on a windbreaker to cut the cold wind, Atticus went outside to explore the area.
Laskerâs place sat on a low bluff, flanked by other luxury beach houses, which Atticus cautiously circled. He found them empty: weekend retreats closed up for the week. While fringed by a stand of stunted hemlocks, the hilltop had only sand and dune grass, giving it an impression of barren isolation even though he could pick out sounds of distant traffic, screened by the trees.
The houses shared a narrow beach facing south, looking out over Nantucket Sound. The storm surf pounded the shore; the water rolled deep green until it broke to white, reeking of salt and a billion fishy organisms, alive and dead. Atticus knew Marthaâs Vineyard and Nantucket lay outacross the water, but the fog hazed the sky to a smothering level.
Atticus had never put his hand in a bag full of scorpions. He assumed that he had too much common sense and intelligence to ever attempt doing so. There was also the little matter of someone finding a good enough reason for him to try. Yet here he was, about to do the equivalentâand worse, it wasnât going to be his hand alone dipping into the bag.
We should just leave. How could this ever have sounded like a good idea?
To be truthful, it never had. It had always sounded like a bag of scorpions.
They were chasing after a phantom, a new designer drug with street names like Pixie Dust, Mojo, Liquidlust, Blissfire, and Desire. Theyâd first heard about Pixie Dust in raves around Baltimore, elusive as an urban legend. The supply was so erratic and the demand was so highâand still growing quicklyâthat theyâd never even seen a sample of the drug. No one knew where Pixie Dust was coming from. As Atticus and Ru set up deals for old favorites inside the Beltway, others tracked the new drug to Upstate New York. Outside of Buffalo, things had gone horribly wrong.
Atticus had worked with Boyes, Scroggins, and German. Despite what Sumpter might think, the men had given new meaning to the word âparanoid;â it was unlikely that they would have been careless. Whoever ambushed them had done a ruthlessly thorough job, killing everyone at the warehouse, buyer and seller alike, and smashing all the security equipment.
He and Ru had driven up to Buffalo to identify the bodies. Early Sunday morning, heâd slipped under the police tape and searched the warehouse with his inhumanly sharp senses, but there had been little to find. Scroggins and German had emptied their gunsâboth carried a SIG Sauer P229 in forty-caliber Smith & Wessonâbut not into the dead drug dealers, who had been killed with shotguns. The lack ofbullet holes in the back wall indicated that theyâd hit someoneâonly all the blood splatters matched up with accounted-for dead bodies. Also thereâd been a mysterious swath of clean floor, as if something had been dragged across it. During the long drive from Buffalo to Cape Cod, heâd reviewed his perfect memory, recalling every inch of the floor and walls in minute detail, and found nothing heâd overlooked.
Both sides had reasons to keep the meeting secret, so who would have ambushed the buy and walked away unscathed? Atticus would have suspected the man who had acted as the go-betweenâJay Laskerâbut he had dropped dead suddenly after setting up a second meeting. With Lasker had gone all the details about the Pixie Dust and the people selling it.
So here Atticus and his team were: at a dead manâs house, meeting with people who had no names, seeking a drug theyâd never seen. Unfamiliar with the area, they didnât know the secret ways, the ancient history, and things long ago buried but not forgotten. And now his brother was thrown into the mix.
One thing was clear: If things went badly, there wouldnât be any place to run to, no one to turn to, no place to hide.
Â
When he got back to the house, Ru was up. Still damp
Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry