Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
“An enhancer?” He contemplated the word. “You mean a drug?”
She nodded. “We call it Glue. Without it, I can only maintain for
minutes. But with Glue, I can stay in face longer and with virtually no pain.”
Thoughts swirled in Jon’s head. Up to now, all he ever wanted to do
was rid himself of his talents and the urges to use them. Alcohol had blunted
both the desire and ability, but maybe things had changed.
He wasn’t a freak or an anomaly.
Or alone.
A new purpose flared inside him. Find out more. Learn from the
others. Starting with this . . . enhancer.
“Maybe I ought to try some Glue and see if it’ll—”
“No!” She spoke so loudly the waitress at the counter looked up from
her tabloid and spared them a disinterested glance.
“No,” Laila repeated more softly. “You’re better off without it. It’s a
narcotic. You get hooked and have to have it. You can’t change without it.”
Her hands started shaking, and she reached into her purse, pulling out a
small, brown plastic pill bottle and fumbling with the cap. “Sinema may look
like a classy joint, but we’re still glorified prostitutes. The only way we can
get the drug is to earn it. We do what they want, or we don’t get it.” Her
hands shook as she battled the bottle. “And we can’t live without it.”
“Let me.” Jon took the vial from her and opened it. He understood all
too well about chemical dependency. But in his case the struggle with the
bottle was to avoid the temptation to shift. At least that’s what he told
himself.
She snatched the open container from him, shook out a tablet, popped
it in her mouth, and chased it with Jon’s cold coffee. She shivered, squeezed
her eyes closed for almost a minute before relaxing. “That’s better.”
He picked up the bottle, examining the contents. “A narcotic that helps
you to shift without pain. Remarkable.”
She leaned her head back, eyes still closed. “Before the pill, it took
everything I had to shift and hold it for more than a minute. Now I can keep
a shape well over an hour. Sometimes almost two.” She opened her eyes, her
face devoid of emotion. “How about you? How long can you hold it?”
“Longest was four hours. But luckily it was getting dark so no one
noticed that my control was weakening there toward the end.”
She gasped. “Four hours? Think what you could do with Glue.” Her
look of astonishment changed in an instant, her cheeks flooding with color.
“What am I saying? I wouldn’t wish Glue addiction on my worst enemy.”
She leveled him with a stare. “You’re not my enemy, are you?”
He met her gaze head-on. “No. All I want to do is find David Worth.”
“Him? More like Worthless,” she sneered. “He’s the club’s manager
and the sorriest piece of shit. He treats us like cattle, expects favors in return
for our meds, shortchanges our pay. He knows we can’t complain to
anybody. We can’t live without Glue. Literally.” She gave Jon a dubious
once-over. “What do
you
want with him?”
“His wife needs his signature on some papers.”
“Wife? God, what idiot would marry an asshole like him?”
Jon picked up the bottle from the table and shook the remaining tablet
into his palm. Serenity Worth’s troubles could wait. He squinted at the
off-white pill that looked definitely homemade. “What’s in this stuff? You
ever gotten it analyzed?”
She released a sigh. “I never had a spare dose until now. Worthless
miscounted the last time he doled them out.” Her expression darkened.
“I’m saving it for an emergency. Sometimes he threatens to withhold our
meds. You’ll agree to almost anything when you’re hurting for a fix.”
Jon returned the odd-shaped tablet to the bottle, capped it, and placed
it in the middle of the table. “If you let me have it, I’ll take it to a friend
who’s a chemist. There’s a good chance he can figure out what’s in it and
how to manufacture it. Then you’d never have to rely on getting it from the
club ever again.”
Hope lit her stolen features. “Then we could all be free.”
“In a manner of speaking. You wouldn’t be free of your addiction, but
you’d at least be free from the sort of
quid pro quo
it takes to get the stuff.”
“Why are you doing this? You don’t know . . .” Her expression
changed in a flash, and she released a giggle that caught him by surprise. “I
bet that’s what you tell all the girls,” she said, her voice a bit too loud.
It only took him a second or two to catch on. “Someone from the
club?” he said under his breath.
“Uh-huh,” she said, not moving her lips.
“How many?”
“Two.” She shot him a brilliant smile and leaned forward as if to
whisper something provocative. “Change back into David Worth.”
Panic flared in his gut. “Don’t I look like him right now?”
“You’re fading.”
He closed his eyes and willed his features to cooperate, but there was
only empty pain. He’d reached the limits of time and his abilities. “Been too
long. I can’t.”
Although Laila continued to smile, her eyes sent an entirely different
message. “They’ll kill you for talking to me,” she whispered, reaching across
the table to grasp his hand. “Take this.” She deposited the last pill in his
palm.
“But—”
“It’s your only chance. One dose isn’t enough to hook you.” She looked
beyond his shoulder and tried to retain her smile. “Hurry. Not much time.”
He hesitated. Unknown drug. Unknown woman. It could all be a scam.
At his hesitation, she added an urgent, “Please.”
He had no time to figure out all the angles. All he had was his intuition,
and every instinct he had screamed that she was telling the truth.
Jon tossed the pill in his mouth, closed his eyes, and swallowed.
Laila’s voice cracked. “They’re coming.”
The pill dissolved in his mouth immediately, but how long would it take
to enter his system? Seconds? Minutes? No matter, whether it was
psychosomatic or otherwise, he felt stronger. More in control. He opened
his eyes and saw Laila was studying his face.
“It’s working.”
“It can’t be.”
She shushed him, looked up, and smiled at someone who was
approaching them with inordinately heavy footsteps. “Harley, Krantz. Out
for a late night dinner?”
