Kyle returned the smile. "Would that be appropriate?"
"It could be."
"Should I leave?" asked Seeks-the-Moon, biting loudly into an apple as he took a seat next to Kyle.
Uljaken glared at the spirit, then turned back to Kyle. "I thought you said spirits didn't like being, what did you say, 'manifest'?"
"Some of us don't," Seeks-the-Moon said before Kyle could answer. "Unlike those poor elementals who must force themselves into an ill-fitting physical body to be manifest, I have an actual physical form. Courtesy of him." The spirit smiled and gestured at Kyle. "Sculpted from the primal potential, cast by the grace of will, and kept extant by the simple fact that banishing me would truly be a pain in the ass."
Kyle laughed softly. "It's true. I've let him get too powerful."
Seeks-the-Moon doffed his hat.
Hanna laughed, and just then the telecom beeped.
Kyle looked at Seeks-the-Moon, then sighed and pulled himself up from the conch. "I'll get it."
"Hate the things," said Seeks-the-Moon to Hanna. "Won't touch 'em."
Kyle sat down at the desk, swung the arm holding the flat screen out to a more comfortable viewing position, and hit the Connect key. William Facile's face appeared on the screen.
"We checked on your 'Desolation Angels'," the ork said, "but no one's got any record of it being a gang name. Not Eagle either or the Feds."
"Any other occurrences?" Kyle asked.
"Yes, an old one. Apparently it was the title of a music disk back eighty years or so. A rock and roll band named Bad Company recorded it. There was also a note that the cover image became a popular design on motorcycle jackets of that era."
"So Melissa Truman may simply have seen Hayward wearing one of these vintage jackets and assumed a gang affiliation."
Facile nodded. "That would be my guess.'
"And what about the Kaleidoscope Club? Anything on that yet?"
"Not really. Just the usual drek. Every organized crime faction in town is said to own it, but it's actually controlled by a local corp called the Caleb Group. They own four clubs."
"Who owns them?"
"They're public. About eight hundred and ninety-two investors."
"Who're the principals?"
"Three people, all with four percent."
Kyle sighed. "Dead end. Nobody with enough ownership worth tracing. I assume they're all legit."
"I'd really rather not bog down Knight Errant's computers conducting background checks on nine hundred people."
"Your call," Kyle said, "but is Linda Hayward on the list of investors?"
Facile blinked, and then reached down to work his computer. A moment later his eyes narrowed. "Yes, she is."
"Great. Let me know who else interesting turns up on that list." Kyle reached for the command keys, said: "I'll check in again later", disconnected, and Facile faded to black. "Interesting," said Hanna.
"Very," Kyle agreed. "Could you do me a favor and have your datapad re-read the profile we got on her."
Hanna nodded and keyed in some commands to the pad. A moment later, it spoke in a clear masculine voice: "Results of a public records search-check on Linda Hayward. Information gathered: one correlation. Linda Kathleen Hayward. Date of birth, 8 March 2029, Rush-Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago. Parents, Nancy Arnold Hayward and John Michael Hayward, deceased 2039. Economic records show employment with Davidion Financial until four years.ago. No registered employment since. Residence records show rented housing at 3121 West George, Chicago, until four years ago. No residence record since. Education records show a degree in management and finance from the University of Illinois, Chicago, 2043. No other records found."
"Again," said Hanna, "not promising."
"It's like information on someone who's slipped off the edge of the world," Kyle mused. "Everything on her is four years old. She's completely dropped out of public record."
"What do you make of it?"
"Well, if we'd found nothing, I'd have said for sure she'd gone over to the shadows," Kyle said.
"Become a shadowrunner?" asked Hanna, almost incredulously. "Is it that easy?"
Kyle laughed. "No. If she were good or smart, there'd be no records by now. They're four years old, which is starting to leave a cold trail. But she's still using her own name." He shrugged. "I just don't know."
He sighed. "But if I run into her at the Kaleidoscope tonight I'll be sure to ask her."
"That wasn't necessary," Kyle told Seeks-the-Moon through the telepathic link they shared as master and ally spirit. Kyle disliked this method of communication with the spirit because, in his own mind, Seeks-the-Moon's voice sounded too much like his own voice. Standing at the rail overlooking the Kaleidoscope's main dance floor, besieged by untold thousands of watts of grinding, pounding, abrasive jet core rock and roll, it was the only way to talk.
The spirit shrugged even though he too spoke telepathically. "The doorman was a joker. We were obviously far more genuine than the fakers he let in ahead of us. I simply proved it."
"You didn't have to burst into flames."
"We're in, aren't we?"
"Yes, but odds are we've been noticed. Being inconspicuous is out of the question."
"Why didn't you tell me you wanted subtlety? It's not the approach you usually favor."
Kyle held up his hand to silence Seeks-the-Moon's bantering. "Okay, okay," he said. "We have a decent idea of who we're looking for, so let's split up and see what we can see."
The spirit shrugged again. "As you wish. If I locate Linda Hayward, should I call you?"
"It would be appreciated."
Seeks-the-Moon stuck his hands in his pockets and moved out through the crowd. Kyle knew the spirit was uncomfortable amid the chaos of music and dancers, but he also knew that Moon's ability to see in both the physical world and the astral one simultaneously would be invaluable in case of danger.
Kyle himself wasn't that comfortable, his musical tastes tending toward subtler techno-phasic harmonies. Jet core was too loud, too dissonant, and, combined with the billions of swirling and spraying multi-colored lights in the club, too fragging frantic.
The crowd was young-older than either Melissa or Mitchell Truman, of course, but by only a few years. There was a younger element, but they tended to orbit each other in small cliques near the edge of the main floor. Kyle wasn't sure if he should simply observe first or start working the crowd for clues to either Linda Hayward or Mitchell Truman.
Below him, the thrashing mass changed its pattern of motion as the music changed beat and pace. He thought he recognized the piece as a version of a more lyrical song from maybe a decade before, but the music wouldn't hold still long enough for him to place it. He moved forward, against the flow of the crowd, toward the bar.
The Kaleidoscope attracted a clientele that apparently considered the "magical" look to be in. He passed a pair of female elves guarded by a troll, but of the three, only the troll seemed real. In their finery, twist-dyed hair, and metallic-flake makeup, the two elves seemed artificial and posed. They ignored him, as bade their pose, while the troll gave him a polite nod. Kyle wondered for a brief moment what the truth behind the three really was.
An ork, garbed as one of the sorcerers from a recent simsense version of the Arabian Knights, threw what seemed a rainbow of color into the air. Kyle didn't need his astral senses to know it was a trick, light refracted through a handful of microcrystals. Fakery, apparently, was all the rage in the Kaleidoscope Cl-