Eight
“If you’re upset about your map, I’d be
glad to replace it.” Hazard didn’t reply. His attention remained
fixed on the road ahead and a frown fixed on his face, the way it
had been since they’d gotten into his car a few minutes
earlier.
Eve suddenly remembered his claim to be a collector
of unique treasures and her heart sank a little. “Unless it was a
rare, one-of-a-kind, irreplaceable edition. Please tell me it’s not
irreplaceable.”
“It’s not irreplaceable and I’m not upset about
it.”
“You sound upset. I already promised to have your
kitchen table refinished or whatever it will take to get rid of the
scorch marks.”
“I told you that’s not necessary. I really don’t
care about the map or the table.”
“Then what are you upset about?”
“I’m not upset. I’m . . .”
“Peeved?” she suggested while he searched for the
right word. “Aggravated? Annoyed? Sorry you offered to help
me?”
He glanced sideways at her and there might have
been a flicker of amusement beneath the somber brooding. “Thinking.
I’m thinking about what just happened. I’ve seen scrying before but
never anything close to the show you put on.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean it’s the first time I’ve ever been blown
across the bloody room or seen a hole burned straight through the
map to what’s under it.”
“Oh.” She hesitated, torn between wanting to know
more and wanting to forget it happened. This time the magic hadn’t
been accidental, or a surprise. It had been a matter of choice, her
choice, and the fact she’d done it only because she was desperate
didn’t ease her misgivings. She would deal with that later, she
decided; for now curiosity won out. “What usually happens when
someone scrys?”
“It takes longer for one thing. Whoever’s doing it
has to keep moving the object over the map until it eventually
connects with the right spot and touches down . . . gently and
without any sparks or smoke.”
“Oh,” she said again. “Why do you suppose it was
different this time?”
“Obviously there was a lot more power there than
the circle—or the room—could hold. But then, you already know that
since you were the one generating it.”
“Not really,” she protested. “Not intentionally.
All I did was follow your instructions.”
She didn’t have to turn her head or see the look on
his face to know he didn’t believe her; she could feel his
suspicion flowing like hot lava.
“Then how would you explain it?” he
challenged.
“I can’t,” she admitted. “You said yourself things
have been happening that don’t make sense.”
“Maybe I was wrong. Maybe it all makes perfect
sense . . . just not any kind I understand.” He took a right onto
Angel Street and slanted a speculative glance her way. “Yet.”
“Well, speaking for myself, I don’t need to
understand it as long as it helps with the only thing that matters
right now . . . finding Rory.”
“And the pendant,” he reminded her.
“Of course.” She managed a casual
that-goes-without-saying shrug to hide the fact that she was so
focused on Rory the pendant had slipped her mind.
If her power scrying had gotten it right, they were
about to find Rory at Prospect Terrace, a small park not too far
away, though with traffic crawling from red light to red light, it
felt to Eve like they were driving cross country. Hazard had
followed her out of the house as if it was understood he’d be going
with her, and had taken her firmly by the elbow and steered her to
his car as if it was also understood he would be doing the driving.
After her initial surprise Eve just accepted the fact that she was
glad to have his company—even if he was only there to protect his
would-be investment in the pendant—and grateful to be cocooned in
the quiet luxury of his car, with its new-car smell and cushy
leather seats and subtly glowing, gadget-laden dash. If she wasn’t
anxious enough to crawl out of her skin any second, she might have
settled in and enjoyed the drive. Instead, she sat leaning forward,
hands fisted, giving directions he didn’t seem to need.
Prospect Terrace was in the area of the city known
as College Hill because there were several colleges nearby. It was
also within walking distance of Braxton Academy, the private school
Rory attended, and as Hazard pulled to the curb and parked, Eve had
to wonder if maybe Rory was just hanging out with friends and the
pendant’s disappearance had nothing to do with her. Maybe she’d
been too quick to link the two. Maybe whoever said there are no
coincidences was wrong and all of it—Rory, the pendant, the
house—was just one big convoluted coincidence. That still didn’t
explain what had happened to the pendant, of course, but first
things first.
She was out of the car before the engine shut off
and scanning the stretch of grass about a city block wide and half
as deep. There wasn’t a lot to see, only a scattering of benches
and tall, old shade trees and a view of downtown. Because the park
was built on a steep incline, a waist-high black iron fence ran
along the back of it to prevent someone from tumbling thirty or so
feet of rocky, brush-covered terrain to the street below. On a
platform extending beyond the fence were a granite arch and a
towering statue of Roger Williams, gazing out over the land he’d
founded.
