Read The Metaphysical Detective (A Riga Hayworth Paranormal Mystery) Online

Authors: Kirsten Weiss

Tags: #Mystery, #occult, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #San Francisco, #female sleuth, #San Mateo, #urban fantasy

The Metaphysical Detective (A Riga Hayworth Paranormal Mystery) (15 page)

BOOK: The Metaphysical Detective (A Riga Hayworth Paranormal Mystery)
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“Do you know if the owners experienced any sort of trauma before they left?” Riga asked.

“No idea.  I don’t get into that with my clients.  You want to see inside?”

“Let’s look at the plans first,” Riga said.  It didn’t take long – it wasn’t a big condo.  When Riga was satisfied, she shielded and cloaked herself, then extended the field of protection to the other two women.  The realtor led them into the kitchen and leaned against the granite counter, arms crossed defensively.  She pointed through the open kitchen to the fireplace mantel.  “That’s his favorite spot for destruction.  There used to be a set of Hummels on it.  One by one they’ve gone flying off – not falling off, flying off, and always in front of a prospective buyer.  In two of my open houses, people literally ran for the doors.” 

A translucent man in a fedora walked through the refrigerator, stopped, and leered at Riga.  “Well, hubba hubba.”

Pen gasped, staring.  Riga’s head swiveled in Pen’s direction.  Could she see it too? 

Frida started from the counter.  “What?  What?  Did you see something?”

The man walked through Frida to stand inches before Riga, leering.  “I’ve died and gone to heaven.  Rita Hayworth, you’ve come to take me to the pearly gates.” 

Frida shuddered, her eyes widening.  “Did you feel that?  Did it get colder in here?  Oh, I can’t stand it.  Do what you need to, I’m waiting outside.”  She turned and fled from the condo.

The apparition raised his hands to chest level.  Riga had seen that look before.  “Back off,” she snarled, just as Pen said, “Hey!”

Riga and Pen looked at each other.  “You can see him?” they asked simultaneously.

“You broads can see me?” the ghost said in a Brooklyn accent.  He was slender and stood a couple inches shorter than Riga – she put him around 5’4”. 

“Pen!  How long have you been able to see ghosts?” Riga said.

“Since about thirty seconds ago.”

“Really?  But if you have the sight you must have…”  Riga trailed off, afraid to upset her niece.  Most people who had the sight started seeing ghosts as children, and then either repressed it or expanded it.  Riga’s ability hadn’t manifested itself until her early twenties and she had no idea why – there had been no emotional trauma, no near death experience.  The ghosts had come with the darkness.  Had Pen inherited it?  Would she darken streetlamps, too?

 “I don’t like this.” Pen’s voice quavered.

“You don’t like this?” the ghost said.  “I’ve been dead for decades, and the first people who can hear me are you two dizzy dames.”

Riga made a stop motion with her hand.  “Okay.  Who are you?  What are you doing here?”

“Me?  I’m Vinnie Delriccio.”  He straightened his lapels with a quick jerk.  “And who, may I ask, are you?”

“I’m Riga, Riga Hayworth, and this is—“

Vinnie hooted with laughter.

“This is my assistant, Pen,” Riga continued more loudly.  “What are you doing here, Vinnie?”

“Got bored of the old digs.  Thought I’d move up in the world.  Something wrong with that?”

“Ye—What do you mean, old digs?” Riga said.

“My house.  It might not have been much, but it had an ice box.  Lived there for years.  Died there too.  Thought I’d never leave.  And then a couple weeks back, poof!  There was a door that hadn’t been there before.  I thought, hey, maybe that’s the signal to move on, and up I went.  But I figured out soon enough, this ain’t heaven, even with you two dolls in it.”  He winked. 

Riga frowned.  “But why here?  Why this apartment?”

“It was empty, wasn’t it?  You don’t think I want to live with a bunch of snot nosed kids, or some hubby and wife yammering away at each other, do ya?  Nah, this place is all mine.”

“What was the address of your old house?” Pen asked him.

“2304 Gardner.”

“Riga, that was the house this place was built over,” Pen said.  “But I thought ghosts stayed in the home they remembered, even if that home was gone?  Like they built up a ghost house in their heads to live in?”

“That’s what usually happens,” Riga agreed.  “There have been cases of homes being built over, and the ghost’s activity was limited to the original dimensions of the home.”

“Hey,” Vinnie said.  “All I know is I’m out and I like it that way.”

 “Vinnie, you can’t just stay here,” Riga said.

“Says you.”  He glared at the fireplace, where a single Hummel remained.  It flew from the mantel and smashed against the far wall.

“Why did you do that?” Riga cried.