A deep voice rumbled from behind Jon. “You shouldn’t skip out of the
club without telling someone where you’re going.”
Jon turned around and faced two of the biggest bouncers he’d ever
seen, and judging by their expressions, they were shocked to see David
Worth sitting there. Jon could only pray that Worth wasn’t the person who’d
sent them.
One of the earliest rules of impersonation was realizing that looking
like the mark was only half the job. He had to act and sound like the mark.
However, having never met the man, the best Jon could do was bluff. He
picked up the coffee cup then he glared at them over the cup’s rim. “You’re
disturbing us.” When he lowered the coffee and scowled, the two men
shrank visibly.
The taller and uglier of the two spoke first. “Sorry, boss. We didn’t . . .”
His voice trailed off, and the other man completed his sentence. “. . .
know she was wit’ you.”
Jon continued to stare. People always filled the silence if you let them.
The taller one shifted uncomfortably. “We was told to bring her back,
pronto because . . .”
Again, his partner finished the sentence for him. “. . . there’s a special
client waiting for her, and he’s I’ impatient.”
Jon stared at the duo, trying to ignore Laila who was fumbling under the
table, probably hiding the empty pill bottle.
“Then I better be going, Mr. Worth.” She stood. “I mean if that’s okay
with you.”
Jon dismissed her with a wave of his hand.
She shot him a look that suggested their conversation would continue
later. If there was a later.
The shorter of the two men gave Jon a hard stare. “You comin’, Mr.
Worth?”
The last thing Jon wanted to do was go back to the club and run into
someone who might see the differences between his David Worth and the
real one. Or worse, run into the real thing.
He looked down at his uneaten dessert. “Gonna finish my dessert.” He
shoved his fork into the pie, managing to break off a chunk.
The two goons nodded, wrapped their sausage fingers around Laila’s
arm, and pulled her toward the exit. As she stumbled along with them, she
turned back toward Jon, her expression a mixture of fear, loathing, and
something else.
Once they were out the door, Jon counted to ten, grabbed his check,
and walked up to the cashier. Paying for his four dollar pie with a twenty, he
pushed the miscounted change back across the counter toward the waitress.
“This is yours if you’ll show me the back door.”
She scooped up the money, stuffed it into her cleavage and nodded
toward the kitchen behind her. “Straight back. Watch out for the garbage.”
Jon pushed through the swinging doors and sidestepped a sleeping
cook perched on a stack of crates, a lit cigarette dangling from his lips. The
rear exit emptied onto an alley which smelled ten times worse than the one
behind the club. The rats and other vermin of the night scurried away as Jon
invaded their territory. He got only a few steps away down the alley when a
deep voice echoed around him.
“Another rat, eh?”
The blow came out of nowhere, landing in his stomach. As he doubled
over in pain, a second blow crashed down on his head. He landed face first
in the alley muck and tried not to breathe in the filth. As he flipped over,
someone picked him up by the lapels, but sludge ran down into his eyes,
obscuring his vision.
“She was supposed to be mine. You promised, but you lied.”
Another blow slammed into his midsection. But this time, he rolled
with the punch and managed to land a few blows, himself. However, they
bounced off the rock-hard torso of his attacker.
The man slammed him against a large dumpster, but Jon managed to
hang onto consciousness. If he passed out, he knew he’d be at the mercy of
someone who probably couldn’t even spell the word. As blackness loomed,
the punches stopped. He heard two men yelling, the sound of running
footsteps and more shouts. Hands helped him up, but his knees buckled.
Someone helped drag him out of the alley and put him into a car.
He heard words, but they didn’t register. He was too wrapped up in the
fire and pain.
“Take him home to his wife. She’ll know what to do.”
GROGGY, SERENITY strained to identify the noise that perforated the
thin veil of sleep. Was it her bickering duplex neighbors, having yet another
knockdown, drag-out fight? Or had some kid wrapped his lowrider around
the car-eating tree at the intersection?
She closed her eyes and listened, hearing a car door slam and the sound
of footsteps on the sidewalk just beyond her window. A moment later, she
heard the telltale creak of her front step, taking a small measure of relief in
the fact that she’d dead-bolted and chained the door.
With phone in hand, she got up and peeked out the front window
overlooking the steps. The porch light revealed a burly man closest to the
window, supporting a second man.
“What do you want?” she called through the window.
“You’re . . .” There was a pause as if he was consulting something or
somebody. “. . . Mrs. Worth, ain’tcha?”
“So?”
“I was told to deliver this guy to you.”
“Who are you?”
“Taxi driver. That’s my cab parked at the curb.”
Sure enough, a taxi sat in front of her apartment. Unlocking the
deadbolt, she allowed the door to open to the full length of the security
chain. The cabbie held up another man—David—bloodied, dirtied, and
barely conscious.
“I think he got rolled in some back alley. Some guys flagged me down
off Melrose, paid his fare, and told me to deliver him here.”
Serenity clenched her jaw. If this was Jonathan Craft’s idea of delivering
on a promise—by beating beat David nearly senseless and sticking him in a
cab—then she was going to have a very serious discussion with the man.
In broad daylight. In a crowded, public place.
“You gonna let us in?”
Although logic said yes, something inside her was screaming, “
No!
I
kicked him out for a reason.
”
But if she refused now, how long would it take to
find him again?
The cabbie released an exasperating sigh. “Listen lady, either you let us
inside or I’m leaving him here on the porch. Make up your mind.”
Make up your mind!
She didn’t worry that she’d fall back in love with him. That ship had
sailed long ago. But just because she didn’t love him didn’t mean she wished
him harm. Or got a kick out of his predicament. Even after he’d raised his
fist to her, she hadn’t wanted retribution.