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Harmony 03 After Glow
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
After Glow
A Jove Book / published by arrangement with the author
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©2004 by Jayne Ann Krentz
This book may not be reproduced in whole or part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. Making or distributing electronic copies of this book constitutes copyright infringement and could subject the infringer to criminal and civil liability.
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Electronic edition: MAY, 2004
For Fuzz lovers everywhere.
The dynamic dust-bunny returns . . .
1
THE TINY BURNERand the little bowl next to the body told the sad story. Professor Lawrence Maltby had finally managed to kill himself. Judging by the dark residue and the lingering scent of exotic spices, he had done himself in with a common street drug known as Chartreuse.
Lydia Smith left the doorway of the shabby bedroom that Maltby had converted into a study and crouched beside the professor’s scrawny, crumpled form. She did not expect to find a pulse, and when she put her fingertips to the throat beneath the scraggly white beard, she proved herself right.
She shivered, rose quickly, stepped back, and reached into her shoulder bag for her personal phone. Her fingers trembled when she punched out the emergency number.
“Yes, that’s right,” she said to the overstressed operator. “Number Thirteen, Hidden Lane. First floor, apartment A. It’s in the Old Quarter near the Wall.”
“I’m sorry, ma’am, but that street isn’t coming up on my city grid,” the operator said brusquely. “Are you sure about the address?”
“Yes, I’m sure. Hidden Lane isn’t on most city maps.” Lydia took another step from the body. “Probably why they named it Hidden Lane. Look, just tell the medics to take Dead City Way to South Wall Street and turn left at the tavern on the corner. Once they’re in the neighborhood, anyone can give them directions.”
“All right.” There was a short silence before the woman came back on the line. “They’re on the way. I’m also sending a police car since you say there’s a body.”
The operator sounded as if she wasn’t at all certain that Lydia could tell the difference between a dead body and the other sort.
“There is definitely a dead man in this apartment. Trust me, I’ve seen one before.”
“Do not under any circumstances leave the scene, ma’am. Since you’re the one who found the body, there will be a few formalities.”
Formalities.Lydia felt the hair on the nape of her neck stir much the same way it had a few minutes ago when she had walked into Maltby’s gloom-filled apartment and realized that something was horribly wrong.
In her experienceformalities was not a good word.
Just a few formalitieswas the phrase the pompous members of the Academic Council had used to describe the farce of a formal inquiry they had staged before they had fired her from her position at the university seven months ago.
We need to go through some formalities,was how the police detective in charge of the investigation into Chester Brady’s murder last month had termed the grilling that Lydia had been obliged to endure.
It wasn’t her fault that she had been the first person to stumble across Chester’s body in that ancient alien sarcophagus, she thought. And there was no reason to hold her responsible for the fact that she had been the first one to find Maltby’s body today.
It was just her bad luck that she had walked in on this mess, she told herself. It could have been anyone. The door of Maltby’s apartment had been unlocked when she had arrived a few minutes ago, so naturally she had put her head inside to call his name. After all, he was the one who had asked her to stop by his place this morning.
Actually the message that he had left on her answering machine while she had been occupied with a museum tour group had been a demand, not a request.
“ . . . This is Dr. Lawrence Maltby. I must see you immediately, Miss Smith. Please come to my apartment as soon as possible. I have extremely urgent news concerning the incident in the catacombs a few months ago that led to your dismissal from the university. . . .”
Although he had been let go from his own position at Old Frequency College more than a decade earlier, Maltby had evidently not lost his air of professorial authority. The tone of his voice on her answering machine had been that of a department head summoning a junior staff member to his office.
In spite of the rudeness, Lydia had wasted no time. The magic wordsurgent news concerning the incident in the catacombs a few months ago had gotten her full attention.
But the expensive cab ride to Hidden Lane had been for naught. She was too late.
She saw no reason to mention the reasons she happened to be standing over Maltby’s dead body to the emergency operator, however.
“Look, this isn’t a crime scene or anything,” she said quickly. “Professor Maltby wasn’t murdered. It looks like he OD’d on Chartreuse. There’s no point in having me stick around to answer a lot of questions. I don’t have any answers.”
The operator was unmoved. “I’m sorry, ma’am, but rules are rules. Stay right where you are until the police and the medics arrive.”
“Yeah, sure.” Lydia ended the call abruptly. She glanced once more at the body and then quickly looked away.
She had not known Maltby personally, but she had heard the gossip along Ruin Row for years. His tragic end had been forecast for some time by all of the gallery owners who had dealt with him. In his heyday he had been a respected, tenured professor of para-archaeology. But his career had foundered after he had sunk into the dark netherworld of drug addiction.
After his dismissal from the staff at Old Frequency College, he had moved here to Cadence City where he had attempted to make a living as a private consultant to collectors and gallery owners along Ruin Row. But the drugs had made it impossible for him to function reliably. Eventually his deteriorating reputation had caused his consulting work to dry up.
