Authors: Evelyn Vaughn
Her first urge was to call him crazy. But when she pushed past that urge and thought about it⦠“Ashley Vanderveer, the nurse practitioner at the Almanuevo clinic.”
The one where the boy's body had gone missing.
“Peachy.” When he saw the question in her face, Lorenzo added, “I already tried her, asking where the corpse wandered off to, but she wouldn't talk to me. Said I'd have to hurt myselfâand that it wasn't an invitation.”
Jo laughed. She'd always liked the new nurseâ¦though to be honest, she guessed Ashley wasn't really new. She'd been running the closest medical facility to Spur for two years now. It was a sign of how strictly Jo had kept to herself, that she'd never pursued that possibility of friendship. “Well, she might talk to me. Or us,” she conceded quickly, at Lorenzo's widened eyes. Definitely brown-green.
“Us,” he repeated. Like he didn't want her to help.
“You don't think I can just go home and forget that all thisâ¦this whatever's-going-on
is
going on, do you?”
That she could go back to that half life? Sure, it was safe. But that's all it was. And she'd thought she'd stopped them. On some level she'd really thoughtâ¦
He stood. Wow, he was a big guy. “Yeah, that's exactly what I think. It's my job, not yours.”
“Arguable.”
“This isn't your jurisdiction.
Mayberry
is your jurisdiction.” Which was true, sarcasm aside. But Almanuevo wasn't exactly his jurisdiction either.
Jo stood, tooânot that it made a big differenceâand folded her arms. “You're the one who said I could help.”
“By telling me your story, in case there's any connection. You did, and I'm thinking there isn't.”
“You also said Ashley won't talk to you.”
“Yeah, well maybe I just need to turn on the Lorenzo charm.” When she lifted an eyebrow at him, he looked mildly hurt. “Hey, I can be charming!”
“Look,” insisted Jo. “I'm still not sure what to believe. But if there's any connection between those missing persons and what happened at the mine, I am
not
letting it go until I find out more. I can either work with you, or on my own. Your call.”
Now he folded
his
arms. The pose looked impressive on him; probably more than on her. “I don't want to distract myself baby-sitting you while I'm going after whatever this is, okay?”
Baby-sitting?
Luckily, she felt too good to hit him. He looked so seriousâand annoyedâthat she grinned instead. “And how many monsters have
you
blown up, tough guy?”
It degenerated into a staring contest, which Jo won. Lorenzo's eyes were a lot easier to resist when he was being this obnoxious. And watching them kept her gaze off his body.
“Fine,” the detective spat. “Fan-freakin'-tastic. Lemme shower and
we'll
go talk to the nurse. Finish the damned pie.”
That last sounded like an order, so Jo resorted to equal familiarity.
“You need a shave, too.” She didn't just feel good, she felt
cocky. Alert. Awake, after having been asleep for far, far too long. Willing to try a risk or twoâmaybe with him.
Breathing.
Lorenzo began to move a handâand not to check his jawâbut lowered it self-consciously before disappearing into the bathroom. He'd probably been raised not to flip off ladies.
Jo felt more stunned than if he had. She slowly sank back into her chair. The man was wearing a ring. How long had she been out of the dating world, that she hadn't even looked until now?
A wedding ring.
She heard the shower come on in the bathroom and forced herself not to think about a big, swarthy,
naked
Zack Lorenzo. Wet. She tried not to look at the shadowy, rumpled bed.
The man was married. Maybe to the Italian girl pictured in his wallet. Some risks, you couldn't pay her to take.
Jo told herself that it didn't matter; they were investigating missing persons, not flirting. In fact, it was probably better that he
was
married. Safer. It meant she could stay casual with him. It meant she didn't have to worry about messy romantic complications. The last man she'd been interested in had died and then tried to kill her. In that order.
For the first time in years, she let herself admit that.
But when she phoned Deputy Fred, to let him know she'd be out the rest of the day, Jo felt disappointment dull the bright edge that her life had taken on a few minutes earlier. Because of a man. One she'd barely even been attracted to.
It pissed her off.
