“Sure.”
The too-glib response worried him. “We have an agreement, remember?” he said as he shoved open the glass doors of the casino.
“Sheesh, calm down, will you? I’ve promised you three times already that I’d let you take the lead tonight.” She gave him a sidelong glare. “What’s the matter with you? You sound nervous.”
“I am not nervous.” The sensation he was experiencing at the moment was merely a wholly justifiable sense of caution, Rafe told himself.
There was no reason to expect any trouble tonight. This was, in effect, a simple reconnaissance mission. They would be here only long enough for him to identify the illusion-talent and the prism while both were safely occupied on stage.
Rafe eased Orchid through the mob that clogged the gaming floor. The artificially cheerful clang and tinkle of gambling machines mingled with the reverberating throb of the music.
When they reached the entrance to the shabby show lounge, Rafe tipped the usher enough to ensure that he and Orchid would get seats reasonably close to the stage, but not in the front row. The darkness of the chamber as well as the fact that the magicians on stage would be working with the lights in their eyes would provide ample concealment, he decided.
“Do you suppose this will be one of those magic acts in which the magician chooses someone out of the audience to assist in the show?” Orchid whispered.
“Do me a favor. Don’t volunteer for anything. Things could get a little awkward if the illusion-talent selects you from the audience, realizes who you are, and decides to make you disappear.”
She smiled demurely. “Would you look for me?”
“Yes. But you would not be happy to see me when I found you. I would not be in a good mood.”
The show lounge filled quickly. When Rafe took the seat next to Orchid on the aisle he could feel the excitement simmering in her. He was mildly annoyed to feel echoes of that same excitement in himself.
Orchid leaned close to murmur in his ear. “I can see why the illusion-talent and his pal are taking on part-time work. Judging from the looks of this place, they aren’t making their fortunes in the magic business.”
Rafe briefly surveyed the theater. The jelly-ice lights were turned down low for reasons other than atmosphere. The gloom hid some of the threadbare quality of the curtain and disguised the fading paint on the walls. The thin velvet cushions on the seats were stained with several years’ worth of spilled drinks. He did not need para-sharpened senses to smell the underlying odor of stale beer, cheap green wine, and the unique aura of frenzied desperation that seeped in from the gambling floor.
The lights faded all the way to black. A spot blazed in the center of the red and gold curtain. An expectant hush settled over the audience. The small band struck up a brisk musical introduction. A man garbed in a flashy tux trotted out from an opening on the left-hand side of the stage.
“Happy Founders’ Day, everyone,” the announcer roared at the small crowd. “The Icy Dicey Casino is proud to present our own master of illusion, Mr. Amazing with his special Founders’ Day extravaganza. Ladies and gentlemen, prepare to be… amazed.”
The spotlight winked out. When it came back on a few seconds later it revealed Mr. Amazing in all his spangled glory. His long hair cascaded in thick waves to the high standing collar of his sparkling red cape.
Rafe leaned forward and rested his folded arms on his thighs. Right size, right build. He even moved the right way.
“Rafe? Can you tell if it’s him?”
He did not look at her. He was too intent on studying his quarry. “Got to be certain. Link.”
He sent out a short, probing pulse of psychic energy. His strat-talent senses fluttered. He felt the familiar wave of brief disorientation that always accompanied an initial quest.
Orchid said nothing but out on the psychic plane the very special prism took shape. Crystal clear. Powerful. Unique. Made just for him.
With an intense feeling of satisfaction that was equaled only by the sensations he felt when he made love to Orchid, Rafe sent power through the prism.
Psychic energy sharpened all of his senses. The quality of the atmosphere around him altered. Suddenly he could see in ways that he could not explain, ways that felt utterly natural.
Ways that he had never been able to savor for more than a few seconds at a time before he met Orchid.
The darkened showroom assumed countless new dimensions. Objects that had been little more than shadows in the gloom could now be clearly discerned, not just through sight but in another, less easily described fashion. Smells sharpened and separated, revealing subtle nuances. The perfume worn by the woman in the next row made Rafe wrinkle his nose. He tuned it out. At the same time he was intensely aware of Orchid’s nearness. It felt right to have her at his side, not just because they were temporarily linked on the metaphysical plane but because…
Because it felt right.
Rafe made himself push the awareness of Orchid and all of the other sensation in the lounge into the background. He concentrated on his quarry.
On stage Mr. Amazing raised his gloved hands high in a dramatic gesture, lowered them quickly and suddenly a curtain of what appeared to be crackling bands of energy materialized on the stage behind him. It shimmered grandly in an invisible breeze. Sparks snapped in the darkness.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” Mr. Amazing announced in a deep voice augmented by a hidden microphone, “I give you, the Curtain as it must have looked to our noble Founders just before it closed forever.”
The semi-inebriated audience was suitably awed. Oohs and aahs rippled across the rows of seats.
Rafe listened to the voice of Mr. Amazing with para-sensitive hearing. He filtered out the distortion created by the microphone.
The same voice. He was sure of it.
“And now,” Mr. Amazing intoned, “let us see what our Curtain reveals.”
