FOURTEEN
Morning comes too soon when it starts with excited phone calls from cops. Especially when I’ve been in bed only a few hours, and not asleep for most.
“What?” I mumbled at my phone.
“The lab has forwarded their report on the samples from
“Mysteries on enigmas,” I said, which made more sense when it started out of my mouth than by the time I’d finished. “What do the labs say?”
“I would like you to see the reports for yourself.”
I grunted and dragged myself upright. “Where? When?”
“I am in my office. Where are you?”
“In bed. I went back to
Solis paused before he asked, “And what did you see?”
“Something creepy and very interesting—but you’ll have to take my word for it, unless I can track down the otter.”
“Otter?”
“I’ll explain when I see you. Which won’t be for an hour or you’ll be embarrassed to be seen with me.”
“I will meet you at your office in an hour.” He hung up without further ado.
I turned my head and glanced at Quinton, who was still mummified in the bedding—the rat. “Why can’t breakthroughs happen after coffee?” I asked his shape.
“Because they wouldn’t seem as interesting if you were fully awake,” the lump replied.
“You don’t think this is interesting?”
“What? The only interesting thing I heard was the part about being in bed.”
I threw a pillow at him. “Sex fiend.”
“Ah! There’s my girl, casting aspersions.”
“Next time I’ll cast a shoe.”
He let out a muffled chuckle but didn’t emerge from under the pillow. I was tempted to let the ferret sneak in and nibble on his toes, just for spite, but I restrained myself.
I managed to shower and get dressed with my eyelids still at half-mast, and get out of the condo looking more like a human than I felt. I stopped for coffee and still managed to get into my office before Solis knocked on the door. I hadn’t checked my watch, so I don’t know if he arrived late or if I was just moving faster than I thought. I suspected the former.
I let him in and returned to my chair behind the desk, picking up the coffee cup as I sat down. “So . . . what was in these reports?” I asked.
Solis handed me an envelope with a few pages in it and removed his coat while I read them. He sat down and waited for me to finish, which didn’t take long since the report was pretty short.
“So . . . there was human blood, but also something from a nonhuman mammal—specific genetic tests on that haven’t been completed yet so we don’t know what animal we’re looking for. But since we didn’t find animal remains at the scene, whatever it was probably didn’t die there. Still, it looked like a lot of blood. . . .”
“Less-than-life-threatening amounts if there was more than one donor.”
I nodded, my eyes feeling loose and gritty in my skull even under the influence of coffee. “With an animal in the mix it’s even less blood per . . . donor. And the rest of this . . . fish scales, mammal fur,” I read, “and nematocysts from some variety of jellyfish, all of these species unknown.” I looked up. “Does that mean they haven’t yet determined the species or they can’t identify it at all?”
“I believe they have been unable to identify them
“OK. And what’s a nematocyst?”
“I also asked that. It is the part of a jellyfish that stings.”
“So jellyfish stingers. But no jellyfish or remains of them. What sort of Frankenstein’s otter are we dealing with here?” I wondered aloud.
“Again you mention otters. Why?”
I drank more coffee and hoped I wasn’t just about to shoot the infant trust between us in the head. “I had a few interesting words with one last night at the marina.”
Solis scowled. “Words? With a large aquatic mammal.”
“It sounds crazy, but that’s kind of what you get with me.”
“I know.”
“Let me start at the beginning rather than giving it to you in pieces. Remember I said I saw something at Reeve’s house and again at the hospital?”
“This green mist you mentioned and the dog.”
“No, we didn’t see the dog for ourselves at the hospital. It was only hearsay. But the mist, yes. It’s some kind of energetic residue that was present at the hospital, but it was a more active thing at Reeve’s and I saw it wrapped around his chest like a snake that was constricting his ribs.”
Solis frowned, but his expression was less skeptical than in the past. “I still don’t understand what this is that you see.”
“I can’t be sure, as I said, but it’s related to what I suspect your mother-in-law sees—and that’s why she said what she did about me. She probably believes this is mystical in nature, that she’s crazy or ‘touched by God’ because she can see it, and she’s got preconceived notions about what sort of people have certain types of energy signatures. But I’m getting off the point. This paranormal energy is visible as light, or a reflection of light, under the right circumstances. In my case—and Maria del Carmen’s and probably Ximena’s, too—some energy that
I shook my head. “I’m getting ahead of myself again. Anyhow. I saw remnants of the same gray-green stuff around the bed where Reeve died. So my guess was the stuff came from the dog or—”
“Or whatever it was,” Solis finished for me. He wasn’t comfortable with the discussion and his energy corona was flickering through several colors and fluctuating in size and shape, surrounding him with spikes of color one moment, then pulling in and blazing in fast-flickering hues the next. I guessed it was an indication of a more intellectual distress than I’d seen in most people, but he was trying to take it in or the energy wouldn’t have been so manic. Positive progress, but it must have been exhausting.
“Right. Or whatever it was. And I’ll get to that in a moment. At any rate, I thought I’d like to get another look at
I watched him for a moment, gauging his reaction, before I went on. “While I was there I heard some more splashing like we’d heard before. I thought is was just fish, but then something touched my foot and I looked down. A very large otter—and I mean a huge, mutant sort of thing—was in the water, looking up at me. Then it heaved itself partially onto the dock and it barked my name.”
“Are you quite sure?” he asked. “Many people imagine their pets talk to them, but they do not; it’s only