Running Scared

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Running Scared Page 22

by Elizabeth Lowell


  Sighing, Risa felt some of her sadness slide away. The elevator was a soothing oasis in the middle of business and fear and uncertainty. All too soon the doors opened, and she found herself staring out at her own hallway. She blinked, orienting herself.

  “Isn’t this marked as a service elevator?” she asked.

  Shane smiled. “Yes.”

  “Sneaky.”

  He laughed and released her hand to nudge her out into the hallway. He felt the tension return to her spine when a man dressed in casual clothes walked toward them.

  “Don’t worry,” Shane said in a low voice. “I’ve put extra security on this floor. He’s one of ours.”

  “Evening, sir, ma’am,”

  Shane nodded to the guard. “How’s it going?”

  “Quiet.”

  “Good.”

  The plainclothes guard ambled off down the hall, looking for all the world like a man with nothing on his mind but a night gambling in the casino.

  “Is it evening already?” Risa asked, then glanced at her watch. “Yes, I guess it is.” Her mouth turned down as she thought of the cops going over and over her story. “My, how time flies when you’re having fun.”

  “Yeah. Don’t know how much more of it my heart can take.”

  She stopped in front of her apartment, reached into her narrow skirt pocket, and came up empty. “I don’t have my key. I must have lost it when I tried to get away from him. Or in the other apartment when we, uh . . .”

  He gave her a smoky, remembering kind of glance.

  Heat shot through her.

  Without a word he pulled a slim plastic rectangle from his wallet. The electronically coded key fitted neatly into the slot. The door opened. He handed the key card to her.

  “New code. If you lose or loan it, let security know,” Shane said. “Anybody using that card who isn’t with you will get a lot of armed attention real quick.”

  Risa started to answer, then saw the mess beyond him. She walked into the room and stood with her fists on her hips. “Well, hell. I was hoping I was wrong.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I thought my mind was playing tricks and no mess could be this bad. Wrong again. How am I supposed to find out if anything is missing when nothing is where it’s supposed to be?”

  The fact that she was already striding toward her bedroom told Shane that she didn’t expect an answer. She did a lightning check of electronics and found the TV, DVD, CD/radio/clock, and computer all in place. Mostly. The computer apparently had been thrown across the room. Clothes—ripped and wadded—covered the TV and made a big mound in the center of the bedroom floor. Shoes were scattered like confetti throughout the rooms.

  She did a swift turn through the bathroom and kitchen. Big mess. Nothing obvious missing. Her grocery list was still stuck to the refrigerator with a grinning, bright green frog magnet.

  Shane was in the bedroom, surveying the chaos.

  “All the electronics are here,” she said.

  He plucked a midnight blue lace bra off a lampshade. He had discovered matching panties in the bathtub. Next time I’ll definitely take it slow. Sliding lace off her skin is worth going slow for. He carefully folded the silky underwear and set it on top of a dresser that was missing all its drawers. They were facedown where they’d been thrown.

  “What about jewelry?” he asked.

  She shook her head. “The stuff I want is too expensive.”

  “So you go without?”

  “I spent my childhood with second and third best and hand-me-downs from charities. If I can’t afford what I want today, I wait until I can.”

  “What do you want?” he asked quietly. He would get it for her.

  “It’s all in museums.” She looked at the upended mattress and for the first time noticed the slash marks where the man had taken a knife to the fabric. “I’m thinking he was pissed off.”

  Shane followed her glance and felt both ice and anger slide into his veins. “I’m thinking you’re right.”

  “He was looking for something I didn’t have.”

  “Celtic gold.”

  She stared at the mess. “Much as I don’t like it, I have to agree.”

  “While you’re being agreeable, think about trusting me a little more.”

  She turned and gave him a startled glance. “I trust you.”

  “Do you? Then why didn’t you tell me that Cherelle had some knockout Celtic gold artifacts for sale?”

  “Because she didn’t tell me.”

