Chapter Thirty-four
Like me. There was that kind of sharp angle to the way he moved.
And still, nothing in his expression. The anger was burning, but it was somewhere miles down and sealed off with a steel hatch.
"You say there's nobody to back up this version."
"Well, there is," I said. "The guy that was here last night. The kid. And you saw some of it yourself last night on the beach. Hell, you could call my boss in New York if you wanted. He'd tell you it was true-well, maybe he wouldn't, come to think of it; he's got a hell of a lot of problems of his own. But the point is, none of these people would be credible to you. They don't have real jobs and real identities you can check out with independent sources. They're ciphers. Like me. So I think you've got to go with your gut on this one, Detective. Do you believe me or not?"
He stopped and put his hand on a leather strap hanging from the wall-the better to grab onto if the van had to move into gear, I realized. This was quite a mobile cop shop he had.
"Tell you what," he said after a moment. "I'll believe it if you show me something."
"What?"
"Anything. Anything, you know, magic."
"It's not magic," I said, exasperated. "It's science. And-well, okay, the Djinn, maybe that's magic, but really, it can all be explained if you go far enough with the physics, and-"
"You do stuff other people can't do, and you make things happen with the power of your mind?"
"Well-um-"
"Magic," he said, and shrugged. "So show me something."
Truth was, I didn't have enough power to show him much of anything. I stared at him blankly for a moment, and then said, "Okay." I had enough energy left inside for a tiny little demonstration. Maybe.
I held out my palm and concentrated.
It should have been easy, doing this; it was a trick I'd been practicing since I'd first joined the Wardens. Nothing to it-anybody with more than a spark of talent could pull it off; the trick was controlling it and doing it with grace and elegance.
I closed my eyes, let out a slow breath, and built a tiny little rainstorm over my hand. Pulled moisture out of the surrounding air and carefully crowded it together, cooled the vibrations of the molecules just enough to make them sticky. When I opened my eyes, a faint, pale fog was forming above my palm. It was ragged and not very well established and, all in all, the crappiest demonstration I'd ever seen, but I held on and continued to draw the moisture together into a genuine little cloud.
A tiny blue spark zipped from one side to another inside of it, illuminating it like a tiny bulb, and Rodriguez drew closer, staring.
I made it rain, a tiny patter of full-size drops on my hand-they had to be full-sized, because it had to do with gravity, not scale. I only squeezed out two or three, because of the size of the source material, but enough to get the point across. The friction of molecules sparked another baby lightning bolt; this one zapped me like a static charge. I winced.
Rodriguez dragged a hand through the cloud, and stared at his damp fingers in fascination.
"Real enough for you?" I asked him, and let it go. It broke apart into fog, which rapidly evaporated into nothing in the dry, air-conditioned environment of the van. I wiped my wet palm on my leg.
He didn't answer for a long moment, and then he reached over and picked up the empty orange juice glass. Handed it back to me.
"We're done," he said. "Watch your step when you get out."
That was it. He slid the door open. The glare of sunlight startled me, as did the humidity rolling in the door. I looked at Rodriguez, who stared back, and finally stepped out and onto the hot pavement.
"That's all?" I asked him.
"Yeah," he replied. "That's all." He started to slide the door shut, then hesitated. "Two pieces of advice; take them or leave them. First, get rid of the car. It's a sweet ride, and it's also hot and it attracts too much attention. Somebody's going to figure it out."
I nodded. Poor Mona. Well, I was really more of a Mustang girl, anyway...
"Second," he said, "if what you told me about Quinn is true, he was in business with somebody, and he had a shipment to deliver. You might want to think about the possibility that somebody might be looking to collect, and why they wanted it so bad in the first place."
I felt the skin tighten on the back of my neck. "You mean, collect from me?"
"You're the visible link, Joanne. I found you. Somebody else could do the same thing. Watch your ass."
I nodded slowly. "So this is good-bye?"
"You see me again, it's because I found out you were lying to me, and believe me, that would be good-bye."
He slid the van door shut. I stepped back. He slid into the driver's side seat in the front, and the van started up with a shiver and a roar. He rolled down the window, gave me a little salute, and backed out of the parking spot.
I watched him drive away. Except for a small patch of oil on the asphalt where he'd been parked, my cop stalker was gone as if he'd never been there.
One problem down. About a million to go.
Overhead, the clouds piled thicker, darker, and more imminently threatening.
