Three
Later, she couldn’t recall actually
reaching for her paddle or lifting it into the air, but suddenly it
was high in the air, doing an excited little “Look at me, look at
me” dance. Clearly her innate bidding style was not from the school
of subtle sophistication.
It didn’t take long for Ben to notice and nod in
her direction. “Ah, a new player. A bid of three thousand from the
lovely Eve Lockhart.”
Three thousand dollars. Somewhere at the far outer
reaches of consciousness, Eve understood that she had lost her
mind. It didn’t stop her. Hell, it didn’t even slow her down. The
bidding continued to climb and she climbed with it. What difference
did it make? She’d blown through her rainy-day fund with her first
bid. Now her vacation savings, Christmas account, and even Rory’s
college fund were all lined up at the chopping block, waiting to be
kissed good-bye.
Eve didn’t care. For the moment the only thing she
cared about was walking out of there with the pendant. When the
bidding reached five thousand, a woman seated a few tables in front
of her shook her head and lowered her paddle and Eve felt a surge
of glee that she knew was totally irrational.
“And then there were two,” announced Ben. From his
podium onstage, he smiled at her and rubbed his palms together. “Do
I hear five thousand two hundred and fifty?”
The bid increments had jumped from one hundred
dollars to two-fifty, and for the first time she hesitated,
wavering, but the auction warrior princess who’d commandeered her
body refused to entertain the notion of quitting. Eve took a big
swallow and nodded.
“Fifty-five hundred?” he asked, his gaze sliding to
the opposite side of the ballroom.
And back to her.
“Fifty-seven fifty?”
Swallow. Nod.
“Six thousand?”
“Sixty-five hundred?”
Five-hundred-dollar increments now. This was crazy.
She nodded.
“Seven thousand?”
“Seventy-five hundred?”
Each time the bid was tossed to Eve, she nodded
quickly, before she had time to think. If she allowed herself to
think, sanity might squeeze back in. She recalled reading somewhere
that you should never bid at an auction without firmly fixing in
your mind beforehand the maximum amount you were willing to part
with. She had no such figure in mind. How could she when one didn’t
exist?
She didn’t care how high the bidding went; she
wasn’t going to stop.
She wasn’t going to lose.
She wasn’t leaving there without the pendant.
“Nine thousand five hundred?”
“Ten thousand?”
This time when Ben swung his attention to the other
side of the room, Eve looked too. Her vision was pretty good, but
ordinarily even “pretty good” wouldn’t be good enough for her to
identify someone standing at the far end of a crowded ballroom.
Tonight it was. Tonight she had no trouble at all recognizing the
dark hair and long black coat of the opposition. And it didn’t
surprise her in the least to discover that the man bidding against
her was the man she’d encountered earlier. It didn’t surprise her,
but for some reason she didn’t have time to stop and ponder, it
made her even more determined to win.
“Twelve thousand?”
She heard someone, Jenna maybe, ask, “Are you
crazy?”
You need to ask? thought Eve.
“Thirteen? Do I have lucky thirteen? I do. I have
thirteen thousand on my far left. Do I have fourteen?”
She nodded with gusto, her gaze steady across the
sea of tables and elegantly clad guests. She was staring directly
at him when he turned his head and stared back, and she felt it for
the second time that night, the sudden, unmistakable change in the
energy patterns in the room. Only much stronger this time.
Things were getting weirder. And weird was never
good. Weird attracted the wrong kind of attention and went against
everything she stood for. Weird invited rumors and gossip. It had
the power to ruin reputations, and lives . . . hers in particular.
In the news business, a good reputation was built upon being honest
and levelheaded and—it went without saying—sane.
She still wasn’t giving up on the pendant. What she
wanted was for him to give up. She wanted him to just drop
his paddle and give the hell up.
In the end it was as easy as that, as easy as
riding a bike or falling off a log or making a wish . . . as easy
as if so much time hadn’t passed and fate was still something she
could trust.
