Paranormal Talent Agency Omnibus

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Paranormal Talent Agency Omnibus Page 23

by Heather Silvio


  Liz and I shared a glance. We’d likely gotten all that we could from Roger’s mom. I stood and Liz followed my cue. “Jacki, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us.”

  She scrambled to her feet. “Was anything I said helpful?”

  I smiled gently. “Yes. You’ve given us a few new angles to consider.”

  “I’m glad,” she said. “You’ll tell me if you find who did this to our boys?”

  “Of course.” I nodded and she clasped my hands in hers. On impulse I hugged her. She tensed but then relaxed.

  “Thank you for listening.”

  Jacki watched us walk back to our car and we considered our next steps while we drove from her home.

  “What do you think?” Sadness hung on me from Jacki and I needed to focus on something active.

  “Let’s head back to Vegas,” Liz declared. “We can review what we have.”

  I concurred, though of course, directed Liz to the nearest coffee dispensing establishment, a Dunkin Donuts this time.

  “Let’s do some internet sleuthing and then review the information Selina provided,” I suggested once we were back on the road for our four-and-a-half-hour drive home. Liz agreed and explained the Audi’s awesome wifi hotspot capability.

  I googled “Juni Los Angeles” and frowned at the screen.

  “What?” Liz glanced over at me.

  “Nothing, that’s what. Absolutely nothing of use. The big goose egg. Nada.” I was trying to think of another expression for nothing when Liz laughed.

  “No more caffeine for you.”

  “Am I a little hyper?”

  “Yeah, I’d say so.” Liz paused. “It really is weird how there’s nothing on Juni No-Last-Name. Even if she decided to drop off the grid, you can’t erase your past like that. Unless she really was in the witness protection program.”

  Or she was a vampire, I silently added.

  “What is it? You’ve got this weird expression on your face. I noticed it last time we talked about her having no history.” Liz narrowed her eyes at me. “Spill it.”

  CHAPTER SIX

  I widened my eyes in a parody of innocence. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.” I broke eye contact. I was not about to tell Liz I thought Juni was a vampire.

  “Fine. Keep your little secret,” Liz said, her tone light, but with an undercurrent of something darker.

  “I agree it’s weird that she truly seems to have popped in and out of existence,” I repeated what Selina had said earlier. “An alternative explanation is that her first name is fake too.”

  “Hmm. That would make sense. And with no good pictures to run a google image search on, that would be an effective way for her to mask her history,” Liz agreed. “Where does that leave us then?”

  “Let’s take a look at Roger Miller’s social media accounts,” I suggested and was already typing away on the laptop. A quick scroll through his Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram accounts confirmed the mother’s reports. “He really was in love – and really depressed and guilty after the accident.”

  “Guess he shouldn’t have been driving drunk,” Liz snapped.

  “Harsh, Liz. He was a dumb kid who made a mistake. You never made a mistake before?”

  Liz lifted a single shoulder dismissively. “This isn’t about me.”

  “That’s true,” I responded and closed the open browser tab. “Let’s review what Selina gave us,” I changed the subject.

  The miles passed by in a blur (except for a single bathroom break, of course) as we reviewed each of the files. While watching Roger’s Facebook Live video again, I had that same sense of déjà vu hearing the firecracker noise and made a slight grunt of irritation.

  “What?”

  “I don’t know. There’s something about that popping noise that I can’t place and I know that I should be able to.” Frustration was audible in my voice.

  “You had the same reaction with Chad’s video?”

  “I did.” I scrunched up my face trying to place the noise. I sighed loudly and slumped in the seat. “This is ridiculous.”

  Liz laughed. “Don’t be so hard on yourself. Quit thinking about it and maybe it’ll come to you.”

  “What do you think about Selina’s conclusion that Juni’s disappearance and the murder aren’t related?”

  “It could be a coincidence,” Liz spoke slowly, thinking. “But. It seems like too big an event NOT to be connected. On the other hand, if it is connected, I’m having a hard time seeing how.”

