Highborn. - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Highborn. Part 3 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"Yes and yes," Brynna answered. She glanced to her right and saw an old man at the counter munching on a piece of dark-colored bread. "Rye," she added. Before Paige could leave, Brynna asked, "Can you give me change for a twenty? I want to buy a newspaper."
The woman glanced at the scarred tabletop, where someone had left three quarters and a couple of pennies. "Just take it out of that," she said wearily, then walked away.
Brynna watched her go, wondering what kind of life the waitress lived outside of this place. Paige smelled like bacon grease, cigarette smoke, and coffee, as though the restaurant had a soul and had insinuated itself into her skin. Beneath that was a faint scent of laundry detergent and a sense of wear, like every day was just one more ch.o.r.e.
After a few moments Brynna picked up the three quarters and went outside. There were two newspaper machines, one for the Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune and one for the and one for the Chicago Sun-Times Chicago Sun-Times; she chose the Sun-Times Sun-Times for no other reason than its smaller format would be easier to manage. Back inside, she worked her way through it, stopping only to enjoy the food that Paige brought. It might not have been the best the city had to offer, but as her first meal since she'd gotten here, Brynna thought it was d.a.m.ned good and finished every bite. for no other reason than its smaller format would be easier to manage. Back inside, she worked her way through it, stopping only to enjoy the food that Paige brought. It might not have been the best the city had to offer, but as her first meal since she'd gotten here, Brynna thought it was d.a.m.ned good and finished every bite.
Concentrating again on the paper, she quickly read nearly every page and used it as a learning tool-there was no faster way to acquaint herself with this city and environment. Competing with politics and gasoline prices was a big chunk of s.p.a.ce devoted to the man who had shot the nephilim talking to Brynna in the drugstore yesterday. Advertis.e.m.e.nts, birth and wedding announcements, even the obituaries, were educational, and Brynna was a little amazed. The human life span had increased dramatically, yet what she read in the paper told her that mankind was still doing astoundingly stupid things to shorten their time on earth.
A few patrons, mostly cops, came and went, but the Nickel and Dime was anything but busy. Brynna stayed in the booth for almost three hours, with Paige clearing the dishes and refilling her coffee without comment. Brynna left the paper there for the next person and went to the register to pay; as she did, she watched one of the old men at the counter drop two dollars next to his empty coffee cup before he left. After another waitress rang up Brynna's check and handed her the change from her twenty, Brynna looked thoughtfully at the money in her hand, then walked back and dropped the ten-dollar bill on the table. Her burn was almost healed and barely even itched, and she couldn't think of anything else to buy. This would leave her with over four bucks-enough for a cheap lunch-and she owed Paige for the newspaper anyway. A ten-dollar tip would probably make Paige's day.
Even hung with car exhaust, the air outside was refres.h.i.+ng and warm after the smells of the stale, over-air-conditioned restaurant. The dirty concrete and trash blown along the curbs by pa.s.sing cars and trucks made Brynna long to be back in the park by the lakefront, where she would have had a reason to take her time walking back to the courthouse. She thought about the b.u.t.terfly that had kept her from being caught by the Hunter, but she wouldn't see anything that beautiful in this part of the city. This area was nothing but concrete and metal, broken only by tough, yellow-green weeds poking intermittently through cracks in the ground.
She knew when Redmond and his partner drove past in their car so they would get to the courthouse before her, just as she knew they were waiting down the hallway when she came out of the women's room after was.h.i.+ng her face and hands. It was partly her sense of smell, yes, but it was also just a ... knowing knowing-what the humans might have incorrectly called a sixth sense, a term they had for trying to justify those things they would never be able to explain. The building was fairly quiet in the afternoon, the downside of the cycle before they built back up to the usual frenzy of a Chicago evening. The desk sergeant looked at her and frowned, but Redmond was there before the guy could question Brynna's presence.
"Glad you could make it, Ms. Malak," Detective Sathi said. "We were wondering if you would."
"No, you weren't," Brynna said flatly. "You knew where I was from the moment I left here." She turned toward Redmond, who looked oddly amused when his partner frowned. She unbuckled the detective's sports watch, then held it out. "Where is your ..." Now it was her turn to frown.
