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Chapter no 14 – Winter

Ninth House

Alex curled into the window seat at the Hutch, and Dawes brought her a cup of hot chocolate. Sheโ€™d placed a gourmet marshmallow at the top, the kind that looked like a rough-hewn stone yanked from a quarry.

โ€œYou went to the underworld,โ€ said Dawes. โ€œYou earned a treat.โ€ โ€œNot all the way to the underworld.โ€

โ€œThen give the marshmallow back.โ€ She said it shyly, as if afraid to make the joke, and Alex cradled her cup close to show she was playing along. She liked this Dawes, and she thought maybe this Dawes liked her.

โ€œWhat was it like?โ€

Alex looked out over the rooftops in the late-morning light. From here she could see the gray gables of Wolfโ€™s Head and part of the ivy-tangle backyard, a blue recycling bin leaning tipsily against the wall. It looked so ordinary.

She set aside her bacon and egg sandwich. Usually she could eat at least two herself, but she could still feel the water pulling her under and it was messing with her appetite. Had she really crossed over? How much was illusion and how much was real? She described what she could and what the Bridegroom required.

When she finished, Dawes said, โ€œYou canโ€™t go to Tara Hutchinsโ€™s apartment.โ€

Alex picked at her sandwich. โ€œI just told you about communing with the dead in a river full of golden-eyed crocodiles and thatโ€™s what you have to say?โ€

But apparently a taste of adventure had been enough for Dawes. โ€œIf Dean Sandow finds out what you did to Salome to get us into the templeโ€”โ€

โ€œSalome may bitch to her friends, but sheโ€™s not going to bring in the big guns. Offering us access to the temple, stealing from Scroll and Key, itโ€™s all too messy.โ€

โ€œAnd if she does?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll deny it.โ€

โ€œAnd you want me to deny it too?โ€

โ€œI want you to think about whatโ€™s important.โ€

โ€œAnd are you going to threaten me?โ€ Dawes kept her eyes on her cup of cocoa, her spoon circling around and around.

โ€œNo, Dawes. Are you afraid I will?โ€

The spoon stopped. Dawes looked up. Her eyes were a warm, dark coffee, and sunlight caught in her messy bun making the red in her hair glow brighter. โ€œI donโ€™t think I am,โ€ she said, as if she was surprised by the fact herself. โ€œYour reaction was โ€ฆ extreme. But Salomeย wasย in the wrong.โ€ Dawes with the ruthless streak. โ€œStill, if the dean learns you made a deal with a Grayโ€ฆโ€

โ€œHe wonโ€™t.โ€

โ€œBut if he doesโ€”โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re afraid heโ€™ll call you out for helping me. Donโ€™t worry. I wonโ€™t snitch. But Salome saw you. You might have to keep her quiet too.โ€

Dawesโ€™s eyes widened and then she realized Alex was kidding. โ€œOh.

Right. Itโ€™s just โ€ฆ I really need this job.โ€

โ€œI get it,โ€ said Alex. Maybe better than anyone else who had ever sat beneath this roof. โ€œBut I need something that belonged to Tara. Iโ€™m going to her apartment.โ€

โ€œDo you even know where she lived?โ€ โ€œNo,โ€ Alex admitted.

โ€œIf Detective Turner figures outโ€”โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s Turner going to find out? That I went halfway to the underworld to talk to a ghost? Iโ€™m pretty sure that doesnโ€™t count as witness tampering.โ€

โ€œBut going to Taraโ€™s apartment, going through her stuffโ€”thatโ€™s breaking and entering. Itโ€™s interfering with an active police investigation. You could be arrested.โ€

โ€œOnly if I get caught.โ€

Dawes gave a decisive shake of her head. โ€œYouโ€™re crossing a line. And I canโ€™t follow if youโ€™re going to put both of us and Lethe at risk. Detective Turner doesnโ€™t want you involved and heโ€™ll do whatever he has to do to protect his case.โ€

โ€œGood point,โ€ Alex said, considering. So maybe instead of going around Turner, she should just go through him.

 

 

Alex wanted to hide at the Hutch and let Dawes make her cups of cocoa. She

wouldnโ€™t have minded a little mothering. But she needed to go back to Old Campus, to renew her grasp on the ordinary world before the things that really mattered slipped away.

