Two fire extinguishers clanked down nearby. He threw away the empty and went to work with a fresh one.
In the distance, sirens wailed their song of bad luck and death.
Lacey stood for a moment, fighting for breath, unaware that she was shaking from adrenaline and fear. The two old cottages looked like a study in light and darkness, fire and waiting. Beyond the reach of hose or chemicals, wood smoked and shimmered into flame. Some of the flames were licking at her eaves.
For the first time she understood that she was losing her shop and her home to fire.
“No,” she screamed. “No!”
Ian braced the extinguisher with one arm and with the other pulled her close for the only kind of comfort he could offer.
“Grandpa’s paintings! I can’t let them burn!”
Before he could prevent it, she twisted away from him and lunged back into her shop. Breathing smoke and fear every step of the way, she raced upstairs, grabbed sheets from her bed and frantically began wrapping up the paintings. Clutching them awkwardly, she turned around and ran smack into Ian.
“Give me those,” he snarled.
It was a voice she’d never heard from him. “They’re Grandpa’s. I couldn’t let—”
She was talking to herself. Ian had grabbed the paintings and was shouldering her out and down the stairs at a speed just short of break-neck. She turned for the back door of the shop, only to be yanked off her feet and shoved through the aisles of Lost Treasures Found toward the front door. She opened the locks automatically and stumbled out into the night, tripping over fear and grief. He caught her before she fell and hustled her across the street, upwind of the fire.
“I’m all right,” she said numbly. “The fire—”
“Will do just fine without you,” he cut in. “Stay here.”
“Only if you do.”
In the light of the streetlamp, he looked at her stubborn eyes and trembling lips and knew she would follow him the instant he turned his back.
“We have maybe two minutes,” he said. “What do you want saved?”
“Everything.” She smiled through tears. “Nothing. I have what’s important right here. All the rest can be replaced one way or another.”
“Computer records?”
“Duplicates in my car.”
“Clothes?”
“There are twelve garage sales this week.”
“Your paintings?”
She flinched. “More where they came from.”
But her expression said it wasn’t true.
“Guard these until I get back,” he said, pointing to the three canvases he’d put on the sidewalk.
He ran back into the shop before she could argue. He couldn’t save all her work, but he could rescue some of it. He snatched the painting drying on the easel, scooped up others at random until he couldn’t carry any more, and clattered back down the stairs and out the shop door.
The night was alive with sirens and red lights and men yelling orders while laying hoses. He dumped the paintings at Lacey’s feet and turned to go get more before the cops who were screaming in from all sides could barricade the entrances.
“No!” Lacey’s surprisingly strong hands clamped over Ian’s forearm, nails digging in.
“There’s time.”
“You’re worth more than a few paintings.”
“There are more than a few paintings up there.”
Her lips trembled into a smile. “You’re still worth more.”
“Don’t tell the IRS.”
Then he pulled her close and held her, just held her, while squad cars slammed to a stop and uniformed cops poured out. Two of them spotted the couple on the sidewalk and came toward them.
Ian braced himself for the questions that would begin raining down. As he did, he wondered if the answers the cops eventually found would include who had started the fire.
And why.
Newport Beach
Early Friday morning
29
The ringing of his phone jerked Rory awake. Bliss, who was sprawled across him, grumbled sleepily and burrowed closer to his warmth. He reached around her and fumbled for his cell phone. Damn, getting older was a bitch. Once he would have awakened completely, mind and fingers nimble. Not anymore.
“Yeah,” he muttered.
“There’s a fire down in Newport.”
“Jesus, Ward, what are you doing awake?”
“You get to be my age, you spend a lot of time awake.”
“Listening to the police radio,” Rory said, understanding what had happened.
“Better than television.”
With a sigh, Rory shifted beneath Bliss’s thighs. He couldn’t believe he was getting an erection—not after the last few nights. But damn, it felt good to have her pussy snuggled up to him.
“You hear me?” Ward said irritably.
“There’s a fire in Newport Beach, which is in Orange County, which wasn’t a part of Moreno County last time I checked.”
“You didn’t have any trouble assigning men to cover Susa Donovan, did you, and she went to Orange County.”
“What do you want me to do, drive down and pee on their fire?” Rory said impatiently.
“I want you to get your well-paid ass out of my daughter’s bed and go see where the fire is.”
Idly, Rory wondered how Ward had found out who was sleeping with Bliss. “Your daughter, my future wife.”
There was a pause. Rory smiled. He could almost see the old man’s calculating frown.
“When?” Ward demanded.
