Hunter's Trail (A Scarlett Bernard Novel) (25 page)

BOOK: Hunter's Trail (A Scarlett Bernard Novel)
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Molly, unaccustomed to genuine emotion, looked distressed by my tears. She stood up and patted me awkwardly on the shoulder. “U
h . . .
I’m gonna go out for a while. We can talk more later.”

She speed-walked out the back door. A moment later, Jesse finished his call and came into the room.

“What was that about—” he began, then saw my face. I was trying to get my tears under control but not having a whole bunch of success. “Oh, he
y . . .
what happened?”

“Can you—” I pointed at the roll of paper towels on the counter, and he went to retrieve it for me.

“She wants me to move out,” I said shakily, blowing my nose on a paper towel. I have never pretended to be a pretty crier.


What
? Why?”

Oops. I still didn’t want to tell him about Anastasia. Things were delicate enough between us. So I just said, “Too dangerous.”

Jesse ripped another paper towel off the roll and handed it to me. I nodded in thanks. “Well, I can’t really blame her,” he said frankly. I looked up from the paper towel to gape at him. “Come on, Scarlett. You know as well as I do that all this wasn’t what she signed on for.”

I flinched. With an effort, I met his eyes, my voice hardening. “Are we still talking about Molly?”

He looked away. A minute of awkward silence ticked by, and then Jesse stood up. “I can finish these calls by myself,” he announced.

Something had shifted between us. I could actually
see
his body language changing to professional detachment. “Why don’t you take the rest of the night off, get some rest,” he added. “We’ll start early tomorrow.”

“Good idea,” I said flatly.

Chapter 38

After Jesse left, I got my cane, swung my leg down carefully, and made my way toward the living room, collecting my cell phone as I passed the counter.

I got myself settled on the couch. Screw going back up those stairs, I was too tired. I held up my phone and realized that I’d missed a text from Dashiell. He had found the Luparii in France, but they weren’t responding to his requests for negotiation, and there wasn’t time for him to push it any farther. It was a dead end. And Will and Kirsten hadn’t contacted me, so I was assuming they were coming up dry too. There was no way to call off the scout.

Not knowing what else to do, I tried calling Eli again. This time the phone went straight to voicemail, so either his battery had died or he’d switched his phone off. Frustrated, I ended the call and dialed Hair of the Dog. The bartender transferred me to Will.

“Have you heard from Eli?” I said loudly. The back room was a lot quieter than the main bar area, but it still wasn’t actually
quiet
.

“Huh?” Will said distractedly. “Sorry, what?”

I repeated the question. “Oh.” Now Will sounde
d . . .
reluctant. “Um, I’m sorry, Scarlett, but he checked out of the motel, and I don’t think he’s been back to his place. I think he left town.”

Oh.

I fought back tears. I did not want to cry again, goddammit. I had already cried too much this week. This year. And it wasn’t like Eli and I had been going steady. I’d saved him after he killed someone; he’d saved me after
I
killed someone. Maybe he just figured we were even now. And the night we’d spent togethe
r . . .
that must have been good-bye.

Could I really blame him?

I leaned back on the couch, staring at the ceiling. Sometimes you are just so completely screwed that you almost have to admire it. Eli had left town right after sleeping with me which, aside from being humiliating and sad, also meant that Lydia was demanding something I couldn’t produce. The nova was going to attack a bunch of people tomorrow night, and the Luparii scout was going to go after the werewolf pack if he couldn’t find the nova, which
we
hadn’t been able to do even with knowledge of the city and a week’s lead time. Jesse and I wer
e . . .
complicated. Molly was evicting me on justifiable grounds.

The steady thrum of pain from my leg suddenly intensified, as if to remind me it existed. “Yes, thank you,” I told my leg. I had almost forgotten to catalogue my messed-up knee. Fantastic. I honestly didn’t know what to be most upset about. I leaned back on the couch pillow, feeling trapped and frustrated.

