Unearthed Secrets
In the end, Shannon found what we were looking
for.
“Mark 8:36,” she called, excitement thrumming in
her voice. When we gathered in the living room, she read from the
book in her hands. “ ‘For what shall it profit a man, if he shall
gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?’ This passage is
highlighted.” She showed us the Bible, where someone, probably
Curtis Farrell, had marked the verse scrawled on his door.
“Sounds like a threat,” Chance said
quietly.
“Somebody knew something,” Jesse agreed. “But
were they blackmailing Farrell or trying to get him to stop?”
An excellent question. Farrell hadn’t displayed
the confidence of a career criminal. He’d seemed hesitant, like he
didn’t know what to do when confronted with resistance. His job had
been spelled out for him—and I still wasn’t sure what he’d intended
to do to Miss Minnie—and once things went wrong, he didn’t know how
to respond.
“Is this a religious thing?” I asked. “Or
someone just using the Bible for a convenient code?”
“Impossible to say.” Jesse took the Bible from
Shannon and flipped through it. As he gave the book a last shake, a
scrap of paper tumbled toward the floor.
With his preternatural reflexes, Chance snatched
it before it touched. He scanned it and then looked at me with a
half frown. “Robert Frost? It’s that ‘Two roads diverged in a wood’
poem.”
“ ‘The Road Not Taken’?” I took the torn yellow
sheet from Chance; it looked as if it had been pulled from a legal
pad. “Wish we had a sample of Farrell’s handwriting. Then we’d know
whether he wrote this down himself or someone else gave it to
him.”
“Can I?” At Shannon’s question, I passed it
along. Her eyes widened. “This is John McGee’s writing. I’d
recognize the crabby little letters anywhere.”
“So Farrell had been talking to McGee,” Jesse
mused. “And they both ended up dead.”
I wondered aloud, “Could that have been the
point? Someone may have sent Farrell to Miss Minnie’s house right
then, knowing we were there.”
A thundercloud frown knit Chance’s brow.
“Knowing we wouldn’t react well to a robber threatening an old
lady.”
“If that’s the case,” Shannon said, “then the
guy on the roof wasn’t working with Farrell. He was there to keep
us pinned down until we noticed something was wrong inside.”
Jesse gave her an approving nod. “Good thinking,
Shannon.”
She flushed with pleasure. “Just makes sense,
right? He didn’t try too hard to hit us. He might’ve been trying to
drive us back inside the house, and then Butch heard the
intruder.”
It would’ve taken a dog’s hearing to notice
someone jimmying the back door with the varmint rifle pinging away.
But then, everyone in town knew I took Butch everywhere. As
theories went, this one seemed to make sense.
That put a scowl on Saldana’s face. “If that’s
true, it makes it even more embarrassing that he got me.”
I didn’t look at him. He’d been shot trying to
protect me. I couldn’t make light of that, even if it hadn’t been
strictly necessary, but there was no evidence to support any of our
hypotheses, anyway.
“We sound like crazed conspiracy theorists,” I
said in disgust. “It was this; it was that; it was—”
“Bigfoot,” Chance said, deadpan.
He startled a laugh out of me.
“Definitely.”
“Nothing else was underlined,” Jesse murmured,
getting us back on track. “I think it’s safe to say our guy isn’t a
scholar or a church-goer.”
Shannon nodded. “No shit. I expect to find a
closet weed farm somewhere in here. But if you want to scope out
the church scene, there’s a potluck dinner every Saturday
night.”
“That’s your grandfather’s territory,” Chance
pointed out. “Is that going to be a problem for you?”
She shrugged. “Up until we leave, everything
here is going to cause problems for me. I’m just waiting for it to
hit the fan.”
At that point, Butch jumped out of my bag into
her arms. She caught him with a startled laugh. He was simply the
best dog ever; he seemed to sense that she would derive comfort
from snuggling him instead of thinking about her troubles.
I rubbed my hands against my denim-clad thighs,
trying to scrub away the residual filth of poking around that
bathroom. To me, Farrell’s home hygiene suggested he didn’t believe
he had long to live, and thus, saw no point in keeping up the
place. But I wasn’t sure I could profile someone, based on slovenly
ways.
“Then I’d say a church social is what we need to
scope out the local color.”
“This won’t end well,” Jesse predicted.
We didn’t find anything else of interest, not
even that closet weed farm Shannon expected. I was starting to get
frustrated with all the separate pieces not coalescing into a
recognizable shape. There’s a reason I hate jigsaw puzzles. I don’t
have the patience to find all the border pieces, especially when
they’re all the same shade of gray.
When we left Farrell’s house, we took the Bible.
I’d handle it later, but it didn’t seem wise to hang around
Farrell’s place longer than necessary. If Sheriff Robinson found us
here, the consequences would be unpleasant.
“Let’s take one last look around,” Jesse
said.
Shannon cocked a brow. “What’re we looking
for?”
