When It Comes (Vampire Assassin League Book 31) (3 page)

BOOK: When It Comes (Vampire Assassin League Book 31)
6.61Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Come on Hartnett. Can’t you give me something to write down?”

“Just get some cars out here.” 

Mitch clicked the END CALL button. Slipped the phone into his back pocket again. Selected a parking post at the front of his right bumper, and started pulling tape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER THREE

 

‘Richard Allen Wright.’

Addie typed in the name with her forefingers. Double-checked it for spelling. She wasn’t a typist. Being a clerk or secretary, or someone who needed typing skills hadn’t appealed to her back when she’d lived. Aside from which, men held most of the jobs then. They still seemed to be employed in the most lucrative ones. The world didn’t change much. Men always seemed to want the upper hand.

She shrugged at the randomness of her thoughts. Clicked the search button. Watched the screen fill with all manner of sites. And started checking. She found several social sites for Richard Wright. One carried his picture. It wasn’t a flattering photo. Not, that she cared.

That was a lie. Addie closed her eyes. A ripple of sensation went through her breasts as she brought her mate’s visage to mind. The man was beyond handsome. Really hot. Sexy.  

Oh.

She cared.

Addie was smiling as she looked back at the screen. There wasn’t much information about Richard on his social site after the first page. Very few photos and none of them snapshots of him. Nothing personal. Nothing of interest, actually.

This was almost exactly like the last three names. But...not quite. This site said Richard was an architect. Single. Thirty years old. The last one had listed his occupation as paralegal. His age as twenty-seven. The one before that he’d been a Special Ed teacher. Aged thirty-one. Married. Two kids. Whoever had set these identities up was a real master at it.

Which meant her mate wasn’t just a detective. He was an undercover one.

She could be wrong, but Addie didn’t think so. She’d watched a lot of television since its invention. Sometimes she’d be hooked for weeks, especially if it was a crime series. It was practically an addiction...that nobody else knew about.

She made a face at her monitor.

Ugh.

Why did her mate have to be a cop?

She should look on the bright side here. He was probably clean. No problematic legal history. No sexually transmitted diseases. No drug addictions, although...he might be alcoholic. Quite a few of the police dramas she’d watched featured that plot-line.

Either way, it wouldn’t matter. Not to her. She was immune to just about everything. Well. Except sunlight, crucifixes, Holy Water, consecrated wood in the shape of a stake...

She was over-thinking this. All she cared about was finding out his name. And then his address. Occupation didn’t matter. Neither did an addiction. Or health issue. They’d be solved upon accepting vampirism. Physical condition would be set for eternity. He’d stay exactly as he was at the moment of change. And that was a very nice thought.

Addie shut her eyes again. Recollected.

Ah. Yes
.

Her mate was
very
nicely built. Masculine...

She opened her eyes and regarded the monitor again. She was wasting time, but she had a lot of it. Evening was hours off yet. Daylight was her enemy. Here, in the cool caverns of her mine shafts, she was safe from UV rays. And she was making progress. Richard Wright was not his name. Addie put that license on the growing discard pile and picked up another one. Her mate was good. Well-hidden. She looked at the new license. They were all from Colorado. Not much of a clue there. This license had been issued to Ryan Samuel Larson. Carried the same picture as the others. She typed the name into the search bar with her two-finger staccato typing style. Hit enter. Got pretty much the same results as before. Started clicking on a few social networking sites. Ended the search.

Okay
.

She now knew her mate wasn’t Ryan Larson from Aurora. She had three licenses left before she reached the passports. She’d saved them for last, since they had impossible-to-make-out photos, and odd names. Addie picked the three driver licenses up and fanned them out like a small hand of smaller cards. She scanned them, waiting to see if any tingling occurred. It was an intuitive nudge from her psyche. She rarely felt it, but she knew better than to ignore it.

Nothing.

She didn’t get any kind of reaction.

