She took Patrick!" Erin wailed. "My baby's gone!"
"Go ahead—work the room. But listen carefully, bitch: You're fucking my
friends, and that's not allowed."
"What can you do about it?" Erin said tearfully.
"Don't worry. You'll be finding out soon."
She clicked off and dialed Damian's number. She'd called him on the way to
confront Trudy and asked him to help watch over Tamar and her girls. There were
other cops around, but Gwen wasn't convinced she could trust any of them.
"Go," he said—his usual greeting.
"Erin Westland is about to leave the safe house. How soon can you get there?"
"Can she do that?"
"Sister Tamar can't hold anyone against her will. Erin is about my size and
age. Big blue eyes, long brown hair. Or she might look about thirty-five, with
brown eyes. Hell, she could look like damn near anything."
"So I follow whoever leaves the safe house, and hope it's the right person.
Is that the plan?"
"I wish I had a better one."
Jeff set the picture down on the desk. "You seem busy. I should let you get
back to work."
"Thanks." When he didn't move, she raised an eyebrow. "And yet you're still
here."
"What was in that stuff I mixed with the juice?"
She shoved both hands through her hair. "It's an herbal mix. Nothing
chemical, no lasting harm. But it can be a strong aphrodisiac. You can believe
me or not, but I didn't know what it was at the time."
He shook his head. "I don't know what to think. But I was out of it until
nearly noon. How did you get up early to go to work?"
"I never went to sleep. After you conked out, I took a shower and left
early."
"How is that possible?" he demanded. "That stuff affected you as much as it
did me."
"Afraid not. Different metabolism. Listen, I don't have time to explain it
right now." Since he didn't seem inclined to leave, Gwen headed for the door. He
grabbed her arm and swung her back to face him.
"Make time."
The petulant, demanding expression on his face was all too familiar. Maybe
the herbal tea made people act like possessive assholes, maybe it just fanned
embers that had been banked and hidden. Gwen didn't know, but at the moment more
pressing matters were demanding her attention.
"You were affected by the tea. I wasn't."
"That's impossible, you were a wild woman."
"That was all me that night. I usually dial it down with you."
"Oh."
He released her arm, and the stricken look on his face confirmed beyond
question his ex-fuck-buddy status.
"Sorry about the hangover," she said. "I guess I'll see you around."
He mumbled something and left the office. Gwen dialed Marcy's home number on
the way to her car.
"How is she?"
"Sleeping like the dead," Marcy said. "How long is that likely to last?"
"Until midmorning, at least. Call me as soon as she wakes up."
"Why? So the three of us can get our stories straight?"
Gwen let the sting fade a bit before responding. "I guess I had that coming."
The phone rang again almost as soon as she ended the call.
"Gwen, this is Shawna O'Riley. I'm at Providence Hospital. It's Damian."
"What happened?"
"They're not sure. He was hit in the chest with enough force to break two
ribs. Fortunately he was wearing Kevlar."
"Smart man. How's he doing?"
"He's alive, and we're all grateful for that. Whatever hit him stopped his
heart, but a good Samaritan gave him CPR and called an ambulance. He's in a lot
of pain, but he's asking for you. Can you come down?"
"I'm on the way."
She made the drive to the hospital in a record eighteen minutes. A nurse
directed her to the waiting room where the O'Riley clan gathered. There were at
least a dozen of them, and they all looked up when she entered the room. The
collective force of all those brown eyes set her back a step.
For the first time she understood what Ian meant when he said the Elder Folk
gained strength in numbers. She wondered, briefly, what it would have meant to
grow up with this kind of support.
Shawna rose and came over to her. "You won't be able to stay long. The
doctor's only letting you in because he figures it's the only way Damian will
behave."
Gwen smiled faintly and followed her down the corridor. Damian was propped up
in bed, looking strangely pale for a Black man.
"Thanks, sis," he said. He winced, as if even that much talking was painful.
"Don't be long," Shawna warned. She backed out and shut the door softly.
Gwen leaned against the door and folded her arms. "Do you have any idea what
hit you?"
"Could be wrong about this, but I think it was a motherfucking arrow.
What's next? Twin motherfucking scimitars?"
"Take it easy. Did you see who shot you?"
"No. Judging from the angle, the dude was in the trees. I hear this
whoosh and something long was coming down at me. Next thing I knew, that
Forest guy from the sports bar was pouring something nasty down my throat."
So Ian was shadowing her friends now?
"Next time I see him, I'll kick him in the balls for you."
"Appreciate that. Though you should probably also thank him for saving my
life."
"I'll be sure to pass along your regards. After I kick him."
"He left pretty fast. Probably took off after whoever shot me."
"That'd be my guess. Where was Erin Westland in all this?"
"Damned if I know. One minute I was watching the bitch, the next I was flat
on my ass."
The door behind Gwen started to open. She moved away, and a middle-aged nurse
came into the room. Her hair was seriously red—a color that was too bright to be
anything but a home dye job, but she had the pale, freckled skin to lend
credence to the basic color scheme.
"That's long enough," she told Gwen as she bustled over to the bed. "Officer
O'Riley needs to rest."
"Don't you be coming over here with that needle," he warned the nurse.
"It'll help you sleep," she said soothingly.
"I sleep just fine. Back off, Freckles."
The nurse's face firmed in disapproval. "You promised to rest after you
talked to your partner."
"You lose. She's not my partner."
"True story," Gwen confirmed. "You want Quaid down here?"
"Hell, no. What I want is for everyone to go home and get some sleep. Pass
that along to the family, will you?"
"For what good it will do."
He glanced at the nurse. "Tell you what, Red. Go check on the family. Anyone
who looks too wide awake, you feel free to go ahead and stick 'em."
The nurse huffed and sailed out of the room. Gwen grinned. "She likes you. I
can always tell these things."
"Uh-huh. Why don't you use your powers for good, and go get me a couple bags
of fries?"
Gwen glared at him. "Now that was just plain mean."
"Hey, when you're the one with your ass hanging out the back of a hospital
gown, you get to take a few free shots."
His voice slurred a bit toward the end. Gwen crossed the room and dropped a
kiss on the top of his head.
"Yeah, yeah. Go tell the rest of the family to go home," he mumbled.
Something opened in Gwen's heart, something that felt like a tight, empty
fist relaxing its grip. The rest of the family.
He might not remember it, but he'd said it. Better yet, Gwen was pretty
certain that he meant it.
She quietly left the room and went to relay Damian's message to the O'Rileys.
But the best part of it, she fully intended to keep for herself.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
By eleven o'clock the next morning, Gwen was back at Marcy's condo.
Trudy was awake, mostly sober, and very, very worried.
"So tell me what happened," Gwen said.
Trudy glanced at Marcy. She nodded.
"I don't remember going to Kyle's house," she began. "To be honest, I don't
know exactly where it is."
"You've been stalking his wife for several months, and you never went to the
house?"
"It's true," she insisted. "I know it's in East Greenwich, but I've never
been there."
"How do you explain the hairs on Kyle's sweater?"
Trudy shook her head helplessly. "I wish I could."
"So tell me what you do remember."
"After my last class, I went shopping. I always go to the wholefood store,
the one on Waterman?"
"I don't care. What then?"
"I ran into one of my students. We started talking. He offered to buy me a
cup of tea."
Again with the tea, Gwen thought. "What's his name?"
"You know, I really should know that. But the new term just started, and I'm
still putting names with faces."
"Okay, so what does this guy look like?"
"He'd be easy to pick out of a crowd. Very blond, very pretty."
Gwen began to get a very bad feeling. "And after the tea party?"
"I can't remember. I wasn't feeling well. I think he drove me home."
"Eventually," Gwen muttered. "Tell me this: Did you two talk about Marcy?"
Trudy nodded, looking thoroughly miserable. "He mentioned he'd seen her the
other day with a man who matched Kyle's description."
"And how would this student recognize me, much less Kyle?" Marcy demanded.
"He saw the two of us together the night we went to the string quartet
concert at Brown, and he remembered you," Trudy said miserably. "All he said
about it was, 'I ran into a friend of yours the other day.'"
"I see," Marcy said coolly. "He made a casual remark, only you couldn't let
it go. You kept at him until he coughed up a description you recognized as Kyle.
For the record, I haven't seen him since the night I brought him over to talk to
Gwen."
"I believe you," Trudy whispered.
"How very gratifying. Late, but gratifying nonetheless."
"Hold that thought," Gwen interjected. "Preferably until after I'm gone. Now,
back to last night. What time did you and this guy meet up?"
Trudy thought about it. "The class was over at four, and I finished my
shopping in about an hour. We went down to Angell Street afterward—"
"Who drove?"
"I did. My groceries were in the car. We got a cup of tea and chatted for a
while."
"And in all this time, you never asked his name?"
Trudy massaged her temples with both hands. "I must have. It must have come
up. I have no idea why I can't remember."
Gwen had a pretty good idea. Probably Adrian had some sort of hypnotic
ability. What had he said in the apple orchard the other night? The Elder Folk
had the ability to influence minds and behavior.
Come to think of it, maybe that wasn't one of Adrian's Qualities. Maybe it
was something all the Elder Folk could learn to do. The idea was
intriguing, and far too appealing for Gwen's peace of mind.
Fuck that. She didn't want that sort of power over people.
Why, then, did she immediately think about what had started when she'd been
lip-locked with Ian Forest in Sylvia's garden? There was a darkness inside her,
a disturbing energy that rippled just under the surface. When that third Quality
came out, what would she become?
It occurred to her the questioning had gone on without her. With difficulty
she tuned in on what Marcy was saying.
"… and you said your groceries were in the car when you had tea with this
student, who afterward drove you home."
"Yes," Trudy said hesitantly.
"So did someone bring the groceries up, or are they still in your car?"
Trudy shrugged helplessly.
"I don't pay that much attention to what's in the fridge, so I didn't notice
a difference," Marcy said. "Where are your keys? I'll go down and check the
car."
"Why does it matter?"
"It matters," Marcy told her grimly, "because it tells us whether or not he
was in this apartment."
She rose and began to pace. "I know how you feel about the police department
right now, Gwen, but it's time to bring someone in. If this man had something to
do with Kyle's death, if he was at Kyle's house, he might have left prints. His
fingerprints here could go a long way toward clearing Trudy."
"They won't find prints at Kyle's house," Gwen said.
Marcy stopped abruptly and turned to Gwen. "You didn't."
"I wanted to make sure things wouldn't get messy for Trudy."
"By destroying evidence that could lead to the real killer?" She dug both
hands into her thick blond hair and gripped her head for a moment with an
intensity that suggested it might otherwise explode.
She collected herself and turned cool gray eyes toward Gwen. "You used to
cross lines from time to time, but you were all about finding answers and
solving problems. If anyone suggested that you'd try to manipulate the
situation, you would have ripped them a new one. What has happened to you?"
That was a fair question if Gwen ever heard one.
"I'm still looking for answers," she said slowly, "but I have good reason not
to trust the conventional channels."
Marcy flopped into a chair and rubbed her eyes. "Do I want to know what you
mean by 'unconventional channels'?"
"Probably not."
The attorney rose and walked to the door, picking up her purse on the walk.
Without turning around she said, "I'm going to need some time to think about all
this. And right now, I really need to be alone."
The door closed quietly behind her. A long moment of silence passed before
Gwen glanced at Trudy and observed, "I never thought I'd see you and me on the
same shit list."
That earned a sickly smile. "A shit-list sisterhood."
"Don't get carried away," Gwen cautioned. "I need your car keys."
Trudy made an impatient gesture. "I don't care about the groceries."
"Neither do I, but I need to check out the car. There's a chance I can find
out something about this guy, and—"
Inspiration came suddenly, striking her dumb in midsentence. Gwen dug the
keys to her Toyota out of the pocket of her leather jacket and tossed them on
the coffee table.
"In fact, I need to take your car for a while. Here're my keys in case you
need to go anywhere. But I'd recommend that you stay close to home."
"I've seen your car," Trudy grumbled. "How far could I go, anyway?"
Gwen paused at the door. "One more thing: that herbal tea you got from The
Green Man? Throw it out."
"Why?"
"If I'm right, it's part of an elaborate setup. There's some serious shit in
that tea, and you've been drinking it long enough to be hooked on it."
Indignation firmed the redhead's lips into a straight line. "That's
ridiculous."
"Really? Have you had a cup yet this morning?"
"No…"
"And how are you feeling?"
She grimaced. "I could tell you precisely how I feel, but my mother raised me
not to use those words."
"What were you thinking of doing as soon as I left?"
Trudy shrugged, conceding Gwen's point and dismissing it in one gesture. "So
what? You always start your morning with coffee."
"Sure, but it doesn't affect my behavior. Look back over the past four or
five months. You've changed. I've noticed it, and Marcy sure as hell has
noticed."
"What did she say to you?"
"Knowing Marcy, a lot less than she said to you. I'll tell you what I've
observed. You've gotten clingy, dependent, and paranoid. Not to mention edgy and
moody and bitchy."
Trudy's shoulders slumped, and she looked down at her hands. "I haven't felt
like myself," she admitted. "But I've been drinking the herbal tea and taking
the supplements because that makes me feel better."
"Duh. Do you think people get turned on to addictive substances because they
enjoy feeling like shit? But after a while you start needing it to feel normal,
and needing a lot more to feel good."
"You make it sound like I'm some sort of junky," Trudy protested.
"Same shit, different tea bag."
Since it was apparent that Trudy wasn't completely convinced, Gwen went to
the kitchen and started opening cupboards. She found the telltale boxes and
poured the leaves into the garbage disposal, let the water and the disposal run
until every last fleck was washed away. When she glanced up, the stricken look
on Trudy's face proved that this instinct had been sound.
"What are you thinking?" Gwen asked. "Don't filter it."
Trudy shook her head in denial. "What you did right now—it doesn't really
matter. It shouldn't matter."
"Then why do you look like your world just went down the drain along with
that tea?"
Silent tears began to run down Trudy's pale cheeks. "What do I do?"
"The same thing any addict does. You acknowledge there's a problem—and I
think you just did that—and you do what's necessary to beat it. We'll make sure
you get through this."
"We? Are you so sure Marcy will come back?"
In all honesty, Gwen couldn't give the answer Trudy wanted. She crossed the
room and crouched down in front of the woman's chair so that they were eye to
eye.
"I'm going to introduce you to a friend of mine. Sister Tamar is very good at
helping people find their way. You'll get through this. I'll be there with you,
whether you want me or not. Although," she added, lifting one eyebrow, "judging
by the other night, I think we've covered that pretty thoroughly."
Trudy flushed and covered her face with her hands. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry."
She dropped her hands suddenly, anger pushing aside embarrassment. "You're
teasing me. I don't believe this. How can you joke about this? What kind of
heartless bitch are you?"
Gwen rose, suppressing a grin. "Hey! I thought your mother taught you not to
use words like that."
"My mother," Trudy said grimly, "never met you."
Trudy's white Lexus was parked in the lot across the street. Fancy car, with
too many whistles and bells for Gwen's taste. It even had a navigation computer
to show you how to get where you're going. She turned the key, and the engine
responded with a welcoming purr.
As she suspected, the last destination was still on the navigation screen.
Adrian hadn't forgotten to erase the screen. He wasn't stupid, and neither
was Erin. They were together now, and they wanted Gwen to find them.
Once again, Gwen was being manipulated in someone's deadly little game. It
made her mad as hell, but she figured she might as well get used to it.
Because one thing was becoming abundantly clear: the Elder Folk—Gwen was
starting to think of them as Effers, for more reasons than one—toyed with humans
like malevolent cats playing with cornered mice, and they weren't all that
different when it came to dealing with one another.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Gwen followed the map on the navigation screen to an old brick warehouse in
Pawtucket. She parked Trudy's car and walked around the building, checking for
the best way in.
A narrow lot behind the building was empty but for a few discarded crates and
a large elm tree. Remembering Damian's observation about the direction of the
arrow that'd hit him, Gwen jumped up and caught the lowest branch. She swung
herself onto the limb and began to climb.
The roof of the warehouse was oddly shaped—a long series of sawed-toothed
triangles, each fronted by a pane of glass to let in light. She walked along the
roof's edge until she found the broken pane.
She dropped to her stomach and peered in. Sure enough, the system of pipes
and venting ducts provided enough handholds to take her across the ceiling to
the narrow walkway that lined one side of the open room. From there, she could
take stairs down to the main floor.
Gwen reached for the first pipe and gave it a tug to test its strength. It
held, so she swung herself into the opening and began to move hand over hand
toward the walk.
The room was eerily silent. The only sound was the faint creak of ancient
pipes, and the skittering of tiny clawed feet as rats went about their business
in unseen corners.
She dropped lightly onto the walkway. Her boots hit the scarred wooden planks
with a ringing thud—a small sound, under most circumstances.
"Down here," called a familiar voice.
Gwen made her way cautiously down to the main floor. Behind a stack of crates
she found Adrian Archer.
He sat on the floor, his face as pale as the visage of the dead woman in his
arms. One trembling hand stroked her brown hair, over and over, as if to imprint
this last tactile memory of her on his heart.
For a long moment Gwen studied the grim tableau. This was not at all what
she'd expected to find. Erin wore a pale blue sweater, a color similar to that
she'd worn in the photo Kyle had carried. It was now soaked with blood. There
was a single hole in the sweater, directly over Erin's heart—a precise, killing
stroke.
The same death wound Gwen had found on Kyle Radcliff. The same spot as the
shot that had nearly killed Damian.
"Where is Patrick Radcliff?" she asked.
Adrian shook his head. "I have no idea. Erin must have made some arrangements
for him, but she never told me what they were."
"I'm curious—did she know Patrick wasn't her son?"
He glanced up sharply. "What are you saying?"
"Erin raised a human baby. Her son was taken from her at birth. He's a
changeling, just like his mother, and he's out there somewhere."
Grief flooded Adrian's face, removing any lingering doubts Gwen had about
Patrick's paternity.
She crouched down on the floor and nodded toward the dead woman. "Why?"
Adrian tangled a strand of silky brown hair around his fingers. "Our
Qualities vary greatly, both in type and power. Hers was a very special gift."
"The glamour."
"That's right. When that began to manifest during her adolescence, she was
brought in. Willingly she came, glad to be among people like herself. She was
relocated quite some distance away. After a time, she disappeared. I was sent to
find her. We didn't expect her to return to the same area she'd known during her
early life. By the time I found her, she had already made contact with others."
"Wallace Earl Edmonson."
"That's correct. He was intrigued by her gift and offered her a place in his
business. By the time I arrived, she had already started to use her own
products."
"So? I thought that didn't affect Elder Folk."
"It doesn't. It shouldn't," he corrected grimly. "But Erin became addicted to
the herbs she sold, and she knew what that meant."
"Tell me."
"The Elders are very concerned about keeping the bloodlines pure. If someone
starts displaying human traits or weaknesses, he disappears. Erin knew this. For
some time, she has been getting ready to disappear on her own terms."
"Her husband has a record of violence. She hoped her disappearance would be
blamed on him. And she had him killed to make that trail harder to follow."
Adrian responded with a grim smile. "She was right. No one will find Kyle
Radcliff's true murderer."
"I think I just did."
"It doesn't matter," he murmured.
"Oh, I think it does. A friend of mine was set up to take the fall, and
that's not going to happen."
He shrugged as if that, too, didn't matter, and turned his attention back to
Erin's still face. "She was so lovely, and so very clever. I couldn't bear to
see that oaf lay a hand on her. She knew that. She provoked him into striking
her, knowing that I would see, knowing how I would respond."
Gwen watched as he stroked her hair. "She manipulated you into killing for
her. You don't seem too upset about that."
"Why should I be? The man's death means nothing to me."
She had no idea what to say to that. After a moment, she told him, "I'm going
to take you in."
Adrian looked up sharply. "You're talking as if you're still a member of the
police force."
"Ever hear of a citizen's arrest?"
"You can't do that, either. I've explained why. My death will be yours, as
well."
She rose to her feet and pulled her gun. "I'll take my chances."
The blond man carefully laid Erin Westland aside, his movements slow and
tender. He was on his feet almost faster than Gwen's eyes could follow.
She fired, point-blank.
The pain in her ears was immediate and excruciating. The sound of the gunfire
echoed back to her in short, sharp stabs, as if she'd fired in a bank vault.
Then Adrian plowed into her, knocking her flat onto her back. She fired
again, but her arms were flung out wide and the shot rang harmlessly off into
the empty warehouse.
He seized both of her hands and dragged them up over her head. He slammed her
gun hand against the floor with numbing force. Gwen felt the crack of small
bones, and nothing else. She tried to flex her fingers around her weapon but had
no idea whether they were closing on steel or empty air.
She'd be willing to bet on the latter.
"How are you still alive?" she demanded.
Her question must have been spoken aloud, because Adrian sent her an arrogant
smile. His lips moved for several seconds, but lip-reading wasn't among her
skills, and all she could make out was the word "Qualities."
It wasn't possible that Adrian could stop a bullet. Was it? She knew that
some people, some humans, had a stronger energy field than others. Frank Cross
had never been able to wear a wristwatch—the damn things always stopped whenever
he put them on. Was it possible that Adrian could generate an energy field with
a stopping power that was greater than Kevlar? She wouldn't have thought so, but
for two things: the man pinning her to the floor should be dead, and a
high-pitched ringing in her head was starting to take the place of stunned
silence. She wouldn't have been deafened by the sound of a bullet plowing into a
vest.
Gwen gathered her thoughts and focused all of her energy into a single move,
twisting her body under his. He winced as her shoulder slammed into his chest,
but he didn't loosen his grip on her wrists.
He pushed her back down on the floor and shifted his weight, pressing his
knees between hers and forcing her legs apart. In another too-quick-to-follow
move, he lifted himself into a kneeling position and slammed one knee up between
her legs.
White-hot pain seared though Gwen's lower body, as she knew it would. Any
woman who thought only men could be hurt by a shot to the groin had never taken
a direct hit. Back in juvenile hall, she'd taken a couple of shots and given
back a few of her own. She knew only too well what it could do.
So did Adrian. He moved off her, confident that she would be out of the fight
for a while.
Gwen curled up on her left side, breathing in shallow puffs and willing the
pain to subside enough for her to finish this.
As Adrian kicked her gun well out of the way, she inched her hand into the
pocket of her jeans and drew out Trudy's keys. There were three on the ring:
car, house, and probably mailbox. She worked them in her palm so that a key
protruded from between each of the fingers of her left hand. That was a slight
problem. Naturally ambidextrous as a young child, she'd been pushed into
favoring her right hand. It would probably be a good long while before she'd be
able to pick up anything with her gun hand, but her left hand would have to do.
Andrian reached down and seized the wrist of her right hand and dragged her
to her feet.
Gwen came up swinging.
Her roundhouse punch connected with his cheekbone with enough force to snap
his head to one side. The three keys raked across his face, carving deep, bloody
furrows. As the Lexus key slid over his eye, there was a wet, sickening release.
The key punched deep into the eye socket.
Adrian screamed and fell from her, clutching at his bleeding face.
Gwen willed herself to deliver a kick that would end the fight. But the room
spun around her, and she was none too steady on her too-high heels.
She dropped to her knees, which in her opinion was better than falling on her
face, and punched straight out from her left shoulder.
Again the makeshift weapon sank deep into flesh, and again her opponent
shrieked in agony. Gwen rolled to one side to avoid his falling body.
She came up in a crouch, ready to throw herself back into the fight. But
Adrian was finished.
Gwen waited until a soft groan announced his return to consciousness.
"You killed Erin," she said quietly.
He carefully pushed himself up into a sitting position, grimaced with pain at
every move. "I've known for a long time that I would have to."
"But you were putting it off. Why?"
"Because I loved her," he replied simply. "And because she was the mother of
my child."
"You didn't know that Patrick wasn't yours? That your son is out there
somewhere, a changeling growing up with humans?"
"No. I had no idea." His eyes held hers imploringly. "Find him. You have to
find him."
"Oh, I plan on it."
"Swear it to me that you will restore him to our people. Swear it by the most
powerful oath known to you."
"Forget it," Gwen said flatly. "I'm not promising anything until I have a
better idea what I'd be getting the kid into."
"Surely he'd be better off among his own kind than among the human rabble!"
"Yeah? Was Erin? Would her adoptive parents have sent a hit man after her if
someone decided she wasn't quite talented enough?"
"It is more complicated than you're trying to make it."
"I'll bet it is. If you guys get all Master-Race anal about these fucking
Qualities, how do you deal with physical imperfection?"
Adrian sent her a hate-filled glare. "You have not quite unmanned me. I will
heal."
"I'm not talking about you, asshole. Erin's son was born with an extra toe.
Bet the big boys aren't going to be too happy about that shit."
Horror and revulsion filled his eyes. "You're saying the child was
imperfect?"
"That's what I'm saying, all right. Still want me to find him?"
"There's no need," he said dully.
"Why?" she persisted. "Because you don't want to acknowledge a son with a
minor birth defect? Or because you know that kids like him wouldn't be allowed
to grow up?"
His glare sent a wave of ice shivering down her spine and raised goose bumps
on her arms. It was quite simply the purest embodiment of evil Gwen had
ever seen.
"You are the most damnably curious thing I have ever encountered that didn't
meow and chase mice," he hissed. "It gives me some small measure of satisfaction
to know that you will go to your death tormented by a hundred unanswered
questions."
Gwen glanced around pointedly. "It's just you and me, pal, and I don't think
you're up to dealing death at the moment."
"You're still determined to turn me in to the human authorities?"
"Damn straight."
"Then your intention has sealed your death. The rest is simply a matter of
time."
Gwen gestured to Erin Westland's body. "Why are so you worried about being
arrested? You've already bought yourself a certain death by killing her."
"Not if you're a Black Arrow."
Something flashed in his eyes, something dark and shining with malice. Gwen
understood the impulse that prompted that look—understood it far better than she
wanted to. Adrian Archer knew that he was dead, and he was going to inflict as
much pain on her as he could while he was still alive.
Conflicting impulses raged through her. On one hand, she burned to end this,
to silence his taunts. But as he'd pointed out, there was so much she needed to
know.
"I'll bite. What's a Black Arrow?"
"An assassin, sanctioned by the Elder Council to mete out punishments duly
approved by the royal court."
Gwen's head swam with the implications. The Elder Folk had a royal house?
With their own branch of assassins? What the hell were these people?
His smirk celebrated her dismay, and his eyes shone with eagerness to deliver
the next blow.
"Let's hear it," she said.
"Your parents were not killed in the car crash. Oh, they were definitely in
bad shape when I found them, but they were still very much alive. I killed them
both, as I was ordered to do. I killed the baby, too, even though that wasn't
part of my assignment. And why not? It was pleasurable at the time, and all the
more so now, having met you. Would you like to know precisely how the real
Gwenevere Gellman died?"
Gwen leaped at him in a sudden rush that sent them both rolling to the floor.
She straddled his body and gripped his throat with both hands. Pain seared up
her right forearm. Gwen ignored it and tightened her grip, then shook him hard
enough to thump his head painfully against the floor.
"Who gave that order? And why? What did my parents do?"
"So curious," he said with malevolent satisfaction. "So many unanswered
questions."
Something in his smile changed, something in his eyes telegraphed his
intention. Gwen caught the glint of metal in her peripheral vision and dived to
one side.
A thick ripping sound followed her as her ancient leather jacket took one
final scar. Fire seared across her lower back as she kept rolling, leaving a
trail of blood on the warehouse floor.
She scrambled to her feet. Incredibly, Adrian did the same. He came at her in
a rush, knife held high.
Gwen dashed toward him and seized his wrist with both hands before he could
begin the downward slash. She pushed his hand higher and slammed her body into
his. He grunted in pain from the impact.
She twisted hard, putting her back to him while still holding onto his wrist,
and continued the motion to bend sharply at the waist.
Adrian flew over her and landed hard on his back. Air wheezed out of his
lungs in a powerful, painful gust.
Gwen let go of his wrist and danced out of reach. But he kicked out hard,
deftly hooking one of her booted feet.
She went down, and suddenly Adrian was on top of her. He lifted the knife
high.
Again she seized his wrist. They struggled and rolled, fighting for
ascendancy.
Suddenly Adrian went limp, leaving Gwen atop him, their hands entangled
around the hilt of the knife.
"I know who killed Frank Cross," he said. Then he tugged down hard, pulling
the knife into his heart.
Gwen rose and stood over the bodies for a long time, wondering what the hell
to do with them. If she called the police, she was as good as dead. On this
matter, if no other, she believed Adrian told the truth.
She could call Ian Forest. He was very, very good at making bodies disappear.
But how would he react if she told him she had two Effing bodies ready for
disposal? Ian had been pretty gung-ho about getting rid of Edmonson for killing
Elder Folk, and it was possible he would take the same view here. Sure, he
seemed very interested in getting into her pants, and he seemed to take his role
as mentor seriously, but what did that mean? Hell, Adrian had loved Erin
Westland, but that didn't stop him from putting an arrow through her heart.
Who, then?
An echo of Jason Cross's words, so unexpected at the time and so deeply felt,
came to her mind: I can live with that.
She pulled her cell phone out of the pocket of her coat and dialed his
number.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Gwen and Jason stood on a hill overlooking the farm in Smithfield. A waning
moon shone overhead, but whatever power it held over Gwen was lost in the welter
of emotions that stormed through her.
"I still can't believe you agreed to help me do this," she murmured.
Jason turned his calm brown eyes to her. "Like the old saying says, 'A good
friend will help you move; a great friend will help you move a body.'"
A reluctant smile tugged at the corners of her lips. "Who said that? Mark
Twain or Oscar Wilde?"
He smiled, remembering the reference to an early conversation. "It's usually
one or the other."
She reached for his hand, and their fingers entwined. "Seriously, why are you
doing this?"
"Those visions of yours were pretty convincing. You showed me enough to make
me glad the two people we buried under those trees are no longer among the
living."
"Is it really that simple for you?"
A bleak expression flickered across his face. "Nothing is simple, Gwen. I
believe what I saw because I know a few things about visions. You know that my
mother was part Narragansett?"
"Sure. Frank mentioned that."
"I've always been deeply interested in that part of my heritage, and I've
studied some of the old ways. I know holy men and women who seek visions through
meditation aided by drumming or dancing."
"Or mushrooms?"
"Different tradition," he said. "But I've seen people in a vision state, and
I've had a few of my own. Yours are different from any I've experienced. I don't
know anyone else who is powerful enough to share a vision with another."
"So you believe what I told you."
"Yes. And I believe what you did was right."
"Don't you want to know why I have visions like that?"
He sent her a faint smile. "I figure that you and I are truly related. We
probably have a common ancestor a few generations back."
"That's a nice thought," Gwen said.
"You've heard of a sport? I'm not talking about a physical activity like
baseball and football, but a genetic throwback. Perhaps you're a sport of some
powerful shamanic line."
"It's something to think about," she said.
He gave her hand a squeeze, then released it. "Are you ready to do this?"
She nodded and reached into the pocket of her new leather jacket for a book
of matches.
The first spark flared into the night. Gwen stooped and touched it to the
straw they'd carefully scattered among the trees—straw that had been soaked in
highly flammable insecticide.
They watched in silence as fire snaked out through the orchard, branching out
in every direction like rows of flaming dominoes. Gwen's throat clenched as the
flames crept up into the apple trees. The hiss and groan the moist branches made
as they burned sounded like the death cries of living beings.
In moments, the entire orchard was engulfed. And with it, the sole crop of
the herb—the cruel toy that had caused so much misery.
"We need to go now," Jason said.
Gwen followed him down the hill and into a nearby wooded area. They'd hidden
two bicycles there near a narrow dirt trail. No one would see a vehicle leave
the area, and they would be on the other side of the woods before anyone
responded to the fire. From there, it was a short walk to the small motel where
they'd rented a room earlier that evening.
It wasn't a bad plan, but Gwen felt no great satisfaction over the work
they'd done. She couldn't wait to collapse on the motel bed, and to seize a few
hours of respite from the questions that had come to dominate her every waking
hour.
Ian Forest slipped from his hidden place among the trees, escaping a single
heartbeat before the apple tree caught fire.
He moved away from the rapidly spreading flames, keeping just beyond the
light of the fire. And at the edge of the orchard, he watched as the traitorous
Jason Cross linked hands with the elf girl who could either save or destroy her
exiled people.
Ian was certain that he would hear nothing of this night's events from the
human agent. Obviously Jason Cross was not so committed to Edmonson and his
successors as Salvadore Anselm seemed to think.
Or was he?
It was no secret that Ian had resented his service to Edmonson and disagreed
with the earl's mode of doing business. But the fact that he had been returned
to Edmonson's service seemed to indicate that he had been forgiven his old
indiscretion:
Sylvia Black.
A lovely woman with an almost elflike capacity for passion, she was one of
those rare humans who possessed a quality that drew Elder Folk to her. The old
stories of elves and humans falling in love had some basis in truth. Ian had
come very close to losing his heart. He had come closer still to losing his
Qualities.
Oh yes, he had reason to know the dangers of ties that bound the Elder Folk
too tightly to their human companions. He was determined to keep Gwen from
following the same dangerous path. If Jason Cross wished to destroy Gwen, this
was one way to do so.
Her sexual adventures meant nothing. There were many ways to toy with humans.
But Gwen was capable of deep loyalties, and her ties to the humans were strong.
She not only had friends—she had family.
The young magus had accepted Gwen's true identity almost without question.
That alone would have raised concern, but Damian O'Riley had entrusted his
family problems to Gwen, and had come to treat her almost like a sister. And
Sylvia Black had all but adopted her.
With such chains holding her back, how would her starlight Quality emerge?
And if they did not, what would become of her?
Of all of them?
Jason waited until Gwen's soft, steady breathing assured him that she was
deeply asleep. He picked up his backpack and slipped from the room, taking the
route through the bathroom window they'd used twice before that night.
He made his way into the woods, moving away from the path they'd taken
earlier and in the opposite direction of the orchard he had helped to destroy.
And with every step, his heart grew heavier.
He came to a small clearing, a circle of bare earth deeply sheltered by
vine-covered trees. A scattering of stones in the center obscured the fire he
had built the last time he came to this place.
Jason dropped his backpack to the ground and arranged the stones in a circle.
He placed some dry wood inside and lit the fire. When it was burning steadily,
he settled down beside it and started unpacking.
Under the clothes he'd packed for tomorrow was a small wooden drum. He
tightened the hide and began to tap a soft, rhythmic pattern.
His hands repeated the pattern over and over, until it became a soft sea of
rhythm that carried him away on its rise and fall. He was barely aware when the
pattern began to change, adding new rhythms that carried him deeper into hidden
places within his own heart.
Much later, Jason emerged slowly from his trance, like a swimmer coming up
from great depths. He was not surprised to see that the small fire had long ago
burned itself out, or to note that his limbs were cold and stiff from long
inactivity.
It was no easy thing, this strengthening of his shields against the elven
magics.
He had told Gwen nothing but the truth—if not quite all of the truth. He had
been raised by a shaman, a wisewoman who came from a long line who guarded the
knowledge that elves existed. For all his life, he had known it was his task to
walk among them. To learn their ways, and undo their plans.
And, ultimately, to find a way to destroy them all.
Shortly before dawn, Ian Forest stepped out of the shadows of a stand of
birch trees near an old blue farmhouse. He took a moment to regard his
surroundings. Small, neat fields were tucked among rows of fruit trees, the rich
soil heaped into long mounds over newly planted seeds. A greenhouse held rows of
seedlings that would soon be ready to plant outside. The pretty farm was framed
by a majestic sweep of mountains, the tallest of which was still crowned with
snow.
Spring had come late to Vermont this year.
The barn held quite a fine assortment of equipment. The delivery truck was
nearly new, as was the small car parked beside it. And best of all, there was a
long ladder that would be perfect for his purposes.
Ian circled around behind the farmhouse and easily dispatched the lock on the
back door. He slipped inside, making his way through the bottom floor and up a
narrow flight of stairs. The house was furnished with very nice antiques, and
bowls of fresh flowers scented every room he passed.
The elves had paid this particular agent very well.
He found the woman's bedroom and walked soundlessly in. He seized the collar
of her nightgown with both hands and dragged her up into a sitting position.
She awoke with a sound that was part gasp, part shriek. Her eyes focused on
Ian's face, and surprise chilled into terror.
He released her and stepped away, sending her a faint smile. "If I had wanted
you dead, why would I have bothered to awaken you?"
"For sport," she hissed at him.
"Well, yes, there is that," he said agreeably. "But I assure you, this visit
is entirely about business."
The woman shook her head emphatically. "I'm out of that business," she told
him. "You told me the Morgan baby would be my last job."
"So I did." Ian hooked his thumbs in his pockets and leaned back against the
dresser. "Of course, I have been known to lie when the occasion demands."
"What do you want?"
"I understand you received an interesting phone call recently."
Fear edged into her eyes. "I didn't tell her anything."
"In truth, I believe you told her entirely too much. And I don't believe I
can trust you with the information about our changelings' whereabouts."
"I'd never tell that! Can you imagine the trouble I'd be in if I admitted to
switching babies?"
"Can you imagine the trouble you are already in?"
He waited until that idea took hold, until the knowledge of her coming death
blazed in her eyes.
The force of his blow snapped her head sharply to one side. Bone gave way
with a brittle crack, and the changeling midwife slumped lifeless to the bed.
Ian opened the dresser drawers and removed the sort of clothing one might
expect a woman to wear as she went about the business of running a farm and
household. Dressing her was an unpleasant necessity, but the local authorities
would hardly believe that she fell off a ladder in her nightgown.
When the agent's body was ready, Ian slung her over his shoulder and carried
her out behind the house. He dropped her to the ground and went back to the
garage for the ladder. This he placed against the house, near the tallest
window. He tossed a pail of soapy water and a kitchen rag to the ground to
complete the deception.
The task completed, Ian returned to the circle of birch trees and stepped
into the shadows. If he hurried, he could check on his youngest changeling
before the sun crested the Vermont foothills.
EPILOGUE
Ian Forest stood with Salvadore Anselm on the edge of the sea cliff, admiring
the view—and pondering the temptation. The man he'd joined forces with to oust
Edmonson had not proved to be much of an improvement.
But at least they were in agreement on two things. They believed they were
better off without the potent herb, and they were furious that the council had
seen fit to send a Black Arrow assassin into their territory.
"Dominance and control," Anselm summarized. "That is why we traffic in such
human vices as sex and drugs. Edmonson lost sight of the central purpose, and
Erin Westland was a pathetic weakling. Distribution, much less use, is beneath
us. We don't become Tiger Leones, we use them."
"For that matter, what purpose is there in controlling the weak? Better to
concentrate on those in positions of power, tools with a purpose."
Anselm smirked. "No doubt this is your segue to the Captain Walsh report?"
"In a manner of speaking. Would it interest you to know that Jason Cross did
not eliminate a single link between Edmonson and Walsh?"
"He killed the doctor, did he not?"
Ian shook his head. "Gwen's visions are growing in power. She visited Kate
Myers's home a second time and learned the truth of what happened there. Adrian
Archer tormented the woman, like a wicked child pulling wings off flies, but he
did not kill her. Walsh did."
"Ah. And now that we know this, and assuming we can convince him of this
knowledge, there is little chance that Walsh will betray our interests."
"That is my reasoning, yes."
"Well done." Anselm toed a stone loose and watched it fall into the surf
below. "A shame your methods were not quite so successful where our changeling
is concerned. We have less hold over her than the humans do. Her 'family' is
thriving."
"How so? Her mentor is dead, her young protege is in the hospital, her most
recent partner will be tried for Kate Myers's murder. Even Erin Westland's
bungling attempts to shift the blame for her husband's murder have borne fruit.
Gwen alienated Marcy Bartlett, her closest friend, when she tampered with a
crime scene to protect Marcy's lover. Thanks to her emerging Qualities, she has
alienated two casual lovers in as many weeks. Other than an aging, foul-mouthed
nun, where can Gwen turn?"
"To Jason Cross," Anselm said gloomily. He shot a resentful look in Ian's
direction. "I will admit that your judgment concerning the man was sound. We may
have a problem in Jason."
The smile that crossed Ian's face was that of an angel contemplating
paradise. "A problem," he said softly, "that can easily be resolved."
Cunningham, Elaine - [Changeling Detective Agency 2] - Shadows in the
Starlight
For Susan, with thanks for the long walks and
moral support
PRELUDE
At this hour of the night, the East Side of Providence was about as quiet as
city neighborhoods get. The people who could afford sedate charm and
architectural interest were dozing in front of their high-definition
televisions, while local newscasts alternated between self-promotion and
breathless promises of news and weather reports to come.
An unexpected downpour, the last April shower of the year, had just swept
through on its way northward. Sound traveled with uncanny clarity in the
rain-washed air, and the quick, light slap of feet against wet pavement rippled
through the silence like pebbles thrown into still water.
Two women ran full out along the deserted road, soaked to the skin by the
sudden shower. Both were dark-haired and both ran with single-minded
determination, but there the similarity ended. Kate Myers, the older of the two,
was a tall, rangy woman with a long-legged, mile-eating stride. A serious runner
since high school, she was built for speed and trained to win. She still ran
every day, and she played soccer on the weekends with women half her age.
Tonight she was running hard, yet her much shorter companion matched her pace
with ease. Kate wasn't sure whether to be impressed or annoyed.
They rounded a corner at the edge of Swan Point Cemetery and began to run
beside a stone wall, a staple of the New England landscape. This one, however,
was built of improbably large rocks. Huge boulders perched here and there atop
these walls, giving silent testament to the precarious nature of existence.
Kate glanced into the graveyard, a nervous habit she'd been trying without
much success to break. Fog was starting to rise from the rain-soaked ground,
only to be swept off by a quickening wind. This part of the cemetery was more
horticultural park than resting place, but Kate could envision the swirl of
earthbound clouds curling around nineteenth-century mausoleums and lending an
illusion of flight to angel wings of immovable stone or bronze. It was that sort
of night—one that H.P. Lovecraft, one of the more famous inhabitants of the
cemetery, would no doubt find inspiring.
Kate had scant appreciation for the macabre, which, given her line of work,
never failed to amuse people.
A soft, slightly husky alto chuckle snapped her attention back to the run,
and she realized she'd picked up the pace considerably. Cheeks flaming, she
dialed back her speed and glanced at her new running partner.
Gwen Gellman was at least a head shorter than Kate, and waif thin. Her slim
legs were bared to the butt by skimpy purple running shorts, and a tiny black
tank top contrasted with skin so pale it brought to mind fine porcelain. Kate
guessed Gwen to be about a hundred pounds soaking wet, which she currently was,
and though she wasn't more than a year or two younger than Kate, she didn't look
a day over seventeen. Despite all this, words like "delicate" and "fragile" just
didn't apply. Five kilometers of hard running, and the girl hadn't broken a
sweat. If there were any justice in the world, all that let's-go-clubbing makeup
rimming her eyes would be running down her face in dark rivulets. Her hair was
as wet as Kate's, but instead of hanging limp and lank, the girl's short, thick
locks reshaped themselves into glistening curls.
Kate could have forgiven Gwen for all that, had she not also been a former
cop with all the annoying traits of that breed. She was relentless and
cat-curious, with the usual arrogant disregard for her own safety. That last,
Kate would never understand. She dealt with death every day, but she was in no
hurry to experience it herself. But Gwen? Kate had yet to decide whether the
girl was too stupid to recognize the danger she was putting herself in, or too
driven to care.
They reached the end of the course and slowed to an easy trot. This was their
third shared run in as many days, and they'd fallen into a pattern: meet at
Brown Stadium, run a five-K loop through the quiet charm of Blackstone
Boulevard, cool down on the way to Kate's house. Her neighborhood was a tangle
of narrow side streets, with tall wooden houses painted in muted pastels and
cars parked on both sides of the road. The only place to run was down the middle
of the streets, but at this hour there was little competition from traffic.
Gwen waited until they'd slowed to a walk to bring up her personal crusade.
"I hate to nag—"
"But in my case, you'll make an exception?"
Kate's sarcasm was answered by a quick, fleeting grin. "Hey, you asked for
three days. Time's up. Did you find anything new?"
"Gwen, there isn't anything to find," she said patiently. "I reviewed all my
notes and test results, and found nothing to indicate that Frank Cross's death
was anything other than an accidental drowning. His blood-alcohol level was
nearly four times the legal limit. I'm not surprised he fell off his boat. It's
a wonder he managed to get as far as he did."
"Don't think that hasn't occurred to me," Gwen said darkly. "Any sign that
the alcohol was forced into him? An IV track, maybe?"
"Nothing."
They walked several paces before Gwen spoke again. "What do you know about
foie gras?"
Kate shot her a puzzled look. "Foie gras? It's a pate made from duck or goose
liver, usually served on crackers. I've never tried it, though I was tempted to
after watching this old James Bond movie. Sean Connery sneaks some foie gras
into a spa and feeds it to his physical therapist. Judging from her reaction, it
qualifies as fore-play. Before I get too distracted by that line of thought,
maybe you should tell me where this is going."
"Do you know how it's made?"
She ran an impatient hand through her wet hair. "With some sort of food
processor, I'd imagine. Cooking doesn't interest me."
"Me either. But I dated a chef once, and he went on and on. Apparently the
geese used for foie gras have to be fattened until their livers balloon up to
seven or eight times the normal size. Since no animals except humans and lapdogs
willingly fuck themselves up to that extent, people shove tubes down the birds'
throats and force-feed them."
Kate grimaced. "That sounds like torture."
"You think? I'm guessing anything that extreme would leave forensic evidence,
even after just one time."
"It would, yes. I wasn't specifically looking for… intrusion of that sort,
but nothing I saw suggested that consuming half a bottle of Scotch was anything
but voluntary."
"That's not what happened," Gwen said stubbornly. "There's got to be another
explanation."
"And I'm sure you have several."
"I'm only interested in the one that's true, and so far we haven't
found it," she said curtly. "Alcohol can be absorbed through the colon. Did you
check…"
"For evidence of an eighty-proof enema? C'mon, Gwen."
"Did you?" she persisted.
Kate suppressed a sigh. "Not specifically, no. But the contents of his
stomach helped establish time of death. There was enough alcohol present to
explain his state. You were at his house—did you see anything to indicate a
struggle?"
"No, but people have been known to clean up a crime scene. And maybe there
wasn't much of a struggle. You said Frank had a cut on his head. They could have
knocked him out."
"More likely he hit it when he fell. What about motive? Was anything taken
from his house?"
Gwen took a moment to think that over. "The investigating officer didn't see
any evidence of theft," she said carefully, "but that doesn't indicate absence
of motive. Frank was a cop for over thirty years. If you do the job right, you
can piss off a lot of people in three decades."
"Yes, I know."
Kate's voice was sharper than she'd intended. She softened her words with a
faint smile before turning away to prop one foot on the third step of her front
stairs. She took her time leaning into a hamstring stretch. When she could trust
herself to speak without emotion, she said, "Give me a minute, and I'll drive
you home. You shouldn't be running by yourself at this hour."
The girl flashed an angelic smile. "Like the man said, 'Yea, though I walk
through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil, because I'm the
meanest motherfucker in the valley.'"
"Why do cops think you're invincible?" she snapped, hearing the bitterness in
her voice but not particularly caring. "No job too sordid, no street too
dangerous, no risk too stupid."
Gwen's smile broadened. "Don't hold back on my account. If that's how you
feel about the job, I can see why you dumped Quaid." She cocked her head to one
side and considered. "Well, plus the fact that he's about as interesting as
white bread with mayo."
"Actually, I didn't mind that Gary Quaid was cautious and conservative."
"But…"
This wasn't a subject Kate liked to discuss, but she could see how it might
work to her benefit tonight. She straightened up, put her other foot on the
third step, and leaned back into the stretch, holding it while she gathered the
composure needed to recite the grim facts of her girlhood.
"My father was a cop. He was killed on the job when I was still in high
school, by a man he'd arrested years before. Knowing this, do you really think
I'd skim over Frank Cross's autopsy? Take the easy explanation without a good,
hard look at other possibilities?"
Gwen nodded slowly. "Point taken. Did they get the guy?"
That wasn't the response Kate would have expected from most people, but it
seemed typical of Gwen. She'd met the former cop about a week ago, just after
Gwen had fished the body of her mentor and best friend out of the Narragansett
Bay. From day one, Gwen had wanted answers, not sympathy. No doubt she thought
everyone processed grief in the same fashion.
"They got him," Kate said shortly. "But in Frank Cross's case, there's no one
to 'get.' You've got to let it go, Gwen."
"Gee, Kate, you don't seem to be very big on closure. Didn't you give the
same advice to Quaid when he was following up on the raid at Winston's?"
The memory was like an icy hand around Kate's throat. "You know about that?
And about the… warning?"
"Yeah. So?"
Kate huffed in exasperation. "So? Someone broke into the morgue and mutilated
the bodies of the two policemen killed in the raid. In my lab. Using my
equipment."
"Seems to me you'd want to find whoever did that, if for no other reason than
to keep your equipment clean."
Her gaze slid away. "The police are looking into it."