“Anything that offers a hint at who’s been
hanging around,” he answered. “Corine learned a lot from a button,
as I recall.”
That much was true. Any small object that
might’ve dropped when people were coming and going might tell us
something. Right now we had no clue why Curtis Farrell had decided
to trade a life of petty drugs and making change for one big
felony.
Chance nodded. “Better to be sure we don’t miss
anything. Somebody will be along to shovel this place out, so we
probably won’t have another shot at this. Corine, you want to take
a look around back?”
I nodded as they divided up the rest of the
small yard. Shannon kept Butch, and he showed no signs of minding
the attention. I circled the house. Near the back door, I found
some weird impressions in the dirt behind Farrell’s garage. It
would take a tracker to make anything of the morass of churned mud,
unless—
I’d never have attempted, or even considered
anything like this in the past, but since dying, my gift seemed to
have stretched into unknown dimensions. Before, I wouldn’t have
tried to read a whole house. I knelt, studying the ground: torn
earth and grass pulled up by the roots. I wouldn’t be able to do
anything with the plants, but what about dirt?
The others were searching the front and sides.
If Chance or Jesse had been there, they probably would have tried
to talk me out of it. I gazed at the new brand on my palm, the
smooth, unscarred skin around it, and felt a cold, eerie certainty.
I could do this. I didn’t know what the mark portended, but it
signified change. Though I had no way to prove it, I suspected I’d
received more of my mother’s power. Instead of passing to me
cleanly during her spell, something must have gone wrong and it had
wound up in the necklace instead. Now that I’d touched it, I’d
absorbed the rest, but there was no way to know how it would affect
me down the road.
But it had made me a more powerful handler, no
question.
Without hesitation, I sank my fingers into the
dirt. It felt like bathing my hand in chemical fire, but I gritted
my teeth and held on. Nobody died here; it wasn’t that bad, but it
was awful enough.
I became two men at once, locked in a
life-or-death struggle. That had never happened to me before
because objects belonged to one person. Not dirt—it belonged to
everyone, no one, or whoever trod upon it.
Their conflicting emotions swamped me: greed,
anger, terror, exhilaration, desperation. I seesawed between the
apogee and the abyss while they grappled and tore the earth. I’d
have given a lot to hear what they were saying, but it never worked
like that for me. I imagined the grunts and gasps of breath while
pain washed over me in waves of red fire. Though I tried, I
couldn’t jerk my hand out of the soil until the vision ended.
Immersion, immolation; I hovered but a half step away from one or
the other.
Finally, the older man shoved the younger to his
knees, both hands on his throat. He spoke, saying something I
couldn’t hear. I strained to read his lips and failed, not for the
first time. For a heartbreaking moment, the man on his knees clawed
at his captor’s hands, desperate. His fear poured through me, sour
and rancid. He didn’t want to acquiesce, but he’d die if he didn’t.
He felt it, believed it, and so did I.
When the beaten man turned his face upward, I
recognized him. Farrell. Whatever the old
bastard wanted, Curtis had been forced to it—throttled into
submission. He managed a nod, and the other man’s hands fell away
just before Farrell blacked out. And I went with him.
I came to on my side, gasping for air. My throat
burnt as if someone had been strangling me,
and my right hand throbbed with an agonizing pulse. Jesus. Well, that’s new.
Through sparks in my vision that meant I was
close to passing out again, I stared at my fingers, focused on
wiggling them, and saw they were fire engine red but possessed no
new marks. I lay there, breathing and reflecting. It was all I
could do right then.
Dirt was less dangerous than metal. But no
wonder the tracks didn’t look like much of anything. Two men
fighting over the same space created the look of a monster
rampage.
Jesse came upon me a few minutes later. “What
the hell, Corine—did someone attack you? What happened? Can you
talk, sugar?” He did a visual inspection of my injuries, lingering
at my throat.
Christ, did I wear marks there too?
I managed to push to a sitting position, but
standing was beyond me. Oxygen deprivation sent tremors through my
limbs; I couldn’t seem to convince my body I hadn’t been choked. He
swung me up into his arms before I could tell him not to, and my
stomach whirled in response.
“Slowly,” I whispered, sounding hoarse to my own
ears.
Jesse called to the others and carried me to the
Forester, but he modulated his step so as not to jar me. He smelled
of plain Ivory soap and a tangy citrus scent. I breathed him in,
trying to identify the cologne, and then gave up, closing my
eyes.
Jesse slid into the vehicle with me on his lap,
and I didn’t try to get away. Then again, I wouldn’t have tried to
escape unless a killer had a hold of me; I was that tapped out. Two
doors slammed, and Shannon and Chance got in the front.
“Drive,” Jesse told Shannon, who started the
engine on command.
She pulled out, gravel spinning beneath the
tires. In making our getaway, we didn’t encounter any law
enforcement types who’d ask awkward questions about why Chance was
hanging around the house of the man he’d killed last night.
“What’s going on?” Chance asked.
