1
Wrong Place, Wrong
Time
FOR ONCE, WHEN PEOPLE STARTED DYING, SYLVIE
LIGHTNER WASN’T at ground zero. When things went wrong, really
wrong, she was fifteen miles away from the crime scene, haggling
with a werewolf bitch over her finder’s fee.
Five days ago, Sylvie had asked Tatya to keep an
eye out and a nose up for a woman who’d gone missing from Alligator
Alley, figuring she could turn Tatya’s nightly perambulations
through the Everglades to good use. Delegation had paid off: Three
days later, Maria Ruben was no longer a missing person. Dead, but
no longer lost, and that was something. Finding her body could
bring its own resolution to the family and was worth every
penny.
So Sylvie had met Tatya at the scene, called the
cops, and split without waiting for them to show, spooked.
Maria Ruben hadn’t been alone. There were four
other dead women, drowned, pushed beneath the duckweed surface of
an Everglades lagoon, and left to sway slowly in the dark, stagnant
waters. Maria’s short dark hair stuck out like a frightened puffer
fish, showing the shock her slack face couldn’t. A pink
barrette—cheap plastic butterfly— floated free, trailing a long
bronze lock of hair belonging to a woman barely into her
twenties.
All of them were young, Maria likely the oldest,
and all were Hispanic. Someone had particular tastes. Sylvie
swallowed disgust, studied the other three women by the sullen gold
of the setting sun. Their ethnicity and ages might match up, but
their clothes argued they came from different parts of the city:
Maria’s casual business wear; swimsuit and sarong; halter top and
skirt; demure blouse and khaki skirt; and one who reminded Sylvie
of her sister—a budding fashion plate.
That was the moment Sylvie had called the police.
The moment she felt over her head. This was someone’s sister.
Sylvie might have a reputation as a vigilante, but she knew when to
leave a crime scene the hell alone.
Tatya wanted a finder’s fee for each woman. Sylvie
didn’t object on any moral ground—never mind that their agreement
only covered Maria Ruben—but finances dictated haggling. Five
hundred dollars had been half of the fee Sylvie had charged Maria
Ruben’s husband, but $2500 started eating into rent. Sylvie would
be willing to take that financial risk, but her business partner,
Alexandra Figueroa-Smith, wouldn’t. Sylvie wanted to keep Tatya
happy—the werewolf was a good source as well as a quasi friend—so
the discussion lasted longer than Sylvie liked, culminating with
Sylvie’s writing an IOU for another thousand, payable the next
month.
Once the rest of the women were identified, Sylvie
could see about spreading around the cost of doing business. There
might be a reward or, more likely, a client who’d want her to
investigate how their loved one had ended up underwater. Now that
she had an in with the local cops, courtesy of her making nice with
Detective Adelio Suarez, she could be a useful liaison to a
grieving family. And she thought that the police were going to be
struggling with this one. The scene had felt . . . charged, a spark
in the still, hot air that tasted of the Magicus Mundi.
Maria Ruben’s car had been found abandoned beside
the road, the battery run down, the driver’s door hanging open. Her
husband had reported his wife’s last words via cell phone,
Salvador, you should see this. A two-headed
alligator. I’m stopping for pics . . . and nothing more.
Whatever had happened that night had seen Maria
Ruben transported nearly fifty miles, her camera bag gone, her
forehead marked, and her body left in a crowded and watery grave.
It smacked of ritual murder.
Those women hadn’t died natural deaths; that much
seemed evident. The question that lingered was—how unnatural had
they been?

BACK IN SOUTH MIAMI BEACH, SYLVIE PUT THE KEY IN
HER OFFICE door, the phone shrilling on the other side of the glass
like a race clock timer counting down. She forced the key to turn,
slammed into her office—all haste, no caution, rushing to hear what
Suarez had to say about the ’Glades scene, cursing him for calling
the office instead of her cell—and fell into a nightmare.
A cobweb brush of sensation lingered and jittered
on her skin, the sign of a spell laid over the doorway. A trap
she’d bulled right on through.
Stupid, she thought, and froze, trying to control
the only thing she still could: herself.
Her office changed around her, warped by powerful
magic, an inferno blossoming. The illusion worked all her
senses—drowned her vision in flickering flames that crackled and
hissed, licked around and out of electrical sockets. She tasted
acrid plastic; the chemical burn of it seared her nose and throat.
Only furious control kept her from coughing, flailing for
air.
