Thomas Hale Jurgen. I used to be a reporter. Now I’m a private detective. I’m not very courageous. I try to stay out of trouble. But my cases, like my news stories, keep taking me into strange supernatural territory . . .
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Not Today, Part One
I poured some Cheerios into a bowl. Then I remembered I was
out of milk. I hadn’t been to the store in a week. Or outside my apartment, for
that matter.
So I sprinkled some tap water over
the cereal and ate breakfast over the kitchen sink.
I managed to make coffee, although
I wasn’t sure why I should.
I staggered to the dining room
table without spilling the coffee very much, then sagged into my chair and
opened my laptop.
User name, two tries. Password, two
tries. Email password, one, two, three tries . . .
Eleven emails. Seven spam, two
bills, two potential clients.
I deleted them all.
So that was done. I sipped my
coffee. Now what? The day stretched out ahead.
A shower? I was in my bathrobe and
shorts, but a shower felt like too much effort to invest in another day spent
on my couch watching TV.
I set my cup down next to a
half-filled prescription bottle and found the remote. What to watch? Rachel
would be mad if I got ahead of Game of Thrones without her. I checked all the
Twilight Zone episodes I’d been watching. But the opening sequence was starting
to make me dizzy.
So I just clicked through the
channels until I found The Beverly Hillbillies. That was quality TV.
I muted the sound and picked up the
prescription bottle. It had my name: Tom Jurgen. And the name of the drug,
which might as well have been in ancient Etruscan. I knew it was a strong
painkiller. A doctor had given it to me after I’d been fighting a vampire.
I’d been looking at the pills for
the last three or four days. Today I opened the bottle. Poured the little white
pills into a pyramid on the table. And stared at them for a long time.
Then I swept my hand across the
table. Most of the pills went onto the floor. I sipped my coffee.
Not today.
Despite the coffee, my eyelids were
drooping. So I laid back and pulled an afghan around me, adjusted a pillow around
my head. The room grew dark.
Not today.
I woke up in a hospital bed, an IV in my wrist and guardrails
on either edge that looked like prison bars. Not the first time I’ve woken up
in a hospital. At least I wasn’t trapped in a hotel room with no exit.
I sat up, confused. “Hello?”
“You jerk.” Rachel lifted a fist to
slug my arm. Her hazelnut eyes blazed as red as her hair. “I come downstairs
after you don’t answer five calls, and you’re passed out on the couch with pills
scattered all over the place and Green Acres on the TV. Green Acres? What the
hell is that, anyway?”
Rachel’s my girlfriend. She lives
upstairs from me, and she helps me out on my cases. I’m not entirely sure why
she likes me, but we’ve been together for a long time.
She must see something in me, but right
at the moment I couldn’t imagine what.
“The nurses said I can’t actually
hit you.” She lowered her fist. “But I should.”
“Yeah.” I sat back.
Vampires . . . monsters . . . last
week we’d watched a murder . . . and before that . . . Dudovich . . . I’d
killed a dragon . . . a demon possessed Rachel, but I’d managed to set it free
. . . the Rain Killer . . .
I might have fallen asleep again.
When I blinked my eyes, Rachel was still standing over me, holding my hand.
Why was she still here? She’s
young, gorgeous and smart. She deserved better than a washed-up ex-reporter
turned private eye who could barely cover the bills, and who constantly dragged
her into situations where she was like to get killed.
“I’ll be fine.” I dropped her hand. “You can
go home.”
“Oh no.” Rachel laughed. “You’re
not getting rid of me that easily, Tom Jurgen.”
I was too tired to argue.
A doctor strode into the room.
Tall, African-American, with the usual stethoscope around his shoulders.
“Hello, Mr.—” He glanced at a tablet computer. “Is it Yurgen or Jurgen?”
I get that a lot. “Just call me
Tom. This is Rachel. She’s my, uh . . .”
“I’m his girlfriend.” Rachel
crossed her arms. “Anything you say to him you can say to me. Right, Tom?”
I nodded.
“Listen to her.”
“Well, I’m Dr. McGee.” He started,
of course, by taking my blood pressure and listening to my heart. “How are you
feeling?”
“Tired. Just . . . tired. What
happened?”
He nodded. “You weren’t responsive
when Rachel called 911. There were significant amounts of a prescription
painkiller found in your apartment.”
“I didn’t . . . I didn’t take any.”
My throat was dry. “Could I have a drink of water?”
