by Jayne Castle
“Then you’d have to explain the coincidence of the timing. Why would someone choose the one night that you’re not home to search your apartment?”
“Simple,” she said. “Opportunity. There may also have been a sense of desperation. After all, we’d escaped the biker gang, disappeared into the tunnels, and gotten married. I signed a contract with your company. We were about to leave for the portal project jobsite. Whoever is after the Midnight Carnival might have been convinced that he was in danger of losing the one person who could lead him to the big find—me.”
“There are a couple of other questions here,” Elias said. “First, how did the intruder know that you had found the missing crystal in the first place and that you had used it to find the carnival?”
She bit her lip. “Okay, you’ve got me there. I kept it very, very quiet, believe me.”
Elias tapped his finger against the side of the mug. “But you registered a claim about two weeks ago.”
Hannah went very still. Her eyes widened. “I registered a claim on a small portion of a sector in the Underworld. There’s nothing on the claim forms I filled out that describes what I found there or hoped to discover within that sector.”
“But if the intruder knew that you had recently acquired a psi-code map and shortly thereafter filed a claim on a certain sector in the tunnels, it would be easy to put two and two together. He would have had every right to assume you had found something valuable.”
“But that would mean he’s been watching me from afar for heaven knows how long,” Hannah said. “And I still don’t see how he could have known that I had found the final piece of the map.”
“You’re the one who told me that collectors can be very obsessive. What if this particular collector has been hunting for the legendary Midnight Carnival for a while now?”
“But how would he know that I had acquired the map and found the carnival?”
“Mind if I take a closer look at the necklace?”
She reached up, unclasped the necklace, and handed it to him. “What are you looking for?”
“I’ll know if I find it.”
He spread the necklace across the palm of his hand and rezzed a little talent. His ring heated a little, searching for frequencies. The inexpensive crystals were of varying colors, transparent and cut to reflect the light in an attractive way. He could tell that they were psi-locked.
“Which crystal is the one you recently bought online?” he asked. “The one you said completed the map?”
“The ultraviolet one in the center. You can see the color when you view it through your para-senses.”
He caught the ultraviolet crystal between his thumb and his forefinger and kicked his talent up a little higher.
And there it was, a fine bit of tuning that had nothing to do with the psi-locked map.
“You said this came from the estate of a collector who had recently died?” he asked.
“That’s right. I kept an eye out for it for years but it never showed up in the underground market because it was locked away in the collector’s vault. He was an elderly man who had probably acquired it decades ago. I doubt that he had any idea that it was a piece of a map. The firm that handled the estate certainly didn’t know anything about it. There was no mention of that in the information about the stone that was posted online at the auction site. As far as I can tell, no other collectors knew the significance of the crystal because I was the only bidder.”
“How did you recognize it when it popped up in the estate auction?” he asked.
“Two reasons. The first was that it was ultraviolet. You’ll notice the crystals form a paranormal rainbow. I always knew that the ultraviolet crystal was the one that was missing. The second reason I could identify it was because of the cut. The faceting of each of the stones in the necklace is identical. I’ve always had a pretty good idea of the size, shape, and color of the missing crystal. I kept an eye out for it in both the regular crystal markets and the underground markets. When it showed up I recognized it immediately.”
“The ultraviolet crystal is hot,” he said.
Hannah looked at the necklace. “Well, yes. All of the stones have some resonating power. Someone was able to tune the whole set so that it functioned as a map. Each crystal had to have some power.”
“I’m not talking about the psi-code tuning,” he said. “This crystal is sending out a second frequency. Whoever possessed this necklace before you is either a very skilled tuner or he paid a good technician to do the job.”
“What are you talking about?”
“The ultraviolet crystal is set to transmit a strong, unique signal,” he said. “Anyone who knows the frequency and has the right equipment could track this stone.”
Hannah took a breath. “Someone traced the crystal to my shop?”
“That’s what it looks like. If I’m right, the ultraviolet crystal was the bait in an elaborate trap. Someone was looking for the Midnight Carnival. At some point he managed to obtain one of the psi-coded stones.”
“The ultraviolet crystal.”
“Right. But he needed the whole necklace and someone who could crack the psi-code and follow the map.”
“All right, I’m following you, so far,” Hannah said. “The person searching for the remaining crystals put the single ultraviolet on the market and waited to see who would take the bait.”
“It was a risk. Some other collector might have grabbed it before you did.” Elias stopped. “No, it wasn’t a risk. You said you were the only bidder. But can you be sure of that?”
“No, not really. I just know that I got the crystal at a very cheap price. The firm running the auction told me I was the only bidder so I assumed that was the case. I had no reason to think otherwise.”
“Have you worked with that particular auction site before?”
“Once or twice,” she said. “They rarely handle the kind of things I am usually looking for.”
“Do you trust it?”
“I have no reason not to trust it, but then, all I care about is the quality of the antiquities being auctioned. That particular firm has never tried to cheat me. The few items I’ve picked up at that site have always been as advertised.”
