“No.”
“So you do like me.” He wriggled an eyebrow at me. “You’d have gone on a date with me if we’d met under normal circumstances.”
“Maybe.” Couldn’t help it. I didn’t do easy commitments. Never had been able to. Whenever I got asked out in high school, I always turned down the first request and waited until the guy asked again before I’d agree to it.
He smirked. He shifted and I moved over a little until he could relax on his side, propped up on his hand and looked down at me. His other hand moved up, tugging a strand of my hair away from my face. “I’ve got those wiggle sparks for you,” he said quietly. “You don’t want to rush anything. I get that, but I swear, I haven’t felt it like this before. Stop thinking about what we should be doing. I wouldn’t ask just any girl to move in with me right after I met her. If you really feel strongly about it, you can still sleep on the couch, or we’ll figure something out.” His hand trailed down, and his palm met my belly again. “But if you feel any spark in there, if you’re not repulsed by the idea of us together, just stay. You can contribute if you want, but you don’t have to. I’ll won’t ask. You’re not costing us anything extra.”
My insides trembled again. This was everything I needed to hear, and the worst thing he could have told me. It was exactly what I needed: him, a place to stay, someone who understood I was starting from nothing was afraid I would eventually get kicked out. He was looking for my brother. Without my knowing about it, he’d been on the hunt and helping me. Trying to fix things.
Marc was here right now, with me, helping me again. It wasn’t enough to help me with Wil. He was giving me a foothold, and at the same time, telling me to stay.
But I couldn’t answer him, because my situation with Brandon niggled at the back of my mind. Axel’s kiss was etched in me. Raven’s hard stares, his touch, his brisk attachments made me crave him. They each tugged at me in different ways. I closed my eyes tight, unable to look at him anymore, because I was sure once he learned the truth, he’d take it all back. He couldn’t feel that way about me if he knew his other friends were that into me and that I shared those feelings.
And with that thought, I swallowed hard to push the pain back. I couldn’t be lured in by daydreams of him and his promises and then later get thrown out. I started pushing him off, pulling myself up.
Marc resisted, capturing my hand and trying to draw it in. “Don’t...”
But I couldn’t answer him. I couldn’t risk hurting any of them and getting kicked out of this group I’d been growing attached to.
It might just kill me if they did.
As if answering my silent pleas, the driver’s door opened. Marc sat up quickly and I did, too, putting space between us.
“Get a nice nap, you two?” Axel asked. He sat behind the wheel and then turned to look at me right behind him and then eased, looking at Marc. If he saw anything, he wasn’t going to say so.
“What’d she say?” Marc asked. He moved, jumping into the front seat of the car and settling in. He glanced once at me, a bit of the pleading still in his eyes but it started to fade. I wondered if he thought I’d heard Axel coming and that’s why I moved away from him. It was like he understood, but was hurt that I felt the need to hide ‘us’ from Axel.
While they weren’t watching me, I fixed myself, and rubbed my hands across my face, trying to get out from under the spell Marc had cast.
Axel pulled the glasses off of his face and rubbed at his eyes. “Randall died here. Random robbery homicide. No suspects. No witnesses except a few people working late at the Chinese restaurant who heard the shots fired.”
“Happened here?” Marc asked, and then scanned the place, as if it was happening in front of him now.
Axel shrugged. “He left the office late that night. He’d been walking to his car, caught a couple of bullets in the chest and someone took his wallet and phone. They found the wallet a few blocks later with everything taken out except a couple of ID cards. His cell was turned off, so they couldn’t follow it. The police are still looking for information, but they don’t have any leads. They think it’s connected to several other attacks that have happened in the area. Though those have all been robberies, but no homicides. Until now. The police are saying he must have resisted and so they shot him.”
My eyes kept darting to Marc, but I shook off the overwhelming thoughts about him and what we’d done and focused on Axel and what he was saying, getting back to business. I curled up a bit and stared out the window. I was looking for Mr. Jones’s ghost. “Robberies in Isle of Palms?” It was a ritzy place to get mugged.
“Yeah. What’s the world coming to?” Axel rocked his head toward the rental agency. “But as far as I can tell, this lady doesn’t know a thing about a communication core.” Axel shifted in his seat, and he scanned the area again. He took out his cell phone and started typing into it.
“What’s wrong?” Marc asked.
