Chapter 1
The first thing Nala noticed about the lounge wasn’t the body odor vs. over-spiced perfume menagerie, but that women were actually capable of pairing flannel with lacy lingerie.
“Welcome to The Crow’s Nest,” a woman dressed in black and white plaid with matching fishnet stockings said. “Would you like something to drink?”
Nala, spying on a bearded man trying his luck with a woman bursting from a tight bustier, whipped her head around. “I’m sorry?” Her voice cracked in her throat.
The hostess’s practiced smile faltered. “I asked if you would like a drink, Miss.”
“Uh, sure. Rum and Coke.”
“Right away. Please find a seat to enjoy. I’ll be right over with your drink.”
Plaid cotton sauntered away. Nala was left standing in the middle of the dimly lit and quiet lounge, a brand new staple of Portland’s illustrious Pearl District. The Crow’s Nest was a marriage of Pacific Northwest sensibilities and hoity-toity expectations. Craft beer, wrought iron umbrella stands, flannel and hoodies for days… and enough expensive perfume to choke a beaver,
That related to a question Nala was asked the moment she sat at the bar. “Ducks or Beavers?”
“Excuse me?” She looked up, meeting a bearded bartender’s eyes. His skinny jeans slipped effortlessly beneath his red and blue plaid shirt.
His smiled broadened. “You like the Ducks or the Beavers? Football.”
“Oh!” Nala nearly dropped her clutch. “Timbers?”
“Ha! I like that one. Prefer the futbol over the football?”
“Sure.”
The bartender disappeared to the other end of the bar to tend to a patron’s request. Nala was left, alone, wondering what the fuck she had gotten herself into. Ducks, Beavers, Timbers, Blazers… Fifteen years ago, when she was a child living in Portland with her mother and sister, nobody asked her such inane sports questions. Portland was a haven for people who didn’t give a shit about sports. That was for the Texans and North Carolinians. Although so many of them had moved to Oregon in Nala’s fifteen-year-absence that maybe they changed the game – literally.
Tasha would have said she liked the Ducks because her favorite color was yellow. It was those little details Nala remembered even now. Details that made her bite her lip and wave away the hostess as she brought by that rum and Coke. Focus, idiot. You’re not here to have a drink. Nevertheless, she had to part with her precious money so she could access one of the richest men in the Pacific Northwest… no, America.
Maybe the world.
She pulled out her notepad and double-checked her research. Xavier Crow, founder and CEO of Black Raven Pharmaceuticals, is also an avid real estate developer who owns many high-rises and businesses throughout Oregon and Washington. His latest addition to his empire is The Crow’s Nest lounge, located on a block he owns in its entirety. The picture in one of the articles she pasted into her notepad showed the fifty-five year old Xavier Crow sitting on the stool next to where Nala sat now. He was surrounded by his flannel-clad servers and bartenders, all smiling above a caption that read, “Mr. Crow intends to make the lounge his second home in Portland.”
He had to be around here somewhere. It was a slow night, but Nala had no choice but to come on Tuesday when the line wasn’t halfway around the block. Without any great connections, there was no hope getting a glimpse of her sister’s killer.
***
“Nala,
I hope this letter gets to you in time. I don’t dare email or call you. I don’t know who might be tracking me. Isn’t it strange I have to go back to pen and paper in order to be undetected? Except it’s the only safe way that I know of.
There may not be much time left. I know I’m not crazy. Men are following me. There was blood left on my apartment door yesterday. I don’t say these things to scare you. I say them to warn you. If they come for me, they may come for you next. Don’t tell Mother.”
Nala could still remember the day she received that letter. She stood outside the dusty mailbox in Carson City, Nevada, wondering what she should do. For weeks, her older sister told her that she was becoming paranoid. Cars. Men in ski masks lurking in the shadows. Threatening notes. She went to the police, but all they said was that Tasha needed to be less “hysterical.” Two days after Nala received that final letter, Tasha was found dead in her Seattle apartment.
