White Hot
Page 21
He didn’t say anything. He just kept watching me.
I opened my mouth to needle him some more.
The barrier on the right of us cracked as if struck by a giant hammer. The cracks chased us, shooting through the concrete dividers with tiny puffs of rock dust. His magic ripped into cement with brutal efficiency. It brushed by me and I almost swung the door open and jumped out.
The cars behind us swerved, trying to shift lanes away from the fractured barriers.
“Stop,” I asked.
The cracks ceased.
“Do you need me to drop you off?” I asked.
“Why would I want that?”
“So you can brood in solitude.”
“I don’t brood.”
“Plot horrible revenge, then. Because you’re freaking me out.”
“It’s my job to freak you out.”
“Really?”
“That’s the nature of our relationship.” A spark lit his eyes. “We both do what’s necessary, and after it’s over, I watch you freak out about it.”
“I don’t.”
“Oh, I don’t want you to stop. I find it highly amusing.”
That’s the last time I try to cheer you up. Go back into your dragon cave for all I care.
“Would you like me to break one more concrete slab, so you can take a picture for your grandmother?” he offered.
“I changed my mind,” I told him. “I don’t want to talk to you.”
He chuckled.
I should just stop trying.
Grandma Frida would think it was really neat.
I took my phone off the console and held it to him. “Okay, but only one or two more. Just enough for the Vine.”
“Your grandmother has a Vine account?” The barriers fractured.
“Yes. She’ll probably post it on her Instagram too. Okay, that’s enough, thank you, or the driver of the Volvo behind us might have a heart attack.”
Elena de Trevino’s family lived in a huge house. The Nathers’ home was large by most people’s standards, and you could fit two of those into the de Trevino homestead. The building sat on half an acre, a huge dark red brick beast that mashed Colonial Revival with chunks of Tudor around the windows. A thick brick wall guarded the yard, with an arch allowing entrance to the inner driveway and the garages, and the chimney of the obligatory fireplace Texans used once in a blue moon mimicked the steeple of a church.
The difference magic made. Both Elena de Trevino and her husband, Antonio, were rated Average. I had found their LinkedIn profiles and they both listed AV in the powers section.
I parked on the street, and Rogan and I walked to the door.
A young Hispanic woman answered the door. “May I help you?”
Her gaze snagged on Rogan. I might as well have been invisible. Women looked at him wherever he went. In the age of magic, many men were handsome. Rogan wasn’t just attractive; he projected masculinity. It was in his posture, in the male roughness of his face, and in his eyes. When you saw him, you knew no matter what happened, he would handle it. Little did they know that he solved most of his problems by throwing money at them or trying to kill them. Sometimes at the same time.
I offered her my card. “I’ve been hired by House Harrison. I would like to speak with Mr. de Trevino.”
The woman dragged her gaze away from Rogan to the card. “Wait, please.”
She closed the door.
“House Harrison?” Rogan asked.
“Cornelius hasn’t been excised.”
Excision was the worst punishment a magical family could level on its member. They withdrew all emotional, financial, and social support, effectively kicking the offender out of the family. An excised member of the House became damaged goods: his former allies abandoned him for fear of angering his family, and his family’s enemies refused to help him because no excise could be trusted. Cornelius distanced himself from his House by his own choice, but he hadn’t left it.
“Look at this house.” I nodded at the door. “We wouldn’t even get a foot in the door unless we dropped some House’s name.”
Rogan smiled, a wicked sharp grin. “You should let me knock.”
Last time he “knocked” on my door, the entire warehouse vibrated. “Please don’t.”
The door opened, revealing an athletic man about forty years old. He wore grey dress pants and a light grey sweatshirt, the sleeves pulled halfway up his forearms. His face was pleasant: dark eyes under sloping dark eyebrows and a generous mouth. A dark, carefully trimmed beard hugged his jaw. His hair was also dark and cut very short. Antonio de Trevino. His resume said he worked as an investment analyst.
“Good afternoon.” He smiled, showing perfectly even white teeth. “Please, come in.”
We stepped inside.
“I’m Antonio. This way. Sorry for the disarray. We’re kind of in the middle of things.”
He didn’t seem broken up about his wife’s death. Compared to Jeremy, he seemed downright cheerful.