She wanted the hourglass pendant, badly, and
without planning to or intending to she gathered her thoughts
together until they narrowed into a single unwavering beam focused
on that one simple objective. Reality bends to desire.
Grand’s words came to her from out of nowhere. And in that instant
a pale, iridescent glow materialized, forming a misty triangle that
stretched from the pendant to her to the man standing all the way
on the other side of the ballroom.
Eve braced for a collective gasp from the crowd,
but it never came, and she understood that just like the gust of
wind in the lobby, no one else saw the mysterious mist hanging in
the air; no one else felt the peculiar shifts in energy. Whatever
was happening, she was completely on her own. Just she and . . .
she looked across the ballroom in time to see his arm drop abruptly
to his side and stay there.
“Sixteen thousand?” called Ben. “Sixteen
thousand?”
Her rival didn’t nod; he didn’t even move. He
simply glared. At her. If looks could incinerate, she’d be ashes.
She turned away so she didn’t have to see it.
“No?” Ben prompted. “All done at fifteen thousand
then? Fifteen thousand once . . . twice . . . and sold for fifteen
thousand to Eve Lockhart.”
The sound of the gavel coming down might have been
a shot from a starter’s pistol. That’s how quickly she was on her
feet and yanking her purse from the back of her chair to make her
getaway. The possibility that leaving early might be construed as a
sign of weakness was no longer her number one concern.
Jenna was shaking her head in amazement. “Eve, my
God, I can’t believe you . . .”
Eve couldn’t believe it either, and she wasn’t
about to hang around and try to come up with a plausible
explanation. “Sorry, Jenna, I really have to run. I’ll call you,”
she promised without stopping.
She kept walking, responding with quick nods and
smiles to the congratulations and surprised looks coming at her
from all sides, until she reached the area set aside for payment
and pickup. Several payment lines had already formed, all of them
long. Considering how the evening was going so far, she wasn’t
thrilled with the prospect of standing around waiting to see what
freaky thing might happen next. Her public image would take a
serious hit if she were to suddenly breathe fire or be pelted by a
rain of toads. And so she did something she never did: she played
the journalist card.
Barbara Vines was still rushing around. Eve caught
her eye, waved her over and hurriedly fabricated something about a
work-related crisis. Barbara immediately led her to the last table
and discreetly beckoned to a young woman who appeared to be
returning from a break. “Mandy, can you please help get Eve on her
way as quickly as possible?” she asked quietly.
“Of course,” replied Mandy, reaching for the
American Express card Eve already had out.
“Thanks, Barbara.”
“Happy to help,” she told her. “Breaking news waits
for no woman.”
Eve soothed her conscience with the thought that it
would be breaking news if puddles of toads suddenly appeared
all over the ballroom or every tuxedoed man in the place turned
into a penguin.
In a matter of minutes Mandy had completed the
paperwork for the sale and retrieved the pendant from the locked
holding area.
“I really love this piece,” she said as Eve signed
for it. She glanced around and added, “Are you alone this evening?
We have extra security guards standing by, and I’d be happy to page
one to escort you to your car.”
Eve shook her head. “Thanks, I’ll be fine. I’m
parked in the hotel garage, and I can probably be at my car before
you can page someone.”
She made it a point to sound more confident than
she felt. For all she knew she wouldn’t be fine. Considering the
way the night was unfolding, there could very well be trouble
lurking out there with her name on it, but not the kind of trouble
that could be scared off with a nightstick or a gun, and she wasn’t
about to endanger the life of some innocent security guard with a
wife and kids waiting at home. This was her problem and somehow she
would deal with it.
She slipped the jewelry case into her purse and
looked up to find her bidding nemesis watching her. And making no
secret of his interest. He was standing alone, away from the crowd,
and if he was upset about losing, it didn’t show. In fact,
considering how he’d lost, he looked a tad too serene to
Eve. She didn’t trust him, and she didn’t like being watched, and
she breathed a little easier when she was safely inside the
elevator with the doors closed.