Detective Redmond took his watch and strapped it back on. "Come with us, please." Brynna fell into step between the two men and they moved deeper into the building. "He's not my my anything. He's just a regular citizen whose daughter disappeared about a week ago." anything. He's just a regular citizen whose daughter disappeared about a week ago."
"And you think I can somehow help."
Redmond shrugged. "The guy barely understands English and I'm not doing much better with what he says. Interpreters are like cops-there's never one around when you need one." He grinned a little at his own joke. "So that's where you come in. Provided, of course, you can do what you say you can."
"I told you, I have no reason to lie to you."
"Right." Brynna glanced at him, but there was no sarcasm in Redmond's voice and his expression was placid.
"In here." Sathi pushed open a door that had a frosted-gla.s.s pane in its upper half and INTERVIEW 5 INTERVIEW 5 on it. A Korean man sat at a table in the center of the nearly empty room. The turquoise-colored silk scarf he was working with his fingers was the only spot of color in the room except for the dull yellow of a new legal pad a few inches away from him. The fabric was pocked with dirt smudges and frayed from rough treatment, as though it had been stepped on. on it. A Korean man sat at a table in the center of the nearly empty room. The turquoise-colored silk scarf he was working with his fingers was the only spot of color in the room except for the dull yellow of a new legal pad a few inches away from him. The fabric was pocked with dirt smudges and frayed from rough treatment, as though it had been stepped on.
Brynna and the two detectives filed in and Detective Sathi pulled the door shut behind him. Redmond and Brynna took seats across the table from the Korean man but Sathi stayed back, leaning against the door and folding his arms like a bouncer outside of a nightclub.
Beneath a thick salt-and-pepper crew cut, the Korean's face was angular and thin, the wrinkled skin loose as if he'd recently lost a lot of weight. When he looked at Brynna, his expression was a mixture of hope and desolation, like a man hanging on to the loose dirt along the edge of a cliff who still thinks that somehow he will survive the coming plummet.
"This is Kim Li-kang," Redmond said. "Mr. Kim speaks extremely limited English but he does understand some important words and concepts." The detective had brought a thin file folder with him, and now he flipped it open and pushed a photograph toward Brynna. "Mr. Kim's daughter is Cho-kyon. She's nineteen and a nursing student at the University of Illinois. We estimate she's been missing for about two weeks. We can't pinpoint the exact date of her disappearance because they didn't speak every day. The last time she called him was a Friday afternoon after cla.s.s. Her roommate went away for the weekend, so she went missing sometime between then and Monday morning, when she didn't show up for her cla.s.ses." Redmond frowned but didn't look up. "No one's seen her. Right now we have no leads."
Brynna examined the photograph, which showed a young girl with shoulder-length straight black hair and a sweet smile. She handed it back to Redmond. "And what am I doing here?"
Redmond closed the folder. "We've got a real language handicap here. I think think Mr. Kim is trying to tell me that he has information. I don't know why he didn't find someone where he works to translate for him, but he wouldn't." He looked at her steadily. "You say you can speak Korean. I think the rest is obvious." Mr. Kim is trying to tell me that he has information. I don't know why he didn't find someone where he works to translate for him, but he wouldn't." He looked at her steadily. "You say you can speak Korean. I think the rest is obvious."
It was. Without bothering to look again at either detective, Brynna leaned toward Kim. "Kim-s.h.i.+, Jae irumun Brynna imnida. Hyongsa ae mal hago s.h.i.+p uen gosul essunmika?" My name is Brynna, Mr. Kim. Is there something you wish me to tell the detective? She picked up Sathi's indrawn breath and resisted the urge to smile; the fool really She picked up Sathi's indrawn breath and resisted the urge to smile; the fool really had had thought she was lying. thought she was lying.
The Korean man looked surprised, but only for a second. Then he began speaking rapidly. "E goes cun nae dal seukapeu imnida," "E goes cun nae dal seukapeu imnida," he said. he said. This is my daughter's scarf. This is my daughter's scarf. His fingers clutched at it. His fingers clutched at it. "Bangkok uel bang mun han chinchok uen chak nyun ae boe naesumnida. E gol kolmok an ae chaja.s.sumnida. E go bwa-irum uel ba neul jilhan gos ae essumnida." A relative who visited Bangkok sent it to us last year. I found this in the alley. Look-here is where she st.i.tched her name on the edge. "Bangkok uel bang mun han chinchok uen chak nyun ae boe naesumnida. E gol kolmok an ae chaja.s.sumnida. E go bwa-irum uel ba neul jilhan gos ae essumnida." A relative who visited Bangkok sent it to us last year. I found this in the alley. Look-here is where she st.i.tched her name on the edge.
