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"I need to call my contact at the police and let him know about the threat," Jamie said. "Is there anything else you need?"

O smiled and squeezed Magda's hand. "I've got everything I need right here."

Jamie left them together and emerged back into the corridor. She called Missinghall and he answered quickly.

"Damn it, Jamie," he said. "Those tattooed body parts reminded me of those specimens from the Hunterian case last year. You always seem to find the weirdest crime scenes."

"It started out as a missing persons case, Al. Things just got a little crazy."

"Well, it's definitely got the notice of the big guns around here. Dale Cameron is heading up the case himself now, taking a personal interest in the murders and also pursuing the tattoo angle. He sent a handpicked team to the abattoir. You know he's running for Mayor, right?"

"You mentioned it," Jamie said. "So I guess he's heavily invested in finding whoever's involved."

"Exactly," Missinghall said. "His slogan is 'clean up the city,' so he's trying to make sure that starts now."

"There might be more trouble coming," Jamie said. "I've spoken with Olivia, and she told me that the man who abducted her mentioned the Southbank masquerade ball."

"That's tomorrow night at the Tate Modern," Missinghall said. "We can't shut it down at this stage, but it will be full of the city's finest, including the Mayoral candidates. Let me get the information to the security team and I'm sure they'll assign more security. We'll get this bastard, Jamie."

Chapter 16

Leaving O in Magda's care, Jamie walked back along the corridor into the waiting room. Blake stood as she entered.

"How is she?" he asked.

"Alive – and grateful." Jamie smiled and for a moment it seemed as if everything was right with the world. She walked into Blake's arms and hugged him, her arms wrapped around his strong back, the warmth of his body against hers. She inhaled his masculine scent and they stood together, just breathing. The seconds ticked past and what had started as a friendly hug between friends morphed into the edge of something more intimate.

Jamie's heart beat faster as she felt an overwhelming desire to lift her mouth for his kiss. He was a beautiful man, and his scars and wounded soul only made him more desirable. She wondered what his bare hands would feel like on her skin. Would he be able to read the desire from her body as he read objects? She took a deep breath. This couldn't happen, not now. Perhaps not ever.

She stepped back, exhaling slowly. Blake's eyes were cobalt blue and she saw her own desire reflected there.

"I need to go," she said, too aware of his proximity. "It's late."

Blake nodded. "It's been a long day."

They walked together out of the hospital, the silence between them no longer comfortable but heavy with unsaid words. When they reached Jamie's bike, Blake refused the pillion helmet.

"I'll get the Tube back," he said. "I know you prefer to ride alone."

Jamie couldn't tell him how much she had relished his arms around her waist as they had zoomed around London together. How his heat against her back had made her feel again. How she longed for more.

She put her helmet on, needing its protective shield to stop her words from escaping.

"Thank you for coming today," she said. "You're the one who really found O."

"We did it together," Blake said. "We make a good team." He reached for her hand and squeezed it. "Sleep well, Jamie."

He turned to leave, but she called him back.

"I'm … going to go to the masquerade ball tomorrow night," she said, her words hesitant. "O told me that the man mentioned it, so perhaps he'll be there. I need to find him, Blake, and Southwark won't sleep easy until he's caught."

The corner of Blake's mouth twitched in a slight smile. "So it's more of a stakeout then," he said. "Definitely not a date."

"Definitely not," Jamie said, but she couldn't help but smile back.

Blake nodded. "I'd better sort out a costume then. I'll look forward to seeing you tomorrow."

As he walked away through the car park, Jamie roared off on her bike, back through East London towards the south. As she rode, she felt the crazy rise inside her. When she felt like this, she needed speed and escape.

She wanted to drink and dance, to stamp her claim on life and shout to the world that she was alive.

Finding O felt like a chink of light in the darkness, a triumph that she needed to celebrate. Life was so short and dark men could cut it shorter still. Or illnesses like the one that had taken her daughter from her. Death is inevitable, the only question is when and what can be done with this life as the seconds tick away. While blood still pumped in her veins, Jamie felt the need to snatch these moments of pleasure and revel in them.

She rode back to her flat, grabbed her tango bag, and headed back out into the night.

The tango milonga was a place of transformation. No one questioned anyone's identity outside, because only the dance mattered in here. It was the early hours of the morning now so only the hardcore remained, those with the stamina to dance for so long, those with the addiction to movement.

Sebastian was there, dancing with a young woman whose body seemed molded to his. He saw Jamie come in and nodded at her. He was always the one she wanted, the chemistry when they danced together was as close to sex as she could get without taking her clothes off.

Jamie put her tall heels on, letting her hair out of the clasp so it fell in dark waves down her back. She shook it out and stepped to the edge of the dance floor as the music faded and Sebastian left his partner to come to her.

There was no need to speak. Their bodies were all the conversation necessary and as the bandoneon began to play, Jamie surrendered to the movement. This was the loss of control she craved. The male role was dominant in tango, he led and she followed, bending to his touch and spinning at the pressure of his fingers on her flesh.

Sebastian had the perfect arrogance necessary in a tango partner, but with an edge of tragedy that filled every step with meaning. Jamie sublimated her desire into the steps, arching into him. She looked up into his eyes as he held her in close embrace, bending her backwards and pressing himself down upon her. She sensed that he would take this further if she gave assent. But dancing with Sebastian would change if they took it any further.

The pleasure of tango was in frustrated desire held in check, not the release. The fantasy of how it might feel to be possessed by him was more erotic than the taking would surely be. But Jamie was glad of the spark, glad that she was not defined only by the loss of her daughter or her work. As a dancer, she was a desirable woman, and the darkness she faced outside didn't matter right now. Here was only life.

Chapter 17

The figure with the skinning knife took another step towards him, bending over his prone form. The blade flashed as it caught the light and then it descended, cutting into his flesh. The touch was gentle at first, a caress along his chest followed by a bead of dark blood. But then the pain began as the man pressed the knife deeper.

Blake twisted, trying to get away from the blade, but he was trapped, tied down, unable to move. His breath came in ragged gasps.

The man laughed and Blake saw the scar that marred his nose, the craggy features of the man he had seen in the museum.