I wish I could say I tapped into reserves of inner strength and struck upon a plan to fix everything, but that’s not really my style. Instead, I laid there for a good long while, alternately pouting and feeling sorry for myself
.
I wasn’t even twenty-four, dammit! Most of the people I knew from high school were currently being supported by their parents while they figured out what to do with their useless but enjoyably obtained liberal arts degrees. I shouldn’t have to deal with all of this! It wasn’t
fair
.

I might have lain there sulking until Jesse arrived the next morning, except that it was still pretty early when he left, and by nine o’clock I was starving. I tried to ignore the hunger cramps in my stomach, but after a while my head began to ache too, and I realized that, unless I got some food, it was only going to get worse. So I took a deep, slow breath, and did what anyone would do in my dire situation: I called for pizza.

While I waited for the food, I ran through my options. I needed to do something. Will and Kirsten were both trying to find out more about the Luparii scout. Jesse was making phone calls. Everyone was busy, hard at work fixing my mess while I laid around waiting for pizza delivery. I felt a rush of shame. This had all started with my mistake, after all.

What I really wanted was someone I could talk to about all this, who could help me work out a plan—but my options were limited. I couldn’t exactly hash it out with humans. I considered calling Corry, but even if I had been certain that bringing her all the way into the Old World was the right play, she was fifteen and probably couldn’t help much. I knew that if I called Molly right then, she wouldn’t answer. She would have already begun to distance herself from me. And everyone else I knew in the Old World were people who were dumb enough to need help cleaning up a crime scene.

I tried Molly anyway, just in case, but her phone went straight to voicemail. I sighed, tapping the phone against my forehead. There was one other person I could try, but I really, really didn’t want to. “Suck it up, Scarlett,” I said, my voice suddenly seeming loud in the empty house. “Nobody cares about your stupid weird feelings.”

I dialed the phone.

A few minutes later, the pizza guy rang the doorbell. I limped to the door to sign the receipt and collect my delicious cheesy goodies. I had barely gotten the door closed when the doorbell rang again, and I opened it, expecting the pizza guy had forgotten to give me a receipt or something—but even before I saw her, I recognized the familiar sensation of a witch in my radius.

“U
m . . .
hi,” Runa Vore said hesitantly.

“You have a really nice place,” Runa said politely, looking around Molly’s kitchen. I set the pizza box in the middle of the table, pulling out a chair for myself.

“It’s not mine,” I said, a little shortly. I pointed to another chair, and as Runa was sitting down I said, “Do you want some pizza?”

“No, I ate. And I’m a vegan,” she added.

Of course she was. I looked down at my greasy, cheesy, sausage pizza. What with the dead animal on it and everything. “Will it bother you to have it here?” I asked reluctantly. I really, really didn’t want her to say yes.

But she waved a hand. “Oh, no. I don’t expect people around me to live the same way I do, that’s just silly.” I relaxed an inch and swooped up a slice, taking a huge first bite. I was
so
hungry. “Bu
t . . .
I guess I don’t really know why I’m here,” she continued, looking almost apologetic.

“Then why’d you come?” I asked, my mouth still full.

Runa gestured helplessly, not sure what to say. I swallowed and said with effort, “I’m sorry, that was rude. What I meant to say was, ‘Thanks for coming.’”

She nodded, her short blonde pigtails bobbing along with her head. I was really having to work hard not to hate her on sight. It wasn’t just that she’d dated Jesse—she was also annoyingly put-together, artistic, and graceful. She gave off a sense of inner peace that I envied much more than her beauty. Lots of people are beautiful, and you don’t live in Los Angeles very long before you notice that, hey, a whole bunch of them congregate here. But Runa also seemed so comfortable in her skin. I, on the other hand, couldn’t even feel comfortable in my sweatpants and ratty T-shirt. I felt a pang of grief for my dad’s Chicago Bears jersey, which Eli had taken away, presumably to destroy.

Focus, Scarlett
. “I asked you here,” I began, “because I need to talk to someone about a really big Old World mess, and frankly my options are limited. Very limited.” She smiled a little ruefully, and I liked her for it. “Sorry again,” I added.

