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The edge in his voice suggested this was something personal. Her frown deepened. "What do you want me to do?"

He raked a hand through his dark hair then glanced around. "My niece was abducted three months ago.

We've tried everything we can think of to find her—gone through every official channel. There's no sign of her. My sister's going crazy. I thought that maybe…" He shrugged. "You help me, and I'll help you."

She frowned. "Why are you so convinced she's still alive?" He'd been a cop long enough to know the chances of that were remote—especially given the fact it obviously wasn't a ransom-induced kidnapping.

"She is alive." His voice was flat, but there was desperation in his eyes.

Clutching at straws. "I can't guarantee anything." After three months, whatever psychic resonances his niece might have left on her personal items would probably be fading.

"Just try."

She nodded. MacEwan had to be frantic if he was coming to her for help. In the past, he'd been the biggest denouncer of her gifts. Yet he hadn't mocked her months ago when she'd called him for help with

Jasper and his zombies, nor had he mocked when she'd mentioned that the bodies in the warehouse were vampires. MacEwan wasn't a man easily figured out, that was for sure.

He took a business card from his jacket and handed it to her. On the back was a handwritten address.

"I should be finished here by six," he said. "You can reach me at home anytime after seven."

She nodded and tucked the card in the pocket of her jeans. It looked like she wasn't going to head home and grab that shower after all. She'd barely even have enough time to go see Jake at the hospital.

"I'll need something of your niece's—something she wore all the time."

MacEwan frowned. "Like what? Jewelry? Clothes?"

She shrugged. "Jewelry works best—metal seems to hold the resonance of its owner longer. But I can sometimes get quite good readings from a bra."

"I'll talk to Sondra, see what she can come up with." He half turned away, then stopped, looking back.

"I know you'll want to see Jake once you leave here, but don't screw me around on this."

Nikki snorted. As if she would. She knew better than anyone how stupid that would be. Though she'd never felt MacEwan's wrath herself, she'd seen it fall on others. Fair cop or not, he had a mean streak wider than the Mississippi when pushed too far.

"Just don't expect me to perform miracles."

He nodded and reached for another cigarette. "I won't. I just have a feeling time is running out for her. If we don't find her soon, we won't find her alive."

"I'll be there as soon as I check on Jake." Hopefully, he was fine. Hopefully, the wound wasn't as bad as it had looked. "Don't suppose you could talk to Matthew's mother and see if you can convince her to part with something of Matthew's?"

The chances of Mrs. Kincaid being willing to see her, let alone touch something of Matthew's, weren't likely to be high right now. Hell, they'd be lucky if she even bothered paying them—not that Nikki could really blame her.

MacEwan nodded. "I'll talk to her." He took a drag on the cigarette, then crushed it under his heel and walked away.

She wondered why he bothered smoking. In all the years she'd known him, she'd never actually seen him finish a cigarette.

She pushed off the crate she'd been sitting on and headed for the street. Jake had given her a spare set of car keys for use in emergencies like this—when he was stuck somewhere and his much-loved

Mercedes was parked in a dubious area. He'd kill her if she left it there.

The car was parked under a streetlight about a block down from the warehouse. She climbed in and sped over to the hospital.

Mary, Jake's wife of twenty years, was pacing the confines of the hospital's waiting room. Her long gray hair had been pulled back into a tight bun, giving her lined features a severe, almost gaunt, look.

"How is he?" Nikki stopped a couple of feet away from the older woman.

Although she'd known them both for a long time now, she still found it easier to talk to Jake rather than

Mary. Maybe because Mary always looked so perfect, so polished, and talked about art and literature and other things that went way over Nikki's head. Things that made her aware of her years on the streets and her lack of schooling.

Not that there was anything resembling malice on Mary's part. After all, she'd welcomed a grubby sixteen-year-old into her home some ten years ago and had become, in many ways, a surrogate mother.

But she was a mother Nikki couldn't easily talk to.

"He's still in surgery. He's lost a lot of blood. They don't know…" Mary faltered, tears spilling down her cheeks. "…don't know if his heart will take the strain of two major operations so close together."

A chill slithered through Nikki. Jake hadn't mentioned anything about heart problems. She hesitated, then stepped forward and drew Mary into her arms, offering the comfort words couldn't. A shudder ran through the older woman's slender frame, and hot tears fell on Nikki's arm.

"This has to stop. He has to stop."

The chill increased. "He'll be fine, Mary." Yet even as she said it, Nikki tasted the lie. Would this be a case of third time unlucky?

Maybe Mary was right. Maybe it was time for him to stop. To walk away while he still could. Though what she would do—where she would go—if he did was something she didn't want to think about.

Mary sniffed and pulled away. "The police told me he was attacked—and that he'd possibly killed his attacker. Do you think they'll charge him?"

"I don't know." As MacEwan had said, manslaughter was manslaughter, regardless of the circumstances. And the gun was registered to Jake, even if his prints weren't on it.

Mary's gaze searched hers. "What happened out there? I thought you were only following a teenager?"

"We were. The people he met with weren't all that happy about our presence. There were at least five of them. We're lucky to be alive." Lucky the woman had run, rather than attacking a final time.

A doctor wearing blue surgical scrubs came into the waiting room. Mary spun around. His gaze briefly met Nikki's, and her stomach clenched. The operation hadn't gone well—she could see it in his eyes.

"We've removed the bullet from his stomach, but the knife punctured his lung. He made it out of surgery okay, but the next twenty-four hours are vital."

Meaning there'd been complications, Nikki thought, and rubbed her arms.

Mary went white. Nikki gently cupped the older woman's elbow, ready to catch her should she faint.

Mary didn't seem to notice. "But he'll be all right, won't he?"

There was a tremulous note to the older woman's voice. The doctor hesitated. "I can't promise anything."

"Can I see him?"

"Not for the next couple of hours. Why don't you go home and get some sleep? We'll call if anything happens."

Mary snorted softly. "Would you do that if it was your wife in there?"

The doctor smiled. "No. I don't suppose I would." He hesitated again. "I'll keep you posted."

Mary sank down onto the chair once the doctor left. "He has to live, Nikki. He has to."

"He will." Jake was tough. If he'd lived through Jasper's attack, surely he could live through this. She glanced at her watch.

Mary caught the movement. "You have to go?"

She nodded. "MacEwan wants to see me."

"Then go." She reached out, gripping Nikki's arm tightly. "Just don't you go after the madmen who did this. Jake wouldn't want that. He never did believe in revenge."

Neither did she. Jasper had taught her the folly of seeking retribution, if nothing else. "I have to find

Matthew. He'd want me to do that."

Mary nodded. "Be careful."

"Always am." She took the car keys and parking ticket out of her pocket. "Tell him his car is safe. It's on level three, to the right of the stairs."