Jack narrowed his eyes in a display of suspicion. "How do you know where I live?"
"Why, from the questionnaire you filled out yesterday."
"Oh, yeah." He gave a sheepish grin. "Forgot about that."
Jack had expected the Fosters to check up on him. He'd been the only new face yesterday when the lights had come on, so he had to be a prime suspect. That was why he'd used the name of a real person... just in case he had to come back.
But he'd given himself plausible deniability: the remote rig in the light switch could be activated from outside the seance room.
He was sure they'd checked up on him. Foster no doubt took a trip to the Millennium Towers and found that a Robert Butler did indeed live there. If he'd seen the real Robert Butler, the jig would have been up. But obviously he hadn't. If he'd called the number Jack had written on the questionnaire-someone had done just that last night and hung up-he heard an outgoing message from "Bob Butler" confirming the number and instructing him to leave a message after the beep.
The Krugerrand yesterday and today's envelope full of cash should have laid any residual suspicions to rest. At least that was what Jack hoped. These two were the type who tried to kill the competition. What would they do to someone they thought was trying to pull a sting on them? Jack took comfort in the little .38 automatic nestled in his right boot.
Foster said, "You were close to your uncle?"
"Oh, yeah. Great guy. Split his estate between me and my brother when he died. Great guy."
"Is that why you wish to contact him? To thank him?"
"Well, yeah. And to ask him..." Jack reached into the left inner breast pocket of his jacket and pulled out one of Monte's clamshell cases. "... about this." Foster's eyes fixed on its chrome finish. "Interesting." He reached for it. "May I?" Jack handed it to him and watched his hand drop as it took the full weight of the box. But Foster made no mention of how heavy it was. The fingers of his free hand glided over the tapered surface, caressing the seam, running across the inset hinges, and coming to rest on the keyhole at the opposite end.
"Do you have the key?"
"Um, no."
"Really. I'll bet there's an interesting story behind this case."
Jack put on a guilty expression as he held out his hand for the case. "You might say that. But that's between me, my uncle, and the lady."
"Yes, of course," Foster said, handing it back to him. He glanced at his watch. "I'll see if Madame is ready."
He stepped away from the desk and entered the seance room, closing the door behind him. Jack listened in on a hurried strategy meeting between Mr. and Mrs. Foster beyond that door.
"He's telling the truth," Madame Pomerol's voice said in his left ear. "I found the uncle on sitters-net. And get this: He was a coin collector."
"You should feel the weight of that case he's got. I'm betting it's stuffed with gold coins. Trouble is it's locked."
"That shouldn't be a problem for you. Get a look inside that case. I'll handle the rest."
A moment later Foster reappeared and motioned Jack toward the door.
"Come. Madame is ready."
He ushered Jack into the room. Again that claustrophobic feeling from all the heavy drapes. This time only two chairs huddled against the table.
Foster pointed to the case. "Did that belong to your uncle?"
"I'm pretty sure it did. That's one of the things I want to find out."
"Then I'll have to ask you to place it on that settee over there until later in the session."
Jack looked at the little red velvet upholstered couch against the wall about a dozen feet away. Jack knew what lay on the other side of that wall: Foster's command center, much like Charlie's but not as sophisticated. He'd found it Saturday night when he'd searched the place.
"Why?"
"Madame finds her gift works better if she is not in proximity to objects that once belonged to the departed she is trying to contact."
Good line, Jack thought as he clutched the case against his chest.
"No kidding? I'd think they'd be a big help."
"Oh, they are, they are, but later. Once she is one with the Other Side, they are invaluable. But early on, when Madame is making the transition, the auras from these objects interfere with her connection."
"I don't know," Jack said, drawing out the words.
Foster pointed to the little couch. "Please. Place it on the settee for now. When Madame has the ear of the spirits, she will ask you to bring it to the table. Have no fear. It will be quite safe there."
