Read The Killing Edge Online

Authors: Heather Graham

Tags: #Romance, #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Romance, #Suspense, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Romance - Suspense, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Murder, #Fiction - General, #Missing persons, #Women psychologists, #Investigation

The Killing Edge (22 page)

“You’re looking for someone who has caused a lot of terror and death, aren’t you,” she said, and it wasn’t a question. “I will do my best to help you.”

He thanked her again, and they started to leave.

“Wait!” she called suddenly.

She reached into a drawer and took out a necklace. It was a beautiful piece, and a strange one, hung with a wide variety of symbols: a cross, a star, a hamza hand, a four-leaf clover, a crescent moon and a pentagram. In the center was a delicate gold circle with the words Believe in Love and Goodness.

“Take this,” she told him.

“No, no, I couldn’t. Thank you so much,” Luke said. “But it’s—”

“It’s not for you. Give it to the one you love.”

“I don’t—”

“You don’t believe in talismans, and maybe you don’t believe in love. Give it to a special friend, then. But take it, please. It will mean a great deal to me.”

He realized that it would be churlish of him to refuse, but he felt bad—the piece was gold, and obviously not a cheap trinket.

He thanked her sincerely, reminding her that any help she could give him would be vastly appreciated, and he and Joe left.

“You’ve got about an hour before I have to get you to the airport,” Joe told him. “And I’ve arranged another meeting for you.”

Luke knew what was coming and tried to come up with an excuse to get to the airport early. No luck.

“We’re going to the carousel bar at the Monteleone, just around the corner and down the street. I know you think it’s going to be a waste of time,” Joe told him. “But at least you’ll get a farewell drink out of it.”

Sure. A drink before he headed home. That would be fine.

He wasn’t sure how he knew, but when they entered the bar, he saw the couple and knew they were the ones Joe wanted him to meet. He was a distinguished-looking older man, slender, with white hair, sitting at one of the window tables with a beautiful teal-eyed blonde who was perhaps Chloe’s age or a year or two older. They stood, and Joe was
greeted with a kiss from the woman, and a warm handshake and a pat on the back from the man, who was almost Luke’s height.

Joe introduced them as Nikki Blackhawk and Adam Harrison, and they both shook Luke’s hand.

“A pleasure,” Adam Harrison said as they all sat. “I’ve heard about you, so it’s nice to actually get to meet you.”

“You’ve heard about me?” Luke said, surprised. “I can’t say the same.”

“I don’t advertise.”

“I don’t, either.”

“But I’m always aware of people who work a little differently from everyone else,” Adam said.

“I’m not a psychic, you know,” Luke said.

“No, you’re not,” the woman told him.

He looked at her, regretting the fact that he had come. The whole thing seemed ridiculous. “Do you read minds?” he asked politely.

She smiled, glancing over at Adam Harrison. “No, I don’t.” She leaned toward him. “But I do read corpses.”

He didn’t have a chance to decide just how she meant that, when a fifth person joined them.

He was definitely a Native American, tall and muscular, with light-colored eyes betraying European blood somewhere in the past. “Brent Blackhawk,” he said, introducing himself. “Nikki’s other half.”

“Mr. Cane isn’t happy about being here, Brent. He thinks we’re a bunch of frauds,” Nikki said.

“I never said that,” Luke protested.

“But he doesn’t believe in ghosts,” Joe said unhelpfully.

“Look,” Luke said. “I’m sorry, but in my experience, knowledge comes from following physical clues, determining a criminal’s mind-set, studying the victims…from what we can see, feel, touch.”

Joe was shaking his head. “Nikki found Jill for us, Luke.”

Luke looked over at the woman. He had a feeling that her husband would be fiercely unforgiving if he mocked her in any way, though the man had a pleasant enough manner. And he honestly didn’t mean to mock anyone; he just thought there were too many corpses piling up for playing games. “How?” he asked her.

She glanced over at her husband.

“You seem like a decent sort, Luke, and Adam said that you’re the real deal when it comes to solving murders,” Brent told him. “So we’re all here to help if we can, especially because the corpse Nikki helped find might be a victim of the same killer you’re seeking.”

“How did you find her?” Luke asked Nikki again. “Did you hold something she owned and try to sense her?”

Nikki smiled politely. “No. I run one of the local ghost tours.”

“I don’t understand,” Luke said.

“I was giving a lecture when I saw her. She wasn’t an accomplished ghost—you’re laughing at me, Mr. Cane,” she said.