Heart attack, the coroner said. Ridiculous. Tasha was still in her twenties. She exercised and was a vegetarian. Out of the three of them, Tasha had the best health while Nala ate like a dumbass and their mother smoked fifty packs a day.
So to say Tasha had a heart attack at her age was like saying Nala would choose a salad over a hamburger.
It had to be murder. It wasn’t farfetched. Not in Tasha’s line of work. She was a lead researcher for Black Raven Pharmaceuticals. Cancer cures. Medications. The type of shit every pharmaceutical company said they poured millions of money into researching, but always came up short. Not Tasha. She was brilliant. Determined. If anyone in the country was going to find some cancer breakthrough, it would be her, one of the greatest medical researchers anyone knew.
Xavier Crow may not have given Tasha her heart attack, but he surely made sure somebody did. Nala would bet her life on it. Since moving to Portland, Crow’s newest home, she sort of had to bet her life on that fact.
She didn’t know what she would do.
She didn’t know what she could do.
But she would find the bastard.
And she would make him pay for his crimes.
***
“You look lonely.”
Nala jerked up. There was that bartender again, this time with a beanie on his head. Did he think that made him look cool? Did he like being a hipster stereotype? Nala furrowed her brows. Whenever she started thinking about her sister’s death, she got angry. Easily. This man was one more condescending comment away from getting a fist through his man-bun.
“I’m relaxing,” she said. Please go away. For your own good.
“What’s your name? I like to learn everyone’s name.”
Nala had to bite back a testy reply. “Na… Natasha.” That was a convenient go-to name. It’s what her mother bellowed whenever she wanted both her daughters to come into the room.
“Natasha, huh?” What a chill-inducing smirk. “I thought you looked Russian.”
What the fuck did that mean? “Interesting. I thought I left my ushanka at home.” Damnit. She should have mispronounced it on purpose. Or said something maybe not, oh, Russian.
The bartender’s smile disappeared, but he remained in front of her. “Uh… what’s that?”
“Imagine a very cold Russian woman. She’s wearing one on her head.”
“Oh. Those fluffy hats?”
“Yes. Those fluffy hats.”
He raised his hands in mock defeat. “Hey, this is a chill place. No need to be uptight. Enjoy your drink.” He walked away. A bit too late to escape Nala’s chilling glare.
No matter where she went in the country, men were the same, especially when they found out she was Russian. The idea of the feisty Eastern European sexpot was alive and well. Joke was on them. Nala was no sexpot. And her idea of feisty was slamming dudes in the balls, not teasing them with a thong on her way out the door. They all need to leave me alone. Nala considered herself “reluctantly heterosexual.” She didn’t like women – not that way – but here she was, attracted to men in theory, but unable to stand them in real life.
“I’ve never even been to Russia…” she muttered. Her parents immigrated right before the Cold War ended. Heard that there was a sizable Russian population in Portland and decided it was for them. Tasha was born in the Motherland, but Nala was born at the same hospital as her kindergarten classmates. The only Russian she remembered was whatever her mother muttered the most. Tasha was the one with an interest. Nala spent her life ignoring her heritage while Tasha taught herself Cyrillic… for fun.
So, great. Here she was, stalking a man she had no idea what to do with, and being propositioned by dudes with man-buns because they thought Kseniya Onatopp was hot in that one Bond film. Nala stretched her arms across the bar and tapped her forehead against the counter. I’m so stupid. Once again, her anger got the best of her. Yeah, she moved to Portland to “get justice,” or at least discover the truth behind her sister’s death, but that was as far as her mind ever let her get. Stupid Nala. Shot first, asked questions later.