Well. What did that give her? Apparently her choices were between Martin Cagney from Dove Creek, Huck Finn from Longmont, and Mitchell Hartnett from Boulder. Addie looked over the one supposedly belonging to Martin. Her mate hadn’t looked or acted like somebody from a small town. Not that she knew for certain, but nothing about Martin Cagney felt right. She discarded that license onto the stack already on the table. Moved onto the second one and couldn’t prevent the smirk. Would a parent truly name their child Huck Finn? She didn’t feel any tingling sensation. But that didn’t mean anything. He could have been named Huck Finn. Having that moniker could explain his attitude. He might have grown up with a chip on his shoulder.

Then again...if her mate
was
named Huck Finn, there would probably be thousands of sites she’d have to wade through to find him. She flipped that license onto the others, and focused on the last one - Mister Hartnett’s driver’s license. There was something unique about this one. It even felt different. As if it weighed the lightest fraction of an ounce more than the others. Addie ran a thumb over the same non-smiling picture all the licenses had sported. If her mate was this Mitchell fellow, she was going to have to dig for his address. The license listed it as a PO Box. She might even have to call the Vampire Assassin League. Get ribbed by the second-in-command, Nigel. Then again, she’d heard he’d found his mate. Maybe Nigel wasn’t such a jerk anymore.

The license listed Mitchell Hartnett as being six foot three. That sounded right. He weighed two hundred and thirty-five pounds. And they were very nice pounds.

Focus, Adelaide.

Mitchell was born twenty-nine years ago on the first of May. He was a May Day baby. Taurus. Born under the sign of the bull. That was interesting. Not that any of that mattered.

Addie went back to looking the ID over. Mitchell Hartnett had black hair. Green eyes. That was a beautiful combination. It was probably really striking if he wasn’t hooded and seen in the lights from a parking lot
.
He didn’t have any physical issues that the Department of Motor Vehicles needed to know about. There weren’t any restrictions listed. He had a couple of endorsements, however.  

Addie turned the piece over. There were some numbers that matched up to things. Mitchell was licensed to drive commercial vehicles as well as motorcycles. And he was an organ donor. Her fangs started tingling. Addie turned the license back over. Smiled widely at his image.

“Hello, Mitchell,” she told him.           

She hit pay dirt on the fourth social media site she checked. He’d spelled his name with two T’s instead of three. As if that disguised him. Hartnet. Addie was jubilant as the screen populated with all kinds of images of him. And then the elation started dying off. There was a brunette woman featured in a lot of the photos. Frolicking in the ocean in swimming suits. On an elegant date of some kind. Mitchell looked amazing in a suit, except for how his arm was about the trim brunette’s waist, pulling that woman close. Holding her, as if...

The info said he was in a relationship.

Addie’s heart reacted. Her eyes widened. Everything went red. Fiery hot. Addie shoved the laptop off the table. Listened to it smack against the wooden wall with a thunk that echoed through the old mining tunnels. She snarled at the useless piece of technology, although the destruction didn’t matter. She had other laptops. Her heart was a live thing, sending spurts of rage-infused beats through her breast. She didn’t have to check on the status of her fangs. They were fully extended. Murderously sharp. Vibrating with the extent of her anger. As was her entire body.

She needed to calm down here.

Think.

The woman was a minor problem. Addie was reanimated because she’d found her mate. It wasn’t open to discussion. Or flexible. It was fate. Mitchell Harnett was Adelaide’s mate. Period. Besides, this woman was mortal. Her life extremely fragile. Especially at the moment.

Addie’s weapon of choice was a blade.

She had a lot to choose from. Long daggers. Sharp stilettos. Nasty-looking sharp knives.

Addie ignored her weapons cabinet and yanked the next one open. Grabbed a sealed laptop from the top. They arrived every so often from VAL Headquarters. Already programmed. Every link secure. She had dozens in there. She’d been told they were upgrades. Addie rarely opened them. She wasn’t interested. She’d come from a different era, where things were difficult to obtain and expensive to own. You made do or went without. If something wasn’t broke, why fix it?

She set the latest model onto the tabletop. Ripped off the packaging with such force, she left long scratch marks on the cover. Grabbed the plug with fingers that trembled and stuck it into the electrical outlet. She was trying for calm here, but her body wasn’t listening. She inhaled a deep breath before opening the unit. Exhaled. Took another.

Crikey.

