Black As Night (Quentin Black Mystery #2) (34 page)

BOOK: Black As Night (Quentin Black Mystery #2)
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As the elevator car slowed to a stop, he shoved the magazine back in and chambered a bullet. Rather than re-holster the gun as the doors opened, he pulled a silencer out of his back pocket and began screwing it onto the end of the gun. He was still working on that as he began to walk past the reception desk and down the nearest hall.

No one really looked at him, or seemed to see the gun.

I felt Black watching him, every ounce of his concentration focused.

Solonik approached a door guarded by two police officers.

He didn’t hesitate but aimed and fired, two shots each, head and heart. He didn’t slow but walked straight up to the door and opened it.

Inside, a man with gray hair jerked his eyes towards the door.

It was Lawless, sitting in a chair by a bed where a red-headed boy, maybe seven years in age, lay pale and still with his eyes closed.

Black’s presence practically suffocated me now.

I knew this was the past. I knew we were already too late, but I felt that same tension crawling over me too, making it impossible to breathe.

I saw Solonik’s mouth moving then, and realized he hadn’t yet fired.

He was talking to him. Saying something to Lawless.

Lawless’s eyes were round as saucers as he nodded. Then he was casting about, looking on trays and tables in the room, moving in a jerking kind of panic as Solonik kept his gun pointed at the boy on the hospital bed.

I saw Lawless find what he was looking for.

A pen and paper. He began to write something, running over the lines a few times to make them thicker. When he finished, he showed whatever he’d done to Solonik, who smiled.

Solonik waved the gun at him again, motioning it towards the ceiling. After a confused expression flashed across his face, Lawless held the paper up, his hands shaking slightly, so that the side he’d written on faced up.

Once he had, I could only stare.

ONE HOUR,
Lawless had written, the words jagged but stark in black ink.
COME TO ME, QUENTIN BLACK. COME ALONE.

BLACK HAD ALREADY hit the accelerator by the time I’d snapped fully out of the vision.

The jump in the SUV’s engine threw me against the seat, forcing me to let go of Black’s leg and grab the base of his chair instead. I was still trying to clear my eyes as the car continued to build speed. My chest hurt. I was breathing hard, fighting a kind of helpless rage that made it hard to think. It occurred to me that the rage likely came from Black too.

I could feel his thoughts now, as well.

He couldn’t bring his team into this. Solonik would have eyes on them. More than that, without knowing how he could control so many of them with his mind at once, it wasn’t safe. Solonik might turn them against us. He might get them to shoot him...or Miriam...rather than Solonik himself. Black couldn’t risk it, even if he kept them close enough to shield them.

I already knew we were going to the hospital.

I glanced up even as Black yanked a phone out of his jacket, handing it down to me as he continued to stare at the road through the windshield.

“Maps,” he said. “Find me a nearby building, Miri. Near the hospital. Same side as Lawless’s room.”

“You think he’s still there?” I said, already hitting the icon for the map program he had installed on his phone. “How long ago was that?”

“Twenty minutes,” Black growled. “He’s still there.”

I typed in the name of the hospital I remembered from the vision I’d seen as Solonik drove past the driveway. As I did, I found myself pressing closer to Black, maybe in an attempt to feel even more enveloped by that shield he still held over us.

After a few more minutes of searching, I found what he wanted.

“L-Tone Hotel,” I said. “Twenty stories. It’s directly across from the hospital on the east side, so the same side as Lawless’s room. There’s no cover, according to the satellite images.”

“Show me.”

I sent him an image of what I was looking at, and felt a reaction from him.

“Was that okay?” I said.

He nodded, once. “You’re getting good at that, Miri.”

I didn’t ask him for specifics on what he meant.

He wrenched the steering wheel to the left before I could ask him if he needed anything else, and I heard the sound of horns erupt around us as he accelerated faster. Some part of me was glad I couldn’t see what he was doing exactly. I strongly suspected he was driving on the shoulder, not in an actual lane, if not alongside the highway altogether.

I could still feel him thinking.

“We’re going to need help,” he muttered.

“What kind of help?” I said.

He didn’t answer. I saw his mouth harden though. He held out a hand then, giving me a bare glance. “You’d better give me the phone.”

Only hesitating a heart beat, I placed it in his palm. I looked up as I did it though. “Black,” I said, warning. “You were right before. About Solonik. He would know to watch your people. He’d be expecting––”

“Don’t worry, Miri.”

He was fitting a headset over his ear even as he said it. I watched him hit a key on the phone, which must be connected the headset already. After glancing at me, his attention shifted back to the road, his eyes flickering to the view out the windshield as he spoke.