She left Dawes in front of the Dramat, but not before sheโ€™d asked about the name sheโ€™d heardโ€”or thought sheโ€™d heardโ€”spoken in the borderlands. โ€œJean Du Monde? Or maybe Jonathan Desmond?โ€

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t ring a bell,โ€ said Dawes. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll do a few searches and see what the library has to say once Iโ€™m back at Il Bastone.โ€

Alex hesitated, then said, โ€œBe careful, Dawes. Keep your eyes open.โ€ Dawes blinked. โ€œWhy?โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™m nobody.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re Lethe and youโ€™re alive. Youโ€™re somebody.โ€

Dawes blinked again, like clockwork waiting for a cog to turn, for the right wheel to click so she could continue moving. Then her vision cleared and her brows knitted together. โ€œDid you see him?โ€ she said in a rush, staring at her feet. โ€œOn the other side?โ€

Alex shook her head. โ€œNorth claims he isnโ€™t there.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s got to be a good sign,โ€ said Dawes. โ€œOn Wednesday weโ€™ll call him back. Weโ€™ll bring him home. Darlington will know what to do about everything.โ€

Maybe.ย But Alex wasnโ€™t going to bet her life on waiting.

โ€œDo you know much about the Bridegroom murders?โ€ Alex asked. Just because she knew Northโ€™s name, she didnโ€™t have to make a habit of using it. It would only strengthen their bond.

Dawes shrugged. โ€œItโ€™s on all of those Haunted Connecticut tours along with Jennie Cramer and that house in Southington.โ€

โ€œWhere did it go down?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not sure. I donโ€™t like reading about that kind of stuff.โ€

โ€œYou chose the wrong line of work, Dawes.โ€ She cocked her head. โ€œOr did it choose you?โ€ She remembered Darlingtonโ€™s story about waking in the hospital at age seventeen, with an IV in his arm and Dean Sandowโ€™s card in his hand. It was something they had in common, though it had never really felt that way.

โ€œThey approached me because of the topic for my dissertation. I was well suited to research. It was boring work untilโ€”โ€ She broke off. Her shoulders hitched like someone had yanked on her strings. Until Darlington. Dawes brushed at her eyes with her mittened hands. โ€œIโ€™ll let you know if I learn anything.โ€

โ€œDawesโ€”โ€ Alex began.

But Dawes was already hurrying back toward the Hutch.

Alex looked around, hoping to see the Bridegroom, wondering if theย glumaย or its master knew she had survived, if an ambush would be waiting around the next corner. She needed to get back to the dorm.

Alex thought of the passage the Bridegroom had quoted fromย Idylls of the King,ย the sinister weight of the words. If she remembered right, that passage was about Geraintโ€™s romance with Enid, a man driven mad by jealousy though his wife had remained faithful. It didnโ€™t exactly inspire confidence.ย Rather die than doubt.ย Why had Tara chosen those lines for her tattoo? Had she related to Enid or had she just liked the sound of the words? And why would someone from Scroll and Key share them with her? Alex couldnโ€™t imagine one of the Locksmiths saying thank you for a particularly sweet high with a tour of the tomb and an education in its mythology. And even if Alex wasnโ€™t making something out of nothing, how had dealing weed to a few undergrads turned into murder? There had to be something more at play here.

Alex remembered lying on her back at that intersection, seeing through Taraโ€™s eyes in her last moments, seeing Lanceโ€™s face above her. But what if hadnโ€™t been Lance at all? What if it had been some kind of glamour?

She swerved down High Street toward the Hopper College dining hall. She longed for the safety of her dorm room, but answers could protect her better than any ward. Even though Turner had warned her off Tripp, it was the only name she had and the only direct connection between the societies and Tara.

It was early yet, but sure enough, there he was, seated at a long table with a few of his buddies, all of them in loose shorts and baseball caps and fleeces, all of them rosy-cheeked and wind-buffed despite the fact she knew they must be nursing hangovers. Apparently wealth was better than vitamin injections. Darlington had been cut from the same moneyed cloth, but heโ€™d had a real face, one with a little hardness in it.

As she approached, she saw Trippโ€™s friends turn their eyes to her, assess her, discard her. Sheโ€™d showered at the Hutch, changed into a pair of Lethe sweats, and combed her hair. After being shoved into traffic and drowning, it was all the effort she owed anyone.

โ€œHey, Tripp,โ€ she said easily. โ€œYou got a minute?โ€

He turned her way. โ€œYou want to ask me to prom, Stern?โ€

โ€œDepends. Gonna be a good little slut for me and put out?โ€ Trippโ€™s friends whooped and one of them let out a longย Ohhhh shit. Now they were looking at her. โ€œI need to talk to you about that problem set.โ€

Trippโ€™s cheeks pinked, but then his shoulders squared and he rose. โ€œSure.โ€ โ€œBring him home early,โ€ said one of his buddies.

