Excerpt--Chasing the Shadows
The breeze whispered around her, its touch furnace hot. Sweat beaded her
skin, staining her T-shirt black and dripping from her ponytail.
Around her, the night pulsed, a bass-heavy rhythm that made her want to
dance. The air was rich with the scent of sweat, alcohol and chlorine.
Nikki stood in the shadows of an oak and sipped a lukewarm soda. Below
her, on the main pool deck, bodies writhed in time to the music, unmindful
of the heat or the closeness of others.
They had to be mad. If she'd had any choice, she would have been in the
pool, allowing the cool water to wash the heat and sweat from her skin.
Instead, she was stuck here in the shadows with a lukewarm Coke, awaiting
the next move of a wayward teenager.
It was all too familiar feeling. Six months ago, she'd followed another
teenager through the night, and had found herself caught in the middle of
a war between two vampires.
Pain rose like a ghost, stifling her. She bit her lip, blinking away the
sting of tears.
It was own stupidity that had driven Michael away. Her refusal to trust,
to admit what she'd felt, had worn him down as surely as the sea wears
down a rock.
But what hurt the most, perhaps, was the fact that he'd left without
saying goodbye.
She crossed her arms and stared moodily at the star-drenched sky. She'd
looked for him, of course. She'd spent the first two months after she'd
woken in hospital doing little else. But America was a big country, with
lots of places to hide. And when the man she was hunting was one with the
shadows, what hope did she really have?
None. Not that it really mattered. She'd keep looking until she found
him-though what happened then would very much depend on how he reacted.
The two-way clipped to her lapel squawked. "Nik, you there?"
It was Jake-her boss and her best friend. He sounded as bored as she was.
Nikki pressed the button. "No, I'm at home enjoying a nice cool bath."
"Forget the bath. A cold beer would go down real well right now. The kid
still in your area?"
She scanned the crowd. Matthew Kincaid, a redheaded, flap-eared teenager,
stood out from the mob like a wart on a thumb. But it wasn't so much his
looks as the fact that he towered a good foot or more over his peers.
Basketball material for sure, if someone could teach him to catch a ball.
"Yeah. He's hovering near the bar, trying to convince some of the adults
to buy him a drink." She hesitated, and took a sip of her Coke. The warm
liquid slid like raw sugar down her throat. She shuddered and up-ended the
rest into the garden bed. "He's not acting like a kid on the verge of
running away from home, you know."
"No. But his mom's paying us to watch him, so watch him we will. Besides,
we need the money."
"When don't we," she said dryly. They'd been working together for close on
ten years now, and she couldn't remember a time when the business hadn't
been strapped for cash. Private Investigators didn't make a lot of
money-not in Lyndhurst, anyway. "Why is Mrs Kincaid so convinced he's
going to disappear tonight?"
"Conversation she caught when passing his bedroom last week. Apparently,
he's been chatting to this girl over the Internet and has formed quite a
relationship with her. He's arranged to meet her during the party."
She frowned. "That doesn't explain why she thinks he's going to run away."
"The kid's unhappy at home. Hates his dad, who's an alcoholic and hardly
ever home, and argues constantly with his mom."
"Sounds like your average teenager to me."
Jake laughed softly. "Yeah, I guess it does. But lately, the kid's
apparently been saying that he doesn't need them any more, that he's found
someone who understands him."
Nikki raised her eyebrows. "The Internet friend?"
"Maybe.
"Has Mrs Kincaid asked Matthew about the friend?"
"Yeah," Jake said, voice dry. "And the reply is one I'm not about to use
over the two-way."
She grinned. "Has she tried going into his computer when he's at school?"
"You need a password to get into his email and chat logs."
"Clever kid."
"Too clever, apparently. That's why he's something of an outcast at
school."
She snorted. "I think the ears and the height might have something to do
with that."
"On the Internet, looks don't matter."
"They do if you intend to meet them."
"Yeah, but there's no indication Matthew's lied about his looks."
