Music of Change #9: This O'erhanging Firmament
By Valerie Hope
Taylor waited for a few moments outside the convenience store,
engine idling, while Samantha Michaelis ran inside to get a few
things. The girl bounced happily, doing little dances here and
there and exuding the sense of a healthy, sexy girl who was happy
to be alive. A far cry from the woman - and the man - she'd been
not an hour before, a bitter killer who attempted to murder both
Joshua Little and Dr. Karl Renfro. A pornographer and a kidnapper
and a drug dealer who'd gotten Renfro's late daughter Sarah
hopelessly addicted to heroin through the burgeoning puppy love
that the sixteen-year-old girl had felt for him. But the Music
had wiped that away forever, leaving behind only the pretty,
bouncy girl with the luscious breasts and the long legs and the
rather dim intellect.
The slender Oriental beauty tapped her long-nailed fingers on the
steering wheel as she waited for Sam to return. Taylor Beauchamps
had seen a lot of weird things in her tenure as an agent for the
Central Intelligence Agency, things she couldn't exactly explain,
but the events of the last few nights had her mystified. Grace
Kincaid - the brilliant detective who was investigating the
attempt on the life of Karl Renfro - had cracked the case, found
out the motives and players in the very complicated plot against
the doctor's life and work. It was so complicated that it almost
seemed simple. And she'd done it with a broken heart - her lover,
Joshua Little, had not told her of his own transformation from a
female doctor named Jocelyn Little at the hands of Renfro's Music
of Change and she'd left him in a bitter breakup. She was an
amazing woman.
And it only left them with a few more loose ends to tie up - the
first and foremost being the gathering of evidence and the
apprehension of the mastermind and financier of the whole plot, a
man named Aaron Kendall who was acting Chief Financial Officer of
a multinational company called Global Ventures, Inc. Grace had
found out, with the help of Taylor and her associate Tiffany
Dayton, that the night of Sarah Renfro's suicide, Dr. Renfro had
first made contact with the vast, magical force of the Music. His
cry had transformed three people that night: his wife, Claudette,
who became as sexually free and promiscuous as any porno starlet;
Dr. Jocelyn Little, the attending physician who'd worked for
nearly an hour trying to revive Sarah Renfro, and Samuel
Michaelis, the girl's lover and drug dealer. Jocelyn had become
Joshua and Samuel had turned into Samantha. In a very complicated
series of events connected to Aaron Kendall's affair with
Claudette, Grace discovered that Michaelis and Kendall together
were behind the recent plot on Karl Renfro's life and were out to
steal whatever information the doctor had collected on the Music
of Change. With Michaelis now out of the picture, all that was
left was to bring in Kendall and the Music - and its stewards -
would be safe again.
The problem was that Aaron Kendall was slick, and he was
incredibly well funded. He'd never really touched anything
directly. It would be very interesting to see how Grace Kincaid
would find any evidence against the man.
Sam bounced into the car again, slithering into the seat with her
knees together as if she'd been a woman her whole life. The
little Lycra tube-dress she was wearing didn't leave anything to
the imagination, and the chilly evening had her nipples standing
at stiff attention through the sheer fabric. Her honey-blonde,
straight locks framed an innocent-looking but devilishly sultry
face with huge blue eyes and a suggestive, unconsciously sexy
pout on the bee-stung lips. She smiled broadly and rummaged in
the plastic sack she'd brought out of the convenience store.
"Three packs of the Virginia Slims 120's," she announced, passing
the cigarettes to Taylor. "And three packs of Marlboro Lights
100s for me. One Diet Coke for you and a Diet Pepsi for me. I
felt bad after all the cigarettes I bummed off of you, so I,
like, bought you some more to say thanks."
Taylor grinned despite herself. To think of a heartless,
vindictive person like Sam Michaelis becoming a sweet, vapid and
thoughtful girl was a shining testament to the incredible healing
power of the Music of Change. Karl Renfro, if he were still
inside the young, vibrant girl he'd been transformed into by
accident, would be very proud of his accomplishment.
"Did you get everything else?" Taylor asked. "Or do you need to
stop someplace else?"
Sam giggled. "Nope," she said, holding up a little plastic sack
full of tampons and rattling it for a moment before stuffing it
back in the sack with what looked like embarrassment. "Getting to
be that time, you know?"
Taylor nodded. "Aha," she said. "Don't leave home without 'em."
Sam tore the cellophane off of a pack of cigarettes and fished
one out. As she was using her long acrylic fingernails to snap
the child-safety feature off of the cheap disposable lighter
she'd bought, she said, "Could have been a, like, emergency."
Taylor smiled and shifted the car into gear, pulling out of the
parking lot into traffic. She was slowly coming to like this new
girl - while no champion in the field of intelligent conversation
- she was sweet and happy and very interested in the people she
met. She was earnest and said what was on her mind, even if it
was only because she lacked the depth for anything resembling
tact. Taylor was about to ask her if she wanted to come out
clubbing on Wednesday night with herself, Tiffany, Vikki and Keri
- their weekly excursion to the dance clubs - when the car
lurched forward roughly with a sound of impact and tearing metal.
"What the hell?" Taylor asked, revving the accelerator and
peering in the rearview mirror. Behind them, a car was backing
off and then accelerating to ram them from behind again.
"Hold on," Taylor cried to her screaming passenger, swerving
sharply down a side street in a squeal of smoking tires. The
pursuit vehicle had to slow down enormously to make the turn and
Taylor gained a great deal of precious space.
In the midst of all the frantic maneuvering and looking behind
her, Taylor somehow managed to toss her cellphone into Sam's lap.
"Call Grace! Speed-dial number three! Tell her we need some
help!" she shouted, taking another bat-turn around a corner,
which slammed them, both hard to the left inside the careening
automobile.
Sam fussed with the phone a little bit before pressing it to her
ear. "Grace! It's Sam. Taylor told me to call you. Somebody's
chasing us and I think they're trying to kill us!"
She lowered the phone after a brief pause and looked at Taylor.
"She wants to know where we are!" she cried, nearly panicking.
"Heading west on 36th Street towards the freeway. I'm going to go
southbound from there, try to lose him in the interchange,"
Taylor said.
Sam repeated it into the phone quickly and waited before turning
back to Taylor. "She says that she'll have units on their way in
two minutes."
Taylor swung the wheel crazily again, slewing the car viciously
to the right in another squeal of tires, praying silently that
two minutes would be enough time to avoid vehicular manslaughter.
She accelerated quickly down the wide street and towards the
freeway feeder road when the pursuit car rocketed out of a side
street a hundred yards in front of them. The passenger-side
window was down and something glinting dully in the streetlight
was sticking out.
Taylor grabbed Sam by the back of the head and pushed her down
roughly as the hail of bullets shattered the windshield where
Taylor's head had been.
***
Grace threw on the first things she grabbed - her second-skin No
Excuses jeans and an oversized "Property of University of
Virginia Athletic Department" tee, which Joshua had left there -
and was out the door not three minutes after the frantic call
from Sam Michaelis. She tried not to look too long at the
sleeping form of her lover in the bed, the lover she thought
she'd lost forever. He'd come to her after the capture of
Michaelis earlier that night, his heart bared and whispering
words of contrition and love that had set Grace's heart into a
million sweet razor-edged shards. Taking him to her bed had been
a foregone conclusion, the only logical outcome of the encounter.
