Sacrificed in Shadow (28 page)

BOOK: Sacrificed in Shadow
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“You’re keeping it?” Rylie asked.

“For now.”

“We’ve always got leftovers.” She pulled a face. “Nothing he would want to eat.”

“Beef bone?”

“We can manage that. Hey, do you want to meet some of the pack while you’re here?” Rylie asked.

Elise would have preferred to choke herself with Ace’s chain. But if she was going to be leaving Lincoln with the pack, she wanted to familiarize herself with the people that would be responsible for his safety. Just in case.

“Okay,” she said.

Rylie took her through tables, stopping to introduce Elise to each group. Few people were sitting. Most milled restlessly as if they couldn’t stop walking, even when they were eating.

The werewolves came in a wide variety of shapes, sizes, and features, but there was still a slight family resemblance to all of them—even beyond the gold irises. Elise couldn’t put her finger on the familiarity. Maybe the way they moved, or how they peeled their lips back in a wolfish glare when they smiled.

Rylie listed names: Trevin, Pyper, Bekah, Paetrick, one after the other. She knew everyone by sight. They all greeted Rylie with respect, and sometimes outright affection. The Alpha regarded them all with a little smile, a nervous laugh, a blushing wink.

This big group of mismatched people were family, united by the very thing that had turned them out from society.

What must it have been like to love so many people? Elise loved, somewhat reluctantly—it was one of Eve’s major drives, that love thing, but it came to Elise with difficulty. And with that love had come fear. Fear of losing Anthony, McIntyre, Leticia, their children.

Loving that many people made Rylie spectacularly weak. It left forty-something chinks in her armor. It was a curse, not a blessing.

Elise didn’t envy her.

She also didn’t retain any of the names that Rylie rattled off. They slid off of her mind as soon as they entered. Their faces blurred together into a sea of indistinguishable smiles.

“You look overwhelmed,” Rylie said as she led Elise away. “I thought it was overwhelming at first, too.”

“You seem to do well now.”

“I’m good at faking it. Being responsible for everyone still scares the crap out of me.”

Abel approached at a rapid clip, head bowed over the manila folder that he had stolen from the sheriff’s office. “Hey, Rylie,” he called, glancing up at her. “This guy look familiar to you?”

He whipped out a photo from the folder, shoving it in their faces. It was a man with short brown hair, thin lips, a scruffy beard.

“That’s the missing man,” Rylie said. “Bob Hagy, right?”

He wasn’t missing anymore. His body had been found that weekend, as mutilated as every other victim. But Elise stared at the picture. She had seen his face recently.

“He was the man with Father Armstrong,” Elise said.

“He’s supposed to be missing,” Abel said.

She grimaced. “He’s supposed to be dead.” Elise spotted Lincoln on the edge of the hazy gold light cast by the paper lanterns. She gestured him over. He was followed closely by Seth, both of whom were holding half-empty beer bottles. Looked like they had been making friends. “This is the man that they found this weekend, isn’t it?”

Lincoln squinted at the picture and leaned in close. His night vision must have been terrible in comparison to Elise’s. “Yeah. Bob Hagy.”

Elise plucked his cell phone out of his pocket. “Be right back,” she said.

She let the others fill Lincoln in while she stepped away from the group, toward the quiet edge of the forest, and dialed McIntyre’s number. She had used Seth’s phone to update him earlier after the confrontation with Father Armstrong, so she expected that he’d still be awake to do some research.

Elise’s expectation was right. Someone answered on the first ring. But it wasn’t McIntyre—it was Anthony.

“Hey,” he said, sounding surprised. “I was about to call you. I was reading up on Father Armstrong and found a connection between the victims. You’ll like this.”

“Give it to me.”

“They’re all members of the same church. Right?”

“Everyone in Northgate’s a member of the same church,” Elise said.

“But these people are part of a church group that goes back a few years. Like, fifteen years back, to a high school youth camp. Guess who else was in the group.” Anthony didn’t wait for her to guess. “Richard Armstrong.”

Elise glanced over her shoulder at Lincoln. He was deep in conversation with Seth, gesturing with his beer bottle, maybe arguing.

