by Anne Stuart
A group of men were playing cards at a table, and he felt a superstitious shiver run down his spine. He’d been one of the men playing that day. He could even remember the hand he’d held. A dead man’s hand.
There was a crowded bar at one end of the brick garage, but most people seemed to be drinking coffee, which only made sense, given the early hour. He could see several elongated cigarette holders, and he reached for his own pack with a sigh of relief. Until he noticed that none of the other cigarettes were lit.
“Helen.” The man who bore down on them wore spats, something that had gone out of style by the early twenties. “You look fabulous, darling, absolutely fabulous! And who have you brought with you?”
“This is a friend of mine. Jamey, this is Greg Turner, an old college friend. He’s the man behind all this—his attention to detail is nothing short of phenomenal.”
Rafferty could recognize the faintly veiled anxiety in Helen’s voice. She wasn’t any more enthralled with this tasteless party than he was, up to and including the men walking around with phony machine guns and brand-new fedoras. “It seems very accurate,” Rafferty murmured, lighting his cigarette.
“Thanks, old man,” Greg said. “I try to be. I’m afraid I’m going to have to ask you to put that out. This is a nonsmoking party.”
Jamey just looked at him, imagining what any of his fellow victims of the infamous massacre would have said to such a stupid statement. As a matter of fact, he’d seen Ricky Drago respond to just such a request once, putting out his cigarette on someone’s hand. For the first time he could understand the temptation.
He dropped the cigarette on the cement floor and ground it beneath his heel, not bothering to plaster a pleasant smile on his face. He didn’t want to be here—the whole thing gave him the willies, but he wasn’t about to leave Helen unprotected. Ricky Drago was a man who kept his word. He wasn’t going to stop until he accomplished what he intended. Or until somebody stopped him.
Mary Moretti had picked a hell of a time to have a baby. Somehow Billy had to pull himself together and come up with a way to protect Helen, to stop Drago, by the time Rafferty left. And at this point, time was running out.
“Great suit,” Greg continued, moving past Helen in a way Rafferty would have found completely nonsensical if he hadn’t already recognized certain proclivities. “It really looks authentic. If I didn’t know better, I’d say it really did come from the early thirties.”
“Late twenties,” Rafferty said.
“Oh, no, dear fellow. Trust me, this kind of suit wasn’t made until 1932 at the earliest. I’m an expert on these matters,” Greg announced.
This time Rafferty did smile. Greg took a sudden, nervous step backward, almost barreling into Helen. “I’m sure you’re right,” Rafferty said, having bought the suit in 1928 at a small tailor’s shop not too many blocks away from this god-awful party. “Still, it’s close enough.”
“It’s fabulous.” Greg gushed, taking a step closer again. “How did you and Helen meet? She usually has such awful taste in men.”
“Cut it out, Greg,” Helen said in a calm voice. “Jamey doesn’t need to hear about my love life.”
“What love life, darling?” Greg responded. “What with that army of ogres you call your family, no man would dare get close to you. Except for your friend.” Greg let his eyes wander over Rafferty. “You look like you’d dare just about anything.”
“Just about,” Rafferty said, moving past him and taking Helen’s smooth bare arm in his hand, letting his touch linger possessively. “Let’s get a drink.”
She went with him docilely enough, which surprised him. “That was rude,” she said in a breathless voice as he quick-stepped her over to the long table serving as a bar.
“Yes, it was,” Rafferty said, reaching for a cup of coffee and handing it to her. He took his own and brought it to his lips, then stopped. “What the hell is this?” he demanded.
An older man was standing near them, and he turned and grimaced. “The worst Scotch money can buy,” he said. “They’re trying to duplicate bootleg liquor.”
“Why in a teacup?”
“Because Greg is our host, and he’s convinced everyone drank liquor out of teacups during prohibition,” the man explained, taking a sip without shuddering.
“Not that I remember,” Rafferty said dryly.
The man’s eyes crinkled with amusement. “Me neither. But since none of us were born then, who’s to know the difference? Hi, Helen.”
“Hi, Mel. This is a friend of mine, Jamey….”
