The Black Diamond Curse (Hattie Jenkins & The Infiniti Chronicles Book 4)

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The Black Diamond Curse (Hattie Jenkins & The Infiniti Chronicles Book 4) Page 11

by Pearl Goodfellow


  I held a floral print dress under my chin.

  Ugh! Too Miss Marple.

  A bell-bottomed pantsuit.

  Yikes! Nancy Drew? The Hardy Boys are waiting downstairs.

  I finally settle on a pepper-gray sleeveless sweater dress that hugged my hips somewhere between “adorably chic” and “take me now.”

  Perfect!

  I only hoped that it didn't look too contrived. I wanted to look like I had put minimal effort into my wardrobe while still coming off as stylish and 'put-together.' Such a delicate balance and it was then I realized just how much out of practice I was for striking that balance. I guess I should have considered myself lucky that this particular garment hadn't been balled up and walled into Fraidy's fashion fortress under the bed.

  Now I just needed a splash of color. I rustled through my scarf drawer and grabbed a soft pink silk. I snagged Grammy’s sterling and stone starburst pin from my old jewelry box. As I pinned the scarf at my shoulder, I appraised the entire ensemble in the cherry wood oval mirror. The light from the Tiffany lamp on the dresser gleamed off the starburst pin, creating a blinding flash. I held up a shielding hand and shifted my angle.

  Ah, that was much better. From the new angle, I could really appreciate how (pretty) good I looked. I felt a small pang as I realized I wasn’t getting all gussied up for David. But, hey! At least someone saw me as more than an above-average herbalist and an amateur sleuth.

  I looked in the mirror and made a slight adjustment to the pin. The different perspective made it easier to appreciate the delicate, filigreed craftsmanship that had gone into the piece.

  Perspective.

  I grasped the starburst pin and wiggled it in the light. Little sparks of light refracted from the glittering stones and danced in haphazard constellations around the room. Midnight joined in the fun, pouncing with abandon, desperately trying to catch the elusive light beams.

  Stars.

  I pursed my lips. I suddenly remembered the pendulous, black-gemmed necklace I had seen Millicent wearing in the footage at the television station. The star-shaped black-gemmed necklace. Maude Dulgrey couldn’t explain the odd, starburst pattern on Millicent’s chest, but perhaps that necklace was the cause.

  It was not something you would expect Millicent to wear. But the woman I was about to go and see might. If it were a gift. A gift from someone who cared about her a great deal. Someone who was certainly in a position to offer a unique perspective on the case. Millicent’s star-crossed lover, Dr. Ravena Valley.

  I took one last, longing look at my (for once) stunning reflection in the mirror and sighed. My date with Gideon was just going to have to wait.

  Again.

  I chuckled ruefully.

  I guess it just wasn’t in the stars

  Chapter Ten

  “What do you mean I can’t see the Chief?” I spluttered as I was uncharacteristically halted at the duty sergeant’s desk at GIPPD headquarters. The mental gut-check I felt caught me a bit off-guard.

  Onyx nudged his furry head into my leg. “Hattie, please be calm. I’m sure it’s not as bad as all that. Esme probably just means the Chief’s tied up right now.”

  Shade giggled. “Who knew the Chief was into kink?”

  Onyx shot his brother a scolding look.

  Esme Discord hardly gave the effort to lift her heavy-lidded eyes to meet my ruffled gaze.

  “The…Chief…is…not…available,” she rasped out in a voice thick from years of smoking cheap cigarettes. “Which syllable seems to be giving you trouble, hon?”

  Esme’s snarky comment further soured the already exasperated expression on my face. Sometimes I really missed Amber Crystal. Okay, so the former executive assistant to the Chief had turned out to be a cold-blooded murderer. But, hey, at least she always greeted you with a smile. The lady had manners.

  I slapped two open palms on the top of Esme’s desk, smudging number four down on the Glessie Gazette crossword Esme had been working on. Now, instead of “disturbance,” it just sort of looked like a Rorschach blob. An interference of another kind rumbled from somewhere deep in Esme’s broad belly. I was pretty sure the desk agent just growled at me.

  She finally lifted her puffy red-rimmed eyes. Her baleful stare indicated she might be considering turning me into a Rorschach blob. I gulped audibly. The cat’s arched protectively and did the queer sideward sidle they are wont to do in times of duress.