โ€œWhy?โ€ she asked. โ€œYou want seconds?โ€

They whooped again and clapped their hands as if sheโ€™d landed an impressive put.

โ€œYouโ€™re kinda nasty, Stern,โ€ Tripp said over his shoulder as she trailed him out of the dining hall. โ€œI like it.โ€

โ€œCome here,โ€ she said. She led him up the stairs, past the stained-glass windows of plantation life that had survived the name change of the college from โ€œslavery is a positive goodโ€ Calhoun to Hopper. A few years back a black janitor had smashed one of them to bits.

Trippโ€™s face changed, eager mischief pulling at his mouth. โ€œWhatโ€™s up, Stern?โ€ he said as they entered the reading room. It was empty.

She closed the door behind her and his grinned widenedโ€”like he actually thought she was about to make a move.

โ€œHow do you know Tara Hutchins?โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œHow do you know her? Iโ€™ve seen her phone logs,โ€ she lied. โ€œI know just how often you were in touch.โ€

He scowled and leaned on the back of a leather couch, folding his arms. The sulk didnโ€™t suit him. It pushed his round features from boyish sweetness to angry infant. โ€œYou a cop now?โ€

She walked toward him and she saw him stiffen, tell himself not to back up. His world was all about deferral, moving in sideways patterns. You didnโ€™t step to someone directly. You didnโ€™t look them in the eye. You were cool. You were fine with it. You could take a joke.

โ€œDonโ€™t make me say Iโ€™m the law, Tripp. Iโ€™ll have trouble keeping a straight face.โ€

His eyes narrowed. โ€œWhat is this about?โ€

โ€œHow stupid are you?โ€ His mouth fell open. His lower lip looked wet. Had anyone ever spoken to Tripp Helmuth this way? โ€œItโ€™s about a dead girl. I want to know what she was to you.โ€

โ€œI already talked to the police.โ€

โ€œAnd now youโ€™re talking to me. About a dead girl.โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t have toโ€”โ€

She leaned in. โ€œYou know how this works, right? My jobโ€”the job of Lethe Houseโ€”is to keep entitled little shits like you from making trouble for the administration.โ€

โ€œWhy are you being such a hard-ass? I thought we were friends.โ€

Because of all the beer pong we played and the summer we spent in Biarritz?ย Did he really not know the difference between friends and friendly?

โ€œWeย areย friends, Tripp. If I wasnโ€™t your friend Iโ€™d have taken this to Dean Sandow already, but I donโ€™t want hassle and I donโ€™t want to make trouble for you or for Bones if I donโ€™t have to.โ€

His big shoulders shrugged. โ€œIt was just a hookup.โ€ โ€œTara doesnโ€™t seem like your type.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t know my type.โ€ Was he really trying to flirt his way out of this? She held his gaze and his eyes slid away. โ€œShe was fun,โ€ he muttered.

For the first time, Alex had the sense he was being honest.

โ€œI bet she was,โ€ Alex said gently. โ€œAlways had a smile, always glad to see you.โ€ Thatโ€™s what dealing was about. Tripp probably didnโ€™t understand that he was just a customer, that he was a pal as long as he had cash on hand.

โ€œShe was nice.โ€ Did he care that she was dead? Was there something more haunted than a hangover in his eyes or did Alex just want to believe he gave a damn? โ€œI swear all we ever did was fuck around and smoke a couple of bowls.โ€

โ€œYou ever meet at her place?โ€

He shook his head. โ€œShe always came to me.โ€

Of course figuring out her address couldnโ€™t be that easy. โ€œYou ever see her with anyone from another society?โ€

Another shrug. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Look, Lance and T were dealers; they got the best weed Iโ€™ve ever had, like the lushest, greenest shit youโ€™ve ever seen. But I didnโ€™t keep track of who she hung out with.โ€

โ€œI asked if you saw her with anyone.โ€

He lowered his head more. โ€œWhy are you being like this?โ€

โ€œHey,โ€ she said softly. She squeezed his shoulder. โ€œYou know youโ€™re not in trouble, right? Youโ€™re going to be fine.โ€ She felt some of the tension ease out of him.

โ€œYouโ€™re being so mean.โ€

She was torn between wanting to slap him or put him to bed with his favorite binky and a cup of warm milk.

โ€œIโ€™m just trying to get some answers, Tripp. You know how it is. Just trying to do my job.โ€

โ€œI feel you, I feel you.โ€ She doubted that, but he knew the script. Regular guy, Tripp Helmuth. Working hard or hardly working.