“As soon as the blood tests come back.”
Ward grunted. “Didn’t know she had the guts.”
Rory didn’t bother to hide his yawn. “Anything else on your mind?”
“The fire in Newport Beach. From the address called in to 911, it sounds close to that girl’s shop.”
“A lot of girls have—”
“The one with the paintings,” Ward interrupted. “Quinn or whatever the hell she’s calling herself now.”
Rory rubbed his hand over his face and told himself to be patient with his once and future father-in-law. Then he told himself to wake up and start thinking about his boss rather than how good it was going to feel to spread Bliss’s knees and dive in.
Girl. Paintings. Quinn.
Damn. No wonder Ward’s dick is in a knot.
“Are you saying that Lacey Quinn, the young woman whose paintings you want to buy, that her shop—where she’s keeping the paintings now—is on fire?” Rory asked.
“How the hell would I know?” Ward shot back. “All I remember is that the place your men followed her to is in the old section of Newport and there’s a fire burning in the old section of Newport right now. Get up and find out if my paintings are safe!”
Rory didn’t bother to point out that the paintings weren’t Ward’s yet—if ever. From all Savoy had been able to find out, the lady wasn’t interested in selling. On the other hand, Rory couldn’t think of the last time the old man had taken no for an answer.
“I’ll make some calls,” Rory said, and hung up.
Savoy Hotel
Friday morning
30
Wrapped up in a thick terry cloth hotel robe, Susa glanced at the closed door of the second bedroom and then at Ian. “How is Lacey?”
“She was asleep when I left her. Hope she still is.” He raked his fingers through his hair and wondered if he would ever get the ghastly smell of death out of his skin and his mind. “Losing everything is a bitch, but at least Lacey didn’t roast like her neighbor.”
“From what you told me about it, I doubt that the woman ever woke up.”
His mouth flattened. “Sure as hell hope so.”
“Are you certain Lacey lost everything? She said they got the fire out before it got into her shop.”
“Smoke and water damage,” Ian said succinctly. “Some of the durable stuff, glassware and jewelry and metal and such, can be saved. Posters and textil
es…” He made a sharp gesture with his hand. “Dead loss.”
“What about her paintings?”
“Mostly ruined, I’d guess. Maybe not. I don’t know much about the staying power of oil and canvas.”
“Better than pastels or watercolors.” Susa frowned. “I’ll help Lacey go through her paintings when she’s ready. She might throw out something that could be saved with proper treatment. Did you ask about insurance?”
“She has it. Whether it pays anything helpful is up to the claims adjuster and the lawyers, if it comes to that.”
Susa looked at Ian’s spiky hair and grim eyes. “How about some food or coffee or a drink?”
“No thanks. I’m still digesting smoke.”
“Some salve for your burns?”
“Been there, done that. Smeared Lacey all over while I was at it.” He almost smiled. That part, at least, had been enjoyable.
“Sleep?”
“In a while. I’m waiting for a call from the arson investigator.”
Eyes narrowed, Susa watched Ian pace. “Arson? Lacey didn’t say anything about that.”
“All fires are routinely investigated.”
“Nice try, doesn’t fly,” she shot back. “You wouldn’t be waiting up if you didn’t expect something more than routine.”
“Bet your boys never got anything past you, did they?”
“Constantly, but nothing that mattered.”
Ian looked over his shoulder at the closed door, then walked over and stood next to it, listening intently. If Lacey was awake, she wasn’t moving around.
Susa waited with the patience of a mother or a hunting cat. Sometimes there wasn’t much difference.
“From what I could see, the fire started in a trash barrel,” Ian said. “Then someone dumped the barrel and the fire poured over the aisle between the two shops. Just in case that wasn’t good enough, some kind of accelerants were used—kerosene or gasoline—plus what looked like chunks cut from those paraffin-and-sawdust logs folks use for fires when they don’t want to bother with wood. Stuff burns like a bastard, even in a downpour.”
“Why would anyone set fire to Lacey’s shop?”
“It wasn’t Lacey’s shop, it was Cosmic Energy next door.”
“Then why are you sending out the kind of feelings that make my Druid ancestors twitchy?”
Ian shot her a dark look. “What kind of feelings would those be, Ms. Donovan?”
“Bad. You might as well tell me the rest of it.”
“Nothing to tell.” And he hoped there wouldn’t be.
“Bullshit.”
He blinked, then smiled slowly, his first real smile since he’d half carried, half dragged a smoky, hollow-eyed Lacey into Susa’s suite an hour ago, dumped her in Susa’s arms, and gone back for the paintings he’d left in the lobby.
