Authors: Megan Morgan
June waited for Micha's response, sort of hoping, sort of not. “Well?”
Micha leaned closer and peered at her face. The light on the phone dimmed. June jabbed the screen, and a moment later a faint jingle came out of the phone.
“Give me that.” Cindy yanked the phone from her and looked at the screen. “You just dialed my boyfriend. Good work.”
June was aghast. “I can’t believe anyone would date you.”
“
One
of them.”
Cindy disconnected the call and shone the light back on Rose’s face. June ground her teeth and pulled a breath through her nose.
After a tense, silent moment, Micha stood upright. “No. I don’t recognize her.” He shrugged. “Pretty, though. I must have game.”
June smoothed a hand over her hair. The strands were greasy and limp and she winced. She hadn’t had a shower in more days than she wanted to contemplate.
“All right,” June said. “It was worth a try. Let’s split, before we get caught. We’ll go through the front door this time.”
Cindy lowered her phone and patted her hip. “If we have to fight our way out, I’m ready.”
“Yes, if the legions of undead try to block our escape.”
June carefully closed the lid of the casket, turned, and walked down the aisle, past rows of couches and folding chairs. The funeral would be huge. She had to get the hell out of the place, away from the woman’s dead body and her own guilt. She needed to get the hell out of Chicago, but she couldn’t. Not yet.
Not until she got her brother back.
* * * *
Cindy had an apartment in West Lakeview. She told June that’s where they were, but June didn’t care if they were on the moon. She felt like she
was
on the moon, in some bizarre alternate reality, even if all signs pointed to being on earth. Cindy also had a tortoiseshell cat named Serendipity—Dipity for short—that liked to sit on June.
June lay in bed in Cindy’s guest room, a small white box with little decoration or furniture—a twin bed, a sagging sofa, and a hulking, ugly wooden dresser. Dipity sat on June’s stomach, kneading her belly as she prepared her for—who knew? Dinner, probably. One paw, then the other. Over and over. Knead, knead. Knead, knead. A cigarette dangled from the corner of June’s mouth, one eye open as she peered through the smoke, past the bowl she was utilizing as an ashtray on her chest.
“Will you lay the hell down?” June snarled.
Dipity did, folding herself into a loaf and gazing at June with wide, accusing yellow eyes. Dipity moved up and down as June breathed.
Soft slapping footsteps sounded in the hallway. Cindy peeked around the doorframe. “Did you say something?”
Dipity looked up at Cindy.
“I was talking to your damn cat,” June said.
Cindy stepped into the room. June found her pretty in an overbearing sense: Amazonian and bodacious, leggy and curvy in a way most guys liked. All the things June wasn’t.
“She likes you.” Cindy wore white pajama pants and a pink T-shirt stretched tight across her ample bosom. “It must be your charming personality. Or you smell like Micha.”
June glanced over at the sofa. Micha had his back to them, covers bunched around his waist, his white T-shirt twisted and hair a tousled, mottled mess of brown and gold. Despite Cindy’s friendship with Micha, she pointed out repeatedly that she was not a “paranormal activist” like him. June didn’t blame Cindy for wanting to be clear. June had actively avoided paranormal activists until she committed the grave mistake of coming to Chicago.
“He’s been sleeping a lot.” Cindy indicated Micha. “Is that one of the side effects?”
June ground her cigarette out in the bowl and sat the bowl next to her hip. “Hell if I know. I’ve never accidentally messed up someone’s mind so bad I couldn’t reverse it.”
Cindy left the room. She returned shortly with a newspaper.
“Look at this.” She walked to the bed and thrust the paper at June.
She gave June the Paranormal section of the
Chicago Tribune
. June had been reading it every day for some mention of Jason. She’d also been reading news online, on Cindy’s laptop. The Chicago Institute for Supernatural Research, the first and biggest facility to be given government approval for paranormal research, kept the city alive with supernatural intrigue and gave bloggers something to endlessly blather about. The Institute’s presence didn’t mean folks in Chicago were hugging their neighborhood telepath, however. The freaks still got persecuted, like in Sacramento where June lived.
The headline on the first page said: HAVE THE SIREN TWINS LEFT CHICAGO? INSTITUTE NOT FORTHCOMING.
