Her car was still there.
She checked her pocket and felt the rough edge of her keys.
Her fingers were sticky.
She lifted her hand to find a shard of glass embedded between two knuckles. She pulled it out and shook more glass fragments from her jacket. On the floor where she'd been lying was dried blood.
She'd let LaRue get the better of her.
Shameful.
She wanted to go home, shower, crawl into bed. Instead, she made herself take another pass through LaRue's house. Without a search warrant, she couldn't touch anything. She had to suppress the urge to open the books that lined the walls, to read his e-mail.
Her phone rang.
She pulled it out and stared blankly at it for an undetermined length of time before finally lifting it to her ear.
Gould.
The signal was weak, and his voice broke.
'Where the hell are you?' was what she finally deciphered.
'Gone where the goblins go…' The words came out a harsh whisper.
'What? I can't hear you.'
He went on to say something about trying to reach her all afternoon.
She looked at her watch; she'd lost four hours.
The signal fell from one bar to none and the phone went dead.
She tried to call him back but couldn't connect. She shut off the phone and dropped it in her pocket.
An enormous amount of energy exerted for nothing.
She slid her gun into the shoulder holster, jacket open and the leather strap free. Before leaving the house, she collected several pieces of broken glass and wrapped them in the fake map LaRue had drawn.
Then she stepped onto the front porch and scanned the area. Was he out there watching? Waiting for her to leave?
Her tires were okay. He hadn't slashed them or let the air out.
With the shards of wrapped glass in her pocket, she slipped into the driver's seat.
It was getting late.
It would be dark soon.
After locking the doors, she forced herself to proceed at a sedate pace. The nausea had passed and she felt she was thinking clearly until she found herself half asleep at the wheel in the middle of the deserted road with no sense of how long she'd been there.
She turned up the air-conditioner of the idling car, letting it hit her full in the face, and continued to Savannah. At one point, she deliberately stopped and pulled out her mobile phone. The signal was strong. There were at least ten messages from Gould, left over the course of the afternoon. The latest said he was heading home and to get in touch with him as soon as she got his message.
She called his cell phone, then his home number, getting voice mail at both.
She'd been to his apartment only once, but Mary of the Angels was easy to find. A place all Savannah residents knew about. A bleak, compelling piece of architecture with a dark past, clinging to the edge of the Historic District.
Time was weird, and it seemed she'd just made the decision to head for Gould's when she found herself there-pulling into the parking lot adjacent to the four-story building.
Darkness had arrived.
There were no stars.
At the front door, she found Gould's name on the intercom and buzzed his room.
No answer.
She leaned against the stone wall and closed her eyes, legs trembling. Why had she come here? Why hadn't she driven to the police station?
She couldn't think.
Sleep. She just wanted to sleep. Could she even make it back to her car? Could she drive herself home?
She pressed the button again… and kept pressing.
A voice crackled over the intercom.
'Yeah.'
Gould. Annoyed.
Elise leaned close to the speaker. 'Let me in.'
'Elise?' His annoyance was gone, replaced by confusion. 'I was in the shower. Come on up.'
The entrance door buzzed and Elise stumbled inside. She took the elevator to the third floor, went down a dark hallway of red carpet and wall sconces, to 335. The door was unlocked.
Inside the apartment, she heard a shower running. A puddle of water had been left on the wooden floor near her feet. The only illumination was a small light attached to the hood of the stove. Nearby, a window air conditioner hummed.
The apartment was a corner unit that probably would have been light during the day if the windows hadn't been covered with ivy. Near those windows was an overstuffed rocking chair. She shot straight for it and collapsed, tipping back her head with a deep sigh.
Something landed on her lap. She looked down to see Gould's Siamese cat. What was its name?
The cat began to purr loudly. Elise stroked its soft fur and closed her eyes.
What a lovely, peaceful place…
David dried off and put on a white T-shirt and a pair of jeans, then wandered back into the living area. Elise was sitting in a dark corner, Isobel on her lap
purring like crazy. There was actually something tranquil and domestic about the little scene.
David opened the refrigerator. 'Wanna beer?' he asked over his shoulder.
She mumbled a negative.
'Soda?'
Another negative.
'I have some news.' He retrieved a diet cola, popped the top, and took a drink. 'There have been four other confirmed cases of poisoning in the area in the past year, all by undetermined toxins. All in different jurisdictions, so nobody compared notes.'
He sat on the stool at the kitchen counter, one bare foot braced against the crossbar, leaving the length of the small apartment between himself and Elise. 'Unless it involves a case that's going to trial, most morgues don't keep tissue and blood samples over a certain amount of time, but I asked them to double-check just in case. If they come across anything like liver tissue, they're going to retest it for a broader range of toxins, then get back to us.'
He took another swallow at sada^ ' amp;JcahcJLo»i^w. a toxin. If some alcoholic showed up dead and his liver was toxic, chances are they didn't look any deeper, thinking he simply died of acute alcohol poisoning.'
His partner seemed completely disinterested in the information he was relating.
'I can't remember your cat's name.'
'Isobel.'
'Isobel. That's a nice name.'
'Let's forget about the cat a minute. Where have you been?'
'To see the TTX specialist.'
'Without me?'
'Bad idea, I know.'
'Is he willing to help? Did he have any relevant information?'
'We didn't get around to discussing it.'
He frowned. Was she acting a little weird? A little out of it? 'So, what happened? What did he say?'
'He offered me a drink of water.'
She rocked and continued to stroke the cat. 'In hindsight, I can see it was foolish of me to accept, because I