She gripped his shoulder more firmly. โ€œBut you need to understand this

situation. A girl died. And these people she ran with? They arenโ€™t your friends and you arenโ€™t going to stay hard or not rat or any of that crap youโ€™ve seen in movies, because this isnโ€™t a movie, this is your life, and you have a good life, and you donโ€™t want to mess it up, yeah?โ€

Tripp kept his eyes on his shoes. โ€œYeah, okay. Yeah.โ€ She thought he might cry.

โ€œSo who did you see with Tara?โ€

When Tripp was done talking, Alex leaned back. โ€œTripp?โ€

โ€œYeah?โ€ He kept staring at his shoesโ€”ridiculous plastic sandals, as if summer never stopped for Tripp Helmuth.

โ€œTripp,โ€ she repeated, and waited for him to raise his head and meet her eyes. She smiled. โ€œThatโ€™s it. Weโ€™re done. Itโ€™s over.โ€ย You donโ€™t ever have to think about that girl again. How you fucked her and forgot her. How you thought she might give you a good deal if you made her come. How it got you off to be with someone who felt a little dangerous.ย โ€œWe good?โ€ she asked. This was the language he understood.

โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not going to let this go any further, I promise.โ€

And then he said it and she knew he wouldnโ€™t tell anyone about this conversationโ€”not his friends, not the Bonesmen. โ€œThank you.โ€

That was the trick of it: to make him believe he had more to lose than she did.

โ€œOne last thing, Tripp,โ€ she said as he made to scurry back toward the dining hall. โ€œDo you have a bike?โ€

 

 

Alex pedaled across the green, past the three churches, then down to State Street and under the highway. She had about two hundred pages of reading to do if she didnโ€™t want to fall behind this week, and possibly a monster hunting her, but right now she needed to talk to Detective Abel Turner.

Once you were off campus, New Haven lost its pretensions in fits and startsโ€”dollar stores and grimy sports bars shared space with gourmet markets and sleek coffee spots; cheap nail salons and cell-phone hubs sat next to upscale noodle shops and boutiques selling small, useless soaps. It left Alex uneasy, as if the cityโ€™s identity kept shifting in front of her.

State Street was just a long stretch of nothingโ€”parking lots, power lines, the train tracks to the eastโ€”and the police station was just as bad, an ugly, muscular building of oatmeal-colored slabs. There were dead spaces like this

all over the city, entire blocks of massive concrete monoliths looming over empty plazas like a drawing of the future from the past.

โ€œBrutalist,โ€ย Darlington had called them, and Alex had said, โ€œIt does sort of feel like the buildings are ganging up on you.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ heโ€™d corrected. โ€œItโ€™s from the French,ย brut.ย As inย raw,ย because they used bare concrete. But, yes, it does feel like that.โ€

There had been slums here before, and then money had poured into New Haven from the Model Cities program. โ€œIt was supposed to clean everything up, but they built places no one wanted to be. And then the money ran out and New Haven just has these โ€ฆ gaps.โ€

Wounds,ย Alex had thought at the time.ย He was about to say โ€œwounds,โ€ because the city is alive to him.

Alex looked down at her phone. Turner hadnโ€™t replied to her texts. She hadnโ€™t worked up the nerve to call, but now she was here and there was nothing else to do. When he didnโ€™t answer, she hung up and dialed back again, and then again. Alex hadnโ€™t been anywhere near a police station since after Hellie died.ย Not only Hellie died that night.ย But to think of it in any other terms, to think of the blood, the pale pudding of Lenโ€™s brain clinging to the lip of the kitchen counter, set her mind rabbiting around her skull in panic.

At last Turner answered.

โ€œWhat can I do for you, Alex?โ€ His voice was pleasant, solicitous, as if there were no one else heโ€™d rather speak to.

Reply to my goddamn texts.ย She cleared her throat. โ€œHi, Detective Turner.

Iโ€™d like to speak to you about Tara Hutchins.โ€

Turner chuckledโ€”there was no other word for it; it was the indulgent laugh of a seventy-year-old grandfather, though Turner couldnโ€™t have been much over thirty. Was he always like this at the office? โ€œAlex, you know I canโ€™t talk about an active investigation.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m outside the police station.โ€

A pause. Turnerโ€™s voice was different when he answered, a bit of that jolly warmth gone. โ€œWhere?โ€

โ€œRight across the street.โ€

Another long pause. โ€œTrain station in five.โ€

Alex walked Trippโ€™s bike the rest of the way up the block to Union Station. The air was soft, moist with the promise of snow. She wasnโ€™t sure if she was sweaty from the ride or because she was never going to get used to talking to cops.