Jesse answered, “At this point? I’m not sure.
But take a look at this.”
I felt him angle my head, and then I did open my
eyes. Chance swore in an entertaining mix of English and Korean.
Mildly curious now that my nausea had started to subside, I lifted
my left hand and touched my neck. Ouch.
I couldn’t remember ever taking an injury apart
from my hands. Unless you count dying, a
cynical voice said. My mother’s necklace might well have changed
everything I thought I knew about my gift, both its boundaries and
its dangers.
“Did someone attack you?” Chance demanded.
I shook my head slowly to make sure that much
was clear. There would be no point in Shannon stopping the SUV so
they could comb the area for someone long gone days before.
Concentrating, I mimed writing.
Chance got it right away. He delved into Jesse’s
glove box and found a pen and scrap of paper for me. I scrawled
what I’d done, what I’d seen, and then passed it to my ex. His jaw
tightened as he read, and he slanted a look over the seat that
could’ve cut glass. Before he said a word, I could tell what he
thought of my pushing my power.
“You’re out of your mind,” he bit out. “Are you
determined to die here? Because I see you
taking risk after risk and you don’t seem to—”
“Stop,” Jesse said quietly. “She’s been through
enough at this point. She doesn’t need you yelling at her
too.”
Chance’s eyes glittered like amber with ire
frozen in their depths. “Don’t tell me what
to do where Corine’s concerned.” He looked as if he would break
Jesse’s fingers and pull them away from me by force.
“Every time I handle, it’s a risk.” I pushed the
words through a raw throat. “I made the choice; I’ll live with the
consequences.”
“Where to?” Shannon cut in, diffident.
I silently thanked her for the change in topic.
I struggled off Jesse’s lap and belted myself with some difficulty
into my own seat. My fingers stung like hell.
“I need a drink,” I told Shannon. “Strong enough
to burn off the clouds. Is there a bar anywhere nearby?”
In answer, she cut right on the county road and
headed toward town.
After a short drive, she pulled up outside a
roadhouse that sat just outside the city limits, a little way past
Ma’s Kitchen. No signs revealed the name of the establishment, but
small orange neon lettering proclaimed CHEAP COLD BEER. That was
probably enough for local clientele.
Refusing Jesse’s aid, I slid out of the SUV. I
brushed myself off as best I could and then gave up, figuring
people who hung around in bars this early deserved my dishevelment.
My knees felt shaky for the first few steps, but I declined to take
anybody’s arm. They would just argue I shouldn’t be drinking if I
couldn’t walk straight before I started,
and they would have a point.
Chance opened the door for me and I stepped in,
squinting at the dim interior. There were no lights on at this
hour, just the uncertain light filtering through dirty windows. The
place was open for business, though, and decorated with liquor
store paraphernalia. Beer signs and old advertisements littered the
walls.
There was nobody at the bar, nobody in here at
all. A guy in a dirty yellow ball cap paused in stocking the bar
when we came in. Did they even have tequila
here? Drowning in a sudden onslaught of homesickness, I wanted
some.
This place was nothing like the warm, inviting
cantinas at home. It wasn’t even as nice as Twilight in San
Antonio. Still, my nerves needed steadying, and I could use
something to numb the pain.
The proprietor tried on a smile, as if he hoped
we were there to spend money and not just use the toilet or
telephone. At a glance, the place didn’t seem to have one—a public
phone, that is. A handwritten sign pointed toward the
rest-rooms.
“What can I get you folks?” His voice boomed
out, jocular and forced.
Shannon asked for a Coke. Smart girl. I hadn’t even thought of her being
underage when I suggested this; I wasn’t used to hanging around
kids. Chance and Jesse both requested beers, but Jesse said the can
was fine for him.
“Hell Fire,” I said aloud, my voice low and
husky as a phone-sex operator.
He blinked at me. “I reckon I have no idea what
that is, but if you tell me how, I can mix it for you.”
“Equal parts tequila, vodka, Red Aftershock, and
a dash of Tabasco. Mix well, pour over ice.”
Their drinks came quick. Mine he had to think
about. “I got the tequila and vodka,” he muttered, more to himself
than me. Cheap stuff it was too. He dumped some ice in a glass,
anticipating success. I watched, feeling almost cheerful about his
uncertainty. He finally glanced over at me. “I don’t have no Red
Aftershock.”
“Cinnamon schnapps will do,” I said, easing down
at the bar.
Something spicy might clear my head and burn
away the confusion. If nothing else, I needed to hold a drink that
reminded me of home, one that burned as it went down. I missed
Mexico. Georgia had been my home once, but it wasn’t anymore.
After I told him what to substitute, it went
quickly for him: tequila, vodka, cinnamon schnapps, a dash of hot
sauce. With an expression that said yuck,
he slid it my way. The bar-tender studied me as I drank the
concoction, as if expecting smoke to rise from my mouth. But I was
used to stronger stuff.
I was made of stronger
stuff.