Blood, Ash, and Bone

CHAPTER Thirty-eight

The reel flowed, and new dancers joined the circle in a flurry of black and white. I grabbed Trey’s elbow and pulled him close.

“Reynolds told me he thought Audrina was trying to kill him by sending him on all those dangerous trips. But Audrina lets Fitzhugh make all her decisions, right?”

Trey frowned. “Fitzhugh is trying to kill Reynolds?”

“No, it’s not the danger that matters, it’s the distance! Fitz-hugh’s trying to keep Reynolds as far away from Audrina as possible.”

“Why?”

“Because Reynolds is persuading her to open the museum, and Fitzhugh can’t have that. Because dollars to donuts, if a museum curator ever gets their hands on Audrina’s collection, they’ll discover it’s full of fakes.”

Trey’s eyes narrowed. “Explain.”

“Authentication is a tricky business. It takes smarts and study and practice, none of which Audrina is willing to invest. Which means that when it comes to antiques, she doesn’t know a verso from a recto. Reynolds doesn’t either. They rely on Fitzhugh. But what if he’s been doing the same thing with Audrina’s collection that Reynolds did with that sword?”

Trey was catching on. “Taking pieces and replacing them with duplicates?”

“Exactly. Only unlike Reynolds, he’s stealing, not borrowing, so that he can sell the real stuff to someone else. It’s brilliantly simple—unless your reclusive mark suddenly starts listening to her brother and decides to open a museum.” I grabbed Trey’s arm tighter. “Omigod, that’s what Fitzhugh’s been doing here all week—making private purchases to try to fill the holes in the collection!”

Trey cocked his head. “That explains the conversation in the hotel room.”

“Technically true but deliberately evasive, I know! And I figured it out all by myself!”

“Stop bouncing.” He disentangled his arm from my fingers. “We need to find Marisa. Now.”

He turned on his heel and headed for the exit. I grabbed my skirts and followed after, only to hear the buzz of my cell phone. I snatched it from my reticule and held it to my ear.

“This isn’t the best time,” I said, “so—”

“Do you want the document?”

I stopped and gripped the phone a little tighter. “Hope?”

“Do you want it or not?”

I shot a baffled look at Trey. He raised one eyebrow. Hope, I mouthed at him. She wants to hand over the Bible!

“Where are you?” I said.

“Look out the window over the courtyard.”

I hurried to the window, Trey right behind me. Sure enough, Hope stood at the threshold of the dock, near the courtyard. She was dressed in a simple black sheath dress, her hair once again dark and cut as short as a boy’s.

“Why now?”

“I watched the top of Winston’s head get blown off! You think I’m gonna f*ck around after seeing that? All I need from you is an answer—do you want it or not?”

“Why would I want a fake Bible?”

“This isn’t about the Bible anymore. This is much, much bigger.”

Trey watched me through this exchange, his expression alert. Not the Bible, I mouthed. He whipped his eyes down to where Hope stood, her face hard in the angled light.

I made my voice calm. “We need to know—”

“You’ve got ten minutes to decide. No cops, no security guards. I see a single uniform, I’m outta here.”

“But—”

“Ten minutes.”

She hung up on me. I looked at Trey. “Game change.”

I gave him the summary. He listened. He pulled out his phone and called Marisa, explaining in succinct no-nonsense language. Then the conversation became one-sided.

“Yes, I realize that, but…yes, I’m willing, but this isn’t a decision I…Very well. I understand.”

He tucked the phone in his pocket and didn’t say anything.

“She told you to go, didn’t she?”

He shook his head, baffled. “She said it’s my decision.”

“What?”

“She said I’m on the ground, not her. She said it’s my call because she’s up to her elbows with Audrina and Reynolds right now. Her words.”

I was a little stunned. Leave it to Marisa to pick the worse possible time to start treating Trey as a partner. Because Trey didn’t do instant decisions. His decisions required hours of sifting, sorting, integrating, charting.

I peeked at his watch. Eight minutes.

“So what do we do?” I said.

“I don’t know.”

