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Waking Evil

Page 14

by Brant, Kylie


  “I believe in facts,” she put in.

  “Facts are nice when they exist. But I’m here to tell you I’ve seen a few things in my time that science can’t explain. Not often, mind you. I see far more that turns out to be nothin’ but hype and hoax. And I spend plenty of time in my books exposin’ those. But there have been a few times . . .” The look on his face almost had Ramsey asking for details. Almost.

  “Anyway, now’s the perfect time to explore the legend of Buffalo Springs.” He stood, walked back to the kitchen to put away his empty bottle before rejoining her. “And the thing I’ve noticed about murder is that it tends to get people agitated. And when they’re agitated, they talk. Not so much to outsiders, but they’ll talk to me. Most of it isn’t worth listenin’ to, but every now and then details come out that are sorta interestin’. I’m hopin’ enough of those details emerge to help me get a clearer picture of what happened the last time the red mist was sighted.”

  It seemed like a masochistic way to get information, but since she could now understand what drove him, she remained silent. It was, she admitted, a braver way to deal with his past than leaving the state and refusing to go back the way she had.

  Not that she was about to rethink that decision.

  “Well.” She slid her half-empty bottle away from her and rose. “I guess I shouldn’t keep you.” She stood, glanced at the equipment in the next room and then back at him. “I mean . . . I suppose midnight is the time you want to be in the cemetery, right?”

  From the grin on his face, it was apparent she’d said something idiotic, but to his credit he said only, “The time really isn’t important. Other than being out of there before dawn. People don’t take kindly to having others lurkin’ ’round the graves of their loved ones, no matter what my intentions are. I’ve alerted Mark’s office that I’ll be there, in case anyone reports lights or some such.”

  Ramsey’s impression of his intelligence had marginally increased since hearing his take on the supernatural events he explored. But it still seemed like a strange way for a person to make a living.

  But then there were some, including her own family, who often pointed out that traveling around from one location to another investigating the most violent of crimes didn’t exactly fit within the “normal” range, either.

  She made her way through the room with him following her and stepped carefully around the stacked cases of equipment. But something stopped her as she had her hand on the door.

  Turning, she surveyed him soberly. “I’m sorry about your father, Stryker.” And she was. The failures of the parents inevitably impacted the child. She wondered now if that seemingly incessant affability of his had developed as a defense mechanism against some of those blows.

  He closed the distance between them. “Have to admit, I’m not sorry you know the whole story. Half promised myself you needed to know that much before I did this.”

  She knew him well enough to mistrust that gleam in his eye. But obviously not well enough to guess what it meant. Because when his mouth lowered to cover hers, she could only stand there, stunned. Oh, she could feel. God, yes, she felt. As his lips molded hers, there was a kick to her system that jumpstarted her pulse. Fired tiny missiles of heat to parts of her body that hadn’t been warmed in . . . The thought grew fuzzy. Jesus . . . God, he was good at this.

  She reached out a hand, clutched at his shirt. And indulged in the hard hot pressure of his mouth for a few more seconds. Returned it.

  He nipped and stroked with teeth and tongue, pressing her lips open to draw a response. Because she wasn’t dead, he succeeded. She drew him closer, went on tiptoe to get nearer still. To warm herself at the flames flickering between them.

  He eased his mouth away to nip at her throat. A rocket of heat shot straight up her spine. “I don’t have to go out tonight.”

  Ramsey was having trouble comprehending the words, accompanied as they were with the stinging kiss he placed on the cord of her neck. “You . . . what?” She shoved her free hand in his hair as her throat arched beneath his teeth. And felt her heart straining like a long-distance runner on the last lap.

  His palm cupped her butt. “I could stay.” His lips did a slow, thorough search along her jaw and settled to worry her earlobe. “So could you.”

  The offer was pure temptation. Every nerve in her body quivered with the need to accept. There was more here than she would have imagined. More than she’d let herself imagine. And that in itself was the impetus she needed to reach for reason, which seemed strangely fragmented.

