Poltergeist (Greywalker, Book 2)

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Poltergeist (Greywalker, Book 2) Page 19

by Kat Richardson


  Silence. I should have been embarrassed at the amusement I took in his annoyance, but I wasn’t. If it had been a Sherlock Holmes story it would have been titled “The Case of the Curious Brooch” and that amused me even more. And reminded me of Celia’s kleptomaniac habits.

  “Solis, was anything missing from Lupoldi’s apartment?”

  “It is difficult to say, since we don’t know what he owned.”

  “Would you even tell me?”

  There was that down-draining silence again. Then he replied with great care, “If you asked after a specific item, I might have to say no.”

  My mind raced. Solis was offering a hell of a favor. The brooch information must have piqued his interest enough to feel he owed me something in return, but being Solis, he could only bend himself so far and he’d already bent a lot with the information about Ken—paltry as it was. I would have to ask the right question—Solis might not even know it was important himself. There was something . . . I just knew it.

  “Did you find his wallet?”

  “We did.”

  “Did it seem to be intact? Money and credit cards still in it?”

  “Yes.”

  “Car keys?”

  “Mr. Lupoldi did not own or drive a car.”

  “Bicycle keys? I know he had one of those U-locks with the cylinder keys. Did you find a key like that?”

  “No keys.”

  “Not even the apartment key?”

  “No. I searched for them myself. Now that we’re done with the scene, the landlord will have to use his master copy to lock up, since no apartment keys have been recovered.”

  “You’re releasing the scene?”

  “We’ve taken all we can from it. The lab continues to analyze samples and fingerprints and to compare against any new ones I can supply.”

  I had a feeling he’d be supplying more samples soon, but relying on few. A lot of the tests and analyses take a while, so most forensic evidence is more important at trial than during the investigation. Solis would proceed with the more readily available evidence of people and their tendency to talk. The case was already a week old and unsolved, so Solis would be under pressure soon to show some progress. I shouldn’t have been surprised that he was picking my brain or willing to give up what might seem like worthless information in exchange.

  Whoever had those keys was likely to be Mark’s killer. Unless Celia had them. I’d have to find out if the poltergeist had been in Mark’s apartment when he died.

  I wished Solis luck and assured him I wouldn’t mention the missing keys to anyone—by which I meant anyone who might be connected to the case—and broke the connection.

  It wasn’t quite dark yet. The overcast sky made it seem much later, but it would do me no good to go looking for Carlos until the sun was fully set.

  I burned the last half hour of sunlight typing up a report for Tuckman. I planned to tell him there was no saboteur at the next day’s séance, but I’d have to have documents to prove it.

  When I was done, I drove up to Adult Fantasies—the twenty-four-hour “home of live girls” and a half acre of exotic fetish wear and sex toys—to ferret out Carlos, who besides being Cameron’s mentor also owned the place. If I appeared in person, he’d find it much harder to refuse my request. I hoped.

  For the most part, I despise and avoid vampires—when I’m not revolted and in terror of them. They rarely needed my help as much as they wanted to command my obedience, and I didn’t go in for that. I’d been pulled into their byzantine politics and personal wars once and had no desire to be pulled in again. They were unpleasant, manipulative, arrogant, and selfish, and their presence often made me physically ill, even when on their best behavior. I also owed part of my strange, irremediable connection to the Grey to one and I consider that grudge-worthy.

  The employees in the shop had changed since my last visit. The current crop had a kind of Stepford genericness to them—as if Carlos had decided it was better to hire people easy to forget to work in a place most people tried not to remember. A man wearing a T-shirt with the words “I wasn’t there and you can’t prove it” on it told me Carlos was out and hadn’t been coming in much lately. I guessed the new employees were also more trustworthy than the previous crop.

  After I’d fenced with him for a while and given him my card, the T-shirt man made a phone call. His eyebrows went up as he listened; then he hung up and looked me over. Curiosity gleamed on his face like sweat.

  “He says to meet him at Green Lake on the south side of the community center. He said he’ll smell you coming.”

