—”
Annie started to slide from the booth, furious. “This is not a fucking
“Hey!
Annie glowered, her buzz cut sticking out in tiny spikes around her pale face. She looked even more like a feisty kid than she had back at the Divine. Feisty, but scared. When she didn’t say anything Baby Joe tilted his head toward her second martini.
“Drink that. It’s costing the paper thirty bucks.”
Annie stared at him belligerently. Suddenly her hand shot out; she grabbed the glass and drank it, then gestured for the waitress to bring another.
“Okay,” she said, her eyes watering. She turned sideways to face Baby Joe. “What do you remember about Oliver’s death?”
“Oliver?” Baby Joe looked taken aback. “Oliver Crawford?”
“Yeah. Did you go to his funeral?”
“No.”
“Know anybody who did?”
Baby Joe stared at her, brows furrowed. “No. Hasel and I wanted to go, but we got a call from Professor Warnick. He said the Crawfords didn’t want anyone there but immediate family.”
“Did you ever actually
Baby Joe frowned. “Do you mean do I think they
“No—I meant, did you see any of them
Baby Joe was silent. The waitress brought Annie’s drink, disappeared into a flood of ruby light. Baby Joe looked at Annie holding her double martini in both hands, like a child drinking a glass of milk. “You think Angelica killed him?” he said at last.
“I don’t know
“Yeah.”
“No wonder your newspaper’s in trouble.” She shuddered. “Listen. I want you to do me a favor.”
Baby Joe raised an eyebrow.
“Labrys canceled the rest of my tour. Angelica called them. I don’t know how she did it—like maybe she pulled Fiona from a flaming plane wreck once and I never knew about it. But Fiona called me a few nights ago and the tour’s off. Angelica Furiano threatened them with a lawsuit, some bullshit about me making a statement to the press that Angelica was involved with that murder in P-town. Only I never
Baby Joe whistled. “Sounds like you’re fucked,
“Tell me about it. So I’m going underground for a little bit.” She sighed and leaned back into the booth, her cheeks bright with a false rosy glow from the martini. “See, I’m thinking that maybe Angelica’ll just kind of forget about me. Like maybe she just wanted to scare me; so
“No.” Baby Joe looked at the empty stage, his expression remote. When the music blared out again and another girl pranced onto the platform, he ducked his head to reach inside his jacket. “Here. You better read this.”
It was Hasel’s letter, and the worn obituary notices from the Charlottesville paper. Annie scanned them quickly.
“What is this?” Her face went dead white. “Baby Joe… ?”
“It’s what happened to Hasel,” he said softly.
“But—is it true? I mean, this stuff he wrote you about Angelica?”
“I think it’s true,
“B-but—but
“Why would Angelica kill anyone?” Before she could protest, he lit his cigarette and took a drag, leaned over and slid the pages from her hand. “You know what this is,
Annie shook her head, hardly seeing him at all. “What?”
“This is some bad fucking fallout from the
“The
“I’m not saying she went
“Why? Because I’m a lesbian? Please.” Annie’s glare softened into curiosity. “So what about her books?”
“They’re a fucking blueprint for a new religion, that’s what.
His black eyes grew distant, unfocused; looking at him, Annie shivered.
“Not any more,
“But then I start to hear other stuff. Guy I know, covers homicide, starts talking about these ritual killings. Bones alongside the Major Deegan Expressway, this fire circle up by the Cloisters. A snuff video, with all these women and some guy who gets it at the end, only no one ever reports him missing. Stuff like that.
“Then some
“Then I hear about something out West. One of Angelica’s bodyguards is, like,