Scottsdale Road. So this was Charlie's son. But why was he running away? Why did he look so frightened? Gretchen was used to jogging and hiking. Camelback Mountain and the desert air were perfect conditioning tools, and though she wanted to lose a few pounds, Gretchen considered herself aerobically fit. She'd been a runner her entire life. Ryan Maize, however, was younger and very quick, weaving among shoppers, never looking back. He shoved someone out of the way. Gretchen heard gasps and squeals from those on the sidewalk as she chased after him. She threaded through the crowd and leaped over a dropped shopping bag, running as fast as she could.
What was she doing? What was she going to do if she actually caught up to him? What if he had a gun or a knife?
She'd karate kick the weapon out of his fist. Sure, right. Brucaleen Lee.
Ryan pulled ahead. Gretchen was fast, but she wasn't fast enough. He was getting away.
Gretchen was using all her energy to catch him. She didn't have the breath to speak. She reached out, and her fingertips almost touched his back.
He pulled away. And tripped again. This time she got a firm hold on the back of his shirt. She heard it rip.
12
Ryan Maize ducks down and tries to twist out of the woman's grasp. She has him by the back of his shirt, and she's incredibly strong, like the lioness of Babylon. He hears the cloth tear.
If he wasn't bingeing at the moment, she wouldn't be catching him.
Too much alcohol and crack cocaine in his past. Whatever he's on, he can't remember taking it. That worries him.
It isn't his fault that he's in a weakened condition. Everything goes wrong for him. People don't help him enough. Like his mother. If she hadn't refused to help him out, he'd be doing really good. Healthy, happy, and rich. All he needs is a little support from the people around him. He needs just one little break.
Life sucks, and then you die. That's his motto. He twists again, trying to break her grip. She's on him like the evil witch she is.
Shapeshifters masquerading as cops. What's next?
He's coming down, slowly descending from an alternate reality.
She's a real cop. He'd seen the badge. That's what he gets for going back to the shop, for wanting one last look.
'Stop running and listen to me,' the female cop says. Words staccato through the air like breaks in the time continuum. Moments lost. For him, it isn't lost moments, it's lost years. All gone. Twenty-one going on dead.
The cop's breath is labored, or is that his?
He whirls and catches another glimpse of the badge. You can't even tell the law from the rest of society. A fake woman has him in her power. A Matrix society, and he alone realizes the truth.
Ryan karate-chops the hand.
No reaction.
She must be undercover.
Then why the badge?
A voice inside of Ryan's head answers him. It always does. It's dependable, like nothing else in his life is. Ego. Power. They're all alike, even the women. Especially the women. Ryan jabs her hard with his elbow, and he feels the release. Freedom.
Run!
If she catches up again, he'll sucker punch her. Anything to get away. Anything at all.
'Your mother is dead,' the woman says, and Ryan is slammed up against the side of a building. She must know all the martial arts. A trained assassin. Who would have guessed by looking at her?
He thinks he will throw up because of the heat pouring through the cracks of the street. He sees serpents twisting out of the poured concrete, coming for his soul. She repeats the statement.
Ryan makes a fist. He puts everything he has behind it, everything he has.
The punch connects, and the woman goes down. Surprisingly fast. His strength and power must be growing.
She doesn't move.
Ryan thinks about the concept of remorse but doesn't feel any. He rarely feels anything.
A being with silver hair comes at him, followed by one the size of a wrestler. He recognizes them from his mother's shop. Ryan saw them there, talking to the woman cop. The enormous woman glares at him but is winded and bends over to widen her airway, to make room for her precious air. She glares up at him, then grimaces without saying a word. The other one is filled with anger but hesitates a moment too long. Her eyes flick to the woman on the ground. His feet pound the pavement, and it sounds like thunder of the gods to him. They have decided to protect him from harm, to champion him for his abilities.
He is one of them.
13
– From
Gretchen tried to ignore the pain in her temple where Ryan Maize had struck her. One punch from that scrawny kid, and she'd fallen hard, like a rock from a mountain ledge. Her mother and April, miraculously arriving just as Gretchen dropped to the sidewalk, had strong-armed a street vendor into parting with a cup of ice. Their quick thinking had kept the swelling to a minimum.
A couple of ibuprofen tablets this morning, and her head no longer felt like it had a built-in subwoofer. And her hair covered the ugly purple bruise.
'I hear you were clobbered good last night,' Bonnie said, her red wig stiff with hair spray. Lip liner was drawn in an exaggerated arch around her lips. 'Are you okay?'
She trotted in place on a small platform, swinging her arms above her head as the music changed to 'Chantilly Lace.'
'I'm perfectly fine,' Gretchen replied, trying not to wince when she bent over. She had a huge headache and two more hours to go before she could take more pain relievers. Nina, working the abductor machine, piped up, speaking around her niece as though she wasn't present. 'Gretchen is too impulsive for her own good. Imagine chasing a tattooed, body-pierced, crazy man through the streets of Scottsdale. What was she thinking?'
Gretchen shrugged. She didn't have a good answer and secretly agreed with Nina.
'Where's Caroline this morning?' Bonnie asked.
'Trying to catch up on our repair work,' Gretchen said.