Vampires & Werewolves: Four Novels

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Vampires & Werewolves: Four Novels Page 2

by J. R. Rain


  “You’re keeping me from my kid,” he said. Sherbet was wearing a long-sleeved shirt folded up at the elbows, revealing heavily muscled forearms covered in dark hair. The dark hair was mixed with a smattering of gray. I thought it looked sexy as hell. His tie was loosened, and he looked irritable, to say the least.

  “I apologize,” I said. “This was the only time I could make it today.”

  “I’m glad I can work around your busy schedule, Mrs. Moon. I wouldn’t want to inconvenience you in any way.”

  His office was simple and uncluttered. No pictures on the wall. Just a desk, a computer, a filing cabinet and some visitor’s chairs. His desk had a few picture frames, but they were turned toward him. From my angle, I could only see the price tags.

  I gave him my most winning smile. “I certainly appreciate your time, detective.” I had on plenty of blush, so that my cheeks appeared human.

  The smile worked. He blushed himself. “Yeah, well, let’s make this quick. My kid’s playing a basketball game tonight, and I wouldn’t want to miss him running up and down the court with no clue what the hell is going on around him.”

  “Sounds like a natural.”

  “A natural dolt. Wife says I should just leave him alone. The trouble is, if I leave him alone, he tends to want to play Barbies with the neighborhood girls.”

  “That worries you?” I asked.

  “Yeah.”

  “You think he could turn out gay?”

  He shrugged uncomfortably, and said nothing. It was a touchy subject for him, obviously.

  “How old is your son?” I asked.

  “Eight.”

  “Perhaps he’s a little Casanova. Perhaps he sees the benefits of playing with girls, rather than boys.”

  “Perhaps,” said Sherbet. “For now, he plays basketball.”

  “Even though he’s clueless.”

  “Where there’s a will there’s a way.”

  “Even if it’s your will and your way?” I asked.

  “For now, it’s the only way.” He paused, then looked a little confused. He shook his head like a man realizing he had been mumbling out loud. “How the hell did we get on the subject of my kid’s sexuality?”

  “I forget,” I said, shrugging.

  He reached over and straightened the folder in front of him. The folder hadn’t been crooked, now it was less uncrooked. “Yeah, well, let’s get down to business. Here’s the file. I made a copy of it for you. It’s against procedures to give you a copy, but you check out okay. Hell, you worked for the federal government. And why the hell you’ve gone private is your own damn business.”

  I reached for the file, but he placed a big hand on it. “This is just between you and me. I don’t normally give police files to private dicks.”

  “Luckily I’m not your average private dick.”

  “A dick with no dick,” he said.

  “Clever, detective,” I said.

  “Not really.”

  “No, not really,” I admitted. “I just really want the file.”

  He nodded and lifted his palm, and I promptly stuffed the file into my handbag. “Is there anything you can tell me that’s perhaps not in the file?”

  He shook his head, but it was just a knee-jerk reaction. In the process of shaking his head, he was actually deep in thought. “It should all be in there.” He rubbed the dark stubble at his chin. The dark stubble was also mixed with some gray. “You know I always suspected the guy doing the shooting was a client of his. I dunno, call it a hunch. But this attorney’s been around a while, and he’s pissed off a lot of people. Trouble is: who’s got the time to go through all of his past files?”

  “Not a busy homicide detective,” I said, playing along.

  “Damn straight,” he said.

  “Any chance it was just a random shooting?” I asked.

  “Sure. Of course. Those happen all the time.”

  “But you don’t think so.”

  “No,” he said.

  “Why?” I asked.

  The detective was used to this kind of exchange. He worked in a business where if you didn’t ask questions, you didn’t find answers. If my questions bothered him, he didn’t show it, other than he seemed to be impatient to get this show on the road.

  “Seemed premeditative. And no robbery attempt. Also seemed to be making a statement, as well.”

  “By shooting him in the face?”