"Since when? Last I heard they were covering it up. Bad for morale, or some
similar pile of bullshit."
"You'll have to take that up with the department." She straightened up. "It's
getting late. If you're sure you don't want a ride…"
Gwen took the hint and trotted off. After a few paces she stopped and turned
back. "One more thing—did you ask about the fingerprints found in Frank's
house?"
"His prints were the only ones found on the glass of Scotch, but you knew
that."
"What about the bottle?"
"Same thing."
Gwen's eyes narrowed. "Only Frank's prints," she repeated.
"On a bottle that's probably been handled by at least a dozen people between
the distillery and the package store. That didn't set off any alarms?"
"What I meant was that his fingerprints were found on the bottle. I don't
know how many other prints were found," Kate said hastily, "but I'll
see what I can find out."
"Thanks. I wouldn't ask, but…"
She didn't elaborate, and didn't need to. Kate knew the story: Gwen had left
the force nearly two years ago under a cloud and set up a small PI business. A
few people on the inside were still willing to deal with her when no one else
was looking, but the investigating officer assigned to Frank Cross's case was
personally offended by any hint of tarnish on the badge, and he'd spitefully—and
effectively—blocked Gwen's attempts to follow up on her mentor's death. That,
apparently, was where Kate came in. A medical examiner known for her obsessive
habits on and off the job, she could ask the occasional odd question without
raising too many eyebrows.
She waved Gwen on her way and headed up the stairs. The screened porch on the
front of her house was deeply shadowed. That was strange, considering how much
attention Kate lavished on safety precautions these days.
Strange, too, that she hadn't noticed the darkness until now. But the nearest
streetlamp was just across the narrow road, and the light outside the house was
bright enough to distract the eye from the darkness within. Kate tested the
porch door and found it securely locked. Most likely the lightbulbs had burned
out, or perhaps she'd simply forgotten to turn on the light when she'd left. God
knows she had enough on her mind to justify a lapse or two.
She let herself in and flipped the light switch. Faint, yellow light filled
the small porch. She's just forgotten to turn on the porch light, something
people did every day. Most people, that is. For Kate, it was the
equivalent of a red-flag offense. When this was over, she was definitely going
to take some of that vacation time she had piled up.
After securing the dead bolt on the porch entrance, she unlocked the front
door. The heavy wooden door swung shut behind her as she stepped into the hall.
Here, too, the lights were off, and she palmed the wall for the switch.
It felt slightly sticky. Kate regarded her hand, and her eyes widened.
Blood, so thick and dark it was nearly black, smeared her hand. Her eyes
focused on the floor beneath her feet, and she noted that the sisal mat was
sodden with blood.
The familiar smells of death hit her in a sudden rush. Panic struck, and she
whirled toward the door—
And fell back, stumbling a little because she couldn't tear her horrified
gaze from the door. Her throat worked as she fought back waves of bile. She
desperately wanted to scream and run, but the nightmare quality of the ugly
little tableau stole her ability to do either.
A neighbor's dog—a squat, ugly little mixed breed that looked like a cross
between a Chihuahua and a footstool—had been duct-taped to the door. The little
dog had been gutted, and above the killing slash was an elaborate design, carved
into its broad, nearly hairless belly. Though somewhat obscured by blood, the
design was plain enough: a circular, mazelike pattern that looked like a spiral
and its mirror image.
The same design that had been cut into the bodies of detectives Tom Yoland
and Carmine Moniz.
Kate lunged for the doorknob. The door opened only an inch or two before
slamming shut. For a moment or two she tugged at the knob with both hands, then
fresh horror swept over her in an icy wave when she realized what this meant:
Someone was in the porch, holding the door shut. Someone was in her
porch. Toying with her. Taunting her.
For a moment, anger was stronger than fear, strong enough to clear Kate's
thoughts and prompt her to action. She quickly flipped the lock and raced up the
stairs, taking them two at a time.
Her bedroom was a minor fortress, with a solid wood door secured not only by
dead bolts but with two long metal bars that slid into braces secured to wall
studs on either side of the door. There was no way anyone could kick down that
door, unless they planned to take most of the wall out with it.
She dashed into the room and slammed the door, sliding the various locks into
place. A metal bat, a relic of her softball days, was propped against a potted
plant by the door. Kate hefted it as she moved cautiously through the room,
turning on lights, throwing open closet doors, checking under the bed. As soon
as she was certain she was alone in the room, she picked up the bedside phone to
call for help.
There was no dial tone. She slammed the receiver back into the cradle, picked
it up, and listened again. A soft, faintly husky chuckle mocked her.
The receiver fell from her suddenly nerveless hands. The intruder was in the
house. He'd left the line open, waiting for her to pick up the receiver.
She ran to the nearest window and fumbled with the lock. Alarms on the window
were connected directly to the police station. Opening the window was as good as
making a 911 call.
Her fingers felt thick and clumsy, frostbitten with fear. Finally she
disengaged the locks and pushed at the window. It raised a fraction of an inch
before it stopped dead. Kate peered out the window, and her heart sank as she
noticed the heavy nails driven into the outer frames, holding the lower window
sash shut. She checked the other windows, just to make sure, but as she
expected, she was thoroughly trapped.
A sudden flare of light drew her eye to the lone tree in her narrow back
garden. High in the branches, not more than twenty feet from her window, sat a
shadowy figure, holding something that appeared to be a small torch.
An eternity passed as Kate stood frozen, staring into that grinning face.
Then her tormenter dropped the torch. It fell into the bed of shredded garden
mulch she'd had delivered last week but had never found time to spread.
The flame flickered and died. Thank God for tonight's rain shower, she
thought fervently.
Even as the thought formed, a thin tendril of smoke began to rise from the
pile of wood shavings, carrying an acrid chemical smell. Small, bright flames
licked across the pile and slithered toward the house.
Kate sank down onto her bed and considered her options. She had a rope ladder
in her closet, and if she had to, she could break one of the windows and climb
out. But if she left the house by the bedroom window, the intruder would see
her. Going down through the house didn't seem any safer. Her best bet was to
stay where she was and hope the police response came in time.
If indeed the alarm had been triggered.
The jangle of the front doorbell brought her leaping to her feet. She was at
the door, throwing aside the first dead bolt, when it occurred to her that the
bell might not be a harbinger of rescue. For all she knew, it could be the
intruder's ploy to get her out of her bedroom.
She peered out the side window, looking for any hint of the strobing light
that might indicate a police response. Unfortunately, no light at all found its
way into the narrow side yard.
A loud thump came from the floor below. Startled, Kate jumped back from the
window. As she did, she realized the source of the noise—the back door had been
forcibly opened. She heard the faint sound of footsteps, and a familiar voice
called her name.
Weak with relief, Kate threw back the locks and cracked open the door. "Be
careful," she yelled. "There was someone in the backyard. He was in the house,
too."
"Stay where you are. I'll check it out."
Long minutes passed before she heard footsteps on the stairs. She peeked out
again, then swung the door open wide.
"Thank God it's you! Did you see him?"
"No. The sick bastard is long gone. There's no one here but you and me."
Maybe it was her strained nerves, but that observation struck Kate as more
ominous than comforting. Her eyes dropped to the gun in her rescuer's hand.
Of course there would be a gun. Who responded to an intruder alert unarmed?
On the other hand, who took time to add a silencer to their weapon?
Kate's gaze flashed up to that familiar face, and what she saw confirmed her
fears. The first bullet tore through her shoulder, spinning her around and
sending her pitching facedown onto the carpet. Oddly enough, she felt the impact
of the floor before her mind registered the pain of the gunshot wound. Then the
pain came in a screaming, blinding rush.
The second shot slammed into her, and the third. There might have been more,
but Kate was beyond the point where such things mattered. Her entire world began
and ended with the white-hot agony radiating from her chest into her useless,
twitching limbs.
Dimly she was aware of a cool pressure at the base of her neck, and in some
corner of her mind she understood what was about to happen.
A lifetime of fear and resentment fell away, and Kate welcomed Death with a
gratitude so vast it bordered on affection.
CHAPTER ONE
A sudden gust of wind blew in from the ocean, carrying the tang of salt and
the recent memory of winter's chill. It ruffled through the late-spring garden
and swept across the balcony of a white clapboard house built by some
prosperous, long-dead sea captain. The two men seated on the balcony broke off
their argument and reached to steady their wineglasses. A silence fell between
them, heavy with the windswept echoes of distant shores, distant times.
Ian Forest glanced at the sea, finding no pleasure in the spectacular view
his perch afforded. The ocean reminded him of a spiteful ex-wife, endlessly
reciting his secrets but reserving the right to keep a thousand of her own. He
swept an impatient hand across his forehead to brush aside his windblown hair
and wondered, not for the first time, why Salvadore Anselm kept a house on
Martha's Vineyard. Both men had roots in island cultures, and to Ian, this
scenic, tourist-infested hell was a reminder of the exile they shared.
Perhaps that explained why Salvadore called him here so frequently. Perhaps
he chose this place because it gave their meetings an unspoken subtext: Of
course you will serve me, for what other choice remains to you?
Ian stifled a sigh and turned his attention to his host, a lean, fit man of
indeterminate age. Salvadore's face was unlined, but he projected an aura of
experience and power that, along with his thick silver hair, tricked the eye
into seeing a man in his mid fifties. His ethnicity was equally elusive, though
few people moved past the Italianate name to ponder the slight tilt of his
sapphire-blue eyes and the sharp, angular lines of his face. Salvadore's origins
might not be betrayed by his face, but his character, more often than not, was
written across it plainly enough. At the moment, his gem-colored eyes held a
faint sheen of malice, and his decidedly unpleasant smile celebrated the dark
joys of privilege and position.
"Shall we move on to the item of business?" he suggested.
Salvadore's voice—a silky baritone that retained an indefinable Old World
accent—was a perfect match to his appearance. Their people aged slowly, but it
had always struck Ian as odd that their speech patterns were likewise unaffected
by the passage of time. Constant, conscious effort was required to keep from
lapsing into their native tongue—or for that matter, into some older version of
the languages spoken in their adopted homelands.
It suddenly occurred to Ian that their conversation had lapsed into the old
language as it grew more heated. Salvadore's return to English decreed an end to
their dispute. Ian acknowledged this with a slight nod that signified, if not
defeat, at least recognition of battle deferred.
"I've decided to put the clubs under new management," Salvadore announced.
"Tonight will be your last evening at Underhill, so enjoy it while you can."
Ian suppressed a wry smile. He'd spent years keeping the sleazy "gentlemen's
clubs" profitable, but insinuating that he enjoyed watching young girls undress
to bad music was deliberately insulting. So, for that matter, was the assumption
that he might actually rise to snap at such tawdry bait.
Instead, he lifted his wineglass. "Here's to the new manager's success."
Salvadore's cool stare acknowledged the irony in Ian's toast, but he drank to
it nonetheless. Among their kind, even the most superficial ritual words held
power.
"We'll need you to begin your new assignment right away." Anselm paused,
lifting one silver eyebrow in mocking inquiry. "Unless, of course, you intend to
observe the ritual mourning for your liege lord?"
Long years of practice enabled Ian to keep his expression pleasantly neutral.
In mourning? Not bloody likely. His only regret concerning Wallace Earl
Edmonson's passing was that he hadn't had the pleasure of watching the bastard
die.
No, make that two regrets: not knowing where the earl was buried
made it impossible to spit on his grave.
"I can begin at once," Ian said mildly. "Be assured that Edmonson's passing
will be marked with all due honor."
Salvadore responded with a knowing smile. "No doubt. And for your service,
you've been granted a singular honor: you are entrusted with untangling the
earl's affairs. Not the council's business," he cautioned. "He handled those
matters admirably, but a few of his side projects were… somewhat questionable."
Ian had few illusions concerning the boundaries of "council business." The
council would never openly admit to taking a monthly tithe of Edmonson's sex and
drug trade, but what other reason could they possibly cite for their
unquestioning support of the man, other than the substantial financial
contributions his dubious activities made possible?
"Define 'side projects,' if you will."
Anselm's expression darkened at this breach of protocol. Their business was
conducted under a strict code of law and tradition, with the understanding that
vague definitions, subtle evasions, and a highly selective version of the truth
would provide the necessary flexibility.
"You require specifics?" he demanded in a tone that mingled reproof with
incredulity.
"I do, yes. Edmonson's life was long, eventful, and thoroughly misspent. Give
me a place to start."
For a long moment, Salvadore sat in silence, his face eloquent with the
battle between pragmatism and custom. "The alliance with Dennis Walsh," he said
at last. "It seems unwise to involve the captain of a city's vice squad in our
affairs. He's in a position to learn too much about us, and it seems likely to
me that any man who can be bought by one person will eventually sell to
another."
Ian rolled the stem of his wineglass between his fingers as he chose his next
words. "We are in agreement concerning the man's character," he said carefully,
"but I understand Edmonson's reasoning in this matter."
"And you concur?"
"No, but I'd prefer to address my concerns as a separate issue."
Salvadore shifted impatiently and glanced down at the antique sundial in the
garden below. "Go on."
"Edmonson's recruitment of Captain Walsh was a response to changes in the
structure of local law enforcement. When the city had separate divisions for
drugs, gangs, and sex crimes, it was considerably easier to arrange for certain
things to fall between the cracks. Unfortunately, it occurred to some
enlightened official that crimes involving drugs, sex, and gangs were frequently
related, and not infrequently committed by the same individuals. An experimental
vice squad was put into place. When it started to prove too effective, Edmonson
thought it necessary to subvert some of the top people."
"How?" Before Ian could respond, Salvadore grimaced and shook his head.
"Never mind—I don't care to know. I find the appetites of such men…
distasteful."
"But profitable."
Salvadore nodded, either missing the subtle rebuke or choosing to ignore it.
He reached for a pottery decanter and refilled their wineglasses. They both
sipped, letting the honey wine slip across their palates.
The mead was exceptional—light, fragrant, and surprisingly dry. Under the
circumstances, however, Ian would have preferred a less civilized drink. The
sordid matters under discussion were hard enough to swallow without providing so
vivid a contrast.
Apparently Salvadore thought so, too, for he carefully placed his glass aside
before continuing. "Very well, you've presented the logic behind Edmonson's
decision. What is your opinion of this matter?"
"Our ties to Captain Walsh have become personal, and therefore dangerous,"
Ian said bluntly.
"Ah. You're speaking, of course, of our new foundling. How much of a problem
is she likely to be?"
Ian glanced meaningfully toward the glass doors that led into the upper floor
of Salvadore's house. In the room beyond was a wall safe, which held, among
other treasures, a blue crystal that magnified the owner's innate ability to
perceive things her eyes had never seen. Neither of them had any claim to the
gem, but they were agreed on the folly of placing so powerful an inheritance in
the hands of an untrained, untried changeling—especially one whose loyalties
were far from certain.
Anselm conceded the point with a slight nod, "Your recommendation?"
"We could remove the source of her grievance."
Dark blue eyes flashed reprovingly to Ian's face. "Killing a high-ranking
official might be an occasional necessity, but in this case, the benefit hardly
justifies the risk."
The hum of an approaching powerboat caught Anselm's attention. His eyes
focused on the driver, then took on a slightly malevolent gleam.
Ian followed the line of Anselm's gaze. A sleek white boat cut through the
wind-ruffled water and pulled up to a skillful stop by the dock. The driver
swung himself up onto the dock, moving with surprising grace for someone his
size. He was not much above medium height—perhaps an inch or two short of six
feet—but he was considerably broader and more muscular than either of the men
observing him. His hair was nearly as dark as Ian's, and his sun-browned face
proclaimed his Native American ancestry.
As if sensing the men's scrutiny, the newcomer looked up toward the balcony.
He shielded his eyes against the sun with one hand and lifted the other in
greeting.
Ian's jaw tightened in annoyance. He had not forgotten the beating he'd taken
from those hands, or the way those kind brown eyes could turn as flat and
focused as any attack dog's—an analogy, come to think of it, that lay entirely
too close to the truth.
Understanding crashed over Ian, and he turned incredulous eyes to his host.
"That man is an enforcer."
"So?"
"You assigned him to befriend Gwen. To watch her, yes, and to report
back any difficulties she might be having, but surely with the goal of helping
ease her way into her new life!"
Anselm's chuckle was as dry and cool as snakeskin. "It's not like you to be
so naive. Our new foundling—"
"Gwen," Ian interjected. "Gwen Gellman is the name she knows and
uses."
"Very well, Gwen is a potential problem. You know that as well as I
do. You also know problems tend to take root and grow if not swiftly eliminated.
As for friends, she has enough of those—too many, for that matter. She
has no need of another, and certainly not a man like Jason Cross."
That struck Ian as the best opening he was likely to get to reopen their
earlier discussion. "I couldn't agree more. The man you call Jason Cross—"
"Enough." Anselm's open palm struck the table, and his tone rang
with finality. "He has been thoroughly tested. For the last time, let it go."
Let it go? Ignore the fact that Edmonson's attack dog was trotting at Gwen's
heels? For several days now, "Jason" had been posing as the estranged son of
Gwen's mentor, a man recently murdered by Edmonson… or someone in his employ.
Ian had his suspicions about that, but Anselm shrugged off his concerns. He was
satisfied that Jason Cross had shifted his loyalty from Edmonson to the new
regime. As far as he was concerned, there the matter ended.
Unfortunately, Gwen had accepted Jason for who he claimed to be. By all
appearances, he'd already found a foothold in her life—a feat that Ian had been
unable to duplicate.
So he swallowed his protests and watched in glum silence as Jason Cross loped
up the wooden stairs to the balcony, making less noise than one might expect.
Whatever he saw in Ian's face seemed to amuse him.
"Am I late?" he said casually.
"Your timing is admirable." Anselm sent his companion a sly, sidelong glance.
"We were just discussing how best to clean up after your former master."
Jason's smile dimmed. "With all due respect, the Middle Ages ended about five
hundred years ago. I don't appreciate being referred to as if I were—"
"A rottweiler?" supplied Ian helpfully.
"I was thinking more along the lines of 'slave' or 'serf,' but sure, that
will do."
Anselm dismissed this exchange with an impatient wave of one hand. "I
understand that your… father, the late Frank Cross, assisted Gwen with her
investigations. Have you been able to replace him in this endeavor?"
"Not yet. In fact, I haven't suggested it to her."
"Really. What have you been doing?"
"Let's see," Jason began, "I've moved into my father's house, started a new
job, set up local accounts, and taken care of a hundred little things that make
an identity theft bulletproof."
Ian's eyes narrowed. "Such as making sure the real Jason Cross doesn't wander
onstage?"
"That won't be a problem," the man said flatly. To Anselm he said, "Gwen
trusted Frank Cross, and she's inclined to extend that trust his son. But how
far would this impulse go, if right out of the box I started prying into her
business?"
"A reasonable argument," Anselm allowed, "but the sooner you can start
monitoring her investigations, the better."
"I'm on it." Jason smiled fleetingly. "I signed up for a couple of
programming classes I could probably teach. Boring as hell, but it'll provide an
opening."
"Why not simply present yourself as a computer expert?"
"Anything that's too convenient and coincidental is likely to raise questions
in Gwen's mind, and I don't want to give her a reason to start looking into my
background. It's better if she thinks I started playing around with Frank's
equipment because it was there, and got interested in learning more."
Anselm conceded this with a shrug. "Is she likely to wonder why you're such a
fast learner?"
"I doubt it. If anything, she'll wonder why anyone would want to bother.
Another benefit of this approach is it allows me to screen information without
raising suspicion. Since Gwen isn't expecting too much from me, she'll be more
likely to assume that I'm passing along everything I know."
"I'll have to trust your judgment on this matter. When do you think you can
start?"
"Soon, I think. I'm playing it by ear."
"Very well. Now, what progress on Captain Walsh?"
"Gwen knows that Walsh was hooked up with Edmonson, but she hasn't started
focusing on that part of the puzzle. She's been obsessed with proving that Frank
Cross's death wasn't a drunken accident."
Anselm's gaze flicked to Ian. "That could be a problem."
"I'll see to it."
"And you, Jason, will work with Gwen to discover and eliminate connections
between Edmonson and Walsh."
A small, grim smile touched Jason's lips. "She's not going to cover for her
ex-boss, I'll tell you that right now."
"Did I suggest that? Walsh has criminal associates. Such men live dangerous
and uncertain lives."
"In other words, you want the middlemen eliminated before she's able to
connect all the dots," he surmised.
"Aptly put."
"What about Walsh? Hands off?"
"For the time being. Focus on the girl, and keep her from inquiring too
deeply into our affairs. We need to know what she knows, preferably before
she knows it."
Jason let out an incredulous huff. "Right. Since Gwen's an easygoing gal
without a shred of curiosity, that shouldn't be a problem. Anything else?"
"There are, in fact, two more things: You can spare me your sarcasm, and you
can stay out of her bed."
The young man smirked and glanced at Ian. "I wonder where this is
coming from."
"Wonder all you like, but do as you're told. Observe her closely, and keep us
informed of anything unusual. Anything. Your reports will help us judge whether
or not she's equal to the path ahead."
Hesitation flickered in Jason's eyes. "What happens if you decide she's not?"
Anselm's gaze dropped pointedly to Jason's hands, which were edged with
calluses formed through many years of training in a killer's arts.
"You were not chosen for this task simply because of your computer skills."
"Wait a minute—didn't Edmonson get carted off because he killed a couple of
you people? Isn't that against your laws?" he protested.
"Yes, but you are not, strictly speaking, one of 'our people.'"
Jason folded his arms and leaned back against the railing. His brown eyes
took on a decidedly unfriendly gleam. "That's an interesting distinction."
"I'm so gratified to learn we're not boring you," Anselm said coldly. "That
will be all."
For a moment Ian thought the young fool would attempt to argue, but he pushed
himself away from the rail and stalked off, making no effort to hide his
displeasure. It was not particularly judicious behavior, but Ian thought better
of him for it.
But not well enough to trust him with Gwen's life.
As soon as Jason was out of hearing range, Ian tried one last time. "Is it
really necessary to submit Gwen to such scrutiny?"
For a moment Anselm simply stared at him. "She is a changeling," he said,
giving each word exaggerated emphasis to point out that he was stating the
obvious.
"She is, yes, but the usual reasoning doesn't apply. There is no question
about her bloodlines."
"Nevertheless, she has spent more than three decades denying what she is.
Words have power, and denial can leave a taint not easily erased."
"She has come to accept that she is not human," Ian said quickly. "She knows
she is a changeling."
"But does she understand what that means?"
Ian hesitated. In truth, Gwen was a long way from an understanding of her
newfound heritage. The best he could offer was, "I heard her refer to herself as
one of the Elders."
The older man responded with a derisive snort. "At the tender age of
thirty-four? She's little more than a child. Teach her what she is, Ian, and
quickly, before she's lost to us."
"She'll be fine," Ian assured him. "In fact, this surveillance strikes me as
not only unnecessary, but risky."
That observation seemed to surprise Anselm. "Risky? How so?"
For a moment Ian considered giving his honest opinion: Edmonson had been a
sadistic fool, and any human who willingly served him was likely to be every bit
as twisted. But Anselm's icy gaze warned him not to revisit the Jason Cross
argument.
"Relying on humans always holds risks," Ian pointed out, approaching the
problem from a broader angle. "Those who perceive our true nature are usually
outside the accepted parameters of normality—someone with a psychic gift, a
great hunger for knowledge or power, even, occasionally, an unbalanced mind."
"Whatever the case, they are all tools," Anselm stated. "Of what consequence
are a hammer's hopes and dreams, so long as it drives the nail?"
The edge in his voice spoke of flagging patience. He picked up his half-empty
wineglass and shifted his gaze to the expanse of open sea.
Ian knew better than to ignore so pointed a dismissal. He rose and inclined
his head in deference to Anselm's position, if not to his opinion.
For he was mistaken: Ian was certain of that. Anselm had warned Jason away
from Gwen's bed, but that was a routine matter borne more of esthetics than
necessity. Bedding humans was usually a harmless enough pastime. But during his
long life, Ian had learned that bonds, true bonds, between elves and humans
could be dangerous.
Sometimes, they could be deadly.
If Ian was right about Gwen, she might become very important to the exiled
elves. They could not afford to lose her, as they had lost so many changelings
before.
CHAPTER TWO
Gwen Gellman walked swiftly through the dark basement, making her way toward
the faint red glow of the exit sign. All of her senses were on alert, so she was
already turning when she heard the first rubber-soled whisper of footsteps
behind her.
The man was close, and moving in fast. His dark face was shadowed by a hooded
sweatshirt, but the way he moved told Gwen he was young and reasonably athletic.
And he was big—he probably had half a foot and a good sixty pounds on her.
He was there before she could complete the turn, plowing into her like a
veteran linebacker. Gwen struggled for balance, but momentum and gravity swiftly
decided the outcome. As he rode her to the floor, she threw her left arm
straight out in front of her and curved her other arm up to shield her face.
They hit the floor with bone-jarring force. Gwen quickly shook off the impact
and took stock of her situation: facedown, no weapons within reach, heavy son of
a bitch sprawled on top of her. Not great.
She rolled toward her extended left arm, using her right arm to push their
combined weight away from the floor.
For a moment Gwen thought she might roll him off her, but he quickly
adjusted, moving with her so that she was still pinned beneath his body. Now
they were face to face, with her right arm trapped between them. The wolfish
grin on his face made it clear that he considered this situation an improvement.
His next logical move would be to seize her unfettered hand. Gwen offered a
distraction: she wriggled her legs out from under his, so that her legs were
spread wide and their lower bodies pressed intimately together.
That surprised him into immobility, if only for a moment. Gwen could almost
hear the blood rushing from his brain as he started thinking with the other
organ men used in decision-making processes. She wrapped her left leg around his
right, pulling them even closer. At the same time she moved her trapped arm a
little, so she could slide her palm up the side of his face—a movement that read
more like a caress than an attack.
Before he could make sense of all this, Gwen slapped her left palm against
the other side of his face and slid both thumbs into position over his eyelids.
She pressed in, hard.
A startled curse escaped him, and he reared back—not much, but enough to
create some space between them. Gwen seized his right arm with both hands. At
the same time, she raised her opposite knee and planted her foot, then pushed
her hips off the floor as hard and as high as she could.
The man lost his balance and started to fall forward. He tried to catch
himself with his free hand, but Gwen was already rolling them both toward his
trapped right arm and entangled right leg.
In less than a heartbeat, their positions were reversed. Gwen kept rolling
and scrambled off him. She came up on one knee, pulled one fist up to shoulder
height, and drove it down hard toward his groin.
She pulled up just short of her target, her knuckles brushing the rough
fabric of his jeans. Holding that position, she glanced toward the shadowy form
standing by the door.
"You can hit the lights now, Stan."
Long fluorescent bulbs flickered and hummed into life. Stan—a painfully thin
man clad in a gray janitor's jumpsuit at least two sizes too big for him—yawned
and picked up his broom. He drifted off, looking completely unfazed by the fight
he'd just witnessed. Business as usual, where he'd come from.
Gwen rose to her feet and extended a hand to her "attacker." He gave it a
light slap, turning her offer of assistance into a low five, then rose on his
own and ambled toward a folding chair over by the watercooler.
She turned to the nine women who sat on a semicircle of mats on the floor of
the church basement, their faces flushed and damp from the hour of rigorous
exercise she'd put them through. They regarded her with wide, uncertain eyes.
One woman looked to be minutes away from tears. Even though they all knew the
demonstration was coming, it had hit them hard.
It was supposed to.
"Let's thank Officer O'Riley for his help," Gwen said. She began to clap, and
the class joined in a short-lived, halfliearted bout of applause.
Damian O'Riley lifted one hand in acknowledgement, then went back to his
usual demeanor: both hands stuck in the front pocket of his sweatshirt, long
legs stretched out in front of him. In that pose, he looked like a bored
high-school kid, not a city cop with a college degree and the tenacity of a pit
bull.
It was a dichotomy Gwen could appreciate. She'd been the same kind of cop not
too long ago, and even though she had a good ten years on Damian, she still
looked like a teenager. Only recently had she started to figure out why. And
tonight, for the first time, she'd have to explain to someone else a mystery she
herself only dimly understood.
She forced that prospect into the back of her mind and focused on the seated
women.
"Before the last class, all of you will participate in staged attacks. Not
like that one, not at first," she added hastily, seeing panic flash across
several faces. "We'll begin with familiar exercises, like breaking holds, only
instead of working in pairs, you'll work with a male partner."
One hand went up uncertainly—a soft little hand belonging to a petite
brunette in her mid thirties. In her pastel pink tee shirt and matching yoga
pants, her shiny brown hair caught back in a neat ponytail, she looked like
someone who'd gotten lost on her way to a Mary Kay Cosmetics home party. Gwen
had a pretty good idea what was coming, and she stifled a sigh as she pointed to
the woman.
"But some of the techniques we're learning are meant to… hurt people."
"You don't need to worry about that," Gwen said briskly. "All the men I know
are used to taking abuse."
Damian let out an emphatic grunt. "She got that right."
This surprised a burst of laughter from the women, and some of the tension
slipped from their faces. Gwen didn't necessarily consider that a good thing.
"You've got to forget all about your nice-girl upbringing. When your life's
on the line, there's nothing wrong with inflicting a little pain, and there are
a lot of good ways to do it. If you can't go for the groin, you can break his
thumbs, crush his windpipe, or rip his ears off. That last thing is a lot easier
to do than it sounds, by the way.
"But," she interjected, holding up a cautioning finger, "you can't rely
on pain. Over sixty percent of sexual attackers are on some kind of intoxicant.
That can take the edge off whatever you dish out."
"Now she tells me," Damian interjected.
Gwen waited for the collective chuckle to die down. "Your best bet is usually
to make as much noise as you can, break free as fast as you can, and run like
hell. But you won't always have that option. What Damian and I demonstrated here
was pretty close to worst-case scenario: pinned, facedown, hands trapped."
"Why do we have to act out attacks?" another woman demanded, a shrill,
you-can't-make-me edge to her voice. "As long as we learn the techniques, won't
the training kick in when it needs to?"
"It might," Gwen allowed, "but one of the main reasons more women don't fight
off attackers is that they're frozen with shock. The whole 'this can't be
happening to me' thing. It's better to get past that emotional bullshit now
than in some parking garage the next time you have to work late."
Several heads nodded, and the woman who'd spoken acknowledged the point with
a grudging shrug.
"If this class is a statistical sample, some of you are here because you've
learned it can happen to you. Some stats say one woman out of ten is
sexually assaulted, some say one out of seven. Some go as high as one out of
four."
"Twenty-five percent? That seems way too high," objected a reed-thin blonde
who'd introduced herself earlier that evening as some sort of state bureaucrat.
She hadn't had much to say since, but hey—the woman was in a position to know
what lying bastards statistics could be.
Gwen nodded. "Yeah, but keep in mind that some women are raped more than
once." Because a few of them looked skeptical, she added, "Sexual assault can
happen to anyone, anywhere, but all of you in this class can take precautions
that simply aren't available to some women. It's hard to stay out of a bad
neighborhood if you live there. It's tough to avoid a rapist if he's your
mother's boyfriend, or even a family member. When I was in juvenile hall, I knew
girls who'd been raped three times or more, and one, an incest victim, who'd
lost count before she was out of middle school."
Several jaws dropped, and they all stared at her with the glazed eyes of
people who'd gone into information overload. Gwen wasn't sure if it was the
concept of multiple assaults or her casual reference to her delinquent past that
tipped the scales, but she figured it was time to call it a night.
A glance at the clock confirmed this. "That's all for this class. Next week
we'll work with legal weapons anyone can carry: keys, key chains, flashlights,
hiking sticks, and so on. We'll be working in pairs, so bring safety goggles to
protect your eyes. You can pick some up at Home Depot. Bike helmets would be
good, too. If that seems extreme to you, keep this in mind: The bad guys take
their work seriously."
As the somber-faced women filed out, Gwen walked over to the young cop. He
gathered his long legs under him and rose, pushing back the hood of his
sweatshirt to reveal close-cropped hair he'd recently dyed a reddish brown. Gwen
didn't particularly like this innovation, since the color didn't provide much
contrast to the rich brown hue of his skin, but hey—it was his hair.
"That went well, you think?"
"If you meant to scare the shit out of everyone, I'd say yeah, it went
great," Damian said dryly. "You think any of them will come back for the second
class?"
Gwen shrugged. "If they're serious about staying alive, sure they will. I'm
not getting paid to make them 'feel good about themselves,' or whatever happy
horseshit the community school had in mind when they named this class
'Self-Defense: Exercise and Empowerment for Women.' Fucking morons."
"Damn, Gellman—aren't you the perky little cheerleader tonight." He grinned
at her as he thrust his hands into his pockets and rocked back onto his heels.
"Now, pay up."
"Yeah, yeah. You want some coffee or something? I'm buying."
"Forget it, white girl—you're not getting off that easy. The deal was quid
pro quo: something for something. I let you kick my ass—"
"You let me?"
"Notice me ignoring that. Quid pro quo," he repeated. "One ass-kicking in
exchange for a follow-up on that kidnapping case."
Not an appealing scenario, since "that kidnapping case" had changed Gwen's
entire concept of reality, but Damian was one of the few people Gwen knew who
might be able to hear the story without concluding that she should check herself
into a rubber room.
"I'm going to pay up," she grumbled, "but I'm dangerously decaffeinated and
really, really hungry. You?"
"Missed supper," he said. "As usual. Yeah, I could eat."
The church janitor ambled back into the room and began to gather up the mats.
Gwen had known the man for years: Stan Domanski, an ex-junkie who owed his job,
and probably his life, to Gwen's friend Sister Tamar. Despite this common
touchstone, Gwen had yet to get more than a word or two out of him. True to
form, he returned her thanks with a noncommittal grunt and hoisted a stack of
mats, staggering a little under the load.
"Maybe we should help," Damian suggested, his gaze following the janitor's
unsteady progress.
"I've offered. He took it as an insult." Even so, Gwen took her time heading
for the exit and glanced back twice as she led the way up the back steps. But
Stan seemed to be managing okay, and as soon as he dumped the mats into a bin,
Gwen shouldered open the heavy door and stepped out into a damp spring evening.
A cold, soft mist was falling, and steam rose from the storm drains on the
much-patched streets as Gwen and Damian walked to a nearby sports pub.
Damian followed her to a back table, his face dubious as he took in the
scattering of patrons staring morosely at the grainy screen of the room's single
wall-mounted television. "You sure about this?"
"What? Since I'm buying, you want to hold out for the Cheesecake Factory?
This place isn't as bad as it looks."
It was, in fact, one of Gwen's favorite haunts in this part of town. The
interior was about as glum as the weather, and the wait-staff were reliably
surly. For some reason, the staff all seemed to be in the late stages of a Goth
phase. Gwen figured they were offended by the white stripes on the referee
shirts they were required to wear. But the food was cheap and reasonably good,
and the cook thought "portion control" meant that you stopped piling food on the
plates when it started to fall off.
Gwen raised her oversize coffee mug and waved it like a cast-away signaling a
passing ship. A waitress sporting bottle-black hair and multiple piercings came
over with a full pot of coffee. She rolled her eyes when Gwen told her to leave
the pot, but she set it down without argument and rattled off the night's
specials—no small feat, considering the size of the silver stud in her tongue.
Gwen ordered a burger and fries and Damian said he'd have the same. As the
waitress slumped away, Gwen poured coffee for them both and laced hers with five
little tubs of cream and two sugars. She stirred it slowly, tasted it, and added
another sugar. Achieving the proper balance was an important culinary ritual,
also known as "stalling."
During these preparations, a young Black man called Damian's name and came
over to the table. They touched fists and exchanged a little small talk,
street-style, before the conversation turned to Gwen.
"This your lady, man?"
"She's a PI," Damian said quickly. "I like to pick up some extra work, off
duty. Saving for a new car, you understand."
"Uh-huh. About damn time." He nodded amiably to Gwen and sauntered off.
An uncomfortable silence settled over the table. After a few moments, Gwen
said, "That raises an interesting point."
"I'm sorry, okay?" Damian said quickly. "That was rude, me not introducing
you and all. It's just that a lot of people I know don't exactly get behind the
interracial thing."
"Yeah, I got that, but it doesn't qualify as an 'interesting point.' The
thing is, you helped me with a case, and I usually pay people who do that. If
this gets to be a habit, we need to work out rates and so forth."
The chagrin faded from Damian's face. "How about we just keep it off the
books? I'll help out when you need me, and you return the favor."
"That's not going to get you a new car, but yeah, we could do that." Gwen
leaned back in her seat. "You have a specific favor in mind?"
"Maybe. You do prenups?"
"Prenuptial investigations? Sure. Are you looking to get married?"
He sent her a look. "My sister Shawna is thinking about it. She's a few years
older than me, has an MBA, works in a bank. Does real well for herself, except
when it comes to men. She can't pick 'em worth a damn. This guy talks the talk,
and he looks solid enough, but I get this weird feeling about him. It's
not just because he's sniffing around my sister. It's a family thing, but not
your average family thing. You see what I'm saying?"
Gwen nodded. According to Damian, his family tree included a voodoo
priestess, a medium, a couple of professional psychics, and the occasional water
witch. Dowsing—the ability to sense underground water with some sort of crooked
stick—cropped up every generation or so. The practice of folk medicine was
nearly a family-wide preoccupation. Damian was pretty open about all this, and
he seemed to take it in stride. He shared Gwen's pragmatic view of such things:
Like the man told Horatio, there were more things in heaven and earth, yadda
yadda.
"Your sister didn't inherit any of the family talents, I take it?"
"Hell no. She doesn't believe in any of that shit. But a private eye, that
sounds like something she could get behind. She likes this guy a lot, but you
can tell she's holding back. My guess is she lost faith in her own judgment when
her last fiance took out three Visa cards in her name and maxed them out. I
could probably talk her into meeting you."
Before Gwen could answer, a caressing wind swept over her—a psychic breeze
that raised goose bumps on her arms and made the hair at the back of her neck
rise. The tingling sensation swept down her body, setting nerve endings on edge
and leaving her feeling as if she'd spent the past fifteen minutes engaged in
innovative foreplay. She didn't need to turn around to know who was approaching.
A shadow fell across the table. Damian looked up, and his jaw dropped.
Figures, Gwen noted glumly. The young cop had known there was something weird
about her the first time he set eyes on her. Naturally he'd pick up vibes from
the Prince of Darkness.
CHAPTER THREE
"Sit down, Ian," she said resignedly. "Stop staring, Damian, and for
chrissake, shut your mouth. It makes you look like a goldfish. Or gay."
Damian shut his mouth with an audible click, but he continued to stare as the
newcomer dropped gracefully into a chair.
Gwen had to admit that Ian Forest was worth staring at: hair that was black
enough to pick up bluish highlights, eyes as large and blue as her own in a
narrow, fine-boned face that brought to mind fallen angels and doomed poets.
Surprisingly, Ian was regarding Damian with equal intensity. "A magus," he
murmured, not sounding entirely pleased by his conclusion.
The cop's eyes narrowed. "How's that again?"
"That's not an insult," Ian assured him. "Quite the contrary, in fact. The
word refers to someone who sees more than meets the common eye. You probably
know its plural form, magi."
"Three wise men. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh," Gwen elaborated. "Fancy
bathrobes, camels, big-ass neon star overhead. Stop me when this starts sounding
familiar."
Damian shot a quelling glance at her. "I know what the damn word
means. I just never heard it used to start a conversation before."
"That is not what's happening here," she said fervently. "Ian has to
rush off. Right now. No time to chat."
The newcomer ignored her and extended a hand to Damian. "Let's start with a
more conventional opening gambit. Ian Forest. Gwen was briefly in my employ. And
you are?"
"A little freaked out, but I'm adjusting." They shook, then settled back in
their chairs and continued to eye each other.
Ian was the first to break the silence. "So, Officer O'Riley, what is your
theory about our Gwen?"
The cop's eyes went wary, then turned flat and cool. "Since we're asking
questions, I got a couple. First: any particular reason why you should know my
name? Second: I should have a 'theory' about Gellman?"
"I would hope so, yes. But I'm answering your questions out of order, aren't
I? In response to the first, you came to my attention when you started
investigating a collection of DNA samples taken from people who attended a
certain club the night it was raided. It was suggested to you that one of those
samples was not human. If you are as intelligent as your college records
suggest, you have eliminated enough possibilities to suspect that this sample
was taken from Gwen. Assuming you are correct, what is she?"
Damian glanced at Gwen. When she shrugged, he said cautiously, "We were gonna
talk about that later tonight."
"Is there any particular reason to wait?"
"Privacy?" Gwen suggested pointedly.
Ian studied her for a moment. "You have no idea what you're going to tell
him, do you?"
"I'll figure it out as I go along," she muttered. "Not that this is any of
your business."
"I beg to differ, but that's a discussion that does require privacy.
Since the topic is up for discussion, allow me to get the ball rolling."
Ian reached out and tucked a strand of Gwen's dark chestnut hair behind her
ear. Instinctively she brushed it back. Her ears weren't her best feature, and
her hair, although short, was always cut to hide the top half of them—
Suddenly she knew what explanation Ian was going to give. Incredible as it
seemed, he was going to play the Elder Races card.
"Don't do it," she warned him.
"Oh, come now," Ian chided. "Young Damian here has seen you in the shower
with your hair slicked back, so he knows what your ears look like."
Damian choked on his coffee and set the mug down hard enough to slosh some of
the brew onto the table. "You got a peeper, Gellman? If he's stalking, say the
word and I arrest his ass."
"Now, there's a thought," Gwen said wistfully. A few years back, Rhode
Island's legislature had upgraded stalking from a misdemeanor to a felony, with
first-time offenders facing sentences of up to five years, a fine of up to ten
grand, or both.
Her sigh held genuine regret. Five years without Ian Forest hanging around
sounded pretty damn good. "He's not exactly a stalker. He just… knows things."
"Yeah? You don't get that kind of info off the fucking Internet. I look hard
enough, how much you want to bet we find out he bent some kind of law
all to hell."
"Gwen recently turned thirty-four," Ian said, undeterred by the younger man's
rant. "How old does she look to you?"
"Like there's a safe answer to that question," he sneered.
Ian smiled faintly. "I stand corrected. One final question: You fought Gwen
tonight. How would you describe that experience?"
"Like trying to hold onto a hundred pounds of Siamese cat," Damian snapped.
"If you got a point, make it."
"I think you know where this is going," Ian said softly. "Surely you remember
a certain weekend in upstate New York during your sophomore year of college?"
Up to this point, Gwen had been watching this odd conversation like a
spectator at a tennis match. Ian's last shot went right past her, but it was
pretty obvious that it'd hit Damian right between the eyes. His face fell slack
with astonishment, and his gaze shifted from Ian to Gwen and back. In the brief
moment Damian's eyes met hers, Gwen read in them a welter of emotions: surprise,
disbelief, speculation, denial.
"What's this about?" she demanded.
The young cop shifted uneasily in his chair. "It's not a big deal—at least
apart from the issue of how the hell he knows this stuff. Thing is,
back when I was in college, I was into fantasy books, online games—that sort of
thing. I even went to a few fantasy conventions, but I usually ended up feeling
like one dark sock in a washload of whitey-tighties. You don't meet up with a
lot of brothers at the cons, I can tell you that. Shoot, there's probably more
color at your basic Klan meeting, and—"
"This is fascinating," Gwen cut in. "In fact, I can hardly wait until we're
both retired and have time to sit on a park bench and swap memories."
"Yeah." Damian blew out a sigh. "Short version: There was this LARP
con—that's 'live action role-playing'—in upstate New York, and a friend of mine
talked me into trying it out. Everybody played a character all weekend, ran
around in costume."
A moment of silence passed before Ian asked, "And what were you?"
"Seems like you the man with all the answers tonight," Damian said coldly.
"You want that put on the table, you say the word."
"Very well. Our young friend here was an elf. A forest elf, to be
precise—a variety that apparently comes in green and brown camouflage."
Gwen shot a venomous look at Ian, then slapped both hands down on the table
and leaned over them to glare at the young cop.
"Step into reality, fanboy," she snapped. "Elves don't exist, and even if
they did, I'm not a freaking elf!"
"Did I say you were?" demanded Damian. He tossed his head toward
Ian. "That's his story."
"I'm just trying to understand your point of view," Ian said smoothly. "Given
your particular set of interests, I wondered if you might make that connection."
"Back in the day, I used to watch Star Trek reruns, too. Ooh, pointy
ears! How 'bout that? Gellman's ears are just a little bit pointy, so maybe I
should have pegged her for a Vulcan?"
Gwen threw up her hands in exasperation and prepared to launch into a tirade.
While she was still drawing breath, Ian caught her eye and asked, "An unexpected
conclusion, perhaps, but I doubt it's much stranger than those she grew up
hearing."
It was a surprisingly shrewd comment, and it hit the mark hard enough to
deflate Gwen's ire. Her hands dropped to the table, hard, as if weighed down by
her childhood memories.
The anger faded from Damian's eyes as he took in her response. "Tell it," he
said softly.
"Not much to tell," she said with a shrug. "I can't remember the first time I
picked up a book or toy and knew who had held it last, or walked into a room and
knew what had happened there last night. When you know things you shouldn't
know, people assume you're lying, crazy, or a nasty little snoop. When I was
nine, a foster family added a couple of new possibilities: I was either the
devil's little mouthpiece, or I was an innocent victim of evil—sort of like
Linda Blair in The Exorcist, I guess."
"No good options," Damian concluded. "So how did you explain what
you could do?"
"An interesting question," Ian put in. "What about it, Gwen? Any 'forest
folk' in your early experiences?"
She shrugged. "Santa's helpers, Keebler cookies. Nothing that rang any
bells."
"In other words, since you didn't share Officer O'Riley's interests, you were
never inclined to his… perspective."
"Hey, man, I know the difference between fantasy and real life!"
"Yet some might argue that you're unusually credulous. You accept as normal
all manner of occult and psychic phenomena."
Gwen caught Damian's eye. "I didn't tell him."
"Never thought you did," the cop replied grimly. "All right, here's the
thing, Mr. Forest: I don't waste time trying to convince myself that something
didn't happen, just because it doesn't fit into the way things are supposed
to happen."
"You accept alternative explanations," Ian suggested.
"Yeah, you could say that. We might not understand how and why something
works, but that doesn't mean it doesn't work."
Ian smiled faintly. "An admirable sentiment, if somewhat difficult to parse."
By this point, Gwen was starting to understand what Ian was doing. Obviously
he knew of Damian's slightly left-of-center childhood and the worldview that
went with it, and wanted to find out just how far that credulity went. By
mockingly pushing the pointy-eared E-word, he established the whole Elder Races
thing as way, way outside the edges of the envelope.
Which, quite frankly, was exactly where Gwen preferred to leave it.
"So, what did I think I was?" she repeated thoughtfully. "Different, I guess.
I never got much further than that, but it never occurred to me that I might not
be human."
"Could be the lab tech made a mistake," Damian suggested. "Or maybe there are
DNA variations among humans that we just haven't found out about yet."
His face grew more animated as he warmed to that idea. "Hey, why not? My
mother keeps bird feeders out back, and the little brown birds that show up all
look pretty much the same. With dogs, though, you get everything from the Saint
Bernard to teacup poodles. Turns out the birds are different species,
but the big-ass dog is the same species as the little white rat with the 'fro."
"Interesting point," Ian said. "So in your opinion, Gwen might be an as-yet
undiscovered variety of human?"
"You got a better theory, Einstein?"
"It makes sense to me," Gwen said quickly. "In fact, it makes a lot
of sense. If we're determined to slap a label on me, 'changeling' works as well
as any. In my case, it's literally true—I was switched with another baby. My
biological parents died before they could teach me how to deal with the psychic
shit that comes with being… whatever."
The waitress clumped over with two orders of burgers and fries, effectively
halting the conversation. Ian glanced at Gwen's meal, and his eyes widened with
something that looked very much like horror.
"You want to order something?" asked the waitress, sounding more than a
little put out by the idea.
"Nothing, thank you," Ian murmured, still staring at Gwen's plate.
A muffled ring came from the pocket of Damian's sweatshirt. He fished out his
cell phone and glanced at the number, then promptly pushed back his chair and
rose.
"I gotta take this." He glanced from Ian to Gwen. "You'll be okay?"
"Go," she told him as she reached for a French fry.
Ian seized her wrist before she got there. "No," he said adamantly.
Her eyes narrowed. "Why not? Do changelings have problems with high
blood pressure?"
"No, but there is salt on those fried potatoes," he explained. "Quite a lot
of it."
"Not enough, most likely." Gwen pulled her hand free and went for the salt
shaker.
Ian snatched it away before she could reach it. "Do you eat like this
frequently?"
"Constantly," she said. "I've got the metabolism of a fruit fly. I can eat
anything I want and it doesn't bother me. I never get sick, never gain a pound,
never had a zit in my life. In fact, the worse my diet gets, the better I feel."
His face cleared in understanding. "Better," he repeated. "By that I suppose
you mean more 'normal.'"
