Windfall (38 page)

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Authors: Rachel Caine

BOOK: Windfall
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“I'm listening,” I said. “Just tell me what you want.”

He nodded and relaxed a bit again. “My business associate—I think you're acquainted with him, Thomas Quinn, sometimes known as Orry—was in the midst of a transaction when he—disappeared. He'd acquired several dozen bottles of a unique nature, which disappeared along with him. I understand that you might have been there to see what happened to them.”

“Who told you that?”

“Quinn's detective partner. Detective Rodriguez? I believe you know him as well, as he's spent several days down there in your parking lot spying on you. I had to go ask him some questions yesterday. He really wasn't forthcoming, until I got out the knife. You won't make me get out the knife, will you, love? The furniture's new. I'd hate to bloody it.” I was watching Eamon's personality change right before my eyes, and it was completely
terrifying
.

The worst part? The look in his eyes. He still, even now, looked as if he were genuinely sorry he had to do this.

But nowhere near sorry enough to stop.

I backed up and sank into a chair, unable to stand any more; my knees were shaking, and my back was on fire. Son of a
bitch
. There were two possibilities to what he'd just said, neither of them good: one, I'd totally misread Rodriguez and he'd been in this from the beginning with Eamon; or two, Eamon had somehow gotten the drop on him yesterday and Rodriguez was . . .

“Is he dead?” I asked.

Eamon put his right hand—the one he wasn't using on my sister's throat—palm up. “No idea, really. By the time he decides to recover enough to talk, if he can, I'll be long gone, so I can't see that it really matters. Of course, you'll be the person who was last seen having words with him. That might be a problem for you, seeing as he's some sort of policeman. The plods do not like one of their own being maimed, in my experience. They might not ask too many questions. Might even get a bit overzealous when they come to take you in, as well.” He glanced down at the mark on Sarah's thigh. “You fair-skinned girls bruise so easily.”

I didn't take the bait. He raised his eyebrows and sank even lower against the leather couch. I remembered all his gentleness, his smiles, his courtesy. I wondered which Eamon was real, or if it all was . . . maybe he was capable of all of this, from passion and friendship to cold-blooded menace, all of it real.

Maybe the regard he felt for Sarah was real. Even now, the way he touched her was . . . odd. Gentle. As if he could force himself to be cruel, but it wasn't his first choice.

My mouth was so dry. I tried to swallow and deliberately unclenched my fists. “All right,” I said, trying to keep it calm and even. “What exactly is it you want?”

“I want the bottles,” he said. “I want them back. It's not personal, love, it's business. My client paid Quinn a great fucking pile of money for them, and he's none too happy about seeing neither merchandise nor refund. And as I have no refund for him . . .”

“Eamon, there
are
no bottles. Quinn's SUV exploded in the desert. The bottles were inside. They were destroyed.”

“So the Djinn were set free,” he said quietly. “Correct?”

I deliberately played stupid. “Gin? You're threatening to kill my sister over bottles of martini juice?”

That got a genuine, charming smile. “I knew I liked you, love, you're quick. Nice try, but I'm afraid I've known about the Djinn for a long time now. Magic, bottles, controlling the weather . . . does it sound familiar? Because Quinn was very informative on the subject. He was positively obsessed.”

“Quinn was insane.”

“Well, yes, I'd have thought so, too, until I met a few more of your friends. Like, for instance, your friend Ella, you remember her. You were talking with her earlier today before that messy business at the office building. I took her back to her house for a chat. Reminds me of my mum, Ella—not very bright, and likes money, though I'm not sure she'd do street trade for it, so perhaps she's not that much like Mum at all.” He rolled his head slightly to one side and let his eyelids drop to half mast, watching me. I wasn't fool enough to think he'd let down his guard. “Ella really can control the weather. I've seen it. So don't try to give me any bollocks about it not working. She's done a nice job of it for your weatherman boss these past couple of years, she told me. And she's made some tidy sums off of it. I believe her on that score. She tried to give me some of it to leave her alone.”