  “Interesting.” Without knowing it, he got his gold pen from the pocket of his sport coat and began walking the slim gold over his fingers while he sorted through possibilities and probabilities with a speed that had made more than one person uneasy.

  Risa wasn’t bothered. She liked knowing that he was more than a pretty face and a fine body. Next time she would have to get more than the essential parts of him naked. She bit her mouth against the smile that wanted to settle in. A few minutes with Shane had been better than hours with any other man. It would have made her nervous if it hadn’t felt so damned right.

  “Did she know what you do for a living?” Shane asked finally.

  “Yes. But until this last time she never asked me any questions about my work.”

  “So we can assume she came to you because of your knowledge about ancient gold artifacts rather than an overwhelming desire to touch all the childhood bases.”

  Risa didn’t like admitting it, but it made too much sense for her to deny. “I guess so. I hadn’t actually seen her in several years. We kept in touch by phone.”

  The gold pen hesitated. “You have her number?”

  “She moved around too much. She’d call me collect.”

  “From a pay phone, no doubt.”

  Risa shrugged. “I didn’t ask. The last time we talked, it sounded like a cell phone.”

  “Moving up in the world.”

  She thought of Cherelle’s clothes when they first met and said nothing. If that had been moving up, her friend had been a long way down.

  “She didn’t call anyone the whole time she was in your room,” Shane added. “At least, not from your phone.”

  “You checked?” Risa asked, irritated.

  “Everything on this room comes out of the comp account.”

  “Since when?”

  The gold pen vanished back into his pocket with startling speed. “Since your friend put about ten grand on the tab.”

  Risa’s jaw dropped.

  He pulled out his pocket unit and keyed in a file number. Silently he handed the unit to her. The list of charges Cherelle had put against the room was startling.

  And long.

  “I’ll pay you back,” Risa said grimly.

  “No.”

  “Yes. It’s—”

  “Not worth arguing about,” he cut in. “I have a standing reward of ten thousand dollars for information leading to the purchase of museum-quality artifacts. As far as I’m concerned, Cherelle collected it. Or are you going to argue that she had nothing to do with the Celtic gold we bought and it’s all a beaut of a coincidence?”

  Out of habit, Risa started to argue, then stopped herself. “I’d like to, but even fuzzy feelings from childhood can’t make that one fly.” She scrolled quickly through the list of purchases and handed the unit back to him. “Well, now we know why the camera didn’t see her leaving the room before Bozo got here.”

  Shane hadn’t kept track of Cherelle’s charges for today. He gave the list one fast look, took the unit back, and flipped it into communicate mode. Before he was finished talking, fifteen people were scanning stored camera data, looking for a hefty woman with short brown hair, baggy jeans, and a blue nylon wind shell.

  “Tell them she’s probably dragging a black rolling suitcase,” Risa added. “Mine. It’s not in the closet.”

  Shane added the information and disconnected. When he turned around, Risa was digging through the heap of clothes in the center of the r
oom. At the bottom were two ratty suitcases.

  “Cherelle’s?” he asked.

  “Yes.”

  He went to Risa, took one of the suitcases, and began feeling the seams with a gambler’s sensitive fingertips. All he found was old grime and a new rip. It was the same for the second suitcase. He glanced over to Risa. She was sorting through the mound of clothes on the floor with the swift, confident motions that had always fascinated him. That kind of cool precision was unexpected in a woman who looked—and was—as lushly sensual as Risa Sheridan.

  “Are all the clothes on the floor yours?” he asked.

  “So far,” Risa said.

  “No notes in lipstick on the bathroom mirror?”

  She snorted. “Cherelle wouldn’t waste good makeup.”

  “No notes on the grocery list in the kitchen?”

  She gave him a startled look.

  He smiled. “No, I haven’t been snooping. Most people have a list going somewhere in the house. Kitchen, usually.”

  “No note.”

  “How about the list?”

  A smile flickered over her face. “It’s there. Every word in my handwriting.”

