Authors: Kelley Armstrong
Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Occult fiction, #Contemporary, #Occult, #Werewolves, #Fantasy - Contemporary, #Supernatural, #Demonology, #Thrillers, #English Canadian Novel And Short Story, #Miami (Fla.), #Reporters and reporting
The doctor noticed and her disapproving gaze shot to me, another twenty-something dipping into her dating pool. I guess I’d have to get used to that.
She turned away and folded back the sheet. I let out a gasp, and could only stare, stupid with shock.
“Th-there’s been a mistake.”
“This isn’t Guy Benoit?” she said briskly.
“Y-yes, but didn’t you say…” I faltered and looked at Paige.
Karl answered. “You said he’d been dead over twenty-four hours?”
“I did,” Dr. Aberquero replied.
“I’m sorry,” Karl said. “But that isn’t possible.”
Paige nodded. “That’s what I said. I thought maybe the fingerprint had misidentified him or that this wasn’t the man Hope knew as Guy.”
“It is,” I said. “But I saw him yesterday. Talked to him.”
The doctor flipped a page on her clipboard. “Then you must be mistaken.”
“She isn’t,” Karl said. “I saw him as well. I’m sure we can get security camera footage from the club to confirm it. He was there yesterday afternoon meeting with people who knew him and saw nothing amiss.”
“And as far as we can tell, he killed two people less than six hours ago,” Paige added.
“Could the time of death be wrong?” I asked. “I know that under some conditions, the initial estimate can be off.”
Dr. Aberquero sniffed. “
CSI
or
Law and Order
?”
“
The State of New York v. Edwin Cole,
2005. Later evidence showed the victim’s body had somehow been in a chilled state. Because that wasn’t immediately detected, the time of death was wrong. As for the ‘unidentified chilling,’ it was postmortem freezing from a clever Gelo half-demon. I know this is the opposite problem, but in our world, changing body temperature isn’t impossible.”
“You’re right. But we look for that here and there’s every indication that this man has been dead at least twenty-four hours. I’d even say it’s closer to thirty-six.”
Paige thanked her. As we were about to leave, I saw Karl’s gaze drifting around the room. Searching for something? Whatever it was, he’d have a better chance of getting it without me around, so I left with Paige.
A few minutes later, Karl emerged, dark blue fabric balled in one fist.
“Guy’s shirt?” I said.
“Scent.”
He waved for us to follow the officer to the elevator.
On the way upstairs, Karl said only that he wanted to return to the warehouse, presuming, I suppose, that we’d know he wanted to search for Guy’s scent.
The officer took advantage of these last few minutes to tell Paige how happy he was that Lucas was investigating. How he’d heard such good things about his work. How he looked forward to working under him.
It could have been a show of support, but as Paige’s fingers clenched around her purse strap, I knew she thought otherwise. With two brothers gone and the third accused, that left one Cabal son to inherit it all, and this young man was brown-nosing as fast as he could.
On the elevator, I touched Karl’s elbow, hinting for him to work his magic, cut in and smoothly rescue Paige. I was surprised he hadn’t already. But Karl just patted my hand, his mind miles away.
AT THE WAREHOUSE,
Karl set about searching for Guy’s scent. He found only old trails.
“But I know he was here yesterday,” I said. “I heard him talking to Max about getting the equipment, and this is where they keep it. I suppose he could have waited in the car…” I glanced around the room where we’d found Max and Tony, now empty except for the table and chairs. “Where’s the note and bottle? Taken into evidence I guess, but if you could sniff those, maybe you’d know who brought them.”
“My sense of smell isn’t that good.”
“It
looked
like Guy’s writing, and the wording was his.” I knew I was grasping at straws. However impossible it seemed, Karl’s findings only confirmed that Guy hadn’t been alive six hours ago to kill Max and Tony.
“Dr. Aberquero thinks Guy has been dead since the night before last,” Paige said. “But you and Hope both spoke to him past midnight that day, which means Karl was close enough to get a scent, right?
Was
it Guy?”
Karl lifted the shirt. “Is this the man I smelled the other night? I couldn’t tell you. I think I faintly detected this scent, but there were others too, and he was wearing so much cologne, I couldn’t be sure.”
“Is there cologne on that shirt?” Paige asked.
“No.”