Heat scalded her every inborne breath, dried her
lungs. Her skin prickled, tightened, felt puffed with heat.
Stretching a cautious hand forward resulted in blistered
fingers.
Even with the memory of the telltale sensation,
that cobweb cling across her face and throat, she nearly believed
in the illusory fire turning her office into a maze of heavy smoke
and hellish light.
Believing in an illusion gave it power.
Illusion could kill if you accepted it as
truth.
Her little dark voice fed her a nasty thought:
What if the spell is layered over a real fire?
What if you burn trying to prove it isn’t real?
That moment of doubt cost her. Smoke choked her,
tightened her lungs and throat, scouring her insides; her hair
stank of burning. Sylvie fumbled for the door handle, just behind
her, so far away, backing up and not finding it. Was she even
moving?
Faintly, she heard the ringing of the warning bell
on the main desk. A singing chime, growing faster, shriller, an
audible sign that magic was saturating the air. It steadied her,
gave her a focus. If the bell was still ringing, then the charred
wreckage of the desk was illusion. It was all illusion.
And it was centered on her. Even if she fled, the
flames would follow.
Meant to send you screaming
outside, into traffic or the ocean, that internal voice
muttered.
If she didn’t flee? She risked being an anomalous
death, a woman dead of smoke inhalation in an untouched
office.
This, she thought grimly, was what came of playing
by the rules. Of leaving the bad guys alive. If she’d killed Odalys
the necromancer instead of seeing her arrested, if she had punished
Patrice Caudwell for returning from the dead instead of balking at
the complications involved—if, if, if. If Sylvie had disposed of
her enemies properly, she wouldn’t be one step from having her
lungs ruined by imaginary smoke.
Anger surged. Hell with
that. It wasn’t a mistake worth dying for.
She broke the paralysis the illusion had forced her
into. The illusion might be cleverly crafted, the mark of a
talented if malign witch, but Sylvie refused to yield.
Sylvie’s lips drew tight over her teeth, snarling.
Hot air rushed into her mouth, drying it. Three ways to break an
illusion spell for a non-magic-user. Kill the
caster. Wait the illusion out. Or overwhelm it.
Sylvie would gladly put a bullet in the witch’s
brain, but the coward had struck from a distance. Waiting wasn’t an
option; not when it was a struggle just to keep breathing, to
override her body’s instinctive panic. But the ringing bell on the
desk was a protective spell, defensive magic. . . .
She thought cool thoughts about AC, about
healthgiving air, about freshwater cascading over her skin, then
stepped into the thickest gouts of flames. The fires licked her
flesh, gnawed her hands, singed her jeans, her jacket, turned her
gun to a hot brand against her back. Sylvie pushed it all
aside.
The bell rang on, her guiding beacon. Sylvie moved
by memory and sound, trusting her will above her body and mind.
Control. Calm.
She slammed her hand down on the bell—agitated
metal quivering against her skin, cool stone containing it, and the
unyielding strength of the desk beneath. Her world erupted in an
entirely new wave of heat/pain/magic. The offensive and defensive
magics warred, her body the battlefield, the choice of weapon—fire.
Pain ran liquid through her body; her blood sizzled as if it boiled
within her.
Her hair streamed upward, rising like smoke, her
eyes blind to both illusion and reality—completely vulnerable; then
it was over, and she stood panting and aching in her office, on a
balmy and peaceful South Beach evening, the only scent of fire in
the air that of the restaurants searing freshly caught fish and
shrimp. The warning bell was slagged silver in a cracked marble
bowl, and beneath them, the desk was crocodile-scaled with
char.
Wonderful. Just after she learned she had a
powerful witch gunning for her, she destroyed the one piece of
magic that would warn her of an attack.
She just wondered who it was that wanted her dead.
The list was regrettably long—the sorcerous Maudits community; the ISI, America’s government
spook squad; even a miffed Greek god or two. If Sylvie had to
choose, though, she’d pick Odalys Hargrove, the necromancer she’d
managed to get slapped behind bars two days ago. Odalys wasn’t the
type to suffer in silence. Sylvie had managed, with the help of the
Ghoul, to prevent Odalys from fulfilling her vicious business plan:
destroying teenagers’ souls and selling the newly emptied bodies to
hungry ghosts looking for a new lease on life. Odalys was exactly
the type to have contingency plans lying around.