Rachel shoved a plastic glass into
my hand. “Here.”
Dr. McGee went back to my chart on
his tablet. “There doesn’t seem to be anything physically wrong with you. High
blood pressure, exhaustion, a little dehydration, some of these enzymes are a
little high . . .” He looked up. “Do you have a high-stress job, Tom?”
I laughed. Maybe too long. After
ten seconds Rachel grabbed my shoulder. “Shut up, you idiot!”
“Sorry.” I caught my breath. “Yeah,
you could say that. I’m the guy they call when monsters are around. Vampires
and zombies and creatures that walk in the night.”
I lurched up in the bed. “I’m not
crazy. Ask Rachel. Call Detective Anita Sharpe at the CPD, she’ll tell
you—except she won’t. Nobody believes me. Nobody believed me around the Rain
Killer! Nobody believes me now! Nobody cares!”
“Tom . . .” Rachel slugged my
shoulder. Gently, for once. “You’re right. I believe you. Lots of people
believe you.”
The room was spinning. “I know. I
know. Sorry.” I rubbed her hand.
“He’s not really crazy.” She patted
my head. “A jerk sometimes, but . . . I saw it all too.”
Dr. McGee nodded. “I’m going to
prescribe some medications. And I’d like you stay here at least tonight.”
I sank back. “Fine. Whatever.” I
was going into the psych ward. The loony bin. Maybe I should have been there
all along.
He nodded again, and glanced at Rachel. “For what it’s worth, I’ve
seen strange things too. Vampire bites, claw marks I can’t explain So I don’t
think you’re crazy. But you need to rest and relax.”
“I’m sleeping a lot lately.” I shrugged.
“But it doesn’t help.”
“Do you dream?”
I tried to think. “No. It’s all
black.”
Maybe that meant something. I
didn’t know what. I didn’t know what was going on anymore. I wasn’t sure I
cared. Sleep was the only way I could stop thinking about things.
“The nurse will be back with some
medications. They’re for blood pressure and stress. Try to get some rest.” Dr.
McGee glanced at Rachel. “See you soon.”
What the hell? Was he hitting on
her? A young handsome doctor hitting on . . . a young hot woman? I couldn’t
blame him. But I was probably overreacting. I slumped down in the bed.
“You idiot!” Rachel leaned down
over the bed. I felt her breath on my eyes. “Tell me you didn’t just try to
kill yourself.”
Not today.
“No.” I shook my head. “I’m just. .
. . tired.”
She didn’t believe me. I didn’t
blame her.
She lurched up. “Well, that’s too
bad. Because I’ve got bad news. I probably shouldn’t tell you, but—”
“You’re breaking up with me.” I
closed my eyes and waited for her to leave.
“No, you dummy.” She stroked my
arm, and then kissed my forehead. “But . . . remember my friend Carrie?”
That was a few years ago. “She
hates me, doesn’t she?”
“No. Well, she did, but . . .”
Rachel sighed. “Carrie needs your help.”
I woke up the next morning, hungry. For the first time in
four days. My brain felt fuzzy, and at first I thought it was just from
sleeping through the night. Then a nurse came in with a cup of pills.
I took
them. Maybe they’d work. Anything was better than sitting on my couch watching
The Beverly Hillbillies and trying to get up the nerve to take the pills.
I realized
that was an improvement on my mental state from yesterday.
So I ordered
breakfast. It was like room service. I ate eggs, bacon, hash browns, sausage,
and watery coffee while watching the news. The drugs they’d given me seemed to
be working already. I didn’t even shout at the footage from the latest White
House press conference.
Then Carrie
Burke walked into the room.
Carrie was
Rachel’s friend. She hated me.
“Hi.” I
perched the bed up and turned the TV down. “Nice to see you.”
“Yeah.” She
sat down in the chair next to my bed. Carrie had long dreadlocks and dark skin.
“I need your help.”
“Did Rachel
mention I’m possibly having a nervous breakdown?” I could feel my blood
pressure rising again. “Why are you here? You hate me.”
“I don’t
hate you.” She sighed. “Okay, there was a time when I just thought Rachel could
do better. I didn’t know—”
“Yeah.” I
wanted to throw my lukewarm coffee at the window. “She deserves someone better.
I get that. Go home.”
Carrie
stood up. “I don’t know what Rachel sees in you, but that’s not my problem. The voarkla’s back.”
Oh god.
