"That painting is a ghost," she said. "Why me?"

She almost ignored it. Almost.

"Miss Gabres. My name is Julian Voss." The voice was smooth, unhurried, with the faintest European rasp. "I'm a curator at the DePaul Collection. I believe you're the person who exposed Councilman Hartley's slush fund."

The rain over Portland wasn't the kind that cleansed. It was the kind that seeped—into coat seams, into old brick, into the cracks of a person's resolve. Kristy Gabres watched it streak down her apartment window, turning the city lights into bleeding gold smears. Inside, her living room was a museum of what she used to be: a framed press pass from the Oregon Herald , a dusty trophy for Investigative Journalism, and a single photograph of her late father, Frank Gabres, a beat cop who'd taught her that the truth was worth a bloody nose.