Authors: Kelley Armstrong
“One month,” he said. “You knew what I meant.”
He stood and the bed tumbled into a yawning pit of black. I started to scream, but the sound turned to a happy shriek.
“Cortez! You’re getting champagne—get that bottle away from the bed!”
The scene cleared. Another hotel room. Three months ago. We were crossing the country at a snail’s pace, with nowhere to go, nothing to do but enjoy the trip. The day before, Maria had wired Lucas the insurance money from his stolen motorcycle, and tonight he’d insisted on using part of it to get us a room with a Jacuzzi tub, a fireplace, and an adjoining suite for Savannah.
We were in bed, where we’d been since arriving late that afternoon. Room-service plates littered the floor and, from somewhere in the mess, Lucas had pulled out a bottle of champagne, which was now frothing onto the sheets … and me. As I laughed, he shook the last bits of foam onto me, then grabbed glasses, filled them, and handed me one.
“To one month,” he said.
“A month?” I sat up. “Oh, right. One month since we beat the Nast Cabal and saved Savannah, an act which we may live to regret. Technically, though, you’re a few days early.”
Lucas hesitated, face clouding for a split second before he nodded. “I suppose I am.”
The memory fast-forwarded a few hours. I was nestled in bed, champagne still singing in my head. Lucas’s warmth pressed against my back. He stirred, mumbled something, and slid his hand between my legs. I shifted and rubbed against his fingers. A drowsy laugh, then his finger slipped inside me, a slow, soft probe. I moaned, my flesh tender from the long night but the slight ache only accentuating another deeper ache. He
pulled his finger out and tickled a fingertip across the top of my clitoris. I moaned again and shifted my legs apart. He started a slow, teasing exploration that made me clutch the pillow.
“Lucas,” I whispered.
Another laugh, but this one clear, no signs of sleepiness. I forced myself to shift from sleep to waking, and still felt a warm hand stroking me from behind.
“Lucas?”
A low laugh. “I should hope so.”
I started to flip over, felt his hand disengage, and reached down to grab it.
“Don’t stop,” I said.
“I won’t.” He leaned over my shoulder, and slid his finger back inside me. “Better?”
“God, yes.” I arched my back against him. “How—how’d you get here?”
“Magic.”
“Mmmm.”
“A good surprise?”
“The best.”
He laughed softly. “Go back to sleep, then. I have everything under control.”
“Mmmm.”
As for falling back to sleep, naturally I did no such thing. Afterward, I propped myself up on Lucas’s chest and grinned.
“These surprise visits are getting better all the time.”
He returned a crooked smile. “I take it my unexpected arrival isn’t completely objectionable, even if I did disturb your sleep?”
“Disturb away. It is a surprise, though. What happened with your case?”
“It ended this afternoon. Once the prosecution confirmed that its new witness resided in a cemetery, they decided to move straight to closing arguments.”
“A definite advantage to working in a human court. They never subpoena dead witnesses.”
“This is true. So, I’m here to help, if you want me.”
“Hell, yes,” I said, grinning. “In every possible way. So you’re staying?”
“If that’s all right with—”
“It’s great. I can’t even remember the last time we spent more than a weekend together.”
“It
has
been a while,” Lucas said softly, then cleared his throat. “My schedule lately has been busier than I anticipated, and I realize this isn’t an ideal arrangement for a relationship—”
“It’s fine,” I said.
“It’s not what you expected.”
“I didn’t expect anything.” I flipped off him and sat up. “No expectations, remember? Take it one day at a time. That’s what we agreed.”
“Yes, I know that’s what you said, but—”
“It’s what I meant. No expectations, no pressure. You stay for as long as you like.”
Lucas pulled himself up. “That’s not what—” He paused. “We need to talk, Paige.”
“Sure.”
I felt Lucas watching me in the darkness, but he said nothing.
“What do you want to talk about?” I asked after a few moments.
“About—” He held my gaze for a moment, then looked away. “About the case. What happened tonight?”
“Oh, God.” I thumped onto the pillow. “You have some strange friends, Cortez.”
A quarter-smile. “I wouldn’t classify Jaime as a friend but, yes, that’s one way of putting it. So tell me what happened.”