I'd wondered what had happened to Ella during the chaos at the offices. She'd just . . . vanished. Eamon was the answer. Eamon had followed me. Eamon had grabbed her and hustled her off without anyone noticing, in the chaos.

“Is she still alive?” I asked.

“Repetitive question. Same answer.” His eyes were taking on an almost metallic shine. “Amusing as all this is, I'm running out of patience, love. So let's get back to the subject.”

“I told you, I don't have the ones Quinn stole.”

“Oh, yes, I understand that. Those are gone, never to return. I hope you understand; this gentleman Quinn took money from, this lovely gentleman in South America with whom he had a preexisting drug business, he won't be very happy with that. But that's really not my affair, as I was fortunately a very quiet partner, and the South American gentleman doesn't know my name any more than you do. But if he locates me, I'm afraid I'll have to tell him exactly what
yours
is.”

“I—” I hated to admit anything to him. “I don't understand. What the hell do you want?”

“Well, I came here to recover property for my client,” he said, as if it was a normal business arrangement and he was more than a little surprised that I wasn't following. “There's no property to be recovered—and I do believe you about that, by the way—but I still have expenses. You can, in fact, be rid of me very cheaply. All I'm asking for is my commission.” He paused and looked down at my sister's slack, unconscious face. Ran a contemplative thumb over her parted lips and tilted his head, considering her. Enraptured. When his voice came again, it had lost its briskness and sounded more like the old Eamon, slow and warm. “All I want is one. Even trade, one sister for one Djinn.”

I felt my breath lock up tight in my chest, but managed to loosen enough to get the words out. They sounded tight and furious. “You're deluded. That's one Djinn more than I have to give you, you asshole.”

For answer, he picked up the remote control from the coffee table and flicked on the big-screen plasma TV on the wall. I turned to look at it. CNNfn was playing, giving a report on falling stocks; he pressed buttons, and a recording began to play. It was at an odd angle, but the focus was sharp enough.

It was my bedroom. My
old
bedroom. As I watched, the door banged open and I came backing into the room, David with me, both of us feverishly touching each other, devouring each other . . .

“Stop it,” I whispered.

My on-screen image fell backward onto the bed. David stood looking down at her, and he looked inhuman, beautiful and unsettling, and incredibly . . .

“Stop it!”

Eamon hit
PAUSE
. “As pornography goes, it isn't bad,” he said. “Although personally I prefer my women a little less vocal, as you know. I've had your apartment bugged for weeks, love. I had to get to know you before I got to know you, if you follow me. Your sister's arrival was a complication, but I was able to . . . improvise.”

I was so angry I was seeing red spots, and had to breathe hard to try to keep from leaping out of the chair and throttling the man dead. He must have known it. He clicked the power off and dropped the remote back to the coffee table.

“You've got a Djinn,” he said. “Obviously. And although I hate to break up a grand love affair, well, sorry, but maybe you can have him back when I'm done with him.”

“No. I can't. I don't have him.”

“Lying to me will cost your sister another injury, love. I know you have him. I'm not being unreasonable about this, but I'm not going to be lied to.” He put those fingers on the creamy-pale skin of the swell of Sarah's breast that was exposed in the gap of her robe. “You know I'm not bluffing.”


I don't have him!
Look, Sarah and I spent last night at the dump, all right? We were looking for David's bottle, his Djinn bottle! She threw it out during the—the—the big makeover!
The one you helped her with!
” I gestured compulsively around at the designer's showroom of an apartment.

He stared at me for a second, astonished, and then laughed. Really laughed, a genuinely amused guffaw. He moved his hand away from Sarah's throat to stroke her hair, then grabbed it and wrenched her head back to a dangerous angle.

I came up out of the chair. “Leave her alone!”

“Or?” Eamon didn't even look at me. He no longer seemed amused, or casual. There was something dark and tense in him now, and I could see a compulsively cruel streak in him that was very unsettling. He
liked
doing this to her. Almost couldn't resist it.
It's hardly the first time
 . . . I wondered what he'd done to her at night, when she'd been lying in that bed with him, zoned out on whatever drug he'd given her. Oh dear
God
. I had to stop this.