  She picked up a robe and shook it out with a hard snap that sent a crumpled piece of paper shooting out of the folds toward Shane. He snatched the paper out of the air with a lightning motion, smoothed out the page, and began reading silently.

  “I didn’t know you were into the vortex thing,” he said, looking toward her.

  “What vortex thing?”

  “You know. Red-rock country and holding hands at the solstice. Talking to the dead through a channel or having the dead talk to you. Expanding your psychic—”

  “Bullshit,” she muttered, then froze, trying to remember something Bozo had said. Not red-rock country, but something like it.

  “—powers,” Shane finished. He turned over the colorful page, which had apparently been torn from some kind of pamphlet. “Well, well. She was doing the Sedona channeling scam.”

  Risa looked up. “What?”

  “Cherelle. Or should I say Lady Faulkner?”

  “In Sedona?” Risa stood up.

  “Looks like it. ‘Lady Faulkner will be your guide in all matters Druidic. Speak with King Arthur, Queen Guinevere, and the Master Druid, Merlin himself. Through Lady Faulkner you will know the most intimate practices of the ancient and powerful—‘ “

  Risa snatched the paper from Shane’s hand, scanned rapidly, and grimaced. “So that’s what Bozo meant.”

  “What?”

  “He said something about the gold she got in Sedona from an old geezer.” Risa glanced up and found his eyes intent on her. “There’s more Celtic gold out there somewhere.”

  “You didn’t mention that to Detective Wilson.”

  “I was tired of his questions.” And she hadn’t wanted to implicate Shane in trafficking in hot gold artifacts. “You know they’re stolen, don’t you?”

  Shane smiled. “Never doubted it. Question is, how long ago?”

  “Not long enough,” she said succinctly.

  “No. Not long enough.”

  “You sound quite certain.”

  “Factoid hasn’t found even a whisper of them on anybody’s hot sheet. Not Interpol, not Scotland Yard, not the stolen archaeological treasure data bases, not museum thefts, not private collectors—not one damn thing. If those gold objects ever existed in any public record, we can’t prove it.”

  “Well, hell,” she said. “If Rarities’ top researcher can’t find anything, it’s not there to be found. Which leaves us with a problem.”

  “No, it leaves me with a problem.”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “You’re fired.”

  Chapter 36

  Los Angeles

  November 3

  Early evening

  S. K. Niall sat in his Rarities office and gave the view screens on the far wall a quick, comprehensive glance. Dana stood next to him, her hand on his shoulder, kneading his muscles with the absentminded sensuality of a cat. He didn’t take it personally. Yet. That would come later, when they ate dinner at his cottage on Rarities Unlimited’s parklike grounds. The riots of color he managed to achieve in his November gardens were quite beautiful by moonlight. So were the lights of L.A. spread out below. From his bed they were incredible.

  And so was Dana.

  “I thought that damned meeting would never end,” Dana said. “Some people just don’t understand that they’re paying for an expert opinion, not an advertisement for their goods. Did Risa call back?”

  “No. Want me to call her before we leave?”

  Dana sighed, stretched, and began tracing the strong lines of Niall’s neck with delicate fingertips. “If it can wait until morning . . .”

  “That’s what I was thinking.”

  “Big surprise. You’re always thinking of sex.”

  His smile was quick and primitive as a love bite. “That’s one of the things you like best about me.”

  She laughed as he lifted her over the arm of the chair and onto his lap. “Not again! One of these days we’ll get caught.”

  “Promises, promises.” But he kept his hands out of the danger zones while he gave the security screens a final scan. “Looks good. All buttoned up for the night except for number-two clean room.”

  Dana focused on the screen displaying the clean room that was still in use. Lawe Donovan, a part-time consultant with Rarities Unlimited, was checking out the emeralds in an early-Renaissance reliquary a dealer was hoping to sell. Ian Lapstrake was with him. They had formed a kind of rough-and-tumble friendship, probably because Lawe was missing his twin Justin, who at last communication was somewhere in Madagascar. The harsh illumination of the room turned Lawe’s hair from chestnut to gold and Ian’s black hair into a shiny kind of midnight.

