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TWO

Fish out of water.

Jonathan Stride tried to concentrate on Elonda, who was slumped on the sidewalk, her body and clothes painted in dried blood. She talked a mile a minute, and he tried to keep up with her, but his eyes kept glancing over her head into the window of the magic shop. There was a black box inside, with a glass fishbowl in one half, filled with water. In the other half of the box, a goldfish swam back and forth. Outside the bowl. Seemingly in midair.

It was a hell of a trick, and Stride wondered how long a fish could survive in those conditions.

He tried to slow Elonda down. “Take it easy, okay? We need your help.”

“You just get this bastard!” Elonda screeched, her arms waving, her cornrows clicking like poker chips. “Son of a bitch probably left me deaf. Sounded like a bomb going off.”

Stride squatted down until he was eye to eye with Elonda, and he took one of her flyaway wrists firmly in his hand. “Stay with me now. We’re going to get you cleaned up, put you in some new clothes, and then you’re going to eat yourself silly at the Rio buffet, all courtesy of Metro. Okay? That sound like a deal? But I need you to give me some information first.”

“I like the Harrah’s buffet better,” Elonda snapped.

“Okay, Harrah’s it is. Now are you ready to talk to me?”

Elonda pouted with her thick lips. She hugged her bare knees with her arms. Stride pushed himself to his feet and slid a notebook and pen from the inside pocket of his navy blazer. He wore the coat over a bone white, button-collar dress shirt and crisp new black jeans. Serena had insisted that he start the new job with new jeans, and he had finally relented, although he hated to abandon the fraying pair that had fitted his body like an old friend for the last ten years in Minnesota. The starched denim felt stiff, like cardboard, which was how he felt here in Las Vegas. A fish out of water. It was another universe compared to the midwestern world where he had spent his whole life.

“The victim, did you see where he came from?”

“The Oasis,” Elonda said.

Stride eyed the casino and its slim, phallic tower. The hotel was hosting a Victoria’s Secret fashion show, and a slinky lingerie model thirty stories tall stared imperiously back from a huge vertical banner that stretched nearly to the Oasis roof. She had white wings, as if she might fly away and terrorize the city. King Kong with a D cup.

“Was he alone?” Stride asked.

Elonda nodded. “Yeah. Headed my way like a fucking laser beam.”

“He say anything to you about himself? Tell you who he was?”

“Oh, sure, baby, we had a fine conversation. People meet me, they want to talk.” Elonda snorted. Then she added, “He said he was from Iowa.”

Stride shook his head. “He wasn’t. His ID says Vancouver.”

“Fucker lied to me? Well, God’ll get you for lying.” She grinned at Stride.

“Was there anybody else on the street?” he asked.

“Nobody.”

Stride glanced at the area surrounding the magic shop. The street was open and wide-you could see for blocks. He didn’t think the killer appeared out of nowhere like one of the magic tricks in the window.

“You told me you heard the killer walk up to you. Where did he come from?”

“I don’t know, man. There wasn’t a soul.” She chewed a fingernail and idly scratched an itch between her legs. “Wait, wait, hang on. There was somebody at the bus stop down there.”

Stride tapped his pen against his front teeth and squinted as he studied the bus stop, which was near the base of the Oasis driveway about thirty yards away. No shelter, just a street sign and a notch in the pavement for the bus to pull off the street.

“What did he look like?” Stride asked.

Elonda shrugged. “As long as he wasn’t a cop, I didn’t care.”

“Tall? Short?”

“Fuck, I don’t know.”

Stride ran a hand back through his unkempt salt-and-pepper hair. It was wavy, with a mind of its own, and more salt and less pepper every day. He bit his lip, imagining the street empty, not a riot of police activity, just Elonda and the horny Canadian.

And a man waiting for a bus.

“Did you hear a bus?” he asked. “You would have noticed if one went by right behind you.”

Elonda thought back. “No. No bus.”

“How long were you in the doorway before the murder?”

“ ’Bout forty-five seconds,” Elonda said.

“You sound pretty sure.”

“I count,” she said, and gave him a broad wink.

Stride got the picture. No bus, and less than a minute before the shooting. He waved at one of the uniformed officers on the scene, a burly kid with a blond buzz cut and a stubble goatee.

“Go down to that bus stop,” Stride told him. “Then time yourself walking back here. Don’t hurry. You’re just a pedestrian on the street, okay?”

The cop nodded. It didn’t take him long. When he arrived back in front of the magic shop, he clicked his sports watch and announced, “Thirty-two seconds.”

Stride squatted down in front of Elonda again. “I’m going to need you to think real hard about that man at the bus stop.”

“That was the guy, huh?” Elonda said. “Shit. I’m telling you, I don’t remember him.”

“Let’s try something,” Stride began.

He stopped when he heard a car horn blare sharply behind him, then heard the expensive purr of a sports car pulling up nearby, just outside the crime scene tape. A door opened, and Stride saw the cop with the goatee, who was still hovering nearby, mutter something foul under his breath. Stride glanced back in time to see a yellow Maserati Spyder peel off toward the Strip.

“Who’s the tough-ass chick?” Elonda asked, looking over Stride’s shoulder.

The Spyder had dropped off a woman who now stood with her arms folded over a large chest and one leg bent, with her foot on the curb. Her hair was short and spiky, dirty blond with black streaks. She was tall, probably only three inches short of Stride’s own six-foot-one, and she looked strong and full-figured, with arms that filled out the sleeves of her tight white T-shirt. Her right arm sported a wolf’s head tattoo. A gold police shield hung from the belt loop of her blue jeans.

“Don’t worry about it,” Stride told Elonda. “Right now, I want you to close your eyes. Just relax and think back to when you first spotted your customer.”

“You trying to hypnotize me?” Elonda asked. “Can you make me stop biting my nails?”

Stride smiled. “No, I just want you to remember. Picture it in your head, okay? You just saw your mark. You’re crossing the street. Is the other man already waiting at the bus stop?”

Elonda started humming. Her head bobbed back and forth, following a rhythm. Then, abruptly, her eyes snapped open. “No, he wasn’t there! Hey, this is cool.”

“Close your eyes again. Keep replaying it.”

“Yeah, now the guy’s behind him at the bus stop. I see him. Where the fuck did he come from?”

“What’s he doing?”

“Checking his watch. Looking up and down the street. Real cool.”

“What’s he wearing?” Stride asked. He thought about a way to trigger her memory and added, “When he checks his watch, can you see his bare arm?”

Elonda pursed her lips, as if she were puckering for a kiss. Her brow furrowed. “A coat!” she said happily. “He’s got a windbreaker-tan, I think. And tan pants, too, khakis maybe.”

“You’re doing great. Is he a big guy?”

“He ain’t so tall. Not real big either. But he looks, I don’t know, tough. Mean dude.”

“How about hair color?”

“Dark,” Elonda said. “Cut short. A beard, too. He’s got a beard.”

“Elonda, you’re beautiful,” Stride said, and he watched the girl beam with pride. He spent another ten minutes playing out the rest of the scene, but the closer she got to the murder, the more her mind blacked it out. When he was done, he called over the goateed cop and told him in a whispered voice what to do.