Darci nodded her head wisely.
“What?” I asked.
“Don’t you know any of the superstitions concerning witches?”
I heard the exasperation in her voice, but I didn’t understand why.
I threw my hands in the air. “What’s a girl getting sick have to do with superstition?”
Darci rolled her eyes at my ignorance. “At one time, people believed seizures, or fits, were caused by the victim being possessed.”
“So?”
“By a witch,” she said with emphasis on the word witch.
I stood and walked over to the edge of my patio. “You’re saying someone thought I’d hexed that girl?”
Darci came to stand beside me. “Yes. You were arguing with her and she fell down in a fit.”
“Okay, someone thought I was a witch and caused the girl to get sick. But it doesn’t explain why someone killed Brian, why they did what they did to him. The wounds, the star carved on his forehead—”
Darci grabbed my arm, stopping me. “What star?”
I took the clip out of my hair and smoothed it flat. “A five-pointed star. The police have never released that piece of information, but I saw the star in my vision.”
“Can you show me?”
“Sure, it’s just a star.” I bent down, and with a stick, drew the star I’d seen in my dreams in the dirt. Throwing the stick away, I stood and looked at Darci.
Her eyes were wide and her hand covered her mouth. Slowly she lowered her hand and turned to me. As she did, her eyes filled with tears.
“That’s not only a star, it’s a pentagram.”
My god, she was right! We’d all been so sure Brian had been killed by a serial killer that I’d never made the connection between the marks on his body and my heritage. The pentagram—the mark of the witch. I suddenly felt like I was standing in a pit and the walls were closing in. And from the pit, I watched the tears trickle down Darci’s face, while her voice sounded very far away.
“I don’t think the killer intended to kill Brian. You—he wanted to kill you.”
Twenty-Eight
The sun was getting higher in the sky and clouds were building in the west. There’ll be rain before nightfall, I thought from where I sat on the cold concrete.
Birds flew over the trees that circled my backyard. Is one of them my hawk, I wondered? I wish I was with him now.
Queenie lay in the grass near me, watching a robin hop around, hunting for worms. Her predator eyes gleamed and the tip of her tail twitched slowly back and forth. She’d never catch him if she pounced. The robin was too far away.
Lady was on the ground next to me, her head in my lap. When I’d sank to the patio, my legs no longer able to support my weight, she’d plopped down near me. With a whimper, she’d snuggled close.
Darci sat at my other side, slowly rubbing my back while I stared at nothing in particular.
Everything looked so normal.
I made a derisive snort. Normal? Nothing is normal, especially me. And because of my oddity, because of who and what I am, my best friend Brian had been killed.
And what about Gus? A low groan came from deep in my throat. Am I responsible for Gus too?
I looked at Darci, questioning, “Gus? Do you think Gus was killed because of me too?”
Darci shook my arm in irritation. “Gus and Brian weren’t killed because of you. They were killed because some sicko believes in old superstitions.”
“But if Gus hadn’t spoken to me at the meeting, maybe the killer wouldn’t have tied him to me.”
She shook my arm again. “Snap out of the guilt trip,” she said sternly. “You said you didn’t know if the energy you felt was directed at you. Maybe it was at Gus. Maybe the killer went to the meeting to find you, but then zeroed in on Gus.”
“But why Gus?”
“He had a squint,” she said, her eyes focused on Queenie as she made a mighty leap and missed the robin completely.
Her words soaked through my misery. “‘A squint’? I don’t understand.”
“You really need to read more about witches,” she said patting my leg. “A squint is the mark of the evil eye.”
“A squint means the person can curse someone simply by looking at them? That’s crazy.”
“The killer’s sane?”
“I get your point,” I mumbled. “But he’s going to kill people because they squint?”
“He might”—she trailed off—“if you and Comacho don’t stop him. Listen, he thinks he’s a witch hunter and he’s hunting you. If you don’t quit feeling guilty, you could screw up and he might get lucky and kill you. Then Abby could be next.”
I scrambled to my feet and whipped out my cell phone. I quickly punched in the number for Abby’s room.
“Hello,” Mother answered.
“Is everything okay?”
“Yes. Arthur is still here and we were talking about going down to the cafeteria. Why?”
“I think it would be better if you went one at a time.”
“You don’t want your grandmother left alone. Is that it?”
“Yeah. I know there’s a guard, but I’d feel better knowing either you or Arthur were with her too. I’ll explain later.”
“All right, dear,” she said and hung up.
I jumped when my cell phone rang as I was putting it back in my pocket. Opening it, I answered, “Hello.”
“You were right. Something’s weird about the bottle,” Comacho said without preamble.
I couldn’t see the expression on his face, naturally, but I bet he about choked on the words “You were right.” I tried not to gloat.
“Hey, you still there? Did you hear me?” he asked.
“Yes.” I moved over to the side of the house and leaned against the siding. “What did the lab find?”
“The bottle did contain urine, but it had been wiped clean, no fingerprints at all.”
“Teenagers wouldn’t have bothered to wipe off the prints before they chucked the bottle in the ditch,” I speculated.
