Authors: David B. Coe
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Urban, #Paranormal
Upon returning to the city, though, I felt myself growing tense again. I made us wait for a table in the back of the restaurant, though there were a couple of open ones near the front when we arrived. And then I insisted on sitting against the back wall, so that I could watch the door and windows.
By the time we were seated and the waitress was handing us our menus, Billie was frowning at me. No half-smile either. This was all frown.
“What was that all about?” she asked.
“What?”
“That bit with the table? The fact that you practically raced me over here so that you could sit in that chair?”
“I don’t like to sit with my back to the door,” I said, trying to keep my voice light. “I’m sure you’ve seen enough detective flicks to know that I’m not the first person to be like that.”
“That’s a load of crap, Fearsson. What’s this about?”
I put down the menu and met her gaze. “I really don’t like to have my back to the door. And since this case has started, I’ve had the feeling, at times, that I’m being watched, followed.”
Hunted.
“Do you think you’re . . . in danger?” Her frown deepened. “I feel so weird even saying it. Now I feel like I’m
in
one of those movies.”
I rubbed a hand over my face. “I didn’t mean to scare you.”
“I’m scared for you, not for myself.”
Hadn’t Namid said much the same thing? Nice to know everyone was so worried about me.
“I appreciate that. I don’t know if I’m in danger or not. I haven’t been threatened or anything like that. I haven’t even seen anyone following me. It’s a feeling; nothing more.” I picked up the menu again and shook my head, eager to find some way—any way—to reassure her. “Who knows? Maybe it’s the strain of working a murder case again. I’m getting paranoid.”
She still wasn’t reading her menu. “Was that a problem for you before? Paranoia?”
“No.”
“I didn’t think so. You don’t seem like the paranoid type. And you also don’t seem like the type to act this way unless you were really concerned.”
Did I mention that she was smart?
“You’re right,” I said. “That’s why I wanted to sit back here, and why I feel better having a view of the door and the street.”
“Should we leave?”
I shook my head. “No. That would be giving in to my fear, and that’s exactly what I don’t want to start doing.”
She nodded.
“So what’s good here?” I asked.
Billie smiled and picked up her menu. “Everything.”
As it turned out, the food was great and the place had Dos Equis Amber on tap, which you don’t find in a lot of restaurants. We stayed for two hours, talking, laughing a lot. We even spent a little time just sitting, looking into each other’s eyes. I swear. I don’t think I’d ever done that with anyone.
After dinner, I drove her home. I went so far as to walk her up to the door. My dad would have been proud.
She got out her keys, but then leaned against the door frame. “What are you doing tomorrow, Fearsson?”
“Not sure yet. I have some more digging around to do, and I have to go see a band play tomorrow night.”
Her eyebrows went up. “A band?”
“It’s work, not pleasure. I need to speak with the manager of Robo’s about the guy the police have arrested, and as it happens, Randy Deegan’s band is playing there.”
“Hmmm,” she said. “I like music.”
I laughed. “I told you it was work.”
“But don’t you need a cover, someone to make it seem like you’re a regular guy going for the music?”
“You mean my girl Friday?”
“Something like that.”
“Sure, why not? Eight o’clock?”
“It’s a date.”
Silence. Our eyes locked again.
“This was fun,” she said. “More than fun. It was . . .”
“It was the best day I’ve had in a really long time,” I said for her.
“For me, too.” She stepped forward and kissed me lightly on the lips. “Good night, Fearsson.”
“Good night.”
I waited until she was in the house before walking back to the Z-ster. As I approached the car I slowed, trying again to sense the red sorcerer. Once more, I felt nothing. He was out there, of course. Somewhere. But for tonight at least, he had let me be.
I peered up at the moon, which was radiant and big, shading toward full. Just seeing it made my head start to throb. I climbed into the Z-ster and closed my eyes, taking long, slow breaths.
One more night. I’d have my date with Billie at Robo’s. And then the phasing would begin.
CHAPTER 13
Often on the cusp of a phasing, my dreams become fragmented to the point of incoherence, as if the insanity that’s about to be brought on by the moon has crept into my sleep. But not this night.