I did.
A
t seven, still talking, we moved the conversation from the bed to the restaurant downstairs. Dining that early meant we got the best seats, a table in the corner of the atrium.
By nine, the tiny restaurant was full, with a line at the door. We were on our third cup of coffee, breakfast long since done, which earned us plenty of glares from those waiting at the hostess station, but not so much as an impatient glance from our server, probably owing to the size of the tip Lucas had tacked onto the bill.
“Nasha?” Lucas said when I told him the name Dana’s attacker had invoked. “It doesn’t sound familiar.”
“I passed it on through Adam to Robert, to get his opinion. I’d called him yesterday to ask—uh, about some council stuff.”
“And a list of alternate necromancers, I presume?”
“I—uh—” I inhaled. “I’m sorry. I know you said to trust you, and I really tried …”
A smile tickled his lips. “But gave up somewhere between Sid Vicious and the private strip show. Either of which, understandably, would strain the bounds of the deepest trust.”
“Actually, it was
after
the striptease.”
His smile broadened. “Ah, well, in that case, you outlasted any reasonable expectation of faith. I’m flattered. Thank you.”
“Still, I should have listened to you. You were right. Jaime did just fine.”
“She is very good, though sometimes I think she’d prefer otherwise. Have you ever heard of Molly O’Casey?”
“Of course. Top-notch necro. Died a few years back, didn’t she?”
Lucas nodded. “She was Jaime’s paternal grandmother. Vegas is Jaime’s stage name.”
“I thought it might be. She doesn’t look Hispanic.”
“She isn’t. Her mother chose the name when she started Jaime in show business, as a child. As Jaime tells it, her mother was a flaming
racist, and had no idea Vegas was Spanish. To her, ‘Vegas’ meant ‘Las Vegas,’ a good omen for a child with a stage career. Years later, when she found out the name’s origin, she almost had a heart attack. Demanded Jaime change it. But, by then, Jaime was eighteen, and could do as she liked. The more her mother hated the name, the more determined she was to keep it.”
“There’s a story there,” I said softly.
“Yes, I imagine there is.”
We sipped our coffee.
“I thought you were in Chicago,” said a voice above my head.
I turned to see Jaime pulling an empty chair from a table behind us. The trio at the table looked up in surprise, but she ignored them and clattered the chair down beside me, then dropped into it. She was wearing a silk wrapper and, I suspected, little else.
“Isn’t this romantic,” she said, snarling a yawn. “The happy couple, all brushed, scrubbed, and chipper.” She dropped her head onto the table. “Someone get me a coffee. Stat.”
Lucas swept a lock of her hair off his muffin plate, then gestured to the server, who stopped mid-order and hurried over with the pot. Jaime stayed facedown on the table.
“Is your, uh, guest joining us?” I asked Jaime.
She rolled onto her cheek to look up at me. “Guest?”
“The guy? From last night?”
“Guy?”
“The one you took back to your room.”
She lifted her head. “I took a—?” She groaned. “Oh, shit. Hold on. I’ll be right back.”
She stood, took three steps, then turned.
“Uh, Paige? Did I get a name?”
“Mark—no, Mike. Oh, wait. That was the blond. Craig … or Greg. The music was pretty loud.”
She pressed her fingers to her temples. “It still is. Greg, then. I’ll mumble.”
She staggered across the atrium.
I turned to Lucas. “Interesting lady.”
“That’s one way of putting it.”
Jaime got rid of her “guest,” and joined us for the rest of her coffee, then went back to her room for more sleep. She had a show in Orlando
that night, so, in case we didn’t see her again, we thanked her for her help.
Lucas unpacked while I phoned Robert about the “Nasha” connection. After four rings, the machine picked up.
“That’s probably one clue that’s not going to help us much anyway,” I said once I’d left a message. “I’d really hoped to get more from Dana.”
“She’s probably blocked what little she did see. We may want to shift our focus to ascertaining how the killer selected his victims.”
“Damn, of course. He obviously targeted runaways with Cabal parents, but how would he find out something like that? Maybe the parents had a connection, because of their shared circumstances. Like a support group. Do the Cabals offer stuff like that?”
