Embraced by Darkness(24)
The little girl nodded so fast her pigtails were a blur of white. And then she stilled, looked at me, and pointed.
“Death, Mommy. Death.”
Chapter 6
I stared at the finger pointed so firmly in my direction, then at the wide, violet eyes. There was no fear in those eyes, only a matter-of-factness that chilled me.
Whatever it was she was seeing, she believed it.
“Where do you see death, Risa?” Dia asked, her voice as matter-of-fact as her daughter’s. Like seeing these sort of things was an everyday occurrence. And perhaps for the two of them, it was.
“Here.” The little girl patted her left shoulder.
A chill ran through me. I clenched my fingers and resisted the urge to say anything.
“Can you describe him for me?” Dia asked.
The little girl screwed up her nose. “Dark, floaty. He smiles, Mommy.”
“Does he reach for Riley?”
She shook her head. “He watches.”
“Nothing else?”
“No.”
“That’s wonderful. Now, would you like a cookie?”
Pigtails went flying again as the little girl nodded enthusiastically.
“Then we’ll race you to the kitchen.”
The little girl took off. Dia rose to her feet and looked at me.
“‘That’s wonderful’?” I asked, eyebrow raised.
“I don’t want Risa to be afraid of what she sees, nor do I ever wish her to be afraid to talk about it. So, I praise rather than react, no matter what she says she sees.”
“And has she ever seen anything bad?”
“She once saw death with his hand on the shoulder of a client. He died the next week, hit by a truck at a pedestrian crossing.”
“Oh.” Great. Not that death and I hadn’t been chummy before. Hell, I’d even faced the god of death himself and was still alive to tell the tale. “So what does it mean when she sees death near me, but not touching?”
“I’d presume it means you’re about to do something dangerous, something that puts your life on the line. Be careful when hunting this serial killer.”
“I intend to be, trust me.” I shivered and rubbed my arms. “I think that coffee you mentioned might be a good idea now.”
She smiled and motioned me to follow her. We went through a large, formal dining room and into a kitchen that was as large as my entire apartment. Unlike the other rooms in this house, though, it had a homey feel to it, filled with warmth and the rich scent of baking. Risa was already in a high chair, munching on cookies.
A thin-looking shifter turned around as we entered, her smile rippling across her face, making her rough, aquiline features glow with cheeriness and affection. Obviously a woman who loved her job.
“A guest! How lovely. Will coffee and cake be good, Miss Dia?”
“Elsa, this is Riley. And coffee and cake would be wonderful.”
“Good, good. You sit, I serve.”
So we sat and we talked, the topics ranging from her work and clients to news, shops, and TV. It was a tentative beginning, but a beginning all the same.
And, oddly enough, despite the fact her visions had confirmed that my future would not be what I’d always imagined, I left Dia’s house feeling a lot more enthusiastic about whatever fate had in store.
I climbed into my car and headed back to the Directorate. Given what Dia had seen of the shadow, my next line of inquiry had to be a search through past murder records, both Directorate and police. Which would probably take ages. But while the computer was doing its stuff, I could at least catch up on Cole’s latest findings. Not that I thought anything would be a lot different from the first murder.
I drove into the parking lot and was lucky enough to find a spot near the elevators. The car keys I pocketed. While regulations said that all keys had to be returned to the responsible officer on reentry to the Directorate, I’d probably need the car later, so it was easier to simply keep them. And besides, it would piss off Salliane.I went through all the scanner and ID checks, then headed downstairs. Rhoan wasn’t in the squad room when I got back, but Jack was. “Cole’s initial report for the second murder,” he said, handing me a folder. “He expects to complete investigations this evening.”
I tucked the folder under my arm and helped myself to coffee. “He didn’t notice anything unusual there?”
“No.” Jack hesitated. “Are you sure this thing you’re sensing at the crime scenes isn’t a vampire?”
I shook my head. “It’s not a vamp. A vamp couldn’t get close enough to the scene, not without Cole and his team sensing him.” Because a shifter’s senses were every bit as keen as a werewolf’s. “It doesn’t even feel like a soul.”
