thirty-three
As I stood, Paula eyed me warily. “Now
what? Do I need to call lawyer?”
“Not unless you killed Claire or Michael Kennedy.
Claire’s mother is my client, so her death is my professional
concern. Her brother’s death is my personal concern. As far as I
can see, you had nothing to do with either, so ...” I shrugged and
put my notebook into my bag. “Not my concern.”
“What about the gun? If Chief Bruyn suspects I
stole it—”
“He doesn’t. I lied. You’re in the clear.”
She let me get to the hall, then she called,
“Savannah.”
I glanced back.
“Thank you,” she said.
“If it’d been me,” I said, “I’d have shot Brandi,
and it wouldn’t have been an accident.”
I went outside and said good-bye to Kayla, then
watched as Paula threw open the door and bent to hug her.
AS ADAM DROVE, I relayed Paula’s story.
“I can see how it happened,” Adam said when I was
done. “It’s Alastair who’s full of shit. They wouldn’t take Kayla
away for a clear self-defense case.”
I shrugged. “It might not have looked all that
clear to him. But she’s wrong about the photos. She just didn’t see
the signs—the cops didn’t, remember? If Alastair is into Santeria,
he knows enough about rituals to fake one and give the murders a
satanic cult angle.”
Adam’s fingers tapped the steering wheel, his gaze
distant.
“What?” I said.
“He could, but would he? Wouldn’t anything cultlike
have them looking in his direction? Then, if they found the
Santeria—which he wasn’t hiding very well—he’d be the new prime
suspect. Maybe the cops never noticed those ritual signs because
they weren’t there. Where did Jesse get his set?”
“From a contact. A friend—” I swore. “They were
doctored before Jesse got them.”
WE COULD VERIFY that theory easily enough—just
look at the real photos. But when I called the station, Bruyn was
out. I wanted to stop by anyway, but Adam eased me off, not wanting
us to jump to conclusions so fast.
“Remember Claire did have that pewter bead in her
hand,” he said as he drove. “Sure, I think it would be dumb for
Alastair to stage it, but maybe he didn’t see that.”
“He was panicked and did the first thing he could
think of. But if that’s true, then it seriously cuts down on the
suspects for Claire’s murder.”
“Let’s say Claire found evidence that Paula killed
Ginny and Brandi. She goes to Alastair to get his advice. He kills
her.”
“Then Michael starts getting close. Alastair lures
him to a warehouse staged for a ritual—”
The Jeep thumped into a pothole. My stomach heaved
and I grabbed the dashboard. Adam hit the brakes and my breakfast
almost hit the windshield.
“Shit! I’m sorry.” He eased the Jeep to the side as
I bent forward, eyes closed.
“Kleenex,” I mumbled, trying not to open my mouth
too far.
“Right. Okay. I’ve got napkins.”
He passed them to me and I spat out the stuff in my
mouth. As I wadded up the tissues, an opened pack of gum appeared
in front of me. I took a piece, and chewed before saying, “I think
I’m coming down with something.”
“You haven’t been feeling well?”
“A bit nauseated.” I glanced over. “And no, it
isn’t morning sickness. Somehow I doubt I’m a suitable candidate
for the next immaculate conception.”
“I was feeling a little off myself first thing, and
it’s definitely not morning sickness for me. Could be the flu. Any
other symptoms?”
I told him about the headaches and the
spellcasting.
“You’re having trouble casting spells?”
“Just a few misfires. It’s nothing.”
“You should have told me. If I’m watching your
back, I need to know that your spells are on the fritz.”
“Let’s just get to the motel and talk to Jesse
about the photos. Avoid the potholes if you can.”
He pulled back onto the road.
“Maybe whoever gave Jesse those photos did the
doctoring himself,” I said. “He wanted Jesse to investigate
Claire’s death, so he Photoshopped the others. I keep going back to
that witch theory. If Ginny and Brandi’s deaths weren’t connected
to Claire’s, then that makes even more sense. Claire could be a
witch. She’s killed. Two weeks later, I’m being stalked and
Tiffany—who we know is a witch—is killed.”
Adam didn’t say anything. When I looked over, he
was staring straight ahead.
“What?” I said.
“I just keep ...” An angry shake of his head.
“About the witch thing. It’s tweaking a memory, and it’s driving me
crazy because I can’t figure it out. I’m going to check a few more
things in the database, then I may have to break down and call
Dad.”
THE FIRST ORDER of business at the motel was to
talk to Jesse and get specifics on where he got the crime-scene
photos. When we pulled in, though, the parking spot in front of his
room was still empty.