“That’s what I think too.”
“What rattled in the bottle?”
I felt Comacho weighing his words before answering my question.
“Nine bent nails. And get this. The urine had human hair in it.” He hesitated. “Since you’re supposed to be a witch—”
“What did you say?” I interrupted.
“You heard me,” he growled. “Is the stuff in the bottle a spell—or what?”
“Does the question mean you believe me?”
“No.” His voice sounded positive. “It means I’m a cop and it’s my job to examine all the angles, even if I think they’re wacky.”
“I see. Sorry, Abby’s the spell expert not me.”
“But don’t you guys write this stuff down? Don’t you have some recipe?”
“You mean like ‘eye of newt, hair of toad. Bubble, bubble; toil and trouble’?” I asked.
Comacho missed the sarcasm. “Yeah.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” I said, my tone derisive.
I wasn’t the only one who needed to read up on witches. Comacho’s only frame of reference was obviously TV shows. I intended to set him straight.
“There are books, journals, handed down from mother to daughter, and I know Abby has them,” I explained. “But I’ve already told you: What we do isn’t about charms and curses. Our magick is about using the energy around us to heal and help. Whatever was in that bottle was meant to hurt; Abby wouldn’t have anything like that written in her journal. Even to write the words, the spell, used in that bottle would give off enough bad vibes to hurt someone.”
“Would you at least look?”
“Yes.”
“Good,” he said, satisfied. “One more thing, tomorrow I’m going to check out the stores in Des Moines that sell this particular wine, see if anyone remembers someone buying it recently. Do you want to go with me?”
Shocked, I almost dropped my phone.
“Sure,” I said.
Wait a second. This was too easy. Comacho had fought my involvement in his investigation from the start. Why the sudden change?
“Why do want me to go with you?” I asked, trying to keep the suspicion out of my voice.
“’Cause if you’re with me, you won’t be getting into any more trouble.”
The line went dead.
Clicking the phone shut, I walked over to Darci.
“That was Comacho. The bottle we found had nine bent nails, human hair, and urine in it. Since you’ve been doing so much reading, any idea what the bottle could mean?” I asked.
Darci pursed her lips. “Hmm,” she said, thinking. “No, but I’ll see what I can find out.”
I placed my hand on her shoulder. “Listen to me carefully, Darci. I only want you to do research. No going off on your own, snooping around, okay?”
Her eyes slid over to the circle of trees. “Okay.”
I gave her shoulder a little squeeze. “I mean it, Darci.”
“I thought I heard voices back here,” said a voice coming around the corner of the house.
We both jumped at the same time.
“Gosh, Bill, you startled me,” I said.
“Sorry. I knocked, but no one answered. I saw Darci’s car and I figured you might be out here.” He looked up at the sky. “Nice day, isn’t it?”
“Yes, but I think there’ll be rain before tonight.”
He sniffed the air. “Maybe.”
“I know you’re not here to talk about the weather. What’s up?”
“First, I hear Abby’s better?”
“Yes. Thank you for posting the guard on her room. We appreciate it.”
“No problem. What with her greenhouse getting trashed and someone attacking her, it makes sense they might try something foolish again. We’ve got a car going by the house every so often too.”
“That’s good to know.”
“Ahh…” Bill twirled his hat in his hand. “Henry said you know Gus Pike’s dead.”
“Yes,” I answered sadly.
“Know anything about an anonymous tip we got on the weapon the killer used to mark Gus?” he asked, suddenly catching me off-guard.
“No.”
“Didn’t think so. At first, we thought the tip came from Olive Martin, but now we know it was a setup. Someone’s idea of a joke,” he said, looking squarely at Darci.
She smiled, twisting a strand of hair with her finger. “Was Olive upset?”
“A little,” he said, giving Darci a stern look.
She smiled back at him, not saying anything.
He turned the look to me. “We’ve got a killer on the loose and I intend to catch him. Last fall you almost got yourself killed ’cause you stuck your nose in the wrong person’s business.”
I knew where he was going with this. I held up my hand, stopping him.
“I know what you’re going to say, Bill. ‘Stay out of it.’”
“Right, I am. Trust Henry and me to do our jobs.”
I looked up at the clouds blowing in, not meeting Bill’s eyes. “I will.”
He made a small noise in his throat as if he didn’t believe me.
“Well, I warned you,” he muttered softly.
“Do you have any idea who attacked Abby?” I asked, changing the subject.
“No. I questioned Harley. Wanted to talk to Kyle, but he’s gone, of course. We’re tracking him down.”
“Wait a second. Kyle’s gone?” I asked, surprised.
“Yeah, didn’t you hear? PP International pulled out sometime in the middle of the night. Wednesday, the night Abby was hurt. Packed up all those hogs and took off. All that’s left are empty buildings and a lagoon full of crap the county’s going to have to take care of.”
Shocked, I glanced at Darci. She shrugged and shook her head.
“Comacho never said anything about PP International leaving,” I said.
“He didn’t find out about it till last night,” Bill replied.
“Does that mean those goons they brought in might’ve been responsible for the attack on Abby? They’re guilty and now they’re running?”