  Esme slowly shifted in her seat, her pendulous breasts heaving under her blue uniform shirt. A few of the buttons strained, the threads squeaking in protest as she sat as straight as her hefty bulk would allow. She took two hammy hands and lifted the half-moon glasses that had been dangling on a beaded chain and fitted them over the bridge of her bulbous nose.

  “Listen, doll,” she finally said. “All I know is a long tall drink of cool water came sashaying in here about an hour ago asking for the Chief and she’s been in his office ever since. And the Chief asked not to be disturbed.”

  A long tall drink of cool water? Was it possible that David was actually seeing someone that he hadn’t told me about?

  “Heeeeeey, now...you don’t suppose the Chief is catting around on our Hattie, do you, Onyx?” Shade drawled.

  “Brother” Onyx scolded. “Show a little decorum. Chimera taught you better than that.”

  I winced. It wasn’t a pleasant thought, but perhaps my overly vocal cat was onto something. Maybe a new inamorata was the reason for David's odd behavior of late. I swallowed hard to clear the welling lump in my throat.

  I guess I had been wrong the whole time. Maybe it wasn’t that David wasn’t interested in pursuing a relationship at all. He just wasn’t interested in pursuing a relationship with me.

  A peal of laughter echoed through the station. My eyes drifted toward the clear windows of Chief Trew’s office. David was leaning casually against the front of his desk. He looked relaxed. He even had the top button of his uniform shirt loose, exposing his strong and muscular neck. I squinted. Just a hint of dark, curly chest hair peeked over the top of the v-neck. There had been more than a night or two where I’d dreamt of curling my fingers in that hair while stealing a kiss.

  Another laugh rang out. Fat chance of that now.

  His normally very neat black hair, avec Pepe-le-peu stripe looked casually mussed. His perfect teeth gleamed in a bright smile as he tossed his head back with a burst of carefree laughter. He looked incredibly laid-back and confident. Very un-David-like. And that’s when I saw her.

  The cascade of blue-black hair. The statuesque form sitting in the chair across from David’s desk. Miss Falk, Gideon Shield’s enigmatic and devastatingly beautiful advisor.

  “But...what’s she doing here?” I managed to squeak.

  “Want me to paint a picture?” Shade asked.

  A fuzzy, black bowling ball of fur spun end-over-end as Onyx sent Shade sailing across the floor.

  Esme threw up two innocent palms. “You know what? That’s the Chief’s business. I just work here.”

  Well, whatever this was, it certainly didn’t look like it had anything to do with the case. And it certainly wasn’t like David to ignore an investigation in favor of a woman.

  Esme’s gritty voice scraped over my already open wound. “You gotta admit, though. She’s a looker.”

  I grabbed a loose sheet of paper and a pen from Esme’s desk and hastily scribbled a message.

  “Hey! That was my grocery list!” Esme grumbled.

  I shoved the paper back at her. “Will you please see that the Chief gets this note? Whenever he manages to tear himself away from his…meeting?”

  “Sure, whatever.” Esme had gone back to her crossword. I took another last look toward David’s office. Miss Falk had stood and was leaning toward David who also stood to clasp her in a warm embrace. I felt the cracks splinter and crawl over my heart.

  Squat, fat, and ugly. That was about how I felt after seeing David and Mari Falk cozied up together like that. To think
that I'd made the effort to get dressed in an attempt to look sexy. I shook my head, feeling pretty foolish with my earlier confidence.

  Squat, fat and ugly was an entirely apt description of Ravena Valley’s near mushroom-shaped home nestled in the shadows of the Glimmer Mountain foothills. Part Tolkien, part Burton and wholly trippy, the entire eccentric structure resembled something that might house a hobbit or be dreamt up in a whimsical nightmare before a festive winter holiday.

  “Don’t ever bring Jet here,” Shade warned. “That’s one serious ‘shroom!”

  I grimaced. Forget Jet, I was beginning to have doubts about bringing Shade along on this little jaunt. Bad humor aside, having Gless Inlet’s most eligible feline bachelor in tow was making my own social shortcomings painfully apparent. He had insisted on giving me relationship advice during the entire broom-ride from Gless Inlet to Chalice.