The voarkla
was a monster from another dimension. The first time I’d met it, years ago, it
had come through a portal created by a computer engineer trying to use quantum
computing to speed online connections.
The voarkla
had killed at least three people before being banished to its own world again.
If it was back—
I threw the
sheets off. “What about Ponto? Pontoval?” Oops. I flung the sheets back.
“Sorry. Can you help me find my pants?”
“Nothing I
haven’t seen before.” Carrie smirked. “But
don’t worry, Pontoavallian’s not here.”
I lay back
on the bed and pulled the sheet back. “So what do you want?”
“I don’t know how much you remember.”
I remembered it all. The voarkla,
like a wolverine with more teeth and a worse temper. And Ponto, a little
wheesling. Pontoavallian . . .
I forced my muggy mind to think. “The
goddess who came through . . . her name was Lionna. She said she was going to
close our world off.”
“Well, it
didn’t work.” Carrie stood up. “I’ll see what I can do. Thanks for your help.”
My heart
pounded. “I didn’t help you at all.”
“Yeah, you
did.” She reached down to shake my hand. “You just need to take care of
yourself now. For Rachel.”
“Okay.” I
was suddenly tired again. “I guess.”
Not Today, Part Two
When I woke up, Rachel was there again. She was reading a
book.
I rubbed my
eyes. “You been here long?”
She
stretched her arms. “I have to go soon. Work to do, as long as you’re not going
to try to kill yourself again.”
“I wasn’t
going to kill myself. I just wanted . . .” I sipped some water. “Carrie was
here.”
“Yeah.”
Rachel shook her head. “I told her not to, but—”
“The
voarkla’s back.”
“Not your
problem.” She stuffed her book in a bag. “Let someone else handle it.”
I sat up. “Who
else knows about the voarkla? The cops? Carrie’s great, but she’s not exactly a
ninja—”
“Goddamn
it, Tom!” Rachel looked like she wanted to pound her fist on my chest. “You
don’t have to solve every problem in this city! Let somebody else be the hero
for a change!”
She lurched
around, leaning over the windowsill. Maybe she was crying.
“I’m
sorry.” My voice was a whisper. “I’ll just stay here.”
“I just
want . . .” Rachel stared out the window. “I want you to be better.”
“Yeah.” I
nodded. “Me too.”
Once Rachel was gone I turned on the news. By the time lunch
came—a decent cheeseburger and onion rings, and more watery coffee—I’d found
reports of two killings by the voarkla.
The first
time it came to this reality, it had somehow roamed through computer networks,
bursting out of screens to slash its prey. Now it seemed to be moving directly
through wifi. A man playing Pokemon Go had been attacked by some kind of animal
near the Lincoln Park lagoon. A woman
just walking down the beach, talking on her smartphone, was killed by a beast
that came out of nowhere and then ran back into the trees. Police were looking
for a rabid coyote.
I didn’t
have my laptop. But I still had my phone.
I spent
half an hour looking up every news report of the killings, and every other
report of attacks by strange creatures in the last 24 hours.
Two more
people had been mauled by the voarkla, but survived. A man walking a dog early
in the morning—the dog was dead, but the man was in the hospital. Maybe in a
room near me. The other victim, an elderly woman, had fought off the voarkla
with a cane. She was braver and tougher than me.
I sipped
the last of my coffee. I was feeling better now, but I didn’t know if I was
feeling the effects of the drugs or just adrenalin. Was this PTSD? Was I going
to crash when it was all over?
I didn’t
care. Right now I felt alive again. I had something to do.
Of course,
I was still stuck in the hospital. And I knew I wasn’t in any shape to find my
pants and leave.
So I did
the only thing I could think of.
“Jurgen?”
Detective Anita Sharpe of Chicago Police Department never sounded happy to hear
from me. “I’m not supposed to talk to you.”
“Wait,
what? Did Hughes—”
“No, your
girlfriend. She called me last night. She’s a spitfire, that one.”
I groaned.
“Yeah.” I couldn’t blame Sharpe for not wanting to piss Rachel off.
“Here’s the
thing.” I was suddenly sleepy. Maybe the adrenalin was wearing off. Or the
drugs were kicking in? “Those murders—the lagoon? And the beach? They’re from a
creature from another dimension called the . . . the voarkla.”
“The what?
I’m only in charge of vampires. Are we going to have to set up another squad
or—Jurgen? Are you there?”