Manufacturers kept altering things with every keyboard. It took several moments to even find the power button. Another few seconds before the monitor gave her an opening screen. Her password worked instantly. As did her search. This laptop reacted a lot faster than the ruined one. She noted that immediately.

Her search didn’t yield much. She couldn’t find one mention of where he lived. Not one picture of a house. Not even an interior shot. Nothing she could use. Addie had a cell phone out and was ready to call VAL when it occurred to her. Mitchell Hartnett was a closed book. Extremely secure. But, like all males, he didn’t check on what his woman did.

Addie went back to the original Mitchell Hartnett site. Selected a picture of him and the brunette. The name Brittney came up.
Hmm. Attractive name.
It fit. The woman wasn’t going to be attractive for much longer. Addie hissed at the image before clicking on the woman’s picture. Got directed to her social media site, listing plenty of photos. Addie scanned down to find a useable photo.

Oh
.

This was so easy.

Humanity didn’t know how much privacy they lost with every stroke of a key, especially since they were the instigators of it. Every insertion into the internet left something traceable.

There!

A picture came up of the couple standing in the driveway of a gated community. They were embracing, which didn’t anger quite as much as it had before. Addie realized the reason. His relationship status was the means for finding him. And that was what mattered. Brittney was collateral damage.

Poor woman.

Adie was smiling at the thought. So was the couple in the picture. The sun was setting behind them. Its rays went right through the wrought iron of an arched entrance gate above them, emblazoning the name. A map search later and Addie knew where he lived. It was a massive complex of condominium units. She didn’t need to go through the Freedom of Information Act to access property deeds, either. She had a laptop programmed and linked to the Vampire Assassin League. Moments later, she was viewing an image of the actual document Mitchell Hartnett had signed when he’d purchased his home. By himself.

It even gave her the unit number.

“Gotcha!” 

Jubilation filled her cry. And her movements. She probably damaged the laptop more with the way she slapped the lid closed.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER FOUR

 

This was complete shit.

Mitch looked over at the sketch artist. They’d just finished the third attempt. Every picture looked the same. Denver PD had a really good artist. The woman should be making a fortune at an art gallery. The pick-pocket’s eyes loomed right off the page. As if she stared straight into his soul...

Shit.

Mitch rubbed his eyes. It was obvious to him. He’d been up too long.

The artist handed the sketch to the FBI guys. Randy looked at it first. Snickered. Gave the picture to Tom who then passed it to Sam. Tom’s brows rose. Sam nodded. When he wasn’t jumping around like a meth addict in need of a fix, he acted downright sedate. He handed the picture to the captain. She pursed her lips as she looked it over, which put lines in evidence all about her lips. Captain Thomas wouldn’t like that. She was in her mid-fifties and looked like she hung onto youth with every chemical method known to mankind.

Randy spoke up. “Well. I gotta say, he’s consistent.”

“Is that her, or not?” The captain asked. Everybody waited.

“Can’t say that it isn’t,” Randy finally replied.

Mitch spoke up. “Look. Cap. I got a really good look at her. I have excellent recall. I appear to be able to describe that efficiently to an artist. We need to move onto something else.”

“She’s quite the looker.”

“So?” 

“So. You’re single. She’s very attractive. And she now has possession of all your personal stuff. I’m just making sure it wasn’t intentional.”

“She busted my cuffs. Broke open a safe.”

“It does kind-a look like that. Doesn’t it?” Captain Thomas answered.

Randy snickered again. Mitch sighed loudly. They were in the large interrogation room. The door was open. It wasn’t a legal proceeding. This space was just less hectic than the rest of the place. Mitch was on one side of the table, half-way down. The three FBI agents sat across from him. The sketch artist was at one end of the table. The captain was seated at the other. Donny, a desk sergeant, was on the captain’s right, standing behind a seat two down from Mitch. Donny was responsible for seeing to amenities. Food. Drinks. Rotten conversation.

At least the females in attendance seemed to keep the amount of testosterone-fueled antagonism at bay. That was one good part of this. Mitch had a headache coming on, either from dehydration, lack of caffeine, or lower-than-normal caloric intake. They’d been at this for hours. Taken several breaks. He’d gotten a couple of quick naps in. Swigged some of the station brew that went for coffee. Sucked down at least a half gallon of water. Eaten some meat and veggies from the inside of the breakfast burrito they provided. Did the same with lunch.