Now she was paying for it. Literally. At least in Carson City her part time job helped her pay her share of the rent. Rent that went toward a whole bedroom in a sizable apartment she shared with a quiet girl her age. In Portland? Ha! Nala rented a closet. An actual closet. She could squeeze a twin mattress in there, but she had to hang her clothes above her and put her meager belongings on the top shelf. She could spring for a bedroom somewhere farther out if she could get a damned full time job.
Maybe it was a good thing she had this drink. First thinking about her sister, and now her living situation? Nala needed to get drunk, and quick. Get drunk, go home to her closet, and lick her wounds. Who was she kidding? Of course Xavier Crow didn’t hang out here on his nights off. That was publicity. This lounge was small. Maybe it seated thirty people comfortably. It was meant to feel intimate, not like a sprawling mess of stools and drunk people. Nala hated the bastard, but at least he had some taste.
She was woefully overdressed anyway. Her little black dress, the only nice outfit she owned, was too much for this plaid paradise. I forgot that’s considered formalwear here.
“…Tell Chester that we still have the ten o’clock meeting.” Two men in suits sauntered in. Nala barely noticed them… would’ve been happy to completely ignore their existence if they didn’t sit one stool away from her and order a couple of Old Fashioneds. “All right. Thanks.” The man on the phone shut it off and tucked it into his front pocket. “Finally, we can relax.”
He had salt and pepper hair, muted cologne, and one of the finest business suits Nala had ever seen. The kind of guy Tasha would have said belonged at the altar with her. She always had lofty ambitions. Nala’s sister was married to her work while in her 20s, but she said she wanted to establish her career and then go find a husband. “I don’t mind Mistress Medicine, if she’ll have me.”
“This place ain’t bad. One of the better lounges in this area.”
The other man rubbed his clean-shaven face. He looked aloof, but that was par for the course in Portland. Hell, the Pacific Northwest. Must be a native. No, a transplant. Nala was starting to learn to tell the difference.
“I suppose. I don’t get out much.”
“Ah, if you stay in this business much longer, young Padawan, you’ll have to learn how to get out and be social. It’s mandatory.”
“I suppose.”
“You say that a lot.”
The older man said that good-naturedly. Nevertheless, Nala heard a hint of frustration in his voice. Is that his son? Nephew? Why do I care? Anything to take her mind off her troubles.
“Crow hasn’t done bad for himself in this town. Did you know he owns this whole block?”
The younger man tugged on his tie and adjusted his cufflinks. Aloof, indeed. “I had heard that. I don’t get it, myself. Then again, I’m not interested in real estate. Or mergers and acquisitions. I just want to do my trade.”
“Boy, you really are young and new to this.”
“Let’s talk about something else.” The younger man, with his soft face and clean haircut, picked up his drink and clinked the ice inside. “Anything but Crow.”
“We’re in his place of business and giving him our money for alcohol. We can’t avoid talking about him. Why don’t you want to?”
“Suppose you could say he leaves a bad taste in my mouth.” The younger man put his glass down and swished his drink around his mouth as if it really did leave a bad taste. His wince intrigued Nala, who watched this through the corner of her eye. “I also suppose the man can’t be avoided around here. I mean, as you said, look where we are.”
“Damn straight. It’s amazing to see how things have changed around here in the past ten years alone. I remember when the Pearl was… well, not as nice as it is now.”
They dropped that part of the conversation after that. Nala was content to finish her drink and leave, but then…
“All right. Let’s talk about him. Xavier Crow, the man who owns half of Portland and developed half the medicine in your bathroom cabinet.” The younger man sounded sarcastic enough to annoy even Nala, who usually loved a healthy dose of sarcasm. “He loves to take over half. Why is that? Is he only half good at what he does?”
The older man smiled again. “You really don’t like him, huh?”
“What’s to like about him? He’s a narcissistic megalomaniac with a God complex. What is there to like about him?”
“Yet you’re here.”
“Well, it’s like you said. I need to be mindful of my business pursuits.” The younger man snorted into his glass. “Don’t think we’ll see Crow around here for me to butter up, huh?”