It had been a night of firsts for Grace Kincaid, a beginning of a
path she'd never considered before. She'd been the aggressor that
night, taking the night well in hand and guiding it to her own
desires. She'd gone down on him for the first time - a strange
experience to say the least, but infinitely more pleasurable for
her than she'd first expected, despite the lingering and
unfamiliar ache in her jaw from Joshua's generous endowment - and
then pushed him backwards on the bed, crawling on top of him and
taking control of the flowing current of raw sexuality which
flowed between them. She'd fought herself a few times - words
like 'slut' and 'whore' running through her head as she tried not
to cry out in ecstasy while she writhed atop him, impaled on his
lovely member - but in the end, she'd forced herself to accept a
simple fact that she hadn't until now faced. She was a woman.
Women did these things, they gave pleasure to their men and they
enjoyed doing it. A gap inside her had sealed, and an incredible
connection was made. She left the house, even in her mad rush to
aid her companion and fellow investigator, resolved to the fact
that her life and attitudes as a woman were going to change.
She tore through the sleepy streets of the city at near-dangerous
speeds, her siren and cherry-light screaming and flashing. It
wasn't until the radio - tuned to the police frequency - blared
"shots fired" that she really put the pedal to the floor,
desperate to get to her colleague's side.
When she at last arrived, the scene was a frozen tableau of
chaos. Lights from police cruisers and ambulances ringed the
street, and the shot-to-hell remains of Taylor's champagne-
colored Eclipse were ringed 'round with crime-scene tape and
forensics crews. Grace hopped out, badge in hand. She ducked the
tape and ran across the lake of shattered windshield glass to the
nearest ambulance.
Taylor looked very small and waxy in the harsh glare of the blue-
and-red lights. Her eyes were closed and her face was distended
strangely by the oxygen mask strapped around her jaw. Grace
stopped the EMT nearest her, her eyes never leaving the sight of
the two paramedics loading the small woman into the back of the
ambulance.
"How is she?" she asked simply.
"Not good," the EMT said back, watching them shut the rear doors
of the ambulance. "Shot four times - minor wounds to the shoulder
and left leg and then execution-style in the torso. If she makes
it through the night, then she has a shot."
"Is she going to St. Anne's?" Grace asked.
"We're probably going to bring her on to Hillcrest," the EMT
replied. "Better trauma there."
"What about Sam Michaelis, the girl that was with her?" Grace
asked.
The EMT lowered his eyes sadly and jerked a thumb at the scene
nearest the car. A county coroner was solemnly zipping a black
vinyl body-bag near the wreckage of Taylor's car. Grace sighed
heavily.
"Poor thing never got to use that second chance," she whispered.
A uniformed officer stepped up to her shortly after, looking
haggard. "You Kincaid?" he asked in a thick basso rumble.
"Yeah, that's me," Grace replied.
"Ken Halverson," the officer replied. "I was first on the scene.
Precinct told me you're going to be in charge."
Grace shrugged. "News to me," she said. "Gimme what you got,
Corporal."
Halverson pointed to an area just off the cross-street nearest
the freeway. "We have a report from a bus driver that a black
four-door pulled out into the street there and stopped and opened
fire on this Mitsubishi. We found a whole sea of nine-mil empties
out there, probably a MAC-11 or even an Uzi. Pretty heavy
hardware for a couple of girls."
"Taylor Beauchamps is a government liaison for an investigation
I'm doing," Grace said. "She had some pretty heavy information. I
have every reason to believe this is a contract job."
"It all points that way," Halverson said. "Both women were
wounded superficially and then shot execution-style, two in the
chest. The blonde girl - Michaelis - got an extra one in the head
for good measure."
Grace looked at the Mitsubishi again. "There's a lot of empties
on this side, too," she said, looking at the brass glinting in
the icy wreckage of the windshield and windows.
Halverson nodded. "Ms. Beauchamps - she was the Chinese girl? -
covered behind her vehicle and returned fire, according to the
people in that gas station over there. She's a real hellcat,
Detective. Apparently she kept them back for nearly two minutes."
"That's my girl," Grace said proudly.
"She plugged one of them - the driver, we think. He's already
bagged and in the meat wagon," Halverson said. "No identification
as yet - we're running his prints through IAFIS right now - we
should have something in an hour or so. But he did have this."
He passed over a forensics bag, already tagged and sealed. In it
were two computerized keycards - a swipe card and a transmitter
card - and a ring of keys. Exactly like the ones that Sam
Michaelis had volunteered to Grace earlier that evening. Keys and
passcards to the Global Ventures building downtown.
"I can identify these," Grace said. "Lieutenant, I want you to
contact me as soon as you hear from IAFIS. I need an ID on that
shooter. Once you have him, check bank records and see if any
deposits have been made for him from a company called Global
Ventures, Inc. I need evidence to nail my suspect, and he's a
slippery sumbitch."
Halverson smiled a mirthless grin. "We'll help you nail him,
Detective."
She grinned back, a wolfish affair that was more than a little
bit chilling. "It's going to be a long night, Lieutenant. Call me
Grace."
***
Ambrose Williams ducked off of the bus he'd caught and down the
street as quickly as he could towards the all-night drugstore.
He'd have to make do as best he could with gauze tape and
homemade sutures until he could skip town and get some medical
attention - going to an ER in town with the cops out looking for
him. Good thing that Kendall was going to pay him double. He'd
never mentioned once that the little chink bitch would have a
gun. She'd gotten him real good in the left shoulder and it hurt
like hell. It was bad enough that his partner had gotten plugged,
since now he'd have to get as drunk as he could for the pain and
still stay sober enough to dig the lead out of the wound. And
he'd have to move fast, too, before the necktie he was using as a
bandage soaked through and he started dripping blood all over the
floor of Walgreen's.
He grabbed needle, thread, disinfectant, gauze, tape and forceps
in rapid succession and made his way lurchingly towards the front
desk. Blood loss was starting to get to him. He was lightheaded
and dizzy. He managed to pay for it all without too much comment
and make his way outside. There was a little run-down motor lodge
just up the street where he could go to ground for a little
while.
After a long hour-and-a-half torture session, he finally managed
to get the last of it sewn up and looking passable. A few hours'
sleep and he could start cleaning up the blood he'd left in the
bathroom sink and try to get in contact with Kendall for
transport out of the country for a little while.
***
It had been an interesting night, to say the least. Tiffany
Dayton slumped heavily onto the sofa and lit a cigarette, blowing
the smoke in a long, feathery plume towards the vaulted ceiling
of the apartment. Her 'assignment' for the evening had been to
tail Karla Renfro around wherever she went, to make sure that
Aaron Kendall's goons didn't try to finish the job they'd
started. Danielle Royal, another of the Corporate Rewards crew
who had been a firefighter (and therefore knew a little bit about
criminal investigation), was staying with Claudette Renfro, the
doctor's promiscuous wife.