“What about Jesse?” she said carefully, keeping her face still. “Can’t he help?”

“Jesse and I are not okay right now,” I answered. No sense tiptoeing around it. “But I’d rather not talk about him.”

Runa nodded again. “I can respect that.”

“Thank you. Please hang on a second while I inhale a little more pizza.” This time she grinned at me, and I finished off the slice and reached for another. “I think my body’s still hungry from being unconscious for a couple of days,” I mumbled.

Runa blinked. “When was this?”

I stilled. “You don’
t . . .
Kirsten didn’t tell you?”

Her eyes flinched away. “Kirsten and I are not okay right now,” she said softly.

Kirsten was the one who’d sent Runa to get close to Jesse, in hopes of finding out if he was telling Old World secrets to anyone, especially other cops. He’d dumped Runa when he’d found out. I was guessing that this had been what created the rift between Runa and Kirsten, which was interesting, but not really my business. “Fair enough,” I said, shrugging.

“But I don’t mind being a sounding board, if that’s what you need.” She fidgeted for a moment, pushing loose strands of blonde hair behind her ears.

“I guess I’ll start at the beginning then. Stop me if you’ve heard this one.”

So I walked her through the whole thing: the confrontation with Olivia, waking up to Will, getting called back to work, the nova, the investigation with Jesse. She told me about being assigned to the Evergreen crime scene and calling Jesse, after which I picked up the story again. By the time I got to the Luparii, we had moved into the living room, drinking coffee that she’d made. Apparently the coffee Molly bought was already vegan.

I told her everything, except for the parts having to do with changing Eli back into a human. Will had told me to keep that a secret, and it was the least I could do for him. And besides, it wasn’t really connected to the mess with the nova, not anymore.

“So Jesse’s still making calls, but I don’t know how we’re going to find the nova,” I summed up. “And the full moon is tomorrow night.”

Runa sat back in her chair, looking thoughtful. “And you don’t know where the nova is,” she said slowly. “But you think you know where he’s going to be.”

“Right. But even if Jesse’s right, Griffith is too big, and the Luparii scout is still out there too.”

“Hmm.” Runa stared off into space for a moment, considering. “And I suppose it wouldn’t do any good for you and Jesse to split up and go after the nova and the scout separately.”

I shook my head. “Jesse’s a good cop, but he can’t go up against a witch with a lethal dog-monster, or a werewolf in a big natural area.” Griffith wasn’t a clear field where you could see anything coming; it was a dense tangle of brushes, trees, and rocky outcroppings. A werewolf would have no trouble getting the jump on a human, with or without silver bullets.

Sighing, I pushed hair away from my face. I’d taken out my ponytail so I could rest my head comfortably on the couch. “It’d be different if we could track the nova somehow, or know exactly where he’s going to park his car and change. Then we could get him in my radius, let Jesse subdue him, and problem solved.”

A slow smile was spreading over Runa’s gorgeous face. “What?” I asked, confused. “What’d I say?”

Runa leaned forward. “You think you need to find the nova, but technically that’s not true. You just need something that can find him.”

“Isn’t that splitting hairs?” I asked doubtfully.

Then I got it.

I grinned at the gorgeous witch, suddenly fully appreciating what Jesse had seen in her. “Runa Vore, you clever minx.”

Chapter 39

Jesse was having a long night.

He’d finished all the phone calls, including doubling back on the people who hadn’t answered the first time, by just after ten. It was mostly a fruitless effort. The more he pressed, the less anyone seemed to know about Henry Remus. The guy was a ghost, one very lost soul in a whole city of them.

The last two on his list were Esm
é
Welch and Corbin Hurd, the werewolves. Hurd wasn’t home, and a quick text to Will revealed that he had a business meeting in Santa Barbara and wouldn’t be back until the following afternoon. Esmé wasn’t home either, but Scarlett had said she was picking up a few shifts at Will’s bar, and Jesse managed to get a hold of her there. When she answered he could tell she’d picked up the office extension, just based on the lack of bar sounds in the background.

