Poltergeist (Greywalker, Book 2)
Page 13
I left, shaking my head and wondering whom or what I’d just met. I returned to the comfortably opulent lobby preoccupied.
“Nice, but stodgy. Sort of the anti-Gatsby, don’t you think?”
I turned sharply and came under the beam of a toothpaste-ad smile. Blue eyes twinkled at me with well-schooled charm above that glittering white expanse of dentition. A yellow thread seemed to ring around his head and shoulders like a halo.
I nodded with a reflected smile. “Yes, it is. Very East Egg.” I watched his smile broaden—he even had dimples. “I assume you’re Ian Markine.” He was the handsome white guy dating the Asian woman from the project. I’d watched him untangle her black hair from her earrings.
His eyes sparkled a bit at his name. “Yes, I am. You must be Harper Blaine, then.”
I just nodded. He was about my own height but where my brown hair was straight, his was wavy. He had remarkable good looks that he seemed well aware of, though he made a show of the opposite. His hair was just a little mussed, his spotless white shirt a touch too large, tie carelessly knotted, but still smooth. It looked like being young and sexy took a lot of work and I was glad I didn’t have to do it, myself.
“You wanted to talk about Tuckman’s project, right?”
“Yeah. Do you have time?”
“Oh, yeah. The audience won’t be coming out for a while and nothing’s had a chance to get messy yet. Why don’t we sit by the fire? No one will mind.”
I agreed and Ian led me to one of the armchairs in front of the fireplace. He sat down near me, rather than across the hearth, and leaned over the chair’s arm to look me in the eye.
“So, what do you want to know?” His eyes were lit from within by some amusement.
“When did you join the project and why?”
He chuckled and there was an odd glimmer around him, like color fragments reflected in a warped mirror. I’d never seen anything like that before. “Back in December I was feeling . . . stagnant. You know—you keep on doing the same thing, seeing the same people, and it gets dull. So I thought I’d find something outside of the sociology department—that’s my major—that would give me some new people to get to know. I admit I’m”—he broke off to laugh at himself—“well, I’m always kind of studying any group I’m in, and sociologists are just not fun to watch. They’re never disarmed. And there’s not much that’s further away from functionalism than making your own ghost, you have to admit. It does start to smack of collective behavior, of course, but I just try to enjoy it, instead of analyzing all the time.”
“So this is a mental break?”
“Yes. And they’re a good bunch of people.”
“Interesting?”
He laughed again. “Yes, they’re great people. We get along well. Ana and I have been out a few times for drinks with Mark and Ken—good times. Well . . . I have to admit that Terry’s an ass, but I don’t have to deal with him, so it’s no issue. Most of the time it’s fun. It’s certainly been rewarding.”
I raised my eyebrows. “In what way?”
He smiled crookedly, looking down. “It’s not good of me, I know. I just find it difficult, sometimes, to be everything to Ana. She’s the center of my universe but . . . it’s been good to have a few other people in it, to make some other friends. That’s very selfish of me, very thoughtless of Ana.”
“That’s Ana Choi, correct? She’s also on the project.”
He looked up. “Yes. Please, don’t rat on me. I don’t want Ana to think I like them better than her. We can both be a little jealous and I assumed this was confidential,” he rushed on, his blue eyes begging, but there was a flicker of dimple as he gabbled and that sparkle of strange color.
“Of course it’s confidential, Mr. Markine.” I wondered why he’d brought it up so fast.
He sighed and sat back. “Harper, you don’t know how much that relieves me. This experience—with the project—has been so remarkable and I don’t want to ruin it.”
“And how do you think the project is going?”
“Terrific! It’s great! Sometimes it’s very exciting. Wednesday, for instance, we really had something going.” He gave a low whistle. “It was impressive, but, you know it’s pretty tiring. We were all completely blown out afterward. Wow.”
“Have you ever thought that the phenomena were faked? Even just once in a while?”
