Part 1 (1/2)
Pure Blood.
by Caitlin Kittredge.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.
Thanks as always to Rachel Vater, my fabulous agent, and Rose Hilliard, my lovely editor at St. Martin's Press. To Team Seattle-Rich.e.l.le, Kat, Cherie, and Mark. Thanks for helping me keep my sanity (mostly). Thanks, Mom and Hal, for giving me a place to stay while I wrote Pure Blood Pure Blood and for being a supportive and understanding family. Agent Heidi Wallace of the ATF remains a peerless source for firearms knowledge and law enforcement procedure. Any errors are mine, not hers. Most of all, thanks belong to all of my readers, who love Luna and Nocturne City as much as I do, and interact with me on a daily basis on my blog. Keep reading, and I'll keep writing. and for being a supportive and understanding family. Agent Heidi Wallace of the ATF remains a peerless source for firearms knowledge and law enforcement procedure. Any errors are mine, not hers. Most of all, thanks belong to all of my readers, who love Luna and Nocturne City as much as I do, and interact with me on a daily basis on my blog. Keep reading, and I'll keep writing.
CHAPTER 1.
I'm not a patient person under the best of circ.u.mstances. Standing next to a dead man on a cold city sidewalk is not one of them. Add in the fact that I was the only homicide detective on the scene, and had been standing around stamping my feet and rubbing my hands together for almost half an hour, and you could kiss any patience I started the night with goodbye.
I grabbed Officer Martinez by the elbow as he walked past, headed to his patrol car.
”Where in seven h.e.l.ls is CSU?”
He shrugged. ”Sorry, Detective Wilder. There was a drive-by shooting on Archer Avenue. Could be another forty minutes. We're low priority tonight.”
I looked back at the dead man. Under the flickering sodium light his cheeks were gray hollows and his eyes receded until there was only black. He was thin, with grayish skin that puddled around his neck and wrists. A tan uniform s.h.i.+rt did nothing to cover the track marks on his forearms, between his fingers, in the fold of his elbow... everywhere. If I took off his shoes I'd find them in his ankles, his toes, and anywhere else a vein might be hiding.
A simple OD doesn't usually warrant a homicide detective, but I had been driving to work and picked up the call. It was a block away, so I swung by. By the way the dead guy smelled, I was wis.h.i.+ng I hadn't. He was stale-stale skin, stale sweat. The tang of cooked heroin burned the back of my mouth as I inhaled.
”CSU is on the way, Detective!” Martinez called from his patrol car. I rolled my shoulders. Thank the G.o.ds. I was in a bad neighborhood with limited backup, and someone in the dark row houses that lined the street was probably itching to shoot me right this second.
”You want a cup of coffee, Detective? I got a thermos in the prowler.”
I shook my head at Martinez, who looked sweetly disappointed. He was baby-faced, stocky and short, but had blazing black eyes and big hands that could probably snap a suspect in half.
”I don't drink the stuff.”
”Something a little stronger?” He pulled his blue satin jacket aside to show me an engraved silver flask. My mouth quirked.
”Your captain know you have that?”
”Don't ask about the captain's late-night lady visitors, he won't ask about what you do on patrol.” Martinez grinned back at me. ”Hey, don't take this as a come-on or nothin', but you look familiar. You didn't just transfer in, did you?”
I sighed. It had to happen sooner or later. Savvy editors had slapped my headshot from the police academy on the front page of every major newspaper in Nocturne City. Above the fold. ”I've been on medical leave for three months. Just got back today.”
”Three months ...” Martinez's gears ground for a second and then he blurted out, ”Hex! You're that cop that killed the DA!”
”Former DA,” I growled, ”and it's not like he didn't try to kill me- DA,” I growled, ”and it's not like he didn't try to kill me-and call a daemon-before I did something about it.” call a daemon-before I did something about it.”
”Holy s.h.i.+t,” said Martinez, slapping his leg. ”We got all your clippings up in the locker room at the precinct house. There was a pool whether they'd let you back on the force or Section-8 you.”
I had an unpleasant flash of Dr. Merriman, my department-appointed psychiatrist, and beat it back. ”Can I a.s.sume you bet against me?”
”h.e.l.l, no,” said Martinez. ”You're a tough bi-er, lady. I knew you'd be back.”
”Your confidence is touching,” I told him, and turned back to the body. Suddenly, the company of a dead junkie didn't seem so bad. At least he couldn't point and whisper.
I was going through the black messenger bag emblazoned with a fancy winged-foot logo and the legend messenger of the G.o.ds when the CSU van pulled up.
A black Lincoln with the seal of the city medical examiner parked behind the van, and Bart Kronen exited after a fight with his seat belt. He brought a canvas tote bag holding the tools of his trade and waved to me with his free hand.
”Good to have you back, Detective! What present have you got for me this evening?”
”Nothing exciting, I'm afraid,” I said as a CSU camera clicked and lit the scene to blinding daylight with a flash. ”Just your standard street OD.” I gestured to the one lit row house a block away. ”I figured he came out of that shooting gallery and dropped dead before he realized he'd gone past the point of no return.”
Kronen checked the man's pulse perfunctorily and then wiggled the arm. It moved like a store mannequin, all stiff joints. ”Rigor is fixed, skin is close to ambient temperature ... dead less than six hours. Can't be more specific, I'm afraid.”
I shrugged. ”Makes no difference to me, unless someone jabbed him with that needle against his will.”
Kronen flashed his light over the man's hands and fingernails. ”No trace evidence that I can see.” He lifted the lids of the staring eyes and examined them. The dead man had had green eyes, a bright gra.s.sy color that was already fading.
The pain caught my gut, a physical sensation to go with a memory of dark green eyes and s.h.a.ggy auburn hair falling across them like autumn leaves on a deep pond. Hex you, Dmitri. Hex you and the ground you walk on. Hex you, Dmitri. Hex you and the ground you walk on.
”Now this is interesting, Detective. Detective?”
As quickly as he'd come, he was gone, fading into a cloud of clove smoke and gravelly laughter.
I crouched next to Kronen, trying not to wince when he poked the dead junkie's eyeball with a rubber-tipped finger.
”See this here?” He indicated spidery columns of red drifting across the white.
”Little late for drops,” I said. Kronen's mouth curled in displeasure. I stopped smiling.
”This is petichial hemorrhaging,” he said. ”A bursting of miniature blood vessels on the surface of the eye.”
”So?” I said.
Kronen snapped off his light and stood, fixing his tie and expansive waistband. ”This is not consistent with a heroin overdose. Petichia usually occur when the brain is deprived of oxygen.”
”He wasn't strangled,” I said defensively. ”He's just dead.” I was competent, dammit. I didn't need to be walked through my own crime scene like a first-year patrol officer. I'd know if someone was strangled, thank you.
Kronen went about tucking all of his accoutrements back into their case, and he pulled out a clipboard, initialed a report of a white male, dead on the scene, and handed it to me to sign as the ranking responding officer.
”I have no idea what could have happened to him,” he said. ”But once I do the post I'm sure all will be revealed. In the meantime, do you ... detect... anything?”
My pen froze mid-signature. ”Exactly what's that supposed to mean, Bart?”
He spread his hands. ”Well, after the incident with Alistair Duncan certain ... rumors have been flying heavily. If you can put your abilities to good use, it might speed a cause-of-death determination along.”