“You’ve met the people here, Paige. They might be Christian, but they’re good people.”
“Even good people can do stupid things when they’re scared. Anyone threaten you? Is there anyone who’s a little extra pushy on the Bible thing?”
“No. For the first time, I’ve found a place that actually feels like home.”
Could this be the reason so many magickal people were in one place?
“Besides, who do you know that would ‘convert’ us, then spread ceremonial symbols everywhere?”
“Point.” Paige dipped her chin in agreement, though her mind wandered down channels that gave reason to those very actions. Like the man who started fires so he could become a fire fighter, the person who kidnapped his daughter so he could save her.
“Who do you think this person is trying to summon?”
“What do you mean?” The hairs stood up on the back of Paige’s neck. How much did the other woman know and how deep was she on the murders?
“It’s not a god or a demigod. It doesn’t feel like they’re trying to raise the fae.”
Who still believed in fairies? What next? Unicorns?
“What about a demon?” Malika’s eyes rounded, everything in her expression said “sincere.”
So why were Paige’s spidy senses tingling? “Demon. What makes you think that? All the symbols are benign.”
“I’ve heard about this stuff happening before.”
“Demons don’t need sacrifices.”
“They don’t scoff at them, either.” Malika shrugged. “It was just a thought. The magick seems hurtful, ugly, dirty.”
Blood magick often did, but how did she know that?
“Oh, hey,” Malika said, her voice filled with concern. “That’s Mia. It looks like she has her daughter this weekend.”
A blonde haired woman and her daughter crossed the street in front of the store.
“It was awful. About a year ago, Ron was sent to jail and his mother filed for custody. Took her away from Mia, claiming she was unfit. What’s the girl’s name? Lenore?”
Paige turned away, waiting for Malika to slip. She just needed the other woman to slip one time.
“Leah?”
Rage slammed into Paige like a wave, nearly bowling her over. The candle in her hand shook.
“Leah?” Malika stepped into Paige’s line of sight, obvious interest splashed across her face.
Regaining control, Paige set the candle on the glass shelf with a clank so loud it sounded like the shelf might break. She had what she’d come for. Malika really was on it. Any further questioning, though, would get her nowhere. The maniacal gleam shining through her eyes. That’s what she’d seen before and could put her finger on.
“No. LeAnn. That’s it.”
“I think I’m done here.” Paige gestured to the box in Malika’s hands. “Leslie will like this.”
The other woman smiled, something dark slithering behind her gaze.
Paige had her suspect to rights. Next, she needed to discover what Jones knew.
She accepted the challenge.
“YOU READY?”
She nodded to Chief White.
Without further ado, he led her through the small station and into the back room. A single, metal table sat in the middle, three chairs around it, the walls bare.
Paige sighed took the lone chair on the one side, her eyebrows raised. “Really? The interrogation room?”
He sat in the chair opposite her. He kept his hand at waste level and pointed to the one-way mirror behind him. “No phones.”
She gave him the barest of nods. “Any particular reason why?”
“Bad reception.”
Paige ran her tongue along her molars. “So, how is this going to play?”
“Are you feeling well?”
“You honestly think you’re going to trick me into just spilling my guts to you if you’re nice to me? I’ve been on that side of the table, Chief. I know how this works.”
The door opened. Jones sauntered in, settling in the chair that sat in the corner.
“I just want to know what happened at the shack.”
“Mold.” She crossed her arms over her chest. She’d used that excuse before, not that it was a good one, but with mold, everyone reacted differently. Allergies, hallucinogens, and poisonings came from mold, so it wasn’t bad. “I’m fine now.”
“Are you sure?”
“What are we doing here, guys?”
“We’re just . . .” White’s lips flattened as he leaned back in his chair. “ . . . having a conversation.”
“That’s cute.” Paige kicked her feet up on the table. “Jones, how are you emotionally tied to this case?”
He smiled and blinked, as if buying himself time. “Ashley was my friend.”
She needed him to admit something that would make the chief understand his guilt. Though, smiling at the fact that his “best friend” was dead was a pretty big red flag in her book.
“What’s that?” Jones pointed to her bare arm.
“What?” She raised it so he could see it better. “Oh, you mean this?”
“A protection rune,” he muttered. “Interesting.”
White frowned at it. “Protection against what?”
“Mold.” She watched Jones for any tale-tell reactions. “You see, it only allows the mold in so far, then it gets stopped and pushed back out.”
Jones bit his lip. “I take it the mold is out.”
Paige tipped her head.
White’s jaw ticked as he fisted one hand, his gaze falling to the table.
Good. He was following along, but was it enough? They needed a trail to follow. Jones wasn’t the mastermind. He couldn’t be.
Jones gestured toward the sigil. “Did you have this on at the shack?”
Paige shook her head. “It’s new.”
“Permanent?”
“We’ll see how well it works.”
White took in several heavy breaths.
“Am I under arrest?”
“You can leave at any time,” White said.