Karla had been the tougher assignment, Tiffany was sure. She was
a bottomless well of energy, and the older Tiffany was having to
really hustle to keep up. Karla had gotten off work at Corporate
Rewards around three in the afternoon, then to the gym for an
hour workout and then to the stadium, where she danced the
halftime show for the local basketball team. After that she'd
gone out with some of the other cheerleaders. In the following
seven hours she'd managed five dance clubs. The sexy, vivacious
girl had used the bubblehead act to maximum advantage, too - she
hadn't paid for a single drink. Not that Tiffany had either, come
to think about it. She did have one or two very promising phone
numbers in her purse from gentlemen she'd met that evening.
Finally, at four in the morning Karla had dragged a very listless
Tiffany from Club Tetra and back to her apartment near downtown.
The girl had hopped into a blisteringly hot shower and Tiffany
didn't need her powers of extrasensory perception to know that a
little late-night play with the shower massager was happening in
there. The little squeals and moans that Tiffany heard were more
than enough to tip her off.
Finally, Karla came out with towels wrapped around her chest and
head, smelling of scented body scrub and shampoo. She flopped on
the couch and lit a cigarette of her own, picking up the remote
and channel surfing for a while.
"How can you not be tired?" Tiffany asked with a smile.
Karla giggled. "I'm, like, way too amped to sleep right now.
Something about dancing, y'know, just pumps me up. Oh my God,
there were so many hot guys out tonight."
"I noticed," Tiffany said.
"That guy Jason at Excitement? God, I wanted to suck his dick so
bad," Karla gushed.
Tiffany smiled in fond memory. "Did you see the size of his
package? He was, like, hung like an elk," she said.
"Totally," Karla said, giggling. "You want something to drink,
Tiff?"
"Diet whatever," Tiffany said.
Karla bounced up, dancing a little sexy-dance to the beat of the
Brittney Spears tune that was currently on MTV, where she's
stopped channel surfing. She continued to talk from the kitchen.
"I'm really glad you came out with us tonight, Tiff."
"I am, too."
"I mean, like, you're kinda new to the place, but you totally
feel like family already. Vikki and Keri and me needed some new
blood anyways. We were, like, where we were just kinda passing
around the same guys all the time, and they're all into
stripping, too, so we don't have many nights where we can go out
together."
Tiffany nodded. "I used to be real shy," she explained. "I always
wanted to go out with y'all, but I guess I was kinda waiting for
you to ask me."
She bounced back in, still dancing her sexy-dance (which
threatened to wrench the towel off of her body at any second) and
with two cans of diet soda in one hand and a bag of Cheetos in
the other.
"Ooh, the puffy kind," Tiffany gushed. "I totally love you."
"Dig in, girlfriend," Karla said, tossing her the bag. She
plopped back down on the sofa, taking up her cigarette from the
ashtray and taking a long drag. "I'm just, y'know, sorry that it
took all this shit happening for us to be friends."
Tiffany shrugged. "It would've happened anyway, K."
"I guess so," she said, blowing out a cloud of smoke to stuff
some Cheetos in her mouth. "But either way, I'm totally glad it
happened."
"Me, too," Tiffany said.
"So what did Grace say?" Karla asked.
"I'm supposed to make sure nobody's watching you," Tiffany said.
Karla opened her mouth sexily and put her arms above her head and
wiggled provocatively to the beat. "Girl, everybody's watching
me."
Tiffany laughed. "You are so bad," she said. "Grace seems to
think that somebody might try to kill you again, so she's keeping
somebody close to you all the time."
"My God, she is so pretty," Karla gushed off-topic before
returning back to the subject at hand. "I mean, that's cool. I
don't mind the extra protection, and I certainly don't mind that
it's you."
Tiffany sat forward a little. "Can I ask you something, y'know,
personal?"
"Truth or dare?" Karla asked, smiling.
"You, like, know what I can do, right?" Tiffany asked carefully.
Karla waved a dismissive hand. "Oh, yeah," she said lightly.
"Grace told me that you're, like, psychic or something. She also
said that you didn't like to talk about it."
"It's true, though," Tiffany said. "I can kinda read minds. Well,
not minds. More like memories. I can see other people's
memories."
"That is so cool," Karla said, then snapped her attention back to
the television. "Oh, cool, it's the new Aaliyah. I totally love
this song."
She turned the volume up a touch and began dancing in her seat
very provocatively; mouthing along with the words, while turning
her attention back to Tiffany with a questioning look.
Tiffany fought back a grin. "Well - and I hope you're not, like,
pissed at me or anything - I sort of accidentally read you a few
days ago. I totally didn't mean to, okay?"
Karla smiled broadly. "I believe you."
"I saw you the day you were transformed," Tiffany said. "You told
Joshua not to tell Grace about being a woman before. Do you,
like, remember why you did that?"
Karla's face screwed up into an adorable pout of thought while
she continued her dance, singing along silently with the song on
television. Finally she looked up.
"I think so," she told Tiffany. "Grace was totally getting close
to figuring out the case and stuff. I needed to protect
Claudette."
"Protect her from what?"
Karla pouted in thought again. "I'm sorry, but I can't remember.
But I do remember it had something to do with Sarah. Does that
help?"
"Yeah," Tiffany said. "It does. Thanks."
"You're welcome," Karla replied, waiting for the song to end
before shutting off the TV. "I'm, like, about to turn back into a
pumpkin. I think I'm going to bed."
"Good idea," Tiffany said. "Good night."
Karla stopped for a moment, looking back over her shoulder at
Tiffany. "Do you, like, want to come with?"
Tiffany couldn't ignore the chilly flash of excitement that shot
through her ribcage. "Uh... I..."
Karla smiled. "It's nothing to be scared of," she said. "Me and
Annaliese used to do it all the time. It's totally fun. And I
just thought, y'know - well, you're really pretty and I'm still
kinda horny from the club and stuff, and you're really turning
into this good friend... you don't have to if you don't want to."
Tiffany sat very still for a moment, wondering whether to listen
to what was between her legs or what was between her ears.
Although the ears had the more sensible argument, the legs just
seemed to drown it out somehow.
"I want to," she said, standing. "But, uh... I've never done it
before. Like, with another girl. Not even when I was, y'know...
still a guy."
"Really?" Karla asked. "Don't worry, babe. All you have to do is
do on me what feels good on you. I'll, like, help you with the
rest."
Tiffany swallowed hard and then giggled nervously. "I'm really
nervous."
"Here," Karla said, stepping closer. "Maybe, like, this will
help."
Softness met softness as Karla's lips touched hers in an electric
contact. Tiffany felt like every hair on her body was standing on
end. Waves of gooseflesh traveled the length of her body over and
over.
"Wow," Tiffany said when they finally parted for air.
"Oh, honey, we're just getting started good," Karla said,
giggled. She took Tiffany's long-nailed hand in her own and gave
her a playful smack on the rump with the other. "Get that fine
ass in bed and I'll show you a real 'wow.'"
***
Annaliese LaPaglia couldn't believe how happy she was. When the
last of the stools were stacked on top of the tables and the
floor was mopped, all her receipts were counted and she had a fat
wad of tips in the hip pocket of her little abbreviated cutoff
jean shorts, she stood just in the door of the Hooters restaurant
downtown where she worked as a waitress with her friend Heather.