“Stop it or I'll kill you,” I said. I meant it.

He looked up then, the nightmare still in his avid eyes, the hungry set of his lips. “I live on borrowed time with a very scary set of characters as company. Threats from you are like being threatened by a sprog on the playground, love. But do go on. It's amusing.”

I changed tacks. “Is that why you want to get a Djinn? To save your skin? Make you invincible?”

He was thinking over what I'd said, clicking it over in his brain. It was easy to see that he was brilliant. His transparency was part of what made him so damn frightening. “Invincibility,” he said. “No. Although that would be nice, wouldn't it, invincibility? But I can take care of myself, always have. Not interested, really.”

“Why do you need a Djinn, then?”

“For someone else.”

“You don't strike me as the type who thinks of others.”

I got a hot flash of temper, the first I'd really seen. “I haven't
struck
you at all, pet. But if you insult me, I may have to take my fit of pique out on someone more ready to hand. Here's what I want from you, and it's not negotiable: be a good little bitch and go out and find me a Djinn. Any Djinn. I don't care what it looks like, because unlike you I won't be fucking it.”

“I'm not leaving you here with Sarah!”

The flare of temper I'd spotted was nothing compared to the full-throated roar that erupted out of him. “I'm not giving you a bloody choice!” He took Sarah's limp left arm, skimmed the sleeve back, and held her forearm in both hands.

Prepared to snap it.

His eyes dared me to test him.

I swallowed hard and said, “If you hurt her, you have no idea how much I'll make you suffer before you die.”

“You're repeating yourself, and as there's only one of the three of us who's sustained any injury at all, you might think hard about the trend.” He tightened his hold on her fragile, limp arm. “You have exactly two hours before I start breaking things, working up from the bottom. If I go slowly enough, she'll wake up before I'm finished. Oh, and love, just in case you have any brilliant ideas about calling the police, I'm taking her with me. I'll call and tell you where to meet me with the Djinn. One life for another. I'm not unreasonable, but I am very, very determined.”

I stood, tense and agonized, as he rose and effortlessly lifted Sarah's limp body in his arms. It was a parody of a romantic picture, her hair tousled, her head cradled against his chest. Arm draped loosely around his neck. I remembered seeing them asleep in bed together, curled into each others' warmth.

It made me sick.

“If you try to stop me leaving, I'll toss her down the stairs,” he said, and walked to the door. “I can assure you she'll break her neck at the very least. Maybe if you're lucky she'll only be paralyzed and you can be changing her bedpans and apologizing to her the rest of your life.”

I swallowed and somehow managed to get myself to stand still. He looked back on his way out, warning clear in his eyes.

“Two hours, Joanne. No excuses.”

I let him go. Partly, I just didn't see a way to stop him without risking Sarah's life; partly, I was just too stunned to cope. It was too much. Just . . . too much.

I slid back the patio door and walked out into the cool predawn breeze. Cotton-thick clouds formed a black shield and blotted out every evidence of approaching morning. It was as dark as midnight out here.

The security lights in the parking lot showed Eamon walking calmly to his car. Sarah looked fragile and small and vulnerable in his arms. He put her in the passenger seat, strapped her in with no evidence of anything but gentleness, and shut the door. He even hesitated to be sure her robe was inside the car first.

He looked up at me for a moment, with no expression that I could read, and then got in and drove away.

I wanted a Djinn, all right.

And when I got my hands on one, Eamon was going to understand just how dangerous screwing with me could be.

 

I wouldn't have followed him even if I'd had the skills, mainly because there was no way he wouldn't notice the great white whale of the minivan trailing him through early-morning traffic. And Eamon, I already knew, had a criminal's perception about danger. No point in giving him a reason to carry through on threats I was pretty sure he meant.

I needed serious help. With John Foster gone, there was no Warden in town I could turn to for help, and I didn't have time to apply for any outside assistance. Two hours wouldn't get anything from Paul. Even if Marion had been inclined to lend a hand, she was out of the picture, recovering in some hospital from what must have been a near-death experience with one of Ashan's militant Djinn.

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