Redmond already had his pen poised over the legal pad. He scribbled rapidly as Brynna repeated what had been said and Kim pointed at the embroidered edge. "Ask him where exactly-the alley behind what?"
"Clark gori ae rikyu jeom dwi ae kolmok essumnida. Keu nyeo ga sa neum gos aeso yak gan gu hwek molli neon. Cho-kyon eul bal gyeon ha gi wi ha yeo in guen an ae kolrokago essumnida," Kim replied when she did. Kim replied when she did. Behind a liquor store on Clark Street. Only a few blocks away from where she lives. I walk in the neighborhood to see if I can find Cho. Behind a liquor store on Clark Street. Only a few blocks away from where she lives. I walk in the neighborhood to see if I can find Cho. Brynna repeated the man's words in English. Before Redmond could ask his next question, Mr. Kim continued. His voice escalated with each word, becoming nearly a shriek by the time he was finished. Brynna repeated the man's words in English. Before Redmond could ask his next question, Mr. Kim continued. His voice escalated with each word, becoming nearly a shriek by the time he was finished. "Keu nom e ya-Kwan Chul-moo. Nae dal eul yoo gwae han nom e ya!" "Keu nom e ya-Kwan Chul-moo. Nae dal eul yoo gwae han nom e ya!" It is him-Kwan Chul-moo. He is the one who has my daughter! It is him-Kwan Chul-moo. He is the one who has my daughter!
Mr. Kim had half risen from his chair and Sathi came forward and urged him back down as Brynna dutifully repeated the man's words. Redmond slipped his fingers beneath his gla.s.ses and rubbed his eyes. "I need more than him just saying this. I need proof, a reason, reason, something more than a scarf found on a sidewalk. I can't barge into someone's house or business on hearsay. Getting a search warrant is only the second step-first he has to convince something more than a scarf found on a sidewalk. I can't barge into someone's house or business on hearsay. Getting a search warrant is only the second step-first he has to convince me. me."
Brynna nodded. "Why do you say these things about Mr. Kwan?" she asked Mr. Kim in Korean. "The police need more than what you think. They need hard proof."
The older man's face twisted, and in the folds of emotion there Brynna saw fear, fury, and helplessness. His answer was long and pa.s.sionate. By the end of it, he was crying and looked a decade older. The two detectives turned to her expectantly and there was silence for a few moments while Brynna tried to think how best to tell these modern-day policemen about the ways of a part of the world in which they would never believe.
"Kwan Chul-moo is a very rich man in the neighborhood," Brynna told them. "A businessman, very respected. He has a daughter named Jin-eun, the same age as Mr. Kim's daughter, but Kwan cannot control her. She uses drugs and alcohol, and has s.e.x with bad people. The things she has done have made her ill."
"In what manner?" Sathi asked.
"She has a disease-"
"AIDS?"
Brynna shrugged. "He didn't say-he might not actually know. Kwan has often tried to talk to Cho, to get her to work for him, to come to his jewelry shop or have lunch with him. Cho thought he was offensive and avoided him-she didn't trust his intentions. Mr. Kim believes that Kwan has kidnapped Cho to use her as a subst.i.tute for ..." Brynna hesitated, but there was just no other way to tell it. "As a subst.i.tute for the demons that are tormenting his own daughter. Kim believes that a very powerful witch doctor has been hired to work magic that will fool the demons into believing that Cho is Jin-eun, and as long as Cho is held, this frees Jin-eun to go back to living a healthy life."
"Aw, c.r.a.p," Redmond grumbled. "Now I have to deal with superst.i.tious bulls.h.i.+t on top of a missing person." He was silent for a moment, then he asked, "I don't suppose Mr. Kim has any solid evidence that this guy nabbed his daughter?"
Brynna knew the answer without asking the Korean man, so she shook her head. At least now Brynna knew where Redmond would stand on this type of thing. She turned back to Mr. Kim and pointed at the scarf. "May I look at that?" she asked in Korean.
