The wheels of the plane touched down on the runway at LaGuardia. A day in the air after taking off from Athens, and now it was almost done, almost time to deliver the item. Deliver. That’s what her grandfather called it. Everyone else, including the legal authorities, called it smuggling.
Marian preferred smuggling. Call it what it was instead of pretending.
When Marian had first started working for the family firm, she’d stupidly thought it was fun. The adventure of evading authorities, the rush when she used her phantom ability, and the praise of her grandfather and father made it all worthwhile.
But in the last few years, there had been too many close calls, too many hours of uncertainty that set her nerves on edge. Now, all she wanted was for the jobs to be over.
The best part was coming home, like now.
The plane taxied to the gate. Most of those around her pulled out their phones to contact those waiting at the other end of this flight. For her, that had to wait. Only after she successfully snuck the little ivory elephant carving past customs could she consider her work over.
All she had to do was duck into a bathroom before customs, go phantom, phase through the walls and hand off Tantor—it was too cute to not give a nickname—to whomever her grandfather sent to wait on the other side of the customs gate.
She hoped it would be Dad. That would be perfect. He’d pamper her with dinner, and pampering was desperately needed after this marathon trip. She’d spent weeks looking for Tantor for their client, traipsing around the hills and dirt-encrusted ruins of Greece.
Worth it, however. Little Tantor would bring in a cool million. Grandfather was probably salivating over the money already.
Once Tantor was delivered to the other side, she’d phase back through the walls to the bathroom before anyone knew she was even gone and navigate customs perfectly legally, like any other passenger. Aside from the over-long and complicated forms and the risk of death by boredom, that was the easy part.
Marian waited over fifteen minutes for the plane to clear out enough to grab her carry-on from the overhead bin. Grandfather was a damn cheapskate. She smuggled for him, and he made her fly coach back to New York every time. She could have used the extra pillows.
Marian tapped her front pocket to reassure herself Tantor was still there. She hoped most people would assume she was checking for her phone.
She shuffled behind the other passengers disembarking and wiped moisture from her palm on her jacket sleeve. Sweat already drenched her back.
I hate this.
But she couldn’t quit. It was the family business. Everyone, extended cousins and all, depended on her to keep the family firm flush with money. She was the only one in the current generation of Doyles to have the phantom ability that had supported the family for over two centuries.
Quit and she’d let everyone down. Maybe she’d even be exiled or shunned. It might be worth it. They took no risks. She was the one who sweated out all the trips through customs, terrified that this would be the time she would be caught, or worse, have her phantom ability exposed.
“Miss Doyle!”
She blinked and raised her head. Damn, she’d spent too much time staring at the floor, or she would have noticed people in front of her before this. She focused on the person wearing a uniform, calling her name. Flight crew? No, it was a TSA agent.
Oh, hell.
“Yes?” Swallow the fear, swallow the panic. She could do this. There had to be a way out.
“Please follow me, ma’am. The customs officers need to speak to you.”
“I don’t understand. Speak to me about what?”
Maybe if she stared at him long enough, he would vanish as if he were a figment of her imagination. Two other uniformed officers came up to her from behind.
Not figments.
“Follow us, ma’am,” said the first one.
She did, wishing she could go phantom and disappear through the floor. Better yet, float up and out through the ceiling and ride the air until she landed near the cabs that would take her home.
And then what? They knew her name, probably her address and her place of work. Unless she wanted to be a fugitive, she had no choice but to go with them.
To say nothing of what would happen if she went ghost on them. Never let anyone see her do it, that was the family rule, and the airport had to be full of cameras.
It was Tantor that needed to disappear, not her, and before they searched her.
“Just what is the problem?” she asked again. “Do you need to see my papers? I know there are some items in my luggage that need documentation. I have everything in order.”
“That will be up to customs, ma’am,” the officer said. “We are ordered to deliver you to them.”
“I don’t understand.”
“I’m sure they’ll explain it, ma’am.”
Somehow all the ma’ams made it much worse. “Can I use the bathroom first? It was a long flight and I really need to stop there.”