June’s heart jumped and then sank again after she read the article. The reporter speculated she and Jason had fled, “shaken profoundly by the horrific and untimely death of the Institute’s top vampire researcher, Rose Bellevue, her vicious murder still a hot topic of rampant speculation.” The article went on to say paranormal citizens were pointing fingers at a normalist group called the Secular Normalists of Chicago or SNC, “a dastardly force polluting this city with misinformation and blatant ignorance.”
June could end the speculation, if she dared come out of hiding.
The article also said police were still investigating the possible kidnapping of Micha Bellevue, Rose’s husband and one of the paranormal community’s most lauded advocates: “last year’s recipient of the J.B. Rhine Award for Advocacy, friend of many paranormal people. His generous admirers hope fervently for his safety and the punishment of those involved in this horrendous crime.”
June had seen plenty of bloggers speculating Micha had something to do with Rose’s death and was on the run, and one particularly amusing guy was convinced Micha had been abducted by the CIA. June could be sneaky, but she wasn’t on level with the government.
“I can’t believe how lurid this shit is.” June tossed the paper on top of Dipity. She emitted an angry mewl and got up. “Reads like a tabloid.”
“Ethan Roberts.” Cindy lifted the paper off her cat. “He’s been the lead paranormal reporter for the
Tribune
for years. He might be colorful, but he knows what he’s talking about.” She tucked the paper under her arm. “My friend will be here soon. So haul your ass out of bed and get dressed.”
Dipity jumped off June and padded slowly around the bed.
“I tried to warn him.” Cindy looked over at Micha. “All those years he thought the Institute could do no wrong. He sure took it up the ass without lube this time.”
June didn’t comment.
“It sucks, though.” Cindy dropped her voice a little. “He didn’t deserve to lose Rose.”
“Look at it this way. Now he can be an advocate for the right people. Knowledge is power. Fight the Man. Rah rah.”
June sat up. Dipity moved behind her and rubbed across her back in a sleek caress. Cats forgave easily.
Cindy turned toward the door.
“Hey,” June said.
Cindy stopped.
“What’s the SNC? I keep seeing them pop up in these articles.”
Cindy scrunched up her face. “They’re a paranormal…protest group. Can’t say ‘hate group’ since the treaty. The Secular Normalists of Chicago. They wanted to set themselves apart from the Bible-thumpers and fundies, but they still like to beat us up.”
“I didn’t realize they needed an organized group to do that. Where I come from, that’s called a gang.”
“It was founded by this guy named Alan Jenkins. He died like five years ago and his son Aaron took over. Aaron says he wants to clean up his father’s dirt.” She pursed her lips. “I don’t believe him.”
“Quite a city you got here.”
Dipity hopped off the bed and landed on the floor with a thump.
“I don’t know how you sleep at night,” June said.
“With one eye open.” Cindy turned and left the room. Dipity streaked after her.
Micha, undoubtedly having been awake for the entire conversation, stirred and rolled partially onto his back and twisted his head around. He gazed at her with bleary, unfocused eyes. She fought the urge to walk over to the sofa and lovingly smooth his hair back; then grab a fistful.
“I like your ink,” Micha said groggily. “I have some. On my back.”
June blinked and stretched her exposed arms. She had countless hours and thousands of dollars worth of tattoos up and down her arms, across her chest, some on her back, one down her left side. A lot she’d done herself. She also had multiple piercings: six in one ear, four in the other—minus the gauges—one in her tongue too, not to mention a few other places. A “rebel,” her mother called her. She caused soccer moms to cross the street on a regular basis, even when doing nothing more malevolent than smoking a Parliament while holding a latte and texting.
“Thanks,” she said. “You’ll have to show me sometime.”
Micha rolled fully onto his back and stretched, arms over his head, long legs stiffening beneath the blanket. He didn’t fit on the sofa, but he’d insisted on taking it, like a gentleman.
“God, what time is it?” he asked.
“A little after nine.” She needed to say something but took a moment to choose her words carefully. “I feel bad about you missing your wife’s funeral today. But until I figure out how to fix what I’ve done to your head, I can’t send you back into the wild. Let them keep thinking you’ve been kidnapped by the CIA or whatever. I have a feeling if you surfaced right now you’d fall into the Institute’s net anyway.”