The
hospital room swam around me. “Be careful. It’s dangerous. I sent it back once
. . . well, I didn’t do it by myself, but it got sent back, and now it’s here
again, I don’t know why . . . ohh . . . ohh . . .”
“Jurgen?”
Sharpe shouted into the phone. “What the hell is going on?”
I gasped.
Heart attack? Panic attack? “Tell Rachel . . . tell her . . .”
I looked up
at the window. The sun streamed through the blinds.
And the voarkla was outside.
Laughing.
I dropped the phone. Okay, I was
going to die. But I grabbed the control wrapped around the arm of my bed and
pressed the call button. “Help!” I shouted. “Help . . .”
Dr. McGee took my blood pressure again. “That’s better. How
do you feel?”
“Fine.” I
glanced at the window. The voarkla was gone. “Just peachy.”
Rachel stormed into the room in a
gray T-shirt and black shorts. “What the hell? You can’t just sit and watch bad
TV like everyone else? What’s wrong with you?”
“He’s okay.” Dr. McGee checked my
heart with his stethoscope, although I had the feeling he was only doing it to
keep Rachel from asking more questions. “It looks like just a panic attack. You
just need some rest, Tom. No more watching the news.”
He gazed at Rachel. Was he checking
out her legs? “Try not to let him get upset.”
“Have you talked to him at all?”
Rachel glared at me. “It’s your fault if I miss this deadline.”
“I’ll let you talk alone.” Dr.
McGee left. I didn’t blame him.
Rachel sat down. “I get a call from
that cop, Sharpe? She said you were dying.”
“You called her yesterday.” I
sipped some water. “She’s a little scared of you.” I managed a grin.
“I hope so.” Rachel stood up and
started circling the room. “Look, we’ve been together, what—three years? Four?
That’s longer than my last two boyfriends combined. How long were you married?”
I tried to figure out where this
was going. “Three years. I think. What does this have to do with—”
“Just tell me what’s going on with
you! I can take it. I just want to know . . .” She stopped, facing away from
me. “I just need to know.”
I watched her breathing slowly, and
tried to think of the right answer. “The voarkla’s back. I think it came back
for me. I saw it right here—”
“That’s not what I mean. And you know
it.”
Yeah. We could deal with the
voarkla. But Rachel meant . . .
I closed my eyes. “I just want to
die.”
Rachel didn’t move.
“I’m tired of all this.” I rubbed
my forehead. “Dudovich is dead. I almost got you killed last week. Jesus
Christ, you got possessed by a demon! I got abducted by aliens. We watched a
woman stake her husband. A little girl sent an assassin to kill everyone in her
family. I just can’t deal with it anymore.”
I lowered the bed all the way down.
“It’s okay. I’m sorry.”
She swung around. “You can’t do
this to me! You offered to marry me once! Okay, I don’t want to get married,
but if I did—”
I held up my hands. “Okay, okay!
Just leave me alone. All right?”
Rachel stalked to the door. “Is
that what you want? Really?”
No. I couldn’t imagine never seeing
Rachel again. “No. Please don’t go.”
I was crying. Damn it. What the
hell was wrong with me?
“You asshole.” Rachel walked back
and leaned down over my bed. “Shut up. Stop weeping. I’m here. I’m here . . .”
“Yeah . .
.” I drifted off.
Not Today, Part Three
I woke up in darkness. Someone had turned all the lights
off. I heard Rachel snoring softly in a chair, the book in her lap. I wondered
if I’d missed ordering dinner.
Late
sunlight flickered through the blinds.
I picked up
the TV remote, turned the sound down, and started clicking through the news
broadcasts.
Weather.
Shootings and robberies. The president’s latest tweets. Then—
“Another
strange animal attack on the city’s north side near the lakefront.”
I sat up.
The story was sparse on details. The reporter stood with Lake Michigan behind
her. All she did was regurgitate the official story, although she did quote a
few witnesses, who described the attack as “gruesome” and “bloody.” The victim
was in a nearby hospital, expected to recover.
Oh hell. I
picked up my phone. Somewhere I had Carrie’s number from years ago. I scrolled
down. Rachel stayed asleep.
Carrie
picked up. “What? Why are you calling me?”
“It’s still
out there. Attacking people. What are you doing about it?”
“I’m trying
to find Lionna! She’s the one who sent it back the first time. Look,” her voice
trembled. “I have to get off. The voarkla is coming through wifi now. It knows
I’m looking for it—”
She hung
up.