  “Maybe Juni faked her death with the plan to come back and kill Roger when the heat had died down,” I suggested my outlandish explanation with a giggle.

  “Oh, I’m sure that’s it,” Liz agreed with a laugh. Soon we were both giggling at the ridiculousness of the idea. Clearly, she was right and I’d had too much caffeine!

  After that, we sang along to the radio and made idle chitchat, letting our brains percolate with the information we’d gathered. Liz pulled into the television station parking lot and dropped me next to my car.

  “I’ll check in with you after my show.”

  “Give me a few more hours to get some sleep,” I requested with a lopsided smile. “When I crash from the caffeine, it ain’t gonna be pretty.”

  “Okay, get back to me when you’re awake. We’ll talk more about our next steps.” She glanced at her watch. “I’m off to catch a few winks myself.”

  “Sounds good,” I agreed and Liz drove off. I sat in my car for a moment. It wouldn’t be dawn for a few hours, so I took a chance and texted Evie.

  You home?

  Sure. Isn’t this a bit early for you?

  I have some questions, best done in person.

  Uh-oh. Everything okay.

  With me, yes. I need your help with something.

  Come on over.

  I drove towards the Arts District and Evie’s condo. A parking spot opened up directly in front of the building as I passed through the final light and I zipped the Miata into the space. The front desk attendant had apparently been alerted that I was coming. When I showed him my ID, he didn’t call Evie to let her know I’d arrived and instead waved me through to the elevators.

  The ping of the elevator door sounded loud in the early morning silence when it opened on Evie’s floor. I saw her door was slightly propped open; I knocked as quietly as I could.

  “I’m coming in, Evie.”

  “Welcome!” was her response from around the corner in the condo.

  I closed the door behind me and had taken only a few steps when both my phone and Evie’s dinged with incoming text messages. She was faster than me at checking and laughed. “It’s Catherine. She wants to know if she can come over.”

  I confirmed that was the text I received and responded yes. A slight knock on the door followed almost immediately. I opened it to Catherine’s wide smile.

  “I heard the elevator and then your voice. I figured it must be something interesting.”

  “I know why Evie’s up, but why are you?”

  “I was up early for a production starting today. On-call in case of any problems,” Catherine explained, long blond hair pulled up in a ponytail. She closed and locked the door behind her. As the only human in the room, security was more of an issue for her than us.

  Soon we were seated on Evie’s couch, me marveling as I always did about her fabulous view of the city. The women turned to me.

  “What’s going on?” Evie asked, blue eyes curious.

  I brought them up to speed about the two murders and my trip to LA with Liz Addison. Evie was frowning before I could finish.

  “I’m almost 100% certain there was no vampire in Vegas named Juni,” she asserted. “Now, if you’re right that she was using an entirely faked name, there’s less certainty. Although I haven’t heard anything about any vampires vanishing either. Of course, we don’t check in and out of the city, so it would be possible for her to come
and go if she’s from here. I have no idea about LA. I can check with my people.” She sent a quick text. “Show me her picture.”

  Evie and Catherine chatted while I turned on the laptop and brought up the half-profile image of our missing, presumed dead, woman, maybe vampire, Juni.

  Evie frowned at the picture. “She doesn’t look familiar at all.” Her phone beeped with an incoming text and she glanced down. “Nobody fitting the description missing in LA, either. Probably not a vampire. Most likely just a drunk guy who is misremembering his evening.”

  Disappointment surged through me. I didn’t know why I wanted Juni to be a vampire so badly. Maybe because then there might be some motive for Roger’s murder? Although that wouldn’t explain Chad’s murder.

  “Earth to Mia,” Catherine said with a laugh, waving her hand in front of my face. I refocused on my friends.

  “Sorry, guys. It just seemed important to me that Juni was a vampire. I really don’t know why.”