He blinked and lowered his head to stare at me. “Faked? No. I mean, that’s just—well, why bother? We do so well without anybody faking anything. And wouldn’t we notice if it was? It’s not as if you can hide something that can move a table around like that. I’ve been working in this place a long time and I’ve seen some of the equipment you’d need to do that—there’s still a ton of the old stuff in the storage attic. It would be far too obvious.”
I didn’t bother to tell him that modern stage rigs had come a long way since this had last been a live theater. Even as a mere chorus dancer, I’d seen my share of flying wire rigs and trapdoors that postdated anything in storage here. But I had to admit I wouldn’t know anything about the equipment needed to fly a table with a roomful of people less than a foot away.
“One last thing and I’ll let you get back to work. What would you think if I told you someone on the team had been faking phenomena?”
“I’d say you were mistaken.”
“But if it were true, who would you suspect?”
Ian frowned. “I don’t like to point fingers . . . but I’d have to guess Ken. He’s got a tricky sense of humor.”
And eyes for your girlfriend, I thought, and wondered if he’d noticed. But since it was Mark who was dead and not Ken George, I presumed Ian hadn’t noticed. He didn’t seem bothered by it if he knew and his ego didn’t seem to have taken any dings as a result. He seemed like a typical, self-involved young man who wanted to look more knowledgeable and impressive than he was. I couldn’t have cared less.
I got to my feet. “Oh, one more thing. Do you ever experience anything strange away from the group?”
“Well, not really,” he confided. “A lot of people claim this place is haunted by several ghosts, including the ghost of Seattle’s lady mayor, Bertha Knight Landes, but I’ve never seen anything like that. No apparitions, no mysteriously moving objects. Our ghost is PK by committee, remember? It doesn’t work outside its own little room.” Ian winked at me.
“I see. I think that’s all I needed to know. Thanks for your time, Ian.”
He stood up and offered me his hand to shake. “It was no trouble,” he said as I accepted the handshake. He closed his other hand over mine. I found his grip cold and just a touch too intimate as he smiled at me. “If you think of anything else, you have my number.”
“Yes, I do,” I replied, stifling a sudden spike of anxiety and the same chilly sensation I’d felt when I saw the poltergeist with Patricia’s kids. The thing seemed to be knitted to the members of the séance group, present even when invisible. I dreaded the next handshake from one of them if this feeling was going to be repeated.
In spite of his practiced charm, I was glad to remove myself from Ian’s presence and head for my next interview.
Looking up at the woman on the wall, I had to squint against the sudden sunshine pouring through a tear in the cloud cover. I wondered why she’d chosen the outside climbing wall when Stone Gardens offered walls inside, protected from the weather.
“Mrs. Stahlqvist,” I called up. “I’m Harper Blaine, you agreed to talk with me about Dr. Tuckman’s project.”
“Yes. Go ahead.” She glanced up and scanned for her next handhold.
The gravel I stood on below her was damp and dark from the persistent sprinkling of rain that had started as I drove between Capitol Hill and Ballard—rain now turned to visual white noise by the shaft of sun. Even the Grey was hard to see and I couldn’t tell much about her from this angle, other than the fact that she had no need to fear spandex. I knew healthy twenty-year-olds who didn’t have the muscle definition of Caroly
n Knight-Stahlqvist at forty. Her blond hair—nearly the same pale shade as her husband’s—was woven into a smooth braid that hung like a pendulum as she moved up into the first overhang.
The hoots of boat horns from the canal locks nearby and the swish of car traffic on the street beside us forced me to yell. “This would be easier if you came down.”
Her snort echoed off the wall. “I said I could give you some time. I didn’t say it would be exclusive.”
I shrugged. “When did you join the project?”
“January. Dale told you that.”
“Yes, but husbands and wives often have differing memories of events.”
“I’ve no doubt of that. Dale sees the world by his own light.”
“What about you?”