Jack made a show of indecision, then shrugged. "All right. If it's gonna help make this work, what the hey."
He walked to the settee and settled the case on the cushions, but his eyes were searching the wall behind it, looking for seams in the wallpaper. He found none, but noticed that the molding here ran in a box pattern just above the level of the settee. He knew one of those rectangles hid a little trapdoor; he'd seen its other side Saturday night.
Empty-handed, he returned to the table and seated himself in the chair the smiling Carl Foster was holding for him.
"Madame will be with you shortly."
And then Jack was alone. He knew he was on camera so he looked nervous, drumming on the table, fiddling with his jacket. While doing that he checked the stack of counterfeit bills inside his left sleeve, and the second metal case in his left inner breast pocket.
All set.
A moment later the overhead spots went out and Madame Pomerol made her entrance in another flowing beaded gown, pink this time. She wore the same turbanlike hat as on Sunday.
"Monsieur Butler," she said in her faux French accent as she extended her bejeweled hand, "how good to see you again."
"Nice to be up close and personal, as it were."
"I understand you wish to contact your late uncle, yes?"
"That I do."
"Then let us begin."
No preliminaries this time, no speech aoout not touching the ectoplasm. Madame Pomerol seated herself opposite Jack and said, "Please lay your hands flat on the table." When Jack complied she said, "I will now contact my spirit guide, the ancient Mayan priest known to me as Xultulan."
As they had Sunday, the clear bulbs on the chandelier faded, leaving the dull red ones lit. Once again shadows crowded around the table, held off only by the faint red glow from above. Jack glanced toward the settee and his case but could make out no details in the darkness.
Madame Pomerol began her tonal hum, then did her head-loll thing.
Jack guessed the reason for the hum: to help mask any sound of the trapdoor opening in the wall by the settee. Foster was probably reaching for the metal case right now.
This was SOP in the spook trade: snatch the purse, rifle through it for whatever information it contained: driver license, SSN, bank account number, address book, pictures of family members. Foster's command center had a photocopier and a key cutter, just like Charlie's; he could copy documents and keys in minutes.
If the remote switch were still in place it might have been fun to turn on the lights and catch Foster with his hand in the till, but Jack had already played that scene. He was going for a bigger sting today.
The table tipped under his hands and so he felt obliged to let out a startled, "Whoa!"
And then the low, echoey moan from the lady. The amp had been turned on.
"O Xultulan! We have a seeker after one who has crossed over, one with whom he shares a blood tie. Help us, O Xultulan!"
Jack tuned her out and concentrated on time. Foster should have snatched the case by now. He'd have had his pick set open and ready and would be working on the lock. Jack had a key but he'd done a couple of test runs picking the lock himself-and had purposely left a few crude scratches around it. As expected, the little lock turned out to be an easy pick, complicated only by its small size. If Foster had any talent, he should be turning those tumblers just... about... now.
And now he's lifting the top... and freezing at th
e sight of rows of gleaming gold coins. Not bullion coins like yesterday's Krugerrand, but numismatic beauties from Jack's own collection, worth far more than their weight in gold.
He wants to touch them but the plastic dome stops him. He tries to lift it but it won't budge. It's locked down. But there has to be a catch somewhere, a release...
"My case," Jack said, straightening and running jittery hands over his jacket like a man who'd just discovered that his wallet is missing. "I want my case!"
"Please be calm, Monsieur Butler," Madame Pomerol said, suddenly alert and aware and free of her trance. "Your case is fine."
Jack rose from his chair. He put a tremor in his voice. "I-I-I want it. I've got to find it!"
"Monsieur Butler, you must sit down." That was a warning to her husband to put his ass in gear and get this turkey's precious case back on the settee. "I am in touch with Xultulan and he has located your uncle. You can retrieve the case in a few minutes when-"
"I want it now!"
Jack feigned disorientation and wandered in the wrong direction first-he wanted to give Foster enough time to close the case and return it-then lurched around and stumbled toward the settee.
