by Mark Henwick
By the time I’d reached the Keynes building, I’d passed by Manassah and I was dressed in the upscale suit that Jen had bought me. It pissed me off that what she’d bought me was so damn useful. And necessary. I’d try and be angry at her again this evening, maybe.
I got in the elevator and looked at myself in the full-length mirror. Turned, checked my butt. Straightened the skirt a touch.
Gods, Amber, you cleaned up okay. Should’ve put some makeup on as well. Nice suit. I’ll forgive you, Jen.
Victor was already there, setting up the system, letting it sink its electronic fangs into the building. He waved at me briefly, did a double take and then grinned at my outfit. I glared, daring him to make a comment. He wisely went back to frowning at the screen.
I made the coffee and rustled up some doughnuts. While I waited, I found Tullah’s fake business cards had arrived and I had a neat pocket in my new jacket for them.
“Nearly there,” he muttered through a mouthful of doughnut, and clicked his way through a couple more screens of settings. He shook his head.
“Too easy, this security system,” he said. “Remember last time?”
“Yeah, we had a fight to get in.”
“Done.” He brushed his hands together. “This is just sitting here in passive mode, demonstratin’ its capabilities, understand. You gonna be on your own with that thing, girl, so whatever you do, don’t hit that button there or it goes active. You understand?”
I nodded. That button. Yup.
“Now, your ‘colleague’ you want delivered. He okay to ride on a motorcycle?”
“Yeah, he’s fit and healthy.” A motorcycle would be a good way to do it. Arvinder could decline if he didn’t like the idea, and I could stand back and say I’d done everything I could within reason. And I’d still hit Skylur up for the check.
“Good. I’ll have a couple of outriders as sweepers behind. It likely to get hot?”
He meant firearms. I shook my head. “Still put them in Kevlar though.”
He brought out a sketchpad and a street map and we spent fifteen minutes making sure we had a good plan for the pickup and the right route to get Arvinder here without anyone else knowing. Halfway along, they’d shake him down for trackers. I wondered if Arvinder was going to feel that a chat with me was worth it after all that.
Victor handed over the rest of the equipment and left, sparing a worried glance at the system.
I came up against the first minor problem with my plan. The octopus couldn’t find any unsecured internet connections in the building.
I locked the meeting room, made the managers aware that I was just stepping out for a short time, and walked out with my laptop under my arm and the antenna sticking out of my pocket.
A block away and the octopus made a couple of connections. I clipped on my headset and made the first call, a test call to Niall. I told him to disconnect his phone after we finished and not reconnect until late afternoon.
He chuckled. “This sounds fun,” he said. “But I suspect I really don’t want to know. And before I forget, Cassie said she’ll be coming home in a couple of weeks. Will you be around?”
“I’ll do my best.” I always did, but I wasn’t entirely sure that was going to be enough this time around. I could just as easily be locked away. “Tell her I have problems with my cell, but a text message usually gets through, eventually.”
I reminded him again about disconnecting and we ended the call. Tests over.
I called Underwood.
“Mr. Underwood? Thank you for taking my call. I’m calling on behalf of the insurers of your sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Quinn.”
“Oh, yes.” Underwood sounded surprised. “How can I help?”
“You’re aware they had a burglary recently?” I rushed on. “Because of the rarity of some of the items, I’m required by our new procedures to confirm a few things. I’m only a block away, can I stop in and take just five minutes of your time, please? Or would it be possible for you to take time to meet my boss later?”
“I don’t see quite how…”
Being involved was the last thing he wanted, but I’d got the drop on him and he couldn’t come up with an excuse quickly enough.
“It’s simply that you are about the only other person likely to have seen some of the items recently. Only five minutes.” Five minutes would be easy, and then he could put it out of his mind.
“Oh, all right.”
“Thank you so much. I’ll be there soon.”
I ended the call and headed back to the Keynes building.
