If, if, if.
Borden suddenly said, “It’s us. Me and Jazz—maybe it has to do with us.”
“You think being in love with her is the mistake they’re referring to?”
“I never said—” He gave up on the reflexive male denial, to his credit. “No, I don’t.”
“Then it’s entirely possible it might be referring to the events of this morning. To my helping McCarthy get released.”
“Then why not just send it to you? Why send it to youandJazz?”
“McCarthy’s connected to both of us now. I think the better question is, why would Eidolon warn us? Wouldn’t theywantus to be making mistakes?”
“I have no idea what Eidolon wants,” Borden growled. “Look, I barely know what my boss wants half the time. So as far as figuring out motives, good luck. Screw this, I’m waking her up and getting her out of here. Now.”
“Yes, you’d better get her back to Manny’s.” If there was any such thing as a safe place, given what they’d learned about the world and the Cross Society and Eidolon, it would be in Manny’s Fortress of Solitude. Wherever it currently resided, since he moved house as often as banks took holidays.
“You’re talking like a cop,” Borden said. “If Eidolon wants us, they can find us. Well, they can find me, anyway. You and Jazz, it’s tougher, since you’re Leads. They can only predict you through the effects you have, not your exact location.”
“Then how did they just deliver me a note? How did the Cross Society deliver one to Jazz that first night?”
He gave a rattling sigh. “It’s too freaking early for philosophy and physics, Lucia. But Leads blip on and off the radar. You’re a blur most of the time, but sometimes they can see you clearly. It’s like somebody who usually drives really fast having car trouble. But on the more mundane level, have you considered that somebody could have been following you?”
Stewart, again. And if she accepted the idea that the note was legitimately from Eidolon, the Cross Society’s adversary in this war of premonitions, then … it changed things. Not for the better. “All right. We’ll need to have a strategy meeting later at the office—one o’clock? Bring Jazz in through the garage entrance—it’s the most defensible. I’ll have someone meet you.”
“Someone who? You’re not giving Manny a gun, are you?”
She laughed. “Not that Manny would need one of mine. But no. I’ve hired a friend to help us out. His name is Omar. He’ll meet you in the garage.”
“We’ll be there.”
There was hope for Borden yet, Lucia thought as she folded the phone and slipped it back in her purse; he had saidwewithout a trace of self-consciousness.
If only they could get Jazz to do the same, a relationship might truly be on the horizon.
“Madam?” The clerk was watching her again, this time with a trace of a frown. “Is everything all right?”
“Fine,” she said, and retrieved the blue suit she’d been studying. Much as she hated off-the-rack on men, no doubt McCarthy would resist the idea of tailoring even more than day-spa grooming. She added the ivory shirt and handed the items to the clerk, who blinked at the price tags, then smiled.
By the time she’d added the glossy, sleek Magnanni shoes, he was very happy.
She asked him to help her carry her packages to the car, tipped him and slid behind the wheel. As she slammed the door and clicked the lock shut, Ken Stewart rounded the far corner, his hands in his pants pockets, doing his best to look jaunty.
She cruised slowly past him, watching.
He pulled an empty hand from his pocket, pointed it at her windshield and cocked back a thumb.Bang, he mouthed, as he let the imaginary hammer fall.You’re dead.
She braked the car, rolled down the driver’s side window and leaned over. Her smile must have been disingenuous enough to lure in even a bitter, cynical specimen like Stewart, because he shuffled a few feet toward her.
“One of us would be,” she said softly, and let him see that her hand was on the gun in the passenger seat beside her. “And before you ask, yes, I do have a permit to carry it, Detective.”
He bared his teeth at her in a crazy grin.A rottweiler raised by wolves.She felt a cold touch at the back of her neck, but allowed only an ironic tilt of her eyebrows as he leveled both hands at her—two imaginary guns, like a kid playing cowboys and Indians—and peppered her with imaginary rounds.
Then he mimed blowing smoke from his fingertips, and those fiercely cold, slightly insane eyes bored into hers. He said, “You be careful, Ms. Garza. It’s a dangerous town if you make the wrong enemies.”
“Are there ever any right enemies?” she asked, and drove away at a calm and leisurely pace, showing no signs of temper or nerves.
Four blocks later, she stopped at a red light and wiped her damp, shaking hands on her pants.