An Inner Fire (9 page)

Read An Inner Fire Online

Authors: Jacki Delecki

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Romantic Comedy, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense, #Psychics

BOOK: An Inner Fire
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Chapter Fourteen

Grayce took the office steps two at a time. Drug addicts, Hollywood stars and the attractive Ewan Davis had converged on her usually calm life. Sheesh! At least James was going to be highly entertained. And before her trip to California to meet a movie star, she needed to talk with Hollie about drug addiction.

“Mornin’ Boss.”

Today, Hollie wore a white concoction layered with lace that skirted the neckline and sleeves revealing her multiple tattoos. A black dragon’s sinewy path ran the entire length of her right arm and peaked through the lace. Hollie’s dress was reminiscent of the Laura Ashley dresses Grayce’s mother made her wear when she was an adolescent—feminine, with no hint of sexuality.

Grayce following Hollie into the office, stared at the finishing touch to Hollie’s ensemble—black combat boots, laced to the ankle. The young woman buried her soft, sensitive underpinnings beneath a tough armor, like a giant tortoise.

“Am I seeing the new client this morning?”

“Yes, Rowan’s at nine. The owner was quite anxious for an appointment before you left.”

“How did this client hear about us?”

“Another referral from Dr. Herrick, your biggest fan.”

“Dr. Herrick understands the benefits of acupuncture.”

Hollie’s nose flared, jiggling the small piercing on her right nostril. “Sure…it’s the acupuncture.”

“Phil Herrick? Please, he’s a colleague.”

“The man practically drools when he sees you.” Hollie rolled her huge doleful eyes in a pitiful manner.

Grayce laughed. “You look more like a Bassett Hound than poor Phil. How about telling me about Rowan.”

“Just an old guy with arthritic hips. Otherwise, pretty healthy. Did I mention that he’s a one hundred and eighty-five-pound Rottweiler?”

“Okay. I’ll try to get some calls in before Rowan arrives. Any word on how Beowulf did over the weekend?”

“No, but I’m thinking that’s good news, isn’t it?” Hollie’s deep voice got softer.

Grayce wanted to touch Hollie and reassure her, but Hollie wouldn’t appreciate the concern. Hollie never acknowledged or admitted any feelings of vulnerability. “Mrs. Leary would’ve called us if she needed anything. So no news is good. How is the schedule for the rest of the week? Were you able to get everyone in?”

“You’ll have a long Thursday when you get back, but I got everyone in.”

Grayce still marveled at the transformation in her receptionist. Hollie had come to Teen Feed for weeks, always dressed the same—stringy hair, leather wrist bands, and a T-shirt with the guild characters from her World of Warfare game. Grayce never questioned her ability to identify the suffering of others. As long as she could remember, she had had the ability to divine the hearts of all creatures.

“Do we still have the jasmine tea?”

“I got more pearls yesterday.”

Hollie, new to the world of tea drinking, tried to surprise Grayce with new types of tea. “I would love some jasmine before I see Rowan the giant. I also need to talk with you at some point this morning.”

Chapter Fifteen

Standing at the fire scene, Davis kicked a pile of charred wood. This fire just didn’t add up. He didn’t have a good theory on how it had reached a high enough temperature to ignite the forty-foot-high lumber. He nudged a large piece of fir with the steel tip of his boot. He was missing something, but fatigue blocked any brilliant insights.

Absorbed in sorting through the rubble, he didn’t see Assistant Chief Maclean barreling toward him until he heard, “Davis.” By Maclean’s curt tone, his stride, and the angle of his head, Davis knew the other man was in a mood. Already peeved by his intrusion, Davis didn’t feel up for a verbal skirmish.

“Glad to see you working.” The assistant chief pressed his lips into a sneer that made him look more like someone who’d had a stroke than the angry bastard he was.

“Glad to see you, too.” He tried to swallow the sarcasm.

Maclean’s beady eyes focused on Davis. “I heard your damn dog got injured on the site? Why in hell would you bring a dog on the site?”