At first the park appeared to be deserted, and
disappointment formed a lump at the back of Eve’s throat that made
it hurt to swallow. Then she ventured down one of the paths to
where there were no trees blocking her view and she saw someone
silhouetted against the twilight sky. Rory . . . Eve recognized the
way she stood and held her head, and she started running.
Rory wasn’t alone. There was a boy with her, a
tall, lanky kid straddling a ten-speed bike. At the sound of
footsteps running toward them in the darkness they stiffened and
turned their heads to look in her direction. It was dark away from
the streetlights, so Eve was almost beside them before Rory
realized it was her. Immediately her eyes went wide with surprise
bordering on horror and her jaw clenched; it was the classic
how-could-you-do-this-to-me expression of a teenager unexpectedly
confronted by a parent—or reasonable facsimile—in public.
“Eve! What are you doing here?”
Rory didn’t sound happy. Eve didn’t care. In fact,
she hardly noticed. She was too busy being relieved and overjoyed
to see that she wasn’t bound and gagged or under attack by spinning
blue lasers or worse. Like a new mother counting her baby’s fingers
and toes, Eve did a quick inventory: two arms, two legs, head still
attached and operational. Nothing missing or bleeding. Only when
she was certain Rory was all right did she remember how upset she
was with her.
“Me? You want to know what I’m doing here. Do you
have any idea how worr—”
“I gotta bolt,” said the kid on the bike just as
Eve was warming up. He deftly wheeled around her to get back on the
paved walk. “See ya, Rory.”
“Toby, wait.”
But Toby didn’t wait, and for just a second Rory
looked exactly as she had when she was five and the string attached
to her balloon slipped through her fingers and the balloon floated
away . . . a little surprised, a little wistful, her full bottom
lip trembling almost imperceptibly. She’d watched until the balloon
was out of sight; then she’d blinked and put her chin up and got on
with her life. Now that she was older and more self-conscious, she
threw in a casual head toss that sent her long dark brown hair
sailing over her shoulder and revealed the trio of small shining
silver studs in her left ear, a sun, a moon and a star.
As soon as the kid took off, Hazard stepped from
the shadows close beside her. “Shall I bring the boy back?” he
asked.
Eve shook her head. She had no doubt he could catch
the kid, but she was less certain about what he’d do with him once
he had. As far as she knew, whoever Toby was, he hadn’t done
anything to merit finding out.
“Bye,” Rory called after him. “Don’t forget about
Thursday night.”
“I’ll be there,” he called over his shoulder.
“Be where?” Eve asked. “What’s Thursday night?
Rory, who was that?”
“Toby.”
“Toby who? And what were you thinking coming here
alone with him at this time of night?”
“Seven thirty?” Rory countered, rolling her eyes as
only a fifteen-year-old can.
Seven thirty? It had to be later than that. Eve
checked her watch and frowned. It sure felt later. And time wasn’t
the issue anyway.
“I don’t care what time it is,” she told her niece.
“I still want to know what you were doing here alone with him and
how you know him . . . and why he was in such a hurry to take off
the minute he saw me.”
“Probably to avoid the inquisition,” Rory retorted.
“God, Eve, Gestapo much?”
“Don’t be a wiseass. You don’t want me to ask
questions? Don’t take off without telling me or calling or leaving
a note so I know where to find you. You turned your cell phone off,
for heaven’s sake. What if I’d needed you for some reason?”
“Is that why you’re here? Because you need me for
some reason?”
“That’s not the point.”
“It never is,” Rory retorted, sounding exasperated.
“You know as well as I do that if I were home now I’d just be
sitting around by myself because Mom’s away and Grand had to go to
her . . .” She stopped and waved her hand in the air. “Her
whatever. And you always work late on Monday nights.”
“Not always,” Eve muttered.
“I’ve forgotten to leave notes before and you never
freaked out and went all Dog the Bounty Hunter on me.”
“Also not the point,” said Eve.
Rory heaved a tortured sigh. “So what is the
point?”
“The point is that I’ve been worried sick about
you.”
“About me?” she challenged, shoving her hand into
her jacket pocket. “Or this?”
She dangled the pendant in the air between
them.
“So, you did take it,” Eve said softly.
“Borrowed it,” Rory corrected. “And I thought I’d
have it back before you or Grand found out. I meant to. Really I
did.”
“But why would you take it in the first place? You
had to know that if we hid it, it was because we had a good
reason.”
She sighed, looking even younger than she
was.
“I know, but . . .” She gathered the chain back
into her palm and closed her fingers around it. “I just wanted to
see if it worked.”
“Worked?”
“You know, if it could really tell whether a guy
was your one true love, like Grand said.”