Gwen thought that over. Come to think of it, whenever "freak week" rolled
around—those occasional periods of heightened psychic sensitivity—she usually
went straight for the salt-and-vinegar potato chips.
"Yeah. I guess."
"And you never wondered why?"
"Not really. Now that you mention it, I can see that maybe salt takes the
edge off psychic ability. I mean, too much sugar makes it hard to concentrate,
right?"
"True, but you're not taking it far enough. It didn't escape my notice how
eagerly you latched onto young Damian's theory of variations within the species.
He's wrong, you know. You are most decidedly not human. Your metabolism
is different, as you've pointed out. Not just faster—different. So is
your brain and body chemistry. It's time you faced facts, Gwen: you are
precisely what I spent the past ten minutes convincing your friend that you are
not."
Gwen suddenly realized that she'd been shaking her head throughout most of
this litany. She stopped abruptly and sent him a narrow-eyed glare. "What I am
not is stupid. You're so full of shit it's a wonder your eyes aren't
brown."
"Would you care to test the truth of my claims?"
To her surprise, this notion held considerable appeal. Hell, she'd take just
about any challenge that would prove Ian wrong and get him off her back, or
better yet, out of her life.
"Maybe," she said cautiously.
"Repeat this: 'I will eat French fries no more. My oath on it, by moon and
star, wind and word.'"
Gwen burst out laughing. She quickly caught herself and dialed it down to a
grin. "That's got to be the most lame-ass incantation ever created."
"Nevertheless," Ian persisted.
Her smile faded, and she shook her head. "It sounds too much like a promise.
I don't make them often, but once they're made, they're kept."
"An admirable philosophy, and not at all surprising under the circumstances.
Just repeat the words, then, with the assumption that they are nothing more
than—what was it? A 'lame-ass incantation'? Don't consider it a promise to me. I
assure you, as far as I'm concerned you can eat as many of those culinary
horrors as you're able to."
"Or how about this," she countered: "You hand over the salt, we forget this
whole conversation ever happened, and everybody gets to live another day."
He smiled thinly. "As soon as you say the words, I'll leave."
"Oh. Well, in that case…"
She repeated the strange phrase, then glanced at Ian and lifted one eyebrow
in inquiry. He swept a hand toward her plate, indicating that she should help
herself.
Gwen picked up a particularly salty potato wedge and popped it into her
mouth.
An acrid stench filled her nostrils—most likely because her tongue had
inexplicably caught fire. Tears rolled down her cheeks, blinding her, and her
throat closed so tightly she couldn't draw breath. She palmed the table for her
napkin. Someone took her hand, turned it over, and slapped the napkin into it.
She spat out the offending morsel. Instantly the burning sensation disappeared
and the tension in her throat eased.
Gwen set down the crumpled napkin with shaking hands and backhanded tears
from her eyes. "What the hell was that?"
"An oath," Ian told her. "The Elder Folk are bound by them. Once spoken, they
are almost impossible to break."
They sat in silence for several moments as Gwen sorted through the
implications. Since the Big Issue was too weird to handle, she focused her
attention—and her ire—on the more manageable one.
"Listen, asshole, you said you wouldn't hold me to it! You said I could eat
as many fries…"
Her voice trailed off as realization hit.
"As you were able to," Ian finished for her.
Gwen eyed the greasy, golden pile with longing. "What the hell am I supposed
to do now?" she mourned. "I live on these things! Ah, son of a bitch!"
Ian rose, chuckling. "Call me, and soon. You have much to learn."
"Blow me," she invited coldly.
His eyebrows rose. "Apparently, you have more to learn than I thought."
With that parting salvo, he turned and wove through the gathering crowd. The
evening mist had turned into a downpour, and people were pushing their way into
the pub. Ian made his way through the standing-room-only crowd as easily as a
fish passing through water. Openings just seemed to happen as he approached.
"You didn't have to wait for me," Damian said as dropped back into his chair.
Gwen snapped her gaze back to her companion's face. "I didn't. Talking to Ian
made me lose my appetite."
"There's a first! You're not going to eat that?"
"Help yourself."
She barely had time to snatch up her burger before he took her plate and
dumped its contents onto his own. She tried not to glare as he started to munch
his way through the pile of fries.
"So, what's the story with that guy?"
"Pretty much what he said. I worked for him for a little while—long enough to
figure out that whatever I am, he's one, too. But you already picked up on
that."
Damian nodded, since his mouth was too full of fried potatoes to permit
speech. He hastily chewed and swallowed. "So he's teaching you about that
changeling stuff?"
"Something like that, yeah."
The cop considered this, then frowned. "I don't like it. I mean, I can see
how you'd want to know about this shit. I just don't like this Forest guy."
"Who does? And to tell you the truth, I don't want to think about him right
now." She reached for the ketchup and liberally anointed her burger. "You were
asking about a prenup investigation for your sister?"
With obvious reluctance, Damian resigned himself to a change of subject. "Shawm's
going to want details before she commits to the idea."
Gwen leaned back in her chair, relieved to be back on familiar, solid ground.
"For some people, it's not much different from the credit checks her bank does
every day. But if you're getting a bad feeling about this guy, your radar
probably isn't picking up on his credit report. Personality glitches usually
show up in how he relates to family and employees. I'll observe him, rind ways
to talk to people who know him. Ex-wives and old girlfriends are usually a good
source of information."
"I'll bet. Problem is, Shawna's not about to listen to gossip. She likes
data, you understand."
"And she'll get it. Tell your sister I confirm ID, check employment history,
confirm school records, look into family history, and check for a police
record."
"That last thing, I've already done."
"Yeah, I figured, but does Shawna know that?"
"Good point," he conceded. "Just so you know, she's also going to ask about
your experience, maybe check some references."
"No problem. Not all precommitment checks are run on future spouses. One of
my best clients is a corporate headhunter. She likes to run a thorough resume
check before she recommends someone for a high-ticket job. Your sister can call
her if she wants. I've also made 'discrete inquiries' for a university that
wanted certain professors checked out before they got tenure—apparently it's
pretty damn hard to get rid of them, afterward. I've even heard from a couple of
local politicians who wanted me to scope out the opposition."
This earned her an incredulous frown. "You do that?"
"You're kidding, right? The only time I worked for a politician was when some
guy hired me to look into his own past. He wanted to see what an
opponent might be able to dig up. Basically, he wanted me to test the locks on
the family skeleton closets."
He let out a long, low whistle. "Damn! I can't decide if that's really smart,
or really sleazy. He win the election?"
"He decided not to run. Let's just say my report made for interesting
reading." Gwen paused for a grim smile. "I might not vote, but I occasionally do
my civic duty."
"Why settle for 'occasionally'? You were on the job," he pointed out, "and
you could be again."
Gwen noted the fervor in his eyes and suppressed a sigh. Damian was gung-ho
about clearing her name and getting her back on the force. She'd put him off for
over a week, explaining that she needed time to get her head around recent
events. Since "recent events" included the death of Gwen's first partner, Damian
had made an attempt at patience. At the moment, however, he looked to be running
about a quart low on that particular virtue.
"I've got a job," she told him. "Or maybe you forgot hiring me a few
minutes back?"
Damian heaved a sigh. "Can you meet Shawna tomorrow morning before she goes
to work? Say, eight-thirty, at that coffee shop down by the waterfront walk?"
"That'll work."
"One more thing." A flush crept up his cheeks, adding an interesting richness
to the dark color of his skin—and cuing Gwen in on what was coming next. "My
sister doesn't know that we…"
"Danced the horizontal tango?" she suggested helpfully. "Had carnal knowledge
of each other? Got the sexual tension thing out of the way so we could get on
with the process of establishing a working professional relationship?"
"Yeah, that. No offense, it's just that my family's kind of…"
He trailed off again, obviously expecting her to understand and fill in the
rest.
But Gwen continued to regard him with wide eyes and a politely inquiring
expression. She didn't have much use for social conventions of any sort, and saw
no good reason to let him off the hook on this one—especially since this was the
second time tonight the issue had come up.
"The thing is," he said hesitantly, "Shawna thinks—actually, most of my
family thinks this way—that people should stay with their own kind."
"When you say 'own kind,' I assume you're talking about DNA?" Gwen inquired
sweetly. "Can't bring a changeling home to Mama?"
Damian's face fell slack. After a moment he let out a rueful chuckle. "Puts
an interesting new spin on that sort of thing, doesn't it?"
"I thought so." She leaned forward and whispered, "Oh, and Tyra Banks? Halle
Berry? Beyonce? They're all changelings, too. Sorry if that puts a dent in your
fantasy life."
His wry grin acknowledged the hit. "You just got to go for the takedown,
don't you? It must have damn near killed you to pull up short on that groin
punch tonight."
Gwen settled back in her seat. "It hurt," she admitted as she reached for her
burger. "But strangely enough, I'm feeling much better now."
CHAPTER FOUR
"Holy shit," Damian said as he stared at the elaborate wrought-iron gate at
the entrance to Sylvia Black's long gravel drive. His gaze flicked past it to
the stately brick house, the sweeping hedge of white lilacs behind a sea of
white tulips and irises. The rain had stopped, and a brisk wind was breaking up
the clouds and sending the pieces skittering seaward. Dark cloud ribbons slid
across a nearly full moon. Sylvia's white garden was luminous in the faint,
dappled light.
"'This is where you live?"
"Sort of. I have an apartment over the garage—that little building over
there. I help with security."
"How'd you score this gig?" he demanded.
"It's a long story, and not really mine to tell. Let's just say that my
landlady has a colorful past."
"Sounds like another tale for us to swap at the old cop's home. Before you
go, I got something for you."
Damian leaned over and popped the glove compartment. He fished out a computer
disc in a plain white paper sleeve and handed it to Gwen.
"Here's a copy of the files my friend recovered from your old hard drive.
We've got to talk about this someday real soon."
"Sure."
"Soon," he emphasized. "I know there's a lot on your mind, but cases get
colder as time goes by, not easier."
Gwen wanted to argue, but damn it, the kid was right. She slumped back into
her seat. "I'm listening."
"Quick recap," he said. "Captain Walsh said you'd requested a personal leave,
when he really assigned you to shadow Tiger Leone. The preliminary report you
sent him before you went undercover was deleted, but not gone, you
understand. When they tossed your old computer, I took it and had the hard drive
stripped. The files on that disc prove you were doing exactly what you were
told. Walsh is owned."
Gwen brandished the disc. "It won't be enough."
"It will get people asking questions," he argued. "The rest will come out."
"Yeah, but after how many more people get fucked over? If you like your job,
remember what happened to me and think long and hard before you take on Walsh."
Damian's face hardened. "You lost your job, sure, but two others died. Maybe
three, if you count Frank Cross."
For a long moment Gwen stared at the young cop, too stunned to comment. She
had good reason to know that Captain Dennis Walsh was a lying sack of shit, but
a cop killer?
As far as she was concerned, Wallace Edmonson had killed Frank. Walsh was
connected to Edmonson somehow, but she'd never considered the possibility that
the captain was responsible for Frank's death, or for the two cops killed in the
nightclub bust. She'd spent fifteen years as a cop, fifteen years taking part in
something she considered flawed but basically decent. No matter how badly that
had ended, a part of her didn't want to believe any cop, including Walsh, could
be that twisted. Cop-killing police captains were movie monsters—celluloid
nightmares about as likely as werewolves and zombies.
On the other hand, the official ruling on Frank Cross's death was bullshit.
Gwen would bet her life on that. Yet Frank's autopsy showed he was well over the
legal limit, and Kate Myers, the medical examiner, had a sterling rep. When Gwen
heard the results, she'd assumed that the killer had forced the alcohol into
Frank somehow, but maybe the explanation was a lot simpler: Maybe Kate had lied.
She had been pretty nervous the first time Gwen talked to her, and
totally freaked out by the B and E at the morgue that resulted in the mutilation
of two dead cops. Since the pattern cut into their bodies was identical to the
torture-tracks left by a trio of serial killers in Edmonson's employ, Gwen had
figured the threads all tied together. But maybe Kate Myers was a loose thread,
one left dangling when Edmonson disappeared.
And since the autopsy results and the fingerprint evidence were telling the
same story, maybe someone in the police department was attached to Frank's death
by yet another thread.
"If Walsh is dirty," she said slowly, "no one in vice is safe until this
thing is over."
"There you go. Why do you think I keep trying to get you in on this?"
She conceded that with a curt nod. "I assume you've been doing more than just
nagging me to get off my ass. Bring me up to speed."
"Now you're talking. That club that was raided? Winston's? Leone had two
other clubs, and someone's still running them. I know for a fact they're still
selling shit."
That didn't surprise Gwen. Tiger Leone had worked for Edmonson. Both men were
gone, but that didn't mean the operations would automatically shut down.
"I went to one of the clubs, checked out the local talent," Damian went on.
"You remember Jackie Teal?"
"One of Tiger Leone's girls. She snuck out the back the night Winston's was
raided. Pretty girl—a Janet Jackson type."
"Right down to the malfunctioning wardrobe. Jackie's dancing at Extreme, a
titty bar not far from the Foxy."
Something in his face set off warning bells in the back of Gwen's mind. "You
wouldn't happen to know if she's doing any private dancing on the side?"
His gaze slid away. "I figured, hey—if I could get her alone and talking,
maybe she'd say something I could use. A lap dance isn't my idea of a good time,
you understand—too many rules, not enough hands."
"You're oversharing," Gwen advised. "Get to the point."
"Jackie offered me a hit of something new. It was like X, she said, only it
started out mellow and worked up to wild."
Gwen sat bolt upright. "Please tell me you didn't buy some to test, not on
your own time."
"How stupid do I look?" he said indignantly. "I told her I didn't have the
money on me, but I could put some together. If this shit was as good as she
said, I could maybe put a lot of money together. She promised to set me up with
a guy who could get me all I wanted."
"A drug bust," she mused. "Not a bad way to jump-start an official
investigation."
"That's my thinking."
"And if you can nail this dealer, maybe he'll give up someone a notch up the
ladder. Keep at it long enough, you might eventually tie this to Walsh… if
you're still around by the time the leads link up."
He shrugged. "So I'll work other angles, too, and come at it from every which
way. You said Walsh was tied in with that attorney whose kid was snatched?"
"Ryan Cody, but that's a dead end. Walsh and Cody were only connected through
a third man. He's gone."
As she spoke, Gwen had a sudden image of Ian Forest dragging Carl Jamison's
body toward an ancient maple tree—and then simply vanishing. The police hadn't
found a trace of the Jamison brothers or the homicidal bitch the two freaks
shared. Ian was really, really good at making bodies disappear, and last time
Gwen had seen Edmonson, Ian's men were taking him away. She was willing to bet
Damian would find Hoffa before he found Edmonson.
Damian's eyes narrowed in speculation. "You know where this guy is, don't
you?"
"Haven't got a clue." Since he still looked skeptical, she added, "You
remember me telling you what Kate Myers said, about those three bodies that
disappeared from the morgue thirty-some years back?"
"Sure."
"Two of them were my parents, the other was the kid they'd swapped me for."
She sent him a warning frown to stave off sympathetic commentary and kept going.
"I don't know much about… changelings, but apparently we keep a low profile. To
the point where when one of us dies, the bodies don't get found."
Damian's eyes held a hundred questions, but he had the sense not to ask most
of them. "So you're saying this Edmonson was one of you people?"
"As much as I hate to admit it, yeah, that's what I'm saying."
"And he's dead."
"I never saw a body, but yeah, that'd be my guess."
"No one's filed a missing-person?"
"Not going to happen."
"And if someone wonders where he went?"
"They'll find out someone using his passport took a one-way flight to Greece.
I did some checking. Trust me, there's no finding this guy."
The cop blew out a long breath. "Okay, then I'll keep looking until I find a
better lead."
It was on the tip of Gwen's tongue to remind him that he could
disappear as easily as Jamison and Edmonson had. But why bother? He'd listen to
her about as well as she'd listened to Frank's words of caution when she
was a rookie. Of course, she'd had Frank looking out for her back then. Damian
just had Quaid, and Gwen hadn't been too impressed with the way Quaid had
watched her back. On top of that, there was the tie between Quaid and
Kate Myers. If Kate was dirty, that increased the chances that Quaid was also
tainted.
"What about your partner?" she asked. "What does Quaid say about this?"
"Not much. Be careful, watch your back. Keep me posted. Like that."
"Is he working with you?"
Before he could respond, the metallic purr of a high-ticket car caught his
attention. The vehicle slowed and pulled off the road to park directly behind
them. The headlights flared, brightly illuminating the interior of Damian's car.
Gwen's eyes had always adjusted quickly, so while Damian blinked and cursed,
she noted the silver gleam of a tidy little BMW sedan. Marcy Bartlett's car,
though what Marcy was doing here at this time of night was anyone's guess. Gwen
reached into the pocket of her battered leather jacket for her cell phone and
switched it on. Sure enough, there were two messages from Marcy's number.
"What now?" Damian complained, reaching under the seat for his weapon. "Can't
a man go off duty?"
She dropped a hand on his shoulder. "There's no problem. That's a friend of
mine. She was probably just checking to see who was in the car. I'll call you
tomorrow."
She got out of the car and slammed the door. The old hatchback took off,
leaving Gwen standing in a small cloud of exhaust fumes.
Damn, he really did need a new car! Not that she could talk. Her aging Toyota
was in the shop, and there it would stay until she came up with the ransom money
to pay for a new transmission.
Gwen went over to Marcy's car and tapped on the driver's window. The door
opened just enough to allow Marcy to slip out. She shut it quickly behind her.
Despite the late hour, Marcy was still in her lawyer clothes: a trim gray
pantsuit, a silk blouse in royal blue, low-heeled black pumps, sapphire studs in
her ears. But her usually sleek blond wedge was rumpled and her eye makeup
thoroughly smeared. Either she'd been running her hands through her hair and
rubbing her eyes—something she did only when her personal life went south—or
she'd thrown her clothes back on after a quick tumble.
No doubt Trudy, Marcy's live-in gal pal, would assume the latter. Calling
Trudy possessive was like calling George Dubya conservative—it was a good start.
"Don't you ever answer your phone?" Marcy demanded.
"Yeah, nice to see you, too. Who's in the car that you didn't want me to
see?"
Marcy glanced over her shoulder at the idling BMW. "I've got a client for
you. I wouldn't have brought him here before talking to you, but this is really
important. I want you to promise me that you'll listen to him before you start
cursing and throwing things."
A bizarre suspicion reared its head. Gwen folded her arms and studied her
friend intently. "You jumped out of that car like a bat out of hell, and now the
'listen before you start throwing things' speech? I can only think of one person
who'd need this much prep work, but your ex is the last person you'd bring
here."
The expression on Marcy's face was all the answer Gwen needed.
"Goddammit, Marcy!" she exploded. "Hasn't Kyle Radcliff done enough damage?
How long did it take you to get rid of his ass? How many times did he send you
to a doctor before you got rid of him? I didn't risk my career kicking the shit
out of him so we could get together later and talk about old times."
Marcy glanced back at the car. "Keep it down," she said urgently. "I had a
hard enough time convincing Kyle to talk to you without reminding him of that
scene."
"Give me a fucking break," Gwen retorted. "Face it, Marcy: Your bullshit
meter shuts down the minute that guy starts talking. If he came to you with a
problem and you ended up bringing him here, you can be damn sure that was his
intention all along."
The lawyer thought this over, then shrugged. "Whatever his method or
motivations, he's here. Look at it this way: he might be a complete bastard, but
he pays his bills religiously. You said business was slow right now."
"Not that slow."
Marcy seized Gwen's shoulders with both hands, and the expression on her face
forestalled Gwen's protests.
"I wouldn't ask you to do this if it wasn't important," she said with quiet
intensity. "His son is missing."
Anger and indignation slowly slipped away. In Gwen's corner of the world, a
missing kid trumped old grudges every time.
She hadn't heard that Kyle had remarried. He and Marcy had divorced about
eight years ago. Factoring in wife-hunting and baby-making time, she figured
Kyle's son would be very young. If he looked anything like his father, he'd be
fair-haired and too damn cute for his own good.
And that was a big problem. Blond boys, aged four and under, were a favorite
snatch. They were young enough to be attractive to adoptive parents trying to
bypass the system's red tape, and old enough to be of interest to the worst
class of pedophiles. Not that there was a good class of pedophiles, but
there were maggots out there who'd buy a preschooler and call him a "throw-down
piece." Same idea as an unregistered gun: use it and lose it.
Gwen took a steadying breath and stepped out of her friend's grasp. "How old
is the kid?"
"Patrick just turned five. He and his mother have been gone nearly two days
now."
The cold, sick feeling in the pit of Gwen's stomach disappeared, washed away
by a sudden flood of exasperation.
"The mother's gone, too? Jesus wept, Marcy, why didn't you say so!"
"Kyle is just as worried about his wife as he is his son," she said
defensively. When Gwen lifted an eyebrow in pointed challenge, she admitted,
"All right! I focused on the kid because I knew it would get your attention."
"Let's review the facts, shall we? Kyle Radcliff has a history of spousal
abuse. Wife number one divorces his ass. Good for you. Wife number two takes off
with the kid. Good for her. I hope she stays missing."
"Talk to him," Marcy urged. "He's changed, Gwen, I swear it."
"Oh yeah—this is the very first time you've heard that story!"
"It's not Kyle's fault that Erin and Patrick are missing," Marcy went on
doggedly. "He's frantic with worry. He loves Patrick. You know how much he
wanted kids. Especially a son…"
Her voice caught, and her gray eyes were suddenly brighter than they should
be.
Gwen, appalled and enlightened, bit back a heartfelt curse. So that's
what was behind this little ambush! Kyle Radcliff, the schmuck, still knew how
to push his ex-wife's buttons.
Marcy Bartlett was one of those rare people who were equally successful in
love and war, which wasn't a bad description of her work as an
assistant DA. Her cross-exam fell just short of vivisection. Professionally, she
was amazing, and her personal game was just as tight. She was in a mostly happy
relationship with a pretty and only moderately neurotic lit professor; she was
on speaking terms with her family; she had good friends, a new condo, a great
car, and a fat portfolio that had weathered the tech fallout.
Most people looking at the Marcy Bartlett package would find it hard to
understand how she could have put up with Kyle Radcliff. But they'd married
young, before Marcy had sorted out the lesbian thing. To complicate matters, she
was only twenty-six when she'd been diagnosed with ovarian cancer. They'd caught
it in time to save her life, but not her fertility. Unable to have children,
ambiguous about her sexuality, Marcy had believed the verbal abuse Kyle dished
out. Gwen had seen time and again how small a step it was from verbal abuse to
the ER. Marcy had probably bought into the notion that she'd earned her
"punishment" long before Kyle had landed the first blow.
Nearly ten years had passed since Gwen answered a neighbor's call regarding a
domestic disturbance. She'd been stunned to learn that the victim was the tough
young legal aide she'd run into at court two or three times. Gwen had decided
that Radcliff had resisted arrest. Fortunately, Radcliff didn't want anyone to
know he'd gotten his ass handed to him by a girl half his size. He didn't press
charges, and better yet, he finally agreed to give Marcy a divorce and leave her
alone.
The memory of his tenacity, even more than the pleading look in Marcy's eyes,
convinced Gwen to hear what Radcliff had to say. All things considered, she'd
rather have his attention focused on her than on Marcy.
"You go on home," she said at last. "The asshole can call a cab when we've
finished talking."
Marcy gave her a quick hug and tapped on the window of the driver's door. The
passenger door opened and a tall blond man climbed out.
Kyle Radcliff looked a lot older than he had the last time Gwen had seen him.
There were a few fine lines around his concrete-colored eyes, and his hair was
considerably thinner. As he rose from the car, she could see moonlight
reflecting on scalp. But he was still fit, perfectly groomed, and wearing a
couple thousand dollars worth of suit. Kyle was a corporate lawyer of some sort,
and very successful at his job—which was another reason he'd finally agreed to a
quick, no-fault divorce. Last Gwen heard, the man had some serious assets.
He strode around the car and extended his hand, as if she were another
attorney who'd agreed to a consult.
"Thank you for seeing me," he said with polite insincerity.
Gwen just looked at his hand, and after a moment it dropped to his side. She
turned her back on him and strode to the gate, punched the code into the
security box. The iron gates swung inward.
They walked in silence to the garage. Gwen unlocked the small, first-floor
room she used as an office, flipped on the light, and nodded toward one of the
wingback chairs.
Kyle hitched up his sharply creased trousers and sat, cautiously, as if he
suspected the chair was not only wired for high-voltage current but plugged into
a faulty outlet.
Gwen settled down behind the table that served as a desk and folded her
hands. "So, you have two missing persons."
He seemed relieved to be getting right to business. "My wife, Erin Westland,
and our son, Patrick."
"You have pictures?"
Kyle reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket and took out a
wallet-size photo of a pretty young woman and a dark-haired, solemn-faced little
boy.
A jolt of something very like recognition surged through Gwen as she studied
the woman's face. The features were delicate, her mouth rosebud small, but her
eyes were wide and very blue. The only time Gwen had seen eyes that big or that
blue was when she looked in a mirror.
But there the similarity ended. This girl was a model of Barbie-doll
femininity. Her makeup played up her pink-and-white coloring, and a soft blue
sweater clung to impressive curves. Glossy, dark-brown hair fell in soft layers
to her shoulders, framing a narrow, heart-shaped face. Her hair on the side
nearest little Patrick was tucked behind one ear—an ear that, like Gwen's, was
definitely not her best feature.
"How old is Erin?" Gwen asked.
A strange look slid across Kyle's face. "She was twenty-three when we met.
That was about eight years ago."
"Really. For someone on the downhill side of thirty, she's holding up pretty
well."
"Erin looked young for her age when we met," he said cautiously. "She hasn't
changed much since."
"You ever wonder about that?"
He nodded. "Yes, but it didn't become an issue until things started going
wrong."
Gwen put down the picture. "Let me guess," she said coldly: "Old habits die
hard?"
"As usual, you'd be wrong. I never laid a hand on Erin. She never needed it,"
he added nastily.
"Don't go there," Gwen warned. "Just tell me your story, so we can get this
over with."
Kyle took a deep breath and began to recite. "A couple of years ago, Erin
starting having terrible nightmares. She couldn't sleep. Depression set in, and
she was getting more and more withdrawn. She's an adopted child, and she became
obsessed with finding her birth parents. She wouldn't let me help her—she said
it was a personal thing, something she had to do alone. After a while her mood
passed. She developed new interests, including a little business of her own.
Then Sunday night, she and Patrick went out to pick up a pizza and never came
back."
"Two days ago."
"If you're implying I should have come to you sooner, what would the point
have been? You're not going to help me."
Ordinarily he would have been right. But three weeks ago she'd changed the
name of her business to "Changeling Detective Agency." This was not only an
acknowledgement of her identity, but a mission statement. There were other
changelings out there, and Gwen intended to find them. It was that simple.
"I'd do it," she said curtly. "But first I want to know why you came to me.
And don't try to sell me on 'Marcy talked me into it,' because we both know
that's bullshit."
Kyle Radcliff was silent for several moments. "I saw you in the courthouse
last week, when you came to testify in the Fergusson insurance case. You looked
exactly the same as you did ten years ago. I don't know what that means, but I
can't shake the feeling that it's important. That perhaps you and Erin are two
of a kind—whatever that means. I thought it might give you an edge of some
sort."
He shook his head and gave a short laugh, as if he'd just overheard his own
words and couldn't believe his ears. "The bottom line, I suppose, is I'm
desperate enough to try anything."
His litany sparked a connection Gwen hadn't yet made—a prospect that sent her
heart racing at near-panic pace.
What if Erin Westland knew far more about a changeling's life than Gwen did?
What if she had simply moved on, knowing she'd have to eventually? The
thirtysomething mother in Kyle's picture looked like a teenager. Chances were
she'd still look like that when her kid was in high school. Maybe she'd
figured out what Gwen was just beginning to grasp: she was aging so slowly that
she'd probably still look like jailbait in another five, ten, even twenty years.
She took a long, calming breath. "I'll need all the information you can give
me," she said briskly. "Start with that new business you mentioned, and a list
of Erin's friends. I'll also need her ID: driver's license, Social Security
number, and so on."
Kyle's eyes narrowed. "You're a PI. Can't you get that information yourself?"
"Yeah, but why waste my time and your money, when you could just tell me?"
He hesitated. "To be honest, I don't have much information to give you."
"Sure you do. There are tax returns, a marriage license."
"Erin doesn't have an income, and we don't file a joint return. In fact,
while I refer to Erin as my wife, we never actually married in a conventional
sense."
"Oh, so that's why we never got a wedding invitation!" Gwen said.
"Too bad—I'll bet Marcy and Trudy would have loved dancing with the bride."
She allowed herself a moment to enjoy the discomfiture in Kyle's eyes. A lot
of guys might fantasize about watching their wives do another woman, but an
ex-wife who'd sworn off men entirely? Not high on the list of macho turn-ons.
"What about Erin's bank accounts and credit cards?" she asked, getting back
to business.
"I handle the family finances. Erin gets an allowance for personal expenses,
and her credit cards are attached to my accounts."
Still the control freak, Gwen noted. "Okay. But you must have done some sort
of cohabitation agreement—common-law prenuptial, or whatever the hell people do
these days when they're shacking up long-term. If nothing else, you would have
made damn sure she couldn't just take the kid and leave—"
Suddenly Gwen realized why he was here. In custody cases, the courts usually
favored the mother. If the parents weren't married, the bias toward the female
parent was that much stronger. If Kyle didn't have legal custody over the child,
there was no reason why Erin Westland couldn't take her son and go whenever she
pleased—provided she could find a way out of the cushy cage Kyle had built
around them.
The expression on Kyle's face confirmed her suspicions. Gwen lifted one
eyebrow.
"I love Erin, and I love my son," he said. "I'll do whatever it takes to get
them back."
"Yeah, you made that point by coming here. I'll find Erin. Whether or not she
comes back is up to her."
"Fair enough."
For nearly half an hour, Gwen asked questions and jotted down information.
The more interesting questions, however, were the ones she didn't ask aloud.
Was Erin Westland simply moving on? Or had she, too, recently found out a
little more about herself than she could handle?
There was also the possibility that Erin was on the run. She'd been looking
for her family. Assuming she found them, how did they respond to Erin's son, who
was apparently a half-breed? Did they try to eliminate such children to keep the
bloodlines "pure"?
Gwen wouldn't put it past them. Judging from what she'd seen so far, the
"Elder Races" were a ruthless bunch. Ian Forest had hired her to investigate her
own parents' deaths, in hope that she'd get their killer—her uncle, who at the
time was looking for Gwen with murderous intent—to admit what he'd done.
Apparently Edmonson had been eliminating family members so he could deploy some
sort of magical trinket. It turned out he couldn't, but Gwen could, and
therein lay Ian's logic. He figured Edmonson needed her, and needed to explain
to her why she was needed. Ian had followed her around throughout and
made damn sure Edmonson's words were witnessed.
Gwen didn't understand all the ramifications of this, but using the newbie
changeling as a big, dumb tool? Yeah, she got that part. And the family
treasure? Ian wanted to put the trinket "somewhere safe, until she was able to
use it." Gwen figured she'd embrace that possibility the same day she
took up celibacy.
There was one more possibility, and Gwen gave voice to it as soon as Kyle's
store of information ran dry.
"Looking over the details on Erin, it occurs to me that someone made it
pretty easy for her to disappear."
A red flush crept up Kyle's face.
"If I was going to hurt my family, why would I hire you to find them?"
"You'd be surprised what people hire me to do. But rest assured, that's one
of the questions I'll be looking into," she told him. "If you can live with
that, my retainer is fifteen thousand."
"Agreed."
Gwen took a copy of her standard agreement and several release-of-information
forms from the file cabinet, filled in blanks, and handed them to Kyle to sign.
He pulled his chair closer to her writing table and set to work without comment.
It was a good thing he didn't haggle about the price, Gwen noted. If Kyle was
planning to set her up somehow, she'd need the bail money.
A month ago, that thought wouldn't have occurred to her. Kyle Radcliff wasn't
stupid, but Gwen was pretty confident he couldn't pull off a complicated sting.
But now, her pride still smarting from her unwitting part in Ian Forest's little
game, she wasn't about to overlook any possibility.
Being paranoid sucked, but Gwen figured it was a lot better than being dead.
CHAPTER FIVE
Shawna O'Riley looked a lot like her brother, right down to the dark auburn
hair. Gwen had no problem picking her out of the morning-glum crowd at Brewed
Awakenings. It helped that Shawna dressed like a bank exec. She looked very
polished and professional in a tailored navy coatdress trimmed with white,
matching navy pumps, and artful makeup—which meant that she'd spent a lot of
time to make it look like she wasn't wearing any makeup at all.
Gwen had taken the professional route herself this morning: a purple shirt
with at least half the buttons done up, black pants, and boots with a stacked
sole and chunky heel instead of her preferred stilettos. Her makeup wasn't
nearly as subtle as Shawna's. Lots of black mascara and dusky eye shadow rimmed
her eyes, a honey-beige foundation darkened her too-pale skin, and her full lips
were the color of juicy plums. For her, it was a conservative look.
She pushed her way to Shawna's table and got the introduction thing out of
the way. Her prospective client gave her the usual dubious once-over, but she
was nicer about it than most. Most likely Damian had told her enough to take the
edge off her surprise.
As Gwen sat down, she noted there were two cups of coffee on the table. Oh
yeah—definitely nicer than most clients.
"Extra cream, extra sugar," Shawna said with a faint smile.
"Perfect," Gwen assured her. "Your brother doesn't miss many details, does
he? Makes him a good cop."
"He speaks highly of you, too. It seemed important to him that you and I
meet. To be frank, that's the only reason I'm here."
"Damian said you'd probably have reservations."
"Of course I do. If you love someone, you're supposed to trust him, not have
him investigated."
"That's a good theory, but divorce statistics don't back it up. Taking a
good, hard look at a prospective spouse is smart. You wouldn't give a loan to
someone without checking his credit, right?"
"Of course not, but it's not the same thing."
"No, it isn't. Money is a lot less important."
Shawna smiled. "That's a good argument, but not the one I might have expected
you to use on a banker."
"I didn't come here to make any argument, good or bad. If you don't
want to do this, say the word and I'm gone."
The woman took a moment to think it over. She nodded toward Gwen's oversize
cup. "Go ahead and drink that. It'll be cold before too much longer."
It wasn't the first time a client couldn't bring herself to say outright the
words that would sic Gwen on a loved one. She took a sip of her coffee and
nearly moaned when it hit her taste buds. If Ian Forest had made coffee
off-limits instead of French fries, she would have had to kill him right then
and there, and to hell with the witnesses.
She set the cup down with reluctance. "Tell me about your fiance."
"He's not my fiance, at least not yet," Shawna corrected, "but things are
heading that way. Roy is a great guy. I couldn't begin to tell you why Damian
has a problem with him."
"So you think Damian is overreacting?"
Shawna hesitated. "I want to say yes, but my brother's instincts are usually
much better than mine. By the way, what did Damian tell you about Roy?"
"Nothing much. Tell me what you see."
The woman went into her spiel: Roy was smart, athletic, good-looking,
responsible, a good conversationalist, and a decent dancer. He had a good
education and a good job. They apparently had similar tastes, values, and
political opinions.
Ooh, similar political opinions! How hot was that? To Gwen's way of
thinking, this relationship was sounding about as interesting as fettuccine
without Alfredo.
"But?" she asked when at last the litany ran down.
Shawna bit her lip, a gesture that mingled reflection and consternation. "If
I had any worries at all, they wouldn't have to do with Roy."
Gwen steeled herself for a recitation of the usual feminine insecurities. It
seemed that every woman she met, no matter how smart and successful and
attractive, harbored a few self-doubts when it came to men.
"So what's the problem?"
"It might not actually be a problem. It's just that my family can be a
little… eccentric. Roy's pretty conventional."
"Has he met any of your family?"
"Yes, but only my parents, Damian, and our three younger brothers. We had
dinner together last weekend at a nice Italian place on Federal Hill. The boys
were on their best behavior, and the evening went very well. But it's hard to
get a feeling for how he'll react to my family in a gathering of only seven
people." Only seven people? That was an interesting perspective.
"So it's the extended family you're worried about," Gwen surmised. "How will
Roy survive the wedding, much less holidays, family gatherings, and the
occasional offer to read his fortune in chicken entrails?"
A strange look crossed Shawna's face, something that was equal parts chagrin
and relief. "I take it Damian has told you about our colorful clan."
"A little. Nothing that would make any difference to me, if I were in Roy's
shoes."
"That's what he says," Shawna agreed. "I've put out some hints about
eccentric family members, and he just smiles and shrugs. The way Roy sees it,
what we have is between him and me. No one else comes into it. It's just about
us."
Gwen was starting to see where the problem might lie. "Five kids is a big
family these days. How many siblings does Roy have?"
"None. His parents passed on a few years back. Roy is a few years older than
I am," she explained. "Well, more than a few. He's in his late forties."
"I guess that's not too old to be starting a family. Assuming he wants kids,
of course."
"Assuming we want children," Shawna corrected.
"No, you want kids, all right. Your face lights up when you talk about your
family, even the weirder members."
Grief slid into Shawna's eyes, and was quickly veiled. "Roy knows himself
well enough to realize there's no room in his life for children. He works long
hours. He likes to sail or play golf on weekends, and he enjoys travel. He wants
to marry a woman who's as serious about her career as he is about his. And he's
realistic enough to know that people can't have it all. What's the sense of
having children if you never see them?"
The argument sounded pretty well-rehearsed to Gwen. "And you're okay with
that."
Shawna nodded. "Roy and I want most of the same things. I don't think it gets
much better."
"You could be right. I don't have high expectations for relationships,
myself."
"That's not what I meant!" she protested.
"No offense. What I'm saying is that most women take men way too seriously.
It sounds to me like you're taking a realistic view to this monogamy thing,
which means you're less likely to make a mistake than some starry-eyed
romantic."
"I guess," she said hesitantly.
"One more question: What kind of things do you guys argue about?"
Shawna blinked. "Argue?"
Uh-oh. In Gwen's experience, that wasn't a good sign. No two people could rub
together for any length of time without finding a few rough edges. The lack of
any point of contention could mean that one person was deferring far too much,
and that went nowhere good. It could also indicate the inability of one or both
parties to confront problems. Or maybe there were deliberately hidden issues.
Whatever the case, perfect harmony was a myth, and an insidious one at that.
And Shawna, judging by the expression on her face, had bought shares in that
particular stock. "Why did you ask me that?"
"Answers can be surprisingly illuminating," Gwen said, keeping it cryptic.
"So, I take a closer look at this guy, set your brother's mind at ease, and
you're good to go."
"That sounds reasonable," she allowed. She was about to say more, but her
gaze settled on someone near the door, and a flash of panic shot through her
eyes.
Gwen wasn't surprised to see a tall, well-dressed Black man approaching their
table, coffee cup in hand.
"Shawna," he said, putting a bit of surprise into it. His gaze slipped to
Gwen and back, and his eyebrows rose. "This is your breakfast meeting?"
"It's not like a meeting meeting," Gwen said, her voice pitched a
few notes higher and several years younger than her usual husky alto tones.
"It's more like, community-service time."
She stuck out her hand, keeping it a little stiff and awkward, as if business
handshakes were new territory for her.
"GiGi Silver," she announced, giving one of her established teen personas.
"I'm a junior at Mount Hope, and Ms. O'Riley agreed to help me with a school
project. But you probably didn't hear about it. I sort of left it to the last
minute," she confessed.
He took her hand briefly. "School project."
"Yeah! We have to research three different careers, and her brother—he's a
cop, which is something I thought might be sort of interesting—told me to call
his sister the banker and see if she could talk to me, and maybe let me follow
her around for a few hours. You know—watch her at work, ask questions and
stuff."
As Gwen hoped, Shawna picked up her cue. "Roy, maybe you could help out,
too?"
A flicker of annoyance crossed his face, and he sent Gwen a smile that didn't
quite reach his eyes. "I'd be glad to. Call my office, and my secretary can set
something up."
"Great! Have you got, like, a business card?"
He fished out his wallet and handed her a card. His smile changed when he
turned it toward Shawna, turning warm and genuine. "Is dinner at nine still good
for you?"
"Absolutely."
He actually blew her a kiss before wading off into the crowd.
Shawna heaved a relieved sigh. "That was quick thinking, girl. It was
something, the way you changed the way you talked, even the way you moved. I
swear you dropped ten years just like that," she marveled, snapping her
fingers for emphasis.
"More like twenty," Gwen said. "I'm glad you're impressed, but like anything
else, it comes with practice."
Enough practice, she added silently, to suspect that any meeting Roy's
secretary set up would only be canceled later on. The man seemed to be genuinely
into Shawna, but Gwen was willing to bet he didn't have a lot of time for anyone
else.
"I don't expect to get much information from this career-day shtick, but it
will give me a chance to observe Roy for a couple of hours, pick up some
impressions."
"Pick up impressions," Shawna echoed, her expression suddenly more guarded.
"Damian said your instincts are very good."
"Don't worry—I always back everything up with completely unspooky data. I'll
get you a report within, say, two weeks?"
"That will be fine. What do I owe you?"
"Work that out with your brother. He helped me on a recent case, so this is
me paying him back."
Shawna's eyebrows flew up. "Keeping it off the books?"
"Oddly enough, that's the term he used."
"I'm not surprised. Actually, I suppose I am a little surprised,"
she amended, "but that's because 'keeping it off the books' is what we call our
in-family barter system."
"Oh."
Gwen couldn't think of anything to add to that. Family was a mystery to her.
If she'd ventured onto O'Riley turf, it was entirely by accident.
After a moment Shawna glanced at her watch. "I've got to run, but I'll look
forward to hearing from you."
"You go ahead." Gwen lifted her coffee cup. "I'm going to need a refill."
After her new client left, Gwen tossed back the cooling brew and went through
line for a takeaway cup. She walked a couple of blocks down a side street to
where she'd parked her car. Thanks to the check Kyle Radcliff had written her
last night, she'd been able to pick up her Toyota first thing this morning.
The rusting blue antique didn't look any better than it had, but at least it
didn't break down between the coffee shop and Gwen's apartment. She parked it in
the garage next to Sylvia's black Mercedes sedan, turned off the car, and
chugged her second cup of coffee while she listened to the engine sputter and
wheeze into silence. Thus fortified, she marched into the office.
It was time to face her computer.
Brushing the dust off the laptop took longer than it should have. So did
powering it up. The infernal machine seemed to be sulking about its long period
of neglect. After too damn long, Gwen pulled up her list of bookmarked Web sites
and got to work.
The information on Roy Williams's business card was enough to get her
started. It didn't take long to find his home address, phone numbers, Social
Security number, credit report, and over a dozen articles in local newspapers
that mentioned his name. Apparently he sailed competitively, attended big-ticket
charity events, and liked to hobnob with local politicians. A quick phone call
to one of the few Providence cops who still spoke to her confirmed that Roy had
no police record, other than a ticket for speeding four years back.
In fact, she couldn't find a single thing wrong with this guy.
Yet.
She sat up and stretched, catlike. The buzzer on her intercom sounded while
she was still in midstretch.
"It's Jason Cross," announced the disembodied voice. "I was driving back from
a computer class and got the impulse to stop by."
It occurred to Gwen that Jason had never been to her place. They'd gotten
together several times since Frank's funeral, but she'd never invited him here.
For that matter, she'd never told him where she lived. No mystery there—no doubt
he'd found her address among his father's things.
"Come on up. My office is in the garage at the end of the drive."
She buzzed him through and watched as he drove up. He'd ditched the rental in
favor of a used two-seater, and the day was warm enough to warrant putting the
top down. His new ride gave her a chance to study him. She'd done quite a bit of
that over the past week, but he still puzzled her.
For one thing, Jason Cross didn't look a thing like his father. Frank had
always reminded Gwen of a Kodiak bear: big, blond, and powerful in a way that
could be reassuring or intimidating, depending on which side of the law you
happened to be standing. Apparently Jason took after his mother, whom Frank had
described as small and dark, with more than a little Narragansett ancestry.
Frank's features had been bluff and broad, but Jason had high cheekbones and a
slight convex curve to his nose. His best feature was his eyes, which were a
warm chocolate brown. Gwen had always appreciated Frank's edgy energy, but there
was something to be said for the calm, kind, centered look in the younger man's
dark-eyed gaze.
The problem was, she couldn't get behind those eyes. Reading people
was a survival skill, one Gwen had learned early. For some reason, she couldn't
begin to figure out what made Jason Cross tick.
"Door's open," she called in response to his knock.
Jason came in and gave her one of his peaceful smiles. "You look busy. Should
I come back later?"
She pushed away from the table. "No, I'm glad you stopped by. I've been
hooked up to this damn machine all morning. I can't believe yon pay to
play around with computers."
"I've got the equipment, so why not learn to use it?"
Gwen propped her feet up on the table. "That's pretty much what Frank said
when the department issued computers. He figured what the hell—might as well do
it right. Somewhere along the line he crossed over from hobby to obsession, but
he had a good time with it."
"I can see why. The information on the Web is amazing. He bookmarked some
really interesting stuff."
A wave of trepidation swept through Gwen. She'd carefully gone through
Frank's files, deleting anything to do with his final case: the death of Gwen's
parents and the key to her identity. But the disc Damian had given her last
night was proof that computers didn't forget easily. How did Damian put it?
Deleted, but not gone.
She reminded herself that Jason was a beginner, probably a long way from
peeling secrets off a hard drive. Plus, why would he think to look? And even if
he did, it wasn't as if she could do anything about it. Frank's stuff rightfully
belonged to Jason.
An irrational surge of resentment followed that thought. Sure, Jason was
Frank's kid, but he was a stranger. She'd been the only family Frank had had for
fifteen years.
It occurred to her that the silence had stretched for too long, and that
Jason was watching her intently.
"Long morning," she said shortly, by way of explanation.
"Anything I can do to help?"
She shrugged and tapped her laptop with one boot-dad toe. "Not much more to
do here. I've pulled together some basic info, but these days I outsource most
of my electronic footwork."
His face brightened with interest. "Oh yeah? Who does that kind of work?"
"I use a public-information broker to collect info that's in the public
domain. He's not cheap, but my time is put to better use gathering information
in person."
"What about info that's not public domain?"
He sounded curious but not judgmental. This guy was definitely a computer
natural—after a couple sessions, he was already developing a hacker's mentality.
"I've got contacts who can find anything."
"Legally?"
Another question that didn't come with moral baggage, she noted. Interesting.
Most people had a truckload of it, even the ones who didn't let their moral
codes interfere with their own behavior.
Jason cleared his throat. "I wasn't implying that you were doing anything
illegal. Well, maybe I was, but I didn't mean to offend you."
"You didn't," she assured him. "My mind was wandering, that's all. The
contacts I mentioned strive to be legally bulletproof. Part of the job—they're
reporters for a tabloid."
He let out a long, low whistle. "You don't strike me as someone who'd be a
fan of the tabloid press."
"Who said I was? My friend Sister Tamar—she's a nun, which you probably
figured out from the name—claims there's a special layer of hell reserved for
the people who publish that crap. But you've got to admit they're damned good at
what they do."
His eyes twinkled. "Like the saying goes, 'It wouldn't be prudent to worship
the devil, but we should at least respect his talents.'"
"There you go," Gwen said approvingly. "Who said that?"
"Mark Twain, I think. Or Oscar Wilde. It's usually one or the other." He
settled one hip on the edge of her desk. "Do you have time to get some lunch?"
"I wish," she grumbled. "I've got another hour or so of work to do on another
case, then I'll be heading down to Tiverton to talk to some people."
"You have a lot of irons in the fire."
"Yeah, well. Life is full of unanswered questions. So is death, for that
matter."
Even to Gwen's ears, her words sounded bitter. A long moment of silence
stretched between them.
"Gwen, let it go," he said gently.
She didn't have to ask what he meant. It wasn't the first time Jason had
urged her to let the official story about his father's death stand: Frank Cross,
a recovering alcoholic, fell off the wagon and into the Narragansett Bay.
End of story.
In a way, Gwen couldn't blame Jason. He never knew his father, and all he had
to go on was what people had told him. Frank had been drinking pretty hard all
during their partnership, and Gwen was willing to bet that Jason's mother had
harbored some resentment.
Or maybe Jason was keeping it light because he was more interested in her
than in restoring his father's reputation?
Nah, that didn't play. Jason treated her like a buddy. In the week since
they'd met, he hadn't shown any inclination toward getting naked and sweaty.
And come to think of it, what was up with that? Just because a guy
wanted to be friends with a woman, it didn't follow that he wasn't also
interested in sleeping with her, if only just once. Since curiosity was one of
Gwen's defining traits, this impulse had always struck her as not only natural
but sensible.
"I've got to head down to Tiverton one of these days," Jason said. "Good
place to get a kayak, I hear. You ever try that?"
"No. I went out clamming with Frank from time to time, but his rowboat is
pretty much the limits of my ability."
"I'm glad you've been using it."