“Orders are to take you directly to their office,” he said. “Sorry.”
They kept hustling her along, one person ahead and one person behind her. Customs knew something. Someone must have tipped them off about what she was carrying. It was the only explanation that made sense. Maybe the tip came from someone who also wanted the carving? No, they would want it to get through customs, not to be confiscated. Unless someone paid off one of the agents. Bribing agents was the usual way to smuggle antiquities into the States. Doyle Antiquities never did that.
They had her.
The TSA agents led her to the customs area and handed her off to the customs officers, who in turn led her from the public area to a windowless room with a chair and table so ugly and nondescript they could only be government issue.
The lead officer was an older African American man. The faint hope she might know him from previous, perfectly legal trips through LaGuardia’s customs inspections faded. Maybe someone familiar would make no difference anyway, though it would help her frame of mind to talk to someone she knew.
The two younger officers at his elbows reflected their superior’s grim look. No sympathy there.
“Do I need a lawyer? I don’t understand what I’m doing here.”
“No, ma’am, you will not need a lawyer unless you are charged with something. Just stay calm, ma’am. Most of the time, this comes to nothing.”
“It’s hard to stay calm when I wasn’t even allowed to use the bathroom after an international flight, sir. It was a very long flight.”
He frowned and pointed to the female officer. “Pat her down, then escort her to the bathroom.”
“Thank you.” Marian closed her eyes and took a deep breath, not just in relief but also for concentration. She needed for them not to find Tantor during the pat down, and the only way to ensure that was to make it vanish.
She focused on the carving nestled in her pocket, only a thin layer of lining separating it from her skin. She pictured it fading into nothingness.
She opened her eyes and held that thought.
The officer asked her to raise her arms above her head. Marian stared straight ahead as the woman patted down her waist and pocket. The agent’s hands passed through little Tantor.
Success!
“Put your arms down.”
Marian did. She remained silent, holding her concentration.
“Nothing,” the female officer reported.
“Then get her to the bathroom and come straight back.”
Marian followed the woman and thanked God it was a short walk. Tantor would become solid in a few minutes. She wished the effect was permanent, but temporary was the best she could do.
Molecular manipulation was damned complicated, as Great-Aunt Eunice had said many times while drilling Marian full of lessons in how to use the ability. The most important rule was to always know its limits.
One slip in her concentration now and the carving could merge with the molecules of her pants or even her leg.
Just a few more steps.
The officer came with her into the bathroom and directed her to a stall. As soon as Marian closed the door, she silently counted back from ten to one, until Tantor was solid again. She took him out and stroked his little tusks. So pretty, and those tiny eyes almost looked real.
So little to cause all this fuss. Tantor belonged in a museum. The one consolation she’d had when acquiring the tiny elephant was knowing that he’d at least be appreciated by someone instead of being buried in a ruin. But now she’d have to hide him away again.
And she had to stash him in a way that didn’t attract attention from her guard and a in a place where she might be able to retrieve him after this was over.
Look as if she were behaving normally. That was the key. After she used the bathroom for its intended purpose, she slipped the carving into her hand. Where? Where could she put it? Not here. The only good place was the toilet and that might ruin it. No, not Tantor!
She turned him intangible again, easier this time because she was holding him. She held the elephant on the side of her body opposite the agent and then used her back to block the agent’s view as she washed her hands, the carving clutched tight in her palm.
“What’s taking so long?” the agent asked.
“Doctors recommend scrubbing at least forty seconds to eliminate germs,” she said.
The agent snorted. Now or never.
Marian pushed the intangible carving into the sink. Her hand went phantom, invisible now save where it was framed by water drops. With Tantor still in her hand, she sunk it and her hand into the concrete wall beyond the sink.
The agent took a step closer. “What are you doing, ma’am?”
“Someone spilled a soda on my arm on the plane. It’s sticky.”
“Or you could be dropping something down the drain.”
“After that pat down you gave me? I don’t think so.” Marian made a show of scrubbing her arm, half of her staring at the agent, the other half of her concentration on her phantom arm and Tantor. There. The density of the wall changed, and she knew it had to be an air pocket.