He explained who he was and why he needed to ask her about Remus, and there was a long, pregnant pause. “Esmé?” he said cautiously. “Are you still there?”

“It was totally an accident!” she burst out.

“What was an accident?”

“Corbin and I were chatting a few months back, while we were waiting for the PAW meeting to start,” Esmé said, and now Jesse could hear tears in her voice. “And we were just talking about our weekend plans, you know, and some of the latest pack drama, and there was this guy, he’d overheard the whole thing, and we sai
d . . .
” She took a gulping breath.

“Let me guess,” Jesse interrupted. “You talked about being werewolves, and changing in between moons.”

“I didn’t see him,” Esmé wailed. “Then he was running away, and I was gonna call the vampires, you know, like you’re supposed to, but nobody remembered his name and nothing bad happened and I just kind o
f . . .
forgot about it. I mean, who would believe a story about
werewolves
?”

Said the werewolf. Jesse managed to refrain from banging his head on the door frame. “What
exactly
were you guys talking about?”

There was another long silence. “Esmé, I can come down there, pitch a big fit, and demand some answers, right in front of Will. Or you can just tell me what I need to know right now and save us both the trouble.”

“There—there’s this place,” she whispered into the phone. “Up by the Sequoias. It’s like a three-hour drive, no chance of running into Will or any of the other pack members. Every month, on the new moon, some of the pack goes up there.”

“What about you, Esmé?”

“I went once,” she mumbled. “But I was too scared of disobeying Will. It wasn’t even any fun.”

Jesse sighed. Well, at least they knew how Remus had found out about the werewolves. Only a guy who desperately wanted to believe in wolves would overhear that conversation and think it was actually true.

“Why did you run out of the October meeting?” Jesse asked.

“How did you—”

“Esmé,” he said tiredly, “maybe you should just assume I know everything, and tell me the truth.”

“I—I realized that he was nuts,” she admitted. “That was the day the guy overheard us. I went to find Corbin, to tell him the guy might be nuts, because Corbin had missed his speech. By the time I got Corbin out of the bathroom and we came back, they were long gone.”

“Did you tell anyone else about this?” Jesse demanded.

“Just my friend Ana,” she insisted.

Jackpot.

Jesse asked Esmé a few more questions, but she didn’t seem to know anything else about Remus, especially not where he might hide. By the time he was finished talking to her, Jesse was exhausted, having fueled the last few days on too much coffee and not enough sleep. He texted Scarlett to let her know about Esmé, then went and laid down on the bed in his little studio apartment. Jesse’s thoughts were just spinning, stuck on finding the nova wolf. They knew how the nova had been made, but that didn’t actually
get
them anywhere.

Despite his churning mind, Jesse’s exhaustion tugged at him. After a few minutes, he gave up and set his alarm for seven, before giving in to it.

He awoke feeling just as stuck, but at least a little more capable of rational thought. He showered and dressed quickly before leaving for Scarlett’s. The LA morning was cool and overcast, with a heavy gray sky that seemed to be drifting slowly downward to cover the ground in haze. Jesse had to shake a sudden impulse to stomp on the gas, to see if he could outrun the weather. It was the weekend, and this early in the morning the streets were practically empty. He made it to Scarlett’s in record time.

To Jesse’s surprise, Scarlett answered her door quickly, with a phone to her ear and her cane tucked under the same arm. She was half hunched over to keep the phone from falling. “I’m on hold,” Scarlett said briefly, and gestured with a shoulder for him to come inside. “Come on in.”

Without another word she took hold of her cane and hobbled back to the couch. She looked better than she had in days, dressed in jeans and an oversized cowl-necked sweater that went to her fingertips. Her hair was damp and sweet-smelling from the shower. She’d wrapped it up in a bun, and when she turned back toward the room Jesse saw what looked like a blue pen stuck through it. He followed her, perplexed. “Who are—” he began, but she half turned to him and held up a hand.

