by Patti Larsen
Her computer pinged, pulling both of their attention toward it. Kinsey clicked the new email icon and rapidly read through the info, noting out of the corner of her eye how Gerri leaned in to devour it with her.
Hey Kins, dug this up. So much for supernatural.
Ron
The email showed the symbol for “not human” next to a report. A police report. A local biker gang, the Divinities. From the details, the gang was growing in affluence and suspected to be now working out of Silver City just down the coast, used the same symbol for their tag.
“Biker gang affiliation.” Gerri sounded relieved as Kinsey’s heart sank, though she shook off her disappointment along with the remaining urge to sway Gerri to her way of thinking. A private fear whispered to her it was just her imagination, anyway, this “thing” she thought she possessed, this ability to influence those around her. She let it go as she considered the source of the information at hand. Dr. Ron Watson, a friend and fellow anthropologist in Los Angeles, was a big help with symbology, but not so much with proving her theory about paranormals. “Thanks, Kins.” Gerri stood up, grinning now, at ease all over again.
“It could also be someone trying to throw you off their trail.” Kinsey hated to play devil’s advocate on her own theories, but it was true. She understood enough of human behavior to know if she was going to commit murder, she’d make damned sure to do everything she could to push the police off her trail. Funny how her mind worked.
“Which would imply premeditation and a hell of a lot of planning.” Gerri shook her head. “It makes more sense Aisling might have had a run-in with the gang and they targeted her as a hate crime.” She shrugged, as though shaking off the last of the stress the conversation caused her. “I’m going to go have a talk with the rival queen.” She hesitated a moment, green eyes clouding over while Kinsey tensed, waiting for Gerri to speak again. She’d always been like this, reserved and withdrawn about certain things. Kinsey learned their first year in college together to be patient with Gerri. There were those who misread her, who saw her as a dumb athlete, a rock-hard woman with a brain to match. But Kinsey knew better. Gerri was the deepest, most brilliant person Kinsey had ever met, too smart sometimes. When Gerri spoke again, though, Kinsey couldn’t hide her surprise. “I’d like you to come with me.”
“Me?” Damn the squeak in her voice. Kinsey lunged to her feet, knowing she was grinning, unable to stop herself. How cool was this?
Gerri rolled her eyes, held up one hand, the other on her hip. The flash of her badge, unintentional Kinsey was sure, helped cool her jets a bit. This wasn’t a game or fun or a dig into a culture for research. It was murder. And yet…
So. Cool.
“I can’t take Pierce with me,” Gerri growled. “He’s an asshole.” Kinsey nodded, keeping her lips pressed tight together to prevent an unfortunate blurt that might change Gerri’s mind. “And, if there is something… weird going on,” Gerri’s exhale almost made Kinsey giggle, “you’d know it, right?”
How would she? But she wasn’t about to say no. Gerri needed her. Sure, yeah, that was why her heart pounded in excitement at the thought of joining her friend in an investigation.“Just, keep your eyes open,” Gerri said, resigned look on her face too comical. Kinsey couldn’t help herself. She grinned all over again.
“You got it, partner.” Kinsey grabbed her jacket, turned back to Gerri who stared out the window, lost in thought with a frown creasing her brow. “What about Pierce?” Kinsey wasn’t afraid of him or anything. He barely spoke two words to her since she met him a week ago. She wasn’t a fan, but had the impression Gerri was stuck with him.
“He’s busy.” When Gerri met her eyes, she was smiling, an evil gleam in her eye. “I hope he likes the morgue.”
Kinsey winced, feeling suddenly sorry for Ray. Then shrugged it off, eagerly following Gerri out of her office while madly texting Mitchell to take over her first year Thursday intro class. Their coroner friend was a big girl. She could take care of herself.
***
INT. – SILVER CITY MORGUE – AFTERNOON
Ray bit back her temper, slim fingers holding the scalpel in her grip so tight she was surprised it didn't bend under the pressure. Her eyes locked on Detective Pierce’s jugular as he leaned over the edge of the slab and winked at her.