She dropped Tantor into it and pulled her hand out. She held it up, water dripping, to show the agent.
“See?”
“Don’t get smart.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Marian dried off her hands with the hand dryer. Of course now she had to come back at some point and search for Tantor, and she wasn’t sure exactly where the little elephant was.
Their client was going to be very angry if she couldn’t get it back. There would go a million-dollar payday. And her grandfather was going to be incredibly pissed.
Let him. She held her head up. Next time, let her grandfather risk being arrested. She had done the best she could. Tantor wasn’t lost. He was just buried again, hopefully temporarily.
“Thank you,” she said to the customs officer. “I feel much better now.”
Marian cut the last slices of the rapidly melting ice-cream cake. The party was almost over. Soon, she could get this confrontation with her grandfather over and done.
Yesterday at customs had been a nightmare that lasted hours, despite hiding Tantor from their prying eyes. Clearly, the officers had believed she had the little elephant and took forever to conclude she didn’t have it.
When she went back to the public restroom to retrieve Tantor after the questioning was over, she hadn’t been able to find him. She’d hidden him too fast, and she hadn’t dared linger too long in there, not after they finally cleared her to leave. Poor little elephant.
Maybe on the next trip she could duck into the bathroom and try again. Grandfather had wanted to send her back to LaGuardia immediately to roam around as a phantom.
It was a good idea. But at that point, she was so tired of his complaining and criticizing, that she’d refused. He had no idea of the real risks she took with all those cameras around.
The only thing that had ended his angry tirade was her father’s assertion that her arrest would have meant extremely bad publicity, possibly even accessory criminal charges, for Doyle Antiquities.
That shut Grandfather up. So far, all he’d done today was glare at her. He probably was thinking of ways to butter her up so she’d head out to the airport, do the ghost thing, and come back with their million-dollar payday.
Maybe she’d do it. But not today. And if she did, she just might anonymously donate it to a museum. Besides, if she’d been caught, she would have missed her new nephew’s baptism party.
She would never let down Jen. Her sister was the only one in her family she could relax with, the only one who cared about Marian the person, not Marian with the gift for smuggling million-dollar items. She liked her brother-in-law too. She expected she’d like the little guy at some point but all her godson James did so far was cry and sleep, so that was hard to tell right now.
But even crying, James was still definitely preferable to Grandfather.
She washed off the pastry knife in the sink as her brother-in-law rushed in to get the last slices to distribute to the guests gathered in the backyard. Scott looked harried, his eyes tired like only the eyes of a parent of a newborn could be. He barely mumbled thanks, added the slices to a tray and slipped back out. Laughter wafted in from the backyard as Marian slumped against the refrigerator, her job nearly finished. Hiding in the kitchen allowed her to plan her speech to Grandfather.
She was done with this. Over, finished. Screw their guilt trip. Her father had plenty of legitimate clients. Let those support the family firm. She couldn’t go on like this.
Marian pulled at a drawer to get out the last of the plastic silverware. It jammed. She tugged the drawer harder and that accomplished nothing except making herself angry. Dammit.
She looked down at her hand and concentrated until it was translucent. She stuck her arm up to her elbow through the jammed drawer and closed her eyes. Usually, she could do this to her hand without thinking, but her mind was stressed and jumbled today. How stupid would it be to screw up something as simple as un-sticking a drawer? She’d never hear the end of it.
She fumbled around in the drawer. The wisps of the solid items tickled her ghost fingers as she tapped around inside until she found the cheese grater in the back stuck upright. She concentrated again, feeling her fingertips take on their regular weight and become solid so she could shift the grater. When the rough edges of the grater scraped her thumb, she knew she had it. She twisted and it fell on its side.
She pulled her hand back through the drawer and dropped her concentration. Her hand filled out and became flesh and blood once more. She tugged at the drawer again. It came free. Success!
If only she could get her life unstuck as easily.
Jen swept into the house, fussy baby attached to her by one of those baby slings. Little James had not yet reached full howl, but he was definitely showing the signs.