“Okay,” Ian said, “but I don’t know how my speculations are going to make anyone feel any better.”
“Did I ask to feel better?”
He whistled very softly between his teeth. “Lawe told me you were a rapier, but I didn’t really believe it until now.”
“You can wiggle like a worm on a hook and try to change the subject, but it won’t work.”
Ian had already figured that out. “Something that looked a lot like burning chunks of sawdust log lay in an arc from the trash can to Lacey’s shop. I thought I caught a whiff of gasoline, too, but nothing I could take an oath on. But I just flat out don’t like how it adds up.”
“Anybody ever tell you that you’re paranoid?”
“Occupational hazard.”
“Unfortunately, I’ve got a gut feeling you’re right.”
It took a moment for Susa’s calm words to sink in. “Damn, I was hoping you’d disagree.”
“So was I. What are we going to do about it?”
“You aren’t going to do anything,” he said, “except what you came here for, and that doesn’t include messing with arson.”
She lifted her eyebrows. “You and my husband have something in common—arrogance.”
“Good thing you like that particular trait,” Ian said easily, smiling.
“I think it’s time to call my new friend Dana Gaynor of Rarities Unlimited. Your boss, I believe.”
“Dana might send me out at your say-so for some slap-and-tickle that she thinks is long overdue, but there’s no way she’s going to put your artistic tush in danger.” He pulled out his cell phone and punched a speed-dial number. “Ask her yourself.”
“And while you’re doing that,” Lacey said from the bedroom door, “Ian can tell me what the hell you’re talking about.”
Newport Beach
Friday morning
31
Rory shifted the weight of his side arm as he waited at a table in a cafe overlooking the ocean. Coffee steamed in front of him, black as hell but a lot better tasting. The weather outside was the other half of January in southern California—sunny, with a warm Santa Ana wind from the desert, and blue sky forever, or until the smog crept back over the land as soon as the inland wind stopped blowing.
He drank more coffee, glanced up, and saw Dick Merle approaching. He looked like a vampire in need of a quart of blood, and was the chief arson investigator for Newport Beach Fire Department.
Rory stood and held out his hand. “Morning, Dick. I want to thank you for taking time out of your busy schedule for me.”
Merle shook hands and grinned wearily. “Man’s gotta eat,” he said. “Since Moreno County is buying, I’m one hungry son of a bitch. I’ve been working most of the last three weeks.”
“Yeah, we’ve been watching the string of arsons you’ve had in Orange County. Bad news. Hope you catch him soon.”
Merle sat down with a heaviness that told its own story of too much work and not enough sleep. “So do I. Until then, I’m living on coffee.”
The server appeared, watched Merle inhale a cup of coffee, poured him another, and set the pot on the table, ensuring her tip. After the server took their orders and left, both men drank in silence for a moment, watching ocean waves flattened by wind blowing from the land.
“Now that your arsonist is up for murder after last night’s fire,” Rory said, “you might get more manpower.”
Merle drained the second cup of coffee, poured more, and sighed. “I’m kind of iffy about last night.”
“What do you mean?”
“Different MO entirely. If you can even call it a MO.”
Rory picked up his coffee cup and settled in to listen.
“Our serial arsonist likes empty buildings, cigarettes, matches, birthday candles, and kerosene,” Merle said. “A real slow fuse leading to kerosene-soaked rags. He gets off waiting for the party to begin, see?”
Rory nodded.
“Then he gets off all over again watching it burn and seeing us run around like ants with our feet on fire,” Merle said.
“But not last night?” Rory asked.
“Dunno.” Merle yawned until his jaw cracked. Then he yawned again and rubbed his bloodshot eyes. “Don’t think so.” He fixed Rory with pale blue eyes. “This is all very preliminary. We’ve barely even begun a proper investigation of the one last night.”
“I hear you. I’m not making any reports. I’m just damned curious. If the asshole comes calling in Moreno County, I want to know what his act looks like.”
“Okay. What we have is a cold, windy night, an alley with small businesses on both sides, two old houses that are shops on the first floor and owner’s quarters above.”
Rory had figured that out from the police reports, but didn’t say a word.
“We have a few resident homeless, a couple old ladies. Then a couple of drifters looking for a place to piss and sleep out of the wind.” Merle rubbed his eyes and poured more coffee. “Nobody else around but the shop owners who were asleep in the two old houses.”
“Did the street people see anything?”
“What do you think?”
“I think th
ey all slept the sleep of fortified wine.”
Die in Plain Sight Page 19