Read Murder of Crows Page 36


  Was that too human?

  He understood Charlie’s warning, but he was a Wolf and always would be.

  But would it be such a bad thing to be just a little more human? Just enough more?

  Don’t get too comfortable in this skin, he thought as he went into the stockroom and rolled a cart to the shelves. Especially when there’s no certainty you’ll still want it a decade from now.

  • • •

  Monty flipped the folder closed when Louis Gresh walked up to his desk.

  The two men studied each other. Then Louis said, “Yesterday you and Captain Burke went to a meeting at the Courtyard. Since then, he’s been on the phone and you’ve been working at your desk instead of being out on patrol. Burke’s not always easy to read, but you’ve got the look of a man who knows there’s a bomb and is trying to find it before the clock gives that final tick.”

  Monty said nothing.

  “Not only that,” Louis continued, “you’re keeping your partner out of it with the captain’s blessing, which means he knows how bad this will be if things go sideways.”

  “Something you want, Louis?”

  “Let me help on the QT.”

  “Did Burke okay it?”

  Louis smiled. “Okay what?”

  Monty hesitated. The fewer people who knew the ultimatum the Others had given, the fewer people who might tell the wrong person. The Controller had clout with people in government and business. What if someone warned him as a way of garnering favor? What would happen to the Midwest—and the rest of Thaisia—if the man managed to escape and go to ground somewhere else?

  But they weren’t going to narrow down the target without taking chances. Not in the window of time Burke figured they had before the terra indigene began destroying the Midwest.

  He wrote down the names of a dozen villages, towns, and cities, then handed the paper to Louis. “We’re looking for private schools, institutions, or any other kind of place where blood prophets might be kept.”

  Louis gave the paper a little wave. “These located around the Great Lakes?”

  “Lower Midwest.”

  Louis looked at him for a long time. “If this bomb goes off before you find what you’re looking for, how much of Thaisia do we lose?”

  “The whole Midwest Region.”

  “Gods above and below.”

  Monty watched Louis carefully fold the paper and put it in a pocket. The Midwest wasn’t their jurisdiction. Government officials should be informed of the threat, and the rest should be up to the Midwest’s governor to locate the Controller and stop the actions that were adding to the ever-present tension between humans and Others.

  But that assumed the Midwest’s governor wasn’t a client of the man the terra indigene wanted killed. That wasn’t an assumption the humans who would get caught in the destruction could afford to make. It wasn’t an assumption he could afford to make.

  Clock is ticking, Monty thought. He hoped Dominic Lorenzo would come through and give him the list of private hospitals or other medical institutions that could hide a compound that matched the description Meg had provided. He hoped that what he was doing would give all of them the chance at a better future.

  He hoped he found the answer before the bomb made of wind and fire destroyed the Midwest.

  CHAPTER 27

  On Firesday morning, Monty waited at the bus stop and listened to the people around him.

  “Crows gathering around schools and medical facilities in the Midwest. Why would they do that?”

  “Spying. That’s what I heard.”

  “Spying on what? Looking to snatch food from the children or pick through the trash is more like it.”

  “All those people arrested for shooting birds. It’s not right.”

  Not wanting to get entangled in the discussion by pointing out that killing crows was against the law, Monty felt relieved when the bus arrived.

  Gods above and below. Shooting crows. Those Midwest towns might as well paint a target in the town square and have the government stand there shouting, We have something to hide!

  The police force grapevine could be an effective tool. However, in this case, some people who shouldn’t have had gotten wind of the hunt. But the Lakeside police were discovering the grapevine had also revealed unexpected allies in other regions. Much of what Captain Burke received was speculation or rumor about halfway houses for girls with addictions, but it was becoming clear that many police stations across Thaisia were looking at Lakeside and wondering if the Chestnut Street station might provide a new model for working with the terra indigene. After all, Lakeside had come through that recent conflict with the Others with minimal casualties and damage to property.

  It won’t mean anything if the east and west of Thaisia are divided by a scorched hole where the Midwest used to be, Monty thought. But we’ll keep trying. Clock is ticking, so we have to keep trying.

  • • •

  “Gods, Doug. What did you get me into?”

  “Problem, Pete?”

  “You’re damn right there’s a fucking problem! Someone e-mailed my wife’s itinerary to me to show they can find her at any hour of the day. Someone sent me a photo of my children’s school and a close-up of children on the playground during recess, with a black X over my kids! Someone doesn’t want me asking questions.”

  “You want to back out?”

  “The time to back out was when you called. But I don’t want to come home one day and find my wife and kids . . .” A choking sound. Then a shuddering effort to regain control. “I’m pretty sure I located Mr. Smith’s compound. It’s not in my town. It’s in the nearest city, which is on the main rail line.”

  “We’ve been looking at the towns with railway access too.”

  “I sent you an e-mail with all the information I have about Mr. Smith and his business. Here in town, there’s a facility that specializes in group housing for ‘those who can’t live on their own.’ It looks legitimate, but the administrator became ‘very busy, must dash’ as soon as I asked about blood prophets. In one of the farming hamlets nearby, there’s a government-run orphanage. It has a small medical facility attached to it and is the place girls who get themselves in trouble go when they’re giving up the babies.”