  “No.” Because the word sounded on a moan, she tried again. “No.” And released the grip she’d had on his shirt. Withdrew the hand she’d had in his hair. Strove to quiet the inner chorus of disappointed hormones.

  “No?” Since his hand showed no inclination to leaving her bottom, she stepped away from him. Would have tripped over one of his blasted cases if he hadn’t steadied her with a hand to her arm.

  “Listen . . .” She had no idea what she should say. But clearly something was in order. “I don’t do this.”

  He cocked a brow, clearly intrigued. “Ever?”

  Ramsey felt her teeth grind. Obviously the easiest way to diminish his appeal was to allow him to talk. “I mean when I’m working. It would be a mistake to mix business with pleasure.” Hadn’t Matthews found that out just the other night in a sort of divine kismet?

  His mouth was quirking. “Even if I don’t mind bein’ the pleasure part?”

  There was a zing to the pit of her belly just thinking about it. And it hardened her resolve. “Especially then.” More cautious this time, she took another step away. And then another. And when he went to follow her, a little thrill of alarm zipped through her veins.

  Obviously seeing it, he stopped. “What? I was just gonna walk you to your car. It’s the gentlemanly thing to do.”

  “I walked from it to the house without incident.” She doubted the same could be said if he insisted on accompanying her back to the vehicle.

  He stopped and leaned a shoulder against the wall. “Okay.”

  “And you can drop that easygoing affable bit,” she informed him, feeling surer of herself now that there was some distance between them. “I know it’s just a facade to get what you want.”

  “Just because it gets me what I want doesn’t make it a facade,” he pointed out.

  Ramsey waved a hand dismissively. “Whatever. It doesn’t work with me. I’m not going to sleep with you, so you’d be wise to save your energy for . . .” She gestured to the equipment. “Your work.”

  “Good advice.” He let her walk through the door. Get as far as the porch before adding, “Thing is, though . . . you kissed me back. I want you to remember that, Ramsey. ’Cuz I’m gonna have a heckuva time forgettin’ it.”

  Up t’ no good, the man was. Yessiree.

  Ezra T. peered from behind the cool mossy tombstone at the person crouched in the center of the cemetery. That’s what people said ’bout him sometimes, out in them woods. Up t’ no good. He liked the sound of that. Made him feel like one of them spies in that show on TV.

  He squinted his eyes. The man was too far away to tell who it was. But he seemed to be alone.

  Disappointment surged. So it wasn’t the couple he’d seen here once, he could tell that much. He’d watched them havin’ butt sex in one of them little buildings with the dead people inside. Crept up real close, so he saw the whole thing. Got himself a good ol’ stiffie, too.

  Ezra T. knew ’bout butt sex. You got it when you was bad or done somethin’ wrong. He and some of the other boys at the home in Memphis was bad sometimes. When he was, one of the workers, Tommy Lee, would creep in his room late at night. And would put a pillow over his head while he was hurtin’ him, all the time whisperin’ that was what happened to bad boys. Yessiree. And he’d get worse, lots worse, if’n he ever told anyone.

  He’d never told. But when he got bigger, Tommy Lee started leavin’ him alone, even when Ezra T.
was very bad. And one time he’d been walkin’ by and seen the man mop-pin’ the floor real close to the big ol’ steps leadin’ up to their floor. Ezra T. had reached out quick as a snake and pushed Tommy Lee, hard. And stopped to watch him bounce and roll down to the bottom of the steps. Everyone said later that somethin’ musta attacked Tommy Lee’s heart and that’s why he died. But Ezra T. knew better. ’Cuz that’s what you got when you was bad. Yessiree.