“You heard us talking?” Eve asked, cursing inwardly
as colorful bits and pieces of her conversation with Grand came
fluttering their incriminating little wings back to her.
Rory did a little uneasy squirming and nodded. “I
wasn’t eavesdropping, honest. I just happened to wake up and hear
your voice and I knew you were home from the auction. I got up to
hear all about it and got as far as the kitchen when I heard Grand
say something about a long-lost family talisman . . . so I sort of
decided to hang out there and listen a little while longer,” she
finished in a guilty rush.
“Which is the definition of eavesdropping,” Eve
pointed out.
“Well, yeah, I guess if you want to get all
technical about it. Anyway, that’s how I happened to hear her
telling you about how the talisman was a gift from a goddess and
about it being a link to divine magic. Divine magic of the
Everrealm, is what she said. Is all that true, Eve?” Her voice
quickened with excitement. “Is it really a magic talisman? Do you
think it’s true that all we have to do is press it to a man’s heart
to find out if he—”
“What I think,” Eve interrupted, suddenly
remembering that Hazard was standing only a few feet away,
listening to every word, “is that it’s something we should talk
about later. At home,” she added pointedly.
As grateful as she was for his help finding Rory,
Eve still didn’t trust him one hundred percent, maybe not even
fifty percent, and the less he knew about the pendant the safer she
would feel.
“All right,” agreed Rory, savvy enough to recognize
a hint when her aunt dropped one on her. “I just have to grab my
bag and . . .” She trailed off and glanced at the bench behind her
and under it. “Oh bollocks,” she muttered, an expression she’d
heard on a favorite television show and made her own.
Also one familiar to Hazard judging by the quick
“heh” from his direction.
“What’s the matter?” Eve asked her.
“My bag. I must have left it with Roger.”
“Roger?”
“Williams,” she said, hitching her head toward the
statue on the other side of the fence.
Eve knew that climbing over the fence and creeping
along the narrow ledge to sit in rebellious privacy at the base of
the stone arch was a rite of passage for local kids. She’d done it
herself more than once. She just didn’t remember the ledge being as
narrow or the drop as long as it looked to her now. Before she had
a chance to say “Be careful,” Rory was over the fence.
She pressed herself against the flat outer wall of
the arch with one hand on the stone and took a step sideways. Then
she stopped and looked back at Eve.
“Here,” she said, “take this so I can use both
hands.”
She stretched her right arm out to hand the pendant
to Eve, and as she did, her left foot lifted off the ledge.
“Whoa, careful,” Eve cried, hurrying to reach out
and take it from her. “I’m not sure this is such a good idea. It’s
dark and—”
“Please,” Rory said. “I’ve done this a hundred
times in the dark.”
“Oh really?” That was something else they would
need to discuss later.
“Well, maybe not a hundred,” she conceded, sounding
not at all concerned as she inched her way along. “But definitely
enough times to know what I’m doing.”
She disappeared around the front of the arch.
“Got it,” she called and a few seconds later
reappeared on the ledge with the bag.
Halfway back the strap slipped off her shoulder and
the bag bounced against her hip. Rory took her hand off the wall to
hitch it back up, but a step later it slipped again. This time the
weight seemed to tug Rory slightly backwards and off balance.
“Be careful,” urged Eve, cringing a little. “Better
yet, hand it to me.”
When she went to hold on to the fence in order to
lean forward and take the bag from Rory, she realized she was still
holding the pendant and looked around.
“Here.” She shoved it at Hazard and returned to
helping Rory.
With both hands free she was able to hold on to the
fence and reach for the bag. She was still a few inches short, so
she stepped up onto the bottom rail of the fence and leaned
forward, stretching her arm out as far as she could.
She almost had it when Rory’s foot slipped and she
lurched sideways. Adrenalin pumping hard, Eve shot forward to try
to grab her. Immediately Hazard was at her back with his arm
clamped tightly around her waist, anchoring her to safety.
“I’ve got you,” he said.
Eve hung farther over the fence than she would have
dared on her own and managed to curl her fingertips under the strap
and haul it in.
Rory took a second to regain her balance.
Hazard bent his head.
“Nicely done,” he said, his voice deep and very
close.
Eve shivered. From relief, she told herself. Either
that or the cool night air. It had nothing to do with Hazard
whispering in her ear or with how strong and warm his body felt
against hers.
He slowly slid his arm from around her waist and
extended it to Rory.
“Would you like a hand?” he asked.
Rory tilted her head to the side and stared as if
seeing him for the first time. And Eve had a pretty good idea what
she was thinking.
“Who are you?” she asked him.
“My name’s Hazard.”
“Hazard something or something Hazard?”
“Just Hazard will do. A hand?”
