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The Graves of Plague Canyon (The Downwinders Book 3)

Page 18

by Michael Richan


  “The fire and the stone,” Deem said. “I’m still not sure about all that.”

  “I have been forming a theory,” Carma said, waving a knife through the air the way she would normally wave a lit cigarette. “David, you said your parents told you that giraffe would protect you?”

  David looked up from his plate. “That’s what they always said. It had been in my room since I was little.”

  “Well, it’s not uncommon for gifted parents to place a good luck charm in their children’s rooms,” Carma said, “such as a necklace that’s been made from a mineral in the River, or a sachet of River ash, or something like that. They do offer some small measure of protection from the random ghost here and there. Your parents may very well have placed some type of protection in that giraffe, David. I don’t suppose you noticed anything when you opened it?”

  “I didn’t,” he replied. “But I wasn’t looking for anything either. I just removed enough stuffing to allow the camera to fit.”

  “And this stone,” Carma continued, turning it over in her other hand, “appears to me to be a talisman. They don’t normally heat up like this one did.”

  “I’ll have a scar for the rest of my life,” Deem said, reaching down to the bandages on her side.

  “The camera you put in the giraffe, David, was it powerful?” Carma asked. “I mean, it must have operated from a battery, correct?”

  “Yeah, a battery,” he replied. “And it was wireless, transmitting to my laptop without any cords.”

  “I’m beginning to think there was a confluence of events,” Carma said. “The protective elements inside the giraffe were activated when Lizzy attacked you, but they were amplified by the electronics somehow, and the interaction of the two protective elements, amplified in a strange way, made the talisman more powerful, like a reflective talisman. That would mean that when Lizzy attacked you, she was attacking herself, which is how a reflective talisman works. The giraffe and the talisman both overheated from the reaction, the giraffe bursting into flames, and the talisman burning a hole into you, Deem. And when Lizzy pushed on the syringe, she thought she was injecting you, but she was really injecting herself. Which is, apparently, what happened.”

  Carma held up the stone for everyone to see. “Had this not been in your pocket, and had David not given you that amped up giraffe, we might not be enjoying your presence around the table tonight, Deem.”

  Deem shuddered. David was sitting next to her, and she grabbed his hand. “If you’d like to give me another stuffed animal from your collection at home, I’d be happy to take one off your hands!” she said.

  “I have a hippo you might enjoy,” David replied.

  “Well, it scares the piss out of me,” Warren said. He was sitting across from Deem, next to Winn, and Deem could see the look of worry on his face. “You could have been killed.”

  “It’s not the first time,” Winn said nonchalantly. “Deem isn’t afraid to take on some bad ass shit.”

  “I wasn’t able to kill her, though,” Deem said. “When Samaria told me to do it, I was looking for every reason under the sun to avoid it.”

  “That’s natural,” Carma replied. “That’s human. That’s why we’re the good guys. Lizzy killed others by command, filled with self-righteousness, without any second-guessing. You’re not like that. You question things, look for other solutions.”

  “I guess our trap for her was a bust,” Winn said, eating more pie. “She saw right through it.”

  “These operatives are becoming more and more sophisticated,” Carma said. “It’s not like the old days, when you could peek through the cracks in a log cabin. We’re going to have to up our game if we’re going to stay on top of these zealots.”

  Deem watched Warren’s face as he resumed eating. He looked troubled. Deem wasn’t about to dig into his concerns here at the table, in front of everyone. She’d wait for later.

  ▪ ▪ ▪

  It was still twilight, but the temperature had dropped to a comfortable seventy-five degrees, and Winn and David were on the back lawn, tossing a football and talking between themselves, laughing. Winn was still limping, but he was able to keep up with David. Carma had gone back inside for a moment to retrieve more iced teas, leaving Deem and Warren in the large lounge chairs.

  “You looked worried at dinner,” Deem said.

  “That was quite a story,” Warren replied. “It was a little more intense than I’m used to.”

