Archive for July 21st, 2007

Not Done Yet!

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Author’s Note: No, I’m not done with Danse Macabre yet, but sometimes when you’re seized with a story idea, you have to type it up before it makes you go nuts, mainly because it’s hard to write anything else until you get it out of the way. So I think I’m going to be alternating stories from now on - one week a chapter of Danse Macabre, the next week a chapter of Hysteria. Or until my head explodes, whatever comes first.

Hysteria: One - Day of the Baphomets

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Infected
Hysteria
by Andrea Speed

One - Day of the Baphomets

inf8.jpgAs Roan grasped his upper arm firmly, trying to staunch the flow of blood, he wondered how he’d gotten himself into this mess.

Maybe the problem was this was another male lion, one not inclined to fold, but also he could smell illness coming off of it - it wasn’t right in body or mind, and therefore not assessing threats correctly. The panicky people didn’t help either; their fear was sharp in the air, and it was making Roan salivate as much as the lion growling in the alley.

“Roan - “ Dylan asked pleadingly, visible in his peripheral vision.

“Get away!” He snapped, and as the lion took a step forward Roan took a step towards the cat as well, roaring a challenge that made its ears flatten against its scalp. It knew he was injured, but it also had to know he was still stronger than it was. Its mane was predominately black, making him wonder if it was a black haired man under the transformation, although such a characteristic wasn’t always a sure bet. He was a good sized guy, though, at least six feet, somewhere around two hundred and fifty pounds.

How had this happened? He was meeting Dylan for coffee before Dylan went to work - that was all. Innocent as could be. Then he heard a woman scream, a truly genuine scream of horror, and he came charging around the corner to find a man under attack by a lion, which had him on the ground and was gnawing his forearm like a turkey leg. Roan didn’t have a chance to finesse this, and of course he wasn’t armed, as he had closed up the office for the day. Not that it mattered - there was no way he’d open fire on a cat anyways, and certainly not with civilians around.

Roan did what he had to do. He charged the cat and tackled it, ripping it off the man and sending them both rolling out onto the street as he yelled at Dylan to get the man inside. Cats, being a hell of a lot more flexible than people, were hard to keep a hold of at the best of times, and this was a big lion, slippery with blood and its own fevered sweat. It twisted violently in his grasp as a car’s tire just missed their head by centimeters, and sank its teeth into his arm, tearing through the flesh like paper.

A mistake. By the cat, as he had been holding back his instincts quite well, but now with the pain ripping through his body, the cat instincts had broken out. He threw the cat bodily away, so hard that it hit a parked Lexus with an audible thud, making it rock on its shocks and leaving a huge dent in its side door. It landed unsteadily on its feet, shaking its head, as Roan struggled to hold in the cat instincts wanting to emerge. He felt his jaw shift, heard the bones crack, and tasted blood in his mouth as his teeth ripped through his gums, but the most troubling thing was he wanted to rip its fucking throat out. He could almost taste its flesh in his mouth, and he wanted it as badly as he had ever wanted anything. It was a desire so electric he wanted it to sweep him away.

He couldn’t let it, though. He fought it back inside him, only vaguely aware that Dylan was trying to get the crowd back, assuring them that “he” (Roan) knew what he was doing and could handle the cat. The lion was momentarily stunned by the impact and the conflicting smells of blood: blood from his fresh arm wound, and the blood of the man, who had been dragged inside a nearby barber shop, but the blood was still on the sidewalk, and smeared on Dylan. Roan instantly recognized the danger and growled, earning the cat’s attention, and it growled back, hair standing up along its spine.

Roan wasn’t sure what he was doing, but he lurched to his feet and charged the cat, roaring all the way, and while Roan knew he never would have done that had a shred of his humanity had control, somehow it worked. The cat turned and ran, heading for the nearest bit of cover, which was a dead end alley between a thrift store and a specialty bakery. It snarled and growled warnings, its eyes lambent yellow as it crouched behind an industrial dumpster, and Roan stood at the mouth of the alley, keeping an eye on it. It wasn’t a permanent retreat; the cat was sizing up its options, and if it was able to race past him, it could get to any of the people who were still looking on in spite of Dylan’s best efforts to warn them back. This was now a territorial thing between two male cats, a struggle for dominance before a fight that couldn’t possibly be fair. Yes, the cat had claws and teeth and speed, but he had strength and a peculiar animal rage that seemed far more dangerous manifesting in his Human form. He had hands and feet and both the knowledge and desire for a kill. The win was his the moment he decided to take it.