Fine. I dropped the phone on my
bed. Let Carrie handle it. Not my problem. All I had to do was take some
medicine, order another cheeseburger and a salad for Rachel, and maybe tomorrow
I’d get to go home.
But if the voarkla was looking for Carrie—
“Rachel?” I picked up my phone.
“Where does Carrie live?”
“What?” She lurched forward, dropping
her book. “I just dozed off! What are you talking about?”
“The voarkla. If it’s coming after
her, she’s in danger. We have to do something.” I punched numbers on my phone.
“She’s at—give me a minute . . .”
She dug into her bag. “What’s going on?”
“The voarkla!” I slumped, weak
again. A moment ago I’d been ready to pull my IVs out, jump out of the bed,
grab my pants, and go into the battle. Now I could barely move.
I was useless.
Damn it,
damn it, damn it . . .
My phone
buzzed. “Yeah?” Anita Sharpe.
I didn’t
remember actually finding her number. But I managed to talk. “You’ve got to
send someone to . . . uh . . .”
I held my
phone up. “Tell her the address. Please.”
Rachel took
my phone. “Anita? This is Rachel. I don’t know what’s going on, but . . . okay.
Here’s the address. Thanks.”
She shoved
the phone back at me. “She’s sending someone. Now you just sit back and calm
down, damn it.”
I nodded.
“Yeah. Right. I was going to order dinner. And a salad for you. And . . .”
My eyes
flickered at the window.
The voarkla
perched outside, its sharp teeth grinning.
My body
went stiff. Then I realized—it wasn’t trying to kill Carrie. It was hunting
me.
I took a
deep breath. Maybe one of my last. But as depressed as I’d been a few days ago—a
few minutes—suddenly I wanted to live at least five more minutes.
I grabbed
for the call button.
Then the
glass broke. It shattered across the room.
“Rachel!” I
rolled over, punching at the bed control. “Get out, get out!”
The voarkla
jumped through the window and roared, its jaws wide. I grabbed a pillow—the
only weapon I had—and thrust it at its face. I kicked as hard as I could,
trying to scramble away.
Rachel jumped
up. “What the—”
She threw
her book at the voarkla, and then she was at the door, yelling for help. She’s
no damsel in distress, but she knows when to call for the cavalry.
I somehow
managed to shift the guard rails on my bed down. I hit the floor with a hard
bump and swore. I couldn’t exactly roll under the bed’s wheels. All I could do
was try to keep the voarkla busy while it tried to kill me. Maybe Rachel could
get away.
The voarkla
leaned over the side of the bed, drooling. The claws in its hands looked sharp.
I was
ready. Not really, but what else could I do? I lifted my arms, shielding my
face. “Come and get me, you asshole. Just try it.”
The voarkla
jumped down—
And then
everything froze.
The voarkla
hung in the air above me. But I could move. I rolled away, gasping as my heart
pounded.
Rachel
stood at the door, her mouth open, her hand high. But paralyzed.
One shard
of glass floated inches above the tile. I flicked a finger at it. It didn’t
move.
Was I dead?
I sat up. My heart slowed down. Maybe
this was my near-death hallucination. I waited for the white light.
Instead a woman appeared before me.
I’d seen her before.
She was tall, with dark skin, and she
wore a long gray robe. Her feet were big and bare on the tile.
Lionna. The goddess from the other
universe.
She looked around, then zeroed her
eyes on me. “You.”
“Yeah.” I slumped on the floor.
“You’ve got me.”
She walked—no, she glided—across
the floor. “I’ve seen you before.”
“Yeah.” I managed to sit up on my
elbows. “Ponto—Pontoavallian? Is he okay?”
Lionna smiled. “Yes. I know you.”
Great. I looked over at Rachel,
still motionless at the door. “Look, you can do what you want with me. I don’t
care. Just let her get away. That’s all I’m asking you. And if you can . . .”
I wiped an arm over my eyes. “Just
say hi to Ponto for me, will you? He might remember me.”
The room went dark. Okay, this was
it. I took a deep breath.
“Pontoavallian says hello.” The
words floated in the air. “He wishes you well.”
I blinked. What?
The fluorescent lights overhead
flickered. Then harsh light flooded the room.
Rachel was shouting at the door. The
voarkla was gone.
But I was still alive.
Not today.
I slumped down and fell asleep.
They sent me home the next day, with a prescription for
anti-depressant meds and the names of a few psychiatrists.