“Shit,” I said. “I gave him the file.” I walked to
Jesse’s door. “Time for a little B&E. Not like he hasn’t done
the same to me ...” I murmured an unlock spell under my breath,
then grabbed the handle and—
The knob didn’t turn. I tried again. Then tried
harder.
Adam shouldered me aside and used the lock-pick
gun. The door opened.
We went in. As Adam retrieved the folder, I closed
and relocked the door, then started to cast.
“Savannah,” Adam sighed.
“It’s bugging me, okay?”
I cast the spell. The door stayed locked. I focused
harder and cast a fourth time and felt a whisper of relief as I
heard that familiar click. The door opened.
I held out my hand and cast a light ball. When
nothing happened, a weird sensation like panic settled into the pit
of my stomach. As I started to cast again, my fingers trembled. I
stopped and made a fist.
“Savannah ...” Adam said. “You aren’t feeling well.
We’ll deal with it.”
“Just give me a sec, okay?”
I concentrated and cast. The light ball shimmered,
then went out. Another cast. It returned and stayed. Weak, but
steady. “Damn it, damn it, damn it.”
Adam reached out, as if he was going to put his
arms around me, but stopped short.
“No need to keep your distance,” I muttered.
“Apparently, I’m not that dangerous today.”
“Apparently you’re sick today.”
“I need my spells.”
“They help, but you don’t need them. Not as much as
you think you do.”
“Let’s get back and check out that file.”
“Changing the subject and completely ignoring the
point I’m making.”
I shook my head and grabbed the file.
I LEAFED THROUGH the file. The crime-scene
photos—and other pages—weren’t there. I read the rest, looking for
anything that disagreed with Paula’s story. Nothing did. Good. As I
read, Adam searched his database.
“Fuck,” he said. I jumped, papers sliding to
the floor. By the time I’d gathered them back up, he was on his
feet, still holding his laptop, reading it as he paced, mouth set,
forehead furrowed.
“Found something, I take it.”
“Witch-hunters,” he said.
“Ah, an old and noble profession, a mere step down
from that most esteemed position: Grand Inquisitor. Hate to break
it to you, but the witch-hunts ended a few hundred years
ago.”
“Not for some people.” He turned his laptop around
to show me. “These ones date back even further than the
Inquisition. Very rare. Very elusive. Young women who are trained
from birth.”
“To hunt witches?” I shook my head. “If such a
thing existed, I think I’d know about it.”
“Did I mention the rare and elusive part? They
usually kill in a way that looks like suicide or natural death,
which is what was tweaking my memory. I was searching on the Bible
verse, though, and they don’t usually leave such an obvious
sign.”
I bent to read the screen, then tapped the database
title. “It’s filed under myths and legends. Meaning it’s bullshit.
Mysterious trained assassins secretly killing witches?” I shook my
head. “Just the kind of bogeyman a Coven—or sorcerers—would create
to turn us into the cowering mice they want us to be.”
“Okay.”
“No, it’s not okay. First, the Inquisition. Then
the witch-hunts. Then centuries of quaking in the dark, too damn
scared to cast a light ball, terrorized by our own kind.
Nobody does this to werewolves or vampires or half-demons. Why
witches?”
“Um, because no one believes in werewolves or
vampires or half-demons.” Adam put the laptop aside. “You’re
preaching to the guy who’s heard the same sermon from Paige for the
last twenty years. Witches get a bum deal. Always have. Personally,
I’d blame sorcerers, but considering you’re a sorcerer, too
...”
“Blame male sorcerers. Or maybe just males
in general. Inquisitors, judges, hangmen ... they were all
male.”
“Are your spells still on the fritz? Or should I
slink from the room while I still can?”
“I’m kidding. You know that. There are just as many
bitches out there as bastards. Equal opportunity
asshole-ism.”
I plunked onto the bed, picked up his laptop, and
read the entry.
According to the myth, witch-hunters had begun as
an actual supernatural race. The Benandanti. I’d heard of them. A
small race of Italian demon-hunters, not witch-hunters,
although they’d been known to go after any supernaturals who used
their power for evil. They were extinct now. No one seemed to know
why. According to this legend, though, they’d been wiped out and
replaced by witch-hunters.
Witch-hunters had been priestesses who’d held
absolute power over their people with garden-variety magic—the kind
every street magician knows. Then their people started trading with
a nomadic tribe, which included families of Benandanti.
The Benandanti, true to their nature, didn’t much
like the priestesses. When the priestesses realized the Benandanti
had real supernatural powers, they cried foul ... and accused them
of being exactly the kind of evil the Benandanti fought. When
people wouldn’t listen, the priestesses decided to eradicate the
Benandanti. That took a few generations, and by the time they
succeeded, they’d ironically slid into the role of the Benandanti,
convincing themselves that they were the righteous ones ridding the
world of evil spellcasters. So, when the Benandanti were gone, they
moved on to a more ambitious target: witches.