He was vaguely aware of an authoritative male voice barking, “Back, get back!” and then movement in the side of his vision, which made his muscles tense as the cat squad came, a tall black man in a black squadron jacket quickly taking aim at the lion and firing a drug gun cartridge at it. Even though it hit the cat in the front leg, it roared in pain and charged, and Roan shoved the man aside and caught the lion with an open palm to the side of its head, making it slam against the brick fronted wall on the left and come sliding down to the pavement, both the drugs and the impact combining to take it out of play.

“You don’t shove a -” another cat squad member began, sounding angry.

But the shooter was up and intercepted him before he could come within reach. “Torres, chill, it’s okay. That’s McKichan.”

Hearing his Human name seemed to bring him back to himself, and he closed his eyes and took several deep breaths through his nose, trying to make his lion go back into its cave.

“The cat guy?” Torres said in disbelief.

Someone else, someone on the other side of the street, commented to someone else, “Did you get that? I’ve never seen anyone move that fast -”

Oh shit, had someone captured him on a phone camera again? God, he hated those fucking things. Once he was sure his cat side had submerged to a reasonable level, he opened his eyes and visually scanned the nearby crowd, but they looked at him funny and he couldn’t tell who was the dick with the cell phone camera.

This cat squad was slightly more deferential to him, as their leader - the man who shot the cat, Moore - seemed to think he was pretty nifty. Moore mentioned meeting him as a rookie, but Roan had no memory of it. He was glad he’d left a good impression, though, or he might have gotten a gun butt in the back of the head.

The ambulance crew that arrived didn’t include Dee, which was actually a relief. He didn’t think he could deal with him right this second. Although they wanted to take him to the hospital for his arm wound, he told them he’d be fine, they could just wrap it up. This was met with frowns and suspicion, but they had no choice.

Once Dylan was done giving his statement to police, he came to see if he was okay. He was uninjured, but he had the man’s blood smeared on the front of his shirt - he’d picked a bad day to wear a white t-shirt. He was a bit unsettled, which was to be expected, but as much as he tried to shrug it off, he knew he had scared Dylan. Was it the roaring, fighting the cat, the partial transformation of his face? Either way, it was good for him to see this. He may have known the realities of him being infected, he may have known he transformed into a lion a few days a month, but he needed to know this. He needed to know other cats could bring out his inner lion; he needed to know pain and rage could do it too. He wasn’t a normal infected, he was a virus child, and that brought its own perils and problems. If he couldn’t handle it, now was the time to find out, before he got too accustomed to having him in his life.

Although Dylan didn’t seem to feel good about it, he told him to go ahead and go to work, he was just going to go home and do some paperwork, which was only a partial lie. He suspected Dylan was slightly relieved; Roan suspected he was as well.

Roan drove himself home, wondering how long he should wait until he searched YouTube for himself, and his cell rang. He let it go to voice mail, but he already knew it was Dee. There was some kind of mysterious EMT network that allowed one to tell him all about his occasional travails and treatments almost the instant they were done. He didn’t know how that worked, yet it always seemed to.

At home, he showered, getting the blood and sweat off, and unraveled the bandage around his arm. Although the teeth had torn through his flesh after biting, there was still a pretty good imprint in it, and blood still oozed from the deeper punctures. He threw on some sweatpants and went downstairs to his still unremodeled office, where he started to throw some punches into the heavy bag. It hurt his arm, but that was the point. Along with the physical pain, he concentrated on how he still missed Paris, how there were moments - just like this - where he longed for him with a physical ache, and that was enough to bring on the partial transformation. He felt it building, felt his muscles burn and twitch, his skin itch from underneath and grow hot as it too stretched and moved, and he watched with almost clinical fascination as muscles and subcutaneous fat reached out across gaps left by the teeth to reconnect again. Within five minutes, the only way you could tell the lion had bit him was by the blood still streaked on the pink, fresh skin of his forearm. Also, as soon as he called back the transformation, wrestled the lion back in its cage, it hurt. It hurt so badly it felt like his arm had been run over by a dump truck and set on fire, and his upper chest and face had been slightly mauled in the incident. But at least he wasn’t bleeding anymore.