Close enough the sharp blade would reach. One little slice—
She let out a tight breath and forced a smile, her precise British upbringing refusing to allow her such respite. “You’re touching the body,” she said, hopefully with the same chill as the refrigerated drawers where the dead were kept.
He leaned away, but not by much, the stench of whatever cologne he thought appealing wafting toward her through a mix of decay and the rank, sharp smell of disinfectant. “You didn’t answer my question.”
Ray sighed, forcing her fingers to release the scalpel handle, the ring of the implement falling to the stainless steel tray carrying through the room. She looked down into the staring, milky eyes of the dead dancer and did her best to be patient.
Mummy would approve.
“No,” she said, knowing her West London accent grew in influence as she went on. “I do not have a guy keeping me warm at night.” She swiveled her head to glare at him, “nor do I need one. No,” she tilted her head to one side, dark ponytail falling over her shoulder, “I’m not interested in having a drink with you. And no.” Ray turned her back on him, wondering if Gerri would miss him, if anyone would, if he happened to meet an unfortunate end. “My answers will never, ever change.” She turned back with a bright smile, one Mummy carefully cultivated, used best on old codgers with wandering hands and lords who thought they could sample a pretty girl’s bottom with a pat or two.
If only Detective Pierce actually had a brain. Perhaps then he might get the hint without her having to murder him.
He circled the table, hands held out in supplication, what he must have thought to be a sexy look on his face. And, she had to admit as she observed with critical eyes, he was certainly handsome. For a man. But, considering her proclivities leaned in other, more feminine, directions and the fact there was something simply wretched about him she couldn’t put her finger on—besides his terrible timing and pick up lines—Ray felt ill at ease in his presence.
“Come on,” he said, winking one of those blue eyes at her in a way that triggered nervousness. Here was a man who would not take no for an answer. She’d met his kind before and backed up a pace when he came closer. “Give a guy a shot.”
Ray’s insides quivered, memory flashing across her mind as she gripped the edge of the second slab behind her, this one empty. Gerald hadn’t believed she wasn’t interested, either. And tried to convince her by force. While she’d escaped physically unscathed from her mother’s third husband’s attention, it still sent chills through her.
And triggered her anger, at last, if only enough to keep her from running from the room. Ray pushed off from the slab and straightened her shoulders, wishing Robert would come back from lunch with his fiancée and give her an excuse to kick Jackson out. Backup. She needed backup.
Why would Gerri send him here for her to deal with?
“Your being a ‘guy’ is, as it turns out, the main source of your problem.” She pushed past Pierce, nostrils flaring from tension, retrieving her scalpel. The moment she had it in her grip again, she felt better, safer. There was no way he would attack her here, if anywhere. Her confidence increased as she forced herself to examine the body before her, if only to lock Pierce out.
As always, the sight of cold, pale skin under the bright light of her spots helped settle her. Work was an easy place to retreat to, the silent call of the dead to answer the questions their bodies hid from her. So many stab wounds. So much hate behind the thrusts of the blade. And the symbols carved carefully in to the flesh, six of them, in a line from shoulder to shoulder.
His scent jolted, the proximity of his body sending a shiver up her spine. Ray refused to show h
im her unease, speaking again, since he was obviously as dense as a brick wall. “Not only am I not interested in ‘guys’,” she prodded one of the stab wounds with a gloved finger, observing the edges, knowing ignoring him would just make him angry and actually okay with that, “but even if I were, at this point, your pathetic attempts to convince me of your attractiveness as a sexual partner would encourage me to bat for the other team.” When she looked up and met his eyes, the anger in his gaze made her pause again. He was even closer than she first thought, barely inches from her, his tall, broad body pinning her against the slab.
She gripped the blade in her fingers tighter and told herself she’d kill him if she had to. No hesitation.