SYLVIE CHECKED THE CLOCK ABSENTLY—10:00 P.M.—THEN
TOOK A second, disbelieving look. Fury rose all over again. That
ridiculous attack had cost her nearly an hour. An hour trapped in
battle with her own senses. An hour gone. An hour . . . in which
she hadn’t heard anything at all from Lio.
Since she’d given him the heads-up on the bodies in
the ’Glades close to two hours ago, she felt justified in her
impatience.
While she doubted she’d have heard the phone ring,
neither her cell nor her office phone had any messages, though the
office phone’s caller ID listed the call she’d missed as from
Salvador Ruben, his nightly check-in on her progress.
Until today, Sylvie had had none to report. Now
that she did, she had to wait on Suarez.
She said, “Dammit,” aloud, and the dry rasp of it
hurt. She leaned against the kitchenette counter, drank straight
from the sink faucet. Lukewarm water had rarely tasted so sweet.
She wiped at her damp mouth and cheek, thinking dark thoughts about
police cooperation.
Detective Adelio Suarez would still have Maria
Ruben as a missing person without Sylvie’s help. He’d better not be
cutting her out of the loop. Their relationship was supposed to be
a two-way street, dammit.
The phone rang again, and she snatched it up,
hoping it was Suarez continuing his habit of calling the office
first. He was one of the long line of people who’d rather talk to
Alex than Sylvie.
“Ms. Lightner?”
Sylvie cursed herself for not checking the ID.
Salvador Ruben. The last person she needed to talk to just then.
“Mr. Ruben—”
“Have you heard from your friend yet? Did she find
anything? Did she find Maria?” Sylvie imagined that Ruben would
have a nice voice when it wasn’t pitched high with stress and hope.
Now it quivered with so much tension, she felt her back and neck
lock up in sympathy.
She let out a careful, soundless breath, stared out
at the soothing flow of South Beach traffic, the glow of headlights
and taillights, the glitter against the dark. She could lie, tell
him she hadn’t found anything, let the cops break the news; but he
was her client. She had a responsibility to tell him the truth. Or
at least as much of it as she could without jeopardizing the police
investigation. “Mr. Ruben. It’s not good—”
“Oh god,” he said, reading her tone accurately. “Is
she dead? Did someone do something to her?”
“Yes,” Sylvie said. “I expect you’ll be contacted
by the police soon.”
“You’re sure?” he asked. “You saw her? It was her?
The picture I gave you wasn’t very good. Maybe it’s someone else. .
. .” A last hope thinned his voice, turned it to a whispered
prayer, a man asking for a miracle.
Sylvie had dealt with gods; she knew miracles
didn’t come cheap.
“The police will answer your questions,” she
said.
“But you’ll keep looking? For whoever did this
thing?”
Sylvie hesitated. She shouldn’t. It was a police
matter now, not hers. But something about the scene nagged at her,
left her with the same jittery discomfort in her bones that came
from being around inimical magic. “I will.”
It took her another few minutes to verify that he
wasn’t alone, that he had a friend who could wait with him for the
news. For the inevitable call that would shatter his world. A few
minutes of evasion, not telling him exactly what had happened to
his wife.
They felt like the longest few minutes of her
life.
She set the receiver down, crossed to the couch,
and slumped onto it with a creak of stressed leather. The air vent
above cooled her skin, her agitated nerves. She wasn’t good at
patience. She wasn’t good at offering comfort. She wished that Alex
or Demalion had been around to take that call. But Alex was done
for the day, and Demalion was . . . finding himself in Chicago,
trying to see what he could salvage of his old life in the new skin
he wore.
Sylvie kicked at the armrest, a brief spurt of
frustration, then dug out her cell phone.
Suarez wasn’t getting off the hook so easily; if he
wouldn’t call her, she’d call him. She couldn’t make him pick up,
though. It went straight to voice mail.
“Call me, Lio,” she said. “I’ve got a client who’s
waiting on official word about his wife.”
The ceiling above her striped light, dark, light
with passing cars; the plate-glass window beside her grew cooler as
the day’s heat faded. Sylvie flipped the phone, checked the time
again. Almost ten thirty. She’d spent most of the day on the road,
meeting Tatya, then taking an ATV down bumpy trails and hiking
through saw-grass paths, then doing it all in reverse; she’d have
to find out when Alex left. It might give her a vague idea of when
the illusion trap had been laid. If it was after working hours, the
odds of a witness dropped.