She smoked a cigarette while she waited for Tyrone - her newest
lover and the man she was rapidly falling in love with - to give
her a ride home and then a ride of a different kind altogether
once they were safely tucked away in her bedroom. He was so kind
to her - he bought her nice clothes and jewelry, called her up in
the middle of the day just to say he was thinking about her. He
was hotter than hell, dressed in his sharp business suit with the
thick gold chain she'd saved her tips for three weeks to get him.
He was in a good job as a systems administrator, made excellent
money and she was starting to think that he was falling in love
with her as quickly as she was with him.
And tonight would be a celebration of sorts, too. Heather had
taken her a week ago to a friend of hers who was a photographer.
Charlotte, from the Avanti salon one building over from Corporate
Rewards, had been on hand to help Annaliese with her hair and
makeup, and she'd gotten several set-ups of really sexy,
glamorous pictures. She'd given a lot of the prints to Tyrone,
but she also sent the best of them in a portfolio to the
corporate office and had been notified today that she'd been
chosen to be the March cover girl of the next Hooters calendar.
She hoped that she'd have a really nice modeling career out of it
somehow. Heather had already said she'd help.
Yes, things were definitely going well for her. She couldn't wait
until tomorrow when she could call and tell her best friend Karla
all about it. Because if Karla didn't know, then it was like it
never really happened.
It was amazing, she thought as she watched the traffic outside
the window of the restaurant go slowly by. A year ago, she'd been
miserable. A real lowlife scam artist named Arturo LaPaglia, an
oily man who made his living off other people's desperation. She
couldn't remember the details of it, but she knew that she'd made
fake identification for people who needed to skip the country.
There were other, darker memories that refused to surface
totally, but Annaliese didn't care. She didn't want to know what
all else that man had done in his life. She was glad he was dead
and never coming back.
At least, she thought, she'd been able to help some of the people
at Corporate Rewards. She could dimly remember getting the new
birth certificates for Grace and Keri and Vikki and Danielle.
That made her feel good, knowing that she'd helped her friends
like that. But sometimes she couldn't forget why she was so happy
now. She'd been transformed the day she'd tried to go and kill
Karl Renfro. He'd hit a button on the wall and the Music had
turned them into the best of friends. It had made her into the
happy, sexy girl she was right now, the one who was in love with
Tyrone Edwards and was about to be the new Miss March.
It was funny how things worked out.
She smiled and tossed her cigarette in the bucket by the door
when she saw Tyrone's Mercedes pull up in the parking lot. Waving
goodbye to the last of the Hooters Girls inside, she ducked out
the door and nearly ran to the car, unable to wait a second
longer to tell her beloved Tyrone the good news.
She was still smiling when the door opened and the gunshots
sounded.
***
Aaron Kendall's face didn't change when he picked up the phone
and listened to the report. He only nodded grimly and said,
"Excellent."
Replacing the phone in its cradle, he walked slowly to the
window, rubbing his temples to ease the growing tension headache
there. He stood, contemplating the sea of electric light below
him, wondering where all of this unpleasantness was going to end,
when a timid rap on the door behind him caused him to turn
slightly.
His assistant, Linda - a prim, no-nonsense woman with an
excellent head for organization - stepped in quietly and said,
"He's here, Mr. Kendall."
Kendall nodded. "Send him in, thank you, Linda," he said. "And do
you think you can scrounge me up some aspirin before you leave
for the evening?"
"Of course, Mr. Kendall."
Kendall turned completely around to face the young, hard-faced
man who entered the room. He was tall and skinny and showed no
promise of filling out to anything more than the possibility of
being called 'wiry.' His posture relayed a sense of fear and
wariness, which suited Kendall just fine. The boy ran a hand
through his lifeless black hair and cleared his throat. His big
nose dominated a very plain, unremarkable face.
"Sit," Kendall said. "Can I get you a drink?"
"You said you had some information for me," the boy said in a
thick accent. His English was very clipped and precise, that of a
man who'd only recently begun using it outside the schoolroom.
"I wanted to tell you that it's impossible for me to keep up my
end of our 'arrangement,' dear boy," Kendall said smoothly. "I'm
sorry to say that your father is dead."
"Dead?" the boy repeated.
"Unfortunately so," Kendall said. "I'm terribly sorry. We tried
everything in our power to find him for you, Francisco. I just
got the report."
The boy did a very impressive job of fighting back tears of
frustration and rage, showing a touch of iron in his soul that
his father had never possessed. Kendall thought there might be
hope for the young man after all.
"Thank you for all your efforts, Mr. Kendall," the boy said. "I'm
sure my father's estate will be able to come up with something to
repay your kindness."
"I require nothing of the sort from you, Mr. LaPaglia," Kendall
said. "But there is other news, as well. It may be hard for you
to hear."
"Tell me, please," Francisco LaPaglia said with a raw throat.
"Your father was murdered," Kendall said. "He was shot to death
by a police officer named Grace Kincaid."
Francisco nodded grimly. "I see," he said, breathing heavily.
"Mr. Kendall, I wonder if you can do me one more small favor?"
"Anything, Francisco," Kendall said.
"Could you tell me where I can find this Grace Kincaid?"
***
Light. Dark. Light. Dark. Light. Dark.
The white glare strobed at her harshly, hurting her head and
forcing sound from a throat too raw to breathe. She sought the
comfortable, cloying darkness, but some small part of her fought
for the light. There was something left undone, a sense of
incompleteness that she had to resolve before she could let the
darkness have her.
The light overcame the darkness, resolved from a terrifying white
smear into the tiny and mundane trappings of the world without. A
curtain. A bedspread. A tray. A face. Hope's face.
"Hi, there," the beautiful blonde said with a tearful smile.
"Welcome back. We missed you."
"Where..." Taylor rasped.
"Hillcrest General," Hope said, smoothing down her sweat-soaked
hair. "You're in ICU. You got shot, honey."
"Grace," she grunted. She tried to sit, but a wall of screaming
pain forced her back.
Hope's cool, soft hands settled her. "Grace isn't here," she
soothed. "Easy, sweetie. You're in pretty bad shape."
"Need Grace," she managed again.
"I can call her," Hope said. "Just tell me what you need."
"Man who shot..."
Hope nodded. "The man who shot you? What about him?"
"Know him," she managed, her voice falling in and out through the
ravages of her emergency intubation.
Hope jumped a little. "You're sure?"
"Yes," Taylor managed. "One of ours. CIA."
***
Grace sagged heavily against the tailgate of the patrol car.
Tears stung her eyes and her breathing had taken on the heavy,
wet rasp of a woman who was about to wail in anguish.
Behind her, the coroners were zipping another bag, which held
another friend. The forensics teams were everywhere, crawling
over every exposed inch of the parking lot looking for some
small, microscopic clue.
Gaining control of herself with supreme effort, Grace took a
deep, ragged breath and picked up her phone, which had been
ringing for some time, and pressed it to her ear.
"Kincaid," she said wearily.