The magician moved his hands in a melodramatic gesture. A woman with long green hair materialized out of the Curtain. She wore only a silver thong and a matching bra made of translucent silver mesh. The audience was treated to the sight of a pair of enormous breasts tipped with gaily painted nipples.
“Talk about an illusion,” Orchid muttered.
Rafe ignored the comment. The woman’s breasts did not interest him. His quarry was the only thing that mattered. He sifted through the scents that flowed around him in a vast sea, searching for one that was familiar.
In the world of para-heightened awareness, scent was one of the most reliable of all stimuli—easily identified, virtually impossible to disguise. The magician was already sweating in the glare of the stage lights.
A second later Rafe caught the unmistakable taint of an illusion-talent. A talent that was strikingly similar to the one he had fought the other night outside Theo Willis’s house. It had to be the same man who had trapped Orchid in Morgan Lambert’s kitchen with the fire illusion.
This was the enemy.
Eagerness coursed through Rafe. A deep yearning to give chase came over him. He recognized the instinct and squelched it quickly. It probably would not be a good idea to bound up onto the stage and pound Mr. Amazing into the floor in front of Orchid and the rest of the crowd. A little too primitive.
“Rafe?”
He sensed the aura of Orchid’s sudden unease and knew that she had picked up some sense of his elemental desire to bring down his quarry. He hoped she wouldn’t hold it against him. She was more understanding than anyone else he had ever met when it came to the nature of his psychic talent. Nevertheless, he was pretty sure she would take a dim view of him entertaining himself with a little happy mayhem.
“It’s him,” he muttered, feeling somewhat defensive.
“You’re sure?”
“Of course I’m sure.”
“You don’t have to snap at me.”
“I didn’t snap at you.”
“Yes, you did.”
Before Rafe could think of a suitable
rejoinder another assistant walked out on stage. A man this time. He was slightly shorter and not as solidly built as Mr. Amazing. His features were thin and sharp. He wore his dark, curly hair cropped close, and his costume resembled formal black evening wear.
Rafe concentrated intently for a few seconds. A sigh of anticipation escaped him when he caught the telltale traces of a familiar scent.
“The prism,” he said very softly.
The music swelled as the assistant displayed a case of throwing knives. The lady in the translucent brassiere arranged herself in an artful pose against a colorful target. Mr. Amazing selected a knife and threw it with confident skill. The point sank into the target near her head. The audience gasped. The woman smiled.
Mr. Amazing selected another knife.
Rafe cut the focus link.
“What do we do now?” Orchid whispered.
“We leave.”
Under cover of a burst of applause, Rafe reached out, took her hand, and got to his feet. He led Orchid back up the aisle to the curtained entrance of the show lounge.
They stepped out into the frenetic activity of the gaming floor.
“We’re going to follow Mr. Amazing after he finishes the show, aren’t we?” Orchid asked.
Rafe smiled at the enthusiasm in her voice. She was not a strat-talent, but she definitely had a few primitive instincts of her own. “The thought had crossed my mind.”
“Then what?”
“Depends.” Rafe drew her through the throng of eager gamblers toward the front of the casino. “The dressing room entrance is in the alley. We can keep an eye on it from outside.”
The street in front of the Icy Dicey was even more crowded now than it had been earlier. The few cars that had ventured into it were trapped by the milling revelers. No one seemed to mind.
The decibel level had escalated. Another street band had joined the ice rock group on the corner. Rafe heard Orchid crunch a discarded noisemaker underfoot. Streamers drifted through the night.
He found a spot near a doorway that offered shelter from the jostling crowd and a good view of the alley entrance. A street vendor dressed in a Founders’ Day costume held out a large paper bag.
“Popped nut-corn. Get ’em while they’re nice and hot.”
“Sounds good.” Orchid fished in her pocket, found some change, and handed it to the vendor.
She accepted the brimming bag, took a handful of popped nut-corn for herself, and offered some to Rafe.
He scooped up a fistful of the salted nut-corn and shoved it into his mouth. Using his talent for extended periods of time heightened all of his appetites, he reflected.
“I love Founders’ Day.” Orchid surveyed the cheerful crowds as she dug into the bag for more nut-corn. “I know we’re here on serious business, but it’s actually turning into a fun evening. You know how to show a girl a good time, Mr. Stonebraker.”
“Glad you’re enjoying yourself.”
“Are you going to give up this private investigation hobby of yours when you take control of your family’s firm?”
The question stopped him cold. “I hadn’t thought about it, to tell you the truth.”
“You probably won’t have time for this kind of thing once you start running a big company like Stonebraker,” Orchid said conversationally. “But I think maybe I’ll start specializing.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“I like this kind of work,” she explained. “There must be other private investigators, maybe some who actually have a license, who need the services of an ice-prism. I think I’ll tell Clementine that I want to limit my practice to working with them.”
Rafe’s gut tightened. “You intend to work with other private investigators?”
“Why not? Clementine wants us to think exclusive. What could be more exclusive than a full-spectrum ice-prism who helps conduct discrete private investigations?”