Rachel
walked me down to her Prius. “You are taking a few weeks off. I can’t do this
again.”
“Is Carrie
okay?” I managed to buckle myself up.
“The
voarkla’s gone. Hopefully it’ll stay away this time.” She started the car.
I put a
hand on her arm. “Why are we here?” I had to ask. “I mean . . . not the car,
not the hospital. Just . . . you and me.”
“Right now
you ask me this?” Rachel pounded the wheel. “Christ, I sound like Yoda.” She
twisted around in her seat. “All right, I’m just going to say this once, so
listen, all right?”
I nodded. I
was feeling a little better. But I had to hear something positive.
Rachel
stared through the windshield. “I had . . . okay, a lot of boyfriends when I
was younger. I’m not going to say how many, but don’t get the idea I was some
kind of a slut.”
“No.” I shook
my head. “Of course not.”
“Most of
them were liars.” Rachel sighed. “They played games, and I never knew where
they were coming from. When I met you . . .” Her lips curled in a smile. “Well,
after a while, you seemed reliable. It’s what I was looking for.”
Then Rachel shrugged. “It took a
while.” She patted my hand. “But not that long.”
“Okay.” She
straightened up in her seat. “All right? Are we done?”
“Yeah.”
Actually, I’d always thought Rachel was the dependable one. “Thanks.”
“Just shut
up and let me drive.” She peered in her rearview mirror. “Let’s go home.”
***
Saturday, September 9, 2017
Witches' Notebook, Part One
Karen Yester folded her hands on my table. “We were trying
to bring the dead back to life.”
I tried to keep my face neutral.
I’ve had some experience with the supernatural. Vampires, demons, ghosts—more
than I like, but it’s making up more and more of my business these days. “So
how can I help you?”
She sighed. “When I was in college,
I was part of a group of—well, witches. It was guys and women. Not exactly a
Wicca coven. We were just playing with doing spells. Make people float in the air,
grow giant flowers? Some of them worked. I was in charge of writing down all
the spells. It was fun for a while. I kept the notebook for all the spells.”
She paused. “Then we started with animals.”
“Like what?”
“Hamsters from the pet store. We’d
suffocate them in plastic bags and Tupperware. Then we tried to bring them back
to life. We . . . a bunch of them died. The last one came back to life. We did
it a few more times, until all the pet stores stopped selling them to us. And
then Marissa wanted to start trying with . . . bigger things.”
She looked
down at the floor. “Felicia had a cat in her apartment, and she was going to .
. . let us do it. But I was sick of it. Throwing dead hamsters in the dumpster,
staying up all night trying out new spells? So I told Marissa I was quitting,
and I was burning the notebook with all the spells.”
She leaned
back in the chair, looking out at the twilight in the window behind me. “All
those little hamsters . . .”
I pushed a box of tissues across
the table.
I wished
Rachel was here. She’s my upstairs neighbor, my girlfriend, and she’s sort of
psychic. Rachel can sense things, and she has friends who know a lot about
magic.
But she was
busy designing a web page for her own client. And I hadn’t expected this meeting
in my dining room to turn quite so dark.
Karen blew
her nose. “But I didn’t burn it.”
“The
notebook?”
“We didn’t want to put anything on
computers. This was ten years ago, 2006 or whatever? But we wanted to be ‘old school.’ ” She
lifted hands for sarcastic air quotes. “No technology, just parchment. I was in
charge of keeping track of the spells and writing them down. What worked, what
didn’t, and the results. I wrote it all down. Until I couldn’t do it anymore.”
She grabbed another tissue.
So I asked
again. “What can I do for you?”
“Marissa
called me.” Karen Yester crumpled up her tissues on the table. “Marissa Sayers.
She was always in charge of the group. She wants the notebook.”
“And she
knows you still have it?”
“She always
knew I was lying. The group was breaking up anyway. She was mad at me about . .
. stuff. I don’t know why she’s doing this now. I just want her to go away and
stop bothering me. I’ll give her the damn notebook.” She blew her nose. “But I
want someone there with me when I hand it over. It won’t be dangerous. I’m just
afraid . . .”
Karen wiped
her eyes with another tissue. “I’m scared she’ll try it on me.”
At 7:30 p.m. I parked my Honda in front of Marissa Sayers’
condo building on Chicago’s Gold Coast. “Okay. Here we are.”
Rachel unbuckled her belt She’s got
red hair, hazelnut eyes, and a mean jab. “Why am I here again?”