He pushed it across the table without comment, but Brynna paused before she touched it. This was a closed room, so the danger was minimal. Still, it was always always there. If she did this, she would be opening herself, even if only for a span of seconds, to discovery. Redmond might think Kim was a crazy old Korean with Old World beliefs, but Brynna knew better. There were reasons the Korean people believed everyone's life was ruled by demons, and several of those nasty, invisible little reasons were probably squatting on his shoulder right now. If Brynna put herself in a position to see them, they would see there. If she did this, she would be opening herself, even if only for a span of seconds, to discovery. Redmond might think Kim was a crazy old Korean with Old World beliefs, but Brynna knew better. There were reasons the Korean people believed everyone's life was ruled by demons, and several of those nasty, invisible little reasons were probably squatting on his shoulder right now. If Brynna put herself in a position to see them, they would see her her too. And they were so very, very talkative. too. And they were so very, very talkative.
She reached out and laid her fingertips gently on top of the Thai silk. Her vision hazed over and she closed her eyes quickly, before she could meet the startled stares of- Sat.u.r.day morning, bright suns.h.i.+ne, cloying humidity already. The launderette smells of heat and soap, washers and dryers making a steady, noisy thrumming. Clothes in the washer, restroom in the back. Finished now, no hot water in the faucet, coming out the door and something stings her on the back of her neck. She reaches for the spot- Blackness.
She wakes in terror and pain. Her vision is skewed with firelight and shadows. Chanting, cold, then hot, burning, the smell of smoking human hair, the sting of a blade, another sting-a needle? Floating, then flying, spinning, terrifying. Force-fed, poked, prodded, cut, another needle. The cycle begins again, and again, and again, and again ...
Brynna opened her eyes and Mr. Kim's two tiny demons were leering at her. They were small and fearful creatures with leathery black skin, drooling and chittering to each other as they constantly pestered the man's subconscious with doubts and enticements. Nothing else could find purchase on this strong-willed old Korean, who was no stranger to the basis for his peoples' faith and would fight their temptations with his dying breath. She should kill them before they ran and revealed her whereabouts to a Hunter-and they would-but this area was too small. To do so would probably incinerate everyone in the room but her.
Brynna lifted her hand from the silk scarf and the demons disappeared from sight as if they'd never been there.
"Her clothes are still in the machine," Brynna said hoa.r.s.ely. She didn't know why that was the first thing to come out of her mouth. "At the was.h.i.+ng house where she was taken."
Detective Sathi stared at her as if she'd grown a second head, while Redmond just looked flabbergasted. "What the h.e.l.l- Now you're a psychic psychic?"
"No, I-"
"What was.h.i.+ng house is this?" Sathi interrupted. "Where is it located?"
Brynna frowned. "I don't know the address, if that's what you mean. It's wherever she normally goes to do her laundry. Walking distance from her apartment, I think." When she turned back to Mr. Kim and asked, he confirmed that there was a self-service laundry only a couple of blocks away. Most of the doorways off the alley hadn't been marked, so he didn't know how close he'd found the scarf to the place where Cho took her clothes.
Redmond tapped his pen hard against the legal pad. "And you say she was taken from there?"
"Yes."
"Who took her?"
"I don't know. It was a surprise. She was coming out of the restroom."
Sathi came over to the table and leaned on it, peering down at her. "How is it you can see all this?" he asked.
Redmond's jaw dropped. "You don't really believe this drivel, do you?"
Sathi shrugged. "I am open to being convinced. There are many strange things in the world." He glanced back at Brynna, and his expression made it clear he thought she was one of those strange things. "You have not answered my question."
Brynna tried to think of a way to explain. "I don't really see see anything," she said. "Not actual images. It's more like a ... a anything," she said. "Not actual images. It's more like a ... a feeling. feeling. I can pick up how the girl felt at the time something was happening to her. It's kind of like being in her head during the moment." She gestured toward the scarf. "I don't know how that came off, but she was wearing it as a belt." I can pick up how the girl felt at the time something was happening to her. It's kind of like being in her head during the moment." She gestured toward the scarf. "I don't know how that came off, but she was wearing it as a belt."
"Great." Redmond grabbed the scarf before Mr. Kim could retrieve it, then thrust it at Brynna. "Take this. We're gonna go find that laundromat."
Brynna jerked away from the piece of fabric. "You take it. I'm not touching the thing again." take it. I'm not touching the thing again."
