No need to draw any more attention to myself today. If I kept this up, somebody might call the police and report a crazy woman. Not too long ago, I’d spent several days in Ashland Asylum on one of my jobs. I had no desire to pay the facility a return visit.
A couple minutes later, I stepped into the Pork Pit.
Sophia was adding some red pepper and paprika to her macaroni salad. Finn sat on his usual stool, sipping another cup of chicory coffee and reading the rest of the financial section.
“Problems?” he quipped.
I gave him a sour glare.
“I only ask because a) you’re not smiling and covered in someone else’s blood, and b) I saw you run out of the building across the street like there were a pack of hungry vampires after you,” Finn said. “I take it Jake McAllister managed to allude you?”
I shook my head. “It wasn’t McAllister. The shooter wasn’t even gunning for me. He was aiming at the girl.”
I filled Finn and Sophia in on my theory about the shooter being a pro and my conclusion his target had been the girl, not me.
Finn let out a low whistle. “Someone hired an assassin to take out the girl? She must have really pissed somebody off.”
“Mmm-hmm.” Behind the counter, Sophia grunted her agreement.
“I don’t care who she’s pissed off right now,” I snapped. “I just need to find her before the assassin decides to make another run at her.”
“Why?” Finn asked. “It’s her problem, not yours.”
I stared at him. “Because she comes in here asking about the Tin Man, asking about Fletcher, and a minute later, somebody’s shooting at her. I want to know why. Why she came here, what her connection to Fletcher is, all of it.”
Mainly, I wanted to make sure there was no way her almost or future murder was going to get laid on my doorstep or on Finn or the Deveraux sisters. Covering myself had been one of the first things Fletcher Lane had taught me.
“Now, what happened after I left? Did she say anything, do anything?”
Finn shook his head. “No. She sat there a minute getting her breath back; then she got up and left.”
My gray eyes narrowed. “And you didn’t try to stop her?”
Finn shrugged. “I figured as long as she wasn’t screaming and calling the cops, it was all right. We both thought it was Jake McAllister shooting at you, not somebody else gunning for her.”
I bit back another curse. Finn was right. It wasn’t his fault. It wasn’t anybody’s fault. Still, I needed some answers, and the girl was the only one who could give them to me. But she was miles away by now. So how could I track her down? I thought for a second, then went over to the counter.
“Uh-oh,” Finn muttered. “I know that look.”
“What look?” I asked, lifting up the cash register.
“That look. The one that makes you resemble a hibernating bear someone just poked with a sharp stick. The look that says you’re not going to let this go, even though it’s not your problem.”
I put my hand over my heart and batted my lashes at him. “You know me all too well.”
“But how are you going to find her?” Finn asked. “She didn’t exactly leave you a personal dossier.”
My fingers probed the dark space under the cash register.
There it was. I pulled out a scrap of paper from beneath the register. The girl’s credit card receipt from lunch. The one with her name on it. Violet Fox. Not as good as a dossier, but it was a place to start.
“Oh, I’m not going to find her,” I said in a sweet voice.
“Don’t say it,” he pleaded. “Please don’t say it.”
I held the piece of paper out to him. “I’m not going to find her because you’re going to do it for me.”
Finn just sighed and took another sip of his coffee.
7
“Anything yet?”
Finn glared over his shoulder at me. “It’s only been two hours, Gin. Keep your panties on.”
I glared back and stuck my tongue out at him.
He grinned. “Don’t stick it out unless you plan to use it.”
I snorted. “You wish.”
“Always.”
After I’d told Finn to track down the college girl using her credit card receipt, he’d gone to his office to get his laptop and some other supplies and tell the money men he was taking the rest of the day off. While he’d done that, I’d scheduled an appointment for a glazier to come fix the storefront windows in the morning. Then I’d sent Sophia home, closed down the restaurant, and driven to Fletcher’s house. That had taken an hour.
Finn had shown up thirty minutes ago. Now he relaxed on the faded plaid sofa in the den, while I puttered around in the kitchen. Given all the excitement, I hadn’t had a chance to eat lunch at the restaurant, and I had a feeling it was going to be a long night. That’s why I’d made chicken salad sandwiches on thick, honey-wheat bread, along with a fresh fruit salad.
I put the food on a tray, along with plates, silverware, napkins, and a pitcher of raspberry lemonade. Then I reached for my Ice magic. The cold, silver light flickered on my palm, centered over the spider rune scar, and I dropped several Ice cubes into the two glasses on the tray.
I took the whole thing into the den and set it on the coffee table.
I sat cross-legged in one of the recliners and munched on a sandwich. Celery, apples, golden raisins, lemon zest, and a sour cream — mayo dressing flavored the chicken salad, while the crusty bread provided crunch and contrast.
I alternated with bites of my strawberry-and-kiwi fruit salad, tossed with lime juice, vanilla, and just a hint of honey.
Finn also helped himself to a sandwich and some fruit, and we ate in silence. Finn’s laptop whirred softly as it sorted through billions of bytes of data, looking for info on one Violet Fox.
After he’d wolfed down his first sandwich, Finn reached for another. He jerked his head at the far side of the coffee table, where he’d slid the folder Fletcher Lane had left me — the one that contained the information on my murdered family and Bria, my baby sister, who was still alive. Finn had moved the folder out of the way so he could set his laptop on the ancient table.
“Any luck with that?” Finn asked.
“No.”
Shortly after Fletcher’s funeral, I’d told Finn about the file and the secrets it held, including my real name—
Genevieve Snow. I’d let him sort through the information and draw his own conclusions about everything else. Including what had happened the night my mother, Eira, and older sister, Annabella, had been murdered by a Fire elemental. For a moment, orange flames filled my vision.
The image of two burned husks of bodies flashed before my eyes, and the air smelled of charred flesh. I willed the memory away.
“You should let me help you with that,” Finn said. “I have contacts you don’t.”
I shook my head. “No. Not… yet. I still don’t know how I feel about it.”
“About what?”
“About the old man knowing who I really was all these years and not saying anything to me about it. About him collecting all that information about my family.”
The spider rune scars on my palms started itching, the way they always did when I thought about my dead, lost family. A small circle with eight thin lines radiating out of it. The symbol for patience. I rubbed first one scar with my fingers, then the other, trying to ease the burning sensation.
Didn’t help. Never did.
“Fletcher loved ferreting out people’s secrets. Compiling information, dossiers on them. It made him a good assassin and an even better handler,” I said. “I just never thought he’d do it to me.”
“You’re angry at him.”