She had done some hasty shopping at the Ala Moana shopping center before catching the flight to the mainland. Luther had accompanied her, exhibiting remarkable patience while she conducted a series of surgical strikes on the various designer boutiques and high-end department stores. She had targeted the sales racks, unwilling to pay too much for an outfit she might never wear again. She was dressing for the mission, she reminded herself. But some part of her that she could not suppress insisted on finding a dress that would cause Luther to sit up and take notice, even if it meant exposing more of her sensitive skin than she would have liked.
Eventually she had emerged from the dressing room at Neiman Marcus wearing a sleek black number with a wide, ballet neckline and a slim skirt that ended just above her knees. In a bow to her ever unpredictable sense of touch, the dress had long sleeves.
The faint narrowing of Luther’s eyes and the very satisfying spike in his aura told her she had discovered the right dress.
“Let’s go find our seats,” he said.
“I need to make a trip to the ladies’ room first. I’ll be right back.”
Luther dutifully walked her to the swinging doors marked “Ladies.” She zipped inside and came to a sudden halt. Awed, she gazed at the seemingly endless ranks of gleaming stall doors.
“Wow,” she said to a well-dressed middle-aged woman at the nearest sink. “There must be fifty commodes in here.”
“And more in the other restroom on the other side of the theater,” the woman said with satisfaction. “I gather you’re from out of town.”
“Yes, but I’ve been to enough opera houses to know that there are never enough stalls in the ladies’ rooms to take care of the demand during intermission.”
“The mayor of Acacia Bay is a woman. She refused to throw her support behind Guthrie Hall unless the planners guaranteed that there would be enough restrooms for the female patrons.”
“My kind of politician,” Grace said fervently. “She has her priorities straight. Let’s hope she runs for president.”
She emerged from the restroom a short time later and joined Luther.
“You look awfully cheerful, considering the fact that we’re here to ID a murderer,” he said.
“I didn’t have to cut off all liquids after three o’clock this afternoon, after all.”
“What do you mean?”
“There were at least fifty stalls in the ladies’ room. I counted. And there’s another restroom on the other side of the theater.”
“So?”
“So, it means that I won’t have to get totally stressed out at intermission assuming we’re here that long.”
Luther frowned. “Are you okay?”
“Never mind, it’s a woman thing.”
“I’ll take your word for it.”
An usher directed them to their seats on the aisle twelve rows back from the stage. Luther was satisfied.
“Close enough to get a good look at her,” he said.
Grace’s stomach suddenly did an odd little flip. Her senses fluttered uneasily. Ever since Fallon Jones had authorized the trip to Acacia Bay, she and Luther had been consumed with preparations, the long commercial flight to L.A. and the drive up the coast. Now the reality of what she was about to do suddenly hit her like a splash of glacial melt. What if she was wrong? What if she was
right?
“Don’t worry about it,” Luther said. “If she’s not our hit lady, there’s no harm done. Just another night at the opera.”
“And if she is the woman I saw in Maui?”
“Then we report the info to Fallon. He’ll take care of things from there. You and I will fly back to Honolulu tomorrow and have dinner with Petra and Wayne.”
And then what? she wondered. She didn’t live in Waikiki. She lived in Eclipse Bay, Oregon. Alone.
Don’t think about it. Live in the moment.
“This doesn’t make any sense,” Luther said.
Startled, she turned toward him. “What? I thought we just agreed—” She broke off when she realized he was reading the plot summary in the program. “Oh, the story line. No one ever said
The Magic Flute made sense. But it’s Mozart so operagoers don’t quibble about little details like plot logic.”
“I’ll keep that in mind.”
“The experts in the Society are certain Mozart was a sensitive, you know,” she added.
“Yeah?”
“How else can you explain his preternatural musical talent?”
“Did he ever join the Society?”
She smiled. “I think he chose the Freemasons instead.”
“Well, the good news is that La Sirène appears in the first act.” Luther closed the program. “It won’t be long before we’ll have our answer.”
The lights went down and the crowded room hushed. The overture began, showering the audience in glorious, sparkling energy.
Music had power. Like some weird combination of a freezer and a microwave appliance, it could capture and preserve the brilliant energy of a long-dead composer, warm it up and serve it again and again to generation after generation.
The curtain rose on ancient Egypt. The story unfolded on an elaborate stage that incorporated all the latest and greatest technology. Grace knew that opera audiences expected over-the-top extravagance, not just from the singers but from the sets and costumes, as well. The Acacia Bay opera company had delivered.
It was the perfect setting for a killer coloratura soprano, and when the Queen of the Night took the stage it was all Grace could do to resist the urge to duck behind the seat in front of her.
The Queen’s costume was an elaborate confection of tiered silks and velvets in luminous shades of sapphire blue. The gown was trimmed with gold and studded with glittering beads. The ornate black wig redefined the term “big hair.” The glittering crown was cleverly woven into the tower of fake curls, producing an effect not unlike lights on a Christmas tree.
Everything about the Queen of the Night flashed and sparkled and glittered in an ominous, stage-dominating way. And all of that energy, including the incredible power of her dazzling voice, blazed just as violently in her terrifying aura.
The audience sat, transfixed, when the florid notes of “O zitt’re nicht” flooded the house to the highest balcony. La Sirène did not just squeak out the impossibly high F, she sang it full voice.
Grace did not move so much as a finger. She almost stopped breathing, half expecting to hear the sound of shattered crystal. There was psychic power in the musical fireworks, not enough to kill, but more than enough to mesmerize the audience. Her skin prickled and burned. All her senses were shrieking that she was in the presence of a predator, a
crazy predator.
She knew that she and Luther were safely hidden in the shadows; knew that the intense stage lighting made the audience largely invisible to the singers; knew that La Sirène had no reason to suspect that she was being hunted tonight. But the logic did little to satisfy her survival instincts. Death and madness walked the stage.
She did not attempt to whisper to Luther. For one thing she was fairly certain that the people around her would be extremely annoyed if anyone in the audience so much as coughed, let alone spoke to a companion.
Luther’s right hand closed around her left. She realized then that she was shivering. He tightened his grip, letting her know that he had received the message loud and clear. She knew that he could no doubt detect the power of the Queen’s aura, if not all the detailed lights and darks. He could probably see the crazy stuff, too.
He shifted a little and tugged lightly on her hand, indicating that he intended for them to leave. She tugged back, letting him know that they could not walk out while the Queen was onstage. There was too much risk that their departure would be noticed.