In the end, Maltby had descended to the lowest rung in the antiquities trade. He had become a ruin rat, eking out a meager living by sneaking illegally in and out of the catacombs in hopes of turning up the occasional valuable relic.
Several of Lydia’s acquaintances in the Old Quarter had told her that, during the brief spells when he was able to kick his habit long enough to go underground, Maltby sometimes showed up with some spectacular finds. No one knew where he did his secret excavating work down in the catacombs and, honoring the unspoken rules that governed the less legitimate side of the antiquities trade, no one asked.
She listened intently for a few seconds and heard no sirens. She had a few minutes before the medics and the police arrived. Surely there was no harm in looking around.
Trying not to look at the body, she moved to the desk and surveyed the cluttered surface. There were several aging copies of theJournal of Para-archaeology stacked randomly on one corner. Pens,
papers, and a notebook were scattered about in a careless fashion.
She unfastened her shoulder bag, removed a tissue, and used it to open the notebook. The scribbling inside appeared to be a series of angry rebuttals to various papers that had appeared in recent editions of theJournal of Para-archaeology; letters to the editor that would never have been published.
She closed the notebook and surveyed the desk. Something about the arrangement of the items on it seemed off. All of the things that one might expect to see on an academic’s desk were present, including a small pad of paper, heaps of reference books, a lamp, and a blotter. There was no computer but that was not a surprise. Maltby had probably sold it long ago to buy Chartreuse. Either that or it had been stolen. This was a rough neighborhood.
She took a closer look, trying to figure out what was bothering her. And then it struck her that the blotter was not positioned squarely in the center where it could be properly used. It had been dragged or pulled too far to the right so that one corner hung off the edge. The lamp was in the wrong place, too. The shade was cocked at an odd angle that would send the beam of light straight down, quite uselessly, to the floor.
It was easy to see what had happened. No doubt belatedly aware that he was in serious trouble from the overdose, Maltby had evidently tried to get to his feet, perhaps to call for help. He would have been dazed and unsteady and had probably flailed wildly about, grabbing at the nearest objects in a vain attempt to steady himself. He had knocked the lamp and blotter askew in the process.
She leaned down to open the top desk drawer. What could it hurt to just glance inside to see if Maltby had left any clue to what it was he had wanted to tell her?
She paused in the act of reaching for the drawer knob when she noticed the little sheet of paper lying on the worn carpet. It was just the right size to have been torn off the small notepad that sat next to the phone.
Curious, she crouched down and angled herself under the desk to pick up the paper. When she turned it over she saw that someone had started to scrawl a couple of words in a very shaky hand.
Amber Hil
A knock sounded loudly on the front door of the apartment, shattering the unnatural stillness of the death room. Startled, she started to straighten. Her head collided smartly with the underside of the desk.
“Damn.” She scrambled out from under the desk and dropped the paper into her purse.
There was a second knock. A shiver went through her. Whoever was out there in the hall managed to make a simple rap on the door sound like a summons to doom.
She hesitated, uncertain whether or not to respond. She still didn’t hear any sirens, which ruled out the possibility that Maltby’s visitor was a medic or a cop. Given the character of the neighborhood, that left a lot of unpleasant possibilities.
She pondered the wisdom of simply ignoring the knock. Then she recalled that the door was unlocked. Whoever was out there in the hall might decide to try his luck with the knob at any moment.
It would probably be a really good idea to go into the front room and lock the door.
She hurried out of the study, went down the short hall, and traversed the dingy sitting room on tiptoe. There was a peephole in the heavily reinforced door. Trying not to give away her presence, she put her eye to the little circle of glass. At the same time she reached out to throw the bolt.
She stopped when she saw the man standing in the shadowy hall. A day’s growth of dark beard, scarred boots, rugged khaki pants and shirt, and a battered leather jacket added up to one conclusion. This was the kind of guy who looked like he’d make an interesting date if you were in a mood to take a walk on the wild side, but you would definitely not want to run into him in a dark alley on a moonless night.
His eyes were a disturbing combination of gold and green. He had the hard, implacable features of a man who was accustomed to being in command.
The face of his watch was a circle of amber. She knew this because she knew the man.
There was nothing special about the amber watch, of course. Almost everyone wore amber in one form or another. Two hundred years ago the colonists from Earth had quickly learned that here on Harmony the unique gemstone had a very special property: Amber made it possible for humans to focus their latent psychic energy, paranormal powers that the environment of the new world had somehow released.
Given the fact that, by the second generation, all of the colonists’ offspring exhibited some degree of psi talent and could control it with the use of amber, the stuff had quickly become the energy source of choice. Even little children could resonate with amber with sufficient skill to operate a door key or switch on the rez-screen to watch cartoons.