There was a sweet spot Sylvie herself had taken
advantage of when breaking into businesses. That gap of time
between people heading home and heading out to dinner. If she were
the witch, she’d have laid her trap then.
Of course, if Sylvie were the witch, she’d have
sent goons in to take Sylvie out while she struggled with the
illusion. Sylvie believed in being thorough.
She forced herself off the couch and folded the
phone away, fighting the urge to redial Suarez. The kitchenette
light flickered, bringing to mind that there were leftover
enchiladas in the little fridge, just the thing for a bite before
she went home to her apartment and its
perennially-in-need-of-groceries kitchen.
While she nuked the enchiladas, munching absently
on the cold corn chips stored in the fridge to avoid attracting
palmetto bugs, she clicked on the local news. The microwave dinged,
but she didn’t notice.
Breaking news and local news, and it was full of
streaming lights, red and blue, and searchlights shining down on
flames against a grey-green backdrop.
Everglades, she thought. Guess Suarez hadn’t called
because he was too busy dodging the media.
There hadn’t been flames when she left.
The news bar across the bottom of the screen made
her heart jolt: Three policemen killed in
Everglades.
She hit the volume, listened to the newscast,
trying to filter the controlled hysterics of the news anchor for
actual fact—everything was urgent these days; everything was
imminent doom on Channel 7. As far as she could tell, it was her crime scene, but what had changed? When she
and Tatya had been there, it was as quiet as death; there hadn’t
even been mosquito hum in the air. Now the newscasters mentioned
bombs and ambushes in a single breath, followed it with a totally
inane recap of how many helicopters were circling the scene, and a
self-referential media report.
Sylvie muted the set, hit redial on her cell phone.
“Lio. Give me a call if you’re all right—” Stupid message, but she
felt the need to try something more than just waiting to see if the
news anchors would broadcast the names of the dead.
Her office phone rang again, and Sylvie grabbed it,
chanting Be Lio, be Lio in her head.
“Shadows Inquiries,” she said.
There was silence on the line, a silence of words,
not breath. She heard a rasp of controlled air, a clogged sound
that might be a stifled sob, and her hand tightened on the
receiver. “It’s Sylvie. Who is this?”
“. . . Lio wants you,” the woman said, just when
Sylvie was about to reluctantly let the line go dead again. “You
come. You see him. Then you get away from my family.”
“Lourdes,” Sylvie said. Adelio Suarez’s wife. She
skipped the questions rising to her lips—Was
Lio all right? Was he hurt? What happened?—and homed in on the
information she needed right at this moment. “Where are you?”
“Jackson Memorial,” Lourdes spat, and slammed the
phone down.

SYLVIE LOOKED IN ON ADELIO AND WINCED EVEN AS
RELIEF STARTED trickling into her system. He wasn’t in critical
care, didn’t have anything her TV-trained eyes would assess as
indicators of serious injury—no cannula, no morphine pump, no
looming machinery surrounding the bed. But he didn’t look good,
either. Both his eyes were so swollen that they made one bruised
lump across the sharp bridge of his nose. A long row of stitches
lined his jaw, and there was enough stitchwork, still shiny with
recent cleaning, on his arms to make her think of quilt patches.
The hospital room, clean as it was, smelled of smoke and
blood.
Lourdes, seated beside Adelio on a visitor’s chair,
rosary dangling from her fingers, looked up, and the expression on
her face convinced Sylvie the woman would be adding Hail Marys for
uncharitable thoughts to her postconfession routine next
Thursday.
The woman got into Sylvie’s space, pushed her back
into the hallway in silent, bulldog outrage. Sylvie, conscious of
the damage she’d done this family, allowed herself to lose ground
before a woman twice her age and half her size.
She throttled down the angry dark voice inside her
that didn’t care for obedience or politeness or anything at all
beyond its own survival, and let Lourdes tear her a new one, half
in Spanish, half in English, all of it conducted with the careful,
quiet fury of a woman who knew exactly how much noise would get
unwelcome attention. Eventually, her words trailed off, fell apart
under fear and hatred; her last sally was a broken, “You’re a bad
person, Shadows. You killed my son, and now you try to kill
Lio.”
“If I were such a bad person, would I sit here and
listen to you?” Sylvie said. “Let me talk to Lio.”
“He’s sleeping.”
“He can wake up,” Sylvie said, and stepped forward
decisively. Lourdes gave ground, then, in a sudden resurgence of
fury, spat at Sylvie’s feet.
