life?”
“As usual, nonexistent.”
“If I believed that…”
“Well, there are one or two,” she said and then told him
what she’d been up to. He concentrated on listening and filling
himself with nourishing food. After lunch they shopped some
more, and he made a solemn promise to find a charity and give
his yellow T-shirt right back. He kissed her cheek at the foot of
the Bonaventure Hotel and thanked her for the ride. They made
plans to meet again before he left Los Angeles, and as usual, she
begged him to consider moving.
“Not a chance. I like Washington. The sun here makes me
feel like beef jerky. I hate the traffic. The people are nice to look at, but not always nice—”
She cut him off. “Just call. We can shop again or go for
dinner. I’ll be seeing you.”
“Bye, Deana Beana.” Adin grinned at her. He went through
the revolving door, scanning the lobby idly. There was no sign,
nor did he expect one, of Donte. But that didn’t stop him from
feeling disappointed. He checked the desk for messages
hopefully, something he’d never done before, and on finding
there were none, he took his Barneys shopping bag and walked
to the bank of elevators. Outside his room, he nodded to a
couple in the hallway and used his card to enter.
Immediately he saw that something was terribly wrong. His
Pullman was on the floor, the clothes strewn like rags on the
bed, which had been made up by the staff. He could smell his
NOTTURNO
57
bottle of Bushmills, which lay on its side, dripping onto the
floor. He turned a full circle in a kind of panic and saw that the
hotel safe was open and his manuscript was gone.
Donte… Motherfuck…
Adin ran from the room and past the elevator, running
down all seventeen flights of stairs without giving it a thought.
He raced to the registration desk and demanded to see the
manager.
“Sir,” said the woman behind the counter. “I’m sorry, the
manager is—”
“I need you to telephone the
police
. My hotel room has been burglarized, and a very expensive document was removed from
my safe.” He stared at her as she dialed hotel security. A man in
a dark blue suit joined them moments later.
“How can I help you?” he said. “My name is Donnelly, and
I’m the chief of security.”
“I’ve been robbed. Room 1724.” Adin found he could keep
his statements clear and concise, and he didn’t blurt out,
I suspect
a vampire stole a priceless piece of gay erotica because he wrote it five
hundred years ago and he wanted it back.
He took a small amount of pride in that. Together, he and Donnelly took the elevator up to
his room, and Donnelly allowed Adin to show him around.
Donnelly telephoned the police, leaving the room and
completing his call discreetly in the hallway. He was a soft-
spoken man who didn’t seem remarkably expressive.
“Okay, sir.” Donnelly looked around the room one last time.
“Was the manuscript insured?”
Adin felt a surge of irritation. “Of course it’s insured, but
what difference does that make? You can insure the California
coastline, but if an earthquake causes it to drop into the sea, it’s not like you can use the money to make a new one, is it?” He
raked a hand through his hair.
“I understand you’re upset, sir,” said Donnelly quietly.
“We’ll do everything in our power to help you, but this looks
like it was done by professionals. I’m sorry. The police will be
here shortly.”
58 Z.A. Maxfield
Adin thanked him. As well as he could, he answered the
questions of the LAPD officers who got the call. They were
meticulous, and it seemed to take hours. Hotel security and the
officers finally left him, conferring with each other on the way
to the elevator. He watched as they got on and the doors closed
behind them. He was about to shut his own door when a shape
melted away from the wall down the hall. It proved to be
Donte, who came to him, a question in his fine brown eyes.
“What has happened?”
“As if you didn’t know.” Adin entered the room, leaving the
door propped open for Donte to enter behind him.
“What do you mean?” Donte asked.
“All right. I’ll play along. The manuscript is
gone
. The least you could have done is leave my Bushmills alone. You should
know better than anyone how much I’ll need it after I make the
calls I have to make.”
“Are you saying you think
I
did this?”
Adin laughed out loud. “When you first came to the airplane
bathroom, I thought,
actor
. You missed your calling. Or have you done that too? Oh, for heaven’s sake. Why are you still
standing in the damned hallway?”
“I
cannot
come in unless you invite me, Adin. You
know
this.”
Adin rolled his eyes. “I’m past worrying about minutiae,
Donte. You can drop the innocent act. I have to make some
calls.”
“I really,
really
cannot come in, Adin. Is there no one else who might have done this?”
Adin froze. “Donte, don’t do this to me. The manuscript is
gone, and if you have it… Well…maybe it’s not my best-case
scenario, but it’s not my worst.” He spoke quietly. “But if you
tell me you don’t have it, I swear by all that’s sacred, I’m going
to be sick.”
“I don’t have it,” confirmed Donte from the doorway, and
from the pain in his eyes, Adin knew it to be true. Adin rushed
to the bathroom and threw up. He washed his face and hands
NOTTURNO
59
and rinsed his mouth, and only then did he recall that Donte
was probably still in the hall, waiting.
Adin felt cold all over. “Come in.” He wrapped his arms
around himself to keep from shaking. “I’m sorry, Donte. I lost
your journal.”
Hands caught Adin’s shoulders. “It was stolen. It could have
happened to any one of the people who have had it over the
years. As a matter of fact, it was stolen from
me
in the first place. Which is why I’ve been trying to get it back.”
“Stolen from you? How?”
“Let’s just say I put my faith in the wrong mortal at one
time. I’ve regretted it for more than sixty years. Did it never
occur to you that I wouldn’t have let that journal out of my
possession if I’d had a choice?”
Adin shook his head. “What happened?”
“I lost
all
my possessions when the Germans marched on
Paris in the Second World War. There was a man there I
trusted, a café owner named Philippe, in whose care I left my
things when I went to help some friends who were going into
hiding. Jews weren’t the only minority scorned by the Third
Reich. Two of my acquaintances were sent as criminal
incorrigibles to Mauthausen, an Austrian concentration camp,
and I believed I could get them back.” Donte sighed heavily.