I remembered thinking Guy must have been heading out on the town that night, because I’d never known him to wear a scent.
I glanced at Lucas. He was trying to listen, but his ear was attached to his cell phone, as it had been since we’d arrived.
“How could it be done?” I asked Paige. “Fake being someone else? And do it so well that it fooled his entire gang?”
Lucas hung up and pocketed his phone. “The most obvious explanation is the nonsupernatural. Guy has an identical twin.”
I pulled out a chair and sat. “So, we have twins, playing the same man, fighting over what action to take with the Cabals. One wants to help Carlos kill his family, the other balks, the first kills the second.
Very…Hollywood.”
“Agreed,” Lucas said.
“I don’t think that’s the answer,” Karl murmured.
I glanced at him, but only got that distant look as his thumb rubbed his jawline.
“On to supernatural means, then,” Lucas said. “The most obvious is a glamour spell. Under the circumstances, however, I can’t imagine it.”
“With a glamour spell, you have to
expect
to see someone else,” Paige explained. “For example, if Lucas and I left and I said I was coming back, then cast a glamour spell to make him look like me, you’d see me walk into the room. But if I didn’t say I was coming back, there’s only a fifty-fifty chance it would work. And if you expected Lucas, you’d see right through it.”
“It’s a temporary illusion,” Lucas said. “Prolonged use isn’t possible.”
“Especially if multiple people saw and recognized him, without expectations.”
“That’s the only supernatural solution I know of, but I’ll go to headquarters and conduct the proper research. They have the most extensive files in—”
His cell phone rang. A line grew between his eyes as he answered it.
Paige lowered her voice. “He’s not going to find the time. I’ll do it. Do you guys want to come? Or, better yet, maybe you could check the scene where we found Carlos. If there are scents or visions, it might help fill in the blanks.”
“Will do,” I said. “Is the site still secured?”
“Discreetly. I’ll have Lucas call ahead.”
LUCAS: 17
BY NOON I’D BEGUN TO WONDER
whether it was possible for a cell phone ringer to wear out. If so, I prayed it would happen soon.
I couldn’t complete a call without hearing the call waiting blip. If I managed to hang up, the silence would last less than ten seconds. My only choice was to let voice mail pick up for a few minutes by discreetly flipping the ring option to vibrate. I was becoming frightfully adept at operating that particular function. Not that it helped—I only had more calls to return and fell ever farther behind.
Some of the calls were case related—Simon with lab results, Dr. Aberquero with autopsy findings, a guard reporting from a scene. All expected and essential. But the others ran the gamut from “Should I cancel Mr. Cortez’s lunch with the governor on Monday?” to “Hi, it’s Bob in marketing, and I really hate to bother you, but your brother wanted to see my plans for the Wellspring campaign before I submitted the material to the printer.” Part of me longed to say, “Do you remember who you’re talking to and do you think I even know what the Wellspring campaign is, much less care?” But that wouldn’t do, no matter how frayed my nerves.
I had to calm “Bob” down and tell him that if he’d been put in charge of Wellspring, then my family had every faith in his abilities and instincts. And if anyone complained, I would handle it. At this rate, I was going to be responsible for every problem from buying the wrong manufacturing plant in Missouri to a copier paper shortage at the Seattle office.
There were VPs capable of handling these problems, but the absence of the top three men crippled day-today operations. Ideally, we’d have declared a period of mourning and shut down Cortez Corporation, giving my father time to recover. But the majority of the company holdings were in the human sector. Telling the world two Cortez brothers had died of unrelated causes in one night would open the door to investigations, by the police, the press and the stockholders.
Somewhere between persuading my father not to kill Carlos and coordinating the stakeout mission of the gang’s warehouse, I’d come up with a plausible story. Hector had died of a stroke. William, then, had to hop on the jet and fly to New York to salvage a merger orchestrated by Hector, which might, in the aftermath of his death, fall through. Somewhere between Miami and that meeting late this afternoon, William would suffer a coronary, brought on by his weight, jetlag, grief and worry over the merger. Awkward, but the best I could manage, running on stress and caffeine. So by tonight, the world could know that the Cortez Corporation had suffered a horrible tragedy, and would close operations temporarily to mourn. For today, though, it was all up to me.