Sylvie studied the shining spot on the worn
linoleum and thought it was lucky Lourdes Suarez was a good
Catholic and not a bruja, or Sylvie would
be fighting off a curse in the midst of Jackson Memorial’s
inpatient wing. Instead, she just stepped around the sputum, marked
it as a new low in her life, that a nice little Cuban housewife
wanted to spit on her, and pushed her way back into Adelio’s
room.
He can wake up, she had
said, and it sounded easy then. Not so easy to lean over him,
searching for an unscathed place to press gentle fingers. Even
washed up, he stank of smoke. His hair was burned to stubble on one
side. Not so easy to wake him from blissful unconsciousness into
pain. But she needed to know.
She settled for tapping the pillow beside his face,
a quick rat-a-tat of fingernails and pressure. He snorted awake,
thrashed a bit, then stilled as events caught up with him. Through
his puffed eye sockets, the narrow slit and shine of his eyes, she
could see him remembering hospital.
Remembering Sylvie.
He angled his head on the pillow, trying to get any
view of her he could. “Not a bomb,” he said. “I didn’t get hit by
shrapnel. The chart is wrong.”
“Okay,” she said. She sat down, hitched the
visitor’s seat close, screeking it over the
linoleum. “What was it, then?”
“Bear.”
It was a meaningless syllable to her at first,
glossolalia brought on by painkillers, then the word clicked. “You
were attacked by a bear? At a crime scene
swarming with lights and cops?”
It just didn’t make sense. There were bears in
northern Florida, but not in the swampy parts of the Everglades.
And even those bears were smaller, more peaceful than the western
bears.
Adelio let out a long breath, took in another, a
careful marshaling of strength. “I know what I saw. I know that it
is possible. You told me so yourself when you showed me the orchids
that once were people. Transformation—”
He broke off, fumbled a hand toward his stitches,
suddenly panicky. Sylvie caught his hand in hers—large, chilled,
shaking—and let it go once he’d calmed. Orchids. Transformation . .
. After Odalys’s arrest, Sylvie had taken Suarez to the Fairchild
Gardens to visit a special collection of orchids, a group of
thirteen rare plants that had once been the satanic coven who’d
killed his son. Suarez had been skeptical, and Sylvie had spent
more time explaining the mechanics of magical transformation as she
understood it than she had ever thought she would.
“Am I going to change?”
“Into—”
“A bear?” Suarez’s eyes glinted, shiny with panic.
Sylvie felt like she was grasping at water, something that shifted
and changed and fled her understanding.
Suarez groaned. She said, “C’mon, Lio, tell it to
me from the beginning. One piece at a time. Tatya found the women,
I called you, you went out to the ’Glades with a team—”
“Nightmare,” Suarez said. His voice was gravelly
with shock and lingering disorientation. “Outdoor crime scenes. A
dump site for a serial killer. The Everglades. Takes forever. Just
to get the bodies photographed in situ, the scene, and finally out
of the water—it got dark. We set up lights, kept working. The
helicopter came. Wind everywhere. But not on the water. No waves at
all.”
“Not in the lagoon?” That same stillness she and
Tatya had noted.
Suarez shifted a shoulder. “Like glass, smothered
ripples. They started loading the first body—
“Maria?” Sylvie asked.
“No,” Lio breathed. “La
rubia, the blond woman, in the swimsuit. Closest to the
shore—
“She burned, Shadows. Burned like rocket fuel. Blue
and white flames, red flames, so hot, and they had her loaded. The
forensic team burned . . . and then so did the bird. That’s what
exploded. The helicopter. Not a bomb. The helicopter and the pilot
and the forensic team.” Wetness streaked from one eye. Sylvie let
him rest, but when she thought he might get lost in mourning his
dead, she pushed again.
“Magic?” Sylvie closed her eyes, tried to recall
the scene she had left. Tried to remember why she had been nervous
there, why she had thought Lio would be calling for her advice. She
was a city girl at heart; her visits into the Everglades had been
school field trips to Anhinga Trail to count animal species, and
the more recent excursions to see Tatya. But even without
familiarity, she had marked the lagoon as too quiet. The lagoon had
had the shaky, stretched feel of a world altered by force, and the
wildlife had fled before that metaphysical earthquake, leaving
deadness behind. So yeah, maybe magic. But it hadn’t struck her as
a spell waiting to happen. Hell, she wouldn’t have called Suarez
out if that had been the case. She would have called a witch to
clear the area first. Magical SWAT. Something.