"We're okay," Foster's voice said in his ear. "It's back on your side."
Jack couldn't see the settee in the darkness so he traveled by memory, and made sure he banged into it when he reached it. He felt around on the cushion and found the case.
"Here it is!" he cried. "Thank God!"
As he was speaking he slipped that case into his left breast pocket and removed its identical twin from the right. He'd filled the mounts within the first with gleaming pristine beauties that anyone would recognize as valuable for their bullion weight alone. But when Foster saw the dates he'd know they were old. And since they'd looked up Matthew West on sitters-net.com, he'd assume they were rare.
The second case, however, he'd filled with lead sinkers.
"Shit, that was close!" said Foster's voice. "But worth it. You should see what's in that case. Gold coins. Not more Krugerrands, but old collectibles. They must be worth a fucking fortune. Think of something. We have got to get our hands on those coins!"
As Jack waded back toward the faintly glowing pool of red around the table, he noticed a look of concentration and distraction on Madame Pomerol's face as she listened to her husband.
She'd probably been ready to scold her sitter, but now she gave Jack a warm, motherly smile.
"See, Monsieur Butler? There was nothing for you to get upset about. You feel better now, yes?"
"Much." He took his seat and used the moment to pull the stack of thirty bogus hundreds from within his sleeve and lay it on his lap. Then he put both hands on the table and clutched the case between them. "I'm real sorry about that. Don't know what came over me. I just got scared, I guess. You know, the darkness and all."
"That is perfectly understandable, especially on your first visit." She covered her eyes with a hand. "I have made contact with your uncle."
Jack jerked upright in his seat. "Really? Can I talk to him?"
"The connection was broken when you left the table."
"Oh, no!"
"But that is not a terrible thing. I can reestablish it. But it was not a good connection, so I must ask you a few questions first."
"Shoot."
"Your uncle, his middle name was Thomas, yes?"
"You know, I believe it was. Yes, Matthew Thomas West. How'd you know that?"
She smiled. "Your uncle told me."
"Damn! That's scary."
"He seemed upset about something. Do you know what it could be?"
Jack averted his eyes, hoping he looked guilty. "I don't think so."
"Something about an inheritance, perhaps?"
Jack looked awestruck. "You know about that?"
He was perfectly aware that he'd told Foster about sharing the estate with his brother, but it was common for sitters to forget that their own loose lips were the source of most of what a medium told them.
"Of course, but communication was garbled. Something about you and your brother..."
Jack started with his story. It jibed with all the available information on sitters-net.com; he'd looked at it from different angles and couldn't see any holes. He hoped Madame Pomerol wouldn't either.
"Yeah. We were his only living relatives. Our folks were gone, and he had no kids."
No kids, Jack thought. Must've died a lonely old man, going to mediums in a vain attempt to contact his dead wife. But that's not going to happen to me. Not now...
The realization lit a warm glow in his chest.
"Monsieur Butler?"
Jack snapped to. He'd drifted away. Jeez. Not like him. Couldn't afford to do that or he'd blow the sting.
"Sorry. I was just thinking about Uncle Matt. After he died, his will divided his estate between me and my brother Bill."
"Yes, he told me his wife Alice had died many years before him. They are reunited now."
"You know about Aunt Alice? This is amazing. And they're together again? That's great."
"They are very happy. The inheritance?"
"Oh yeah. Well, I got the house and everything in it." Jack frowned and pushed out his lower lip, just shy of a pout. "Bill got the coin collection. Uncle Matt always did like him better."
"These two things, they were not equal?"
He sighed. "Yeah, they were about equal in dollar value. But all Bill had to do was find a coin dealer to unload the collection. Know what he walked away with? A quarter of a million dollars." Jack snapped his fingers. "Just like that."
"And you had to sell the house. Not so easy."