“Of course I do. Women in business have to make opportunities as much as seize them. I seized Dale when I had the chance and I’ll hold on so long as I need him. We both get what we want and we don’t interfere with the other’s life otherwise.” She dug a foot into an artificial crevice and pushed the other foot free, planted it against a knob and stood higher on the wall.
“Sounds a little cold-blooded.”
“It’s business. Hot blood is for other endeavors—which is not what I married Dale for. Younger men whose ambition doesn’t rise above the bedsheets are much better for that, anyway.”
“Is that why you joined the project—to find someone to rumple your sheets?”
She laughed a precise and modulated derision. “Plato was right about women being like library books—he just had the sexes wrong. I can check a man out of anywhere and put him back when I’m done. And it’s what they want, so they don’t complain. I really don’t need a stalking ground. Most women don’t, they’re just too sure it’s wrong to help themselves.”
She pulled herself up and braced against the hard corner of the wall. White sunlight shimmered on her wet skin and clothes and threw a moment of butterfly illumination onto her face, leaving a flashbulb impression of film goddess perfection before she shifted slightly and the light slid away.
“I joined the project because Tuck asked me to. I took some classes from him at the U as an undergrad and we understand each other. He thought I’d enjoy it. And I do. I enjoy the creation of Celia. There’s a challenge in reaching a successful consensus of minds and moving forward from there. It’s an exhilarating change from leading the corporate pack for a while.”
“How successful is the project?”
“Very. We are able to accomplish extraordinary things. There were some early hitches and recently I lost a piece of jewelry that I’m annoyed over—but other than that it’s very smooth now.”
“Do you think one of the participants stole your jewelry?”
“No. It was a Knight family heirloom—it belonged to my great-aunt Bertha, who was mayor of Seattle, and it has great sentimental value—but I’m sure it’s just misplaced. Our poltergeist sometimes hides things from us and she’s fascinated with jewelry.”
I nodded, remembering Celia’s interest in Ana’s earrings in the recordings—but I also recalled the ghost in the theater who’d said a certain brooch was a fake. Same brooch? If she was the ghost of Bertha Knight Landes, it might well be. “Do you believe in it?” I asked.
“You’ll need to rephrase that question. I don’t know what you’re asking.” She slipped a little on the wet grips and grunted as she dipped her hands one by one into the chalk bag at her back, then dug her hands and feet into new positions.
“Do you believe the phenomena are genuine?”
“Yes. I was doubtful initially, but I’ve been convinced. There truly is more to the world than we can see.”
“Do you think that any of the phenomena are faked, sweetened, or manipulated, now or ever in the past?”
She laughed again. “I know the early days were faked. Seeded, you could say. We no longer need that crutch. We control Celia through our committee of the mind now. No one’s faking anything.” She chuckled. “Anything.”
“How do you know?”
“Mark told me how it’s done. Once I knew what to look for, I could spot it. Now I never see it. We’re clean.” She sounded rather smug as she wedged herself into another chink in the overhanging surface. She checked her position. “What time is it?” she asked.
I looked at my watch. “Three twenty,” I called back.
“Good. Almost done here. If you have any other questions, you’d better ask quickly.”
I asked her what she thought of the rest of the group. She replied they were pleasant enough but, like her husband, she found the college students a bit silly and not of her social class. She also didn’t like Patricia and called Wayne, the retired military man, “a likable sot.” The only people she seemed to truly like aside from herself were Tuckman and Mark. I kept speculation to myself on why she liked Tuckman, and I wondered why Mark had told her about the faked effects and how she’d react when she found out he was dead.
By the time she’d finished answering my question, she had come to the apex of the climb. She hooked onto the rappelling rope and glided down, chalk-streaked, her thin shoes crunching into the gravel in front of me.
Carolyn didn’t look the least chilled or uncomfortable. I held in a shiver, realizing how damp I’d gotten standing in the drizzle while she clambered above me. She was breathing a little fast, but not much, and she glowed through the sheen of sweat and rain with more than exertion and health. She fixed me with brilliant blue eyes and looked me over, nodding. Then she gave a very small smile. “You can call me Cara. Any other questions?”