Maybe Lourdes was right. Maybe Sylvie was to blame
for this.
“Can’t tell about the fire,” Suarez murmured. “God
only knows. Could have been an incendiary inside her. But I don’t
think so. Not with the bear.”
“Yeah, the bear,” Sylvie said. “I’m still
not—”
“I was in the water, thigh deep, worried that a
gator was going to take me off at the knee, when the fire started.
I tried to get to them, then I saw the body move before me.”
“The burning—”
“The other one. The one closest to me. The wildlife
photographer. Your client’s wife. Maria Ruben. I thought—she was
alive. I reached for her, and she changed. All claws, and teeth,
and fur. Charging me. Her claws . . .”
His hand flailed at his stitches again, and Sylvie
got it this time. “The dead woman changed into a bear?” It was so
hard not to sound skeptical. Even knowing about the Magicus Mundi, even knowing about
shape-shifters.
Shape-shifters didn’t play dead very well—too much
animal. But they also didn’t come back from the dead.
“Am I going to change—”
“No,” Sylvie said. “It doesn’t work like that.
Either it’s a genetic ability, or it’s a sorcerous one. It’s not a
disease.”
Given that there was death involved, Sylvie assumed
sorcery. True shape-shifters were creatures at least partially
bound by natural law: They lived, they bred true, they died if you
killed them, and they stayed dead. Beyond that—Maria Ruben was
straight-up human. Had been, at any rate.
The wild card might be the tiny percentage of
shape-shifters that were curse-related, but those were rare enough
that she felt comfortable erasing them from the map of
possibilities. Didn’t take too many generations of magic-users to
learn that cursing your enemies to change them into beasts was more
of an “oops” than a “ha!” Witches and sorcerers could make a tasty
meal for a pissed-off shifter with a grudge.
Lio was quiet, more of those silent tears streaking
his cheeks. Relief, this time, she diagnosed.
“They all changed,” he whispered finally. “Wolves
and a big cat with a lashing tail.”
“The bodies?”
“Their eyes in the fires. Shone.”
“What happened to them?”
“We were dying,” Lio said. “Jorgé was
screaming—haven’t heard men scream like that. Since the
Gulf.”
Sylvie caught his hand in hers again, held it tight
until the shaking eased.
“Los monstruos,” he said.
His eyes closed, shields against the intolerable. Bruises on
bruises. Emotional and physical. “They left us there.”
“ ‘Left,’ ” Sylvie parroted. It was an odd choice
of words. Didn’t seem to apply to a group of fleeing animals.
“Retreated,” he said. “All the same
direction.”
No matter how she questioned Lio, she doubted she’d
get much more sense out of him. His skin was grey, beaded with
sweat. His throat worked, holding back sickness, pain, fear. She
didn’t have a clear idea of what had happened in the ’Glades; but
then, the real question was, did she need to? She’d investigated
other cases with less to go on.
“Sylvie,” Adelio said. “Find out. The only bodies
in evidence now are police. Find out what happened, and stop
it.”
“Okay,” she said.
“Do you have a plan?” he pushed, unwilling to take
her word.
“Monster hunting,” Sylvie said. “I’m waiting until
morning, and I’m taking magical backup.”
Dead women who changed shape? Dead women who came
back to life? Sounded like necromantic magic. Luckily, she had a
new acquaintance who liked to pal around with death magic. Tierney
Wales, the Opa-locka Ghoul, was going to find himself rousted
bright and early for a field trip.

SYLVIE MADE HER WAY ACROSS THE CROWDED PARKING
LOT—hospitals always seemed to be doing a booming business no
matter the hour—homing in on her truck and its clawed hood gleaming
beneath a streetlamp. She thought of Suarez and his patchwork of
sutured flesh with regret. He was going to scar as badly as her
truck.
Footsteps sounded behind her, quick-moving, and she
turned, always on alert, but saw only a woman searching for her
keys in a cavernous leopard-print bag. Disorganized, Sylvie
thought. The woman had the common sense to move quickly through the
quiet lot but not enough planning to pull her keys ahead of time.
She was asking to be mugged. Especially while leaning up against a
steely grey BMW.
One of the sheep, her
little dark voice suggested, dependent on a
careless shepherd.