The entry described a secret society of women who
spent their childhood and adolescence preparing for the day when
they would kill a witch or two. When they “came of age,” they
finally got their chance. It reminded me of religions where the
young adults spend a few years traveling, spreading the word and
making converts. Only these girls hit the road in hopes of killing
a few witches before rejoining civilian life, marrying and raising
the next generation of assassins.
Like your standard myth, it made a good story,
which is why my gut reaction was to treat it as such. And
yet...
According to the legend, there were very few of
these families remaining, as elusive as snow leopards. When they
killed, they did it in a way that wouldn’t raise any alarms, even
among witches. Wasn’t that exactly how Claire and Tiffany died? One
the apparent victim of a serial killer. The other likely a
suicide.
Witch-hunters were said to recognize witches on
sight—as sorcerers do—then stalk their victims until they found
exactly the right circumstances. What if one had been following
Claire Kennedy? That witch-hunter comes to Columbus, and discovers
another witch ... then another. She’d think she’d struck the
jackpot.
Kill Claire and link her death to the first two
crimes. Kill Michael when he got too close. Kill Tiffany in an
apparent suicide. And then? Well, there’s one witch left ...
“If this is right, you’re in deep shit,” Adam said,
around the time I came to the same conclusion.
“I’m not backing off.”
“I don’t expect you to. Just don’t blast me with an
energy bolt if I dog your steps until this investigation is
done.”
“I won’t.” I eased back on the bed, pulling my feet
up. “My spell casting has fizzled, remember? Damned inconvenient
time for the flu.”
Adam went still. Too still. I was about to ask if
he was okay, when he grabbed his laptop and began typing furiously.
When he looked up, his eyes were dark with worry.
“What have you been eating?” he asked.
“Um, lots of stuff. As usual. Most of it bad for
me.”
“No, what have you been eating regularly? In
the last few days. Something I might have had, too.” His gaze shot
to the door. “The coffee shop. You had three meals from them, and
I’ve had one ... No, I was feeling a little off before that.
Something else then. What have you been eating a lot of? Especially
something given to you by someone else—”
His gaze swung to the table and he let out an oath.
I grabbed the box of cult cookies.
“You weren’t eating these, though,” I said. “You
finished off Paige’s.”
He shook his head. “No, I swiped a cult one, too. I
had to see if they lived up to the advertising. I liked Paige’s
better, so I finished hers.”
“Witch-hunters are young women, right?”
“Yep, and there’s a whole house of them on the
hill, making cookies. Who gave you the box?”
“Megan, but it was sitting on the counter before
that. I’d stepped outside with one of the girls. Anyone could have
come in and dosed it.” I thought back to every contact I’d had with
the young women at the cult. “It could be Megan, could be Deirdre,
could be Vee ...”
I remembered someone else. Someone I’d had far less
contact with. “The new girl. She was watching me, and she saw me
talking to Tiffany. Remember when we were at the house while
Tiffany was being killed? Megan was asking where she was.”
“Looks like we’ve got our—”
“Except for one thing. She was Claire’s
replacement. She arrived in town at the same time I
did.”
“Doesn’t mean she wasn’t here before. But, yeah,
that makes it a little less clear cut. We need to take a closer
look at all those girls. I can’t say for sure that it’s the
cookies, but that’s my guess. There are a bunch of poisons that can
inhibit spellcasting.”
“Poisons?”
“That’s why I’m worried. I know you’re going to
hate this, but I want to get you to Portland, pay a visit to Dr.
Lee.”
Lee was the physician used by most area
supernaturals when they had a health concern that went beyond a
cold or flu. In an emergency, we can use a regular hospital, but
whenever possible we avoid it—there are things in our systems that
can give wonky test results and raise eyebrows.
“So the theory would be that this witch-hunter
poisoned me to reduce my spellcasting so she can get the jump on
me,” I said as we prepared to leave.
“Could be. Or she might just be protecting herself
against you. That Bible was left out for a reason. She knew
you’d be involved in the case, and I can’t see why she’d tip her
hand like that unless it was a warning.”
“So she’s not targeting me, just telling me
to back off? Mmm, not so sure. I see it more as a challenge.”
Adam’s look said he didn’t like that explanation. A
challenge said she intended to kill me no matter how hard I
fought.
My cell phone rang. It was Bruyn.
“You were looking for me?” he said.
“I was. I wanted to get a look at the crime-scene
photos if you have them.”
“Sure do. If you’ve got a minute, swing by now.
I’ve got some news you might want to hear.”