Read Pack of Lies Online

Authors: Laura Anne Gilman

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Mystery

Pack of Lies (27 page)

BOOK: Pack of Lies
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“He fought back—the ki-rin had bruises.” I hadn't gotten close to the fatae, but even at that distance the dark marks on its chest and neck had stood out against the nearly luminescent skin, enough to be noticed, so at odds with its perfection otherwise. “A human wouldn't be able to hit that hard physically, especially once he was down, so they had to be current-strikes. But not enough to be fatal. And not enough to leave any lingering signature that we could pick up or, I guess, that the Council suits who took it away would have picked up?” I heard the question in my voice, but didn't think I'd get an answer. They might have, and they wouldn't think to tell us. Why should they? They were convinced it was a justified kill, whatever else had happened, and they had no further interest beyond that. God, I hated amateurs.

From the look on Venec's face, he was having the same bitter thought.

“We can ask, but I bet they didn't even notice,” Nifty said. “I'm not sure it matters. The available evidence—the fact that there was no trace, and only limited bruising—suggests that the second perp wasn't strong enough to hurt the ki-rin significantly.” He shrugged, his broad shoulders lifting in an almost operatic gesture, telegraphing both frustration and resignation. “This guy is not one of life's better results. Just because the average Talent could do it…well, half of everyone is below average, right?”

“Average or mean? Never mind.” Pietr waved off his own question as irrelevant. “You're right, we made a logical assumption that current was not used in the attack or defense, because we didn't find any lingering traces at the site. And Bonnie says that there was no fear, not the kind he should have felt, fighting for his life—just the way there was no fear from Mercy. That's what we should be focusing on, not the defensive blows. Why weren't we picking up any emotion in the signatures, especially once we were specifically looking for it?”

“Bonnie's right, we may not be good enough to pick it up, especially with how many other people were on the scene so fast,” Sharon said bluntly. “And yeah, Ian and Ben might have had better luck but…emotions? Come on, people, let's not give ourselves demigod status just yet.”

Brutal, but true. Hell, the fact that we could identify signature so clearly was a major leap for most of us from what the general Talent could do. I could see everyone let themselves relax a little from the self-questioning that we were all doing, even—maybe especially—Venec.

“So is this a dead end,” Pietr asked, “or evidence we have to look at differently?”

“Dead end,” Sharon said. I had to agree. Magic, for once, wasn't helping us solve this case.

“So we have a lot of…nothing.” Venec got up, stretching his hands over his head to the ceiling, and we all heard his back crack. My spine whimpered a little at the noise. He seemed to feel better, though. “Come on, people, we can do better than that. What are we overlooking?”

“Money.”

It was almost a relief to let my head turn and finally look to the far end of the table. Nick was shutting down his netbook, closing the lid with the air of someone with a stupendously fantabulous secret. He got up from his chair, and staggered a little, putting a hand on the back of his chair to steady himself. Current-wear. He'd probably just burned five-six hundred calories, with that kind of tight-focus work.

“We already thought about that,” Nifty objected. “We couldn't figure any way it would make sense.”

“That's because we weren't thinking the right way,” Nick said. “We've been going about it all totally the wrong way.”

I blinked at him, feeling myself get pissed. What did he mean, the wrong way? I'd chased down every single damn avenue I could think of….

“What's the one assumption that we've been making about this case, all of us, from the very beginning?”

We stared at him, and he grinned; sweaty, ego-triumphant,
and perfectly willing to wait until we bowed down before his greatness and begged for the answer.

“If you don't spill, I'm going to hold you upside down by your scrawny ankles and shake it out of you,” Nifty said, instead.

“Spoilsport.” Nick sat down, folded his hands in front of him and leaned forward. “The assumption we've all been making was that this was a crime of passion—lust or hate or just sheer moment-of-opportunity violence. It wasn't.”

“A calculated attack?” You could hear the gears turning in Venec's head, and Sharon was drawing lines and boxes in her notebook with quick strokes, muttering as she reworked whatever logic-equation she was using.