“Just Jamey,” Rafferty interrupted, holding out his hand. Despite the occasional lapses, this was too well-informed a crowd to make free with his last name.
“Mel Amberson.” The older man took it, giving it a decent shake. “You guys want to drink that swill, or do you want to know where they keep the good stuff?”
“Uh, Mel, it’s a little early for liquor,” Helen said, setting her untouched cup of whiskey back down on the table.
“No, babe, I’m talking about the really good stuff. Pure Colombian.”
“Mel,” Helen warned.
Mel grinned. “Coffee, honey. I’m talking about coffee.”
“I’ll be your slave for life,” she said, casting a mischievous glance up at Rafferty. “Mel likes to tease me. He’s known me since I was a baby, and he still thinks I’m wet behind the ears.”
“To put it mildly. I was on the force with her old man. He and I were even partners for a couple of years, until I decided there were more honest ways to make a living.”
“Mel’s a stockbroker. A very successful one.”
“That’s just another word for professional gambler,” Mel said. “The main trick is to earn money and keep a clean conscience.”
Rafferty found he could laugh. “How do you manage to do that?”
“That’s where I use my police background. I investigate. Find out who’s dirty, who’s clean. Who runs a tight shop, who rips off little old ladies, who screws up the environment, who has decent pensions and benefits. I find that the happier the workers, the stronger the company, and the stronger the company, the better the profits.” He gave Rafferty a curious glance. “What do you do for a living, Jamey?”
“I’m retired,” he said. “As a matter of fact, I used to be involved in gambling myself.”
“Did you, now? How’d you do?”
Rafferty grinned, finally finding someone he liked. “Let’s just say I had a certain gift for it.” He hadn’t even realized Helen had moved away until she reappeared, two mugs of coffee in hand. He took one, his fingers just brushing hers, and her eyes flew up to meet his for a brief, shaken moment before she stepped back.
“You say you’re retired?” Mel said. “A young man like you? Ridiculous! If you ever need a job, look me up. I can always use someone with a certain gift. Picking the right stock isn’t that much different from picking the right horse. You just have to have the talent.”
For a moment it flashed before him, like a perfect jewel, just out of reach. The woman standing beside him, the scent of white roses mixing with the aroma of coffee. A job, a future, a life. And then it vanished like the pipe dream it was.
“I wish I could take you up on it,” he said, not bothering to disguise his own regret. “But I can’t stay.”
“Says who?” Mel asked.
“He’s been trying to convince me…” Helen began, and then her voice trailed off as he shot her a mild, warning look. “Been trying to convince me he’ll settle down sooner or later,” she continued smoothly. “But I’ll believe it when I see it.”
Mel nodded. “I can understand wanderlust,” he said. “I had it myself. You two known each other long?”
“Long enough,” Helen said, flashing her own warning look, and she threaded her arm through his.
“Your father met him? Or those brothers of yours?”
“Not yet,” Rafferty drawled. “Should I be scared?”
Mel laughed. �
��If it were anybody else I’d say so. But you strike me as a man who can hold his own, even against five Chicago cops named Emerson.”
“I imagine I can.”
“Let me know if you change your mind,” Mel said, clapping a hand on Rafferty’s shoulder. “You got to settle down sooner or later, and I can always use a good man.”
“That’s the best offer I’ve had in a long time,” he replied. “I wish I could say yes.”
Mel looked between the two of them, and there was a very definite twinkle in his eyes. “I’m not sure if I believe that, son,” he said. “But you keep me in mind if you ever need a job.” A look of distaste crossed his face. “Lord, that little horror Greg is heading our way. I’m out of here, Helen. See ya.”
“Let me walk you out,” Rafferty said with a trace of desperation, but it was too late. Greg had already jumped in front of Mel, and beside him was a watered down version of Crystal Latour in her prime.
“This is Helen’s friend,” Greg gushed. “Have you ever seen anyone more marvelous?”
“Marvelous,” the woman breathed. “Hi, Helen.” She didn’t even glance at Helen, her kohl-rimmed eyes glued to Rafferty.
