That glower swung up at him. He saw a flicker of something blander, as if she was trying to force a more polite expression for him. After a moment, she gave up.
"Yes?"
Finn flashed his badge, too quick for her to read it, hoping for a reaction without pushing her to panic. But her expression didn"t change.
"Security? Fine, I"m not supposed to come in there. But I"ve paid, see?" She waved her wrist.
"This isn"t about whether you"ve paid " He held up his badge. She made no move to read it, her gaze already moving on, scanning the crowd.
"I"m Detective Findlay. I believe we spoke earlier on Robyn Peltier"s phone."
Her head swung around fast enough to cause whiplash, and what little color she had in her cheeks drained.
She bolted, but Finn was ready, lunging and catching her arm.
"Hey," a voice slurred. "You can"t do that." A kid, not old enough to drink, lurched toward them, eyes glazed as he waved at Finn"s badge. "I got a cell phone, you know. Let go of her or you"ll be starring on You Tube, a.s.shole."
Finn kept his grip on the girl"s arm, deftly steering out of the drunk kid"s way, while keeping him in sight.
"Miss, I need to ask you "
Someone whacked him between the shoulder blades. His grip relaxed just as she yanked. She slid free and dove into the crowd now surrounding them, cell phones out.
Finn went after her, shouldering his way through the mob. He kept looking for his backup. No sign of it. He called his lieutenant, updating him as quickly as possible, then getting off the phone. The girl was running now. Everyone got out of her way. Not everyone got out of his, a few intentionally stepping into his path, making him veer around them.
"Finn! I got her!" Damon"s voice rose above the din. "She"s heading toward the kiddie section. I think there"s an exit there."
Following Damon"s voice, Finn rounded a corner. The people there, not having witnessed the altercation, saw only a big man bearing down on them... and stepped aside. Ahead he could see the girl"s yellow shirt flashing through the darkness.
Damon continued shouting, keeping him on track, as they headed into the children"s area. It was all but empty and that"s where she made her mistake. Finn might be big, but he was in top condition and she wasn"t. As the gap between them closed, she kept glancing over her shoulder, slowing herself down all the more, but unable to stop checking.
Finn broke into an all-out sprint. The girl weaved toward a quartet of retirees enjoying cotton candy under a tree, away from the fair hubbub. Alarm flashed over their faces as they spotted a man chasing a young woman. Finn waved his badge, and they fell back to give him room. The girl swerved straight for one of the women.
"Finn!" Damon shouted. "She"s got "
Finn saw the woman backpedal, frantically trying to move aside. Then the confusion in her face turned to horror. Her husband pitched toward her, hands out, as if to shove her from the girl"s path. But he was too far away. The girl was bearing down on her, a gun in her outstretched hand. The woman screamed. The gun fired. The woman tottered back, eyes wide with disbelief. Then the girl gave the woman a shove, knocking her down like a bowling pin.
Shot her, shoved her out of the way and kept going.
Finn skidded beside the woman as her husband dove for her.
"Finn!" Damon shouted. "No! That"s what she wants. They"ve got it. Keep going."
Finn sent a silent apology to the woman... and raced past her, shouting back for them to call 911.
He could see the girl"s yellow shirt ahead, but he had to slow, calling his backup. And though he didn"t stop moving, didn"t stop watching that yellow shirt, by the time he reached the midway, she had too much of a head start. She disappeared into the first large mob. He caught a glimpse of her once on the other side, but by the time he made it through the crowd, she was gone.
The backup team had shut down all exits and was patrolling the perimeter. They were still searching the park, but in his gut, Finn knew she"d gotten away. He"d seen how easy it had been for her to sneak into the park. She wouldn"t have bothered with the exit. She"d have found another way out, dodged patrols and escaped. And she"d have done it right away, knowing she"d bought a limited amount of time with her distraction.
She had shot that woman to slow Finn down. Of all the senseless reasons you could have for killing someone, there was none as cold as that.
She could have knocked the woman off her feet. Could have fired the gun in the air. Could have winged her shoulder. But she hadn"t. She"d looked a stranger in the face and killed her.
And now Finn stood near the crowd surrounding the fallen woman, and while everyone else"s attention was on the paramedics working frantically to revive her, his was on two people sitting apart on the curb. Damon and the woman"s ghost.
