fifteen
I still had almost two hours to kill before
meeting Cody. I called Jesse to let him know I’d sent the files. He
was on the other line and said he’d phone back. I wandered into the
first shop I came to—the hardware store where Dorothy claimed Cody
and Claire had argued. I was browsing, trying to attract the
clerk’s attention so I could ask about it, when a voice behind my
shoulder said, “I thought PIs were supposed to be
unobtrusive.”
I turned to see Megan. The rest of her group was
outside, milling about.
“Getting in a catfight with the main suspect’s
wife?” she said. “On Main Street?”
“She started it.”
Megan smiled. “I don’t doubt that. Tiffany Radu is
one of those women who believes it’s easier to scare away the
competition than to tell her husband to respect his wedding vows.
You should have seen her when we first moved here—practically
hissing every time we came to town.”
“Did you ever see her facing off with
Claire?”
Her eyes sparkled. “Is that the direction you’re
looking? Interesting. I can’t say I did, but I’ll ask the girls. Or
you can ask them yourself. We’re heading to the diner for an early
lunch, if you want to join us.”
“So I’m forgiven for yesterday?”
“You were just doing your job. And I was doing
mine. Protecting the business.”
I noticed she said the business, not the
girls.
“I might take you up on that. And Alastair? Is
he—?”
“Away today, I’m afraid. But we can set up an
appointment.”
I glanced out the window. “The new girl seems
nervous. Still bracing for the orgies, I bet.”
Megan laughed. “Is that all you think about?”
“I like sex. And from what I hear, so do you.” I
turned to go. “Or is it power?”
A good parting line, but I didn’t get more than two
steps before she said, “Power,” and I spun back to face her.
“You didn’t expect me to admit it?” she said.
“Sure, the sex is a nice bonus, but sex is power, at least when
you’ve got a houseful of girls and one man.”
“That’s honest.”
“I thought you’d appreciate it.”
Megan was clearly playing me, having decided I made
a better ally than enemy. That was fine. I thought the same about
her.
“So you’re sleeping with Alastair?”
“I’d rather not admit it, because that’s
exactly what everyone expects, but I know you already got the scoop
from Deirdre, so yes, Alastair doesn’t spend a lot of nights alone.
Under the circumstances, he’d have to be a saint or a eunuch if he
did. I’m sure Deirdre also told you that I’m insanely jealous of
every girl he takes to bed.”
“And you’re not.”
“They like to think I am. They’re like little
girls, giggling because they put one over on the teacher. But I’m
not Tiffany Radu. I encourage Alastair to take the new girls up on
their offers. What matters isn’t that he strays; it’s that he comes
back.”
When I looked doubtful, she said, “Think about it.
All those girls. All that temptation. He gives in—he’s only human.
But he always returns to me. To the girls, that means
something.”
“That you’re the queen bee.”
She smiled. “Every hive needs one.”
I DID JOIN them for lunch, though I just got a
coffee. But no one was about to say anything in front of Megan.
When I asked about Claire and Cody, I noticed a girl with
blue-streaked hair shifting in her seat, like she had something to
add. She didn’t speak, though. I needed to get her when the boss
wasn’t around.
The girls had barely ordered when my cell rang.
Jesse. I excused myself to take it, and thanked them for their
time, leaving a five to cover my coffee—and win brownie points with
Lorraine.
I rubbed my neck as I headed outside to call Jesse
back. The headache again. Definitely time for a different helmet
... something I’m sure the hardware store didn’t stock. I made a
mental note to grab aspirin later.
Jesse had run a background check on Megan. She was
twenty-six, older than I thought. Her story checked out—MBA from
Columbia, worked on Wall Street for awhile, then bailed.
“Burnout,” Jesse said. “She doesn’t strike me as
the type to run off to a commune, but I guess you can never
tell.”
“Oh, you can usually tell. I don’t think Megan
burned out. She just realized she could make more working in a
startup company where she was in charge. That’s what the commune is
to her. A business. Those girls aren’t working for much more than
room and board, I’m sure of it. And they’re pulling their own
weight there, too—cooking and cleaning.”
“So cynical, so young.”
“You think I’m wrong?”
“No, I’m just kicking myself for not seeing the con
first. I’m supposed to be the expert on the workings of the
criminal mind. I’ll make up for it now and dig into the
financials.”
“Please. Everyone here really likes the sexy
angles—the philandering husband and the weird cult leader—but it
may come down to money.”
“It usually does. I’ll get on that, then.”