“After failing utterly, I came back to Paris to find that Philippe
was collaborating in bed with a rather-dashing SS officer, and all
my things were gone. Sold or stolen or on their way to the
caches of art and precious gems and metals the Germans were
pilfering at that time.”
“Shit.”
“Indeed. When the journal came to light, I was beside
myself. I had the money, even, to buy it. I could have…” He
swallowed hard. “There was a problem, they said, with my
bank, and later I found that it had been hacked, specifically to
prevent
my
participation in the auction.” He shook his head. “I am understandably eager to find out why anyone would have
done such a thing.” Adin noted that Donte looked grim and
troubled.
60 Z.A. Maxfield
“I am so sorry.” Adin closed his hand around Donte’s cool
one without thinking.
“Thank you.” Donte smiled sadly.
“I have to make some calls.”
“I know. I’ll leave you to it.” He walked to the door. “I
heard you call my name again, you know? I heard it in my
heart.” He gripped the front of his suit jacket in his fist. “It’s
very strange, Adin. That has never happened to me before.”
Adin shrugged. “I wouldn’t know anything about that.”
“I know.” He turned to the doorway, then looked back.
“You know I’m still hunting for the manuscript. I won’t give it
up if I get it back.”
“I know.”
I know.
“Then you should also know I won’t let anything—or
anyone—get in my way.” He took a step toward Adin. “Adin,
please! Go back to your home and file an insurance claim.”
“I can’t do that, Donte. I’m sorry, but I can’t.”
Donte took one long look back and left, closing the door
quietly behind him.
Six hours later, Deana burst through his hotel room door
like a rocket, latching onto him with her small self and clinging
a little. “Tell me you’re okay, oddball.”
“I’m fine, Deana. I was robbed while I was with you at
Barneys. The worst part was dealing with the police.”
“Were they rude?”
“No, of course not. It just took time I didn’t want to spend.
I’ve got a ticket to San Francisco tonight to speak with my
friend Edward, who brokers manuscripts and art from
legitimate sources. I think he’s got contacts that are not so
aboveboard. His partner is an insurance investigator. They
might be able to point me in the right direction.”
“What if someone just wanted it badly enough to steal it and
doesn’t ever want to sell it?”
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61
Donte immediately came to mind. “I can think of one
person who wanted it and
could
steal it, but I don’t believe he did. I need other ideas.”
“Why?”
“Basically, the people who collect these kinds of things
aren’t exactly James Bond, Deana.”
“You are.” She grinned.
“No, I’m not.” Adin shook his head. “But I can and have
kept myself out of trouble so far. The people who took this
manuscript were professional thieves. They took out the
security cameras on this floor and opened the safe. They
probably aren’t the kind of people who sit in clean rooms
translating sixteenth-century Italian love letters.”
“But you can’t rule it out.”
“Well, no. Of course, it’s always possible that Ned Harwiche
the third, who I am told I outbid for the manuscript by a very
narrow margin, has grown a couple and gotten his
Mission
Impossible
on to steal it from me. Somehow I doubt it.”
“Ned Harwiche. Isn’t he the one who favors a less-
masculine Truman Capote?”
“Yes. But he’s basically honest, I think. He does have the
money to send a large ninja army, though. He’s on my list. The
thing is…I really want this back.”
“Oh, oddball,” said Deana, making small circles on his back.
“How can I help?”
“I’m packing,” he said, “and then I’ll need a ride to the
airport. I’m checked out of here, and I don’t know when I’ll be
back.”
“I’m sorry to hear that. When it’s over, can we have a long
visit? Maybe a good weekend together somewhere in the
middle?”
Adin smiled at her as she removed the tags and folded the
clothes he’d purchased that afternoon. “Sure, that sounds really
nice.”
“You’ll be careful,” she said without looking up.
62 Z.A. Maxfield
“I promise,” he told her. “I promise you I will be very,
very
careful. I left some things with the dry cleaners here. Maybe you
could pick them up?”
“Sure.” She smiled and continued folding and packing until
everything was in his Pullman, ready to go. “My car’s down in
the parking garage.”
He hefted his case and took a last look around. “Good to go
then.”
“Where will you be staying in San Francisco?” she asked.
“The Kabuki.”
She frowned. “Do I know that one?”
“It used to be the Miyako, near the Japan Center. Next to
the plaza with the tower?”
“Oh… yeah.” The elevator arrived, and they entered it.
“They have Wi-Fi, so e-mail me if you need me, okay? I
have my laptop.”
“I thought you said your case was stolen on the airplane
from Frankfurt.”
Mention of that plane trip made a ruddy flush stain his
cheeks. “It’s weird, you know? I didn’t put my laptop or the
manuscript in it. I checked them. I had a feeling…”
“You’re fey, oddball,” she said, getting off the elevator with
him and heading across the parking garage. She pressed her
remote and her car chirped cheerfully.
“That’s Mr. Oddball to you,” he said, following her. After a
few steps he stopped, then turned, as he’d done in Frankfurt, an
entire three hundred sixty degrees.
“What is it, Adin?” asked Deana, her hand poised on the
handle of the car.
“Nothing,” he said. “Sometimes I get the strangest feeling
I’m being watched.”
“Look, maybe you shouldn’t go,” Deana said, looking at him
over the roof of her BMW.
NOTTURNO
63
“I’m sure I’m just paranoid. I was robbed twice, after all. It’ll
take me a while to settle down.”
“I hope that’s all it is.”
“What else could it be? They’ve got what they wanted,” he
pointed out. He opened the trunk and put in his Pullman and