The Awakening s-1

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The Awakening s-1 Page 11

by L. L. Foster

"Why?" Walking backward allowed her to sneer at his face as she withdrew, "You want to dig up any other unpleasantness for me? Wanna talk about my years in foster homes, or how the other kids all hated me and called me a freak?"

  "No." He looked annoyed with her.

  "Why the hell don't you just poke me with a stick, you coldhearted bastard? What gives you the right to dig into my life anyway?" Because he was getting closer, she turned back around and lengthened her stride. "It's no wonder this town is in such sad shape when the cops waste time—"

  A hand on her arm snatched her around. Luther had caught up quicker than she realized. She collided hard against his big, solid body.

  Chapter Nine

  "Why won't that cop just go away?"

  The frustrated voice carried on the wind, but no one was around in the darkness to overhear. The cop and the very strange woman were several yards away, on the other side of the fenced playground, well out of range.

  Almost impossible to see.

  Even with the streetlamps shining down and a fat moon overhead, the night remained pitch black around every corner, behind every building and down every alley.

  The hour grew late. The watchdogs grew tired.

  This would be the perfect time to accomplish a great deal. There were things to be done, things with the failed test subjects.

  And things with that girl.

  But not while a law official lurked nearby, causing complications. If the police got suspicious and started snooping around, they could ruin everything accomplished through careful research, great risk, and enormous sacrifice.

  Hopefully the girl would send the cop on his way, and soon. Burning the candle at both ends had a draining effect on even the most brilliant minds. Each day held so many responsibilities: working at the hospital, studying and tending the test subjects, getting rid of failed experiments, and following the girl.

  Something had to be forfeited.

  The girl, obviously, would have to go. Yet she was so fascinating…

  "Maybe, just maybe," the doctor spoke aloud, "I need to get rid of the police officer first." Yes, that plan made sense. With the detective gone, everything would go smoother.

  And that would leave the path wide open to get to the girl.

  But how to do it?

  Distracting the woman would be a problem, but thinking of the weaselly landlord… "Maybe it won't be an insurmountable issue at all." Everything needed was in quick supply, stored a short distance away—or right at hand.

  Smiling, the doctor tugged on the length of rope, and got a groan in return. "Yes, I know. Not much longer now. I've just thought of a brilliant way to make use of you one last time. Your death will not be in vain. You will have another opportunity to atone for past sins."

  An odd noise echoed out around the area; it was the doctor's laughter of eagerness and delight. But given the other night sounds, no one would pay any heed.

  There were benefits to hanging in the slums.

  The rope grew taut, then slack again with submission.

  No one cared what happened or to whom it happened, and that made medical experimentation so much easier.

  Before she could deck him, Luther said, "I'm sorry, Gaby." And he meant it.

  But damn it, she tripped him up at every turn. What should have been simple became too complicated to unravel, especially when Gaby lost the belligerent aggression of a pit bull, and instead mirrored a small wounded female.

  Once again a pit bull, she shoved him back. "Keep your hands to yourself, will you already?"

  "Yes." But he knew he wouldn't. For whatever reason, he couldn't. "Will you let me explain?"

  "Do I have a choice?"

  He wanted to tell her that she did, but it'd be an outright lie. Much as he might sometimes dislike it, he was a detective, and that meant certain things had to be disclosed. "I'm trying to understand you, Gaby. Yes, out of personal interest, but also because as a cop, I've lived by my gut instincts much of my life. And alarm bells clamor whenever I'm near you. Something isn't right."

  Her lip curled. "I told you. I'm a freak."

  It wasn't easy to draw a calming breath, to keep from berating her over such self-inflicted castigation. "I asked about the death of your mother because I think it might explain a few things."

  "Like my life?"

  She was so hurt, so angry and antagonistic—and untouchable. The walls around Gaby weren't just sturdy; they were all but impenetrable.

  As Luther was a male chauvinist of the first order, her barriers only made him more determined to get beyond them.

  "Your life, and how that life might play into my perceptions now. You see, I researched lightning strikes and—"

  Throwing up her arms, Gaby complained, "Oh God, you've got to be kidding me."

