Read Playing With Vampires - An Izzy Cooper Novel Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
“Hi guys. Sorry I’m a little late,” I apologized, and then hurried to explain. “While I was at the Quick Stop, I decided to do some asking around about Polly. It seems that she was out and about last night because she had taken a second job. Her coworker, Janet, didn’t know exactly what it was that Polly was doing. It was supposed to be some kind of secret, but Janet thought it might have something to do with the new owner of the Marsh Estate.”
“Maybe Polly’s grandfather knows,” Ayden suggested. “I think I’ll stop by there this afternoon and talk with him.”
My attention fell on Tim. His eyes were glued to an open file on his desk.
“What have you found out about the Coos Bay victim?” I asked.
“Any other connection?” I asked, plopping down in my desk chair.
“For what?” I asked, as I studied the autopsy pictures that Tim handed me.
“She was buying a stereo from the pawnshop on Anchor,” Ayden put in. “Anchor is our connection.”
I had to agree. Although Anne Chase hadn’t been killed on Anchor, she’d been a recent visitor.
But there was something that still wasn’t clicking. Although I wasn’t a trained profiler, I knew a few of the basics, like the comfort zone theory.
“That would mean that he probably lives or works somewhere near Anchor, which would put that area as his comfort zone. Coos Bay is way off the mark with that.”
That was something I hadn’t thought of. If he did live in one place and work in another, that would give the perp two comfort zones.
“Did you notice the lack of blood at the crime scene?” I asked Tim.
He nodded. “It was the same with Anne Chase.”
“There are puncture wounds on both victims. Why isn’t this noted in the report?” This time I directed my question to Ayden, who happened to be busy on his computer, and not paying any attention to the conversation.
“The Council wanted it kept out of the report,” Ayden informed us.
By Council, I assumed he meant the Council of Supernatural Beings, which was something along the lines of the NSA for, not so normal people. We’d recently discovered that the boss man was a double agent. He worked for the FBI, but first and foremost, he worked for the CSNB.
“So I take it you think we are dealing with a vampire?” I asked.
“It would appear so,” Ayden replied, without looking away from his computer screen. “The mutilation could be an effort to cover the true cause of death,” he added.
The name, Marty Morrison jumped into my head. He was the paranormal investigator we’d used on our last case. I knew he frequented the island on his ghost hunting expeditions, but he lived on the mainland. Even more incriminating, he was a vampire.
The problem was, he just didn’t seem like a killer. Then again, neither did most serial killers.
“What about Marty Morrison? He’s familiar with the island, and he lives on the mainland.”
“We could always ask him if he’d come in,” I offered.
Tim shook his head. “If he is our subject … the last thing you want to do is tip him off.”
He had a point.
Not just that, but with Marty being a vampire, we would only be able to question him after sundown.
But I had an idea.
“What if I question him, without him knowing that’s what I’m doing?”
Ayden lifted one brow. “And how do you propose to do this?”
“They are having a town meeting tonight to discuss the proposed resort on the Marsh estate. I could invite him to attend with me on the pretense that we suspect the killings could be connected to someone at the this new resort.”
“Doesn’t he specialize in ghosts?” Ayden frowned. “I can tell you for sure, a ghost didn’t commit these murders.”
“Well of course not.” I rolled my eyes. “Besides, a ghost wouldn’t have bitten them, he’d just scare them to death.”
Sighing, I leaned back in my chair. I had a feeling this might be a long conversation. “How is it that you know so much about vampires?”
Tim glanced away nervously, which told me that he knew a lot more about something than I did.
I totally resented that. The boss man was always favoring Tim.
Getting up from his desk, Ayden walked to the coffee maker we kept in the office. After filling his cup with straight black coffee, he looked back at me.
Pausing, Ayden made his way back to his desk and sat down.
“I’m so sorry,” I kept my voice low and contrite.
“And you believe a vampire was responsible?” I asked, though it was obvious that he did.
“The Seattle police believed it was some kind of psycho who viewed themselves to be a vampire, but it was too perfect. Someone like that would have shown disorganized traits, but it was clear that whoever killed my family had been meticulous and very organized. The more I looked into it, the more homicides I found with the exact same MO, but they were spread out over decades, and all over the world. That’s what convinced me that vampires were no myth,” he finished.
“So that’s why you got involved with the ACMU and the Council?”
He nodded. “Eventually my search led me to the people who knew about these things. I’ve been hunting vampires ever since.”
Poor Ayden.
“Did you ever find the vampire … or whatever was responsible for killing your family?”
“I thought I had when I first came here. There was that Beaufort legend. I figured the old bloodsucker had fooled everyone into thinking he was down under, while he went about killing all over the Pacific Northwest, but so far, I haven’t found any evidence to support that theory.”
With my entire family being witches, I knew all about binding spells, but I didn’t have a lot of info when it came to vampires. Apparently the boss man did.
I wished I could say for sure that it was, but the only person I knew who had any experience with this hidden dimension was my sister, Annabelle, and she didn’t remember much about her experience.
Ayden shook his head. “I don’t know. You can’t trust vampires, even those who seem harmless,” he said, his skepticism evident in his voice.
“It’s a little more complicated than what you see in the movies,” Tim warned.
“I know, but I’m not totally helpless. If worse comes to worse, I do have a friend or two I can call on for help.”
But he had saved me at least one other time.
“I’ll be okay,” I told them again.
Ayden nodded, which meant go for it, and that’s exactly what I intended to do.
What was it about truck people that made them think they could do anything they wanted with their vehicles?