All night long I dreamed of the red sorcerer, and in every dream he was tracking me, hunting me down. I’d wake from one dream, fall back asleep, and slip right into another; my mind was like a flat stone skipping along the surface of a pond. At one point I dreamed that I was back in the monument with Billie, running along a dried river bed, leading her, pulling her by the hand. I kept staring back over my shoulder, expecting to see the red sorcerer. I could feel him behind us, and as much as I wanted to get away, to get Billie away, I also wanted to see his face, to find out who he was.
We reached a bend in the riverbed, and I hesitated, though now Billie tugged at my hand, trying to get me to run on. She said something to me that I didn’t hear, and I turned to her. And as I did, I saw her eyes widen at something she could see past my shoulder. She screamed, and I spun to look.
Which, of course, is when the phone rang, waking me from the dream. I groped for the receiver, missed it the first time, got it the second.
“Fearsson,” I mumbled.
“Sleeping late, I see,” Kona said. “You alone, or did you have another date?”
I grunted a laugh. “Both.”
“Good. What do you have for me?”
“So much for the social niceties.”
“You’re lucky you got as much as you did. I’m having a bad day, partner. It’s not even nine o’clock and my day’s shot to hell.”
I sat up, running a hand through my tangled hair. “Tell me. Maybe I can help.”
“It’s nothing you don’t already know. Gann is being arraigned right now, and I’ve got no way of proving to Hibbard or Arroyo or anyone else that he’s innocent.”
Right. “I’ll see what else I can find,” I said, forcing myself awake. “I didn’t get much from Q or Luis, but there’s another place I can go today.”
“We don’t have much time.”
I chuckled humorlessly. “Don’t I know it.”
“Meaning what?”
“Meaning that our friend has taken a particular interest in me. I don’t know why; I guess he knows I’m after him. But he’s taken the measure of my warding three times now and—”
“You’ve lost me, partner. It’s that mumbo-jumbo stuff again.”
“Sorry. He’s been testing me in a way, and he’s done it three times, which in magical circles basically means that he owns me. The next time, if he wants to hurt me, or kill me, or turn me into a toad, he can pretty much have his way.”
“And you’re guessing it won’t be the toad thing.”
I grinned, despite the tightness in my gut. “Yeah, something like that.”
“Well then, watch yourself,” she said.
“I will.”
I hung up, showered, and was soon on my way back to Mesa. There was a small park near Falcon Field where I knew other weremystes would be gathered today in anticipation of the full moon. The drive was as slow as one would expect on a weekday morning, and by the time I was parking the Z-ster I could see the crowd gathered among the small tents and plywood stalls.
Passersby would have thought it nothing more than another small farmers’ market, of which there was no shortage in the Phoenix area. This market, though, was far from typical. We referred to it as the Moon Market, because it only turned up for a few days right before the phasing. Rather then selling produce and jams and homemade salsas, the sellers at the Moon Market sold herbs and oils, crystals and talismans, elixirs, incense, and bundled blends of flowers and native plants that resembled the sage sticks burned by the Pueblo people. Many of the items were similar to those Q sold at his place, only in far greater numbers and varieties, and often at much better prices. Some peddled their own spells, which they taught to other weremystes for a fee. Some sold knives or candles that they claimed to have charmed.
As usual, there were as many wannabes circulating among the tents as there were actual weremystes. Sometimes tourists stumbled across the market as well. They took pictures of the various displays and bought the occasional geode or quartz spear. But it was always easy to spot the weremystes in the crowd, even if direct sunlight obscured the wavering effect from their magic. They weren’t there for the fun of it, and they weren’t shopping for pretty trinkets. They moved around the market with quiet urgency, seeking something—anything—that might take the edge off the coming phasing.
I’d tried a few of the herbs early on: sachets of stargrass and alyssum that I was told to leave near all the windows and doors of my house; blends of anise, bay, pennyroyal, and rosemary that I was supposed to put in pots of boiling water. Once I even bought a wand made of mulberry. As far as I could tell, none of them had done anything to ease the pull of the moon.