Underwood’s small office suite was pleasant, even luxurious. His secretary guarded the door and her domain included a table where she was preparing a promotional campaign for an event at one of his galleries. There was no one else in the suite. I’d learned that from listening to Jen last night. Underwood didn’t need this office. He would be better and more inexpensively accommodated in one of his galleries, but he liked the impression a separate business office made.
While he made me wait, I found out his secretary, Mrs. Ellis, commuted to work by car. Good. I was going to use that later.
When he came out to meet me, the man himself was skinny and bug-eyed, with lank, gray hair brushed straight back. He frowned a lot and fidgeted, touching lapels, cleaning his glasses, joggling his tie in a constant cycle.
His office was lined with mahogany display cabinets. I showed interest and got the two-minute tour of his private collection. By the end of the tour, he and I were being filmed by a tiny bug I’d planted, hidden against the side of one of the cabinets. It was to cover one of the weak points in my plan. I needed confirmation that the medal was here and, just as important, where it was. I couldn’t come in and tear cabinets up or blow safes apart.
Underwood settled down behind the gleaming shield of his bare desk and offered me a drink. I turned it down.
“Well, Ms.…” he glanced surreptitiously down at my fake card, “Johnson, how can I help?”
I handed over a picture of the medal. “This is the item we’re particularly concerned with, Mr. Underwood. Can you confirm you recognize it and are you aware of what it is?”
He placed the photo carefully on his desk and bent his head over it.
“Oh, indeed, I am. This is their Congressional Medal of Honor, earned by Captain Quinn in the First World War. This was stolen?” He looked up at me over the rims of his glasses. Mistake. He was trying to overdo the innocence.
“You didn’t know?” I asked.
“No. I knew they’d been burgled, but that was all.”
Liar.
“That’s strange, isn’t it?” I did wrinkly-forehead puzzlement on steroids. “Surely, this is the most valuable piece. I’d have thought they’d have said.”
“Can’t be sold, Ms. Johnson, by law. And it’s inscribed, so value is notional.”
“Yes, of course. I meant most valuable to them.”
He’d started sweating. “I don’t think Ruth told me. Maybe she told my wife and she must have forgotten to pass it on.”
Liar, again.
“It doesn’t matter.” I brushed it off. “But obviously, you can confirm they had it and you’ve seen it recently.”
“Oh, yes, fairly recently.” He smiled. He knew he was past the difficult part and that I would be out of his life soon. Just a couple more minutes. “They know I have an interest in these things.”
“And you can confirm you saw it only at their apartment?”
“Yes.”
“Never anywhere else? It hasn’t been, oh, here in this office for example?”
“No.”
I could almost hear the jolt of panic in him; I could smell his lies. My instinct was right. He had it, and he had it here.
“And there’s no possibility that it’s a fake, a copy for instance? We’ve had some recently.”
“No. I assure you, I would know.”
“The fakes we found fooled half the experts,” I said as an aside
and stood. “Thank you so much for your time. You’ve been very helpful.” I leaned over and offered my hand to shake. Immediately wished I hadn’t. His palm was sweaty.
Back in my meeting room, a couple of floors down, I stood at the window, urging my anger to subside. Underwood wasn’t a hardened criminal, and there was nothing profitable in what he’d done. I suspected whoever he’d gotten to do his theft had taken the jewels as payment. No one got hurt and, of course, the insurance would pay for everything, he thought. A victimless crime. He was just a little boy, never grown up, who couldn’t stand that he didn’t have what he wanted in his collections. He had no concept of the distress he’d caused the Quinns, let alone my outrage. Well, he’d messed with the wrong people.
Victor’s system was recording the output from the bug. I scanned back through it. As soon as he’d been sure I was out the door, Underwood had unlocked the bottom drawer in his desk and taken out a simple box. He took a medal from the box and examined it with a jeweler’s loupe, almost stroking it. There was no way I could tell if it was the Quinns’, but every instinct told me I’d hit the jackpot.