He still felt horrible. It was probably thinking of Paris, of course. He’d been dead for two years now and he hadn’t been quite able to let him go. How could he? He’d been his husband and the one person in this world whom he could truly say was perfect for him; they had balanced each other out almost perfectly. Which was exactly why it couldn’t last, as things like that never did. You got a moment in the sun, but that was all - a moment. Good things never seemed to last beyond that.

He liked Dylan, he really did. He was intelligent and serene and had a good sense of humor, and there was no doubt at all that he was extremely attractive and seemed to like him for some unfathomable reason. And yet he couldn’t stop wanting Paris, missing him. Dylan was being patient with him, waiting for him to make the moves, but Roan was already convinced it would never happen. He wondered if he’d ever get the courage to tell him before he left in disgust.

The phone rang as he was about to start upstairs. He figured it was Dee calling him again to ask why he hadn’t called him back earlier, but as he glanced at the caller ID, he saw it was displaying Murphy’s number. Was she calling to taunt him about his latest cat fighting venture? She really wasn’t the type to do that. Roan picked up the receiver out of curiosity.

“Something I can do for you, officer?”

She made a small noise of a smothered laugh. “Well, aren’t you snappy? You should be in action hero mode more often.”

“I’m hanging up now.”

“Oh, don’t be that way. I heard you saved that guy’s life. So just take your compliments graciously, you negative queen.”

“I am not a negative queen,” he snapped, sounding pretty negative to himself. He sighed heavily, and collapsed on the end of the sofa. “What can I do for you, Murph? Besides be a punching bag.”

“Well, I have this favor I wanna ask you, but I’m afraid to.”

“Oh god, this isn’t one of those things where you’re gonna ask me for some of my sperm, is it?”

“God no! Keep your goddamn spunk to yourself!”

Roan felt oddly relieved. “Good. I mean, I am infected and a bad candidate, but if you believe Hollywood, all you lesbians are sperm hungry baby machines.”

“So I’ve heard. It’s news to me and Kim, but I imagine we’re out of the loop,” she admitted sardonically. She cleared her throat - he imagined her spunk comment was overheard and earned her a funny look, which she cut off with that sound - and after a moment, she said, “I’m afraid to ask you this because I know you’ll go off and investigate it yourself. And you can’t do that, as it’s a police matter. Do you get me, mister?”

Now he was curious. “Is this some cat thing?”

“No.” There was a long pause, and when she spoke next, she had dropped her voice to a low whisper. “You don’t know about this because no one in the media has picked up on it, but we seem to have a serial hustler beater in town.”

“What?”

“These hustlers - I think you guys call ‘em twinks, younger guys, kind of on the slim and feminine side - have been turning up beaten bloody and left in parking lots, on the sides of the road. They were reported by emergency rooms, and occasionally a statement was taken, but for the most part the hustlers gave fake names or got out of there before or when the cops showed up.”

That was understandable. Even female hookers weren’t likely to report beatings or rapes, for the same reason: who believes them? They also had a poor opinion and association with most cops and just didn’t trust them. If they admitted what they did, they could get arrested. “How many in what time frame?”

“Well, what we’ve got is five in as many weeks.”

“So he’s a busy boy.”

“Worse than that. The newest victim was found bleeding in a gutter on Tuesday night, very nearly beaten to death. His jaw was fractured in six places, he’s missing four teeth, his eye socket was shattered, and they had to induce a coma to keep his brain from swelling.”

Roan winced. “Jesus fucking Christ. He’s still alive?”

“He is, but barely. And get this - he’s fifteen.”

