Part 12 (1/2)

”I am following your clues, Miss Drew, and looking further into the Synth.”

”Progress? You are making progress?”

He is by now nibbling on her neck, so I suppose he is making progress indeed.

”Some,” he finally says, a weasel word that does not describe the thorough inroads upon her person he has just engineered. ”Have you heard of a new club in town called 'Neon Nightmare'?”

”Sure,” says my Miss Temple, retreating from the abandoned purr-in with visible effort. ”PR people know all, like fortune-tellers. A strange outfit is running the place. It is part disco, performance hall, magic club, bar. If you want my professional opinion, the owners have diversified their image too much. Neon Nightmare is a cool name, though.”

”Hmmm.” Mr. Max is miles away from Neon Nightmare.

I am contemplating a fast, full-bore, four-limb leap upon his unprotected spine, but he suddenly leans back against the sofa, foiling my purpose.

”I suspect the place has links to the Synth,” he tells Miss Temple.

”Really? You really think the Synth is concrete enough to have a clubhouse?”

”Why not? An extravagant attraction is the best disguise in Las Vegas, anything extravagant is.”

”What about Matt?” she asks.

Mr. Max fulfills my dearest wish and pulls far away from Miss Temple. ”What about him?”

”He needs our help.”

”Let him help himself. It will be good for him.”

”Max! You have a compa.s.sionate side, I know you do.”

”But does he have a pa.s.sionate side? That is something you should think about, Temple.”

”Why?” She is sifting up like a redhead someone has just called a mere strawberry blonde.

”If you want to be someone's champion, you need to know what he is capable of.”

”Apparently a lot more than I would have thought!”

”Ah. Women always resent the professionals.”

”No, I do not! I did not resent that poor Cher Smith, even though you were feeling so sorry for a stripper you'd never met before that you nearly got arrested for murder.”

Mr. Max sighs, the gesture for which I most envy men and dogs, and I make it a point to never envy men and dogs.

”Cher was not a professional. That was her problem, and ultimately her death warrant. But you are right, Temple. We all have our knee-jerk soft spots. I am just warning you that you have no idea what Matt Devine is capable of; or me, for that matter; or Carmen Molina; or even yourself. Or, to be ridiculous, even Midnight Louie. We all harbor surprises deep within. Sometimes they are well-kept secrets from ourselves.”

”I thought we were all in this together, and going to 'get together, people and love one another.' Right now. Are you trying to tell me that Matt might have murdered that call girl?”

”I am trying to tell you that he might not have. It is a fifty-fifty chance for any one of us to committing it-murder-if we are pushed hard enough, and something, or someone, important enough is at stake. And those are pretty good odds for Las Vegas. I could have snapped Molina's neck the other night when I realized you were in danger and shehad to delay me by going mano-a-mana in the parking lot.”

”But you did not. You let her beat you up!”

”I do not want to fight real murder charges as well as the phony ones, and my object was to get into a car and get to you. A cop car did as well as any.”

”Especially since you can crack any handcuffs on the planet. Still, it must have bruised your pride to let her subdue you.”

”Bruised pride heals. Dead amateur detectives do not.”

”I was all right. I had your darned pepper spray. Not to mention Rafi Nadir.”

”You are lucky he fled the scene. He might have been more lethal than the Stripper Killer, who was merely a sick puppy. Nadir is dangerous.”

”And he once was Supercop Molina's significant other. Oh, G.o.d, this whole town is . . . a neon nightmare.”

”Exactly. Just like life.”

Mister Max pecks her on the cheek, a chaste gesture even a possessive guy like me cannot resent, and gets up to leave by the same circuitous route he arrived.

Sometimes you just gotta love the guy.

And sometimes you do not.

Chapter 14.

. . . The Shadow Knows The Strip couldn't extend to the distant mountains surrounding Las Vegas, so someone had come up with the bright idea of bringing the mountain to the Strip: the club named Neon Nightmare.

From the exterior the new enterprise was a bold slash of neon and a galloping horse graphic atop a man-made peak that reminded Max Kinsella of the ersatz landmarks at Disney attractions.

He squinted at the towering facade by leaning far over the Maxima's steering wheel to peer through the winds.h.i.+eld.

That winds.h.i.+eld was the last protective barrier between himself and what he proposed to do.

He was planning to venture back into the world of the professional magician, planning to expose his carefully secured flanks and underbelly ... for what?

Not for Matt Devine. He wouldn't lift a magic wand to save Matt Devine, would he? The ex-priest was grudgingly likeable, and he was a true innocent, but Max owed himnothing. No. And not for Molina. She had twisted her professional and personal life into a barbed-wire spiral of ethics and self-interest like the briar and the rose in an old English ballad. Sweet and sour turned mostly sour. He would do it for Temple, but she was on the fringe of this. No. He did this for himself, for the nagging certainty that everything bad that had happened in this town in the past year affecting the other three had something to do with him.

Call it instinct, call it ego. It was time to face the music and dance.

Trouble was, the Man of a Thousand Faces had problems coming up with a credible new ident.i.ty. Elvis was too obvious to fly here. The Cloaked Conjuror's masked costume had come in handy a couple of times, but at a magician's club would only get Max stoned by flying doves if not more lethal missiles. He'd considered a mime's disguise: leotards and white-face, but the costume would only emphasize his trademark lanky muscularity, and he couldn't picture himself, even in deep disguise, with painted teardrops and a bowstring mouth.

So . . . Max sighed at his newest persona, one he would have never seriously presented to an audience. So unoriginal, but apt and useful here and now. He came to this new costume party as a glitzy Phantom of the Opera, black sequins turning the cape into a distracting, glittering carapace, the porcelain half-mask sporting an Austrian crystal jet-black bat as a tattoo over right temple and cheekbone.

With the cape he could crouch a little to hide his sixfoot-four frame, another trademark he didn't want ringing a bell of memory.

No one would have heard of the Phantom Mage, but the costume was flashy enough to banish thoughts of the recently vanished Mystifying Max, who had always been both bare-faced and discreet and who religiously wore matte-black.

Max studied the building's sloped exterior, planning his entrance. It should be noticeable, but not too spectacular.