  And oddly enough, it didn't seem a mere expletive so much as a rebuke. At who? "Lightning can affect all organ systems, sometimes in long-term or even lifelong ways."

  In a huff, she examined a fingernail. "Fascinating."

  Luther locked his back teeth. "It can cause all kinds of problems."

  "Yeah, uh-huh."

  "Nerve disturbances. Movement disorders. Dementia. Decreased—or increased—reflexes."

  Her gaze swung up to his and she pursed her mouth, maybe to keep from laughing. "I get it. You think the way my mother died somehow explains what you saw when I laid out the bums by the bar?"

  "How you move, yes. But also how antagonistic you often are, and why you looked… different when I first met you. The way your facial expressions, even your appearance, altered." Because he couldn't stop himself, Luther eased closer to her. "It seemed such a phenomenon, I figured there had to be a medical explanation, but I had no clue what it might be."

  At the mention of her transforming countenance, Gaby froze up. "You've got a damn screw loose." Pointing a finger at him, she said, "Leave me alone. I mean it." And she turned to head back to her place.

  "I can't do that, Gaby." Once again, he found himself following close behind her.

  "Try." Shoulders tense and tread stomping, she kept on going.

  Damned stubborn twit. "You're just digging yourself into a deeper hole."

  "Go fuck yourself."

  His patience wore thin. "Is foul language your answer for every damn thing?"

  Vibrating with fury, she halted, then jerked around to square off with him. "No, asshole. I like to talk with my fists. I was making an exception for you because you're such a pretty boy. But since you refuse to back off…" She widened her stance and poised herself for combat.

  Blood thrummed in Luther's veins. "Here we go again." He braced for her attack.

  He anticipated grappling with her again. She wouldn't hold back, so by God, neither would he.

  Then a bloodcurdling scream blasted from her building.

  Their locked gazes afforded Luther a firsthand view of Gaby's singular reaction. She went still and calm, but alive with a flood of energy unlike anything he'd ever seen.

  So fluid she nearly became a blur, she spun around and charged for the apartment building.

  "Gaby, damn it, wait!" Who knew what she might run into? Luther's longer legs didn't help much in catching up to her, not with her unholy speed.

  He drew out his gun and got up the front steps two paces behind her, just in time to see her open Mort's door and, without an ounce of caution, storm inside.

  She had that razor-edged blade in her hand, and a look of anticipation that turned his blood cold.

  "Mort!" Her voice rang out. "Mort, where the hell are you?"

  Luther did a quick surveillance around the small apartment and saw nothing amiss.

  He tried to get in front of Gaby, but after she scoured the rooms, she headed back to the foyer.

  "Mort!" she bellowed again.

  And they both heard the whimpers.

  Gaby shoved Luther aside and went to the bottom of the stairwell. Almost at the top near to Gaby's rooms, Mort hunkered down.

  On nearly
every step beneath him, thick, sticky blood pooled and dripped.

  "Shit." Gripping the handrail with one hand, Gaby levered herself up the stairs three at a time, avoiding the spill of blood as much as she could. At first, she went right past Mort and checked her door. When she found it still secured, she stowed her knife and came back to Morty. "Talk to me, Mort. Let me know you're okay."

  White with shock, he stared at her and began to babble. "I was seeing if you were in. I wanted to tell you about the newest Servant manuscript I got, and how mind-blowing it is. But you didn't answer and then I thought I heard you come in, so I turned to call down to you, but… You weren't there. No one was there. It was just… all that blood."

  "None of it is your blood?" Gaby knotted a hand in his spiky hair and worked his face this way and that, checking him for injuries.

  Watching her, Luther sighed. She had a shitty bedside manner. And poor Mort looked ready to expire from her attendance.

  "Come on, Florence Nightingale." He returned his gun to the concealed holster at his back. "I'll help you get him down from there, and then I'll call it in." Being as cautious as Gaby had been, Luther went up three steps and stretched out an arm.

  "Butt out, cop." Ignoring his proffered hand, Gaby pulled Mort's limp arm over her bony shoulders, put her arm around his waist, and stood. "We don't need your kind of help."