“Dad and Grandfather are looking for you.” Jen rolled her eyes and shifted the baby. He gurgled and stopped fussing. “I told them you were helping and to stay out of your way until the party was done.”
“Thanks, Jen.”
She shrugged. “I’d almost think you’re in here avoiding them.”
“Exactly what I’m doing.”
“They’re pissed at you about something?”
“You noticed, huh?”
“Screw them,” Jen said. “They’re always on your case about something, ever since you discovered you have the family gift. Want to buzz out before they find you? I’ll cover. Let ’em stew, that’s what I say.”
The baby started crying, and Jen started pacing. Jen’s way of dealing with Dad and Grandfather was to avoid them. She’d moved out at eighteen, come back with Scott in tow and then announced she’d taken a job outside the family firm, as an accountant in a bank.
And when Dad complained about her “abandoning the family”, she’d ducked his phone calls until even he got a clue.
Then Jen got pregnant and the prodigal child was welcomed back with open arms. Dad was so happy about having a grandchild that he didn’t mention the past. Ever. Dad never liked to fight. It was why he had trouble standing up to Grandfather.
More than anything, Marian wished she could live her own life like Jen did. But Jen didn’t have the family’s phantom power. Jen didn’t have the responsibility of the future of the business falling to her. Marian vowed to make sure whoever came after her would have a choice. She doubted Jen would want James, if he inherited the power, to someday be badgered into illegal and immoral smuggling for the family good.
This was the best way, for everyone. Even if Grandfather didn’t realize it yet.
“Actually, Jen, could you tell Dad and Grandfather that I’d like to talk to them right now? Somewhere private?”
Jen shifted her weight again in an effort to soothe the baby. “You have something big to tell them, right? Can I listen?”
“Not that big. Your kid trumps me.” Marian grinned. “Thanks for the offer of help, but I have to do this thing myself.”
“Sure. Good luck! Don’t you dare let them guilt you into something. You’ve done plenty already. You’ve got a right to live your own life.”
“As you’ve been telling me for years. I know. Well, I’m listening now.” Marian swept a bunch of dirty paper plates into the trash. “Thanks.”
Even as Marian said it, her stomach soured. This was going to be bad.
Jen reached out and squeezed Marian’s hand. “Go get ’em, sis. And you could always stay here to hide out, if you need to. You know Grandfather can’t take all the baby’s crying. Too much disorder! He would never come here after you.” Jen wrinkled her face in perfect imitation of their grandfather.
Marian hugged her. Carefully, so as not to squish James. “I needed that.”
“I’ll tell them to meet you in the living room,” Jen said. “It’s the cleanest place.”
“Great.”
Apparently, Jen’s cleanest room meant the room was only half full of unopened baby presents instead of being jammed with them.
Marian began stacking the presents next to the playpen in the corner. These would do James no good right now—he’d have to grow into them, just like the playpen.
Grandfather arrived, her father at his heels, as usual.
“You should let your sister clean up, not act as her maid,” Grandfather said.
Oooh…a comment that disapproved of Jen for being messy and Marian for covering the mess up. Two insults for the price of one. She was so tired of this.
“Marian is just helping,” Dad said. “Jen has plenty to do today.”
Marian smiled at her dad. He genuinely loved Doyle Antiquities. He loved doing the research that led to finding ancient, lost things. He had a knack for following the trail of dusty documentation, and clients respected him for his expertise.
She wished Grandfather respected him too, instead of belittling his son for not being charming enough or tough enough and especially for not having the family gift. Dad would get the fallout from her walking away. Damn. What was worse was that he’d never complain to her about it.
Grandfather clasped his hands behind his back. “You wanted to discuss something with us?” He straightened to show off his full height. His brows were furrowed in disapproval. He was the picture of a head of the family, like some ancient Roman patriarch.
Dad lurked in his shadow, his shoulders slumped. They looked like father and son, except her father had never grown a backbone to defy his father, save to occasionally defend his daughters. Marian was not going through her life like that.