  “Do you want to go through the rest of your material? Maybe Catherine and I will see something that you and Liz missed.”

  I thanked her for the offer and we methodically moved through each of the documents. The autopsy report confirmed suffocation, like we expected with Chad’s forthcoming report, but no evidence on the body of how. No strangulation marks on the neck, for example.

  The interviews of family and friends were the typical, I can’t believe this happened to him, type of responses. We found it interesting how few people mentioned Juni.

  Then we reached the last piece of evidence we had – the Facebook Live video. Between seeing Chad’s in real time, and the multiple viewings of Roger’s, I no longer wanted to watch. I faced my head away and tilted the screen more toward Catherine and Evie.

  “Do you guys hear that popping noise? What is that?” Roger’s words, so eerily similar to Chad’s, pierced my heart. These poor young men, snuffed out before their lives had really even started.

  I bolted upright just as Evie shouted.

  “I know what that is!”

  She and I faced each other and simultaneously exclaimed, “Djinn!”

  Catherine looked back and forth between us, clearly not following. But, we’d figured it out. I sat back down and patted Catherine’s knee, smiling at Evie.

  “It’s been bothering me since I first watched Chad’s Facebook Live video. That popping noise, so much like firecrackers, sounded familiar. I just couldn’t place it. And each time I watched Roger’s, the same. Now I know.”

  “The murderer is a djinn,” Evie added, which increased Catherine’s confusion.

  “A djinn is better known as a genie,” I explained.

  “How do you know that noise is from a genie?”

  “If a djinn is angry enough, and this one must be to want to kill people, they create a popping noise that is a physical manifestation of that anger,” Evie said.

  “That means that even though I was wrong about her being a vampire, I was also probably right about Juni,” I added. Catherine looked confused again.

  “A djinn is an elemental being. When one dies, it reverts back to its element. If Juni was stabbed by the metal of the guardrail through the heart, that would certainly have killed her.” I felt a moment of sadness at the death of the immortal, but not invincible, being.

  “And since she would have reverted back to her elemental nature, there would be no evidence of her in the car.”

  The three of us considered the possibilities.

  “How do you think that’s connected to the murders?” Evie asked.

  “I’m not sure,” I answered as my mind worked through the logic. “I’m not aware of any djinn in Vegas…” Evie shook her head no, that she wasn’t either.

  “Since the first murder took place in LA, the djinn could be there. I don’t know anyone to ask. We should operate on the assumption that the djinn could be in either city and travelled back and forth,” I finished.

  “Do you think this djinn will kill anyone else?” Catherine asked in a small voice.

  “Since we don’t know the motive behind the murders, I think we should assume it’s likely,” I answered grimly. “Even if the first murder is related to Juni’s death, that doesn’t explain Chad.”

  “He has zero connection to the paranormal as far as I know,” Catherine added.

  We pondered this inconsistency.

  “There is a possibility,” Evie said as she stood and walked toward the sliding glass doors leading to her balcony. She stopped and stared out into the dark. “I may be misremembering my elemental being knowledge, but aren’t many djinn born as twins?”

  I gasped. “Oh, my goodness. You might be on to something!” I stood as well and paced back and forth in front of the couch while I worked through this new angle. “If Juni had a twin, that djinn could be our killer. How do we find her? Or him?”

  Evie frowned. “I think the twins are usually same-sex, but honestly, I don’t really know. I think, either way, we’ll have a heck of a time finding a djinn that probably doesn’t want to be found.”

  “Why?” Catherine asked.

  “Oh, djinn are fun,” Evie answered with a laugh.

  I explained further. “They can shape shift, fly, and become invisible.”

  “Ah, those would make it difficult,” Catherine agreed and the three of us chuckled. “What do you want to do?”

  “I want to talk to Detective Dawson,” I blurted out.

  Catherine arched an eyebrow. “Jacob?”

  Evie looked confused. “Who?

  “Detective Jacob Dawson is investigating Chad’s murder,” Catherine explained to Evie.