“You think that Father Armstrong used that camp to select his victims,” she said, and Anthony made a sound of assent. It would have made perfect sense if she hadn’t seen one of the victims with Father Armstrong that afternoon, perfectly alive. “Father Armstrong looked like he was only thirty years old. He wasn’t leading a church group in high school, was he?”

“No, that was led by this other guy, someone named Father Mikhail Night,” Anthony said.

Father Night?

He hadn’t said that he had known Father Armstrong for fifteen years. In fact, he had given Elise the distinct impression that they had only known one another for a few months.

“That’s interesting,” Elise said in what had to be the understatement of the week, if not the year.

“It gets better. There were other people that went to this church camp—thirteen total. All of them have gone missing or turned up dead.”

“Wait, thirteen?”

“Five of them moved away to other towns nearby. Fairfield, Woodbridge, Bellevue City… But they’ve gone missing, too. It hasn’t been connected to the case because they’re not in Northgate.”

“Anthony,” Elise said slowly, trying to organize her thoughts, “is it possible that the bodies in the morgue aren’t the people that they believe them to be? They don’t have enough teeth to match dental records, no faces…”

He caught on quickly. “You think that this group is faking their deaths so that they can go missing?”

“I ran into Robert Hagy this afternoon,” Elise said. “That’s why I was calling you. He was the man with Father Armstrong.”

“Oh shit.”

That summed it up pretty well.

Twelve people—thirteen, counting Father Night. It was the exact number of people that a coven would get together to perform big rituals. The kind of spells that required a delicate balance of energies, forcing them to be cast on specific moon phases. The kind of spells that took human sacrifice.

“Text me the names of the other people that attended that camp,” Elise said. “I need to run.”

“Where are you going?”

“I’m going to have a talk with Father Night.”

TWENTY-TWO

ELISE FLEW INTO
the night and reappeared twenty miles away in Woodbridge.

She coalesced on the front lawn of the house where Father Night was supposed to be hiding. The lights were on in the house, even though it was almost midnight. Everyone else in the neighborhood was already asleep. The glow of light beyond the curtains seemed to taunt Elise.

She could have tried to mist under the front door, but those cult fuckers had exorcised her once, and she didn’t want to see what kind of magical booby traps they might have waiting for an incorporeal demon this time. Leaning back, she unleashed a powerful kick next to the handle, shattering the lock.

The door swung open.

Elise jerked the falchion out of its scabbard as she stepped inside. “Father Night?” she thundered, fist tight on the bare hilt, ears perked for sound.

Nobody responded. She also didn’t hear any rustling, doors slamming, or other sounds of attempted escape. The air was still, anticipant.

She would have been able to taste it if there had been anyone in the house. Even when mortals slept, their minds gave off an electric buzz. But there were no functioning brains in the house. Not even the heartbeat of a family pet.

The house was empty—or its inhabitants were hiding somewhere warded, where she couldn’t sense them.

She prowled the living room, searching for family photos among the glass-front cabinets displaying antique shotguns, blunderbusses, and pistols. Everything was ancient; the house looked like a museum.

Elise found what she sought in the hallway leading to the kitchen: a recent family portrait. She pulled it off of the wall and studied it closely.

The family looked nice enough. Prim brunette wife; husky, bearded husband. She did a double-take at the wife. It was Sheriff Dickerson. Elise had only seen pictures of her on Lincoln’s phone, but in every single one of them, she had been uniformed, with her hair in a tight bun. Her hair was loose around her shoulders in these pictures. When she was smiling, she was unrecognizable.

Elise pulled a second photo off of the wall. The sheriff and her husband were outdoors in that one, holding a pit bull puppy between them—a dog with a pink nose, brown markings, and a ribbon around his neck. Ace was ridiculously cute as a baby, all giant paws and big eyes. Must have been barely taken from his litter in the photo. And he probably hadn’t tasted human flesh yet.

“You fuckers,” she breathed.

She was going to kill them.

Elise dropped the photo on a table.

She rolled her feet down the hall, barely making a sound as she entered the kitchen, which was only illuminated by the hallway light. Long shadows stretched from the pots and pans hanging from the ceiling, throwing shapes on the wall beyond that looked like stalactites, or the open maw of a demon.