But, her words did the trick. He shook his head, backed off, hands in his pockets, mouth turned down in a scowl reminding her of a sulky boy. Suddenly, she felt better, confidence returning, memories of the past washed away with the joy of victory. Vindictiveness, a feeling she hated most of the time because it reminded her of her mother, replaced her ill ease. Normally, she would compress it, dispel it from her mind. But, today, she needed its strength and embraced it whole heartedly.
Really, she was worried about this pathetic little man and his ego? An indelicate snort accompanied the thought.
“I need your autopsy report.” Hostility had replaced his attempt at familiarity, only solidifying her feeling of success. She’d gotten to him and held him there, in place, pinned with the coldness of her best British stare. His attitude was perfect. Just what she needed to push her the rest of the way out of any kind of nervous and into fuck you, asshole. “You’ll get it,” she said, “when it’s done. Which, I might say, would go faster if you stopped bothering me.”
Detective Pierce just glared. “At least confirm cause of death.” How sweet, trying to salvage his ego. Fine, she’d allow that, as long as he acted like a damned professional from now on and not a bloody plonker.
“Multiple sharp force trauma.” She shrugged, gesturing at the body.
“How many multiple?” He didn’t look down, stared at her.
“Over thirty,” Ray said. “Definitely a crime of passion.”
Detective Pierce grunted, finally pulled out his notepad, jotting down the number. “Would have to be,” he said. “No way some random murderer hits this freak that many times without a good reason.” He glanced down at the naked victim at last before looking away quickly with a shot of disgust on his face. For the dead? Or because she was transitioning? Her carefully constructed breasts were ruined now, the saline bags exposed. Whoever attacked her focused on the newly female physical parts, but left the male sex organs alone. Ray had winced earlier, undressing and cleaning the body as she examined it. The penis and testicles had been taped with severity she’d rarely witnessed, to the point she wondered if a vaginal reconstruction from the tissue would have been possible with surgery. The lack of circulation had to take its toll.
Ray felt sadness wash over her at the sight of the dancer who called herself Aisling. The dichotomy of her femaleness clashing against the sagging masculinity between her legs. Ray might not have desired to change her sex this way, counted herself fortunate to merely be lesbian and not transsexual in desperate need to turn her body to her true orientation, but she understood what it was like to feel different.
When Detective Pierce met her eyes again, she knew he was homophobic. Or, at the very least, a hater of all things out of place. And that infuriated her even more. Which was exactly what she was hoping for.
“If you’ll excuse me,” she said, calling up Mummy and her bossy, professional socialite persona, “I have work to do. I assume, so do you.”
He finally left, thank goodness. She wasn’t sure how much more of him she could take. And, naturally, the moment he did, one of the attendants returned, though not her Robert. Ray did her best not to glare at the technician, though she aimed a curse at the young woman in her head for her poor timing and total lack of attention, head bobbing to some music piping directly to her brain from her headphones.
This wasn’t about Ray, though. It was about Aisling. Adam Rose, born in the wrong body, with a soul she was certain didn’t fit her masculine form. Ray whispered a soft apology over the cold, dead flesh, knowing Aisling was long gone, but hoping she could hear her anyway.
She tapped the tape recorder with one finger and began her report.
“Autopsy of Adam Rose, stage name Aisling, twenty-two years old. Male.” She cleared her throat. “Transitioning to female.” And asked Aisling to forgive her. “Height, 5’6”, weight 130 pounds.” Ray double checked the scale marker on the table before going on. “Victim sustained multiple sharp force trauma to the torso and neck, thirty two punctures in all.” Ray lifted the first sheet of X-Rays, the thin plastic held up to the light as she crossed the room, sliding it into the lightbox for a closer look. “Death occurred at approximately 3:15am on Friday the 13th.” How odd, that. Coincidences of such kinds always made Ray shake her head. Superstitious though it was, she couldn’t help herself.
