Page 12 of Fire and Ice (Buchanan-Renard 7)
The memory caused her to shudder. The purse had to be in the living room.
It wasnât, though.
âAlec, did you see my purse? Red leather â¦â She glanced around the room again. âI was holding it when I got shot. It has to be here.â
âI saw it,â Gil said around a mouthful of pizza. âIt was on the floor, right over there by the window,â he added, waving a half-eaten slice in that direction. âIt was covered in blood.â
âCovered in blood? No, not my Prada!â
Jack looked at Alec and tilted his head toward Sophie. âIs this gonna be like the cabana shirt?â
She heard him. âIt was a Dolce & Gabbana, and the Prada red leather tote is a one-of-a-kind.â
âWas a one-of-a-kind,â Jack corrected.
She felt like cursing. She slumped into the chair next to Jack. âWas? Care to explain what you mean by that?â
âI guess you could say the Prada helped save your life,â Jack said. âThe bullet went through the latch before it got to you.â
She sat back. âOkay, I can have that fixed. If the leather isnât stained ⦠if I can get the blood out ⦠where is it?â
âIt isnât here,â Alec told her.
âIt was part of the crime scene,â Gil explained, âso it was taken to the lab.â
âI want it back. My recorder is inside, and my wallet with all my identification, and oh, my God, my credit cards.â
âIâll call Steinbeck in the morning,â Alec promised as he finished the last of the pizza and began to clear off the table.
Sophie yawned. The pain medication was making her sleepy and she was worn out. âDonât you two have someplace better to be?â she asked Alec and Jack. âMaybe some bad guys to catch?â
âNot me,â Jack answered. âI might be taking a leave of absence. If I do, Iâm going to find a secluded beach where itâs hot all year long and set up a hammock. I hate the cold, and Chicagoâs already getting there.â
âWell, Iâm sure youâll have a lovely time,â Sophie said. âNow, if you will please excuse me, Iâd like to go to bed.â
âJack and Iâll head out,â Alec said, âbut Gilâs staying here tonight.â
âButââ Sophie began.
âDonât argue with me on this one, Sophie,â Alec warned.
Gil winked at her. âThat sofa looks mighty comfortable to me. I promise to be quiet as a mouse. You wonât even know Iâm here.â
Reluctantly, Sophie gave in. She no longer had the energy to argue.
After locking the door behind Alec and Jack, she went to her linen closet to get a blanket and pillow for Gil. She straightened up the kitchen and turned out the lights, then headed for her bedroom. The living room was illuminated by the glow of the TV. Gil was watching a basketball game with the volume turned down.
âGood night, Gil,â she said. âAnd thank you.â
âGood night, Sophie, darling,â he answered through a yawn.
Sophie dressed in her nightgown and sat on the edge of her bed. She was so weary she could hardly keep her eyes open. The clock on her nightstand said 11:30. She couldnât go to sleep yet. She had to stay awake another half hour, so she picked up a magazine and read. Finally, at 11:55, she slipped quietly out of bed. She tiptoed to her bedroom door and cracked it open a sliver. Gil was snoring loudly. Gently closing the door again, she crossed the room to her closet and pushed aside a stack of shoe boxes on the floor to reveal a small wooden panel. With a couple of taps the panel came loose. Behind it was a cavity the size of a paperback novel. She reached inside and pulled out a thin cell phone. Glancing across the room at the night-stand, she squinted to see the clock. It now said 11:59. She waited.
At precisely midnight, the phone vibrated in her hand.
Sophie quickly flipped it open and put it to her ear.
âHi, Daddy.â
JOURNAL ENTRY 300
ARCTIC CAMP
I cannot describe how distraught all of us are. Lucy, the other adults, the pups, all gone. The only survivor is Ricky.
Ricky was at deathâs door, too. Eric convinced Brandon and Kirk to return to the base facility. As soon as they left, Eric sedated Ricky and then, with my help, gave the wolf another injection of K-74. I urged him to increase the dosage.
