Judas Kiss - Judas Kiss Part 10
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Judas Kiss Part 10

But Taylor was uncharacteristically unnerved. She'd seen the look in Tony Gorman's eyes, the twist of lust in his features. This was a man who'd thought of sex when he saw her, and that made her more uncomfortable than anything she'd felt in some time. If she'd been weaker, or another woman entirely, the situation would have gone a different way.

She erased Tawny from the browser and plugged in the name Tony Gorman. Too many hits to count. She tried variations-Anthony Gorman, Tony Gorman Nashville, Anthony Gorman Tennessee, but the results were just too numerous. She was damned tired, and figured she'd have better luck using the police channels to track the bastard.

Taylor closed the Web browser, leaned back in her desk chair. Thought about the quick glimpse into Tony Gorman's soul. She had been familiar with the concept of desire from a relatively tender age. Her parents, for all their failings, had treated her as an adult from the time she could be expected to make a few of her own decisions, and as a result she'd ended up being rather precocious.

When her body developed, her gangly height and tomboy attitude turning into a lush ripeness at age fifteen or so, she'd found herself the recipient of plenty of unwanted attention. Most came from older men; boys her own age had no idea what to do with her. She'd gone from being a favorite colt to a sleek thoroughbred in the span of weeks, and was somewhat shunned among her male playmates, who had always treated her as just another one of the boys. She'd felt that was unfair and from then on stuck to dating boys older than her.

She'd lost her virginity to a friend of her father's in a torrid affair when she was seventeen. She was head over heels in lust with the man, a classics professor at Vanderbilt. Dr. James Morley was sexy and urbane and taught her many things about life and love. The relationship was the final nail in the coffin for Morley's crumbling marriage, but he'd remained friends with both Taylor and his wife. He had a fatal heart attack a few years later, and Taylor had grieved for him.

Over the subsequent years she'd had a few short-term affairs, lovers her age who were frightened by her intensity, older men who wanted to protect her, to keep her. She had a knack for getting involved with men she could never love but who loved her, and that had forced a few nasty breakups.

Baldwin was the first man she'd ever truly loved, loved in a way she'd thought she was incapable of. The giving and receiving of hearts was something she had always scoffed at. It was wonderful and scary at the same time. But if she were honest with herself, Baldwin had some of the same characteristics as her first lover-the cosmopolitan attitude, the intelligence, the striking looks. But Baldwin was different in all the good ways; he was an honest man. No need to worry about infidelity; he'd never tried to hide anything from her. No late-night cruising through his e-mail or wallet would be necessary, she'd simply ask and he would always answer.

And maybe, deep down, knowing he'd always be truthful was the most important part of her feelings, the reason she'd been able to give herself fully to him.

Taylor shook off her emotions, shut off the computer. As the light sputtered out on the screen with a snap, she bade farewell to the ghosts lingering in the room with her. She finished her wine and turned off the light.

Her bed was warm and soft, and she felt sleep tug at her immediately, probably as a result of all the alcohol. Groaning, she got up and took two Advil, sucked down five Dixie cups of water, hoping to alleviate what she assumed would be a killer headache in the morning. She didn't get hangovers from wine anymore, but could be struck with a migraine if she didn't prepare her body for the process.

She climbed back in the bed, this time nearly boneless. Images from the evening spun through her head, the ugly twist to the strange man's mouth, the whirling waiters, the pouty-lipped social mavens with their identical face-lifts and overinjected foreheads. She was asleep within moments.

The ringing phone woke her. It was still dark. Somewhere in her consciousness, she palmed the Glock from under Baldwin's pillow as she answered the phone.

"What?"

There was nothing. A deep silence filled the room, static and bottomless. She wondered if she were dreaming. Then she heard the breathing.

She slammed the receiver down. It rang again immediately. The backlit caller ID said UNKNOWN NAME UNKNOWN NUMBER in a ghostly green. Of course. She answered it anyway, this time more awake.

"What." It wasn't a question.

This time a man's laugh filled her ear. It wasn't Tony Gorman, that much she knew. This was a different tone altogether. And then he was gone.

Taylor continued to grip the phone for another minute, listening to the soft bonging of the dead line. She set the phone back on the cradle carefully and sat up, slipping a pillow behind her back. She wouldn't turn on the light-if the caller was anywhere near, he'd see that and know he'd rattled her. There would be no more sleep tonight. She caressed the Glock, comfortable in the knowledge that she was safe enough. She'd just like to know who was trying to spook her.

