enough of Monroe’s blood samples to run more tests. Some labs have been engineering Ecstasy with LSD and other drugs. Nasty shit, and we’ve seen teenagers come through here pumped up with drugs that are variants of what’s popular. They end up in the hospitals, too. Some are brain-dead; some just die. I promise, we’ll keep at it. We want to know, and I know your Narcs want to keep up with anything new hitting the streets.”
“Any other bodies come in?”
Fern tilted her head. “We’re a morgue; we get dozens of bodies a day.”
Grant rubbed his temple. “Bodies with marks like Monroe and Erickson.”
“Actually, yeah. They weren’t my cases, but I’ve seen a couple marks like this over the last week.”
“Can you send me copies of the files?”
“Sure. On one condition.”
He raised an eyebrow. “What condition?”
“Put in a good word with your hunky partner for me. I’m calling him my first day off.”
Grant smiled even through the pain in his head. “He wanted me to do the same with you.”
“No shit?”
“No shit. He’s receptive.”
“Screw that then, he can call me. But if I don’t hear from him by tomorrow-I have Sunday and Monday off-I’m calling.”
Grant handed her Jeff’s cell phone number. “Can I see Nadine?”
“It’s not pretty. We call her Humpty Dumpty.”
“I want to see her tattoo.”
“That’s easy, I took a picture. This way.”
Grant followed Fern to her small cubicle near the intake area. Her space was filled with photographs of the morgue and the dead. Though all were eerie and bordering on the sick side, they were quite phenomenal. “You’re talented.”
Fern grinned. “Thanks. I know, it’s a morbid hobby-can you believe Takasugi tells me that
But Grant barely heard Fern. He stared at the tattoo. It was a perfect circle, with an intricate pattern that was the same if you looked at it from the top or the bottom. It had been on the small of her back.
Julie had the identical tat in the same location.
TWENTY-SIX
Wendy gloated as she strode through Velocity casting a protective spell. She smiled, pleased that everything was coming together better than she’d planned-considering the disasters that had occurred over the last twelve hours. Losing Rachel as a vessel had been devastating, and having Raphael Cooper and Moira O’Donnell steal her chalice-Wendy was more than a little furious. That chalice had been in her coven for generations. If her mother were alive, she’d be irate that her precious chalice had been stolen by another coven.
Nicole emphatically believed that Moira wasn’t practicing magic and intended to destroy the chalice, and even the
Living prisoners made better bargaining chips. There was no doubt in Wendy’s mind that Moira had valuable information on how to gain power to leverage into a high position within Fiona’s growing circle of covens. It would be fun to play with Moira, torture the information from her, use Wendy’s newfound talents to make up for the embarrassment of losing the chalice, for having to make another agreement with her new demon.
Nicole was weak; no matter what her sister said, she’d obviously been banished and had come running home. Wendy had never been weak. She didn’t need her sister, but it would be nice to use her.
Wendy finished casting the protective spell around the empty club so that she would be forewarned if anyone drew near. Only a few more hours and the demon would be able to locate Grant Nelson, but Wendy wanted him in a special place. She’d spent half the day preparing Kent Galion’s house for the ritual. Wendy needed space to give the demon what she wanted-an agreement she wouldn’t have had to make if Moira hadn’t stolen the chalice. And Moira wouldn’t have been able to steal the chalice if Julie hadn’t hidden Grant Nelson from them last night.
Wendy did not like being made the fool. Julie deserved everything she got. If she survived the night, when the demon left her body Wendy would call on an incubus to deal with the traitor. She’d watch Julie suffer until she begged to die.
Wendy had wanted to die many times. Her mother, Susan, was not a kind woman. Punishments were never as simple as spankings and time-outs. When Wendy was sixteen, she’d been raped by an incubus when her mother found out she’d been practicing sex magic outside of the coven.
Susan Donovan didn’t tolerate betrayal, insolence, or anyone in her coven seeking power outside of her authority.
But Wendy grew up and got strong. She seduced the men in her mother’s coven-weak fools, every one of them-even seduced the magician who’d taken her virginity on her fourteenth birthday. She’d been a sex slave for them, but she’d had her retribution. Wendy practically glowed with pleasure remembering her mother pleading with her to stop the ritual that ended with her grisly death.
Nicole walked onto the empty dance floor as Wendy finished the protective spell. Nicole the ignorant. Nicole the stupid. Nicole the baby. Her sister had never appreciated all she’d done for her, freeing her from their horrid mother’s control. Nicole had wanted to simply kill Susan, but where was the fun in that? What was the fun if Susan didn’t suffer what Wendy had suffered
Nicole asked, “What are you doing?”
“I cast a protective spell.”
“Pam called. Grant Nelson’s partner just drove up in front of her house.”
“Pam knows what to do,” Wendy said.
“But-”
Wendy put up her finger to silence her pathetic younger sister. “I’m going to show you how easy and enjoyable victory is when it is properly orchestrated by a talented magician. Maybe you’ll learn something.”
Julie couldn’t find Moira O’Donnell. She’d checked out of her hotel and Julie had no idea where she’d gone. She thought Moira must have a powerful protective spell around her aura, because Nicole had said that even Fiona O’Donnell couldn’t locate her, and rumor had it that Fiona could find
She might not be able to find Moira, but she
Without her voice, Julie didn’t know how to communicate with Grant. Though she had great control over astral projection, she’d avoided communicating with anyone, living or dead, because of the inherent dangers to her life. Communicating took extreme focus and energy that could be replenished only once her spirit reunited with her body.
The astral body was always attached psychically to the physical body. As long as her astral projection had energy, she would be fine. But if she lost her strength, or if her spirit
Julie continued to concentrate on Grant. Pictured him, imagined touching him, kissing him, being with him. Her body flew without conscious thought over the city. This complete and total oneness with the air could not be