“I hear he comes here a lot, but nobody ever actually sees him. Sounds like shit to me. If I were him, I’d build an exclusive club to hang out in. Or stay home. He’s got a beautiful place up in the West Hills. Was there for a soiree a few months ago. The man knows how to throw a party to please the people.”
“I bet.” The younger man turned his head away. “Thanks for having a drink with me, by the way. I know you didn’t have to.”
“And give up a chance to relax with my favorite young entrepreneur? Please, Vince, I’ll pick you over my wife at home any day.”
“Around this town someone might take that statement the wrong way…”
“Oh, I know.”
They switched to talk about the older man’s wife and kids, thereby losing Nala’s interest. She slammed down her drink, feeling the liquor warm her body and help her relax. Not that she wanted to relax. What else was there to do? These strangers all but confirmed that she would not see Xavier Crow around there anytime soon. Her best bet was to do her reconnaissance elsewhere. Build up some evidence that the man had something to do with her sister’s death…
Who was she fucking kidding? No one. The more the weeks went by and nothing happened, Nala considered moving elsewhere. Maybe not back to Carson City, but somewhere it didn’t rain nine months out of the year and the sun could shine on her pale skin.
“Was everything to your… liking?”
It was the hostess in flannel and fishnets. At first Nala thought she was being spoken to, but when she craned her head around she saw a couple emerging from a back room. The man, also dressed in a pristine suit, had a lovely young woman on his arm. A woman wearing nothing more than a slinky red dress and a black mask on her face.
The way she curled her hand around the man’s arm and batted her eyelashes at him said she worshipped the ground he walked on. Gag. Yet Nala couldn’t look away. There was contentment to the woman’s demeanor that Nala envied. She wished she could look so happy about her life. So… in love.
Ha. Love. Nala had a boyfriend once. Before Tasha died and took over her sister’s psyche. That man? Nala thought she loved him. Then she realized that what she thought was love was merely a forced emotion that didn’t mean anything at all. I’m not suited for those sorts of emotions. She both envied women in love and feared for their souls. Maybe they knew something she didn’t.
“Everything was wonderful,” the man said with a silky voice. “Starling and I will be returning soon, for sure.”
“I’m glad to hear that, sir. If there’s anything I can do for you in the future, please do not hesitate to ask.”
“Oh, if you could go down and tell Mr. Crow that I’ll be calling him about business tomorrow, that would be helpful. We were so… distracted… that I completely forgot.”
The hostess chuckled. “I will do so. He will want his ten o’clock Chardonnay anyway.”
The couple left. Although the men beside Nala continued to speak of mundane matters, she ignored them, her mind focused on only one thing.
Crow is here. He’s behind that door over there. I could go find him right now.
Find him and do what? Ha! That didn’t matter. Nala was young – and dumb. She may have more life experience and be more jaded than the average twenty-one-year-old, but that didn’t mean she didn’t feel that rush of sheer invincibility that told her to take over the world with her mind and body alone. If she owned a car, she would be exposed to bouts of reckless driving for the sake of it. If she were a partier, she would be in and out of hospitals with alcohol poisoning. If she had casual sex… well, that was neither here nor there. Point was, Nala had her stupidity vices like anyone else her age. Vices pinpointed on vengeance.
In her mind, she entertained images of stabbing Xavier Crow right in the heart. Bashing his head in with a club. Lighting his shoelaces on fire and watching him burn. When she had these fantasies, her blood rushed, adrenaline pumping in her veins like gas pumped into semis. Propane tanks. Exploding. Fire and brimstone raining upon the man who killed her sister and knew how many other people because… well, she still didn’t know the details. All Nala had was her gut, and her gut told her to find Crow. The rest would fall into place after that.
Maybe I’ll play the plucky young and driven gal who wants a job. Infiltrate his company. Lure him out of his shell. I’ll… She stood up, stumbling from the whole glass of rum and Coke. She wasn’t drunk, but she was definitely tipsy. I’ll fall down.
