Evil Dark (33 page)

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Authors: Justin Gustainis

Tags: #Justin Gustainis, #paranormal, #Stan Markowski, #crime, #Occult Investigations Unit, #urban fantasy

BOOK: Evil Dark
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  "I know," I said. "And I've been feeling really bad about that, too. But I wondered if any of you folks had seen
this
." I tossed the newspaper onto McGuire's desk.
  McGuire reached for it, but Thorwald was faster. She snatched it up, stared at the headline, then ripped the paper open to page 3. She must have been a fast reader, because less than ten seconds went by before she closed the paper, folded it in one angry motion, and flung it back on the desk.
  "This is outrageous!" she cried.
  "I couldn't agree more," I said calmly. Next to me, Karl said, "Yeah, me neither."
  McGuire had acquired the paper by now and was reading the article with a look of horrified fascination.
  "This… this…" Thorwald seemed to be having trouble getting a sentence started. "Some cocksucker has
leaked
those fucking snuff videos to the motherfucking
press
. And since
I
didn't do it, and
Greer
didn't do it, do you know what that fucking
means
?"
  Normally, listening to an attractive woman talk dirty turns me on a little, but I think even a satyr's lust would have been quelled by Thorwald's fury.
  "Um, someone in Washington isn't to be trusted?" I asked innocently. I wasn't going to give Thorwald the fight she was obviously spoiling for. I wondered if she would have been quite this pissed off at me if she'd achieved the two hours of "good hard fucking" that she'd been seeking.
  I guess Greer was feeling neglected, because he pointed an index finger at me and said, "I've had just about
enough
out of you, pal."
  Before anybody could respond to that, Thorwald turned and headed for McGuire's door, with an expression that said as clear as words, "Don't get in my fucking way!"
  Karl and I stepped aside and let her pass. After a couple of seconds, Greer followed. I was glad Thorwald wasn't the last one out. She'd probably have slammed the door hard enough to shatter the glass.
  The three of us watched as the two agents made their angry way across the squad room and out the door. A couple of other detectives at their desks turned and looked, too. That much rage is impressive, even when it's not directed at you.
  McGuire sighed and tapped the newspaper a couple of times. "Histrionics aside," he said, "this
is
pretty goddamn bad."
  Karl and I sat down in the chairs the Feebies had vacated. "Yeah, I know," Karl said. "The public is gonna go nuts over this, which means pressure on the politicos, which means more pressure on us."
  "As if we needed it," McGuire said.
  "Boss," I said, "have you ever noticed that the stuff that's published in the
People's Voice
always seems like an echo of the bullshit put out by the Church of the True Cross?"
  McGuire glanced down at the screaming headlines again. "You figure there's a connection?"
  "At this point, I'd be surprised if there wasn't."
  "Even if there is, so what? There's no law says a church can't own a newspaper."
  "Yeah, but they're hiding it, aren't they? If so, they're doing it for a reason."
  "You got any thoughts as to what that reason might be?" McGuire asked.
  "No, not at the moment."
  "Then bug me about it when you do, not before."
  "No matter
who
owns that rag," Karl said, "somebody sent them copies of those fuckin' videos. Since it wasn't us, I gotta wonder–"
   Louise appeared at McGuire's door and said, "Excuse the interruption, sir." She looked at me. "Rachel Proctor on the phone. Says it's urgent."
  I turned to McGuire. "You mind, boss?"
  "No, go on – get out of here, both of you. I've got calls of my own to make. When I tell the chief, I bet he's gonna make Thorwald sound like a Mary Poppins."
  I walked quickly to my desk, pushed a blinking button on the phone, and picked up the receiver. "Hello, Rachel?"
  "Stan, one of the best ideas you had was when you suggested I tell the other witches that those murderers were still at large – although I like to think I would've thought of it myself."
  "I'm sure you would," I said. "What's up?"
  "I just got a call from Carol Ann Cosgrove."
  "Yeah, I know Carol Ann."
  "Apparently one of those commando assholes made a grab at her, but she had a spell ready to protect herself."
  "She froze him, like you did?"
  "No, she used a sleep spell," Rachel said. "He's dead to the world, until she wakes him."
  "Good for her. I'm glad she was quick enough, and kept her head."
  "Me, too," she said. "Thing is, Carol Ann isn't sure who she should call to report it – the regular cops, the Supe Squad, or–"
  "Rachel, are you home, or in your office?"
  "Office. I could've come up, but wasn't sure if you were there. I was gonna call your personal number if Louise said you were out."
  "Great," I said. "We'll be down in a minute."
  I put the phone down and looked at Karl. "Come on," I said, and turned toward the door.
  As we walked down the hall, Karl asked, "What've we got, Stan?"
  "A break. If we play it right, maybe a big one."
 