“Yes. Yes, I’m still here,” she said into the phone. “Nobody? All right, I must have the wrong information. Thank you.” Ending the call, she collapsed onto the couch, careful to keep her knee free. Scarlett picked up a yellow pad of paper that was tucked into the couch between the arm and the cushion. She pulled the pen out of her bun. “There’s coffee in the kitchen if you want it,” she said through a yawn.

“I had some on the way. What’s going on?” he asked, still mystified. He perched in the armchair, more so he wouldn’t be looming over her than because he needed to sit.

She scribbled something on the pad before looking up. “You’re not going to believe this, but I came up with a plan. Well, Runa and I did.”

For a second he thought he must have misheard her. “
My
Runa?” Jesse said incredulously.

Scarlett stuck out her tongue and crossed her eyes for a moment. “No, the
other
bearer of that globally popular name.”

“Shut up. Wha
t . . .
why were you talking to Runa?”

“I figured it was time we had a long talk about your expertise in the bedroom,” Scarlett said gravely. When Jesse’s eyes more or less fell out of his head, she laughed. “Sorry, I’ve had, like, a
lot
of coffee. Like a lot.”

Jesse shook his head slightly to clear it. “Okay, let me start all over. Good morning, Scarlett. How was your night?”

“Good morning, Jesse,” Scarlett said gamely. “My night got a lot better when I invited your ex-girlfriend over for a chat. I needed to talk through this whole thing, and I couldn’t really think of anyone else.” Off Jesse’s look, she rolled her eyes and said, “No, we didn’t talk about you.”

He must have looked relieved, because she added, “I mean, just your penis size, but that was it.”


Scarlet
t
. . .

“Okay, okay.” She flapped a hand. “I told Runa most of what’s been happening, and she pointed out that, since we know where the nova is going to be, all we have to do is show up and hunt him down.”

“Well, yeah, but that park is enormou
s . . . 
,” Jesse began, but she waved him into silence.

“I know; just listen. We need a way to find a renegade werewolf, and we just happen to have a trained werewolf-finder in town.”

Jesse stared at her. “You’re not suggesting—” he started to say, but stopped when Scarlett bounced a little in her chair.

“Yes, I am,” she said gleefully. “I’m suggesting we steal the bargest.”

He eyed her suspiciously. “Wait,” Jesse said. “
How
much coffee have you had?”

She pulled a face. “Think about it. If we take the bargest away on the morning of the full moon, the Luparii scout won’t have time to get a replacement or get his pals here to help him. It’ll cut his legs out from under him, and that’s one problem solved. Then we take the bargest to Griffith and use it to find the nova.”

“That’
s . . .
huh.” Jesse stood up and began pacing the length of the living room, thinking it over. “There are so many unknowns,” he said, mostly to himself. “For one thing, even if we could pull off finding and stealing the bargest, we have no idea if it will listen to us.”

“But remember, the thing started out as a dog,” Scarlett contended. “And you and I know dogs. We have as much chance as anyone outside of the Luparii at controlling the thing. What else?”

He turned to face her, considering the problem. “Well,” he said, “we don’t know the bargest’s range. If Remus isn’t right where we expect, there’s no guarantee that it’ll be able to scent him from one end of the park to the other.”

“True,” Scarlett allowed, “but the Luparii have spent, like, three hundred years perfecting this creature to hunt wolves. The friggin’
werewolves
are afraid of it. I think we should trust that the Luparii wouldn’t be as successful as they are if the bargest wasn’t a complete werewolf-hunting badass.”

She must have seen the doubt on his face, because her enthusiasm waned suddenly and she said in a more desperate tone, “Look, Jesse, I know it’s kind of crazy, but it’s our best shot.”

Jesse thought it over once more, and had to admit that she was right. The bargest was their best option. “Even so,” he said slowly, “we have no idea where the scout
is
. Will and Kirsten haven’t been able to find him, and they know way more than we do about the Luparii.”

Scarlett clapped her hands together, enthusiasm back. “Ah, yes. But you and I have been so busy working on finding the nova,
we
haven’t tried finding the scout until now.” She leaned forward and held out the pad of paper she’d been writing on.

