Well, finallyĀ ... Covid, a bad concussion from a fall related to that, and some attendant issues thereafter notwithstanding. I apologize for the wait, but Life got in the way of Hobby.
So, we left off with Mitchell dead and Richard Bertram gloating that Harry was too slow. Then Rachel Bertram called and said she'd provide a place to startĀ ...
āC
CHAPTER 7
"I shot him," Jess said.
"Yeah, you did." I wasn't going to treat her like some delicate damsel and sugarcoat it.
It wasn't easy to view her as just another buddy. The way she was sitting half-leaned against my shoulder, a glance down past the dark hair, past the nose wrinkled in distaste against the bite of High West Double Rye, went directly into a neckline. Jess was slender, but that slenderness set off the curves swelling into a lacey edge to deliver the message to my hindbrain: Woman Here.
I pushed that not-even-a-thought away. It wasn't easy to view her as just another buddy, but treating her as fragile was insulting. I told her the truth.
"You didn't kill him. I did that. But you put one through his side into a lung. Probably not fatal, but serious and it hurt him enough that I could finish the job." Then I gave her the other piece of the truth. "He'd have killed me for sure if you hadn't."
She shook her head. "I don't regret it!" Her tone was fierce. "Not even a little bit. It's justĀ ..." She searched. "It's just some kind of, you know, some kind of afterwards reaction. That, and I realize now that I hadn't been sureĀ ... those times when I was at the rangeĀ ... I hadn't been sure I could actually shoot someoneĀ ... pull the trigger and shoot at something that wasn't paper."
She was repeating herself a little, not something she normally did. It was the whiskey. I'd driven her home. I didn't like her taking public transportation given the situation, and she refused to hang with Sydney in the hotel even though I was paying. She'd been agitated during the car ride and when we got upstairs.
"I need a drink," she'd declared and pulled out a tall, thin bottle with its familiar wood-and-cork stopper. "I got this in case you ever wanted one while you were here. I should learn to like this stuff."
"I thought you disapproved of my drinking?"
"I disapprove of you drinking yourself into oblivion over the bitch who used to be your wife. She wasn't worth it."
Without waiting for my response, she'd splashed a finger into each of two glasses and pushed one my way. Her first went down in a gulp. "Fuck! This stuff's like paint remover." The second pour had been twice as much. "But they say it becomes an acquired taste."
"Maybe if you slow down."
"Yeah." She'd flopped down on the couch next to me and pulled a comforter over her legs against the slight chill. We'd talked through the craziness of the last few weeks, re-testing conclusions and searching for anything we weren't considering. The gulps turned to sips; the facial expressions got less disgusted.
"Fucking heat sucks in this place," she'd said and pulled the comforter over both our legs even though I wasn't cold. Slowly, she'd settled back with her shoulder pressing into mine, but I knew she wasn't relaxed. Something was eating at her.
And then, out of the blue, "I shot him," and I knew what was going on.
"When the time came, you did what you had to do," I said. "Don't ever beat yourself up for what you have to do."
She jerked her head in a nod. "He was going to kill you and then maybe me."
"No, not you. We were both going down." I remembered the slow-motion clarity of that moment, knowing that I had him, and his round wasn't going to jerk me into death before my finger exerted the simple five pounds necessaryĀ ... just as my shot wouldn't interrupt him doing the same to me.
She twisted to look up at my face. "I saw where your two shots hit him, and he was moving when you did it. You're a better shot than I guess I realized."
"Practice pretending popup silhouettes were Amber," I repeated what I'd said to Mitchell as he slumped, dying.
Jess gave a fierce little grin. "Fuck your ex. And fuck him." She peered at the glass she was holding. "It's just after-shock. Another of these. They don't suck so much after your taste buds go numb. Yeah, fuck him."
A half an hour later, I shooed an inebriated woman toward her bedroom and headed to the hotel for a little of that myself. Different meaning to the word.
⢠⢠ā¢
There was a knock on the door of Sydney's room. I checked through the peephole and then opened it to find Murray with his arms full of two banker's boxes.
"The stuff that was on the hooker'sā" He broke off, seeing Sydney sitting there. "Uh, the Gowin woman's body."
Her eyes held a weary amusement. "It's okay, Darryl. I've been called worse." After a second, she added. "And I'm retired, anyway."
He covered his discomfort by turning to Jess. "Hey."
She waved a greeting, her mouth full of the pizza she'd arrived with just moments before. We were steering clear of the office for a while.
"The other box has papers and a laptop taken from Everett's place," he continued. "I couldn't get anything from the Beck apartment. IA's got that stuff on lockdown because cops are involved. Can't keep this stuff long. Maybe a day or so before someone asks."
We started sifting through the contents. Jess picked up an evidence bag and read the label. "Emerald's phone."
So much had happened; it seemed like an eternity ago that I'd gotten a phone call from a red-headed woman I'd met only in death. "I think of her as Cara now," I said gently.
Jess met my gaze and her eyes softened. "You're right. Cara. I'm sorry. It's a long shot, but maybe there's something on there that we can use as leverage." She pressed the button. "Almost dead. I'll put it on a charger."
"You don't happen to know what her passcode is, do you?" I asked Sydney.
She shook her head. "We were friends, but not close friends, you know?"
"Does your lab have something to crack it?" I asked Murray.
He shook his head. "Not without a warrant. Even then, on one this new, I dunno if the tools they have would work."
"I could start guessing numbers," Sydney said, reaching for the phone.
"No!" Jess snapped, jerking it out of reach. "After ten attempts, the phone will erase its data."
"No," I said more mildly. "We can try human engineering." Their expressions turned puzzled. "If she's like most people, she uses similar passwords for things."
"But the phone uses face recognition or a number," Sydney protested.
"But her cloud account won't, and it's worth the gamble she had cloud backup on for pictures. You," I said, turning to Murray, "play the police card."