"Hey, Gracie, it's Hope," the voice on the other end said.
"Taylor's awake."
"Thank God," the detective breathed.
"Are you okay?" Hope asked, suddenly solicitous.
"No," Grace said, trying to keep her firm hold on her emotions.
"I'm at the Hooters on Kennedy Avenue. Someone just killed
Annaliese LaPaglia."
"Oh my God," Hope breathed.
"They dumped the guy she was seeing, too. Tyrone. They killed him
and took his car. Annaliese thought it was him coming to pick her
up after work - those damn tinted windows, she couldn't see - and
they cut her down."
A loud sniff on the other end announced Hope's tears. "I'm so
sorry."
Grace's iron control started to erode. Wetness flowed down her
smooth cheeks. "This bastard keeps killing my friends, Hope."
Huge, wracking sobs shook her frame roughly.
"I know, sweetheart, I know. They're my friends too."
"Goddamn it," Grace said, wiping her eyes angrily. "I was too
slow."
"You can't blame yourself, Gracie. You can't."
She took a deep, steadying breath. "I know. I know. I just have
to catch this son of a bitch before he kills anybody else."
"You'll get him," Hope said, blowing her nose.
"You're goddamn right," Grace said, her control back in place and
a fiery determination as well. "Why did you call me?"
"Taylor was asking for you when she woke up," Hope said. "She
said she knew the man who shot her. He's ex-CIA. Said his name
was Ambrose Williams. I think - she was kinda out of it - that
she said he usually went under the alias of Peter Owens."
"Owens," Grace repeated. "Got it."
"Hang in there, Gracie," Hope said.
"I will," Grace said. "I'll fall apart after I nail this
motherfucker."
***
The ringing phone was almost expected. He set down his coffee and
picked it up in a thick, beefy hand. "Ned White," he said
tiredly.
"It's Grace," the equally-tired voice said.
"Late nights all around," Ned said. "How you holding up,
partner?"
"They're killing my friends, Ned."
"I know, kid. I know. What do you have?"
"Guy name of Ambrose Williams. Travels under the name of Peter
Owens. I need to know where he is, what he eats, whether he
snores, shoe size, everything."
"Owens. Right," he said, writing down the name. "Listen, Gracie,
I do have some good news for you. We pulled the bank records on
the DOA shooter from the Michaelis shooting. He just got a lovely
bonus from Corporate Rewards - overpayment of benefits, you
believe that shit? - in the amount of forty thousand dollars.
Signed off by your friend and mine."
"Aaron Kendall," Grace hissed. "I got the sonofabitch. Conspiracy
to commit murder."
Ned stood up. "You're not going in there alone. Tell me where to
meet you."
"This is my collar, Ned," Grace warned.
"You go in there with no backup, it'll be your ass, Grace. I'm
not backing off on this. Now you get your choice of me or about
fifty blue-and-whites. Your call."
"You fight dirty," Grace said.
"That's why they made me a detective," Ned said. "Now gimme an
address."
"I dunno, old timer, you up for some real cop work?"
"Stuff it, red," he said. "Address."
"Meet me on the corner of Heights and 3rd in half an hour. Bring
donuts."
***
Tiffany traced long, languorous circles around the sumptuous
curve of Karla's breast with the tip of a long, square-cut
fingernail. The curvy blonde sighed happily, kissing Tiffany's
smooth shoulder. The tangled sheets and open coolness of the
bedroom were flavored heavily with the scent of their combined
arousal and climax. Or, more to the point, climaxes. Climaxes and
climaxes and climaxes.
"How do you feel?" Karla breathed.
"Like a melted Hershey's kiss," Tiffany giggled.
Karla licked the tip of one of Tiffany's soft breasts with a very
practiced tongue. "Mmm. Melted chocolate. That gives me some
ideas for the second date."
"You are so bad," Tiffany scolded, kissing her deeply.
"So how about it?" Karla asked cheerfully. "Since Annaliese
started seeing Tyrone, she's totally not into the girl thing
anymore. Want to, like, be my Friday-night girl?"
"Are you asking me to be your girlfriend?"
"There's nothing like a big, hard dick," Karla explained, "but
sometimes there's something only another girl can give me,
y'know?"
"I believe it," Tiffany said. "What happens, though, if I like...
y'know..."
"Fall in love with me?" Karla asked. "It's cool. I'm, like,
totally okay with it. Look at Heather and Jenna. They're, like,
totally in love with each other and they screw around all the
time. Sometimes a girl just needs some cock - like me - but I'm
totally more into women. They're, like, easier to be around and
easier to love."
Tiffany blushed deeply. "You are amazing."
Karla kissed her again. "So, will you? Be my, y'know,
girlfriend?"
"Any time you want me to," Tiffany answered. "Seriously."
"I'm so glad," Karla said. "'Cause I, like, think I'm falling for
you."
Tiffany fell into her arms again and pressed her lips against her
lovers, savoring the delicious way that their large, cotton-soft
breasts fit in between one another. She was just entertaining the
notion of kissing her way southward down Karla's athletic body
when the phone rang, shattering the moment.
"Oh, God," Karla said, pushing up in the bed quickly. "That has
to be Grace."
Karla picked up the phone from the bedside and opened the line
with a beeping keypress.
"Hi, this is Karla," she bubbled. "Oh, hey, Grace."
Tiffany felt as much as heard her new lover's heart begin to
sink. "Oh God. Oh my God. Yeah. Yeah, we'll be right there. Okay.
Bye."
Karla stood up quickly, the sheets falling away from her smooth,
taut body. The streetlights through the vertical blinds striped
her luscious curves in a very artistic way, which belied the
heaviness of her demeanor.
"Grace wants us to meet her," Karla said, a glistening tear
falling from one eye. "Somebody just killed Annaliese."
***
Ambrose Williams hadn't stayed alive in his business for as long
as he had by being stupid. Once he'd grabbed a few hours' sleep
on the lumpy motel mattress he was up, dressed and ready to keep
moving. His ticket out of the country - and his payment for
services rendered - was waiting for him downtown.
Trying to keep as low a profile as possible, Williams pulled his
coat on over the bloody ruin of his undershirt and ducked out of
his room into the waiting taxi he'd called earlier. The sun was
just beginning to lighten the eastern sky into a rich, dark blue.
The traffic would start sucking in just a few hours, and he
wanted to be on his way to the airport as soon as he was able.
"Where you headed?" the cabbie asked.
"Downtown," Williams grunted, shutting the door. "Third and
Heights, the Global Ventures building. There's fifty in it for
you if you get me there before rush."
The taxi sped away in a chirp of tires.
***
The unmarked Crown Vic pulled to the curb just as Grace was
lighting her cigarette. Her long auburn hair trailed behind her
in a soft, billowing curtain as the wind whipped through the
claustrophobic streets of downtown. She acknowledged her fellow
detective out of the corner of her eye, but her gaze never left
the Global Ventures building. She pushed her glasses up her nose
- she'd been crying again - and pointed as Ned White got slowly
out of the car.
"There are lights on the fifteenth and seventeenth floors," she
said. "Our gopher is probably up there."