I unlocked the doors. “You know
more about this stuff than I do. There probably won’t be any trouble. If there
is—well, just run. I’ll be right behind you. Or possibly ahead of you.”
“You better
run fast, or I’m leaving you behind.” But she kissed my cheek.
The doorman
was young Hispanic man with a nametag: Raoul K. He called up to Sayers’
apartment and then opened the door with a fob.
Karen was waiting in the lobby. She
carried a canvas bag slung over one shoulder. “Hi.”
“Ms. Yester,
this is my associate, Rachel Dunn. She’s psychic. I told you I’d ask her to—”
“I just
want to get this over with.” She punched the elevator button. But in the
elevator she held out a hand. “Sorry. Nice to meet you.” They shook hands.
On the 17th
floor we knocked at a door.
“Karen! Come in!” Marissa Sayers wore
tight tan slacks and sandals, and a wine-colored blouse then dangled loosely
from her shoulders. She reached forward for a hug.
Karen leaned forward, awkwardly.
“Hi, Marissa.”
Rachel nudged my arm. “Stop
checking her out.”
I’d already
checked Sayers out on the internet. A real estate attorney, with degrees with
from the University of Illinois and Purdue. Two lawsuits for breach of duty,
settled. One award from a state realtors’ association.
And, okay, a few pictures of her in
a bikini from her Facebook page, from a vacation in Jamaica. I’d saved those in
a private folder. I’m a guy.
Sayers led
us into her living room. A wide window had a dramatic view of Lake Michigan in
the twilight—clouds drifting across the sky, sailboats rocking on the water. A
long leather couch dominated the floor.
“I didn’t
catch your names.” She smiled at Rachel and me. “Why are you here?”
“Tom
Jurgen.” I held out a card. “And this is my associate, Rachel.”
“Mr.
Jurgen’s a private detective.” Karen dropped her bag on the thick gray carpet.
“I wanted someone here when I handed this over.”
Sayers’ eyes
fluttered. “Of course. Let me get you a drink. Curtis?”
A short man
in jeans and a black T-shirt emerged from the open kitchen door. “Yes?”
“Get some
drinks for our guests.” She waved a hand. “The usual for me.”
He blinked, as if waking up from a
doze. “Hi. I’m Curtis. What can I get you?”
“Just a glass of water.” Karen
glanced at me. “We’re not staying long.”
Rachel
reached out to shake his hand. “Hi, I’m Rachel. Maybe a beer? And one for my
boyfriend.”
They held
hands for a moment. Rachel’s shoulder went stiff, and she let her hand drop. “I
didn’t get your name. Curtis . . .?”
“Just
Curtis.” He nodded. “Beer. Water. Marissa?”
“The usual.
Let’s sit down.” Sayers sank into a chair in front of a long glass-topped table.
“Karen, it’s so good to see you again. What are you doing now?”
“I’m in
marketing at D&K.” Karen zipped her bag open. “Social media, SEO, all that
stuff. You?”
“Real
estate.” Sayers crossed an ankle across one knee. “It’s booming all over the
city. More highrises coming up every day.”
Curtis
emerged from the kitchen, holding a tray full of drinks. Rachel and I took our
beers. Sayers took a gulp of her white wine, and Karen sipped her water.
“Curtis,
take a seat.” I sipped my beer. “Or are you working?”
Rachel
kicked my ankle.
“I’m . . .”
He seemed confused. “I have stuff to do. Maybe later?”
“Go ahead,
Curtis.” Sayers waved a hand. “I’ll call you if I need you.”
He nodded,
like an obedient butler, and went back into the other room.
Karen yanked
her bag open and dropped the notebook on the table. It had a brown leather
cover, and it looked at least 20 years old. “Here it is. You can have it.”
Sayers
leaned forward and started flipping through the pages. “Thank you.”
“What are
you going to do with it?” I sipped my beer.
Sayers
giggled. “What do you think?”
“If you’re
planning to start up again . . .” Karen shuddered. “With cats or dogs or, I
don’t know—”
“We did it,
didn’t we?” Sayers slammed the notebook shut. “It’s all here. And I’ve got
more.” She sat back. “Death doesn’t have to be the end. Do you remember when
your grandmother died, and how you—”
“Don’t even
talk about that!” Karen grabbed her bag. “I’m out of here. Keep it if you want
it, but don’t drag me back into this!”
Curtis
returned from the kitchen. “Is something wrong?”