Antonio led us into a vast living room, to plush beige chairs arranged on a red rug. The furnishings looked expensive, but it was the middle-class kind of expensive: new, probably in the latest style, and nice. The furniture in Rogan’s house had weight; it looked timeless. You couldn’t tell if it had been purchased by him, his parents, or his grandparents. Compared to that quality, these furnishings seemed superficial, almost cheap. Perspective was a funny thing.
The Hispanic woman hovered in the doorway.
“Coffee? Tea?” Antonio asked.
“No, thank you.” I took my seat.
Rogan shook his head and sat in the chair on my right.
Antonio took the small sofa and nodded at the woman. “Thank you, Estelle. That will be all.”
She vanished into the kitchen.
“So House Harrison is looking into Mrs. Harrison’s death. Understandable, considering how little Forsberg is doing. How may I help you?”
“Would you mind answering a few questions?” I asked.
“Not at all.”
I took out my digital recorder, tagged the conversation, and set the recorder on the glass coffee table.
“Do you know why your wife was in that hotel room?”
“No. I would imagine for professional reasons. I can tell you that the situation at work had been stressful in the day prior to her death. She seemed distracted at dinner.”
“Did she mention anything specific?”
“She said, ‘I can’t pick up John tomorrow. I’m sorry. There’s an issue at work. The entire office is in a state of emergency and I’m not sure when I’ll be able to get home. Would you mind terribly taking him to his play? It’s at seven.’”
He’d said it in his normal voice, but the intonation was unmistakable female.
“You’re a mnemonic,” Rogan said.
“Yes. We both are, actually. Elena was a predominantly visual mnemonic and I’m auditory. We both have near perfect short-term recall.” Antonio leaned back. “I don’t want to give you the wrong impression. I’m deeply saddened by Elena’s death. I lost a capable, caring partner, and our children lost their mother. She was a wonderful parent. The blow to their childhood is devastating.”
True.
“Our marriage was arranged. Our families had agreed that we had a high chance of producing a Significant, so we married and dutifully tried three times. We may have succeeded with Ava, our youngest. Only time will tell. We weren’t in love.” He said it so matter-of-factly.
I opened my mouth to needle him some more.
The barrier on the right of us cracked as if struck by a giant hammer. The cracks chased us, shooting through the concrete dividers with tiny puffs of rock dust. His magic ripped into cement with brutal efficiency. It brushed by me and I almost swung the door open and jumped out.
The cars behind us swerved, trying to shift lanes away from the fractured barriers.
“Stop,” I asked.
The cracks ceased.
“Do you need me to drop you off?” I asked.
“Why would I want that?”
“So you can brood in solitude.”
“I don’t brood.”
“Plot horrible revenge, then. Because you’re freaking me out.”
“It’s my job to freak you out.”
“Really?”
“That’s the nature of our relationship.” A spark lit his eyes. “We both do what’s necessary, and after it’s over, I watch you freak out about it.”
“I don’t.”
“Oh, I don’t want you to stop. I find it highly amusing.”
That’s the last time I try to cheer you up. Go back into your dragon cave for all I care.
“Would you like me to break one more concrete slab, so you can take a picture for your grandmother?” he offered.
“I changed my mind,” I told him. “I don’t want to talk to you.”
He chuckled.
I should just stop trying.
Grandma Frida would think it was really neat.
I took my phone off the console and held it to him. “Okay, but only one or two more. Just enough for the Vine.”
“Your grandmother has a Vine account?” The barriers fractured.
“Yes. She’ll probably post it on her Instagram too. Okay, that’s enough, thank you, or the driver of the Volvo behind us might have a heart attack.”
Elena de Trevino’s family lived in a huge house. The Nathers’ home was large by most people’s standards, and you could fit two of those into the de Trevino homestead. The building sat on half an acre, a huge dark red brick beast that mashed Colonial Revival with chunks of Tudor around the windows. A thick brick wall guarded the yard, with an arch allowing entrance to the inner driveway and the garages, and the chimney of the obligatory fireplace Texans used once in a blue moon mimicked the steeple of a church.
The difference magic made. Both Elena de Trevino and her husband, Antonio, were rated Average. I had found their LinkedIn profiles and they both listed AV in the powers section.