“I don’t like this,” Axel said. “Kayli’s right, this guy doesn’t seem to have any connection to a secret communication service. There’s no sign of a profit of any sort. This guy doesn’t seem all that intelligent, either. I mean, he had an okay business going...”
“He still worked,” I said, catching on. I snapped my fingers, suddenly getting it and pointing at them. “Because he’s not the owner. He’s just a user.”
The boys looked at each other and then turned, looking over their shoulders at me.
I kept going. “This guy owned vacation homes, right? And he’s been in the black, even with the recent dead zone of a tourist season there’s been lately. I bet he uses a secret phone to appeal to people who are looking for indiscreet services. You know, like guys trying to find a secret spot to take their mistresses. Look at his office,” I said, pointing to the corner of the strip mall it was nestled in. “These are million dollar vacation homes he was renting out, right? Simple business. But he was here, doing business as usual. I mean he was working when he got knocked off. If I had extra cash stashed away, like the million I’d earn running a secret communication thing, I’d be travelling and letting other people run my business. You don’t make a bunch of money like that and not spend it. I don't think he owns this core. I think he’s just a lead. He was a target because he had one of their phones.”
Marc furrowed his eyebrows, sitting back. “His phone’s on the underground system. That’s why it was stolen.”
I nodded. “We find out where he bought it from, we’ll figure out where this core is, who owns it...”
“He wouldn’t have a bill,” Axel said. “It’s anonymous.”
“We need a cell phone,” I said. “Couldn’t Corey track down this core if we give him a cell phone that worked with the network? That must be how they found it. We could make a couple of calls and track where the signal goes.”
Axel rocked his head in a nod. “We could do that. We’d have to find someone else who owned a cell phone on the network. And then we have to hope they’d let us borrow it long enough to run...” Suddenly, his own cell phone started going off. He pulled it out and checked it. He put it on speaker and held it out. “Corey, tell me some good news.”
“Not this time,” he said. “The phone Kayli stole just got wiped.”
“Come again?”
“I was rooting around when the entire data set blanked out. Must have been done remotely while I had it on.”
“What could do that?”
“I don’t know. Something sophisticated.”
“If it’s sophisticated, it’s traceable. Make sure it’s dead, or let Kevin or someone get rid of it.” Axel hung up. He sat back a little, staring out the windshield, silent. Suddenly, he punched at the steering wheel. “Damn.”
“We’ll find him,” Marc said. “He’s not going to get himself killed.”
Axel glared out the windshield. “We don’t have time to trace a bugged cell phone. I really don’t like not knowing what’s going on.”
Marc sat back, rol
ling his head along the headrest. “Let’s think for a moment. This underground cell service. It’s still cellular. We could set up something to listen for unusual signals. Then we can source a cell phone or tower.”
“We don’t have the time to set that up, and then wait for a chance something has come in. I don’t know if we’ve got anyone trained on this side of the globe. I mean, it’s Charleston, for Christ’s sake. This shit happens in New York or Washington.”
“You want to call in the Feds on this?” Marc asked. “Or CIA? Or local police? I mean, this is usually beyond what… what we do.”
Axel sighed, shook his head. “Believe me, I want to. I’m considering it, but I’ve got some reservations. By the time they caught up with what we know, they’ll still be ten steps behind.” He shoved a finger across his brow, gliding back and forth. “They’re not going to pull a civilian like Brandon out in a swoop and destroy evidence to possibly one of the biggest assets they’ll come across in this area. They’ll see this cell phone service as a way to identify local crooks. ‘Corey’ currently looks like he’s involved with it, and given his record, he might be facing a trial at the least. And we run the risk they’ll start a full investigation that will take months before they act just to catch bad guys who need a secret cell phone service.”
I piped in. “Do we know anyone local that listens? Tracks signals?”
“The Academy just links into NSA and FCC networks,” Marc said. “I think the FCC looks for illegal signals, if they know about them. But only if they know there’s something to listen for. Maybe the NSA.”
A particular smoking Irish guy came to mind. I’d met him briefly, but he could be our best shot. “Doyle does it,” I said flatly. “He might know.”
Both of their heads shook, like they thought I was joking. They stopped, turned and faced me.
I widened my eyes at them. “What?”
“Who’s Doyle?” Marc asked.
“That friend of Blake Coaltar. Didn’t I tell you guys about him?”