Ned tapped her shoulder with a thick folded document. Grace took
it in perfectly-manicured hands and looked at it strangely.
"A warrant for the arrest of Aaron Kendall," he said. "Word on
the street is, those help when you want to arrest somebody."
"Thanks," Grace said, stuffing it in a back pocket of her tight-
as-sin jeans. "You don't have to do this, Ned. You've been behind
a desk for five years. This could get ugly."
"I'm going in there with you, and that's the end of it," Ned said
firmly. "Mrs. White didn't raise her son to let a Brother in Blue
go into a situation like this alone."
"Ned, thanks," Grace said with a heartfelt half-smile.
"Anything for a friend," he replied, his customary reply.
"Ready to go get this bastard?" Grace asked.
"I have cruisers posted at all the street corners around this
place if he tries to jackrabbit," Ned said. "FAA has declared the
roof helipad a no-land area and we have every unit in the
Eighteenth Precinct ready to jump on this guy's ass - they owe
him for the shooting the other night."
Grace nodded. It had been Sam Michaelis - before the Music had
changed her - who'd done the shooting, but it was Aaron Kendall
whom everyone suspected gave her the order. People who shot at
cops didn't have very healthy prospects in this town.
"Let's go get him," she said. "You wearing?"
Ned tapped his breastbone in reply, and a firm rap of reinforced
Kevlar resounded in reply. Grace patted him on the shoulder, made
sure her badge was displayed prominently, and started to walk
briskly up the sidewalk towards the building.
***
"There's her truck," Tiffany said, pointing out the familiar gray
Dodge Dakota parked by the side of the street downtown. "Grace
did say to meet her at Corporate Rewards, right?"
Karla, whose bubbly demeanor had been drastically dimmed by the
news of her best friend's murder, could only nod silently in
reply. Tiffany desperately wanted to reach out to her and draw
her into an embrace, but it wasn't possible. There was a wall of
private misery around her that brooked no intrusion.
"I wish I'd never discovered that damned Music," she whispered
bitterly.
Tiffany pulled the car over and put a warm hand on her lover's
wet cheek. "Listen to me, Karla. You cannot blame yourself for
the things that have happened. They weren't your fault, okay? I,
personally, am very glad you found that Music. I remember what I
used to be and I'm, like, so much happier now than I ever could
have been before. Remember that. Me, Hope, Stacey, Danielle,
Jenna, Heather, your wife, Josh and Grace, Marc, Kylie, Vikki,
Keri, Taylor... We're all better people - happier people - since
you and your Music came into our lives. And Annaliese, too. Her
life was so much more than it could have been, no matter how
short a time she got to live it."
Karla placed her hand alongside Tiffany's, sandwiching it warmly
against her cheek. "Thanks, Tiff," she whispered, managing a
haunted smile.
"You gonna be okay?" Tiffany asked.
"Yeah," Karla said, a bit of her old effervescence returning.
"I'll feel better once I can talk to Grace about what happened."
"If I only knew where the hell she was, I'd take you," Tiffany
grumped with an unintentionally adorable pout.
As she put the car into gear to head back into traffic, a taxicab
screeched in front of them, cutting them off and slamming on the
brakes. Tiffany had to swerve her lipstick-red BMW Z3 roughly and
jam on her own brakes to avoid a collision.
She flipped him a flawlessly-French-tipped bird, yelling, "Nice
signal, asshole!"
The taxicab door opened and a tall, rough-looking man in a
stained and rumpled suit hopped out, bending over to pay the
driver. Tiffany recognized the face, from distant and dim
memories of an eternity ago, but the shreds of memory she
unintentionally read from the shady-looking man were more than
enough to drive the point home.
"I know that guy," Tiffany said. "He was in the CIA, a long time
ago. One of their assassins."
Karla looked at him more closely. "Him? He looks so, like,
plain."
"That's what the Agency wanted," Tiffany said from far away.
"Ordinary-looking, everyday citizens."
Another of the man's memories slammed into Tiffany's brain, a
hard one to watch. "Oh my God, K. That's the guy who killed Sam
Michaelis and shot Taylor."
Karla grabbed her friend's arm tightly. "Did he kill Annaliese,
too?"
"No," Tiffany said. "It was somebody else. But they both work for
the same man."
"Stop," Karla said as Tiffany pulled away from the curb quickly
and tried to get as much distance as possible from the killer.
Fear thrilled up and down her spine, a dancing chill that made
her heart beat fit to burst. "Tiff, stop! We have to go back!"
"He's a monster, Karla! He's killed more people than he can
remember!"
"He doesn't know us," Karla said. "I need to find out where he's
going, Tiff. I need to find the man who killed my best friend,
okay?"
Slowly, inexorably, Tiffany guided the little sports car to the
curb. She sighed heavily as she cut off the engine. "I'm scared,"
she confessed.
Karla nodded and squeezed her arm. "So am I," the blonde replied.
"Fucking terrified. But I have to know, Tiff. I have to."
Tiffany opened her door. "I understand," she said, swinging her
legs around to the pavement. "Let's do it quick before I lose my
nerve."
***
Kendall couldn't exactly figure out why, but something about
Francisco LaPaglia disturbed him. Taken as a whole package, the
youth wasn't much to write home about. Skinny and awkward and
unattractive. But there was a dangerous, unpredictable element
about him; shrouded in the unnerving icy calm he always exhibited
that set off many of Kendall's internal alarms. The boy simply
stood, silhouetted by the rising morning sun, staring out into
the city. Like somehow he could find Grace Kincaid just by
staring long enough.
"My boy, please, you should at least have something to eat,"
Kendall said, desperate to find some basic need in the boy that
could hint that he was human like the rest of them.
"I am not hungry, thank you," LaPaglia replied. "Mr. Kendall. I
will need to purchase a handgun today. Do you think you might
help me?"
Kendall's soul iced over at the intensity and calm of the
request. "It's difficult, Signor. It takes a seven-day waiting
period under new laws. It would be a week before you were able to
claim it."
"Surely there are, shall we say, unofficial channels where I
could obtain one? Cost is no object," he said.
"Wouldn't it be easier to use that money to hire someone to do it
for you?" Kendall attempted. "It might be more sensible for you
to keep your hands clean. The police don't take very kindly to
people who shoot one of their own."
"The police don't concern me," LaPaglia replied meticulously.
"And I would never hire somebody to make a profit on revenge that
by rights belongs to me. No, I will do the job myself, Mr.
Kendall. Now, do you know of a way where I could get a handgun
today?"
Kendall tried not to shiver. "I do," he said. "I'll make the call
once my secretary arrives for the morning."
LaPaglia nodded and turned his gaze back out the window. "Grazie,
Signor," he said.
Kendall suppressed a shudder and tried to look at anything in the
room that wasn't the slender youth.
***
The badge and the warrant were more than adequate to gain access
past the building's security in the front lobby. With hardly
anyone in the building at 7 a.m., the actual move on the office
was uneventful and painless, assisted by building security with
quick precision. They stepped into the well-appointed office just
as Kendall's assistant - a firm-looking, no-nonsense type of
woman was arriving, stowing her purse and booting up her
computer.
Grace stepped forward quickly, badge in hand. "Ma'am, I'm
Detective Kincaid, this is Detective White. We have a warrant for
the arrest of Aaron Kendall."
She looked shocked. "Mr. Kendall isn't here right now," she said
automatically.
"Are you aware that obstruction of justice and aiding and
abetting are both criminal offenses, ma'am?" Ned replied quickly.
"We know he's here. Building security confirmed it five minutes
ago. Now let us in or I'll have to arrest you, as well."
"I don't..." she attempted.
"Ma'am, you're slowing me down," Grace said. "Now either let me
into that office back there right now or you're under arrest. Do
you understand?"
The woman's resolve broke. She stood nervously and paced quickly
to the wooden door behind her desk. She opened it just a crack,
saying, "Mr. Kendall?"
Grace shoved past her, elbowing the door open and nearly
trampling the poor woman. Kendall was there, behind his desk,
looking strangely at the back of a gangly young man who was
staring out the window.
"Marsha, I told you no interruptions," he said in an
authoritative bass.
"Aaron Kendall?" Grace said, showing her badge. "Detective
Kincaid. I have a warrant for your arrest; the charge is
conspiracy to commit murder. You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of
law. You have the right to have an attorney present during
questioning. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be
appointed to you by the state. Do you understand these rights as
I have read them to you?"
The awkward-looking man at the window turned slowly, regarding
Grace with a cool, almost bored expression. "Detective... Grace
Kincaid?" he asked slowly, in a thick Mediterranean accent.
"Yes," Grace said, not taking her eyes from Kendall.
She never saw the young man explode into motion, his outstretched
fingers seeking her slender neck.
***
Karla and Tiffany ghosted silently up the stairs, a few flights
behind the man who'd killed Sam. Tiffany was on high alert,
trying to read the man's thoughts to see if he had any inkling
that he was being followed. So far, his mind was focused on
escape and evasion and the pain in his shoulder where one of
Taylor's shots had found him. His single-mindedness made the
girls' job easier. They tracked him up fifteen flights - which
left all of them panting a little for air, even the superbly
athletic Karla - and through an access door. Waiting to make sure
his thoughts hadn't turned towards looking behind him, Tiffany
took a deep breath and pushed the door open. Karla swallowed
heavily and pulled her can of pepper spray from the little
holster on her keychain. It was the only weapon they had.
The door opened into a long, unadorned hallway, flanked by
several sets of doors on either side. The door at the far end on
the right was slowly closing on its springs. Tiffany and Karla
moved as quickly as they could, trying to make no sound, and
stopped before the closed door tensely, their ears open for the
slightest hint as to what this man was doing and where he was
going.
After an interminable pause, Karla placed a trembling hand on the
handle.
"I have to know," she told Tiffany. Bestowing a quick kiss on her
lover's soft lips, the young blonde turned the handle.
***
Grace didn't waste any time or energy. She spun on her heel and
delivered a savage palm strike to the young man's chin, following
it up with a vicious kick to the inside of his knee that left him
flat on his back in the thick pile of Kendall's carpet. Her
pistol appeared in her fist as if conjured there.
Kendall had sprung up and made a dash for it, towards a back door
hidden in the paneling behind his desk. He collided with a
heavyset man who was coming in the other way through the
bolthole. They fell against the doorjamb in a windmilling of arms
and a torrential downpour of surprised profanity. Ned had them
both covered under the muzzle of his nine-mil before they could
recover.
"Who the hell are you?" Grace asked the young boy.
"I am your killer," he said in his thick accent. "I am here to
avenge the death of my father, who you murdered."
"Murdered? What the fuck are you talking about, kid?" Ned asked.
"My father! You killed him!" he cried, looking as if he were
about to lunge for Grace again. She forestalled the thought by
pulling back the slide of her weapon.
"And just who the hell is it that I'm supposed to have killed?"
Grace demanded.
"You don't even know his name," the boy hissed. "You heartless
bitch."
"Keep talking, kid, and you're going to find yourself in the
lockup with Kendall over there. I have never taken a human life
in my whole career. Whoever got you thinking that I killed your
pops was lying to you," Grace said through gritted teeth.
"You... did not kill my father? Kendall? Is this true?" the boy
stammered.
Kendall said nothing more than, "I want my lawyer."
"I'm telling you, kid. You can pull my records. I've only shot
one person in all the time I've been a police officer and it was
a wound to the leg. I haven't killed anyone," Grace said. "Now,
just who the hell are you, anyway?"
The boy seemed to relax a little and cleared his throat. "My
apologies, Detective. I was given false information about you.
Mr. Kendall told me that you were responsible for the death of my
father, Arturo LaPaglia."
Grace's eyes went the size of teacups. "You're Arturo LaPaglia's
son?"
"Yes," the boy said. "He disappeared from me and my mother when I
was very young. Mr. Kendall was kind enough to care for me, to
provide for my mother and my education in Italy. But I never
ended my search for my missing father, with Mr. Kendall's help."
Grace's eyes narrowed to hateful slits as they moved back to
Kendall. "So that's what you had on LaPaglia," she said. "That's
how you managed to force him to kill Dr. Renfro."
Kendall remained silent, propped against the doorframe alongside
the heavyset, unknown man. He refused to look at the young man.
"Mr. Kendall? What is she talking about? Mr. Kendall?" the youth
demanded.
Grace turned back to him. "Your father didn't leave you, kid,"
she explained. "You were kidnapped. Arturo LaPaglia worked for
Aaron Kendall for several years. Several months ago, your father
attempted to kill a man named Karl Renfro on the orders of
Kendall and a man named Sam Michaelis. We've been wondering for a
long time how he managed to get a paper-pusher like LaPaglia to
make an assassination attempt. He was using you, kid."
"He used me? To blackmail my father?" LaPaglia the Younger asked
in disbelief.
"He did," Grace confirmed.
"Then my father is not dead?" the boy asked.
"I'm sorry, kid. He is dead. He was killed late last night,"
Grace said sadly. "We suspect that it was Kendall's orders once
again."
The boy covered his eyes with his hand. His body began to shake
with silent sobs.
Unable to watch comfortably as the boy wept, Grace turned back to
Kendall.
"Get up, you piece of shit," she ordered, pulling her handcuffs
from the holder in the small of her back. "Time to pay up."
Ned gestured with his weapon. "What about this other guy?" he
asked.
"Anybody who knows the back door into this office is suspect,"
Grace said. "Put him in custody until we can figure out who he
is."
Ned stepped forward. The heavyset man shoved Kendall away with a
grunt of effort and straightened, a silenced pistol in his hidden
hand. Grace moved with near-supernatural speed, throwing her
slender body into Ned's as the muzzle spoke once, twice. Grace's
eyes flew open wide and a tiny, almost little-girl grunt, escaped
her lips.
She hit the carpet hard, her shirt bloodying quickly. Ned got to
his knees quickly and brought his pistol up, but the man had
already ducked out the back door. Ned stood to pursue, when the
heavyset man staggered backwards through the door again, his
hands clutched over his face, strangled cries escaping from
between his fingers. He stumbled over Kendall's prone form and
went backwards over the expensive desk.
