She glanced around and noted the banging was Mr. Grand Theft Auto pounding the heel of his sneaker on the bars.
“It’s about fucking time!” he yelled when he saw her.
Skye saw Moira O’Donnell, sprawled on the cement floor, blood pooled around her and smears on the wall. Her first thought was murder. Skye had Young cover the door while she quickly searched—there were no hiding spaces in the jail.
She opened the cell and checked Moira’s pulse. Strong. Her eyes opened, then closed again.
“Moira!” Skye exclaimed. “What happened?”
The auto thief said, “She’s bleeding to death, what do you think?”
“Shut up,” Skye ordered.
He continued. “This crazy dame walked in, some kind of psychic or something, and the babe just flopped against the wall like some big beefy guy was holding her up, and then her nose started bleeding like a fucking waterfall.”
Moira groaned and tried to get up. “Relax,” Skye told her. Protocols would demand that Skye wait for additional backup, secure the prisoner, and arrange for transport to the hospital. But Anthony had dropped the charges, Moira wasn’t a threat to her. Could a demon have done this?
She said, “Anthony dropped the charges against you, Ms. O’Donnell. You’re free to go. I’ll call a medic, get you to the hospital.”
Moira rolled over onto her back, wiping the blood from her face with her stained shirt. She began to laugh, borderline hysterical, and Skye tensed. “She found me. Seven years and she never found me until now.”
“Who?”
She continued to laugh. “You—you think you can arrest Fiona O’Donnell? For what?” She sat up. Skye offered her hand, but Moira ignored it, crawling over to the bars and pulling herself up onto unsteady legs. Skye was stunned at the huge amount of blood left behind on the floor. It had presumably come from her nose, but Moira also had scrapes on her face and arms, and a nasty bruise on the side of her head, partly obscured by her hair.
“Let’s get you to the hospital—” Skye said.
“No. No. I just need a bathroom for a few minutes.”
“You lost a lot of blood.”
“I just need a few minutes,” Moira repeated. “And orange juice. If you have any. Or water.”
Skye was inclined to take the woman back into custody and force her to go to the hospital, but what would she tell the ER doc? That no one touched her? She stared into Moira’s eyes, so incredibly blue—both dark and bright—that Skye felt entranced.
“All right,” she reluctantly agreed. “Then I’ll drive you back to your motel.”
She planned to argue, Skye could tell from her posture. Then she relented. “Thank you.”
ELEVEN
During the fifteen-minute drive from the jail to the motel on the edge of town, Moira didn’t speak unless the sheriff asked her a direct question. She was numb from both physical and emotional pain. All she wanted was to return to the Italian sanctuary of St. Michael’s and lick her wounds.
But of course she couldn’t run away, and not just because the sheriff had kept her passport. The time for running was over. Her mother was here in Santa Louisa, and she had to be stopped. Fiona had done awful things in her life—kidnapping, torture, murder, a seemingly endless spree all done for power. Power begets power—the more control Fiona exercised over dark forces, the more power she craved.
But it wasn’t simply the lust for power that drove Fiona and other magicians. It was the thirst for knowledge that could never be satisfied. One taste of the infinite possibilities and the need for more grew, all-consuming, never ending until death. And for Fiona, death was merely an obstacle that could be avoided, within reach was the golden trophy: becoming a demigod.
Moira had to stand in Fiona’s way. She accepted that she would die—she deserved to—but Fiona would as well. Pure justice.
Yet if Moira was caught again by surprise, trapped, there was no way she’d survive long enough to stop her mother. She could protect herself if she were free, but locked up—she was a sitting duck. She’d make sure that never happened again.
Skye pulled into the motel parking lot. “Thanks for the lift,” Moira said as she reached for the door handle.
“You didn’t listen to anything I said.”
“I have a headache, it’s been a shitty day. I promise, I’m not going anywhere. Besides, you have my passport.”
“What did she do to you?” Skye asked.
“You wouldn’t believe it. Best thing you can do is stay out of my way.”
Skye turned off the ignition and bristled. “I don’t like threats.”
“I’m trying to save your ass. Fiona won’t go after you unless you try to stop her from getting what she wants. She doesn’t know what tricks Anthony has up his sleeve, but you can bet she knows you’re screwing him and she’ll use that against you if she can.”
