The Law of Nines (Sword of Truth 15.50)
Page 13
“So?”
“She’s confined to a mental institution. When I visited her she told me that I must run and hide before they get me. When I asked her who it was that was trying to get me, she said ‘a different kind of human.’ Then the report came on about those two officers being murdered. It said they were found with their necks broken. My mother said, ‘They break people’s necks.’ Then she retreated into that faraway world of hers. She hasn’t spoken since. She won’t speak again for weeks.”
Jax squeezed his arm sympathetically. “I’m sorry about your mother, Alex.”
He glanced around to see if anyone was paying attention to them. No one was. People probably assumed that they were two lovers whispering sweet nothings to each other.
His blood was up and, despite her calming voice and her gentle touch, he was having trouble coming back down. He made himself unclench his jaw.
Something between them had just changed, changed in a deadly serious way. He was sure that she felt it as well.
“I want to know how it is that you said the very same thing my crazy mother said. I want you to tell me that.”
From mere inches away she gazed into his eyes. “That’s why I’m here, Alex.”
10.
THE DOOR TO THE REGENT GRILL, covered in tufted black leather, closed silently behind them. There were no windows in the murky inner sanctum of the restaurant. The hostess, a pixie of a woman with an airy scarf flowing out behind, led them to a quiet niche that Alex requested. With the exception of two older women out in the center of the room, under a broad but dimly lit cylindrical chandelier, the restaurant was empty of patrons.
Empty or not, Alex didn’t want his back to the room. He got the distinct feeling that Jax didn’t, either.
They both slid into the booth, sitting side by side, with their backs to the wall.
The padded, upholstered walls covered with gold fabric, the plush chairs, the mottled blue carpets, and the ivory tablecloths made the restaurant a quiet, intimate retreat. The location in back felt safe in its seclusion.
After the hostess set the menus down and left and the busboy had filled their water glasses, Jax again glanced around before speaking.
“Look, Alex, this isn’t going to be easy to explain. It’s complex and I don’t have enough time right now to make it all clear for you. You need to trust me.”
Alex wasn’t exactly in an indulgent mood. “Why should I trust you?”
She smiled a little. “Because I may very well be the only one who can keep you from getting your neck broken.”
“By who?”
She nodded toward the rolled-up canvases on the bench on the far side of him. “By the people who did that to your paintings.”
His brow twitched. “How would you know about that?”
Her gaze turned down to her folded hands. “We caught a glimpse of him doing it.”
“‘We’? What do you mean, we caught a glimpse of him doing it?”
“We were trying to look through the mirror in Mr. Martin’s gallery. We were trying to find you.”
“Where were you when you were ‘looking’ through the mirror?”
“Please, Alex, would you just listen? I don’t have the time to explain a hundred different complicated details. Please?”
Alex let out a deep breath and relented. “All right.”
“I know that the things I’m telling you might sound impossible, but I swear that I’m telling you the truth. Don’t close your mind to what is beyond your present understanding. People sometimes invent or discover things that expand their knowledge so that they accept as possible what only the day before they had thought was impossible. This is something like that.”
“You mean like how people used to think that no one would ever be able to carry around a tiny little phone without it having to be connected to wires.”
She looked a little confused by the analogy. “I suppose so.” She turned back to the subject at hand. “One day I hope I can help you better grasp the reality of the situation. For now, please try to keep an open mind.”
Alex slowly twirled the stem of the water glass between his thumb and first finger, watching the ice remain still in place as the glass spun. “So, you were saying how you were looking for me.”
Jax nodded. “I knew that you had a connection to the gallery. It’s how I knew where you were today. I had to hurry if I was to catch you. Because we had to hurry we couldn’t prepare properly and as a consequence I don’t have much time here.”
Alex wiped a hand across his face. He was starting to feel like maybe he was being played for a fool. “You need a room with my mother.”
“You think this is some kind of joke?” She looked up at him with fiery intensity. “You have no idea how hard this is for me. You have no idea the things I’ve been through—the chances I’ve had to take to come here.”
She clenched her jaw and swallowed, trying to keep her voice under control. “This isn’t a joke, Alex. You have no idea how afraid I am, how lost I feel here, how alone, how terrified.”
“I’m sorry, Jax.” Alex looked away from the pain in her brown eyes and took a sip of water. “But you’re not alone. Tell me what’s going on?”
She let out a calming breath. “I’ll do my best, but you have to understand that for now I simply can’t tell you everything. It isn’t just that I don’t have the time to explain it all right now, it’s also that you aren’t yet ready to hear it all. Worse, we’re in the dark about a lot of it ourselves.”
“Who is this ‘we’ you keep mentioning?”
She turned cautious. “Friends of mine.”
“Friends.”
She nodded. “We’ve been working for years, trying for years to figure some of it out. They helped get me here.”
“Get here from where?”
She looked away and said simply, “From where I live.”
Alex didn’t like her evasive answer, but he decided that ther
e was no harm in just letting it play out for the moment.
“Go on.”
“We finally came to a point where we thought it would work, so despite the risk we attempted it, but we don’t yet know how to make it work reliably. Not like the others do.”
“You mean work to get here, to where I live, from where you live?”
“That’s right.”
“What would have happened if you hadn’t gotten it right, if it didn’t ‘work’?”
She stared into his eyes for a long moment. “Then I would have been lost for all eternity in a very bad place.”
Alex could tell by the tension in her expression how real the peril was—to her, at least—and how much the thought of failure frightened her. Considering that this woman was not easily intimidated, that in and of itself gave him pause.
He was about to again ask who the others on her team were when a waitress came up to the table and smiled warmly. “Can I get you two something to drink? Maybe a glass of wine?”
“I could really use some hot tea,” Jax said.
The tone of that simple request revealed how weary she was, and how close she was to her wits’ end.
“I’m fine with water. The lady doesn’t have a lot of time, though.
Maybe we could order?” He turned to Jax as he picked up a menu. “What would you like? Chicken? Beef? A salad?”
“I doesn’t matter. Whatever you’re having is fine.”
It was clear that she didn’t care about food, so Alex ordered two chicken salads.
As the waitress left, Alex’s phone rang. He reflexively asked Jax to excuse him a moment as he pulled the phone out of his pocket.
“Hello, this is Alex.”
He’d thought that maybe it was Mr. Martin calling to say that he’d changed his mind. Instead, Alex was greeted with garbled noises. He heard a strained, disembodied voice torn by howling that sounded like it said, “She’s there. She’s there.” Otherworldly whispers and strange, soft moans underlay the crackling static.