of father and he seemed more concerned with punishing Bradley than with getting Marianne home.
From the balcony of the condo, I looked over a circular swimming pool, which in turn looked over a palm- fringed garden and down on to the marina. Yachts and motor cruisers seemed to be the preferred mode of transport here.
To my left was the house that Jorgenson had leased for the summer. He had his permanent place of residence up the coast at Neptune Island and a boat moored at Puerto Banus, in Spain, but this was my best chance for getting Marianne away from him.
I was there on a scouting mission. Rink would join me later after he'd finished a little business of his own in Tampa. Dressed in shades, a short-sleeved cotton shirt and Bermuda shorts, I set myself up on the private balcony. A glance over the rail and I could see beautiful bikini-clad women frolicking in next door's pool. The deckchair was comfortable and the beer cold; it was mind-numbingly boring on stakeout, but someone had to do it.
By the time the sun started to set, the bathers had disappeared inside and my beer had grown warm. Even the executive-class sun lounger was beginning to feel like a torture device. The sunset made up for some of my chagrin, though. It was spectacular, setting Miami city and Biscayne Bay aflame with bronze and gold highlights.
Also, as if he was a vampire out of lore, Jorgenson made his first appearance.
In a cream linen suit, his reddish hair slicked back, and a mobile phone to his ear, he wandered out on the tiled area next to his pool. The water was like a mirror, reflecting his downcast face. Bradley didn't seem very happy.
'I've told you,' he grunted into his phone. 'Over and over again. No! When is that going to sink into your stupid fucking head?'
Whoever he was speaking to must have pleaded their case. As he listened, Jorgenson chewed his lips, and even from my high vantage above him I could hear the rasp of his breath.
'You know what I should do to you?' Jorgenson suddenly shouted. 'I should have you…' His voice faltered, and his gaze nervously searched for unseen watchers. His dark eyes flicked my way, but I'd already moved back out of sight. His next words were whispered and I couldn't hear what was said. But I heard the snap of his phone as he closed it. Then followed the clop of leather heels as he hurried inside. More shouting ensued but it was muffled, then there was a crash, and — I'm pretty sure — a woman's voice crying out.
I'd made up my mind already, but the man's words and actions only served to confirm that. Jorgenson was a bully. And anyone who knows Joe Hunter knows I can't abide bullies.
My plan didn't extend to walking up to his front door and ringing the bell, but at that moment I felt the urge to get on the move. It was the stirring of anger that always drove me to violent conclusions. Rink has accused me of getting a kick out of the violence. But I don't. I only want peace. The problem is, I want that peace to extend to everyone, so if it means cracking the skulls of those causing the rot in the world, then so be it. As a counterterrorism soldier my career was dictated and channelled towards specific targets. Now, free to roam, I could pick and choose who needed sorting. And I'd decided: Bradley Jorgenson required setting right on a point or two.
Despite the glitz and riches, Marianne Dean had to be very unhappy. I'd seen it many, many times before: a woman giving up everything for the man she loves. She will take the beatings and humiliation, won't reach out for help, because, underneath it all, he loves her. It must be her own fault.
Domestic violence is a curse on society. Most times it stays hidden, but even when a woman is brave enough to come forward and report what is happening behind closed doors, the finger of blame can be pointed back at her. What was she doing to push her man to hurting her? Likely she got exactly what she deserved!
But I wasn't from that school of thought.
The way I look at it, men who hurt women are only a step lower on the ladder of shame than those who hurt children. Sometimes there is no distinction between the two. Marianne had blossomed into a beautiful young woman, but she still remained the shy child captured in that school portrait less than a year ago. Likely she wouldn't thank me for saying so, but to me, Marianne was still a baby. Suddenly I could understand her father's vitriol, his desire to see Jorgenson dead.
In the past I've been accused of many things. Some have called me a vigilante. Fair enough, I can live with that. But I don't see things the same way. I prefer to be seen as someone who can help. When the full weight of the law can't do anything, well then, that's where I step up. I don't take the law into my own hands. Not as such, not when the law doesn't extend to what is occasionally required.
The thing that stopped me approaching Jorgenson right that instant was one undeniable truth. I still hadn't seen Marianne. I'd no way of knowing if she was even inside the house. Introducing myself to her violent beau at this stage could mean that I never saw her again.
Better to wait, then.
There would be a time for entering that house, but it would be later, under the cover of darkness and with Rink watching my back.
Jorgenson — notwithstanding his sudden rise to prominence as one of Florida's social elite — was third- generation money. His grandfather had come over from Europe in the late 1950s. He brought with him a pharmaceutical supply company that rocketed along with the post-World War II financial boom. The Korean and Vietnamese conflicts didn't do any harm either, and set Jorgenson's father, Valentin, at the helm of an industry driven by military contracts that were fed by Desert Storm and the more recent campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. With his father ailing, Bradley was now poised to step up and take the reins. He was the face of twenty-first century consumerism.
My worry, and this was possibly due to my doubts regarding the man's character, was that he was living a lifestyle usually associated with another kind of pharmaceutical. Those that don't come with a prescription.
Two could play to those rules. Whatever he was peddling, I had a painkiller of my own.
I reached for my SIG Sauer.
5
As a child of the Mississippi Delta lands, Dantalion had been raised on the myths and legends surrounding haunted groves and magical ceremonies performed by High Priestesses of Voodoo. Louisiana Voodoo, Haitian Vodou or West African Vodun in its generic form, had all appealed to the fertile mind of a child with too much time on his hands. From an early age he had eagerly grasped at tales of spells and enchantment, of living dead men, and ritual sacrifice. But in his early teens, he left all that nonsense behind. He turned his attention to other legends, in particular a story everyone knows, though their take on the Fall from Grace was normally mired in the dogma preached by the Church.
How could this impressionable youth not seize on the notion of angels, when his alabaster skin and ice-blue eyes had singled him out and set him above all the other human cattle? His earliest recollection had been of his momma cooing that he was her little angel. They were fond memories. Next came the bullies at school stripping him to see if his wings had been cut down to stumps, then beating the shit out of him when their suspicions had proved wrong. They were fond memories too, which confirmed in his mind that he was better than them. Encouraged him to embrace the reality. The Fallen did not have wings. They were seared from their backs when God cast them into the flames of Hell.
In the subdued darkness of his hotel room in the SoBe district of Miami Beach, Dantalion was not concerned about the stares he received in day-to-day life. In this enlightened age, people were more sensitive to the feelings of others. Still, people passing him in the street couldn't help the involuntary flicker of their eyes as they tried to probe beneath his coverings, seeking out what the hell he was.
They were ignorant of his condition. Most assumed that he was an albino, but that was not the case. Vitiligo is an acquired disorder distinguished by patches of depigmented skin. Ordinarily people with vitiligo lack melanin in the epidermis, and form patches of milky- or chalky-white skin. In extreme cases — as in Dantalion's — the hair and retina of the eye are also affected. Various treatments are available, but in cases where depigmentation affects more than half of the body, a bleaching agent named monobenzone is applied to the normal skin to match it with the paler areas. It is not usually debilitating, but the skin can become more sensitive to the sun. Occasionally,