Spider's Bite (Page 58)

"Hmph?" Sophia Deveraux answered with her usual greeting.

"It’s Gin," I said. "Good news. I’ve changed my mind about not needing your services.

How fast can you get over to Northtown?"

For once, luck smiled on me. Sophia Deveraux was in the area and arrived about ten minutes later, pulling up to the curb in her vintage black convertible. I eyed the car.

With its long body, fins, enormous trunk, and creamy white interior, it looked more like a hearse than a classic car, especially this late at night. I showed the Goth dwarf the blood on the fence and the bush I’d dragged Charles Carlyle’s body behind.

"Do you think you can clean this up before one of the neighbors wakes up and sees you?" I asked in a low voice. "Or do I need to stay and help you with the body?" Sophia grunted and gave me a sharp look. "Sorry. Just thought I’d ask." While the dwarf got to work, I jogged back to Carlyle’s house. The front door was still open. I stepped into the house, quietly shut it behind me, and headed toward the game room.

"Why isn’t she back yet?" Donovan Caine’s rough voice drifted down the hall to me.

"Because killing people takes time, detective," Finn replied. "She probably had to chase the bastard a few blocks before she caught up with him."

"And what if he caught up with her instead?" Donovan countered. "What if he got the drop on her? What if he killed her?"

Finn laughed. "Unlikely. Gin’s been dissecting toads like Carlyle for years. Why the concern, detective?" A pause. "Fuck if I know."

"Might it have something to do with the way the two of you were sucking face at Northern Aggression?" Another pause. "You saw that?"

"Don’t be embarrassed, detective. Those eyes, those lips, that firm body. She’s a looker. And Gin seemed to be having a marvelous time on your lap." Even though I wasn’t in the room, I could imagine the smirk on Finn’s face. I paused, wanting to hear the detective’s answer.

"She’s … something," Donovan admitted. "But I’m glad it stopped when it did." A third pause, this time from Finn. "I never considered you a stupid man, detective, but when you say things like that, you make me wonder. You’re glad you didn’t f**k her?"

"She’s an assassin, and she killed my partner," Caine snapped. "You don’t f**k your partner’s murderer."

"Oh, get off your high horse, detective," Finn replied in a sharp voice. "Cliff Ingles wasn’t the saint you make him out to be. Quite the opposite. As for Gin being an assassin, well, we don’t exactly live in Mayberry. She’s done what she’s had to in order to survive over the years. We all have, even you, I imagine."

"I’ve never killed people for money," Caine said in an acidic tone. "Sure you have, detective. It’s called your city paycheck."

Okay, time to stop this before the two men came to blows. I tiptoed back down the hall, opened the door, and shut it again, hard enough so they could hear it. I made my footsteps loud and heavy.

"Finn? Donovan?" I called out. "Still in the office," Finn replied.

I stepped into the room. Finn leaned on the edge of the pool table, rubbing his chest.

Donovan Caine perched on the lip of the fireplace. A couple of shallow cuts decorated his hands, along with a bruise on the side of his face, but the detective didn’t look like he’d been too damaged by getting tossed into the stone wall. Probably hurt his ego more than anything else.

"Where’s Carlyle?" Donovan Caine asked. "Feeding the worms," I replied.

The detective nodded. He didn’t seem as broken up by Carlyle’s death as I’d thought he would. Or maybe getting thrown across the room by the vampire had changed his perspective a bit.

"And the body?" Finn asked.

"Being taken care of by our mutual Goth friend."

Donovan stared at me, then Finn. "So now what?" he asked.

I pulled the flash drive out of my pocket and held it up. "Now we get out of here and go see what’s on this-and why the Air elemental wants it back so badly."

Chapter Twenty-Three

Using all the usual precautions, we left Carlyle’s house, dumped our stolen car in one of the downtown parking garages, and headed to my apartment.

Once we were inside, Finn opened his laptop and plugged in the flash drive. Donovan Caine dropped into a chair at the kitchen table and flipped through the matching folder we’d found in the fireplace hiding spot. I grabbed the photos of Giles and went through them. Injuries, bloody clothes, aches and pains, everything else was forgotten except for the information we’d found.

Finn was right. Gordon Giles had been into some kinky stuff. Leafing through the pictures, I saw much more of the middle-aged accountant than I’d ever wanted to.

But I studied each image carefully. Hopefully, there was a reason Gordon Giles had kept these pictures, other than for his own private enjoyment. But nothing jumped out at me.

After about ten minutes of nonstop mouse clicking and the occasional burst of typing, Finn let out a low whistle and leaned back in his chair.

"You got something?" Donovan Caine asked. "Because I can’t make heads or tails out of what’s in this folder. It’s just account numbers and file names and other gibberish that makes no sense to me."

"I’m not a forensic accountant and I’m usually more interested in hiding money than tracking it down, but it looks like Haley James has been skimming off the top of her own company," Finn said.

Not a surprise, but it was a welcome bit of confirmation instead of mere speculation.

"Are you sure it’s her?" I asked.

Finn nodded. "If not, someone’s framed her but good, because her password and log-in information are all over these files. Not exactly the kind of info you give out to just anybody, especially when you’re the head of a company as large as Halo Industries."

"What do you mean by skimming off the top?" Donovan asked. "How is she doing it exactly?"

Finn shrugged. "Your usual embezzling. Padding expenses. Getting reimbursed for business trips she never took. Diverting company cash flow into offshore accounts. A couple hundred thousand dollars here, a few more there, you’d be surprised how quickly it adds up."

I frowned, thinking of the care that had been put into this whole operation, into framing me to take the fall for

Giles’s murder. "That sounds too easy, too obvious, too sloppy."

Finn shrugged again. "Keep in mind I’ve only been looking at these files for a few minutes. A company as large as Halo would generate hundreds, if not thousands, of files every single day. It’s probably a very delicate operation, but we’ve got the exact, specific files you need to put it all together."