“Uh, sure,” I said. “Please.”
“Yes, please,” Augustus said.
She moved about the kitchen for a few minutes, preparing three big pint glasses of tea with ice. I watched her go about the business, slowly, steadily, until she’d finished pouring all three of them. When she got done, she sort of stared at them for a moment and I could see her conscious mind clicking away realizing what she’d just done, and how she didn’t have enough hands to effectively carry all of them. “You,” she said to Augustus, “come help me with these.”
Augustus snapped to it, nice guy that he was, and he grabbed two glasses and hurried them over to us while Mrs. Coy took the third for herself and settled in on one side of her couch, taking up maybe three-quarters of a plaid-ish cushion. She held the iced tea glass in her hand, and I watched it start to sweat. It wasn’t exactly sweltering in her house, but it was warm, and she was wearing only a thin cotton dress.
Augustus handed me a glass and I took it up, immediately taking a long drink. When the tea hit my lips, I froze. It was like no tea I’d ever had. I’d gotten used to the British version of tea. This was not that. This was diabetes encased in a glass cylinder.
It was sugared like a soft drink, with a hint of honey running throughout. I tried not to slurp, because even as my brain was protesting that this was way, way too sweet for me, my tongue was asking me for more and more. Also, in fairness, it was kind of warm, so a cold drink felt pretty good.
“What do you think happened to my Kennith?” Mrs. Coy asked as I pulled the glass away from my face. I didn’t really want to pull it away, but I needed to stop before I drowned myself in this stuff.
“Ma’am, we don’t exactly know,” Augustus answered for me while I composed myself. He gave me a sidelong look like he knew the tea had captured me and was holding me prisoner. The secret ingredient may have been heroin, because all I wanted at that moment was MOAR TEA.
“Another man was killed the same night,” I said, finding my voice again. “Roscoe Marion. Does that name sound familiar?”
Her eyelids fluttered as she thought it over. “I read his name in the paper, but … other than that, no. I don’t think so. I don’t recall Kennith or anyone else ever mentioning him to me before.”
“How was Kennith doing?” I asked. “I know he was on … probation.”
“He was following the rules,” she said. “He worked at the tire shop down the road. He didn’t go out at night, just went to work and came home straightaway afterward. His parole officer came by a couple times a week at first, but we hadn’t seen him in a while now.” She shook her head. “I don’t see how he could have been in any trouble, let alone enough for someone to want to kill him.”
I made a mental note about the tire shop. “Did he ever have friends come by?”
She looked up at me. “Just that Darrick. He would stop by every once in a while. I never did like him.”
“What was wrong with him?” Augustus asked.
“He had no respect,” Mrs. Coy said, and she was off to the races again, animated and irritated. “He would honk his horn on the driveway until Kennith came out and talked to him, like an animal. No manners.”
“What was Darrick’s last name?” I asked.
“Cary,” she said. “Darrick Cary. I’ll write it down for you so you can beat on his door for a while.” She puckered her lips and gave me enough of a look that told me what she thought about my tactics.
Augustus’s lips went into a thin line. “Darrick Cary … young guy. About yea tall?” He held up a hand to around his chin. “Drives a little SUV?”
“He’s in a fancy Corvette now, but that’s him,” Mrs. Coy said, looking at Augustus with more than a little mild irritation. “He a friend of yours?”
“No,” Augustus said, looking more than a little offended. “We went to school together is all. I know of him.”
“Can we talk about the night Kennith was killed?” I asked.
“I don’t see anyone stopping you,” Mrs. Coy said, just a little short of a snap.
“What can you tell us about that night?” I asked.
“Well, let’s see,” Mrs. Coy said, with more than a little irony dripping, “it was the night before last, so it might take me a while to remember since it was so long ago. How do these stories normally start? ‘It was a dark and stormy night’? Yeah, it started like that.” She was clearly annoyed at us. “Kennith and I were sitting on the couch watching TV—”
“What were you watching?” Augustus asked.