Thirteen.

Sometimes Baldwin just wanted to kiss the bureaucracy he worked for.

Not that he was a fan of all the measures put in place since 9-11, but the upside was when the FBI, or the CIA, needed to find someone, they could.

It was late. A glance at his watch showed two in the morning. He wondered if Taylor was asleep, or playing pool. This was her witching hour, the time she was most likely to start awake and begin thinking. That woman thought too much. He toyed with the idea of calling, but didn't want to risk it.

He decided on a cup of coffee instead.

The lights were still burning through the outbuilding where he and Garrett had quietly set up shop. Garrett was on the phone in the office next door with yet another international agency, getting cooperation from all sides in the hunt for their killer.

The short hallway opened into a galley-style kitchen. Two fresh pots of coffee were already made, and he poured himself a cup, sipping it as he went back to his desk.

Baldwin vowed that he would find Aiden, sooner rather than later. The hunter had become the hunted, and Baldwin was the master. Though his eyes were crossing at the multitudes of miniature lines of data, he felt like he was getting closer. Instinct dictated that Aiden would follow a somewhat set pattern for his trip to the United States. The trick was simply figuring out the start point for his journey. Italy, Germany, and England had already been ruled out. All the South American countries were off the initial lists as well-if Aiden had been in Europe as recently as a month ago, it was possible he'd been called to another continent for a hit they weren't aware of, but unlikely. He wouldn't blend in as well as he did in the European nations, didn't work in that region very often.

Aiden was a rare beast. On the OA radar for six years now, he'd started life as an intense loner who traveled the world on the heels of his diplomat father. At some point they had a massive falling-out, so Aiden rebelled and went into the service. He'd done well in the Army, qualifying as a sniper, but something went south. After only three years on his tour of duty, he was discharged for conduct unbecoming.

Aiden disappeared for a while, then emerged as a freelance assassin. Some of his more unsavory ex-Army buddies got him into the game. He became an assassin of stature, one that could be counted on for a clean hit at long range. Very valuable. But Aiden got bored. He began contracting for the more personal hits. He was used by nasty characters who wanted to send a message when they assassinated someone. And Aiden's silver garrote was unmistakable.

Yet the professional assassination game still wasn't enough for him. Aiden liked to go off the reservation. The OA monitored him as best they could, using eyes and ears to let them know when he skipped off plan.

Baldwin knew all this, knew how dangerous Aiden was. Knew that he must be traced, at all cost, or innocent people would die.

Baldwin had compiled a list of known aliases and sent it to the International Air Transport Association. The IATA in turn kindly filtered all of those names through their eTARS database, the names coursing through the Aviation Management Systems Departure Control System, or eDCS, popping up matches that met Baldwin's parameters. Typical of the overcomplicated governmental structure, it was a fancy way to say they were combing the passenger manifests.

Coffee half finished, Baldwin went back to stacks of pages, scanning the names, departure flights, dates, numbers in the party. He was looking for a man traveling alone, buying one-way tickets, or tickets with extended return dates. This was Aiden's usual standard operating procedure. Baldwin was a fan of Occam's Razor, figured all things being equal, starting with the most obvious answer was generally the best approach.

It was 4:00 a.m. when he finally saw it. He flipped open the file of the eighth report and the name practically jumped off the page.

"Gotcha," he whispered.

Wednesday.

Fourteen.

Taylor stretched. She'd fallen asleep despite her intent to stay awake for the remainder of the night. The malice from the previous evening was lost in the warm sunlight streaming through her shades, and she wondered briefly if she'd dreamed the whole thing. But no, the Glock was still in her hand.

The television came on, the morning news blaring. She tuned it out, rolled around in the sheets for a few moments, having her usual morning debate. Get up or play hooky. The former always won, unfortunately.

Groaning, she secured the weapon and pulled on a pair of yoga pants. She thought about washing her face, and made five steps toward the bathroom but drew up short when she heard the now familiar words.

"Nine-one-one, what is your emergency?"

"I think my sister is dead. Oh, my God."

Michelle Harris's tear-stricken voice drifted from Taylor's television. She sat back on the bed and listened to the rest of the tape, following with the visual on the television screen, the lines scrolling slowly.

Taylor shut her eyes and rubbed her knuckles against the closed lids. The media would make hay out of this as long as they didn't have something more sensational to cover.