Within hours of injecting him, Ricky was up and as strong as ever. His remarkable recovery in such a short time stunned Brandon and Kirk.
For the first time, I saw emotion in our alpha male. Ricky went into deep mourning over the loss of his family. He couldnât seem to find his bearings and wailed long into the night; in the daytime, he paced.
EVERYTHING WAS GOING TO BE ALL RIGHT, ACCORDING TO her father anyway, and ninety-nine percent of the time he was right. Things did have a way of working out for the better, and, as he constantly reminded her, there would be a light at the end of the tunnel. It was just that crawling through that tunnel to get to the light was always such a pain.
Getting shot was a perfect example. What possible good could come from that? Too soon to know, she supposed, but she chose to believe her father and to embrace his optimistic outlook on life. She also thought sheâd start embracing another of his philosophies: get even. Sophie would welcome the opportunity to shoot the man who had shot her. See how much he liked it.
Over the phone her father promised her that Kellyâs employees would get justice, and she trusted him. She hoped they would get their money back, too, which she mentioned several times. Her fatherâs response was a simple, âWeâll see.â
After they finished discussing the current sorry state of affairs with Kellyâs Root Beer, she told him all about William Harrington, sparing no details of his gruesome death. He suggested that she pack her bag and take a trip to Prudhoe Bay. He reminded her that she was a reporter, and that there was obviously a story to be had there. Sophie recognized her fatherâs real motive. He wanted her out of Chicago until all the hoopla over Kellyâs closing calmed down. What he suggested made good sense, though. There was a story to be told in Alaska.
The next couple of days went by surprisingly fast, yet Sophie didnât get much of anything accomplished. She slept a lot, ate a little, and felt dull as oatmeal. Gil spent only that first night in her apartment, but he was never far away. When he wasnât guarding her apartment, someone else was on duty. No one got past the lobby without identification and permission. The added security was Alecâs doing, and Sophie didnât know how she was ever going to repay him for keeping her safe.
She had company, lots of company, and there were Get Well cards and fresh flowers. Mrs. Bitterman came by with a pot of homemade spaghetti sauce and meatballs. There was enough to feed a family of twelve. Even complete strangers sent good wishes for her speedy recovery. Most insisted they didnât believe Bobby RoseâChicagoâs very own Robin Hoodâhad stolen money from Kellyâs retirement fund. The vast majority blamed Kevin Devoe, Kellyâs investment money manager, for being inept and making bad stock purchases.
Sophie couldnât escape from the scandal. Every night there was something in the local news about the company closing and also about the bitter divorce. Kellyâs daughter, Meredith, and her soon-to-be-ex, Kevin Devoe, were involved in a nasty, hateful fight. Accusations were being flung by each side, and all of them were caught on film and shown like a sick soap opera on the six oâclock and ten oâclock local TV news. Their vile, angry sneers were right there in the middle of the screen for everyone to see.
How could a couple who obviously had loved each other when they married turn into such gargoyles? Love one day, hate the next? No wonder the thought of marriage made Sophie want to gag.
Mr. Bitterman called her every day, but he refused to come and see her until she had recovered from her injury, and he refused to let her say a word about work.
âI know if I do, youâll hound me to let you get back to the newspaper, and Iâll feel sorry for you because you were shot, and I might give in,â he told her.
When she opened her mouth to tal
k, he cut her off. At first she was infuriated by his obstinacy because she was dying to tell him about Harringtonâs fate, but she soon realized Bittermanâs stubborn insistence could work to her advantage. She needed more time to gather information before approaching him with her plan.
Sophie couldnât get Harrington out of her mind. She wanted to call Paul Larson in Prudhoe Bay and ask him if he had found out anything more about the deceased. Paul had given her his cell phone number and had told her she could call him anytime night or day but she didnât want to bother him. He had a full-time job working as a security officer for the oil companies, and he had promised that he would call her if and when he had further information about Harrington. Still, waiting to hear something was driving her to distraction.
