back so she could sit in the front, away from all the gear Max had in the back. Not for the first time, Ukiah wondered if all the military hardware Max had was totally legal.
Ukiah leaned forward and noticed that her hair was scented with honeysuckle. Her one long bang swept down to the white curve of her neck. She noticed that he was staring at her and turned to meet his gaze. He expected her to say something, but shemerely looked back at him silently. Her eyes were somber and still, moonstones of gray.
Max noticed her turn in her seat, then glanced at Ukiah in the rearview mirror. âWhen Ukiah looks at you, you stay looked at.â
âIâve noticed.â
Max glanced again in the rearview mirror and turned onto Janet Hazeâs street.
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âWhat was that all about, kid?â
âWhat was what?â Ukiah checked his .45 and slipped it into his kidney holster. The day was hot and the flak jacket uncomfortable, but he knew Max was too edgy to let him go without.
âThe looking.â Max snapped shut the chamber of his gun and put it into his shoulder holster.
Ukiah shrugged and slipped on his headcam. âI donât know. I was just looking at her and she looked back.â
âYouâI understand.â Max shook his head. He flicked on his handheld tracking system and checked the signal. âIâve got you.â He slipped the tracking system into his pocket. âIâll leave the deck on the Hummer. I mean, you look at people. Thatâs what I remember most about the first time I met youâthe look.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âKid, youâve got a look thatâlike I saidâone stays looked at. That first day, I came up the tree-house ladder and was eye to eye with your look. Pow, straight to the core. I almost climbed back down and dropped the case.â
Ukiah shook his head, giving Max a grin. âMax, I have no idea what youâre talking about.â
âOf course not. People donât do it back to you. Check it out sometime, thoughâyou make a lot ofpeople damn nervous by it, especially the guilty ones.â
âShe wasnât nervous. She just looked back.â
âWhich has me damn nervous.â
Max slotted a new disk into the Hummerâs deck. âMax VOX test. Testing. Testing.â He tapped the colored signal strength bar on the monitor. âIâm coming through loud and clear. Give me a test.â
âUkiah VOX test. Test 1â2â3â4.â
âThatâs lousyâyouâre barely in the yellow.â Max reached up and tugged on Ukiahâs headset. âTry it again.â
âUkiah VOX test.â Ukiah grinned. âHey diddle diddle, Max jumped over the moon.â
Max shook his head, laughing slightly. âYouâre in the green. Letâs go.â
Max slammed the Hummerâs door and locked it by his remote. Together they went up the steps to join Agent Zheng by the door. She had unsecured the police barrier tape and pushed open the broken door.
As she stepped cautiously inside, Max caught Ukiah by the shoulder. âJust because Agent Zheng is with us, that doesnât make her an automatic good guy, kid. Remember that. Donât rely on her, donât expect her to cover your back.â
Ukiah nodded. âOkay, Max.â A thought occurred to him and he smiled. âNot one of the good guys? Max, havenât you noticed? Agent Zheng is a girl.â
Max cuffed him on the shoulder and went on into the house.
The bodies had been removed. The bloodstains remained. Ukiah crouched in the threshold as he remembered doing the day before. Slowly he scanned the entry. His memory skipped back and forth between his normally laser-etched recall and his slightly fuzzy regained memory. âLots of peoplebeen in here since the day before yesterday, things are shifted around, not by much, but enough.â
âLike what?â Agent Zheng
Adele Allaire
Julie E Czerneda
Beatrice Gormley
Helen Kirkman
Richard Haley
Budd Schulberg
Ken McClure
Alan Armstrong
A.D. Ryan
Steve Ward