Harper gave a little gasp, as though surprised by his agreement 					to help—or by his touch—and shook her head, but Lana shifted nervously from one 					foot to the other. Suddenly suspicious, he homed his gaze in on her. She licked 					her lips, narrowed her eyes, shifted from one foot to the other. He remained 					silent, waiting for her to crack. They always cracked.
   				Determination filled those green eyes. “Nope, nothing,” she 					said.
   				Oh, she knew something, and he would find out what it was. But not here, and not now. He’d dig up 					some details about her, Harper, the art gallery, the owner, the people who had 					attended Harper’s gala, and go from there. The more armed he was with 					information, the better chance he’d have of intimidating Lana and forcing her to 					talk.
   				He only hoped Harper was safe with her.
   				Has been so far, he told himself. 					“I’ll swing by this evening,” he told Harper, crowding her backward and forcing 					her to stop against the building. Their gazes were locked, the air charged 					between them. For a moment, her breath hitched in her throat.
   				He leaned down, careful not to touch her a second time—would 					she gasp if he did?—and whispered straight into her ear, “Consider this your 					first and only warning. Next time your knee goes near my balls, I’ll retaliate. 					But don’t worry…I think you’ll like it.”
   				* * *
   				WHEN THE ELEVATOR DINGED and opened up to the OKCPD 					bull pen, Levi tensed and he wasn’t sure why. He recognized the sights: guys in 					button-ups and slacks, guys in uniforms, cubbies and desks, computers, criminals 					cuffed to chairs, papers all over the walls. He recognized the sounds: heavy 					footfalls, the clack of high heels and the stomp of boots, inane chatter, angry 					shouting, fingers tapping keyboards, phones ringing. And the smells: coffee, 					aftershave, soap, unwashed bodies, perfume, sugar.
   				He just wasn’t sure he belonged here anymore. He felt 					disconnected, separated, and wasn’t sure it had anything to do with his 					suspension. So…why?
   				Your neighbors’ crazy is rubbing off on 						you, that’s all.
   				Small comfort. He maneuvered around the cubbies, throngs of 					people headed in every direction, each too busy to pay him any attention. He 					reached his partner’s office and rasped his knuckles against the already open 					door. Vince sat behind his desk, head bent over a file. His gaze flicked up, 					landed on him, but quickly returned to whatever he was reading. His features 					were pale, drawn, and lines of tension branched from his eyes. Though he was 					only thirty-four, he appeared fifty and unable to care for himself, his cheeks 					hollowed, his sandy hair disheveled and his white shirt coffee-stained.
   				“Ignoring me still?” Levi asked. Vince had yet to forgive him 					for attacking the suspect and placing himself in the line of fire.
   				A reel of memory suddenly played, startling him. He and Vince 					had stormed into a small basement room. The perp had raised his arms, seemingly 					accepting of his arrest, and smiled. Smiled, smug and proud of all he’d done to 					his victims—and silently promising to do it all over again if ever he was 					released.
   				Levi had worked too many gruesome crime scenes because of the 					man, the last one enough to turn even his iron 					stomach. A young female had been staged, her lifeless, bruised and battered body 					pinned to a billboard for all of Oklahoma’s downtown commuters to see as they 					hurried to work.
   				That smile had razed the jagged edges of his already shaky 					composure, a desire to protect the rest of Oklahoma’s females rising up inside 					him. A desire he hadn’t been able to fight. He’d rushed forward, busted the guy 					around—and gotten busted around himself.
   				In the present, he experienced a pang in his side. His kidney 					must have taken a couple shots.
   				“Come on, Vince,” he said, and was once again ignored.
   				Detective Charles Bright stalked down the hall, spotted him and 					did a double take. “Levi?” His gaze roved the area just over Levi’s shoulder 					before returning. “What are you doing here?”
   				He watched as Vince finally glanced up. Jaw clenched tight, he 					gritted, “What do you think I’m doing here, Bright? Working. Maybe you should do 					the same.”
   				Talking through him. “Real mature,” Levi said, flipping him 					off.