She propped the bike against a wall by the parking lot and sat down on a

low concrete bench to wait. A Gray hurried past in his undershorts, checking his watch and bustling along as if afraid he was going to miss his train.ย Youโ€™re not going to make that one, buddy. Or any of the rest.

She scrolled through her phone, keeping one eye on the street as she searched Bertram Boyce Northโ€™s name. She wanted a little context before she went asking the Lethe library questions.

Luckily, there was plenty online. North and his fiancรฉe were celebrities of a kind. In 1854, he and his betrothed, the young Daisy Fanning Whitlock, had been found dead in the offices of the North & Sons Carriage Company, long since demolished. Their portraits were the first link underย New Havenย on the Connecticut Haunts site. North looked handsome and serious, his hair more tidily arranged than it had been in death. The only other difference was his clean white shirt, unmarred by bloodstains. Something cold slithered up her spine. Sometimes, despite her best efforts, she forgot she was seeing the dead, even with the gore splattered all over his fancy coat and shirt. Seeing this stiff, still black-and-white photo was different.ย He is moldering in a grave. He is a skeleton gone to dust.ย She could have what was left of him dug up. They could stand by the edge of his tomb together and marvel at his bones. Alex tried to shake off the image.

Daisy Whitlock was beautiful in that dark-haired stony-eyed way that girls of that time were. Her head was tilted slightly, only the barest hint of a smile on her lips, her curls parted in the middle and arranged in soft loops that left her neck bare. Her waist was tiny and her white shoulders emerged from a froth of ruffles, a posy of mums and roses clutched in her delicate hands.

As for the factory where the murder had taken place, parts of it hadnโ€™t yet been finished at the time of Northโ€™s murder and it was never completed. North & Sons moved their operations to Boston and continued to do business until the early 1900s. There were no photographs of the crime scene, only lurid descriptions of blood and horror, the gunโ€”a pistol North had kept in his new offices in case of intrudersโ€”still gripped in his hand.

The bodies had been discovered by Daisyโ€™s maid, a woman named Gladys Oโ€™Donaghue, who had gone screaming into the streets. Sheโ€™d been found nearly a half mile away, hysterical, at the corner of Chapel and High. Even after a calming dose of brandy, sheโ€™d had little information to offer the authorities. The crime seemed an obvious one; only the motive offered any kind of intrigue. There were theories that Daisy had been pregnant by another man but her family had hushed it up in the wake of the murders to avoid further scandal. One commenter suggested that North had been driven mad by

mercury poisoning because of the time heโ€™d spent near Danburyโ€™s hat factories. The simplest theory was that Daisy wanted to break off the engagement and North wouldnโ€™t have it. His family wanted an infusion of capital from the Whitlocksโ€”and North wanted Daisy. Sheโ€™d been a favorite of the local society columns and known as flirtatious, bold, and sometimes inappropriate.

โ€œI like you already,โ€ murmured Alex.

Alex scrolled past maps to both Daisyโ€™s and Northโ€™s graves and was trying to zoom in on an old newspaper article when Turner arrived at the station.

He hadnโ€™t bothered with an overcoat. Apparently he didnโ€™t intend to stay long. Even so, the man could dress. He wore a simple, staid charcoal suit, but the lines were sharp, and Alex saw the careful touchesโ€”the pocket square, the thin lavender stripe on the tie. Darlington had always looked good, but effortlessly so. Turner wasnโ€™t afraid to look like he tried.

His jaw was set, his mouth a pinched seam. It was only when he spotted Alex that his mask of diplomacy dropped into place. His whole bearing changed, not just his expression. His body went loose and easy, unthreatening, as if actively discharging the current of tension that animated his form.

He sat down beside her on the bench and rested his elbows on his knees. โ€œI need to ask you not to show up at my place of work.โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t answer my texts.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot going on. Iโ€™m in the middle of a homicide investigation as you know.โ€

โ€œIt was that or go to your house.โ€

That live-wire tension sprang back into his body, and Alex felt a jolt of gratification at being able to rile him.

โ€œI suppose Lethe has all of my particulars on file,โ€ he said. Lethe most likely did know everything from Turnerโ€™s Social Security number to his tastes in porn, but no one had ever offered Alex a look at the file. She didnโ€™t even know if Turner lived in New Haven proper. Turner checked his phone. โ€œI have about ten minutes to give you.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d like you to let me talk to Lance Gressang.โ€ โ€œSure. Maybe youโ€™d like to run his prosecution too.โ€

โ€œTara wasnโ€™t just connected to Tripp Helmuth. She and Lance were dealing to members of Scroll and Key and Manuscript. I have names.โ€

โ€œGo on.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re not something I can disclose.โ€

Turnerโ€™s face was still impassive, but she could feel his resentment

building with each moment he was forced to indulge her. Good.

