“Ah,” he said, with a knowing grin. “Therein lies the rub. They became lovers in June last year.”
“That’s the month Mark started his current project,” I said with a frown.
“Coincidence, hey?”
I eyed him for a moment. “You obviously think not—why?”
“Because she was trying to read me.” He tapped his head. “Felt the buzz of her telepathy, but she didn’t have any more luck than that Adam fellow last night. As I said, I tend to rate rather highly when it comes to telepathy resistance.”
“So did she offer the storeroom adventure before or after that?”
“After. I rather suspect I would have gotten a whole lot more than a tasty bit of ass.”
I snorted softly. “So we have lead number two.”
“Maybe. I mean, that cop friend of yours would no doubt be as aware of her connection to Baltimore as us.”
Probably. And he’d no doubt had Adam covertly read her mind and pick out any information. “But if she was working for whoever is behind this, why is she still working there now that Mark is dead?”
“Probably for cover. It’d be too obvious if she quit right away.”
“Yeah, but Adam’s also telepathic, remember, and he—or someone with similar skills—would have interviewed her by now. She wouldn’t be working there if Sam’s people thought she was involved.”
“Not necessarily. It’s not unusual for strong telepaths to be unable to read each other. That might be the case here.”
Meaning, if they’d been unable to read her, they’d undoubtedly have a watch on her. Which also meant Sam would be aware that Jackson had talked to her this morning and that we weren’t letting the case drop as advised. “What about Michelle, the other waitress?”
“Interestingly, she hasn’t come into work since Baltimore died.”
That raised my eyebrows. “Has anyone contacted her?”
“Yeah. She’s sick, not dead.”
“Is she worth talking to?”
He shrugged. “It can’t hurt.”
No, I guess it couldn’t. I downed the drink quickly, then rose. “Shall we go, then?”
“What, now?”
Getting up so quickly had my head spinning. I had to grip the bar to steady myself. “You did get her address, didn’t you?”
“Yes.” He rose and threw some cash on the counter. “Might be worth waiting to see what we get back from my contact, though.”
I frowned. “Why?”
“Because if he came after you, they might also be going after anyone else who had any contact with Baltimore.” He rested his hand lightly against my spine, guiding me toward the exit. “And that could be a reason for her disappearing act.”
“You said she was only sick.”
“Doesn’t mean she actually is.”
True. I studied the sunlit street as we walked toward his pickup. For the first time that morning, there was no immediate sensation of being watched and, for some reason, concern stirred. My watcher had been nearby when I’d entered the institute less than an hour ago, so where was he now? And more important, where the hell was Sam? Why wasn’t he answering my phone call? Frowning, I added, “What about Professor Wilson? Did he have similar liaisons?”
“Wilson was married.”
“If a man is inclined to stray, being married certainly won’t stop him,” I said dryly.
“True. And to be honest, it never occurred to me to check. I’ve focused more on Baltimore and you, simply because that’s where all the leads seem to be.”
Not to mention the sex, I thought with amusement. “Meaning you haven’t talked to the wife?”
“I have, but she was in a rather distraught state, and I couldn’t get anything useful out of her. But if Wilson was having an affair, I don’t think she’d know about it. She seemed pretty clueless about what he did for a living.”
“She may have been clueless about his job, but if he was having an affair, or was otherwise in trouble, she would have had some sense of it—even if she didn’t want to confront or admit the situation.”
“Maybe.” His expression suggested he didn’t agree.
I shrugged. “Then we need to talk to his friends. If there’s one thing I’ve learned over my many lifetimes, it’s that men boast.”
He grinned. “Well, when it comes to a tasty bit of ass, can you blame us?”
“When you’re married, yes.”
“I’m not married, and never will be.”
“But if you were, I’d have to punch your lights out.”
His grin grew. “Fae don’t marry. We don’t even do serious commitment.”
“Which is a very good thing for both of us. But I merely meant that I don’t believe in fooling around with a married man.”
“You’re perfectly safe with me, I assure you.”
“Somehow, I’m doubting that.”
My voice was wry, and he chuckled softly as I got into the car. “You could be right in that.”
Once I was seated, he jogged around to the driver’s side and got in. As he pulled out into the flow of traffic, I flipped down the sun visor and adjusted the vanity mirror to look behind us.
“Looking for anything in particular?” he asked.
“Just wondering where my official follower is. I’ve never really spotted him, but I’ve generally sensed his presence. I didn’t when we left the bar, and it just strikes me as odd.”
“Maybe they’ve been pulled off your tail since events at the Crown.”
“Surely they’d only do that if they’d solved the case, and the vampire at the institute suggests this case is far from solved.”
“True.” He contemplated the rearview mirror for several seconds, then shrugged. “The only way to know for sure is to ring the cop.”
“Tried that. No immediate response.” I grimaced, then thrust the worry from my mind. There was nothing I could do about it, after all. “Where are we headed?”
“Braybrook. Michelle apparently rents a small house not far from the Braybrook Plaza.”
Which didn’t mean a whole lot to me as I really didn’t know the area. We cruised on in comfortable silence, and it wasn’t long before he was slowing in front of a small double-fronted house whose facade had been “beautified” by a wash of white concrete that made it stand apart from its orange-bricked neighbors. Two green rubbish bins stood on the lawn next to the concrete path that led up to the front veranda, and a white station wagon sat in the shared driveway.
“All the curtains are drawn,” I commented, peering past him. “But the wire screen door is open.”
“And the front door is slightly ajar.” He studied the house a bit longer, then parked several doors up. “She might be getting ready to leave.”
“Could be.”
We climbed out of the car and walked back. But as we neared the front gate, something shattered inside the house; then the screaming started. It was a woman.
“Back door,” Jackson said as he bolted for the front door. I ran down the driveway, my sneakered feet making little sound on the concrete. A large metal gate divided the front yard from the back, but I leapt up, gripped the top, and hauled myself over.
Behind me came the sound of a door crashing back against a wall. Jackson, inside the house already. The screaming stopped abruptly but not the noise. Whoever was inside was on the move—toward me.
I bent and ran past a window, then stopped just to the side of the back door. The footsteps came closer—two men, not one.
I flexed my fingers, and fireflies danced across my fingertips. Timing was everything.