The Trouble with Twelfth Grave
Page 11“What’s your name?” I asked her when the officers forced her to sit on the back of an ambulance.
The EMT checked her pulse and blood pressure and slipped an oxygen mask over her face.
“Maya,” she said, trying to catch her breath.
Uncle Bob sent an officer after a bottle of water, then stood beside me.
She lowered the mask. “Is it her?” she asked, her voice pleading. “Is it Patricia?”
“We believe so,” he said to her, and she broke down, sobbing and shaking her head.
“No. That’s not possible. I just saw her.”
Another woman came rushing up then and threw her arms around Maya. They looked too much alike not to be sisters. They cried together while Ubie questioned a couple more potential witnesses. But I needed to know why this woman was attacked. If it were human and random, that was one thing. But supernatural and random was a completely different situation.
After a while, Maya had calmed down enough for me to talk to her. She was still crying, and a big part of her was still in denial—she wanted to see the body to make sure—but at least she was more coherent.
“Maya?” I asked, easing closer. “Can I ask you a couple of questions?”
She sniffed as her sister handed her a cup of water.
Maya had brown hair cropped short and a tattoo of SpongeBob SquarePants on her arm. She also wore strings of leather around her wrist with different charms. One had her wife’s name engraved on it.
“Did Patricia seem anxious lately? Worried? Maybe someone was harassing her or calling and hanging up?”
Maya shook her head. “No.” She looked at the water in her hands. “Everyone loved Patty. She was just that kind of girl, you know?”
The sister agreed with a nod before squeezing Maya to her.
“Why would someone do this?,” Maya continued. “She’s been through so much, but she just picked herself back up and shook it off. She was so special. She was so … unique. It’s like killing a mermaid or a unicorn. Why would someone do that?”
I found it interesting that she used mythical creatures to describe her wife.
“She was just so special,” she repeated, her breath hitching. “You have no idea.”
After that, Maya broke down again and crumpled into her sister’s arms. They both sobbed, and when the ME finished with the scene and brought out the body in a body bag, it took another team of officers to keep her back. She would be able to see her, just not until after the autopsy.
6
I always carry a knife in my purse …
you know, in case of cheesecake or something.
Uncle Bob and Angel stayed behind to continue the investigation, but Osh, Garrett, and I left the gas station feeling even more frustrated than when we’d gotten there. Reyes had gone feral, the world was being devoured by an alternate hell dimension, and a supernatural entity was killing humans on this plane.
We pulled behind Calamity’s in Garrett’s truck.
“I need food,” Osh said. “And a shower.”
“Late night?” I asked.
“Very.”
“You aren’t winning souls at the card tables again, are you?”
“What?” He winked at me, then opened the door and stepped out so I could vacate the premises. Garrett was going to give him a ride home.
“Are you going to be okay?” Garrett asked, his voice soft with concern.
Osh scoffed. “You know she can kill you with her pinkie, right?”
“I’ll be fine,” I said, ignoring him. “Let me know if you find out anything new.”
“Will do, if you’ll return the favor.”
“Of course.” I started to scoot out, but he put a hand on my arm.
“Charles,” he said, his voice edged with warning, “that’s the deal. We share info, right?”
I narrowed my lids. “Right.”
“And I don’t mean three days after the fact.”
Ah. He was still bent about that. “So, the same day. Gotcha.”
I gave him two thumbs-ups, then scooted across the seat and out the door. Osh offered me an encouraging grin before he climbed back in.
“Do we need to move this up?” Garrett asked.
We’d planned on luring Reyes into a trap the next day. Garrett had to get a few supplies first.
“No. We’ll stick with the plan and meet up tomorrow morning.”
“You got it,” he said.
I pushed a nifty button on my phone. “Hey, Pari, what’s up?”
“Hey, Chuck. I’ve been meaning to call. See how you were. See if you’ve managed to destroy any small countries.”
“Hey, I’ve only destroyed parts of small countries. Never a whole one.”
“Yeah, whatever helps you sleep at night, babe.” She was pretending to be okay. I could hear a slight tremble in her voice. Pari was not exactly the trembling sort.
“Pari, what’s going on?”
“Oh, not much. The usual. Could you drop by sometime today? There was a detective here.”
Alarm shot through me. Pari had a habit of hacking government facilities. “A detective? What happened? Are you okay? Did you hack the Pentagon again?”
“I’m fine. And no. He just had a couple of questions. You know, the usual stuff. Where were you on the night of the fifteenth between the hours of 9:00 P.M. and 4:00 A.M.? Can anyone corroborate that? Is there any particular reason you don’t want to take a polygraph test?”
“I’ll be there in five.”
“’Kay. Thanks.”
I hung up, wondering if I should run upstairs and tell Cookie, but her car hadn’t been at our apartment building. I’d tell her later.
I walked the two blocks to Pari’s shop and went in the back door. She’d prepared for my visit. Door to the public area closed. Shades on. Coffee brewed. Good girl.
The minute I stepped inside, however, I felt it. The tremble in her voice may have been slight over the phone, but the tremble in her emotions felt like the earth shaking under my feet. Alarm rushed up my esophagus and tightened around my throat, almost cutting off my air supply, which was a rather extreme reaction to Pari’s emotional state.
Then I realized I was mimicking her physical response to whatever had her on edge. It had to be bad. Pari was as cool as a cucumber in the Arctic. Her vocabulary didn’t include the word panic.
I feigned nonchalance and strolled into her office. She was sitting at her desk, pretending to work in a red, sleeveless halter that showcased her ink.
She looked up and acted surprised to see me so soon, but I felt relief flood every cell in her body.
“Oh, hey,” she said, all sunshine and smiles.
She stood to hug me, then gestured toward a chair. I sat across from her and took the cup she offered. She made a killer cappuccino.
“How have you been?” I asked in lieu of moaning aloud after my first sip.
“Good,” she lied. She sat back down, chewed at her lips for a few minutes, then stabbed me with the most serious expression I’d ever seen her wear. Not that I could see much of it from behind her dark glasses, but still.
“I may have inadvertently murdered someone.”
“They found a body.”
“I guess that’s better than losing one.”
“A guy’s.”
“Okay.”
“The only thing he had on him was a card from my shop.”
“Well, you do own a tattoo parlor. It’s not odd that somebody would have your card, right?”
“Right.” She twisted her hands together. “There’s that, but I’d written my name and cell number on the back.”
“So, you knew him?”
“I told the cops I didn’t.”
“You lied to them?”
“Yes.”
“Care to explain why?”
“Because, like I said, I may have killed him. Well, Tre and I may have killed him. But we didn’t mean to.”
“Then I think technically that would be manslaughter. Not murder. I’m sure they’ll understand,” I said, tossing my own lie into the conversation.
“What? Oh, right. Manslaughter. Is it still manslaughter if it’s self-defense?”
“Why don’t you start at the beginning?”
She gathered her resolve in one shaky breath and plowed headlong into her story. “Well, as you know, Tre and I have been seeing each other off and on for a while now.”
“How is Tre?” Tre was one of her artists. One of her tall, dark, delicious artists. “Still painfully gorgeous?”
“Oh, yes. Among other things.”
“Okay, I’m with you so far. Off and on. Painfully gorgeous.”
“So, it was during one of our off times that I met a man named Hector Felix. Tre had gone to California to visit family for a few days when Hector comes in with a couple of his friends wanting a tattoo. A Native American symbol for prosperity. Or maybe porn. I can’t remember. Anyway, I gave him some ink that night, and he was just so charming.”