Paige came with me back to headquarters. Once there, I moved on autopilot, my brain spewing commands, my body obeying, no time to pause much less think.
Yes, it’s a horrible shock. Yes, my father is well, thank you.
No, I’m sorry, but I really can’t look at that. No, I’m sorry, but I won’t be at that meeting. No, I’m sorry, I don’t know who’s in charge of the special dispensations department now, but I will find out.
We met the guard I’d requested for Paige. I told him to take her to the research rooms, assign someone to guide her through the system, then stay with her until I joined them.
I said good-bye to Paige. Tried to ignore the worried look in her eyes. Kissed her forehead. Saw her onto the elevator. Caught the next one going down. Pushed “basement” for the morgue.
“Lucas!”
The use of my given name yanked me out of automode, and I grabbed the elevator door before it shut. A young man in a suit was jogging across the lobby. Everyone had turned to stare, but no one tried to stop him. His face was flushed from running, and his shoulder-length blond hair, usually neatly tied in a conservative ponytail, hung around his face.
“Sir?” Griffin said.
I raised my hand, saying it was fine. I let the young man onto the elevator and pushed the basement button again. He panted, his eyes bright from exertion, big and impossibly blue. The trademark Nast eyes. Savannah’s eyes.
“Sean.”
He clapped me on the shoulder. Griffin tensed.
“I’m so sorry, Lucas. I know you weren’t close, but I’m sorry. How’s your dad doing?”
“All right.”
“And—” He turned to Griffin. “Your partner, right? Troy?”
“He’s recovering, thank you, sir.” Griffin’s response was polite, but had a brittle edge. Nothing against Sean personally, but rather, who he was and what his appearance portended.
“Your grandfather is here, I take it,” I said. “And your uncles.”
“Yeah. I just…I wanted to give you a heads-up.”
“Because they aren’t here to pay their respects.”
“Well, they are, technically, but…”
“But what really concerns them is not my family’s tragedy, but what it means for the Cabals. Two Cortez brothers dead, the third…unavailable, the CEO in mourning and the bastard rebel son in charge.”
“Um, pretty much.”
I swore.
Sean’s lips twitched. “I always thought that was the one word you
didn’t
know.”
“The last twenty-four hours have expanded my vocabulary.”
The Nasts would be closely followed by the two other Cabals—the Boyds and the St. Clouds. All of them wanting reassurances that we were still the leader of the Cabal world. All of them ready to whisk the title out from under us if we showed any sign of weakness.
As the elevator touched down, my knees jiggled and, for a moment, it seemed as if the floor was about to vanish beneath my feet. A wave of exhaustion set my hands trembling.
I couldn’t deal with this. I was in over my head. Out of my league. Choose your cliché.
This was not my world. I
fought
this world. And now I was being asked to save it from imploding.
Everything in me said “let it implode.” But if the Cortez Cabal crashed, the institution itself would not disappear.
The jackals were already circling, ready to divvy up the corpse.
I stepped from the elevator and made a call upstairs.
“Members of the Nast Corporation will be arriving shortly. Please see that they are shown to the boardroom and served lunch. Have my cousin Javier attend to them during the meal and answer their questions, and I will be there within the hour.”
“I’m sorry, Lucas,” Sean said when I hung up. I knew he meant it. He might be a Nast, but he was Savannah’s half-brother and the only member of her family who acknowledged her, much less attended to her. Over the last few years, his loyalties had shifted away from his family business—he was still a VP, but he was only going through the motions, eyes on the horizon looking for other opportunities.
“Is there anything I can do?” he asked.
I was about to say no, then glanced at the pad of paper still clutched in my hand. “The special dispensations department.”
“What about them?”
“Who are they, what do they do and what other department head could I temporarily put in charge?”
He smiled. “Can’t promise anything—the Cortez setup might not be exactly the same as ours—but I’ll give it a shot.”
I CHECKED IN
with Paige before meeting the Nasts, an excuse to collect my thoughts. She gave me a brief update. Besides the glamour spell, she’d found only two explanations. Carlos could have been demonically possessed, which would explain why he denied being at the crime scenes. For Guy, the only answer was zombification, which would explain the use of cologne—to cover any stench of death. But a gunshot to the CNS
would have meant he wouldn’t have been able to walk normally, no matter what a necromancer commanded.