The Love-Haight Case Files

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The Love-Haight Case Files Page 6

by Jean Rabe, Donald J. Bingle


  Evelyn laughed. “Val, I don’t have a law degree yet. The bar’s not until February. I can’t practice on my own. The office is going to close.”

  “Bummer.” The ghost’s face seemed to grow longer. “You’re not shittin’ me, are you?”

  “No, I’m not shitting you.” Evelyn sagged deeper into the chair. “Tell me one more time, Val, everything you remember.”

  The ghost did, in vivid gory details that Evelyn figured would stick in her brain for eternity. She’d have to relate this, somehow, to the detective tomorrow … later today. She knew better than to ask Val to make a report. Either the police wouldn’t believe him because he was a spirit—an OT—or he wouldn’t utter one word to begin with.

  “I know what you’re thinking, Evey. I don’t talk to pigs.”

  “Yeah, Val, I know.”

  “Sorry.”

  He started to fade and she waved him back. “Wait, Val.”

  He rose higher and impatiently and soundlessly thrummed his insubstantial fingers across Gretchen’s desk blotter.

  “I think there was someone with the fey.” Evelyn should have realized that when the detective dropped the hint. She hadn’t caught it then.

  “I was mostly paying attention to the checkerboard. The fey was awesomely high.”

  “But you said that you didn’t get here right away.”

  “No. Just basically in time for the shredding.”

  Evelyn gritted her teeth. “The detective asked me if I noticed anything missing.”

  “Guts are missing from the computer, looks like.”

  “They’re called circuit boards.”

  The ghost looked disinterested.

  “Val, Detective Reese asked if I noticed anything missing.”

  The ghost cocked his insubstantial head. “You’re pulling a Gretchen, repeating yourself.”

  “Don’t you get it? They took the fey into custody. I saw him in the back of a police car.”

  “Yeah.” A gauzy finger reached up and twirled into the beard.

  “So they’d know if the fey had taken anything, ’cause they carted off the fey from right inside the office. They would’ve grabbed whatever he had on him … like money from the cashbox, the backup hard drive. They wouldn’t have asked me what was missing, would they? And the detective said he didn’t have money on him. She let that slip.”

  “I don’t think he was wearing any clothes, nothing with pockets anyway, nothing he could have stuck money in. He had this Tarzan look going on.”

  Evelyn abruptly stood, the chair on rollers shooting back from the momentum. “So there was someone else. If they thought money and other things were missing, someone else had to have taken them and got out before the cops showed. Someone else was here with the fey.”

  “Well, duh. There was a second guy. I just didn’t pay a world of attention to him.”

  “Val, why didn’t you—”

  “I don’t talk to pigs. But I like talking to you.”

  “Thanks.”

  “The second dude was in a hooded sweatshirt, but he wasn’t interesting. Wasn’t on anything, and hadn’t been high for quite a while. Didn’t give him any of my time. The fey, that was the interesting one. Besides, the hooded dude left before the pigs showed up.”

  “But the fey didn’t get out.”

  “No. He was woozy, and after he’d picked himself up after all that ripping and—”

  “Val!”

  “Sorry. But you’re right, the fey didn’t get out. He was standing at the back of the office, just picked himself up after tearing Tom up, starting to come down from his high, when the pigs barged in.”

  “So the police somehow knew there was someone else here.” She started pacing in a tight circle. “And who called the cops? Someone passing by with a cell phone? The building next door is vacant. Someone from one of the bars across the street? Someone driving by? The guy in the apartment above the deli?” She could find that out from the police report. “Maybe the caller mentioned there was more than one.”

  “We done here? Gotta go, you know.” Val shimmered and melted into the desk, and the air around her warmed again.

  Evelyn wondered where Val went when he wasn’t in the office or on the street. Maybe he hung out in the sewers with other ghosts or other OTs, or maybe … she shook off the notion—it wasn’t her concern anyway—and wrapped her arms around herself, the chill returning. Maybe Val had forgotten to relate an especially gruesome detail and had come back to tell her.