He groaned and sank back deeper into the couch. “Motherfucker.”

“He’s been ID’d as a fifteen year old runaway from Idaho, Michael Gilpin. He was new on the street, and claimed to be a seventeen year old named Eric; no one who has talked to us have claimed to know him.”

“But you think they’re lying.”

“I do. I also think our mystery john is decompensating fast. I think his next victim will be a murder victim.”

Considering Gilpin was almost beaten to death, he was willing to bet she was correct. “You’re homicide. I had no idea they had you working on future murders.”

She exhaled heavily, like this comment was a low blow. “They’re not. This is Wilson’s and Lozano’s case, but I’m doing Wilson a favor.”

“Which Wilson?” There were actually three cops that he knew of working out of that precinct with the last name Wilson, two white and one black, and none of them related to each other. He decided to make a wild guess. “Maya?”

“Yeah. She asked me if I had any street level contacts since she and Loz are having such a hard time getting any of the hustlers to talk to them honestly. I didn’t, but I did think of you.”

“’Cause the whores love me.” He said that with thick sarcasm, but really it wasn’t sarcastic at all.

“They do, Roan. They always talked to you. I’m hoping, since you’re no longer on the force, they’ll do that even more.”

He thought about that, leaning his head back and closing his eyes. The one thing he did as a cop - lousy as he was at it - was open up dialogue between some of the street people and the cops. He wasn’t sure why, except he didn’t see them as sad junkies but people who’d made poor decisions in their lives and were just trying to survive, which he couldn’t begrudge. Also, he was seen as an outsider even amongst his fellow cops: openly gay, openly infected. Pariahs had a tendency to recognize each other, and while they didn’t necessarily stick together, they did try and deal with each other honestly. Occasionally, arrested hookers would request him specifically, because they knew he wouldn’t rough them up or make backhanded remarks about them, and usually give them a cup of coffee. “So that’s the favor. Go talk to the whores and find out what they know.”

“We need to get this guy before he kills. Considering his pattern, we’re quickly running out of time.”

That made him open his eyes. “One a week. How many days do you think we have?”

“He hasn’t stuck to a strict seven day schedule, so it’s hard to say. It could be as many as five days, or as few as two.”

“Son of a bitch.” He rubbed his eyes, wondering why this day had turned out so shitty. “Where was the Gilpin kid found?”

“On Royal Avenue. We have reason to believe he had been selling his ass on Weston Boulevard.”

Which only made sense - you wanted to buy a piece of ass, you went to Weston Boulevard. “Okay, I’ll start there.” He wondered vaguely if any of the hustlers he knew by name were still working the streets down there.

So much for his plan to brood and feel sorry for himself tonight.

Danse Macabre: Six - Ghost Dance

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Alone With The Dead
Danse Macabre
by Andrea Speed

Six - Ghost Dance

dm4.jpg“How do you know about him?” O’Leary asked when he could finally speak. It had taken him several tries to make his mouth work correctly. “Have you been investigating me?”

Gryphon scoffed, rubbing his forehead. His head was starting to hurt, but in a weird way that wasn’t entirely unpleasant. “Again, let me take you back to that point where you agreed that I wasn’t a screaming fraud. I’m not. I know about Jeff McCandless because he told me not to trust you. Now, do I hear your version of the story or not?”

“I told you to get offa my lawn,” the old dead guy croaked.

“We’re not on your lawn,” Gryphon snapped, casting an evil glance at him. “Now knock it off.”

“Who are you talking to?” O’Leary asked warily. “McCandless?”

“No. Some other ghost, who apparently haunts the lawns of this neighborhood.” He sighed, wishing for the billionth time that he could neither hear nor see the dead. “Now, Jeff.”

O’Leary looked around, as if appealing for help from an unseen force, but there was no one around interested in helping him. He made a vague gesture with his hands, and said, “We can’t talk about him here.”

“Why not?”

“Because you’re here to look for Juliet Saltzman!”

He’s scared, Ruby said.

No shit, Ray replied.

“And yet, you’re dodging the question. I have no guarantee you’ll tell me the truth.”

