Page 21 of Whisper of Evil


  Leaving his silent deputy leaning against the cruiser, Ethan led the way to the front door. “Just what is it you do?” he asked as he unlocked it. “I mean, if you don’t have a crystal ball.”

  Nell gave him an abbreviated explanation of how she was able to tap into the energy of a place, and she was hardly surprised when he looked disbelieving.

  But all he said was, “And that’s going to help me ... how?”

  “I might be able to tell you what happened in this house.” Nell shrugged. “It’s the most intense events I tend to tap into, so if there was any violence here, any threat, that’s what I’m likely to see.”

  “This wasn’t a violent murder.”

  “No, but according to what I’ve heard, you guys believe poison was put into Lynch’s vitamins, right?”

  “There is way too much gossip in this town,” Ethan muttered half under his breath.

  “Not much fun when it works against you, is it?” Without giving him a chance to answer, she added, “The poison had to be put into the bottles, which means the killer might have been here in the house. Planning a murder is a fairly intense experience even without the actual killing.”

  As they stepped into the foyer, Ethan eyed her with lifted brows. “You spend a lot of time tapping into murders?”

  Silently berating herself for slipping up, Nell replied calmly, “It’s a bad world. Amazing how many places hold the memories of bad things happening.”

  It was Ethan’s turn to shrug. “Okay. I guess you want to wander around, maybe touch things. Check out the vibes.”

  “The vibes?”

  “I asked you not to give me a hard time about this.”

  Nell smiled, but as she walked into the living room and began looking around, she said, “Actually, I don’t have to touch anything. Where did he die?”

  “Master bedroom, upstairs.”

  “Was he alone when he died?”

  “Yeah. Terrie had left earlier for an appointment in town. Peter’s usual routine was to down some kind of breakfast drink with his vitamins, make a few calls from the home office across the hall, then work out for an hour or so in the exercise room off the master bedroom. He was in workout clothes when his body was found. Looked like he had been on his way to shower afterward when his heart gave out.”

  “Not all that uncommon, I guess. A man his age to have a heart attack after exercising.”

  “So the doc said. We were satisfied. Until Terrie had a fit and demanded an autopsy.”

  “Which turned up evidence of poison.”

  “Yeah. And by then we didn’t exactly have what you’d call an uncontaminated crime scene. But we searched the place anyway. And I guess you heard what we found hidden in his closet.”

  “Porn.”

  “Very sick porn. Also evidence of the very young mistress he kept in New Orleans.”

  Without emotion, Nell asked, “Any signs of other abnormal ... tastes?”

  “Just the pedophilia,” Ethan replied dryly. He was about to add that he considered that quite enough abnormality for one man when he saw Nell’s face change almost imperceptibly. She turned her head slightly, looking toward the front of the house with what Ethan read as uneasiness in her eyes.

  Thinking she might be having one of those visions, he said, “What? Do you see something?”

  “Not yet.” She sighed, and when she met his eyes her own were definitely uneasy. “Better tell your deputy to let Max come in. He’s not likely to stay outside willingly.”

  Ethan’s surprise was brief. “I didn’t hear his truck. You sure he’s outside?”

  “Just turning into the drive.”

  “A vision?”

  “No.”

  Ethan decided not to try and figure that one out. “So he really is playing watchdog, huh? Or is it because you’re with me?”

  “Six of one and half a dozen of the other, I’d say.”

  Ethan couldn’t tell how she felt about that. He wasn’t sure how he felt about it either. “Okay. And I’m supposed to let him tag along during an official investigation?”

  Nell sighed again. “Look, the last thing I want to do is worsen the tension between you two, but we both know how stubborn Max can be. He knows I’ll be trying to use my abilities here, and he knows I pay a price for that, so short of arresting him you are not going to be able to keep him out of this.”

  “Price? What kind of price?”

  Nell kept it simple. “Headaches, blackouts. It takes a lot of energy, Ethan, and sometimes my body rebels. Max knows that. He ... worries.” She shook her head. “It’s my risk to take, and I want to help if I can. As for Max sticking close, that’s something you don’t have to like, but you do have a murder investigation very much at the top of your priority list, so I think we can all be grown-ups about it. Don’t you?”

  “Think that’ll work on Max?”

  “It will if you tell your deputy to let him pass before he’s stopped at the door and loses his temper.”

  After a moment, Ethan nodded and reached for the radio clipped to his belt. He issued a brief order to Deputy Critcher to allow Max into the house, then turned the volume back down so they wouldn’t be disturbed by radio calls but he could hear it if any were directed specifically at him.

  “Thanks,” Nell said.

  Ethan grunted. “I should have known you’d call him. It was when you went back into the house, right?”

  Nell hesitated for only an instant. “I didn’t call him.”

  “Then how did he know we were here? Christ, don’t tell me he’s watching you that closely?”

  She was spared having to answer when they heard the front door open, and a moment later Max came into the living room. Nell knew at once from his guarded but calm expression that Max had made up his mind to keep his temper under control and avoid any confrontation with Ethan, which eased her mind at least a bit.

  The last thing she needed was these two at each other’s throats.

