As Jim stood just inside the break room across from the morgue, he got up close and personal with the fact that invisibility had its benes—and sometimes could put your balls on the rack.
He’d known the moment Mels Carmichael had entered the St. Francis medical center complex, and given the number of cops in the basement, it hadn’t been a total surprise that she’d beelined for right where he was. Unfortunately, he’d also sensed a reflection of Devina somewhere around—but he couldn’t quite pinpoint it.
And then he’d seen those photographs.
Unlike the reporter, her buddy with the munchies, and the doctor-type in scrubs, he knew exactly what those markings were—as well as who put them there.
And who had taken them off the body.
Those runes in the skin of that dead woman were exactly what had been on Sissy’s abdomen. A language, a marking, maybe even a message. And what Devina could carve in could probably be lifted—after all, she routinely created a three-dimensional image of perfection over her true, walking/talking corpse self.
An eraser job was not outside the realm of possibility….
As the guy with the hospital pass hanging from his lapel got up and left, Jim followed him and those pictures into the morgue, even though there was nothing he could do—and leaving the reporter was probably not the brightest idea.
Except why would Devina be fucking around with killing some random human woman? You’d think she’d be too busy worrying about the game—and that prostitute had clearly not been a virgin, so it wasn’t like she could be used to protect the demon’s mirror—
Hair color. Blond hair color.
Straightened hair.
Just like Sissy.
What were the chances. “Motherfu—”
The hospital guy stopped dead in the middle of the CPD clog and looked behind himself—and Jim sent a reminder to his mouth that invisible was one thing; silent was another.
As the man led the way down a hall and into a cramped, tech-heavy office, Jim stayed out of the way, settling back against a whiteboard marked with a grid of names, dates, and procedures. When the phone rang minutes later and the guy got distracted, Jim wanted to yank the cord out of the wall and refocus the bastard.
But come on. He already knew the deal; the question was who to be more pissed off at. Himself. Devina—
Jim frowned, as something dawned on him. During the check-ins with Adrian this morning, the angel had mentioned he’d been hanging out at a murder scene with the reporter.
What a frickin’ coincidence.
It was a good half hour before the man got up from his crouch over the scope to head back out to the reporter and her carbo-loading friend.
“So what’s the verdict,” she asked as he sat down.
“Okay, first the caveats. Without the digital file itself, or the ability to pixelate it and run a scan, I really can’t give you a one hundred percent—”
The sound of clanging above their heads had all three of them looking up and then shielding their eyes as a shower of fine particles sifted loose from the ceiling squares.
“How long’s this construction been going on?” Tony asked while a shrill grind of a saw played chaser.
“For. Ever.” The man lined up the photographs on the table. “Anyway, disclaimers aside, here’s what I think. From what I can see under the scope, it appears as if there was no retouching done—but that’s not really saying much, given that I only have the printouts, and people can do some pretty subtle, sophisticated stuff with images if they have good enough equipment.”
Mels inhaled deeply. “Well, thank you—”
Suraj put up his palm. “Wait, I’m not finished. I saw that body. There was a rash in the abdominal area, but obviously that’s not what’s in these photographs. And I remember that pattern—it’s also on the girl who was found in the quarry—”
Another sound, louder, like thunder, reverberated through the ceiling…as if something had been dropped on the tiles directly overhead.
The last thing Jim saw before all hell broke loose was Mels sending a glare heavenward. One second later, a six-by-eight-foot section of the suspended ceiling broke free of its maze of girders and swung down in one piece, hinging on where it was still attached.
Firing right at Mels.
Jim flipped into action, surging forward, shoving her off that orange chair and out of the way. His back and shoulders took the brunt of the impact, the sharp-edged weight cutting into him, drawing blood as everyone in the room shouted and ducked for cover.
The pain caused him to reveal himself, but that wasn’t the biggest problem. Looking up through the dark hole in the ceiling, he locked eyes with…a construction worker who was illuminated by the light flooding upward from the break room.
Standing with his boots planted on the rafters and his hands on his hips in the vast space above, the man was not right.
His eyes were black as the depths of Hell.
“Devina,” Jim hissed.
All at once, the worker grabbed his chest and started falling forward, his body slumping with a curious grace, the ends of all those tools on his belt flaring out like a model’s hair in front of a fan.
Jim played buck-stops-here for the second time, catching the guy in a sloppy grab because loose, limp bodies, though they weighed less, were messier than hunks of ceiling.
There was an abrupt explosion of talk, but Jim didn’t pay any attention to it. He was too busy easing the unconscious worker onto the floor—and sensing Devina’s abrupt departure.
Damn it…
“Oh, dear God,” Mels said, crouching down.
