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Authors: Adrian Phoenix

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BOOK: Black Heart Loa
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Don’t always work.

Bravo. Very helpful that, Valin.>
Augustine’s sending was dry as a river in the Sahara.



Augustine murmured, and Layne had the uneasy feeling he meant it.

A mental snort.

Layne felt a wry smile pull at his lips.

Layne’s thought died unfinished as a vehicle blurred out from a side road at high speed less than twenty-five yards in front of him. Layne swerved and felt the Harley’s tires stutter across the rain-puddled gravel, then slide. Felt the bike going down as the road rushed up. Sound faded, drowned out by his drumming heart.

Fuck.

Time stretched out, slow and elastic, while the truck
swung wide in an effort to miss him, a scowl of concentration on the driver’s face as he spun the steering wheel. Caught in the slo-mo of imminent disaster, Layne realized that if he wanted to avoid a collision between his head and the Dodge Ram’s looming steel bumper with the trailer hitch jutting like a sword pommel behind it, he had to move.
Now.

Layne kicked his legs free of the bike and rolled.

Time snapped back in on itself.

He hit the road hard, shoulder first. He heard a loud crack as his helmet smacked into something. Blue light flashed like jet engine flame through his mind. Pain stunned him, stole his breath, as he bounced and somersaulted across the gravel road and into a tree trunk or post or rock wall.

Stars lit up his vision like a Disneyland fireworks display.

Just before the fireworks display went dark and he was shuffled off to Night-Nightland, Layne thought he saw a Siberian husky and what looked like a pair of wolves staring at him from the back of the fishtailing Dodge Ram.

Musta hit the son-of-a-bitching bumper after all.

Then all thought winked out.

N
INE
Q
UEEN OF
S
PADES

A
ugustine felt the nomad’s
consciousness switch off, even through his protective bubble of static. Neurons pulsed and flashed in the darkness, a ferocious lightning storm of pain—which he, fortunately, couldn’t feel. But if he abandoned his bubble and climbed into the driver’s seat, he
would,
and he might very well black out, just as Valin had.

Of course, attempting to replace Valin at the controls without his cooperation and without their precise little avoidance dance could lead to some very ugly consequences—the meshing and/or unthreading of their personalities.

The images he’d caught from Valin—a rain-blurred truck, an anxious-looking Siberian husky, the sliding Harley, lambent-eyed wolves—told Augustine that they’d been in an accident. And, given the dubious presence of the animals in Valin’s vision, that the nomad had thumped his thick skull dangerously hard.

Several questions pinged through Augustine’s mind in rapid succession: How serious were Valin’s injuries? Had the driver of the truck stopped to render assistance? And if
he/she hadn’t, how could help be summoned? Only one way to find out on all accounts—he would have to leave Valin’s body and assess the situation.

Augustine hesitated, a conversation nearly twenty-four hours old swirling through his mind, a conversation between a just-murdered man and an unoccupied (and determined to stay that way) Vessel.

Permission isn’t required, and Vessels aren’t supposed to be capable of resisting. At least, that’s always been my understanding.

Most can’t. But I’ve learned how, and you ain’t getting in.

I believe you’re bluffing. You’re a Vessel for a reason, Valin. You are a natural and needed resource. And, since I don’t believe in coincidences, your arrival here when you were needed most shouldn’t be wasted.

But in the end, a gun strategically placed against the head of Valin’s fierce pixie of an ex-wife had produced the result that Augustine’s calm, rational arguments hadn’t—Valin had stopped resisting.

While it was a shame the gun had been necessary, Augustine had no regrets. The nomad hadn’t been harmed and their arrangement was only temporary.

However, given what he now understood about the nomad’s strength and force of will, Augustine suspected that Valin
hadn’t
been bluffing when he’d claimed that he’d learned how to keep from getting shanghaied by desperate ghosts.

So what if Valin awoke while he was outside of his body and refused to let him back in? What then?