“People who run auction sites take a commission on the sales. I think that someone paid that firm well to run a very special auction for a single crystal that had no obvious value—except to the one person who recognized it.”
Hannah exhaled slowly. “Me.”
“Here’s how I think it all went down,” Elias said. “We have an obsessive collector who is looking for the Midnight Carnival. He’s got a piece of the map, a single crystal, but he can’t find the rest of the necklace. It occurs to him that another collector might have acquired it. He also knows that if that collector is aware of what he has, he will be watching for the ultraviolet crystal to come onto the underground market.”
“He put it out there and waited to see who would pounce on it,” Hannah said.
“When you jumped on it, he must have realized that you probably knew its real value. You were very likely the only bidder. That’s why you got it so cheap. But it also indicated that you might know something about the rest of the necklace. He tuned a tracking frequency into the ultraviolet crystal, had it delivered to you anonymously, and then sat back to watch your every move.”
“Oh, geez.” Hannah slumped in her chair, thoroughly irritated with herself. “I led him straight to the carnival. He didn’t even have to follow me. As soon as I filed my claim he had the approximate location.”
“But he couldn’t get through the dreamlight gate,” Elias said. “He was probably trying to figure out how to overcome that obstacle when I showed up. Being a paranoid collector, he assumed that I was after the carnival, too.”
“So he hired those bikers to try and grab me.”
“I’m not sur
e if the bikers were hired to get rid of me or grab you. They were able to follow us into the tunnels—probably had your personal amber frequency—but they lost us when we ducked into the Midnight Carnival. The collector would have lost the signal from the ultraviolet crystal at the same time. All he could do was wait for you to show up aboveground again.”
“And then, sometime around two that morning, he sees the story about our midnight marriage in the Curtain.”
“The photo in the Curtain was sharp and clear,” Elias said. He tightened his fingers around the crystals. “He could see that you aren’t wearing the necklace. He panics. Now he’s wondering if you discovered the tracking frequency on the ultraviolet crystal and neutralized it. All he knows for sure is that you are no longer wearing the necklace.”
“He’s desperate. He breaks into my apartment, maybe hoping to find the necklace or at least figure out what is going on.”
“You are his only hope for getting through the dreamlight gate. He wants to get you back under his control.”
Hannah glared. “I was never under his control.” She hesitated. “But you’re right. He’s a paranoid collector who has just lost his only lead to the Midnight Carnival. That probably explains the rage that I saw in his psi-prints.”
“We’re going to need a little help finding this guy and nailing those bikers,” Elias said. “If this were any other city I’d contact Jones and Jones or the Federal Bureau of Psi Investigation. But this is Illusion Town—your town. Got any ideas?”
Hannah smiled. Her eyes heated, not with passion, he concluded, not this time. The excitement he sensed radiating from her was the thrill of the hunt. After all, she was the Finder.
“We start with a phone call to my aunts,” she said. “And then we pay a call on Uncle Ollie.”
Chapter 28
It was going on ten o’clock when Hannah and Elias walked through the door of Ollie’s House of Pizza. Hannah had Virgil tucked under one arm. He clutched Arizona Snow in one paw.
Like most restaurants in Illusion Town, there was a slot machine at every table and a bar.
The night was still young and the crowd was light, mostly regulars who lived in the neighborhood. The out-of-zone tourists wouldn’t show up until after midnight. They had to have time and a few drinks to work up their nerve to leave the safety of the bright lights and the high security in the Amber, Emerald, and Sapphire zones.
Virgil considered himself one of the regulars. He wriggled free of Hannah’s grasp, bounced down to the floor, and scuttled across the floorboards to an empty stool. He scrambled up to the seat and from there vaulted onto the polished surface of the bar. There was another round of greetings.
Virgil, always ready to play to an adoring audience, went into full cute mode. He fluttered the length of the bar, proudly displaying his Arizona Snow doll and accepting affectionate pats en route.
When he reached the far end of the polished bar top, Jake, the bouncer-turned-bartender, put a dish of bar snacks in front of him. Virgil set Arizona Snow aside and went to work emptying the bowl of salty tidbits.
“Interesting doll, Virgil,” Jake said. He patted Virgil and gave Elias an appraising look before nodding approvingly and turning to Hannah. “Interesting husband. Congratulations, Finder.”
“About time you took the plunge, honey.” Milly Lamont, a former chorus line dancer perched on a stool at the end, hoisted her martini glass. “But why do your friends and family have to learn this from the Curtain?”
A small, tightly muscled woman seated at one of the tables spoke up.
“Heard the name was Coppersmith,” she said. “Would that be Coppersmith, as in Coppersmith Mining?”
Elias looked amused. “So I’m told.”
The woman gave him a sultry smile. “I’m Venus, by the way. I’m one of the artists in the Alien Visions show at the Glass Pavilion. I’ll make sure you and Hannah get tickets. Wedding gift.”
“Appreciate it,” Elias said.
Someone proposed a toast. There was a round of cheers and best wishes.