"Great," Redmond muttered again. Kim tried to reach for his daughter's scarf, but Redmond wadded it up and stuffed it into a plastic evidence bag he pulled from one pocket. "Let's go take some clothes out of the washer."
[image]
THE NEIGHBORHOOD TO WHICH Detective Sathi drove the four of them was an odd mixture of cultures-Korean, Swedish, Pakistani, and more. Brynna stared out the back pa.s.senger window, fascinated by the shops, the people, the Detective Sathi drove the four of them was an odd mixture of cultures-Korean, Swedish, Pakistani, and more. Brynna stared out the back pa.s.senger window, fascinated by the shops, the people, the peace. peace. Humans living in the world today didn't always see it the way she was perceiving it right now, of course; sometimes they focused only on the crime, fighting, wars, and plenty of evil. They thought the times were bad, and why? Because they had only a few hundred years of history to compare to their own short lives. It was too bad they couldn't have seen what would have happened two thousand years ago if just three of these nationalities had met at the apex of some primitive mountain. Each would have immediately tried to exterminate the other two for no more reason than the belief that anyone outside of their own tribe was inferior. Yes, there was still plenty of that behavior in the world, and there were still wars and fighting and murder, but here, on this one sun-filled Chicago street, people at least seemed capable of coexisting. Humans living in the world today didn't always see it the way she was perceiving it right now, of course; sometimes they focused only on the crime, fighting, wars, and plenty of evil. They thought the times were bad, and why? Because they had only a few hundred years of history to compare to their own short lives. It was too bad they couldn't have seen what would have happened two thousand years ago if just three of these nationalities had met at the apex of some primitive mountain. Each would have immediately tried to exterminate the other two for no more reason than the belief that anyone outside of their own tribe was inferior. Yes, there was still plenty of that behavior in the world, and there were still wars and fighting and murder, but here, on this one sun-filled Chicago street, people at least seemed capable of coexisting.
Brynna, however, did not blend in well.
She was taller than almost everyone, and certainly all the women. Her face was long, almost wolflike, and her features were dark and sharp. Her pale brown eyes were rimmed in shadows and her gaze was a magnet for other people's, especially men. The weaker the man, the more he vied for her attention-it was on this very weakness that the demon in her had preyed. Once upon a time, before she had grown weary of torment and fire, Brynna had walked the soil of this world as Astarte and hunted for just such souls, those ripe for corruption and the unknown lure of d.a.m.nation. Now she just found that type annoying.
"Hey, sweetheart." An athletic-looking young guy of about twenty-five fell into step next to her, making a point of ignoring her two escorts. He was handsome and well-dressed; to Brynna he smelled like expensive aftershave and cocaine. His gaze swept Brynna's face and form appreciatively, then he licked his lips. His sudden hot desire thickened the air between them and gave it a honeylike scent that only Brynna and her unwanted devotee could smell. He was pathetic and weak-minded; if she didn't get rid of him fast, his l.u.s.t would smother his reason and things would turn ugly. "I've been looking for you all my life. Let me buy you something beautiful."
Redmond frowned, but before he could open his mouth, Brynna's stinging gaze pinned her admirer and her irritation found voice. "You have no idea what I am. Leave me be or I will rip your head off and throw it into Lake Michigan." Something in her tone of voice-perhaps the unspoken potential for true malevolence-made her would-be suitor's eyes widen. The man stumbled backward, then blinked and pressed himself against the side of the building as Brynna kept going.
"That might have been a bit harsh," Redmond said calmly.
"He is a foolish man with a rotting soul and a polluted body," Brynna said without thinking. "He'll be dead before his thirtieth birthday."
Sathi's gaze darkened and he automatically glanced back at the man on the sidewalk, who was already moving away from them. "What makes you say that?"
Brynna started to answer, then just shrugged. She'd said too much already, and in the scheme of what was going on here, it didn't matter anyway. She really needed to get a handle on the in-the-mind, out-the-mouth in-the-mind, out-the-mouth thing. "Here." She stopped in front of a laundromat as Mr. Kim nodded. "This is where Cho was when she was kidnapped." thing. "Here." She stopped in front of a laundromat as Mr. Kim nodded. "This is where Cho was when she was kidnapped."