  “And by shooting him outside the courthouse. His place of work. Makes you think it was business related.”

  I nodded. Good point. I decided not to tell the detective he had a good point. Men tend to think all of their points were good, and they sure as hell didn’t need me to boost their already inflated egos.

  I’m cynical that way.

  He stood from his desk and retrieved a sport jacket from a coat rack. He was a fit man with a cop’s build. He also had a cop’s mustache. He would have looked better without the mustache, but it wasn’t was my place to suggest so. Besides, who better to wear a cop mustache than a cop?

  “Now it’s time to go watch my son screw up the game of basketball,” he said.

  “Maybe basketball’s not his game.”

  “And playing with girls is?”

  “It’s not a bad alternative,” I said, then added. “You think there’s a chance you’re reading a little too much into all of this with your son?”

  “I’m a cop. I read too much into everything.” He paused and locked his office door, which I found oddly amusing and ironic since his office was located in the heart of a police station. “Take you, for instance.”

  I didn’t want to take me for instance. I changed the subject. “I’m sure you’re a very good officer. How long have you been on the force?”

  He ignored my question. “I wondered why you insisted on meeting me in the evening.” As he spoke, he placed his hand lightly at the small of my back and steered me through the row of cluttered desks. His hand was unwavering and firm. “When I asked you on the phone the reason behind the late meeting you had mentioned something about being busy with other clients. But when I called your office later that day to tell you that I was going to be delayed, you picked up the phone immediately.” He paused and opened a clear glass door. On the door was etched FPD. “Perhaps you were meeting your clients in the office. Or perhaps you were in-between clients. But when I asked if you had a few minutes you sounded unharried and pleasant. Sure, you said, how can I help you?”

  “Well, I pride myself on customer service,” I said.

  He was behind me, and I didn’t see him smile. But I sensed that he had done so. In fact, I knew he had smiled. Call it a side effect.

  He said, “Now that I see you, I see you have a skin disorder of some type.”

  “Why, lieutenant, you certainly know how to make a girl feel warm and fuzzy.”

  “And that’s the other thing. When I shook your hand, it felt anything but warm and fuzzy,” he said.

  “So what are you getting at?” I asked. We had reached the front offices. We were standing behind the main reception desk. The room was quiet for the time being. Outside the smoky gray doors, I could see Commonwealth Avenue, and across that, Amerige City Park, which sported a nice little league field.

  He shrugged and smirked at me. “If I had two guesses, I would say that you were either a vampire, or, like I said, you had a skin condition.”

  “What does your heart tell you?” I asked.

  He studied me closely. Outside, commuters were working their way through downtown Fullerton. Red taillights burned through the smoky glass. Something passed across his gaze. An understanding of some sort. Or perhaps wonder. Something. But then he grinned and his cop mustache rose like a referee signaling a touchdown.

  “A skin disease, of course,” he said. “You need to stay out of the sun.”

  “Bingo,” I said. “You’re a hell of a detective.”

  And with that I left. Outside, I saw that my hands were shaking. The son-of-a-bitch
had me rattled. He was one hell of an intuitive cop.

  I hate that.

  6.

  I was boxing at a sparring club in Fullerton called Jacky’s. The club was geared towards women, but there were always a few men hanging around the club. These men often dressed better than the women. I suspected homosexuality. The club gave kick-boxing and traditional boxing lessons. I preferred the traditional boxing lessons, and always figured that if the time came in a fight that I had to kick, there was only one place my foot was going.

  Crotch City.

  I come here three times a week after picking the kids up from school and taking them to their grandmother’s home in Brea. Boxing is perhaps one of the most exhausting exercises ever invented, especially when you box in three-minute drills, as I was currently doing, which simulated actual boxing rounds.