“Maybe. More to the point, calculated by someone
else
. See, I got to thinking…none of it made sense, right? Like Sharon said, usually you doubt even the stuff you're almost a hundred percent sure about. That's just natural. Everyone being so rock-hard in their truth, that's the kind of thing it takes a while to build up, and usually it needs, I don't know, a trigger or something. Something or someone reinforcing their belief that it's all hunky-dory, reassuring them. We're all much more likely to believe someone else, someone with authority or enthusiasm, when they say it's all golden, right?”

“Point?” Venec asked, but he was alert, not doubting. He knew Nicky-boy was on to something. I was barely able to breathe, I was listening so hard. Nick had it, I could feel it, like all the puzzle pieces clicking in, even if I couldn't see the final picture, yet.

“My point is, people aren't as smart as they like to think
they are—there's always trace when you try to meddle. Only we weren't finding any trace at all—no guilt, no anger, no residue. So I thought…we've been considering the things that matter to the
Cosa,
Talent and fatae, either one. Why? What if this had nothing to do with the
Cosa
at all—what if it was just a human thing?”

“None of the players were Null,” Sharon objected.

“None that we knew about,” Nick corrected her. “But that's not what I'm talking about.”

He didn't stop to check our reactions this time, but lurched right into the explanation.

“I went looking in the most likely places where our players could have ulterior motives—health and wealth. No medical records beyond the basic for our girl, nothing at all for the others. So someone might have been slipping them something to make them violent, or whatever…or maybe not. Moving on, I just did a deep read into their financial records, what they've been spending, what they're investing, that kind of thing.”

He paused, shaking his head. “Man, don't ever use Trade-World for your brokerage house, they're almost painfully easy to hack. Anyway, guess who got pretty little deposits into their bank accounts?”

“The attackers?” Sharon said.

“Our survivors,” Nick corrected her triumphantly. “All three of them—ki-rin, girl, and alleged attacker who didn't get whacked.”

“Ki-rin have bank accounts?” That surprised the hell out of me, although I don't know why.

“Ki-rin even have brokerage accounts,
chica
. It dabbles a
bit here and there, although nothing major. But I don't think that matters, although it's damn interesting, because we've got a smoking gun right here in their checking accounts. Whoever it was sending them the money staggered times and sources to make it look random, but it came to the same total amount for all three of them. What are the odds on that, huh? And a sum of money like that? Can support a whole lot of certainty, even without the added fillip of magic.”

“And the source?” Venec asked, impatient.

“A little more digging, and I found the answer to all our questions.”

He waited, trying to build suspense.

“Your ankles are looking grabable,” Nifty warned, and while I usually had time for Nick's games, even I was getting twitchy. I didn't even look at Venec, knowing the thunderous expression that was probably glaring at Nick right now.

“All right, fine. Turns out the dead guy? Had a serious insurance policy for an underemployed loser, made out to his best friend from back home. A million dollars payable on certification of death. Nice, huh?”

“Fuck me,” someone said softly, almost reverently, and suddenly all the parts started clicking together like prefab furniture. The colored chalk appeared again, and Nifty grabbed them off the table, wiping the old board clean and starting fresh.

“Gimme the starting play,” he told Nick.

“Financial transactions, starting seven months ago. Sums from between $2,000 to $5,000, deposited on seemingly random days, several times a month, to each player's checking account, for a total of $25,000 each.”

It seemed cheap to me, but I knew firsthand that people killed for less, without flinching or regret. $25,000 to some people was a year's salary, a way out of debt, the salvation of a dream—was that the price for a scum-of-the-earth's life?

“A few were electronic transfer, a few were cashier's checks, and a couple were cash, which must have been fun to process. Those were the smaller ones. I'm not a money guy, but it sounds like they were broken up to avoid any kind of pattern-trigger?”

“Likely,” Venec said. “And that would suggest that whoever set this up knew what he was doing…or had watched enough television to think he knew what he was doing.”

