Authors: James Swain
“I’m sorry.”
“You need to be more open with me. All of this secrecy is driving me crazy.”
He’d never seen her this angry, and mumbled “Okay” under his breath.
“Is that a promise?” she asked.
“Scout’s honor,” he said.
“Were you ever a Boy Scout?”
“What do you think?”
“Damn it, Peter, I’m trying to be serious.”
She was boiling mad, ready to walk out. He’d stepped over a dangerous line.
“I promise to start acting normal,” he said.
“I’m going to hold you to that.”
The conversation had turned awkward. It was hard to live a lie, harder still when it was with the woman you loved. The doorbell rang, saving him.
“I’ll get it.”
He sprinted down the hallway and opened the front door. Schoch stood on the stoop wearing a beige raincoat and looking straight out of the pages of a glossy women’s magazine. Behind her, Dagastino was parked at the curb. He still looked angry about last night.
“We got here as fast as we could,” Schoch said. “Now, tell me about your vision.”
Peter stepped outside and shut the door. “I know you’ll think this is crazy, but I went back in time last night. I saw the three men who killed my parents. One had the Order of Astrum’s tattoo on his neck.”
“Hold on. You went back in
time
? How does that work?”
“The spirits do it. It’s how they reveal things.”
“The spirits.”
“That’s right. This morning over breakfast, the Order’s symbol appeared to me. There was blood coming out if it. The presence of blood is a sign that someone’s about to die. Wolfe’s getting ready to kill again.”
Schoch blew out her cheeks. “Assuming I buy in to this, who’s his next victim going to be?”
“I wish I knew.”
“Where will it happen?”
“I don’t know that, either.”
“In that case, I’d say we’re plumb out of luck.”
“You don’t believe me.”
“It has nothing to do with believing you. I need something solid.”
“It’s the best I could do. I thought you should know.”
Schoch eyed him skeptically. “Let me ask you a question. Were your parents involved with dark magic? Did they practice witchcraft or anything like that? It’s important that you be up front with me.”
Peter had never discussed his parents’ psychic abilities with anyone outside of his Friday night group. Telling Schoch was going to feel strange, yet he knew it must be done.
“They were both psychics,” he said. “They held séances in my father’s study with a group of their friends. I stumbled upon them one night when I was a kid.”
“Could your parents have been involved with the Order?”
He thought back to his father’s study. Astrological symbols on the table, white candles, and the five-pointed star used to ward off evil spirts. He had not seen the Order’s symbol.
“No,” he said.
“Your parents were from England. Could they have been involved with the Order when they lived there?”
“We left England when I was little.”
“But you still have memories.”
“We lived in a flat in London. My parents taught at a small college. On weekends we went to the park, and I played while my parents read books. If they were members of the Order, I never saw any evidence of it.” He paused. “But you already knew most of this, didn’t you? You knew these things when you came to see me last night.”
“Most of it, yes,” she admitted.
He hated when people deceived him, and he felt himself grow angry.
“Who told you about my parents?” he asked.
“Please lower your voice.”
He took a deep breath to calm himself.
“I’m sorry. Please. Who told you?”
“I can’t tell you who gave me the information,” she said. “But I will tell you this. There are a lot more people besides the police looking for Wolfe. With any luck, they’re going to find him, and we can get to the bottom of this.” She consulted her watch. “I’m late for work. Call me if you have any more visions.”
“I’ll do that.”
Schoch got into the Volvo and her partner drove away. Peter shook his head. Why was it that whenever he talked with her, he felt like he knew less than when he’d started?
* * *
He opened the front door, and went inside the brownstone. Liza awaited him in the foyer. If looks could kill, he would have been six feet under, pushing up daisies.
“Why are you looking at me like that?” he asked.
“Figure it out. You’re the mind reader,” she said.
He shut the door behind him. The intercom was covered with wet fingerprints. She’d heard their conversation. He leaned against the door, and shut his eyes.
“You were listening,” he said.
She punched him in the arm. “Stop climbing into your shell. Look at me.”
He opened his eyes and looked at his beloved.