Jesse crossed the space between them to take it from her. “Beverly Hills Hotel, the Four Season
s . . .
what is this?”

“A list of places where the scout might be staying. The Luparii are rich, and a lot of the really swanky LA places let rich people bring their pets into the hote
l . . .
” She shrugged. “It’s a work in progress.”

“It’s a good idea,” Jesse mused, “but the problem is that they could also be in a rental house, or an unoccupied private home, or somewhere out of town.” He put the list down. “This is a good plan B, but there’s gotta be another way to find the Luparii.”

“Yeah?” Scarlett said. She grinned at him, a look full of such excitement and hope that it pierced his chest, hollowing out the spot where doubts about her had begun to collect. “What do you got?”

Jesse sat down and leaned back and thought it over for a moment. The Old World leaders had been trying to find the guy using their own channels. But Scarlett was right; no one had tried coming at the problem the way the police would. If he was at work on a regular investigation, what would he have done?

“Start at the beginning,” Jesse said. He stood up and paced the living room again. “Henry Remus goes to the place where the wolves run between moons. Ana was there, and she knew Remus might show up. She changed him and then abandoned him. Then she told her good buddy Terrence, who had connections in Europe, possibly from his time in London. He called the Luparii and told them about the nova wolf. The Luparii got interested and sent someone to LA to hunt him down.”

Scarlett shrugged. “That’s the working theory, yes.”

“But then the scout killed Terrence and his sidekick, Riddell. Why?”

Scarlett’s brow furrowed. “Maybe he found out that Terrence and Ana don’t really know who or where the nova is.”

“But then why bring the Luparii to LA to begin with?” Jesse ground out, frustrated. He looked at Scarlett. “Ana is the last link in the chain. We need to talk to her right away.”

To his surprise, Scarlett paled, unmoving. “What?” Jesse asked.

Her lower lip trembled for a second, but then she lifted her chin and met his eyes. “Ana’s dead,” she told him. “She came after me two nights ago, upstairs in my room, and I killed her with the boot knife you gave me.”

Jesse sank down in the nearest chair, flummoxed. “Scarlet
t . . .

“That’s why Molly is evicting me. And I didn’t tell you, because I didn’t want you to know that I murdered someone,” she rushed on. “And I didn’t want you to look at me the way you are right now.”

He stared at her. “Anastasia’s really dead?”

“Yes,” she said in a small voice.

Sighing, he leaned back in the chair, taking that in. “You’re not a murderer,” he said, toward the ceiling. Deciding that was unfair, he sat up and looked at Scarlett. “I know I’ve been hard on you,” he said quietly. “And I know we haven’t been on the same page on this case. I should never have taken Dashiell’s deal; it’s knocked everything out of whack. But I also know you well enough to know that you wouldn’t have killed Anastasia if you’d had any other choice.”

Scarlett visibly relaxed in her seat on the couch. “Thank you,” she whispered.

“You’re welcome.” He absently rubbed his arm, which still hurt where Anastasia had wrenched it. “I just don’t know where that leaves us, as far as the investigation goes.”

Scarlett looked at him thoughtfully, her fingers fidgeting in her lap. “You said Ana was the last link in the chain. Ana and Terrence made the nova and brought the Luparii.”

“Yea
h . . .

“But we’ve been assuming that they brought the Luparii here to go after the nova,” she pointed out. “What if they made the nova in order to bring the Luparii here?”

He stared at her. “Why?”

“What do the Luparii do?”

“Kill werewolves,” Jesse said promptly.

She sat up, swinging her legs to the floor and leaning forward. Despite wincing a tiny bit at the movement, Scarlett plowed on. “Ana’s upset about Lydia. So she comes after me, for the cure. And maybe she goes after Will, for not protecting her girlfriend from Eli in the first place. She’s not strong enough to kill him herself, and her pal Terrence is too crazy to do it. So she gets the Luparii to send a scout here who can take care of Will. But the scout doesn’t appreciate being used as someone else’s tool, so he kills Terrence and his henchman.”

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