Damon held the woman"s hands, leaning in close and talking to her as she nodded numbly, her gaze fixed on the crowd around her body. Finn stayed where he was. There was nothing the woman could add that would help him solve her murder, and there was nothing Finn could add that would comfort her more than Damon already was.
Gradually, the woman"s shock seemed to thaw. She added words to her nods. Then she made eye contact with Damon while she spoke to him. Finally she twisted to face him. He said something, and she nodded and replied. He helped her to her feet and, still holding one of her hands, led her to the edge of the crowd.
Damon stopped there, releasing her hand. She took his back, squeezing it and saying something. Then, leaving him on the edge, she walked to where her husband knelt beside her body, tears streaming down his face. She stood behind him and touched the top of his head, stroking it even as her fingers pa.s.sed through. Her husband stopped. He lifted his head. She smiled and bent, murmuring, hand still resting on his head.
Then she was gone.
ROBYN.
Robyn followed Hope onto the path. They"d emerged near the barricade. Hope looked around, then jammed the gun into the back of her jeans like an action-movie chick.
"Which shoulder was it?" Hope asked.
"What?"
Hope waved for her to sit on the barrier. "Which shoulder were you shot in?" When Robyn paused, Hope prodded her until she was sitting, then said, "Take off your shirt," as she pulled what looked like a first-aid kit from her pocket.
"Karl..."
Hope glanced toward the forest, then blinked, erasing a flash of worry. "He"ll be fine. Let"s get that shoulder cleaned up before we go."
Robyn shed the shirt and Hope set to work, as competent as any field medic.
I don"t know her. I don"t know her at all.
She shivered.
"Cold?"
Hope took off her denim jacket and started pulling it around Robyn"s bare shoulders. Then her face lifted, eyes closing. A soft gasp. When she opened her eyes, Robyn saw the same gleam from before, now fading into a glow of rapture.
"It"s over," she whispered. "He"s okay."
"Hope?"
She jumped, startled, then busied herself tugging the jacket on Robyn. "I don"t hear them fighting anymore, and I think Karl called out. Once he gets here, we need to leave "
"What happened?" Robyn"s throat was dry, her whisper like the rustling of dry leaves.
"Hmm?"
"Back there. In the forest. The man."
"My guess is that he"s the partner of that girl who shot you. Luckily she seems to be relying on him to bring you in and staying clear. One less problem for us to deal with."
"He"s not working with her."
A tight laugh. "That would be awfully coincidental, you having two two people hunting you for unrelated reasons. I"m sure he"s " people hunting you for unrelated reasons. I"m sure he"s "
"He"s not. He took a call. He was talking about her Adele about getting me away from her."
"Oh?" Hope"s head shot up. "What did ?" She stopped. "You saw a man at Judd Archer"s house, right? I bet that was him. Her former former partner, now pursuing his own agenda." partner, now pursuing his own agenda."
"And, according to what he said on the phone, pursuing Karl."
It took a moment for Hope to find the proper expression of surprise. "I guess we"ll have to figure it all out later. For now "
She looked up, then quickly plastered on a fresh bandage before hurrying to the forest"s edge. Robyn heard and saw nothing, but a moment later, Karl appeared. He and Hope stayed there, a dozen feet away, murmuring in voices too low for Robyn to make out.
Hope checked Karl"s lip, then fingered a bloodied rip in his shirt. He bent over her, talking, Hope nodding.
Then Karl brushed hair back from her face, leaning to say something more intimate. The other Karl the one in the forest, the one who"d pushed them aside was gone.
"I"ll walk you two back to the car first," Karl said as they approached Robyn.
Hope shook her head. "We"ll be fine. You finish here, then meet up with us." She looked at Robyn. "Karl has to clean up."
"Get rid of the body," Robyn said.
Hope let out a chirp. A laugh? Or a choke of surprise? "Damon really did subject you to too many crime shows, didn"t he? I meant Karl needs to clean himself himself up." She waved at his bloodied shirt and split lip. "He can"t go traipsing around in public like that." up." She waved at his bloodied shirt and split lip. "He can"t go traipsing around in public like that."
Robyn gave her a look. Hope met it without flinching. Robyn continued to stare, trying to make Hope look away, give another nervous laugh. When she did neither, Robyn strode toward the forest. She got to the edge. Then Karl"s hand fell on her shoulder.
"You"re going to the car," he said.
There was no menace in his voice. No room for questions either.
She looked back at him, lifting her chin to meet his eyes.