A sharp elbow pushed Jim aside, the man with the hospital badge getting on his knees and putting fingertips to the side of the construction guy’s throat. As Jim stepped out of the way—
“Jim Heron.”
Jim looked at the reporter, who was staring up at him as she rose from the floor. Fucking hell, he thought as she squared off at him.
“Well?” she demanded, seemingly undaunted by the fact that she’d nearly been killed. “And don’t deny it. I’ve seen your picture in a lot of places.”
“I’m his twin brother.”
“Really.”
The medical guy looked up. “Someone call extension nine-zero-zero-zero on that phone. Tell them we’re outside the morgue.”
Matthias’s girl snapped into gear, discharging the directive calmly and quickly. When she came back, she went over to her newspaper colleague, who, in spite of the drama, had managed to peel back the wrapper of a Snickers bar and get munching.
“You okay?” she asked him.
“Close call,” he muttered, staring at the medical drama on the floor at his feet.
Mels relocked her eyes on Jim, and then she grimaced and rubbed her temple like it was aching.
Things turned into a convention at that point, with other construction people arriving, along with hospital staff, security, and a couple of cops who’d heard the crash.
When the worker who’d fallen through the ceiling was finally put on the stretcher, he opened his eyes. Blue as the sky now. Not black.
Not a surprise.
Man, that demon had some kind of balls: If the conventional theory of a higher power held true, then the Big Guy Upstairs knew everything that happened, at every moment, all over the planet—from each blossom that bloomed to the feathers on a sparrow, to…big hulking construction workers who free-fell into break rooms at major metropolitan hospitals because they’d been temporarily possessed.
No doubt Devina had intended that chunk of the building to fall down on Mels. And wouldn’t that have been a destabilizer in the game: Matthias finally bonds with a chick, and then she dies on him?
Great setup for decision making.
And to think Jim had assumed the demon was being too quiet?
Keeping free of the congestion, he disappeared himself, figuring that Mels would assume he’d walked off. Instead, he stayed put, and stuck close to that reporter—and had to admit he was impressed. She was a tough bird, answering the questions that hospital security gave her, keeping tight for her friend as well as the guy who’d done the microscoping, working with crowd control as the injured SOB on the stretcher was removed from the scene.
She looked around from time to time, as if she were searching for someone, but in the end, all she could do was describe her “savior” to the St. Francis security set. She didn’t name names, however. Then again, she didn’t really know who he was, did she.
As far as Matthias’s reporter was concerned, he just bore a striking resemblance to a dead man. That was it.
Funny, much as Jim didn’t approve of so much his old boss had done over the years, he found himself not faulting the guy’s taste in the opposite sex.
And he was going to have to get her and Matthias together ASAP. Not just because it would make defending them easier, but who knew when the crossroads would come…and Matthias would have to choose his way.
The more time his former boss spent with that female…the better off they were all going to be.
Where the hell was “Jim Heron,” Mels wondered when she and Tony were finally free to go.
“Good thing I had that food,” her buddy said as they got back on the elevator they’d taken down to the basement a lifetime ago. “It’s frickin’ eight o’clock.”
“Yeah.” She pushed the up button. “Yeah…”
Tony’s palm landed on her shoulder. “You okay?”
She took a deep breath as they began to rise. “Don’t ask me that until we get upstairs. Between my car accident and what just happened, I’m worried there’s another big crash coming my way. Things happen in threes, you know.”
“That’s just superstition.”
“I hope you’re right.” To think she’d been worried about the morning coffee stain/fingernail three-pletion. This current streak of catastrophe she had going on was way over and above anything that could be handled with a Tide-to-Go and an emery board…. after a moment, she said, “Ah, Tony, I have another favor to ask you.” God, was she really going to do this?
“Name it.”
“Remember when I asked if you knew someone in ballastics? I need a bullet casing analyzed.”
“Oh yeah, sure—I got a couple of guys I can call. What’s your timeline?”
“As soon as possible.”
“Let me make some calls and see who’d be willing to do it for you.”
“You’re a lifesaver.”
“Nah. That guy down in the basement? He’s the hero.”
“Don’t shortchange yourself.”
As they arrived at the lobby, she stepped out and…well, what do you know. Jim Heron, or his twin brother—or whatever—was waiting across the way, lounging against the wall, looking as inconspicuous as any six-foot-plus guy who was built like a brick shithouse could be.
Putting her hand on Tony’s arm, she stopped him and gave him back his keys. “Hey, I’m going to cab it home, okay?”
Her friend frowned. “I can take you back—it’s not that far out of the way.”
“I’m going to head over to the newsroom—”
“It’s late and we’ve had a hell of a night already.”