Having put part one of the plan into action, I ‘accidentally’ hit that button on Victor’s system. The security manager here was no longer in control of his system, even though it’d look to him as if he was. I could override him at any point. And if Underwood left the building, I’d know.
I rubbed my face. Time to get on with the other plan. I walked back down the block and called Chopra on the octopus. He took my detailed instructions without a protest. Arvinder had to text a cell phone, then walk down 15th towards Union Station and make a call to one of Victor’s phones. He’d be picked up as he walked, code word Siddhartha.
“He will be there, Ms. Farrell, in about…” He checked. “…thirty minutes.”
“Just so he’s aware, he’ll be checked for bugs and tails.”
“Indeed. Most prudent under the circumstances. Thank you again, Ms. Farrell.”
He ended the call. I smiled crookedly; he was so polite it was tiring.
I called Victor and gave him the green light.
There would be a little while before things would start to happen back at the Keynes building. I bought a fruit salad for lunch and strolled down towards the center. Once I’d put a couple more blocks between me and the office, I turned my old cell back on to see what might be waiting for me. Every time I did this now, I imagined Ingram’s eyes flicking to a screen and watching a little icon labeled Farrell pop up on a map.
A missed call from Mom came up.
I turned the cell back off and called her on the octopus.
“Hi Mom! It’s me. How’s Florida?”
“Fine.” She seemed to struggle for a second, which said ‘not fine’ to me. “How are you, Amber?”
“I’m okay. Mom, what’s up? You sound worried.”
“Amber,” she said, then paused. “I trust you. I trust your judgment. I depended on you for so long. We both did, Kathleen and I, and you never got the recognition you deserve for that.”
“Jeez, Mom, you make it sound so serious.”
I regretted the flippancy as soon as I said it. The little sob that she nearly stifled cut me deeply. “Mom, what is it?”
“I hate it when you two don’t get along. I’ve told you that before.” She paused, then went on in a rush. “You would tell me if something was really wrong, Amber? You would, wouldn’t you? Anything?”
I groaned. “Oh no! What did Kath say this time?”
“I don’t want to go into it now. I don’t want to ruin John’s vacation. You know we haven’t ever really been away. Promise me, swear to me, Amber, nothing’s wrong.”
“Mom, things happen, I deal with them. There’s nothing that you should be worried about.” The Keynes building loomed up above me, and the octopus was flashing warnings that it was down to its last connection. I cast around desperately for something I could say to reassure her. “Nothing, on my Blood, I so swear,” was what came out. Not entirely the best thing.
There was a tearful chuckle on the line. “What a phrase, but thank you, Amber,” she said. “We’ll be back on Sunday. Please come and see us. We’ve got to settle this with Kathleen.”
“We do, Mom. I can’t keep letting her walk all over me like this. Saying things to you, to our friends. Hurting you like this.”
“Oh God, I don’t want to get into this now. But please, Amber, she has some issues, let’s listen to them before going to war.”
Well, I had issues too. And Kath’s issues were likely around things I couldn’t talk about or couldn’t prove, but Mom deserved peace on her vacation.
“Okay, Mom. I’ll hold fire.” I looked up. Arvinder had just arrived at the entrance to the Keynes building on the back of a motorcycle.
“Mom, look, I’ve got a meeting, I gotta go soon, but one quick thing. You remember in your old souvenir box, you had some kind of heirloom?”
“Oh, of course dear, that old Arapaho necklace of your great-grandma’s.”
Yes! As soon as she said it, an old memory of a beaded blue band came back.
“Do you still have it?”
There was a little pause, and my heart fell. It got worse.
“No. I gave it to Kathleen for a fancy dress party, oh, two or three years ago. I think she still must have it. Is it important?”
Damn!
“It is, Mom, it’s…ah…a sort of Arapaho Wolf Clan history group that I’m part of. It’ll keep.”
“Oh, that’s interesting. You kept that quiet, dear. Maybe I can meet them.”
