“All circuits are busy. Please hang up and try your call later.”
“Great.” The nagging pain in his shoulder got worse, to the point that he dropped the phone and grabbed the place where it hurt. That was when he realized for the first time since the pain started that he hadn’t given it a proper look. At the same time, he felt something wet on the hand gripping his aching shoulder.
When he looked, he found his palm and fingers stained with a red, viscous slime of some sort.
“Blood?”
56
THE BLOOD CAME FROM WHAT APPEARED to be a wound on his shoulder. By the look of it, the bullet from Raul’s gun had only grazed his flesh. But Nick had never bled before, not even a drop.
His descent into mortality had indeed begun.
It’s what you wanted, isn’t it?
In any case he had to check in with Lena, who wasn’t answering his calls. One day she tells him to protect the cartel leader, the next day she wants him dead. If nothing else, it would be a relief not having to work for such a fickle boss any longer.
A moment later, by mortal time, Nick was back in the lobby of the Broadmore. Too weary to cloak himself with invisibility, he walked past the front desk, covering his bloody shoulder with his hand.
“Sir, are you all right?” the concierge said.
“I’m fine.” Nick kept walking.
“But your arm,” the young man said. “It’s bleeding.”
He stopped and took a quick look. The bleeding had actually stopped, but the red stain had spread down his sleeve making it look a lot worse than it actually was. And the wound no longer hurt.
“It’s nothing. I fell on some broken glass.”
“Would you like me to call a doctor?”
A group of teenaged girls were staring at him. Enough of this. Nick planted a construct into the concierge’s mind, then glanced across the lobby to the revolving door.
“Look, isn’t that—”
“Justin Bieber!” one of the teenagers shouted.
The concierge double-timed over to the hotel entrance following the squealing girls.
Nick blew out a weary breath and got into the elevator. Better end the construct before “Justin” appeared to enter the lobby. Just as the elevator doors slid shut, he heard one of the girls saying, “I know I just saw him.”
When he finally got to the room he realized that he hadn’t got a key, so he knocked.
“Hope? It’s me, Nick.” He kept knocking, but no one answered. Perhaps she was in the shower.
The only way in was to pass through the door, something he wouldn’t be able to do much longer. But as he began to alter his physical state he felt light-headed, and the door’s material resisted slightly. Rather than passing through as though the door were air, it felt thick and sticky, like tar.
At one point, the resistance stopped him from moving forward. What an idiot he’d look like in the middle of a door, nose inside the room and hindquarters out in the hallway.
With a great lunge, he pushed through and fell onto the carpet inside the room. When he got to his feet, the entire room swerved counter-clockwise a quarter turn. Nick grabbed the frame of the open closet door to steady himself. It took a few long seconds for everything to settle.
Finally, he opened his eyes. Diffuse light illuminated the room through sheer curtains.
“Hope?”
He knocked on the bathroom door, which swung open revealing a tidied shower, tub, and sink.
Exhausted and disappointed, Nick went into the bedroom. On the night table he saw a small ivory envelope with his name on it. He tore it open and unfolded the note:
Gone to the village to explore. If you have any trouble finding me, I’ll be at The Coffee Shack in the afternoon.
His first thought was to go and join her. But the more human he became, the more he realized how tiring it was being mortal. For the first time since his London days, the need for sleep engulfed him.
Without quite intending to, he dropped onto the bed. His eyes closed.
And the note fell from his hand.
57
THE FIRST THING LITO HAD TO DO was reach Maria. Secondary were his plans to leave the family business, but that couldn’t happen overnight. Not if he wanted to survive and keep his sister from harm.
The truth was, he didn’t exactly know how to make such a change, much less make it safely. But his life had been spared more than once, and by divine intervention—surely a way would become clear. In any case, he wasn’t about to renege on the vow he’d made in that church last night.
I might end up in jail. Even if that happened he’d continue to do right, as best he could. Not my will but thine, and all that. Of course, he could do much more good if he wasn’t locked away…
Lito waited patiently in the lobby of the Sheraton on Harbor Island. His sources had informed him that Maria had returned to San Diego yesterday and checked in. Clever enough not to use her credit card, for which he had online access, she had no doubt bought a prepaid Mastercard or Visa.
He kept his eyes trained on the hotel entrance. Coming or going, she was bound to show up sooner or later. And sure enough, at 9:07 AM she walked in wearing a black, close-fitting short skirt and stilettoes, the bag slung over her shoulder bouncing with each step.
“Maria!” He dropped his iPad into his leather courier bag, grabbed it, and followed her. For the briefest of moments she paused, nearly stopped, then resumed walking, even faster. “Maria, wait! I just want to talk.”
That got him a quick turn of the head.
“I have nothing to say to you, Lito.”
He overtook her, then stood right in front of her. She stepped to the left. So did he, again blocking her.
“Please, Maria. Just give me a minute, okay?”
“I swear, I’ll scream if you don’t get out of my way.” If eyes were knives, his face would be sliced to ribbons by now.
“You have to know why I was protecting you from Alfonso—”
“You protect me by taking away the one person that made me happy?” Her voice resounded throughout the lobby. More than a few people turned to look.
“He was using you.”
“You’re paranoid, Lito! Admit it, you can’t stand seeing someone else be my protector, provider!”
He grabbed her arm. “Alfonso was dangerous, he was about to—”
“LET GO OF ME!” Lito had already loosened his grip so that when she yanked her arm back, her newspaper and magazine went flying across the lobby. The magazine nearly struck the bellhop, who ducked just in time.
Hands up in surrender, Lito backed away and watched her storm out of the lobby. He hadn’t even gotten to the reason he wanted to speak with her. No matter what happened with the family business, he wanted to make sure the secret Alfonso had threatened to tell Maria would never come to her through another person. He could no longer live with that hanging over his head. Not when a new life awaited him.
Over at the baseboard lay Maria’s newspaper, a half-folded white slip of paper atop its scattered pages. Lito picked up the paper and unfolded a printout of an online receipt for an event. Jonathan Hartwelclass="underline" SEIZE YOUR DESTINY.
Had to admire this guy. He never gave up the name of the girl on the video that had gone viral but failed to identify her. Nor had he issued any public apologies, though Lito had read in the paper that he would give an official statement at the event tomorrow night.
Lito sighed. If Maria was serious about her claimed faith in Jesus, she might have to forgive him. But for that to happen, they’d have to speak again. And with his radical shift from the life Papi had left him, it was only a matter of time before the clock ran out. The Suarez syndicate, the Hernandez branch, and now the power- hungry Guzman lieutenants were up to something.