“I just didn’t know that ghosts could be accomplished or unaccomplished,” he said, but he couldn’t help remembering how serious Chloe had been about seeing ghosts.

Nor could he forget the dampness on the rug in her room.

Brent spoke up. “There are actually all kinds of hauntings. Residual hauntings, for instance—happen a lot on battlefields. Ghosts stay to relive the last traumatic moments of their lives—over and over again. Sometimes they become very strong, what we call accomplished. There are areas at Gettysburg where even people without a hint of a sixth sense can feel the dead around them. New ghosts are seldom as talented as those who’ve been hanging around a long time, but the longer they’re around—and the harder they work at it—the better they get at appearing to others, and even creating physical manifestations.”

“Like rattling chains,” Luke murmured.

“Yes,” Adam said pleasantly. “Like rattling chains.”

“Jill appeared on the corner where she had been abducted,” Nikki said.

“She didn’t happen to mention her killer’s name, did she?” Luke asked.

“This is a waste of time,” Brent said, but Nikki ignored him and went on.

“He wore a mask, so she never saw his features. But she felt she’d met him a day or so earlier at a bar. She would have told me more if she could have, Mr. Cane. He raped and tortured her before he killed her. He kept telling her that he was saving her soul. That he was a warrior for God. Does that help you at all?”

Luke was startled. Maybe Nikki Blackhawk was playing up the religious angle because Joe had told her about his own interest in the religious angle, but there was something sincere about her. About all three of them.

And he couldn’t forget Chloe’s insistence that she’d been seeing ghosts. Or her belief that they were trying to help.

He sighed softly, then grinned ruefully at the others. “It does. Thank you. I believe that the killer is a religious fanatic. I don’t mean to have a closed mind, but I have never believed in ghosts. Dead is dead—and gone. I lost my wife. For a while I actually prayed she’d come back as a ghost so I could beg her forgiveness.”

“Perhaps you always had her forgiveness, or there was nothing for which she felt she needed to forgive you,” Nikki said. She was studying him intensely with her aqua-colored eyes. “She was murdered, wasn’t she? But her killer is dead.” She leaned back. “By your hand.”

He was startled. And defensive. Then he remembered that Adam Harrison had said he knew about him.

Joe suddenly cleared his throat. A waiter was standing there, ready to take their drink order. Luke opted for a beer, then looked at his watch while the others ordered. He had about fifteen minutes left. Looking from Nikki to Brent, and then to the soft-spoken Adam Harrison—who hadn’t ordered a drink, he realized—he wondered if he wasn’t a fool to refuse to accept any help, no matter what the source.

“To be honest,” he said, “I have a friend who would love to talk to you. She was one of the survivors of the first massacre, a friend of the currently missing girl, and involved with the agency where the latest murders took place—and now she believes she can see ghosts.”

“Then she probably can,” Brent said with a shrug.

Luke wanted to say that was impossible, but he refrained.

Joe pitched in then. “We’ve just been to see Mama Thornton. Luke believes that the symbol on Jill’s back was a hamza hand, and he believes that the killers a decade ago painted a hamza hand on the wall in blood. Mama Thornton is going to ask her staff and go through her records to see if she can come up with the name of someone from the Miami area who might have been up here and shown an interest in hamza hands and been a religious fanatic.”

“I’ll give her a call and mention the importance of the project,” Nikki said.

She had a soft drawl and, unlike her husband, was obviously a native of the area.

Adam rose suddenly. “I have a car outside—five-thirty flight to D.C., I’m afraid.” He glanced at Luke, amused. “Appointment at Quantico. But if we can be of any help…” He offered Luke a card.

Luke accepted and thanked him, then rose, as well. “I’d better skip that beer, because I have a flight, too. I’m afraid to be away from Miami too long.”

“Ride with me, then,” Adam said. “Save Joe the trip.”

“Thank you,” Luke told him, though he privately wondered if he was going to be lectured about the paranormal all the way to the airport.

The others rose to say goodbye. Nikki shook Luke’s hand, then hesitated, before smiling suddenly. “For what it’s worth, I thought I had lost my mind the first time I saw a ghost,” she told him. “If it hadn’t been for Brent and Adam…” She shrugged. “If I can help you or your friend, please let me know.”

“Thank you,” he said, and he meant it.

He left with Adam Harrison. Not only did the car taking him to the airport have federal government plates, it wasn’t a car at all. It was a stretch limo. Someone certainly thought Harrison was the real deal.