The plastic slipped under the clip, film settling over the glass. Ray hit the switch on the side of the box, scanning the chest image quickly before realizing something was terribly wrong.
Her eyes widened, pulse pounding heavily in her chest as she realized what she was looking at, before she turned to stare at the body in shock.
Because Aisling wasn’t right. She wasn’t right at all.
***
***
INT. – ROXY’S APARTMENT - AFTERNOON
Kinsey hovered beside Gerri as her taller friend knocked firmly on the worn paint of the apartment door. The 6 in the 26 slid sideways, turning into a 9 that hung unhappily below its more firmly attached partner. The scent of burning popcorn and the faint taint of mildew hung in the air of the dank hallway, the carpet under her feet sticking occasionally to the underside of her boots.
Nothing could staunch Kinsey’s excitement at being here, not even when Gerri’s phone rang and she turned away to answer it, leaving Kinsey alone, eyes wide and mouth open, as the door to the apartment jerked inward, exposing a small, fine-boned woman with giant blonde hair and far too much makeup on, even for two thirty in the afternoon.
“Yes?” She clutched at the opening of her robe, nails arching in fake bridges of acrylic, painted so red Kinsey thought immediately of the blood the night before, pooled on and around Aisling. Gerri raised one hand, fingers flicking at her while she whispered into her phone a few steps away. Kinsey planted an apologetic smile on her face and addressed the woman.
“We’re with Silver City police,” she said, wishing she had a badge to flash. Wouldn’t that be awesome? Maybe Gerri would let her have one, just for emergencies.
The woman’s face tightened, little nose turning upward as she gave Kinsey the once over.
“You’re no cop,” she said, though her gaze did flicker to Gerri. Her irises were a vibrant violet, the edges of her contact lenses showing in the faint light reflecting from the window at the end of the hall. Kinsey thought they were a beautiful match to the silver and lavender eye shadow, if a bit showy for her taste. “That one is, though.”
“We just have a few questions.” Kinsey glanced at Gerri who was frowning. “May we come in?”
The woman shrugged, the faintest hint of stubble on the edge of her cheek. Kinsey gulped, realizing that, like the victim, this was a... her mind tried very hard to come up with the politically correct terminology, hating herself for not being instantly comfortable with Roxy. That was better. Names were better than labels. Still stiff, though, and considering her job, how she, of all people, should understand the social dynamics of the woman’s culture, Kinsey felt awkward and uncomfortable behind her smile.
This had to be Roxy, the rival queen, as Gerri called her. Kinsey followed her inside, glancing over her shoulder at the detective who remained in the hall, whispering into her phone as though angry about something. The thrill of being on an interrogation returned and Kinsey se
t aside her discomfort with trying so hard not to offend Roxy in favor of hunting for clues.
Weird, Gerri said. Look for weird. As if Kinsey looked for anything but.
Roxy turned partway through the tiny kitchen that was the entry to her apartment. Her ancient refrigerator hummed and vibrated as it settled, the small counter worn and old but, nonetheless, tidy. As was the rest of the place, as far as Kinsey could tell. So, maybe not wealthy, but cared about not only her appearance but that of her home.
Said a lot about a person.
“I take it there’s a reason for your visit?” Roxy headed for the counter, pouring a cup of coffee that made Kinsey’s mouth water, though that ended when Roxy poured an excess of sugar and milk into it. Shudder. Coffee was meant to be served hot and black, enjoyed for its natural, robust flavor. Oddly, she found Roxy dipped in her estimation as she spoke.
“We’re here because of Aisling.” Nothing weird as far as she could tell so far, except the pile of costumes on a chair just past the kitchen, though Kinsey didn’t think it weird in the paranormal sense. More weird as in why would someone so neat would leave her costumes out?
“Aisling? What about her?” Roxy’s finger nails tapped against the side of her mug.
“The murder last night.” Kinsey really wished Gerri would hurry up. This questioning thing was supposed to go the other way around, wasn’t it? She realized she’d rather observe than participate after all.