“I’ll be damned.”
Reggie braked at a traffic light. A group of uniformed schoolchildren crossed in front of them. Seeing Reggie behind the wheel, several stuck out their tongues. Reggie turned in his seat to look at his passenger. “Why is the Order after us, Holly?”
“I don’t know why,” she replied.
“How do they even know about us? Could there be a traitor in our group?”
“Don’t say that, Reggie.”
“Think about it. Someone tipped Wolfe off. It’s the only explanation.”
Holly bit her lip. “But who, Reggie? Who in our group would betray us?”
“I hate to say it, but I think it’s Max. He’s been having money problems, lost a bundle on the stock market.”
“But Wolfe tried to kill Max yesterday. Peter told me so.”
“Really? Well, there goes that theory, I suppose.”
“It’s not one of us, Reggie, I’m sure of it.”
The Aston rocked forward. Startled, they turned in their seats to stare at the delivery van that had tapped their bumper. The delivery driver shrugged his shoulders as if to say Sorry.
Reggie shook his fist at him. “Idiot!”
The driver shook his fist back.
“How dare he shake his fist at me,” Reggie said furiously.
The light changed. The driver beeped his horn, mocking them.
“Think you’re funny, do you?” Reggie shouted.
“Reggie, no,” Holly said.
Reggie undid his seatbelt and hopped out of the Aston. He stood in the middle of the street, and put his dukes up, challenging the driver to a fight. The delivery van driver got out as well. Almost too quickly, Holly thought. He wore a baseball cap, and on his neck glowed a shimmering tattoo. From his jacket he removed a pipe, which he whacked against his palm.
The light changed. Cars slipped around them, avoiding the two men facing off in the middle of the busy street.
“Reggie-it’s Wolfe! Run!” Holly yelled.
“Oh, my Lord,” Reggie said.
Discretion was the better part of valor. Reggie ducked the traffic, and got on the sidewalk. He took off running, his arms and legs pumping like a comic strip character. He was fast for his age, but Wolfe was right on his heels, and the race’s outcome was never in doubt.
Holly jumped out of the Aston and started to give chase. She did not look where she was going, and nearly collided with a professional dog-walker out with his pack. There were poodles, dachshunds, a drooling boxer, and several breeds she’d never seen before. The dogs gave her an idea. Taking Mary Glover’s lock of hair from her purse, she waved it in the air.
“Little mongrels, oh so spry, do my bidding, or you will die!”
The dogs changed before her eyes. No longer were they a pack of domesticated house pets; now, they were vicious beasts, prepared to follow her every command. Holly pointed up the sidewalk at Wolfe.
“Stop him!”
The pack broke forward, throwing their handler to the ground. Up the sidewalk they went, trailing their leashes. They surrounded Wolfe, attacking from all sides. Wolfe waved his pipe frantically. He doesn’t like dogs.
“Tear him up!” she commanded.
Within seconds, Wolfe’s pants were shredded, and he was starting to look like a meal. Several of the smaller dogs had latched on to his shirt sleeves, and pinned his arms. Seeing Holly approach, he cursed her.
“Bitch.”
“Try witch,” she shouted back.
“You’ll pay for this.”
“Go for the throat!”
The dogs leapt into the air, trying for Wolfe’s windpipe. Sheer panic filled Wolfe’s face. The hunter had become the hunted.
“Say, lady, those are my dogs.”
The handler had gotten to his feet, and stood beside Holly. He blew through a dog whistle that hung around his neck. The pack broke free of her spell, and ran back to him.
“Thanks for lending them to me,” Holly said.
Wolfe still had his pipe. His arms and legs were bleeding, his eyes filled with pain. Holly waved the lock of hair.
“Evil man, oh so wicked, cast away thy weapon, or be stricken.”
The pipe flew out of Wolfe’s hand, and landed in the gutter. A smart man knows when he’s beaten. Wolfe staggered across the street, and melted into a crowd.
Holly breathed a sigh of relief. She tucked the magic lock of hair into her purse. She wasn’t so defenseless after all. Too bad Peter hadn’t been here to see her.
Reggie had parked himself on a bench, and was attempting to catch his breath. She sat down next to him. His cheeks had turned an alarming color.
“Are you all right?”
“Call 911,” he gasped.
“What’s wrong? Did he strike you?”
Reggie would not look at her, his eyes peeled to the sky.
“My heart,” he whispered.
“Are you having a heart attack?”
He let out a deathly moan. “Oh, my.”
“What’s wrong?”
“I see them.”
“Who?”
“The welcome wagon.” He managed the weakest of smiles, and spoke to a presence only he could see. “Hello, Marie. Back so soon?”
“Reggie, you’ve got to hold on,” Holly begged.
“Too late. Good-bye, my lovely friend.”
Closing his eyes, Reggie slid off the bench to the ground, where he lay in a heap. Holly punched 911 into her cell phone with tears streaming down her face.
34
Peter’s limo pulled up to the emergency entrance of Roosevelt Hospital on West 59th Street and Tenth Avenue, and he hopped out. Like many New Yorkers, he knew of Roosevelt Hospital through an episode of Seinfeld, where Jerry and Kramer had accidentally dropped a Junior Mint into Elaine’s ex-boyfriend during an operation. The send-up of the inept hospital staff had seemed funny at the time. It didn’t now.
The emergency room was loud and chaotic. He found Holly giving a statement to a uniformed policeman. Their eyes met, and Holly shook her head as if to say Not now. He backed away, and headed for the nurse’s station. He wondered what story Holly was giving the police. Something that left out the Friday night psychics and the Order of Astrum, he guessed. That was the bad thing about living a lie. Once the lie got started, there was no turning back.
The nurse’s station was also busy. The nurse in charge was a middle-aged woman with a kind face, and appeared to be the calm in the eye of the storm.
“May I help you?” she asked.
“A friend of mine named Reggie Brown was admitted a short while ago. I was wondering if you could tell me how he’s doing.”
She slipped on her bifocals and consulted a clipboard. The corners of her mouth turned down. “I’m sorry, but your friend didn’t make it.”
The words hit him like an invisible punch.
“You mean he’s dead?”
“Yes. He passed away a short while ago.”
He brought his hand up to his face. What good were his powers if he couldn’t save the people he loved? He wanted to scream.
A phone on the desk rang, and the nurse answered it. Peter lowered his hand. The cup of coffee on the desk was boiling over, the black liquid running down the sides onto the blotter. He forced himself to calm down, and the coffee went back to normal.
She hung up the phone, and resumed speaking to him.
“I’m sorry for your loss,” she said.
“Thanks,” he whispered.
* * *
The hospital cafeteria was near the emergency room. Except for a group of nurses on break, it was empty. Peter sat at a corner table, and stared at the pale blue wall. It didn’t seem possible that Reggie was gone. He’d been a part of Peter’s life for as long as he could remember. The notion that he was no longer alive just didn’t seem real.
Every psychic Peter knew was an eccentric; it seemed to come with the territory. But Reggie had been unique. He could look at any game of chance, and predict its outcome. Instead of turning himself into a billionaire, he’d used his gift to help others, and had supported many of the city’s less fortunate through his generosity. Reggie’s favorite quote had come from the Talmud. He who saves a single life, it is though he has saved the entire world.