  “Sounds like a good place to run a breeding program for cassandra sangue.”

  Stunned silence. “What did you say?”

  “Nothing you heard.” A long pause. “Pete? How are you set with gas coupons?”

  A hesitation. “Eve and I have been conserving fuel since I got your call earlier in the week. I can spare a few gallons of gas from the family budget if you need me to drive somewhere and take a look around.”

  “No, I want you to pack up your family and come to Lakeside. Now.”

  “You said we had time. Doug, there’s still time—”

  “To find someone waiting for you when you get home?”

  “I . . . I need to cancel the newspaper, put a hold on the mail, hand off my cases or at least contact—”

  “Someone who will tell the people who sent you your wife’s itinerary and pictures of your children at recess that you’re going to disappear?”

  “Gods.” Rough breathing. “Will . . . Will we be able to come back here?”

  “Hopefully I’ll be able to answer that by the time you get here. And Pete? Keep your eyes open. If you think you’re being followed, head into the wild country and make enough racket to draw the attention of whatever is out there. Right now, your wife and kids have a better chance with the Others than they do with whoever knows you were asking questions.”

  “I’ll call you when we get to Lakeside.”

  “Check in along the way. And before you leave, send me an e-mail with the make and license number of your car.”

  “All right.” A pause. “Doug? Do you think it’s
all worth it?”

  “I think we’ll know in a few days, one way or the other.”

  CHAPTER 28

  The following Windsday morning, Monty entered Burke’s office and closed the door. “I think we found the compound owned by the Controller.”

  Burke gave him a long look. “Call Dr. Lorenzo. Tell him it’s time for whatever input he’s willing to give. And send a car around to pick up Simon Wolfgard. This time he needs to come to us.”

  Monty went back to his desk, made the call to Dominic Lorenzo, and sent Kowalski to pick up the Wolf. Then he sat back, almost swaying with fatigue despite the early hour.

  For several days he, Louis Gresh, and Burke had been running on strong coffee, sketchy meals, and little sleep as they tried to narrow down the possible places where the Controller’s compound could be located. An incident room had been set up at the station and was kept locked. Not that a lock was needed. The sign that read RESERVED FOR DOUGLAS BURKE was enough to make other officers in the Chestnut Street station avoid that corridor as much as possible.

  Everyone at the station knew something was going on and it was something big, something dangerous. Everyone knew he and Louis were involved and their respective teams were not. Everyone knew it somehow involved the terra indigene.

  Everyone knew something bad was about to happen, but not even the station’s chief had asked Captain Burke for an explanation—especially after the report came in that Burke’s friends were run off the road on their way to Lakeside. The two adults and two children suffered minor injuries and were now in some undisclosed location. The assailants, however, suffered fatal injuries when the roadway suddenly turned to quicksand and buried them up to the chest before hardening again.

  It was understood that the local wildlife didn’t find the unexpected feast until after Burke’s friends had been taken from the area.

  Louis sat on the corner of Monty’s desk and leaned toward him. “Do you think we defused this bomb?”

  “Not completely,” Monty replied, rubbing his eyes. “But it will be a smaller one because of what we’ve done.”

  • • •

  Hearing the soft scuff of a shoe, Meg spun away from the front counter and hurried into the sorting room, hoping Simon finally had some news. But it was Jane, the Wolfgard bodywalker, who stood in a spot where she wouldn’t be seen by someone entering the office.

  “Hello, Jane. Is there something I can do for you?” Then she thought of one reason why Jane would come up to the office. “Sam! Is he sick? Is he hurt?”

  Jane shook her head. “Sam is fine. Did you . . . have an itch?”

  Meg sagged against the sorting table. “No. When I saw you, it was the first thing that popped into my head.”

  “Prairie dog thoughts. They can pop up right under your nose.”

  The image made her smile.

  It felt like she hadn’t smiled in days. It felt like all she’d done was wait for news, for answers, for . . . something. The terra indigene, on the other hand, had worked and played and hunted as if nothing was happening. Sure, more of the Wolves were patrolling the Courtyard’s boundary, more Crows were on lookout, more Hawks were soaring, but the Others weren’t waiting the way the humans were waiting. They were ready. Until it was time to act, they would simply live.

  “I was wondering about the Wolf cookies,” Jane said.

  “Did you want something in particular?” Meg asked. “Tess is going to e-mail the order to Eamer’s Bakery today. I’ve asked for smaller cookies for the puppies. The beef-flavored cookies were the most popular, and—”

  “The people-shaped cookies,” Jane said.

  “Oh.” Meg hesitated. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to have people-shaped cookies anymore.”

  Jane looked disappointed. “They were useful.”

  “Oh. They could still make chamomile cookies in a different shape,” Meg said.

  “Small cookies? I’ve been giving Skippy a little piece each morning, and it calms him down just enough for his brain to work properly. We’ve all noticed the difference.”