  Like acid through his veins, the rejection burned. Luther didn't move, didn't retract his offer or his arm. "You will take my hand right now, Gaby, or so help me you won't like the consequences."

  Morty stirred from his horror-induced trance. Lips trembling, he whispered, "Thanks, Luther." And he reached out.

  "Fine." Gaby let him go with a slight shove. "But try not to track it all over the place, will you. It's going to be a bitch to clean up."

  Rather than pamper Mort, Luther did the expedient tiling and slung him over his shoulder, bounded down the remaining steps, and put him back on his feet. "You all light?"

  Morty shuddered. "Just grossed out. I mean…" He spared one fitful, fleeting peek at the bloody stairwell. "There's so much of it, and there are chunks of things in it, too. And I can…" He gagged. "Smell it."

  Frowning, Luther looked again at the blood.

  Gaby crouched down on one of the steps and she, too, took a better study. "He's right. Looks like hunks of flesh and skin and stuff. Maybe some bone." She made a face. "And hair."

  "This is too much." Luther pulled out his radio. "Try not to disturb things too much until the forensics guys can get here."

  "No."

  He stabbed a glare at Gaby. She leaned over the rail and slid down on her belly to keep her feet out of the blood. When she reached the bottom, Luther automatically helped her down around the broken wood finial at the front post.

  Again, she brushed him off. "Put the radio away, Columbo. There's nothing here worth bothering the specialists."

  She amazed him at every turn. "You don't think a gallon of blood warrants inspection?"

  "Why? It's just another damned prank. Likely from a slaughtered pig. If you want to do some investigating, start at the butcher's around the block. You can find it by the raunchy stench."

  Luther looked at the blood again. "You think that's from an animal?"

  Her light blue eyes rolled up in annoyance. "No, it's from the president's wife."

  Luther didn't appreciate her sarcasm.

  "What? You thought it was human?"

  "I don't know."

  She shook her head, as positive as a person could be. But how? "It's not."

  "No?"

  "It's an animal. And unless you know something about cult worshipping and sacrifices taking place in the area, which wouldn't surprise me, it'd almost have to come from a place with lots of spare blood."

  She held out her hands, encouraging him, and Luther dutifully replied, "The butcher."

  "Exactly. If there was another murder, you'd already know about it, right? If anyone was slaughtering house pets, you'd probably know about that, too." She gave him a superior look. "Or am I wrong?"

  If he replied to her at all, Luther knew he'd lose the fragile thread on his temper. He directed his questions at Mort. "Have you pissed off anyone lately?"

  "I don't think so." Folding his arms around himself, Morty turned his back on the gore. "People come into the comic book store to sell stuff or buy stuff, and sometimes I don't need what they have, or don't have what they want. It makes people pissy, but I don't think I've made any real enemies because of it."

  Gaby lounged back on the wall. "I bet I know what it is."

  Both men looked at her.

  "You." She held Luther in her pointed gaze. "Look around the neighborhood, Detective. This isn't Sesame Street. Around here, cops are the bad guys, especially the kind who wear suits instead of uniforms. And yet old Mort has played nicey-nice with you, chatting you up, inviting you in. That can't be good for his social standing." Her lip curled. "Do us both a favor and go solve some real crimes, will you?"

  Shit. She could be right about that. He disregarded her last dose of disparagement and said, "So you think someone managed to throw in a bucket of pig's blood without Mort noticing?"

  Gaby slanted her attention at Mort, who wore a blank, befuddled expression, then back to Luther. "Hardly seems possible, huh?"

  Her wisecracking added to his tension. Luther rubbed the back of his neck, undecided. "Maybe. But I still need to have this checked out—"

  "So you can get even more people hating Mort? Sure, why not. He's got that coming."

  Morty started to panic. "Now wait a minute. I don't want more stuff like this to happen." He grabbed at Luther's sleeve. "C'mon. Luther. Do you really have to make a fuss about it? What if I promise to keep the entry doors locked from now on? Only Gaby and I will have keys. Will that be okay?"