Augustine thinned his static bubble, then erased it entirely. A risk he’d simply have to take. Valin’s injuries
could be critical. He could even be dying. Of course, if that
was
the case, he didn’t really know what he could do to help. But he had to try.

Which presented another very important question: How
does
one leave a body? Wish upon a star? Snap one’s fingers three times? Click one’s heels?

Ghosting into the nomad had been like pulling on a crisp new shirt, a cool and irresistible glide into silken flesh and rippling muscle. Valin’s presence had radiated a magnetic, magical quality, like a human ley line, like a curved
Hey, sailor
finger, and even if Augustine
had
decided to cross over after his unexpected murder, he would’ve been quite helpless against the nomad’s allure.

Would that magnetic lure make it difficult to free himself from Valin’s unconscious body? Only one way to find out.

Drawing in a breath—a figurative one, anyway, a mental girding of the (also figurative) loins—Augustine visualized sieving out of Layne Valin’s body, imagined streaming out of his pores, mouth, and nostrils, in countless curls of pale mist.

Or smoke,
he amended, thinking of his much-missed cigarettes and yearning for the taste of vanilla-spiced dark tobacco.

Right. Here we go, then.

Augustine snapped his fingers three times, then tossed in “Olly, olly, oxen free” just for good measure.

A Velcro ripping sound, then Augustine felt himself peeling away from the nomad’s familiar and comfortable flesh. He blinked. He was
out
and standing in a mudpuddled dirt road in a pouring rain he couldn’t feel as anything more than a generalized cold sensation.

Well, that was bloody easy.

Had it been the visualization, the finger snaps, or the childhood chant? All three? A puzzle to ponder another time, he reminded himself.
Otherwise you and Valin both might be without bodies and utterly homeless.

Augustine looked down. Valin lay crumpled on his left side, his long, thick dreads snaking across the rain-soaked ground like honey-colored vines. His body rested beneath a rain-dripping palmetto bush beside a canted and dented mailbox.

Augustine noted that a crack split the back side of the nomad’s matte black shorty-style helmet and wondered if he’d smacked his head against the mailbox’s wooden post.

Dammit, Valin. Not good.

Kneeling, Augustine examined the nomad closer. Breathing. Small trickle of blood from his mouth and one nostril. None from his ears—good sign, that.

He tried to remove Valin’s rain-beaded goggles so he could lift one eyelid to take a peek at the pupil, but even though his fingers gripped the protective gear, nothing happened. They didn’t move. At all.

Hmmm. Apparently I lack what it takes to be a poltergeist. A shame. Hurling things and moving objects might’ve come in handy.

Abandoning the pupil-gazing attempt as lost, Augustine slid his hands along the nomad’s limbs, feeling for broken bones, but succeeding only in sinking elbow-deep into the handsome and tattooed Valin’s oh-so-comfy flesh as his ghostly body responded to the nomad’s magical pull.

I’ll bet if Valin weren’t a Vessel, I could feel him up without any bother.

His ghostly body responded in another way entirely at the memory of his/Valin’s heated hands exploring the nomad’s freshly possessed body.

Mmm. Dear God, yes. But no. No. Not now.

With a sigh of frustration, Augustine gave up his search for injuries and patted Valin down, fingers seeking his cell phone. It wasn’t tucked into a pocket of the nomad’s storm-drenched jeans. Nor in his leather jacket.

Blast.

Rising to his feet, Augustine automatically brushed at the knees of his gray trousers and scanned the wet grass, palmetto bushes, and scrub for any sign of the phone, not sure what he planned to do with it even if he located it. If he couldn’t lift an unconscious man’s eyelid, odds were against his being able to use a cell phone.

But one never knew until one tried.

A searing flash of lightning painted the sky blue-white and Augustine froze. He’d
felt
that. A prickling, pins-and-needles sensation surged through his body—essence, spirit, whatever you wished to call it—an energizing and electric energy.

