City of the Lost

City of the Lost by Stephen Blackmoore

Book: City of the Lost by Stephen Blackmoore Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Blackmoore
Ads: Link
place, Mr. Sunday. There’s more than just gangbangers, porn, and ingénues. A lot more.”
    “’More in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy’?”
    “Exactly. I wouldn’t have taken you for a Shakespeare fan.”
    “Is that what it’s from? Heard it in a movie once.”
    So Neumann’s a big fish. How big is the pond? And what kind of sharks are swimming in it?

    I know something’s wrong the moment I see my front door. It’s closed, but the jamb is broken. My porch light is out. The door swings open at my touch.
    I step inside and flick the light switch. The lamp’s been knocked to the floor, casting eerie shadows through the room.
    Whoever broke in did a thorough job. Cushions are sliced open, stuffing on the floor. Books in a pile, pictures off the wall.
    I rush to the bedroom closet, throw it open. The safe’s sitting wide open. Nothing’s missing, not the cash, not the guns.
    Nothing except the stone.

Chapter 12
    I sift for half an hour before giving up. It’s not here. Neumann said I’ve got some kind of link to it. Maybe if I close my eyes and wish really hard, it’ll call my name or something.
    I try it. No such luck.
    What do I know? I’m starting to panic. I can tell because I’m pacing. I only pace when I’m starting to lose it. I force myself to stop moving and think.
    Wherever it is, I’m not going to find it standing in a pile of busted CDs and overturned furniture. I start righting things, sift through piles of books and tossed through clothes.
    The light outside my window goes from black to gray. I clean the house up best I can, but the thief did such a thorough rollover, the place looks like hell no matter what I do.
    By the time I’ve got things at least livable, the sun’s poking over the palm trees.
    As I’m sorting through a pile of random crap, I find something I know I’ve never had before. It’s a broken piece of a blue card. Like a credit card, but a hole punched in one corner and the words LA COUNTY DE in raised letters. A library card? I pocket it, not sure what to do with it.
    So, how do I find the stone? I don’t know where to start.
    The best person I know at finding stuff out is Carl. But after our fight in the gym I doubt he’ll talk to me.
    Besides, he’ll want to know why I’m looking. What happened to my house. What happened last night. I can’t pull him into this. He’s my friend. Was my friend, at least. Now, I don’t know.
    I push the thought aside. Focus. People, I know how to find. You ask a bunch of questions, break some fingers. Go to the last place they were seen.
    That gives me an idea.
    I find my toppled computer. It’s dented, and the side’s been torn off, but other than that it works fine. I run a quick internet search on the burglary in Bel Air that started this whole mess.
    In a few minutes I have the name of the guy who owned the stone, Kyle Henderson, and his address.
    Henderson took a bullet during the burglary. Went into Emergency with a sucking chest wound, went out in a body bag. He hung on long enough to tell the cops that it was three guys and was able to give a description of one of them.
    The police have thoroughly gone over the place. I don’t doubt that. I don’t know if he was married, had children, or anything else about him. If I’m lucky maybe I can get someone to talk to me, maybe a neighbor. See if maybe there’s something anyone might not have asked.
    Of course, Bel Air people don’t usually talk to folks like me. Roughing up a rich soccer mom with private security a minute away doesn’t appeal, but I’ll figure something out.
    With a place to start, my mind calms down enough to think about things a little. Who’d want the stone? Anybody who knew about it, that’s who. And that list keeps getting longer. Neumann, Giavetti, Frank. I look over the card Samantha gave me, wonder what her role is in all this.
    No time like the present. I wonder if she’s an early riser. I dial the phone, get her voice

Similar Books

Divine Intervention

Cheryl Kaye Tardif

Battle of the Ring

Thorarinn Gunnarsson

Scarlet Night

Dorothy Salisbury Davis

Mystery Bookstore

Charles Tang

What Katy Did

Susan Coolidge

Best Buds

Catherine R. Daly