Blood truth, p.33

Blood Truth, page 33

 

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  If Butch had some bank account information, he could check and see any transactions that had gone through to that effect. But something told him that that kind of hassle was probably not a big priority for someone who lived this sparsely. Although if you were trying to cover up homicide? You’d Amazon Prime the fuck out of another pair of pants.

  Wouldn’t you? he thought.

  “What about muscle shirts?” Butch said. “Does he submit them for laundry regularly?”

  Fritz bowed. “He does, indeed. He also has two sweatshirts that he alternates between, as well as some gym clothing.”

  “I want to speak with the laundress, please.”

  Fritz bowed again. “Right away, sire. Stay here. I shall bring her unto you.”

  Left alone, Butch sat back on his ass and let his blue-gloved hands dangle off his knees. Staring at the leathers, he tried to find the hole in the reasoning. Some other explanation for why the only two pairs of pants the male seemed to own did not smell like death or the blood of a female.

  Maybe Syn had borrowed someone else’s leathers when he’d done the killing and then dumped those. Maybe . . . Fritz had miscounted.

  That last one was probably not it.

  Leaning to the side, Butch looked out at the vacant bedroom. So empty. So lonely. So . . . not the private quarters of a well-adjusted guy. But the anti-hoarding didn’t mean Syn was a killer.

  Helania, on the other hand, had not only been totally certain that she’d seen the Bastard with the deceased, the dark glasses and knit cap she’d described were right here with the rest of Syn’s clothing—

  “Sire? This is Lilf.” Fritz entered the closet with a uniformed female doggen. “She would be pleased to answer any of your questions.”

  As Lilf bowed low, Butch noted that her pressed gray-and-white uniform matched her gray hair.

  “Sire,” she said, “how may I serve you?”

  “Hi, Lilf. Thanks for coming here.”

  Butch got up to his feet and indicated the pile of clothes: Three muscle shirts, all pressed, and three undershirts, all pressed, and one black sweatshirt. There were also six pairs of thick black socks and a jockstrap.

  “Do you wash all of his clothes? Syn’s?” he said.

  “I wash everyone’s clothes, sire.”

  “Good, and thank you for doing such a nice job on my own, by the way. Now, can you please tell me if, in the last five nights, you have scented vampire blood on any shirt, pant, sock, fleece—anything owned by anyone in this household? I mean, vampire blood that was not that of the owner.”

  “Allow me to think.” Lilf’s eyes traveled around the barren closet. “Well, yes. The Brother Vishous had a muscle shirt with blood, not his own, on it. Just this morning. It was female in derivation.”

  No doubt from when the brother had moved Mai’s body. “Good. Okay. Anyone else?”

  “Balthazar and Zypher had the same blood on their shirts. I could tell by the scent.”

  They had helped V, Butch thought.

  There was a long period of silence. “I’m sorry, sire, I seem to be quite slow this evening.”

  “Take your time, Lilf. It’s really important that you’re one hundred percent sure.”

  The doggen crossed her arms over her chest, lowered her chin, and shut her eyes. As she seemed to fall into a trance-like state, Butch prayed that she would remember that—

  “No one else,” she said as she lifted her lids. “Just those three. In the last five nights.”

  “Out of the entire household.”

  “Yes, sire.” She glanced at Fritz. “Have I done something wrong?”

  Fritz patted her on the forearm. “Oh, no, dear. You’re doing just fine—as long as you’re certain.”

  “I am.” She looked at Butch again. “I do all loads sequentially. There is a system that rotates through all the bedrooms. So I know whose laundry is whose.”

  “Is there any way that V, Balthazar, or Zypher’s things could have gotten mixed up with someone else’s?” Butch spoke very carefully, as he didn’t want to offend the doggen. “Is it possible that you could be confused about whose muscle shirt is whose?”

  Maybe V threw out his, and Syn’s was the other of the three she was counting. It wouldn’t explain why the Bastard’s leathers were not marked with the scent of Mai’s blood, but it would be something to go on.