Gwen's only response was a curt nod. Since the funeral, she'd taken Frank's
rowboat out several times, hoping this familiar activity would jump-start her
capricious "gift" into doing something useful. But she hadn't been able to pick
up any images or impressions, no glimpses of how he had died. When it really
mattered, her visions deserted her.
"I've been thinking of selling the bigger boat," Jason said hesitantly. "What
would you think about that?"
"Why should what I think matter?"
He shrugged. "You were Frank's family."
Gwen averted her gaze, not wanting Jason to see her response to that central
truth. She swung her feet off her desk and rose, turning aside as she stretched.
"Listen, why don't you drive down to Tiverton with me? You're not working
until tonight, right? I could swing by your place around noon to pick you up."
"She can take a hint!" he said cheerfully. "And since I also have that
ability, I'll be leaving now. Noon works for me. I'll make a couple of subs to
eat on the way."
She glanced over her shoulder at him. "You should make one for yourself,
too."
"I've never seen anyone your size who could chow down like you do."
"What can I say? It's a gift."
His chuckle wafted back to her as the door swung shut. She watched his car
pull away, then got out the notes she'd taken last night during her meeting with
Kyle Radcliff.
Gwen found a Web site for Erin's place of business, a little shop in Tiverton
called The Green Man. But when she started digging, she found that the shop was
jointly owned by Alice Powers—the business partner—and Kyle Radcliff. Kyle
Radcliff, not Erin Westland.
So much for "her own little business." Gwen wasn't too surprised; Kyle had
always been a controlling bastard.
Come to think of it, he'd mentioned that Erin didn't have an income.
Nor did she have assets.
Her name wasn't on anything—not the mortgage on Kyle's house, not Kyle's bank
accounts, not even the car she drove.
How much of that was Kyle's choice, Gwen wondered, and how much of it was
Erin's? Was it possible that Kyle's desire to dominate and control harmonized
with Erin's need to be invisible?
According to Kyle, Erin had been born in Mystic, Connecticut. Her birthday
was in late March, so she'd recently turned thirty-one. But there was no birth
record for anyone by that name in or around Mystic. No school records, no voter
registration. A search for Social Security numbers yielded a few Erin Westlands,
but none of them were from Connecticut. There wasn't much on Patrick, other than
the SSI number. The kid wasn't in school yet, so he was too young to have left
many electronic footprints.
Gwen shut down her computer and was on her way out the door when the phone
rang. She lunged for it and hit the speaker button before the machine could pick
up.
"Changeling Detective Agency."
"You busy tonight?" inquired Damian without preamble.
Gwen glanced at her watch. "No, but I'm busy now. Talk fast."
"I set up a meet for tonight. The dealer is expecting me to bring a girl with
me. You want in, or should I bring another cop?"
"Yes to both. I want in, but you should still bring backup. When and where do
I meet you?"
He gave her the name of a little park on the East Side, a common meeting
place for drug deals despite its proximity to the police department.
"I can do that," Gwen said. "But with one slight change."
In a few words, she blocked out an alternate scenario. Damian heard her out,
then chuckled appreciatively.
"Damn! I'm glad you're one of us… So to speak."
Gwen's heart did a sudden free fall toward the pit of her stomach. "Geez,
thanks for the reminder. I've gone all morning without once thinking about the
whole not-human thing."
"Yeah? Sounds like your day's been more interesting than mine."
"That I doubt. I've been dragging my ass all over cyberspace."
"Don't let Forest hear you say that. He'd probably think you were spamming
for a porn Web site—'Elves on the Internet,' or some damn thing."
Gwen supposed she should be pleased that Ian had accomplished his purpose so
thoroughly, but she didn't want to hear the E-word from anyone, even
when it dripped with sarcasm.
"Ian likes to yank people's chains. Forget about him. Listen, I've got to
run. I'll meet you at the park tonight."
"As far as our guy's concerned, you're there to sample a new party drug.
Don't forget to dress the part."
She rolled her eyes. "And me with a closet full of plaid skirts and sensible
shoes."
"Huh. Good point."
He hung up without saying good-bye, just like Quaid always did. Apparently he
was picking up a few of his other partner's habits.
Gwen's grin faded abruptly. His other partner? Since when had she
started regarding Damian O'Riley as her rookie trainee as well as Gary
Quaid's?
Her gaze nicked to the disc Damian had given her last night. Some part of her
hoped she could clear her name, settle the books, and go back to her old life.
Maybe on some level she even believed it could happen. But c'mon—an elf on the
Providence vice squad?
Wait a minute—a what?
For a moment Gwen stood frozen with shock. She slumped into one of the
wingback chairs and dropped her head into her hands. It was a bit much, having
two nasty little pieces of self-knowledge hit her in the last five minutes.
The first was bad enough—what the hell business did she have training a
rookie cop?—but the second was a full-fledged paradigm shift:
She believed Ian Forest. Down deep inside, she knew he was right about who
and what she was.
And the funny thing was, Gwen suspected that she'd always known.
CHAPTER SIX
As Gwen drove down the long gravel driveway, she noticed something sticking
out of her mailbox.
The postal delivery wasn't due until afternoon, but a large manila envelope
had been bent into an inverted U and slid partway into the mailbox, with at
least a third of it exposed. Someone wanted to be sure to get her attention.
The vision hit her the moment her fingers touched the envelope. A lean, dark
face, with cheekbones so sharp they cast shadows on the hollows below. Dark eyes
studied her with a mixture of hunger and resentment, and the thoughts behind
those eyes flooded her with numbing clarity. Wallace Earl Edmonson, her father's
brother, had regarded her as both a necessity and a nuisance. He'd envied the
"gift" she'd inherited, but he'd reconciled himself to using her as a tool and
was eager to get on with it.
Edmonson's face dissolved, and the vision shifted into a smothering emotional
cloud, a dark miasma of dread and death.
Gwen quickly released the envelope and drew in a long, shuddering breath. She
reached into the pocket of her leather jacket for a pair of latex gloves and
snapped them on, not so much to preserve fingerprints on the envelope—she
doubted there would be any—as to mute the intense memories captured by whatever
was in the envelope.
She tore it open and pulled out two photos. One was a black-and-white picture
of Frank's fishing boat adrift on moonlit waters, just as it had looked the
night he'd drowned. The picture was carefully composed and beautifully printed,
mocking her grief with art.
Gwen quickly shuffled it behind the second photo, and her eyes widened.
The second picture was also black-and-white, but in this case a color shot
would have looked much the same. A small, ornate silver handgun was displayed
against black velvet. Gwen recognized the weapon immediately. Ian Forest had
given it to her as a gift—and taken it from her hand the last time she'd faced
down Edmonson.
The warning was unmistakable: Tie Frank's death to Edmonson, and we'll tie
Edmonson's death to you.
Her lips firmed around a small, cynical smile. How stupid did Ian think she
was? As warnings go, this one definitely lacked teeth. After all the trouble
they'd gone through to make sure no one missed Edmonson? They weren't about
to negate the effort by accusing her of his death. And even if they did,
what use was a weapon if you couldn't produce a corpse? After her parents died
in a car crash, their bodies had been stolen from the morgue to avoid close
scrutiny. Gwen didn't know much about the Elder Folk, but one thing was very
clear: when they died, they disappeared.
Her smirk faded as a new explanation occurred to her. They didn't need to tie
her to Edmonson's death. Her fingerprints were on the silver gun. If she stepped
out of line, someone would die. Almost certainly someone she knew. That she'd be
blamed for it was beside the point.
Gwen carefully set the photos aside. Ian had it right—she was an
idiot. He'd given her an unregistered gun, and she'd taken it. When he asked for
it back, she'd handed it over without question. That wasn't like her, and the
lapse bothered her almost as much as the threat.
She'd noticed that Ian was unusually persuasive, but it had never occurred to
her that his particular "gift" might enable him to override people's normal
reservations and inhibitions.
Muttering imprecations, she stripped off the gloves and dialed Ian's number
on her cell phone. He answered after the first ring.
"Hello, Gwen. I'm glad you called."
For once his silky baritone had absolutely no effect on her libido. "Like I
had a choice," she snarled. "Okay, you win. I won't challenge the official
ruling on Frank's death. If you want, I'll take an oath on it, but first you
have to give me back that little silver trinket and give me your oath
that it won't be used on anyone else."
"That sounds reasonable. Shall I bring the item by your apartment?"
"I'll be out late tonight. But then, that won't be a problem for you, will
it? You always seem to know where to rind me. Damian had it right when he called
you a stalker."
"Gwen—"
"Don't bother. Nothing you could say will change any of this. Overriding
people's judgment, clouding their ability to make their own choices? In my book,
that makes you no better than a rapist. Oh, and an extortionist. Let's not
forget that."
A long silence followed. "In time, you'll understand why certain precautions
were necessary."
She threw the cell phone into the passenger seat and yanked the gearshift
into first. Gravel spit from her tires as she spun out of the drive. By the time
she reached Jason's house in East Providence, her hands had stopped shaking.
Despite the bad start, the drive down to Tiverton ended up being surprisingly
pleasant. Jason drove his car, vowing that that bottom was due to fall out of
Gwen's any day now. That freed Gwen's hands to tackle the Italian subs Jason had
put together for the trip. He had filled bakery-fresh torpedo rolls with spicy
meats, provolone, onions, and hot peppers—enough good stuff to drown out the
requisite lettuce and tomatoes. The car's top was down, the sun was warm, and
jazz poured out of the sound system. By the time Gwen had worked her way through
the second sub, she was feeling, for lack of a better term, almost human again.
They drove along the Sakonnet River in companionable silence, passing scene
after scene ripped from the pages of the Scenic New England book on
Marcy's coffee table. The whole town had an out-of-the-way feeling, and The
Green Man, tucked as it was into a grove of beech and maple trees on a narrow
side road, wasn't exactly designed to pull in drive-by customers.
Gwen got out of the car and studied the carved wooden sign over the door—a
man's face surrounded by oak leaves, presiding over "The Green Man" carved in
Celtic-style lettering. The sign looked handmade, artsy, and expensive.
Apparently Kyle took his wife's hobbies seriously.
The setup was bigger than it looked at first glance. The storefront was
narrow, but the main room was surprisingly long. The ceiling was opened to the
rafters, giving the shop a lofty, spacious feel.
The Green Man looked and smelled like a cross between a health supplement
shop, an old-fashioned country store, an herbalist's warehouse, and an English
tearoom. In the main room, pretty oak shelves lined with rows of small boxes and
pill bottles filled most of one wall. A long table held a couple of dozen small
wooden barrels of dried herbs, each with its own scoop and small stack of
prelabeled bags. Toward the back of the room, two newer wings jutted off to each
side. On the left was cozy tearoom, on the right, a greenhouse.
A smiling, ash-blond woman wearing a small fortune in beige linen separates
bustled over to greet them. Gwen figured her for another hobbyist, a woman who
enjoyed playing at running a business but didn't need to depend on it for a
living.
"Can I help you find something?" she asked, glancing from Gwen to Jason.
"Actually, I'm looking for someone. This is Erin Westland's shop?"
"That's right. I'm her partner, Alice Powers. Is there something I could help
you with? Or are you a friend of hers?"
"I've never met her. My name is Gwen Gellman, and I'm a private investigator.
I'm working for her husband, Kyle Radcliff. Erin hasn't been home since Sunday,
and he hired me to find her."
The woman's eyes widened, and the hand she lifted to her throat was more than
a little unsteady.
"Dear God. She's missing? Erin is missing?"
"I don't mean to be rude, but it seems like you would have noticed by now."
She gave a nervous titter. "You would think so, wouldn't you? But the shop
doesn't really need more than one person here at a time. We take turns, so I
didn't know—" Her voice trailed off, and she swayed on her low-heeled Italian
shoes.
Jason took the woman's elbow and steered her toward the tearoom. "Let's all
sit down."
She let him lead her to a chair, and sank gratefully into it. "Give me a
minute to absorb this. I was just about to make a fresh pot before you came in.
We have our own herbal blend here. It's very soothing, and I don't mind telling
you that I could use a cup."
Gwen took the seat across from the woman. "Since you're here today, I'm
guessing Tuesday is Erin's day."
"That's right. She works Tuesday and Thursday, from ten to five, as well as
an occasional half day on Saturday."
"Would you have any way of knowing whether or not Erin came in yesterday?"
"Oh, I'm sure she didn't. We're not open Sunday and Monday, so there are
usually quite a few messages on Tuesday morning. The messages were still there
when I came in this morning, so clearly Erin didn't pick them up yesterday. Come
to think of it, there were several calls from Kyle."
Either the woman was a complete flake, or Erin wasn't exactly the most
reliable partner. "Is skipping work a pattern for her?"
"Not really, no. She takes a day off from time to time, but she calls to let
me know, so I have the option of coming in or not. Our regular customers know
that our hours are flexible, and they call before making the drive."
"When was the last time you heard from Erin?"
"Let's see," she mused. "Thursday? Yes, that sounds right. She called me
about an order. We're running low on the chamomile citrus tea. And speaking of
which, let me get that tea going. Would you like some lavender shortbread with
it?"
"I'm sure she would," Jason told her, sending a small smile at Gwen. "Thank
you, Mrs. Powers."
"Alice, please." She lifted one hand to smooth her hair, a movement contrived
to show off a perfect pale-rose manicure and a couple of snazzy rings.
"Jason," he said, offering his hand.
An expression of mock exasperation crossed her face when she touched his
hand. "Another man who thinks skin cream is only for women! We have a very nice
lotion, all natural of course, with a lovely, woodsy scent. A very popular gift
for men."
"I'll take a look at it afterwards," he assured her.
She beamed at him. Her smile broadened when he stood up with her. "How nice.
You don't encounter many gentlemen these days." She gave Gwen an aren't-you-a-lucky-girl
wink and headed to the little morning kitchen at the end of the tearoom.
"Suck up," Gwen murmured.
He smiled complacently. "What can I say? My momma raised me right."
Alice turned on the electric kettle and measured dried herbs into a plump
white teapot, then piled a small silver tray with lightly golden wedges necked
with dried lavender. She brought the cookies to the table and returned for the
tea things.
Gwen took an experimental nibble. The shortbread was rich and buttery, the
lavender more ornamental than anything else. That was a relief. She'd expected
it to taste more… purple. Maybe she'd try the tea after all.
After Alice finished the pouring, Gwen asked, "Would you object to me looking
at the store's books?"
"Of course not! Anything I can do to help."
She got up and bustled off, returning in a few moments with a binder holding
a computer printout.
"We have a very simple system. Neither of us are financial wizards, so this
should be easy for anyone to follow. This is a copy. You can take it with you if
you like."
After Alice settled back down, Gwen handed her a business card and a copy of
the release form Kyle Radcliff had signed.
Alice flushed. "Oh my goodness. I didn't think to ask for your ID, or
credentials, or anything. And here I am, just handing over the books.".
"You're worried about your partner," Jason said soothingly. He lifted the
small cup. "This is very good."
"It is, isn't it? That's our biggest seller. People come from all over
southern New England for it, and you know how Rhode Islanders hate to drive any
distance."
"I'm finding that out," he said with a grin. "If someone has to drive more
than fifteen minutes to get to work, they start wondering whether they should
move closer to the office or start looking for a new job. Around here, anything
more than an hour away is a day trip."
She chuckled. "That's certainly true. And it's insidious! We moved here from
Connecticut. My husband used to take the train into Manhattan every morning, but
now he complains about driving from here to Providence."
The door chimes tinkled, and a trio of matrons walked into the store. Alice
glanced over. "I've got to see to the customers. Please help yourself to more
tea."
Gwen sipped hers while she looked through the records. "This is interesting.
Erin takes a lot of days off. And even when she's here, the receipts on Tuesdays
and Thursdays are significantly lower than on other days."
Jason poured himself a second cup. "Skimming, maybe?"
"I wouldn't be surprised. Hubby keeps a tight hold on the purse strings. This
business is technically his. Well, more than technically, I guess. His name is
on the lease, and he wasn't kidding when he said Erin didn't have an income.
This place isn't exactly turning a profit."
She glanced up at Jason and grinned. "I like it. Kyle pays the bills, Erin
pockets the cash."
"You don't care much for the husband, I take it."
"Hell, no. He was married to a friend of mine." Gwen closed the book and
pushed it aside. "I'm finished here. Is there anything you need to do around
town? Want to stop at that kayak place by the bridge?"
He glanced out of the window. The sky was clouding over in one of those
abrupt mood changes for which New England weather was famed.
"Another time, I think. Since the weather's turning, I think I'll head down
to the library. I've been meaning to start some sort of volunteer work in the
community. A lot of organizations post fliers on the library bulletin boards
looking for volunteers."
"I can save you a trip. Monday nights I teach a class in self-defense for
women. Interested in helping out?"
He nodded avidly. "I was thinking about doing some work with beach or
wetlands maintenance, but that's good, too. How are you running the class?"
"Not much talk, demos as needed, lots of drills. I've had them practicing in
pairs."
"But you want them to get used to employing these techniques against males.
That's smart."
"Problem is, they're just starting out. And they're, you know, girly."
He grinned. "You say that like it's a bad thing. Tell you what: Let's head
back to Frank's place, and you show me the holds and escapes you'll be using."
She consulted her watch. "I've got a little time. Sure, let's do that."
An hour later, Gwen was in Jason's backyard, barefoot and disheveled, and
grinning like a kid in a video arcade.
She circled, moving opposite Jason, her eyes on his. Usually she could tell
what an opponent was going to do by watching his face. Most people telegraphed
their intentions in a hundred little ways. But Jason was nearly impossible to
read, and Gwen had ended up flat on the grass a dozen times.
He lunged for her, cat-quick. Gwen slapped away his hand and pivoted on her
left foot, leaning away and snapping off a kick with her right foot.
She fully expected him to block. To her surprise, Jason grabbed her ankle and
tugged in the direction she was already moving. The added momentum threw off her
balance, and suddenly she was heading for the grass again. Twisting on the way
down, she caught herself with both hands and kicked out with her free foot—
And met only air. Jason had already released her and moved aside.
She flopped down on the ground and immediately flipped onto her back, pulling
her knees up to her chest. When Jason dove at her, she planted both feet on his
torso and pushed out hard. He soared over her.
It was a near-perfect throw. It would have been perfect if Jason hadn't
somehow managed to land on his feet rather than his back.
Gwen rolled up to a sitting position. Before she could scramble to her feet,
Jason dropped to one knee and got her in a headlock, pulling her in tight
against his chest.
Since she was several inches shorter than Jason, her butt fitted firmly
against his lower body. To her surprise, he was very happy to have her there.
Normally this sort of thing didn't surprise her. The male psyche held few
mysteries for Gwen. Men, in her observation, were driven primarily by a desire
for sex and territory. Modern life lent a veneer of complication to these basis
instincts, but most masculine responses boiled down to the three C's: curiosity,
competition, and conquest. The thing was, Gwen had never picked up even a hint
of sexual interest from Jason, not even during the physical contact of their
mock sparring. But something was definitely happening now.
Jason splayed his hand on her stomach and pulled her closer still, making her
aware that her tee shirt had ridden up, exposing everything that wasn't covered
by her skimpy excuse for a bra. His hand suddenly felt very warm against her
bare skin. A rush of pure, primal lust was coming off him in waves.
He relaxed his hold on her neck. Before Gwen could pull away, Jason turned
her to face him so they knelt together, thigh to thigh. He buried both hands in
her hair and tipped her head back for a kiss.
He lowered his head until they were nearly touching, until Gwen could see her
face reflected in his chocolate-brown eyes.
Jason stopped suddenly, a breath away from her lips. Chagrin washed over his
face. Apparently he'd glimpsed his reflection in her eyes, too, and didn't like
what he saw.
Even before he released her, the palpable sense of desire switched off, as
abruptly and completely as a door shutting between them. He eased away, then
rose and put several paces between them, hands thrust in his pockets as if he
didn't trust them to be out on their own recognizance.
"That wasn't planned," he said quietly, his back still to her. "In fact, I
have no earthly notion why I just did that."
"You Tarzan, me Jane?" she suggested.
"That's not it." He turned to face her. "It's not my style to jump a woman
just because she happens to be there and female. Especially not you."
Gwen rose to her feet. "Okay," she said cautiously. "But just out of
curiosity, what did I do to rate 'especially'?"
"We're sort of like family, once removed. I'm not saying I look at you as a
sister, but maybe—I don't know—a cousin or something."
"And as far as you're concerned, this isn't Appalachia."
"Not even close." He studied her face. "Are we on the same page with this?"
Gwen thought that over. "Being in a clinch felt a little strange to me, too.
I don't know about the cousin thing, though. Never having had any family, I
don't know how that works."
"Okay, scrap that analogy. You've got one that works better?"
"I'll give it some thought." She glanced at her watch. "Listen, I've got to
go."
"Are you sure you're okay with this? You're not pissed off at me for grabbing
you?"
He looked so contrite, even worried. Gwen sent him a reassuring smile. "We're
okay. Listen, you want to take the boat out this weekend? We might as well take
advantage of it before you sell it."
Jason greeted this suggestion with obvious relief. "Sure. How about Saturday
morning?"
"Sounds good. You make the coffee, and I'll bring a dozen donuts."
"Make sure you bring something for me, too."
Gwen paused in the act of putting on her boots and shot a sidelong glance at
him. "Smart-ass."
He chuckled, obviously reassured by this exchange. Gwen waved good-bye and
jogged to her car.
Rush-hour traffic clogged the streets as she drove toward Marcy's condo in
downtown Providence. Impromptu visits weren't usually their style, but Gwen
figured it couldn't hurt to check in. Marcy had been shaken by Kyle Radcliff's
reappearance in her life, and Gwen wasn't about to see her friend lose hard-won
ground.
She parked in the lot across from the condo and dashed across the street,
dodging a small crowd of canvas-toting art students released from late-afternoon
classes. When the intercom hummed into life, she gave her name and grabbed the
door when the buzzer sounded.
Trudy Wasserman met her at the door to the condo, a steaming mug in hand. She
was wearing a sleeveless tunic of some silky fabric in swirling, watercolor
shades of blue and green over black leggings—sort of an updated, upscale version
of a tie-dye tee shirt. It suited Trudy, who was one of those people who
definitely would have gone to Woodstock if she hadn't been in diapers at the
time. She'd done something different to her sleek red hair, crimping it so that
it fell nearly to her shoulder in a soft, wavy triangle. Her bangs were cut
straight across. To Gwen, the look said Cleopatra with a henna rinse and a bad
perm. Or maybe early Tina Turner.
"Marcy's not home," Trudy said without preamble.
Gwen rocked back on her heels, surprised by the edge in the woman's voice.
Trudy had always been a little wary of Gwen. Every now and then a little
jealousy showed through, but never had Trudy been so openly hostile.
"I'll come back another time," Gwen said.
Something flickered in Trudy's eyes, and the resentful expression dropped off
her face. In fact, her whole demeanor changed so suddenly that Gwen could
envision a switch being flipped.
"Don't go. I'm glad you're here, really. Please, come in." She seized Gwen's
arm and all but dragged her into the room.
Gwen disengaged and took a step back. "Let me guess: you want know what's
going on with Kyle Radcliff."
Her hostess blinked, clearly surprised by her own transparency. She quickly
gathered her composure and sank gracefully into one of the white leather chairs,
then took a sip from her mug before answering.
"Of course I'm concerned that Kyle has come back into March's life. I don't
trust him."
"Neither do I, but I'm a. private investigator, as in, no, I'm not
going to discuss the case with you."
"Did I ask you to?"
"I figured you'd get around it. Just like you pumped me for details about
Jeff Monroe, not to mention Marcy's three assistants before Jeff."
Trudy set aside her mug with exaggerated care. "Marcy is the single most
important thing in my life. Of course I'm interested in her job and the people
she deals with on a day-to-day basis. It's only natural."
"I don't know about that. It's 'only natural' for people to keep having a
life after they get a relationship. Not every aspect of Marcos life revolves
around you. Deal with it."
Trudy's gray eyes narrowed. "Really, Gwen, let me know what you really
think."
"Okay, I think it's insulting that you expect me to talk about a friend
behind her back. I think you need to get over yourself and get a life of your
own. And I think I should leave right now and come back when Marcy's home."
"And I think you don't know the first thing about a real
relationship," Trudy shot back. "Look at you—jumping into bed with anyone who
catches your eye, never willing to commit. Your vocabulary includes every
four-letter word but 'love.' You're—you're as bad as a man!"
In Trudy's lexicon, those were fighting words, but Gwen had to fight back a
grin. "Yeah, I can be a real bastard."
The redhead threw up her hands in exasperation. "Is it any wonder people talk
about you and Marcy? You're more of a man than that husband of hers ever was!"
"Yeah, but so are you," Gwen pointed out, "and you're the poster girl for
lipstick lesbians."
Without warning, Trudy launched herself from the chair and came at Gwen,
swinging a handful of manicure at her face. Gwen leaned out of reach, grabbed
her wrist, and yanked it hard to one side. When Trudy spun away, Gwen planted
one foot on the woman's rump and shoved her toward one of the sofas. She plunged
forward and sprawled facedown on the white leather.
Trudy scrambled up and tensed for another spring, but something in Gwen's
face froze her in place.
"You're just dying to haul off and punch me, aren't you?" she hissed. "You'd
just love that, would you?"
"Now that you mention it," Gwen said dryly. "But this isn't about you and me,
fingernails versus fists. Bottom line: Kyle Radcliff is a waste of skin. Marcy
knows that. You've got nothing to worry about from him, and your only problems
are the ones you're causing. Tell Marcy I was here, would you?"
She spun on her heel and left Trudy to fume and sputter. Enough time
wasted—Damian was expecting to meet her at the park in less than an hour.
Suddenly, the prospect of a drug bust was actually sort of inviting. People
were so much easier to deal with when you were allowed to kick their asses.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Later that evening, Gwen sauntered into the park on stiletto heels, one hand
tucked in the back pocket of Damian's jeans. The dealer would assume that Damian
had brought a girl along to help him test out the drug's supposed aphrodisiac
effect, so she figured she should start acting the part. They'd come early to
check out the area, but most likely their contact was doing the same thing.
After a quick stroll around the park they headed for the designated meeting
spot—a bench tucked back among several old maples. Once they sat down, Gwen
noticed that the trees blocked out the lamplight, leaving them in a deeply
shadowed alcove. No passersby would see what happened in this place.
The minutes ticked by. Unseen cars swished past. A big man with sheepishly
hunched shoulders skulked down the path behind a tiny dog, a toy breed of some
sort with a prancing, mincing gait and a pink ribbon on its head. Gwen wondered
if the sensitivity points the guy was racking up with his wife or girlfriend
outweighed the humiliation of being seen walking the little mutt. Moments after
the unmatched pair passed out of view, a shrill soprano yapping gave challenge
to some passerby.
Damian nudged an elbow into her ribs, warning her to be alert.
She saw the man approaching before he did, and her heart began to race.
She leaned in as if to nip playfully at Damian's earlobe. "It's one of the
blond kids who trashed the DNA lab," she whispered. "If he recognizes us, he'll
run. Don't let him see your face until he's close enough for me to grab him."
"Why do you get to do the grabbing? Whose bust is this, anyway?" he whispered
back. But he lifted a hand to play with her hair, shielding her face from view.
Gwen pulled her knees up so that her feet were braced against the edge of the
bench. She nuzzled at Damian's neck and murmured, "Give me an ETA."
"Counting down: ten, nine, eight."
She completed the rest of the countdown silently, trusting Damian's ability
to judge the timing of the blond man's approach. She didn't have much choice—the
guy approached with ghostly silence. When she figured the moment was right, Gwen
pushed off the bench with both feet, launching herself off into a flying tackle.
The blond guy went down with Gwen on top of him. Before he could move, she
had her gun out of her thigh holster and pressed against his temple.
"Remember me?" she inquired sweetly. "And surely you recall my friend,
Officer O'Riley?"
The young man's blue eyes darted toward Damian then returned to Gwen. "You're
the police?"
He spoke softly, but his light tenor voice had a resonance that suggested a
theatre background. His accent was more pronounced than Ian's, not to mention
crisper and harder to place. The closest thing Gwen had ever heard was the
accent of a short-term boyfriend, an Hungarian grad student whose English had a
slight British flavor.
"Are you going to arrest me?" continued Gwen's captive.
"That's the plan, yeah."
"You can't do that," he stated, more calmly than most people could have
managed under the circumstances. "Not if you expect to live until the next full
moon."
"Don't be threatening her," Damian warned. "That's a real bad idea."
Gwen sent the cop a quelling glance. She slowly rose to her feet and stepped
away, keeping her gun on the man.
"You know," she said conversationally, "not many people can pull off snooty
when they're flat on their backs. I admire your style."
"And I your speed and agility. May I rise?"
"Do it slowly," she warned.
He got to his feet in a fluid sweep of motion that was absurdly graceful and
impossibly slow: ballet played back half-speed.
"Damn," Damian muttered. "The man can move."
"As can you," the blond man told Gwen. "The first time I saw you, I knew what
you were from the way you moved. Given your heritage, surely you know that
turning me in to the authorities would mean a death sentence for me."
As much as she hated to admit it, there was a certain grim logic to that. It
would be hard to keep a collective low profile if the police started taking too
close a look at individuals. Most likely one of the Elder Folk who landed in
jail had about the same life expectancy as a Mafia informer.
"I've heard that killing each other is a big no-no," Gwen said. "So the deal
is, if you die because of me, I die, too?"
"You grasp the situation precisely."
"I grasp that it's supremely fucked up," Damian observed.
"This doesn't concern you," the blond man said coolly.
"Actually, I'd say it does." Gwen tipped her head toward Damian. "That guy
isn't one of us. Even better, he doesn't answer to me. I'm not his boss,
partner, wife, mother, or girlfriend. I am in no way responsible for what he
does, nor do I direct his actions in any way. In fact, at the moment it's the
other way around. This is his party, and I'm the tagalong."
The young cop knew a cue when he heard one. He pulled his gun and aimed it at
the man's kneecap.
"You think?" he asked Gwen.
She shrugged. "Let's see what he's got to say first. Start with your name,"
she told him.
"Adrian," he offered. "When I'm required to offer a surname, I use Archer."
"Okay, Adrian Archer, what's your gig these days, now that Edmonson's gone?"
"Much the same as before. I do whatever the earl's business affairs require.
At present I'm running the clubs until his heir steps forward to claim them."
Gwen suddenly had a bad feeling about this. "His heir?"
"The closest kin. In the earl's case," he said meaningfully, "his only kin."
"Oh, shit," she murmured.
Damian caught on fast. "Wait a damn minute," he demanded. "You're related to
this Edmonson guy? And you just inherited a couple of high-ticket titty bars?"
"She will come into a considerable amount of property," Adrian responded. A
tiny smile nickered at the corner of his lips. "Provided, of course, she meets
the terms of inheritance."
"Gee, I can't wait to hear those," Gwen said with heavy sarcasm. "You guys
have lawyers?"
"Of course. You would have been contacted once the official mourning period
ended."
"Since I've shed all the tears I plan to, why don't you just give me the
highlights."
He shook his head. "I am bound by certain oaths. I will turn the earl's
affairs over to you, but several days remain to the mourning period."
Gwen thought this over. "I suppose you know where I live?"
"Of course."
"All right, then, we'll let you go if you give me your oath that when the
mourning period ends, you'll contact me and lay out everything you know about
the earl's drug business. Swear it by moon and star, wind and word."
Adrian looked at Gwen as if she'd finally said something interesting. "That
is a most solemn oath."
"Yeah, it's a favorite of mine, too. Let's hear it."
When he said the words, Gwen returned her gun to its holster and gave him a
curt nod. "See you around, Archer."
He touched two fingers to his forehead and melted off into the shadows.
An angry crashing erupted from a stand of bushes behind them. Gary Quaid came
wading toward them, crumbled leaves in his brown hair and an angry scowl on his
face.
"What the hell's wrong with you two? You're letting dealers walk now?"
"He'll be back," Gwen stated.
Quaid's eyes narrowed. "And you know this how?"
"Because I can't eat French fries anymore," Gwen told him. She shrugged at
his puzzled frown. "Long story."
Quaid's breath hissed out in obvious exasperation. He sucked air in slowly,
through clenched teeth, clearly fueling up for a major ass-chewing.
"Hold on," Damian told Quaid as he stepped between the former partners.
"Before you two start throwing punches, there's something you need to see. We
came out here for more than one reason. Follow me, and keep it quiet."
He took off without waiting for a response. Quaid glanced at Gwen. When she
didn't offer any explanation, he shrugged and fell into step behind his rookie.
The three of them left the path and walked quietly to the other side of the
park and around behind a thick stand of trees. Damian motioned for them to get
down.
After a few minutes, three men slipped out of the shadows and off into the
night.
When they were out of earshot, Damian said, "See that bench there, right by
the trees? When I did the paperwork for this bust, that's the place I said we
were supposed to meet the dealer. Anyone at the station could have read it. But
I told you and the contact to come to another place, at a later time. Those guys
have been waiting here for maybe an hour."
"It's a freaking ambush," Gwen summarized.
Quaid nodded slowly. "And the only way those guys would have known where to
meet you is if someone in the vice squad told them. Smart move on your part."
His choice of words made Gwen wince. Quaid's chowder-thick Rhode Island
accent left him severely R-impaired. Sentences such as "Smot move on yoah pot"
were particularly painful.
On the other hand, Quaid's reaction answered an important question. He had no
idea about the ambush. It wasn't absolute proof that he wasn't dirty, but at
least he wasn't the one who'd betrayed his young partner.
"Switching the meeting place was Gellman's idea," Damian said. He sent her a
wry grin. "I gotta tell you, I'm pretty fucking glad I ran the plan past her."
His voice came out a little shaky. Gwen slid an arm around the young cop's
shoulders, but no reassuring words came to her mind.
"So what do we do now?" Damian demanded.
Quaid turned a cool, measuring stare toward Gwen. "We continue what Gellman
started: figure out who's feeding info to Walsh."
"What do you—" Damian stopped short as understanding hit. "Damn, Gellman—you
thought Quaid was the rat?"
"It's important to rule out possibilities," the cop said evenly. "In her
shoes, I would have done the same thing."
They walked several blocks in somber silence, coming to Damian's car first.
The rookie nodded good night and took off. Gwen batted away the resulting
exhaust fumes and turned to face her former partner.
"Since we walked past your car on the last street, I figure you've got
something to say to me."
Quaid folded his arms and returned her stare. "I saw Kate Myers last week.
She said the two of you started running together."
Gwen frowned. Quaid had never been much for small talk, but that was abrupt
even for him. "That's right. So?"
"If you don't mind me asking, how did that come about?"
She shrugged. "We both live on the East Side. We both run. It's convenient."
"But who initiated it?"
"Kate did," she said slowly. "What's this about?"
He thrust his hands into his pockets and stared moodily at the house across
the street. "I started dating Kate shortly after you and I were partnered up. A
week or two after I break up with Kate, I find out that you two are buddies? It
doesn't play right."
"You think she might be keeping an eye on me?"
"It crossed my mind."
"For whom?"
"Well, that's the question, isn't it?"
Gwen thought this over. The most likely culprit would be Dennis Walsh, but it
wouldn't be the first time Internal Affairs decided to observe a cop under
investigation through an unconventional angle. After the raid on Winston's, IA
had been all over her. It wasn't outside the realm of possibility that Kate
Myers had been recruited to pick up secondhand info from Gwen's partner, then to
observe Gwen herself.
Seriously sleazy, yes, but the Providence police force wasn't exactly a
hotbed of trust and brotherly love. Like the time a small silver disk with
flashing lights was found in an interrogation room, and the police department,
assuming IA was checking on the cops, had an outside company evaluate the
object. The hired geeks declared it a high-tech listening device. Local
newscasts were all over that, and eventually it came out that the "high-tech
device" had broken off a cheap piece of costume jewelry. An earring, to be
precise. Gwen had laughed herself silly over that one. For starters, you'd think
the thick shitheads at the station would think to ask why anyone would design a
"secret device" to look like a tiny disco lamp.
It just went to show how paranoid cops in the post-Buddy era had become. The
police force had often been described as Buddy Ciencia's private army, and the
former mayor's ouster on corruption charges made a lot of government employees
nervous. Gwen had experienced firsthand the let's-clean-house mentality that
could transform accusation into nightmare and turn long-term friends and
coworkers into cold-eyed strangers. Against that backdrop, Quaid's concerns
didn't seem quite so outlandish.
"Did Kate ask a lot of questions about your work?" she asked.
"Some," Quaid admitted. "I didn't think much of it. Since she's an ME, some
of her cases overlapped with mine."
"When Kate and I run, I'm the one asking questions, but I suppose that's
another way of gathering info. Asking questions gives a pretty clear picture of
what I know and where I'm thinking of heading. If someone wanted to find out my
thoughts concerning Frank Cross's death, Kate would be the person to ask."
"There you go," he said glumly.
"I asked Kate to do Frank Cross's autopsy," she reminded him. "When it comes
to coincidence, I'm as skeptical as the next guy, but that puts a dent in your
'let's keep an eye on Gellman' theory."
"Yeah, but did she bother to tell you that she was the only ME working that
week? She would have done the autopsy regardless."
"Hmmm. Must have slipped her mind," Gwen murmured. "Interesting theory you've
got going about your ex-girlfriend."
He shrugged. "You're not the only one crossing names off a list."
"You mind telling me why you thought to look at her? I mean, she's an ME.
That's related to the job, sure, but a corpse-cutter playing Mata Hari?"
"She started pressuring me to back away from the investigation of that
nightclub bust," Quaid said softly. "When I asked her where that was coming
from, she tells me about what was done to Moniz and Yoland in the morgue. Says
it was a warning to the cops to stay away. The weird thing was, no one else at
the station said word one about it. I figured she was making it up."
"No, it happened," Gwen told him. "Teresa Moniz confirmed. She insisted on
seeing her husband's body, and she made a sketch of the design cut into him."
Quaid looked genuinely shocked. "No way."
"In context, it made sense. The design was some sort of mystical symbol, and
she's into that stuff. It's also the same markings we found on the women the
Jamisons tortured and killed. When they weren't playing those games,
the Jamisons dealt party drugs for the guy who owned Winston's. It all ties in."
The cop's brow furrowed. "But Tiger Leone died in the raid."
Since Gwen was the one who'd killed him, this wasn't exactly news. "Tiger
wasn't the owner. The paperwork was set up to make it look that way. Tiger
worked for a guy named Wallace Edmonson. Him, we won't find—he's in the wind. As
of last week, he's out of the country. Last known destination, Athens."
Quaid took this in. "So Kate was telling the truth about what happened to
those cops. About the warning."
"Yes," Gwen said slowly, "but come to think of it, maybe the warning wasn't
directed at the police. Maybe the message was for Kate. That would
explain why no one at the station heard about it. Both men were cremated, so
there wouldn't be any buzz coming back from funeral directors. If Kate hadn't
said anything to you, it would have stayed with her."
"What about Teresa Moniz?"
"Psychic. She's the real deal, so you can stop rolling your eyes. I'm betting
she got a feeling that something had happened. If she came down to the morgue
and demanded to see her husband's body, there's not much Kate could do."
Quaid huffed out a long sigh and folded his arms. "For argument's sake, let's
say you're right. That means Kate would be tied in with this Edmonson guy,
right?" He shook his head in disbelief. "A drug dealer, a guy who owns sleazy
clubs, and Kate? How the hell did that connection happen?"
"Edmonson was really good at roping people in. You said you've been talking
to Kate. Did she by any chance know that we were coming out here tonight?"
"Not unless you told her," he said.
Gwen shook her head. "I haven't talked to her since Monday night. She knew I
had a class on Tuesday, and I left a message on her machine telling her I
couldn't run tonight."
A silence fell between them. "Can you look into possible ties between Kate
and Edmonson?"
"First thing tomorrow," she assured him.
"Good. I'd love to be proven wrong on this."
"But you don't think you are."
Quaid shrugged. "Gut feeling."
"Yeah, but your gut's been wrong before," Gwen said lightly, hoping to tease
some of the veiled sorrow from his eyes. "You thought I was one of the bad
guys."
He turned to her, and his bleak expression didn't brighten in the slightest.
"This Edmonson is in Athens, you say?"
"That's what his passport says. But by this time, I doubt you'd find him
there."
The cop nodded slowly, never taking his eyes from her face. "Yeah, I doubt
that, too."
A knot started to form in Gwen's throat. Had Damian passed along what she'd
told him about Edmonson? Surely not—he couldn't let slip that Edmonson was dead
without revealing what he knew of Gwen's odd heritage.
"You still don't trust me."
His smile was tight and humorless. "Let's just say I've noticed people you
don't like tend to disappear. As far as I can tell, the Jamisons dropped off the
face of the earth. Now you're telling me that Tiger Leone's boss is nowhere to
be found. I've got to admit, I'm a little concerned."
Gwen let a beat or two pass before asking, "Is this your way of asking me if
I like you?"
For several moments he simply stared. "Do you find this amusing?"
"No, but I do find it amusing that you're so worried about who's on
my shit list," she snapped. "If you'd been paying attention, you might have
noticed that my friends have more to worry about than my enemies. Tom
Yoland died in the raid on Winston's. Frank Cross is dead. Someone tried to
ambush Damian tonight. When I start liking you," she concluded grimly,
"that's when you should worry."
CHAPTER EIGHT
A tentative sunrise was experimenting with pastel pinks as Gwen jogged down
Sylvia's long gravel drive. She let herself out through the pedestrian door
beside the main gate and started down the road.
The door on a parked car swung open abruptly, swinging right into her path
with a timing that was too perfect to be accidental. She leaped out of range and
took a step forward. Pulling her gun from her thigh holster, she dropped to one
knee, using the open door as a shield.
When no further attack was forthcoming, she slowly rose, holding her gun in
front of her with both hands.
To her surprise, the driver was a fat man with a bad comb-over and a
who-shot-the-sofa plaid sport coat. Dennis Walsh, captain of the vice squad and
her former boss, slowly lifted his hands from the steering wheel and held them
up, empty.
Gwen glanced at the passenger seat for a ready weapon, then into the
backseat. Both empty.
She holstered her gun and sent a pointed glance at Sylvia's stately brick
home. "I hast got to get a better address. Any lowlife can wander into
this neighborhood."
Walsh hauled himself out of the car and leaned his arms on the top edge of
the open door. "It seems like you'd want people to find you, seeing that you're
in business for yourself now."
"Business," he repeated emphatically, "in a residential area. We have zoning
codes in this city, Gellman. You can't run a shop out of this place."
"Maybe not, but I can have a home office," Gwen countered. "I don't
have a principal place of business. I'm like a consultant; I meet most of my
clients off-site and do nearly all my work in the field."
"Yeah, but what address do you advertise?"
"You won't find me in the Yellow Pages. I work strictly on referrals."
"Smart," he approved. "I can see how you'd want to keep a low profile. This
state has some pretty hefty fines for people like you, doing business without a
PI license."
Gwen's laugh held more derision than humor. "People like me? Jesus, you're
really fishing. I'm completely legal, Walsh. My bond is paid, and my license
isn't up for renewal for another three months."
"And that's interesting, you having a PI license," he went on doggedly. "I
thought one of the requirements was good moral character. Good moral conduct,"
he emphasized. "Maybe the IA couldn't prove it, but everyone in the department
knows you were pretty friendly with a drug-dealing pimp. They sure as hell know
the two cops who were looking into your little game ended up dead."
Gwen had taken two quick steps toward him before she realized she was in
motion. She caught herself and clenched her fists at her side until her nails
bit into her palms.
"You do not want to go down that road," she warned, "because you won't like
where it's going to lead."
A mottled flush crept up Walsh's face. "Listen, Gellman, when you're not on
the job, you can't see the whole picture. Look what happened when you butted in
with the Cody girl."
"I didn't exactly crash the party. Meredith Cody's mother hired me to find
her missing daughter, and with good reason. The girl had been gone for four
days."
"And the kid would have been back at the end of those four days, if you
hadn't started nosing around." The chief held up a hand to cut her off. "Ryan
Cody filled me in on the details. After he brought me in, I insisted on it."
"Did he also mention that he was working for a sleaze peddler, and that his
daughter was snatched to keep him in line? But you'd know all about that,
wouldn't you? By that point you and Wallace Earl Edmonson were well
acquainted, and I got the very distinct impression that you weren't very happy
about that relationship."
His eyes narrowed. "Where is this going? All I know is Edmonson was Cody's
lawyer."
"Edmonson owned Ryan Cody. I guess Cody figured it wouldn't be too good for
his career if it got around that he gets off on kiddy porn. I'll bet a lot of
people would love to hear what Edmonson's holding oversow."
Walsh sent her a reptilian smile. "Don't take up poker, Gellman, because you
can't bluff worth shit. If you had something, you would have put it on the table
by now."
"I'm working my way around to it. Tiger Leone was also reporting to
Edmonson."
"Yeah? That wasn't in the reports you filed after the bust."
"I didn't know about it at the time. Since then I've learned all kinds of
interesting things."
"Like?"
Gwen suppressed a grim smile. Walsh usually wasn't so transparent. He stopped
by to lean on her a bit, hoping a few threats might persuade her to back off.
Barring that, he wanted info. Fine. She couldn't wait to see his reaction.
"Tiger Leone got a phone call the night Yoland and Moniz came to the club. An
old friend, he said—someone who'd been busted by Yoland and Moniz. Someone who
conveniently called when the cops were standing right there. That was Eddie
Davis, wasn't it?"
Walsh shifted one plaid-covered shoulder. "Might have been. Him and Leone
came up together."
"Davis got out just that day. You want to know why I know that? Because I'm
looking into every case handled by Edmonson's pet lawyers. Ryan Cody, of
Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye, handled Davis, and Edmonson handled him. I figure
you assigned me to Tiger before Edmonson sucked you in. You couldn't pull me off
the case or keep Yoland and Moniz from following their leads without raising
questions, but you could set us up. You expected all three of us to die
that night."
"That's bullshit."
"Maybe, but the truth frequently is."
He shrugged, proving he was still cop enough to concede her logic in this
matter. "Even if that was true, you couldn't prove it and you'd sound crazy just
saying it."
"It's amazing what people will believe. Like the IA buying your story about
the Tiger Leone paperwork disappearing, along with the forms for the leave of
absence I supposedly requested."
Walsh shrugged again. "One of those regrettable errors known to occur in busy
offices."
Gwen leaned in close. "You're an idiot, Walsh, and what's worse, you're a
fucking dinosaur. You know those little beige boxes sitting on all the
detectives' desks? They're called 'computers.' Tenacious little bastards. Once
they've got hold of some information, they hang onto it."
He had the sense to look wary. "What are you saying?"
"I sent you a preliminary report when you first assigned me to shadow Tiger
Leone. It might have been deleted, but when my old computer was scrapped, the
files were stripped off the hard drive."
For a long moment Wash stood very still. Then his eyes cleared, and a smile
crept over his face. "Even if that's true, it doesn't mean a damn thing. That
was just you covering your ass—"
He broke off and raked a scathing gaze over her outfit: good running shoes, a
custom-made thigh holster with straps at the top and bottom to keep her gun from
bouncing, and a black sports bra that matched her shorts.
"Covering your ass," he repeated, his gaze fixed pointedly on that portion of
her anatomy, "and, as usual, not doing a very good job of it. You didn't send me
this alleged report by e-mail, did you? If someone got into the guts of my
computer, would they find a copy of that report?"
Gwen's stomach suddenly took a nose dive in the general direction of her
Reeboks.
"There didn't seem to be a point," she said dully. "You never read e-mail. I
printed a copy and put it under your door."
"Then there's no record you actually sent that report." Walsh winked at her.
"Sometimes it pays to be a fucking dinosaur."
He swung his considerable bulk into the car and gunned the engine. As she
watched him spin triumphantly off, Gwen thought about Ian's claim that she had
some sort of ability to cause rain. Too bad that talent didn't extend to meteor
showers. If ever a dinosaur deserved to have his ass bombed into fossil fuel, it
was Walsh.
Two hours later, Gwen flicked on her computer and waited impatiently for the
files she'd stolen from Ryan Cody's computer to upload. They formed the basis
for a growing database into the activities of Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye, the
law firm that Edmonson owned—
No, that she owned. She was, after all, Edmonson's heir.
This had possibilities. She quickly dialed Cody's private line. He picked up
on the second ring.
"It's Gwen Gellman," she told him. "I'm looking for some information on Kate
Myers. There might be a connection between her and Edmonson. She's not the drugs
and dancing type, so I thought I'd start with his law firm."
The only sound for several moments was a faint static. "You were a police
officer. I shouldn't have to remind you about client privilege."
"But you could confirm whether or not she was ever a client?"
"I suppose," he said cautiously.
"How long would that take?"
"About fifteen seconds. The law firm has a searchable database. Spell that
last name?"
Gwen gave him the spelling and listened to the faint, rapid clatter of
computer keys.
"Kate Myers wouldn't by any chance be related to Sergeant Brendan Myers,
Providence city police?"
"Probably. She mentioned her father was a cop, killed in the line of duty."