  My trainer was an Irishman named Jacky. Jacky wore a green bandanna over a full head of graying hair. He was a powerfully built man of medium height, a little fat now, but not soft. He must have been sixty, but looked forty. He was an ex-professional boxer in Ireland, where he had been something of a legend, or that’s what he tells me. His crooked nose had been broken countless times, which might or might not have been the result of boxing matches. Maybe he was just clumsy. Amazingly enough, the man rarely sweat, which was something I could not claim. As my personal trainer, his sole responsibility was to hold out his padded palms and to yell at me. He did both well. All with a thick Irish accent.

  “C’mon, push yourself. You’re dropping your fists, lass!”

  Dropping one’s fists was a big no-no in Jacky’s world, on par with his hatred for anything un-Irish.

  So I raised my fists. Again.

  During these forty-five minute workouts with Jacky, I hated that little Irish bastard with all my heart.

  “You’re dropping your hands!” he screamed again.

  “Screw you.”

  “In your dreams, lass. Get them hands up!”

  It went on like this for some time. Occasionally the kickboxers would glance over at us. Once I slipped on my own sweat, and Jacky thankfully paused and called for one of his towel boys who hustled over and wiped down the mat.

  “You sweat like a man,” said Jacky, as we waited. “I like that.”

  “Oh?” I said, patting myself down with my own towel. “You like the sweat of men?”

  He glared at me. “My wife sweats. It’s exciting.”

  “Probably because you don’t. She has to make up for the two of you.”

  “I don’t know why I open up to you,” he said.

  “You call this opening up?” I asked. “Talking about sweat and boffing your wife?”

  “Consider yourself privileged,” he said.

  We went back to boxing. We did two more three-minute rounds. Near the end of the last round, I was having a hell of a time keeping my gloved fists up, and Jacky didn’t let me hear the end of it.

  When we were done, Jacky leaned his bulk against the taut ropes. He removed the padded gloves from his hands. The gloves were frayed and beaten.

  “Second pair of gloves in a month,” he said, looking at them with something close to astonishment.

  “I’ll buy you some more,” I said.

  “You’re a freak,” he said. He studied his hands. They were red and appeared to be swelling before our very eyes. “You hit harder than any man I’ve ever coached or faced. Your hand speed is off the charts. Good Christ, your form and accuracy is perfect.”

  “Except that I drop my hands.”

  “Not always,” he said sheepishly. “I’ve got to tell you something so that you think I’m earning my keep.”

  I reached over and kissed his smooth forehead. “I know,” I said.

  “You’re a freak,” he said again, blushing.

  “You have no idea.”

  “I pity any poor bastard who crosses your path.”

  “So do I.”

  He held out his hands. “Now, I need to soak these in ice.”

  “Sorry about that.”

  “You kidding? It’s an honor working with you. I tell everyone about you. No one believes me. I tell them I’ve got a woman here that could take on their best male contenders. They never believe me.”

  Around us the sparring gym was a beehive of activity. Both boxing rings were now being used by kick boxers. Women and men were pounding the hell out of the half dozen punching bags, and the rhythmic rattling of the speed bags sounded from everywhere.

  “You know I don’t like you talking about me, Jacky.”

  “I know. I know. They don’t believe me anyway. You could box professionally with one hand behind your back.”

  “I don’t like attention.”

  “I know you don’t. I’ll quit bragging about you.”

  “Thank you, Jacky.”

  “The last thing I want is you pissed-off at me.”

  I box for self-defense. I box for exercise. Sometimes I box because it’s nice to have a man care so vehemently whether or not my fists were up.

  I kissed his forehead again and walked out.

  7.

  I drove north along Harbor Blvd, through downtown Fullerton and made a left onto Berkeley Street. I parked in the visitor parking in front of the Fullerton Municipal Courthouse, turned off my car, and sat there.

  While I sat there, I drank water from a bottle. Water is one of the few drinks my body will accept. That and wine, although the alcohol in wine has no effect on me.

  Yeah, I know. Bummer.