It was just like Maclean to have discovered his only breech of procedure in two years and come out to harass him about it. He tried to tell himself it wasn’t personal. Maclean couldn’t handle change—the words firefighter had never passed the man’s disapproving lips. Maclean still believed only a fire
man
, a Caucasian male, should work for the department.

“I didn’t bring my dog to the site. She jumped out of the car.” The excuse sounded lame.

“Your dog could’ve disturbed or destroyed evidence.”

“I know. The wall fell right after she got on the site.”

He was glad he had told no one how close the collapsing wall had come to crushing him. Things happened on the fireground.

“So did your dog find an accelerant?”

“My dog isn’t trained to smell for accelerants. She’s a French poodle.” He could see Maclean eyeing him. He knew exactly where the assistant chief’s thoughts were going. It was hard enough to live up to his Scottish background. “She’s my ex-girlfriend’s dog.”

Maclean stepped over the yellow tape, avoiding getting ashes on his shoes. Davis found it hard to believe his boss had ever gotten “wicked dirty” from the tar, the creosotes, and other by-products of the fire that clung to your clothes and skin at a fire scene.

“Are you planning on using Henny?”

Once he finished his digging, Davis planned to bring in Henny, whose nose was trained to detect possible accelerants. But to annoy Maclean, he refused to give him a straight answer. “I haven’t finished my digging. I’m going to need a crane.”

“Do you know how fricking expensive cranes are? You’ve got to fill out the paper work. And good luck with that.”

Maclean could see by the giant fallen lumber, a crane was necessary to excavate the scene. Davis took a slow, deep breath and swallowed the words he was dying to unleash.

“What about the pictures? Have you taken them yet?”

Maclean had a bigger bug up his ass than usual. Why was he here on a Saturday? He never got personally involved.

“I took some photos early this morning.”

“Have you uploaded them yet?”

He thought about the pleasure he would get from telling Maclean to go to hell. “I’m going back to the station after I finish the digging. Why so much interest in this fire? Don’t tell me the mayor and the press are going to show up tomorrow?”

“The press hasn’t started yet, but the port wants answers now. There’s a lot of interest in the wharf since they started filming that TV show down here. The port doesn’t want any bad press and neither does the chief.”

Maclean hadn’t just come to harass him about Mitzi. He came to tighten the screws on Davis, to demand that he finish the investigation, tidy and quick.

“Are you up for this one? Or should I assign a real fire
man
?” Delivering his sunny message, Maclean walked away. He spoke over his shoulder in his familiar patronizing voice. “And none of the usual attitude, no independent bullshit. Keep me in the loop.”

Davis could feel the blood pulsating at his temples, right above his clenched jaw. Independent…bullshit! It wasn’t an attitude. Fire investigators were separate. They solved crimes.

Something about this fire made him uneasy. Maclean hassling him added fuel to the fire, literally. He would’ve laughed at the pun if he wasn’t so frustrated.

Before he left, he needed to finish his inspection of the area surrounding the fire scene. Ordinarily, he would’ve scouted out the perimeter well before this, but the crashing wall and Mitzi’s injury had interfered. Davis headed to his Suburban to get Mitzi, glad that Maclean hadn’t seen the dog in the department’s rig.

“Come on Mitzi, let’s go for a walk.” The dog stretched her length on the back seat and then jumped out of the door.

He and Mitzi walked the entire wharf. They inspected other sheds that extended toward the Ballard Bridge, then turned and walked along the waterfront. The air hung with a salt water tang. They walked past rows of moored fishing boats.

A few clouds scuttled across the sky. The night walk was helping to clear his head of his crazy, disorderly thoughts. To solve a fire, you needed to fit the pieces together in a logical methodical process. But with this fire, everything was out of order, out of sync.

Underneath a monument to the Chinese who’d migrated to the Pacific Northwest in the early 19th century, Mitzi found the only clump of grass left in the area to relieve herself on. As a responsible citizen, he had his dog bag on hand for clean up, but he needed a garbage can in which to toss the full bag.