As soon as she was alone, her impatience took over
and she pulled the black leather jewelry case from her purse. She
couldn’t wait to get her first good look at her prize. Or maybe
booty was a better word, seeing as how it came from a sunken ship.
Her fingers shook a little as she untied the ribbon, opened the
case and braced for fifteen thousand dollars’ worth of buyer’s
remorse to come crashing down on her.
It didn’t happen. Not so much as a penny’s worth.
In fact, she couldn’t recall ever feeling so right about anything
in her life as she felt about buying this pendant. She’d never seen
a piece of jewelry so beautiful, much less owned one. The gold
gleamed both more softly and more brightly than any she’d ever
seen. And Ben had been wrong about the miniscule crystals inside
the hourglass; they sparkled far more brightly than either diamonds
or stars.
Just looking at it made her feel good, happy and
warm all over. She touched it, tracing the graceful curve of the
hourglass with one fingertip, and the feeling blossomed. Excited,
she lifted it from the case and slipped the chain over her head,
tucking the hourglass inside the neckline of her dress, where the
solid weight of it against her skin was immediately
reassuring.
There was a melodic ting as the elevator
slowed to a stop and the doors opened directly across from the
enclosed walkway to the garage. Eve quickly shoved the empty case
back into her purse and glanced in both directions before stepping
out, relieved that there was no one in sight. She still couldn’t
quite shake the antsy feeling, and halfway across the walkway she
looked back over her shoulder to see if anyone was following. No
one was.
She blew out a breath of relief and turned left at
the first row of parked cars, glimpsing a sliver of her trusty old
white Volvo parked in the very last spot. It was like the smile of
an old friend, easing some of the tension that had turned her spine
to stone.
That’s when she saw him.
He was leaning against her car, smoking a cigarette
and watching her approach with the same enigmatic, oh-so-cool
demeanor with which he’d just watched her leave. Which raised an
interesting question: how could that be? She supposed it might be
possible, if he’d bolted the very instant she was out of
sight and taken the stairs. And if he then raced the
elevator down nine flights without breaking a sweat, and if
he made it across the walkway and all the way to her car without
becoming the slightest bit winded and without her catching so much
as a glimpse of him along the way.
That was a whole lot of ifs. Her left brain was
telling her it was flat-out impossible for him to have beaten her
there. And that it was also impossible for a human being to be in
two places at the same time. So either he had an identical twin
brother or . . . she wasn’t ready to connect the rest of those dots
just yet. Suffice it to say she didn’t think he had a twin.
If there’d been a way for her to get to the
driver’s door without passing him or, better still, acknowledging
his existence, she would have. There wasn’t. Option two: take the
initiative.
“What do you want?” she demanded.
He came away from the car and straightened to his
full height, which was taller than she’d realized, a good head over
her own.
“What do you think?” He spoke with a subtle British
accent, in a voice that was smooth and deep.
“What I think is that it’s very interesting how I
left before you and yet you made it here first. How do you explain
that?”
“I don’t.” He flicked the cigarette to the pavement
and ground it out with one black leather boot heel.
I don’t. Not I can’t. Not even I
won’t. I don’t.
“What are you?” she asked, looking directly into
his eyes and not bothering to hide her suspicion.
“My name is Hazard.”
“I didn’t ask who you are. I asked
what you are.”
“Hazard,” he repeated. “Gabriel Hazard. And let’s
just say I’m a collector.”
“Of what?”
“This and that.”
“Specifically.”
“Rare books. Antique firearms. And unique treasures
such as the pendant you purchased this evening. It so happens I’ve
been searching for that particular piece for a long time.”
“Why?”
He hesitated before shrugging. “The answer to that
is complicated. Very complicated.”
“Then you’re in luck.” She ignored the sardonic
lift of his dark brows. “Because complicated is not a problem for
me. It so happens I’m clever. Very clever.”
“I’m relieved to hear that. It means you’ll accept
the exceedingly generous offer I’m about to make for the pendant
without a fuss.”
“No fuss. And no deal. Sorry.”