"Damn right. Had to sell off all the furniture as well. I wound up with the same amount of cash, but I had to keep flying back and forth to Minnesota and it took me until just last week to get it. That's almost six damn months!"
Madame Pomerol gave a Gallic shrug. "But still you have much money now, yes? You should be happy. But none of this tells me why your uncle is so upset."
"Well..." Jack looked away again. "I guess it has to do with this little case."
"Yes?"
He took a deep breath and sighed again. "Last week, as I was cleaning out the last of Uncle Mart's stuff before the closing, I came upon the case. It was locked and I couldn't find the key, so I brought it back with me. I was planning on finding a locksmith to open it for me, but..."
"But what, Monsieur Butler?"
"I don't think Uncle Matt wants me to have this."
"Why do you say that?"
"You won't believe this." He gave a nervous laugh. "But then again, maybe you will, seeing as how you're a medium and all." Another deep breath, a show of hesitation, then, "It's the case." He tapped its shiny surface. "Someone or something keeps moving it on me."
"Moving it?"
Jack nodded. "I keep finding it in places where I never put it. I mean that: never put it."
"Perhaps your wife or-"
"I live alone. Don't even have a cleaning lady. But I'm looking for one. You know of anybody? Because I-"
"Please go on."
"Oh, yeah. Well, it kept moving and I kept making excuses, blaming my memory. But Saturday... Saturday really got to me. You see, I'd planned to take it down to a locksmith that day, but when I was ready to leave, I couldn't find the case. I looked everywhere in that apartment. And finally, when the locksmith was closed and it was too late to do anything, I found the damn thing under my bed. Under my bed! Just as if someone had hidden it from me. In fact I know it was hidden from me, and I have a pretty good idea who did it."
"It was your Uncle Matt."
"I think so too."
"No. It was your uncle. He told me."
"You mean to tell me you knew about this all along? Why'd you let me go on so?"
"I needed to know if you were telling me the truth. Now I do. What you say agrees with what your uncle told me."
Yeah, right.
Foster said, "There were a bunch of sc
ratches on the case lock. Looked like this jerk tried to pick it himself. Hit him with that."
Madame Pomerol cleared her throat. "But you left out a few things."
Jack wished he knew how to blush on cue. Probably wouldn't be noticed in this light anyway.
"Such as?"
"How you tried to open the case yourself and failed."
He covered his eyes. "Oh, man. Well, yeah. Tell Uncle Matt I'm sorry about that."
"Also, you believe the case holds valuable coins, and if so, they belong to your brother, yes?"
"Now wait just a minute, there. Uncle Matt left the coin collection to Bill and the house and its contents to me. This here case was part of the contents. So it's rightfully mine."
"Your uncle disagrees. He tells me they are silver coins of little monetary worth."
Jack could feel her eyes on him, looking for some sign that he already knew what the case held. He avoided a quick, negative reaction, but he didn't want to appear too accepting.
"Yeah?" he said, frowning as he hefted the case. "Seems kinda heavy for just silver."
The lady brushed past his doubt. "I know nothing of such things. All I know is that your uncle told me they were of great sentimental value to him. They are the very first coins he collected as a boy."
"No kidding?" Jack was getting an idea of where she might be heading with this.
"Yes, your uncle was hoping to take them along with him when he crossed over, but he could not manage it. That was why they remained in the house."
"Take them into the afterlife? Is that possible?"
She shook her head. "Sadly, no. No money in the afterlife. At least not permanently."
"Can't take it with you, eh? Well, I guess that settles it. I'll just have to give this to Bill."
"Don't let him get away!" Foster cried. "I'm telling you there's a small fortune in that case!"
Jack slapped his hands on the table, picked up the case, and made as if to stand. Wasn't she going to say anything? Was she going to let him walk out with all those rare gold coins? A mook like her? He couldn't believe it.
"One moment, Monsieur Butler. Your uncle wishes me to apport the case to the other side so that he can see them one last time."
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