“Damn you, Peter! We’ve been living together for two years. When were you going to tell me you had these strange powers?”
“I tried to over breakfast.”
“You really can travel back in time?”
“I can do a lot of unusual things.”
“Like have visions?”
“Yes.”
“And read minds?”
“Uh-huh.”
“What am I thinking about right now?”
He gazed into her eyes. “You’re thinking about spending the night at your girlfriend’s.”
“That’s a no-brainer. Which one?”
“Amber.”
She brought her hand to her mouth. “Oh, my God. You really can. It’s not a trick.”
“Yeah.”
“Damn you, Peter. That’s not fair.”
She was pulling away from him. If he didn’t come clean with her now, it was over. Tell the truth, and maybe he had a chance.
“Do you remember my friend Nemo?” he asked. “We ate oysters at Balthazar while he told you jokes. He made you laugh the whole time.”
“What about him?” she said.
“Nemo is also psychic, and can see into the future. The CIA found out about his powers, and whisked him away to a farm in Virginia. He’s in their employ now, so to speak. They’re never going to let him go. That’s what happens to people like me. The government gets ahold of us, and we never come home.”
“There are more of you?”
“Yes. We have these gifts that we keep hidden.”
“You still should have told me.”
“I wanted to, but I was afraid.”
“Of what?”
“That you’d think I was a freak, and leave,” he said, the words pouring out. “I didn’t want to lose you. I know that’s selfish, and I’m sorry.”
The truth had a way of cutting through just about everything else. Liza crossed the foyer, and put her hand under his chin. Their eyes met.
“I would never do that,” she said.
“Is that a promise?” he asked.
“Scout’s honor.”
“Then I’ll never hide anything from you again.”
They kissed. Liza still loved him. He had been saved.
* * *
They returned to the kitchen. Peter sensed they were not alone. His eyes scanned the room, spying the Order’s shimmering symbol on the refrigerator. The oozing blood coming out of its center had been replaced by a face.
Peter got up close to stare.
It was Wolfe. The assassin sat at the counter of a diner, eating a breakfast of steak and eggs. Taking the knife off his plate, Wolfe tested the knife’s sharpness. Satisfied, he stuck it up his sleeve, and hopped off his stool.
The symbol vanished, leaving a menu for Chinese takeout.
“He’s going to kill someone,” Peter muttered.
“Who? What are you talking about?” Liza asked.
The diner looked familiar. It was on the Lower East Side, and served a mean breakfast. He had to alert the police, and grabbed his leather jacket off the back of a chair.
“I have to go out.”
“What? You can’t be serious. Didn’t you just promise me—”
“I’ll explain everything later.”
“I’m sure you will.”
He tried to kiss her, and Liza pulled away.
“You have to trust me,” he said. “The man who attacked me last night is about to strike again. I have to stop him.”
“How can you possibly know that?”
“I just do.”
“You’re treading on dangerous ice, Peter.”
Liza followed him down the hallway. He went outside, and turned up his collar to the annoying rain. The front door slammed angrily behind him.
He hurried down the sidewalk, hoping she’d understand.
8
The greasy spoon on East 11th Street had no name. Wolfe sat at the counter, gazing at a dingy storefront across the street.
THE SACRED PLACE—PSYCHIC READINGS FOR ANY OCCASION.
He pulled a slip of paper from his wallet to make sure he had the right place. Lester Rowe, owner of The Sacred Place, was number three on his hit list.
Wolfe resumed eating his steak and eggs. A police cruiser passed by, splashing water onto the sidewalk. It was the third cruiser he’d seen in the past ten minutes. That wasn’t normal, and he guessed the law was looking for him. That was the tricky part of his work. It was classic cat and mouse, and he relished his role as the mouse.
Wolfe glanced at his waitress, a young woman with spiked hair and a ring in her nose. She was flirting with another customer, a punked-out boy about her age. Picking up his steak knife, he slipped it beneath the rubber band on his wrist, and pulled down his sleeve. His captain in the army had taught him the usefulness of rubber bands. They came in handy in so many situations, he always wore one.