There was no indication that he hadn't either, and she had a bad feeling
the teenager had lied through his teeth while online. Given his height,
his coloring, and those ears, he would surely have been the butt of many
harsh jokes at school. The Internet would have given him not only
anonymity, but also the ability to reinvent himself.
So why would he risk all that to meet his friend and reveal the truth? And
why did she have a feeling that it could all go horribly wrong?
She glanced at her watch. "It's close to eleven-thirty now. Does his
mother have any idea when the meet was going to happen?"
"Midnight, apparently."
Witching hour. The time when all things dark and deadly came out to play.
Things like Michael. Or Jasper.
She shivered and lightly rubbed her wrist. In the worst of her dreams, she
could still feel Jasper's touch-in her thoughts, and on her skin. But
Jasper was dead, burned to ashes by the sun's heat. His evil could never
touch her again.
Could never feed off her again.
A chill ran through her. Jasper wasn't the only malevolent being in this
world. She couldn't shake the certainty that evil of another kind was on
the move in Lyndhurst tonight. And that it was after Matthew Kincaid.
The bass-heavy pounding faded, replaced by a gentler, more romantic song.
On the pool deck, teenagers drew close. There was probably more kissing
going on than dancing.
She looked across to the bar. Matthew was staring at the crowd, his
expression a mix of envy and anger. He slammed his drink on the counter
then walked away.
"Heads up. He's on the move."
"Where?" Jake sounded relieved.
Matthew disappeared behind tent that held the bar. Nikki broke into a run,
keeping to the shadows as she skirted the sweating mass of slow-dancing
teenagers. The teenager came into sight, arms swinging as fast as his legs
as he strode along the path.
She slowed, not wanting to get too close and maybe attract his attention.
"He's heading for the back gate."
"Anyone else in sight?"
"Not unless you want to count the teenagers getting passionate under the
trees."
Jake snorted softly. "I'll bring my car around. Keep me posted."
"Will do."
Matthew reached the gate and stopped to unlock it. She stepped behind a
tree. The kid threw the gate open, then glanced over his shoulder. His
look was petulant, like a child who sees candy he knows he can't have.
It wasn't his family making him run, she thought with a grin. It was his
hormones.
He headed out and turned right. She pressed the two-way, telling Jake,
then followed the teenager out the gate.
Matthew's long strides had taken him a good way down the street. She
crossed to the other side then broke into a run, closing the distance
between them. The slow beat of the music began to fade and silence closed
in, broken only by the occasional roar of a car engine or the blast of a
horn.
The teenager strode on, looking neither right nor left. She swiped at the
sweat dripping from her chin and studied the street ahead. They were in
the Heights-a ritzy and very expensive section of Lyndhurst nestled into
the western edge of the mountains that ringed the town. Below them, lights
blazed, a neon sea of brightness that outshone the stars. Matthew could
have been heading toward any one of those lights, but her gaze stopped at
the docks. Ocean Road led down to there. And that's where he's going, she
thought.
The two-way buzzed softly. "Nik, I'm in the car. Where are you?"
She pressed the receiver. "Ocean Road, just past Second."
"I'm parallel on West. Let me know if he changes direction or meets a
car."
"Will do."
They continued on-Matthew striding out, her half running to keep up with
him. Box-like shapes began to loom up around them as houses gave way to
factories and warehouses. The faint wash of traffic noise seemed to die
completely and in the silence, her breathing seemed sharp and harsh.
Ahead, Matthew stopped in the puddle of an overhead light and glanced at
his watch. He looked briefly to his right, then turned left, heading into
a small side street.
She pressed the two-way. "He's just turned into an alley. He's heading
you're way."
"Last cross street?"
She frowned, thinking back. "Sixth."
"Just passed it. I'll park and wait."
She stopped near the street entrance and peered round. Matthew was no
where in sight.