  He crept closer, quiet as a fox sneakin’ up on a rabbit. The man wouldn’t hear him, neither. Ezra T. could imitate any animal in the woods. The calls they made. The way they moved, all silent and quick. He was fast, though not as fast as the deer or the rabbits. But faster than the boys who chased him sometimes, chunkin’ rocks at him and callin’ names. Those boys didn’t know what could happen to ’em when they was bad.

  The man had set up some sort of light. That was stupid. Dead people didn’t need lights. And he was takin’ a bunch of stuff outta bags and turnin’ them on with clicks and whirs. Ezra T. remembered that stuff. He’d seen it down at Ashton’s Pond.

  He’d seen that man there, too. Stryker, Duane had said his name was when Ezra T. told him ’bout it. Said the man chased haints and goblins and stuff.

  That was stupid, too. Ezra T. coulda told the man dead was dead. He’d seen dead before, hadn’t he? He oughta know.

  Growing bored, he looked back toward the fence he’d climbed to get inside. He could go home. Or back t’ the woods.

  He gave a little shiver. But at home, Mary and Duane would be smokin’ the smelly stuff and yellin’ at him to get on outside. And the woods . . . he hunkered down behind another tombstone and wrapped his arms around his middle, rocked a little. He didn’t want to hear the screams again. It was gettin’ harder and harder to tell if they was in his head or comin’ from deep inside the woods.

  All he could be sure of was that woman they’d found—the one in the pond—had been very, very bad.

  Yessiree.

  Chapter 10

  If he hadn’t stopped that afternoon and looked at a map of the cemetery, Dev would have been reduced to stumbling around for hours, shining a light on tombstones to find the one he wanted. As it was, he’d had little problem finding the first ones he was interested in located in one of the oldest parts of the area.

  He wore a camper’s light on his cap to keep his hands free. He shone the light on the stone in question. Despite their violent parting, Harold Bean and his wife Wilma rested for eternity side by side, sharing one stone. Squatting down to read the faded inscription, he realized with a jolt that the couple had been younger than he when they’d died. Wilma had been—he did a quick estimation—twenty-two and her husband eight years older. There were no children listed.

  He scooped up the multifield meter and the temperature sensor. Neither had picked up anything out of the ordinary remaining stationary at the gravesite, so he’d walk around a bit to see if he got any activity.

  With the Beans being the first identified victims associated with the pattern of the red mist, he’d figured they were the likeliest place to start. But before the night was over, he’d take a reading at the gravesite of each victim Donnelle had mentioned.

  Including his daddy’s.

  There were many in town who wouldn’t list Lucas Rollins in the victim column, but until Dev was finished with his own investigation here, he’d reserve judgment on that himself. Regardless what anyone else thought of him, or of his profession, he was first and foremost a scientist. He was interested in proof. What constituted that just differed a bit from what satisfied the law.

  He stepped surely around the overgrown graves, headed by pitted and crumbling headstones. The cemetery was located on the outskirts of town, with the newest area on the other side of the site, its markers gleaming and shiny. But he’d always preferred this section, with the huge old trees seeming to spread their branches protectively over the dead.

  He’d played here as a kid, he recalled, with friends from town. They’d fought their fair share of Indians and waged more than a few intergalactic battles before invariably being shooed away by the groundskeeper.

  The memory brought a smile. Eddie Hammonds had been in charge of the place then, and he’d always pretended to turn a blind eye to their presence for a couple hours before chasing them off. The new guy he’d met this afternoon had gotten all pinch-faced and disapproving when Dev had shown him the note from Mark, typed on sheriff’s department letterhead, requesting he’d be allowed access to the place tonight. But there had been little he could do, other than to snappishly demand that Dev lock the old iron gates behind him when he left.

  It was a pretty certain guess that kids weren’t allowed in here to play these days.

  Lora Kuemper hadn’t been listed on the plot chart he’d checked this afternoon. But ninety years ago, people were as likely to bury their dead on their property as in town in a cemetery, especially farm dwellers. Cal Hopkins’s name, though, had been found, and it was to his grave that Dev made his way now.