  “No,” Lilf said confidently. “All loads, no matter how small, are kept separate as each person in the household prefers things cleaned in a different way. Some like fabric softener, some do not. Some like fragrances, some do not. Many have a specific preference of detergent, so as I check in the hampers—”

  “You check their contents in?”

  “Yes, I have a log.”

  Butch stared at the doggen. “Of every piece of clothing sent to the laundry, by owner?”

  “Yes, and it has notes on stains, which is how I am sure about the blood.” She tilted her head to side. “How else could I do things properly?”

  Dayum. He’d hit the jackpot. “How far do the records go back?”

  “Since the first load I did for the King under this roof.”

  Well . . . there you go, Butch thought.

  “May I see the log?” he asked. “Not because I’m doubting you, I’m just curious how it’s all done.”

  And because he was double-checking her.

  “Oh, yes, sire. Right this way.”

  As Fritz and Lilf walked out of Syn’s suite, Butch followed along.

  He was quiet as they went down a back set of stairs to the laundry facilities, but he was not on autopilot.

  Quite the contrary.

  He was trying to figure out how Syn had managed to slit Mai’s wrists and throat, and string her up by a meat hook . . . without getting any blood on his leathers. His knit cap. His shirt—

  Butch pictured Syn coming out of the workout room, covered with sweat.

  “Wait!” he exclaimed.

  As both doggen halted on the landing with a start, he waved his hand back and forth. “Sorry, I didn’t mean you all. I forgot about the lockers down in the training center.”

  The evidence he needed would be there.

  He was sure of it.

  * * *

  Back at Helania’s apartment in her bedroom, Boone was naked and on his back under the covers, his female’s body tucked in tight against him. He was pretty sure she was asleep. After she had taken his vein and they had made love again in here, she had been in that post-feeding logy state, and he was happy to be her bolster as she went boneless and gave herself up to rest.

  As he stared at her ceiling, he was aware they were in a holding pattern.

  The door to sex was open again, and he was glad about it. But the larger issue of who they were to each other was tabled for the moment.

  If she was pregnant, she was right. He was going to want to mate her and that was that. He was not going to have her and a young of his out in the world alone, no way—and it was not a case of honoring his bloodline. Hell, he wasn’t even part of his own family tree anymore, was he.

  Getting disinherited was a pretty clear line in that kind of sand. But for him, taking care of her and their young, making sure any offspring of his had a stable, loving home, was a personal imperative, not one tied to the shitshow he had been born into. His sire’s performance as a father was an example of everything Boone did not want to be—

  “I need to find that female.”

  Boone lifted his head. “What?”

  Helania rubbed her face up and down on his chest as if she were trying to stay awake. “The female who came to tell me about Isobel. Who helped me bury her. She deserves to know that the killer’s been found, and she needs to decide if she wants to be there at the end, too.”

  “That makes sense.” Boone frowned. “What do we have to go on?”

  “The house. The house where she took me. I need to find it, will you help me? I want to try and remember where in town it is. I checked her profile on Facebook, but there’s no address, obviously. No real name. No clues to her identity. Her picture is just a close-up of part of her face, for godsakes.”

  “Did she ever get back to you? I know you said you’d messaged her.”

  “Not yet, but I haven’t checked since we went out to the training center.” Helania propped her chin on her hand and looked at him. “I feel a responsibility to her. She was as upset as I was. Utterly heartbroken. Clearly, she was a very good friend of Isobel’s.”

  “We’ll find her.” He brushed Helania’s hair back and kissed her on the forehead. “And we’ll start by searching that house at nightfall. And we’ll just keep looking for her until you can talk to her again.”

  As Helania’s lashes blinked quickly, he wished he could shoulder the pain for her. He would do anything to make her mourning easier, so yes, goddamn it, he was going to find that house, that female, for her if it was the last thing he did on earth.