  “Like a study in darkness and light,” Dana murmured. “Beautiful in a masculine way.”

  “Quit drooling. You’ll wound my manly feelings.”

  “It would take a fifty-caliber round to wound your manly feelings.”

  “Which is the second thing you like about me,” he retorted. “I don’t fold up at the first sign of your royal displeasure.”

  “Then I’ll try my temper on Lawe. I’m ready to lock up and go home.”

  “Go ahead. I’ll—”

  “With you,” she cut in.

  He glanced at her dark eyes. Their lazy, sultry gleam told him all he needed to know. Like him, she viewed their earlier play as a snack—and she was ready for a full meal. He lifted her to her feet and activated the audio for the third clean room.

  “How’s it going, boyo?” he asked.

  Lawe didn’t look up. At Rarities he had become accustomed to ceilings speaking to him without warning. “Depends on which outcome you prefer.”

  “Happy clients are always good,” Dana said.

  “Then it’s going badly.”

  Dana tilted her head and studied the screen. “Why?”

  “I’m ninety-nine percent sure that two of the emeralds are laboratory gems that have been stressed to reproduce the kind of fracturing that is common in natural emeralds. I can’t be a hundred percent certain without removing a stone and sacrificing a tiny bit of it for testing.”

  “But the emeralds are fake?” she asked.

  “Technically they’re quite real. Just man-made. Very nice color. Perfect for this kind of primitive cabochon setting and quite in line with early usage of gems, when stones were chosen for their depth of color rather than their brilliance.”

  “Could they be replacements of earlier stones that were lost?” Dana asked.

  “Could be. But I suspect at least some of the gold is a modern eighteen-karat alloy,” Lawe continued, pushing back from the table. “It just doesn’t have the feel of some of the old gold I’ve handled. If I’m right, at best you have a heavily repaired object. At worst a fraud. I’m not a gold expert, so I can only suggest that you do more tests.”

>   Dana looked at her thin platinum watch. “Tomorrow.”

  “He has a ten a.m. flight to Seattle,” Ian said.

  “We don’t need Lawe for lab tests,” Dana said. “Write up your preliminary report. If the client wants more tests on the emeralds themselves, we’ll take care of it.”

  “It’s a lovely piece,” Lawe said.

  “It’s a joker,” Ian said.

  “So it’s a lovely joker.”

  “Why would anyone put all that work and expensive raw materials into making a fake?” Ian asked, shaking his head.

  “Because there aren’t any modern churches, kings, czars, or emperors who pay artisans to create gorgeous dust-catchers,” Lawe said. “But museums and collectors will pay high dollar for history with crowd appeal. So you create the history and get very well paid at the same time.” Lawe ran sensitive fingertips over the piece. “Either of my sisters would love this.”

  “We’ll offer that fact to our client as a consolation prize,” Dana said. “Good night, gentlemen.”

  “I believe that’s a hint,” Ian said, standing and stretching.

  “Ya think?” Lawe asked, nudging the other man toward the door. “C’mon. You owe me a beer.”

  “Huh? What are you talking about?”

  “You bet a beer that Factoid wouldn’t try the chocolate syrup thing twice on Gretchen.”

  “So?” Ian asked.

  “So she came back from lunch with a chocolate smear on her majestic cleavage.”

  “That doesn’t prove that—”

  Niall hit the audio switch. “Let’s go before something—”

  His phone rang. One of his very personal numbers. The one very few people had. “Bloody hell.”

  “Amen,” Dana muttered.

  Niall checked the caller number, said “Tannahill” to Dana, and put the call on the speakerphone. “Niall here. What’s wrong?”

  “Risa was attacked by a thug who thinks she has more Celtic gold artifacts like the ones I sent you.”

  “Is she all right?” Dana and Niall asked simultaneously.

  “Hello, Dana,” Shane said. “Risa outsmarted the guy, so she wasn’t hurt. Her apartment in the Golden Fleece was trashed and slashed.”

 

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