“Yes, you do. I just wanna get this done. I’ll tell you whatever you want afterwards, okay?”

“Everybody’s always on my goddamn lawn,” the old man was muttering. “Always ignoring me, like they think I don’t matter. I do matter, lousy assholes -”

“No one is ignoring you,” Gryphon said, turning back towards the old ghost. “No one else can see or hear you. You get me? You’re dead. I’m sorry, deal with it.”

The old man glared at him, eyes swimming behind glass. “I’m not dead. What are you tryin’ to pull?”

He heaved a broken sigh. “Not another one. Look, friend, you’re dead; very, very dead. You’re what - eighty? This can’t be a shock.”

O’Leary took a step back. “You still talkin’ to that other ghost?”

Gryphon gave him a look that could have blistered paint - that was the extent of his answer. He gave the same look to the ghost, who didn’t seem to care. Or maybe Mr. Magoo just couldn’t see it. “There’s no need to get prickly about it, boy. I ain’t dead.”

“Yes you are. You’re so dead your shirt is out of style. “ Actually, he was wearing a polyester blend shirt, white with narrow green stripes, tucked into tan slacks that could very well have been Sansabelt. He wasn’t sure that was ever in style, or conversely out of style, as it was an “old guy” shirt, and those seemed to exist in a twilight area neither in style nor out. But that really wasn’t a debate to be having with a ghost who couldn’t give a shit about his fashion sense. “I’m sorry, but that’s how it is. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m talking to this guy now.” He turned back to O’Leary, only to find him giving him a look like he couldn’t believe what a freak he was talking to.

“Are you making this up just to freak me out?”

“I wish. You can answer some questions about you and Jeff for me as we walk the grounds. Okay? And you don’t get to say no.” Gryphon turned and stomped across the yard, not waiting for an answer. He assumed he followed, but didn’t care either way.

They walked the front yard, Gryphon not expecting anything at all, and being unsurprised by the lack of anything. He heard O’Leary tromping behind him, giving off a vague air of disgust. “Jeff was a cop,” Gryphon prompted, peering over the flimsy wooden fence that separated the front yard from the back. The back was overgrown and weedy, with the occasional mystery item tangled within the weeds, looking like the skeletal remains of some long lost robot.

“Yeah. He was an undercover narc,” he admitted reluctantly.

“Something went wrong,” Gryphon prompted.

“Everything went wrong,” he grumbled. “It was a sting, but somebody fucked up, and they knew we were comin’ in. We had to go in early guns blazing, as they’d already brought out their guns.” He paused, sighed heavily. “It was a fucking massacre. Five dead in all, seven wounded.”

“Jeff was among the dead.”

“Yeah. I think he was the first one shot.”

“Lying motherfucker,” Jeff said, suddenly reappearing off to one side. “He knows that’s not what happened.”

“I don’t think you’re being honest with me.”

He heard O’Leary stop walking behind him, and turned to face him. His face was starting to flush a violent red, which he was doing his best to hide. He swallowed hard, sweat starting to bead on his broad forehead. Gryphon felt obscurely bad for him - he was clearly tormented by his own guilt, and yet he couldn’t quite embrace the truth of what he’d done. He was uncomfortable in his own skin, with his own existence; he wore his own bulky flesh like an itchy sweater. “Have you found anything?”

“Besides the get offa my lawn guy? No.” He stepped up onto the porch, knocking on the white painted hollow metal door. “Although the lawn in back needs a good shaving, unless they’re planning to film the next Tomb Raider movie back there.”

Gryphon was suddenly overcome by a strange, familiar feeling, a cold wave down his spine that made him shiver convulsively as his fingertips went numb. O’Leary was saying something behind him, but his voice sounded frail and distant, noises from a hallway on the floor below. Standing beside him was an elderly woman, her hair a nimbus of blue rinsed curls, a small, frail body hidden beneath a loose pale blue dress and a tan cardigan held together by a chain clip in the front. She had on clear framed glasses that still seemed thick, riding on the end of her nose. Her eyes were almost colorless, her skin as thin as parchment and almost as pale, lines gathered in the corner of her mouth, at her eyes, under her eyes. Her lips were cracked and knuckles gnarled by arthritis. “I’d let you in if I could, but I don’t seem able to right now.”

