Ortiz is a vampire. Also, a member of San Diego’s finest. He worked for Williams before the shake-up.
He nods. Ortiz is keeping me in the loop. He’s assistant to the new acting police chief. Gives him access to information pertinent to our community.
A hint of wistfulness comes through. He misses his job. I wish I could muster some sympathy.
Instead, I gesture to the report.
Sounds like a weird cult to me. No one has been killed. No one has been seriously hurt. So why is this important to the community?
I’m not sure.
Three words I never thought I’d hear from the supreme know-it-all. He tents his fingers on the desk in a deliberately casual movement and looks at me.
And looks at me . . . until I get it. This is the favor he wants in return for lending me the witches.
So what do you want me to do? Work with Ortiz? Question these guys again? What can I find out that the police haven’t?
A shrug. I don’t know. You fancy yourself a smart cookie. Come up with an angle. All three victims have been picked up in bars around the Gaslamp district. You know the area. Maybe you can stake it out, catch one of these women in the act. Find out what the game is. Between real vamp corpses showing up and these wannabes out there attacking men, it won’t be long before the Revengers involve themselves. We don’t need that.
Especially if the Revengers get it in their heads that one of these human women is a vampire and decide to take her out. Killing a mortal would bring the worst kind of attention—to them and to us. Still—
I can’t promise to do anything until I know Culebra is safe.
Agreed.
I stare at him. Too quick.
There’s a knock on the door.
Ariel pokes her head in. “We have a location,” she says.
I’m on my feet before she’s finished the sentence.
Williams and I follow her back to the room. The table has been pushed to one side, a pentagram chalked on the floor. Crystals wink from each of the star’s five points. In the middle, three candles burn. Under the candles, a map is laid out.
It’s a detailed map of the city.
“She’s in San Diego?” I ask.
Susan points to a tiny diamond on the end of a silken rope. The gem rests on a street in National City, a suburb to the south of San Diego.
“How could you—?”
Min smiles. “We started out with a bigger area,” she says. “A map of the U.S. Working such a powerful spell would require proximity.
When we were shown the way, a map of California. Finally, the energy led us right here. She’s close.”
She hands me a piece of paper with an address written in neat script. “But I must warn you, Anna, the same energy that led us to her location may have warned her that she was being sought.”
My thoughts jump to Frey. “I have a friend who is working his own spell to counteract Burke’s magic. What happens if Burke becomes aware of our interference?”
The three exchange anxious looks. Min speaks first. “He is in danger,” she says shortly. “The sooner you find and deal with Burke the better.”
Ariel holds something out to me on the palm of her hand. “Wear this.”
I hold it up. It’s a charm, a filigree ball, on a silver chain. Light reflects off the surface like sparks from a pinwheel. “What does it do?”
“It’s an amulet. For protection and guidance.” She helps me slip it over my head. “It will tell you when you are close.”
“How?”
“You’ll know.”
I drop the charm inside my shirt, between my breasts. It’s warm where it touches my skin.
“Don’t take it off,” Susan says. The seriousness in her eyes is mirrored in the expressions of the other two. “Promise us.”
I don’t believe in charms but neither did I believe in vampires until about nine months ago. Besides, what could it hurt?
“Sure,” I reply. “Promise.”
CHAPTER 12
I CAN’T WAIT TO GET GOING. WILLIAMS FOLLOWS me back to the elevator, droning on about how I owe him. All I can think about is getting to Burke and I mumble a “yeah, yeah, I know” as the doors slide shut.
When I’m alone, I look at the paper.
The address is in an industrial park on the outskirts of National City. I’ll head there directly after making one stop—I keep my gun in our office safe. When I’ve retrieved it, and it’s reassuring weight is snug against the small of my back, I’m ready.
The exact address is a warehouse with a sign on the side that reads “Second Chance Products.” The name means nothing to me. The way the building is situated, though, does. It’s located below street level and surrounded by a parking lot and chain link fence. It’s the last building in a string of utilitarian, prefab warehouses, the nearest neighbor a half mile to the west. To the east is a vacant lot.
It’s perfect for surveillance. I pull onto the shoulder of a frontage road where I have an unobstructed view of the entrance.
I touch the amulet through the fabric of my blouse. I don ’t know what magic it possesses, but I won’t need it to recognize Belinda Burke. I remember the first time I saw her with Culebra at Beso de la Muerte. Remember the dark hair and eyes, the belligerent way she stared at me. She was arguing with Culebra in rapid-fire Spanish, standing over him, thin face drawn with anger. I see that face in my mind now, features burned into my memory.
I won’t need an amulet to recognize her.
It’s close to noon. The parking lot is full, trucks and workers streaming in and out. It’s what keeps me from taking the direct approach, barge in, guns blazing. I’m not detecting any supernatural signatures. Only human. I don’t know yet if Burke is inside.
At one p.m., a limo pulls up to the entrance. The driver disappears through the main entrance.
A few minutes later, he returns with a woman. He holds open the rear passenger door for her and stands aside. The woman is tall, slender. She’s wearing a charcoal pantsuit tailored to accentuate broad shoulders, a small waist, narrow hips. She has red hair, fair skin.
She pauses outside the limo and her gaze sweeps upward.
Directly at me.
I have the absurd impulse to duck. I resist. I know there’s no way she can possibly tell that there’s anyone sitting in a car so far away.
Besides, this is a busy frontage road and there are two other cars, one parked in front and one, behind me.
Still, she is looking only at my car.
Then, a strange thing happens.
The amulet around my neck begins to burn.
CHAPTER 13
I YELP AND PULL THE AMULET FREE. IT’S GLOWING red.
What the hell? If this is what Ariel meant by telling me the amulet would let me know when I was close to Burke, she could have warned me.
I start to yank it off, but the image of those three women and the promise I made to keep it on stays my hand. I let it fall against the outside of my blouse. It still smarts through the fabric, but not nearly as much.
By the time I look again at the parking lot, the limo is gone.
Shit.
The amulet’s glow diminishes.
It takes me a second to regroup. There’s only one egress from the warehouse. If it didn’t come by me, the limo must have gone the other way.
Burke must have been in the limo.
I hang a U and take off.
The limo is a quarter mile ahead. I hang back and follow. They jump on 805 North and proceed up the coast. At the junction with 52, they head west, into La Jolla.
La Jolla is a wealthy enclave of the rich and famous. It attracts lots of tourists—so forget about finding a place on the street to park. But people try. As a consequence, traffic along Prospect, the main drag, is usually stop -and-go. At lunchtime, it’s stop and stop and stop before a short go. But it gives me plenty of time to watch the limo as it pulls up in front of La Valencia hotel.