  “My world is much stranger than most, I admit,” Deem said.

  “All this River stuff is really weird and bizarre,” Warren said. “It’s cool in a way, but kind of freaky. I mean, ghosts? Seeing dead people? That would blow my mind. But then you top it off with President Dayton and this whole underground world that uses religion to try and manipulate things in the River, and people who are gifted, and the barbarity of what they’re willing to do — yeah, it freaks me out a little.”

  “I can’t change who I am,” Deem said.

  “Oh, I wouldn’t want you to change,” Warren said. “I just have to figure out how to handle it. I hate the idea of you being in danger.”

  “I look at it this way,” Deem said, relaxing back in her lounger. “Everything everyone does every day is dangerous. There’s a heart attack or a bike accident or a stray bullet just waiting to happen, all the time, even though people don’t think about it. The threats I face are just more visible, that’s all. In some ways, they’re easier to deal with than someone t-boning you in an intersection.”

  “Can I ever see it?” Warren asked.

  “See what?”

  “The River?”

  She paused. “I don’t know how. I wish I could buy you a day pass and let you see how it looks, but I’ve never heard of such a thing. Either you can go there, like I and Winn and David can, or you can’t.”

  “And Carma,” Warren added. “Her too. I’m the lone man out.”

  “That doesn’t make you any less handsome,” she replied. He began to blush.

  “You’ll need to keep spending time with Winn, I suppose?” Warren asked. “You two are going to keep working together?”

  “We will,” Deem replied. “I trust him. It’s a lot easier to deal with the shit that pops up if you have someone like him you can rely on.”

  “And David?”

  “Carma’s right, someone’s got to give him some training, or he’s going to make a lot of unnecessary mistakes. I suppose it’ll be me and Winn, although Winn doesn’t seem too keen on the idea.”

  “They seem to get along,” Warren said as they watched David tackle Winn. The two rolled on the grass, laughing.

  “I think Winn’s eased up on him,” Deem replied. “The role David played in all this wound up saving my life, and Winn recognizes that. We’ll have to see if Winn changes his mind about helping David out down the road. He tends to soften up over time.”

  Carma reappeared with a large tray of iced tea and lemonade. She set it down on a nearby table and poured herself a drink. “You can make your own Arnold Palmers,” she said. “Everyone likes the balance of iced tea and lemonade a little different, and I don’t want to serve improperly balanced drinks.”

  Carma sat next to them in a padded chair, observing David and Winn on the lawn. “They’d better be careful or Winn will rip that wound open.” She took a sip and made a funny face. “Ooo,” she said, pulling the glass from her lips. “You may notice slightly more vodka in the lemonade than I’d intended.”

  “You want a glass?” Warren asked Deem, rising from the lounge chair and walking to the table.

  “Please!” Deem replied.

  “Lyman wants to see us both tonight,” Carma said to Deem. “Will you be available?”

  “Sure, what time?” Deem replied.

  “Midnight or so,” Carma answered. “He’s had some disturbing news, and wants us to look into something for him.”

  “Sure,” Deem replied. “I’ve got some news for him, too.”

  “What’s
that?”

  “Lizzy killed David’s parents, but she didn’t kill Claude,” Deem said. “She tried to take credit for it, telling me she’d slit his throat. Claude wasn’t killed that way. He was gutted.”

  Carma sighed. “Maybe she forgot how she killed him?”

  “It seemed more like she was lying,” Deem replied. “I asked her if she did it, and it was like she was trying to take credit for something she knew would impress me. It didn’t ring true.”

  Carma sighed. “I guess we’ll need to continue the search for Claude’s killer.”

  Warren returned with Deem’s glass and handed it to her. “Heavy on the lemonade,” he said as he sat down.

  “You just want to get her drunk,” Carma said.

  “You see everything, Carma,” Warren replied.

  “How’s the scanning coming, Deem?” Carma asked.