“F’ing krauts.  That German fig-ooo-rine is no loss.”

“They’re made by nuns!”

“Kraut nuns,” Vinnie muttered.

Riga leaned back against the kitchen counter, and crossed her arms over her chest.   “Vinnie, you’re really hurting the owners.  They’re not rich, they had to move for work.  They can’t afford to pay for this place indefinitely while you scare off every prospective customer.”

He blew a raspberry.  “Cry me a river.  I’m dead.”

Pen snorted.  “You really thought appealing to his better nature would work?”  She faced the ghost.  “Listen up, Napoleon, it’s time to hit the road.”

“How’re ya gonna make me, little girl?”  He sneered.

Pen clenched her fists. 

Riga intervened.  “Look around, Vinnie.  Do you see a light?”

“Yeah, sure.”

Riga sagged with relief.  “Then you don’t have to stay here, Vinnie, there’s a better place for you.  All you have to do is go to the light.”

He gave her a pitying look.  “Hey, I’ve seen Ghost Whisperer and you ain’t her.  Besides,” he said, pointing at the ceiling, “I was talking about the lamp.”

Pen’s jaw sagged.  “The ceiling lamp?  That’s the light you see?”

“What did’ja think?  You really are a dim bulb, kid, no pun intended.  Listen,” he sidled up to Rita.  “You’re some knockout.  Why don’t you ditch the eager beaver and we can—“  He whispered something in her ear.

Riga’s face twisted with disgust.  “You’re making an exorcism look very attractive, Vinnie.” Exorcisms were for malevolent entities, not ghosts like Vinnie.    But Vinnie wouldn’t know that.

Pen bounced on her toes.  “Cool!  Can I watch?”

“Just don’t tell your mother.”

“Awesome!”

“Awesome,” Vinnie mimicked her in a high pitched voice.  “I’ll show you awesome, kid.”  He reached toward her and gave her a ghostly grope. 

Pen shrieked.  “Go to hell!”

There was a pop, an ethereal puff of smoke, and Vinnie vanished.

Riga stared at Pen, horror stricken.

“What… just happened?” Pen asked, eyes wide.

Riga reached out with her senses.  Vinnie was gone.  “I think you exorcised him.” 

It wasn’t to the place Riga would have sent him, however.

 

Chapter 24: Faerie Shaman

Riga tried not to let Pen see how upset she was as Pen drove her back to the condo.  Looking to find a way back into Pen’s good graces, Riga had brought her niece into the ghost hunt.  But Pen had no training.  True, Riga had never imagined Pen would be able to see and hear the ghost, or that she would be able to send Vinnie to hell with a word. 

But she should have. 

She had to make this right. 

Pen risked a sideways glance.  “Frida seemed happy,” she said, testing the waters.

Riga looked out the window and made a “hmm” sound.  She rested her arm against the window, tapping her fingers on the car door.  Finally, she turned to Pen.  “Are you sure you’ve never seen a ghost before?”

Pen’s brows lowered threateningly.  “I told you I hadn’t.”

“Look, if you see one again, please don’t engage with it.  Just pretend it’s not there.  Then call me.”

“Why?  Do you think I’ll see another?”

Riga hesitated.  Pen had sounded too eager for her liking.  “I don’t know.  But I’d like you to get some training before tackling one alone.”  She pointed to the corner ahead.  “Drop me here, will you?”

Pen pulled to the side of the road, in front of a taqueria.  “What’s here?”

“Lunch.  Thanks for the ride, Pen.  I’ll call you tomorrow and let you know if the office is open.”  She darted from the car before Pen could respond.  A Saab pulled up behind the Bug and blasted its horn, forcing Pen to drive on.

Riga waited until her niece was out of sight, then turned a corner and hurried down the road.  Ten minutes later she stood before a shop with a sign that read:
Mystic Treasures
.  Its windows displayed sparkling orange, black, and purple bottles.  The last time she and the owner, Sal, had met, Sal had tried and failed to help Riga with her problem.  Riga didn’t mind the failure, but the naked fear in Sal’s eyes ended the relationship and Sal had told her not to come back.  Riga took a breath, steeling herself, and walked in.  A bell tinkled above the door. 

“Just a minute!” a female voice sang out from a back room.

Riga wandered through the shop.  It was overflowing with houseplants, whirligigs, fountains and, if Riga relaxed her gaze, faeries.  Riga caught a flash of one out of the corner of her eye, felt its heat, and looked away, repressing a shudder.  Faeries creeped Riga out.  At best, she considered them unreliable, at worst, dangerously cunning.  Sal, a faerie shaman, was a cultural relativist, and took their quirks in stride. 