Skye blanched. “I’m not—I mean, it’s—”
“Save it.”
“I’m not going to let anyone hurt Anthony, or get away with murder.”
“You don’t understand.”
“Shit, I hate it when Anthony says that and I
really
hate it when you say it.”
Moira asked, “How’d you and Anthony hook up?”
“You know about what happened at the mission?”
“Santa Louisa de los Padres? Of course. A demon-driven murder-suicide.”
“More like drug-induced murder-suicide. The priests were poisoned. There was one survivor, Anthony’s friend Rafe Cooper. Know him?”
Rafe Cooper. Raphael Cooper?
She shrugged, disguising her interest. “Not personally.” Of course she’d heard of him. He was from St. Michael’s. Moira glanced toward her motel room. No light.
She’d left a light on.
She discreetly looked around the parking lot. Jared. His truck was parked on the far side. Had he found Lily? Moira hoped so … and that he’d actually listened to her and brought his girlfriend here.
Moira itched to get inside, but she also didn’t know if she could trust the sheriff completely. Yet based on the phone conversation Fiona had while torturing Moira, someone had tipped her off that the sheriff was coming in. Who? A cop?
“So, where’s Anthony now?” she asked Skye.
“Researching.”
Moira couldn’t help but smile. Some things never changed. “I hope he finds something useful. I don’t know how much time we have, but Fiona will be working all hours of the day and night to finish what she started.”
“And exactly just what
did
she start?”
“You heard Anthony. He told you about the Seven. And—” She hesitated.
“And what?”
“Fiona said something that had me thinking her ritual went wrong. I don’t think she has the Seven Deadly Sins under her control. Not yet.”
“Then where are they? Still in Hell?”
Moira glanced at Skye, impressed that the cop was thinking like a paranormal investigator. “Possibly. Either there, or out and about, and wreaking havoc in the world.”
“Why do you think that?”
“Because she was frustrated about it. Also, if she had them under her control, she wouldn’t have time to spend trying to kill me. It’s not like she can put them in a cage and walk away. She would need to maintain a demon trap, which is difficult in the short term and nearly impossible in the long term. Either way, she’d need to focus all her psychic magic on the trap, not walking away and playing games with her traitorous daughter.”
“And why aren’t they still in Hell?”
“They could be, but …” But what? “It’s just a feeling. And what I saw out there.” Moira didn’t want to explain her vision standing at the ruins, which would inevitably open the door to more questions that she didn’t have the time for. She itched to get inside and talk to Jared.
Skye had more questions, but Moira cut her off with, “I’m really tired. Can I go in?”
“Are you sure you don’t want to go to the hospital?”
“I’m fine.” She held up the quart of orange juice Skye had bought her at the mini-mart near the jail. “This helped, and with a few hours’ sleep I’ll be good.” She didn’t plan on sleeping.
“Don’t do anything stupid.”
“I’ll try to be smart.” She put her hand on the door, then asked, “What’s going to happen with Abby’s body?”
“Why?”
“You absolutely must convince the family to cremate her body.”
“It’s not my place.”
“You don’t underst—”
“Stop!” Skye ran a hand through her hastily pinned-back hair. “You and Anthony—I swear, I understand a hell of a lot more than either of you give me credit for. Why, dammit, is her body so important?”
She wanted honesty? “The human remains from a sacrifice are divided up for use in a variety of divinations. Her heart. Her liver. Her ovaries. Her eyes. Her organs have value. They’ll cut her up and use her for years. It’s sick, but it’s very effective. And it traps her soul. She’ll wander, restless, divided. Evil spirits are truly dangerous, because they usually can’t be destroyed until all their remains are destroyed. As soon as her remains are divided, she’ll be nearly unstoppable.”
Skye looked ill. “I’m going to get some sleep,” Moira said. “Do what you can.” She wasn’t holding her breath. Moira herself would have to find the body and destroy it. There was no other option. Unless she could convince Anthony to do it. He would understand the dangers.
She started to get out of the truck, but Skye grabbed her arm. “If you’re right, they’ve done this before. So why isn’t the world overrun with evil spirits?”
Moira stared at her, a half-smile on her face. “Who says it isn’t?”