I parked on the street, and Rogan and I walked to the door.
A young Hispanic woman answered the door. “May I help you?”
Her gaze snagged on Rogan. I might as well have been invisible. Women looked at him wherever he went. In the age of magic, many men were handsome. Rogan wasn’t just attractive; he projected masculinity. It was in his posture, in the male roughness of his face, and in his eyes. When you saw him, you knew no matter what happened, he would handle it. Little did they know that he solved most of his problems by throwing money at them or trying to kill them. Sometimes at the same time.
I offered her my card. “I’ve been hired by House Harrison. I would like to speak with Mr. de Trevino.”
The woman dragged her gaze away from Rogan to the card. “Wait, please.”
She closed the door.
“House Harrison?” Rogan asked.
“Cornelius hasn’t been excised.”
Excision was the worst punishment a magical family could level on its member. They withdrew all emotional, financial, and social support, effectively kicking the offender out of the family. An excised member of the House became damaged goods: his former allies abandoned him for fear of angering his family, and his family’s enemies refused to help him because no excise could be trusted. Cornelius distanced himself from his House by his own choice, but he hadn’t left it.
“Look at this house.” I nodded at the door. “We wouldn’t even get a foot in the door unless we dropped some House’s name.”
Rogan smiled, a wicked sharp grin. “You should let me knock.”
Last time he “knocked” on my door, the entire warehouse vibrated. “Please don’t.”
The door opened, revealing an athletic man about forty years old. He wore grey dress pants and a light grey sweatshirt, the sleeves pulled halfway up his forearms. His face was pleasant: dark eyes under sloping dark eyebrows and a generous mouth. A dark, carefully trimmed beard hugged his jaw. His hair was also dark and cut very short. Antonio de Trevino. His resume said he worked as an investment analyst.
“Good afternoon.” He smiled, showing perfectly even white teeth. “Please, come in.”
We stepped inside.
“I’m Antonio. This way. Sorry for the disarray. We’re kind of in the middle of things.”
He didn’t seem broken up about his wife’s death. Compared to Jeremy, he seemed downright cheerful.
Antonio led us into a vast living room, to plush beige chairs arranged on a red rug. The furnishings looked expensive, but it was the middle-class kind of expensive: new, probably in the latest style, and nice. The furniture in Rogan’s house had weight; it looked timeless. You couldn’t tell if it had been purchased by him, his parents, or his grandparents. Compared to that quality, these furnishings seemed superficial, almost cheap. Perspective was a funny thing.
The Hispanic woman hovered in the doorway.
“Coffee? Tea?” Antonio asked.
“No, thank you.” I took my seat.
Rogan shook his head and sat in the chair on my right.
Antonio took the small sofa and nodded at the woman. “Thank you, Estelle. That will be all.”
She vanished into the kitchen.
“So House Harrison is looking into Mrs. Harrison’s death. Understandable, considering how little Forsberg is doing. How may I help you?”
“Would you mind answering a few questions?” I asked.
“Not at all.”
I took out my digital recorder, tagged the conversation, and set the recorder on the glass coffee table.
“Do you know why your wife was in that hotel room?”
“No. I would imagine for professional reasons. I can tell you that the situation at work had been stressful in the day prior to her death. She seemed distracted at dinner.”
“Did she mention anything specific?”
“She said, ‘I can’t pick up John tomorrow. I’m sorry. There’s an issue at work. The entire office is in a state of emergency and I’m not sure when I’ll be able to get home. Would you mind terribly taking him to his play? It’s at seven.’”
He’d said it in his normal voice, but the intonation was unmistakable female.
“You’re a mnemonic,” Rogan said.
“Yes. We both are, actually. Elena was a predominantly visual mnemonic and I’m auditory. We both have near perfect short-term recall.” Antonio leaned back. “I don’t want to give you the wrong impression. I’m deeply saddened by Elena’s death. I lost a capable, caring partner, and our children lost their mother. She was a wonderful parent. The blow to their childhood is devastating.”
True.
“Our marriage was arranged. Our families had agreed that we had a high chance of producing a Significant, so we married and dutifully tried three times. We may have succeeded with Ava, our youngest. Only time will tell. We weren’t in love.” He said it so matter-of-factly.