"Did Carol Ann say where the perp is now?" I asked Rachel.
  "Curled up on the floor of her garage," she said. "He was hiding there, and apparently made a grab for her when she got out of the car."
  "How long will he stay out?" I asked.
  "I know the spell she used. It'll remain in place until she lifts it. I mean, she has a moral obligation to wake him before he dies of thirst, or something, but that won't be a danger for several days."
  I thought for a couple of moments. "You mind getting her on the phone for me, Rachel?"
  "Sure."
  Rachel made the call.
  "Hi, Carol Ann, it's Rachel again. I've got Stan Markowski from Occult Crimes with me. You know Stan, don't you? Good. He'd like to speak with you, so I'm going to hand him the phone now, OK? All right, just a second."
  "Hi, Carol Ann."
  "Hello, Stan. Long time."
  "Yeah, it is. I hear you've had quite a night."
  "To say the least. I don't think my heart rate has returned to normal yet – but it's better than it was."
  "You'll be fine, soon," I said. "Tell me, how was the guy dressed, do you recall?"
  "He looks like something out of the movies, Stan. Black clothing, even his stocking cap."
  "OK, that's what I figured. Uh, Carol Ann, I'm going to ask you to do something kind of… unusual."
  Her voice became guarded. "Go ahead and ask."
  "Well, instead of sending a squad car over there right now to pick up Sleeping Beauty, I'd like to leave him where he is for a few hours. Think you can stand that?"
  After a short pause she said, "Yeah, I suppose so. What's going on, Stan? Are all the cells full tonight?"
  "Not exactly. But I want time to arrange for some special accommodations for this fella."
  "What kind of accommodations?" Carol Ann asked.
  "It's probably better that you don't know that," I said. "But I'll tell you this much – if I can make my idea work, I might be able to find out who's sending these thugs after you and your sister witches."
  Actually, I already knew the answer to that question – what I needed was
proof.
  "All right, Stan. I suppose I can go along with that – with one proviso. Are you planning to do harm to him? Because, although part of me would love that, I cannot permit it to happen as a result of my magic."
  "Carol Ann, I'm not planning to harm a hair under his little stocking cap. Now, there's just one more thing I need to ask you…"
  As Karl and I walked back to the squad room, I reached for my own phone. It only took a few seconds to find Lacey's number and call it.
  "Hello?" she said.
  "It's Stan."
  "Yes… and?"
  "We've got one. It's on."
  "I'm very glad to hear that."
  "How soon can you be ready?"
  "Everything's all set up at the cottage," Lacey said. "All I have to do is get there. Say… an hour fifteen, to be on the safe side."
  "Fine. We'll see you there."
  "Stan?"
  "What?"
  "Thank you."
  When I told McGuire that Karl and I were going to take personal time for the rest of our shift, he looked at me and nodded grudgingly. He doesn't like stuff like that, but union rules say we can, and neither one of us does it a lot.
  McGuire looked at me. "Do I want to know how you and Karl are going to be spending the time?"
  "No, you don't."
  He nodded slowly. "All right. Good luck."
  As we walked outside, I asked Karl, "You sure your uncle's not likely to show up in the middle of things?"
  "Naw, he's already in Florida. I called him last night, before I gave Lacey the key and directions. He's down there, all right."
  In the parking lot, Karl said, "No point taking two cars, is there?"
  "None that I can see."
  "Which one, then?"
  "You've got more trunk space," I said.
  "Good point. OK, get in."
  In another ten minutes, we were ringing Carol Ann's doorbell. She answered it almost at once.
  "Come on in, guys."
  She gave me a quick hug. "Good to see you, Stan."
  She had a hug for Karl, too. "How've you been, Karl?"
  "Not too bad, I guess."
  Carol Ann asked him, "I understand you're
nosferatu
nowadays," she said. "How's that working out for you?"
  "Ah, it's like anything else, Carol Ann – good points and bad ones."
  I asked her, "Did you prepare what we talked about?"
  "Yep, got it right here."
  She showed me a small statuette. I'd had a bad experience with a Gorgon statue a while ago, but this one looked entirely different. There was nothing evil about it.
  "It's a representation of the goddess Hecate," Carol Ann said. "I'd like it back someday. No hurry."
  "I'll take good care of it," I said.
  "When the time comes, just close your hand around it, like this–" she made a fist "–and say the word
pardac
. It's only charged to work once, so be sure you're ready before you say it."
  "It's
pardac
," I said. "Right?"
  "Perfect. Here you go." She handed me the statuette, and I carefully put it in my jacket pocket.
  "Well, any time you guys want to take out the garbage, he's ready for you," she said.
  Five minutes later, we pulled out of Carol Ann's driveway. In the trunk we had an unconscious commando, who was probably in for the worst night of his life.
 