Scanning the area, he spotted two large dumpsters across the parking lot behind a metal fence. The gate to the fence hung open. He and Mitzi headed toward the dumpster, bag in hand. The sign “For restaurant use only” induced a little guilt, but he reasoned one little baggie wasn’t going to hurt.

Lifting the large lid of the dumpster, he was hit with the smell of rotting fish. He peered into the dumpster for possible clues. Nothing. It figured. It would’ve been just too easy to discover evidence sitting there, waiting to be taken to the landfill.

He lowered the lid. Mitzi had disappeared behind the dumpster. “Mitzi, come.” He used his command voice, but no response. Irritation prickled his skin. “I’m not up for this tonight.”

He heard a faint sound from behind the dumpster. He hoped it was Mitzi and not a Norwegian Rat the size of a small cat.

“Mitzi, come out. I don’t want to go looking for you. And I sure as hell don’t want to tangle with a rat.”

Davis could barely squeeze into the recess between the side of the dumpsters and the fence. Debris blocked his progress. He heard the rustle of papers and a scratching noise. A shudder coursed through his body. Shining his flashlight beam in front of him, he spotted his dog. “Mitzi, get out of there.”

She looked up briefly and then resumed her efforts to grab onto an empty container. At least it wasn’t something rotten or alive. On closer inspection, he could make out an empty canister of brake fluid. Brake fluid mixed with chlorine could make a big bang, just the type to set the forty-foot wall of solid fir ablaze.

“Good dog. Let’s see if we can find anything else of interest around here.”

Together they combed the area around the dumpster and office building. They walked up to Nickerson Street and scanned the grass along the curb, retracing the route the torch might have used for his exit. No chlorine bottles had been left lying on the side of the road. An empty container of brake fluid might be a dead end. But in this business, nothing could add up to something big.

Chapter Sixteen

Grayce took the steaming mug of tea from Hollie. Intricate patterns of blue and red tattoos wrapped around her assistant’s arm. “What time is Lieutenant Davis and Mitzi’s appointment this week?”

Hollie pulled the comfy treatment chair from against the wall and sat down across from Grayce. “He and Mitzi are scheduled for Thursday at 4:30.”

“Mitzi will need another treatment. She attacked a homeless man in Belltown.”

“What the f…? Mitzi’s not aggressive.”

“Mitzi jumped on the man to stop him from stabbing Lieutenant Davis.”

The idea that someone tried to kill Davis was doing weird things to her nervous system. She felt jittery, jumpy—like she had chugged a super-sized Diet Coke.

Hollie’s lips, the color of an eggplant, twisted into a smirk. “Mitzi, a street-fighting Poodle. I can just see the gangsters hangin’ with Poodles.”

Grayce laughed at the outrageous image.

“Did Davis know the dude?”

“No.”

“What was he after? Money? Drugs?”

“Neither, according to Davis. He is convinced that the guy was either mentally ill or high on something and didn’t know what he was doing.”

Now came the difficult part. She had never probed Hollie’s past. In their quasi-job interview, Grayce asked if drugs would interfere in Hollie’s ability to work. Hollie had declared “she was clean” and Grayce believed her. In the two months of her employment, Grayce had never had reason to doubt her.

Grayce chose each word carefully. She could feel the red moving into her face to the tops of her ears. “I’m not sure the guy was an addict…my only experience with drug addiction was volunteering at Teen Feed.”

Hollie’s purple lips emitted a brash laugh. “And you thought I’d know about junkies?”

“I wanted to get your perspective.”

Hollie arched her blackened eyebrow. “The dude must have been strung out to take on Davis.”

“That’s my point. Why would anyone take on a man of Davis’ size? There are so many easier targets. This guy didn’t act like an addict. He just didn’t have the detachment I’ve seen in kids who were high.”

Hollie cracked each knuckle painfully slow. The harsh sound punctuated each word. “Nothing matters to an addict ’cuz the junk owns ’em. They don’t care about anyone. My dad only cared about cooking meth.”

Grayce flinched at Hollie’s detached recital. Teen Feed was filled with kids who were running from either their abusive families or their abusive foster care placement.

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