Karla Renfro walked through the door then, a can of pepper spray
held in front of her in both hands. Tiffany Dayton was right
behind her.
Kendall's eyes were enormous. "My God," he rasped. "Sarah?"
From the corner of his eye, Ned saw Kendall making a break for it
out the back door. Ned's pistol spoke deafeningly, chewing huge
gouges out of the deep oaken paneling of the wall nearest the
door. Kendall came up short with a startled squeak and fell to
his knees. Tiffany tackled him then, her elbow sitting heavily on
his skull and her shapely knee digging into the small of the
man's back.
The boy was on his knees, shaking Grace's unmoving body roughly,
saying "Detective Kincaid? Detective Kincaid?"
Ned knee-walked across the carpet to where she lay. "Gracie? Oh,
God, Gracie," he muttered, digging for the radio in his coat
pocket. "This is White. I need an ambulance, now. I have an
officer down. Move!"
Grace moaned, a very delicate and feminine sound. "Ned..."
He took her hand in his own. "I'm here, Grace. Right here."
"I don't feel so good..." she managed, before her eyes rolled
into her head. Her breathing, ragged and pained, gradually became
shallower and shallower until it seemed to stop entirely.
"No," came a high voice. "No."
Karla moved closer to Grace's form, her hands clutched in her
luxurious blonde hair.
Ned nearly screamed into the radio. "Get me that goddamned
ambulance! Now!"
"No," Karla repeated. Her eyes closed tightly, tears leaking
through the long, soft lashes. "No! NO!
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO..."
The horrible sound hung in the air like a solid living flame, and
somewhere from the middle of it Ned heard, threaded in between
the fibers of pain and loss and betrayal, something that sounded
for all the world like Music...
***
Karla floated in darkness so thick that it caressed her. There
was a presence there, an old friend that she'd known for her
whole life, a voice that had spoken to her the first time long
ago in a tent on the riverlands of southern Canada.
I am here, it said.
"Is it really you?" Karla asked. "Heammawihio?" She used the
ancient Cheyenne name for the Great Spirit, the ruler of the Sky.
I have answered to that name, it said. It is not my name, but it
will serve.
"Where am I?"
The same place you have always been, human. Stuck between Earth
and Sky. Belonging to neither. This is the second time you have
called me. The first was for the loss of a child. Now why have
you summoned me?
"I didn't mean to," she said. "I just saw Grace laying there, and
all that blood, and I just screamed. I never meant to summon
you."
Your friend, this Grace? Heammawihio - or whatever it was - asked
from the darkness.
"Yes," Karla said. "I don't want her to die. Too many people have
died today. I can't stand any more."
Death is a natural part of life, the voice said. It is
unavoidable for you.
"Death may be nothing much for someone like you," Karla said.
"But to a human like me, it's a very big deal."
The darkness sounded amused. I understand that better than you
know.
"I guess you don't have to be here," Karla said. "I just
screamed. That was all. I didn't mean to call you here."
But here is where I am, the darkness responded.
"I sometimes wish I'd never found you," Karla confessed.
I know, the voice responded. I have seen what has happened.
"And you can just let it happen like that?" Karla asked.
Life is a balance, human, the voice explained. For every birth
there is a death. For every warm, secure lodge that is built -
trees must die. For every baby born, animals must perish to feed
it. Healing must harm and harming must heal, or they cannot
continue to be that which they are. Perhaps these deaths are
payment in kind for the work you've already done.
"I don't want this to be my fault," Karla said, near tears.
It is no one's fault. It simply is. The animals, which you think
beneath you, know this. They accept it and live in its embrace
with every breath. Why should you be different?
"Because I can love," Karla said.
Perhaps that is the difference, at that.
"So if all these deaths, all this suffering - it's just to
balance out the healing we've already done. So if I want to keep
healing, more people must suffer?"
Sometimes, the spirit said to her.
"Then end it now. Take me. Kill me. Just leave my friends alone."
The darkness seemed somehow speechless. Your life means so little
to you? It asked finally.
"No," Karla countered. "It means that much to me. So much that
I'm willing to give it away just to end this pain and suffering.
It's not fair to the people I love. And if taking me can end it,
then take me."
The darkness considered a bit. No, it finally decided. The world
is bettered by having you in it. I will not take you.
"Then the suffering continues," Karla concluded.
The suffering will continue whether I take you or not, human, the
darkness explained. Don't you see? Suffering is a part of this
world. It is one of the risks of living. It is not your fault
that people suffer, that people die. They suffer and die because
it is in their nature to suffer and die. A human is a tragic
thing.
"So why are you here?" Karla asked.
Because you called me.
Karla wanted to scream in frustration. "So what do I do with you,
then?"
That is, as it always has been, yours to decide, human. I am but
the tune. You make the music.
"Kendall," Karla hissed. "He's the one behind all of this. He
should be punished for his crimes."
His crimes will punish him by themselves, the darkness said. Your
interference would be unnecessary.
"I don't know what to do," Karla said helplessly.
Another risk one takes when one is human, the darkness told her.
It is simple. You do what it is in your nature to do.
"And what is that?" Karla nearly wailed. "Dammit, I don't know
what that is!"
What is the word you humans use for one who cares for those who
suffer?
"Doctor," Karla supplied.
Are you not a... doctor? The darkness asked, unaccustomed to the
feel of the word.
"I was," she said. "A long time ago."
Why did you become a doctor?
"Because of why I'm here now. Because I can't stand to see people
suffering."
Then perhaps, it is in your nature to heal?
Karla's eyes nearly shone.
***
The horrible, screaming pain as her body was violated, the heavy
and helpless feeling of the projectiles ripping through muscle
and internal organ, the warm, sticky and calm acceptance as her
blood leaked from her body. It burned - God, how it burned. But
it was fading, like a dimly-remembered dream. She fluttered her
eyes open a little bit, feeling a warm hand in her own. Memories
filtered down through the haze, of being shot and trying to
arrest Aaron Kendall. Of Ned screaming on the radio about an
ambulance before taking her hand.
"Ned?" Grace asked. She noticed, for the first time, that the
hand she held in her own wore a French manicure just like hers on
her long, square-cut nails.
The stunning young blonde was sitting mystified, looking down at
the not-inconsiderable breasts which were straining at the front
of the man's dress shirt she was wearing and providing a very
tempting nest for the gold detective's shield she wore on a chain
around her long swan's-neck.
"I think so," she said in a breathy mezzo.
***
Jenna and Heather were prompt and thorough as always, managing to
get the nest of transformees out of the building and back to
Corporate Rewards before the morning rush started in earnest.
Tiffany and Karla were able to slip them out the back door of the
office the way they'd come in and down to the street level, where
Danielle and Hope were waiting with a rented van. Soon they were
all in the picked-over processing room of Corporate Rewards, most
of the people in the room still unconscious from the shock of the
Music that Karla had overwhelmed them with.
Danielle distributed the last of her cigarettes to Hope, Stacey,
Tiffany and Grace in the hall outside the small but well-equipped
medical room, after having given Grace a complete examination.
There weren't even bruises, much less scars. It was as if the
shots she'd taken in Ned White's stead had never even been fired.