To get to Lake Wallenpaupack, you take Route 84 east from Scranton for about twenty miles, then follow shitty secondary roads that seem to go on forever – or at least they do in the part we were headed for, a stretch of shoreline that mostly consists of smaller houses or cottages. They're empty for about half the year.
  Often a bunch of fishermen will chip in and buy one of the cottages, and use it as a base in the summer. Karl's uncle had one all his own, and that's where we were headed, much to the dismay of Karl's shock absorbers. We bounced through the potholes at ten to fifteen miles an hour. Our guest in the trunk should have been glad he was unconscious, although he'd still find himself all bruised and banged up when he awoke. And that was going to be the least of his problems.
  Lacey's Dodge Perdition was already there when we pulled into the graveled driveway. Good – that was the plan.
  We opened the trunk, and Karl carried the limp form down some sloping ground and around to the back, to the basement entrance. A couple of big doors that belonged on a barn stood slightly open, and a light shone from inside. I pulled one of the doors wide enough for Karl and his burden to get through. He didn't need an invitation – he'd been in here before.
  As we came into the big, open room, we found Lacey facing the door, waiting for us. "Good evening," she said. Some people might have said that à la Bela Lugosi, but not Lacey – she was serious tonight. Deadly serious.
   I took in the dirt floor, peeling wallpaper, and ramshackle furniture that I figured had constituted all the original furnishings. But Lacey had brought in a few things of her own.
  The most impressive of the new additions was a big frame made of black PVC pipe, the stuff they use in industrial plumbing and scaffolding. The freestanding structure was about eight feet square, and the plastic surface of the pipes gleamed in the overhead light. It looked like a big Tinkertoy that had been designed by the Spanish Inquisition.
  Next to the PVC structure, but at a right angle to it, was a folding table that I assumed Lacey had also brought with her. Arrayed along it was a collection of implements, which I had described for Lacey from the two snuff films I'd seen.
  The macabre smorgasbord included knives of course, and a new-looking blowtorch. Somewhere she had found an old-fashioned corkscrew – the kind that is just a tightly wound spiral of steel with a sharp point at one end and a handle on the other. She had a hammer and the needlenose pliers, too.
  Lacey looked slowly around the room and said, "Nice place your uncle has here, Karl."
  "I know it's a wreck," he said, "but fishermen aren't too fussy. All they wanna do is fish, tell lies about what got away, and drink beer."
  Lacey shook her head. "No, Karl, I'm sorry – you misunderstood. No sarcasm intended – I
mean
it. For what we're going to do tonight, this place is
perfect
. I practically fell in love the first time I saw it."

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