  “Is he…like us?” Evie asked.

  I shook my head no.

  “Then why would we want to tell him anything? Would you tell him everything?”

  “Of course not, Evie. But,” I continued before she could interrupt, “if we give him the background, leaving out that Juni was probably a djinn, we can tell him to look for a sister. With the risk this sister poses to humanity, let alone exposing all of us with her actions, it’s imperative we find her sooner rather than later. Maybe with their additional databases and stuff, Jacob’ll have better luck.”

  “I guess that makes sense,” Evie reluctantly agreed.

  “And the LA cop too, right?” Catherine asked.

  “I’ll let Liz know and she can tell Selina. We just leave the paranormal stuff out of all of it,” I concluded and the other women nodded in agreement.

  A narrow band of light was surfacing over the mountain range outside the city. Evie gestured to it. “Sun is coming up, ladies, so I’ll need to kick you out now. Time for my beauty sleep.”

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  Sitting in my car, watching the light brighten around me as the sun came up, I considered my options. It was barely daytime. The detective was probably not even awake yet. Although Liz definitely was, she was likely prepping for her show in a couple of hours. The best thing, I decided, as I started my engine, was to go home and get my own beauty sleep for a few hours. I was truly running on fumes, after being up for … how many hours? I started counting backwards to determine how long I’d been awake and then realized this was further proof of my exhaustion. Time to return to The Lakes.

  Unfortunately, with the sun up, a skinny dip in the lake was not a good idea. I decided a quick swim in my pool would have to suffice. And I guessed I’d be neighborly and wear a swimsuit. Once inside my home, I padded silently across the natural stone floor while I stripped my clothes off. I grabbed the aquamarine one-piece off the back of the wicker chair in the breakfast nook (its permanent home when I wasn’t wearing it) and slid the glass door open. Stepping out onto the concrete, I breathed in the crisp morning air. The mountains were visible in the distance.

  Water caressed my skin as I dropped beneath the surface of the pool. No underwater life lived here so I swam a few laps, flipped a few somersaults for fun, and practiced what I l
iked to call, mermaid maneuvers. I realized I was smiling underwater and settled to the bottom. Colorful pebble-tec instead of boring plaster coated my pool and I delighted in the dolphin, turtle, and seal I had custom designed for the floor.

  Despite the replenishing qualities of the water, the exhaustion from lack of actual sleep threatened to overwhelm me. I surfaced with reluctance. I felt someone’s eyes on me and a quick glance to my left identified the source.

  “Hi, Elliott,” I called out to my neighbor and swam to the side closest to our shared wall. He had a dazed look on his face.

  “How—?” he asked, and I groaned under my breath. I knew better than to stay underwater so long during the daytime.

  I hoisted myself out of the pool and began the short walk to where he stood on the other side of the shared concrete wall. His eyes tracked the water dripping off my slender figure. I squeezed the extra water from my long green hair and flashed a bright smile at my befuddled neighbor.

  “You aren’t going to sing me to my death, Mia, are you?” He asked with a nervous laugh, probably his idea of flirtation. I managed not to roll my eyes at his not-so-subtle joke that I was a siren. This was why humanity couldn’t know about us. They wouldn’t even get it right!

  “Of course not, Elliott,” I responded, modulating my voice slightly and watching his eyes glaze in response. “You didn’t see anything out of the ordinary, did you, Elliott?” I’d reached where he stood opposite and touched his arm resting atop the short wall.

  “Like what, Mia?” he asked in a daze.

  “Exactly, Elliott.” I smiled and saw that he was completely mesmerized. My green eyes sparkled and I giggled, the sound of a tinkling bell. “You enjoy the rest of your day, Elliott.” He nodded like an excited puppy and I turned before I broke the spell with a real laugh. I felt his eyes watching me walk away, back toward my sliding glass door. After opening it, I turned to give him a slight wave goodbye, and then closed the door tightly.

 

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