   				Bright waved Vince off, then led Levi to the office at the end 					of the hall. He closed and locked the door, and motioned for Levi to sit as he 					claimed the chair behind a desk scattered with papers.
   				Levi had always liked Bright. Guy had dark skin and eyes and 					kept his head shaved to a glossy sheen. He was a laugher, truly cared about the 					victims he fought to protect and would work himself to death to solve a 					case.
   				“I can’t believe Vince is so mad he refuses to speak to 					me.”
   				A soft, sad smile greeted his words. “Had you put him in 					danger, he’d be over it and you’d be forgiven. But you put yourself in danger, 					and that’s harder to forget. He loved—loves—you like a brother.”
   				“He better still love me.” Vince was all the family he had.
   				“He does. Give him time. He’ll come around.”
   				Levi understood the need for time, he did, but his balls were 					sore and he wasn’t exactly in the best of moods, so he decided to forget Vince 					for now. “Listen, I’m not actually here to beg my partner’s forgiveness. My 					neighbor thinks she witnessed a murder and I promised to help her find out the 					truth. I can’t access any databases, so I need your help.”
   				Bright frowned, instantly intrigued. “Your neighbor?”
   				“Yeah. I don’t know if I told you but I moved into an apartment 					building downtown, close to Brick Town. She just moved in, too.”
   				“Her name?”
   				“Harper.”
   				“And the rest?”
   				“Just a minute.” Levi shifted to dig in his back pocket. He 					withdrew the driver’s license he’d slipped from her purse when he’d backed her 					into the building. After reading the text, a laugh bubbled from him. “Aurora 					Harper.” How freaking adorable. Aurora fit her in a way Harper did not.
   				Fingers clicking on the keyboard, Bright was silent for a long 					while. He would stop and read, then type again, then stop and read again, then 					type again. With every pause, his frown deepened. The wait for answers nearly 					drove Levi to pace, punch a wall, something.
   				“Okay, here’s what I know,” Bright finally said, propping his 					elbows on his desk. “Your Aurora—”
   				“Harper. She prefers Harper, and she isn’t mine.” He paid no 					attention to the fact that having her referred to as “his” affected his body 					just as strongly as her nearness had. Heat and tingling and want…so much 					want.
   				The denial earned him a swift grin. “All right. Well, Ms. 					Harper is twenty-seven. Five foot two. One hundred and ten pounds. She’s gotten 					three tickets for speeding, one for parking illegally, and was in a car accident 					two years ago, but it wasn’t her fault and she walked away with only a few 					bruises.”
   				Silence.
   				“That’s it?” Levi demanded. “That’s what had you frowning?”
   				Bright drew in a deep breath, slowly released it. He settled 					back in his chair and folded his arms over his middle. “Milana Buineviciute, her 					roommate, works for After Moonrise and has the ability to see and communicate 					with the dead. Ms. Buineviciute reported her missing five weeks ago.”
   				Milana Bonnie Wee Cutie. Now there was a name. Five weeks ago. 					Early October. She’d been in the apartment for a week, so that left four weeks 					unaccounted for. And the After Moonrise thing wasn’t a point in her favor.
   				A few times, an After Moonrise agent had helped the OKCPD with 					a case. And for each of those few times, Levi had had to deal with a wealth of 					irr 
					     					 			itation. A.M. came in with their fancy equipment and superior attitudes and 					simply took over, acting as if the detectives couldn’t find their way out of a 					paper bag. But his favorite? They’d called him a “norm,” as if it were a 					four-letter word.
   				Wait. It was. Whatever! It had ticked him off.
   				“Inquiries were made, and it was discovered that Harper was 					last seen at Carmel Art Gallery, on October fifth around midnight.” Bright 					paused, flicked his tongue over an incisor. “That gallery certainly has been 					popping up on our radar a lot lately. Seems your boy Cory Topper bought a few 					paintings there. Only came to light a few days ago, since the sales were made 					under the table. We didn’t think to tell you because you’re, uh, off the 					case.”
   				His stomach clenched. Topper. The serial killer who’d kept 					pieces of his victims in his freezer. The lunatic who’d tortured women in his 					basement. The psychopath who’d left a dead body on a billboard. The smug little 					ant whom Levi was now suspended for brutalizing.