It was the chick’s fault.

Mitch had been witness
numero uno
ever since prints from his car and the bag and even some of the wallets from the trashcan matched an unsolved homicide from 2015 in Orlando, Florida. A folder with newly printed documentation sat on the table somewhere in the pile of folders. The murderer had used a sharp object. Blood evidence should have been everywhere. The pattern analysis experts had been baffled. The DNA seemed to be a scrambled mess.

Which was just the first oddity in this.

The chick’s prints had also been found at an unsolved homicide in Houston in 2012. Murder weapon had been another sharp instrument but that fellow had bled out. A third homicide was from 2005. Syracuse, New York. Same type of weapon. They’d run the DNA on that homicide. Couldn’t seem to get a DNA profile. The lab analysis was inconclusive. A fourth murder was from 1999 – which was impossible, as well as ridiculous. The pick-pocket would have been a toddler.

Mitch hadn’t known forensics could work this fast. Apparently, it helped that the prints matched those from unsolved open cases, they were in the National database, and the matches just kept coming despite the absurdity of it.

It also helped that the FBI was involved.

“Can we call it a day, Cap?” Mitch asked. “Start again in the morning? I could use some real food. And some decent sleep.”

“What? You don’t like breakfast burritos? Half-pound cheeseburgers, large fries? Chocolate shakes?”  Randy asked.

“Hell. He’s such a health freak, he doesn’t even eat doughnuts. And I waited for them to frost these, right out of the cooker.” 

The speaker was Donny. He stuffed the last half of a glazed doughnut into his mouth for emphasis. Washed it down with cream and sugar-filled coffee. Mitch watched without expression. Everyone knew he didn’t eat fast food if he could help it. He didn’t care who heckled him over it. Donny was one of the worst offenders, however. And the guy wondered why the spare tire worth of flab around his gut kept increasing.

“What kind of chow do you eat?”

Randy asked it. The guy had his aggressive edge on display again. Mitch watched Captain Thomas note it with a glance in the agent’s direction and another pinched-lip look.

“I can go to a Chinese joint if you want,” Donny offered.

“Oh, brother. Don’t tell me. Let me guess. You’re the rice and sushi type, aren’t you?”

Mitch considered Randy for a moment. “I’ve got a black belt in
tae-kwan-do. Aikido.
And
karate
.”  He paused between each martial art as he listed them. “If you’d like, I’d be happy to demonstrate.”

“Why, you—!” Randy replied.

“Stop it, gentlemen. We have to work together here. We’ve lucked onto the trail of a serial killer. Looks like she’s been hidden for years. Macho crap isn’t going to find her. Can we agree on that, at least?” 

Randy had shoved his chair backward, but then he settled back as though stopped by Captain Thomas’s words. Mitch didn’t exhibit any expression. He didn’t much care why. The agent’s attitude was only adding to the complete shit package facing him.

“Good. Now. Let’s go over it one more time,” Captain Thomas said.

At her words, Mitch’s shoulders sagged. Not far. And he caught it before anyone noticed. Especially Randy.

“Special agents? Is this a decent sketch of the woman Detective Hartnett had in custody when you approached the trashcans? He had a cuff on her. The other was on his wrist. Yes?”

All three men answered in the affirmative.

“All right. Mitch? Is this the woman you arrested and secured in your vehicle?”

The captain turned toward Mitch’s side of the table, lifting the newest sketch into Mitch’s line of sight. He made the mistake of looking at it again. And the same thing happened as before.

The eyes...

Mitch locked gazes with the drawing as if it were real. The artist had gotten the eyes perfect every time they’d worked. The pick-pocket had astounding eyes. They’d snagged Mitch’s attention in the real world. The rendition did it, too. They drew him into a mesmeric state somehow. He got the sensation of his heart enlarging. His heartbeat got fuller. Deeper. The organ sent thumps resounding through his chest. His pulse joined in next, only it moved at a rate that sent surf sounds through his ears. And as he watched, unable to even blink, the noise got interspersed with the oddest sensation of whispering. Indecipherable words. In a feminine tone...