She grinned. “Sure.”
Shifting one foot to the bottom rail, she grasped
the hand he offered and with him supplying momentum, vaulted
gracefully over the fence.
“Are you okay?” Eve asked, succumbing to the urge
to give her a quick hug.
“Of course,” Rory countered, hugging her back. When
Eve let her go, she reached for her bag and fished out her
comb.
Hazard met Eve’s gaze. “And you?”
“Better now,” she admitted. “Wouldn’t mind sitting
down, though.”
He nodded and they started back toward the
car.
Rory snagged Eve’s arm to hold her back a step and
shot her a look from beneath raised brows.
Who is he?
Nobody, Eve told her with a small but firm
shake of her head.
The silent exchange of looks continued behind his
back.
I’m impressed.
You have the wrong idea.
Oh yeah? Well, something tells me he’s got the
same wrong idea.
He doesn’t. At least I don’t think he does. No,
he definitely doesn’t.
Want me to try to find out?
Want to be grounded forever?
Rory just grinned.
“Nice car,” she said from the backseat as Hazard
slid behind the wheel.
“Thank you,” he replied.
“Satellite radio?”
“It seems so,” he said. “I know there are four
weather stations.”
“That’s nice,” Rory said politely and waited half a
beat. “So. Do you guys know each other from work or—”
“Or,” Eve said without waiting to hear the second
choice.
She glanced sideways and found Hazard doing the
same.
“Are you a reporter too, Hazard?” Rory asked.
Damn, thought Eve. She should have known Rory would
want to know more. She wasn’t sure exactly how she was going to
explain Hazard to her and wanted some time to mull it over. She was
very sure she didn’t want him explaining himself.
“No,” he told her.
“A photographer? Producer? Director? Butcher . . .
baker . . . somebody want to help me out? I’m running out of job
titles.”
“Hazard is a consultant,” Eve told her.
“That sounds interesting.”
“Oh, it is. Fascinating, in fact,” said Hazard. He
slanted a wry look at Eve and added, “At times. Unfortunately, it
can also be tedious and repetitive.”
“That’s probably because you stick with one project
too long,” Eve countered. “You have to know when it’s time to throw
in the towel and move on.”
“I never move on until the job is done.”
When they pulled into his driveway, Eve breathed a
sigh of relief and quickly got out of the car. She started to thank
him, expecting him to say good night and go inside; instead, Hazard
accompanied them across the street to her car and walked around to
open the passenger door for a surprised and delighted Rory. He even
offered her his hand as she climbed in and told her it had been a
pleasure to meet her. Eve wasn’t sure, but she thought she heard
him use the word “charmed.”
As if, she thought, he hadn’t made enough of an
impression on her just by standing upright and breathing.
“You do realize that in a matter of minutes you
have completely dazzled her,” she told him as he walked back to
where she was standing.
“I have? How?” He seemed genuinely puzzled.
“By being dazzling. Holding her door, holding her
hand, paying attention . . . did I hear you tell her she was
charming?”
“I was merely being polite and doing what’s
required of a gentleman.”
“Last century maybe. These days . . . not so
much.”
He shrugged. “I was being a gentleman, nothing
more. I never intended for it to be seen as anything else.”
“Well, what you intend and what a fifteen-year-old
sees are not necessarily the same thing. Besides, it’s not only
what you do or say, it’s you . . . the hair, the face, the accent.
The hint of mystery and I-don’t-give-a-damn attitude don’t hurt any
either.”
“I don’t give a damn.”
“And it’s working for you, so keep it up.”
He appeared mystified and a little bothered by her
observations.
“Oh come on,” Eve said to him. “You must be aware
of the effect you have on women. Some women anyway,” she added so
he wouldn’t get the wrong idea. “Girls Rory’s age are especially
susceptible to your brand of dazzle.”
“Dazzling.” His lip curled as he said it. “That’s
not something I would ever want to be.”
“Really?” she countered, not believing a word of
it. “Most men I know would really get off on it.”
His gaze swung back to meet hers. “It would be a
mistake to confuse me with other men you know.”
“I’ll make a note,” she said, trying to keep it
light in spite of the fact that there was no hint of teasing in his
voice or his eyes. “Before I go I have to thank you for helping me
tonight, but first I want to apologize for the way I came barging
in and throwing accusations at you. I’m sure you noticed I was
pretty frazzled.”
“Frazzled?”
“You know, freaked out. Worried.”
He nodded. “That’s understandable.”
“It’s still no excuse to go jumping to conclusions
. . . especially the wrong conclusions. I kept thinking of all the
bad things that could have happened to her and I panicked. Then
when I looked at your card and saw where you live . . . well, it
pushed me over the edge.”