The octopus was blinking and Arvinder was waiting.
Ask. Tara nudged me.
“Yeah, sure. Um. You’ll think I’m crazy, but when they were asking me, I realized for the first time, of course, she was Dad’s grandma. But you always told us about the bedtime stories she’d tell you.”
“But yes. Oh, gosh, I must have told you this, Amber. It was always a joke that it was an arranged marriage because Blane and I knew each other from the age of five. We were always staying over. We always joked that Speaks-to-Wolves had chosen me for Blane.”
Gods! She very possibly did. What was the reason?
“We’ll talk when you come back, Mom. I’m sure the history group will want to hear all those stories as well.”
“But it’s all just children’s tales.”
“He’s got all this stuff in files and files, I’m sure the stories will be valuable.”
“Oh, he? Well, yes, of course, dear, I’d be happy to talk to him.”
I squeezed my eyes tight. Sorry, Alex. Adept Truth Sensors? Nothing on Mom.
“I hardly know what to think,” she said. “But if,” she hesitated, then plunged onwards, “if you need to make personal choices that aren’t what you think I would approve of, Amber, remember, they’re your choices to make.”
Thanks, Kath. Mom knew about Jen. Yes, this was going to be an interesting family evening when she got back. But I couldn’t get into it now.
“I love you, Mom.”
“I love you too. I love you both, Amber. Bye.”
I ended the call just as the octopus gave up.
Could it get worse?
My damned sister. Not content with calling me a whore and a drug addict to my face, she told the Quinns. Then Mom. Who the hell did Kath think she was?
Then it turns out she has the necklace. Oh, freaking perfect!
But I’d promised to leave it for the moment, and I had to concentrate now.
Arvinder was standing in the reception area, smart in a gray Nehru suit, looking a little ruffled, but calm.
If the casting director of a Bollywood spectacular had been here, he’d have jumped at Arvinder. He was handsome, not with the generic pleasantness of the Bollywood heroes, but with the dark, cruel look of a raptor. He’d be just the right casting for the pirate captain, or the chief of the hill bandits. Then his hawk eyes turned to me as I approached and he beamed with pleasure.
&nb
sp; Much nicer.
He’d been charming at the charity ball. I’d had to trust him there, and he had to trust me here.
I reminded myself that he was Basilikos. He was still in the enemy camp. Maybe he was looking to come over, but at the moment, I needed to be wary.
Chapter 30
Arvinder settled himself into a chair at the meeting table. It could have been any everyday meeting between a couple of businesspeople, instead of one between an Athanate group leader and a…whatever.
I had coffee ready, and there were some cookies. Arvinder took one for show. He didn’t really seem like a cookie person.
“Were the security procedures okay?” I asked.
“A most creditable arrangement. Your colleagues are extremely efficient.” He tossed his head, flicking the wave of black hair off his forehead. “I would like to offer you just one item of advice, however.”
“I’m always learning, Arvinder.”
He smiled briefly. “Your colleagues are not kin.”
“They’re secure. They know nothing about the Athanate, and I’m positive they will not discuss this operation today with any third parties.”
He held his hand up. “I am sure you have the greatest confidence in them, and I have confidence in you. That is not my point.” He shifted slightly. “Kin have status amongst Athanate. Harm done to kin is taken as harm done to Athanate. No Athanate would harm your kin short of an all-out declaration of feud.” He frowned, considering. “Or war. My point is this; do not lightly use unaligned humans to deal with Athanate. By our laws, we can do what we like to them without legal offense, unless we harm or expose the Athanate.”
“Then that’s a situation I will work to change,” I said. I clamped down on my temper. “Thanks for the advice.” I must have sounded like an idiot to him. I’d barely become Athanate and here I was, going to force them to change the systems they’d had in place for centuries.
Arvinder regarded me steadily over the rim of his cup. “I am most certain you will try,” he said and took a sip. “If you get the chance. I wish you luck.”