“We’re
going.” Karen waved an arm at me. “Come on.”
Sayers smiled,
as if we were leaving a cocktail party early. “Well, it was nice to see you
again, Karen.” She didn’t go for another hug. But she did glance at Rachel and
me. “And meeting you two.”
“Yeah.” Rachel
pulled me to my feet. “Sorry to drink and run, but . . .”
I gulped my
beer and set the half-finished bottle on the table. Rachel pulled at my wrist,
but I stood my ground on the carpet. “I have to tell you—raising the dead? I’ve
seen it before. It doesn’t always work out the way you want.”
“We’ll see.” Sayers picked up the notebook.
Karen was
waiting for the elevator down the hall, tapping impatiently on her phone.
“Okay, that
was weird.” I looked back at Sayers’ door. “Am I right about what’s going on?”
Rachel punched
my arm. “Couldn’t you feel it?”
“Yeah.” I’m
not psychic like Rachel, but I could pick up the vibe. “Curtis. He’s dead.”
“I saw the
same thing.” Karen jammed the phone in her back pocket. “With the hamsters.”
I glanced
at Sayers’ door. “But she didn’t have your notebook.”
“I wasn’t
the only one taking notes.” The elevator opened. “I just took the best.”
A man was
riding down. He checked Rachel out as the elevator descended. I couldn’t
exactly blame him, but I was annoyed that we couldn’t keep talking.
In the
lobby Karen split away from us, walking as fast as she could toward the
revolving door. “Wait!” I ran around the short man and followed her outside.
“We need to talk.”
“No, I’m
done.” Karen wheeled around on the street. Her body was trembling. “I’ll mail
you a check.”
I couldn’t
stop her. I stood back as her Uber slowed down at the curb. She jumped in and
slammed the door. The car sped away.
“So that went well.” I unlocked the
Honda.
Rachel got
in and buckled her seat belt. “Now what?”
They’d
killed hamsters as experiments. Now Sayers had a dead man working for her. Not
exactly a zombie. But not a human. And she had Karen’s notebook.
“I don’t
know.” I started the car. “Let’s just get away from here.”
I couldn’t sleep. By the time Rachel came down the next
morning I’d been up since 4 a.m., and I was wired by coffee. My hand fingers
shook on the keyboard as I tapped at my laptop.
“So what
have you got?” Rachel poured herself a mug of coffee.
I turned
the laptop to let her see. “Curtis Atlee. Facebook friend of Marissa Sayers.
That part was easy.” I wondered how The Big Sleep would have turned out if
Philip Marlowe had social media in the 1940s.
The profile page showed Curtis, a
bright smile on his face, leaning into a selfie. His other pictures showed him
eating lunch, walking a dog, and laughing with friends.
“What’s
their connection? Aside from social media?” Rachel scrolled down. “He was
posting two or three times a day up until last week. Ever since—” She looked up
at my Sierra Club calendar on the wall. “Almost two weeks. Nothing. Like he’d—”
“Died. Yeah.” I rubbed my eyes.
“They might be college friends. He has a degree from Purdue, like Sayers, but
Karen didn’t go there. So she wouldn’t know him from there.” I rubbed my eyes.
My coffee was lukewarm. Time for a
fresh pot. “He’s got an employer listed. Not Marissa Sayers’ office. I’m going
to call them at nine.” I stood up and checked the time over the door to the
kitchen. 7:30. “Do you want some cereal?”
“What about
Sayers?” Rachel followed me into the kitchen, where I got bowls from my
cupboard, milk from my refrigerator, and a box of Lucky Charms from the pantry.
“She’s on
my other list.” I poured cereal. “Are you eating?”
“That?”
Rachel grimaced. “I guess.”
Out on the
dining room table I tapped at my laptop while Rachel ate. “Marissa’s a real
estate lawyer. Nothing about dabbling in witchcraft or necromancy on any of her
social profile pages, obviously. Not much of an internet footprint at all, but
I’m checking out all her friends and contacts—wait a minute.” I picked up my
phone. “I’m an idiot.”
“Well, I
knew that.” But she nudged her foot against my leg instead of kicking me. “I
should call Karen Yester to find out who else was in that group.”
But Karen
didn’t pick up. I left a message and went back to going through Sayers’
Facebook friends. She had 216. This could take all morning. And I had a client
meeting at 10.
Rachel
finished her cereal and left. I worked for as long as I could, and then I took
a shower and headed out for my meeting.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)