I wished I knew what to do next. If Lewis hadn't bugged out, at least I could have mined him for information-I knew he had a lot more than he was saying-but of course holding on to Lewis was like trying to hold on to a wave in motion.
And without access to the aetheric, trying to find anyone was trouble. The Djinn were-at least for now-leaving me alone, probably too preoccupied with their own battles and problems. Jonathan, despite his threats, hadn't come knocking for his pound of flesh. Ashan was proving the once-bitten, twice-shy clich�. I didn't know whether that was a good sign, or bad, but at least it gave me a little more time to do whatever it was I proposed to do.
Which was... what?
I was in the middle of dithering about it when my cell phone rang, and it was Paul Giancarlo, calling from the Warden offices at the U.N. Building in New York.
"Good morning," I said. "Before you forget to ask, thanks, I'm fine."
"I wasn't going to," he grunted. "Lewis was with you last night?"
He had good sources, but then, he was the Head Hon-cho. At least for now. "Yeah. He needed someplace to stay and recover. Look, you've got rogue Wardens running in packs out here. Lewis has a bull's-eye painted on his back. You need to do something, fast."
"Would if I could. I've got a problem. I need your help."
"Does the word no ring any bells with you? Because I've said it before."
"Joanne, I'm not fucking around here. When I say problem to someone like you, what do you think it means?"
"Disaster," I said briskly. "From what I've seen, there's plenty of that going around, and I'm sorry about it, but I can't help."
"Yes, you can."
"Seriously, I can't."
His voice went very quiet. Gravelly. "Did you hear me ask you a question? Short declarative statements, sweetheart. Not negotiable. This is serious business, and you're going to get in line or I promise you, your powers get yanked. Clear?"
Fuck. Frankly, Paul sending Marion's team after me to rip out my powers was far down my waiting list of panic attacks, but it wasn't worth risking, either.
"Clear," I said. "What do you need?"
"Get over to John Foster's office. Nobody's answering over there. I got nobody on the ground I can trust right now. Just make sure everything's okay."
That gave me a quiet moment of worry. "Paul? Is it that bad?"
His sigh rattled the speaker of my cell phone. "However bad you think it's gotten, it's worse than that. And I don't think it's anywhere near hitting bottom yet. Get over there, but watch your back. I'd send you cover if I could."
"I know. Are you all right there?"
"So far. Nobody wants to uncork a Djinn around here, though. Six Wardens reported dead in the Northeast, and word is their own Djinn stood by and let it happen."
I remembered Prada on the bridge, her defiant anger. "And once they're free of their masters, they go after others to free them," I said. "Packs of them."
"Yeah. It's a mess. Swear to God, Jo, I don't know if we're going to survive it. We're warded halfway to hell around here, so I think this building's secure, and I gave my Djinn a preemptive that her job was to protect my life from all comers until I said otherwise. I passed that along to everybody in the system; don't know if it'll do any good. You know how expert they are in getting around orders when they want to."
"Yeah," I agreed softly. "I know. Listen-be careful. I'll call you when I know something."
"Thanks. I can't afford to leave the Florida stations unmanned."
I knew. Key areas had seasonal posts of enormous responsibility. California was important all year long. Tornado-prone states like Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas got extra staffing for the spring and summer.
Florida, in hurricane season, was a key weather post, and if John was missing ...
We were in big trouble.
I signed off and headed for my car.
The Warden Regional Office was located not far from the National Weather Service offices in Coral Gables, conveniently enough; we'd sometimes used them for conferences and research. But the Warden offices were unassuming, located in a seven-story building with standard-issue brown marble and sleek glass. There was no sign on the building itself, just a street number etched in brass. Security on the entrance. I didn't have a card key, so I sat in the car and waited until someone else pulled into the parking lot and wheeled a laptop toward the front door. I didn't recognize her-she probably didn't work in the Warden offices, of course, because they only had a couple of small offices out of seven floors, and the others were all occupied.
I moved in behind the woman, smiled when she smiled, and she carded me into the building and took off for the stairs. I, feeling lazy, went for the elevator.
The lobby was quiet and dimly lit, going for soothing and achieving a state of restfulness usually reserved for dropping into a nap. The elevators were slow-it was a general rule of the universe that the shorter the building, the slower the elevators-and I killed time by trying to imagine what the hell I was going to do if I got up there and found a major fight in progress. I wasn't going to be of any help, that much was sure.