“Hi, Clarissa,” Helen muttered, and Rafferty could hear the annoyance in her voice. Clarissa had a quite spectacular body, one that usually would have interested Rafferty, but not today. Right now all he cared about was the slender, far more subtle woman beside him, not this brightly dressed creature looking him over as if he were a piece of blueberry pie.
Clarissa sidled up to him, and she smelled like Shalimar. He’d always hated Shalimar. “You look so realistic. Where did Helen find you?”
“He’s a time traveler, Clarissa,” Helen said irritably. “He actually comes from another century.”
He looked at Helen and smiled. She was definitely annoyed with Clarissa. She was also undeniably jealous. It had been too long since he’d had time for someone to grow jealous over him. It felt good. It felt damned good. “I thought you decided it was just another planet,” he said, and his eyes met hers in a rueful smile.
The tension was gone. “Mars,” she agreed.
“Pluto,” he corrected her, teasing.
“Well,” Clarissa said, not one to be ignored, “you still look absolutely perfect for an occasion like today. You look just like one of those cold-blooded gangsters.”
That artless statement drew his attention away from Helen. “I do? How would you define what they looked like?” he asked in a silken voice that should have warned the woman.
But Clarissa wasn’t a sensitive soul. “Oh, you know what I mean. Ruthless. Sadistic. Amoral. Those men cared more about their clothes and their cars than they did about human life.” Now that she’d got his full attention she was making the mistake of enjoying it. She tossed her mane of lacquered hair. “They were just a bunch of murdering hoodlums.”
His smile was thin, threatening. “I don’t think so.”
Clarissa was still oblivious to his reaction. “I know what I’m talking about, Jamey,” she insisted. “I’ve read…”
“The majority of men involved in the mob were family men,” he said. “They earned money the only way they could to keep their families going during the Depression.”
“Oh, grow up, Jamey!” Clarissa pleaded, almost getting her capped white teeth knocked down her throat for the trouble. “You’ve been seeing too many of Helen’s old movies. No one believes that kind of romantic stuff about a bunch of cold-blooded killers anymore.”
He wanted to refute her casual words. There were good, decent men, involved in not so good, not so decent work, and he wasn’t that impressed with modern-day business in comparison. But the memory of Ricky Drago and his deadly usefulness wiped out any of Rafferty’s possible defenses.
“Maybe you’re right,” he said instead, turning away from her.
She put her hand on his arm, possessively, and he was about to shake her off when he saw Helen’s eyes narrow in rage. He left it there, enjoying the sensation of a woman caring enough to be angry. Angry enough to care.
“Where did you find this man, Helen?” Clarissa said again. “He’s absolutely wonderful.”
“He’s mine,” Helen said flatly.
Rafferty almost kissed her there and then. Instead he simply smiled, coolly, and detached Clarissa’s clinging arm. “That I am,” he agreed, and watched the blush rise to Helen’s rouged cheeks.
Clarissa was a good sport. “Let me know if you get tired of him,” she said, conceding defeat. “You know who you look like, Jamey? It’s finally come to me.”
“He looks like a cross between Humphrey Bogart and Cary Grant,” Helen said sharply, and Rafferty almost expected to hear her say “he’s mine” again.
“Perhaps,” Clarissa conceded. “But he’s a lot taller. No, he looks exactly like one of the guys in an old photograph I was looking at last night. A gangster.”
Rafferty took a slow, careful sip of his coffee. It was already cold, and the noise from the party was overwhelming. He knew what was coming next. He just wondered how Helen was going to react.
She was still innocent. “It’s the suit,” she said.
“Uh-uh. It’s the face,” Clarissa said. “He’s the spitting image of one of the guys killed in the massacre. One of Bugs Moran’s more trusted lieutenants. What was his name? Doherty? Gogarty? Something Irish like that. I remember…Rafferty!”
Helen dropped her coffee. It landed at Clarissa’s feet, shattering, splashing Clarissa’s sturdy white legs. Rafferty moved Helen in time, protecting her white dress from the stuff. “You’ve got a good memory,” he said evenly. He looked down at Helen, at her white face and huge, shocked eyes. “You ready to go, Helen?”
