The Shadow Hunter
PROLOGUE
She had a gun in her purse, and she was ready.
“I hate men,” Sheila Rogers said, gulping her daiquiri. “Know what I mean?”
The dark-haired woman nodded. “I know.”
“They’re pigs, is what they are. They use you and throw you away.”
“Sure.”
“Like, there was this guy I told you about. What we had was really special, and then all of a sudden it’s over, and he won’t even talk to me.”
“That’s rough. Really.”
The dark-haired woman had a name, which she had mentioned earlier when they’d met at the Roxbury, a club down the Strip, but Sheila had already forgotten it. She was no damn good with names.
She wondered why the woman was hanging with her, anyway. They’d been club crawling all night, moving from the Rox to the Viper Room, then to Babylon and the Teaszer, and finally to Lizard Maiden at the west end of Sunset Strip. Along the way, Sheila had imbibed a variety of liquid refreshments, settling ondaiquiris as her drink of choice. The alcohol had fuzzed up her brain, and she was vaguely aware that she was talking too much. She couldn’t seem to stop.
“He was a really great guy,” she was saying aimlessly as she leaned on the mahogany bar. “I mean, he was a pig—he turned out to be a pig—but when we were together, it was like magic, you know? Like we were meant for each other.”
“Yes.”
“Like goddamn destiny. That’s what it was. What I thought it was.” Sheila shook her head slowly. “I guess I said all this stuff already, huh? Back at the Viper Room or somewhere?”
“It’s okay. You can tell me again. Sometimes it helps to talk things out.”
“What are you, Mother Teresa?”
“Just a friend.”
“Well, shit, I sure can use one of those. Lately…I’ve been kind of messed up.”
“How?”
“Over him. He—I don’t know, I can’t get him out of my mind. It’s been two goddamn months. You’d think I’d forget the son of a bitch by now. You’d think…”
“Maybe you don’t want to forget.”
“No. I don’t.” Sheila leaned closer to the dark-haired woman on the bar stool beside her. “Can I tell you a secret?”
“Sure.”
Sheila wanted to whisper, but she couldn’t, of course. Lizard Maiden, known to aficionados as the Liz, was not a place for subdued conversation. It was one of the raunchiest clubs on the Strip, a den of flashing lights and thunderous music from the live band, where the dance floor was always packed with swaying, spastic bodies, and along the bar and at the tables lining the walls, patrons leaned close together and shouted to be heard.
“The thing is,” Sheila said, “I’m running around from club to club because I figure if I go to enough places like this, I’ll run into him.”
“He comes here?”
“Sometimes. Usually on a Friday night, or a Saturday.” Tonight was Friday. “I mean, he hangs at all the clubs, so I never know when I might see him. He’s a club crawler. I met him down the Strip at the House of Blues.” Sheila chuckled wistfully. “Appropriate, right?”
“Even if you do run into him, how will that help?”
Sheila looked away. “It just will, that’s all.” She shifted her purse in her lap and felt the weight of the pistol inside.
“Maybe if you meet someone else, you’ll forget about him. There are other guys out there.”
“Not like this one. He wasn’t just anybody. He’s famous. You’ve heard of him. Everybody’s heard of him.”
“So who is he?”
Sheila hesitated, reluctant to reveal much more. She studied her companion. The woman was a few years older than Sheila herself, maybe twenty-seven or twenty-eight, of medium height, slender and self-possessed. Framed by a fall of dark brown hair in a pageboy cut, her face looked pale and angular, her cheekbones high and strong. Her cool hazel eyes betrayed no hint of judgment or reproach.
“Devin Corbal,” Sheila said finally. “That’s who.”
“The actor?”
“I told you he’s famous. He’s been in, like, six movies. Six. And he’s only twenty-three.”
“And you went out with him?”
“For two whole weeks.” Sheila frowned. “It was great. Me and Devin were, like, soul mates. For two weeks anyway.”
She swallowed the rest of her daiquiri.
“Two weeks,” she said again.
The dark-haired woman dismounted her bar stool. “Save my seat for me, okay? I need to use the can.”
Sheila nodded, lost in memories of Devin. She barely even noticed as the woman walked away into the
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