Michelle Harris's voice, sharp and immediate, made Taylor sit up. Live, or recently taped, the words were unfamiliar. This was a new interview.

Taylor reached for the remote and turned up the volume.

Michelle Harris was wearing a white button-down shirt that washed out what little color she had left in her face. Her cheekbones created dark hollows, her lips were bloodless, her hair lashed back in a ponytail so tight it seemed to pull the hairs from their roots. She looked like absolute hell.

"Miss Harris, when was the last time you saw your sister?"

"On Friday. We grabbed a Starbucks after tennis."

"And you never saw your sister alive again?" The anchor's eyes were misty, she obviously felt every word's impact.

"Yes. The next time I saw Corinne, she was, she was...dead." Michelle's voice was breaking, rich with emotion, but her eyes remained dry.

"And you," the anchor began, but Michelle interrupted.

"Whoever killed her needs to know that we won't stop until he is caught. We will hunt you down, and kill you ourselves. You can't do something like this and not get punished. I just can't believe that someone could do this to my sister. It's not fair." Overcome with emotion, she began to cry. The anchor threw it to commercial.

Taylor punched the power button with her thumb, and the television snapped off. Damn it. Just what they needed, Michelle Harris on national TV, playing the victim.

Morning soured, she went downstairs, rubbing sleep out of her eyes. She was famished, so she poured a bowl of cereal. Checked the milk, yes, still fresh enough-the organic stuff Baldwin had talked her into lasted at least a week longer than regular. Dropped a tea bag and some honey in a cup, splashed in a little milk, then filled it with boiling water from the in-sink tap. Stood at the kitchen sink, gazed out into the backyard. Spooned crunchy wheat biscuits into her mouth slowly, watching the woods, thinking.

A huge rabbit was in the back, nibbling on the clover. Taylor could see another farther back into the thicket, on alert, watching over his mate as she foraged for breakfast. The knowledge that she'd soon be sharing mornings with baby bunnies made her smile. She watched the creature hop slowly forward, just a few inches at a time as it grazed. Then it stopped, ears alert, nose twitching.

With a suddenness that made Taylor's heart race, the rabbit fled, scared by something. A dog, most likely, Taylor could hear the faint echoes of barking bleeding through the air. She looked closer at the spot in the lawn vacated by the panicked rabbit. What was that?

She set the bowl in the sink and made her way to the back door. Stepping out onto the deck, she heard the alarm buzz its warning tone. Shit. She'd forgotten to turn the damn thing off. She dashed back inside and punched in the code. It squawked and the series of lights turned green. Disarmed.

She went back to the yard, bare feet cold as she picked through the still dew-wet grass. A lump of dark was thirty feet to her right, in line with the kitchen window.

She drew closer, scenting the murk of decay, heard the buzzing of the flies. A furry pile, red and slick. She recognized the cottontail of a rabbit, the body skinned, turned inside out. Poor beast. There was a thin line of wire digging deep into the animal's neck, the ends wrapped around each other like a twisty tie on a loaf of bread.

She felt exposed, her T-shirt too thin, and she rubbed her arms up and down for warmth. She wasn't an idiot, knew this was a message. The who wasn't the important question, she assumed it was from her nocturnal stalker. Why she was being targeted, that's what she wanted to know. Was this the work of the Pretender? He seemed too subtle for gross displays, but perhaps they'd misread him.

She didn't want to touch the carcass. She needed to secure it in some way, keep it intact and safe from the multitudes of predators that would surely come to scavenge. Preserve the integrity of the message so a tech could come collect it as evidence. She went around the side of the house. The lid from the trashcan wouldn't work, it was too flat. There was an empty flowerpot, a good-sized one that held a dead hydrangea. Perfect. She dumped the flower and the dirt onto the ground, then went back to the dead rabbit, carefully placing the pot over the body. That should keep for an hour or so.

Feeling eyes on her from every corner, Taylor left the makeshift shrine in the yard and went back inside. Her morning's peace shattered, she abandoned the cup of tea on the counter, dressed quickly and headed into the office.

There were news vans lining the streets in front of the CJC, receiver satellites pointed toward the heavens. Taylor decided to park in the adjacent lot so she wouldn't have to run the media gauntlet. She walked the cement ramp, spiraling down toward the street, her boot heels echoing with each step. The repetition calmed her, the pattern resonating through her mind.