โ€œYou come to me for information but youโ€™re not willing to share yours?โ€ he asked.

โ€œLet me talk to Gressang.โ€

โ€œHe is the chief suspect in a murder investigation. You understand that, right?โ€ A disbelieving smile had crept up his lips. He really thought she was stupid. No, entitled. Another Tripp. Maybe another Darlington. And he would like this version of her better than the one heโ€™d met at the morgue. Because this version could be intimidated.

โ€œAll I need is a few minutes,โ€ she said, adding a whiny note to her voice. โ€œI donโ€™t actually need your permission. I can make the request through his lawyer, say I knew Tara.โ€

Turner shook his head. โ€œNope. As soon as I leave this meeting Iโ€™m calling him and letting him know thereโ€™s a crazy girl trying to insert herself into this case. Maybe Iโ€™ll give him a look at the video of you running around Elm Street like some kind of fool.โ€

A bolt of shame shook Alex as she thought of herself writhing in the middle of the road, cars swerving around her. So Sandow had shared the video with Turner. Had he shared it with anyone else? The thought of Professor Belbalm seeing it made her stomach churn. No wonder the detective was doubly smug with her today. He didnโ€™t just think she was stupid. He thought she was unhinged. Even better.

โ€œWhatโ€™s the big deal?โ€ Alex said.

Turnerโ€™s fingers flexed on the immaculately pressed legs of his suit. โ€œTheย big deal? I canโ€™t just sneak you in there. All visitors to a jail are logged. I have to have a good official reason to bring you there. His attorneys have to be there. The whole thing will have to be recorded.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re telling me cops always follow the rules?โ€

โ€œPolice.ย And if I bent the rules and the defense found out, Lance Gressang would get away with murder and Iโ€™d lose my job.โ€

โ€œLook, when I went up to Taraโ€™s placeโ€”โ€

Turnerโ€™s gaze snapped to her, eyes blazing, all pretense of diplomacy gone. โ€œYou went to her house? If you crossed that tapeโ€”โ€

โ€œI needed to know ifโ€”โ€

He shot to his feet. This was the real Turner: young, ambitious, forced to dance to make his way in the world and sick of it. He paced back and forth in front of the bench, then pointed a finger at her. โ€œStay the fuck away from my case.โ€

โ€œTurnerโ€”โ€

โ€œDetectiveย Turner. You are not going to mess with my case. I see you anywhere near Woodland, I will fuck your life so hard, youโ€™ll never walk straight again.โ€

โ€œWhy are you being such a hard-ass?โ€ she whined, cribbing a line from Tripp.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t aย gameย for you to play. You need to understand how easy it would be for me to take your life apart, to find a little stash of weed or pills on you or in your dorm room. Get that.โ€

โ€œYou canโ€™t justโ€”โ€ Alex began, eyes wide, lip wobbling.

โ€œIโ€™ll do whatever I have to do. Now get out of here. You have no idea the line youโ€™re walking, so do not press me.โ€

โ€œI get it, okay?โ€ Alex said meekly. โ€œIโ€™m sorry.โ€ โ€œWho did Tripp say he saw with Tara?โ€

Alex didnโ€™t mind sharing the names. Sheโ€™d meant to from the start. Turner needed to know that Tara had been dealing to students who werenโ€™t in her phone logs, using a burner or a phone Lance had hidden or destroyed. She looked down at her gloved hands and said quietly, โ€œKate Masters and Colin Khatri.โ€

Kate was in Manuscript but Alex barely knew her. The last time sheโ€™d spoken to her had been the night of the Halloween party, when she and Mike Awolowo had begged her not to tattle to Lethe about drugging Darlington. Sheโ€™d been dressed as Poison Ivy. But Colin she knew. Colin worked for Belbalm and he was in Scroll and Key. He was cute, tidy, as preppy as they came. She could imagine him relaxing with an outrageously expensive bottle of wine, not hotboxing with town goods. But she knew from her time at Ground Zero, appearances could be deceiving.

Turner smoothed his lapels, his cuffs, ran his hands over the clean sides of his head. She watched him put himself back together, and when he smiled and winked it was as if the angry, hungry Turner had never been there. โ€œGlad we had this chat, Alex. You let me know if thereโ€™s anything at all I can do to help you out in the future.โ€

He turned and marched back toward the hulking form of the police station. She hadnโ€™t liked whimpering in front of Turner. She hadnโ€™t liked being called crazy. But now she knew what street Tara had lived on, and the rest would be easy.