  She blew out a breath, seeing that it fanned away from her face like lace. Really cold in here.

  “Evelyn.”

  Her throat grew tight and she fought for air.

  “Evelyn?”

  Her lips quivered, from the cold and fear and the realization of something both wonderful and wretched. She turned, slowly, looking toward the back of the office, keeping her gaze high so she couldn’t see the blood. Mist coalesced into a man’s form.

  “Thomas?”

  “Evelyn, I came back.” There was disbelief in his whispery voice.

  She spun, looking for him, but there was nothing there.

  “Thomas?”

  Had she imagined his voice? No, she’d heard him. She felt him. Her spine felt like an icicle. Arm’s length in front of her a spot of air about the size of a baseball shimmered, looking watery like the mirage haze that hovers above blacktop on a sweltering summer day.

  Her sensibilities gathered and screamed for her to run. But her feet had turned to concrete.

  The shimmery spot lengthened and widened, for an instant reminding her of the special effects they used around teenaged vampires in a popular movie series. She discarded that image as the shiny quality vanished to become fog like and opaque. It continued to grow and take on a thickness, a swatch of gray tissue paper fluttering and threatening to blow away in the air she exhaled. The patch darkened ever so slightly.

  When it took on the silhouette of a man her notions of God and heaven and hell swirled in her mind, the memories of Sunday school sermons and Bible sessions spinning out of control into a white noise miasma that threatened to drop her. She knew they existed—undead like Holder and others the office had worked with and that she’d read about. They were true and not the stuff of fantasy fiction. But until this very moment they’d all been “the other,” real but not actually a part of her life. Separate.

  Real and yet surreal.

  The hazy hint of a man that continued to become more distinct threatened to sunder her Catholic convictions.

  Thomas Brock was a ghost.

  “Dear God,” Evelyn said.

  “Call Dagger,” the ghost managed. “I need to talk to both of you.”

  Chapter 1.10

  It was ten before Evelyn managed to reach Dagger McKenzie, a private investigator she’d met at the previous law firm she’d worked for. It was another hour before he got to the office.

  He didn’t bother to take off his sunglasses when he came in, nodding to her and scowling, saying nothing until he’d downed the large coffee he’d brought with him. Evelyn had considered Thomas tall, but Dagger was taller—six feet five, jet hair pulled back tight in a short ponytail and long, thick sideburns that hid the hard planes of his face, and muscles that strained the seams of his black denim jacket. She thought he had the look of ex-military. But Evelyn only guessed at his background; she knew little about him other than that he was good, discreet, and fairly expensive.

  “This better be good,” Dagger said, folding himself into Evelyn’s chair. She had expected him to have some sort of reaction when Thomas appeared as a ghost. But Dagger just sat there. “Well, what do you need me for?”

  “To help solve my murder,” Thomas replied.

  “Cops got somebody,” Dagger said. “I heard it on the radio coming over here. The reporter said a dark fey basically put you through a paper shredder.”

  “There was a little more to it than that, I think.”

  “Then spill,” Dagger said
.

  “I decided to put in a late night at the office,” Thomas began.

  O O O

  It wasn’t that Thomas didn’t have anything else to do or that he had an extraordinary amount of backlog to plow through, he just loved the law. In fact, he didn’t so much think of it as work, but as his life and his mission. Nothing else to do with the Holder case—until the Honorable Vernon Vaughan rendered a decision. He had another case simmering, and it involved building codes, historic preservation, and this very structure … and Pete on the roof. He dug through the material, more than an hour passing before he came up for air.

  His stomach rumbled. The micro-brew and a few crackers hadn’t been enough. He reached for the phone, punching the “3” on speed dial and quickly placed an order with Asqew Grill. Thinking about the whole eating dead flesh thing from court that morning, he selected the grilled pear salad with a side of citrus couscous, an extra-large pink lemonade, and said he’d come pick it up. Just down the street, he’d grab it, bring it back, eat at his desk, and study building codes and floor plans the rest of the night.