  For a moment, I felt chilled. Carlos scared me more than most—but not all—of his kind. A powerful bloodsucker, he was also a necromancer. He could see, touch, and taste the ghosts and Grey bits that clung to me and was an intimate of death and dead things. I’d almost gotten him killed for good and all once and I still wasn’t sure how he felt about that, no matter how many favors might be owed otherwise. I supposed I was going to find out.

  I drove north to the gemlike park around Green Lake, slowed by the remaining tail of rush-hour traffic on Aurora.

  The last time I’d seen him, he’d still been a cinder creature with charred skin cracking on burned bones and clothed in the reek of destruction. I wasn’t sure what to expect in either looks or attitude since then.

  I was glad there were people on the streets. Joggers wearing headlights and reflective vests ran on the path around the lake and neighborhood people came and went through the doors of the restaurants and bars across the street. I hoped I had nothing to fear, but even a busy, human-rich environment couldn’t protect me from Carlos if he chose to kill me.

  I felt him long before I laid eyes on him. A pitching, queasy sensation in my guts and a shiver of icicles up my spine alerted me. Light from the windows of the community center picked out his silhouette but didn’t seem to penetrate the dark clot of bleeding Grey that hunched around him. I could see his eyes spark as they met mine, but he stayed still and let me walk almost to the water to meet him.

  Up close, I could see that his skin was patterned with scars in coiling loops and baroque twists. He’d regained his intimidating height and breadth, but his black beard and hair were thin. He held himself stiffer than I remembered, but he still had the posture of a poised tiger. His eyes remained black pits that burned with intimations of Hell, even more horrible among the scars.

  He gave me half a nod before I could speak. “Blaine. Let’s walk,” he added, tipping his head toward the water. “I imagine your business with me won’t bear the scrutiny of daylighters.”

  It seemed Carlos no longer considered me one of the daylight people. I knew I had moved a bit sideways of normal, but I wasn’t one of his own. He wasn’t causing me the sickening discomfort I would have expected if he were angry, but Carlos was tricky and mercurial in his temper, so I went beside him warily.

  We turned together and began walking along the lakeside path. “What is it you want?”

  “A young man was killed last week,” I started. He cast me a sideways glance. “It seemed to be an accident, but it’s mysterious and the cops are treating it as a murder. I . . . have an interest in the case and I need to know if a ghost was on the scene when it happened.”

  “Can you not tell?”

  “No. I don’t have that sort of skill. And it’s not a normal type of ghost.”

  Carlos had developed a small unevenness in his stride. “And what do you want of me?”

  “Is this some kind of ritual? That I have to be explicit with you or you won’t help me?”

  His mouth quirked in cruel amusement, which sent my stomach on a crash dive. “It is. So be explicit.”

  I swallowed before replying. “You owe me a favor for checking on Cameron’s . . . mistake. I need to know if the ghost in question was there and what it did. So I am asking you to come and see the scene and tell me what you can.”

  “Where?”

  “It’s an apartment in Fremont. The
cops are done with it and the key is missing, so I think we should have no problem getting in, as long as we’re discreet.”

  “Ah. ‘We.’ You still accept equal risk. That’s good. You do this for yourself, none other?”

  “If you mean is someone else controlling me, no. This is strictly my side of the daylight.”

  “Such as it is. Your daylight is darker than most.”

  “Yes.” I made myself level my gaze and look without flinching into his hell-depth eyes. “Are you going to help me out or not?”

  He chuckled a small earthquake through my bones. “When?” “Tonight, I’d hoped.”

  His eyebrows quirked. “Tomorrow. I’ve already given you too much of my time tonight.”

  “Then why did you?” I blurted.

  He cupped one giant hand over my left shoulder and drew something off me, flicking it away like lint—perhaps some remnant of Celia. I shuddered and felt a hot twisting thrum in my chest and down my arms. He crossed his own arms over his chest and looked down at me. “You continue to interest me, Blaine. And as you say, I owe you. I’ll go with you tomorrow, though I don’t guarantee that what I can tell you will be to your liking.”

  “It never has been.”

  “When it is, I shall be very surprised. Come here tomorrow night at the same time and we’ll see what there is to dislike.”