Looking at her, he knew all he needed to. “You’re still inside, Hazel?”

“I think so. I’d thought one of my kids would have visited by now. Who are you?”

“No one; just an intermediary.”

“An angel?”

That startled a laugh out of him. “God, I’d hope not. But it’ll be okay now. I’ll make sure you’re found.”

She nodded, her mouth curving downwards in a skeptical frown, but she really had no choice in the matter. Who else was she going to appeal to?

O’Leary grabbed his shoulder, and once again the connection was gone, reality suddenly roaring back in a wave of noise, light, and color that seemed momentarily overwhelming. He shook his head and closed his eyes, trying to gather his foundering wits, as O’Leary continued to rant, “ - fuck’s the matter with you? Do you have seizures or something? You’re always doing this -”

Gryphon spun around and backed up a step, almost falling off the porch. “Call your cop buddies, let them know there’s a dead body in the house, okay?”

O’Leary just stared at him. “You found her?”

“No, I found the current resident, Hazel White. She died last week, from a stroke I think, and no one’s found her yet. If you want to open the door you’ll probably smell it for yourself, but I really wouldn’t advise it.”

“Is this normal? Do you find dead bodies wherever you go?”

“Generally. It makes sense, since I’m apparently death and all, but I must admit that finding someone who died of natural causes is a refreshing change.”

He walked back to the truck, only aware that he’d left O’Leary there on the porch when he asked in a small, disbelieving, “oh-my-god-I’m-with-a-crazy-person” voice, “What d’ya mean you’re death?”

Gryphon stared at him, and wondered if he could handle the truth. Jeff McCandless was standing behind him, arms crossed over his chest, scowling as deeply as Human possible. This man, handle truth? He wasn’t even handling his own very well right now. “I was kidding,” he lied. “Where’s your sense of humor?” He didn’t wait for a reply, just got in the truck.

I like this even less than usual, Hugh said, as Gryphon noticed the lawn ghost still glaring at him from the corner of his eye. But at least he was outside the truck.

“I ain’t crazy about it either, but so far it’s been a harmless diversion.”

Diversion? Ruby replied angrily. There’s some freakazoid serial killer out there! We should be finding him, not fucking around, helping some washed up cop assuage his guilt.

Assuage! Ray said. Wow, I had no idea twenty dollar hookers could use ten dollar words.

Before Ruby could justifiably bite his head off, Sylvio exclaimed, Would you just shut the fuck up? How dare a white trash fuck up like you put anyone down anyways! You were killed in the commission of a felony, you dirt bag asshole! What delusion are you operating under that allows you to feel superior to anyone?

There was a long moment of silence before Ray responded. You got a crush on the hooker, boy?

Did you just call me boy? Sylvio replied in disbelieving anger. It didn’t matter so much when you were dead, but when he was alive, Sylvio was mixed race, half-black and half-white.

Ray, I will figure out a way to knock you out if you don’t zip it now, Hugh warned. And go ahead and make any gay slur you want, but all you’re doing is convincing me you’re in the closet. I know a self-loathing queen when I meet one.

I ain’t no fag!

They all say that, Hugh replied witheringly. At first.

Ray didn’t seem to realize he’d already lost control of the conversation, and kept digging himself in deeper. I ain’t no queer, damn it! I fucked women!

So did I, Hugh said casually. I was once hit with a paternity suit.

You got a kid? Ruby asked in shock.

Possibly, but not that one. The DNA didn’t match. She got around a bit, let’s just put it that way, and I was the only one of the group of suspects with steady employment and health insurance. I think she went with the best case scenario at first, but the reality was probably ugly. The father was probably an unemployable hobo whose brain was so soaked in alcohol it was officially pickled.

Why’d she sleep with someone like that anyways? Ruby asked. Did he pay her?

No, I’m afraid the answer is simply tequila shooters night. Bars should just hand out morning after pills and tetracycline with them and the Jello shots.

