Given their own involvement, and knowing he’d make any snitch pay with his life, none of the others would dare point a finger at him in any way.
Fabian smiled in triumph. He’d turned conventional society on its ear, broken every restrictive taboo, and he’d gotten away with it, time and time again.
No one and nothing could ever stop him.
He unlocked the back door to the tattoo parlor and went inside. They didn’t officially open for another couple of hours, but he wanted to do some research on his business computer. Before he met with Gaby tonight, he would figure out how he knew her, and the best way to kill her.
He could hire others to dispatch of her, but only he possessed the passion, the skill, the control, to do it properly.
With Gaby, he would do his finest work.
The change in weather did little to lighten Gaby’s mood. Slouched on the curb, earbuds in so she could vibrate her brain with hard music, she alternately watched the play area and Sin Addictions.
She’d unzipped her sweatshirt, revealing a T-shirt beneath. Elbows on her knees, she waited for the little girl to show up. And she noticed when a light went on inside the tattoo parlor.
Her skin prickled.
Today, something would happen.
What, she didn’t know, but she felt it deep inside. Unlike her usual calling that tormented her with twisting pain, this feeling of expectation sizzled along her nerve endings, a foreboding of imminent distortion in her life.
To ensure she wouldn’t miss a call from Luther, she’d set her phone to vibrate. At the small of her back, the hard bite of her knife against her spine lent a degree of comfort.
A cool breeze stirred her hair. A bird dipped in flight, then circled and landed in a barren tree. Children laughed.
Off in the distance, a siren squealed, blending with the lonesome whine of a train whistle. Dogs barked.
Seeing the girl she wanted walking hand in hand with another, smaller child, Gaby pushed to her feet. The younger girl shot free and ran to join the other children.
Wondering what to say first, how to protect the girl without alarming her, Gaby started across the street.
The girl glanced up, and smiled a greeting. “Hey.”
Relieved that she wasn’t afraid, Gaby said back, “Hey.” She nodded toward the other girl. “Who’s your friend?”
“My little sister.” She moved toward where the girl played. When Gaby didn’t immediately follow, she looked back. “Come on. She always wants to play, but . . . I fear it might not be safe.”
Perplexed by the friendly welcome, Gaby joined her. “You’re not afraid?”
The girl crossed her arms over a broken chain link fence. “Now, with you here, it is better. You will keep everyone safe.”
“No . . . ” Stumped, Gaby turned and leaned her back on the fence. She felt awkward with the girl’s innocent acceptance and trust. “I meant, aren’t you afraid of me? After what I did, I thought . . . I don’t know. It didn’t freak you out a little?”
Braided, the girl’s long dark hair reached the middle of her back. She wore too-small, tattered jeans, a stained shirt that couldn’t keep her warm, and sneakers without socks.
But she smiled when she looked at Gaby again. “I am Dacia. And you are?”
“Gaby.”
Dacia stared at her sister. “She is Malinal. I care for her, but it is not easy.”
“How old are you?”
“I am twelve.” Sunlight glinted on her small nose and long, dark lashes. “Mali is five.”
Gaby’s heart twisted. She moved a little closer to Dacia, tried to look relaxed when she felt anything but. “Dacia, where do you and your sister live?”
The silence grew louder than the kids’ laughter, more deafening than the cawing crows and beeping horns of traffic a few streets away.
Gaby waited, while inside her soul, the turmoil clamored and expanded to immeasurable proportions.
Mali ran after another kid, and Dacia adjusted her position to keep the little girl in her sights. When that required moving a few feet away, she held out her hand to Gaby.
Unnerved by the gesture, Gaby took the small hand in her own, and knew she would die to protect the girl.
“I can trust you,” Dacia said as they rounded a big, half-dead tree. “Can I not?”
“You can,” Gaby vowed.
“I do not want Mali taken from me.”
“I won’t let that happen.”
“Sometimes . . . ” Dacia swallowed, took a moment to compose herself. “Mali cries in the night. And when she sleeps, she holds me so tight. I am all she has.”
“You love her a lot, Dacia, and that makes her a very lucky little girl.”
Dacia’s voice broke. “Sometimes she is hungry.”
“And you?”
“Sometimes I am hungry, too.” They continued to walk, always keeping Mali in view. “We live wherever we can. Where I think we will be safe. We hide.”
Because Gaby had done the same off and on throughout her life, she wasn’t overly shocked. Just very, very heart-broken. “It’s getting colder, you know. Soon it will snow. You need real shelter.”
Dacia bent to retrieve the wing of a dead butterfly. She studied it, and then dropped it back to the ground. “I would rather be cold than be alone.”
“You won’t be alone. Not ever again.” Gaby went down on one knee, and damn it, she felt tears sting her eyes. Dacia needed a strong defender, not a whiny female.
Unfortunately, in the current modification of her life, Gaby could no longer distinguish quite where the paladin ended and the woman began.
“From now on,” Gaby said, ignoring her weaknesses, “you have me.”
Dacia started to smile, when suddenly she looked past Gaby and fear widened her eyes.
Gaby felt it, the charge in the air, the smothering of young laughter, the halting apprehension. The kids fell silent, and Dacia went pale with dread.
This was what had brought her here.
Without looking behind her, Gaby said to Dacia, “I will handle it. Do you believe me?”
Dacia blinked away much of her fear, and proved her incredible trust.
“Yes.” She licked her lips, nodded, and said, “Thank you.”
Before succumbing to her injuries and loss of blood, the victim had given Luther the name of a street, and a grisly account of her harsh captivity.
Speeding, with lights flashing atop his car, he drove hell-bent for the scene. He’d called ahead, giving strict instructions for cops in the area to gather quietly, to contain the scene—but not to intrude.
Yet.
If he could apprehend someone still at the house, get a match on the teeth marks left on the victim, maybe some DNA . . . it’d be perfect, a real break in the case. And God knew they needed a break. The bodies were piling up.
Beside him, Ann held herself in brooding silence, no doubt wracked from seeing the shape that poor woman was in. But hell, he didn’t blame her; it shook him, too.
To think of someone going through what she had, and then to be chained to a wall to be available for future abuse . . . His muscles constricted with the need for physical violence.
Nasty bite marks, most of which had viciously pierced skin and torn flesh, marred her body. She’d been so bloodless that, other than swollen bruises, her skin looked translucent, ghostly blue. Wild-eyed but frail, she’d whispered of atrocities too horrific to imagine—and then she’d given them the name of a street, and died.
Voice trembling, Ann whispered, “I want to kill him, Luther.”
“Me, too.” He felt no shame in admitting that.
He heard Ann breathing, and then: “I almost . . . almost want to turn Gaby loose on him.”
“No!” Hands squeezing the steering wheel, Luther said again, more calmly this time, “No. Not that.”
Ann put her head back on the seat and closed her eyes. After a time, she agreed. “Of course not. It’s unthinkable.” She rolled her head to look at Luther. “For Gaby, as much as the matter of the law.”