She could only nod. He took her arm and she followed, docilely enough, as he led her through the noisy crowd. “This party is awful,” he muttered, reaching for her coat and draping it around her shoulders.
She stopped, staring up at him. “Did you tell her to say that?”
“Say what?”
“I didn’t tell anyone your last name. You must have told Clarissa…”
“Helen, I haven’t been away from your side in the last thirty hours. When would I have told her? Besides, she seemed too stupid to be able to carry something like that off.”
“Clarissa is a circuit court judge,” Helen said.
“You’re kidding.”
“Most of the people here are lawyers and judges. Rafferty…” Her voice trailed off, and she shook her head.
“Let’s get out of here, Helen. I don’t want to waste my last day in Chicago like this.”
It didn’t require much persuasion. “All right,” she said, heading for the door.
There was something to be said for Greg after all. They were out the door, standing on the sidewalk, when their host came barreling after them, pushing between them in his effort to catch Rafferty’s arm.
Helen slipped in her very high heels, falling sideways as the car roared around the corner. Rafferty heard the noise with a sickening sense of horror, and his next move was pure instinct, shoving Greg out of the way, diving on top of Helen as the thunderous sound of machine-gun fire filled the chilly February air.
And then suddenly all was a hushed, horrified silence. Until Greg pulled himself to his feet, shook himself off and announced, “God, that was absolutely fabulous!”
The door to the garage was full of guests, staring wide-eyed at the street, and an enthusiastic cheer went up. Rafferty’s heart was still racing too fast to control, and beneath him Helen lay soft and panting, staring up at him with the same sort of panic he was feeling. And unless he was wrong, the same sort of desire.
And then hands hauled him upright, pulling Helen to her feet as well, as Greg continued to bounce over the sidewalk. “I can’t thank you enough, Jamey!” he announced. “I never thought of staging a drive-by shooting. It was fabulous, just fabulous.”
The idiot hadn’t noticed the bullet holes in the outer wall of the garag
e, or seen the chips of flying debris. The whole gaggle of slightly tipsy legal minds thought Ricky Drago’s latest attempt was nothing more than a party game. Rafferty wanted to knock some heads together.
He controlled the effort. Drago was long gone, but that didn’t mean he wasn’t crazy enough to turn around and try it again. The sooner they got out of there, the better.
Besides, Helen was swaying slightly on her feet, and her color wasn’t that much better than the off-white velvet dress that fitted her slender body so perfectly.
“Let’s go home, Helen,” he said, shaking off Greg’s enthusiastic embrace and putting an arm around Helen’s shoulder. The fox coat had ripped in their fall, and for a moment he had the sudden terrifying thought that she might have been hit after all.
But she was tougher than he would have thought. “Yes, let’s,” she said in a slightly shaken voice.
“Home,” Greg echoed archly. “Things have moved pretty quickly between you two.”
“Try not to be too big a jerk, Greg,” Mel said, stepping forward. His faded blue eyes surveyed them, and Rafferty knew that unlike the others, he hadn’t missed a thing. “You need any help, Jamey?”
“We’ll be fine.”
Mel nodded, glancing at the bullet holes in Greg’s brick garage. “The offer still holds, you know.”
Rafferty managed a tight smile. “I only wish I could.”
Helen was silent as he helped her into the car, silent when he leaned forward and fastened the seat belt around her. He was getting better with the stupid metal buckles, and Helen was in no shape to criticize. As a sop to her nerves he even fastened his own belt, as a sop to his own nerves he lit a cigarette, waiting to hear her start nagging. She said nothing as he pulled into traffic, barely missing an oncoming truck.
“Did you arrange that?” she asked finally, her voice slightly husky.
He glanced over at her. She’d managed to pull herself together, at least a bit, and he wondered how much he dared tell her. Whether she’d believe in Ricky Drago any more than she believed in him.
He shook his head. “It must have been someone else’s clever idea. I wish to God they’d warned us. It scared the hell out of me. I thought those were real bullets.”