"But if I'm so valuable, they'd pay me accordingly, right?"
"Have you got a price in mind? Proper compensation for your freedom? Your free will? Because that's what they'll demand. Yes, they'll pay--they'll pay for you as a commodity, not as a human being, because to them, that's all you--"
"Oh, God, please, no." Tony dropped his head to the table, then looked over at me. "You had to get him started, didn't you?"
Guy pegged him in the head with a bottle cap. "Okay, okay. It's Rodriguez's celebration. No more talk of Cabals. That's an order. You've got exactly ten minutes to goof off, then we need to get down to business and talk about tonight." To me, he added, "If you want to continue this conversation, today's a write-off, but grab me tomorrow. Don't even consider Cabal employment until you've talked to me, okay?"
"I will."
AFTER EXACTLY TEN more minutes of eating and drinking and joking around, Guy moved on to our plans for that night. I expected a larger scale version of what we'd done yesterday--maybe knock over a liquor store or hijack a transport, both common gang activities according to Benicio's notes. What Guy laid out though, made me
realize why this gang, despite its size, was such a concern to Benicio.
His scheme was audacious. There was no other word for it. Clever, elaborate and mind-blowing in its boldness.
Bianca assigned us preparation tasks. I was put with Jaz and Sonny again, getting the equipment ready. As everyone filed out, Guy ordered me to wait.
"These marks tonight," he said when the others had left. "They're your kind of people, aren't they?"
Society people, he meant. I considered distancing myself right now--sure I come from that, but they aren't my people, not anymore. Too easy to see through that lie, so I nodded and said simply, "That's right."
He leaned back in his chair. "Any advice you can give? Potential problems I'm not seeing?"
After studying the plans, and rehashing his scheme, I ventured an idea to help him get away with it.
"Smart girl. I wouldn't have thought of that."
"The others might not be too happy. It'll cut into the profits."
He smiled. "Well, then, you won't mind if I take credit, will you?"
"Not at all."
LUCAS
2
I SWIPED MY KEY CARD at the office delivery doors and parked my motorcycle in the back hall. In this neighborhood, I wasn't leaving a 1929 Indian Scout in the alley. While it wasn't yet motorcycle weather, Paige had the car, so I'd brought the bike out of storage. I won't say I wasn't happy for the excuse.
I left my helmet on the seat and adjusted my glasses. For comfort, contacts are the preferred eye wear with helmets, but I couldn't be bothered inserting and removing them for a short ride. Savannah tells me that I could resolve the problem by exchanging my glasses for contacts permanently. I tell her contacts irritate my eyes. A lie. Glasses project an image and I've grown comfortable with that image. Investigating supernatural cases sometimes requires more than lobbing a few defensive spells, and I've won more than my fair share of fights simply because my opponent takes one look at me and presumes I won't throw the first punch.
Another key card swipe to get into the stairwell, then up to our second-floor offices where yet a third pass of the card is required. I'd grown up with such security measures at the Cabal offices, but I often overheard Savannah and Adam cursing as they fumbled to find their cards. No one complained, though. When it came to the building, we were still in the honeymoon phase.
Cortez-Winterbourne Investigations used to be housed in a cramped spare bedroom, and we hadn't dignified it with anything as formal as a name. It had been something to talk about in bed, late at night, how one day Paige would be able to quit her Web design business, I'd stop taking on commercial legal piecework and we'd run our legal-cum-investigative firm helping supernaturals full time, from an actual office. Now, some days, I walked around to the front door just to see the business name and reassure myself it was real.
Five years ago, I'd been a new lawyer, unemployed, no fixed address, chasing cases of injustice--and usually getting the door slammed in my face. No one slammed it harder than one infuriating, stubborn and absolutely bewitching young woman determined to protect her ward from the Cabals without any sorcerer's help. I'd gotten the case, though. And gotten the girl.
As I opened the door to the second floor, the smell of coffee hit me. I paused, still holding the door handle. No one should be here. Paige was at an appointment. Savannah and Adam were in Seattle, doing legwork for a case.
A pot left on the burner would mean burnt coffee, but this smelled fresh. Had Paige returned early? I smiled as I pulled off my jacket. Then I remembered the empty parking lot. If Paige's car wasn't here, neither was she.
I moved cautiously to the kitchenette door. A man stood at the coffeemaker, his back to me. His Rolex caught the light as his fingertips tapped the reservoir, waiting for the machine to finish brewing. He'd look at home in any financial district--the tailored designer dress shirt, pressed pants, polished leather loafers. Perfectly groomed, not a lock of dark hair out of place, not a shaving nick or rough patch to be seen. A man easily discounted as a soft urban professional. Just as one might presume that I'd caught him unawares.
I waited. He took two upside-down mugs from the shelf and flipped them over.
"Cream?" he asked without turning. "Sugar?"
"Black."