She looked daggers at him—big, fat, stabby ones. “What does it matter what we were watching?”
“We try and be as thorough as possible, Mrs. Coy,” I said as gently as I could. Augustus, for his part, looked like he was going to stutter an answer out somewhere around 2050. This woman was extremely off-putting.
“We were watching that show with the boy and the girl that fall in love—” She shook her head. “I don’t know, he picked. I was reading a magazine.” She glared at Augustus. “You want to know what magazine it was? People, okay? People magazine. It had that little blond tramp on the cover, the one with the—” She squinted at me. “You know her. That little skinny-ass bitch.”
This was the problem with being well known; Mrs. Coy had been holding out on me a little bit all along, at least. Normally that would have thrown up a cloud of suspicion, but I couldn’t really blame her for being a little ornery two days after her son died. “I used to know her,” I corrected.
“Anyway, if we can escape some of these details,” Mrs. Coy said, “we were sitting there and the TV went out. Just the TV, not the power. It started spitting that white static. It was storming, so we didn’t think too much of it, but then there was a noise outside and Kennith thought maybe a branch had fallen on the roof, maybe took out the TV.”
“Don’t they bury those cables nowadays?” Augustus asked.
“We have an antenna,” Mrs. Coy said, pointing to the roof. She paused, waiting. “May I continue?”
“Sorry,” Augustus muttered.
“So he went out and looked, and—let me wrap this up before either of y’all go interrupting me again—I heard something, then a scream, and by the time I got out there, he was dead in the yard. Burned all up.”
“Did you hear thunder?” I asked.
She concentrated hard, thinking it over. “There was thunder earlier in the night, for sure. I remember hearing it crack, feeling it rattle the house. But … I don’t remember it when he screamed, not at all. His scream was so clear, so much louder than the …” She swallowed, nearly choking on her emotions before she got ahold of herself. “… than the rain on the roof.”
I couldn’t look away from her. “Mrs. Coy … did you ever see a branch?” She stared blankly at me. “The one that made the noise Kennith heard.”
She frowned, thinking again. “No, I did not. I suppose I forgot about it in the fuss afterward. But no, there was no branch, no sign of anything.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Coy,” I said, and watched her put her face on her hand. “We’ll … let ourselves out if that’s all right with you.”
“Are you going to catch the person who did this to my baby?” she asked, looking up at me again.
“I’m going to try,” I said. “They’re not making it easy on me. Whoever it is, they’re covering their tracks so well that we can’t even prove for a fact that someone did it, at least not yet.”
“I don’t even know what to think,” she said, shaking her head. “If you could please … just … leave me alone.”
“Yes, ma’am,” I said, and gestured to Augustus.
He paused, just a little ways off from the arm of her couch. “Our condolences, Mrs. Coy.”
She looked up at him, all trace of sarcasm gone, replaced by a twin track of tears glistening their way down her cheeks. “Thank you, young man,” she said, and we left her to her grief.
19.
“What do you suppose happened with the branch?” Augu
stus asked as we closed Mrs. Coy’s front door behind us.
“I think our killer jumped on the roof,” I said, walking back down her driveway with a purpose. “Sat there and waited until Kennith showed his face, then nuked it off with a lightning bolt.”
“Burned his face off?” Augustus asked, sounding horrified. “For real?”
“Eh, from the autopsy photos it seemed like it caught Kennith in the hand,” I said. “But still, it wasn’t pretty.”
“Man, I am hearing all the grossest stuff with you today,” he said. “Old men sleeping with pretty starlets—”
“Like that never happens.”
“—people getting their faces fried off,” he went on. “This is not as clean as factory work.”
“Good thing you can use your powers to fix that problem,” I said, halting at the sidewalk. “Who is Darrick Cary?”
Augustus stopped short, and I could see the hesitancy in his posture because he stiffened like someone had just rammed a stick up his ass. “Just some dude from the old neighborhood.”
I just stared back at him. “You seriously expect me to believe that?”