  “You know, I don’t hold the deed to Chief Trew’s heart, Shade. He’s got a right to see whomever he pleases.”

  “Well, if you ask me, the good Chief needs to clean his glasses. Forget tuna. You’re the real catch, Hat!”

  While I appreciated Shade’s pep-talk, I had to admit it wasn’t as if Miss Falk wasn’t attractive. It was easy to see why David found her so appealing. But my cat still wasn’t buying it.

  “Ooh, Hattie! I tell ya, something isn’t right with that dame. And believe you me, I know dames.”

  Onyx, who had also come along for the ride, scoffed at the self-professed lothario. In retrospect, out of the two cats, he was likely the better choice for this particular venture. His mind-reading skills would undoubtedly reveal some valuable information during the delicate questioning of Millicent’s former lover. But, I was also secretly glad he was here to hold Shade’s (well-meant) opinion in check.

  “Oh, certainly,” Onyx agreed sarcastically. “And is that why Miss Poof gave you that little ‘love tap’ you’re sporting across your cheek?”

  Chagrin mellowed Shade’s features, but not his enthusiasm. “Okay, okay, okay. So maybe my reflexes aren’t quite what they used to be. But I’m telling you. My intuition is spot on. Underneath that cool exterior, that babe is double-bubble, boiling trouble!”

  “Whatever, Shade,” I dismissed him with a wave of my hand. “David is his own man.”

  I turned my attention back toward Ravena Valley’s unique abode. The dwelling seemed to sprout up from the landscape itself, a living thing in symbiosis with its environment instead of a rude encroaching salt box plopped on usurped surroundings. The asymmetrical, warped shingles that rode up the exterior walls of the house resembled the finely stacked lamella, the gills that packed along the underside of most Basidiomycota that a vigilant hiker might find nooked in the cooling shade of a wooded thicket.

  The roof rolled in undulating eaves, a golden-green cap of Mexican feathergrass rippling in raspy whispers as the breeze drifted in from the Crystal Sea. Stones, smoothed by the punishing waves, had been painstakingly carted up the hill from the shore below and cobbled into a winding path leading up to the arched, planked door, crafted lovingly from driftwood. A lot of love had gone into building this particular home. A crooked chimney jutted its way up through the grass roof. A thin column of smoke drifted lazily into the azure sky.

  Well, I guess that means she’s home.

  I just hoped she was in the mood for company.

  I leaned my broom against the limestone-plastered edge of the house and rapped four sharp knuckles on the door.

  A faint shuffling emanated from within the dwelling. Eventually, the door opened with a creaking hesitation. A diminutive figure, a tiny, blonde wisp of a woman, peeked around the jamb with the temerity of a mouse looking for a bit of cheese. Her curls lay in flattened clumps, plastered against the sides of her head. Her eyes were red-rimmed and puffy. Shadowed underneath.

  Ravena Valley was in mourning. I’d had my share of date-nights with the tissue box, so it was easy to recognize the signs. But this display of vulnerability was certainly not what I had expected after her brazen outburst at Town Hall.

  “May I help you?” Ravena Valley’s voice cracked with apparent grief. Gone was the fire and brimstone that had erupted in the face of the unflappable Governor Shields. That day, pure rage had filled the small woman’s face. Murderous rage.

  That’s when I saw the menacing Taser clutched in her free hand. She must have sensed my hesitation because she shifted the balance of her body weight to shield the dangerous device from my line of vision.

  I was suddenly reminded that science could be just as dangerous as magic. For a moment, I began to second guess coming here without David’s support.

  Ah, well. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. I needed to find out about that necklace.

  “I’m terribly sorry to bother you, Dr. Valley,” I said. “My name is Hattie Jenkins. I own The Angel Apothecary on Glessie Isle? We met--sort of--at the meeting at Gless Inlet Town Hall. Regarding the runway proposal and the future of the Least Tern?”

  “Felis catus,” came her unusual reply. She sniffled and gave her nose an absent-minded wipe with the tissue.

  “Pardon me?” I asked, perplexed. Violet had said Ravena was supposed to be some sort of brilliant biologist. Indeed, she wouldn’t make such a blatant mistake in delivering the scientific name of the Least Tern. She hadn’t even gotten the species right!