“Good to know.” She took that to mean he had what he needed. She, however, didn’t. “Jones, where were you when your best friend was murdered?”
Jones snorted. “You’re not asking the questions here.”
“I thought we were just having a conversation.” She opened her arms, palms up. “In the interrogation room.”
Jones chuckled and rubbed his arm. “I was with Malika, my fiancé.”
White’s eyebrows flickered.
Paige rapped her knuckles against her jean-clad knee. “Where?”
“At her house.”
“Is that where you killed your best friend?”
His eyelids lowered minutely, his smile locked in place. “I didn’t kill her.”
“You let Malika do that for you? Was it for a spell of some sort?”
“You have no evidence.”
White’s face lost its pallor.
She had him. “I think you and I both know I don’t need evidence.”
White cleared his throat. “Detective.”
“Chief.” She mimicked his tone.
Jones studied her arm, rubbing his chin.
Paige ran her finger along the rune. She could stop all this nonsense. She could summon Balnore, have him appear right there in the room, and all this would stop.
Her eyes drifted toward the ceiling as she folded her hands behind her head. Cameras. They were videotaping the entire conversation. As much as she was tempted, she had to be careful what she admitted on tape.
She let out a sigh. Summoning a demon right now was probably not a very good idea. Tempting, though. If things got any worse, Balnore could always destroy the tapes.
“What kind of drugs do you like to take?” White asked, standing up.
“Ibuprofen.” Paige crossed her ankles on the desk, watching White approach. “I don’t like aspirin. It doesn’t seem to work as well.”
“You k
now what I think?” White placed both hands on the armrests of her chair.
She threw him a complete dead-pan stare. “That I’m guilty and in on this?”
“You have a track record.” He brought his nose close to hers. “Every time you’re called in on a special case, it always remains unsolved. You know what that means?”
“That sometimes unexplainable shit happens that you can’t write in a report. You know why? Because writing that kind of crap makes you look insane.” Careful. Tapes.
“Do you know what the killer’s attempting?”
She blinked long and slow. “That’s why you called me in, right?”
Jones steepled fingers and pressed them against his lips.
“Can you share with the class?”
What did Jones need to hear? White was trying to throw her a line. She simply didn’t know what to do with what he gave her. “The murders were to draw me here. What happened at the shack was a trap for me.”
Letting his hands fall, Jones kept his eyes trained on her.
That’s what he needed, but the damned tapes were recording everything. “Someone thinks I can raise a demon for them.”
“And do what?” White asked.
“Open the Gate to Hell.”
Jones barked with laughter.
“Is that the story you’re going to stick to?” White asked with a chuckle.
“It’s easier to buy into the mold theory, isn’t it?”
“Cut the crap, Whiskey,” White shouted. “I will have you detained for impeding—”
“Bullshit, and you know it!” Paige slammed her feet against the tiled floor. “If you had anything on me, I’d be under arrest. And if you had any evidence, he wouldn’t be sitting here right now. He’d be behind bars.”
“You really have a hard on for me, don’t you?”
“So what is it with the killer?” White asked. “Is your boyfriend into the kinky shit? Does he get off killing people? Is the murderer this new guy, Dexx?”
She needed to talk to White about his interrogation skills. She had nothing to work with. “Come on, Jones, are you into whips and chains? I mean, what do you and Malika do afterwards?”
He laughed. “We’re so vanilla, it’s not—”
“Why do you keep turning this back to Jones?” White demanded.
“I knew a witch was involved.” She stood up. “The first victim was just to see if blood magick was enough. Ms. Fort was killed because she caught on. But then the third victim. He was different.”
Jones leaned his head against the wall and smiled at her.
She dug into his personal space, whispering into his ear. “How did it feel to torture him? Was it empowering?”
His smile deepened.
She walked away and placed her shoulder against the opposite wall. “His murder was the key, actually. You see, Chief, Mr. Lopez was a generator. In magical circles, they’re the ones that create the power for the ritual. When a generator is tortured, there’s even more pow—”
“You have no proof.”
She sauntering toward him, planting her hands on either side of him. “You and I both know that in this world, I don’t need proof. Proof is for the mortals.”
“How are you feeling? Are you sure you’re alone in there?”
“I think I’d know if I were sharing my meat suit.” She pushed away from him. “Don’t you?”
“Chief,” Jones said, standing. “You see she’s out of her mind. She has no idea what she’s even talking about. You can’t—”
“You don’t tell me what I do and do not believe.” White took his seat, his brown eyes narrowed. “Why did you request her?”
“I knew about her reputation. The Pilmner case was too similar to this one.”
“I’m going to need to check your alibi. Yours and Malika’s.”
“Chief, don’t you think that’s a little unreasonable?”
“No. I don’t.”
Thunder crashed across Jones’ expression. He ripped open the door and stormed out.
White glared at her as the door slammed shut behind his officer.
At least there wasn’t any question as to his guilt anymore, but no evidence to hold him, which was frustrating.