He deflated. “Come on. You can’t expect me to … snitch on someone.”
“‘Snitch’ on someone?” I snickered. “Like a rat? What the hell is this?”
“You don’t do that,” Augustus said. “It … that’s not right.”
“Code of omertà? Nice. I don’t care what Cary’s doing,” I said, “except as pertains to this particular case. But I need to talk to him, and if I go into that conversation without all the facts, someone might end up getting shot.”
“That’s a little extreme, don’t you think?” Augustus asked. “And a bit of a leap, too—straight from, ‘I don’t have all the facts’ to ‘BAM BAM BAM’ and cooking some fool.”
“Here’s what happens when I don’t have the facts going into an encounter,” I said, trying to explain it patiently. “A lot of times, they run when they see me coming, especially if they have the sort of checkered background that would prompt someone like yourself—a decent and honorable person, clearly—to hesitate before discussing their business. This flight to avoid me … well, it ends up pissing me off.” I clapped him on the shoulder with one hand. “Tempers flare. Unkind words are sometimes exchanged, ones that can never be taken back. And somewhere, in the middle of all that heat, a gun is drawn. Maybe by him, maybe by me, but the point is—who do you think wins that exchange in the end?” I gave him my most serious look.
Augustus chewed it over for a minute, finally looking disgusted. “I didn’t think you were going to be able to draw the line between points like that, but you went and did it, and made it almost seem like a reasonable person talking instead of a crazy-ass insane killer person.”
“I like how you threw in the ‘almost.’”
“He’s a dealer,” Augustus said. “Has been for a long time. Probably where Kennith got his abnormal narcotics results.”
“Hrm,” I said, pondering that one. “That’s … hrm.”
“What are you thinking?”
“I’m thinking we have to talk to him,” I said. “That’s our obvious link to Kennith’s criminal past, after all.”
“Yeah, but what if Kennith went straight?” Augustus said. “You know, after jail. What if he went straight, except for maybe a little indulgence in the herbal remedy for his glaucoma every now and again?”
“Then this is gonna be a short conversation with Darrick,” I said, “and also, you know damned well he didn't have glaucoma.”
“How are you going to know if he’s telling you the truth?” Augustus asked. I sensed skepticism.
“If you break like … three, four major bones in their body and they still tell the same story, they’re usually telling the truth,” I said, absolutely deadpan. Then I smiled, nodded, and started to walk away.
“Oh, hell,” I heard Augustus say. And then, after another few seconds, his footsteps hurrying to catch up with me. “You were joking about that.”
“You asking me or telling me?”
“You have a dark sense of humor,” he said.
“I have a dark sense of everything.”
“That a new thing?” he asked.
I thought about it for a beat. “Not particularly, no.”
I could feel his presence at my side, walking along with me, eyes boring into me as we walked. “You know, they don’t really talk about your early life much.”
“‘They’ don’t really talk about anything factual in relation to any point in my life,” I said. “Because ‘they’ are a bunch of assholes who are paid to speculate in order to fill dead spaces in airtime, magazine column inches, and bytes on the web.” I quickened my pace, and Augustus hurried to keep time.
“You really got a powerful anger for the press, don’t you?” he asked.
“I’ve done, like … two interviews,” I said. “Two. That’s all they really know of me, other than some YouTube videos that have me in action doing things like flying around and beating the crap out of the occasional person that deserves it—”
“I think like ninety percent of your YouTube videos are you beating the crap out of someone,” he said. “I mean, everyone knows the New York one, but there’s that one in Houston—”
“Dude totally deserved it,” I said.
“—Los Angeles—”
“Super-duper-uber-deserved it.”
“—that one in Montana—”
“I didn’t even break any bones that time.”
“—and wasn’t there one in like … northern Canada someplace?”
“Yellowknife,” I said. “Which was totally unfair because that was a bar fight that someone else picked and I just finished.”
“Wasn’t that person human?”
“Yes,” I said. “And very drunk. Which is why he’s still able to walk and has all his limbs still attached.”