  The hairs on the back of my neck started to stand on end. It wouldn’t be the first time in an investigation where things weren’t always what they seemed.

  “I think you mean Sternula antillarum,” I corrected gently, muscles bunching and warily listening for the crackle of the Taser as it enlivened my form.

  Ravena pointed with her used tissue. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Shade start to make a face at the mucus-filled rag, but I nudged him gently with my foot. We could investigate without being rude.

  “No, no, I was talking about your cats,” Ravena furthered. “Bombays?”

  Shade lost all vestiges of his prior disgust and suddenly sat just a little bit straighter, puffing his chest out as he did so. Even Onyx, who already always held himself with a certain degree of pride, managed to stretch to a slightly more elevated height.

  The Infiniti, despite whatever magical properties they may have possessed, did seem to resemble the domestic Bombay house cat. With their shiny black coats and golden eyes, most of my little clowder of kitties, with an especially gloomy exception, were relatively sociable cats. Even Eclipse, though picky about whom he let do so, came around at least once a year for a prolonged belly-rub.

  So, when the cats were included in the social niceties of human conversation, they were only too happy to thrive under the attention. I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised when Onyx stretched his chin obligingly upward as Rowena bent down to give him a friendly scratch.

  “Why, yes,” I replied awkwardly as Shade twisted himself through Ravena’s ankles, purring engine up to full throttle. “I’m sorry about this. They are friendly cats. Just not usually this friendly.”

  Ravena gave Shade a scratch in turn then stood straight, opening the arched door wide to invite passage.

  “Would you like to come in for tea?” she asked. “I don’t have much company, now – sniff – now that Millicent is gone.”

  She broke into a fresh cascade of tears. Loud, hiccupping sobs wracked her frail shoulders as she gestured inward.

  “Are you sure you’re in the mood?” I hesitated. The tears gave me pause, but it was the Taser that kept my feet glued to the stoop. My eyes stayed glued to her electric weapon.

  “Omigosh! Are you worried about this?” Ravena exclaimed as she noticed the hesitation in my gaze. “Gracious, no! I only keep this around for protection. Millicent insisted. It’s so isolated out here.”

  She held the Taser up and gave it a quick crackle or two. A jagged blue spark arced between the contact points. “No one to even hear you scream.”

  I looked around. I guess, even though we were merely t
en or so miles outside of Chalice, the location of this humble dwelling was pretty remote. Not another home in sight.

  After seeing the effects electricity had had on Carbon, Shade decided, chin scratch or no, he was not taking chances where electrical currents were concerned. He sat perfectly motionless behind my left calf instead. And, then deciding even this wasn't protection enough, he made his move instead.

  “I’m just gonna, uh, take a stroll, Hat. You know. Take in the sights. Grab a souvenir. Wait out this potentially dangerous situation. Ciao!”

  With that, he melted into the shadows. I sighed. At least I wouldn’t have to listen to any more relationship advice.

  “Please...please, come in,” Ravena urged.

  I exchanged a wary look with Onyx and placed a hesitant foot across the threshold and stepped into what I hoped wasn’t the home of a murderer.

  “It’s very kind of you to come out all this way to visit,” Ravena said graciously as she poured a steaming stream of lemon balm tea into the porcelain cup before me. She also poured herself a cup before settling the teapot back on the serving tray.

  “We...”

  She hesitated before trying again. “That is to say, I don’t get many visitors way out here. Which never quite bothered me before. The solitude has allowed me to pursue my work without being disturbed.”

  A tiny part of me wondered if that “work” included dispatching her late lover.

  “And what sort of work is that, if you don’t mind my curiosity?” I asked.

  Ravena gave a small smile. “Certainly not. Curiosity is something to be encouraged.”

  “She says to the cat,” Onyx muttered quietly. Not quietly enough, apparently.

  “Fact of the matter, dear kitty, is one of the greatest scientific minds of all time readily admitted that it was not necessarily any great talent that made him successful, but only that he was passionately curious. He’s the reason, in fact, I became a scientist. I positively idolized him.”

  “And who was that?”

  “Albert Einstein, of course!” Ravena said reverently.

 

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