I was hoping like hell that it was a downed-phone-line problem. Weak, but sometimes optimism is the only drug that works.
But it's sadly temporary in its effects.
The front door of the Warden offices looked like somebody had taken a sledgehammer to it-splintered in half, raw wood shining naked under the sleek brown finish. The lock was shattered, pieces of it scattered for ten feet down the carpeted hallway. The windows on either side were gaping, glassless holes, and I felt the crunch of broken pieces under my shoes as I walked carefully toward the destruction.
I was half afraid I was going to find everybody dead, given the state of the door, but I heard voices almost immediately. I recognized the slow, Carolina-honey voice of my ex-boss.
The tension in me let go with a rush of relief. John Foster was still alive, and I was off the hook.
I knocked on the shell of a door and leaned over to look through the opening.
John-still in a shirt and tie, which was his version of business casual-was standing, arms folded. With him was Ella, his right-hand assistant; she was a dumpy, motherly Warden with moderately weak weather skills but a stellar ability to keep John's stubborn, independent group working together.
Speaking of which, none of the others were anywhere in sight.
Ella looked exasperated. While John dressed like he'd been interrupted on his way to a board meeting, Ella might have been called out of giving her tile a good grouting: blue jeans, a sloppy T-shirt, a flowered Hawaiian-style shirt over that. She had graying, coarse hair that looked windblown.
They both turned toward me when I knocked, and Ella's mouth fell open. "Jo!" she yelled at ear-bleeding volume, dashed for the door, and knocked it back with a nudge of her Nike-clad foot. Before I could say "El!" she had me in a warm, soft hug, and then was dragging me over the threshold into the office.
Which was a wreck, too. Not as much as the door, but definitely not in the best of shape. Computers tossed around, papers lying everywhere, chairs overturned.
The filing cabinets had tipped over, and the big metal drawers were out, their contents spilling in waterfalls of folders to the floor. Everything looked thoroughly bashed and dented.
"Love what you've done with the place. Sort of Extreme Makeover meets Robot Wars," I said. John-middle-aged, fit, graying at the temples in fine patriarchal style-smiled at me, but his heart wasn't in it. He looked strained and a little sick. "Okay, that was lame, I admit it. What happened?"
"We're trying to figure that out," John said, and extended his hand. "Sorry, Joanne. Good to see you, but as you can see, we're having a little bit of a crisis."
"Paul was trying to raise you on the phone and couldn't get an answer. He sent me to check up." I looked around, eyebrows raised. "Robbery?"
"I doubt it," Ella said, and kicked a destroyed flat-screen monitor moodily. "They didn't take the electronics, and there wasn't any cash here. Maybe it was kids, smashing things up."
"You're not going to say kids today, are you? Because I never really thought of you as grandmotherly, despite the hair."
That earned me a filthy look.
John sighed and put his hands in his trouser pockets, watching me. "We're fine, thanks. Tell Paul I'm sorry. My cell battery ran down hours ago. How are you?"
He sounded guarded, which wasn't unexpected. I realized, from the wary light in his eyes, that my arrival was looking more and more suspicious. I mean, he'd taken me for a ride and practically accused me of corruption, and here we were, standing in his wrecked offices, and I was saying I'd been sent by the boss.
I could see how it could be misinterpreted.
"I didn't do this," I said. "You know me better than that, John."
John and Ella exchanged looks. "Yeah," Ella agreed. "We do." John didn't say anything. He kept his arms folded.
I took a deep breath and plunged in over my head. "Any trouble with the Djinn on your end?"
"What?" John frowned. "No. Of course not." He had a Djinn, of course. Ella, so far as I knew, didn't. Only four Wardens in Florida were equipped with magical assistants and, by last count, only about two hundred in all of North and South America. It was an alarmingly low number, until you considered two hundred Djinn who might decide to kill off Wardens, in which case it was alarmingly high. "What are you talking about? What kind of trouble?"
"Some of the Djinn are breaking free of their masters. You haven't heard?"
Another look between the two of them. Silent communication, and me without my decoder ring. "No," John finally said. "Not about that."
"But you heard about some of the Wardens going rogue."
He looked grimmer. "Yes. And that's a subject I don't think we should be discussing with you."
A not-so-subtle reminder that I wasn't in the Warden business anymore, and therefore not privy to the fun, interesting politics. I changed the subject with a wave around the trashed office. "Think this is related?"
"I doubt it."
"Yeah? You get this kind of thing often around here?"