Redmond pushed open the door and went inside, his expression betraying nothing. Sathi motioned Brynna and Mr. Kim to go in next. Brynna was happy to oblige-being out in the open wasn't good after this morning's short mind-sink into the realm where she'd been seen by two minor demons. It wasn't hard to imagine a Hunter shadowing her at every turn, just waiting for a chance to ambush and the approval that would come from returning her to Lucifer's Kingdom.
There was nothing special about the inside of the laundromat. Standard-issue industrial washers and dryers lined each side of the hard-used, narrow s.p.a.ce, and half a dozen tables divided the room. A skinny young woman sat on a chair by the front window. Music leaked from her earphones and she barely glanced up from the People People magazine on her lap. The s.p.a.ce got dimmer toward the back, where the light from the front windows didn't quite reach and two of the four overhead fluorescents were burned out. magazine on her lap. The s.p.a.ce got dimmer toward the back, where the light from the front windows didn't quite reach and two of the four overhead fluorescents were burned out.
"So which washer are they in?" Redmond asked.
Despite the blandness of his tone, Brynna heard doubt, perhaps a hint of derision. She brushed off her irritation-how could this human, born into modern times when the true roots of faith and fear had been all but forgotten, be expected to believe? Instead of answering, she walked slowly down the line of beat-up was.h.i.+ng machines, lightly trailing her fingers along the edges. Two-thirds of the way back she caught a whiff of something sour and dry. "Here," she said. She lifted the lid, then backed away from the heavy scent of mildew.
Redmond stepped up and peered into the tub, then Kim reached around him and pulled out the topmost garment. Black spots of mold covered the still-damp underside of the pale yellow blouse. "This is my daughter's," the old man said in Korean. His voice was thick with fear. "A birthday gift from me."
Brynna repeated this to Redmond, who, with Sathi right behind him, was already moving toward the back exit. Brynna followed the two detectives and left Mr. Kim to stare morosely at the washer's contents. Redmond still had Cho's scarf, but Brynna neither needed it nor wanted to touch it again, especially in such an open and unprotected environment. When she caught up with Redmond and Sathi, they had pushed through the back door and were standing in the alley. There wasn't much for them to see besides the overflowing Dumpster by the gyro place to the north and several precariously stacked piles of boxes behind the card shop to the south. They were in the middle of the block, so the alley, empty and smelling of decomposing food, stretched in both directions.
"This is useless," Redmond muttered as Mr. Kim wandered out to join them. "What the h.e.l.l are we doing here?"
Brynna eyed the alley, noting the doorways and alcoves, all the places a Hunter might hide. It wasn't too bad since it was mid-afternoon and a bright day, and the presence of the two humans took the danger level down to almost zero. Funny how these men had unknowingly become her protectors. Although it was fading, the scent of the girl was still here-she had fallen at least once and been dragged-and after a few moments, Brynna turned to the left and began walking, following the thin leftover traces of sc.r.a.ped skin and blood, evidence that would be impossible for these detectives to detect. The men trailed her automatically, watching carefully to see what she would do. At first there wasn't much to find, and Brynna wouldn't have been surprised if it all disappeared in a sudden drift of old car exhaust and gasoline, very possible if Cho had been forced into a vehicle.
But then the lingering smell of the Korean girl suddenly intensified, swelling into fear and sweat and more blood, mixed with- Corruption.
Brynna stopped and looked around, careful to keep her face expressionless, working to make it seem as if she had nothing at all to give the detectives. It was stuffy and windless here, and the afternoon's increasing humidity was making them all perspire. Beneath her feet, however, the concrete radiated more than heat, and it all led up to the metal door on which she had purposely turned her back. There was a sense of darkness here, of evil and magic and a kind of menace that these two Chicago detectives would never be able to fight. To the right of the doorway was a greasy window at ground level, but it was small, barely two feet long and less than a foot high. The girl was inside this building, and she was alive-Brynna could sense that much-but to try to rescue her now would be disastrous in more ways than Brynna could measure.
Cho would have to wait.
"I'm sorry," Brynna said. "There's nothing more I can do."
Sathi peered at her. "You're not picking up anything?"
"No," she lied.
"Excuse me, but what did you expect?" Redmond asked impatiently. "An excerpt from Psychics Today Psychics Today?"
"This is the second time you've brought up psychics," Sathi pointed out. "Let me remind you that you you were the one who decided we should come out here." Brynna thought he was doing a remarkable job of keeping his voice even. were the one who decided we should come out here." Brynna thought he was doing a remarkable job of keeping his voice even.