“I can’t believe he’d be a part of something like this, but that man—that man was not the one I know.”
Paige’s eyebrows rose.
“I’ll check their alibis, but Detective.”
“Yes, Chief?”
“I want this demon crap out of my parish.”
“I’ll do what I can.”
“And I want a report on the symbols, something I can actually put in a report.”
“Understood, Chief. I’ll get right on it.”
“I take it you’re well acquainted with writing feasible reports.”
She glanced at the camera in the corner. “I need my Grandmother to look at them. The killer spliced runes together. I think its crap, but she has a better understanding of this.”
“Normally, my answer would be no . . .”
“But today?”
He headed for the door. “I’m way out of my league on this one, Detective. Way out of my league.”
“Thanks, Chief.”
“Don’t thank me yet. Just make sure no one knows of her involvement. This case has enough problems already without adding a known witch into the legal investigation.”
Paige nodded. “Right, sir.”
“And, Whiskey.”
“Yes?”
“God be with you.”
There are billions of people on the planet.
You’re not alone.
If it feels like it,
you’re the only one who can fix that.
Artist:
Musica Cthulhiana
Albums: Fragment
IN THE REAL world, when cases didn’t immediately solve themselves, a person had two options. Well, two major options. Either sit around and run the information through the brain for hours and hours and hours on end, asking the same questions and going absolutely nowhere.
Or choose to do something else.
Paige had already been at it for hours and hours and hours. The evidence didn’t reveal anything new. She’d been lured to St. Francisville to summon a man who was part demon to open the Gates of Heaven and Hell.
Leaving was the best option, but she didn’t have the key and people weren’t safe yet.
Malika and Jones were involved, but couldn’t be the mastermind. The puppeteer was the real prize, the person she needed to catch. Running away and allowing him to remain free was a bad idea.
Dexx pushed away the to-go bag from the local sandwich shop and leaned on the table in her room. “How does the new ink feel?”
She shrugged. He’d put a new mark in the middle of her back, not permanent. “It feels like nothing. Like I said, I don’t need it.”
“Okay, whatever. Join us on the investigation tonight.”
Paige shook her head, staring at Ashley Fort’s file. “I don’t do ghost hunts, Dexx.”
“Why not? They’re fun.”
She gave him a deadpan look. “They’re ghost hunts.”
“And you’re a demon summoner. What’s the problem?”
She let out a long sigh. She just needed something to click. If they were really after Lucius, she was the wrong person for the job in the first place. He’d been a man. She did demons. Okay, so he was part demon or something due to him being immortal or whatever, but still the pieces didn’t fit. She’d missed something. But what? She had just enough pieces to see what kind of puzzle she was putting together. Not enough to complete it.
Dexx grabbed her hand, dragging her half-resisting out the door and down the stairs. She really did need a break and it had been a long time since she’d gone on a paranormal investigation.
The sun had set. The stars shone above the tree line as the cool breeze wafted around them. The moon played peak-a-boo behind wispy clouds that did little to blot out the rest of the
sky. The scent of flowers teased her nose. It was a gorgeous night.
“We’ll take my car,” Dexx said, pulling his keys out of his pocket.
“Aw, Jackie!” Paige grinned, putting her hands on the warm burgundy hood of the 1976 Dodge Challenger. She’d had some good memories with this car. She met Dexx’s gaze as something clicked. “So, all those cases you helped me out with in Denver.”
He raised his eyebrows, his lips flat. “Yup. Demons and all with you unaware.” He disappeared inside his car.
Paige let out a long breath. She should be pissed, but she’d already expended so much energy on being mad, she didn’t need to take it out on the one guy just trying to help.
The car was a dream, especially from the inside. She closed her eyes and enjoyed the moment. When Dexx brought Jackie to roaring life, Paige purred, her fingers stretching like a cat doing the happy-paw dance. She licked her lips, turning to Dexx, a slight smile on her face.
He wiggled his eyebrows and put the car in gear. “Just like old times.”
“Not like old times. I know what’s going on now.”
“Right.”
“Also, I’ve never been on one of Tru’s investigations with you.”
“You—wha—oh. Huh. Right.”
They hadn’t driven very far before Dexx glanced over at her. “Spill it. What’s eating at you?”
She looked at him with narrowed eyes. “What do you mean?”
He glanced in his rearview mirror. “Pea, I’ve seen you at your worst. You’re not going to scare me, you know.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“You’re brooding.”
Paige waved him off. That’s what she did, brood. “I’m working a case.”
“You forget. I’ve worked cases with you before. I know what ‘case face’ looks like.”
She rolled her eyes. They’d only worked two cases, but they’d spent a great deal of time together, and she couldn’t ignore the fact she’d allowed him to get close. She enjoyed his company. So, yeah. He did know when something was off. “This is my fault.”
Dexx’s face screwed up. “It’s not. Look, the—I don’t understand everything going on, but how much of this could be your fault?”
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