There had to be something evil about a person who would leave someone to die in the middle of the street.
No thanks. I would just as soon keep Lady Luck locked.
Tonight the parking lot was so jam-packed that people were having to park up and down the street. I knew this new resort was a hot topic in town, but I hadn’t quite realized just how hot.
She was still the same witch she’d always been, but these days she’d toned down her temper quite a lot.
Double checking Lady Luck’s locks, I hurried to catch up with her. “Hey Granny.”
Just as I was ready to relieve her of the box, another set of hands grabbed it.
Marty the vampire smiled. “Let me get this for you.”
“Thanks,” I told him. “This is my Grandma Stella.”
Turning to Granny, I said, “And this is Marty Morrison.”
Granny nodded. “Hello there, young man.”
She was wearing one of her pink flower print dresses and had her long gray hair secured in a bud at the back of her head. With Granny being such a stout woman, she probably could have handled the box without a problem, in spite of the fact that she was well into her sixties.
“I see,” he said, giving me a half smile.
I hoped I sounded convincing enough, but it was hard to tell. The one thing I’d learned about vampires was they were hard to read. Of course it wasn’t as if I were real good at
reading people to begin with, my ex fiancé being a good example of that, but vampires were even more difficult than normal people.
Marty’s eyes scanned the gathering crowd. “I don’t see any yet.”
“Well, we should get a seat before they’re all taken,” I suggested.
“So how have you been?” I asked, once we were both seated.
“Good.” He nodded. “I was very impressed with how quickly your team solved your last case. From what I’ve heard, you had one strange case on your hands.”
“It damn sure wasn’t your everyday day case. Even for what we do, it was strange.”
We slid into an uncomfortable silence, during which Marty continued to study the crowd.
“So I hear you’ve been doing a lot of ghost hunting on the island.”
Marty nodded. “I’m fascinated by this Captain Marsh ghost everyone keeps talking about. But I have to tell you. … I’m not so sure if the ghost people see is actually that old captain, or the vampire the founders witched during their mutiny on the Mystique.”
“Well if it’s true that the original captain of the Mystique was a vampire entombed beneath the Marsh estate, it was probably a good idea for you to come to this meeting anyway,” I told him.
Marty nodded. “Actually, I already had plans to be here tonight.”
Smiling, he shook his head. “You know … you could have just asked me to come in for questioning. This charade wasn’t really necessary.”
Damn it! Maybe I wasn’t so good at stealth questioning.
“I was at the Four Square Clinic blood bank in Coos Bay. I have a friend there that slips me a bag or two of O Positive every few days.”
“I thought you only fed off animal blood?” I frowned, not sure I liked the idea of a vampire that actually subsisted off human blood.
“I do most of the time, but once in a while I like the real thing,” he explained.
“I stayed there with her for awhile. You could say that I repay my friend with services.”
“What services … and does your friend have a name?” I asked, shifting positions to where I wasn’t sitting quite as close to him. It wasn’t so much that he made me
uncomfortable, though he did a little. My discomfort was due more to the hard wooden pew, than Marty.
“You know … services,” he said with a devilish grin as he arched his hips a little.
The blood rushed to my cheeks.
“Oh.” It was all I could think to say.
“Still … that’s not a nice thing to do,” I came back with a scowl.
Since my ex’s fiasco with the wedding planner, I wasn’t exactly tolerant of cheaters. Not that I had been before that, but now the idea really irritated me.
“I can’t force you to give up her name, but it’s the only way to clear you,” I informed him.
“Let me think about it,” he said, draping his arm over the back of the pew. “She’s a nice lady. I’d hate to ruin her life and marriage over this.”
“Sounds like she isn’t too worried about that,” I responded, twisting my mouth into a sour grimace.
“But not a vampire?” I was doubtful.
Marty shook his head. “You really don’t know much about vampires, do you?”
“I guess not.”
My face grew hot. The last thing I’d intended to do with Marty was talk about sex, especially in a church.
Just then I heard a voice that nearly stopped my heart.
“Do you mind if I sit with you?”
It was Elias Moreland.
When I looked up, he was gazing at me with those sexy dark eyes of his.
“Sure,” I said, scooting a little closer to Marty, giving Elias more room.
Since Elias didn’t make an appearance in Storm Cove too often, I was a little surprised to see him, though I shouldn’t have been. He and the other Roseland wolves belonged to a secret order charged with keeping the dreadful Beaufort entombed for eternity.
“How have you been?” he asked in that deep - smooth voice of his.
I had no idea what having sex with a vampire was like, but I could tell you for sure that being with a werewolf was a mind-blowing experience, and it was an experience that I really did want to have again.
And that was the problem.
Perhaps I was a little screwed up in the head, but that was me. Besides, why would I want to play second to some old vampire anyway, especially one who was probably more legend than real.
“Thank you all for coming here tonight,” Reverend Chadwick started. “I know everyone is concerned about the new resort that is to open on our island soon, so we have Mayor Christensen here to talk with you, as well as a representative from Dupree Enterprises.”
Mayor Doug Christensen was in his usual gray - pinstriped suit. Every time I saw him, he had his black hair slicked back. The man reminded me of a gangster from the 30s or 40s.
“Thank you all for being here tonight,” he said, with one of those, used car salesmen smiles, pasted on his face.
“We are very much aware that the citizens of Storm Cove … and in fact, all of Mystique County, have concerns about the proposed resort on the old Marsh Property.”
The crowd stirred, and the mumbling grew so loud that Mayor Christensen had to hold up his hand to bring it under control.