 

 

Alex was tempted to go directly to Woodland and find Taraโ€™s apartment, but she didnโ€™t want to try to do her snooping on a Sunday, when people would be home from work. It would have to wait until tomorrow. She hoped that whoever had sent theย glumaย after her thought she was still laid up at the Hutchโ€”or dead. But if they were watching her, she hoped theyโ€™d seen her talking to Turner. Then theyโ€™d think the police knew what she knew, and thereโ€™d be no point to shutting her up.ย Unless somehow Turner is in on all of it.

Alex shook the thought from her mind as she pedaled back toward the Hopper gates. Cautious was helpful; paranoid was just another word for distracted.

She texted Tripp to let him know where sheโ€™d dumped his bike inside the gate and headed across Old Campus, turning over Taraโ€™s ties to the societies. Theย glumaย suggested the involvement of Book and Snake, but so far it didnโ€™t look like Tara had been dealing to anyone in that society. Tripp connected her to Skull and Bones, Colin and that weird tattoo connected her to Scroll and Key, Kate Masters tied her to Manuscriptโ€”and Manuscript specialized in glamours. If someone had been dressed in magic that night, pretending to be Lance, Manuscript was probably involved. That could explain why Alex had seen Lanceโ€™s face in Taraโ€™s memory of the murder.

But all of that also assumed Trippโ€™s information was good. When you were scared youโ€™d say anything to get yourself out of a bad situation. She should know. And Alex had no doubt that Tripp would happily sell out whoever first came to mind to get himself out of trouble. She supposed she could take those names to Sandow, explain that Turner would now be hunting down their alibis, try to make him reconsider Letheโ€™s involvement in the investigation. But then sheโ€™d have to explain that sheโ€™d badgered the information out of a Bonesman.

Alex had to be honest with herself too. Something in her had shaken loose when theย glumaย attackedโ€”the real Alex coiled like a serpent in the false skin of who she pretended to be. That Alex had snapped her jaws closed on Salome, bullied Tripp, manipulated Turner. But she had to be careful.ย Itโ€™s essential that they see you as stable, reliable.ย She didnโ€™t want to give Sandow any more excuses to sever her from Lethe and her only hope of staying at Yale.

Alex felt a rush of relief as she climbed the steps to Vanderbilt. She wanted to be behind the wards, to see Lauren and Mercy and talk about work and boys. She wanted to sleep in her own narrow bed. But when Alex entered

the suite, the first thing she heard was crying. Lauren and Mercy were on the couch. Lauren had her arm around Mercy and was rubbing her back as Mercy sobbed.

โ€œWhat happened?โ€ Alex said.

Mercy didnโ€™t look up and Laurenโ€™s face was harsh. โ€œWhere have you been?โ€ she snapped. โ€œDarlingtonโ€™s mom needed help with something.โ€

Lauren rolled her eyes. Apparently the family-emergency excuse was past retirement.

Alex sat down on the battered coffee table, her knees bumping Mercyโ€™s.

Mercy had her head buried in her hands. โ€œTell me whatโ€™s going on.โ€ โ€œCan I show her?โ€ said Lauren.

Mercy released another sob. โ€œWhy not?โ€

Lauren handed over Mercyโ€™s phone. Alex slid unlock on the screen and saw a text string with someone named Blake.

โ€œBlake Keely?โ€ He was a lacrosse player, if she remembered right. There was a story about him kicking a kid from a rival team in the head during a game in high school. The player had been on the ground at the time. Every college had revoked his scholarshipโ€”every college but Yale. The lacrosse team had been Ivy League champs four years running, and Blake had landed a modeling gig with Abercrombie & Fitch. His posters were plastered all over the storeโ€™s windows on Broadway, giant black-and-white images of him emerging shirtless from a mountain lake, hauling a Christmas tree through a snowy wood, snuggling a bulldog puppy by a roaring fire.

You were hot last night. All the brothers agree. Come by again tonight.

There was a video attached.

Alex didnโ€™t want to press play, but she did. The sound of raucous laughter blared from the phone, the thump of a bass track. Blake said, โ€œHeyyyyy hey, we have such a pretty girl, something exotic on the menu tonight, right?โ€

He turned the camera on Mercy, who laughed. She was sitting in another boyโ€™s lap, her velvet skirt hiked high on her thighs, a red Solo cup in her hand.ย Shit. Omega Meltdown.ย Alex had promised Mercy sheโ€™d go with her, but sheโ€™d completely forgotten.