Swearing softly, she hurried down the street, keeping an eye on the fences
lining either side of the road, looking for gaps or gateways the teenager
could have gone through. Nothing. But halfway down on the right she came
across a small lane. The teenager was a dark shadow moving quickly away.
She sighed in relief. "He's turned off again," she told Jake. She glanced
up, studying the unlit street sign. "Heading down Baker's lane toward the
docks."
"That lane comes to a dead end."
She hoped it was just a figure of speech and not a reality. "It's a rather
odd place to meet an Internet friend, don't you think?"
"If it is a friend he's meeting, then yes. But all sorts of perverts go
trawling the chat rooms looking for innocents like Matthew."
She kept close to the fence on the off chance that Mathew turned around.
At least in the darker shadows lining the fence she'd be harder to spot.
"Problem is, I've got a feeling it's not your average pervert we're
looking at here."
Jake groaned. "That's all we need. I'm heading in-and bringing a gun."
"Be careful, Jake. I really don't like the feel of this."
"Oh, great. Maybe I'll call the cops, just to be safe."
"And tell them what? I've a got feeling?" When it came to her psychic
abilities, scepticism ran high within the Police Department. It was
doubtful if a statement like that would get anything other than laughter.
Jake grunted. "Don't do anything stupid till I get there."
Meaning she could do something stupid after he'd got here? She grinned,
though it didn't ease the tension beginning to knot her stomach.
The lane narrowed, and the warehouses on either side seemed to loom in on
her. She skirted several dumpsters and screwed up her nose. From the
amount of rubbish overflowing onto the laneway, they hadn't been emptied
for several weeks. Combine that with the heat of the last few days and the
result was stomach turning.
Matthew stopped. She ducked behind a stinking dumpster, and held her nose
as she peered around the side. He was studying the buildings on either
side but after a few seconds he turned and ran at the fence on the left.
She waited till he'd disappeared over the top and moved after him.
"He's just climbed a fence. Third warehouse from the end."
"Wait for me."
"I might lose him if I do."
Jake swore. "Damn it, be careful."
"You be careful. I'm not the one who can die here."
"But you're not immortal either, and I'm more than a little certain
Michael didn't tell you everything about his gift of life everlasting."
She smiled grimly. Michael had only ever told her what he thought she
needed to know. Bare facts, nothing more-especially when it came to
anything concerning his past or what he did for a living.
"I'm heading over."
She grabbed the chain link and pulled herself over the fence. Dropping to
the ground on the other side, she crouched, her gaze sweeping the
darkness. It had to be some sort of produce warehouse-packing crates were
lined in neat rows, those closest containing limp remnants of lettuce
leaves.
Matthew could have gone anywhere. She stayed where she was, listening
intently. The wind moaned through the silence, raising the hairs on the
back of her neck. She rubbed her arms, then reached down, withdrawing a
knife from her right boot. Made of the purest silver, it was one of two
she'd had specially designed after her little dance with Jasper. If an old
kitchen knife with only the smallest amount of silver in it could stop
him, her new knives should stop just about anything. That's what she was
hoping, anyway.
From the right came a soft, metallic squeal. She rose, padding quickly
through the rows of crates. An old brick building loomed through the
darkness. She stopped at the end of the row and peered out. To her left
were several large entrances, all shuttered. To the right, nothing but
brick wall. The sound had come from around the corner.
She ran to the wall, then edged forward and looked around the corner.
Matthew's sandals were disappearing through a window.
"Jake, Matthew has just entered the warehouse through a window on the
right side of the building. I'm just about to follow."
"I'm almost with you, Nik."
Almost wasn't good enough. She couldn't afford to wait. The sensation of
danger had risen ten-fold and was threatening to stifle her.
She edged around the corner and made her way to the window. It was a foot
or so above her reach, but there were several packing crates stacked close
enough to use as a ladder. She climbed them carefully, and peered through
the window.
There was no sound, no light. Just a darkness thick enough to carve. Yet
the warehouse was far from empty. Somewhere in the blackness, evil waited.