True enough—and chances were good she was going to be reliving the near miss for a while. But she wasn’t losing her chance to talk to the superhero who’d stepped in at just the right time…and who now appeared to be waiting for her.
Mels leaned in and gave her buddy a kiss on the cheek. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
Tony said good night and ambled off toward the revolving doors. As he took out his phone, she was willing to bet he was calling for takeout, and for some reason that made her like him even more.
Pivoting around, she clashed eyes with Heron—or whoever he was—and found his casual stance was nothing to be fooled by. His size alone was vaguely threatening, and that grim expression didn’t make her think of daisies and daffodils, either.
And yet she wasn’t afraid as she went over to him.
Bullshit this man was a twin…
Then again, why hang around a public place where someone might recognize him as she had?
“I thought you’d left,” she said.
“Nah, I’ve been here all along.”
“Business at the hospital?”
“You could say that.”
“Security wants to talk to you.”
“I’m sure they do.”
As he fell silent, she waited for something, anything, to come back at her. There was nothing. He just stood there, meeting her stare as if he were prepared to do that for the next hundred years.
“I suppose I should thank you for saving my life,” she muttered.
“No reason to. I’m not sentimental.”
“Well, you look like you’ve got something to say to me—”
“Matthias needs you.”
Her brows popped; then she glanced away fast. And even though she’d heard him just fine, she muttered, “I’m sorry?”
“Can you come with me? He’s back at the hotel.”
Mels looked at the man again. “No offense, but I’m not going anywhere with anybody. And if you don’t mind my asking”—not that she cared if he was offended down to the tips of his combat boots—“what is he to you?”
“An old friend who I’m trying to help. He hasn’t been right for a long time, and the way he talks about you gives me hope.”
Now she just blinked. “He doesn’t know me any better than I know him.”
“Does that really matter?”
She laughed in a hard burst. “Ah…yeah. It does.”
Jim Heron’s “twin” shook his head. “Look, I’ve been worried about him for years, okay? He’s heading for a brick wall right now, flailing around, searching for purpose, and I’m exactly that kind of asshole to drag anything and anyone into this who will help him find his way.”
“And you think that’s me?”
“No. I know it’s you.”
She let loose another laugh. “Well, you should have seen who he was having breakfast with earlier today.”
The man cursed. “Let me guess. Brunette with legs down to there?”
“As a matter of fact…yes. Who is she?”
“Bad news.” The guy shoved a hand through his dark blond hair. “Please—look, I just…I really need your help. I can’t go into specifics, but Matthias and I were in the service together for twenty years, and I don’t need to tell you what war does to people. You’re a reporter. You’re a human being. You can extrapolate from there. He needs…a reason for living.”
She thought of the gun at the small of Matthias’s back. Then remembered him curling his body into her as they stood in the parking lot behind the CCJ’s offices.
I’m leaving soon.
“If you think he’s a danger to himself,” she said roughly, “you should be calling the proper authorities. Other than that…I’m really sorry. But I can’t do this—”
“Please.” The man’s eyes seemed to shimmer, not with tears, but with a light that reminded her of sunrise on the ocean. “He’s come too far to lose everything now.”
Boy, those pupils of his were hypnotic. And she had the sense that she had stared into them before…stared into them and…
As that headache came back, she closed her eyes and wondered if she had any Advil in her purse. “Why the hell do you think I’m any kind of answer for the guy?” Except even as she tossed that out, she thought of the connection between them and knew exactly what Heron-whoever-he-was was talking about. “I shouldn’t matter this much to him.”
Make that, he shouldn’t matter this much to her.
He was armed for godsakes. And staying in a hotel where someone had been shot—
“But you do.”
Mels popped her lids and frowned at the guy. “Be honest with me. Did you follow me here tonight?”
“Yeah, I did. I wanted a chance to talk to you, but wasn’t sure how to approach you without freaking you out.”
“Well, you nailed that one,” she said dryly. “Just save my life.”
“So in that sense, you owe me, right?”
She had to laugh. “I cannot believe you’re laying that on me.”
“Like I said, I will do anything in my power to save him.”
“Save him? Interesting choice of words, Mr. Heron.”
When the guy said nothing further, she stared into his face for the longest time. “Goddamn it.”
“Is that a yes?”
Turning away and heading for the exit, she expected him to follow her out to the cabs lined up at the curb. And he did.
“Tell me something, Mr. Heron—and that is your name, right? Jim Heron.” He didn’t answer; then again, he didn’t have to. “Do you believe that bad luck comes in threes?”
As a taxi rolled into position in front of them, Heron got the door for her. “I don’t know about numbers. But lately, the shit’s been coming in brunette.”
With another curse, Mels squeezed past him…and got in for the ride.