after-dark visit.
God, her head was pounding.
At the end of the covered walkway, they stopped in front of the faded stencil of a cow holding an ice cream cone with his hoof. As the wind kicked up, blackened leaves chattered and rushed along the cracked sidewalk, congregating in the corner of an inset doorway with others of their kind.
Pivoting around, she shook her head and felt like a fool. “Bill said I’d gotten some kind of tip that I’d been vague about. I’d told him it was off my blog, but there’s nothing about this site anywhere on it—hey, there are stairs over here. Do you mind if we see where they take us?”
“Nope. Lead on, female.”
Jo smiled some more and led them down the concrete steps, spurred on by something in the center of her chest. At the base of the descent, she stopped and took in the sight of a vacant parking lot—
A gust of wind ruffled more winter-worn leaves across pavement that had potholes like it was Swiss cheese. And that was when she heard it. Creeeeak—slam. Creeeeeak—slam.
Over in the far corner of the lot, there was a building with sets of garage doors running down the front of it. A regular-sized door off to one side was loose on its hinges, and as the wind came up, it opened and closed on its own.
Wincing and weaving on her feet, she muttered, “Yes. Over there. I know the sound of that door.”
Without waiting for a response from Syn, she stumbled across the asphalt, blinded by pain, but hyper-focused by the sense that finally, the mystery was going to be solved. When she got to the door, her breath caught in her throat and her heart began to pound. With a trembling hand, she reached—
Syn put his arm out. “Let me go first.”
“I can do it.”
But he made the decision for her, stepping ahead, stepping inside. A moment later, a flashlight clicked on, and its beam made a slow circle . . . of an absolutely empty, windowless, concrete-floored maintenance facility.
“Shit,” she said as she joined him. “I could have sworn—”
The door slammed shut behind her, making her jump.
“Another wild-goose chase,” she muttered as she walked around, her footfalls echoing.
She was just about to suggest they leave and promise that she wouldn’t have any more bright ideas about nocturnal destinations . . .
. . . when the first of the cars pulled up just outside that slamming door.
“I swear to fucking God,” Butch said, “it was down here. The door was like something out of a dungeon . . . and she . . .”
As he let the words trail off, he walked back down the corridor, reading the little laminated headers that announced each corporate owner of each storage space behind each absolutely normal-looking fucking door.
“I’m beginning to think I’m crazy.” When V didn’t say anything, Butch glanced over at the guy—who was standing in front of what should have been the entrance to Mel’s apartment. “I swear—”
“I believe you.” V put his hand up. “Gimme a minute.”
Vishous closed his eyes and lowered his head, becoming so still, it was as if he were no longer a part of the living-and-breathing crew. Meanwhile, Butch found it impossible not to keep pacing.
None of this made any sense—
Well, actually, it did make sense. It was just Butch didn’t like where the connect-the-dots was taking him.
“What if she wasn’t who I thought she was,” he said. More to try the words out than anything else.
V lifted his head. “And you’re sure this is the building.”
“We can check the GPS on my phone, right? You record where all of us go every night—it’s how you found me here just now.” Butch got his Samsung and held it out to his roommate. “It should be in the log.”
In the back of his mind, he was aware his instincts were going haywire—and it was a little late for that, wasn’t it. If he’d been played by something . . . otherworldly . . . whatever it was was no longer here.
“I can get your trail on mine,” V murmured.
As the brother went into his own phone, Butch crossed his arms and thought about the strange thing that had happened when he’d started walking away from Mel’s the night before. He’d just closed her door and taken one, maybe two steps . . . when that massive locking mechanism with the bifurcated iron bars had slid back into place quietly behind him.
There was no way