  “Thank you,” she whispered. “You’re always there when you’re needed, aren’t you.”

  “I try to be.”

  “How could your father not have been proud to have you as his son?”

  Boone shrugged. “Different set of standards. Way different.”

  There was a pause. And then she said, “What is it?”

  “Hm?”

  She brushed her fingertips over his eyebrows, smoothing them. “You’re frowning. What are you thinking about?”

  It was probably not the best timing to go into it. But for some reason, he couldn’t stop himself from speaking—probably because of the conversation they’d had with Butch in that interrogation room.

  “I sometimes think my sire might have had my blood mahmen murdered.”

  Helania jerked up, her citrine eyes popping wide. “Are you serious?”

  “It’s okay.” He soothed her shoulders with his hands. “It’s all right.”

  “No, it’s not. What happened?”

  “I don’t know. She wasn’t sick. She wasn’t old. She wasn’t pregnant. Except one evening, she woke up dead.” He shook his head. “I wasn’t any closer to her than I was my sire, but even a stranger could tell she was woefully unhappy.”

  “Did she . . . commit suicide?”

  “You can’t get into the Fade that way. Or at least that’s what they say—and I know she believed it. I overheard her talking to my aunt once, saying that the only thing that kept her going was the thought that eternity was waiting for her at the end of the suffering. Provided she didn’t do anything rash.”

  “How did she die?”

  “I never knew. I came down to First Meal, and my father informed me she had passed. That was it. Like it was an update on the weather or something. I never got the story of the how and I should have asked. Even though I probably wouldn’t have gotten any kind of answer from him, I regret that I didn’t even try.”

  “Was your father upset?”

  Boone shook his head. And he was a little surprised at how hard it was to say the words. “My father was in love with someone else.”

  “He was cheating on her?”

  “It was more than that, I think. It was a full-blown relationship.”

  “And he stayed with your mahmen because divorce doesn’t exist in the glymera?”

  “No, I think it was because it was a male. He was in love with a male. With Marquist, the one he left everything to.”

  Helania’s jaw slowly fell open. “Did your mahmen know?”

  “She must have. Even though aristocrats are very particular about their vices, very private about them, and that kind of relationship was not—is not—allowed, there is no way when Marquist moved in that it wasn’t apparent to her. How could it not be?” He shrugged. “Besides, I doubt it was my father’s first affair in that regard, and maybe that was why she cheated on him, too.”

  “She did?”

  “I’m not even sure I’m biologically his.” As Helania’s eyes popped again, he laughed bitterly. “Yes, I’m afraid things only look good from the outside where I’m from. And that is precisely why, right after my mahmen died, my father moved another ‘appropriate’ female in. His second shellan fared no better than his first, but at least my stepmahmen seemed better prepared to live with the situation.”

  “Boone . . . I had no idea you grew up like that.”

  “It’s all right.”

  “No, it’s not.” Helania massaged the center of his chest, right over his heart. “My parents didn’t have much when it came to money, but their love was the binding to my sister’s and my lives. I can’t imagine what it was like not to have that example to believe in, to model, to hope for for yourself.”

  The idea that that kind of loving relationship had existed between her parents made Boone want her for his own shellan even more.

  “I’m so sorry,” Helania whispered. “That sounds so lame, but . . . I wish—”

  “It’s okay,” he said as he leaned up and kissed her. “It feels good to get it all out in the air to someone. I’ve never told anybody the real story—and as for my blood mahmen’s death, I’m not sure which one of them did it.” Boone laughed in a hard rush. “Knowing my father, he probably refused to get his hands dirty. And hey, Marquist is good with a carving knife. You should see what he can do to a roast beef—although those nights in the kitchen are long over now that he’s lord of the manor.”

  “Can you do something about this? Maybe Butch can help?”