“Mitch? Yo.”

A hand waved before the picture. Mitch started. Blinked. Looked down at his lap. Barely caught the flush of reaction.

“You gonna answer my question? Like...today?” the captain asked.

“Uh. Yeah. Sorry. Lack of sleep. That’s her.”

“You stated she was approximately five foot six.”

“Five two. Maybe three.”  Mitch kept his voice even-keeled. Non-emotional. The captain was trying to trip him up now? More shit.

“A hundred and fifteen pounds.”

“Give or take.”  Mitch looked back up to Captain Thomas.

“Age range could be eighteen to thirty? Wide gap there, Hartnett.”

“I said she looked about twenty-two, but could be anywhere from eighteen to thirty. I don’t know for sure. I didn’t ask. She didn’t offer.”

“She gave you her name, though.”

“Yeah.”

“Told you it was Adelaide? Addie for short?”

“Yeah,” Mitch repeated.

“And then she wanted to know your name?”

“Yeah.

“And you didn’t tell her, which is a normal response to anyone who asks for just about anything about you. That is probably the only normal portion of this.”

Mitch sighed again.

“But you did tell her you weren’t there for pick-pockets. That’s a strange answer. Might have piqued her interest as to what you really wanted.”

“She didn’t react to it.”

“No?”

“According to your statement she answered that she was much more than just a pick-pocket.”

“Yep.”

“You missed a big one there. But...we do have some light here. You did ask for specifics and she wanted to know if you’d use it against her. And you told her ‘yes’. That shows that you gave her Miranda Rights, and apparently she understood them.”

“Apparently,” Mitch answered. He was on auto-reply. This was the fourth reading of his statement. He was being taped this time. He didn’t much care. He had nothing of use. He’d had very little contact with her. He’d already entered all this into the database and printed it out. There were multiple copies. The captain held one copy in her hands. The FBI agents had their own.  

“And then she said something about daylight.”

“Yep. You got the entire conversation. In a nutshell. She wanted to make sure I was coming back. Before daylight.”

The captain looked steadily at him. Mitch returned the gaze with the same lack of expression. A long silence ensued. Nobody said anything. One of the FBI agents shuffled. Mitch didn’t care which one. The silence lengthened. This kind of tactic worked especially well on perpetrators getting interrogated. Mitch was immune.

Randy spoke up finally.

“Well. Guess that solves it.“

The captain looked at him. Mitch didn’t bother turning his head. It was going to be a smartass remark. And he was too tired to react.

“How so?”

“Looks like we’re dealing with a vampire.”

Donny laughed. Sam and Tom chuckled. Even the sketch artist coughed. The captain blew out a sigh. Randy’s phone vibrated on the table. Randy picked it up and looked at the screen. His voice matched his astonished expression.

“They just matched the prints to a murder scene in Cleveland from 1985. Same M.O.”

“Nineteen eighty-five?” the captain asked.

“No way. I mean, no way. Even I can tell you she was not that old.”

Oh. This sucked even more. Mitch really didn’t want to thank Randy.

“Well. Looks like you’ve got your break, Hartnett. We’ve got a really weird case here. Be back at eight o’clock. Sharp.”

“Can we make it earlier or later, Cap? So I don’t have to deal with rush hour traffic?”

The captain regarded him for long moments. She finally answered. She wasn’t smiling, but her voice sounded it. “How about nine-thirty? We’ll get all this information verified in the meantime. Until tomorrow?” 

“Be here at eight,” Randy inserted. “This is our case now. We’ll have all kinds of info ready tomorrow. And I don’t give a crap about rush hour in Denver.”

The guy stood and looked down at him. Mitch looked at his lap again. Waited. Any answer would cause trouble. So he didn’t make one. He didn’t know what it was about that woman, but meeting her was complete shit.

 

 

 

 

Other books

Rev by J.C. Emery
Horse Blues by Bonnie Bryant
Leftover Dead by EVANS, JIMMIE RUTH
The Sorrows of Empire by Chalmers Johnson
Life Without Hope by Sullivan, Leo
The World That Never Was by Alex Butterworth
Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
Postmark Murder by Mignon G. Eberhart