She took a step toward the car and though Eve
didn’t actually see him move, he was suddenly there, blocking her
path. She felt the energy around her stir, just as it had when they
crossed paths earlier.
“You haven’t heard my offer,” he pointed out.
“I don’t need to hear it. The pendant’s not for
sale.”
“That hardly seems sporting. Considering.”
“Considering that I won it fair and square?”
He smiled. It wasn’t a genuine smile, of course,
but it was still plenty effective, more than enough to make her
heart do a little stutter step.
“Define ‘fair,’ he challenged.
Ouch. Best not to let the conversation veer in that
direction.
“Look, I’m very sorry to disappoint you,” she said,
trying to sound reasonable but firm, “or seem uncooperative, but
this discussion is really a waste of time.”
“That’s a matter of perspective. As I told you,
I’ve already invested a great deal of time searching for the
pendant.”
“And as I told you, it’s not for sale.”
He hesitated, his expression clouded, as if she
were a puzzle he couldn’t quite figure out. “What if I told you it
was a matter of life and death?”
Everything inside her went still. Was that a
threat? Belatedly it occurred to her that remaining there alone
with him hadn’t been the smartest move she’d ever made. She’d
chased down interviews with enough unsavory types to know better
than to let herself be manipulated into such a vulnerable position.
It was more evidence—as if she needed any—that she’d been thrown
way off her game.
“I suppose I’d ask whose,” she said in her calm and
even reporter’s voice.
“Mine.”
It wasn’t the answer she expected, and she
immediately suspected it was a trick. Before she had a chance to
find out for sure, someone spoke from the shadows behind
them.
“Not so fast there, pal. If you want to be real
about this, both your lives are on the hook here.”
They both turned in that direction, Gabriel Hazard
as startled as she was.
Eve would have bet the night couldn’t get any
stranger. She would have lost. Standing in front of the concrete
wall ten yards away, wearing shiny black suits, dark glasses and
black felt fedoras, were the Blues Brothers, or at least a damn
good facsimile.
Whoever they were, they definitely had not been
there when she arrived a few moments ago. Eve was certain of that.
Well, as certain as she was about anything that had happened in the
past few hours. The relevant point was that they seemed to
have appeared out of nowhere, which she knew enough to know meant
they had appeared from somewhere else . . . another dimension or
world or someplace equally fantastical.
That couldn’t be good.
“So,” said the shorter and rounder of the two,
“that being the operational situation, why don’t you just do
yourself a favor, doll, and toss that pendant my way?”
“What pendant?” she asked with what she hoped was a
credible aura of utter cluelessness.
The Blues Brothers chuckled and elbowed each
other.
Brother Small adjusted the tilt of his fedora.
“What pendant, she says. Everybody’s a joker these days.”
Their laughter stopped abruptly, as if someone had
jerked the needle off an old record album.
“I hate jokers,” said Brother Tall. “But just on
account of I also don’t go for messing up a dame if I don’t have
to, I’m going to give you one more chance to play nice and hand
over that pendant. A little something I call the three-second
chance. Three . . . two . . .”
He skipped one and both men started toward her. So
much for chivalry.
Acting on instinct alone, Eve grabbed the pendant
right through her dress and held on to it as tightly as she could.
She had no idea what prompted Hazard to grab her and try to shove
her behind him and no time to think about it. As soon as he touched
her, the same iridescent glow that had materialized in the ballroom
appeared again, this time forming a dome over the two of them so
that they were cocooned inside a bubble of highly charged
mist.
Hazard scowled suddenly and pressed his fingertips
to his forehead as if his head ached, but still managed to keep his
body angled protectively in front of hers.
“Nice trick,” said Brother Tall, his smile smug as
he examined the mist. “Too bad for you I got a nicer one.”
They kept coming, their hands raised in front of
them, palms open flat. When they were just inches away, blue lasers
shot like blades from the center of their palms.
