Authors: Heather Graham
By then, it was far too late to scream.
When at last he slept, Thor dreamed. In his dream, he saw a battle. Fierce and furious. A
man with dark hair, in expensive nineteenth-century apparel, against another, more
tattered, fiercer….
Shouts rang between the men, along with the clash of steel. Shouts, words, but he
couldn’t comprehend them.
He woke. As he woke, it seemed he could still hear the ringing of steel on steel
He realized Genevieve was wide-awake. She was lying in his arms, shaking, staring at
nothing in the shadows of the night.
The sound faded and was gone, as if it had never been.
She realized he was awake and turned to him.
“She isn’t at rest,” she said softly. “Oh, God, she isn’t at rest.”
He just held her.
But he knew that when he stood, the floor would be flooded.
With seawater.
15
W hatever was happening, it wasn’t good, Genevieve could tell that the moment she
stepped outside.
Jay Gonzalez was at the tiki bar, deep in conversation with Victor, who was angry and
gesturing emphatically.
Hoping Thor wasn’t directly behind her, Genevieve hurried over, certain Jay was reaming
Victor out about the mannequin business, and equally certain Victor was going to be
furious with her.
He was. He shot her a cold glare as she neared them. “I’m trying to tell you, Jay, I don’t
know how the mannequin wound up in my room. I didn’t take it. I didn’t play the joke on
Gen.”
“But you do admit to dumping the pieces?” Jay said.
“Thanks,” Victor muttered to Genevieve.
“Jay,” Genevieve said. “I called you to stop a problem, not create one. I helped throw it
away. I told you that.”
Jay had his sunglasses on, so she couldn’t read his eyes, but she knew he was irritated.
“Genevieve, the problem is not that the mannequin was thrown away. It’s not illegal to
discard a mannequin. It isn’t even illegal to pull it to pieces first. It is, however, illegal to steal a mannequin.”
“I didn’t steal it,” Victor protested.
“Wait,” Genevieve said. “When was it reported stolen?”
“When I made my initial inquiries, the staff at Key Klothing didn’t know they were
missing a mannequin. The owner called the station late last night. He’d figured it out, but
he told me he thought some kids had spirited the thing out. He wasn’t going to report it,
but since we’d discovered the pieces, he wanted to let us know where it had come from.”
“Key Klothing,” Genevieve murmured. “That’s right by Audrey’s place.”
“You’re suggesting Audrey stole the mannequin?” Jay asked.
“No,” Genevieve protested.
“Look, Jay,” Victor said. “How long have you known me? If I wanted a mannequin, I
wouldn’t have stolen it. I know half the shopkeepers on Duval Street. I would have
bought one. Are you really going to arrest me over this?”
“No. Not if you make good to the owner.”
“But I didn’t steal it!”
Thor would be joining them any minute, she knew, and she had to stop this before he got
involved. She pushed her way between the two men. “Look, Victor, I’ll pay for the
damned thing. Let’s just get it over with.”
“But I didn’t steal it.”
“I believe you. But let’s just make this end here and now. I’m begging you,” Genevieve
pleaded.
Victor stared at her, still indignant. “Genevieve, it might be important to find out who did steal it.”
“Why?”
He shook his head. “I don’t know. I only know that I didn’t do it.”
“Let’s just make it go away, please? We have bigger problems. Please, Victor?” she said.
He let out a sigh. From the corner of her eye she saw that Thor was coming. She had to
get this settled—now.
Victor shook his head. “Fine. I’ll pay for it,” he said.
“No, I will,” Genevieve insisted.
“Don’t be ridiculous.”
“We’ll argue about it later,” she said. “Jay? Good enough?”
He nodded his assent just as Thor strode over to join them.
“Any word from Marshall?” Thor asked.
“No. But Gen’s going to fill out a missing persons report today. Then we can do more
than just have me calling old friends in Miami-Dade and asking for off-the-record help,”
Jay said.
“Something’s wrong,” Genevieve insisted.
“Or right. Maybe he’s found the woman of his dreams,” Victor said.