Micha put his hands over his face. The light caught on his gold wedding band.
“I’m so confused,” he murmured through his fingers. “Not only about this woman who’s supposed to be my wife, but about the Institute.” He took his hands away. “I supported them. I thought they were doing the right thing. I believed they were helping the maligned and oppressed.”
June couldn’t believe he’d used the words “maligned and oppressed” in seriousness.
“I’ve done so many seminars there,” Micha said. “I’ve lauded them as a safe haven and a place for paranormal people to understand themselves and help others understand them. When I think of all the people I’ve sent there…”
The sunlight blazing on the white walls magnified the color of his eyes, making them some inane interior decorating color like
cerulean
. They were desperate though, dimmed with worry and care, darkened and dulled by sadness.
“Well”—she wasn’t good at placating—“a lot of people thought Hitler was doing the right thing until they found out the truth. Didn’t make them criminals.”
Instead of seeming relieved, Micha blanched, his eyes going wide. She popped her tongue into her cheek and looked around for her smokes. Smooth.
Real
smooth.
Cindy changed into a brown shirt-dress thing, black leggings, and fuzzy brown boots. The colors looked good with her pale skin and shock of short, choppy brilliant red hair. At least she knew how to dress. She made some tea and proceeded to slosh a shot of Jack Daniels into her cup. June looked at the clock on the wall—just after ten a.m.
“My nerves are shot,” Cindy said.
They were sitting in her living room, June in a chair, Cindy on a big cushy stool. The kitchen and living room flowed into each other, small and sparsely decorated and as colorless as the bedroom. June didn’t mind. She could handle minimalism.
“I’ll take your word for it,” June said. “But who puts Jack Daniels in tea? That’s not even right.”
“I have an excitable condition. It keeps me calm. Trust me, you don’t want it to get out of hand.”
“Trust her.” Micha sat on the couch, legs tucked under him. He looked wide-eyed and tousled and stupidly cute.
June wanted to hug him and tell him she didn’t mean to call him a Nazi. And maybe give him an apologetic hand job.
“Let’s get down to business.” Cindy plunked the bottle of whiskey on the black lacquer coffee table in front of her.
June was tempted to snatch the bottle and take a swig. Without the tea. She hated tea.
“June,” Cindy said, “this is Robbie Beecher.”
Cindy’s friend was a slender sharp-shouldered man, with neck-length dark brown hair. Cute, but not exactly June’s cup of…well, straight Jack Daniels. He wore all black—black pants and a black sweater under a black tailored jacket, fashionable, suave. He smiled at June and she couldn’t stop herself from flinching. He had a wide mouth and thin lips, making him appear to have too many teeth, like a shark. She and her friend Diego in Sacramento would classify him as a “surprise horse face.”
“Robbie’s deaf,” Cindy said.
“Well that’s inconvenient.” June sighed.
“It’s all right,” Robbie spoke up, voice smooth, words well pronounced, not at all like the slow, labored speech of the deaf. “I’m a powerful telepath. I can hear your voice in my head. That’s how I can speak so well, since you’re wondering. And thank you for the compliment.” He smiled a tiny toothless smile.
“Most telepaths are courteous enough not to stick their faces in other people’s heads,” June said.
“I need to read your mind to hear your voice.”
“I wasn’t talking when I was thinking about your huge mouth.”
Cindy pursed her lips together, and took a drink of her tea.
“Robbie’s a member of the Paranormal Alliance, just like Cindy,” Micha said. “He’s a powerful telekinetic in addition to being a telepath. The Institute has solicited him for years. He’s also compiling an enormous collection of pre-research era supernatural documentation.”
June blinked a few times. “What?”
“Books and other written works documenting supernatural phenomena throughout history,” Robbie clarified. “Back when they still thought vampires turned into bats and gypsies put curses on you. I have quite the collection. The Institute would love to get their hands on it.”
She detected smugness.
“How titillating,” June said.
How very goddamn boring
she thought at Robbie.
Robbie flicked his gaze to the bottle on the coffee table; it slid smoothly across the surface and stopped at the edge, in front of her.
“Hey!” Cindy lurched forward.
“There,” Robbie said. “Since you want some.”
June hated telepaths.
A smile tugged at the corner of Micha's mouth, and his eyes glittered as he glanced at June.