Hannah felt the heat rise in her cheeks. Luckily, Ollie’s House of Pizza, like most such business establishments in Illusion Town, existed in a state of eternal night carefully engineered by low lighting and heavily darkened windows. She was reasonably sure that no one could see her turning red.
“Thanks, everyone. But really, it’s just an MC,” she mumbled.
“So what?” Ned Higgins said. “It’s a marriage. That calls for a celebration.”
Ned was a retired croupier who supplemented his pension with small-time blackjack games conducted in various back rooms scattered around the Dark Zone. Jake was a very good card counter. He had a psychic talent for it. He was so good that he had been quietly but firmly informed that he was not welcome in any of the major casinos, at least not as a player.
Alexandra Collins, one of a team of aging waitresses who worked at Ollie’s, crossed the room to give Hannah a hug. She stepped back and studied Elias. Energy whispered in the atmosphere around her.
Hannah held her breath, waiting for Alexandra’s verdict. Alexandra operated a small side business as a storefront psychic in the DZ. She had a talent for reading people.
For some reason Hannah was relieved when Alexandra gave Elias an approving smile.
“Welcome to the DZ,” Alexandra said. “As long as you’re married to Hannah, you’re one of the family.”
“Thanks,” Elias said.
Hannah decided to take charge.
“Thanks for all the good wishes,” she said. “Afraid we can’t stay. Just dropped in to see Uncle Ollie.”
“About time you showed up, honey. Let’s have a look at this new husband of yours.”
The big voice boomed from the large, barrel-chested man who emerged from a back room. He was in his seventies with a lot of shoulder-length silver hair, which Hannah suspected was not all his own, and an unnaturally tight face that was kept firmly in place by regular visits to a discreet cosmetic dermatologist. His dark eyes glinted with a little heat as he examined Elias.
Ollie had a last name but he hadn’t used it for years. He was “Ollie” to almost everyone in the DZ and “Uncle Ollie” to Hannah. Once upon a time he had managed the Lost Colony casino, one of the scruffier establishments in the Emerald Zone. At the time it had been owned by Maxwell Smith. When Smith sold the business in order to move upmarket with the new, flashy Amber Palace, Ollie had retired from the fast lane. He claimed he had always wanted to run a small neighborhood restaurant.
“This is Elias Coppersmith,” Hannah said. “And it’s just an MC, Uncle Ollie. My life has gotten a little complicated lately.”
“Yeah, marriage will do that to you,” Ollie said. He offered his hand to Elias. “Welcome to the DZ, Elias. I met your dad a few decades back.”
“Do I want to know the circumstances?” Elias asked.
Ollie chuckled. “He used to show up at the Lost Colony every few months. He’d win just enough to get my attention and then he’d leave. My security people checked him out and said he wasn’t cheating so they figured he was some kind of talent, one we didn’t know how to detect. I sent in a cooler to try to take the edge off his streak. Didn’t work. My security team suggested we just ask him to leave but I decided I’d like to talk to him first.”
Elias smiled. “Dad told you he was using your casino to run some real-world lab tests on some quartz samples, right?”
“Yeah. Claimed his lab instruments weren’t nearly as good as a casino for running some kinds of tests.”
“Dad tends to be very lucky at cards.”
Ollie snorted. “You can say that again. Your father would have made one hell of a professional poker player.”
“He likes a friendly game, but generally speaking, when he risks big money it involves opening up a new hot-rocks territory.”
“When I
figured that out, we made a deal,” Ollie said. “I told him he could continue to test his samples at the Lost Colony provided he let me invest in the territory the samples were coming from. Turned out to be the Sapphire Mine.”
Elias grinned. “It was one of our most profitable territories. Still is, for that matter.”
“Tell me about it. How do you think I financed this place? And now you’re married to my niece. Whatever you need, you got it. Family is family, right?”
Elias smiled. “It is where I come from.”
“Same here in the DZ,” Ollie said. “So what can I give you two by way of a wedding gift?”
“What we need is a little extra protection, Uncle Ollie,” Hannah said. “The cops can only do so much. Runner and his crew are good but there’s only five of them and they don’t carry a lot of firepower. The guys we’re worried about are running around on big motorcycles and they’re armed with mag-rez pistols.”
Ollie squinted a little. “You’re talking about that gang of out-of-zone bikers that tried to grab you the other night.”
Hannah smiled. “Should have known you’d have heard about that by now.”
“Can’t keep stuff like that quiet in the DZ. I doubled the neighborhood watch on your street as soon as I heard about what had happened. You know, the Club isn’t going to be at all happy about this.”
“Funny you should mention that,” Elias said. “Hannah’s aunts arranged an appointment for us with Smith at the Amber Palace this evening.”
“Excellent.” Ollie chuckled. “Those bikers are gonna find out real quick who runs things here in Illusion Town.”
Chapter 29
It was just after midnight and the atmosphere on the gaming floor of the Amber Palace was hot with energy. Elias knew that some of the charged heat seeped in from the nearby ruins but most of it was generated by the players. There was a reason why the excitement of gambling was often described as a fever.