  “I’ll put in the request.”

  “Thank you.” Jane shifted from one foot to the other. “Are there any humans working in the bookstore today?”

  “I don’t know. But Merri Lee is working at A Little Bite. Did you want to talk to her?”

  “No.” The word was snapped out too quickly, followed by a little whine. “No, I just thought, while I was up here . . .”

  Merri Lee, Ruthie, and Theral had grown up watching scary “wolfman” movies, and they all agreed the real thing was a lot more terrifying. But they also agreed that the Others shouldn’t feel reluctant to shop in their own Market Square just because a few humans worked there—especially the terra indigene who couldn’t go to the human stores because they couldn’t pass for human and would likely cause a panic if people saw them.

  Having someone like Jane Wolfgard, a respected bodywalker, go into Howling Good Reads and purchase a book when Merri Lee or Ruthie was at the checkout counter, or sit in A Little Bite to have a drink and a snack, might make other terra indigene feel easier about doing the same thing.

  And anything that helped each side accept the other had to be a good thing. Especially now.

  Meg touched the side of her head. “No one will mind furry ears.”

  Jane studied her, then nodded and went out the back door.

  Hearing the Crows who were on watch cawing at someone’s arrival, Meg returned to the counter in time to see a patrol car pull in and continue up the access way. Then she heard someone come in from the back and turned, thinking it was Jane needing a little more reassurance.

  Not Jane. Simon crossed the sorting room and stopped at the Private doorway.

  “They found the enemy,” he said. “I’m going to the Chestnut Street station to talk to Montgomery and the other police.”

  “All right.” Suddenly cold, Meg hugged herself. “Will you tell me . . .”

  Simon cocked his head. “Tell you what?”

  “I don’t know.”

  He waited a moment, then said, “I have to go.”

  Gone.

  She waited and watched until the patrol car pulled out of the delivery area and turned right on Main Street, heading toward the Chestnut Street station.

  She held out her hands, studied her arms—and wondered if she should be relieved or alarmed that she didn’t feel even the faintest prickle anywhere.

  • • •

  Caught in an uneasy sleep, Jean grimaced, and a split on her lower lip reopened, turning dream into a prophecy that flowed like a movie clip.

  The ground shook. The wind roared. The Walking Names shouted and pleaded and screamed. Walls were sprayed with blood, and limbs ripped from bodies littered the corridors.

  The girls, locked in their cells, shivered and cried.

  Then her door slammed open and she saw . . .

  Jean opened her eyes—and she smiled.

  • • •

  Dominic Lorenzo looked haggard when he walked into the incident room at the Chestnut Street station. He studied Monty, Louis, and Burke before sagging into a chair. “Do you realize what we’ve stirred up? How many influential people have called to rattle the hospital administrators about my suitability to practice medicine?”

  Burke sat down opposite Lorenzo and gave the man a fierce-friendly smile. “Oh, I wouldn’t worry too much about that, Doctor. Lakeside’s police commissioner has been dealing with similar calls about me and mine. I think the people complaining about you now will be singing a different tune very shortly.”

  “Why?”

  Burke’s smile became fiercer. “Benevolent ownership.”

  “A necessary evil.”

  “What about breeding farms? What about breeding girls with an eye to enhancing their ability to see prophecy? What about
breeding them until the offspring are so sensitive they can’t survive without that benevolent ownership?”

  Lorenzo stared at Burke. “That’s monstrous.”

  Monty studied the doctor. “But it also confirms something you’ve begun to suspect, doesn’t it?”

  Lorenzo opened his briefcase, pulled out a thick stack of papers, and didn’t reply for a minute. Finally, “The people who use these compounds and buy prophecies aren’t going to let that kind of information come to light. Breeding farms for those girls? None of those people would survive the firestorm of that kind of scandal.”

  “Which is why I’m not planning to give the information to other humans,” Burke said. “I’m going to give it to the terra indigene.”

  “Give what to the terra indigene?” Simon Wolfgard asked as he and Vlad Sanguinati walked into the room.

  “We’ll get to that,” Burke said. “Lieutenant?”

  “We’re reasonably sure we’ve found the city where the Controller’s estate and the compound are located,” Monty said, walking over to the map on one of the incident boards.

  Can’t pass for human today, Monty thought, glancing at Simon and Vlad. Neither of them. There’s just too much predator showing through.

  “What about you?” Simon said, looking at Lorenzo.

  The doctor hesitated, then pulled out his own map and unfolded it. “I’ve talked to colleagues, acquaintances, and hospital administrators. I’ve marked the places where blood prophets have been given some medical care. I want to point out that most of the facilities who brought the girls in for treatment are known in their communities and are run openly.”

  Simon and Vlad said nothing. They just looked at each map. Then Simon opened up another map and set it on the table next to Lorenzo’s.

  “What have you marked?” Monty asked, noting the same towns that were marked on each map.

  “Crows talk to the Crowgard,” Vlad said. “So they obliged when asked to look at human places. We made note of the places where humans shot them.”