  “One more day and it’ll be done,” Deem replied. “I had no idea how long and tedious it would all be. At least I can start going through it soon. I’m hoping we can pick up some new information on Dayton from it.”

  “You’ll be moving back to Mesquite after you’re done?” Carma asked.

  “I suppose so,” Deem replied. “You’ve been so kind to let me stay here while I scan.”

  “Nonsense, the pleasure’s been all mine,” Carma replied. “You know, if you roomed here, you’d be a lot closer to Warren than way out there in Mesquite.”

  “Are you offering me a place to stay?” Deem asked, surprised. “On a permanent basis?”

  “Well, I was just thinking that you’re old enough to be out on your own now, instead of living at home,” Carma said. “Besides, I like having you around. I like the energy it gives the house. So long as you clean up and do as I say, of course, and maintain appropriate levels of courtesy. I know Lyman won’t object.”

  “Do you want rent?” Deem asked.

  “The occasional task will suffice,” Carma said. “We have a lot of work that needs to get done.”

  “Like finding callum for a sick niece?” Deem smiled at her.

  “That paid your rent for the next year!” Carma said, smiling back.

  “I’d be delighted to stay, Carma,” Deem replied. “My mother might be disappointed, but she spends so much time with her sister now, I don’t think she’ll mind too much. All my River stuff wigs her out, anyway.”

  “What about David?” Carma asked, looking out into the yard, where David was preparing to pass the ball to Winn. “I can’t bear the idea of him alone in that house in Ivins with all those reminders of his parents everywhere he turns. Breaks my heart.”

  “What did you have in mind?” Deem asked.

  “Well, I was thinking it’d be a lot easier for you to train him if he lived here too. God knows I’ve got plenty of bedrooms upstairs, and he’d have company around who understand him. I’d have to check with Lyman on that, of course.”

  “I think it’s a great idea, if you want to do it,” Deem said. “It’s your house, Carma. I feel like we’d be taking over.”

  “How ridiculous,” Carma said. “What I like about David is how incredibly courteous he is. You don’t see that much these days. If I were going to offer up a room to someone, it’d be someone like him.”

  “How do you think he’s handling his parent’s finances?” Warren asked. “Has he said?”

  “He hasn’t, to me,” Carma replied. “That’ll be something to investigate and see if he’s doing things properly. What nineteen-year-old even knows how to balance a checkbook? I don’t want anyone taking advantage of him. You handle his River training, Deem, and I’ll look to his temporal needs.”

  They sat quietly for a while, watching Winn and David run back and forth over the large lawn, Winn limping with each step, passing the ball to each other and chasing each other for an occasional tackle.

  Deem thought about the idea of living at Carma’s instead of Mesquite, and something inside her clicked. This is the right move for me, she thought. I’ll be surrounded by allies and protected from enemies, at least here at the house. I like being here. Carma and Lyman feel like family. The place just feels right to me.

  Night was falling, and the earliest stars were out. She leaned back in the lounger, raised the glass to her lips, and took a sip. It was heavy on the vodka, but she didn’t mind. For the first night in a while she intended to have a full night’s sleep.

  ###

  Michael Richan lives in Seattle, Washington.

  You can contact Michael at www.michaelrichan.com.

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  ▪ ▪ ▪

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  ▪ ▪ ▪

  More titles in The Downwinders series are coming, with new adventures for Deem and Winn.

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  And if you haven’t already, enjoy the books of the companion series, The River.

  ▪ ▪ ▪

  By the author:

  The Downwinders series:

  Blood Oath, Blood River

  The Impossible Coin

  The Graves of Plague Canyon

  The River series:

  The Bank of the River

  Residual

  A Haunting in Oregon

  Ghosts of Our Fathers

  Eximere

  The Suicide Forest

  Devil’s Throat

  The Diablo Horror

  The Haunting at Grays Harbor

  It Walks At Night

  The Dark River series:

  A

  All three series are part of The River Universe, and there is crossover of some characters and plots. For a suggested reading order, see the Author’s Website.

 

 

 


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