  I was dismissed and I left him, feeling the hot/cold bore of his watching gaze as I walked away.

  NINETEEN

  I was roused out of bed early Wednesday by the wretched intru-sion of the cell phone’s happy burp. I remembered now why I had resisted them for so long. No one likes a chirpy morning person—especially an electronic one—when they’ve slept like Pinkerton. Carlos’s touch on my shoulder had set off a buzzing, burning sensation in my body that had left me with bad dreams and restless sleep.

  Snatching the phone from its charger I snapped at it, “Hello.”

  “Ms. Blaine, I’m concerned, in light of Sunday’s events, to have outside confirmation of the monitoring equipment for today’s session.”

  It took me a moment to put the voice and information into context. “Tuckman, it’s seven a.m. Your session isn’t until three thirty.”

  “Yes. I’m making a last-minute request. I thought you’d appreciate as much time as possible to accommodate it,” Tuckman replied. His voice oozed condescension. “You appear to have an electronics expert you trust to vet this. I’d like you and your expert to reexamine the room and observe the session to confirm our procedure is as documented.”

  “Look, Dr. Tuckman, my expert doesn’t work for free and may not even be available on such short notice.” My brain was kicking into gear and I wondered if I could get ahold of Quinton so early. He kept bandicoot’s hours. “This is a bit of an intrusion and I suspect he’ll charge extra for it, if I can get him at all.”

  “Immaterial. Whatever got past us last time mustn’t happen again. I’ve spent a lot of time on the phone with the subjects to get them to try one more time. I even had to concede to this ridiculous idea that Mark Lupoldi is haunting them. I’ve put some additional safeguards in place and added some additional protocols and checks to document the session. But they have to be inspected and checked off by an independent expert before the session. We only have today.”

  I hesitated.

  Tuckman lost his cool. “Damn it! I’ve been up all night to do this!” I didn’t know if it was caused by exhaustion or fear, but the sudden whining snap to his voice got me raising my eyebrows.

  “Calm down, Dr. Tuckman,” I soothed. “I’ll get it done.”

  “I have to have outside corroboration.” I could hear him breathing fast.

  “I understand. I’ll set it up as quickly as I can. Make sure the room is locked and remains that way until we get there unless you’re in it. No one else should enter that room, if possible. If they have to, you need to be with them and watching them every second, or you can’t guarantee that the room is properly controlled. And the same goes for the observation room. No access to anyone but you until I get there.”

  Tuckman took a long, deep breath and let it out slowly. That reminded me of the relaxation breathing I’d been forgetting to practice myself. “All right. I’ll make sure it’s secure. I’ll have Terry deliver my lecture so I can keep working on the room.” Lucky break for Terry—I imagined Tuckman’s ego didn’t allow anyone else much time in his limelight.

  “Good. I’ll see you later.”

  I dragged myself through a short run and a shower, followed by an argument with the ferret over the ownership of a banana she had tried to stuff into her mayonnaise jar. I always won, but the look she gave me made me feel guilty. Yet another reason not to have kids: if a two-pound ferret had me wrapped around her tiny toes, I’d be a full-time hostage to a child.

  I violated the law and used the cell phone while driving. The height of living dangerously, considering the merry oblivion practiced by most Seattle drivers. You can spot a coffee mug or briefcase riding on a car roof every morning commute.

  I had to leave a message for Quinton getting him up to speed on the situation and asking him to call me back soon.

  He returned the call a little after ten. He agreed to do it and estimated it would take two to three hours to complete the job and document it. I suggested we meet at the Merchants Cafe for lunch at eleven and go on from there.

  “I hope he’s prepared to pay well for all of this,” Quinton said.

  “He is.”

  “Good, ’cause I’ve never met the guy but I’m pretty sure I won’t like him. Working for jerks costs extra and working for jerks on short notice is even more,” he added, then yawned. “I’ll see you at eleven.”