โ€œTake it in the other room,โ€ said Lauren as Mercy wept.

Hurriedly, Alex entered her bedroom and shut the door. Mercyโ€™s bed was unmade. That, even more than her sobbing, was a sure sign of distress.

In the video Mercyโ€™s skirt was pushed up to her waist, her panties pulled down. โ€œJesus, look at all that bush!โ€ Blake giggled, a high, giddy sound, his

eyes tearing with laughter. โ€œItโ€™s so straight. You doing good, hon?โ€ Mercy nodded.

โ€œHavenโ€™t had too much to drink? Youโ€™re sober and consensual as they say?โ€

โ€œYou bet.โ€

Mercyโ€™s eyes were bright, lively, alert, not glazed or heavy lidded. She didnโ€™t look drunk or like sheโ€™d been roofied.

โ€œOn your knees, hon. Time for Chinese takeout.โ€

Mercy knelt, her dark eyes wide and wet. She opened her mouth. Her tongue was stained purple from the punch. Alex paused the video. No, not the punch. She knew that color. That was how those servants had looked that night at Manuscript. That was Merity, the drug of service, taken by acolytes to give up their will.

The door opened and Lauren slipped inside. โ€œShe wonโ€™t let me take her to the health center.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re rapists. We should be going to the cops.โ€ They should be good for that at least.

โ€œYou saw the video. She told me she barely drank.โ€ โ€œShe was drugged.โ€

โ€œI thought so too, but she isnโ€™t acting like it. She doesnโ€™t look like it. Did you watch it?โ€

โ€œPart of it. How bad does it get?โ€ โ€œBad.โ€

โ€œHow many guys?โ€

โ€œJust the two. She thinks heโ€™s going to send it around to his boys if he hasnโ€™t already. Why werenโ€™t you with her?โ€

I forgot.ย Alex didnโ€™t want to say it. Because, yes, a girl had been murdered and Alex had been attacked, but at the end of the day, Alex hadnโ€™t spared a second thought for Mercy, and Mercy deserved better. She deserved a night out to have fun and flirt and maybe meet a cute boy she could kiss and take to a formal. That was why Alex had agreed to go to Omega Meltdown with her. She owed Mercy, who had been kind to her and helped with Alexโ€™s papers and never pitied, just pushed her to do better. But sheโ€™d forgotten all about the party after theย glumaย attack. Sheโ€™d gotten caught up in her fear and desperation and her desire to know why she was being hunted.

โ€œWho did she go with?โ€ Alex asked.

โ€œCharlotte and that crew from upstairs.โ€ Laurenโ€™s voice was an angry growl. โ€œThey just left her there.โ€

If Mercy was under the influence of Merity, then she would have said she was fine, that they should leave, and they wouldnโ€™t have known her well enough to argue with her. But if Alex had been there, she would have seen Mercyโ€™s purple tongue. She could have stopped this.

Alex put her coat back on. She took a screenshot of the video and sent it to her own phone showing Mercyโ€™s mouth open, her purple tongue out.

โ€œWhere are you going?โ€ Lauren whispered furiously. โ€œDoes Darlingtonโ€™s mom need some more help?โ€

โ€œTo fix this.โ€

โ€œShe doesnโ€™t want us talking to the police.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t need the police. Where does Blake live?โ€ โ€œThe Omega house.โ€

Up on Lynwood, in the filthy frat row that had sprung up when the university had kicked the fraternities off campus years ago.

โ€œAlexโ€”โ€ said Lauren.

โ€œJust try to keep her calm and donโ€™t leave her alone.โ€

Alex strode back out of Vanderbilt and across Old Campus. She wanted to go straight to Blake, but that would do no good. A group of Grays flickered in the corner of her vision.ย โ€œOrare las di Korach,โ€ย she spat. Her grandmotherโ€™s curse felt good on her tongue.ย Let them be swallowed alive.ย All of her anger must have gathered in the words. The Grays scattered like birds.

And what about theย gluma? If it was out there hunting, would it go running? She would have been glad for a glimpse of the Bridegroom, but she hadnโ€™t seen him since their encounter in the borderlands.

Alex knew she shouldnโ€™t have riled Detective Turner. He might have been willing to help if she hadnโ€™t messed with him. It was possible he still would. Part of her believed he really was one of the good guys. But she didnโ€™t want to rely on Turner or the law or the administration to fix this. Because the video would still be out there, and Blake Keely was rich and beautiful and beloved, and there was a big difference between things being fair and things being set right.

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