She managed to slip in the side door unnoticed. The building itself was humming, noisy, aware. She stopped for a Diet Coke, feeding her dollar into the machine, the can dropping with a clatter. Normally the noise thundered through the halls; today it was barely heard. She entered the Homicide office, saw Lincoln Ross sitting with one butt cheek on the edge of his desk, holding court. It looked like half of headquarters had jammed into Homicide.

A few people acknowledged Taylor, polite "Loot's" and "Morning, LT." She nodded back, caught Lincoln's eye.

His face lit up when he saw Taylor. He jumped off the desk and greeted her with a hug. She hugged him back, hard, thrilled that he was out and obviously okay. She stepped back and took him in. More than okay. Lincoln had a gap-toothed smile that spread from ear to ear. His new look made him seem vaguely like a pirate-bald head, curly beard, eyes flashing with charm and intelligence. Toss him a cutlass and he'd be ready to rapier his way through downtown Nashville.

"Girl, you look great. Whatcha been doing while I've been away? You and the fed have a good trip?"

"It's damn good to see you, Linc. First things first. What's happening?"

He smirked and waggled his eyebrows. "I got Terrence Norton for you, all tied up with a pretty little bow."

They bumped knuckles, her generation's version of a high five. "Really? That's great news, Lincoln. But why is every newsie in town camped on our doorstep?"

"Got his boss, too." He said it with such nonchalance that Taylor instinctively knew it was someone visible that no one would ever expect.

"Okay, you've got me. Who's been running this train?"

"Our very own Sidney Edgar."

She drew back in surprise. "Kong?"

"Yup."

"Sidney Edgar, wide receiver for the Tennessee Titans. You are shitting me."

Sidney "King-Kong" Edgar had been a first round draft pick, a rainmaker for the Titans, a young man out of Atlanta who had more brawn than brains. He was six foot four inches of lean, hard muscle, devastatingly dangerous when his hands got within five feet of the pigskin, and a gangster thug to boot. Since he joined the team, Kong had rushed for over one thousand yards and been arrested no less than eight times, always skirting the edge of felony territory. He ran with a bad crowd, a posse of ruffians who traveled between Nashville and Atlanta, lawless men who were regularly picked up for weapons and drug-related charges.

Though as far as Taylor knew, they'd never been connected to Terrence Norton's gang. She said that, and Lincoln nodded.

"We didn't know that either until last night. I have to say, I can act. After Sunday night..." He gave her a meaningful look she understood immediately. He'd smoked crack with them, so they'd accepted him.

"Anyway, my CI told me the big dog was coming in. He very kindly left his cell phone on so I could hear the deal being made, and I called in the cavalry. It was too sweet. Caught Kong and Terrence Norton with their hands full of crack baggies."

Lincoln was obviously still riding the adrenal train. Taylor thought he was probably putting a good face on the situation; she knew it must have been dicey, moment-to-moment danger.

In that inevitable way with men who'd had street violence bred into them before they were weaned, Edgar had always seemed a little too close to the edge. It was a sad thing. So many of those boys pulled themselves up by the bootstraps, got straight, made something positive happen. And some were just a little too weak, too easily seduced by the illusion of power.

Lincoln was wrapping up his tale. "We brought him in, got him processed. King Kong and Terrence, plus fifteen others, will be arraigned this morning. That's what the news is here to see."

Taylor squeezed his arm. "Have you been debriefed?" When he nodded, she said, "You take the rest of the day off. Go get some rest. You must be completely exhausted."

"You sure, LT? I hear you've got some stuff on your plate."

"I'm sure, Lincoln. Whenever you're ready, no rush. But yeah, I need you sharp, so you go do what you need to do to get yourself back in the real world. We'll pick up with you tomorrow. Deal?"

"Deal, Loot. Thanks."

She left him to his adoring crowd and went into her office. Marcus Wade joined her after a few minutes.

"Morning, Marcus. How'd in-service go?"

"I still have a badge, and a gun. My fifth day is scheduled for June." He rolled his eyes. In-service, while required, was generally considered one of the most boring weeks out of the year. Cop school, four days of repetition of items they already knew by heart. Inexplicably, the gun qualifications came a few months later, a single day of shooting to requalify.

"Mine is too, I think. We must be on the same testing day. Well, that's good news. Fitz bring you up to speed on the Corinne Wolff murder?" He nodded. "Good. I want you on that case, but I need you to do something for me first."

She leaned over, spoke quietly so no one enjoying the Lincoln Parade could accidentally overhear.