Genevieve shook her head. “This project meant too much to Marshall for him to just walk
off it. He’s a responsible person. He’s built up a great reputation. I can’t believe he would slough it off all over some woman.”
Thor nodded. He, too, was wearing dark glasses, so she couldn’t read his thoughts.
At least he hadn’t commented on the water, or the smell of the sea that permeated his
cottage.
“I’m going to get some coffee,” Thor said.
Genevieve’s eyes followed him, and she saw that Adam was walking toward the tiki bar from the parking lot, and he had met up with the Blackhawks on the way. He looked
upset.
Frowning, Genevieve hurried toward them.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“Probably nothing,” he said, forcibly easing the tension from his features as he tried to
smile.
She shook her head. “Tell me.”
“I’m sure Audrey just overslept—either that, or she simply forgot her appointment with
an old man,” he said lightly.
Genevieve felt her heart catapult. “You were supposed to meet Audrey?”
“For breakfast, yes,” he admitted unhappily.
“And you went by her house? And she isn’t answering?” Genevieve demanded.
“Please, don’t panic,” Nikki cautioned carefully. “Something important might have
cropped up.”
Genevieve spun around and rushed back to Jay. “Audrey’s missing,” she said flatly.
“Missing?” Victor said impatiently. “Don’t be silly. I walked her home myself last
night.”
“She was supposed to meet Adam Harrison for breakfast. She didn’t show. And when he
went to her house, she didn’t answer the door. Jay, you have to do something.”
“I can’t just break into her house,” Jay protested.
Genevieve whipped out her cell phone, staring at them all angrily. “What’s the matter
with you? Haven’t you noticed that people around here keep disappearing!”
“Marshall hasn’t disappeared. He called the station. Adults have the right to take off if
they choose,” Jay told her.
“That’s a bunch of police crap,” she snapped at him.
“I walked Audrey home, and she was fine,” Victor said.
Genevieve had already punched in Audrey’s number. It was ringing and ringing. The
answering machine came on.
“Call me as soon as you get this,” Genevieve said. Then she snapped the phone closed
with dread in her heart.
Something was really wrong. Why couldn’t they see it?
“I’m going over there,” she said.
“Do you have a key?” Jay asked.
“No.”
“Then what are you going to do? If you force your way in, I’ll have to arrest you for
breaking and entering,” Jay said wearily.
“Please, Jay, I’m worried sick,” Genevieve said.
He looked down. “I’m going to wind up fired after all these years,” he muttered. “You go
out on your dive. I’ll go to Audrey’s place, okay? And if she’s angry because I jimmied
my way in, I’ll never speak to you again. I won’t be able to, because I’ll be looking for a
job slinging hash in a distant city!”
“Audrey would never get you in trouble. She’d know we were just worried,” Genevieve
promised.
Jay shook his head and started off. “She missed a breakfast meeting,” he muttered. “As if
we all haven’t slept through breakfast at one time or another.”
“C’mon. No lectures today. Let’s get on the boats,” Thor called out from the bar, where
he was drinking his coffee. He didn’t know anything about Audrey yet, Genevieve
thought. Should she tell him, then insist they stay on shore for the day?
No, she decided. Jay would check on Audrey. And there would be some simple
explanation. She hadn’t been missing and out of action forever, not like Marshall.
She didn’t need to put a hold on the dive. She could do her work; Jay could do his. He
was a cop, and he was also a friend. He wouldn’t let her down.
“Move!” Thor called.
When they reached the dock with their equipment, Thor started giving out their diving
instructions for the day.
“Jack, stay topside on the police loaner. Bethany and Alex, as usual. Zach and Lizzie,
you’re with them. Victor…topside on my boat for the first dive, but we’ll switch around
later. Brent and Nikki, keep being a couple. Genevieve, you’re with me. Everybody got
it?”
There were nods all around, and they headed to the appropriate boats.