  My hands were still feeling heavy from the boxing workout. I flexed my fingers. I couldn’t help but notice my forearms rippling with taut muscle. I like that. I worked hard for that, and it was something I didn’t take for granted.

  I sat in the minivan and watched the entrance to the courthouse. There was little activity at this late hour. I wasn’t sure what I was hoping to find here but I like to get a look and feel for all aspects of a case. Makes me feel involved and informed.

  And, hell, you never know what might turn up.

  Two security guards patrolled the front of the building. So where had they been at the time of Kingsley’s shooting? Probably patrolling the back of the building.

  Behind me was a wooded area; above that were condominiums. A bluejay swooped low over my hood and disappeared into the branches of a pine tree. A squirrel suddenly dashed along the pine tree’s limb. The jay appeared again, and dove down after the squirrel.

  Can’t we all just get along?

  When the guards disappeared around a corner, I got out of the van and made my way to the court’s main entrance. My legs were still shaky from the workout; my hands heavy and useless, like twin balloons filled with sand.

  The courthouses consisted of two massive edifices that faced each other. Between them was a sort of grassy knoll, full of trees and stone benches. The benches were empty. The sun was low in a darkening sky.

  I like darkening skies.

  Shortly, I found the infamous birch tree. The tree was smallish, barely wide enough to conceal even me, let alone a big man with broad shoulders. As a shield, it was useless, as the additional bullets in Kingsley’s head attested. To have relied on it for one’s sole protection of a gun-wielding madman was horrifying to contemplate. So I did contemplate it. I felt Kingsley’s fear, recalled his desperate attempts to dodge the flying bullets. Comical and horrific. Ghastly and amusing. Like a kid’s game of cowboys and Indians gone horribly wrong.

  I circled the tree and found four fairly fresh holes in the trunk. The bullets had, of course, been dug out and added to the evidence. Now the holes were nothing more than dark splotches within the white bark. The tree and Kingsley had one thing in common: both were forever scarred by bullets from the same gun.

  The attack had been brazen. The fact that the shooter had gotten away clean was probably a fluke. The shooter himself probably expected to get caught, or gunned down himself. But instead he walked away, and disappeared in a truck that no one seemed to remember t
he license plate of. The shooter was still out there, his job left unfinished. Probably wondering what more he had to do to kill Kingsley.

  A hell of a good question.

  According to the doctor’s reports cited in a supplementary draft within the police report, all bullets had missed vital parts of Kingsley’s brain. In fact, the defense attorney’s only side effect was a minor loss in creativity. Of course, for a defense attorney, a lack of creativity could prove disastrous.

  Someone wanted Kingsley dead, and someone wanted it done outside the courthouse, a place where many criminals had walked free because of Kingsley’s ability to manipulate the law. This fact was not lost on me.

  Detective Sherbet had only made a cursory investigation into the possibility that the shooting was related to one of Kingsley’s current or past cases. Sherbet had not dug very deeply.

  It was my job to dig. Which was why I make the big bucks.

  I turned and left the way I had come.

  8.

  “So how often do you, like, feed?” asked Mary Lou.

  Mary Lou was my sister. Only recently had she discovered that I was, like, a creature of the night. Although I come from a big family, she was the only one I had confided in, mostly because we were the closest in age and had grown up best friends. We were sitting side-by-side at a brass-topped counter in a bar called Hero’s in downtown Fullerton.

  I said, “Often. Especially when I see a particular fine sweep of milky white neck. Like yours for instance.”

  “Ha ha,” she said. Mary Lou was drinking a lemon drop martini. I was drinking house Chardonnay. Since I couldn’t taste the Chardonnay, why order the good stuff? And Chardonnay rarely had a reaction on my system, and it made me feel normal, sort of, to drink something in public with my sister.

  Mary Lou was wearing a blue sweater and jeans. Today was casual day at the insurance office. This was apparently something that was viewed as good. She often talked about casual day; in fact, often days before the actual casual event.

  “Seriously, Sam. How often?” she asked again.

 

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