   				To find out there was a connection between Topper, a dirtbag 					scum with evil in his veins, and Harper, a delicate, fragile little thing with 					knees of iron…he didn’t like that. At all. But to learn that she’d been missing, 					to now know beyond any doubt that something had 					happened to her, was even worse.
   				He brought her painting to the forefront of his mind. The male 					Harper was bringing to life certainly fit Topper’s body type, he realized now. 					Average height, slim build, deceptively gentle-looking hands.
   				“Where was Harper found?” he rasped. “When? And where had she 					been?”
   				“Oh, hmm.” Bright glanced at the screen. “She wasn’t found. At 					least, nothing has been entered into the system.”
   				“I don’t understand. What do you mean?”
   				“The case is still open.”
   				Irritation laced with anger flooded him, and he popped his jaw. 					Why hadn’t Lana reported her as found? Why hadn’t Harper come forward? Fear that 					Topper would find her again? But then, that would mean she remembered him, if he 					was truly the one responsible, and it was clear that she didn’t.
   				Levi replayed his new memory of the night he’d come 					face-to-face with Topper. Topper had been standing beside…what? All he could 					picture were rivers of blood. Lots and lots of blood, flowing this way and that 					way and all around. Had there been any secret rooms? Someplace Harper could have 					been stashed, bound and helpless, forced to watch? Someplace she could have 					accidently stumbled upon and hidden?
   				A cage flashed through his mind.
   				A cage?
   				“Was there a cage in Topper’s home?” he asked. “Actually, don’t 					tell me. Just give me the crime scene photos.” He’d never seen them.
   				“You know I can’t do that,” Bright said sternly.
   				“All I want is a glance at them.” He could compare them with 					Harper’s painting.
   				A sigh met his words. “I’ve always been a sucker. I’ll see what 					I can do.”
   				“Thanks. So how’s our man Topper doing?”
   				Bright rolled his shoulders, easing tension. “He recovered from 					the injuries you gave him and is now locked up without bail, awaiting trial. We 					managed to find evidence of his crimes after his 					arrest.”
   				Meaning, everything they’d found the day they’d arrested him 					had been thrown out because of Levi and they’d needed something new. And thanks 					be to God, they’d gotten it. Levi had read what had been fed to the media and 					knew there was more, but he wasn’t going to ask. Yet.
   				Don’t make everything a battle, 						son, his dad told him once. He didn’t remember this on his own. He’d 					seen a home video of the two of them together. You do, and 						you’ll never win ’em all.
   				“You got anything else on Harper?” he asked.
   				“A bit.” Bright gave the computer screen another read. “The 					night of her disappearance, the art showing had wound down and only the owner 					remained in the building when she left, but he claims he was counting receipts 					in the back room and heard nothing unusual.”
   				“Any connection between Topper and the owner?”
   				“Not that we’ve found.”
   				“Are there any suspects in Harper’s 					case? An ex-boyfriend with an ax to grind? A neighbor with a record? A stepdad 					with a grudge?”
   				“Oh…no, but I’ll be sure and…close things now, and I suppose 					there’s no real reason to press charges for withholding information.”
   				Why the hesitation?
   				Bright cleared his throat and said, “Why don’t you bring your 					Harper in? To me, only to me,” he added in a rush, “and I’ll question her about what happened.”
   				“What do you know?” Levi demanded.
   				“What do you mean?”
   				“You’re acting weird, hesitating to say certain things.”
   				The detective pinched the bridge of his nose. “I’m telling you 					everything I can, Levi. Given that you’re on a leave of absence, in fact, I’m 					telling you more than I should, and could even lose my own job over this.” 					Bright’s scolding tone lacked anger but was filled with understanding. “Now, 					what about bringing her in? I’ll make sure she’s protected while she’s 					here.”
   				No one was better at interrogation than Bright, and he’d be as 					gentle as possible, but… “Questioning her right now won’t do any good. She 					doesn’t remember. Whatever happened—” and it had to be bad for her to have 					repressed it as deeply as she had “—she’s painting the image of a murdered 					woman.”