"About twenty-five years ago, yes. His daughter Katherine received a full
scholarship through college and medical school."
"From the law firm?"
"That's right. Over the years, Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye has assisted
several promising students."
"Interesting. Survivor benefits to off-the-books employees? Or maybe an
investment in the future?"
Cody sighed heavily. "I wouldn't be at all surprised. But since Myers's name
only appears in the scholarship fund, I couldn't tell you what business Edmonson
might have had with the sergeant or his daughter."
"You're being unusually candid. Thinking of moving on?"
"If I could, I'd quit tomorrow," he said bluntly. "You know I can't."
Gwen knew. Cody had been recruited by Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye because his
personal flaws gave Edmonson a means of control. When that failed, Edmonson had
Cody's fourteen-year-old daughter snatched to remind the attorney who held his
leash.
"How is Meredith?"
"She's taking some time off from school. We felt she needed a change of
scenery. Dianne took the children to visit friends."
In other words, his family was gone. "Your choice or hers?"
"Does it matter?"
As a matter of fact, it did. If Dianne Cody wanted to dump her husband
because he was a sleaze, Gwen had no arguments. If the family was trying to put
things back together, that was another story. Her gut told her Cody genuinely
wanted change. He'd outgrown his hobby when he started realizing that the hot
young things he'd been watching onstage were kids, not much older than
his own daughter. To his credit, that had proved to be a major buzz kill. But
when he tried to leave the corrupt law firm, his daughter paid the price for his
rebellion. As long as Cody thought Edmonson had a hold over him, he wouldn't do
anything that might put his family at risk again. Knowing that Edmonson was dead
could make all the difference in the world to the Cody family.
On the other hand, Gwen had no reason to trust Ryan Cody. For now, a bit of
cautious optimism was the best she could offer.
"I'm working on something that might have an impact on your career plans. If
it pans out, I'll let you know."
Several beats of silence passed as he processed the possibilities. "If you
require representation, I'd be happy to recommend another attorney," he said
softly.
Another criminal attorney, Gwen noted, reading between the lines to
the phishing expedition. Cody suspected that she was taking a less-than-legal
approach to the problem of Edmonson, and his faintly eager tone suggested that
he more than approved.
Gwen made some noncommittal noises and ended the call, glad she'd gone with
her instincts about passing along information on Edmonson. Maybe Cody had
changed his mind about kiddy porn, but he was still a sleaze.
Shortly after noon, Gwen walked up the stairs of a state-run nursing home,
wearing a ball cap embossed with the name of a made-up florist and carrying a
cheap floral arrangement she'd purchased at the nearest grocery store.
She stopped at the front desk, a battered wooden relic heaped with medical
charts. A thin, tired-looking woman in an old-fashioned white uniform was
working her way through the stack. Gwen got the nurse's attention and asked for
Irma Williams.
The woman's ferret-eyed gaze took in the flowers. "Hmmph. About damn time, is
all I got to say."
Gwen blinked in feigned surprise. "Delivery was guaranteed by end of the day.
I'm actually a little earlier than I expected."
"Oh, I wasn't talking about you, honey. It's that son of Irma's. Son of a
bitch is more like it, no reflection on poor Irma. Haven't seen him around
here in maybe two, three years."
"Sorry to hear that."
"Be nice to your kids, I always say," the nurse went on. "Not that you're old
enough to have kids just yet, and don't you be in any hurry. Just remember,
someday those kids will decide where you end your days. Not that there's
anything wrong with this place," she added hastily.
Gwen managed a smile. "I'll keep that in mind."
"No, you won't," the nurse retorted. "You kids all think you're immortal."
"Not me," Gwen said fervently. "What could be more depressing than knowing
you were going to live forever?"
The nurse snorted in agreement and gestured toward her littered desk. "You
might as well take those flowers right down to Irma. God knows there's no place
to put them here."
Gwen got the room number and general directions, and set off down a series of
halls floored in cracked, yellowed linoleum. The walls were long overdue for
painting, and many of the rooms she passed were still the shade of institutional
green that was considered soothing fifteen or twenty years back. The unsavory
scent of lunch—liver and onions with a side of broccoli would be Gwen's
guess—competed with a strong undercurrent of unwashed bodies and unchanged
Depends.
Gwen couldn't help wondering what happened to her kind of people when they
got old—or for that matter, if they got old. She couldn't see the Elder
Races warehousing their oldest members. In her more facetious moments, Sister
Tamar claimed the Canadian government could afford a uniform health-care system
because they set their elderly adrift on ice floes. From what Gwen had seen of
the Elder Races so far, she suspected they'd employ some similar method.
She found room 321 and tapped on the open door. A tiny woman with skin like
thin, crumpled brown parchment was seated by the window. She regarded Gwen with
bird-bright eyes.
"Yes, dear?"
"Are you Mrs. Williams?"
The woman looked puzzled for a moment. Her expression cleared and her eyes
lit up. "Yes, that's me! Lord, I haven't heard that name in years. The people
around here are 'Irma this, Irma that.' Talking to me like I was a child. I'm
not, you know. I'm a married woman."
Gwen responded with a noncommittal hmm. "Where would you like me to put your
flowers?"
Irma Williams flashed a radiant, toothless smile and held out her arms for
the flowers. "Those would be from my Henry. He never forgets an anniversary.
We've been married for some time, you know."
Thanks to the report Gwen had received that morning from her information
broker, she knew that Henry had been Roy Williams's father. Roy had told Shawna
O'Riley half the truth: his father was long dead. His mother was alive, but when
her mind faltered under the weight of her years, she'd forgotten him and he'd
apparently decided to return the favor.
She placed the flowers on the peeling windowsill, right next to Mrs.
Williams.
"Enjoy them," she said as she backed out of the room. She swiftly retraced
her steps down the depressing halls, knowing that she'd completed the job Damian
had asked her to do: she'd found a reason for the vague unease the cop had felt
around Roy Williams.
Gwen had a fairly good idea how Shawna O'Riley would react to this news.
Knowing he'd warehoused his mother would be a deal-breaker.
She could picture Shawna's stunned indignation, but she couldn't understand
it. Yes, Roy Williams had dumped his mother in a state-run home, to an unknown
fate at the hands of strangers. That was no different from what had been done to
her, and Gwen couldn't manage to summon the same level of indignation. What she
had was questions. Lots of them.
She'd only recently learned that James and Ruby Avalon, not David and Regina
Gellman, were her real parents.
When her parents died in a car crash, another baby girl had been strapped in
Gwen's car seat—or whatever people used thirty-four years ago when they traveled
with small children. They'd taken that little girl from her crib and left Gwen
in her place. Apparently this was standard practice among her kind. What had
prompted her parents to do this, and what did it say about them?
It wasn't a pretty picture from any angle. At the very least, James and Ruby
Avalon had put another child at risk to save their own daughter's life.
According to Edmonson, they had brutally slaughtered the girls' parents and left
their own daughter, a changeling child, to be raised by the state.
And why were her parents running? What did they have that Wallace Edmonson
wanted? Was it just the blue crystal he'd shown Gwen, or something more?
Over the years, Gwen had never given much thought to her family. During her
childhood, practical matters—such as survival—had taken most of her focus, and
she'd never seen much sense in dwelling on the past. But all of a sudden family
was very, very important. There was no getting around it: to understand what she
was, she had to know more about where she'd come from.
Even if—no, especially if—those answers were hard to face.
CHAPTER NINE
The scent of cinnamon greeted Gwen when she walked into The Green Man later
that afternoon. Alice Powers hastened over, a steaming mug in hand.
"Any word of Erin?" she demanded before Gwen could speak.
"Nothing yet. In fact, I have a few more questions for you, if you don't
mind."
"Of course not. Would you like some tea while we talk? It's the same kind you
had the other day, only with a bit of cider and cinnamon added."
It sounded like one of the concoctions Trudy routinely made. She was always
drinking some sort of green-smelling brew laced with juice and spices and
god-only-knows what else. And she wasn't alone in this. You could actually buy
the stuff in bottles at otherwise respectable coffeehouses.
"No, thanks. I'm a degenerate coffee fiend, myself."
Alice clicked her tongue reprovingly. "A good herbal tea is much healthier,
not to mention far more soothing."
Who wanted soothing? Gwen was used to being tense and saw no reason to
change.
On the other hand, Trudy would probably love this stuff, and considering
their last exchange, perhaps a keep-the-peace offering was in order. Gwen picked
up a box that had a label similar to the shop's sign. "Is this it?"
"Yes. Those are loose tea leaves. It also comes in a condensed syrup that's
very convenient for making fruit-blend teas, warm or iced."
"I'll take one of each."
Alice's appraising gaze slid down Gwen, taking in her ancient leather jacket,
the dozen or so cheap silver rings on her hands, and the boots from
Payless, buy one pair get the second pair half-off.
"This particular tea isn't inexpensive."
What the hell, thought Gwen—it was on Kyle's dime. "In that case," she said
dryly, "I'll take two of each."
The woman gave her an uncertain smile, but she rang up the sale and led Gwen
into the tearoom. Alice sat down and pushed up the sleeves of her sweater in a
getting-down-to-business gesture not usually associated with lavender cashmere.
"Now, what can I tell you?" she asked briskly.
"Anything you can think of. Any names Erin might have mentioned—friends,
babysitters, her kid's friends, whatever. Any people who came here to see her
recently."
Alice shrugged. "We're seldom in the shop on the same day. When we are
together, Erin is pleasant, but very private. She really doesn't share much.
Funny," she mused, "but I've never really noticed that before."
Apparently sharing wasn't something Erin did. Kyle gave her a generous
household allowance, but he had no idea what she spent the money on. At Gwen's
request, he'd sent a disc containing a record of their household bills, which he
had scanned into a computer file and meticulously organized. Odd, that someone
who was that particular about his finances would let huge chunks of cash go
unaccounted for. Erin used one of Kyle's debit cards for mundane purchases—gas,
groceries, clothing, and so on—but apparently she paid cash for anything that
might leave a clue to her habits.
"Has she ever mentioned a favorite restaurant or shop? Or maybe where she
gets her hair done?"
The older woman brightened up. "Yes! She had some very nice reddish
highlights added about a month ago, and I asked her where she had them done. She
mentioned a day spa in Newport: Esprit. It's down on Belleview Avenue, not far
from the Tennis Hall of Fame."
In Gwen's opinion, that was a long way to drive to get a haircut. Usually
when people went that far out of their way, they were going to a familiar salon
or a longtime hairdresser.
That was good news. There seemed to be something about the fumes in those
girly places that made women want to tell complete strangers about their lives.
Maybe Erin had let something slip.
She thanked Alice and hit the road, heading back north to catch the bridge
leading to the bay's biggest island. The drive to Newport was decidedly unscenic,
winding as it did through streets lined with strip malls. Golden arches and
similar signs hinted enticingly of off-limit French fries, breaking Gwen's heart
every few blocks. It took her over a half hour to wind through this culinary
purgatory to the island's southernmost town.
Apart from a couple of visits to the summer jazz festival, Gwen had never had
much reason to visit Newport, but she figured Belleview Avenue couldn't be too
hard to find. All the Gilded Era mansions were along this street—the "summer
cottages" built by the Vanderbilts and their buddies back in the days before
income tax and minimum-wage laws cut into a robber baron's profits.
After doing a few circles on narrow, one-way streets lined with historic
clapboard houses and the occasional folksy tavern, Gwen found Belleview. She
parked at the small, upscale strip mall and walked the rest of the way to the
day spa, armed with Erin's photo.
Jason had scanned the photo Kyle had given Gwen into his computer and fooled
around with it until he managed to crop little Patrick out of the picture and
superimpose Erin's picture on a woody background. He'd made a good job of it.
That was no major surprise to Gwen. Some people just had the knack—god knows
Frank had taken to the computer like it was a new kind of donut.
Gwen showed the altered picture to the receptionist, a young woman with
honey-blond hair gathered back into an artfully careless knot. The blonde pursed
her lips and studied the photo.
"She looks familiar. Lisa? Take a look at this."
A thirtysomething woman with sleek black hair cut in an asymmetric wedge came
over and glanced at the photo.
"Sure, that's Helene. Helene Tremaine. I've been doing her hair for years."
Her eyes narrowed in sudden suspicion. "Why?"
Gwen gave a quick, fictitious explanation: she couldn't remember the name of
the day spa Helene had recommended, only that it was on Belleview Avenue. She'd
tried to call Helene to check, but she wasn't answering her phone.
Lisa cast a critical eye over Gwen's short hair, which had been styled only
moments before by a brisk wind and a few impatient passes of Gwen's hands.
"Unfortunately, I don't have any openings today."
"No problem—I'll call in later and make an appointment. What I was wondering
is, can you tell me what sort of styling products Helene uses?"
"I could, but your hair is… a lot different from hers."
Gwen grinned. "That's more tactful than I would have been! I like the way
hers looks—nice long layers, lots of shine—and I'm thinking of letting mine grow
out. I know I've got a ways to go, but what can I do to help bridge the gap?"
The stylist explained in considerable detail the virtues of various bottles
of overpriced hair goop. But where Erin/Helene was concerned, she sang pretty
much the same song that Alice Powers had: the woman was pleasant, but didn't
talk about herself very much.
"She's a very pretty woman," Lisa concluded, "but you shouldn't try to copy
her look. For one thing, she's quite a bit older than you. In fact, her
hairstyle is a little young for someone her age."
A jolt of surprise hit Gwen. She saw Lisa register the reaction, so she
decided to hide it in plain sight. "Wow. I thought she was close to my age!"
The stylist smiled. "Now you're just being nice. I remember what it was like
when I was a teenager. Anyone over thirty was ancient. Helene is a pretty woman
and I can help her look her best, but she'll never look seventeen again. That's
a nice photo, but it's years out-of-date."
That was interesting. The picture Kyle had given Gwen couldn't have been
taken more than a few months ago. In it, Patrick had looked around four or five,
and Erin looked like she was still in high school.
"How long have you been doing Helene's hair?"
Lisa pursed her lips and gazed toward the ceiling as she counted the years.
"Twelve, maybe thirteen years? Maybe a little longer."
"Well, she looks great. I'll bet you have a lot of customer loyalty."
The stylist beamed. "Thanks. Helene's a pretty woman, but it's important to
have your own identity."
Gwen didn't have to feign the rueful edge to her answering smile. Apparently
"Helene" didn't share that opinion.
Well, this was just great. Kyle's runaway wife had multiple identities, one
of which was established well before she'd met Kyle. Gwen had found missing
persons who'd had more than one identity, but something told her that finding
Erin Westland or Helene Tremaine or whoever the hell she was would be about as
easy as herding cats.
Gwen stopped to restock her fridge on the way home: milk for coffee, rolls
and meat for sandwiches, and lots of fruit. She was barely in the door of her
office when the front-gate buzzer rang. Grumbling, she dumped the bags on her
desk and stabbed the intercom button with her car key.
"Who is it?"
"Whoa! Snarl much?"
The light, humor-edged baritone was familiar, even through the crackle of the
intercom. Plus, she only knew one guy whose syntax was influenced by Buffy
the Vampire Slayer.
"Jeff?"
"She remembers me! Did you forget about our date, or are you just fashionably
late?"
She glanced at the calendar and suppressed a groan. The appointment was
clearly marked: "Jeff & Jazz, 7:00."
Jeff Monroe was Marcy's legal assistant, a pleasant-looking young man who
shared Gwen's taste in music. Three or four times a year, they went up to
Woonsocket, a mill town in northern Rhode Island and the home of Jimmy Chen's,
the only Chinese restaurant in the state that featured live jazz. Tonight was
supposed to be one of those nights. A few egg rolls, a little music, and a
friendly tumble to round out the evening. She'd been looking forward to it.
"I forgot," she confessed. "It's just that this case I've been working—"
"Say no more. When you didn't show, I picked up some takeout. We can put on a
CD while we eat. It's not the original plan, but it's close enough."
A smile played at the corners of Gwen's lips as she buzzed him in. Jeff was a
good-natured guy, and easy to be around. His face was pleasant rather than
handsome, he wore glasses to work, and he was thin enough and clean-cut enough
to look sort of nebbishy in a white shirt and tie. Thanks to an addiction to
racquetball, he looked a lot better when the business clothes came off. Nothing
too exciting, but he was the kind of guy that went well with jazz and lo mein.
He was definitely vanilla, but vanilla sex was a good flavor for a weeknight.
She reclaimed her bags and sprinted up the stairs. It took all of five
minutes to put the groceries away, and she was finished by the time she heard
his footsteps on the stairs.
Jeff had switched from office attire to his equally conservative casual look:
khaki Dockers and a polo shirt. Tonight's polo shirt was pale yellow, and over
it he wore a cotton sweater in forest green.
He greeted her with a quick kiss, then handed her a black leather CD case.
While Gwen flipped through the CDs for something interesting, he made himself at
home in her miniature kitchen. He quickly dished up two plates and brought them
to the coffee table.
"The chicken Hunan is way too spicy," he warned. "Do you have anything cold
to drink?"
Gwen glanced up from the stereo, CD in hand. "There's some herb-tea mix in
that little bottle and some cranberry juice in the fridge. You can mix it if you
want—there's a pitcher in the cabinet over the sink. Glasses, too."
Jeff stirred up the concoction and took an experimental sip. He made a "not
bad" face and drained the glass. He refilled his and poured another for Gwen,
and brought them over to the sofa.
A saxophone began a mournful exploration of lost love as Gwen settled down
beside Jeff. She took a mouthful of the chicken—Jeff hadn't been exaggerating
about the spices—and promptly reached for her fruit tea. Like Jeff, she drained
the glass. It took that much just to put out the fire. He refilled her glass
from the pitcher, and topped off his own.
As she took another sip, the flavor began to edge its way past her seared
taste buds. It wasn't anything like the bottled blends Marcy and Trudy were
always getting at Starbucks. Gwen couldn't figure out why anyone would enter
that cathedral of caffeine without taking Mass, but the fruit tea there wasn't
half bad. This stuff was so sweet and strong it was almost medicinal.
"Yikes! Didn't you add water?"
He took a considering sip. "I didn't know I was supposed to. Maybe it's a
little strong, but I like the taste."
She set her glass aside and tucked into her pork fried rice and the lo mein,
then went back to the kitchen for seconds on both. The Hunan chicken wasn't so
bad once she stirred in extra white rice. Jeff, however, continued to eat the
spicy stuff straight up, washing it down with the fruit tea.
"Good thing it's herbal," she observed as he poured his fourth glass. "If
that was regular black tea, the caffeine would keep you up all night."
Jeff responded with a sidelong glance and a decidedly masculine chuckle. "I
don't think I'm going to need caffeine for that."
It took Gwen a moment to catch the double entendre—she just didn't expect
them from Jeff. But neither did she expect that predatory gleam in his eyes.
Or his impatience.
He took the plate from her hands and tossed it like a Frisbee in the general
direction of the coffee table. Before she could comment, he pulled her into his
lap so that she was facing him, her knees straddling his lap.
Their first kiss was Hunan-spiced, and from there things heated up fast. He
devoured her, exploring with ravenous hands as they kissed. When they came up
for air, Jeff pulled off his sweater and polo shirt in one quick, impatient
motion, then reached for the top button on Gwen's shirt. His fingers fumbled in
their hurry. Grimacing in annoyance, he took hold of her shirt with both hands.
Buttons flew as he ripped it open.
"Why the rush?" Gwen's protest was slightly breathless, and more amused than
annoyed. "What's another minute or two?"
"An eternity," he murmured, his breath whispering against her neck as he
worked his way down.
She reached around to unclasp her bra, lest it meet a similar fate. Jeff
tossed it aside, then cupped her bottom with both hands to raise her to nuzzling
position. He teased her with his lips and tongue while his hands slid around to
tug at the leather thongs fastening her lace-up jeans.
Several minutes passed in this fashion. He wasn't making much headway with
her pants, but Gwen didn't mind. It slowed things down a bit, and besides, her
boobs were definitely enjoying the attention.
Finally he gave up. A groan of frustration escaped him as he dropped his head
to rest on her shoulder. "Ever think about wearing a skirt?"
She grinned. "I've been known to. Hang on."
Scooting off the sofa, she tugged the laces loose and shimmied out of her
jeans. He was diving at her when her cell phone rang.
Gwen stepped nimbly beyond reach of his grasping hands and walked naked
toward her kitchen.
"You're not going to answer that?" he asked, incredulous.
"I have to. I have several cases going. This could be important."
Damian's number flashed on the readout. She clicked on the phone. "What's
up?"
"I just came from the Extreme. You know, the place where Jackie Teal was
dancing? She was a no-show."
Guilt and concern hummed through his voice, but Gwen had no time for that
right now. "Are you insane? You went to the club to see her after what
happened last night?"
"Wanted to make sure she was okay, is all. When a cop turns up on the other
end of a drug deal, people get unhappy, you know?"
"Only too well."
Jeff came up behind her and nuzzled at her neck. He'd shed the rest of his
clothes, and it was obvious that the interruption hadn't seriously dampened his
mood—Gwen felt the hard evidence of that pressed against her.
First Jason, now Jeff. What was going on with the men in her life?
Not that she was complaining. She reached over her shoulder with one hand and
slid her fingers into his crisp, short brown hair.
"The guy from the park—he runs the club now," she reminded Damian. "You're
lucky you were able to walk out of there."
"Let's hope Jackie was that lucky," he said grimly.
Jeff slipped both arms around her waist. His hands skimmed up to cup her
breasts and he began to tease her with urgent, insistent fingers. Gwen's knees
suddenly felt less stable, and she leaned back against his chest.
"I'll help you look into it," she told Damian.
"Tonight? Can you come down to the club?"
"No, she can't," Jeff said coldly.
Gwen stiffened in surprise. She turned in his arms and stepped away. Her
hormones were still singing, but for a moment incredulity was stronger than
lust.
"What the hell is wrong with you? Listening in to my phone calls? Telling my
friends what I can and can't do?"
"Shit, you got company. Sorry about that. I'll call you tomorrow," Damian
said hastily, and the line went abruptly silent.
An expression of contrition crossed Jeff's face. "I don't know what came over
me. It's just the sight of you standing there naked, talking to another man,
made me feel like a green-eyed monster."
Gwen switched off the phone and placed it on the counter. "No strings, no
commitments, no possessive bullshit," she reminded him. "That's the deal, and
you've always been okay with it."
"I still am. A momentary aberration, that's all."
He pulled her to him and lifted her in one quick movement, his hands on the
back of her thighs. Gwen wrapped her arms around his neck and held his
smoldering gaze as he lowered her, pushing into her in one slow, extravagant
stroke.
Lust shimmered through her, chasing away her pique. Granted, jealousy could
be a problem. There was no way in hell she'd put up with the crap Marcy took
from Trudy, and she'd definitely have to do something about it.
But not right now.
She wrapped her legs around Jeff's hips as he carried her toward the bedroom,
reveling in the sensations that coursed through her with each slow, languorous
step.
By the time they got to the bed, the banked fire in Jeff's eyes had flamed
into something approaching madness. They fell together onto the bed, rolling
twice before they fell off the other side in a tangle of limbs and sheets.
Gwen had time for a small, breathless laugh before Jeff claimed her lips.
Their fingers met and entwined, and he raised her hands over her head, pinioning
her to the floor as they took each other in a ravenous frenzy.
Much later, Gwen crawled back onto the bed and flopped onto her back. Her
limbs felt like pasta that had been boiled way the hell past al dente, and her
ears were actually ringing.
"Where is Jeff," she demanded, "and what have you done with him?"
The only response was a faint groan from the tangle of bedclothes on the
floor.
Gwen glanced at her watch and barely kept from echoing the sentiment. Dawn
was less than an hour away—not much sense going to sleep now. She had an early
appointment and a long drive to get there.
She dragged herself out of bed and stumbled for the bathroom. Ian Forest had
told her that rain was restorative for her, which sounded as crazy as everything
else she'd heard from him over the past several days.
This tidbit of information, however, wasn't hard for her to accept. Not that
she was the type to dance in puddles and swing herself blithely around
lampposts, but for as long as she could remember, she'd always liked rain, and
she found that a shower was nearly as refreshing as sleep. It was the first
positive aspect to this whole changeling business. As the steaming spray beat
down on her, Gwen was almost willing to believe that there might be others.
All her life she'd had questions, but she'd grown up in a world where answers
were in short supply. Raised by the state, alongside other kids who'd been
abandoned, discarded, or just generally fucked with, she eventually stopped
asking and put her energy into surviving.
Then she'd met a chain-smoking, foul-tempered nun, who was and remained the
most inherently decent person Gwen had ever known. Sister Tamar had an Old
Testament viewpoint when it came to evil, and her approach to helping the
victims of evil had given shape and purpose to Gwen's personal brand of rage.
Becoming a cop allowed her to give back or get even—her priorities varied
according to circumstances. Finding lost kids had kept her from spinning
offtrack after her career was pulled out from under her. And now she had a new
shtick: seek out other changelings, help them find their place in the world. It
was work worth doing, and she was uniquely suited for it.
Optimism was a new flavor. Gwen liked it more than she expected to. It was a
nice balance to the voice in the back of her mind, the warning that no amount of
good sex and falling water could silence:
Once she found these changelings, what awaited them? Induction into the
hidden society of the Elder Folk, certainly, but what, ultimately, would be the
price of admission?
CHAPTER TEN
Gwen found her way into downtown Plymouth without much problem. She drove
along the harbor and pulled into the public parking lot around nine o'clock. She
got out of the car and stretched, catlike, working away the stiffness that came
of a two-hour drive.
Oddly enough, she'd never been to Plymouth before, even though she'd spent
her entire life in southern New England. It was a nice place if you liked this
sort of thing—a pretty seaside town with lots of old buildings and a couple of
nifty historical landmarks.
Gwen watched as a school bus disgorged its cargo. A trio of frazzled-looking
teachers tried without much success to interest their kids in the rock entombed
in a miniature Grecian shrine. As far as Gwen could tell, Plymouth Rock looked
pretty much like any other big hunk of stone. And the reproduction of the
Mayflower docked nearby was tiny. No wonder so many of the pilgrims had
died the first winter. It was a marvel any of them survived the sea crossing.
Hell, if Gwen had been forced to live in such close quarters, she would have
been responsible for most of the shipboard deaths.
Having gotten in touch with her national roots, Gwen left her car and walked
up a side street, following the directions on the Yahoo! map Jason had printed
out for her.
Jason Cross was really getting to know his way around cyberspace. He'd spent
the previous afternoon helping her search for Helene Tremaine. Between the two
of them, they'd pieced together a partial picture. Helene was born in 1944,
which meant she would be in her late sixties. Assuming Helene and Erin were one
and the same, that wasn't out of the realm of possibility, as long as Erin aged
as slowly as, say, Ian Forest.
Of course, that was a rather large assumption. Helene's stylist had
recognized Erin's picture, but she'd insisted that "Helene" looked considerably
older than Gwen. The photo was recent, and it showed a girl who could have been
in Gwen's high-school graduating class. The numbers didn't add up, so Gwen
decided to come to Helene's hometown for a closer look.
The only member of the Tremaine family Jason could track down was an older
brother, still living in the house he and Helene had grown up in. It had taken
some talking to get the man to agree to a meeting.
Clyde Tremaine sat on the step of a small porch, a rickety affair fronting a
tall, narrow house painted barn red. He was tall and rangy, with a craggy,
pitted face. Rheumy eyes regarded Gwen with a sour expression.
"You're the girl who's asking about Helene?"
"That's right."
"Don't see why. She died in a car crash way back in '61."
That date seized Gwen's attention. After 1962, lists of Social Security
numbers for the deceased became a lot easier to come by. Interesting
coincidence?
She showed him the picture Kyle had given her. "Is this Helene?"
The old man patted his shirt pocket for glasses, slipped them on, and leaned
in close.
"That's her," he said, his voice flat. "Pretty much as I remember her, too.
She was seventeen when she died."
"What was your sister like?"
The lines on his face deepened in disapproval. "Let's just say she died the
way she lived. She'd run off that night to meet some boy my parents said she
couldn't see. The boy, or what was left of him, was with her when the car
crashed—my car, by the way. She took my car, and when they
found her, she was wearing my mother's necklace. That was Helene. She helped
herself to any little thing she wanted."
"She wasn't adopted, by any chance?"
The man looked surprised, then thoughtful. "No, but come to think of it, I
once heard my folks talk about some sort of confusion at the hospital, a
possible switch. Me, I'd always thought it was wishful thinking on their part."
Gwen wasn't so sure about that. "I know this is a hard question to answer,
especially so long after the accident, but do you think there's even a remote
possibility that the girl who died was not your sister?"
He thought about that for quite a while. "You know," he confided, "down deep,
I never really felt that Helene was my sister."
Gwen returned to her car and switched on her phone to check messages. The
first one was from Quaid. She hit Return and waited through several rings.
"Did you find out anything about Kate?" he asked without preamble.
"Yeah. Apparently she went to college on full scholarship, courtesy of the
law firm Edmonson controlled. Anything happening on your end?"
"I called her at work. She hasn't been in since Monday."
An icy shiver danced down Gwen's spine. Jackie Teal didn't show up for work
after she set up the drug meet for Damian, and now Kate? Someone was very
serious about keeping people from looking too closely into Edmonson's business.
"Has someone gone over to her house to check on her?"
"I called, but she's not answering the phone. She was off Tuesday and
Wednesday, so she only missed one day of work. Enough to annoy people, but not
enough to worry them."
"Maybe you could drive by and knock on the door?"
"I stopped by last night. No answer."
"Was her car parked on the street?"
"Not that I could see, but I don't know what she's driving. She was shopping
for a car when we split up. Did she tell you what she bought?"
"It never came up." Gwen sighed in frustration. "Without a missing-person
report, you can't check her place out, at least not officially. How are you with
locks?"
"I'll pretend I didn't hear that."
"You do that. Maybe I'll swing by for a little girl talk later today."
"Let me know how it goes."
As usual, he hung up without saying good-bye. Gwen listened to the rest of
her messages and headed toward the nearest restaurant to refuel.
After a quick breakfast and several cups of coffee, Gwen headed for the town
library and asked to see the microfilm archives of the local papers. If there
was some sort of scandal about a possible baby-switching, it might have been
covered.
The hours rolled by more slowly than the miniature pages. Gwen finally found
the article around two o'clock that afternoon.
There were a few follow-up articles, too. She was not entirely surprised to
learn that the other baby's parents had dropped off the face of the earth
shortly after the birth, and the daughter had ended up in a foster home. The
little girl was one of the system's rare success stories—she'd been adopted.
After making a few phone calls and calling in a few favors, Gwen tracked down
the adoptive parents. John and Emily Meekins had spent most of their married
life in Dartmouth, Massachusetts. John Meekins, a retired professor, still lived
in Dartmouth. It was more or less on the way back to Providence, so Gwen decided
to give it a shot.
Dr. Meekins was even less interested in Gwen's search than Clyde Tremaine had
been. She had to play the missing-child card to convince him to give her five
minutes.
They met on the college campus, by the history department where, Gwen
assumed, he used to teach. Certainly John Meekins looked like a retired history
professor, right down to the tweed jacket with elbow patches. He was ancient,
his body worn down to a shadow and his voice to a whispery quaver, but once he
started talking it became plain that his mind was still very sharp.
"Vivian changed rather suddenly when she was seventeen," he told Gwen.
"Before then she was a sweet girl, a good student. Seemingly overnight she was
crazy about boys, and she started drinking and staying out all hours of the
night. She left home the day she turned eighteen and that was the last we saw of
her."
"Do you know where she went?"
"She moved to Providence. My wife tried to keep in touch, but Vivian couldn't
be bothered—not even when her mother was dying. I haven't heard from her since."
He glanced up at Gwen, a mixture of anger and resignation in his faded eyes. "I
suppose you have news."
For a moment, Gwen debated how much to tell him. She settled on the truth—or
at least, what she suspected was true. "I'm sorry, Dr. Meekins, but your
daughter is dead."
He nodded, accepting validation of an opinion he'd held for a long time. "I
suppose you have your reasons for asking about her, and I trust you won't mind
if I don't care to listen to them. Vivian has been dead to me for a very long
time."
The professor cocked his head as if listening to the echo of his own words.
"I know how that must sound to you. You must think me sadly lacking in family
feeling."
"Not really," Gwen said slowly. "I'm starting to understand just how
complicated family ties can be."
Kate Myers's car was parked right outside the narrow two-story building. Gwen
knew the gleaming black Passat was Kate's the minute she touched it—the mental
image of Kate behind the wheel was so real that she could almost smell the
woman's perfume.
She walked up the stairs to the screened-in porch and tried the doorbell. The
deep, sonorous tolling was clearly audible, but it didn't raise a response. Gwen
tried the door. It was securely locked.
No problem. She took her key-and-pick combo from her pocket and slipped it
into the lock on the doorknob. The lock popped in about five seconds. The door
bowed out a little when Gwen tugged on the handle, but it held secure. There was
no other lock on the outside, so she figured it had a dead bolt, one that could
only be locked from the inside. A little paranoid, maybe, but effective.
Gwen circled around the house. A pile of garden mulch was heaped against the
foundation. It smelled a bit odd, so she crouched down for a closer look.
The shredded wood was sodden, even though the last rain had been four days
ago. Some of the chips appeared to be blackened. She picked up one and sniffed.
There was a faint smell of lighter fluid.
She rocked back on her heels and stood, her gaze sweeping the backyard. There
was a flower bed with a few May-flowering tulips and a row of spent daffodils. A
clump of lilac bushes, the purple buds still tight, grew by the back stairs. The
yard was dominated by a single large tree. It grew close to the back fence, but
its branches spanned half the yard and shaded the neighboring property, as well.
Gwen checked the back door. Someone had kicked it in, splintering the old
wood around the various locks. Gwen glanced at the ruined door. A lock in the
doorknob, two dead bolts, one with a chain. Kate was definitely security
conscious. Much good it had done her. If someone was determined enough, no locks
could provide much of a deterrent.
Gwen moved cautiously into the kitchen, called Kate's name. There was no
response, but she hadn't gone more than a few steps when it hit her—the sickly
sweet, coppery smell of death.
Two doors led out of the kitchen, one into a small dining room, the other
into a central hall. Gwen headed down the hall. The front door drew her eye,
though for no reason she could ascertain. She laid her palm against the door and
was immediately flooded by sensations of mute terror and agonizing pain, and
behind it, a simple, alien mind numbed with the astonishment of betrayal.
Gwen snatched her hand away and rubbed it on the leg of her jeans, as if
doing so could erase the odd vision. She peered at the door but could see
nothing to explain her reaction, other than a slight tackiness that felt like
the residual gumminess a price sticker left on a hard surface.
The smell was stronger now, and definitely coming from upstairs. She climbed
the stairs and stood at the bedroom door only long enough to identify the body.
The woman had been shot several times. One bullet had gone into the back of
her head at close range, blowing off most of her face. Her hair was so thickly
matted with dried black blood that it was impossible to tell what color it once
had been. But it was Kate, all right—or at least, someone wearing the clothes
she'd worn for their Monday-night workout.
Gwen headed outside and took several long, cleansing breaths before pulling
her cell phone from her pocket. Quaid would be pissed at her for not calling him
first, but the farther he stayed away from this case, the better off he'd be.
She dialed the station and asked for homicide. After passing along the basic
details, she sat down on the front step to wait for the detective.
Her first instinct had been to make an anonymous call, but that struck her as
too risky. Judging from Kate's clothing and the state of her body, she'd been
dead since Monday night. That meant Gwen was one of the last people who'd seen
her alive. If she was going to get pulled into this, there could be no question
about where she stood.
Unfortunately, the responding officers were not inclined to think the best of
her. Ben Cerulo and Kimberly Jackson had been partners for years, reaching back
into the time before Frank's retirement. The four of them had gone out for a
beer from time to time, or to shoot a game of pool… but Tom Yoland had been
Kimberly's cousin, and she'd taken his death hard—and blamed Gwen for the mess
that had caused it.
Her plain, much-freckled face was hard as she regarded her former colleague.
"Let's hear your report," she said curtly.
Gwen went through the basic details, leaving out only her lock-picking
activities and the strange, painful memories haunting the front door.
"The back door was open when you got here," Kimberly repeated.
"It was unlocked and slightly ajar," she confirmed. "That, plus that fact
that Kate's car was here, seemed sufficient reason to check things out."
"Probable cause, yes, but that doesn't apply if you're not a cop."
"Like I told you, Kate and I started running together last week. She hasn't
been answering her phone, she didn't show up for work. I came over to see if she
was okay. That's what friends do."
"And you and Kate Myers were friends."
"Heading in that direction, yeah."
Kimberly sniffed. "Seems like you've been losing a lot of friends recently."
The snide, hateful tone in her voice snapped Gwen's patience. She rose and
took one step forward, looking the taller woman hard in the eye. "True enough,
but apparently not all of them were worth keeping."
A hand settled on her shoulder. Gwen spun toward Kimberly's partner, a ready
snarl on her lips, and was stunned by what she saw in his eyes.
Compassion.
Ben Cerulo squeezed her shoulder and then released her. "You've had a tough
time of it, Gellman. Go home, pour yourself a drink. We might have more
questions later on, so stay in town, okay?"
Gwen nodded, not quite trusting herself to speak. Kimberly's hostility she
could take and return in kind, but Ben's kindness simply undid her.
Sadly, she was cynical enough to wonder if he'd known it would, and had
chosen his weapons accordingly.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Shortly before closing time, Gwen walked into a pediatrician's office in East
Greenwich, the pretty, rural, and mostly upscale community where Kyle Radcliff
had lived with his family.
She went to the counter window and handed the receptionist a form letter Kyle
had signed, requesting a copy of his son's medical records.
The woman glanced at it. "Where do you want these records sent?"
"Could I, like, wait for it? My dad wants a copy." Gwen rolled her eyes in
silent commentary on incomprehensible adult demands.
The nurse smiled. "Usually Friday is our busiest day, but things are a little
slow. Let me see what I can find for you."
She turned her chair to face the computer keyboard, and her fingers clicked
busily for several moments. Her eyebrows drew together in a puzzled V.
"Are you sure you're in the right place, honey? We don't have any patient by
the name of Patrick Radcliff."
Well, if Erin Westland went by more than one name, it was possible her kid
had an alias or two. Gwen showed her the picture of Erin and Patrick.
"This is my brother. Maybe there's a problem with his records?" she
suggested. "You're sure you haven't seen him here?"
A younger woman, a ponytailed nurse wearing a lavender smock covered with
Scooby-Doo cartoons, noted the photo in the receptionist's hands and bent down
for a closer look.
"I don't recognize the little boy, but the girl looks familiar. I'll get
Jen—she'll know. She's been here forever."
Jen, it turned out, was an older woman with deep, parenthetical frown lines
framing her mouth. These lines deepened when she glanced at the picture. She
shoved it back across the counter at Gwen, her face stony.
"Wait, now I remember her," announced Scooby. "She was an office temp, but I
don't think she lasted more than a day or two."
The reception's eyes widened. "Oh, she's the one who—"
She broke off abruptly and exchanged glances with the nurse. Jen marched off,
her jaw set and shoulders rigid.
As Gwen reclaimed the photo, her mind was flooded by a sudden image of a
short, balding man in a white medical coat, standing very close to the young
woman seated on the examining table. The ring on his left hand was a match to
the one Jen wore. His brown corduroy pants were in a puddle around his ankles,
and a pair of slim, feminine legs wrapped around him. Oops. That was more info on Erin Westland than Gwen wanted.
Gwen made a hasty retreat, leaving Nurse Scooby to deal with the metaphorical
pile of shit she'd inadvertently stepped in.
Friday afternoon was a lousy time to be on I-95, but for once Gwen didn't
mind the traffic. She had plenty to think about, starting with the question of
who had died in Clyde Tremaine's car, all those years ago.
Had it really been Helene Tremaine, or did people see the mangled female body
in her brother's car and make the logical assumption?
And what about Vivian Meekins? Her personality transformation had occurred
right around the time of Helene's death.
Was it possible that Helene and Vivian had switched places when they were
seventeen? Was the dead teenager in the car wreck Vivian, and did Helene take
her place? Surely the Meekinses would have noticed if a different girl was
living under their roof. Gwen could buy the theory of two teenaged girls who
looked enough alike that a body, post car crash, could muddy the waters, but the
girls would have to be damn near identical for Helene/Vivian to pull off a
switch.
Or would they?
Two people had identified Erin Westland's picture as Helene Tremaine:
Helene's brother and the stylist at Esprit. Clyde Tremaine said the picture
looked like Helene had when she died, but the hairdresser thought that Helene
was considerably older than seventeen. But Kyle Radcliff said the photo
was recent. Comparing the perspectives of Kyle and Clyde, Erin/Helene looked
exactly the same today as she had fifty years ago. According to Lisa the
stylist, Helene was an older version of Erin.
There were two logical conclusions: either Erin and Helene were two different
people, or they were two names for one person who could alter her appearance.
Well, make that one logical conclusion, and one conclusion that,
though illogical, might be compatible with Gwen's broadening definition of
reality.
If her theory was correct, the girl who died in the crash was in fact the
real Helene, the daughter born to the Tremaines, switched in the hospital,
and adopted by the Meekinses. The changeling child, a child of unknown heritage,
grew up as Clyde's sister, and was now Kyle Radcliff's wife.
His runaway wife. It looked as if "Erin Westland" was well on her way to yet
another identity. At least this time, no one had died to help smooth her path.
Was this common practice with the Elder Races? Did they routinely change
their identities by arranging the death of a substitute? It appeared that they
did, and in incredibly cold-blooded fashion. The amount of planning it would
take to pull off the double switch—first as infants, then as teenagers—was
mind-boggling.
The next question was whether or not Erin participated in Vivian's death, and
to what extent. These questions were of more than academic interest to Gwen. It
was always good to know whether you were tracking a scared rabbit or a cornered
wolf.
Erin was no innocent. The visit to the pediatrician had proven that. Kyle's
meticulous financial records showed a number of bills for Patrick's routine
checkups, but the pediatrician had no record of the child. The only explanation
was that Erin had finagled her way into the office as a temp and stayed long
enough to steal a stack of blank bills.
That was definitely thinking ahead. It covered Erin's ass in case Kyle
wondered about medical care for his kid, while neatly avoiding the possibility
that a doctor might find some medical anomaly. And most likely, it wasn't as if
the kid needed medical treatment. If he was anything like Gwen, he'd never been
sick a day in his life, and any type of medicine would work its way out of his
system fast enough to render inoculations a waste of time.
When Gwen got back to her office, she pulled up Kyle's file and studied the
electronic copies. As she clicked her way through them, her eye fell on the
numbers on the upper right corner. The invoice numbers didn't seem to be in any
particular sequence, but the numbers were within a fairly limited range.
Curious, she printed out the receipts and arranged the bills according to
number. The pattern that emerged brought a wry, almost admiring smile to her
face.
When the receipts from Patrick's five years of checkups were put in numerical
order, they were all sequential. Erin had put them out of order to make
detection less likely.
Her own medical bills were more sporadic than her son's. She seemed to have a
constitution similar to Gwen's. Her only medical expenses dated back to her
pregnancy, and there weren't many of those, either. Apparently she'd opted for a
midwife and a home birth.
Gwen glanced at the clock. It was well past seven. She'd have to wait until
Monday morning to start checking out Erin's medical situation, which was fine
with her. If Erin was willing to boink a balding pediatrician just to get her
hands on a stack of blank invoices, God only knew what she'd do for a copy of
her ultrasound.
Gwen trudged up the stairs to her apartment. Her bedroom door stood open, and
the covers from her bed were still heaped on the floor after last night's
marathon. She paused at the door and debated whether to remake the bed or just
flop facedown on the mattress.
"Don't let me stop you," announced an amused male voice. "In fact, I may
allow myself to be persuaded to join you."
Gwen jumped and whirled toward the sound. Ian Forest, damn his pointy little
ears, was lounging on her sofa.
"Christ on stilts! Don't do that," she snapped. "What the fuck are
you doing here? And come to think of it, why are your ears pointy all of a
sudden?"
He came to his feet in a graceful, fluid movement. "Your perceptions have
changed, that's all. People seldom notice ear shape unless the differences are
extreme. A slight point toward the back of the ear is easily concealed and
likely to go unnoticed. Only the jug-eared tend to draw attention."
"Like Ross Perot," she noted. "Or better yet, Prince Charles. That man could
hang glide over half of Wales without equipment."
Ian's blue eyes widened in surprise, and he burst into genuine laughter.
It was, in Gwen's opinion, a big improvement from his superior, smirking
humor. Against her better judgment, she felt pleased and even a little charmed.
She reminded herself that this was his gift—the ability to manipulate
emotions. She remembered the too-young girls who danced at the club he managed.
She reminded herself of the elaborate scheme he'd created to maneuver Edmonson
out of power, using her as an unwitting tool. And finally, the reason why he was
here. Ian Forost was a manipulator, a blackmailer, and quite possibly a
murderer.
"Kate Myers and Jackie Teal," she said coldly. "Do you know anything about
them?"
The amusement faded from his eyes. "The first name is familiar to me, but
only because you two have been together several times of late. Why do you ask?"
"Kate is dead and Jackie's missing. She used to be one of Tiger Leone's
girls. Lately she danced at the Extreme."
"I see," Ian mused. "That's one of Edmonson's establishments. I assume Kate
Myers also had some connection with the earl?"
"He paid her way through college. I'm guessing she covered for him every now
and then by fudging autopsy results."
Ian studied her. "You think those photos were a threat to frame you for
murder. Edmonson's, perhaps even this Kate's."
"Wouldn't put it past you. Where's the gun?"
He reached into the inside pocket of his suit coat and drew out the small
silver weapon. He placed it on the coffee table, which was still littered with
the remnants of last evening's takeout.
"I know this is difficult for you, Gwen," he said softly. "Your friend's
honor is important to you, and that's as it should be. But you must understand
that your first loyalty is to your own kind. Looking too closely into Frank
Cross's death would draw too much attention to us. We can ill afford that kind
of scrutiny."
"You have my oath," she snapped. "Now let me hear you say that you had
nothing to do with Kate's death and Jackie's disappearance."
"Easily done. I brought no harm to either of these women. This I swear."
Gwen felt some of the tension between her shoulders seep away. "Since you're
here, you might as well make yourself useful and answer a few questions. You
said I have two Qualities—"
"Three, actually. The ability to remember things you haven't seen, an
affinity for rain, and one that is as yet undiscovered."
Okay, that wasn't too disconcerting.
"Three, then," Gwen said, adding this new revelation to her growing list of
Things to Deal With. "What I need to know is, can some of you guys—"
"Some of us," Ian interjected patiently.
"Would you stop with the interrupting?" she snapped. "Okay, can some of
us change how we look?"
The supercilious little smile was back. "I assure you, Gwen, the apparent
change in the shape of my ears is nothing more than selective observation on
your part."
"Hate to be the one to break the news, buddy, but it's not all about you. I
need to know if this is something one of us can do."
His smile broadened. "Ahhh, finally she says 'us.' We're making
progress."
"Ahhh. Blow me." Gwen took a deep, steadying breath. "I used to go
out with a guy who was into Arthurian stuff, and he nagged me until I read this
book he was crazy about. Mists of Avalon. I wanted to bitch-slap most
of the characters—"
"Your namesake in particular, no doubt."
"Didn't we talk about this interrupting? But yeah, you're right. The book
made Gwenevere out to be a spineless simp. But the thing is, some of the magic
in that book sort of… made sense to me."
"I can see where this is going. You're speaking of the glamour cast by the
priestesses of Avalon."
"Well, yeah."
He leaned against the wall and crossed his arms. "The writer wasn't far off.
The ability to cast a glamour was one of the Old Gifts. There have been several
attempts to revive it, but too often that gift conflicts with another Quality.
And sometimes, it's the sole Quality the bearer possesses."
"If you have to be a one-trick pony, that's one hell of a trick. There
actually were people who could change what they looked like?"
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder," Ian said, "and perception is a
powerful thing."
Gwen bit back the impulse to comment on his sudden penchant for cliches. "So,
they didn't actually change how they looked, but how people perceived them."
"That's correct."
"How?"
Ian lifted one eyebrow. "You're asking for a scientific explanation?"
"Give it your best shot."
"All right, then. The mind functions on a sort of electrochemical energy.
When that chemistry is altered, the mind can be persuaded to change how it
interprets the data collected by the senses. Excessive alcohol, psychotropic
drugs, even pheromones can influence perceptions."
"Maybe pheromones can influence more than perception," Gwen mused. "Not long
ago a friend of mine gave me this article about prayer and healing. There was
this study done on people who believe in that sort of thing. Apparently they
give off this pheromone when they pray. Other people pick up on it without
consciously noticing it. If someone sick is in range, so to speak, prayer might
actually speed up the healing process through a sort of chemical jump start."
"An interesting point," Ian said. "Humans draw lines between magic, religion,
and the natural powers of the mind, but those boundaries keep shifting.