Bill scratched his head. “I doubt it, but I’m checking. I think the atmosphere became too uncomfortable for them. They didn’t care for all the attention they were getting after Gus’s body was found right across the road from their building.” Bill settled his hat back on his head. “It’ll be good news for Abby when she wakes up, won’t it?”
“Yes. Yes, very good news,” I said, pondering what this latest development might mean.
“Got to go. I wanted to stop by and have a chat.” He looked first at Darci, then at me. “You girls remember what I said about trusting the law,” he said, shaking his finger in our direction.
“We will,” we said simultaneously.
But I had my fingers crossed.
Twenty-Nine
After Darci left, I changed into jeans and a sweatshirt. One last disgusted look at all the flowers and I headed to Abby’s.
I’d been in the greenhouse yesterday with Comacho, but I hadn’t gone in the house. I walked up to the wide porch and unlocked the door.
It had been less than a week since I’d been inside the house, but much had changed. Gus Pike was dead, Abby in the hospital. The familiar walls were no more than a shell, a body without a spirit, without Abby’s presence to make the house a home.
I felt a growing tightness in my chest and a thickness in my throat made it hard for me to swallow. Not wanting to linger, I walked with my head down through the kitchen and out the back door toward Abby’s summerhouse.
Taking the key from Abby’s hiding place, I unlocked the door and let it swing wide. The faint smell of Abby’s special candles reached out of the darkened room and drew me in. Lighting several of them, I scanned the room for Abby’s journals.
Moving quickly to the bookshelves, I withdrew several of them and carried them to a chair by the window where the light was sufficient to read. Sitting, I carefully placed the top journal on my lap. With a rag from my pocket, I gently wiped the dust from the cover and opened it. I recognized at once the spidery handwriting of Abby’s grandmother, the first owner of my runes.
Tracing the handwriting with my finger, I sensed the woman who’d written these words. I saw her as she toiled by candlelight writing down each spell, each healing. What she’d used, how successful it was. A woman similar to Abby. A strong woman, gentle, but not willing to suffer fools gladly. A woman accustomed to hard work. A woman who spoke her mind and, when she did, expected people to listen.
While I carefully turned over each page, I noticed the handwriting change as she aged. The handwriting became harder and harder to read as I looked further into the book. I knew these yellowed pages represented her life’s work and had only been set aside when her eyes could no longer see well enough to write.
This is my heritage, part of who I am, I thought, my hand gliding over the smooth surface. Whether I accepted it or not, I carried a fragment of this woman’s spirit inside me. I wondered what she’d think of me.
Settling back in the chair, I read how to make a wand for witching water and how to cure horses of poll-evil, whatever that was. She wrote of destroying warts by using roasted chicken feet.
Yuck. I skipped reading the details for that spell.
She had a tonic recipe for babies with colic. The recipe called for “good” rye whiskey and tobacco smoke.
I shook my head, chuckling. Of course, any baby forced to drink rye whiskey would sleep better.
For weakness of the limbs, she recommended a tea made from white oak. Cotton soaked in camphor oil was good for both an earache and a toothache.
One spell prevented fires in the home. Chicken heads and a piece of cloth, worn by a virgin, were necessary items.
I skipped that one too.
I read about dyeing cloth, using juice from plants I’d never heard of; rendering lard; brewing beer; keeping weevils out of the flour
bin.
Not once did I read any spell that required a bottle containing urine, nails, and human hair.
I looked down at the other books on the floor by the chair. I knew I wouldn’t find a spell in them either.
Closing the journal, I picked up the rest of the books and walked over to the shelf. After placing them one by one on the shelf, I stroked the spine of the book I’d read; written by a woman whose name I didn’t even know. Her book had held the spells she used to heal her neighbors, cure their livestock, and make their lives easier.
Whatever had been used to create the energy in the wine bottle wouldn’t be in her book.
That spell was created out of evil.
On the drive home I thought about the killer. I knew he’d left the bottle in the ditch, but for what purpose? And where was he now? I hadn’t dreamed about him since Abby had been hurt. Did the lack of dreams mean he’d left Summerset? No, the clipping proved he was still around. Was he watching, waiting to catch me off-guard?
A shiver slid down my back.
What about Harley? Could he have been in Iowa City five years ago and witnessed the girl’s seizure? Harley in a library? The thought stretched my imagination.
Shaking the image away, I concentrated again on Harley as a suspect. How superstitious was he? Enough to kill? Did he hate enough to kill?
The images of Brian and Gus floated in my mind and I felt a twinge of guilt spring to life. I extinguished it. Darci had been right. Guilt could cloud my thoughts and I couldn’t afford to let that happen.
Once home, I changed into my sweats again and checked with Mother on Abby’s condition. No change. I prowled the house, but avoided the living room.
I had to do something about those flowers.
Maybe I should go to the hospital. Anything would be better than this feeling of being at loose ends. I stopped and looked out the window. No. What if the killer, the witch hunter, came after me there? It would put Abby and Mother in danger.
Charmed to Death Page 19