The thought of Orchid working in a dangerous situation with another talent sent a chill through Rafe. He had a sudden, clear vision of her standing on a street corner on a warm summer night munching popped nut-corn with another man while staking out a person of interest. A fierce sense of denial raced through him.
She was his. They were meant for each other. Didn’t she understand that?
“I don’t think that would be a good idea,” he managed in what he hoped was a reasonable tone.
Her brows rose as she took another handful of nut-corn. “Why not?”
“Uh, because you don’t really have any experience in investigation work.”
“Sure I do, thanks to you.” She shrugged. “And I’ll get more as I go along.”
“Orchid, this is not the kind of work you go into on a casual basis.”
“You’re the one who called it a hobby.” She munched nut-corn. “How did you get started, anyway?”
“I did a favor for a friend shortly after I returned from the Western Islands. Found something that had been lost, something valuable. A few weeks later one of his friends called. Asked me to find something else. One thing sort of led to another.”
“Sounds pretty casual to me. No training, no apprenticeship with a private investigation firm, no license. You only take referrals. You only take jobs that interest you. You only work for people who, for one reason or another, can’t or won’t go to the police.”
“Damn it, Orchid, if you think you can just blithely go to work as a prism who does private investigations—” He broke off as he caught sight of a shadow emerging from the alley. “There he is.”
“Mr. Amazing?” She spun around to stare at the alley entrance. “I don’t see him.”
“Not Mr. Amazing. His prism. But he’ll do.” Rafe took the half-full bag of popped nut-corn out of Orchid’s hand and tossed it into a nearby garbage can. “In fact, the more I think about it, the more I think it would be a good idea to start with him.”
“Why?”
Rafe smiled as he took her arm and plunged into the crowd. “Because he’s the weaker one.”
Easy prey.
“Do you think he’s headed back to his car?” Orchid asked.
“I doubt it.” Rafe kept his eye on the curly haired man. “He’s acting as if he’s late for an appointment.”
There was something nervous and hurried about the prism’s movements. He did not glance back over his shoulder, however, so whatever he anticipated lay ahead, not behind.
Rafe found it simple to pursue his quarry through the crowd. The prism was the only one who was walking purposefully along the sidewalk. Everyone else was either strolling, ambling, or dancing.
Rafe and Orchid followed the prism at a discreet distance. After a block and a half they passed the last tavern on the street. The crowd thinned rapidly.
Rafe dropped back a few more paces. The prism had yet to look over his shoulder, but if he chose to do so now that there were fewer people about, there was a chance he would notice his tail.
In the middle of the next block, the magician’s assistant slowed his pace. Rafe got the impression that whatever the appointment was, it was not one the prism wanted to keep.
Something was wrong. The nervousness Rafe had detected in his quarry was increasing. He looked more agitated. There was a stiff, tense set to his shoulders. His strides became almost jerky. He began to fiddle with something under his coat. A knife?
Rafe’s driving curiosity was suddenly tempered with caution.
“Link,” he ordered softly.
“What’s wrong?” Orchid supplied the prism even as she asked the question.
“I don’t know.” He shoved power through the crystal prism. “I just want all the information I can get.”
The night shifted around him. Awareness infused his senses. He sorted through the new array of sounds, smells, and sights.
He picked up the mix of sweat, unwholesome, adrenaline-fed excitement, and a trace of anxiety and recognized the indefinable essence of bloodlust.
Not the prism, Rafe thought. Someone
else. A predator waited in the darkness of a side street up ahead.
He saw that his quarry was moving even more slowly now than he had been a moment ago. But the prism kept going forward.
Rafe realized the curly haired man was going to turn down the side street where the predator was waiting.
“Oh, shit.” Rafe released Orchid’s hand. He shoved her into the shadows of a darkened doorway. “Stay here. Don’t follow.”
“What is it? What are you going to do?” she whispered.
“Just hold the focus for me. Whatever you do, don’t lose it.”
He broke into a silent, loping run. His para-heightened instincts told him he had only seconds to catch up with his quarry.
The prism was his prey, damn it. He would not give him up to the other hunter who lay in wait in the shadows.
Chapter
14
Time ran out a heartbeat later. Rafe launched himself at the prism just as he reached the corner and started to turn down the street where the predator waited.
At the last instant, the curly haired man apparently sensed Rafe bearing down on him. He jerked around, his face a mask of startled fear. He threw up one hand in a reflexive gesture while he struggled to bring an object out from beneath his jacket with the other.
“Christ, no. Don’t—”
The prism’s scream halted abruptly as Rafe slammed into him. The jarring impact sent both men crashing to the sidewalk.
A figure came around the corner. Rafe did not need the weak streetlight or his paranormal senses to see the pistol in his hand.
There was a flash of icy flame when the gun roared. The bullet crashed into a brick wall above Rafe’s head. He rolled and pulled the stunned prism deep into the cover of the doorway.
Rafe released the prism, got to his feet, and reached down to yank a small pistol out of his ankle holster. He raised the gun and fired in one single motion.
But the predator who had been waiting for the prism had either lost his nerve or concluded that he did not like the new odds. He had apparently braced himself to shoot one man in cold blood. He was not prepared to deal with two, one of whom was also armed with a pistol.