  Thomas slipped his suit coat back on and out of habit dropped his cell phone in his pocket.

  The Buick chugged by again, even slower this time. The backseat tinted window rolled down, Thomas saw the visage of some sort of fey. He heard the car stop, probably finding a place to park in front of the empty building next door, same car he’d seen at the bus stop at the courthouse. He’d flipped the sign to closed, but he would correct that, never one to turn down the possibility of a new client, especially an OT who obviously had been cruising to find him.

  Thomas had to go out anyway to pick up his food order, and so he craned his neck around the office front, seeing the Buick about twenty feet away, parked a little too far from the curb. The fey got out.

  “I’m still open,” Thomas called—just in case they were here to see him rather than to go drinking at one of the two bars across the street.

  Thomas caught himself impolitely staring; he hadn’t seen a fey like this before. One of his favorite characters from vintage X-Men comic books had been Nightcrawler, the black-blue mutant with a prehensile tail, a shock of curly hair, and bright yellow eyes. This fellow looked quite a bit like that, but without the hair. The ears were sharply pointed, but instead of black-blue, the skin was black-red. As the fey stepped closer, Thomas saw that it was covered with scales, snakelike, and that its tail undulated, further invoking the serpent image. The only clothing was a loincloth in camouflage army print and a muscle shirt.

  “Here to see me?” Thomas asked, putting on his stoic, businesslike face.

  The fey didn’t answer, but the driver side door opened and a second individual got out—this one human, wearing stylish tight jeans and an overlarge hoodie, the hood of which was pulled up and shadowing the face within.

  “Yeah, we’re here to see you,” the man returned. He had a deep voice with a trace of a Latin accent. “A case to discuss with you.”

  “By all means come in,” Thomas said. He’d held open the door and gestured.

  The fey went inside first, and the hooded man followed with the swaggering walk of a street punk. But the man didn’t smell like a punk, he smelled expensive, cologne trailing him. His right hand was thrust in the slash pocket of his hoodie, but the left was free, and there was a big watch on it, a Swiss Hublot King with diamonds circling the face. Thomas recognized it because his father favored the expensive brand.

  “My desk is the third one in. The conference table is all the way to the back.”

  The fey seemed uncertain, casting furtive glances here and there, appearing a little nervous or perhaps ill. Thomas didn’t think much of it; he was more concerned about the man, who hadn’t removed his hood and who nudged the fey in deeper.

  Something didn’t feel right, but Thomas was never quick to judge anyone. He hoped that perhaps this might be another wealthy client crossing his threshold. Still, he dropped his hand into his pocket and touched the cell phone inside and flipped it open. Just in case.

  “So this case,” Thomas prodded, following the pair to the back. “Tell me what it’s about.”

  “The Northern Structure’s bringing you some business.”

  “The Northern Structure?” Thomas had never heard of that organization. “This case, you mention—” He suddenly worried that the hooded man might have had a gun in his pocket, but that wasn’t the situation.

  It was a syringe, and the man brought it out and jammed it into the fey’s back. Then he stepped to the side and the fey whirled.

  Thomas’s fingers found the “9” and the “1” and punched them.

  “This case,” the man taunted, twitching his neck in a hip-hop dancer’s move, “We’re all over your case. You’re in the hat, lawyer man. Dust. It’s time for you to grow daisies.”

  Thomas reflexively hollered.

  The fey, ugly to begin with, became horribly grotesque now, face contorting in a mix of pain and rage, eyes shimmering with utter madness. The fey sprang at Thomas, driving him into the floor next to the conference table and shredding his clothes. Some detached part of Thomas heard the hooded man toss things around, breaking his computer, pulling out drawers and repeating “Your case is gonna be closed, chapete. Your case is gonna be closed.”

  Thomas tried to fight the fey, but it was impossibly strong. And although Thomas was an athlete, his strength was nothing next to the beast that ripped into his flesh.