Skye downed her third cup of foul-tasting sweetened black coffee and still felt fuzzy after two hours’ sleep and eight hours of investigation.
She watched the medical examiner, her longtime colleague Dr. Rod Fielding, cut into the body of seventeen-year-old Abigail Weatherby.
She had to admit that she was unnerved by the conversation she’d had with Moira O’Donnell on the way from the jail to the motel. She caught herself biting her thumbnail, and pulled out a pair of latex gloves from the box on Rod’s workbench to stop the nervous habit.
Anthony didn’t like Moira because he thought she was a witch responsible for the death of one of his “brothers”—the boys he’d grown up with at the orphanage. She supposed it wasn’t
technically
an orphanage—Anthony had never referred to St. Michael’s as such—but Skye didn’t know how else to think about it. None of the boys there had parents, and they’d all taken the last name of one of the priests or monks in residence.
Odd, but Skye had never contemplated Anthony’s unusual upbringing largely because he didn’t hide anything. Still, she couldn’t stop thinking about how many kids were abandoned by their mothers at a monastery to be raised as warriors for God. The entire
idea
sounded suspect to her analytical cop mind.
Yet her mother had left when she was fourteen, walked out with a man who made lots of promises, then killed her. Abandonment wasn’t foreign to Skye, either.
And she loved Anthony. She accepted what he said as truth, even though it was unusual.
Then Moira O’Donnell showed up, and Skye saw a side of Anthony she’d only glimpsed briefly during the few months she’d known him. Anger and hostility. Had he and Moira been involved? She tried to brush it off as cop instincts, not feminine insecurities, but it wasn’t working.
Rod was unusually quiet as he performed the autopsy, but he was generally more reticent when working on young people. Focused, deliberate, with none of the banter Skye was used to. It made the autopsy that much more uncomfortable. If it was a drunk or a sixty-year-old heart attack victim or even a gang shooting, Rod would joke to relieve the tension. But Abby was seventeen; she’d had her whole future ahead. Everything …
Skye had come to the autopsy after telling Abby’s parents of her death. They had been sitting at the kitchen table drinking coffee, both of them believing that Abby was still sleeping in her bed. It was the hardest damn thing she’d ever done. She knew Hiram Weatherby, and she also knew that Hiram would be on her ass day and night until she solved the crime.
He was, after all, the mayor, and the council member who’d led the charge to appoint her sheriff.
She said to Rod, “You’re killing me here. It’s been thirty minutes.” All he’d spoken were clipped orders to his young assistant.
“I have nothing,” he snapped. “Nothing.”
“Nothing … what the hell does that mean?”
“Heart—perfect. Lungs—strong. No sign of cancer, heart attack, internal bleeding, physical signs of OD—I sent the labs over as a rush, and Monica just walked over tissue samples from every major organ, as well as skin and hair samples. I have a second set being worked up to send to the state lab for additional testing, beyond our capabilities. But sudden, violent overdoses would normally show
something
somewhere. Needle pricks in her arm? No. Bloody nose? Nope. No signs of sores or burns in her mouth. Hell, she probably has never even smoked a cigarette; her lungs are in great condition. Her stomach contents are next to nothing, some liquid—probably tea—no solids. Sent that over too.”
“There was an odd smell at the scene when we arrived—maybe she was poisoned through the air, breathed it in.”
“No sign of violence to her nasal cavities or throat or lungs. It’s like her heart just … stopped for no damn reason.”
Skye wanted something scientific to hold on to, but Rod wasn’t giving her anything.
He continued. “I saw the destruction on the cliffs, Skye. There had to have been more than one person on scene before or during her death. We didn’t find her clothing or her car, and she couldn’t have walked there without shoes—her feet are dirty, but no cuts or bruising. Someone had to have brought her out; someone had to have taken her clothing. Why? She should be alive. She’s perfect in every way.”
“This morning her father said she’d recently lost a lot of weight, that she’d been exercising.”
“How recent? Sudden weight loss, or over time?”
“He said she started losing at the beginning of the school year. Lost twenty pounds or so, according to her mother.”
“Twenty pounds in five months? Not common, but certainly possible.” He inspected her body. “Yeah, I see the loose skin here … here. But if she was popping pills, I’ll know when I get the bloodwork back. I’m running everything I can think of.”