  In lieu of a greeting, she said to Max, “I thought I might be able to offer something useful to Ethan’s murder investigation.”

  Ethan lifted a brow at her in silent appreciation but didn’t comment on her version of who called whom for help.

  And all Max said, with a brief nod to Ethan, was, “Anything so far?”

  “We hadn’t had time to get started. Ethan, you said he died upstairs?”

  “In the master bedroom.”

  “Lead the way,” Nell said.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  Nell wasn’t sure she would be able to tap into anything at all with both Ethan and Max so near, the tension between them unexpressed but obvious. And even without that, given her druthers she would have avoided trying to use her abilities again so soon after the trauma of this morning’s vision. But she was more conscious than ever of time ticking away, and she knew she couldn’t afford to wait.

  “So how does this work?” Ethan asked when they had reached the airy, light-filled master bedroom.

  Nell stood in the center near the foot of the bed, looking around, and answered absently, “I concentrate and try to tap into whatever energies and memories this room might hold.”

  “And we stand very still and don’t bother you?”

  She looked at him and smiled. “Something like that.”

  Max said, “Are you sure you’re up to this, Nell?”

  “I’m fine.” She didn’t give him a chance to question further or protest, but simply closed her eyes and began to concentrate, forcing herself to drop her shields and open herself up, to begin to reach out.

  Since Peter Lynch had died in this room more than eight months before, and since his death had been sudden and apparently without warning, Nell really didn’t expect to pick up much from that event. She had discovered that she seldom saw anything of an actual death scene, a fact that both relieved and puzzled her.

  But she often got something of the minutes before or after, depending on the violence or intensity of emotion involved, and si
nce she was concentrating as specifically as she could on Peter Lynch and his death, she expected to see something of that.

  Instead ...

  It was initially difficult to reach out, as if she had to push her way through something, and she was dimly aware of using more energy or energy of a different kind to do that. Finally, she felt that distinctive time-out-of-sync sensation, but veiled again, oddly distant, and she was uneasy about that even before she opened her eyes and found herself in a different room entirely, a living room.

  A completely unfamiliar room.

  Nell looked around, trying to figure out where she was as well as find something to mark time, something to tell her when this was. An open magazine lay face-down on the coffee table, and when she stepped closer, she saw that it was dated January of the previous year. Most people read magazines the month they arrived, didn’t they?

  She stood looking around, uneasy. Where was she? And why was she here? What she saw was definitely a vision: The edges were blurred, softened, her attention as always directed to the center. But there was something peculiar about it, about the sensations of it, so much so that Nell felt a chill of real fear. Her first instinct was to try and fight her way out of the vision, but both an innate curiosity and an even deeper need to understand the limits of her own abilities made her hesitate. And in that moment of hesitation, she saw Hailey stalk into the room, obviously upset.

  Ethan was right behind her.

  “What, I’m not supposed to be pissed about it?” he demanded, grabbing her arm and swinging her around to face him just as they came abreast of Nell.

  “No, you’re not. You have no right, Ethan, and we both know it.”

  “No right? I’ve been in your bed for two months— that doesn’t give me the right to get just a mite upset when I find out you’ve also been sleeping with Peter Lynch?”

  “I told you, it’s none of your business. We don’t have a relationship, Ethan, we fuck.” She pronounced the harsh word with complete deliberation, even enjoyment. “Period. You have fun, I have fun, that’s it. No strings, expectations, or obligations on either side.”

  Ethan didn’t seem to be buying that; his face was tight, eyes grim. “Not even respect, huh?”

  Hailey laughed, and the smile she gave him was incredulous. “Respect? What does respect have to do with anything we do together? If we did it outside in the dirt instead of in a bed, we wouldn’t be the slightest bit different from two stray dogs meeting up when one of them’s in heat.”

  “So which one of us was in heat?” he asked roughly. “Which one just had an itch that needed scratching?”

  Hailey laughed and jerked her arm free of his grasp. “Me, of course. I’m always in heat, didn’t you know? Hadn’t you heard? Jesus, Ethan, don’t try to pretend you weren’t convinced I was a whore long before you came on to me. And what about the scars left by a whip on my back? The cigarette burns? You never even asked about those, did you? Because it’s just what you expected to find when you got my clothes off, isn’t it?”

  “Hailey—”

  “Whores are always marked, aren’t they, Ethan? Not with a scarlet A, maybe, but we’re always marked. So men like you won’t feel guilty kicking us out of your beds before dawn.”

  “Goddammit, I never asked you to leave. Never.”

  “You didn’t have to ask. I knew what you wanted. I always know what men want.” She began to turn away from him abruptly, obviously on the point of storming out of the apartment—but then froze.

  Nell found herself staring into the widening eyes of her sister and had the sudden, terrifying knowledge that Hailey saw her. That she was actually, physically there, in the past.

  No longer just a witness.

  “Some detective I am,” Justin muttered. “I don’t even have a clue what I’m supposed to be looking for.”

  However reluctantly, Shelby had to agree with him, at least about their fruitless search. “Lots of births in this parish in the last forty years. Listen, are you sure there was nothing in George’s desk at the bank to explain why he was so interested in these old records?”