He moved to the window and stood to the side, pulling the sheer curtain back slightly. The courtyard lay below, square and golden and rimmed with tiny pearl-toned lights, tossing in the rain-spiked gusts. A dozen yachts bobbed in the inky water. It had all looked so innocent from our balcony. Now it glared like ground zero. Hope tapped her foot, checked her watch.

Seven minutes.

Trey went into assessment mode. “It’s relatively protected as a meet point. Two access zones—one from the courtyard, a second from the dock. The dock is unsecured, no doubt why she chose it, but the rain has kept the foot traffic down. There’s one problem.”

“What?”

He pointed to the left, beyond the trellis. “Limited sight range. There’s a blind spot just past the dock entrance. Someone could be waiting on the other side of that wall, concealed by the foliage.”

I saw the danger zone exactly as he described. “Shit.”

“Exactly.”

I stomped my foot. “Damn it, Trey, this isn’t about some artifact anymore. That bitch needs to be behind bars.”

“I don’t have that authority.”

“But you could detain her, right?”

“Not unless she presents imminent danger to others. Which she doesn’t.”

He stared down at Hope. I stopped talking and started considering my words very carefully. I was treading on the edge of the phrase that would decide for him—life or death. Once that clause was evoked, there was no going back. Trey was a straight line to action, all his rules flying out the window.

“That woman is wreaking havoc wherever she goes. If we can put an end to it by getting whatever she has away from her, then we should, before she gets me in any more trouble, or worse, gets another innocent person killed. But it’s not worth doing anything stupid. And from what I heard you say, going down there with a blind spot is stupid.”

He examined the courtyard again. “There is one solution.”

“What?”

He pointed. “Our suite is there—corner window, seventh floor balcony. From that perspective, I could see the entire area. If you stayed here while I went there, I could surveil the blind spot before proceeding to the meet point.”

I followed his finger. “Then you could go down to the dock entrance using the back stairwell, staying under cover the whole way.”

“Concealment.”

“Whatever. With all those trellises and ivy, there’s no way for a sniper to get a sight line.”

He blinked in surprise. “You read the manual.”

“Of course I did.”

“Good. Very good.” Then he checked his watch. “Six minutes.”

I cursed again. I knew he’d do whatever I told him. If I said stand down, he’d stand down. If I said go, he’d go. Damn Marisa.

He looked at me, waiting. I shook my head.

“You have to decide, Trey.”

“I can’t.”

“You have to.”

He blew out a breath. “Tell me what to do.”

“Trey—”

“Please.”

I took a deep breath. I was going to ream Marisa out when this was over. “Fine. We go. But only if you think it’s safe.”

“It has an acceptably low level of risk. Nonetheless.” He slipped the H&K out of his holster and pressed it into my hand. “Take this. I’ll get the spare in the room.”

I held his gun, warm from his body. Suddenly everything seemed real. Too real. Suddenly I wanted to crawl into that metaphorical box I’d warned him against.

He scanned the courtyard once more. “You wait here at the window, but keep an eye on the ballroom. This could be a diversion. Let me know if you notice anything out of the ordinary.”

“Okay.”

“But don’t leave this spot.” Trey looked me in the eye. “We stick to the plan. No deviations. You do not move from this window until I call you. Do you understand?”

I hid the gun in the folds of my dress. “I understand.”

He wasn’t even pretending to be trusting. He analyzed my mouth, my eyes, the tic of each facial muscle. I let him read the truth lying on my face. There wasn’t anything that could get me away from that window until he called.

I turned my attention to the courtyard. “Go. And be careful.”

He left me standing alone in a hotel ballroom surrounded by men and women pretending to be dead sympathizers to an armed rebellion. I was among the doomed and blinkered and blind, deliberately unaware of the crashing violence roaring down on them, holding onto their illusion even as it dragged them to the bottom of the river.

I called Hope back. “Trey’s coming to get whatever the hell you have. Stay where I can see you. And if this is a trick, I will spit and roast you, you hear me?”

She hung up. And I took my spot at the window, the gun in one hand, the cell phone in the other.