  Something in Gaby's expression convinced Luther. Though she tried to conceal it, and from most, she succeeded, he still saw that she didn't want the cops there.

  In fact, she was outright rigid about it.

  Somehow, Luther knew that if he pushed her, she'd disappear. He couldn't chance that. Not until he got everything neatly resolved.

  "Yeah, all right, Mort. That'll be fine."

  Gaby left her slouched position on the wall. "What are you asking him for? You own the damn building." As she walked between them, she gave Morty's chest an arrogant shove. "If you want the front doors locked, then lock them."

  "Where are you going?" Luther demanded.

  "To the storage closet to see if Mort has any cleaning supplies. Someone's got to get this mess cleared up, and I'm afraid if he does it, he'll pass out."

  Morty nodded. "She's probably right." Then in an attempt to be stronger, he said, "But I'll help, Gaby."

  Turning his wrist, Luther looked at his watch. What the hell. "I'll help, but I can't stay too long. I do plan to go by this butcher's you mentioned, just to look around. I'll say a few choice words to anyone there, and hopefully that'll put an end to it."

  "Yeah sure." Gaby returned. With one hand she dragged along an industrial-sized mop and bucket, and in the other she held a large plastic garbage bag and a bundle of old rags. "Knock yourself out."

  It took more than an hour to get the worst of the mess cleaned up. Luther looked around, and decided it was time for him to go.

  Gaby, still behaving like a prune, walked off to dump the bag of blood-soaked rags in the basement near the washer and dryer.

  Mort changed the mop water for the fifth time and prepared to go over the stairs again. He'd promised to have a new lock put on the doors first thing tomorrow morning.

  That made Luther feel marginally better, but he still didn't like it. Something was up.

  He felt it.

  Just as Gaby had said, he caught a whiff of the meat market long before he reached it. The unique smell of a fresh kill hung in the air like sweat in a closed locker room.

  It wasn't far from her apartment; just a few blocks over. Rather t
han announce himself, he parked at the curb half a block away and started in that direction. But before he'd reached the butcher shop, he heard a soft, mewling noise.

  Luther glanced around but saw no one. Still, he felt the attention directed at him, and knew he was being watched. Gaby? Maybe she wanted to make sure he checked out the butcher, as she'd suggested.

  But he didn't think so.

  She was far too pissed at him right now to be dogging his heels for any reason. Hell, if he didn't keep going to her, ignoring her rapid-fire insults, he'd probably never get to see her again.

  He knew without doubt, she'd never come to him.

  Eyes narrowed and temper soured, Luther scanned the area, peering at the closed businesses, the dark doorways, the overflowing garbage cans.

  One empty building, boarded up and darker than sin, caught and held his attention. Drawn to it, Luther approached the front but found it locked up tight. He tried a side door.

  No one answered his knocks.

  He heard another low-pitched whine and moved closer to investigate.

  Jaws snapping, a muscular dog lunged out from the shadows. Blood hung from the animal's mouth and mottled the fur around its face.

  Luther stumbled back and cracked his spine on a metal railing by the side door. "Damn it." His feet slipped in something wet and he barely caught his balance.

  Fur on end, muzzle undulating, the dog continued to menace him. It circled, licked its chops, and inched forward.

  Unwilling to shoot the animal, Luther stomped a foot and said with his own mean snarl, "Git. Go on, go. Get lost." He slapped his hands together, all but attacking.

  The beast turned and ran.

  Heart still thumping, Luther caught his breath, rubbed the bruise on his back, and then turned a semicircle to get his bearings. The partially blocked alley led to a back entrance and, on alert, he moved in that direction.

  He heard another, barely audible whine.

  The dog was gone, so where… He looked, but saw nothing.

  No one.

  After releasing the leather latch on his holster so he could get to his gun quickly, he said, "Who's there?"

  No one answered.

  Drawn deeper into the alley, beyond where the illumination of streetlights could reach, he withdrew a penlight and scanned the area. There on the ground, a large black stain caught his attention. Moving closer to investigate, he stepped around discarded crates and cartons and a few sealed-up bins that didn't warrant investigation.

 

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