According to this study you mentioned, it would follow that people who have
exceptionally strong and varied pheromones could alter the perceptions—and, as
you have observed, perhaps even the physical realities—of the people around
them."
"And we have stronger and more varied pheromones."
"Surely you've noticed that your arousal is highly contagious. Men respond to
your sexuality because they perceive it physically. Chemistry, in your case, is
quite literal."
"And here I thought it was my ladylike charm," Gwen said dryly. "So it could
be done. Changing appearances, that is—making people see you differently."
"Theoretically, it's possible that this Quality might still exist," he
specified, "but it's unlikely. In fact, we no longer breed for that gift."
For a long moment, Gwen simply stood and stared. "You did say 'breed,'
didn't you?"
He nodded. "That will no doubt offend your human-instilled sensibilities, but
consider the situation: each of us has three Qualities, all of which ebb and
flow in certain predictable patterns. It's vital that these qualities be
compatible."
There was probably some sense in what he said, but Gwen was too tired to
care.
"Okay, I've officially gone into information overload. Why don't you let
yourself out the same way you got in—whatever the hellthatwas—and we'll talk
about this in, oh, another month or so."
Ian held his ground. "Don't let it wait, Gwen. If you have any reason to
believe this particular Quality is surfacing in you, you must let me know at
once. Me," he emphasized, "and no other."
His tone was serious, almost ominous. Gwen shrugged and headed for the
shower. "I suppose my life depends on it," she tossed back.
"For once," he said somberly, "you are most definitely right."
CHAPTER TWELVE
The disturbing conversation with Ian echoed through Gwen's thoughts as she
drove to Sister Tamar's safe house. Saturday night was their pizza-and-poker
night, weather permitting and if no major crisis contravened. Missing a night's
sleep simply didn't qualify as an excuse.
The safe house was a sprawling old Victorian located a few blocks from
Providence College. The proximity to the school allowed the dozen or so young
female residents to come and go without much comment, and the old-fashioned iron
fence around the property was easily dismissed as the remnant of the original
owner's pretensions.
Few people noticed the state-of-the-art security system, the bulletproof
windows, the guard dog. The latter, an English sheepdog, was certainly visible
from the street, but he looked more like an affable pet than a trained assassin.
Gwen noticed it was hard for people to take any long-haired dog seriously.
Dobermans, pit bulls, German shepherds, rottweilers—those clean-cut guys got all
the press.
The nun's dogs tended to be as unconventional as their mistress. All dogs
were pack animals, and any creature with functioning brain cells recognized
Sister Tamar as the resident alpha bitch. If her life was all about serving and
protecting, who were they to do otherwise?
The sheepdog's MO was to gamble over, his tongue lolling in a goofy canine
grin and his killer eyes shielded by long, shaggy fur. He looked like an
oversize stuffed toy, but he could take several chunks out of an intruder before
the guy realized that Fluffy liked to play rough.
Gwen parked on the street and walked over to the intercom. Because she knew
where to look for it, she glanced toward the camera in the old beech tree just
inside the fence long enough to let it get a good shot of her face. The gate
buzzed, and she walked through, making sure it clicked shut behind her.
The sheepdog greeted Gwen with a little woof, then followed her through the
small yard and around to the back door like a shaggy, four-legged shadow.
Sister Tamar had a small apartment on the first floor, three rooms that she
kept fiercely tidy and sparsely furnished. Her only luxury was a collection of
high-quality ionic filters, all of which were kept running constantly.
The reason for this hit Gwen as walked in. Tamar was sitting at her small
table, feet propped up on a second chair. As usual, she was smoking like a bad
chimney.
Gwen grimaced and swatted at a plume of menthol-scented smoke. "I thought you
were going to give up the habit."
The nun glanced pointedly down at her skinny, jean-clad legs and bare,
bunion-lumpy feet. " 'Give up the habit?' Since when did you start talking in
bad puns?"
"Seriously. Those things will kill you."
Tamar sucked at her cigarette and blew out a leisurely cloud. "Never happen.
Not in this business."
"What? Brides of Christ have a special dispensation against cancer?"
"No, but I figure I'll be shot by someone's irate husband, knifed by
someone's pimp, or run over by someone's stalker first. Something with a little
drama and pizzazz."
She had a point. Gwen had never been optimistic about her own life
expectancy, either.
Until recently, that is.
The nun's gaze sharpened. "Why so glum?"
"Maybe I don't like the idea of outliving you," Gwen said. And because that
was too close to the truth, she added, "Besides, who would take care of your
girls?"
Tamar glared, then ground out her cigarette in a deeply stained ashtray
someone had bought in Niagra Falls circa 1964.
"Not bad," she said grudgingly. "When results count, go straight for the
guilt button. Where'd you learn that trick?"
"Well, my best friend grew up Irish Catholic…"
One corner of Tamar's lips twitched. "Shut up and deal the cards."
They played a few hands of Texas Hold 'Em, but neither of
them had much luck concentrating. The pizza was more successful; between the two
of them, they demolished a deep-dish pizza piled with extra cheese, Canadian
bacon, green peppers, onions, and pineapple.
"You're playing worse than usual tonight," Tamar pointed out as she snagged
the last slice. "Something on your mind?"
"A lot of things," Gwen admitted. "But there's one thing in particular I did
want to discuss with you. I haven't made any progress finding Irena's friends.
If you think she's up to it, I'd like to talk to her."
Tamar looked dubious, and Gwen could see why. It had only been a week or so
since the teenage girl had escaped from enforced prostitution and made her way
into the nun's care.
"She doesn't speak much English, and you don't speak Russian or Polish.
Unless you plan to get out the hand puppets, I'm not sure what you think talking
to Irena is going to accomplish."
"It's hard to explain," Gwen said. That, she added silently, just might be
the largest understatement in the history of Rhode Island. How could she tell
Sister Tamar there was a chance that she might pick up a mental image from
Irena, something that might help her find the pimp who'd imprisoned Irena and
two other girls?
Even if pragmatic Tamar bought into the whole psychic thing, recent events
had added a whole new layer of weird. Gwen's psychic flashes, which had always
been capricious, had recently become even more problematic. A few days ago,
she'd had several vivid, hologram-type visions that anyone could see. It hadn't
happened since her showdown with Meredith Cody's kidnappers, but the risk was
there.
Still, when you considered the two girls still in the pimp's hands, the
biggest risk was doing nothing at all.
Since Tamar was obviously waiting for an explanation, Gwen shrugged and said,
"It's a long shot, but I'd like to try."
The nun rose and brushed crumbs off her gray sweatshirt. "I'll ask Irena if
she'll talk to you. She's come a long way this week, so I think she might be
ready. She has a hard time formulating her thoughts in English, but she should
be able to understand you if you speak slowly. If you like, I can stay and
translate."
"No, I think we'll be fine." If things went wrong, Gwen thought grimly, the
fewer witnesses, the better.
Several minutes later Tamar was back with a blond girl who looked to be about
sixteen. Irena was too pale and thin to be pretty, and her narrow face was
nearly overwhelmed by a large nose. She glanced at Gwen and said sometime to
Tamar in either Polish or Russian, something that made the nun snort with
laughter.
"Do I want to know?" Gwen asked.
"Probably not. I've explained to her that you find people, and that if she
answers your questions, you might be able to help Marina and Anya."
Gwen smiled reassuringly at the teenager. "Tell her I think she's very
brave."
Tamar's translation brought a faint smile to the girl's face. Even so, her
gaze followed the nun as she left the room and closed the door behind her. She
turned back to Gwen, her eyes wary.
"I need you to picture the man who kept you, Marina, and Anya in that house."
The girl frowned and pantomimed drawing. "Make picture?"
"No. Make picture here," Gwen replied, tapping her head.
Irena nodded and closed her eyes. Her desire to help her friends must have
been strong, because the picture that flooded Gwen's mind was vivid and
immediate.
A piercing shriek shattered Gwen's concentration. She opened her eyes—
And saw her vision reproduced in translucent colors and startling precision.
The ghostly form of a burly Latino was right there in the room with them.
Irena scrambled away from the apparition, screaming something in Russian.
The door flew open hard, slamming into the wall hard enough to send a thin
crack snaking up the old plaster. Tamar rushed in, wrath in her eyes and a small
bottle in one hand. Without a moment's hesitation, she pummeled the vision with
holy water and colorful curses. The situation might have been darkly amusing if
it wasn't for Irena's terror.
Gwen doubted the holy water had much effect, but her own guilt appeared to be
a real vision-quencher. The apparition faded quickly. While Tamar soothed the
sobbing child, Gwen called the last doctor in New England who made house
calls—most likely because he'd been one of Tamar's pupils back in the day, and
still had a lively fear of her.
It took more than an hour to restore order. Finally Irena went off to bed,
taking with her Tamar's favorite dog, a gaunt greyhound the nun had rescued from
his "retirement." The girls seemed to find comfort in the ugly guard dog. The
beast might not be able to race anymore, but he sure as hell remembered how to
bite.
When Tamar and Gwen were finally alone, the nun took a bottle of brandy from
the kitchen cupboard and poured generous three-finger portions into two glasses.
Gwen tossed hers back and waited for the nun to catch up.
Tamar took a sip and sank into her chair, holding her glass in both hands.
"Ugly son of a bitch, wasn't he?" she murmured. "I'd always had my doubts
about the whole 'fallen angel of light' crap, but the devil looks like some guy
who pumps gas in Cranston."
"I don't think that was a demonic visitation," Gwen said hesitantly. "In
fact, I'm sure it wasn't. Tamar, I've got a confession."
"Do I look like a fucking priest?" the nun snapped. "Besides, no sensible
person expects devils to look like Clark Gable. Evil works best when it's
mundane and banal and normal. That way, it can sneak up and bite you in
the ass. Every one of the men who tormented Irena is a devil, and how many of
them do you think are sexy, Hollywood vampire types?"
"Not too many of them were transparent, either."
The nun dismissed this with an impatient gesture that sent the contents of
her glass sloshing onto the table. "That… thing we saw. Is that the man
who has Irena's friends?"
"Yeah."
Tamar nodded—a single, decisive inclination of her head, then she tossed off
the rest of her drink and reached for the bottle. "Well, go find him."
Gwen stared at her. "Just like that. You don't want to know what happened in
here?"
Tamar poured herself another drink and regarded the smoky gold contents for a
long time. Her thin shoulders rose and fell. "I used to demand explanations.
Mostly about the sort of things you'd expect a young religious to contemplate:
the paradox of an all-powerful God and a profoundly imperfect world, the nature
of good and evil. In my business, answers are in short supply, so I stopped
asking certain questions a long, long time ago."
"Yet you never left the order."
The nun laughed shortly. "I didn't have a crisis of faith, kid. To the
contrary. Enlightenment isn't guaranteed. Useful work is. I just figured out I
have all the answers I need to do the work that's in front of me."
"Must be nice," Gwen murmured.
"So you don't have all the answers yet. Keep at it. You'll find this
bastard."
"I plan to." Gwen took a long, settling breath. "Actually, I was talking in a
more general sense."
__.
Tamar's shrewd eyes studied Gwen's face. "Looks like we need to have a long
talk… in a more general sense. But another time," she concluded briskly. She
held up the bottle. "You've got work, and I've got some serious drinking to do."
Gwen dialed Ian Forest's number while she was driving home.
"So you decided not to wait a month before contacting me," Ian said by way of
greeting. "I'm glad you changed your mind."
"Yeah, hello. You know those visions I told you about? The hologram things?
Well, they're back."
"What did you expect?"
"That's why I'm calling you! You're the guy with all the answers."
"I consider that admission a true sign of progress on your part."
"Whatever. Can we get back to the home-movie thing? I've got to get a handle
on this before someone drowns me in holy water."
For a long moment, the only response was the static on Gwen's cell phone.
"I'm sure there's a story there," Ian said in a slightly bemused voice, "but
it will have to wait for another time. I prefer to speak of this in person."
"Like anyone who overheard us would believe any of this," she scoffed.
"You might be surprised who listens to conversations, and why. Shall we meet
in Sylvia's moon garden in, say, ten minutes?"
Gwen's eyes narrowed. "How come you're so close? You're not still following
me, are you?"
"Not as such. It just so happens that I can walk from my home to yours in
that length of time."
"Great," she muttered. "Ring the intercom at the gate. I'll buzz you in."
"That won't be necessary. Meet me by the old maple tree in ten minutes."
"Make it fifteen. I'm still driving."
She shut off her phone and tossed it onto the passenger seat. The lights in
Sylvia's house were on, but that was because they were on a timer. Gwen's
landlady wasn't home and wouldn't be for another week or more. A bad shock had
sent her to the hospital. After her release, she'd decided to take a cruise. The
first one had gone so well she signed on for another. Most likely she'd found an
elderly admirer or two.
Or maybe she needed time away from the weirdness that Gwen had brought into
her life.
And that was something to think about. Gwen gazed wistfully at the calm,
green haven behind the black iron fence. She liked living here, but doing so was
putting Sylvia at risk. She really needed to find a different place.
Gwen pulled into the drive and stopped her car by Sylvia's garden. This
chapter of her life was drawing to a close, but for tonight she would enjoy the
heady sweetness of lilac, the luminous glow of the white flowers.
Ian emerged from the deep shadows under the maple and came to stand at her
side. He observed the garden for a long, contemplative moment. A cloud drifted
lazily over the moon, dimming the wattage coming from the flowers.
He glanced at Gwen. "Tell me this: what is the moon phase?"
"What phase?" Gwen huffed in exasperation. "Adolescent? Premenopausal? How
the hell should I know?"
"It's one of the things you must know," he said adamantly.
"You're obviously manifesting your moon-cycle Quality in the waning phase.
This is not a common pattern, but it does occur."
"How about repeating that in English?" she demanded. "Preferably as it's
spoken in the twenty-first century?"
"Very well. Each of us is capable of learning a number of… unusual skills,
but we're born with certain gifts, also known as Qualities. These abilities are
closely tied to the cycles of the year and the position of the moon and the
stars. Your ability to Remember—to powerfully envision things you yourself have
never seen—is apparently tied to your moon phase."
"So I'm… what? Like some kind of werewolf?" Gwen demanded.
Ian chuckled. "Hardly. Our cycles are far more subtle and complex. Your
ability to Remember wanes and waxes with the moon. You can call storms. That
Quality is tied to the turning of the year, so it's very powerful right now."
"Beltane," Gwen murmured, naming the old Celtic holiday that fell on the last
day of April.
"That's right," he said, sounding pleased. "It remains to be seen whether
your third Quality will manifest at the corners of the year—summer and winter
solstice, spring and autumn equinox—or on the dancing days: Beltane, Samhaim,
Lammas, and Imbolic."
"I've heard those names."
"No doubt. Some of the Old Ways have modern counterparts in this or that bit
of folklore or religion. Once you understand the pattern, you'll be able to
chart your path, and make decisions based on the ebb and flow of your
abilities."
Gwen thought this over. "Okay, what happens when all three lines intersect?"
"That depends, of course, on what these Qualities might be."
"And if they don't get along with each other? Or maybe they work well
together, but too well?"
Ian suddenly appeared to be very interested in the flight pattern of a
moon-white moth.
"Well?"
He sighed and turned to face her. "You needn't worry about that. Your
parents' bloodlines were carefully matched."
Gwen suddenly understood the resigned expression on Ian's face. The outburst
he clearly expected from her simmered just under the surface, but she feel too
numbed by informational overload to get at it.
The Elder Races had bloodlines, like stallions and champion dogs, carefully
matched to produce the right kind and balance of abilities.
She shook her head in utter bemusement. "As God is my witness, I don't know
what to say."
Ian's lips twitched. "If that is so, then ignorance truly is bliss."
Gwen's cell phone chirped. She glanced at the screen. The number took her
back—it was the number for Tiger Leone's cell phone. She glanced at Ian. "I need
to take this."
He swept one hand out, palm up, in an elegant "by all means" gesture.
"I'm a private investigator," she reminded him. "Notice the emphasis on
private."
He nodded and headed for the maple tree. "We've just begun," he warned her.
"I'll meet you again, soon."
She waved him away and walked toward her car. "Gellman," she said curtly.
There was a lot of background noise—voices and music—and it took her a few
moments to place the voice: Adrian, the blond kid who'd sworn to help her figure
out Edmonson's drug business.
"Where are you?" she shouted into the phone.
"Do you know Extreme, the dance club?"
"I know where it is."
"Come down. I have things to show you."
She clicked off her cell and jogged up to her apartment to get her gun out of
the gun safe. Adrian might be oath-bound, but she wouldn't put any bets on his
buddies.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Music thumped and throbbed, binding the gyrating crowd like a collective
heartbeat. A slim Black girl swayed lazily onstage, one hand moving slowly
across her body in a languorous caress. With some relief, Gwen recognized Jackie
Teal. She was barely dancing, and seemed almost unaware of the crowd. Gwen
averted her eyes from what appeared to be an intensely private moment.
She caught sight of Adrian's pale blond hair in the crowd. She pushed her way
over to him and used his earlobe as a handle to pull his ear low enough to shout
into it. "What's so important that I had to come to North Providence at this
godforsaken hour?"
Adrian pulled away and tipped his head in the direction of a nearby door.
Gwen followed him to it, then up a small flight of stairs to a small, glassed-in
room overlooking the club. Soundproofed, too. The relative silence washed over
Gwen in blissful waves.
"So, why am I here?" she repeated.
He gestured to the smoked window. "I thought you would want to see the clubs.
Since you are the earl's only heir, you should start learning about his
affairs."
"Why? I want to shut them down, not improve operations."
"You might want to reserve judgment until you know all the facts. Look at
that dancer."
Her gaze flicked back to Jackie. "Yeah, I noticed her. Kind of risky, putting
someone who's under the influence onstage."
"If she were arrested tonight, she would be released within the hour. There
are no intoxicants in her system."
Gwen raised an eyebrow. "Then whatever she's taking has one hell of a placebo
effect."
For no reason that she could fathom, that seemed to amuse him. Before he
could speak, sirens wailed outside, slicing though the din.
Adrian took her arm and led her to a wall panel. He rapped on it sharply, and
it swung open. "You have contacts in the police department. Ask them tomorrow
what happened here, and you will begin to understand. Now go."
He gave her a shove that sent her reeling into the darkness. She caught her
balance against a rough concrete wall, then looked around to get her bearings.
She was in a narrow stairwell, built into what appeared to be a double wall.
The narrow alley was open at the top, and faint city light filtered down.
Gwen walked down the stairs and through a narrow door. She emerged into a
basement stairwell in the alley behind the club. She waited until the noise died
down, then clicked on her phone and dialed Damian's number.
His sleepy voice came online, grunting something that might have been
"hello."
"There's a drug bust going down at the Extreme. I need to know everything you
can tell me about it. But be careful—Jackie Teal was picked up. You might not
want her to recognize you."
"She's okay?"
He put enough into that question to pique Gwen's interest. "You sure you
didn't play?"
"With a drug-dealing stripper? What are you smoking? The drug business coming
out of that titty bar is our best link to Walsh. If Leone's people get shut
down, we get shut down. And it's not like we've got a lot of time.
Quaid and me got ourselves on Walsh's shit list, remember? Or maybe I should
say bit list."
"I hate to interrupt someone who's got a good rant going, but listen up.
Jackie was on some sort of horny high. I've seen her dance before, and trust
me—she doesn't have that much juice. Adrian assures me she won't be held for
illegals. You and Quaid need to follow the evidence every step of the way. If
you can catch someone fixing things for Jackie—"
"We're that much closer to nailing Walsh," he finished. "I'm on it."
The dial tone hummed. Gwen clicked off her phone and listened to the clamor
in front of the club. Jackie's shrill protests rose above the murmur as she was
taken away.
Gwen quietly climbed the stairs and edged around the building. Four
black-and-whites blocked the street, red lights strobing into the night. A dozen
or so cops, both uniformed and plainclothes, hustled dancers and partygoers into
cars.
A faint smile curved Gwen's lips. For once, departmental politics would
actually accomplish something worthwhile. A lot of people in the law-enforcement
establishment hadn't been wildly enthusiastic about the vice squad. This
wouldn't be the first time a street cop called for backup without referring a
case to Walsh's department. With this many people involved, it would be harder
for Walsh to lay claim to his territory.
A profound sense of relief washed over her, easing some of the tension that
had kept her moving for too many hours. Suddenly Gwen's eyelids felt incredibly
heavy, and the prospect of crawling into bed had never been so appealing. She
slipped down a side street to the nearly deserted parking lot where she'd left
her Toyota.
To her relief, everything was quiet at Sylvia's house. No handsome but
irritating visitors lurked in the shadows of Gwen's apartment. She stumbled into
her bedroom and fell facedown on the bed, not even bothering to kick off her
boots.
But sleep proved elusive. After a few minutes of tossing and turning, Gwen
decided she might as well get some work done.
She grabbed a quick shower and dressed in jeans and a black tee shirt, then
padded downstairs to her office to type up her report to Shawna O'Riley.
Gwen's four-fingered technique wasn't designed for speed. She worked
carefully, listing the steps she'd taken and the information she'd uncovered.
Roy Williams was a solid citizen with a good job, money in the bank, a good
portfolio, no police record, and no interesting vices. He wasn't cheating on
Shawna, he didn't fudge his tax returns. He'd lied about one thing, but it was a
doozy.
Somehow Gwen doubted there would be a wedding invitation in her mailbox any
time soon.
She completed the report and sent it to Shawna as an e-mail attachment. Her
phone rang while the file was still uploading, and Quaid's number floated onto
the tiny screen.
Gwen took a deep breath and clicked on the phone. "Listen, about Kate: I
couldn't call you in on the murder of an ex-girlfriend."
"You did the right thing."
That wasn't what she'd expected to hear. "Do they have any leads yet?"
"They think they do," he said heavily.
Gwen blinked. "Does that mean what it sounds like?"
"Unfortunately. When I stopped by Kate's house the other night, one of the
neighbors saw me. She just can't remember exactly when that was."
"They can't charge you on something like that."
"It gets better. They found the murder weapon in the lilac bush behind Kate's
house. No prints—it was wiped clean—but it turns out the gun was taken from the
weapons locker over at vice. Naturally they like a cop for it."
"And because you and Kate have history…"
"You got it."
"Jesus, Quaid! What can I do to help?"
"Keep an eye on O'Riley," he said softly.
Gwen sat bolt upright. "What aren't you telling me?"
"I'm in holding now. They made the arrest late last night. I was arraigned in
night court. Bail was set at two hundred thousand."
"That's ridiculous!" she sputtered. "No cop has that kind of money. Not an
honest one, anyway."
"Yeah. Kinda like the Monty Python witch hunt, isn't it? Throw the witch in
water. If she floats, she's guilty. Burn her. If she drowns, she's innocent but
dead."
The analogy came too close for comfort. A convicted vice cop wouldn't be very
popular with the other inmates.
"Have you tried a bond?"
"The union rep wouldn't even make the calls. He figures at this hour, on a
Saturday, there wasn't much point."
"If and when the lazy bastard calls, tell him your new lawyer and your bond
money are on their way."
"Gellman—"
"Don't start with me. The lawyer and the bond agent owe me. And if you skip
out, I'll hunt you down and take out your kneecaps with a crowbar."
"Jesus, you say that like you're hoping I'll skip. Who'd you have in mind for
a lawyer?"
"Ryan Cody."
He whistled, long and low. "Talk about the devil's advocate. That'll get
their attention."
"That's the idea."
"Problem is, with the clients Cody represents, hiring him is second cousin to
an admission of guilt."
"Let's hope you stay alive long enough to worry about it."
Gwen hung up before he could embarass them both by thanking her. She dialed
Ryan Cody's home number, letting the phone ring until Cody picked up.
Gwen quickly described the situation. "I need you to call around right away
and assure everyone that Quaid is your client and that he'll make bail."
"Will he?"
Amazing how the mention of money brought Cody wide awake. "Write a check on
Simmons, Fletcher, and Rye. I'll meet you afterward at the breakfast place in
Barrington—that little diner on Old Country?"
"I know where it is."
"Good. I'll bring enough cash to cover the bail and your fee."
A long silence followed. "You can put that kind of cash together in an hour?"
"Sure, but you might have to pick up breakfast."
She hung up and dialed Ian Forest. "I need a quarter of a million, in cash.
How much do you think I could get on eBay for that big blue gem of mine?"
"That's nothing to joke about. When do you need the money?"
"Forty-five minutes?"
"I'll be there in thirty."
He made it in about twenty-five and handed her a small backpack of the sort
middle-school kids carried.
Gwen unzipped the bag and peered inside. Fat stacks of twenties filled the
backpack. She shook her head in astonishment and closed the bag. "I'll make sure
you get it back."
"No need. The money is yours—or will be, as soon as Edmonson's estate is
settled. Since that task has fallen to me, you can consider this an advance. Do
with it as you like."
She shouldered the bag. What she'd like to do is shove it up the ass
of every pervert who put the money in Edmonson's pocket. Keeping Quaid out of
jail was not quite as noble, but it'd have to do.
Later that morning, Gwen headed over to Jason's bungalow.
He met her at the door, grinning when he noted the size of the bakery box she
carried.
"That should do for both of us. I've already made coffee. Give me a minute to
put it in some travel cups. We can take it out on the boat, if you want."
She nodded and followed him to the kitchen. While Jason fixed the coffee, she
gazed over the backyard to the river. A light wind ruffled the water into a
shimmering silver blue, and the boat anchored a few feet offshore bobbed
invitingly. It was one of those spring mornings that made everything look bright
and fresh. And speaking of which, Gwen noted that Jason had made some repairs to
the small dock. As they approached, she was glad to note that Frank's old
rowboat was reassuringly unchanged.
She got into the backseat and took the oars. Jason deftly untied the mooring
rope and hopped in.
"You want me to row?"
"Kind of hard to do from where you're sitting."
He shrugged and settled down in the front seat. Gwen rowed out to the fishing
boat. She pulled up to the float that marked the second anchor line and tied the
rowboat, then scrambled up into the boat.
To her surprise, the temperamental motor turned over for Jason at the first
try. Most likely he had tinkered with that, as well.
"What's wrong?" he asked her.
Gwen smoothed the frown from her face. "Caffeine deprivation. Hand me one of
those cups."
Jason didn't look convinced, but he refrained from further questions. He
steered the boat down the river and into the bay. The wind was brisk enough to
entice early morning sailors, and he moved among the slower crafts with ease and
skill.
"I forgot to ask you if you could drive this thing," Gwen said, "but you've
sort of covered that. Where'd you learn?"
"My stepfather liked to fish. Hunting, too. He took me out quite a bit.
Growing up in Florida, you can do both year round. In fact, I spent a lot of
summers working as a guide down in Big Cypress, the Seminole reservation." He
grinned. "You look appalled. Are you one of those people who frown on hunting?"
"Hell, no. I'd whack a cow any day, if that was the only way to get a burger.
It seems to me that if you're going to eat meat, it's more honest to kill your
own."
"So…"
"It's just that I've never met a real country boy before. Won't you miss all
that, if you settle down here?"
He sent her a quizzical look. "If? I'm pretty settled already."
"You're really diving into the computer stuff. Thinking of changing careers?"
"What, and give up the lucrative lifestyle of a martial-arts instructor and
occasional carpenter?"
Gwen grinned. "You don't seem to care much about lifestyle. Except for the
car. That's a sweet little ride."
"It's a Miata," he told her. "They're about the same price as an econobox,
and a lot more fun. You can get some great deals on used cars. If you want, I'll
help you look around."
"Why not? I've got nothing better to do than go car shopping."
Her sarcasm prompted a quick smile. "I can see that. You must have searched
high and low for that heap of blue scrap metal."
"It runs. Most of the time."
She helped herself to a cinnamon donut. "So, you still up for that
self-defense class Tuesday night?"
"I'll be there. I've been meaning to ask how you got started teaching."
She swallowed a sugary mouthful and chased it with a gulp of coffee. "It's a
community school. Several classes are held in a local church. A friend of mine
goes there. She heard about the program and talked me into doing a self-defense
class."
"Do you like teaching?"
Gwen shrugged. "None of the women are all that serious about it. I'm guessing
none of them have had to be."
"Not like you."
She sent him a quick, sidelong look. "I was a cop, for chrissakes."
"But you started learning martial arts when you were, what? Around twelve?"
"You've got a good memory. Yeah. I was small for my age and I got beat up a
lot."
He shook his head. "Somehow I have a hard time seeing you as anyone's victim,
no matter what your age and size."
"Who said I was a victim? I said I got beat up a lot. The other people didn't
walk away without a scratch." And some of them, Gwen added silently, didn't walk
away at all.
Jason throttled down and settled the boat into a more leisurely pace. "I've
been meaning to ask how you're doing. You know, with Frank gone."
Gwen's throat tightened. "I miss him. Other than that, I don't know what to
tell you."
"So you're content to let the official version of his death stand?"
"Actually, I'm a long fucking ways away from 'content,' but it's out of my
hands. The man who killed Frank—or at least, the guy who was responsible for
it—is dead."
"The guy who ordered the Cody girl's kidnapping."
"That's right."
"Aren't the police still looking for the kidnappers?" he asked cautiously.
Gwen met his tentative gaze squarely. "They'll stop eventually."
He gave that some thought, then nodded slowly. "I can live with that."
It suddenly occurred to Gwen what he thought she was telling him. "You think
I killed those guys!"
He studied her face for a moment before answering. "You never told the police
Frank's laptop was missing. When you gave it to me, I figured that was your way
of letting me know the score had been settled."
"And you were okay with that."
"It's one solution. In fact, I can't think of a better one."
"Some people could. Most of my former colleagues, for example."
"I'm not going to run to the police, Gwen," he told her. "You seem surprised
by my attitude. Keep in mind that I grew up as a citizen of the Seminole Nation.
I never went out of my way to break American laws, but I didn't hold them in
high regard, either. My mother's influence, in part."
"Cops' ex-spouses are seldom crazy about the system," she admitted.
"Add to that the fact that I'm a Southerner and a male. Our motto is 'Deal
with it.' To be honest, I'm glad Edmonson is dead."
Gwen jolted in surprise, sending coffee sloshing onto the deck. Her hands
were shaking as she put down the cup. "Edmonson?"
Something nickered in his eyes. "You mentioned him when you told me about
Meredith Cody's kidnapping. I put the pieces together from what you said and
figured he was the guy in charge. Was I wrong?"
She didn't remember mentioning Edmonson's name, but Jason's explanation was
plausible. With all she'd had on her mind, it was no surprise she'd let
something slip.
The conversation switched to general topics: movies, music, the Red Sox.
Gwen liked football and couldn't give a rat's ass about the Bambino and his
curse, but it turned out that Jason was a lifelong Sox fan, and still damn near
giddy over the 2004 World Series. Morning ran into afternoon, and they docked at
the Wharf Tavern in Warwick for a bowl of chowder.
Her first creamy spoonful triggered a memory, and a profound sense of loss.
She swallowed hard, forcing the soup past the lump in her throat.
"You look sad," Jason observed.
She shrugged. "Frank used to make chowder about once a week. It was sort of a
tradition."
"Sorry I missed it."
"Me, too."
She would have said more, but suddenly yawning seemed much more imperative.
She noticed Jason's stare and stopped in mid yawn. "Sorry."
"When was the last time you slept?" he demanded.
"What day is this?"
"Very amusing. I'm serious."
"And you think I'm not? I don't sleep a lot. Sometimes I go a night or two
without bothering to sleep, but it catches up with me eventually."
"Apparently." He nodded to her chowder. "Eat up, then I'll take you home.
You're going to fall face-first into that bowl."
Because Gwen couldn't argue with that assessment, she finished up her soup
and didn't complain when Jason drove the boat back to Riverside at a
less-than-leisurely pace. But she put her foot down when he tried convincing her
to let him drive her back to her apartment.
She made her way home and headed for the bed. No need to set an alarm—she
always woke up the moment the sun hit her.
Cycles of nature, she thought as she drifted off to sleep. Maybe Ian was on
to something.
First thing Monday morning, Gwen went to the office of the obstetrician Erin
Westland had seen when she was pregnant with Patrick. Thanks to yet another form
Kyle had signed, she was given access to Erin's chart.
It wasn't strictly legal, but fortunately for Gwen, the medical profession
was still sorting through the do's and don'ts of the Privacy of Information
legislation. Medical-office workers spent a lot of time shuffling papers.
Handing them something that looked offlcial was like ringing a bell around
Pavlov's dogs: they automatically went with familiar patterns.
According to the records, Erin had come in only once, just to get a referral
for a sonogram. She preferred a home delivery, so the doctor had referred her to
a midwife.
Gwen went back to her car and fired up her cell phone. After a few calls, she
tracked down the midwife, who'd apparently taken up organic vegetable gardening
in Vermont. She introduced herself and explained briefly why she was calling.
"I remember Erin very well," the woman said. "It's hardly something I'm
likely to forget."
"Why's that?"
"For one thing, the baby was born very late."
"Is that really so unusual, especially for first babies?"
"I'm not talking about a few days, or even a week or two," the midwife said.
Gwen took a moment to absorb that. "Was the baby normal?"
"Yes, he appeared to be fine, if somewhat small. Erin had a remarkably easy
delivery, considering that it was her first child."
"What about Erin's ultrasound? Did that show anything strange?"
"I didn't actually see the ultrasound, but I received a report. Apparently
the baby was developing normally. The test showed a fetus in the sixth week of
development."
"You say that as if it's a problem."
"Well, the dates just don't add up, not on either end. Patrick was born more
than nine months after that ultrasound was taken. And the date on the test
report was nearly two months after Erin's appointment with her obstetrician."
"So when you do the math, it turns out that Erin wasn't pregnant when she
went to her doctor."
"Yet her pregnancy was confirmed by physical exam. The doctor estimated that
she was nearly two months along."
"Don't they usually do blood tests to confirm?"
"Erin said she had a phobia about needles. That's why she insisted on a home
birth. The idea of giving birth in a hospital terrified her."
Smart girl, Gwen noted. Most likely members of the Elder Races who checked
into hospitals met the same fate as those who ended up in jail. Keeping a low
profile was very high on the priority list.
"Was there anything else unusual about Erin's pregnancy?"
"You'd think that would be enough," the midwife said, "but actually, there
was. The report noted that although the the fetal development was normal, there
was some concern about the mother. It showed what appeared to be three ovaries,
raising questions about the possibility of a tumor. The report strongly advised
that she have another test."
"Did Erin follow up?"
"She told me she did, and that everything was fine."
"You don't sound convinced," Gwen observed.
The midwife was silent for several moments. "I asked questions. After all, I
was responsible for two lives. After a while, I stopped asking."
The tone of her voice suggested that lack of interest was not the reason she
stopped seeking answers.
"What happened?" Gwen asked softly.
"A lot of things. Harassment. Hang-up phone calls late at night, slashed
tires. Nothing I could trace to Erin—not that I thought there was any
connection. Then my dog was killed. Hannah, a beautiful golden retriever. She
was pregnant at the time. She was left by my door. Her belly was slit open, the
puppies left to die."
"And you think Erin had something to do with this?"
"Hannah always barked when Erin came in for her checkups and prenatal
classes. She was a lovely dog, very friendly, but she didn't like Erin at all."
Gwen heard the faint sigh of a long, steadying breath as the woman prepared
to spill the rest.
"One night Hannah set up an awful racket. She was outside—she had a doghouse
in the yard. I went downstairs and looked around, but there was no sign of any
intruder. Hannah calmed down, or so I thought at the time, and I went back to
bed. The next morning I… found Hannah. I was terribly shaken, but I had several
appointments that afternoon. One of them was with Erin. When I went to get her
chart out, I found that all of my notes were missing."
"So you think Erin was responsible?"
"I know she was." The woman's voice broke, and she cleared her throat. "She
didn't say anything, but the look in her eye when she came in that day was… like
nothing I've ever seen before. Malevolence came off her in waves."
"I'm surprised you kept her as a patient."
"Oh, I tried to drop her, but she let me know in no uncertain terms that
wouldn't be a good idea."
Gwen thought this over. It didn't seem very smart to piss off the person
who'd have your life and that of your unborn child in her hands—unless you had
some sort of guarantee.
"What else did she do?"
"Again, nothing I could trace to her. I received some pictures in the
mail—pictures of Hannah, after…" Again she broke off and cleared her throat.
"And in the same envelope, a picture of my daughter. She's going to college in
North Carolina. The picture was taken in her dorm room, while she was asleep.
There was a newspaper lying on her quilt, showing the date, and her alarm clock
was placed beside it."
"The picture was taken around the same time that Hannah died," Gwen
concluded.
"Yes."
Well, that message was clear enough.
"Your name won't come into this investigation," Gwen assured her.
"It doesn't matter." The dullness of old grief colored the woman's voice. "I
really don't care what happens to me, and my daughter's dead."
"I'm sorry," Gwen murmured. "Was it—"
"Erin Westland? No. Oddly enough, I think that would have been easier for me
to deal with. Sometimes it helps to have someone to hate. My daughter died in
childbirth, in a hospital. She went that route on my advice because she was
having mild symptoms of preeclampsia. The doctors did nothing wrong. But Sarah
had a congenital heart problem, something we'd never picked up. It was
asymptomatic until the strain of childbirth…" Her voice trailed off.
"I'm sorry," Gwen repeated. "Thank you for taking the time to talk to me. It
has been a big help."
She ended the call and drove in silence, thinking through this new
information.
The most logical conclusion was that Elder Folk had longer pregnancies, with
the extra time most likely in the early stages. Women who walked around with a
bump for a year or so would draw attention, but who the heck could tell if a
woman was six weeks pregnant? If Erin was figuring this out as she went along,
it was possible that she'd been to more than one doctor, and had had more than
one ultrasound taken.
Thanks to the whole Privacy of Information thing, getting that information
wouldn't be easy. Gwen was lucky to have gotten as far as she had with signed
releases from Erin's "husband." It was definitely time to bring in a heavy
hitter.
She pulled into the parking lot of a fast-food joint and dialed Harley Faden.
His voice-mail announcement told her to leave a message. She followed the drill
and hung up.
Her cell phone rang almost immediately. "This is Harley," announced a nasal
tenor voice. "What have you got for me?"
"No story. Sorry about that. I'm working on a case. Thanks for calling back
so soon."
"You don't need to thank me," he said. "You need to pay me. The clock starts
now."
"I need you to check on some medical records for me. One person with at least
three names: Erin Westland, Vivian Meekins, Helene Tremaine. There might be
more."
"I'm getting it down," Harley murmured. "What else?"
"She'd have to go to someone specializing in obstetrics and gynecology to get
referrals for ultrasounds. Several of them. I need those tests. The actual
films, if you can get them, not just the reports."
"You don't like to make things easy, do you?"
"What fun would that be? Here's something that might help: this woman might
have three ovaries rather than two."
"Cool. How many tits?"
"Standard issue, as far as I know."
"Just checking. These tests—what's the time frame?"
Gwen considered this. Patrick Radcliff was born about six years ago. "Go back
eight years," she suggested, "and cover a period of at least two years."
"Wait a minute—one woman, two years, three egg crates, multiple names, and a
photo album of ultrasounds? What's going on here?"
"This woman gets pregnant a lot," Gwen said blandly. "She's supplying a lab
doing illegal stem-cell research. One of the researchers is knocking up the
volunteers himself, and selling the videos as Internet porn. You think there
might be a story in that?"
His moan sounded faintly orgasmic. "Damn it, Gwen, it's not nice to tease."
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
On her way through the East Side, Gwen stopped at an art-supply store near
the school of design and picked up a roll of white paper and several drawing
pencils. She tossed her purchases into her car and called Damian about last
night's bust.
"Got anything for me?"
"Not a damn thing," he grumbled. "Archer told it straight; Jackie Teal was
clean."
"You followed the evidence?"
"I met the beat cops at the station, followed our girl through the whole
routine. Stuck to her like a tick. I took her over to the lab myself, stood
right there while they ran a tox screen. That came up negative for all known
illegals. You sure she was using?"
"I'd put good money on it." Gwen hesitated. "You talk to Quaid since then?"
"Hell, no. It was past midnight by the time they were finished."
"You should call him."
"Tried to. He's not answering his cell."
"Then call his home number. If he doesn't answer that, stop by his place."
A couple beats went by as Damian took this in. "What's going on, Gellman?"
"It's not my place to tell you. Quaid's okay, or was when I talked to him
last night."
"I'm on it. Anything else?"
"How are your art skills?"
"Not worth a steaming purple crap. Why?"
"I need you to help me do a drawing of someone."
"Huh. Something tells me you don't want to sit down with a sketch artist."
"Good call. I'm heading to my apartment. How soon can you be over?"
"Give me an hour. I'll talk to Quaid, come right over."
"Thanks. I'll leave the gate open. Park by the garage, and come right
upstairs."
She drove home and set to work, cutting long sheets of the paper and taping
them to her bedroom wall. She was just finishing up when she heard footsteps on
the stairs.
Damian ambled in and regarded her handiwork. "I'm tempted to make some
comment about needing to see the big picture."
"Fortunately, you're man enough to resist temptation."
"Not that I've noticed. Okay, what now?"
"Watch. And try not to talk too much. It's hard to hold onto the image if I
get distracted."
Gwen took a deep breath and called to mind the man she'd pulled from Irena's
memory. The translucent image began to take shape as Gwen projected it
powerfully onto the papered wall.
"Holy shit," Damian murmured. To Gwen's relief, he sounded impressed, not
freaked out. "I get it. It's like one of those lame light projectors teachers
used back in the day."
"Less taking, more drawing."
He picked up a pencil and started to trace the image. By the time the vision
faded, he had a reasonably good sketch. He stepped back, pursed his lips, and
considered.
"Not exactly wallet-size."
"I know a RISD student who can scale it down for me."
"Sounds like a plan. In the meanwhile, I'll take a look at the books, see if
I can find this guy's mug shot."
"Are you sure that's a good idea? Showing up on the weekend is the sort of
thing that'll put you on Walsh's radar."
His face hardened. "Do you want to catch this guy, or not?"
"But Quaid—"
"He'd be there, too, if he could. So would you, if you were still on the
job."
Since Gwen couldn't argue with that, she gave Damian a see-you-later wave and
reached for her cell phone. She'd switched it off to avoid interruption. During
that brief blackout, she'd missed three calls, all from the same number.
Harley Faden answered on the first ring.
"Where the hell have you been)" he demanded "And I'm not talking
about your physical location. I don't know what parts of cyberspace you visited,
but something really big and ugly followed you home."
"What the hell are you talking about?"
"I found those sonograms for you, and tried to send you a scanned copy. No
can do—there's spyware on your computer, and fairly sophisticated stuff. When I
send you something, it tries to follow the path back to me. Wait a minute."
Gwen heard a brief clicking of keys, and he let out a low whistle. "It did
better than just try—it got past my first firewall. Hang on."
This time the clatter of his keyboard went on for several moments.
"Ha! Got the little bastard nailed down—nope, there it goes. Holy shit, Gwen!
Seriously, where have you been recently?"
"Online? Nowhere exotic."
"Well, whatever you've been doing has attracted some high-powered attention."
Gwen thought back to Winston's, and the pictures taken of everyone who came
to the club. Someone had used those pictures to identify and locate everyone
who'd been there the night of the raid. Yeah, someone on the sidelines of her
game definitely had some megageeks on the payroll. It was disturbing to know
that these guys were still working even though Edmonson was out of the picture.
"Got any advice?" she asked.
"Give me your address. Real world, not e-mail. I'll come right over with a
software program that'll hunt down and kill most spy-ware. Once your system is
clean, we can go over my reports."
She gave him the address and hung up, then carefully took down the life-size
sketch and rolled it up. She left a message on the phone machine of the art
student who did an occasional odd job for her, telling him to pick up the scroll
at the gate and have the eight-by-ten version back as soon as he could possibly
swing it.
She left the scroll where she'd said it would be and opened the gate for
Harley's little red two-seater.
Harley was one of those people whose voice didn't match the visual. His
nasal, slightly whiny voice suggested a geek stereotype—a scrawny,
twentysomething, low-budget Bill Gates. In the flesh, he resembled an
out-of-shape lineman, from the big cubic-zirconium studs in his ears to the
flabby remnants of once-heroic biceps to the belly that hung over his belt and
stretched the faded Patriots jersey to the limits of the fabric's tensile
strength. His head was bald, his black beard was sprinkled with gray, and rumor
had it he'd worked in military intelligence toward the end of Vietnam.
Apart from the inherent oxymoron in "military intelligence," Gwen was willing
to buy that. Harley definitely knew his shit. The fact that he was also a
church-lady gossip with less moral backbone than your average squid made tabloid
reporting a natural career choice.
She hopped into his car and rode up to the garage with him. He inserted a
disc into her laptop's drive and tapped a few keys. While his spyware hunted
down invaders on Gwen's computer, he spread a series of seven fuzzy
black-and-white pictures on the desk.
"These are the sonograms for Erin Westland, Helene Tremaine, and Vivian
Meekins. These were taken over a period of three years, but they're all the same
person."
Gwen squinted at the blur, trying to make sense of it. "How can you tell?"
"How can you miss it? Look here; see these three small blobs, with the tubes
running down from them? Those are the ovary triplets. Same in all seven
ultrasounds."
"So they're the same person."
"I'll go you one better," said Harley. He gathered up the photos, fanned them
like a deck of cards, and brandished them with a read-'em-and-weep flourish.
"These are all the same pregnancy."
"How can you tell?"
"What's the first thing new parents look for?"
"How the hell should I know?" A terrible thought occurred to her. "Sweet
Jesus! Don't tell me you've reproduced."
"Ha. Much laughter on my part. C'mon—ten fingers and ten toes? It's a
cultural cliché, chickie. If you look very, very closely, you'll see that this
little dude has an extra digit. Check the piggies on this shot—it's the one with
the best angle."
Gwen took one of the pictures and studied the blurred squiggle that looked
more like a chicken embryo than a future child. Sure enough, there was an extra
tiny stub on one of the little feet.
Erin Westland had been pregnant for almost four years. Which meant, among
other things, that Kyle Radcliff was not Patrick's father.
An hour later, Gwen was sitting in Kyle's downtown office and none too happy
about being there. Sure, he was a son of a bitch, but she wouldn't wish the news
she carried on any living soul.
"Did you find them?" he demanded.
"I've learned a few things," she said cautiously, "but mostly everything I've
found just leads to more questions."
"Great. That's just great." He slumped into his chair and gave her a resigned
look. "What do you need to know?"
Gwen settled down in one of the wing chairs opposite his desk. "For starters,
does Patrick have an extra toe on one foot?"
He looked startled. "No. He was perfectly normal. In fact, he was a beautiful
baby."
"Were you right there in the room when he was born?"
He shook his head. "I know that's the fashion these days, but neither Erin
nor I wanted that. As I've said before, she was very private about certain
things. She just wanted the midwife, no one else."
Gwen made a mental note to place another call to Vermont and steeled herself
for the hard part.
"Tell me about Erin's sex life. Leave out the boring parts, which would be
anything including you."
He let out a short bitter laugh. "So, you did manage to find out a thing or
two about Erin."
"You knew she was fooling around?"
"She was a slut," he said flatly. A bitter smile stretched his lips. "Well,
what do you know. I finally figured out what you two have in common."
Gwen folded her arms. "Real nice. You're talking about the mother of your
child, right?"
"As far as I know," he said glumly.
"You have any reason to doubt paternity?"
"I always assumed Patrick was my son, even though he looks so much like Erin.
Now I'm not so sure."
"When did you find out she was involved with other men?"
His jaw clenched so hard that a muscle twitched alongside his mouth.
"Yesterday," he admitted.
"I'm going to need a name." Something flickered in his eyes that prompted her
to add, "Or a list."
"I can do better than that. I can get you pictures."
He reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a manila envelope, which he
threw into Gwen's lap.
She slid out a sheaf of eight-by-ten prints and began to leaf through them.
The pictures caught Erin in a wide variety of compromising positions—the girl
was nothing if not flexible—with several attractive partners. Gwen shuffled
through them until one caught her attention. He was young, blond, and very
familiar.
Gwen knew this man—or more accurately, this changeling—as Adrian
Archer.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The rest of the weekend passed quickly. Gwen left a message at Extreme for
Adrian Archer, making it plain he needed to call her immediately. She called
Jason and left a message warning him about the spyware that had shown up on her
computer and letting him know there was a good chance his system had also been
infected.
She stuffed three twenties into an envelope to mail to the artist who'd
scaled down the sketch. It was a quick job, but he'd faithfully translated the
big sketch, and even added some depth and shadow without changing the subject's
appearance. Gwen fed the original into her scanner and sent a copy to Tamar. By
sunset, the nun's contacts would have it all over the streets.
After a brief hesitation, she dialed Ian's number. She had a lot of balls in
the air right now, but Ian was right—she needed to explore and master her
"Qualities" as soon as possible.
For the first time she was actually looking forward to it. After all, look at
how successful she'd been with Irena. Granted, she'd scared the crap out of the
poor kid, but the end result was a damn good lead on the girl's former captor
and her friends' current location.
Ian answered on the first ring. "Ready to resume the lesson?"
