Stacy drew in a deep breath and pulled her thoughts together. She had decided to pursue the White Rabbit angle. She hoped Bobby Gautreaux was the one, but hope didn’t cut it. She knew how cops worked. By now, Malone and his partner would have focused all their energy and attention on Gautreaux. Why spend valuable time pursuing other, vague leads with such a good suspect in hand? He was the easy choice. The logical one. Many cases were solved because the one who looked most guilty was.
Most cases.
Not all.
Cops had lots of cases; they always hoped for a quick solve.
But she wasn’t a cop anymore. She had one case.
The murder of her friend.
Stacy opened the car door. If Bobby Gautreaux fell through, she planned to have another trail for the dynamic duo to follow, bread crumbs and all.
Stacy climbed out of the car. The Noble residence was a jewel. Greek Revival. Beautifully restored. Its grounds-which included a guest house-encompassed a full block. Three massive live oak trees graced the front yard, their sprawling branches draped in Spanish moss.
She crossed to the wrought-iron front gate. As she passed under the oak’s branches, she saw that they were beginning to bud. She’d heard that spring in New Orleans was something to behold and she was looking forward to judging that for herself.
Stacy climbed the stairs to the front gallery. She didn’t have a badge. There was no reason the Nobles should even speak with her, let alone reveal information that might lead to a killer.
She had no badge; she meant to create the illusion that she did.
She rang the bell, slipping into detective mode. It was a matter of stance and bearing. Expression. Tone of voice.
And the flash of imaginary police identification.
A moment later a domestic opened the door. Stacy smiled coolly and flipped open her ID, then snapped it shut. “Is Mr. Noble home?”
As she had expected, a look of surprise crossed the woman’s face, followed by one of curiosity. She nodded and stepped aside so Stacy could enter. “One moment, please,” she said, closing the door behind them.
While Stacy waited, she studied the home’s interior. A huge, curved staircase rose from the foyer to the second floor. To her left lay a double parlor, to her right a formal dining room. Dead ahead, the foyer opened to a wide hallway, which most probably led to the kitchen.
Fitting her original impression of Leonardo Noble being both surfer dude and mad scientist, the interior was a mishmash of the comfortable and the formal, the modern and classic. The art, too, was bizarrely eclectic. A large Blue Dog painting, by Louisiana artist George Rodrigue, graced the stairwell; next to it, a traditional landscape. In the dining room hung an antique portrait of a child, one of those hideous representations of a child as a miniature adult.
“The portrait came with the house,” a woman said from the top of the stairs. Stacy looked up. The woman, of obvious mixed Asian descent, was gorgeous. One of those cool, self-possessed beauties Stacy admired and despised-both for the same reason.
Stacy watched as she descended the stairs. The woman crossed to her and extended her hand. “It’s quite awful, isn’t it?”
“Pardon?”
“The portrait. I can hardly bear to look at it, but for some obscure reason Leo’s grown attached.” She smiled then, the curving of her lips more practiced than warm. “I’m Kay Noble.”
The wife. “Stacy Killian,” she said. “Thank you for seeing me.”
“Mrs. Maitlin said you’re a police officer?”
“I’m investigating a murder.” That much was true.
The woman’s eyes widened slightly. “How can I help you?”
“I was hoping to speak with Mr. Noble. Is he available?”
“I’m sorry, he’s not. However, I’m his business manager. Perhaps I can be of some assistance?”
“A woman was murdered several nights ago. She was heavily into fantasy role-playing games. The night she died she was meeting someone to play your husband’s game.”
“My ex-husband,” she corrected. “Leo’s the creator of a number of RPGs. Which one?”
“The game that refuses to die, I’ll bet.”
Stacy turned. Leonardo Noble stood in the doorway to the parlor. The first thing she noted was his height-he was considerably taller than he had appeared in his press photo. The boyish grin made him look younger than the forty-five she’d read his age to be.
“Which one would that be?” she asked.
“White Rabbit, of course.” He bounded across the foyer and stuck out his hand. “I’m Leonardo.”
She took it. “Stacy Killian.”
“Detective Stacy Killian,” Kay added. “She’s investigating a murder.”
“A murder?” His eyebrows shot up. “Here’s an unexpected twist to the day.”
Stacy took his hand. “A woman named Cassie Finch was killed this past Sunday night. She was an avid fan of role-playing games. The Friday before her death, she told a friend she had met someone who played the game White Rabbit, and he had arranged a meeting between her and a Supreme White Rabbit.”
Leo Noble spread his hands. “I still don’t understand what this has to do with me.”
She took a small spiral notebook from her jacket pocket, the same type of notebook she had carried as a detective. “Another gamer described you as the Supreme White Rabbit.”
He laughed, then apologized. “Of course, there’s nothing about this situation that’s funny. It’s the comment…a Supreme White Rabbit. Really.”
“As the game’s creator, aren’t you?”
“Some say so. They hold me up as some sort of mystical being. A god of sorts.”
“Is that the way you view yourself?” she asked.
He laughed again. “Certainly not.”
Kay stepped in. “That’s why we call it the game that refuses to die. The fans are obsessed.”
Stacy moved her gaze between the unlikely pair. “Why?” she asked.
“Don’t know.” Leonardo shook his head. “If I did, I’d re-create the magic.” He leaned toward her, all boyish enthusiasm. “Because it is, you know. Magic. Touching people in a way that’s so personal. And so intense.”
“You never published the game. Why?”
He glanced at his ex-wife. “I’m not the sole creator of White Rabbit. My best friend and I created it back in 1982, while we were grad students at Berkeley. D amp;D was at the height of its popularity. Dick and I were both gamers, but we grew bored with D amp;D.”
“So you decided to create your own scenario.”
“Exactly. It caught on and quickly spread by word of mouth from Berkeley to other universities.”
“It became clear to them,” Kay offered quietly, “that they had done something special. That they had a viable commercial success at their fingertips.”
“His name?” Stacy asked.
Leonardo took over once more. “Dick Danson.”
She made a note of the name as the man continued. “We formed a business partnership, intending to publish White Rabbit and other projects we had in the works. We had a falling out before we could.”
“A falling out?” Stacy repeated. “Over what?”
The man looked uncomfortable; he and his ex-wife exchanged a glance. “Let’s just say, I discovered Dick wasn’t the person I thought he was.”
“They dissolved the partnership,” Kay said. “Agreed not to publish anything they worked on together.”
“That must have been difficult,” Stacy said.
“Not as difficult as you might think. I had lots of opportunities. Lots of ideas. So did he. And White Rabbit was already out there, so we figured we weren’t losing that much.”
“Two White Rabbits,” she murmured.
“Pardon?”
“You and your former partner. As co-creators, you could both go by the title of Supreme White Rabbit.”
“That would be true. Except that he’s dead.”