Page 17 of Hearts


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He breathes heavily. “Sweet fucking Jesus.” He pinches the bridge of his nose as creases form across his forehead. “And you’re sure what you found was legit? Not some, I don’t know…realistic Halloween decoration or something?”

I shake my head. “These were real, Harrison. We could go back and you can see for yourself.”

“Abso-fucking-lutely not.” He stops pacing, crosses his arms. “There’s no way either of us is setting foot back in Aces until your sister is behind bars…or six feet under.”

I stand and face him. “I agree. We should approach this delicately, but we also don’t have much time before Rouge figures out what we know.”

“Right. Right.” Harrison gazes out his front window. “Holy shit, Bianca.”

“Holy shit doesn’t begin to cover it.” I walk up behind him, rub his shoulders. They’re tensed. No amount of massage is going to loosen them. “Do you have any idea where we should go from here?”

He turns. “I was about to ask you the same question.” He widens his eyes. “Wait. This might be something.” He crosses over to his kitchen counter and brings a tiny teapot into the room.

I narrow my eyes. “What the hell is that?”

“It’s a music box. I found it in my car trunk when I got home. It was placed there before we rescued Alissa and Maddox. I noticed the gift bag in my trunk that night, but obviously with everything else going on, I didn’t give it much thought past that.” He places the music box on a side table by the couch and winds it up. “The tune is disjointed. It’s some kind of code.”

“Code?”

“Yeah. Remember what Alissa told us? Maddox found a riddle that led them to that poor girl’s head in the nature reserve out by O’Hare.”

I lean down and examine the small teapot. “How did someone even get this in your trunk?”

“Remember when we left your apartment and picked up my car? The valet driver didn’t recognize me because I’d left my car with someone else?”

I widen my eyes. “Right. You were freaked out someone had stolen your car.”

He nods. “I think some guy disguised himself as a valet so he could take my car and plant this music box inside it.”

“But who would have done that?”

“I’m not sure.” He sits down with a sigh. “He didn’t speak, and his face was completely hidden by his outfit.”

“Are you even sure it was a he at all?”

“I’m pretty sure. He was super tall. Most women aren’t as tall as this guy was.”

I widen my eyes. “How tall was he?”

He bites his lip. “Pretty freaking tall. He made me feel short, which isn’t something I’m used to. At least six-six, maybe six-seven.” He shrugs. “This could be a nonstarter, though. The valet said it could have been some guy named Chad.”

I shake my head. “Chad has parked my car before. He does wear a lot of scarves, but he’s average height.”

He shifts his gaze. “Oh, shit.”

“Yeah.” I sit down on the couch next to him. “Come to think of it, I’ve never seen a valet driver at my complex that tall, and I’ve been there a few years now. And why would a person of that height take a job where he’d have to be cramped inside tiny cars all day? Doesn’t make a lot of sense.” I tap at my chin. “You don’t see men who are considerably taller than you every day. It’s not impossible, but it’s uncommon. In fact, the only person I know who’s that tall is…” I clamp a hand over my mouth.

He leans in. “Who, babe?”

I blink several times. “The only man I’ve met in Chicago who is as tall as this valet driver you describe…is Chet.”

6

HARRISON

Alarm bells go off in my brain.

At Bianca’s words, I want to open my window and chuck this little teapot as far as I can from my house.