"As a matter of fact, that's why I called. Can you come over again tonight?"
"Let's see—moonrise is around seven tonight. I can meet you in the same
place, shortly before."
"I'll be there."
She hung up and dialed Marcy's work number. Jeff Monroe answered with a
crisp, "District attorney's office, Ms. Barlett's line."
"Hey, there. Is your boss around?"
"Gwen," he said, suddenly sounding much more tentative. "I've been meaning to
call you."
Her brow furrowed. "Problem?"
"I'm… not sure."
"Just spit it out," she said impatiently.
"Not easily done during work hours," he said softly. "And speaking of which,
I was late to work the night after our date. Marcy wasn't very happy with me."
"What? You want me to put in a good word for you with the boss?"
"No!" he said sharply. In a lower voice, he added, "I don't think the
assistant DA needs to know I was sleeping with her best friend."
She still wasn't following, but she did catch his use of past tense, as in
was sleeping.
Damn. A good man was hard to find, and vice versa.
"I get it," she said, letting him off the hook easy. "One of those
office-politics, conflict-of-interest things."
"I really can't talk about it right now. I'll call you."
The phone went dead. Gwen shook her head in bemusement and dialed the number
again. Jeff reprised his spiel.
"Marcy?" she requested.
"Oh. Sorry. I'll put you through."
Marcy answered her phone in the same brisk tone her assistant had used.
"Not much news on the investigation yet," Gwen said. "I'm just calling to see
how you're doing."
"No news," Marcy said slowly. "But you have no reason to think they might
be…"
"None," Gwen assured her. "But I've got to tell you, Kyle's luck with women
went straight downhill after you showed him the door."
"You know, that should brighten my mood considerably. The fact that it
doesn't worries me a little."
"No shit. What's going on?"
Marcy sighed. "Kyle's not the only one who's having problems at home. Trudy
has been… I'm not sure how to put this."
A human leech? An insecure little bitch? A spoiled, moody daddy's girl? A
contender for the Jewish-American Princess crown? Hell, Gwen could take that
ball and run with it in any number of directions.
"Take a stab at it," she suggested.
"She seems distracted, and more than a little disconnected. She's more
jealous, sometimes to the point of paranoia."
This sounded fairly serious. Until this moment, Gwen had had no intention of
telling Marcy about her encounter with Trudy. But if there was a pattern
happening, it might be an important piece of information.
"I guess I should tell you that Trudy took a swing at me the other day."
"Seriously?"
"As serious as a bitch slap is ever going to get. One of these days you
should let me show you two how to throw a decent punch."
She could almost hear Marcy's shudder over the phone. "Oh yeah—that's exactly
what Trudy needs right now. But we all have our moods," she added hastily. "This
will pass."
"Okay," Gwen agreed. "Moving on?"
"Please. And may I say, you showed remarkable restraint."
"I thought so. About Kyle—has he contacted you recently?"
"No. Why do you ask?"
The wary sound in Marcy's voice suggested that this hadn't been an unfamiliar
question of late. "Just so you know, I'm going to be taking a close look at your
ex. It seems his wife was fooling around. A lot. There's some question of
paternity."
"Kyle knows this?"
"Yeah. He said he just found out yesterday, but with Erin and Patrick gone,
the timing doesn't look good."
Marcy blew out a long breath. "Kyle's not stupid enough to do a Scott
Peterson imitation. A wife and child are not easily discarded."
"It's not a question of stupidity; it's a question of arrogance."
"Is there really much difference?"
"Good point. Listen, I just wanted to let you know how this might go."
"Thanks. Keep me posted, okay?"
Gwen clicked off her phone and started to look toward the clock. She caught
herself in time and turned toward the office window, instead. If she was going
to do this "cycles of nature" thing, she'd better start paying attention to what
was going on.
Daylight was fading, and the velvety green shadows that gathered under the
old trees were venturing out to welcome the coming night. The moon would soon be
rising. The scene was very pretty and possibly even poetic, but it didn't do a
damn thing for her.
She gave up and looked at the clock. It was a quarter of seven. So much for
being at one with the rising moon.
Gwen shut down her computer and headed for the garden.
Ian Forest was waiting for her under the old maple. One of these days, she'd
have to ask him how he got around.
He greeted her with a smile that did interesting things to her heart rate.
"Can you tell me where the moon will rise tonight?"
She shook her head. "I have no idea when and where the moon plans to rise, or
what phase it's in. I don't feel a damn thing. But I can tell you the names of
the astronauts who landed on it, if that's any help."
A frown flickered across his face. "I suppose a certain lack of awareness is
to be expected. Until just recently, you haven't been among others of your
kind."
"That makes a difference?"
"Of course. Qualities get stronger in proximity to others."
Gwen thought about that. "Then why are some of us left among humans as
changelings? You'd think kids would grow up stronger if they were with their
families, or at least with other people like them."
"You've just answered your own question. Not all Qualities are desirable in
and of themselves, and some combinations can be dangerous. That's why we pay
careful attention to genealogy."
"Except when you don't," Gwen said, suddenly understanding where this was
going.
"Except when we don't," Ian agreed. "Sometimes we get… careless, and children
are born of incompatible bloodlines. These children are put into fosterage with
humans until their gifts begin to emerge. At that time, a determination is
made."
"And then what?"
"It would depend, of course. Most often the young ones are brought in, taught
what they are, and given a place among us."
"What about the rare exception? And what happens to the human babies?"
He hesitated. "Each case is decided separately."
"Yeah? Who decides?"
"That's not something of immediate concern to you. It's more important for
you to concentrate on learning and controlling your abilities."
There was a strange note in his voice, and Gwen didn't think it was remorse
over those lost young lives. "You're worried about this third Quality, the
starlight thing."
"These gifts usually begin to manifest in adolescence. Yes, I'm concerned
that you have shown only two of the three." He gave her a slow, devastating
smile. "Perhaps if we spend more personal time together, this gift will emerge."
"Nice try," she said dryly. "But if this works on a the-more-the-merrier
basis, I know this guy who used to work for Edmonson. Adrian Archer. Maybe we
should call him over, join hands, sing 'Kumbaya.'"
Ian reacted like a clap of thunder.
"There's another?" he demanded, seizing her arm. "Here in Providence?
Describe him."
"Jesus, dial it down a notch or two, would you? He looks sort of like a young
Brad Pitt, minus the stubble. Taller, thinner, blonder. What's the problem?"
He dropped her arm and began to pace. "I don't know this Adrian Archer. To
the best of my knowledge, I was the only one of our kind in Edmonson's… employ.
What were the circumstances of your meeting?"
"Meetings. Plural."
She described the theft in the lab out in Lincoln, the recent drug meet on
the East Side, the recent meeting at the Extreme, and the strange result of the
drug testing of one of the dancers.
Ian nodded thoughtfully. "Of course I knew that drugs were available at
Underhill and the other clubs, but it was my understanding that the humans—Tiger
Leone, the Jamisons, and a few like them—handled that end of the business."
"Does it make a difference?"
"It might. It would certainly explain the results of the tests conducted on
that dancer, and might also explain why your Captain Walsh was involved with
Edmonson."
"They're selling something new, something law enforcement hasn't seen
before."
"Not for several hundred years, certainly. Our people have long made potions
from rare herbs, things that can have a rather profound effect on humans and
none at all on us."
"What's the effect?"
"It would depend on the herb, and also its preparation. A mild infusion can
be soothing. In stronger doses, these herbs usually act as some sort of
stimulant."
"A mild infusion, you said," Gwen murmured. "Like a tea."
"Yes, that's right."
She considered the soothing herbal brew Alice Powers offered them at The
Green Man. It did seem to have an effect on the woman—she calmed down as quickly
as someone who'd popped a Valium. It had had a somewhat different effect on
Jason, but then, he'd had about four cups of the stuff. And Jeff…
Suddenly the explanation for their two-person orgy became abundantly clear.
Ditto his reserve on the phone. People coming off Ecstasy had one hell of a
drop. Since Jeff was sufficiently hung-over the next morning to miss work, he
probably thought she'd slipped him something.
Which, in effect, she had.
"How could you make sure this drug is what you think it is?"
"I'd need a sample."
"I'm pretty sure I've got some."
A peculiar expression flitted over his face. "Have you tried it?"
"Yeah, when I thought it was some kind of herbal tea. It didn't do a thing
for me, but a friend of mine had some. A lot of it, actually. It definitely had
an effect on him."
"Is he still alive?"
She laughed shortly. "Yeah. It wasn't quite that good."
"I'm not sure I'm following you."
"This friend was over at my place. He mixed some concentrated tea with juice.
He should have added water, but he didn't, and he drank a lot of it. It made him
really frisky."
Ian's eyebrows rose. "The tea acted as an aphrodisiac?"
"That's right. The effect was fairly similar to how someone might act after a
hit of X. The weird thing is, a normal cup of tea seems to have a calming
effect."
"I know this herb," Ian said. "In different doses and manner of preparation,
it mirrors the effect of popular street drugs: marijuana, amphetamines, and, as
you have observed, Esctasy. Like marijuana, it is a completely natural
substance, but the intoxicants it contains are quite different from any of the
known illegal substances."
"So if this stuff was tested, it would look like herb tea."
"Or a capsule of powdered herbs, or even a small tablet," Ian concluded.
"So in any form, it's virtually undetectable," Gwen mused. "Is there a lot of
this stuff around?"
"That seems unlikely."
"Then I can see why Edmonson wanted Walsh in on this. If one of his people
got picked up for distribution, Walsh could arrange a switch. The tea leaves
look and act like weed. I'm guessing the pills and capsules are made to look
like street drugs."
"I would assume so, yes."
"So the dealer's lawyer has the stuff tested, and it looks like the only
thing his client is guilty of is scamming a bunch of party people."
"Yes."
Gwen shook her head. "It's a lot of trouble to go through just to avoid a
routine bust for weed and speed."
"That would depend. Most low-level dealers are expendable. Few are
sufficiently well informed to implicate their suppliers. The police can arrest
as many street dealers as they like, and no one sheds tears over the death of a
Tiger Leone. But what of the people who use the drugs? For some, the penalties
can be inconvenient."
"A sting, then? Extortion?" She turned the possibilities over in her mind.
"Edmonson's people could sell the herbal drugs to rich college kids,
professionals, politicians—anyone who'll pay to avoid a drug conviction. If
they're picked up, arrange the switch with Walsh, resell the original drugs,
pocket the cash. A lot of people would pay good money for that kind of service.
If they had enough chutzpah, they might even threaten the arresting officers
with a lawsuit for false arrest. Edmonson would profit from that, too—he had his
own law firm."
"All of this sounds plausible."
"Of course, you couldn't go to that well too often. If the ability to switch
the drugs depends upon Walsh, the department couldn't screw up too often or he'd
lose his job."
"Unless he was seen as a crusading, incorruptible police chief because he
weeded out tainted members of the force."
"Like me," she said bitterly. "Son of a bitch."
Rage rose in her like black mist, dimming her vision. A moment passed before
she realized that the dwindling clouds had reformed into a dense blackness that
blocked out the stars. In the back of her mind, a small traitorous voice
suggested that Gwen was responsible for this, as well.
She turned her back on Ian and drew a long, shuddering breath.
"We can do nothing more tonight," he said quietly. "Whatever the starlight
holds for you is blocked by your anger."
Gwen whirled back toward him. "Then unblock it. Let's put all the cards on
the table."
"Can you dance?"
For a long moment she stared at him. "Jesus Christ on stilts. You're
serious."
"Of course."
"C'mon! Dancing in the starlight? How Tolkien is that?"
"Mind and body are closely related. Movement frees the flow of power. You can
probably accept that humans can treat depression through exercise, that yoga and
tai chi make their practitioners more centered and connected, that martial arts
develop the ki. Given your background, you may believe that prayer is more
powerful when focused by the movement of rosary beads through the fingers of a
penitent. If these things are plausible, why is it so difficult to believe that
dance, particularly in the company of others of our kind, strengthens our
Qualities?"
"You make it sound almost reasonable," she grumbled.
"It is reasonable. Moreover, it works. Come." He extended a hand to her.
Gwen shook her head. "They didn't exactly have cotillions where I grew up. I
can shake my stuff, but I don't think that's what you've got in mind. Is there
another option?"
He lifted one eyebrow. "Now that you mention it." He pulled her to him and
claimed her lips before she realized his intention.
The kiss was different than those she'd recently shared with Jeff. Her senses
filled with the scent of woodsmoke and green forests, and the lure of darker,
unknown places. Any thought of resistance faded.
They sank together to the grass. Gwen stripped off her shirt, hungry to feel
his skin on hers. But in her building sexual excitement was another
note—something dark and fierce, alien yet disturbingly familiar. She got the
impression that every nightmare she couldn't quite remember was trying to push
through a wall in her mind.
If this was the Quality, she wanted no part of it.
Gwen pulled away, chilled in a way that had nothing to do with the evening
breeze on her skin. She rolled up into a sitting position and wrapped her arms
around her knees. If she hugged herself hard enough, she could almost control
the shaking.
Ian rolled to one side and propped his head up on one elbow. A casual pose,
but Gwen detected a hint of worry in his eyes.
"Something was happening. Tell me about it."
"It wasn't good, but it was big."
"Perhaps a bit too much for a first manifestation. Our Qualities tend to
manifest more powerfully around others of our kind. That's one of the reasons
why we're rather widely scattered."
"Put too many in the same room, we reach critical mass and blow up?"
"Not as such. But yes, it can be dangerous. That's why some of the young
whose bloodlines are in questions are placed among humans."
Gwen's phone rang. Ian shook his head in resignation and got to his feet.
"I know," he said. "You've got to take this."
He picked up his discarded coat and shirt when did that come off, anyway?—and
melted into the shadows beneath the old tree.
Gwen snapped her gaze away from Ian and clicked on the phone. "Talk."
"It's Tamar. That picture you sent to me rang a bell. Can you meet someone
tonight? Right away?"
She reached for her tee shirt and rose to her feet.
"Just tell me where, and I'm on my way."
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Gwen sashayed into the pool hall down by the river and presented her GiGi
Silver ID at the door. The bouncer glanced at it and gave a skeptical grunt—most
people thought twenty-one was a bit of a stretch for her—but he handed back the
card and waved her into the room.
There was only one man in the room wearing a bright yellow shirt. He was a
big guy, Latino. According to Tamar, he was on the same kind of hunt as Gwen.
Two young cousins had disappeared and he'd followed their trail from Mexico to
California, and from there to Providence.
The man gave Gwen an appreciative once-over as she strode over to his table,
but his jaw dropped when she mentioned her name.
"You are she the holy sister sends?"
"That's right. You got a problem with that?"
He spread both hands, palms up, in an almost courtly gesture. "Forgive me,
chica, but I was not expecting…"
His eyes slid over her, taking in her gel-spiked hair, her heavily made-up
eyes and her crimson mouth, the snug black top and the even tighter black jeans
(not to mention the wide strip of skin in between), the garnet stud on her
belly-button ring, the stiletto-heeled ankle boots.
"Me," Gwen summed up.
"Truly. The sister spoke of an… ángel que se venga?"
An avenging angel? That was a little dramatic, even for Sister Tamar.
"My wings are at the cleaners. Sorry about that," Gwen said dryly. "And if I
come as a shock, you're lucky the 'holy sister' isn't riding shotgun tonight."
His dark brows met in a frown of puzzlement. Idiom overload was Gwen's guess.
Since he seemed a little uncomfortable with English, Gwen dropped into the
street Spanish she'd picked up from the girls in juvenile. "Sister Tamar said
you recognized the man in the sketch. Tell me where I can find the motherless
fuck."
"Mierda! This is how the Spanish is taught in American schools?"
"Depends on where you went to school. This guy, did he have any girls with
him? Two of them, blond. Probably Russian girls, and about the age of the kids
you're looking for."
"If I found any girlchild in the possession of such a man, would I leave her
with him?" he demanded.
Gwen shrugged. "Some would."
His offended expression melted into something very much like sorrow. "That is
truth. You don't know me, so how else could you answer such a question?"
"Glad we cleared that up. Where can I find this guy?"
"Do you know Atwell Avenue?"
Gwen nodded, and he gave concise directions from that main road to one of the
less savory neighborhoods on the west side of I-95. When he finished, he gave
her an uncertain stare.
"This man is a wolf who preys upon young girls. You will not go to him
alone?"
"I'm thinking he'll be more likely to open the door to a client."
He nodded, clearly relieved by what he thought she was saying. "I would go
with you, but this man, he knows my face."
Gwen saw no reason to point out that she could pose as a client as
well as any man. A guy who sold sex—especially someone who wasn't peddling his
own ass—usually wasn't too picky about whom he sold to.
"Thanks for the offer. I hope you find the girls you're looking for."
"And you as well, chica." He gave her a quick smile, little more
than a baring of teeth. "Buena caza."
Good hunting.
Their eyes met, and a moment of perfect understanding passed between them.
The city was full of predators, but tonight, some of them would take a step or
two down on the food chain. And neither of them saw a damn thing wrong with
that.
Gwen got to the pimp's house about five minutes too late. As she killed the
lights on her Toyota, she noticed a skinny, furtive man climb the front stairs.
The front door swung open and the Latino she'd seen in her vision ushered the
client inside.
The next half hour passed in frustration and fury as Gwen waited for the man
to complete his purchase. As soon as he sauntered out, she was out of the car
and heading for the front door.
The pimp stared at her, first in surprise, then calculation. "What do you
want?"
Gwen tossed her head in the direction the John had taken. "Same thing he
wanted."
A leer spread across the man's face, and he cupped his groin with one hand.
"I can help you with that."
"Chicks, not dicks," she said succinctly. "Are you selling, or aren't you?"
"A little girl like you is buying?" he said, eyeing her skeptically.
"It depends. Do you have a girl who does hard tricks?"
His eyes widened. "How hard?"
"No bruises, no blood." Gwen shrugged. "Or very little."
"No problem. For that, two hundred for an hour."
She pulled several fifties from her leather bra. When he reached for it, she
snatched it away. "An hour," she said coldly. "In an hour's time, I'm coming
down the stairs and walking out of this house. If I don't, some very bad boys
will be coming in to get me."
His eyes lifted over her shoulder, scanned the street. No watchers were in
evidence, but then, they wouldn't be.
"An hour," he agreed, and reached for the money. This time, Gwen let him take
it.
She walked up the stairs and into the door on the left. A pale-haired waif
sat on the edge of the bed, looking at Gwen without surprise. Without emotion of
any kind. But when their eyes met, Gwen got a vivid mental image: The blond girl
down in the basement of this house, tears streaming down her cheeks as she
struggled to dig a grave in the hard-packed earth.
Gwen looked around for something to write on. There was no paper anywhere,
but a big oval mirror was strategically positioned by the bed.
Sick bastards.
She took her lipstick from her purse and drew a simple picture of a nun—just
a smiley face surrounded by the folds of an old-fashioned wimple, shoulders, and
a necklace with a cross. She sent a questioning look at the girl. After a
moment, she nodded.
Gwen drew three small stick figures with skirts. She pointed to one of the
figures, then to the girl, signaling This is you.
Again the girl nodded, and interest began to replace the dull, dead look in
her eyes.
Using a corner of the sheet, Gwen erased the second stick figure. She drew it
again, close to the smiley-face nun, then drew a circle around them both. She
added a pair of vertical lines coming down from the circle, and connected them
with a curved base. The drawing was crude, but it was recognizable as a tower. A
safe place.
Gwen tapped the stick figure who'd found safety with the nun. "Irena."
A smile burst over the girl's face like a sunrise, and she said something in
Russian that sounded like a brief, fervent prayer of thanksgiving. She touched
her heart, then reached for the stick figure that represented her.
"I am Marina," she said carefully.
"Hello, Marina. My name is Gwen. How much English can you speak?"
The girl considered. "Some of it."
"Fair enough. Listen, I'm going to take you to Irena. Somewhere you'll both
be safe."
Marina tapped her ear and shrugged helplessly.
"Great," Gwen muttered. She regarded her lipstick. It was getting
low—definitely long past time to wind up this conversation.
She drew an arrow from the Marina figure to the tower, then stood and held
out her hand.
The girl rose slowly and took the lipstick from Gwen's hand. She smeared the
third figure, added a pair of triangles to represent angel wings, and turned
mournful eyes to Gwen.
"I know," she said softly. She erased the picture with the sheet, then held
out her hand again. "Let's go."
Marina's small fingers curled around hers, and she followed Gwen down the
stairs.
The man met them at the foot of the stairs, his face twisted in a scowl. "You
rented the little bitch, that's it. You thinking about buying, I'm gonna need to
see a lot more money than you put down."
Without letting go of Marina's hand, Gwen leaned to one side and snapped off
two quick kicks—the first into the pimp's face, the second catching him in the
solar plexus. He folded, clutching his gut and wheezing.
A cry burst from Marina—a banshee howl of rage and pain. Suddenly she was on
him like a small fury, pounding him with her fists. Gwen let her get in a few
satisfying shots, then stepped in and delivered a roundhouse punch to the side
of his jaw. He went down and showed no sign of getting up anytime soon.
Gwen crouched beside him and took out his wallet. It held several hundred,
including Gwen's fifties. She took out the wad and handed it to Marina.
"For you and Irena."
The girl was still trembling with wrath. It took a moment for her to focus on
the money, and on Gwen's meaning. Her face hardened, and she shook her head
adamantly.
Gwen could respect that. Come to think of it, she wouldn't have taken it
either. She pocketed her two hundred and put the rest back.
She led Marina to the front door and pointed to the battered Toyota. "You go
ahead. Lock the door. You'll be safe, and I'll be there in just a minute."
Maybe the girl understood, maybe she was only too happy to leave her captor.
She ran out to Gwen's car and flung herself into the backseat.
Gwen looked around for something resembling a rope. The room on her right was
a sitting room, furnished decades ago with a cheap pair of chintz-covered chairs
and a sagging sofa. Faded drapes framed each of the two windows, tied back with
a triple tier of satin ropes ending in unraveling tassels.
Gwen yanked off the satin ropes and dragged the pimp over to the banister.
She propped him in a sitting position and tied him securely in place.
That accomplished, she slapped his cheeks until his eyes fluttered open. When
they focused, Gwen rose and stepped away from him.
And Remembered.
She brought to mind Marina's last memories of Anya, and willed them to fill
the room.
A shadow moved at the top of the stairs. Gwen looked up and smiled.
Something in her face brought a look of alarm to the pimp's eyes, and he
craned his head toward the source of that malevolent satisfaction.
And started screaming.
Anya's ghostly body tumbled down the stairs in eerie silence. She landed at
the pimp's feet, one limp, translucent arm flung out wide in such a manner that
it seemed to go through him.
He kept screaming even after the vision faded away, and his eyes were wild as
they tracked something moving about the room. Something only he could see.
For just a moment, fear shimmered an icy path down Gwen's spine. Maybe
memories this painful and powerful left more than a psychic echo. Perhaps there
really was something else in the room.
She shrugged away that thought and left the man alone with his ghosts or his
guilt. It didn't particularly matter to her which.
Once outside, she pulled her phone from her pocket and dialed Damian's
number. After all, she'd cheated him out of a drug bust, so she owed him. This
ought to pay off the debt with interest.
Gwen dropped off Marina at Sister Tamar's safe house and called Adrian from
her car. He agreed to meet her in the park where Damian had set up the drug
bust.
He was waiting when she got there. Instead of speaking, Gwen held up the
picture of Erin.
"I know this girl," he readily admitted. "She is one of us."
"Tell me."
"We met years ago. When we became intimate, her powers started manifesting.
Two years ago, I brought her to the earl. She agreed to work for him in
distribution."
"That herbal store down in Tiverton. The Green Man."
"Yes."
"But that's not your only means of distribution."
"Of course not. We offer something for everyone. The drugs were sold in all
of Tiger's clubs. We have people working the schools. And, of course, street
deals."
"Do you have some on you?"
He handed her a capsule. She pulled it apart and spilled the finely ground
powder into her hand. An image of a rocky, almost lunar landscape flashed into
mind.
"What is this stuff?"
"A very rare plant. It was found in a place in western Ireland called the
Burren."
"It grows there?"
He hesitated. "It was found there. The Burren is one of the
strangest ecosystems on earth. There are many plants among all those rocks that
have no business being there: alpine plants, plants from the Mediterranean
coast."
"Where is this one from?"
"That is hard to say," he replied carefully. "But it's being grown here,
locally."
"Show me."
Moonlight sifted through the purposefully stunted limbs of apple trees,
glinting on the tiny green globes that promised future fruit. Gwen walked down a
row of trees, but saw no other fields beyond. As far as she could tell, this
place looked like any other farm in rural Smithfield.
"Okay, where is it?"
Adrian pointed to a low-growing meadow flower in the grasses, a dainty blue
flower growing above fernlike foliage.
"That's it?" Gwen marveled. "You're growing organic Ecstasy in a
freaking apple orchard?"
"Yes. This is the only place in the world where it is grown."
"Who owns this place?"
His smile was faintly mocking, and his eyes searched her face as if greedy
for her reaction. "It would appear that you do."
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
"I own hell's happy acres?" she demanded. "Is there any sleazy real estate in
Rhode Island that Edmonson didn't own?"
Archer's smile broadened. "Actually, this farm belonged to your parents."
Gwen waited for some emotional response to this. Something was there, right
under the surface, but she just couldn't get to it. Or perhaps she didn't want
to.
"Is that the reason Edmonson killed them? To get control of this drug?"
"In truth, I don't think Edmonson wanted them dead. He wanted to know where
the plants were originally found."
"But they died in the car crash."
Adrian's only response was an eloquent shrug.
"Why would he admit to killing them?"
"Because he was ultimately responsible. He started a course of action that
could only result in their deaths. By our laws, there is only a slight
difference between responsibility and murder. How could it be otherwise, when
you're talking about a people who can influence others to do their bidding?"
Like Ian Forest. Despite everything he'd done, Gwen still felt the man's
magnetic pull.
Gwen scanned the rows of trees. "So how does this work?"
"The herb is picked in midsummer. Bunches are hung in that barn over there.
Once they are dry, they are sent away for packaging or processing."
"Where?"
"No one particular place. The scope of this business is still fairly small,
and it's operated as a cottage industry. This is a precaution, as well as a
practicality."
"I'll need the addresses of those cottages."
"Of course."
She turned a narrow-eyed gaze toward him. "You're being very helpful."
"Of course," he said again. "After all, you have my oath."
"Sure, but that doesn't mean you have to be so happy about it. You really
don't seem to mind selling out your boss."
"Technically, I'm not selling him out. You are, after all, the earl's only
heir."
Gwen nodded as if she actually bought that. For the time being, it was better
to let this lunatic think she was ready to climb onboard.
"Is there anything in the barn?"
"No. Last year's crop has been processed. There is still some of the product
in distribution channels, but the new harvest is only weeks away."
"Is this profitable?"
"Not particularly. It will be in time, perhaps."
"Then why are you doing this?"
He smiled faintly. "Why not? Haven't you ever used your Qualities to toy with
the humans?"
She was about to say no when the image of the pimp's chalk-white face and
quite literally haunted eyes came to mind.
"Only in a good cause," she said grudgingly.
"You don't consider simple entertainment sufficient reason?"
"That's sick," she said flatly.
"I don't see why."
"Because they're people?"
"They are vermin," he hissed. His face darkened, and suddenly he no longer
looked like a cute blond singer from a particularly vapid boy band.
"The humans breed like rabbits. They control the planet's resources and
destroy the environment in the process. Every year more species disappear,
squeezed out by 'human progress.' There is a very real possibility that we, the
Elder Races, might join them. What harm is there in indulging those few small
pleasures that remain to us?"
"Like fucking with the humans."
Her sarcasm found no foothold in Adrian's worldview. In fact, he looked
pleased that she'd grasped the concept so readily. "In a word, yes."
Gwen took a deep breath. "How many of us are left?"
He waved aside this question. "Our diminishing strength has less to do with
our numbers than with our Qualities. The Old Gifts are disappearing or changing.
Our birthrates are down, and acceptable powers seldom manifest with real
strength."
"Okay, but what does selling drugs to humans have to do with any of this?"
"It proves that they are weak," Adrian said flatly. "They are driven by their
appetites, eager for any chance to shrug off personal responsibility. They find
the mildest chemicals and herbs debilitating."
He stooped and plugged a spring of lacy foliage. "You and I could eat a large
bowl of this herb with sliced tomatoes and Italian dressing, and feel no ill
effects whatsoever."
"Unless there was a lot of salt in that dressing," Gwen retorted.
Adrian rocked back on his heels, looking as if she'd struck him across the
face.
"It is hardly the same thing," he said stiffly.
Gwen let the point go. "So you get your jollies from watching people make
fools of themselves."
"By exploiting their weakness," he emphasized. "Those of us who are strong
suffer no ill effects. Those who are weak sink ever deeper into their pitiful
little swamps."
"I don't like it. In fact, I want this stopped," she said, sweeping one arm
wide to indicate the field.
His smile was cold. "That may not be your decision to make."
"Why not? I thought you said I owned this place."
"True, but I also said the earl's property would fall to you if you met
the terms of inheritance. Have all three of your Qualities manifested?"
Gwen shrugged. "Ian Forest is working on that."
One corner of Adrian's mouth twitched into a sneer. "In that case, I wouldn't
plan to collect your inheritance anytime soon."
Gwen parked Sylvia's black Mercedes beside the road, around the corner from
The Green Man and beyond sight from the parking lot. Her landlady didn't mind if
Gwen used the car from time to time. Not many people would associate the elegant
vehicle with Gwen, but you never knew who might stop by for a cuppa and wonder
why she was skulking around the shop.
She found a fairly comfortable spot among the trees to the west of the shop
and settled in, lying on her stomach to keep out of view. It was a little damp,
but she'd been on worse stakeouts.
Alice Powers drove up shortly before ten. The lights flickered on in the
shop, and the tearoom lights quickly followed. Had to have that morning hit,
Gwen thought. Most likely the shop owner was thoroughly hooked on her own
products.
Within moments, a white Lexus pulled up in front of the shop. Gwen sat bolt
upright, startled by the familiar vehicle. She quickly caught herself and
dropped down out of sight.
A small, slim woman got out of the car and tucked a strand of her crimped red
hair behind her ears.
"Trudy Wasserman," murmured Gwen. "Why am I not surprised?"
What she was was pissed. What with one thing and another, Gwen had
enough to deal with without tripping over Trudy.
She waited until the redheaded woman returned to her car and pulled away. She
marched into the store and grabbed two boxes of the Green Man tea. Alice Power's
face darkened with dread when she took in the grim look on Gwen's face.
"Have you found Erin?"
"Not yet. Sorry, but I don't have time to chat," Gwen said, throwing a twenty
on the counter. She left without waiting for her change and ran to the Mercedes.
Fortunately, there weren't too many ways to get from Tiverton to Providence.
Gwen followed at a distance until she ascertained that Trudy was going to take
highways: Route 24 north to I-195, then west to Providence. All the better. It
was easy to tail someone in a crowd.
Trudy drove straight home. Gwen parked beside the Lexus in the lot across
from the condo. She jogged over to the building and rang the bell a couple of
times before Trudy responded.
"Hey. It's Gwen. I've got something for you."
"What is it?" Even through the intercom, Trudy's voice sounded suspicious.
"There's one way to find out."
The buzzer sounded, and Gwen yanked the door opened and took the stairs two
at a time. She pushed past Trudy and shut the door behind her, then tossed the
box of Green Man tea at the woman.
Trudy instinctively caught the box, bobbled it for a moment. When she
realized what she held, her eyes widened into limpid pools of guilt.
"Don't bother trying to sell me on coincidence," Gwen advised her.
The redhead tossed back her head and faced Gwen down. "All right, then, I
admit it: I've been watching Erin Westland for some time now."
"Why?"
"She's married to Kyle," Trudy said, her tone suggesting that this should be
self-evident.
"Again, why? Not why Erin married Kyle," she clarified, "although
that's definitely a question to ponder another day, but why are you so
interested in all the details of your girlfriend's ex?"
"Marcy was married to Kyle Radcliff for years. They have a history, and that
can be a powerful thing. You saw how she came running to you with his problems."
"So you decide to start following the second wife? That sounds dangerously
like obsession to me. How long has this been going on?"
"A few weeks," she admitted.
Gwen raised one eyebrow.
"Okay, maybe a few months. Four or five."
"So how does this work? You follow Erin Westland down to her place of
business, and decide to become a regular customer so you can keep an eye on the
new missus?"
Trudy sighed heavily. "You're not going to believe this."
"That's probably true, but tell me anyway."
"I went down to The Green Man the first time not knowing Erin worked there. A
friend of mine gave me a box of this herb tea. I really liked it, and
asked her where I could buy it. She sent me down to Tiverton. It's the only
place that sells it."
"What's your friend's name?"
"Sally. Sally Lyons."
That name sounded familiar, but Gwen couldn't quite place it. "Describe her."
"Well, she's about my age—late thirties—and about my height and build,
although she's slimmer, I'm sorry to report. She has long brown hair, lovely
hands. She's a very pretty woman. Very feminine."
That could describe a lot of people Gwen had seen around. "Do you have a
number for her?"
Trudy went off for her phone book, and came back from the bedroom with a slip
of paper in her hand. "Here's her home phone, though frankly, I don't know what
you expect to learn from her. Just because she buys tea at Erin Westland's shop,
it doesn't follow that she'd know something about the woman's disappearance."
"Couldn't hurt to ask. Can I give you a word of advice?" Trudy nodded
cautiously.
"Stop drinking that stuff. It doesn't exactly bring out the best in you."
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Gwen spent a good chunk of Tuesday at the station, going over her statement
about Kate Myers. She got to the church five minutes after her self-defense
class was supposed to start.
Damian and Jason were already there, avidly discussing the merits of Jason's
two-seater. The Miata and Damian's wreck were the only vehicles in the parking
lot.
"I called it right last week," Damian told her. "Looks like you scared them
all off."
"Looks like," she agreed. "Wait a minute—looks like we've got a couple of
takers."
A blue SUV pulled into the lot, and two women got out. One was the blond
political aide, and the other was the woman who had been so disturbed by last
week's demonstration.
Gwen herded everyone into the basement and pulled the attendance list out of
her file. As she went down it to check off the names of the women who showed up,
she noticed the name of one who hadn't: Sally Lyons.
That was the name Trudy had given her—the friend who'd turned her on to the
funny herbals.
Gwen got the two women started practicing the holds and escapes they'd
learned last week. Then she stepped into the stairwell and shut the door. She
called Sally Lyons's number and got a recording.
As soon as the voice message was finished playing, she dialed Kyle Radcliff.
"Have you got a recording of Erin's voice?"
"I don't think so," he said hesitantly. "She never liked video cameras, and
my voice is on our phone machine at home."
"Figures. What about the shop?"
He thought about that. "I'm pretty sure Alice left the voice message. But
come to think of it, Erin probably left her own message on her cell phone."
"I'm not in my office and don't have her file handy. Give me the number."
He recited the number. Gwen hung up on him and dialed it. Sure enough, a
young female voice invited her to leave a message. She hung up and dialed Sally
Lyons's number again.
The voices were the same.
First thing the next morning, Gwen was at the address given on Sally Lyons's
class-registration form. A little boy was in the front yard, absently kicking at
a Spider-Man backpack. He was definitely the kid in the photo Kyle had given
her.
"Hey, Patrick," she called, feeling a stab of guilt over using one of an
abductor's favorite ploys. Call a kid by name, chances are he'll assume he
should know you. Why parents insisted on displaying their kids' names on their
shirts and hats and backpacks was a mystery to Gwen.
He looked up and waved at her. "Hi!"
"Is your mom home?"
"Yeah, but she's making faces today."
"Making faces," she repeated.
"Uh-huh. She's coming right out. You'll see."
At that moment Sally Lyons opened the front door, and Gwen definitely saw.
The woman with Erin Westland's child was one of the women from Gwen's
self-defense class, the suburban mom in pastel pink who'd been worried about
hurting her workout partner.
Suddenly Sally Lyons was gone, and Erin Westland stood her in place. "Get
away from my son!" she shrieked.
The woman unsheathed her claws and came at Gwen in a sudden rush, swiping a
handful of manicure at Gwen's face.
Gwen leaned away from the blow and came back with a punch to the jaw. The
woman staggered back three steps, then dropped straight back onto her ass.
The little boy ran to her. She put her arms around him and glared over his
head at Gwen.
"I'm not going back," she insisted.
"Well, that proves you've got some sense. I don't plan to take you and
Patrick back to Kyle."
Erin sniffed. "I'm not afraid of him."
"Then what's this about?"
The woman gently moved Patrick away from her and put a hand under his chin,
turning his face to hers. "Go inside, honey. Mommy will be with you in just a
minute, okay?"
The child's gaze flashed to Gwen.
"I won't hurt your mother," she said.
"You promise?"
Acting on impulse, Gwen said, "I swear it by moon and star, word and wind."
The little boy's face lit up. "Hey! Can you make faces, too?"
Gwen obliged by crossing her eyes and sticking out her tongue. Patrick
giggled. "Not those kind of faces!"
"Patrick," Erin prompted in one of those no-nonsense mother tones. He turned
and scampered for the house.
"What didn't you want him to hear?" Gwen asked.
"He's in danger," Erin confided. "It's the others. They found out about
Patrick."
"So?"
"According to the Elders, he can't exist." A bitter smile twisted Erin's
face. "My son is a half-breed."
"Nice try. I know about your pregnancy. It lasted close to four years.
Patrick isn't Kyle's son."
"My relationship with Kyle goes back several years. I started seeing him when
he was still married to your friend Marcy."
"Wouldn't surprise me. But what about the other men?"
"What other men?" Erin demanded.
"Kyle had quite a photo album."
"Oh, that. Do you have any idea how easy it is to alter photos? Anyone who
worked for Edmonson had access to a lot of pornography. It wasn't hard to find a
photographer who could shoot me in similar positions and impose my face on some
other woman's body."
"Kyle was pretty pissed off."
"That was the whole idea," she retorted. "I didn't want him looking for me.
The man has an ego the size of Texas. If he thought I was fooling around, he
wouldn't want me. If he thought Patrick wasn't his, he wouldn't waste another
moment on him."
That also rang true with what Gwen knew of Kyle. "And what about Trudy
Wasserman?"
Erin huffed. "What about her? I was tripping over her every time I
turned around, so I decided to give her another hobby."
"An addiction."
The woman shrugged.
"You're deliberately getting people hooked on this stuff. And not just
Trudy."
"I need the money," Erin stated. "I've stretched my local identities to the
breaking point. It's time to start over, somewhere far away. The Green Man was
giving me a chance to build up a nest egg—"
"So why aren't you gone?"
"I can't get at the money without giving myself away," Erin said. "That's
where you come in."
Gwen lifted one eyebrow. "You're looking to hire me?"
"I figured Kyle might end up coming to you when I left. So I signed up for
your self-defense course to see what you had. I figured, if you could find me,
you were probably good enough to help me disappear."
"Glad to know I passed your little test," Gwen said dryly. "As much as I hate
to admit it, I'm being shadowed fairly closely by one sneaky pointy-eared son of
a bitch. If I can find you, chances are he can, too."
Erin's face fell. "I hadn't thought of that."
"I know where you can go. A friend of mine runs a safe house. There's
excellent security, police protection. They won't bother you there—keeping a low
profile is a high priority to these people."
"Our people," Erin corrected. She conceded with a shrug. "Very well.
I'll go to this safe house."
"You're welcome."
She shrugged again and started toward the house. Gwen fell into step. "I hope
it won't come as a shock to hear that I don't exactly trust you."
Erin darted a surprised glance in her direction. "Why should you?"
"Just so you know, I'm going to be very unhappy if anyone at Sister Tamar's
place is hurt because of you."
"I'll keep a low profile." Erin smiled sweetly. "Like you said, that's what
we do best."
Much to his dismay, Ian found himself obliged to pay a call on the man who
called himself Jason Cross. An unannounced visit, of course. Unfortunately,
Jason wasn't even slightly startled by the sudden appearance.
The man leaned against the kitchen counter in his "father's" bungalow and
crossed his arms. "So. To what do I owe the honor of this intrusion?"
"You haven't contacted me with your findings on Gwen."
"What findings? If you told me what you were looking for, I'd have a better
chance of noticing it."
"Selective observation? No, thank you. Tell me what you have managed to
discover."
Jason gave a concise report of her online activities, as well as those of
people who did her more complicated Internet work for her.
"Anything she knows, I know," he concluded. "She's working on a number of
things. Some background checks, a missing woman."
"Tell me about them."
"Aren't we supposed to be following a drug connection and erasing ties to
this Captain Walsh?"
"We must know everything she's working on." Ian gave him a keen look. "It
could be particularly uncomfortable if she starts looking too closely into Frank
Cross's death."
The man returned his stare. "Yes, I can see how that would be a problem for
you."
Doubt flickered in Ian's mind. He was certain that this man had killed Frank
Cross, but he couldn't pick up any inkling of guilt from the young man. Perhaps
he was a sociopath who knew no such emotions?
"Tell me about this missing woman."
"Her name's Erin Westland, aka Helene Tremaine. She's married to Kyle
Radcliff, the ex-husband of Gwen's friend Marcy Bartlett. She has a son. They're
both gone."
Ian's heart seemed to leap into his throat, then thud painfully back into
place. This was a most disturbing development. Especially now that Jason Cross
was involved.
"What progress has Gwen made?"
"We've visited the woman's shop. An herb shop down in Tiverton called The
Green Man."
This, too, was disturbing news.
Shaken, Ian left the little house and hurried to his car.
He drove to Erin Westland's shop and bought a box of the store's tea.
As soon as he got back to his car, he spilled some of the dried herbs into
his hand. He sniffed them, then touched a pinch to his tongue. The taste was
unmistakable.
It was true, then. These herbs, banished for centuries, must have blown into
the Burren from a gate that led into the Hidden land. And that could mean only
one thing:
James Avalon, Gwen's father, had figured a way in.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Gwen decided to take Sylvia's car to East Greenwich. In Kyle Radcliff's
neighborhood, a black Mercedes was the next best thing to camouflage. And unlike
her aging economy car, the Mercedes could exceed the speed limit. She drove with
grim concentration, weaving around slower vehicles and pushing the sedan to its
limits. The sooner she got to Kyle's place, the sooner the coming confrontation
could be done and over.
She'd never seen his house in East Greenwich. The home he'd shared with Marcy
in Providence had been pretty spiffy, but this place was obscenely huge. A
sprawling French colonial, all steeply peaked rooflines and small gables, was
set in at least an acre of manicured lawn and carefully landscaped beds. The
circular drive curved around a sea of late tulips, and azaleas bloomed amid the
foundation plantings. A fenced area behind the house suggested an in-ground
pool. Erin Westland was escaping a very posh cage.
Gwen pulled up at the front and rang the bell. No answer. She tried a couple
of times before deciding that Kyle had missed their appointment, probably just
to be a pain in the ass.
She was turning to leave when a fluttering curtain caught her eye. The
movement drew her gaze to the open window—and the grim scene beyond.
A tall, fair-haired male lay faceup on the carpet, his arms flung out wide.
Gwen went over to the window for a closer look.
It was definitely Kyle. His cable-knit sweater, once a natural sheep-colored
beige, was dark with blood. His face was unmarked, and his cold gray eyes were
open and staring.
Gwen reached for her phone to call it in. On impulse, she stopped, stuck the
phone back into her pocket, and climbed through the open window.
The room was remarkably tidy and very, very beige. The carpets, walls, and
furniture were all shades that could be found in a bowl of oatmeal. The only
color in the room was the pool of blood seeping into the carpet around Kyle
Radcliff's body.
As far as Gwen could tell, there was only one wound, but it had done the job.
Someone with remarkable aim had gotten him right in the heart. Judging from the
angle of the body, he'd been facing the open window and had fallen straight
back.
Gwen crouched beside the body. Her brow furrowed as she studied the wound.
The placement was perfect, but it was like no gunshot wound she'd ever seen.
Both his clothes and the flesh beneath had been torn, as if he'd been stabbed
with some sharp but strangely shaped object.
A glance at his hands discouraged that theory. Kyle lay with his arms flung
out wide and his palms turned up. There were no defensive wounds on his hands.
There probably would have been, if someone had come at him with a knife.
She picked up one hand and turned it to study the nails. They were neatly
trimmed and buffed, so her eyes went at once to the single imperfection: caught
under one nail was a single wavy, bright auburn hair.
Trudy's hair.
Gwen sat back on her heels, stunned into immobility. True, the woman was
ridiculously jealous. Marcy had said Trudy had been acting strangely, and yes,
she'd taken a swing at Gwen, but murder? It didn't seem possible.
She rose and walked over to the window. The angle was too perfect. Whatever
had hit Kyle had come through the open window. And the red hair? It was Trudy's,
Gwen had little doubt of that, but that didn't necessarily mean that Marcy's
lover had been in this room. Someone was manipulating the scene.
Gwen pulled out her phone and dialed Sister Tamar's private line. "Is Erin
still there?" she demanded.
The nun sniffed. "Yes, and she's quite the princess. Why? What's happening?"
"Her husband's dead. There's a chance that whoever killed him might come
after Erin. Lock the place down. Don't let anyone come or go."
"Done," Tamar said. "Do you know who did this?"
"Not yet. I've got to go."
She went to work on the body, searching for more telltale hairs. There were
three, two on the sleeves of Kyle's sweater and one entangled in his hair. None
were on the blood-soaked torso, which, to Gwen's way of thinking, argued
strongly for their placement after Kyle's death.
Her next stop was the kitchen, where she denuded a roll of paper towels. She
set to work wiping clean every surface in the room, including the windowsill and
the doorknobs, inside and out.
When she was reasonably satisfied that she'd obliterated every false trace of
Trudy's presence, she picked up her phone to call it in. She started to dial
Quaid's number before she remembered he was on leave, pending investigation in
Kate's murder. After a moment's thought, she dialed the station and asked to be
patched through to Ben Cerulo.
"It's Gellman," she told him. "I'm working on a missing-persons, and I just
got to a client's house for a meeting. Instead of a client, I have a body."
"I'll be right there," he said without hesitation. "Give me the address."
"Well, that could be a problem. It's in East Greenwich."
He huffed in exasperation. "Why are you calling me instead of the townies?"
"He has an estranged wife. She's not a suspect—she's been in Sister Tamar's
safe house since this morning. But she might be in danger. Can you get someone
over there? Preferably plainclothes?"
"You got it. Do you have any idea who might have killed your guy?"
Gwen's eyes slipped to the telltale red hairs she'd placed in a Ziploc
sandwich bag. "I'll leave that to the East Greenwich people. Thanks."
On her way out, she left a fresh set of prints on the windowsill, the front
doorknob, and the doorbell. The town cops would know there'd been a
housekeeping, and her prints would suggest that it had happened before her
arrival.
Before she called the townies, she did a circle of the property, looking for
weapons conveniently stashed in the landscaping. When she was confident there
was nothing to find, she sank down on the front step and dialed 911.
After the East Greenwich police were finished with her, Gwen drove straight
to Marc's condo. Her friend's little silver BMW was not in the parking lot, but
Trudy's Lexus was.
Gwen entered the building by following two male tenants and took the stairs
up to the third floor. She knocked on the door for a while before Trudy swung it
open.
The redhead was dressed—barely—in a sea-green teddy and a matching short
robe. She looked rumpled and sexy, as if she'd been called from her bed, but not
from sleep.
Trudy regarded Gwen with a beatific smile. "Hello gorgeous," she said in a
cheerfully awful imitation of Barbra Streisand imitating Fanny Brice.
Gwen cast her eyes toward the ceiling. "Forget it," she advised. "You don't
have the nose for it."
The woman actually giggled. "I did, once," she confided. "I had it bobbed.
See?" She presented her profile.
"Yeah, whatever. Where were you this afternoon?"
"Oh, who cares?" Trudy swayed closer and draped her arms around Gwen's neck.
"Hold still, will you?"
"I'm not moving," Gwen pointed out as she tried to disentangle herself. It
wasn't easy—the woman looked as boneless as a lap cat and twice as blissful, but
she clung to Gwen with surprising strength and rapidly increasing passion.
"Jesus, how much of that stuff did you drink?"
"What the hell is going on in here?" demanded Marcy.
Gwen glanced over her shoulder. Her friend stood in the open door, looking as
if she'd just been whacked between the eyes with a two-by-four.
"Don't just stand there," she snapped. "Help me get Trudy into bed."
"Why? It looks to me like you're doing just fine on your own."
Just then Trudy managed to plant a wet one squarely on Gwen's mouth. Gwen
seized two handfuls of wavy red hair and held her off. "A little help? She's
higher than a weather satellite."
"Impossible," Marcy stated flatly. "Trudy doesn't take drugs."
Gwen raised an eyebrow.
"Okay, she'll smoke some weed once in a while, but other than that she is
extremely health conscious. Annoyingly so."
Trudy started to sag as euphoria gave way to stupor. Gwen staggered under the
sudden deadweight. "Give me a hand, would you?"