“I mean, maybe it’s just my naturally sunny disposition talking, but,” he made a pained grimace that showed me rows of even teeth, “if I wanted more people to like me, I might be a little … gentler. More restrained. I’m not saying ‘be like Katrina,’ but she’s got the public persona down—”
I stopped, feeling a hard shudder run through my body. “I will never be like her.” I whipped a finger into his face. “You know what Kat is like? Weak. She’s weak. She flops around from place to place, person to person, unable to make a decision with spine for herself.”
“That’s harsh,” he said. “I thought you used to be friends.”
“Yeah,” I said. “So did I. Until she broadcast a private phone call between the two of us on her show’s premiere without my permission in order to boost her ratings on my name.”
“Oh, shit,” Augustus said, and his hands came up to his mouth like it could cover his obvious surprise. “You didn’t know about that?”
“No,” I said, more than a little miffed. “And I sat there and talked to her after the Russian incident for … I don’t even know. Forty-five minutes? Thinking she cared. That she was a friend. That she was … worried.” I spat the word out with hard contempt. “But she wasn’t. She was just worried about her ratings. Worried how she’d look if her little vanity project bombed. So she used me to look concerned, sweet, caring—they edited that call down to five minutes of me being a complete and total—”
“Yeah, I heard,” he said. “It, uh … I mean it wasn’t the New York video, but uh … it maybe didn’t highlight your most flattering … uh … side? Personality? I got nothing,” he said, finally giving up on trying to put a nice spin on it.
I waited a beat to see if Aleksandr Gavrikov would interject. He didn’t say much about her anymore, which I considered a giant effing blessing. “I keep getting blindsided by people,” I said.
“So why’d you take me on as a partner?” He froze. “Intern? Uhhh … charity project?”
I sighed, felt the weight of everything I’d just told him settle on me. “Really, at this point …
why not?” I felt my eyes burn a little at that admission. “What do I have to lose?”
He was quiet for a moment after that. “Your job?”
“Screw my job,” I said.
That just hung there for, oh, about two minutes, and he finally spoke again. “So … what should we do?”
“Find Darrick Cary,” I said. “After we stop at the tire shop and ask Kennith’s old employer a few questions.”
There was a flash of confusion across his face. “I thought you said—”
“I know what I said.” I straightened my shoulders and started walking. Any direction would do, because I was sure Augustus would correct me if I was heading the wrong way. Eventually. “But I haven’t lost my job yet, and until I do … I’ll just keep doing what I have to.” I felt an acidic taste on the back of my tongue, a disagreeable aftereffect of the tea. It reminded me of life: it had seemed sweet for a little while, but that had faded pretty quickly, leaving nothing but awfulness behind.
20.
Augustus
There were easier things than finding Darrick Cary in the midst of Vine City, especially when I didn’t know where he lived or where he usually hung out. I’d known Darrick way back in the day. He’d dropped out at—sixteen? Seventeen, maybe? I’d heard the rumors here and there about him, of course—that he’d had a kid and actually got married and turned to dealing when economic prospects didn’t turn out so bright for a high-school dropout with a couple of high-level possession charges. Just enough to go felony, I heard.
Walking down the street looking at random passersby wasn’t going to do it, I knew, but I was really hesitant to just go all out and call someone I knew would know where Darrick was. I had loyalties still, and one of those was … well, you didn’t do that sort of thing without a damned good reason.
Especially when the person asking was the sort of person who might—oh, I don’t know—break his kneecaps for the hell of it.
“Where are we going?” Sienna asked, still wearing that hangdog look. Man, I expected this killer lady to be a total badass, but I hadn’t exactly expected the level of bad juju coming off of her in the emotional toxic waste department. This girl had some issues, and not just the kind that stemmed from a bunch of crappy articles about her, either. There was something behind all this “betrayed by a friend, everybody hates me” motif. Something deeper, maybe? She had an anchor of some kind on her, and it was dragging her down, or burying her in quicksand or something.
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