“Not right now,” I replied. It was strange to feel my height was, for once, no advantage. Cara radiated assurance beyond physical stature, though she certainly wasn’t short. I was irritated at my small pleasure in her evident approval. I squashed it with quick self-reproof. Cara Stahlqvist was a first-order opportunist, driven by ambition. There was nothing soft to her, inside or out. She didn’t like people, she used them and thrived on competition.
“Are you satisfied with your investigation thus far?”
“It’s about what I expected.” I looked at my watch again and snuck a peek at her through the Grey now that the sun was no longer obscuring my view. Like the others, Cara had a thin yellow thread mantling her head and shoulders, but nothing like the shifty aura that had surrounded Ken or the strange colors around Ian.
She glanced down at her left hand and frowned at a bleeding scrape. She had removed her wedding ring, but I noticed there was no band of untanned flesh to mark it. “What time is it?”
“Three thirty.”
“Then your time is up.” She looked back into my face. “If there’s anything else, call me.”
I let my eyes narrow. I didn’t like her and she didn’t have to like me. “I’ll be in touch.”
She gave me a cooler smile and strode away into the building. I gave her time to get into the locker room before I followed through the building and back out.
I headed for Queen Anne, thinking that there was something wrong. None of the participants so far seemed to have any unusual ability in the Grey that could account for the power of the poltergeist. Unlike a vampire or a witch, they had no inherent power and no apparent tie to the power grid except the thin yellow tether to Celia. But they also seemed to have no knowledge or opportunity to manipulate anything physically to create the effects Tuckman was recording. I was still convinced that what Tuckman was getting was real phenomena, but I wasn’t sure how they’d jumped the barriers that had stumped the Philip group. And if the poltergeist was involved in Mark’s death, I couldn’t figure out how without the whole group to support it, which seemed unlikely.
But before I could argue with Tuckman about the poltergeist’s power, I’d have to prove to him that none of his people could have faked the phenomena physically. And I still needed to know how that could—or couldn’t—be done.
FOURTEEN
Ben sat at a small wooden table in the Five Spot’s ba
r with a canvas book bag beside him. The seasonal menu looked to be Hell’s Kitchen Italian, to judge from the collection of American tin advertising signs and picturesque laundry arrayed overhead while the Bobby Rydell version of “Volare” played in the background. Excess is the Five Spot’s stock-in-trade, though they’d forgone the red-and-white-checked tablecloths in the bar. I slid into the bench opposite Ben’s chair.
“Hi. I thought I’d be ahead of you. It’s not four yet.”
“Mara shooed me out of the house early. I tried to call you a little while ago, but I just got your voice mail.”
I snatched the cell phone from my pocket and saw I’d never turned it back on after leaving the theater. “Damn,” I muttered. “This thing has the worst ringer—some kind of annoying pop song. I shut it off and forgot to turn it back on. I miss my pager.”
“I’m sure it’s got a vibrate mode.”
“Yeah, I just can’t find it.”
“Can I take a look at it?” Ben asked, holding out his hand.
I shrugged and handed it over.
Ben poked at it and the phone made several aborted yelps and squawks before giving forth a rich purr. “There. That should do it.”
I peered at him. “How did you do that?”
“It’s the buttons on the side. You press the top one to unlock the mode, then poke the bottom one until the screen says ‘vibrate’ and then lock it again.”
“Now I feel stupid.”
“Don’t. I had to get one of my students to show me three or four times.” He handed the phone back to me and I tucked it back into my jacket pocket. “Do you want a drink?” Ben asked, putting his hands flat on the table.
“Not yet. What are you going to show me about séance tables and knocks?”
“Well, not a lot. My technique is pretty rough.”
The table lurched toward Ben, kicking its feet up at me and sending the candle on the tabletop clattering to the floor. I yelped and slid back in my seat.