Finally convinced, Marcy kicked off her heels and came over to help. Between
the two of them, they got Trudy into bed. She promptly rolled over to her side,
curled up, and started snoring.
They slipped out of the bedroom. Marcy closed the door and walked over to the
liquor cabinet. She poured herself a glass of wine with shaking hands.
"Has she been acting like this a lot recently?"
Marcy slumped into a chair. "If you mean has she been dry-humping my friends
and associates, no. But she's been having mood swings. She has definitely been
more insecure and possessive."
"The weaknesses grow stronger," Gwen murmured, remembering Adrian's screed in
the orchard.
"What is she taking? Do you have any idea?"
"An herbal blend. Something new. It's powerful stuff, but it hasn't found its
way onto the list of illegals yet."
Marcy shook her head in sorrow and astonishment. "How long has this been
going on?"
"The best I can figure, four or five months."
She was silent for a long time. "So it's gotten to be an addiction."
"I'd say so, yes."
She set down her glass and covered her face with both hands. "I don't know
what to do with this." Her voice sounded muffled and shaken, as close to tears
as Gwen had ever seen her.
"Take your time. This has got to be a shock."
Marcy took a long breath and lowered her hands, folding them in her lap. "If
this isn't a recognized substance, can she go into rehab?"
"It probably wouldn't be covered by major medical, but I don't see why not."
Marcy waved that obstacle away. "I can afford to pay for treatment. The thing
is, what happens after? I don't know if I'm up to dealing with this. You know
about my father."
Gwen nodded. Marcy had been raised by her maternal grandmother because her
father was usually too drunk to pay much attention to his kids. The experience
had left Marcy with an extreme aversion to any kind of overindulgence. That was
one reason super-healthy, squeaky-clean Kyle had appealed to her. It was one of
the reasons she'd gravitated toward health-conscious Trudy. There was something
ironic in the fact that Trudy was probably an addict before she discovered the
herb. The fact that she was addicted to a person just made it harder to
recognize.
"Would it help to know that she didn't realize what the herb was when she
started taking it?"
Marcy nodded slowly. "I hate to admit it, but yeah, that does help."
"Good, because you've got a lot of hard decisions ahead of you. I hate to
dump this on you right now, but it won't wait. Marcy, Kyle is dead."
"What? When? How?"
"He was stabbed or shot once, right through the heart. I found him at his
house."
"How awful." Marcy reached for her hand. "I'm so sorry you had to deal with
that."
Gwen squeezed her friend's hand and released it. "There's more."
She took the little plastic bag containing Trudy's hairs from her pocket and
tossed it onto the table beside Marcy's chair. The woman glanced at it and
looked up, her face ashen.
"Where did you find these?"
"I think you know."
Marcy exploded to her feet and began to pace like a caged panther. "Damn it,
Gwen, please tell me you didn't tamper with a crime scene!"
"Would you rather I left evidence incriminating Trudy?"
"Yes!" She whirled away, and her shoulders slumped. "No. But it doesn't
matter what I think. If Trudy killed Kyle, you've just made both of us
accessories after the fact."
"Do you honestly think Trudy is capable of stabbing a guy through the heart?"
"No, but I never expected to come home and find her trying to drag you into
bed, either. She can't stand you."
"That's the cross I have to bear," Gwen murmured. "For what it's worth, I
don't think Trudy killed Kyle."
"I don't either, but I trust the system to prove her innocence. You did, too,
once upon a time."
"As in, before I was framed and pushed off the force?"
Marcy came back over and sat down across from her. "Gwen, I'm sorry as hell
about what happened to you, and I won't argue that the justice system is
infallible, but I can't ignore all the rules just because someone I care about
is involved."
"And that's the problem: I'm involved. Walsh is gunning for me. If he finds
any connection at all between me and Trudy, you'd better believe the evidence
will turn against her."
Marcy studied her face. "Walsh would do that? You're sure?"
"Very. He's involved with the people who held Tiger Leone's leash. They have
something on Walsh—what, I haven't been able to find out. But I'm pretty sure he
ordered the call that turned Tiger Leone onto Tom Yoland and Carmine Moniz the
night Winston's was busted. Just last week, someone in vice set up a couple more
cops who were looking into that mess. That didn't work. Now one of those cops is
trying to work his way out of a murder frame-up."
"Can you prove any of this?"
"It may take a while. Until then, I'd like to keep Trudy out of the line of
fire."
For a long moment, Gwen watched the struggle on Marcy's face. She felt as
guilty as hell about dumping this on her friend, but she didn't see a better way
to play it.
"What if Trudy…"
"One way or another, I'll find out who killed Kyle," Gwen said. "You have my
word on that, by moon and star, wind and word."
Marcy looked puzzled. "What's all that about?"
"It means," Gwen said quietly, "that you can be extremely fucking certain the
truth will come out."
CHAPTER TWENTY
Gwen's phone rang as she emerged from the building.
"There's a problem at the safe house," Tamar announced.
The nun sounded more rattled than Gwen had ever heard her. "What happened?"
"It's Oscar, our English sheepdog. He was killed last night."
An unexpected wave of nausea roiled through Gwen even before Tamar's memories
hit her. She swallowed bile and tried to blink away the image of a gutted
sheepdog, his long fur matted with blood. She hadn't quite believed the tale the
midwife told—at least, not until this moment.
"You're sure Erin didn't leave last night?"
"Absolutely. What does that have to do with Oscar?"
"Did anyone else leave?"
"Yes," Tamar said slowly. "We have another young mother here. Rita. She left
earlier that evening, before you called. But she doesn't look anything like
Erin—she's blond and a little plump."
"What about her kid?"
"A little girl, about four years old."
"Did the kid walk out with her mom?"
"No. She was sleeping and wrapped in a blanket. Rita carried her out. Where
is this going?"
"Go check on Erin and call me back."
Gwen reached for the electronic gate opener clipped to her car's sun visor
and pulled into Sylvia's drive. A green Civic followed her in. She recognized
Jeff's car and groaned. The last thing she needed right now was a confrontation
with an irate fuck buddy.
He came out of the car like a well-groomed thunderstorm and followed her into
her office. "We need to talk."
The phone in Gwen's hand sounded, and she held up a finger to indicate Jeff
should wait.
"Erin's here," announced Sister Tamar.
Her voice didn't sound any steadier than it had during her last call. "You're
sure?"
"Yes! Why do you keep asking that?"
"What about the blond woman and her kid?"
"That's where things get strange. Rita came in shortly after you last called,
only she didn't have her daughter with her."
"Was this before or after you checked on Erin?"
A long silence greeted her question. "Someday you're going to tell me what's
going on." "Before or after?"
"Shortly before."
Whatever Tamar said next was drowned out by a woman's scream, shortly
followed by the sound of angry voices raised in accusation and protest.
"I've got to check on that," Tamar said.
"Call me back."
Gwen clicked off the phone and turned to Jeff. The cool-off time seemed to
have done him some good. The expression on his face had dialed down from furious
to merely agitated.
"You were saying?" she said resignedly.
Jeff pointed to the photo of Erin on Gwen's desk. "Who is that?"
She picked it up and handed it to him. "Someone I was hired to find. You know
her?"
"No, but I've seen her around. A lot."
"Tell me."
Jeff put the picture down. "I saw her several times around the courthouse,
near the office. Once or twice when I went out to lunch with Marcy, she'd be in
the restaurant. I saw her once in the health club where Marcy and I worked out."
"Did you ever point this out to Marcy?"
His face turned red. Gwen caught on, and suppressed a smile. "You thought she
was following you."
Jeff shrugged.
"Hey, it was a logical assumption, especially if she'd seen you in your
racquetball shorts."
His grin was faintly sheepish. "Thanks. I guess. So she was following Marcy?"
"Well, since she was living with Marcy's ex-husband, that seems like a
reasonable assumption. When did all this happen?"
"Not for a while. Four or five months ago. I haven't seen her since."
Gwen could understand why. If Erin was planning Kyle's death and needed
someone to pin it on, she'd probably decided that Trudy was a better candidate
than Marcy. Erin certainly wouldn't be the first among the Elder Folk to
recognize and exploit a human weakness.
And they didn't stop with humans. Obviously Erin had made a point of learning
about Marcy's friends. She knew enough about Gwen to sign up for her
self-defense class. Quite likely, she knew a few things about Gwen's
friends—including Sister Tamar. All that bullshit about protecting her
half-breed son was a way to get into Tamar's safe house. That gave her an
airtight alibi for the time of Kyle's death.
Gwen's phone rang again. "Put Erin on the line," she said by way of greeting.
"I don't think that's a good idea," Tamar said. "She's extremely upset."
"Let me guess: She woke up and went to check on her kid, and found out that
Rita's blond daughter was in the bed. Patrick is nowhere to be found, but Rita
denies leaving the safe house, much less absconding with Patrick."
"How the hell did you know that?"
"Lucky guess. Put her on."
A ragged snuffle announced that the grieving mother was on the line. "Nice
touch with the dog," Gwen said softly. "You just had to rub my nose in it,
didn't you?"
"She took Patrick!" Erin wailed. "My baby's gone!"
"Go ahead—work the room. But listen carefully, bitch: You're fucking my
friends, and that's not allowed."
"What can you do about it?" Erin said tearfully.
"Don't worry. You'll be finding out soon."
She clicked off and dialed Damian's number. She'd called him on the way to
confront Trudy and asked him to help watch over Tamar and her girls. There were
other cops around, but Gwen wasn't convinced she could trust any of them.
"Go," he said—his usual greeting.
"Erin Westland is about to leave the safe house. How soon can you get there?"
"Can she do that?"
"Sister Tamar can't hold anyone against her will. Erin is about my size and
age. Big blue eyes, long brown hair. Or she might look about thirty-five, with
brown eyes. Hell, she could look like damn near anything."
"So I follow whoever leaves the safe house, and hope it's the right person.
Is that the plan?"
"I wish I had a better one."
Jeff set the picture down on the desk. "You seem busy. I should let you get
back to work."
"Thanks." When he didn't move, she raised an eyebrow. "And yet you're still
here."
"What was in that stuff I mixed with the juice?"
She shoved both hands through her hair. "It's an herbal mix. Nothing
chemical, no lasting harm. But it can be a strong aphrodisiac. You can believe
me or not, but I didn't know what it was at the time."
He shook his head. "I don't know what to think. But I was out of it until
nearly noon. How did you get up early to go to work?"
"I never went to sleep. After you conked out, I took a shower and left
early."
"How is that possible?" he demanded. "That stuff affected you as much as it
did me."
"Afraid not. Different metabolism. Listen, I don't have time to explain it
right now." Since he didn't seem inclined to leave, Gwen headed for the door. He
grabbed her arm and swung her back to face him.
"Make time."
The petulant, demanding expression on his face was all too familiar. Maybe
the herbal tea made people act like possessive assholes, maybe it just fanned
embers that had been banked and hidden. Gwen didn't know, but at the moment more
pressing matters were demanding her attention.
"You were affected by the tea. I wasn't."
"That's impossible, you were a wild woman."
"That was all me that night. I usually dial it down with you."
"Oh."
He released her arm, and the stricken look on his face confirmed beyond
question his ex-fuck-buddy status.
"Sorry about the hangover," she said. "I guess I'll see you around."
He mumbled something and left the office. Gwen dialed Marcy's home number on
the way to her car.
"How is she?"
"Sleeping like the dead," Marcy said. "How long is that likely to last?"
"Until midmorning, at least. Call me as soon as she wakes up."
"Why? So the three of us can get our stories straight?"
Gwen let the sting fade a bit before responding. "I guess I had that coming."
The phone rang again almost as soon as she ended the call.
"Gwen, this is Shawna O'Riley. I'm at Providence Hospital. It's Damian."
"What happened?"
"They're not sure. He was hit in the chest with enough force to break two
ribs. Fortunately he was wearing Kevlar."
"Smart man. How's he doing?"
"He's alive, and we're all grateful for that. Whatever hit him stopped his
heart, but a good Samaritan gave him CPR and called an ambulance. He's in a lot
of pain, but he's asking for you. Can you come down?"
"I'm on the way."
She made the drive to the hospital in a record eighteen minutes. A nurse
directed her to the waiting room where the O'Riley clan gathered. There were at
least a dozen of them, and they all looked up when she entered the room. The
collective force of all those brown eyes set her back a step.
For the first time she understood what Ian meant when he said the Elder Folk
gained strength in numbers. She wondered, briefly, what it would have meant to
grow up with this kind of support.
Shawna rose and came over to her. "You won't be able to stay long. The
doctor's only letting you in because he figures it's the only way Damian will
behave."
Gwen smiled faintly and followed her down the corridor. Damian was propped up
in bed, looking strangely pale for a Black man.
"Thanks, sis," he said. He winced, as if even that much talking was painful.
"Don't be long," Shawna warned. She backed out and shut the door softly.
Gwen leaned against the door and folded her arms. "Do you have any idea what
hit you?"
"Could be wrong about this, but I think it was a motherfucking arrow.
What's next? Twin motherfucking scimitars?"
"Take it easy. Did you see who shot you?"
"No. Judging from the angle, the dude was in the trees. I hear this
whoosh and something long was coming down at me. Next thing I knew, that
Forest guy from the sports bar was pouring something nasty down my throat."
So Ian was shadowing her friends now?
"Next time I see him, I'll kick him in the balls for you."
"Appreciate that. Though you should probably also thank him for saving my
life."
"I'll be sure to pass along your regards. After I kick him."
"He left pretty fast. Probably took off after whoever shot me."
"That'd be my guess. Where was Erin Westland in all this?"
"Damned if I know. One minute I was watching the bitch, the next I was flat
on my ass."
The door behind Gwen started to open. She moved away, and a middle-aged nurse
came into the room. Her hair was seriously red—a color that was too bright to be
anything but a home dye job, but she had the pale, freckled skin to lend
credence to the basic color scheme.
"That's long enough," she told Gwen as she bustled over to the bed. "Officer
O'Riley needs to rest."
"Don't you be coming over here with that needle," he warned the nurse.
"It'll help you sleep," she said soothingly.
"I sleep just fine. Back off, Freckles."
The nurse's face firmed in disapproval. "You promised to rest after you
talked to your partner."
"You lose. She's not my partner."
"True story," Gwen confirmed. "You want Quaid down here?"
"Hell, no. What I want is for everyone to go home and get some sleep. Pass
that along to the family, will you?"
"For what good it will do."
He glanced at the nurse. "Tell you what, Red. Go check on the family. Anyone
who looks too wide awake, you feel free to go ahead and stick 'em."
The nurse huffed and sailed out of the room. Gwen grinned. "She likes you. I
can always tell these things."
"Uh-huh. Why don't you use your powers for good, and go get me a couple bags
of fries?"
Gwen glared at him. "Now that was just plain mean."
"Hey, when you're the one with your ass hanging out the back of a hospital
gown, you get to take a few free shots."
His voice slurred a bit toward the end. Gwen crossed the room and dropped a
kiss on the top of his head.
"Yeah, yeah. Go tell the rest of the family to go home," he mumbled.
Something opened in Gwen's heart, something that felt like a tight, empty
fist relaxing its grip. The rest of the family.
He might not remember it, but he'd said it. Better yet, Gwen was pretty
certain that he meant it.
She quietly left the room and went to relay Damian's message to the O'Rileys.
But the best part of it, she fully intended to keep for herself.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
By eleven o'clock the next morning, Gwen was back at Marcy's condo.
Trudy was awake, mostly sober, and very, very worried.
"So tell me what happened," Gwen said.
Trudy glanced at Marcy. She nodded.
"I don't remember going to Kyle's house," she began. "To be honest, I don't
know exactly where it is."
"You've been stalking his wife for several months, and you never went to the
house?"
"It's true," she insisted. "I know it's in East Greenwich, but I've never
been there."
"How do you explain the hairs on Kyle's sweater?"
Trudy shook her head helplessly. "I wish I could."
"So tell me what you do remember."
"After my last class, I went shopping. I always go to the wholefood store,
the one on Waterman?"
"I don't care. What then?"
"I ran into one of my students. We started talking. He offered to buy me a
cup of tea."
Again with the tea, Gwen thought. "What's his name?"
"You know, I really should know that. But the new term just started, and I'm
still putting names with faces."
"Okay, so what does this guy look like?"
"He'd be easy to pick out of a crowd. Very blond, very pretty."
Gwen began to get a very bad feeling. "And after the tea party?"
"I can't remember. I wasn't feeling well. I think he drove me home."
"Eventually," Gwen muttered. "Tell me this: Did you two talk about Marcy?"
Trudy nodded, looking thoroughly miserable. "He mentioned he'd seen her the
other day with a man who matched Kyle's description."
"And how would this student recognize me, much less Kyle?" Marcy demanded.
"He saw the two of us together the night we went to the string quartet
concert at Brown, and he remembered you," Trudy said miserably. "All he said
about it was, 'I ran into a friend of yours the other day.'"
"I see," Marcy said coolly. "He made a casual remark, only you couldn't let
it go. You kept at him until he coughed up a description you recognized as Kyle.
For the record, I haven't seen him since the night I brought him over to talk to
Gwen."
"I believe you," Trudy whispered.
"How very gratifying. Late, but gratifying nonetheless."
"Hold that thought," Gwen interjected. "Preferably until after I'm gone. Now,
back to last night. What time did you and this guy meet up?"
Trudy thought about it. "The class was over at four, and I finished my
shopping in about an hour. We went down to Angell Street afterward—"
"Who drove?"
"I did. My groceries were in the car. We got a cup of tea and chatted for a
while."
"And in all this time, you never asked his name?"
Trudy massaged her temples with both hands. "I must have. It must have come
up. I have no idea why I can't remember."
Gwen had a pretty good idea. Probably Adrian had some sort of hypnotic
ability. What had he said in the apple orchard the other night? The Elder Folk
had the ability to influence minds and behavior.
Come to think of it, maybe that wasn't one of Adrian's Qualities. Maybe it
was something all the Elder Folk could learn to do. The idea was
intriguing, and far too appealing for Gwen's peace of mind.
Fuck that. She didn't want that sort of power over people.
Why, then, did she immediately think about what had started when she'd been
lip-locked with Ian Forest in Sylvia's garden? There was a darkness inside her,
a disturbing energy that rippled just under the surface. When that third Quality
came out, what would she become?
It occurred to her the questioning had gone on without her. With difficulty
she tuned in on what Marcy was saying.
"… and you said your groceries were in the car when you had tea with this
student, who afterward drove you home."
"Yes," Trudy said hesitantly.
"So did someone bring the groceries up, or are they still in your car?"
Trudy shrugged helplessly.
"I don't pay that much attention to what's in the fridge, so I didn't notice
a difference," Marcy said. "Where are your keys? I'll go down and check the
car."
"Why does it matter?"
"It matters," Marcy told her grimly, "because it tells us whether or not he
was in this apartment."
She rose and began to pace. "I know how you feel about the police department
right now, Gwen, but it's time to bring someone in. If this man had something to
do with Kyle's death, if he was at Kyle's house, he might have left prints. His
fingerprints here could go a long way toward clearing Trudy."
"They won't find prints at Kyle's house," Gwen said.
Marcy stopped abruptly and turned to Gwen. "You didn't."
"I wanted to make sure things wouldn't get messy for Trudy."
"By destroying evidence that could lead to the real killer?" She dug both
hands into her thick blond hair and gripped her head for a moment with an
intensity that suggested it might otherwise explode.
She collected herself and turned cool gray eyes toward Gwen. "You used to
cross lines from time to time, but you were all about finding answers and
solving problems. If anyone suggested that you'd try to manipulate the
situation, you would have ripped them a new one. What has happened to you?"
That was a fair question if Gwen ever heard one.
"I'm still looking for answers," she said slowly, "but I have good reason not
to trust the conventional channels."
Marcy flopped into a chair and rubbed her eyes. "Do I want to know what you
mean by 'unconventional channels'?"
"Probably not."
The attorney rose and walked to the door, picking up her purse on the walk.
Without turning around she said, "I'm going to need some time to think about all
this. And right now, I really need to be alone."
The door closed quietly behind her. A long moment of silence passed before
Gwen glanced at Trudy and observed, "I never thought I'd see you and me on the
same shit list."
That earned a sickly smile. "A shit-list sisterhood."
"Don't get carried away," Gwen cautioned. "I need your car keys."
Trudy made an impatient gesture. "I don't care about the groceries."
"Neither do I, but I need to check out the car. There's a chance I can find
out something about this guy, and—"
Inspiration came suddenly, striking her dumb in midsentence. Gwen dug the
keys to her Toyota out of the pocket of her leather jacket and tossed them on
the coffee table.
"In fact, I need to take your car for a while. Here're my keys in case you
need to go anywhere. But I'd recommend that you stay close to home."
"I've seen your car," Trudy grumbled. "How far could I go, anyway?"
Gwen paused at the door. "One more thing: that herbal tea you got from The
Green Man? Throw it out."
"Why?"
"If I'm right, it's part of an elaborate setup. There's some serious shit in
that tea, and you've been drinking it long enough to be hooked on it."
Indignation firmed the redhead's lips into a straight line. "That's
ridiculous."
"Really? Have you had a cup yet this morning?"
"No…"
"And how are you feeling?"
She grimaced. "I could tell you precisely how I feel, but my mother raised me
not to use those words."
"What were you thinking of doing as soon as I left?"
Trudy shrugged, conceding Gwen's point and dismissing it in one gesture. "So
what? You always start your morning with coffee."
"Sure, but it doesn't affect my behavior. Look back over the past four or
five months. You've changed. I've noticed it, and Marcy sure as hell has
noticed."
"What did she say to you?"
"Knowing Marcy, a lot less than she said to you. I'll tell you what I've
observed. You've gotten clingy, dependent, and paranoid. Not to mention edgy and
moody and bitchy."
Trudy's shoulders slumped, and she looked down at her hands. "I haven't felt
like myself," she admitted. "But I've been drinking the herbal tea and taking
the supplements because that makes me feel better."
"Duh. Do you think people get turned on to addictive substances because they
enjoy feeling like shit? But after a while you start needing it to feel normal,
and needing a lot more to feel good."
"You make it sound like I'm some sort of junky," Trudy protested.
"Same shit, different tea bag."
Since it was apparent that Trudy wasn't completely convinced, Gwen went to
the kitchen and started opening cupboards. She found the telltale boxes and
poured the leaves into the garbage disposal, let the water and the disposal run
until every last fleck was washed away. When she glanced up, the stricken look
on Trudy's face proved that this instinct had been sound.
"What are you thinking?" Gwen asked. "Don't filter it."
Trudy shook her head in denial. "What you did right now—it doesn't really
matter. It shouldn't matter."
"Then why do you look like your world just went down the drain along with
that tea?"
Silent tears began to run down Trudy's pale cheeks. "What do I do?"
"The same thing any addict does. You acknowledge there's a problem—and I
think you just did that—and you do what's necessary to beat it. We'll make sure
you get through this."
"We? Are you so sure Marcy will come back?"
In all honesty, Gwen couldn't give the answer Trudy wanted. She crossed the
room and crouched down in front of the woman's chair so that they were eye to
eye.
"I'm going to introduce you to a friend of mine. Sister Tamar is very good at
helping people find their way. You'll get through this. I'll be there with you,
whether you want me or not. Although," she added, lifting one eyebrow, "judging
by the other night, I think we've covered that pretty thoroughly."
Trudy flushed and covered her face with her hands. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry."
She dropped her hands suddenly, anger pushing aside embarrassment. "You're
teasing me. I don't believe this. How can you joke about this? What kind of
heartless bitch are you?"
Gwen rose, suppressing a grin. "Hey! I thought your mother taught you not to
use words like that."
"My mother," Trudy said grimly, "never met you."
Trudy's white Lexus was parked in the lot across the street. Fancy car, with
too many whistles and bells for Gwen's taste. It even had a navigation computer
to show you how to get where you're going. She turned the key, and the engine
responded with a welcoming purr.
As she suspected, the last destination was still on the navigation screen.
Adrian hadn't forgotten to erase the screen. He wasn't stupid, and neither
was Erin. They were together now, and they wanted Gwen to find them.
Once again, Gwen was being manipulated in someone's deadly little game. It
made her mad as hell, but she figured she might as well get used to it.
Because one thing was becoming abundantly clear: the Elder Folk—Gwen was
starting to think of them as Effers, for more reasons than one—toyed with humans
like malevolent cats playing with cornered mice, and they weren't all that
different when it came to dealing with one another.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Gwen followed the map on the navigation screen to an old brick warehouse in
Pawtucket. She parked Trudy's car and walked around the building, checking for
the best way in.
A narrow lot behind the building was empty but for a few discarded crates and
a large elm tree. Remembering Damian's observation about the direction of the
arrow that'd hit him, Gwen jumped up and caught the lowest branch. She swung
herself onto the limb and began to climb.
The roof of the warehouse was oddly shaped—a long series of sawed-toothed
triangles, each fronted by a pane of glass to let in light. She walked along the
roof's edge until she found the broken pane.
She dropped to her stomach and peered in. Sure enough, the system of pipes
and venting ducts provided enough handholds to take her across the ceiling to
the narrow walkway that lined one side of the open room. From there, she could
take stairs down to the main floor.
Gwen reached for the first pipe and gave it a tug to test its strength. It
held, so she swung herself into the opening and began to move hand over hand
toward the walk.
The room was eerily silent. The only sound was the faint creak of ancient
pipes, and the skittering of tiny clawed feet as rats went about their business
in unseen corners.
She dropped lightly onto the walkway. Her boots hit the scarred wooden planks
with a ringing thud—a small sound, under most circumstances.
"Down here," called a familiar voice.
Gwen made her way cautiously down to the main floor. Behind a stack of crates
she found Adrian Archer.
He sat on the floor, his face as pale as the visage of the dead woman in his
arms. One trembling hand stroked her brown hair, over and over, as if to imprint
this last tactile memory of her on his heart.
For a long moment Gwen studied the grim tableau. This was not at all what
she'd expected to find. Erin wore a pale blue sweater, a color similar to that
she'd worn in the photo Kyle had carried. It was now soaked with blood. There
was a single hole in the sweater, directly over Erin's heart—a precise, killing
stroke.
The same death wound Gwen had found on Kyle Radcliff. The same spot as the
shot that had nearly killed Damian.
"Where is Patrick Radcliff?" she asked.
Adrian shook his head. "I have no idea. Erin must have made some arrangements
for him, but she never told me what they were."
"I'm curious—did she know Patrick wasn't her son?"
He glanced up sharply. "What are you saying?"
"Erin raised a human baby. Her son was taken from her at birth. He's a
changeling, just like his mother, and he's out there somewhere."
Grief flooded Adrian's face, removing any lingering doubts Gwen had about
Patrick's paternity.
She crouched down on the floor and nodded toward the dead woman. "Why?"
Adrian tangled a strand of silky brown hair around his fingers. "Our
Qualities vary greatly, both in type and power. Hers was a very special gift."
"The glamour."
"That's right. When that began to manifest during her adolescence, she was
brought in. Willingly she came, glad to be among people like herself. She was
relocated quite some distance away. After a time, she disappeared. I was sent to
find her. We didn't expect her to return to the same area she'd known during her
early life. By the time I found her, she had already made contact with others."
"Wallace Earl Edmonson."
"That's correct. He was intrigued by her gift and offered her a place in his
business. By the time I arrived, she had already started to use her own
products."
"So? I thought that didn't affect Elder Folk."
"It doesn't. It shouldn't," he corrected grimly. "But Erin became addicted to
the herbs she sold, and she knew what that meant."
"Tell me."
"The Elders are very concerned about keeping the bloodlines pure. If someone
starts displaying human traits or weaknesses, he disappears. Erin knew this. For
some time, she has been getting ready to disappear on her own terms."
"Her husband has a record of violence. She hoped her disappearance would be
blamed on him. And she had him killed to make that trail harder to follow."
Adrian responded with a grim smile. "She was right. No one will find Kyle
Radcliff's true murderer."
"I think I just did."
"It doesn't matter," he murmured.
"Oh, I think it does. A friend of mine was set up to take the fall, and
that's not going to happen."
He shrugged as if that, too, didn't matter, and turned his attention back to
Erin's still face. "She was so lovely, and so very clever. I couldn't bear to
see that oaf lay a hand on her. She knew that. She provoked him into striking
her, knowing that I would see, knowing how I would respond."
Gwen watched as he stroked her hair. "She manipulated you into killing for
her. You don't seem too upset about that."
"Why should I be? The man's death means nothing to me."
She had no idea what to say to that. After a moment, she told him, "I'm going
to take you in."
Adrian looked up sharply. "You're talking as if you're still a member of the
police force."
"Ever hear of a citizen's arrest?"
"You can't do that, either. I've explained why. My death will be yours, as
well."
She rose to her feet and pulled her gun. "I'll take my chances."
The blond man carefully laid Erin Westland aside, his movements slow and
tender. He was on his feet almost faster than Gwen's eyes could follow.
She fired, point-blank.
The pain in her ears was immediate and excruciating. The sound of the gunfire
echoed back to her in short, sharp stabs, as if she'd fired in a bank vault.
Then Adrian plowed into her, knocking her flat onto her back. She fired
again, but her arms were flung out wide and the shot rang harmlessly off into
the empty warehouse.
He seized both of her hands and dragged them up over her head. He slammed her
gun hand against the floor with numbing force. Gwen felt the crack of small
bones, and nothing else. She tried to flex her fingers around her weapon but had
no idea whether they were closing on steel or empty air.
She'd be willing to bet on the latter.
"How are you still alive?" she demanded.
Her question must have been spoken aloud, because Adrian sent her an arrogant
smile. His lips moved for several seconds, but lip-reading wasn't among her
skills, and all she could make out was the word "Qualities."
It wasn't possible that Adrian could stop a bullet. Was it? She knew that
some people, some humans, had a stronger energy field than others. Frank Cross
had never been able to wear a wristwatch—the damn things always stopped whenever
he put them on. Was it possible that Adrian could generate an energy field with
a stopping power that was greater than Kevlar? She wouldn't have thought so, but
for two things: the man pinning her to the floor should be dead, and a
high-pitched ringing in her head was starting to take the place of stunned
silence. She wouldn't have been deafened by the sound of a bullet plowing into a
vest.
Gwen gathered her thoughts and focused all of her energy into a single move,
twisting her body under his. He winced as her shoulder slammed into his chest,
but he didn't loosen his grip on her wrists.
He pushed her back down on the floor and shifted his weight, pressing his
knees between hers and forcing her legs apart. In another too-quick-to-follow
move, he lifted himself into a kneeling position and slammed one knee up between
her legs.
White-hot pain seared though Gwen's lower body, as she knew it would. Any
woman who thought only men could be hurt by a shot to the groin had never taken
a direct hit. Back in juvenile hall, she'd taken a couple of shots and given
back a few of her own. She knew only too well what it could do.
So did Adrian. He moved off her, confident that she would be out of the fight
for a while.
Gwen curled up on her left side, breathing in shallow puffs and willing the
pain to subside enough for her to finish this.
As Adrian kicked her gun well out of the way, she inched her hand into the
pocket of her jeans and drew out Trudy's keys. There were three on the ring:
car, house, and probably mailbox. She worked them in her palm so that a key
protruded from between each of the fingers of her left hand. That was a slight
problem. Naturally ambidextrous as a young child, she'd been pushed into
favoring her right hand. It would probably be a good long while before she'd be
able to pick up anything with her gun hand, but her left hand would have to do.
Andrian reached down and seized the wrist of her right hand and dragged her
to her feet.
Gwen came up swinging.
Her roundhouse punch connected with his cheekbone with enough force to snap
his head to one side. The three keys raked across his face, carving deep, bloody
furrows. As the Lexus key slid over his eye, there was a wet, sickening release.
The key punched deep into the eye socket.
Adrian screamed and fell from her, clutching at his bleeding face.
Gwen willed herself to deliver a kick that would end the fight. But the room
spun around her, and she was none too steady on her too-high heels.
She dropped to her knees, which in her opinion was better than falling on her
face, and punched straight out from her left shoulder.
Again the makeshift weapon sank deep into flesh, and again her opponent
shrieked in agony. Gwen rolled to one side to avoid his falling body.
She came up in a crouch, ready to throw herself back into the fight. But
Adrian was finished.
Gwen waited until a soft groan announced his return to consciousness.
"You killed Erin," she said quietly.
He carefully pushed himself up into a sitting position, grimaced with pain at
every move. "I've known for a long time that I would have to."
"But you were putting it off. Why?"
"Because I loved her," he replied simply. "And because she was the mother of
my child."
"You didn't know that Patrick wasn't yours? That your son is out there
somewhere, a changeling growing up with humans?"
"No. I had no idea." His eyes held hers imploringly. "Find him. You have to
find him."
"Oh, I plan on it."
"Swear it to me that you will restore him to our people. Swear it by the most
powerful oath known to you."
"Forget it," Gwen said flatly. "I'm not promising anything until I have a
better idea what I'd be getting the kid into."
"Surely he'd be better off among his own kind than among the human rabble!"
"Yeah? Was Erin? Would her adoptive parents have sent a hit man after her if
someone decided she wasn't quite talented enough?"
"It is more complicated than you're trying to make it."
"I'll bet it is. If you guys get all Master-Race anal about these fucking
Qualities, how do you deal with physical imperfection?"
Adrian sent her a hate-filled glare. "You have not quite unmanned me. I will
heal."
"I'm not talking about you, asshole. Erin's son was born with an extra toe.
Bet the big boys aren't going to be too happy about that shit."
Horror and revulsion filled his eyes. "You're saying the child was
imperfect?"
"That's what I'm saying, all right. Still want me to find him?"
"There's no need," he said dully.
"Why?" she persisted. "Because you don't want to acknowledge a son with a
minor birth defect? Or because you know that kids like him wouldn't be allowed
to grow up?"
His glare sent a wave of ice shivering down her spine and raised goose bumps
on her arms. It was quite simply the purest embodiment of evil Gwen had
ever seen.
"You are the most damnably curious thing I have ever encountered that didn't
meow and chase mice," he hissed. "It gives me some small measure of satisfaction
to know that you will go to your death tormented by a hundred unanswered
questions."
Gwen glanced around pointedly. "It's just you and me, pal, and I don't think
you're up to dealing death at the moment."
"You're still determined to turn me in to the human authorities?"
"Damn straight."
"Then your intention has sealed your death. The rest is simply a matter of
time."
Gwen gestured to Erin Westland's body. "Why are so you worried about being
arrested? You've already bought yourself a certain death by killing her."
"Not if you're a Black Arrow."
Something flashed in his eyes, something dark and shining with malice. Gwen
understood the impulse that prompted that look—understood it far better than she
wanted to. Adrian Archer knew that he was dead, and he was going to inflict as
much pain on her as he could while he was still alive.
Conflicting impulses raged through her. On one hand, she burned to end this,
to silence his taunts. But as he'd pointed out, there was so much she needed to
know.
"I'll bite. What's a Black Arrow?"
"An assassin, sanctioned by the Elder Council to mete out punishments duly
approved by the royal court."
Gwen's head swam with the implications. The Elder Folk had a royal house?
With their own branch of assassins? What the hell were these people?
His smirk celebrated her dismay, and his eyes shone with eagerness to deliver
the next blow.
"Let's hear it," she said.
"Your parents were not killed in the car crash. Oh, they were definitely in
bad shape when I found them, but they were still very much alive. I killed them
both, as I was ordered to do. I killed the baby, too, even though that wasn't
part of my assignment. And why not? It was pleasurable at the time, and all the
more so now, having met you. Would you like to know precisely how the real
Gwenevere Gellman died?"
Gwen leaped at him in a sudden rush that sent them both rolling to the floor.
She straddled his body and gripped his throat with both hands. Pain seared up
her right forearm. Gwen ignored it and tightened her grip, then shook him hard
enough to thump his head painfully against the floor.
"Who gave that order? And why? What did my parents do?"
"So curious," he said with malevolent satisfaction. "So many unanswered
questions."
Something in his smile changed, something in his eyes telegraphed his
intention. Gwen caught the glint of metal in her peripheral vision and dived to
one side.
A thick ripping sound followed her as her ancient leather jacket took one
final scar. Fire seared across her lower back as she kept rolling, leaving a
trail of blood on the warehouse floor.
She scrambled to her feet. Incredibly, Adrian did the same. He came at her in
a rush, knife held high.
Gwen dashed toward him and seized his wrist with both hands before he could
begin the downward slash. She pushed his hand higher and slammed her body into
his. He grunted in pain from the impact.
She twisted hard, putting her back to him while still holding onto his wrist,
and continued the motion to bend sharply at the waist.
Adrian flew over her and landed hard on his back. Air wheezed out of his
lungs in a powerful, painful gust.
Gwen let go of his wrist and danced out of reach. But he kicked out hard,
deftly hooking one of her booted feet.
She went down, and suddenly Adrian was on top of her. He lifted the knife
high.
Again she seized his wrist. They struggled and rolled, fighting for
ascendancy.
Suddenly Adrian went limp, leaving Gwen atop him, their hands entangled
around the hilt of the knife.
"I know who killed Frank Cross," he said. Then he tugged down hard, pulling
the knife into his heart.
Gwen rose and stood over the bodies for a long time, wondering what the hell
to do with them. If she called the police, she was as good as dead. On this
matter, if no other, she believed Adrian told the truth.
She could call Ian Forest. He was very, very good at making bodies disappear.
But how would he react if she told him she had two Effing bodies ready for
disposal? Ian had been pretty gung-ho about getting rid of Edmonson for killing
Elder Folk, and it was possible he would take the same view here. Sure, he
seemed very interested in getting into her pants, and he seemed to take his role
as mentor seriously, but what did that mean? Hell, Adrian had loved Erin
Westland, but that didn't stop him from putting an arrow through her heart.
Who, then?
An echo of Jason Cross's words, so unexpected at the time and so deeply felt,
came to her mind: I can live with that.
She pulled her cell phone out of the pocket of her coat and dialed his
number.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Gwen and Jason stood on a hill overlooking the farm in Smithfield. A waning
moon shone overhead, but whatever power it held over Gwen was lost in the welter
of emotions that stormed through her.
"I still can't believe you agreed to help me do this," she murmured.
Jason turned his calm brown eyes to her. "Like the old saying says, 'A good
friend will help you move; a great friend will help you move a body.'"
A reluctant smile tugged at the corners of her lips. "Who said that? Mark
Twain or Oscar Wilde?"
He smiled, remembering the reference to an early conversation. "It's usually
one or the other."
She reached for his hand, and their fingers entwined. "Seriously, why are you
doing this?"
"Those visions of yours were pretty convincing. You showed me enough to make
me glad the two people we buried under those trees are no longer among the
living."
"Is it really that simple for you?"
A bleak expression flickered across his face. "Nothing is simple, Gwen. I
believe what I saw because I know a few things about visions. You know that my
mother was part Narragansett?"
"Sure. Frank mentioned that."
"I've always been deeply interested in that part of my heritage, and I've
studied some of the old ways. I know holy men and women who seek visions through
meditation aided by drumming or dancing."
"Or mushrooms?"
"Different tradition," he said. "But I've seen people in a vision state, and
I've had a few of my own. Yours are different from any I've experienced. I don't
know anyone else who is powerful enough to share a vision with another."
"So you believe what I told you."
"Yes. And I believe what you did was right."
"Don't you want to know why I have visions like that?"
He sent her a faint smile. "I figure that you and I are truly related. We
probably have a common ancestor a few generations back."
"That's a nice thought," Gwen said.
"You've heard of a sport? I'm not talking about a physical activity like
baseball and football, but a genetic throwback. Perhaps you're a sport of some
powerful shamanic line."
"It's something to think about," she said.
He gave her hand a squeeze, then released it. "Are you ready to do this?"
She nodded and reached into the pocket of her new leather jacket for a book
of matches.
The first spark flared into the night. Gwen stooped and touched it to the
straw they'd carefully scattered among the trees—straw that had been soaked in
highly flammable insecticide.
They watched in silence as fire snaked out through the orchard, branching out
in every direction like rows of flaming dominoes. Gwen's throat clenched as the
flames crept up into the apple trees. The hiss and groan the moist branches made
as they burned sounded like the death cries of living beings.
In moments, the entire orchard was engulfed. And with it, the sole crop of
the herb—the cruel toy that had caused so much misery.
"We need to go now," Jason said.
Gwen followed him down the hill and into a nearby wooded area. They'd hidden
two bicycles there near a narrow dirt trail. No one would see a vehicle leave
the area, and they would be on the other side of the woods before anyone
responded to the fire. From there, it was a short walk to the small motel where
they'd rented a room earlier that evening.
It wasn't a bad plan, but Gwen felt no great satisfaction over the work
they'd done. She couldn't wait to collapse on the motel bed, and to seize a few
hours of respite from the questions that had come to dominate her every waking
hour.
Ian Forest slipped from his hidden place among the trees, escaping a single
heartbeat before the apple tree caught fire.
He moved away from the rapidly spreading flames, keeping just beyond the
light of the fire. And at the edge of the orchard, he watched as the traitorous
Jason Cross linked hands with the elf girl who could either save or destroy her
exiled people.
Ian was certain that he would hear nothing of this night's events from the
human agent. Obviously Jason Cross was not so committed to Edmonson and his
successors as Salvadore Anselm seemed to think.
Or was he?
It was no secret that Ian had resented his service to Edmonson and disagreed
with the earl's mode of doing business. But the fact that he had been returned
to Edmonson's service seemed to indicate that he had been forgiven his old
indiscretion:
Sylvia Black.
A lovely woman with an almost elflike capacity for passion, she was one of
those rare humans who possessed a quality that drew Elder Folk to her. The old
stories of elves and humans falling in love had some basis in truth. Ian had
come very close to losing his heart. He had come closer still to losing his
Qualities.
Oh yes, he had reason to know the dangers of ties that bound the Elder Folk
too tightly to their human companions. He was determined to keep Gwen from
following the same dangerous path. If Jason Cross wished to destroy Gwen, this
was one way to do so.
Her sexual adventures meant nothing. There were many ways to toy with humans.
But Gwen was capable of deep loyalties, and her ties to the humans were strong.
She not only had friends—she had family.
The young magus had accepted Gwen's true identity almost without question.
That alone would have raised concern, but Damian O'Riley had entrusted his
family problems to Gwen, and had come to treat her almost like a sister. And
Sylvia Black had all but adopted her.
With such chains holding her back, how would her starlight Quality emerge?
And if they did not, what would become of her?
Of all of them?
Jason waited until Gwen's soft, steady breathing assured him that she was
deeply asleep. He picked up his backpack and slipped from the room, taking the
route through the bathroom window they'd used twice before that night.
He made his way into the woods, moving away from the path they'd taken
earlier and in the opposite direction of the orchard he had helped to destroy.
And with every step, his heart grew heavier.
He came to a small clearing, a circle of bare earth deeply sheltered by
vine-covered trees. A scattering of stones in the center obscured the fire he
had built the last time he came to this place.
Jason dropped his backpack to the ground and arranged the stones in a circle.
He placed some dry wood inside and lit the fire. When it was burning steadily,
he settled down beside it and started unpacking.
Under the clothes he'd packed for tomorrow was a small wooden drum. He
tightened the hide and began to tap a soft, rhythmic pattern.
His hands repeated the pattern over and over, until it became a soft sea of
rhythm that carried him away on its rise and fall. He was barely aware when the
pattern began to change, adding new rhythms that carried him deeper into hidden
places within his own heart.
Much later, Jason emerged slowly from his trance, like a swimmer coming up
from great depths. He was not surprised to see that the small fire had long ago
burned itself out, or to note that his limbs were cold and stiff from long
inactivity.
It was no easy thing, this strengthening of his shields against the elven
magics.
He had told Gwen nothing but the truth—if not quite all of the truth. He had
been raised by a shaman, a wisewoman who came from a long line who guarded the
knowledge that elves existed. For all his life, he had known it was his task to
walk among them. To learn their ways, and undo their plans.
And, ultimately, to find a way to destroy them all.
Shortly before dawn, Ian Forest stepped out of the shadows of a stand of
birch trees near an old blue farmhouse. He took a moment to regard his
surroundings. Small, neat fields were tucked among rows of fruit trees, the rich
soil heaped into long mounds over newly planted seeds. A greenhouse held rows of
seedlings that would soon be ready to plant outside. The pretty farm was framed
by a majestic sweep of mountains, the tallest of which was still crowned with
snow.
Spring had come late to Vermont this year.
The barn held quite a fine assortment of equipment. The delivery truck was
nearly new, as was the small car parked beside it. And best of all, there was a
long ladder that would be perfect for his purposes.
Ian circled around behind the farmhouse and easily dispatched the lock on the
back door. He slipped inside, making his way through the bottom floor and up a
narrow flight of stairs. The house was furnished with very nice antiques, and
bowls of fresh flowers scented every room he passed.
The elves had paid this particular agent very well.
He found the woman's bedroom and walked soundlessly in. He seized the collar
of her nightgown with both hands and dragged her up into a sitting position.
She awoke with a sound that was part gasp, part shriek. Her eyes focused on
Ian's face, and surprise chilled into terror.
He released her and stepped away, sending her a faint smile. "If I had wanted
you dead, why would I have bothered to awaken you?"
"For sport," she hissed at him.
"Well, yes, there is that," he said agreeably. "But I assure you, this visit
is entirely about business."
The woman shook her head emphatically. "I'm out of that business," she told
him. "You told me the Morgan baby would be my last job."
"So I did." Ian hooked his thumbs in his pockets and leaned back against the
dresser. "Of course, I have been known to lie when the occasion demands."
"What do you want?"
"I understand you received an interesting phone call recently."
Fear edged into her eyes. "I didn't tell her anything."
"In truth, I believe you told her entirely too much. And I don't believe I
can trust you with the information about our changelings' whereabouts."
"I'd never tell that! Can you imagine the trouble I'd be in if I admitted to
switching babies?"
"Can you imagine the trouble you are already in?"
He waited until that idea took hold, until the knowledge of her coming death
blazed in her eyes.
The force of his blow snapped her head sharply to one side. Bone gave way
with a brittle crack, and the changeling midwife slumped lifeless to the bed.
Ian opened the dresser drawers and removed the sort of clothing one might
expect a woman to wear as she went about the business of running a farm and
household. Dressing her was an unpleasant necessity, but the local authorities
would hardly believe that she fell off a ladder in her nightgown.
When the agent's body was ready, Ian slung her over his shoulder and carried
her out behind the house. He dropped her to the ground and went back to the
garage for the ladder. This he placed against the house, near the tallest
window. He tossed a pail of soapy water and a kitchen rag to the ground to
complete the deception.
The task completed, Ian returned to the circle of birch trees and stepped
into the shadows. If he hurried, he could check on his youngest changeling
before the sun crested the Vermont foothills.
EPILOGUE
Ian Forest stood with Salvadore Anselm on the edge of the sea cliff, admiring
the view—and pondering the temptation. The man he'd joined forces with to oust
Edmonson had not proved to be much of an improvement.
But at least they were in agreement on two things. They believed they were
better off without the potent herb, and they were furious that the council had
seen fit to send a Black Arrow assassin into their territory.
"Dominance and control," Anselm summarized. "That is why we traffic in such
human vices as sex and drugs. Edmonson lost sight of the central purpose, and
Erin Westland was a pathetic weakling. Distribution, much less use, is beneath
us. We don't become Tiger Leones, we use them."
"For that matter, what purpose is there in controlling the weak? Better to
concentrate on those in positions of power, tools with a purpose."
Anselm smirked. "No doubt this is your segue to the Captain Walsh report?"
"In a manner of speaking. Would it interest you to know that Jason Cross did
not eliminate a single link between Edmonson and Walsh?"
"He killed the doctor, did he not?"
Ian shook his head. "Gwen's visions are growing in power. She visited Kate
Myers's home a second time and learned the truth of what happened there. Adrian
Archer tormented the woman, like a wicked child pulling wings off flies, but he
did not kill her. Walsh did."
"Ah. And now that we know this, and assuming we can convince him of this
knowledge, there is little chance that Walsh will betray our interests."
"That is my reasoning, yes."
"Well done." Anselm toed a stone loose and watched it fall into the surf
below. "A shame your methods were not quite so successful where our changeling
is concerned. We have less hold over her than the humans do. Her 'family' is
thriving."
"How so? Her mentor is dead, her young protege is in the hospital, her most
recent partner will be tried for Kate Myers's murder. Even Erin Westland's
bungling attempts to shift the blame for her husband's murder have borne fruit.
Gwen alienated Marcy Bartlett, her closest friend, when she tampered with a
crime scene to protect Marcy's lover. Thanks to her emerging Qualities, she has
alienated two casual lovers in as many weeks. Other than an aging, foul-mouthed
nun, where can Gwen turn?"
"To Jason Cross," Anselm said gloomily. He shot a resentful look in Ian's
direction. "I will admit that your judgment concerning the man was sound. We may
have a problem in Jason."
The smile that crossed Ian's face was that of an angel contemplating
paradise. "A problem," he said softly, "that can easily be resolved."