Hush, Sylvie thought at it. Bad enough when it
preached misanthropy; it made her downright nervous when it started
to verge on theology. The voice was the leftover bit of Lilith’s
genetic legacy carried down through generations, an all-too-active
form of ancestral memory. Sylvie had killed Lilith when they met;
she didn’t need to keep Lilith’s madness alive in her own
blood.
Sylvie left the hospital behind with the usual
diesel cough from her truck and a belated protest from her stomach,
which chose that moment to remember the abandoned enchiladas.
Burned women, hospital visits, dead cops—part of being a pro meant
it didn’t even faze her appetite. Not anymore. Which, considering
the rate that the Magicus Mundi was
invading Sylvie’s day-to-day life, was a good thing. She’d have
starved otherwise.
She checked her mirrors, checked the streets,
trying to remember what restaurants were open and nearby. Mia
Rosa’s, she thought, was only two blocks back. She checked the
streets once more, looking for cops, then hung a U-turn. During the
day, she wouldn’t have made it. At this hour, it was a little
tricky, best done at speed, but definitely possible. Behind her,
horns honked loud and long, and too late to be directed at her. She
glanced back to see that another car had made the same maneuver,
though the woman driving looked a little wild-eyed. Sylvie hmmed
thoughtfully, and when she parked the truck, she unlocked the glove
box and took out her gun.
She didn’t like being followed.
She especially didn’t like being followed when she
had a killer witch after her.
The hostess at the door greeted Sylvie with a stiff
smile, a pointed reminder that they were closing at midnight, and
sat her among a group of tables with the chairs put up. Subtle,
they weren’t. Sylvie didn’t care as long as the food was hot,
plentiful, and quick to arrive.
She had just sent the waitress off with her order
when the door opened again; the hostess moved to intercept another
last-minute diner. Sylvie narrowed her eyes, and the dark-haired
woman in the doorway waved at Sylvie and waved off the
hostess.
The woman from the hospital parking lot threaded
her way through the tables, her ridiculously large bag still
hanging from her shoulder and clunking against upended chair legs
every few feet. The same woman who’d made a U-turn to keep up with
her, pushing her ancient Jeep hard to make enough speed to keep
from being t-boned. She homed in on Sylvie, and Sylvie kicked out
the chair opposite her. “So, that business with the BMW, was that
playacting or wishful thinking?”
“A little of both,” the woman said. “It was a nice
car, wasn’t it? And if I had approached you in the lot, you would
have walked away.”
“Still might,” Sylvie said. “I don’t like strangers
following me.”
“I’m Caridad Valdes-Pedraza,” she said. “And you’re
Sylvie Lightner. You’re a PI who’s always on the scene, and I’m a
freelance reporter looking for a scoop. I’ve been waiting to see
Adelio Suarez; you just came from seeing him. Feels like
fate.”
“Fate’s an excuse for people who don’t want to make
an effort,” Sylvie said.
“Interesting,” the woman said. “I’d have marked you
as believing in destiny.” She hefted her purse to the tabletop,
dropped it with a clatter, and pulled out a
notebook and a pen.
She scribbled in it, and Sylvie had to ask, “Are
you writing that down?”
“Hey,” Caridad said. “I like to take notes on my
subjects.”
“I’m not a subject,” Sylvie said. “Ms.
Valdes-Pedraza—”
“You could call me Caridad if you want. I know the
other’s a mouthful.”
Sylvie let her breath out in a steady gust. She
wasn’t in the mood. If she hadn’t seen the sullen waitress
approaching with her meal, she would have just given up. Walked
away. Caridad’s expression was friendly, pert, that of a would-be
newscaster. But there was something harder beneath it.
Intelligence, ambition, and something deeper still, betrayed in the
tension in her jaw: need.
“My friends call me Cachita,” she said. She shot
Sylvie a demure glance, one step away from flirtation. It was a
good front, a good act, no doubt got her into a lot of
conversations with her targets; but it was only an act.
Sylvie made her voice flat, no weakness. “Ms.
Valdes-Pedraza, we’re not friends, and we’re not going to be
friends. I’m going to eat a long-overdue dinner, and you’re not
welcome at my table. If you have something to say, say it and go
away.”
“Fine,” she said. Caridad sat up straight, pressed
her curling hair out of her face, drummed her nails on the table, a
quick rumba, and said, “Tell me about the bodies you found in the
Everglades.”
“Police made a statement,” Sylvie said. “There were
no bodies, only mannequins. It was a trap, and three officers
died.”