"Yes," he said. Nothing more. It could have meant "yes, you"re going to the car" or "yes, I will stop you from taking another step." But she knew it didn"t. It meant "yes, you"re right." That was all she needed. She backed onto the path and followed Hope.
It took no more than five minutes to walk from the forest. As Robyn saw the woods opening up, the field ahead, she slowed, certain the edge couldn"t be so close. When she"d been running she"d told herself repeatedly how small the woods had to be, but with everything that had happened in there, it felt like those trees should go on forever, that they"d been miles from civilization.
And here, just ahead, was civilization, as garish as it got. The fair. The music still boomed. The kids still screamed. The lights still colored the night sky. The air smelled, not of fear and blood and dirt, but of corn dogs and cotton candy.
Robyn rubbed her arms and blinked. They"d been gone less than an hour, but she"d somehow expected to walk out and find the fair packed up, the field a desolate wasteland of half-filled c.o.ke cups and unwanted prizes. She felt like Lucy, stepping from the wardrobe to see that despite everything she"d seen in Narnia, the everyday world had continued, oblivious.
"Where"s the car?" she finally asked. Her first words since leaving Karl.
Hope didn"t break her her silence only pointed at the fair, then headed deeper into the field, leaving Robyn squinting to see why she wasn"t taking the direct route along the fence. When she asked, Hope just shook her head. silence only pointed at the fair, then headed deeper into the field, leaving Robyn squinting to see why she wasn"t taking the direct route along the fence. When she asked, Hope just shook her head.
"Hope?"
Her friend stopped. It was a moment before she turned. The moon had slid behind wisps of cloud, leaving Hope"s face shadowed, her expression unreadable. It was another moment before she spoke.
"You said Adele can find you anywhere."
Robyn nodded.
"I"m making sure she doesn"t."
Hope resumed walking. Robyn trudged behind her, the late-night dew soaking her shoes. Exhaustion slumped her shoulders, the injured one aching. The adrenaline rush from earlier was long gone. Like a midafternoon caffeine-and-sugar-crash, all she wanted to do was follow Hope, let her worry about Adele and find them someplace safe to hide, and to h.e.l.l with the questions, the whys and hows. But those questions buzzed in her brain like bees, stinging her every time she tried to ignore them.
How did taking this route protect her from Adele? The field was empty all Adele had to do was glance out when the moon reappeared and she"d see them.
She remembered when they"d first entered the forest, the man saying it was "suitably nondescript" and would keep Adele from finding them.
"She can see me, can"t she? She"s... like one of those psychics the police use to find people." Even as Robyn heard the words, she couldn"t believe she was saying them, and worse, saying them as if she believed them.
"Adele sees me," she pressed on. "She sees what"s around me and that"s how she tracks me down. If there aren"t any hints in the landscape "
" then she can"t find you."
There, Hope had admitted it.
They traveled another twenty feet before Hope stopped. "Going to the car might not be the wisest idea. Something tells me Adele wouldn"t hesitate to turn the parking lot into the O.K. Corral." She took the gun from her waistband. "We"ll wait for Karl to come. He"ll find us."
Of course he would. He always did. An unnatural ability to find them anyplace they left a trail. Like a tracking dog. She shivered and looked over at Hope. She was scanning the field. At a glance, Robyn could see there was no one around, but Hope kept looking, slowly turning. Robyn leaned toward her to say something. Hope"s eyes were closed.
"Hope?"
She lifted a finger, telling her to wait. After a few seconds, Hope flinched and went rigid. Her eyes flew open, gaze swinging to something white in the gra.s.s a dozen feet away.
Robyn walked closer and saw a small, white cross with a faded plastic wreath. "Someone must have died here."
"Yes." Firm, as if Hope knew that for sure.
Robyn rubbed the goose b.u.mps from her arms, started to sit, then felt the cold, wet gra.s.s and changed her mind. Arms wrapped around her chest, she looked at the forest.
"What happened back there?"
"I don"t know. You said that guy seemed to know Adele and know she was after you, but he definitely wasn"t planning to rescue you, at least not in the sense of letting you walk away "
"That"s not what I meant."
The wail of an ambulance filled the silence. They both turned to follow the sound. It seemed to be heading for the fair, but with all the flashing lights, it was impossible to tell. After a moment, Robyn wasn"t even sure it was an ambulance at all, not just the sirens on a ride.
When it stopped, Robyn waited. Still Hope didn"t respond.