  Tuckman was grading papers on the séance table when we arrived. His condescending sneer came out when Quinton walked in, but it vanished once the work began. Quinton’s odd but thorough, and I had to smile a little at Tuckman’s surprise over the scruffy technician’s abilities. Quinton found several flaws in the installation of Tuckman’s new toys and deftly rewired them as the psychologist watched. He also produced a complicated form on a clipboard and asked a bunch of questions about the previous installation, nodding and frowning and making notes.

  After a while, he handed me the clipboard and asked me to fill in some blanks as he called things out. Then he stalked around the room with his tools and meters, testing the repaired circuits and running through an extended version of the same baseline performance he’d done the last time. We were done at ten to three and Quinton took the clipboard back from me to add some more notes and his signature.

  Tuckman handed him an additional form and pointed to a place for another signature, saying, “You’ll need to stay for the session and confirm the operation of the equipment.”

  Quinton shrugged and signed without looking up. “It’s your money.” He handed the whole sheaf of forms to Tuckman.

  Tuckman looked a bit pale when Quinton told him how much money, but he agreed. When he reached for his checkbook I said I’d add it to the bill—Quinton worked on a cash-only basis, which Tuckman found amusing.

  The observation room was packed once Terry arrived. The close quarters and lack of sleep made me feel raw. In the séance room, the sitters seemed nervous and keyed up, too. Their chatter was more shrill than usual and the meters showed spikes of sound and energy as the participants moved and talked, settling themselves for whatever was going to happen. No one seemed to have any doubt that something would.

  Patricia put a spray of dried flowers in the center of the table and fussed with them as the others walked around. Something Grey and powerful was visible to me in there, even though the glass made it fuzzy and ill defined. I could see the swirling yellow mass I associated with Celia and feel the surge of cold. I heard Dale Stahlqvist and Wayne Hopke on the audio monitor arguing about the possibility of Mark’s ghost appearing.

  “Does anything look odd to you guys?” I asked, half expecting that they could see the
strong Grey activity, too.

  Terry and Quinton looked down at the boards as the participants gathered around the table. “Some of these EM readings are higher than normal,” Terry said. “The new room barometer is also indicating rising pressure. We’ll have to compare it to the outside pressure later. Those guys are kind of wound up, though, so it could just be that.”

  I nodded and looked back into the room. My earlier fatigue had revved up to nervousness, though I thought I shouldn’t care.

  The group had distributed themselves around the table at equal distances so their fingertips, resting lightly on the surface, never touched one another’s. Ian had ended up almost sideways to the mirror between Cara and Wayne with Ana on Wayne’s other side. Ken was right in front of the mirror between Ana and Patricia, who had Dale Stahlqvist on her left looking straight into the booth. Cara—the cut on her cheek still covered in a gauze patch—had the spot between Dale and Ian. Someone had turned on the stereo and it let a smoky blues guitar bleed moodily into the room.

  Wayne cleared his throat and started to speak, but Dale Stahlqvist cut him off. “Good afternoon, Celia,” he started, giving Wayne a sharp glare. “Are you with us?”

  The table bulged upward in the middle, deforming like a balloon filling with air. Its metal-shod feet dug at the carpet and the flowers slid off onto the rug. I felt my own knot of Grey tighten in my chest and the air in the booth tasted metallic.

  Terry looked up from his display of monitoring instruments. He sounded worried. “I’m seeing a static charge building up. And the temperature in the séance room is dropping.”

  “What?” Tuckman demanded. “How much?”

  “Five degrees in one minute,” he said, shaking his head and staring back down at the panel. “Most of my electrical monitors are acting up. I’m guessing magnetic interference. . . .”

  “It was clear during the tests,” Quinton stated. “It’s not the new equipment—that’s working fine.”

  A thunderclap cracked the air of the experiment room.

  The participants looked nervous, shooting glances at one another from the corners of their eyes. I could see the hazy yellow wad of energy was now streaked with sudden jagged welts of red. As I stared, the haze seemed to pull into pieces and draw back together, then apart, drifting from the center of the table toward the participants. The largest clouds of energy moved toward Ken, Ana, Ian, and Cara, fired with red and yellow flashes. Smaller balls like heat lightning twitched in the direction of Wayne, Patricia, and Dale.

 

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