  “It was two decades ago, and all I have are my suspicions. Besides, now I have a conflict of interest because I was disinherited in favor of Marquist. If he committed a murder tied to my mahmen? I think he’s disqualified from getting the assets because she was my father’s shellan, and if she had lived, she would have kept everything—and I would be her sole heir.”

  “But if what you think is true, Marquist could be getting away with murder and taking your inheritance.”

  Boone thought about it for a time. And then he focused on Helania. “Well, then that former butler can pat himself on the back and enjoy the money and the house. I’m not going backward, only forward.”

  As he said the words, he realized . . . he really wanted her to be pregnant.

  He wanted to start his life over. With Helania and their young.

  And he wanted to do things right, like her parents had done.

  As the door to the patient room opened, Syn looked up from where he was sitting on the foot of the hospital bed. When he saw who it was, he cursed and stared down at the floor. Anyone else. He would have preferred anyone else, and no doubt that was exactly why the Brothers had chosen the male.

  And what do you know, Xcor, the leader of the Band of Bastards, was not alone. Vishous was behind him, and as the pair of them entered, the Brother closed the door and locked it.

  “So they sent you,” Syn muttered. “I should have guessed.” Xcor sat down on one of the chairs that were lined up against the wall, his enormous body filling the piece of furniture. The male had recently gotten a skull trim, and the lack of hair made his neck look even thicker, his shoulders bigger, his chest broader. As was typical of him, his face was unsmiling, that harelip distorting his mouth into what looked like a sneer, but was actually just a misalignment of the upper lip.

  Or maybe the guy was pissed.

  “As if I would not have come on my own,” Xcor said in a low voice.

  That Old World accent, so similar to Syn’s own, was a reminder of how many years they had been together. Fighting, surviving . . . being angry at destiny. But Xcor had changed tracks. He was happily mated now and even had step-young.

  Never would have seen that one coming, Syn thought as he looked into the eyes of his mentor, his leader . . . his friend.

  The stare that came back at him was so level, so unemotional, it carried a punch to the gut that Syn had to resolutely ignore. As much as he hated to admit it, the two of them were on different sides of the table right now and it bothered him.

  Xcor glanced up at Vishous. “Can you leave us?”

  The Brother shook his head and lifted his phone. “And I’m recording.”

  “Such an official show all this is,” Syn said.

  “’Tis official.” Xcor eased back in the chair, his weight making the plastic and metal creak. “A female is dead.”

  “Wasn’t it two?”

  “Are you saying that to show off?”

  “No, just to correct the record given that we’re so serious.” Syn nodded over at the Brother who was looming by the door like a prison guard. “And also to give his phone something to do.”

  There was a long silence, and the fact that his leader, and others, were operating under the belief that Syn had done the killing made absolute sense. The present was always judged on the past, and his actions spoke for themselves.

  Or maybe it was more like his corpses spoke for themselves.

  After a while longer, Xcor said, “It’s not like you to leave the bodies behind. Usually no one finds them, at least for a while. And then they’re hard to identify.”

  “You sound disappointed in me.”

  “It would have made things easier,” the male muttered dryly.

  Syn raised his eyebrows. “But that poor female would still be dead, wouldn’t she. And the other. Boo-hoo.”

  “So you’re admitting you did it.”

  “What do I get if I do?”

  “You know the answer to that.”

  Thinking back to the Brother Butch shoving that gun up against his temple, Syn smiled. “I’m okay with that outcome. Can we do it now, or do you have to wait for nightfall so we can go out into the woods and leave less of a mess for the doggen to clean up.”

  Xcor’s foot started to tap, his shitkicker’s heel bouncing on the tile floor. “You’re cycling really tight. Eight months ago. Six nights ago. The night before last with the human male in the alley. You’re moving really quickly.”

  “So let’s end it right now.” Syn nodded at the gun holstered on V’s hip. “He can do it. Or if you want to, you do it.”

  The Brother Vishous frowned, the tattoo at his temple distorting. “I still haven’t heard you say you killed the females.”

 

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