“Why would that matter?”
She turned to look at the house. “Because this is
where I used to live. A long time ago. I grew up here. And I
couldn’t believe it was a coincidence that of all the places in
Providence you could have lived, you chose this one.” There were
lights on inside the house, and something about standing there on
the outside, looking in, made her suddenly homesick. Which was
absurd since it hadn’t been her home for a very long time.
“There used to be a weather vane,” she said, mostly
to have something to say. “A black raven with ruby red eyes. When I
was a kid, no matter where I was in the neighborhood I could look
up and see him watching me. I knew that there was home, and it made
me feel . . . safe.”
She turned to find him leaning against the car with
his arms folded, watching her with an expression she couldn’t
decipher.
“Why don’t you go ahead and ask me?” he said.
“All right. Is it just a coincidence that
you’re living here?”
“It must be, since when I bought the house I didn’t
even know you existed, much less that you’d once lived here.”
Eve caught the edge of her bottom lip between her
teeth, stared into his eyes and tried to decide if she believed
him. “Would you lie about it?”
“Yes. If I had to. But I’m not lying now.”
Unless he was lying about lying, she thought, but
there was no sense jumping into that vicious circle.
“Are you happy living here?” she asked
impulsively.
He did hesitate at that. “I never thought about it.
I don’t think in terms of being happy or unhappy. I certainly
didn’t buy it for that reason.”
“Why did you buy it?”
Again he hesitated. Eve had the impression of a man
searching for safe ground between the truth and a lie.
Finally he shrugged. “For the three things that
experts say matter most when buying a house . . . location,
location, location. And I suppose because the room at the top of
the turret is ideally situated for magic and the flow of energy.
That suits me, as I’m sure it once suited you.”
He said it offhandedly, but the interest in his
gaze was anything but casual.
“That was a long time ago,” she said, trying to
block memories that threatened to bully their way in and tear her
concentration to shreds. “But I know my grandmother will be pleased
to hear that the house belongs to someone who appreciates it. And
speaking of Grand, it just occurred to me that I didn’t leave a
note either. Maybe I can get home before she does.” She rested her
hand on the door handle. “I just want you to know how grateful I am
for your help finding Rory. Without you, I’d still be looking . . .
and going crazy.”
“You did all the work.”
“I don’t know about that. I do know that if not for
you I wouldn’t have had a clue what to do or how to do it. I guess
I owe you one.”
“And I’m guessing you don’t like owing me.” He
straightened suddenly. “So I’ll give you a chance to settle up—have
dinner with me and we’ll call it even.”
“Hazard, are you asking me for a date?”
“I’m asking you to allow me to call for you, escort
you to dinner and return you safely home.”
“Sounds like a date to me.”
He tilted his head to the side. “Was that a
yes?”
“No.”
His eyes narrowed. “A no?”
“Oh, no. I didn’t mean it was a no, just no it
wasn’t a yes.”
“So . . . it’s a no and a yes?”
“Actually, it was more of an ‘I really don’t think
that’s such a good idea, but thanks for asking.’ ”
He stepped closer to her, a lot closer, and with
the car at her back Eve had nowhere to go.
“Are you afraid of me?” he asked, his voice dark
and silky.
“Should I be?”
“Probably.”
“Then why on earth would I have dinner with
you?”
“Because you have questions, and I have answers.
And because even if you are afraid, you’re not a coward.” He peered
down at her, closer to looking amused than she’d seen him. “Or are
you?”
“Dinner would be lovely.”
“Tomorrow night.”
“I’ll check my schedule.”
He smirked.
She caved.
“Fine. Tomorrow night. But there’s no need to call
for me. Just name the restaurant and I’ll meet you there.”
He shook his head. “My date, my rules. When you
invite me to dinner, I’ll let you make the rules.”
“Gee, how sporting of you.” She sighed. “Do you
need directions?”
“No.”
“Of course not. What was I thinking?”
“Eight o’clock?” he suggested.
Eve nodded. “I’ll be the one with bells on.”
“I’ll look forward to seeing that.” His tone was
dry, and a small smile lifted one corner of his mouth as he lightly
swept her hand aside and opened the car door for her.
“Thank you,” she said. It was impossible not to be
struck by how attentive he was, making sure she was in and settled
before saying good night and closing the door.
He remained in the street, standing with his hands
in his pockets, looking on as she started the engine, and then just
before she pulled away, almost as an afterthought, he stepped
forward and tapped on the window. When Eve lowered it, he lifted
his hand as if to give her something and she instinctively held
hers out to take it.
Without saying a word he dropped the pendant in her
palm and walked away.