The rain was spitting as he crossed the street. The weather was worse than London. The front door was locked, and he rapped loudly on the glass while peering inside. It was a toilet, with cheap furniture and even cheaper wall coverings. Hundreds of psychics worked out of storefronts in New York. Except for the names on his list, they were all fakes. There were so many fakes that the real ones were forced to scrape by giving readings out of places like this. A greeter wearing a turban unlocked the door, and ushered him inside.
“Welcome to The Sacred Place. My name is Habib.”
Wolfe was good at placing accents. Habib was from the southern region of Turkey.
“I’d like a reading with Lester Rowe,” Wolfe said. “Is he available?”
“Yes, he is. You will need to make a one-hundred-dollar donation. Cash or credit?”
A donation. That was a new one. Wolfe paid in cash, and Habib handed him a clipboard and a pencil.
“Please fill this out. I will return shortly.”
Wolfe parked himself on a cheap plastic chair in the reception area and read the printed form on the clipboard. It asked for his name, date of birth, astrological sign, and personal things about himself, including his fears, beliefs, likes, and dislikes. The last question was the kicker. Why had he come for a reading today?
He laughed to himself. He’d been given a similar form to fill out in psychic parlors before, and knew what it meant. The Sacred Place was a scam. There was a hole in the wall behind his chair which Habib was staring through at this very moment. Habib would copy down his answers, and share them with Rowe before their session began.
Taking out his Zippo lighter, Wolfe stared into its reflection, and found the hole in a framed picture hanging behind his chair. Rowe was a bloody fake, and shouldn’t have been on his hit list. Something wasn’t right here, and he decided to find out what was going on.
Wolfe scribbled down his answers. Soon, Habib returned.
“All done?” Habib asked cheerfully.
“I believe I am,” Wolfe replied.
“Very good. Take the form off the clipboard and put it in your pocket. We ask you to write down your answers so you can better channel your thoughts during the reading.”
Sure you do.
“Please follow me, and watch your step. The carpet needs to be replaced.”
They passed down a narrow hallway to a small parlor with Persian rugs hanging on the walls. A white-bearded Turkish man sat in a wheelchair strapped to an oxygen tank. The apple had not fallen far from the tree. Habib looked just like him.
The elderly Turk motioned toward an empty chair. Wolfe sat down.
“Are you Lester Rowe?” Wolfe asked.
“Do I look like a man whose name is Lester Rowe?” the elderly Turk replied.
“I’ve never met the man. But I’m guessing you’re not him.”
“You are a good guesser. My name is Akan. I bought the business from him a few month ago.”
“Do you have Rowe’s address? I need to get in touch with him.”
“Why do you want to contact a man you’ve never met?” Akan asked pointedly.
“It’s a personal matter,” Wolfe replied.
Wolfe heard someone breathing. Behind the wheelchair was a door with light streaming through the bottom. A pair of shoes lurked on the other side. Son number two, he guessed.
“You are a liar,” Akan said. “Sedat! Come out here!”
A dark-skinned man built like a Greco-Roman wrestler marched into the parlor. He pulled Wolfe out of his chair, and patted him down.
“He’s clean,” son number two said.
“What’s the meaning of this?” Wolfe demanded.
“I think you know,” Akan said.
“No, I don’t. I’m not a mind reader. Then again, neither are you.”
“Do not make fun of my father.” Sedat had a voice like a bear. “You’re the man in the BOLO. The police say you’re extremely dangerous.”
“What’s a bloody BOLO?” Wolfe asked, trying to buy time.
Sedat removed a flyer from his pocket, and held it out for Wolfe to see. Wolfe’s photo was printed on the paper, along with the words
BE ON THE LOOKOUT
, courtesy of the NYPD.
“That doesn’t look anything like me,” Wolfe said indignantly.
“I will be the judge of that. Take off your hat.”
“And what if I say no?”
Sedat ripped off Wolfe’s baseball cap, and compared his face to the one in the photo.
“You bear a strong resemblance to this man,” Sedat said. “I am going to call the police. If you are innocent, then there is no harm done.”
Wolfe’s mind raced. He needed to keep several steps ahead of the police if he was going to have a chance to complete his mission.