But other weremystes swore by remedies like these, and who was I to argue? I knew cops who used one kind of aspirin, but not others. Different people have different headaches; same with phasings.
I wandered through the market, searching for people I knew, people who might be able to tell me something about the Blind Angel killings. A few vendors and shoppers appeared to recognize me, but most of them refused to make eye contact. They probably thought I was still a cop.
The first person I saw who both knew me and appeared willing to speak with me was an old Navajo named Barry Crowseye, who sold crystals at the market, and jewelry in a small shop in Tolleson. He waved me over when he spotted me and stood to shake my hand, reaching across a long table that was covered with baskets of polished stone—petrified wood, tiger’s-eye, citrine, jasper, bloodstone, malachite, and a dozen other stones I couldn’t identify.
I’d known Barry for years and he hadn’t changed at all. As far as I could tell, his hair had always been silver, and he had always worn it in a long ponytail. He was a big man, with a chiseled face that could have come straight off of a coin. If I’d been making a western and needed to cast the part of Indian chief, I’d have tracked him down simply because he looked the part. His skin was the color of cherry wood, and his eyes were almost black. He was wearing jeans, a pale blue Los Lobos t-shirt, and a brown leather vest. And as always, the shimmer of magic around him was so strong that his face, neck, and shoulders were blurred.
“Good to see you, Jay,” he said, smiling at me, a gold tooth glinting. “Been a while.”
“You too, Barry. Things going well?”
He shrugged, then lowered himself back onto a folding canvas chair. “I suppose. You interested in buying?” he asked, pushing a few stones around on his table until satisfied with his display. In addition to the polished rocks, he also had agate geodes, pendants of various sizes and colors, and amethyst, quartz, and fluorite crystals. Like the herbs and oils I’d seen elsewhere, his selection of stones was weighted to those said to offer magical protection and psychic strength.
“No, thanks,” I told him.
He gave a sage nod. “Information, then.”
I laughed. “Guess I’m getting predictable.”
He shrugged again. “I haven’t seen you around here in more than a year. And even back when you were a regular, you were never as interested in protection as you were in information.”
“You’d make a good PI.”
He chuckled, but quickly grew serious again. “People here don’t want to talk about the murders. They didn’t when you were a cop, and they don’t now. Can’t say as I blame them.”
“How’d you know I’d be asking about that?”
Barry regarded me in a way that made me feel like the biggest idiot on the planet.
“Yeah, all right,” I said, my voice dropping. “If you knew anything, would you tell me?”
“Yes,” he said.
I believed him.
“Who else should I talk to?”
“I don’t know that, either.”
“Well, thanks anyway,” I said. I started to leave, but then stopped. Barry knew as much about magic as anyone I’d met, aside from Namid. And unlike the runemyste, Barry was willing to give me a straight answer now and then. “What do you know about dark magic?” I asked, turning to face him again.
“Not a lot. Some. I did a little when I was younger. And my brother played around with some nasty stuff once upon a time. Why?”
I asked him the same question I’d asked Luis Paredes a few nights before. “Can you think of any reason why a weremyste would kill on the night of the first quarter moon?”
His eyebrows went up. “First quarter moon is a powerful night. Any spell would be stronger then.”
“So I’ve heard. But what spell would require a murder?”
“Lots of them do,” he said, his voice and expression grim. “Why do you think they call it dark magic? Sacrifice is just another word for murder, and there’s not that much difference between killing a goat and killing a person. Except that human blood amplifies the magic more.”
“Could he be using the kids he’s killing to make himself stronger?”
Barry gave a small frown. “I suppose.”
“But you don’t think he is.”
“I don’t know enough about the guy to think anything. But I’ve never heard of a weremyste making himself stronger with magic. We cast spells, we hone our craft, we practice. But using magic to strengthen our magic?” He shook his head. “I’m not sure I believe it.”
“Yeah, all right. Thanks, Barry.”
“No problem. And don’t be such a stranger,” he called after me.