Footprints coated in faerie dust residue led to the back room – the dust Sal had traveled on in her most recent trip to upper or lower world.  Riga sniffed – definitely lower world – it smelled of primeval forest.  The shaman must have journeyed recently for the tracks and trace odor to be so strong.  Riga probed gently with her mind, just to assure herself that she still could.  Sal’s magical energy tickled Riga’s senses, strong and steady.

“Hello?” Sal called out, exiting the back room, a dust cloth in hand, her caftan, a brown and yellow African print, rustling about her.  Her long dreads, threaded with gray, bounced against her rounded shoulders.  Sal was all earth mother curves. 

Riga stepped out from behind the cabinet.  “Hi, Sal.”  Her gaze dropped to the woman’s other hand.  It was bound in surgical tape and missing a ring finger. 

The woman stopped dead, the smile slipping from her face.  “Shamans are often transsexual.  The energy that allows them to slip between the sexes is similar to that which allows them to move between the worlds.”  She clapped her hands to her mouth, eyes wide.

Riga stared at her.  “That’s…  interesting.” 

Sal’s hands dropped to her chest.  “It’s been in my head all day.  When you walked in it just–”  Her shoulders collapsed forward, curling in on herself.  

“Your hand – what happened?”

“Work place accident.” 

Bull, Riga thought.  An accident would have taken her outside finger, too.

Sal shifted her weight, looking everywhere but at Riga.  “I know why you’re here.  But I can’t help you.” 

“Sal,
I’m
not even sure why I’m here.  But I trust you and you’re the best shaman I know –”

“I’m the only shaman you know.”

“Untrue,” Riga said. 

“Look, I don’t know what—“

“This isn’t about me,” Riga interrupted, her expression hardening.  “A spirit was accidentally banished and I think he went somewhere he wasn’t supposed to go. I need to find out, make things right.”

Sal furrowed her brows.  “Where do you think you sent him?”

“Hell.”

“Sweet mother of God!”  The words exploded from her mouth.   “This is bad, Riga.  Really bad.”  She paced the narrow aisle.

“Can you help me get him back?”

“No, I can’t!”

“Sal, this isn’t about me.  I’ll stay as near or far from the operation as you want but I’ve got to get this guy back.”

Sal stopped pacing and looked at Riga, astonished.  “Riga, when I said I can’t help you, I mean I
can’t
help you.  Even if I wanted to go… there, which I don’t, it’s too dangerous to travel to the lower or upper worlds these days.  Haven’t you been paying any attention?  Something is seriously wrong.  It’s like the energies have shifted.  The rules don’t apply anymore.  Everyone’s talking about it.”

Riga digested that.  Slowly, she said, “It’s a strange sort of accident that takes a ring finger while leaving the rest unharmed.  What really happened?”

Sal looked at the floor.  “You know how shamanism works.  To become a shaman, you usually have to go through some sort of dismemberment.”

“Yeah, but that’s a spiritual dismemberment in the lower world.“  Riga blinked.  “You don’t mean you lost your finger in the lower world?  That’s not possible!”

 “It’s not possible, but it happened.  I was lucky.  Sitting Deer –”  She shook her head.  “You don’t want to know what happened to her.”

Riga’s mind raced.  She’d been a fool thinking the events had been localized to her little problem.  She should have kept in better touch with the others, if she had, she’d of known sooner.  “When did this start?”

“Just over a week ago.”  She shook her head, sending her dreads flying about her.  “No, that’s not true.  There’d been little things before, warnings, oddities.  But all hell broke loose about a week ago.”

“Which brings me back to my problem.  Under normal conditions, is it possible?  A soul retrieval from…  you know?“

Sal barked out a laugh.  “Sure, if you’re Jesus.  And you can wear all the crosses you want.”  She looked pointedly at the silver around Riga’s neck.  “We both know you’re far from it.” 

“No argument there.  But there’s got to be another way.”

Sal took an involuntary step back, her hands out in a warding gesture. “There’s no—“  Sal puffed her cheeks out and exhaled noisily.  “You’d need a guide and what kind of a guide do you think would know
that
territory?”

Riga picked up an oblong piece of quartz and rolled it in her palms.  It felt cool against her skin.  She looked thoughtful.  “You’re talking about using a demon or a damned soul as a guide.”

“Are you kidding me?” Sal shrieked.  “You’re afraid of the fae folk but you’ll truck with demons?”

“King Solomon used demons to build his temple in Jerusalem,” Riga said reasonably.

“You’re no King Solomon either!”

The two women locked eyes. 

“No,” Riga said.  “I’m different.”  Sal’s diagnosis had been clear on that point. 

BOOK: The Metaphysical Detective (A Riga Hayworth Paranormal Mystery)
3.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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