Good thing she had something worthwhile to doâ¦even if it might yet prove a little insane.
I
t felt weird, showering with the sheriff in the next room.
Hell, it felt weird thinking of Jo James as a sheriff. In Zack's world, most sheriffs were overweight, balding andâoh yeahâ
men.
He might not agree that's how it ought to be, but it's what he was mainly used to. It even seemed safer.
If he didn't like women, that would be one thing, but he did. Grandmas and toddlers, housewives and businesswomen. That was his problem. He liked women enough that he couldn't stand by to see one hurt. And if Jo James insisted on “helping” with this investigation, stirring up powers she couldn't see or believe, the odds were on hurt. Zack didn't need that responsibility or the guilt of failing at it.
Again.
Having a lady sidekick, even for the few days he was in Almanuevo, wasn't going to help. It would just distract him.
So he lathered up and rinsed off and did his damnedest to think of Jo James only in terms of her professional role, rather than her small build. Or how crossing her arms plumped her breasts under the plain blue T-shirt she wore. Or how the hip-holster for her revolverâtalk about your Old West clichesâ
emphasized the curve of her hips. A revolver, despite that most law-enforcement officers carried 9mm automatics like his.
Tomayto, Tomahto.
It wasn't like she needed quick reloads or stopping power in greater metropolitan Spur. But distractions were distractions.
She
was
female.
If he hadn't had enough proof, her mood swings had confirmed it. By the time he was dressed and back in his tacky motel room, Jo had gone serious on him. Not
I-really-survived-a-zombie-attack
serious, either. Closed off.
“We'll take my car to the clinic,” Zack announced as he buckled his shoulder holster on over his shirt, then threw on a light jacket to cover it.
The sheriff nodded, heading for the door with her hat in hand. It seemed too easy.
Zack pushed his luck. “You can help me with Nurse Vanderveer, but after that I'm workingâholy crap, is this
March?
” It took less than two steps out the door to know that he'd overdressed. He turned around and stalked back inside, unbuckling the holster to strip to his white undershirt.
“After that you're working what?” challenged Jo from the doorway. At least she'd averted her eyesâbut her cheeks looked a bit pink. Blushing, or sunstroke?
Distractions.
Zack slung his holster back on, using his long-sleeved shirt to conceal itâbadlyâbefore heading out again. “How hot
is
it out here?”
“Eightiesâ¦the weather's been strange this last year. But there's a breeze. After I help with Ashley, you're working what?”
“I'm working alone.” He locked the hotel door behind them with a key; key cards were apparently beyond local technology. Actual sandâsandy dirt, anywayâoverlapped the edges of the rutted parking lot, and beyond that, reddish-brown rocks and clumps of cactus. No grass, unless you counted some strawlike tufts. Things seemed kind ofâ¦dead.
He used his keyless remote to unlock the Ferrari with a beep, then headed for the passenger door. Sheriff Jo reached it first. “We'd make better time working together.”
“You shouldn't be working this at all.” He swung into the driver's side while she fastened her seat belt. She had to take her hat off, because of the headrest. Good. “For one thing, I've been doing this for almost four years. I know what we might be up against better than you do. For another, you're⦔
A woman.
But even his sisters would have bristled at that. And the only thing worse than a moody woman would likely be a well-armed moody woman. “Little.”
From the way Jo arched an eyebrow at him, she didn't like that version of his argument either.
“And none of that matters, 'cause it's my job,” he finished, smoothly starting the car.
“I'm not asking for payment,” she pointed out.
“Did I say you were? I still work alone.”
“I thought you had a business partner.”
“He's a silent partner.” He considered young Cecil Taylor, the student who'd first told him Gabriella's casket was empty and how talkative he could get, then qualified that description, “Technically speaking.”
“Look,” said Jo. “You tell me that dead bodies may be walking off on their own, not an hour away from where I live.”
Funny that she didn't say,
from my home.
“Yeah. So?”
“So I'm one of the few people who'll probably believe you. Since I do, I can't just ignore that. Especially not if it has anything to do with what happened in the mine. I won't just drive home and sing la-la-la and pretend it isn't happening.”