She kept a notebook close, and every time she remembered something Harrington had said during that endless interview, she jotted it down. Guilt plagued her. She should have paid more attention to him.
Her attention now, however, was focussed on her missing purse. What she should do is find out where the crime lab was located, go there, and demand that they give her back her personal possessions. They still had her digital recorder with every word Harrington had said on it.
THE DAY HER STITCHES WERE REMOVED started out as a very good day indeed. Paul Larson, the security guy from Alaska, called with all sorts of interesting information.
âThey found Harringtonâs wallet. It was thirty yards from the remnants of a tent that had been set up about twenty miles from nowhere. I mean it. It was smack dab in the middle of the most desolate land you could ever imagine. Nothing around for miles and miles. A small plane flew over looking for Barry, and they set down to put some new markers up.â
âWhoâs Barry?â
âThe male polar bear that ate ⦠I mean that killed William Harrington. Iâve discovered that Barry is quite the celebrity up here.â
She was horrified. âBecause he killed a man?â
âOh, no, no. Heâs a celebrity because heâs been part of a scientific study on polar bears. Thereâs always one scientific group or another up here collecting data about something. If itâs not the polar bears, itâs global warming.â
âYou said they were checking up on Barry?â
âThatâs right. The pilot spotted a long strip of red fabric flying in the wind. A big wad of it was part of a tent, but then there was another smaller strip frozen to the wallet. If the tent hadnât been such a bright color, he never would have seen it. Even so, when you think about how huge this place is, itâs pretty amazing they found anything. They call it a frozen wasteland.â
And William Harrington pitched a tent in the middle of it? What in Godâs name was he doing camping twenty miles from ⦠frozen nothing? Sophie couldnât even begin to imagine what he had been up to. She wondered aloud: âYou donât suppose Harrington was in Alaska because of one of these scientific studies, do you?â
âWhat kind of study?â Larson asked.
âThis might be a stretch, but I keep thinking about the project Harrington mentioned. He called it the Alpha Project. Itâs probably nothing,â Sophie said. âHarrington was pretty boastful, so he most likely was exaggerating about some superman club he was a part of, but it might be worth a little investigating.â
âAlpha Project?â Larson laughed. âSounds a little sci fi to me.â
âIâm sure youâre right, Paul,â Sophie admitted, âyet I canât help but be intrigued. I still wonder why Harrington was in Alaska. What was inside the wallet?â
âHis driverâs license, a couple of hundred-dollar bills, and a twenty, and a Visa bank card. There wasnât a scratch on that skinny leather wallet. Not a scratch they said. Amazing, huh? Considering ⦠you know â¦â
Considering that good old Barry had chewed up William Harrington?
âThey sent the wallet down to the lab in Anchorage. The remains had already been taken there. I talked to a guy down there, told him I was real interested in the investigation, and that I would appreciate it if he would let me know what was going on.
âI guess they started with the bank that issued the credit card and from there they tracked down the name of a law firm handling Harringtonâs affairs. They even got the name of the one and only relative, who, I understand, is going to inherit a hell of a lot of money. Dwayne Wicker. A second cousin. Pretty sad he only had the one relative.â
âI donât know who his friends were or if he even had friends,â Sophie said. âWe only discussed the twenty-four races heâd won. And blisters. We talked a long time about his blisters.â
Paul laughed. âBlisters? Youâre making that up.â
âNo, Iâm not. Iâm ashamed to admit I sort of daydreamed while he talked. I feel bad about that. Those races meant so much to him.â
âThen why did he blow off the twenty-fifth race?â
âIf I had to guess, Iâd say he knew he wouldnât win, but the fact that he was still wearing his racing socks in Alaska is making me wonder if there isnât much more to his disappearance.â
âListen, Iâve got an idea. Since youâre not going to be writing about races, come up here and write about Alaska. Weâve got a five-star hotel just outside of Barrow. How about I make a reservation for you? I really want that candlelight dinner.â
âDo they put chocolates on the pillows every night in this five-star hotel?â
He had a nice laugh. âOkay I made up the hotel, but you still have to come up here. We have a no-frills hotel here with clean rooms and clean sheets, and youâve really got to see the northern lights. The view here is spectacular.â
âI thought you said it was a wasteland.â
âA beautiful wasteland.â He laughed again. âI guess thatâs a contradiction. You just have to see it to understand. Alaska will fascinate you.â
âLet me think about it,â she said.