Terrified, Eve cringed backwards and came up
against Hazard’s arm; it curled around her like a steel cable. She
fully expected the evil-looking lasers to slice and dice their way
through the mist and then do the same to them. Instead, there was
an explosion of white sparks and a screeching sound so high-pitched
it was painful, and the lasers were deflected with enough force to
send both brothers flying backwards in a blue-black blur. They
slammed into the concrete wall ten feet away and came to rest on
their butts.
For a few seconds they just sat there, stunned. A
very few seconds as it turned out. Rolling to their feet, looking
all too resilient, they began moving forward once again, but this
time there was more caution than swagger in their approach. Brother
Tall even seemed to hold back half a step and let Brother Small
take the lead as he lifted his right arm and moved it over them
slowly, without actually making contact with the mist. Instead of
the lethal-looking blue lasers, his outstretched palm glowed with a
soft white light. It seemed to Eve that he was checking for
something. She had no idea what it might be, but she was in the
business of reading people, and whatever bizarre breed these guys
were, they were close enough to people for her to read them. The
look they exchanged was one of surprise-laced fear.
The laser boys were afraid of . . . what? Hazard?
The mist? She couldn’t tell, but something had sure spooked them
and that was good enough for her.
Brother Small muttered something under his breath
that Eve decided must roughly translate to “Let’s get the hell out
of here,” because Brother Tall quickly reached out with one gangly
arm and made slicing motions in the form of an X. At once the air
in that spot rippled and separated, creating a dark opening that
both men tumbled into and disappeared.
Eve saw it happen and she still had to look around,
twice, to make sure they were really gone and not just lurking in
the shadows, waiting for the mist shield to come down so they could
strike again. Only when she was convinced they were nowhere around
did she allow herself to sag with relief, thankful for the strong
arms and solid chest supporting her. Her relief lasted only
seconds, and then she remembered who owned those strong arms and
solid chest. She wrenched free of Hazard’s hold, which wasn’t
difficult since he seemed more than willing to let her go.
The mist disappeared as well, melting back into the
atmosphere and leaving them eyeing each other across several
suspicion-laden inches of space.
They spoke at the same time.
“How did you . . . ?”
“How did you . . . ?”
“Me . . . ?”
“Me . . . ?”
Their scintillating conversation was cut short by a
security vehicle rounding the corner at the opposite end of the
garage with its rotating yellow spotlight on.
Hazard grimaced.
Eve wasn’t sure, but he might have also
growled.
“I’ll be in touch,” he said through clenched
teeth.
She wanted to fire off a clever comeback, but there
wasn’t time in the fraction of a second it took him to vault to the
top of the garage wall in a single fluid motion and—as she looked
on in disbelief—drop out of sight on the other side . . . leaving
her to deal with the security guard.
Fortunately, years of arriving at a news scene and
being told she was going live in sixty seconds had prepared her to
think fast and run without facts. She told him a group of teens had
hit her up for spare change and taken off when they saw his lights.
Strange loud noises? No, she hadn’t heard any noises. Nor had she
seen anyone leap over the wall behind her.
“Wouldn’t that be dangerous at this level?” she
asked him.
“Dead dangerous,” he declared. “And dead is what
you’d be if you tried it. I guess my eyes were playing tricks on
me, because I could have sworn I saw a fellow . . .” He shook his
head.
Then he told Eve that he and his wife watched her
all the time and asked her to sign his cap.
After making sure she was safely inside her car,
the guard drove off, probably to see to it the phantom gang of kids
weren’t hassling anyone else within his domain. Eve wasted no time
doing the same. She was anxious to get home, to whatever safety
there was within those walls. And to Grand, the only one who could
answer the questions rioting inside her head.
But first she made one small detour. She pulled out
of the garage and turned right, circling around to check out the
spot where Hazard had pulled his disappearing act. She carefully
counted to the level where she’d been parked.
Dead dangerous was right. It was a fifty-foot drop
from where he’d taken off, straight down, ending in blacktop. Even
if a man was lucky enough to survive a jump from that height, he’d
be left broken and bleeding. But there wasn’t a body or a drop of
blood in sight.
Just a collector my ass, she thought.