Like she'd done after the cave-in. So the sheriff had something to proveâpeachy. Zack squinted sidelong at her, sitting beside him, as he shifted gears. “La-la-la?”
She narrowed her eyes at him.
He said, “Just don't get in my way.”
“Am I in your way?”
He was tempted to say
yes
âbut she wasn't. Not yet.
Give her time.
At least she proved useful with Nurse Vanderveer.
“Jo!”
exclaimed the tall blonde, peeking from a back room into the empty waiting area. The clinic wasn't exactly County General. “It is so good to see you again!”
She didn't say the same to Zack.
“Hey, Ashley,” greeted the sheriff, awkward under the nurse's friendly, one-armed hug. “Is it still a good time? You said on the phone⦔
“Nothing's come up,” the nurse assured her. “Wednesdays are generally pretty quiet.”
Zack said, “That wouldn't have anything to do with you misplacing bodies, would it?”
Ashley Vanderveer flared her pale eyes at him. She was a pastel kind of person, especially in the pink smock she wore over her jeans, pure contrast against the smaller, sturdier sheriff. Jo looked more real, more competentâ¦more touchable.
Though equally annoyed. “You really earn a living at this?” Jo asked him.
So maybe he'd been a little over the top. “Sorry,” he admitted, if with effort. “I just want to know what happened, and last time I came by here, Ms. Vanderveer here blew me off.”
“Go figure.” Now the sheriff looked amused.
“Jo said you wanted to ask questions about local Craft activity.” Ashley caught a chain around her neck with one manicured finger and tugged a small pentagram out to show him. She was witchy in more ways than one. “
That,
I will talk about.”
“But not about the dead boy,” Zack challenged.
“It's all in the report I filed.”
“Don't mind him,” said the sheriff in
that
voiceâthe condescending voice women use when discussing men right in front of them. “He's from Chicago.”
“Hey!” he protested, but at least the nurse grinned.
“Come on into the break room, and we'll talk,” said Vanderveer. “Over tea.”
Zack wasn't real comfortable with getting this interview on Jo's credentials, but he wasn't dumb enough to turn it down, either. Not if he could learn why certain dead people weren't staying dead around here. “You got coffee?”
A card table and metal folding chairs, two Salvation Army sofas, a sink, a microwave and a minifridge crowded the break room. Not a top-of-the-line facility. Though Vanderveer ran the clinic, she wasn't even a doctor. From what Zack gathered in
their previous talk, before she'd decided to hate him, a doctor visited on Mondays. Any other serious cases were sent to El Paso.
“I'm glad you thought of me,” Nurse Vanderveer assured Jo as they sat with their drinks. The sheriff, like Zack, took coffee. Either Jo didn't mind instant, or she was good at hiding it, since it was pretty bad. “I'm a Wiccan and a
curandera.
”
“Which is like some kind of healer.” Zack leaned a cautious elbow on the flimsy card table.
“Which
is
a healer,” corrected Vanderveer. “Nurses and
curanderas
are both legitimate healers.”
Did he say they weren't? Zack had no problem with women being healers. That was something they
should
be good at, what with all that nurturing and emoting. Women warriors? Barring some TV-show babes, he had to withhold judgment on that one.
Jo asked, “So you know something about the local, well⦔
This was always the hard part in the interview, especially when you realized how thin the veil of normalcy really was.
“About local magic,” clarified Zack. “Not so much Wiccans; your type are generally benevolent. Sorcerers. Ceremonials. Wizards. The kind of magic users who aren't real worried that instant karma's gonna get them.”
Ashley stared at Zack, sleekly amused. “In Almanuevo?”
“Aren't there any?” asked Jo, not understanding, and took a brave sip of bad coffee.
Ashley smiledâZack had met plenty of Wiccans in his time, and she had that wise-woman look down pat. “Finding magic users in Almanuevo won't be your problem.”
Considering the town's reputation, Zack wasn't surprised. “The problem's gonna be sorting them all out, isn't it?”
“That, Mr. Lorenzo, is only one of your problems.”