This had completely taken the wind out of Ray’s sails - maybe he realized there was nowhere he could go from here, and also, in his brief time on Earth, Hugh had had more (unpaid) sex than all of them combined (Ruby excluded, for obvious reasons) with both men and women - so he was quiet by the time O’Leary got in the truck. The cop shot him a sidelong glance as he got in, only this time it wasn’t evil, just curious and a little scared. “Were you talking to yourself?”

He shook his head. “To my people. They feel I’m wasting my time here.”

O’Leary sighed wearily. “Maybe we are. I know I’m just grasping at straws here, but when you run out of options …” He trailed off and laid his head against the steering wheel.

“Why is this important to you?”

He was silent for much longer than he should have been. “I’m sure Wax is still active, but I also know he’s smarter than your average trash; he knows how to play the angles. And I think he knows more about what happened to that girl than he’s ever said and ever will say. I need extra-legal means to get the truth out of him, and short of torture, there’s you. If you’re genuine … which I will admit you are, as far as I can tell. You certainly seem to know things you shouldn’t.” He let out a tiny snort of laughter. “Maybe you’re like that guy on that show, that guy who’s jut really observant but pretends to be psychic.”

“I won’t say it again: I am not, nor have I ever claimed to be psychic. And you know damn well I’m not, you’re just having a hard time accepting what I am. Are you also aware that you have condemned Wax to death? If he is guilty, my people will probably kill him.”

O’Leary sat back and nodded, looking tired but not surprised. “I could live with that. I’ve lived with worse.”

“Speaking of which, I haven’t heard the whole story about Jeff McCandless.”

He couldn’t work up indignance or defiance anymore; he was exhausted in both spirit and mind, beaten down by the horrible realities of his own guilt. “No, you haven’t. But I think I’ll need a few beers before I can tell you the rest of it.”

“Fair enough. Let’s go get some.”

O’Leary snapped his head around so fast he might have just given himself whiplash. “It’s not even noon.”

Gryphon shrugged. “So? Haven’t you ever heard of a liquid lunch?”

You’re such a fucking lush, Taneesha accused.

From the look on his face, O’Leary was thinking much the same thing. “Are you even old enough to drink?”

“Of course I am. I’m older than I look.”

Kid, I don’t think you’re of legal drinking age in this state, Hugh pointed out. And you’ve known and ignored this for quite some time. Your poor liver.

He’s with an ex-cop, Ruby pointed out. They’re not going to card him.

“Why do I think you’re lyin’ to me?”

“I have no idea. Do you think I’m lying when I say I need a drink?”

That made him scoff. “No. If you told me you needed a hit, I’d believe ya.”

Was that an insult? Taneesha asked.

I’m gonna guess yes, but only to the kid, Hugh said.

Yeah, well, he’d been called worse.

He leaned his head against the cool passenger window and closed his eyes, the uneven rocking of the truck cab on the rough road about the only thing keeping him awake. O’Leary was talking, but since he wasn’t saying anything of consequence he’d tuned him out. He wanted to believe the killer he was looking for was Wax, it would have made things easier, but his mind kept rejecting the name. His instincts knew something he didn’t, something he hadn’t formulated into words, something that hadn’t fully formed in his cerebral cortex yet. The killer he was looking for was no middle aged sex offender; he was looking for a younger, more methodical and even more deeply fucked up psychopath. Somebody slaughtering people like meat.

A butcher.

That made him wake up, open his eyes. Could it be that simple? No, it couldn’t possibly be. But this guy definitely had experience cutting large bodies into more bite sized portions. Gryphon also realized, with a convulsive shudder, that he honestly thought he was doing them a favor.

“You okay?” O’Leary asked.

“I dunno,” he admitted, rubbing his eyes. One of the victims, one of the ghosts left at the riverside, knew the killer better than they thought. He didn’t know why he believed that, but he did. He’d picked something up and hadn’t even realized it until now.

“Shit!” O’Leary exclaimed, slewing the truck around violently, and Gryphon only got to see the SUV swerve unsuccessfully away before it smashed into them, and the world dissolved in a hail of flying glass.