âThink about me, too.â
She didnât respond to his comment. âYouâll call me if you get any more information on Harrington?â
âIâm going to call you anyway. Bye now.â
SOPHIE WAS DESPERATE. âI need Kellyâs Root Beer, and I need it bad.â
âAnd youâre calling me because ⦠?â Cordie asked.
âBecause you know how to get things from the street ⦠the âhood.â
âThe what?â
âThe âhood, like in neighborhood. Can you get me some or not?â
âIâve got a couple of bottles in my refrigerator. I could bring them over after my last chem lab.â
âThatâs not enough. I need cases of the stuff.â
âOkay. Iâll ask the obvious. Why?â
âBecause Mr. Bitterman is coming over tonight. Thereâs a story I want to investigate and it might be necessary for me to take a trip. My hope is that heâll approve the story and cover my expenses. Iâll tell you everything when we get together. But now I need root beer and lots of it. I lured Mr. Bitterman to my apartment with a promise, and I exaggerated just a bit.â
âHow much is a bit?â
âI suggested I had a closet full of the stuff.â
âThereâs an easy solution. Call the grocery store and have them deliver a couple of cases of another brand of root beer.â
âMr. Bitterman would have heart failure. It has to be Kellyâs Root Beer.â
âWhat about Regan? Maybe she can help.â
âIâve already given her an assignment. Sheâs supposed to work on Alec to help me get my things back from the crime lab. Thereâs absolutely no reason for them to hold on to my personal possessions.â
âGil told me there was blood all over your purse and that the bullet went through the clasp. Poor you. They had to take it because it was part of the crime scene. Donât you ever watch any of those CSI shows on television? Youâre lucky they didnât cut your rug up and take that, too.â
âBut what about the things inside my purse? Why do they need to keep my wallet and digital recorder and my cell phone? I guess I can kiss that
battery good-bye.â
âTalk to Detective Steinbeck.â
âI have talked to him. He keeps telling me heâll get my things back real soon, but Iâve stopped believing him. Heâs just humoring me.â
âI donât know what you think Alec can do. This isnât a federal investigation.â
âHe has friends in the police department, and Iâm hoping he can get one of them to help. I really need my recorder. Thereâs an important interview I have to listen to,â she explained.
âAh, the runner interview.â
âYes,â she said. âIâm desperate. I even left a message on Alecâs cell phone telling him that if I donât get my recorder back by tomorrow, Iâm going to break into the crime lab and get it myself. If I have to tear up the place, so be it.â
Cordie laughed. âOh, I bet he just loved listening to that message.â
After she finished talking with her friend, Sophie tried several other possibilities, but none of them could hook her up with Kellyâs Root Beer. The beverage was as scarce as mascara at an Amish convention.
Nothing was going her way, and Sophie had reached the end of her rope. She wasnât asking for much, just a little good news.
And then it came. But why is it that most good news is accompanied by bad news? Sophie wondered.
Good news: She got her digital recorder back.
Bad news: Jack MacAlister came with it.
JOURNAL ENTRY 304
ARCTIC CAMP
Brandon called a meeting and proposed we keep the deaths of the pack âour little secret.â He fears that our funding will be taken away. It had only just been renewed, and none of us wants to leave until we see what happens to Ricky.
We âve all agreed to Brandonâs proposal.
Ricky has found a new pack for us. He wandered alone for almost two weeks before he found another family. Itâs typical for wolves to move around in the fall and winter. Ricky came across a pack in migration, and though itâs highly unusual, he has managed to blend in. It remains to be seen if this alpha male will cause trouble in his new community.