For once, the nurse didn't sound like she meant it as an insult.
The way Jo James snorted into her coffee indicated she took it that way.
Â
For years, Jo had assumed anybody who heard her story about the cave-in would find her certifiable. She liked that Zack Lo
renzo hadn't doubted her, despite his spotty people skills. He believed things.
The kind of man who makes a woman feel safe.
She pushed away the thought.
He's married.
Despite knowing that Ashley was into herbs and shiatsu, Jo would never have dreamed of walking in and asking the nurse practitioner about Almanuevo's magic scene. But Zack would. And it turned out the town was crawling with every known flavor.
“The Wiccans really are the biggest group,” Ashley admitted casually, while the P.I. took notes. Jo knew that Wiccans, often called witches, were neo-pagans, but remained hazy on some things.
“Are we talking religion or magic?”
Ashley smiled. “Both. Magic is all about belief, and faith definitely affects beliefs. You don't need one for the other, but they're connected all the same. Just among the Wiccans we have Gardnerians, Dianics, Hellenistics, Celtics, faeries, some Hermeticsâlike the Greek or Egyptian pantheonsâsolitaries⦔
Trying to absorb all this, Jo found herself watching Zack's big hands, particularly his thick wrists. The sprinkling of dark hair on the back of his hands seemed to thin for maybe an inch, like the cuffs of his long-sleeved shirts had rubbed them smooth. She'd never thought of wrists as sexy before.
She didn't mean to start now.
“You might consider talking to some H.P.sâhigh priestesses,” Ashley continued. “Even if they don't mess with the dark stuff, they may know who does. On another front, there are several well-respected
Brujas
living in the hills.”
“Mexican folk magicians?” translated Jo cautiously. From what she understood, they were similar to Wiccans, but practiced a different religion. Or a different kind of magic. Or both.
“Mexican and Indian,” clarified Ashley. “And you've got your shamans too, though most shamanism around here is modified for the tourists. There's a debate going on about cultural integrity and Anglos misappropriating native rituals, but either way, shamanism's a pretty big moneymaker right now.”
“Shamans,” repeated Lorenzo as he wrote it out. While his
head was bent, Ashley caught Jo's gaze and slanted her eyes toward him, clearly questioning.
It had been so long since Jo had hung with female friends, it took her a moment to understand the signal. Did Ashley want to know if she was
interested
in him?
Jo held up her left hand, just over the edge of the card table, and waggled her empty ring finger.
He's married.
Ashley frowned and shook her head, which didn't make sense. Of course Lorenzo was marriedâand, now, looking up at them expectantly. At least he didn't seem to have caught their exchange. “Other than shamans?” he prompted with mock patience.
“Rumors of Santeria, but that's low key. A biker couple outside town practices Asatru. But there doesn't seem to be any Candomblé or Quimbanda in the area.”
Jo fought the urge to dismiss all this as craziness.
Lorenzo shifted his weight in his chair. “Any voodoo?”
“Surprisingly, yes.” With a grace Jo had never possessed, Ashley brushed her hair back. She was the kind of woman who kept her nails polished, who wore earrings and perfume, who somehow managed to look accessorized even in a medical smock. The kind of woman who made Jo feel vaguely like a lawn gnome. Maybe
Ashley
was interested in Zack Lorenzo. “Good Vibrationsâone of the local supply shopsâhas a Vodoun priestess who does rituals every other Friday. I don't think she's particularly powerful, though.”
“Maybe.” Lorenzo tapped his notebook with the pencil eraser, looking amused. “But if we're dealing with⦔
He caught Jo's gaze knowingly.
Zombies.
She nodded, catching on. “Good point.”
Ashley looked from one of them to the other. “Hello? If we're dealing with what?”
“Too bad you don't want to talk about the missing body.” Lorenzo had the nerve to look smug as he took a sip of coffee.
Jerk.
Jo said, “One of the possibilities Zack suggested wasâ¦.” Then she hesitated too. Up until now, they'd been talking about real religionsâon the fringe, but legitimate all the same. Nothing downright fantastical.