"Yeah, well, sometimes even I let myself get caught up in the moment." Redmond shaded his eyes from the sun and scanned the alley, but there was nothing to see. "Let's get Mr. Kim and head back downtown. We'll write up what we found-not much-and take the two of them home." He glanced at Brynna. "Or wherever it is they want to go."
THE H HOLY M MAN HAD come to him again this afternoon, and Michael Klesowitch was, as always, honored and terrified by His visit. Although His mission in this world was dark and unpleasant, was not the fact that He could walk in G.o.d's beautiful, bright sunlight inarguable proof of His righteousness, of His right to demand unflinching obedience from one so lowly and insignificant as Michael himself? It had to be. come to him again this afternoon, and Michael Klesowitch was, as always, honored and terrified by His visit. Although His mission in this world was dark and unpleasant, was not the fact that He could walk in G.o.d's beautiful, bright sunlight inarguable proof of His righteousness, of His right to demand unflinching obedience from one so lowly and insignificant as Michael himself? It had to be.
An hour home from work, and Michael hadn't been doing much of anything-just sitting around and trying to decide what to do to occupy himself. It might be nice to go to the lake, pack a peanut-b.u.t.ter-and-jelly sandwich, a bag of chips and a diet soda, and trek down to Diversey Harbor, watch the boats come and go while he stayed safely in the shade (he burned easily). Mike had been pulling the jar of grape jelly from the refrigerator when he'd heard the front door open. Although he shouldn't have been surprised-he'd given the Holy Man his spare key weeks ago-he didn't think he would ever shake that sudden sense of antic.i.p.ation, of nervous elation, that came with each meeting.
"h.e.l.lo, Michael."
"Hi, uh, H-Hank." It seemed so strange to address the Holy Man by such a mundane, human name. Still, Michael understood-as Hank had told him, he would never be able to p.r.o.nounce Hank's heavenly name. He had a thousand questions he wanted to ask, but Mike forced himself to stay silent. It was not his place to know most of what he wanted. It had taken him awhile to understand that-after all, he wasn't some sicko lead-me-around-by-the-nose idiot. No, he was an intelligent, fairly well-educated man in his midtwenties. He knew the difference between right and wrong, had a healthy sense of conscience and ethics, wasn't paranoid, and could tell when he was being scammed. He also had enough religion in his upbringing to appreciate a miracle when he saw it, and Hank had shown him more than a few of those.
"I have another task for you."
Michael swallowed and looked down at his hands. These tasks ... he knew they were necessary. Hank had explained that to him, had been so patient each time as Michael struggled with his own instincts.
Thou shalt not kill.
Not one of the Seven Deadly Sins-most people didn't realize that-yet still sixth on the list of those all-important Ten Commandments. Such an important rule in the game of life, and yet every time Hank came to him, he directed Michael to break it. But it was G.o.d's work, was it not? Through Hank? Through Michael?
"You should not doubt yourself and your role," Hank said. His voice was gentle and full of compa.s.sion. "It is a hard one, but you fulfill your duties well."
His duties ... yes. Five of those "duties" so far, and here was Hank again. Who, Mike wondered, was to be the next duty duty?
As if Hank could read Michael's mind, he held out a piece of paper. Mike took it, seeing his hand reach out of its own volition and feeling like he was dreaming, or maybe watching someone else who was wearing his face and body. So odd that Hank could make Michael's sense of will and self-control just ... evaporate.
"The information is all there," Hank said. The Holy Man actually sounded sad, and when Michael looked down at the paper, he immediately understood. It was a cheap, computer-printed image of a man who was about sixty years old. He had a soft, friendly face, and he looked vaguely like Michael's grandfather. Next to the photo was the man's name and address, plus a few sentences about his routine and where Michael was most likely to find him. He couldn't help wonder what this guy had done to mark him for celestial a.s.sa.s.sination. But the question he would have asked skittered out of his mind at Hank's next words. "You must take extra care not to be identified. The police would not understand your calling, or me, or the wisdom of eliminating those who would cause unwanted events before they have the opportunity to do so."
Michael examined the piece of paper in his hand and again considered asking what this man could possibly do to warrant his death. Instead, he folded it reverently and put it in his pocket.
Five.