  Justin leaned forward to drop several pages of birth listings onto the stack on the coffee table, then stretched absently. “There was nothing I could see. Christ, look at the time. Didn’t we just have breakfast?”

  Shelby heard her stomach rumble and grinned at him. “My stomach says the donuts were hours ago. Why don’t we really give the gossips something to talk about and go to the café for lunch?”

  “Aren’t you tired? We’ve been poring over these damned records for more hours than I want to think about.”

  “I’m a natural night owl, and it’s not so unusual for me to skip a night’s sleep if I get involved in something.” She shrugged. “Anyway, since tomorrow’s Sunday, we can both sleep as late as we want, so what the hell. You did say this is your weekend off, right?”

  “Officially. Sheriff Cole has us all working overtime, but he’s insisted everybody gets at least one weekend a month off the clock, and this one’s mine. So unless another body turns up, nobody’ll expect to see me at the office.”

  “Do you want to go home and crash? Or lunch at the café? Maybe we can figure out a way to find some clue as to what George was looking for in these birth records.”

  Justin had his doubts, but he was also enjoying Shelby’s company and was far too wired to even think about sleep, so agreed that lunch sounded like a good idea.

  It was fairly busy in town on this Saturday afternoon, but the lunch crowd at the café was already thinning out and they had no difficulty getting a somewhat secluded booth near the back.

  Shelby, perfectly aware of several covert glances, managed not to laugh, but did say to Justin when the waitress had left with their order, “Life in a fishbowl, that’s Silence.”

  Casual, Justin said, “Is it the fact that you’re with me they’re interested in, or the fact that I’m with you?”

  “Both, I’d guess. You’re a very visible part of the investigation, so everybody’s naturally interested in what you do. As for me, well, let’s just say I seldom have lunch with handsome men.”

  “That’s a surprise. And thank you.”

  She laughed half under her breath. “Since I’m usually wandering around town with my cameras and probably see a lot of stuff I wouldn’t otherwise see, I know most of the men in Silence very well. Too well, I guess. Makes it difficult for me to think of any of them as boyfriends or bed partners.”

  “Because your candid camera caught them being themselves?” Justin guessed shrewdly.

  “Something like that. It’s amazing how many people seem to imagine themselves in a bubble of privacy even when they’re out in public.”

  Justin didn’t ask for any of the details of what she’d seen, but he did wonder if even one of the hopeful suitors Shelby had undoubtedly turned away had the slightest idea why she found them unacceptable. But before he could say anything, she was cheerfully supplying some of the details he would just as soon not have had.

  “I mean, it’s hard to blame anybody for scratching an itch even in public, or dealing with a wedgie—because you really have to, after all—but nose-picking and cleaning out one’s ears really crosses the line, you know? And I actually watched one guy clipping his nose hairs with one of those little battery-powered clippers. I found it extremely unsettling. And not at all attractive.”

  Justin laughed. “Obviously you’re going to have to lower your standards.”

  “Or put away my cameras,” she agreed ruefully. “Not that I’m prepared to do either. Which makes it a good thing that I don’t at all mind being alone most of the time.”

  “Well, for God’s sake, tell me if I do anything disgusting, okay?”

  Shelby grinned at him. “I don’t think you will.”

  He eyed her uncertainly for a moment while Emily poured coffee for them, and when the waitress had gone again he said, “You have pictures of me, don’t you? Candid shots?”

 
“Just a few.”

  “Jesus.” He tried to remember if he had done anything that he, if not she, would consider embarrassing, but found it all but impossible to recall movements or gestures that probably were unconscious anyway.

  In a more serious tone, Shelby said, “One of the reasons I decided to approach you about the investigation was that I had watched you on and off these last weeks. It’s obvious you’re committed to your job and that you do it well. You’ve always been very intent, very focused on what you’re doing at any given moment, and yet you always pay attention to the people around you.”

  “I didn’t see you and your cameras,” he pointed out wryly.

  “That’s because I didn’t want you to see me. Not that I was spying on you or anything like that, it’s just that I’ve developed the knack of watching people without their awareness.”

  “The way you watched Sheriff Cole,” Justin said, deciding to turn the conversation in a less personal direction.

  Shelby followed agreeably. “Exactly. Remember, I’ve been watching Ethan Cole for years, so when I paid closer attention to him after the first murder, I could see he was behaving differently. For a long time, there was nothing I could put my finger on, but when I grouped all the photographs of him together, that’s when I found what I showed you. These.”

  In her enthusiasm, Shelby reached into the big canvas tote bag she always carried and pulled out the manila envelope she had showed Justin the day before.

  “These pictures mean something, Justin, and we both know it.”

  Alarmed, he glanced quickly around the café and found, as he expected to, that several people had noted Shelby’s actions. To make matters worse, before he could stop her she opened the envelope and drew out the photos, handing them across the table to him.

  “Take another look at them,” she invited him.

  Justin knew that making a big fuss would only draw more attention to them, but as he bent his head and looked at the pictures, he said under his breath, “I really wish you hadn’t pulled these out, Shelby. Not here and now.”