Genevieve noted that Adam wasn’t there to watch them leave. She hoped he had gone
with Jay and that, between the two of them, they would find Audrey. She fingered her
cell phone, in the pocket of her cover-up. She couldn’t take it down with her, but she
would tell Victor to answer it if it rang.
Thor was at the helm. Genevieve chose a seat beside Nikki, who gave her hand a
squeeze. “It will be all right.”
“Will it?” Genevieve asked.
“Maybe the ghost is at rest.”
“She isn’t,” Genevieve said flatly.
“No?”
“She still came to me in dreams,” Genevieve said. “And she soaked the room while she
was at it.”
Nikki smiled gravely. “I’m telling you, she’s here to help.”
“Great.”
Brent joined them in time to overhear the last part of the conversation, sitting next to
Genevieve rather than his wife. “There is a reason,” he assured her.
Victor sat next to Nikki. “Do ghosts steal mannequins and move things around?” he
asked.
Genevieve wasn’t sure if the question was genuine, or if he was just mocking them.
Looking at him, she thought he was sincere.
He hadn’t been the one to play the joke on her, she thought. But still, the niggling
suspicion was there. Especially now that they had been caught getting rid of the
mannequin.
Brent hesitated, looking at his wife before answering. “They have been known to gain the
ability to move objects, but as to stealing a mannequin with a purpose…I don’t know.”
“What exactly do you know?” Genevieve asked.
“Please,” she asked, to take the sting out of her words.
“Most of the time, spirits remain or return with a purpose. And usually that purpose is to
aid the living in some way.”
“Time to anchor and dive flag,” Thor shouted, breaking off the conversation.
Genevieve quickly found her position and buckled on her tank.
On the platform, she glanced at Thor as she positioned her mask. He looked back at her,
but she could read nothing in his eyes.
She realized she was dreading the dive.
She had forgotten her enthusiasm for the project, her love for what she did. All she was
doing now was waiting.
Something else was going to happen. She was sure of it.
She stepped out into the water, felt her body fall, felt the rush of the sea around her.
Bubbles surrounded her as she released air from her vest and began to sink.
Thor had moved them out into slightly deeper water today, she realized. They were following a path that led them past the reefs, then dropped down to deeper shelves.
She listened to the sound of her breathing. Slow and easy. She was proud of how long she
could go on a single tank of air.
Look around, watch, feel, remember everything you love about this, she told herself.
But it wasn’t working. The sense of dread that had first assailed her on the platform was
growing. She found herself breathing far too quickly, too heavily. Her heart was
hammering.
Small brilliant fish swept by her, unconcerned with anything but their next meal. The
sun-kissed yellow of a tang, the stripes of a clown fish. To her side were dozens of pastel
anemones, drifting in the easy flow of the current.
She was gaining control. The world beneath the waves was as it should be. A nosy
barracuda was tracking them at a distance. Silver in the water, he stuck out his jaw,
looking like a belligerent child. A giant grouper swam toward them, took a look, turned
away.
Staghorn coral rose, followed by a field of brain coral. More anemones. More tiny,
colorful, darting fish. A starfish began a slow trek across the sand. A tiny ray was
disturbed by their passage and dug deeper into the sand.
She knew, her heart thundering, seconds before the body came into view that she was
going to see it.
At first she denied it.
It was the ghost. Surely it was no more than the ghost, and she was there to lead
Genevieve to the treasure, some new find….
But it wasn’t the ghost.
It was real.
Like the body on the beach, this one was real.
Caught just the other side of a huge field of staghorn coral, this was not a ghost.
Not a mannequin.
Suddenly she felt a deepening certainty that it was Audrey.
Her heart seemed to scream. Her stomach pitched. Thor was just feet away from her, but
she couldn’t bring herself to reach out to him.
She didn’t want to know.
She had to know.
She gave a thrust with her flippers and approached the body, desperate to know the worst.
Adam Harrison caught up with Jay before he left the parking lot.
Jay was annoyed. What the hell was with the guy? There was no reason for him to be so
concerned so quickly.
Victor had walked Audrey home, undoubtedly made sure she was inside with her door