“Yeah,” he said. “It’s Black.” He barely paused. “I’ve got a new offer for your boss.”

I felt a whisper of some other presence around Black then and I flinched. I almost withdrew from him entirely, but Black’s fingers left the phone in his lap and coiled into my hair. I felt reassurance there, but mostly an insistence that I not move away from his mind––specifically away from the shield he held over both of us.

“...Yeah, I have her,” Black said then. “But this situation isn’t acceptable.”

There was a pause while Black listened.

He shook his head after another moment, clicking.

“No,” he said, adamant. “You promised me they’d be safe if I backed off of my operation here. You can’t take credit for her. She got out herself.” There was a short pause, then he raised his voice. “No, goddamn it. You go in there, guns blazing, and they’re both dead. Let me handle it. I’ll get him to come out in my own way.”
 

There was another pause, then Black let out a humorless laugh.

“Bullshit. You still haven’t even found out––”

Someone on the other end cut him off. Black listened for a few beats more. I felt a coil of anger on him, even before he scowled.

“No,” he said. “That’s not acceptable either.”

I bit my lip in frustration, but I could neither feel nor hear what they were talking about. I strongly had the impression it had something to do with me, though.

“Look,” Black said then. “What if I got him to turn himself in to you? He walks out of there, away from Lawless and his kid, you can do whatever the fuck you want.”

There was another silence while he listened to the response on the other end.

“Yes,” Black growled. “I already said I’d do that if you agreed to my terms. Nothing’s changed.” His voice grew into another warning. “But that’s the end of this. She’s no risk to you. I want her left alone after this. I let the thing with the kids go. I’ll let the rest go too, if you’ll agree to that. I want your boss’s word.”

I bit my lip, fighting to remain silent.

There was another long moment where Black didn’t talk, then he nodded, his mouth grim.

“I’ll do what I can,” he said.

Seconds later, he hung up.

“What was that all about?” I said, my voice short.

He shook his head. “It doesn’t matter right now, Miri,” he said.

“It doesn’t matter?” I said, incredulous. “Who was that?”

“Anders,” Black said, giving me a warning look.

“Did you make another deal with those assholes?”

“You don’t need to worry about that right now, Miri,” he said, his voice sharper. “We’ll talk about it later. In the meantime, we need to take care of this, okay?”

Before I could speak again, he dialed a new number on his phone. He spoke into the headset again as soon as that person picked up.

“Fah?” he said. “It’s Black. I need you to arrange something for me.”

I let out a low snort. When he glanced down, I shook my head.

“Translator, my ass,” I muttered.

He didn’t answer, but I saw him frown.

“Yeah,” he said into the headset. “It has to happen now.”

A memory reached my mind, of the woman’s silky black hair, her flawless face and lips as she stood waiting for me outside the airport’s baggage claim. I found myself remembering that Black had been sleeping with people since he’d been out here. For the first time, it occurred to me that Fah might have been one of those people.

Black gave me a darting glance, right before his eyes flickered back to the road.

“...The silver case in my closet,” he said into the headset. “Yes. L-Tune Hotel. The lobby.” There was a pause. “Yes. The long one. You can’t miss it. I need the leather bag in there too, the one with the red handles.” Another pause. “You shouldn’t have to ask anyone. Just go to my room...you have a keycard already.” He paused again. “Well, I authorized them to give you one before. If they give you any trouble, have them call me...”

He must have sensed my reaction to that, because he glanced at me again. He focused back on the phone, his voice openly warning.
 

“...No. Not a fucking word. Not to Farraday, either. Get one of the hotel staff to help you. Or ask Bia if he’ll do it.”

Another pause.

“Thanks, Fah. Yes...perfect.”

Black hit the button to hang up the phone. I watched him pull the headset off his ear and toss it on the dash.

Then he hit the gas harder.

Now was definitely not the time to grill him about his sex life.

Even so, something about the thought made me pull my hand from his leg. I leaned against the base of his chair instead, pulling my feet around with a grimace as I looked at my blood-covered shoe. I felt more than saw Black notice.

“We’ll get that taken care of, doc,” he murmured.

I didn’t answer.

I contemplated taking off the shoe, then decided it would be better to wait. Wherever he was going inside the L-Tune hotel, I knew without asking that I would be going with him.
 

“Doc...” he began, sighing. “Me and Fah––”

“Please don’t tell me,” I said, shaking my head. “Please.”

I felt him hesitate, then exhale again.

Then we were driving faster.

Fifteen

CONVERGENCE

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