I walked away, raising a hand as I went. I made my way around the rest of the market, unsure as to what, exactly, I was trying to find. I figured I’d know it when I saw it.
I was right.
Near the back of the market, as far as possible from where I had parked, a woman sat under a small white tent selling an odd assortment of oils, herbs, and stones carved into animal shapes: owls, snakes, bears, wolves. They resembled Zuni fetishes in a superficial way, but I could tell they were knock-offs. In fact, her entire display could have come from one of those New Age stores in a mall; I doubted that any of what she was selling had much value for a weremyste. I noticed a small sign taped to one of the tent legs; it said “Renewing Designs, Shari Bettancourt.” It gave a website and PO address in Tempe.
I no more than glanced at the woman as I gave her table a quick scan and prepared to move on. Then I froze, eyeing the woman once more, my gaze settling on a pendant that hung around her neck. She wore a long multi-color batik dress with a v-neck. The necklace was barely visible beneath it. But I could see a small stone and the silver setting around it. And I was certain that the stone glowed with a faint shimmering of crimson magic.
The woman was speaking to another customer, and at first paid no attention to me. I stared at the stone, stepping closer to her table. The other customer walked away, but I hardly noticed.
“May I help you?”
I tore my eyes away from the pendant, forcing myself to look at her. She appeared to be in her forties. There were small lines around her mouth and eyes, and her short, dark hair was streaked with strands of gray. She had a pleasant, round face and pale blue eyes.
“Yes,” I said, finding my voice. “I was . . . I was admiring your necklace.”
“Isn’t it pretty?” she said. But her smile tightened and she adjusted her dress so that it covered the pendant.
“Yes,” I said. “That red stone is quite remarkable.”
“It’s garnet,” she told me. “It’s a healing stone, and a protector.”
I nodded, meeting her gaze again.
“I have some garnets here,” she said, pointing to a small wooden box that contained a few pieces of raw red crystal. Compared to the glowing pendant, they appeared dull, lifeless. “Of course, they need to be polished to shine like mine.”
“Yes, of course. Where did you find yours? Shari, is it?”
Her gaze wavered; her smile vanished. “Yes, I’m Shari. I . . . I don’t remember where I got it. I think it was a gift, but I’ve had it for a very long time.”
She wasn’t a very good liar.
“Can I see it again?”
Shari hesitated, then drew the pendant out from under her dress and held it up for me. I noticed that her hand trembled.
“That’s a lovely stone,” I said. “It’s so bright, it could almost be glowing.”
She slipped it back into her dress. “Trick of the light,” she said.
“I’m not sure it was. I think it was magic.” I kept my tone light, trying to make it sound like an observation rather than an accusation, but you wouldn’t have known it from her response.
“Well, I think I’d know if it was magic, wouldn’t I?” she said her tone turning brusque. She dismissed me with a flick of her eyes and spied an older man walking near her tent. “Good morning,” she called. “How are you today?”
The man offered a vague smile and half-hearted wave as he continued by. But Shari had made her point: our conversation was over.
“I’m sorry if I offended you,” I said. That was a lie, too. I’d meant to spook her.
She scrutinized her goods, and made a show of rearranging several of the items. “You didn’t,” she said, her voice clipped.
I watched her a moment longer, then turned and walked away. I left the park by way of a nearby path that led onto the street running behind her booth, and went so far as to walk past her tent once more, so that she might see me over the small hedge growing there. I wanted her to think that I’d come on foot. Once I was sure she couldn’t see me anymore, I circled back to the Z-ster, pulled out of the parking lot, and then positioned it along a curb where I could watch the market entrance.
As I expected, Shari didn’t stay there much longer. I’d scared her too much. She came out a short time later wheeling a large, battered suitcase that must have held her goods. Her folded tent was tied to it with bungee cords. She walked hurriedly to a small hatchback, heaved the suitcase into the back, and pulled out of the lot. I kept low as she drove by me and then followed at a safe distance.
She drove straight back to Tempe, sticking to back roads, and eventually pulled into a driveway beside a small house near the sports complex south of the University. I parked nearby and waited until she was back in her house before walking up the path to her door and knocking.