“Our best friend of the deceased is an MBA?”

“Sadly, no. Mr. Harrison, Null, is a schoolteacher. Not even a math teacher, either. World history, pounding dry facts into ninth graders' heads, out in Nashville.”

“What the hell is a schoolteacher doing best friends forevering with a skeevy guy like our dead body?” Nifty asked.

“Went to high school together, managed to keep it going.” Nick shrugged. “I'm not going to argue nature versus nurture with you. People hook up and stay friends for all sorts of weird reasons. All I know is this Steve Harrison and our very dead Paul Blake named each other in their life insurance policies about seven years ago, so it's likely he knew about the
Cosa,
and, it seems, the less savory parts of it.”

“So how did they know about the ki-rin, how to lure it into this?”

“Don't know. Unless we can get it to talk, odds are we'll never know.”

“'Scuse me,” I said, and got up. Venec and Pietr both watched me leave the room, which weirded me out a little; the others kept going on the play-by-play.

I grabbed my bag from the closet, then walked down the hallway to Stosser's office. The door was open, so Ian had already left to do his political oil thing. I sat down at the desk, and pulled a card case out of my bag. Had I put it in there…I had! Picking up the phone, I dialed the number on the business card, and waited. Venec might have contacts in the police force, but I had friends in lower places than that.

“Sylvan Investigations. How can we help you?”

The voice was pleasant, mellow, and male.

“Can't afford a receptionist, huh?”

“Bonnie?” The voice made an instant switch from smooth to raspy. Raspy sounded better on him. “How you doing? Why are you calling? Who died?”

“Are you always that paranoid?”

Danny made a rude noise. “Bonnie, when a Talent calls me on the phone, it's never good news. Unless you're calling to invite me over for breakfast?”

“Not this time, sorry. I have a favor to ask you.”

“I knew it. All right, Blondie, shoot.”

“Can you dig up any dirt on a guy named Steven Harrison? He's a history teacher out in Nashville. Yes, Tennessee, you know of another Nashville? He's not a Talent, so my contacts would be useless. He doesn't have a police record, far as we know—” if he did, Nick would have found that
“—but I figure he's probably going to have something off-color in someone's file somewhere.” You didn't be BFF with a loser like our dead guy without some trouble, somewhere. I trusted Nick's talents, but there were some things that needed magic…and some that needed old-fashioned snooping.

“This has to do with the case you're working on?”

“It could help us crack it.”

“And you'll owe me?”

“PUPI will owe you.”

There was a pause, the sound of papers being shuffled, and he laughed. “I'll settle for that. How can I reach you?”

I gave him the office number, and, after a second's thought, my home number, too.

“God, I wish you people could use email like the rest of us. At least you're not demanding it all be couriered, because P.B.'s rates are getting crazy. I'm assuming that these are landlines?”

“You betcha. I gotta get back into the fray. Let me know as soon as you've got something!”

 

The entire exchange had taken maybe ten minutes, but by the time I made it back down the hall, the chalkboard was already full of names, timelines, and exclamation points, and everyone was talking rapid-fire, bouncing ideas off each other.

“If he was just killed, yeah, there might be suspicion on the event,” Sharon was saying. “But a known sexual predator who gets what's coming to him? Nobody would be surprised, and damn few would question the actions of the killer…. No, it could work.”

“If he died while committing a crime, though,” Pietr responded, “the insurance company might stop payment, right? What's the legal ruling on that?”

“If he's killed in the commission of, or in connection to the commission of a crime, all payments are off. It's more complicated than that, because if it was simple we wouldn't need lawyers, but if he was charged with a felony the insurance company would be able to refuse benefits.” Sharon might not have my total recall, but she was damn reliable for legal stuff.

“Legal rulings are moot,” Nick said irritably. “If the girl won't talk, then it's he said/she said and there's enough reasonable doubt to turn him into a possible victim. She doesn't press charges, there is no crime.”

BOOK: Pack of Lies
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