I pulled out my notepad and began to copy down the symbols that were in the photograph.

'What's it say?' Lacey asked. 'Do you know?'

'No, I don't,' I told her. 'But tomorrow night I've got a shot at talking to a guy who might just be able to tell me.'

'And you'll let me know anything you find out, of course,' she said. ' And send copies of the two case files of yours.'

'Sure, no problem. In the meantime, there's something you can do for me.'

Lacey gave me a wicked grin. 'What, right here in the squad room? In front of all the guys?'

'That's not what I meant,' I said, and hoped that I wasn't blushing. 'See if your lab guys can find out what material that garrote was made of.'

'Okay, I can do that,' she said. 'You think it matters?'

'It might,' I told her. 'It might matter a hell of a lot.'

I thanked Lacey for the heads-up, and got out of there before she noticed the bulge that had developed in the front of my pants. God only knows what she'd have said about that.

According to my buddy Ned, who taught something called Communications at the U, the guest lecture by esteemed Georgetown scholar Benjamin Prescott, PhD, was scheduled for 8 o'clock at the HoulihanMcLean Center. A reception would follow.

It took some work, convincing McGuire to let Karl and me attend this thing on company time. But I told him that Prescott was our best chance for getting a translation of the runes, sigils, or whatever they were that were being left on the corpses. Hell, he might even know what ritual they were part of.

As for what we were going to do with that information – well, I'd worry about that when we got it. Or, rather, if we got it.

The program they gave us at the door said Prescott's talk was called 'The Devil Made Me Do It: Demonic Possession as a Defense in European Witch Trials, 1530-1605.'

Ned once explained to me that academic papers usually have a colon in the title, because so many of them are written by assholes.

Before things started, I spotted a couple of witches I knew in the audience. They looked just like anybody else – which is the trouble with a lot of supes, if you ask me.

I wondered if the witches viewed this lecture kind of like 'old home week.'

The university's president, a tall, skinny Jesuit named Monroe, made some introductory remarks. He surprised me by being both witty and brief.

Then Prescott came to the podium.

I saw right away where the wheezing in the guy's voice came from – and it wasn't asthma or smoking. Benjamin Prescott must have weighed over four hundred pounds. Put that much pressure on your lungs and ribcage, and breathing problems are almost guaranteed.

That's not to say that Prescott was a slob. His brown hair was carefully cut and brushed straight back. The gray suit he was wearing didn't exactly make him look slim, but it fit his bulk well, and the material looked expensive. I can't afford pricey clothing, but I still torture myself with an issue of GQ every once in a while.

A guy that size, you'd expect him to sound like James Earl Jones. But Prescott's voice, as I knew from the phone, was closer to a tenor. I listened to it for the next forty-seven minutes.

I can't say that I paid real close attention to the lecture. The guy wasn't bad – at least he seemed to be talking to us, rather than just reading his damn paper. But I wasn't too interested in what witches and demons were doing back in the seventeenth century. The ones running around today give me enough problems.

After Prescott finished his presentation, he took questions from the audience for about twenty minutes. The ones coming from students were usually polite and to the point. But you could always tell when professors were called on: they usually preceded the question with a mini-lecture designed to show off how much they already knew about the subject. And their questions seemed designed to trip Prescott up, although they didn't succeed, far as I could tell.

I thought about sticking my hand up to ask something like 'Professor, what's your opinion of the power of the spells contained in the Opus Mago?' But he'd probably just shut me down and move on to the next question. My cousin Tim used to be a stand-up comic. He once told me, 'Never take on the guy who controls the microphone. You'll always lose.'

Better I should talk to Prescott one-on-one, in a situation he couldn't control. I hoped the reception would give me the chance I wanted.

It did. Sort of.

• • • •

The post-lecture gathering was held in a big room with hardwood floors and lots of paintings on the walls depicting big deal Jesuits of the past. Karl and I stood in a corner at first, munching some pretty good hors d'ouevres while we watched people coming ell. o pay homage to the great man. Finally, the traffic in Prescott's direction slowed down.

'Come on,' I said to Karl. 'It's our turn to welcome our guest to the big city. Try not to look like a thug for the next five minutes.'

'Five whole minutes? Gonna be hard.'

We made our way over to Prescott, who was standing next to a table on which somebody had put a big bowl of iced shrimp. The professor was scarfing them down, one after another, as if seafood was going to be illegal tomorrow. I stopped in front of him, put a suck-up smile on my face, and stuck my hand out. 'Professor, I just wanted to say how much I enjoyed your talk tonight.' I was hoping he wouldn't recognize my voice from the phone.

Apparently, he didn't. Prescott squeezed my hand for about a second before dropping it. 'Thank you,' he said with a little smile. 'I'm pleased you enjoyed it, Mr…'

I was tempted, for Karl's sake, to say 'Bond – James Bond,' but common sense prevailed.

'My colleague and I,' I said, gesturing at Karl, 'were so impressed by the depth of your knowledge that we wondered if you could give us your opinion on something we've been working on.' Ned had helped me work out some stuff I could say to impersonate a guy with too much education.

Prescott's smile went out like a candle in a hurricane. 'Well, I hardly think this is the appropriate place for me to read any-'

'Oh, this isn't a paper, or anything like that,' I said. 'Just a few images that we'd been puzzling over. Can't make head or tail of them, to tell you the truth, and we figured that if anyone could help us out, it was you.'

The smile I had plastered on was starting to make my face hurt.

Prescott grabbed another shrimp out of the bowl. 'Well, if we can do this quickly, I suppose it might be-'

'Hey, that's terrific,' I said, and pulled from my pocket a sheet of paper where I had copied the three sets of symbols we'd found on the murder victims.

Prescott popped the shrimp into his mouth and took the paper from me. I signaled Karl with my eyes, and he took a slow step to the side, blocking Prescott from a quick exit in case he tried to walk away once he realized we'd conned him.

Prescott's eyes narrowed as he stared at the symbols on the paper. After a few seconds, I said quietly, 'Those were found carved into the bodies of three recent murder victims. Rumor has it they were taken from a spell that's part of the Opus Mago. You remember the Opus Mago, don't you, Professor?'

His eyes wide open now, Prescott looked up from the paper and stared at me in shock and anger. He drew in breath to speak, but I'll never know what he intended to say.

• • • •

Prescott's mouth was open, but instead of angry words, what came out were a series of hoarse grunts. His fleshy face began to turn a deep shade of red.

'Christ, he's choking on the shrimp!' I said to Karl. 'Your arms are longer – quick, Heimlich him!'

Karl immediately slipped behind Prescott and threw his arms around the big man's midsection, clasping his hands together in front. He gave the quick, hard squeeze that was supposed to constrict Prescott's diaphragm with enough pressure to send the shrimp back out of his windpipe.

Nothing happened. Other guests were starting to converge on us now, asking urgent questions that I paid no

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