“It’s not like you’ve had a whole lot of experience with souls yet.”
And if I had my way, that lack would continue. But this was one instance where I was never likely to get my way. “When I feel souls, I feel the chill of death or whatever the hell the afterlife is before they appear. With this other thing, all I feel is evil. It needs to kill, it hungers to kill, and then it hangs about afterward to gloat in the destruction it causes.”
“So it could well be a soul—just one so warped in what it has become that’s all you’re sensing.”
“Maybe.” I sipped my coffee, then said, “But how the hell does a soul kill?”
“I don’t know. I’ll ask our magi division and see if they know.”
I nodded. A few months ago I hadn’t even known the Directorate had a division that dealt with magic, spirits, and whatnot. It often made me wonder what other divisions we had that I knew nothing about.
“I don’t suppose anyone else has talked to the sister yet?”
“No. She’s still under sedation.” He hesitated. “Why?”
I shrugged. “I was just curious as to whether our second victim had recently been unfaithful.”
Jack raised his eyebrows. “You think unfaithfulness is the key to both murders?”
“It’s certainly a possibility.” I told him about my visits to Nonpareil and Dia. “If unfaithfulness is the key, then we have our link. And our murderer. But he’s going to be damnably hard to track down.”
“Especially if he’s a spirit rather than flesh.”
Very true. I walked over to my desk and sat down. “I’m going to do a global search for any past murders resembling our current two. Dia suggested these aren’t his first kills, so maybe we’ll get lucky. Has Cole given any indication of what killed the second husband?”
“It’s looking like a heart attack, same as the first guy.”
“Which doesn’t make sense, you know. Neither man was heart attack material.”
“Given the exertion they underwent, and the shock to their bodies, it’s not surprising their hearts gave out.” He tossed his plastic coffee cup into the trash. “Kade and Iktar should be finished training next week.”
I couldn’t help a smile. Having Kade at close quarters would make this dreary old conference room that much more exciting. Although Jack’s ethics of not mixing work and pleasure could prove problematic. Especially since Kade was too delicious for my own good. “You still planning to use Iktar in the day division?”
“We’ll probably float him, depending on situational requirements. They’ll both be officially on deck in two weeks.”
“So you’ve given them a whole week off? You’re all heart, boss.”
“Given our workload,” he said grimly, “they’re damn lucky to get that. Tell Rhoan I want to see him as soon as he gets back.”
He walked out. I signed into the system, then set about tracking down police reports. As I expected, it was a long, arduous process, and I was still there four hours later when Rhoan finally traipsed in.
I leaned back in my chair and rubbed a hand across my eyes. “Boss wants to see you.”
“Jack can wait. I need something to drink.” He raised a plastic coffee cup in question. I nodded. And noted that he was covered in dirt and cobwebs, and looking more than a little raw around the edges.
“You catch your vampire?”
“Yeah. Bastard put up a hell of a fight, though.”
“I thought he was only a youngster?”
“Even a young vampire can be bloody strong.” He poured the coffees, then handed me one. “This one had help. Bitch scratched me.”
He twisted his neck and showed me his battle scars—three deep but healing lines gouged into his skin. “Nasty. What happened to the bitch?”
“Her ass is now in jail. Assaulting a guardian and all that.”
“Ah. A human.”
“A stupid human, who will spend several years in jail for said stupidity.” He plonked down on the edge of my desk. “How goes the hunt for the bastard’s missing daughter?”
“Slowly. I talked to her lover today, and discovered Adrienne had uncovered a possible story at the nightclub.”
“Nothing to do with the entertainment piece, I gather?”
“Nothing at all. I’m going there to have a look around tonight.”
“Liander wants to take me to the premiere of his latest movie tonight.”
I raised my eyebrows. “My, my, my.”
“Indeed.” He screwed up his nose. “Suits and attention are not my style.”
“Since when? You love attention and dressing up. It’s just that by going as his date, you’re making it truly official.”