"Then there was the fact that Clementine didn't shoot you for standing up to her. Instead, she just slapped you around a little bit. It didn't make any sense that she wouldn't kill you, especially since I'd heard her talk about shooting someone in the face like it was no more important than getting her nails done. Sure, she wanted to keep the hostages calm, but you directly challenged her. She should have put you down just for that."
"So she didn't shoot me. So what?"
"So why didn't she just go ahead and kill you and make everyone else fall into line that much quicker? There was only one reason she wouldn't: because you were her boss. She wouldn't kill the person who'd hired her to pull the heist, or she wouldn't get paid the rest of her fee," I replied. "You really should have at least let her wing you with a bullet or two. But instead, you got away with only a bitch slap. Now, that seems to be something you excel at, so I didn't think too much of it at the time. But later on, it was just one more thing that didn't quite add up."
He eyed me. "And what were these other things that you found so troublesome?"
"Well, for starters, there was the fact that a woman was murdered - a woman who was wearing the exact same dress as I was," I said. "That made me think that I was the intended target, which I was. Now, I have more enemies than most, but there were a lot of bad people at the gala. So why come after me and not someone else? Because you knew that I was a threat to your plans to steal Mab's will. And, well, killing me would have been a nice bonus. You've wanted me dead for a long time now, and you saw a chance to finally make it happen at the museum."
"It would have worked too," he muttered. "If not for that damn dress."
This time, I nodded, agreeing with him. "Maybe. Although I imagine you were quite happy when Clementine dumped that body in the rotunda and you thought it was me."
"Ecstatic, actually. Too bad it didn't take. It never seems to, with you."
I grinned. He gave me a sour look, finished off his brandy, and poured himself another one. The first two rounds had already given his cheeks a ruddy flush - or perhaps that was just his anger finally showing through his too-smooth skin.
"Then there was Owen," I continued. "Since you were in charge of the gala, you knew exactly who was coming. When you saw his name on the guest list, you realized you could force him to help Clementine open the vault. Plus, you would never pass up a chance to hurt my friends and family. No doubt, you told Clementine to kill Owen immediately after he opened the vault for her."
McAllister shrugged. "You'd taken away my son. So yes, I wanted you dead, but I wanted the rest of your band of miscreants to suffer too. Killing Grayson seemed like an ideal way to do that, and I was going to make it look like he was working with Clementine the whole time. Just think of the problems that would have created for that sister of his. Everyone in Ashland would have been pounding on her door, demanding to know what her brother did with all of that stolen art. It would have been amusing to watch."
The brandy really must have bolstered his courage, because he was actually bragging - bragging about how he'd planned to hurt the people that I loved. Rage pulsed through my body. It had been bad enough that he'd put Owen in the line of fire, but to frame him after the fact . . . it almost made me rethink my plan for McAllister.
Almost.
"But the most interesting thing is exactly why you hired Clementine and her crew to break into the vault," I continued. "That's the really fascinating thing about all of this - what you wanted her to steal."
I reached down. McAllister tensed, but I wasn't going for one of my knives. Instead, I pulled the ebony tube out of a pocket on the front of my vest. I set it on the desk and scooted it forward, then turned it so he could see the sunburst rune glinting on the side.
"When I first went into the vault, I had no idea what Clementine was after," I said. "There were lots of treasures in there. Art, jewelry, paintings worth tens of millions. But all she wanted - all you wanted - was this. You didn't want anything else from the museum, not even the jewels that Clementine took from the partygoers. No, all you were after - all you needed - was this one little tube."
McAllister's face pinched even tighter than before, the flush in his cheeks taking on a fiery tomato tint, and I could tell that he was struggling to control himself. So I decided to be a good guest and answer his silent questions.
"It took me a few minutes, but I figured out how to open it," I said. "And I know what's inside. In fact, I've spent the last few days reading and rereading Mab's will. Quite a bit shorter than I thought it would be. But fascinating all the same for what it says - and what it doesn't."
"And what do you think you've figured out from it?" he sneered.
"Why you wanted Mab's will so badly," I replied. "I must say I'm a little shocked that she didn't leave you a little something-something for all your years of loyal service. But you aren't mentioned in the will at all. She didn't leave you a nickel's worth of anything. No cash, no land, no personal property. Not even so much as a silverstone pen or a cheap gold watch. No wonder you were so pissed."
McAllister stared at the tube, his cold, furious gaze locked onto the sunburst rune. "You have no idea what it was like working for her. Being at her beck and call night and day for years - years. Constantly knowing that one wrong word, one wrong move, and she'd kill me with her Fire magic right where I stood with no warning and no sympathy. Mab wasn't even particularly clever. She was just strong. All that power, all that magic, all that money. She could have done so much with it. But she never could think big enough."
I'd thought Mab had dreamed plenty big, since she'd practically run Ashland, but I didn't contradict McAllister. Even he had a right to rant here at the end.
"But you know what the really ironic thing is? Mab actually had me draw up that will. I guess she thought she'd be around a lot longer than I would. Elementals." He snorted. "They all think that they're so much better than the rest of us. So much stronger, so much more powerful. But they die just like everyone else does."
He let out a dark laugh. "You definitely proved that to Mab."
I shrugged.
He raised his brandy glass to me. "I should thank you for that. For killing that bitch. For finally freeing me from her. I would have been content to do just that. Live and let live, if you will - if you hadn't killed my son."
McAllister moved to the end of the bar, reached down, and picked up a photo from a nearby table. A younger, larger, beefier version of himself stared out from beneath the glass - his son, Jake. McAllister stared at the photo a moment before setting it back down on the table. He nudged it with his index finger, making sure it was in exactly the same spot as before.