   				Another frown tugged at the corners of Bright’s mouth. “A 					woman? Describe the woman you’re talking about. Could she—” a pause, a shifting 					in his seat “—be Harper?”
   				“No. You know I can’t see the dead.” His stomach clenched as he 					once again brought the painting front and center and saw the pale skin of the 					woman, the delicacy of her bone structure. “There are similarities, granted, but 					no. And I can’t tell you much more because Harper hasn’t yet painted the 					face.”
   				Bright worried two fingers over his stubbled chin. “Bottom 					line, there’s a chance she saw the guy torture someone else.”
   				“Yeah.”
   				There was a whoosh of air as Bright straightened in his seat. 					“I want to see the painting. If we are, in fact, dealing with Topper, I want 					every piece of evidence I can gather. Yeah, he’s going away for life, will 					probably be put to death, but maybe this is the way we’ll find the bodies of his 					other victims.”
   				If there was anything left of them. Levi had no idea why Topper 					had deviated from his usual M.O. and bound that woman—with all her parts—to that 					billboard. He had no idea why he’d kept mementos of some but not others. But 					really, did Levi want to know the twisted reasons of 					a psycho? “I’ll take a picture and email it to you.”
   				“Good, for starters.”
   				“And I’ll want a copy of the missing-person’s report.”
   				“Fair is fair, but I’m only giving you a glimpse of it.” A few 					clicks and the papers began printing. “You can’t take it with you. And don’t 					dare ask if I’ll do the same with the crime scene photos. That’s a bigger deal, 					and you know it.”
   				Disappointment struck him, but he said, “All right. 					Understood.”
   				Bright held out the paper, and Levi scanned the contents. He 					didn’t try to sort things out; he simply memorized every detail for later. When 					he finished, he stood. “Thanks for everything. I appreciate it.”
   				“Anytime. And keep me updated on what you learn about Harper, 					okay? I’ll work a few angles from this end.”
   				Meaning, legitimate ends. He nodded and trudged to his 					partner’s office, only to find that Vince had left. W 
					     					 			hatever. They’d talk 					eventually. Next time, he wouldn’t let Vince ignore him.
   				Now to dig through the report, and question Lana. That guilt 					he’d glimpsed at the gallery…she knew something more. Had she helped the 					abductor? But why report Harper missing? To hide her own actions? And yet, he 					doubted that was her motive. Genuine affection existed between the pair. 					Although, a lot of people could be bought, whether they loved someone or 					not.
   				Great. He was talking himself into believing in Lana’s 					culpability, then talking himself out of it. Well, he wasn’t going to wait until 					Lana cracked. Tonight, he was going to crack her open…himself…and…darkness…so 					much darkness…closing in....
   				No, he nearly roared. Ice 					crystallized in his veins, while sweat beaded over his skin. Breath boiled in 					his lungs.
   				Right there in the bull pen of the OKCPD, a shroud of black 					fell over his mind, slowly at first, stealing his thoughts one by one. He 					tensed, hating this feeling, knowing what happened…next—how he would 					lose…hours…perhaps days—but what he didn’t know was why this kept happening or what—
   				Black…
   				Nothingness…
   				Empty…
   		 			 				CHAPTER FIVE
   				Not again, Harper thought, 					panic rising as she peered down at her paint-splattered hands. She clutched a 					paintbrush, the tip drip…drip…dripping crimson onto her bare feet. Sickness 					bloomed in the pit of her stomach like a poisonous flower, its pollen drifting 					through the rest of her, sticking and growing until her blood was ice and her 					skin fire, her breath jagged and burning as it rasped against her lungs.
   				Before she looked up and faced the reality of what she had 					created, she spun and checked her surroundings. She stood inside her apartment’s 					studio. Her shoulders sagged with relief. Okay. She could deal with anything 					else. Right?
   				Her gaze took in other details. The clock on her wall flashed 					12:01—no, 12:02. The dark of the night seeped through the five-inch crack in the 					red, orange and yellow curtains Lana had made, and the scent of rain saturated 					the air, a roll of thunder booming.