There was one problem. The door said “Private,” and it was not a large room full of shadows to lurk in. If Nala got up and tried to go in, someone would certainly spot her. This wasn’t a dive bar where the worst that happened was getting a stern talking to. If Xavier Crow, resident billionaire who owned half of a major city, lurked behind that door, then… well, Nala could probably kiss her life in Portland goodbye.
I won’t know if I don’t try.
Maybe it was the alcohol that made her so brazen. If she were 100% sober, she may go home and regroup with her new information, but she wanted to find out now. So she went to a table by the door, stocked with water in a dispenser and many small glasses. She picked one up and slowly filled it with water, biding her time until nobody looked at her. The place wasn’t busy. That meant she didn’t have to wait long, but it also meant she was so conspicuous that a blind man could spot her.
The bartender was washing glasses at the far end of the bar. The hostess played coy with a single man in another corner. The two men in suits at the bar were getting up and shaking hands, paying her no mind. Now was the time to go for it. She could regret it later.
There were many things she could regret later.
Nala slipped her hand over the handle and found it deceptively unlocked. It opened, slowly, shadows filtering into the lounge. Good. It was a hallway. An unlit hallway she could fumble around in. Good thing I wore a black dress and have dark hair. While everyone in the lounge was still distracted, Nala ducked behind the door and shut it behind her.
Regret.
She waited. Assessed her environment. Listened for someone coming after her. Nothing happened. The hall was boring. More shadows. A long, long tunnel with a staircase at the bottom. Nala felt a lock on the handle behind her and wondered if that man and his little Starling were supposed to turn it on their way out.
She stepped forward, slowly. Each step was heavier, as if every one of those steps attached five more pounds of weight to her flats. This is wrong. She was trespassing now. One thing to go to Crow’s lounge and order a drink. This? This wasn’t legal.
Nala didn’t care.
Although she didn’t care, that didn’t mean she wasn’t aware of her heart fluttering in her chest and her forehead sweating. Crow was somewhere around here. Probably at the bottom of those stairs. Sure enough, as she advanced down the hallway as if she trudged through molasses, she began to hear the sounds of a party. Laughter. Shouts of glee. Applause. Any private party Xavier Crow threw was probably full of the Pacific elite. She didn’t want to know them.
“Thatta girl!” she vaguely heard. Whispers in the constricted air. “Enjoy that!”
Smack.
Smack.
Nala didn’t know what she heard, but people were having a good time. A better time than her, anyway. Something about that genuinely irked her. Why do they get to have a good time while I…
She didn’t see the first step. Not in those shadows. So when her foot took an unceremonious step over the edge without her permission, Nala suddenly felt her beating heart surge into her throat and threaten to jump out of her mouth, bounce on the steps, and land dead at the bottom.
Or maybe that was her.
“Ah!” She was falling. Fell. Fallen. Her body lurched forward, arms shooting out to catch her fall, for all the good it would do her. I’m going to die. Or break my arms. Amazing what people thought when they were in the middle of falling down some stairs. It almost felt commonplace. Like it was naturally something one did every day. Brush teeth. Check mail. Fall down stairs. Okay, ready for bed! Nala wanted to berate herself, but she was sort of busy falling down some forbidden stairs.
Before her hands could catch on a narrow step and take the rest of her body with her, however, something miraculous happened. Or at least it felt miraculous when it happened. When one was in the midst of falling down some stairs, having a strong hand snatch out and grab said faller was definitely miraculous at the time.
“Oh my God!” Nala stared into the dark maw of the staircase, frozen in time and space. A man’s hand was around her wrist, slowly pulling her back up to the top of the stairs as her feet tripped again and her heart gradually slowed down. “Oh my God, thank y…”
She whipped her head around and looked straight into the soft countenance of the younger man from the bar.
For some reason, she wanted to vomit.