The heater clicked on. The smell of blood slapped her in the face as the air stirred. It was a rich, meaty odor, suggestive of more than just a few drops spilled. And as soon as she slipped around the marble kitchen island, she saw why.

Father Night’s body was sprawled in a glistening puddle. In such quantities, his blood looked black. It made his cassock shine.

His arms were spread to either side, ankles together, head missing. Very much like a decapitated Jesus. At another time, Elise might have appreciated the artistry of it.

Except that this time, it meant she was too late.

She slammed her fist into the wall, letting loose a string of curses that might have even managed to shock McIntyre. She punched through sheetrock wrist-deep.

And she heard a responding
thud
from somewhere else in the house.

Elise froze, listening for the sound to repeat. A moment later, she heard another
thud
, and then another, like fists pounding on a door. It wasn’t far. Definitely on the first floor.

She still couldn’t sense any mortals in the house. But that noise had to be coming from something alive.

She searched the garage, the living room, the dining room, but couldn’t seem to find the origin of the pounding noise. It didn’t stop. She followed it back into the kitchen again and opened the pantry. There was a trap door leading to the crawl space, and it was bouncing.

Elise kneeled to inspect the lock. Wards were etched into it. No wonder she hadn’t been able to feel anyone on the other side.

“Hang on,” she said, “I’m coming in. You might want to step back.”

The pounding silenced.

She slammed the hilt of her falchion into the lock once, twice. The infernal obsidian sparked against the metal. On the third strike, the padlock shattered, and she was able to rip the door open. Her blood burned hot in the wake of finding Father Night—she pulled the door off of its hinges and tossed it aside.

Elise dropped through the door.

What had once been a crawl space had been carved out, converting it into a space large enough for her to stand in. Anyone taller would have to stoop.

There was another pentagram smeared on the wall, another cage, plastic sheets spread over the floor. It was a second ritual site, though it didn’t seem to have been used in several weeks. The blood was brown and fading. The only footprints in the dust belonged to the person that had been trying to catch Elise’s attention, which were in the shape of designer heels. Shoes that definitely didn’t belong in a cult’s ritual space.

“I never thought I would be happy to see
you
,” said a female voice from the shadows.

Elise hadn’t heard that voice in a long time, but she would never forget that cold condescension, no matter how long she managed to walk the Earth. It was the voice of a jealous woman, someone who didn’t believe that her boyfriend, James, wasn’t fucking Elise behind her back—a witch, a talented doctor, and an all-around bitch.

Stephanie Whyte emerged, hunched over in the uncomfortable space. Her strawberry-blond hair hung loose around her shoulders. She looked gaunt and wasn’t preceded by her usual cloud of Victoria’s Secret perfume.

“Stephanie…Armstrong,” Elise said. “You’re fucking kidding me.
You’re
the coroner?”

“The one and only, for the last three months,” Stephanie said. She managed to sound dignified, even as she all but collapsed in Elise’s arms. Elise hadn’t been expecting Stephanie to grab her, so she staggered under the doctor’s weight, sinking to the dusty floor. “The things I’ve done, Elise—the things I’ve seen—you’d be doing me a favor if you slit my throat where I stand.”

“You’re not standing,” Elise said dryly.

She had definitely contemplated slitting Stephanie’s throat a few times—well, spitting in her pancake batter, at the very least—but no matter how much they disliked each other, it wasn’t worth murder.

There were no stairs leading out of the crawl space, and Stephanie seemed too weak to climb, so Elise wrapped her arms around her.

“I’m going to do something that will make you uncomfortable. Close your eyes, hold your breath, and don’t breathe until you hear my voice again,” Elise said.

She expected argument from Stephanie, but the doctor must have been even worse than she looked. She curled against Elise’s chest. Her eyes fell shut.

Elise bled into darkness, wrapped her misty form around Stephanie, and dragged the woman to the first floor. It only took an instant, but she knew from what Anthony had told her that it felt like a lifetime. He hated being transported by Elise—he had only voluntarily done it once since they moved to Las Vegas together, and that was because they had been about to fall off of the top of the MGM Grand. Anthony preferred Elise’s embrace to death. That was about the
only
thing he preferred it to.

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