corner. Isabella drummed her fingers on the side of the door frame.
“I really hate to see him go free like that,” she said. “It’s not right.”
“Maybe not,” Fallon said. With one hand he pulled a pristine handkerchief out of his pocket and wiped his cheek. He used his other hand to take out his phone. “But letting him run might give us the answer to one lingering question.”
Isabella speared the flashlight at Fallon. Blood glistened on his jaw and dripped down the front of his jacket.
“You’re bleeding,” she wailed.
He looked down at the handkerchief. “Yeah.”
She rushed to him, took the handkerchief from his hand and gently blotted up more of the blood.
“You need to sit down,” she ordered. “You could go into shock.”
“I don’t think so,” he said. “Let’s get out of here.”
He started to bend down to pick up the mirror but stopped midway, groaning a little, and gingerly reached inside his jacket.
“I’ll get it,” Isabella said quickly.
“Thanks.” Fallon spoke into the phone. “He’s running. Don’t lose him. He’s injured and will probably seek medical help. Don’t interfere. Just keep an eye on him until one of Lucan’s people takes over.”
He ended the call and punched in another number. “Max? Jones here. Isabella was right about everything. Looks like Caitlin Phillips is most likely dead. She was Garrett’s partner, but he needed another fall guy after he realized he required Isabella’s help to locate the artifact. What is it? The Quicksilver Mirror. Yeah. Worth a fortune in some quarters. We’ve got it and Garrett is running. I’ve got a hunter following him until you can get someone on it. I’ll give you the whole story tomorrow. What? Of course we’ll send you our bill.”
He closed the phone.
Isabella picked up the mirror and took Fallon’s arm to steady him, although he did not seem to be wobbly. She drew him carefully down the staircase.
“What’s the one lingering question?” she asked.
“The name of the person who commissioned the Quicksilver Mirror.”
“You let Julian run because you want to know the identity of his buyer.”
“Well, that plus the fact that there wasn’t anything else I could do with him except try to convince the local cops that he’s guilty of breaking and entering and something tells me that wouldn’t fly.”
“But Garrett doesn’t have the mirror to sell now. Why would he contact the buyer?”
“He might not,” Fallon said. “But I’m thinking there’s a high probability that the buyer will contact him.”
“Why?”
“Because we are not going to let it be known that Arcane recovered the mirror,” Fallon said patiently. “That will be our little secret.”
A cold thrill of comprehension swept through Isabella. “You think that the buyer will believe he’s been double-crossed. That Julian has sold the mirror to someone else.”
“It’s been my experience that not only is there no honor among thieves, but there’s also not a hell of a lot of trust or mutual affection, either. What’s more, that type tends to be vindictive.”
“One more thing. You said the mirror is going back to the rightful owner.”
“Yes.”
“Who is that?”
“The Arcane Society. The Quicksilver Mirror was stolen from one of the museums.”
“Oh, geez. That raises some troubling questions doesn’t it?”
“Sure does,” Fallon said.
29
Caitlin Phillips’s body was found buried in her own backyard,” Max Lucan said. “Looks like she was drugged and then strangled. Garrett has gone to ground in a third-rate motel outside of Sacramento. I’ve got a team on him. I’ll let you know if he contacts anyone or if someone attempts to contact him.”
“Don’t let the disgruntled customer get to them first,” Fallon warned.
“In spite of recent evidence to the contrary,” Max said, “my people do know what they’re doing.”
“Too bad you didn’t know what they were doing,” Isabella said.
Fallon looked at her. “Play nice, Isabella. We need Max’s help at the moment.”
She wrinkled her nose. “Oh, all right.”
Max raised his brows at Fallon. “Vindictive, isn’t she?”
“Not usually,” Fallon said. “But this particular situation is a little different.”
It was the day after the events at the mansion. The three of them were sitting in the executive suite of Lucan Protection Services. It occurred to Isabella that although she had worked for Lucan for nearly six months, she had never been in Max Lucan’s office. Her career path was clearly trending upward. When you worked for J&J, you got some respect.
She had not been keen on the idea of coming face-to-face with her former boss on his own turf, but Fallon had said that it was important for her to be seen