“I’m leaving the firm, effective today,” she said.
“One incident and you’ve lost your nerve. Pathetic,” Grandfather said. “And totally unacceptable. You’re not leaving, especially not before you get that elephant back for our client.”
Definitely, Tantor was going to a museum.
“I’ve made some inquiries and I’ve been told an application to join a Native American dig in western Virginia will likely be approved. It starts in two months. I’m taking the time in between for a break. I’ve never had one before. I’m looking forward to it.”
She said the words all in a rush, to get them finally out. There. Done.
“Marian, are you sure? Maybe you only need a break. We could talk about a sabbatical,” Dad said.
“Thomas, stop trying to placate her. She thinks she’s just going to walk away from us. Isn’t that right, Marian?”
“I’m done.”
“You are simply afraid. You’ll get over it. You’ll grow a better backbone, that’s all. Perhaps you need some more training with Eunice. She never flinched in a crisis.”
“I didn’t flinch. I saved myself from an arrest.”
“And lost our client’s item. We’re out a million-dollar commission, Marian. That needs to be made good or made up with another commission. You may not care about me, but what about the rest of our employees who depend on the firm for their livelihood?”
Her mouth went dry. The guilt trip was working.
“Aunt Eunice didn’t have to worry about the new rules and regulations when coming back from overseas. Customs officers are all over the place now. There are full body scans, cameras everywhere and God knows what else. Do you have any idea how much harder it is for me to navigate this than it was for Aunt Eunice?”
“My sister Eunice always did the family proud.”
“Good. Talk her out of retirement and put her back to work. I bet a little old lady just might be able to fool security better than me. Problem solved.”
“Marian, I know you’re scared, and you have every right to be,” Dad said, pushing past Grandfather. “We can talk about it, maybe change some things for you. You’re right, you’re on the front lines. We need to make things safer for you.”
“You’re coddling the girl, Thomas,” Grandfather said.
“Dad, you’re not helping. Please be quiet and let me talk to my daughter.”
There was Dad, defusing the conflict again, trying to make everyone happy.
“Dad, you don’t need me. You’re great at this. The firm can survive on entirely legal jobs. You and Grandfather have all the contacts. The firm won’t miss me.”
“You’re the only one who can live up to the legacy of the Doyles, Marian,” Grandpa said. “You owe us this. You can’t walk away.”
“Legacy? You mean the Doyle history of stealing?”
“Oh, so now all your ancestors are as equally to blame as I am? They’re the ones who built the firm that allowed you to be well fed and clothed all these years. Yet you sneer at them.” Grandfather shook his head. “And all to cover that you’re a coward.”
“Maybe I just don’t like breaking the law!” No, she hadn’t meant to lose her temper. This was a stupid argument. They couldn’t force her to do anything. Hell, they couldn’t even stop her from ghost walking through the back wall to get away from them.
So why did she feel so guilty and miserable? She tasted bile in her throat and wondered what the old man would say if she threw up on him.
He’d probably call her pathetic again.
“Marian.” Her father hugged her. “I didn’t realize you were so unhappy. You’re right, that last flight was a wake-up call. We can do something to fix it, give you more time off, maybe you could go on your dig and come back. Let me work something out. This is just such a bad time to leave. Give us another chance, please, sweetheart?”
“Dad. No.”
She backed away. She was immune to Grandfather’s insults but not her father’s concern. Jen apparently had the right idea all along. Run away and don’t look back.
“Dad, please. Let me go. I’ve had enough. I’ve done enough.” She looked down at the floor.
“You talk as if the phantom ability is a curse to run from and not a birthright to be proud of,” Grandfather sneered.
Marian glanced at her dad. He stood between her and his father, frowning. More than once, he’d told her he wished he had the family gift instead of her, so she could have a normal life. He would always follow Grandfather’s wishes, even if it came to being arrested. He enjoyed pleasing his father.
Dad took off his glasses and rubbed the bridge of his nose.