“They do, but separately. They strongly discourage interaction with the employees of other Cabals.”
“What about therapists or social workers? Would they share them?”
Lucas shook his head. “What I believe we’re looking for is someone who has obtained access to employee files at the Cortez, Nast, and St. Cloud Cabals.”
I looked across the room at my laptop. “They’re all computerized, aren’t they? So someone hacked into the system … and I cannot
believe
I didn’t think of that.”
“You wouldn’t because you aren’t familiar with Cabal record-keeping procedures, and the amount of personal detail they keep. You won’t find many corporations who keep records of their staff’s personal situations. Nothing in a Cabal employee’s life is sacred. If someone’s mother-in-law has a gambling problem, the Cabal knows about it.”
“For leverage.”
“Not just leverage, but security. If that mother-in-law gets in trouble with a loan shark, her half-demon son-in-law may use his powers to permanently solve the problem. Likewise, a runaway Cabal child could be a potential security threat, so they keep track of them, and probably know more about their whereabouts than their parents do. As for hacking into the system, while it’s possible, Cabal security
is
top of the line.”
“Everyone thinks their security is top of the line,” I said. “Until someone like me slips in the back door.”
“True, but the systems are protected by both technical and supernatural means. To hack them would require a supernatural with an inside knowledge of Cabal security systems.”
“Someone who worked in the computer or security departments. Probably someone who was fired in the past year or so. The old ‘disgruntled employee’ theory.”
Lucas nodded. “Let me phone my father. See whether we can find anyone who’d fit that theory.”
Lucas had no trouble getting the Cortez Cabal employee list. Benicio knew that while Lucas might love to keep a copy of that list for his own investigations against the Cabals, he would do the honorable thing and destroy it as soon as it had served its stated purpose. Getting the other Cabal HR departments to cooperate wasn’t nearly so easy. Benicio didn’t tell them Lucas would be accessing the list, but they didn’t want
any
Cortez getting his hands on their staff records. It took two hours just to get a list of dismissed employees’ names and positions.
Those lists were surprisingly short. I thought the Cabals were holding out on us, but Lucas assured me they looked accurate. When you hire only supernaturals, and you find ones who work out, you bend over backward to keep them. If they don’t work out, it’s better to make them disappear rather than hand them a pink slip … and not just to avoid paying severance. A pissed-off supernatural employee is a lot more dangerous than your average disgruntled postal worker.
Once we narrowed the list down to employees in the computer and security departments, we had two names from the Cortez list, three from the Nasts, and one from the St. Clouds. Put those together and we had five possibilities. And no, there was nothing wrong with my math skills. Two plus three plus one should equal six. So why did we have a list of five names? Because one appeared on two rosters. Everett Weber, computer programmer.
According to the Cortez files, Everett Weber was a druid who’d worked as a programmer in their Human Resources department from June 2000 to December 2000, on a six-month contract. That didn’t qualify as a dismissal, but people often take contract jobs expecting them to turn into permanent positions. We needed to find out how amicable Weber’s leaving had been. And we needed details of his employment with the Nasts. Lucas phoned Benicio again. Seventy minutes later, Benicio called back.
“Well?” I said as Lucas hung up.
“Preliminary reports from the Human Resources department indicate that Weber’s contract ended without rancor, but my father will investigate further. It’s not uncommon for managers to be less than forthcoming when confronted with a potentially unreported employee problem. As for the Nasts, Weber worked in their IT department from January of this year until August, in a contract position.”
“Another six-month contract?”
“No, a one-year contract that ended after seven months, but the Nasts refuse to elaborate.”
I slammed my laptop shut. “Damn it! Do they want this guy caught or not?”
“I suspect the problem is coming from both sides. My father would be reluctant to let the Nasts know we’re raising questions about someone in particular. Otherwise Weber may disappear into Nast custody before we can question him, a definite possibility considering he’s currently residing in California.”
“And the Nast Cabal is based in Los Angeles, meaning they’d beat us to him.”
“Precisely. My father’s suggestion, and one I would second, is that we proceed to California ourselves and investigate Everett further, before we press the Nasts for details.”