“You know what police statements are? Sop for
reporters too lazy to do their own digging. Too lazy to do anything
but print a preapproved story. They trade integrity and a real
interview for easy bylines.”
“So you’re what? A crusader for truth?” Sylvie
spiced her words with as much mockery as she could manage when she
was tired . . . and dammit, the woman was drawing her in.
“Is that a bad thing to aspire to?” Caridad asked.
“There’s an awful lot of truth that gets ignored or denied out
there. I want to open people’s eyes.”
“Good luck with that,” Sylvie said. “I get paid to
find things out, and people still don’t listen.”
“Doesn’t it just drive you crazy?” Caridad said.
“Make you want to shove it down their throats? Me, I get so
frustrated, I could scream. I turn in reports, and it’s all, ‘But,
Cachita, where’s the point of—’ ”
Sylvie growled, took a breath, and said, “You know
something else that drives people crazy? Intrusive reporters. Go
away. I have nothing to tell you.”
Caridad leaned back in her seat, took her hands
from the table, made herself smaller. Dammit, this reporter was
good at reading people, at manipulating her own body language, her
meekness only another path to taking control of the conversation,
to keep the dialogue open, to derail Sylvie’s anger.
Sylvie felt a wolfish grin stretch her mouth. Maybe
that kind of thing worked on regular people, but Sylvie had anger
to spare.
Caridad’s eyes narrowed, pale eye shadow crinkling
beneath dark brows. “Women have been disappearing from the city.
The police aren’t talking about it, and even if they did, they’d be
talking about a serial killer. Not a monster. But that’s what it
is. You can help me. You found its playground, didn’t you?
“I’ve got sources, Sylvie. They tell me that
someone called in five bodies that they found in the Everglades.
Another source tells me you left the scene. You’re not police, and
you wouldn’t be welcome at a crime scene—so you must have found
them. What made you look for them in the first place?”
“Do you really expect me to talk to you?” Sylvie
took another bite of her “special”; it was some sort of creamy
pasta and seafood, barely lukewarm and sour with her irritation.
“You said it. I’m not real popular with the police. You think
they’d be happy if I shot my mouth off to a reporter?”
“I think you’re dying to. I
do my research, Sylvie. I know my subjects. I know about you.
You’ve got to be sick of the injustices, the fact that people are
getting away with murder. You could help me.”
Sylvie said, “I usually get paid for
helping.”
“I expected better of you,” Caridad said.
“What are you, my mother?” Sylvie said. “The only
approval I need is my own.”
She pushed her plate away, appetite gone. Her
personal approval rating wasn’t at its all-time best: Her dreams,
in what fitful sleep she’d managed since the confrontation with
Odalys, had been angry and focused on the one person who’d gotten
away clean with murder: Patrice Caudwell, one of Odalys’s revenant
ghosts, who’d managed to keep the teenage body Odalys had provided.
At least Odalys had had to lawyer up, had her world disrupted.
Patrice? She was sipping cafecitos poolside
and working on her tan. Impatience and irritation flared; Sylvie
stood. Caridad grabbed her wrist, faster than Sylvie had thought
she’d be, and a lot more willing to get physical.
“You aren’t listening.”
“You’re not saying much,” Sylvie said. “You want me
to piss off the cops by sharing stories out of school. You want me
to confirm your theory about a monster who’s stealing women. Even
if I played along, then what?” Sylvie shook her head. “Crazy talk’s
not going to get you far as a freelancer. You’d be better off
peddling predigested stories.”
“I’m disappointed,” Caridad said. “I thought you’d
respect the truth. But you’re just another cover-up artist.”
Where the previous attempt at scolding hadn’t
stung, this one did.
“Tell me something,” Sylvie said. “You know Maria
Ruben?”
Caridad’s eyes went wide, sensing some sort of
chance in the air. She chewed her lip, flipped through her mental
files, raised her chin. “Should I?”
Sylvie sighed. Maria Ruben was the missing person
most likely to be newsworthy—her husband saw to that with his
ranting about alien abduction. If Caridad Valdes-Pedraza hadn’t put
her name on her list of missing people, she was no kind of reporter
at all and a waste of Sylvie’s time.
When Caridad stood, preparing to follow Sylvie from
the restaurant, Sylvie snapped, “Sit. I’m leaving. You’re
not.”
“We could be allies, Sylvie,” Caridad said. “Help
each other.”
“You sure you want to volunteer? My most recent
ally’s in a bed at Jackson Memorial, torn all to hell.”