WITH THE GIRLS eating lunch in town and Alastair
away, it was the perfect time to take a closer look at the commune.
I parked my bike in a wooded area nearby, then headed in the back
way. Once I was sure that the drive was empty and the lights all
off, I approached the front gate, to get a better look at the
symbol. It was there—and had been repainted.
I licked my finger and smudged a line. Yep, blood.
Likely chicken blood, if someone was practicing Santeria.
I eyed the house wistfully. As rustic as it
appeared, I was sure it had a burglar alarm. Disarming it wouldn’t
leave me much time for searching before Megan came back. And I
figured I had just as good a chance of finding evidence of rituals
out here.
I went through the outbuildings. Met some chickens,
a couple of cows, even a pig. No horses, though, which seemed a
complete waste of barn space. I did manage to make friends with a
barn cat. Or it made friends with me.
I’m not a pet person—even with horses, I’ve never
seriously considered owning one—but you have to give cats kudos for
attitude. If you stop to pet them, they can’t be bothered with you.
Ignore them, and they rise to the challenge. By the time I was done
searching the outbuildings, the cat had brought me a gift—a
still-twitching rat. I was impressed. I rewarded it with an ear
scratch, and it took off, mission accomplished.
That was the only reward I got, though. A half hour
of searching, and all I had to show for it was shit on my
boots.
There was one other outbuilding behind the barns.
It was locked, which seemed promising, until I opened it and found
tools and a lawn tractor. I checked out the yard next. Vegetable
garden, herb garden, even a couple of beehives behind the toolshed.
So very Little House on the Prairie. Why anyone would choose
to live like this was beyond me.
I was checking out the hives when I noticed the
boarded-up window above them. That made me realize I hadn’t seen a
boarded-up window from the inside ... and that the toolshed looked
a lot bigger from out here.
I went back in. Sure enough, there was a false
wall. And behind it? A sacrificial altar. Not for human
sacrifice—Santerians don’t practice that. I’ve been well schooled
in basic respect for religions, courtesy of Paige. Not that she
always practices what she preaches—I recall a certain incident with
naked Wiccans in our backyard—but she handled it more respectfully
than I would have, and she would point out it’d been a small sect,
not indicative of the religion as a whole.
Santeria is a Caribbean religion melding African,
Catholic, and Native American traditions. Its rituals include the
sacrifice of animals. There was evidence of that here—a small
ornate axe and bloodstains on the floor. There were also coins,
oils, flowers, herbs, colored cloth, stones, beads, even a set of
dominos, for rituals of a less bloody sort.
A lamp burned on a table. It was a clay pot of oil
with stuff floating in it and a wick on top. I could make out ashes
and metal in the oil. Beside it lay a dead scorpion coated in
oil.
I took pictures, sent them to Adam, then
called.
“Now that you actually need my help, I can’t get
rid of you,” he said when he answered.
“I just sent you—”
“Photos. I’m looking at them now. With the
scorpion, we seem to have another home-protection ritual, this one
specifically to keep away enemies. The oil has to burn for a few
days, and most of it’s still there. You were up at the house
yesterday, weren’t you?”
“So this ritual is to protect them from me?
Cool. Doesn’t work, though.”
“I can’t imagine anything that would. So we
definitely have someone practicing Santeria. Presumably someone
high on the group’s food chain. One of the girls isn’t going to
construct a hidden room in the toolshed.”
“I know Santeria doesn’t condone human sacrifice,
but if we’re dealing with a wannabe, maybe they’re bending the
rules. If chickens don’t work, try dead girls. Any link with the
crime-scene stuff?”
“That bead Claire was clutching could be
significant for the pewter or from the symbolism. Could even be a
cheap stand-in for silver. I’ll keep looking. Anything else?”
“No, Jesse’s doing the background checks.”
“Got the guys doing the grunt work, huh?”
“After years of doing it for you, Paige, and Lucas,
I’m liking this a whole lot better.”
“Just don’t get used to it.”
EVIDENCE OF SANTERIA did not mean we’d found our
killer, any more than if I’d found evidence of a Catholic mass. But
these ritualistic religions did attract fringe types who
misunderstood the beliefs and focused on the occultlike
aspects.
Now I needed to figure out who was the
practitioner. The best place to find evidence of that would be in
the house. If there was an alarm, I’d be out of luck, but I could
always hope they were the sort who left without turning it
on.
Even better—the back door was latched but not
locked. I eased it open, bracing for the squeal of an alarm.