Thunder grumbled and boomed. Augustine looked up, excitement curling through him. Hadn’t he read something once about how ghosts drained energy from objects and the living in order to communicate or manifest?

Maybe if he drank in enough energy from the storm, he
would
be able to pick up and use Valin’s cell phone. Provided he found it, that was.

Augustine studied the angle of Valin’s body against the post and visualized possible trajectories for items bounced free from his pockets by the force of impact. His gaze traveled beyond the fractured, listing mailbox.

A rutted dirt driveway wound past oaks and elms to a house with a wraparound porch shaded by palm trees. The uncurtained windows looked like dark, empty eyes, and seen through the rain, the house looked weathered, desolate.

Augustine frowned. The place seemed familiar even though he was positive he’d never seen it before. He mentally thumbed through his recall, seeking the reason for the unsettling familiarity—had he seen a photo? Read/heard a description?

Then Kallie Rivière’s voice, low and grim, sounded through his memory.

There’s another woman involved as well.

Another? Do you know who?

No. But I have some ideas I need to research online.

A deep unease curled along Augustine’s spine. It seemed Valin had found the home of Doctor Heron and his long-dead bride, Babette St. Cyr, after all.

So who had been driving the truck that had blasted out of the driveway as though fueled by an illicit tank of nitrous oxide—or chased by a ghost? And why hadn’t they stopped after Valin bit the road?

More important, where was Babette St. Cyr?

Energy prickled through Augustine as lightning flared overhead in a strobing series of strikes, temporarily bleaching the ground; and glinting in the rain beside a clump of yellow dandelions, he spotted what looked like a cell phone.

A crash of heart-stopping thunder rolled for several long seconds across the storm-bruised sky.

Glancing at Valin’s motionless form, Augustine sent a thought to his unconscious mind.

When Augustine returned his attention to the driveway, his figurative heart kicked against his ribs. A dark-haired woman wearing a black and flowing gown was bending over the little clump of dandelions. When the late Mrs. St. Cyr straightened, she held the cell phone in her hand, a smile glacier-cold on her lips. Straightened black hair swept to her shoulders and framed a toffee-brown face. Her eyes were nearly iridescent with captured storm-energy.

“Finders keepers, dead man,” she said.

“Good morning, Mrs. St. Cyr,” Augustine said, casually tucking one hand into his trouser pocket. He nodded at the cell phone. “If you’re hoping to call your husband to check in on the progress of your various murderous schemes, I’m afraid I have sad news for you. Jean-Julien is dead.”

Babette stared at him, her smile dying upon her lips. “When?”

“Just a few hours ago. He received what he was so busy dishing out, I might add.”

“That man’s been a corpse in my heart for over two decades now. Ever since he took up with that harlot, that witch, Gabrielle. I quit mourning him a long time ago.”

“Your daughter is dead also,” Augustine said quietly.

Grief crackled like frost across Babette’s face and she closed her luminous eyes. She touched her fingers to her breast, above her heart. “I felt my baby cross over,” she whispered. “Jean-Julien’s fault. He couldn’t be a man and take care of things on his own. No. He used Rosette to do his dirty work at the hotel. And he cost my baby—my only child—her life.”

Augustine shook his head, unmoved. “I believe your
daughter’s death is as much your fault as your husband’s—perhaps even more so.”

“How dare you? I had
nothing
to do with Rosette’s death, dead man.”

“Oh, I disagree, Mrs. St. Cyr.” Drawing upon the conversation he’d “heard” between Layne and Kallie last night—
eavesdropped
is such an ugly word—Augustine took a gamble.

“You poisoned your husband’s clients after you learned of his affair, didn’t you? Then you allowed him to take the fall and be sent to prison, knowing he was innocent of the crimes he was charged with. You let him think Gabrielle had betrayed him. Let your daughter believe the same, poisoning her heart and soul with your lies. Even on your deathbed.”

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