  He’d spent his fair share of nights in cemeteries over the years, but this was the first time he hadn’t had to drag along machines specifically to detect hidden sound or technological equipment. He didn’t have to worry about disproving alleged hauntings this time around.

  As he walked, he idly played the laser pointer of his infrared digital thermometer around the area. The temperature sensor gave an instant reading, and more than once it reflected a relative cold spot, what some would insist indicated a spiritual presence. Dev would have liked to investigate the spots further, but he forced himself to stay on task. It really wasn’t important whether former residents of Buffalo Springs were resting peacefully. What mattered was whether those associated with the red mist still felt the need to make their presence known.

  In the end, he found no signs that Cal Hopkins’s spirit was raising paranormal hell. Lucien Tarvester hadn’t been buried here, so he made his way across the graveyard to a slightly newer section.

  To the section that housed his daddy’s grave.

  He stopped at the sites of Jessalyn and Sally Ann Porter first. Paused a long time, watching the illuminated dial of the multifield meter intently. Interestingly, there was a bit of activity, with the needle swinging slowly back and forth before settling into a normal setting. Which made him wonder whether that was . . .

  “What do you think you’re doing?” A hard cold hand landed on his shoulder.

  “Jesus!” Dev jumped like a flea off a wet dog. Logically, he knew it wasn’t Jessalyn Porter demanding he state his business. But he was startled enough that he stumbled backward a bit, landing against a body that was all too solid.

  Swinging around, recognition flickered. The person was only slightly more welcome than had it been one of the long-time residents of the cemetery resurrected to accost him. “Ah . . . evenin’, Reverend.”

  Reverend Jay Biggers glared at him, shielding his eyes from the glare of the illuminated lamp on Dev’s cap. “Stryker.” Somehow he’d always managed to make the name sound like a curse. “What are you up to sneakin’ ’round here in the middle of the night? Decent people are sleepin’ at this hour, not out desecratin’ the graves of others’ loved ones.”

  “You’ll be happy to know I only desecrate on the third Wednesday of the month. The graves are safe for the time bein’.” Dev shifted a bit to avoid stepping on the nearest plot as he put a little distance between them. Biggers had the dour demeanor of a revivalist preacher at an atheist convention and had always smelled, Dev thought fancifully, a bit of brimstone.

  The man stared distrustfully at the instruments he still held. “Tell me you aren’t despoilin’ this hallowed ground by your ghost-huntin’ antics. This is an abomination, Stryker. I demand that you leave immediately.”

  “I’ll be done in another hour or so.”

  “Right. This. Instant!” The man’s voice quivered with the same fervency he usually reserved for the pulpit. But his zeal was lost on Dev.
/>   “The thing is, Reverend,” Dev started reasonably, “You don’t really have the right to be orderin’ me off the premises. This isn’t church property, it’s county. I have permission to be here, which, I have to point out, you don’t. So technically . . .” He paused a moment to watch the vein in the man’s prominent forehead begin to throb. “You’re the one without a right to be here now, not me.”

  “Right? Right?” The man’s face, usually sallow, went florid. “My position grants me the right. God himself grants me the right.”

  “A powerful friend, but in this case, he’s trumped by the sheriff. I’ll leave when I’m done here and not before.”

  The man’s large worn hands clenched at his sides. “I have to say I’m not surprised at your flagrant disregard for simple decency. Given your bloodline.”

  The urge to punch the man didn’t stem from his words. No, that temptation arose from Dev’s sudden vivid memory of summer bible camp when he’d been about ten. The churches in town joined forces when it came to saving the local youngsters’ souls from the devil that would likely lodge there given too much free time. That particular summer it had been Biggers’s turn to supervise the events. One day he’d delivered a particularly impassioned sermon on sin, and with his gaze fixed on Dev, had assured the unruly group that murderers burned in hell for all eternity.

 

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