the cards, and his hand hovered briefly before he reached casually and turned one over.
Caitlin stared down at it. The Lovers.
Ryder Mallory smiled into her eyes, a slow, in furiating smile.
âIâll be in touchâKeeper.â
He brushed out through the purple curtain, and Caitlin stood, frozen, not breathing, until she heard the outer door open and close.
Then she jerked forward and swept the cards up into their silk wrapper, slammed the cupboard door on them and pushed out through the curtain.
The daylight of the shop was nearly blinding after the candlelit cocoon of the reading room, and Caitlin blinked to adjust. Her brain was roiling with confusion and anger.
She stalked behind the counter and grabbed for her cell phone, started punching the speed-dial for Fionaâ¦
Then stopped, and forced herself to breathe.
They didnât believe you this morning, so what makes you think they would believe you now?
She set the phone down, thinking.
This time Iâm going to do it right.
Then she turned and walked to the front window, turned the Open sign to Closed, and hurried out the door.
Chapter 3
C aitlin hurried down the uneven cobblestone sidewalks of Royal. Air-conditioning blasted from the open doors, cooling the sidewalks enough to entice shoppers inside.
The wind, which had been quiet for most of the day, was picking up again, warm and gusting, swirling flurries of glittering dust up from the streets.
Bad wind, Caitlin thought again, and then was angry at herself for using the shapeshifterâs words, even though sheâd said them first.
The Eighth District New Orleans Police Department was located in the heart of the Quarter, just four blocks away from the shop, and it and the courthousetook up two square city blocks all on their own. It was, Caitlin thought, probably the most magnificent police station in the country: a massive three-tiered white-and-gray-veined marble wedding cake of a building, with grand old magnolia trees in the yard and tall black wrought-iron fences. Even in such a formal setting, the mysterious beauty of New Orleans carried the day.
Tourists and locals alike were drawn to take rest on its sweeping marble steps, and could be found day and night, lounging back on their elbows, under the shade of blossoming magnolias, as street musicians and singers played to their captive and willing audience from the sidewalk on the other side of the street.
Caitlin hurried up the steps, past a group of Goth teenagers watching a couple of the boys on skateboards do whatever they called those flip things on the stairs.
Across the street, a saxophonist played a sultry version of âGeorgia,â the notes enticingly full and sexy. Caitlin turned and glanced at him. The well-muscled Jamaican tipped his head to her as he played.
She turned and hurried up the stairs.
Â
And on the sidewalk, concealed in his musician body, Ryder watched her, his lips wrapped around the mouthpiece of the horn.
This is interesting , he thought, as he lowered thesax, staring at the police station. Heâd known back at the shop that the indifference the Keeper had been demonstrating to his story was completely feigned. She might be distrustful of him, but she certainly believed that there was danger in the city; that had come through loud and clear in her thoughts. The focus of her concern had also been clearâher sisters above all else, which was also interesting. Ryder wondered if there had already been some kind of attack, or if sheâd sensed some sort of menace, that would make her so instantly jumpy.
But she hadnât done the obvious thing, which would have been to run to her sisters, the other Keepers, who were, in Ryderâs experience and at least in other parts of the world, notoriously clannish. He had been counting on taking on some sweet, innocent form to make it easier to eavesdrop. A cat was always good for womenâand he wouldnât have minded curling up