Lydia knew only too well that Emmett London was not into amber accessories because they were fashionable. He was a very powerful dissonance-energy para-resonator—a ghost-hunter. He had the psychic talent and the training required to neutralize the dangerous, flaring balls of chaotic dissonance energy, the so-calledghosts, that drifted at random through the endless underground corridors of the alien ruins.
Ghost-hunters were a necessary part of any excavation team. They were, in essence, professional bodyguards who were hired from their Guilds to protect archaeologists, researchers, and others who explored and excavated the ancient catacombs beneath the Dead City.
Until she had met Emmett last month, she had held an extremely low opinion of hunters in general. She considered most dissonance-energy para-rezes to be little better than high-end mobsters. There was a hunters’ Guild in every major city on Harmony and as far as she was concerned they were merely legalized criminal organizations run by ruthless bosses.
Emmett was the mysterious ex-boss of the Resonance City Guild. Shortly after his arrival here in Cadence last month, rumors had begun to circulate in the tabloids to the effect that he was the handpicked successor of the current boss of the Cadence City Guild, Mercer Wyatt.
Emmett denied any interest in assuming the leadership of the local Guild, but Lydia was not so sure he could avoid the job—not if Wyatt put pressure on him. There were a lot of old sayings about the hunters and the Guilds, one of which was,once a Guild man, always a Guild man. Granted, the conventional wisdom overlooked the fact that there were some female hunters but that was beside the point.
In the past few weeks she had tried very hard not to think about the fact that she was sleeping with the man Mercer Wyatt had chosen to take over as the boss of the Cadence Guild.
She yanked open the door and threw herself into Emmett’s arms.
“You don’t know how glad I am to see you,” she said into his shirt. “How did you find me?”
“I called your office. Melanie told me you were here.” He put an arm around her shoulders and glanced back to check the grimy hallway. Satisfied, he moved both of them into the apartment and closed the door. “What the hell are you doing in this part of town?”
“Maltby, the man who lives here, said he wanted to see me. When I arrived I found him lying on the floor of his study.” She took a deep breath. “He’s sort of dead.”
Emmett looked pained. “Not another one.”
She frowned. “This isn’t like the last time. It looks like Maltby took an overdose of Chartreuse. I called for an ambulance.” She sighed. “Not that it will do any good.”
“Where is he?”
The stoic resignation in his voice annoyed her. “You don’t have to act as if I make a habit of finding dead bodies.” She waved a hand toward the study. “He’s in the room down that hall.”
Emmett walked to the doorway of the study. She trailed after him, clutching her purse.
“This is not good,” Emmett said.
“Yes, well, it’s a lot worse for Maltby.”
“That’s not what I meant. Some complications have come up. The last thing we need right now is a dead body.”
He disappeared into the study.
Alarmed, she hurried to the doorway. Emmett was standing over Maltby’s remains, surveying the
small space with a considering expression.
“What complications?” she asked. “Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad to see you, but what are you doing here? When did you get home from the camping trip with Zane and his buddies?”
It was not at all surprising that Emmett looked a little rough around the edges today, she thought. Her young neighbor, Zane Hoyt, and his pals were all budding dissonance-energy para-resonators from a part of town where good male role models were decidedly scarce. The boys in the neighborhood were growing up fast with more psi power than any of them knew how to handle. It was a recipe for disaster. They desperately needed guidance and a firm hand.
The Guild-sponsored Hunter-Scout troops were a useful community resource for boys in Cadence but there had been none in the section of the city where Lydia and Zane lived. Emmett had taken care of the problem a couple of weeks ago when he had quietly prodded the Guild into establishing a troop in the neighborhood. He had even gone so far as to take an active interest in the newly formed group.
All of the boys, Zane included, idolized Emmett. He was, after all, one of the most powerful para-rezes in the city. Young males, Lydia had discovered, were very impressed with raw power.
“Got in around three o’clock this morning,” Emmett said. “Dropped the boys off at their homes and went to my place to crash. Didn’t want to wake you up. The phone rang just as I was walking in the door.” Absently he rubbed his jaw. “I haven’t been to bed yet.”
Sirens wailed in the distance. About time, Lydia thought.
“Who called you?” she asked. “Why didn’t you get to bed?”
“It’s a long story. I’ll explain later.” He eyed her closely. “Meanwhile, please tell me this dead guy doesn’t have anything to do with your new consulting job?”
“Oh, no, things are going great with the Hepscott project,” she said, relieved to be able to give a positive, upbeat answer for once. She cast an uneasy glance at Maltby. “This was a, uh, private matter.”
“Yeah, I was afraid of that.” Emmett’s expression hardened a little more. “This is connected to those questions you’ve been asking along Ruin Row for the past couple of weeks, isn’t it? The ones about your so-called Lost Weekend?”