into the shadows. A hand moved across the hay. A ghost? Finn took a step toward it. The ghost lay facedown, as if too shocked to stand. His hand was moving toward a rifle. The straw crackled and shifted under the man’s fingers . . . and told Finn this was no ghost.
Finn slipped up over the man, bent and pressed his gun to his skull. “Stop right there.”
Running footsteps pounded the concrete pad outside the barn. Finn looked up sharply, but the stall blocked his view. Rhys wheeled, gun rising. Two pairs of hands lifted over the stall. Women’s hands. Rhys lowered his gun as Marsten strode over.
“There’s a guy in the hay. He’s—” Hope saw Finn with his gun trained on the man. “You found him. Good. Rob and I were running beside the barn when I caught a stray thought.”
“Niko?” Rhys strode over, kicked the rifle aside and hauled the middle-aged man to his feet. “Playing possum, were you?”
“Th-the poison,” Niko said. “It didn’t work for me.”
Rhys cold-cocked Niko and sent him flying into the hay pile.
“I’m not going to fight,” Niko said, struggling up. “I claim sanctuary.”His gaze swung to Hope. “With the council.”
“The same council you’ve always sworn was in league with the Cabals?”
“You don’t understand, Rhys. You never did. To give clairvoyants the community they need, we lie. It’s a blueprint created by bulibas has long before my time.”
“Lies? Like the one about hiding from the Cabals? Protecting the kumpania from them?”
“We do protect—”
“You brought the Cabal here, Niko. When Adele told you the Cabal chased her and Colm earlier today, you knew she was wrong. The Cabal wouldn’t do that because they own the kumpania. It’s not a safe haven. It’s a clairvoyant farm.”
“That’s—”
“I’ve been following the trail for ten years now, and finally figured out where it ended. You tried to stop this—” He waved to the dead young couple. “—from happening by telling the kumpania not to worry, not to panic.”
“Of course, I didn’t want—”
“Because if they killed themselves, it would be your fault. You alerted the Cabal. You told them about me. They somehow linked it all to Detective Findlay’s investigation—”
“Because he visited the Nast offices today,” Hope said. “He met with Sean, who went digging for information on clairvoyants to help me, which must have triggered an alert. They found out about Detective Findlay’s visit, and put it together.”
“And the Cabal wouldn’t want the police descending on their kumpania. They rerouted Detective Findlay’s calls, and probably all emergency calls from that motel.”
“Because they wanted to protect us!” Niko said. “As they have always protected us, Rhys. That protection comes with a price. One clairvoyant every ten years. A pittance to pay. But you couldn’t leave well enough alone. And look what happened.” He pointed to the couple.
“The Cabal swooped in because of Adele,” Rhys said. “Adele was your creation, Niko. Her actions brought everyone to your door step—”
“Uh, guys?” Damon ran in. Rhys and Niko were still arguing. Damon leapt between them. “Finn, get them to shut up. Now. We’ve got—”
Marsten strode in. “They’ve figured out where we are. Process of elimination or he—” A chin jerk toward Niko. “—alerted them. We have eight armed men heading this way, led by one old man—”
“Rhys Vaughan? Hope Adams? Karl Marsten?” a voice boomed. “This is Thomas Nast. We have the building surrounded.”
“Come out with your hands raised,” Hope muttered, sounding surprisingly calm.
“Split up,” Finn said. “Take the windows. How many guns—?”
“No, Detective,” Hope said. “Fortunately for us, this isn’t going to end in a hail of bullets.”
“We can negotiate,” Rhys said.
Hope took a deep breath. “Okay, as the council representative and chaos-sensing half-demon, I should be the one—”
“No.” Marsten grabbed her arm. “Rhys wanted to go this alone. I think it’s time we let him.”
“Really?” Rhys said. “And I thought you were about to volunteer. Silly me.”
“Stop it.” Hope brushed off Marsten’s hand. “I’m—”
“Bobby!” Damon shouted.
Finn spun to see Robyn disappearing out the barn doors, armed men closing in, eight guns trained on her. Finn broke into a run.
“Mr. Nast?” she said. “We’d like to declare a truce.”
HOPE
This was one of those cases that happens more often than anyone cared to admit, where the council and the Cabal were not on opposite sides. The council wanted to stop Adele. The Cabal wanted to protect its kumpania. Killing Adele had accomplished both. Now they just needed to tidy the loose ends. So they negotiated.
It helped that neither side had taken casualties.