As they drove, the older man kept the conversation casual but still focused on the paranormal. “I envy them so much. People who have the gift.”

“You don’t have it?” Luke asked, surprised.

Adam shook his head. “My son did. He knew I would lose him. And when I did, I discovered that he’d passed his gift on.”

“To Nikki? Or Brent?”

“No,” Adam said, smiling and shaking his head. “I have many agents. That’s my talent. Finding them. It’s only recently that I’ve been able to see Josh.”

“Your son,” Luke said politely.

Harrison nodded, still smiling. “He’s here in the car, sitting right across from us.”

Luke didn’t know how to react. There was no point in telling the other man that there was no one sitting across from them.

“Does he know anything?” he finally asked politely. “Can he help me?”

Harrison laughed and looked over at Luke. “He said that you’re a skeptic with a closed mind, and that you should listen to those around you.”

Luke looked at the empty seat across from him. “Nice to meet you, too, Josh.”

Harrison merely smiled.

Luke debated as he stared at Harrison. Every government agency in the country seemed to respect the man, even though he was obviously crazy.

What if he wasn’t?

Luke let out a breath. “All right. Maybe Josh is there, but I don’t see ghosts. I only see what’s real and tangible.” One more hesitation. “But someone I care about very much believes that
she’s
seeing ghosts, and
I
believe in
her
. What would you say to that? What would Josh say?”

Harrison lowered his head for a moment, then looked up at Luke. He didn’t look insane. He looked confident, like a man who didn’t need to prove anything to anyone.

“Josh says that it’s a start, and he also points out the fact that you’re deep in a quagmire and wants to know what the hell you have to lose? I’m willing to send Nikki and Brent down to Miami, and they’d be happy to help you. If nothing else, trust me when I tell you that Brent is as solid as the day is long. He’s a brilliant investigator whether seeing ghosts or—and I know you’ll find this hard to believe—proving that they don’t exist. Since you have nothing to lose and only help to gain, why not say yes?”

Luke was surprised to find himself laughing.

He still didn’t see Josh. But Brent was flesh and bone, and it would be good to have someone around who wasn’t involved, who was rock solid—and another few bodies to keep watch wouldn’t hurt.

Josh—or the ghost in Harrison’s mind—was right.

“I
am
in a quagmire. And I
can
use all the help I can get,” Luke said.

Harrison nodded. “Good.”

Luke smiled ruefully. “Mind if I ask Josh a question?”

“Not at all,” Harrison said.

“If ghosts exist, why have I never seen my wife?” Luke asked, and he was surprised by the huskiness in his voice.

“Because,” Harrison said after a moment, “she loved you, and she knew you loved her in return. Because her murderer was stopped—by your hand. She’s moved on, and that means it’s time for you to move on, as well. She’s gone, Luke. She’s happy and at peace, and she would want the same for you.”

Luke was surprised by how deeply the answer seemed to affect him, surprised by the tension inside him.

Surprised at how much he wanted to believe.

He decided it didn’t matter what he believed. Having outside help from a crack agency would be great.

At the airport, they parted ways, but he couldn’t stop thinking about everything Adam Harrison and his agents had said, and he had plenty of time for thinking, because his plane was scheduled to take off almost forty-five minutes late. He wasn’t sure why, but after his meeting with the Harrison Investigations team, he was more anxious than ever to get back.

He was worried. No, he was more than worried, he was afraid. Afraid for people he was coming to care about. Afraid for Chloe.

He chafed, looking at his watch.

This was the night that the Church of the Real People had been planning to host its potluck supper. At least that wouldn’t be happening, not after everything that had gone on.

He called Stuckey from the plane, while they were still at the gate, just to check in, and discovered it hadn’t been canceled after all.

Stuckey was well past annoyed. “Oh yes, the righteous indignation of Brother Mario Sanz has been all over the airwaves. And get this—they’ve been so cooperative that it’s almost ridiculous. An entire list of past and present members arrived on my desk this morning. Not one of the current members would object to any questioning, and we were invited to search any and all premises. Since we’re all afraid of what might happen tonight, we have more officers than we can spare guarding the church. It’s a zoo, and that’s exactly what I don’t need.”

Other books

Over the Boundaries by Marie Barrett
Darkhouse by Alex Barclay
Coffee Scoop by Kathleen Y'Barbo
Sora's Quest by Shreffler, T. L.
The Veil Weavers by Maureen Bush
Mass effect. Ascensión by Drew Karpyshyn
The Acolyte by Nick Cutter