It was Moira who now warned Jackson. She took his hands and squeezed. “Jackson, you be careful, too. Love is blind.”
Rico returned to Olivet with a heavy heart. He didn’t know why he was so uneasy. He’d known from the first report out of Santa Louisa after the demon Envy had been captured that Moira’s blood was a weapon. But now he had proof. Her fate was set in stone.
He called the cardinal, who answered on the first ring.
“The test was positive.”
“It worked?” His voice was calm but hopeful, as if he had doubted it even though it was his own theory that had prompted the test.
“Yes. The demon died.”
But the man the demon had possessed would never be the same. The victim was in a special ward of a hospital, one that housed many victims of demons. Few recovered.
“Good work, Rico. The tide is turning.”
“I think we should keep this information contained for as long as possible. You understand that if it gets out, Moira will be in grave danger.”
“You explained your concerns earlier, Rico. There’s no need to reveal the truth at this point, but you understand that the time will certainly come.”
“She’ll become a prisoner; we can’t do that to her.”
“It will be the only way to protect her, as you well know. When the word gets out-and it will, sooner or later- rogue hunters will want her, as well as the covens. They will double their efforts.”
He knew it, and he hated it. He’d do anything to protect Moira.
“God bless you, my son,” the cardinal said.
Rico hung up. He didn’t feel like celebrating, and for the first time in his life he did not feel blessed.
THIRTEEN
Skye sat straight in her chair at Starbucks listening to Detective Nelson rant about her interference in his crime scene. Staring across the table at him, she decided to let him get everything out. He was obviously exhausted and running on fumes.
After he told her about finding Rafe and Moira in the alley, and how they walked out after he’d ordered them to stay put, he said, “They’re damn lucky I didn’t haul their asses to jail. I didn’t say anything, but your
Skye restrained a wince. She’d warned Moira about carrying the gun, but Moira was stubborn. And she certainly had every right to feel threatened. Skye, as sheriff, had offered her a CCW permit, but Moira refused to go through Live Scan fingerprinting.
“I think-”
He interrupted. “I’ve been working nonstop since seven a.m., when I was called to a possible homicide which may not be a homicide,” Nelson snapped. “Ten hours with a sandwich on the run and not enough caffeine to keep a rat awake. I’m supposed to have the weekend off, but I already know that I’ll be working for the next forty-eight hours on my own time because I have a high-ranking county attorney sitting on my ass claiming that George Erickson’s fucking wife is a witch and cast a spell over him. I have a college kid who’s dead but had no drugs and little alcohol in his system, and a small-town sheriff riding my ass with two sidekicks who don’t obey orders!” He pinched the bridge of his nose and said, “What were they doing at Velocity? I don’t buy their pathetic excuse of wanting to see where Monroe died.”
“Grant,” Skye said quietly, “did you say witch?”
“Witch? Oh yeah, witch. I’ve known Nina Hardwick for more than a decade, since she was bright and shiny out of law school working for the Board of Supervisors. It sounds fucking insane, and if it was anyone other than Nina I would have sent them on their way. But Nina’s not some flighty, birdbrained witness. She’s one of the most respected attorneys in the county.”
“This may be the cult I was telling you about.”
He stared at her blankly as he gulped coffee, but Skye knew what he was thinking, because she had thought the same thing when Anthony Zaccardi had first tried to convince her that demons existed. She hadn’t really believed him until she saw her best friend possessed. Until she was thrown across the room by a bolt of energy that couldn’t be seen.
She continued, being patient with Nelson because she understood how he felt. “Moira O’Donnell, my consultant, would be a good person to look into this, Detective. You’re right, she should have stayed and answered your questions. And I’ll make sure she talks to you. Moira is an expert on this cult, and she’d be able to tell pretty quick if Erickson’s wife is involved.”
Nelson shook his head. “I’m not working with a civilian. I’m not working with you. I want you to leave and take your consultant and her boyfriend with you.”
It took Skye a second to realize Nelson was referring to Rafe Cooper. “I really-”
He cut her off. “I
“I don’t think you should be working this alone-”
“I have years of experience over you,
“Hold it right there, Nelson. I’m damn tired of your mightier-than-thou big-city-cop attitude. You need my help, and I’m not here to trample on your case or take any glory; I could care less about taking credit for this collar. The only person I care about finding is Nicole Donovan, because she’s a material witness in an ongoing investigation. You can have the rest of them. But if you want any chance of finding answers, you have to open your mind. I thought that’s what L.A. was all about-open-mindedness.”
He stared at her. “We’re a lot more close-minded than people think. If-shit, what is it?” He pulled his ringing BlackBerry from his pocket. “What?” he answered. His face changed. “Are you one hundred percent positive? … Meet me at her condo and don’t go in until I get there.” He hung up. “Bring me Moira O’Donnell and we’ll talk.”
“What was that about?”
“Fingerprints all over George Erickson’s bedroom belong to one of the waitresses at Velocity.” He grinned humorlessly. “Murder or not, she walked out and didn’t report a death. I’ll find out if it’s connected to Craig Monroe. One thing I’m good at, Sheriff McPherson, is getting answers.” He stood. “Eight a.m. Tomorrow. If O’Donnell and Cooper aren’t there, I’ll have them arrested.”
Skye watched him walk out and then she called Moira. Rod was on his way to pick her up so they could head back to Santa Louisa. When Nelson had called her about Moira and Rafe, she’d taken a cab to Westwood and met the detective at Starbucks while Rod continued his research at the morgue.
“What’s up, Sheriff?” Moira answered.
“I just had my ass chewed out by Grant Nelson. Why did you leave when you were being questioned? You’re really screwing with my authority.”
“We had to-there’re witches at Velocity, and they were working a spell. Did you see Nelson? Is he okay?”
“Tired, irritated, and hungry, but nothing seemed out of the ordinary.”