“It’s not your fault, Dad.” Yes, she liked making him happy, as he liked making his father happy. “You know the firm is in good shape. Think of it as a challenge to build us up legitimately. What if something happens to me? Or if no one gets the gift in the next generation? You’d have no choice than to be legitimate then. This works out better for the long-term.”
“Long-term doesn’t always pay the bills in the short term.” Dad sighed. “The work you do will also ensure your new godson has a bright future. Jen and the baby deserve our help too.”
James. She was letting her godson down. She was letting her sister down. “I don’t want…”
Don’t let them guilt you, her sister had said. And here they were, doing exactly that. “Jen would agree with me.”
“As your father said, this is a very bad time to talk about this,” Grandfather said. “Stop acting a spoiled child who doesn’t realize how good she has it. Do you think you would have your lovely loft in SoHo without us?”
“And my next home might have bars if I’m caught. I can give up the loft. I can give up everything. Okay, you’re right. I’m scared. But it’s more than that. A hundred years ago, even fifty years ago, this smuggling and looting wasn’t a big deal to anyone. But times and attitudes have changed. These precious items belong to their native heritage, not in the hands of some private collector. At the least, they belong in a museum. We’re being selfish and greedy and helping no one but ourselves.”
“I see you’ve learned political correctness at college,” Grandfather said. “We’re doing what we’ve always done. We’re making sure beautiful objects get in the hands of those who appreciate them.”
“No, we’re putting them in the hands of those who can afford them and locking out anyone else who might appreciate them. Fine, I’m a coward. But I’m brave enough to give it all up, Grandfather. That means the travel, the nice clothes, the spacious loft and all the rest of the money. Could you do that? So who’s the selfish one here?”
Dad held up his hands. “Marian. I hear you. But did you hear me? This is a very bad time for you to leave.”
“It’s always a bad time.”
“We have a unique job that requires your skills. We just found out about it today.” Dad’s voice ended on a whisper that sounded like a plea.
“It’s always a unique job that requires my skills.” But her voice wavered.
“It’s the most important job you will ever have on behalf of our firm,” Grandfather said. “We have to take it.”
“What the hell could be that important?” Tantor had been a million-dollar job. What could be more important than that?
“This job is from our special patrons, the Court,” Dad said, taking off his glasses.
“The Court?” She collapsed on the couch, next to the baby blankets. “You’re kidding. You mean that fairy tale about the mysterious Court of Immortals who’ve hired us through the centuries?”
“It’s no fairy tale. They rarely come to us, but when they do, we are duty-bound to do what they ask. These are not people to piss off, Marian,” Dad said.
Marian swallowed to bring moisture to her dry throat. She was being sucked back in. She should run. Phase. Get away somehow.
Grandfather sat in the single chair in the room. Something squeaked. He reached back and pulled out a rubber duck from the cushions. With a grimace, he tossed it aside.
“What do these supposed immortals want?” Marian asked.
“Obviously, they need your phantom talent,” Dad said. “And don’t joke. They’re very real.”
“Right. Of course they are.”
Dad sat down next to her and put his arm over her shoulder. “Isn’t a part of you curious about meeting an immortal?”
She sighed. “Maybe. If they’re real.”
“You can have a six-month sabbatical after you help Richard Genet. I promise.”
She rubbed the back of her neck. “Six months? Really?” Argh. Try not to sound so eager, she told herself.
Dad squeezed her hand tighter. “Six months, absolutely.”
“We cannot refuse the Genets,” Grandfather said, pontificating as if his easy chair were a throne.
She stood. Her grandfather believed the Court was real. She could discount that. But her father believed too, and she couldn’t discount that. “I’ll do this. And I’ll take those six months. But I’m not promising anything about when I’m coming back.”
Her life needed to change, one way or another.
“And keep in mind while you’re so worried about pissing off these immortals, you might start worrying about pissing me off. I’m the only one qualified to train the next person who inherits the phantom ability. And I won’t do it unless I’m sure they have a choice in the matter and that they’re not raised to be criminals looting the heritage of nations. This is no way to live.”
It was a dumb last word, but it was the best she could do. All three of them knew she’d given in to her grandfather.
Again.