Silence. I slipped in and looked around. I found a security panel,
but it was green. Unarmed.
As I crept into the hall, a phone rang. On the
third ring, it stopped. I paused, expecting an answering
machine.
“Hello?” A man’s voice. Alastair. Shit. That’s why
the door was open and the alarm off.
The voice came from the front of the house. I cast
a blur spell, and began a slow retreat to the kitchen door. That
sleep spell would have come in really handy right about now. Damn.
I needed to find a cemetery.
“Ice cream, huh?” He laughed. “No, that’s fine.
They could use the break and I could use the peace and quiet to
finish this ledger. Take as long as you want, Meg.”
Okay, he was busy in his office and the girls were
enjoying after-lunch ice cream.
I took off my boots, cast another blur spell, and
zipped up the stairs, boots in hand. Padding around in socks, I
searched all six bedrooms. The closest thing to talismans I found
were a four-leaf clover pendant on a dresser and a dream catcher
hanging in a window. For drugs, I only found a stash of pot and a
cache of diet pills. Whoever was practicing Santeria was keeping it
out of the house.
I headed back downstairs. As I passed the living
room, the doorbell rang. I darted into the living room, dove behind
an armchair, and cast a cover spell. As long as I didn’t move, I’d
be okay.
When Alastair opened the door, I recognized the
visitor’s voice. Tiffany Radu.
“I met your new girl in town,” she said. “She gave
me a coupon for a dozen cookies. Getting a little bold, aren’t you?
It would be much easier to call.”
Alastair laughed. “I wish I could take the credit,
but no, Megan must have given Amy those to hand out. A nice way to
introduce herself. Come in, please.”
Tiffany pushed the baby buggy into the living room
and returned to the hall.
“So, do you want those cookies?” he asked.
“Is that the only thing on the menu?”
A chuckle. Then a crash, like a body hitting a
wall. I jumped, startling the baby, who stared at me, her blue eyes
wide. From the hall came a grunt, then the whir of a zipper. A
groan. A sucking noise. Another groan.
Okay, no one was getting killed. And I would have
been less surprised if someone was.
The baby craned her head, trying to see her mother.
I really hoped she couldn’t. Seeing Mom blowing a guy who isn’t
your dad really isn’t an experience any kid needs imprinted on her
young memory.
I slid from behind the chair and tugged the buggy
toward me until I was certain the baby couldn’t see Tiffany. It’s a
sad day when I’m more concerned for a child than her mother
is.
The baby started whimpering now. There was no way
Tiffany could hear her—Alastair was too vocal in his appreciation.
When a baby isn’t heard, though, a baby gets louder, and I didn’t
want them coming in here.
I murmured an incantation. A light ball appeared on
my fingertips. The baby’s eyes rounded. I tossed it to hover over
her buggy and she giggled and crowed.
“Mama, Mama!” she said, bouncing as I made the
light ball dance.
Tiffany really needed to work on her parenting
skills if her kid adopted the first stranger who paid attention to
her.
I went through a repertoire of simple
tricks—lights, sparks, fog, all the ones kids love. I’d learned all
the ways to keep Elena and Clay’s twins amused when I baby-sat. Now
that they’re school age, they want to learn the tricks ... and get
royally pissed off when they can’t.
So I entertained the baby as Mom and the local cult
dude moved to full-on screwing. When they started banging against
the walls, the baby got concerned again. I did, too. The house was
old and they were really going at it.
I picked up an ugly stuffed toy from the buggy and
made it dance. The baby grabbed it and threw it. I knew this game.
I picked it up and gave it back. She threw it, then chortled when
the stupid grown-up fell for it again.
The toy looked homemade. Tiffany didn’t seem the
type to lovingly sew toys for her baby. It was definitely an
amateur job, with weird stitching along the seams. An older
sibling? Whatever they’d stuffed it with, it wasn’t exactly soft
and cuddly. It felt like ... dried herbs.
I caught a whiff of something that made my eyes fly
open. I lifted the toy to my nose.
It was stuffed with blessed thistle. Most witches
don’t use herbs outside of rituals, but blessed thistle used to be
stuffed into sachets for protection and health. I think Wiccans
still used it. I glanced toward the front hall. Was Tiffany
Wiccan?
I looked closer at the toy and noticed the
stitching wasn’t actually messy. It was symbolic. Special stitching
for protection. Not Wiccan. Witch.
Now I knew why the baby had been calling me Mama
when she saw the spells. Cody Radu wasn’t the spellcaster in the
family. Tiffany was.