  “Your case is all bloody, Mr. OT Lawyer. Your case is history.”

  Thomas felt pain at first, hot and horrible, but it didn’t last. Somehow his brain mercifully disconnected from all that, granting him a measure of peace. Still, he could hear the hooded man tear through his office, continue to rant loudly about the Northern Structure, and faintly he heard someone talking from his pocket.

  “Sir? What is the nature of your emergency?”

  The nature? I’m getting killed, Thomas thought. “Help!” he managed, praying that the listener could hear what was going on. That’s the nature of my emergency.

  “Your bloody case is closed. Hear me, lawyer fool?”

  “Help!” Only one more strangled word would come out, and then half his throat was torn away.

  Thomas thought about Evelyn, hoping she wouldn’t see the mess that he was certain the fey and the hooded man were making, that she wouldn’t have to look at whatever was going to be left of him. And he thought about Holder, about how he wouldn’t be able to represent the ghoul come Monday morning in the Honorable Vernon Vaughan’s chambers, and about how he’d never get to try the building codes case that was so intriguing.

  Then he thought about dying … diving.

  Thomas had excelled at the backward press. Standing on the platform, a regulation ten meters above the water, he would do an inward takeoff, arcing fast and making the slightest of splashes when he hit. He only ever had seconds to register the feel of the chlorine-tinged air against his skin before he cut into the water, down down down, then turning up and surfacing to the applause of whoever was watching. It was an amazing rush he never got enough of—diving his special “crack” that gave him a high like nothing else could ever approach.

  The only Olympic events he’d watched in August had been men’s diving. In front of the television, he saw David Boudia—who’d claimed he was once afraid of heights—twist and somersault from a platform three stories high, attaining a speed of nearly thirty-five miles an hour, and garner the gold medal for the United States. Boudia had placed only tenth when competing in Beijing in 2008; Thomas had nearly made the team then, right after his first year in law school.

  Thomas knew he could have done better than Boudia that year, and a sizeable part of him regretted not even trying to make the team for London. But he’d stopped diving as often after 2008, focusing more on his studies, and then after graduation in 2010, focusing entirely on his new practice. It had been at least two months since he’d ventured to the university pool and gotten pe
rmission to use the platform. The public pools and the ones at health clubs only had lower springboards, and though he visited the health club to dive every week, it wasn’t the same as a platform.

  Dying had been like diving, falling, accelerating, hitting the surface and going under. Down down down and turning up for whatever reason, breaking the surface and coming back out into his office, hovering above a body that looked like it had been through his paper shredder.

  Dead. Thomas Brock was dead.

  Had he been in heaven? Or had he been going there? Thomas had thought he was a fairly religious man, raised Presbyterian, attending a private church school in his elementary years, before going to San Francisco University High School for college prep, and then eventually onto Stanford. He’d not attended church since high school, save for Christmas celebrations with his family, weddings, and funerals.

  Funeral.

  Thomas forced himself to look away from his bloody corpse.

  Had God thrown him back?

  Or had he not been ready to face the hereafter … whatever the “hereafter” was?

  Had there been too much unfinished business in his life?

  Was he that tied to this office?

  He floated along the ceiling for a while, watching the hooded man pick up a treasured diving trophy and bring it down hard on the back of the dark fey’s head. Then the man left, backup hard drive under his arm, pockets full of whatever else he’d taken … money, probably, Thomas guessed, judging by the open and empty petty cash box.

  The fey had struggled to rise, but slipped in the blood, fell and lay there until sirens keened in response to Thomas’s 9-1-1 call. The fey covered his ears, the noise clearly bothering him, and once more he worked to get up, finally succeeding and staggering toward the door—only to be met by a pair of patrolmen rushing in, guns drawn.

  Thomas noted the look of disbelief on the fey’s face—not just at the police’s arrival, but at what he’d wrought.

  “I—I—I killed that man,” the fey stated. His words were thick, like a patient coming out of the effects of anesthesia. “I thought he was going to help me. And I—I—I killed him.”

 

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