Connor flipped through several of them, checking their copyrights. “Hadn’t really thought of that, kid. Nice catch. A lot of what we end up with in the Resource Room is through donation or leftover from church sales. Not a lot of first-run material. Again, those goddamn budgetary concerns.”
“I don’t think these books are going to help us,” I said. “They only cover the old Strip of Vegas. There’s the whole new Strip that’s been building up over the past twenty years that isn’t even mentioned in these books.”
Connor stared at me. “And you know this how, New England boy?”
“Jesus. Don’t any of you bookworms have cable? I saw it on the Discovery Channel,” I said. “It was a special on building roller coasters. One of them runs right through one of the newer hotels in Vegas. New York, New York, I think.”
Connor rolled his eyes and reached for his mouse. “I’ll bring up a link to their tourist bureau.”
The Internet was rarely our first line of investigation, owing to protocol. Between the speculative fiction, blogs, and porn, we simply didn’t have the manpower to sift out legitimate sources from the bullshit ones. Plus a lot of the wisdom of the ancients that resided in the arcane tomes we used had yet to be scanned in. Digital investigation might be the tool of the future, but not until the funding kicked in.
Within a minute, we had an interactive map covering the modern Vegas Strip. Starting at the Stratosphere, Connor systematically passed the mouse over icons for each of the venues. A window full of stats popped up for each of the hotels, each with the intent of bringing fat-walleted tourists into their oasis in the desert. I started reading the names out loud as Connor scrolled.
“Stratosphere, Sahara, Slots-A-Fun, Stardust, Frontier, Treasure Island, The Venetian, Mirage, Royale, Harrahs, Paris, Aladdin, Excalibur…I never knew there were so many different places to lose money at.”
I continued scrolling until the screen revealed one final casino at the farthest end of the Strip, hiding just past the obsidian pyramid of the opalescent Luxor. One final hotel.
“Mandalay Bay,” I read out loud.
“Mandalay?” Connor asked, slowly narrowing his eyes.
“Mandalay,” I agreed. “You don’t think-?”
Connor interrupted me, finishing my developing thought. “-that Gaynor’s riddle about the wooden fish and ‘following the Vegas trail’ is aboutCyrus Mandalay? How many Mandalays doyou know?”
Possibly having solved the riddle felt satisfying, but the dawning realization that Cyrus might be involved in this whole stolen fish business gnawed at my stomach. If so, how? And had we given anything away when we’d walked right into his shop?
Connor was excited, though. “This is a great lead.”
“You see?” I said encouragingly. “We don’t have to invoke a power to do every little bit of investigation.Perhaps when a man has special knowledge and special powers like my own, it rather encourages him to seek a complex explanation when a simpler one is at hand.”
Connor looked impressed. “You come up with that on your own, kid?”
I shook my head. “Sherlock Holmes,” I said. “Never read it, but one of the books I accidentally triggered off in my past belonged to some guy who really liked the line. It stuck.”
“Oh,” Connor said, rolling his eyes. “Well, speaking of books, I think it’s time we head back to Tome, Sweet Tome and find out what Cyrus has to say for himself.” The reality of what it would mean if Cyrus was really involved was clearly sinking in. Connor’s face grew angrier by the second. Cyrus had been acting a little shady the last time we had been to the Black Stacks, but wasn’t he someone Connor relied on, after all?
Sure…for a price. Now it seemed as if all signs were pointing to his involvement in something far more sinister than simply overcharging his customers.
Connor stood up and headed toward the door without another word, full of purpose. I had never seen this type of silent anger building up inside him. He was going condition critical. As I stood to follow, he called out.
“Don’t forget your bat.”
22
Connor was silent the entire cab ride up to Tome, Sweet Tome, and I sensed the tension in him building. Hell, I felt it myself.
All because of Cyrus Mandalay.
Despite the tattoo down the entire left side of his face, his dreads, his sharklike teeth, and imposing figure, Cyrus had always portrayed himself as a good guy-an advocate of reading and responsible arcane usage-and we had believed him. He wassupposed to be on our side. If Cyrus was somehow tied to Irene’s death or had dealings with the Sectarians without telling us…
It sat like a bad taste in my mouth.
We stopped in front of the bookshop, and I spied Cyrus through the front window. I was surprised to see that rather than wandering casually into the store and then cornering Cyrus, Connor leapt from the cab and sprinted toward the door. Clearly Connor didn’t like playing the fool, and Cyrus’s deception had gotten to him more than I thought. He had thrown caution to the wind. If I was suddenly the rational one, we were probably in trouble.
I saw Cyrus’s eyes widen through the main window at the sight of a charging Connor, and he took off toward the back of the store. I quickly paid the driver, but by the time I was done, Connor had already flung the doors to Tome, Sweet Tome open and stomped in. I raced in after him, pulling my bat free from my belt as I ran.
A crowd of kids stood in the teen-friendly section across from the registers, but they were pointing toward the back of the store down an aisle where a stack of books had recently been knocked over. Unheard of at Tome, Sweet Tome.
Connor dodged some of the still falling books and sped down the same aisle at a full run. He hadn’t even hesitated for a moment to look back and see what I was doing. That was either a sign that his trust in me was growing or that he was too angry to care. Probably a little of both.
“Cyrus!” he shouted as he ran through the Stacks. “Don’t make me chase you! I really don’t need this exercise, and when I catch you, I’m only going to be more pissed off!”
I paused by the confused-looking teens and smiled. “Stay here. Don’t come any farther into the store.” Another thunderous cascade of books rang out and several of the kids jumped. One of them looked like he was about to throw up. “On second thought, it might be safer if you just cleared out all together. Catch a movie or something. Go start a gang.”
Slinging my bat over one shoulder, I started down the aisle, slowing occasionally to make my way past several of the literary avalanches. My progress slowed even further as I stopped to check out two stunned customers I came across that had been knocked over in the chase. The first was a dazed older woman who had been shoved face first into the Horticultural Necromancy section, but was otherwise all right. The second was a man clasping his wrist. I stopped for a quick glance at his injury, but possessing no medical knowledge whatsoever, I could only pat him compassionately on the shoulder and point him toward the front of the store.
“Good luck with that,” I offered, and sped off.
“Simon!” Connor yelled out from somewhere nearby. “A little help here!”
As I rounded the corner of the next bookcase, I could see why. Cyrus stood just inside the gate of the Black Stacks with Connor’s headwedged between the gateway and the iron bars of the gate itself.
Cyrus slammed the gate hard against Connor’s throat and his face turned purple. Cyrus Mandalay would kill him in a matter of seconds if I didn’t intervene, and fast.
I closed the distance with five bounding steps and swung the bat, aiming for Cyrus on the other side of the gate. I got lucky on the downswing and the bat passed effortlessly between the bars, catching Cyrus on his right shoulder. He stumbled back, and Connor pulled himself free of the bars.