Read Known Devil Online

Authors: Matthew Hughes

Tags: #Occult Investigations Unit, #Occult Crimes Investigation, #zombies, #wereweolves, #vampires, #demons, #gangbangers, #crime spree

Known Devil (34 page)

BOOK: Known Devil
3.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
McGuire moved around a couple of objects on his desk that didn’t need moving, and that’s when I felt icy fingers touch my spine. The boss doesn’t usually hesitate to say what’s on his mind – about anything.
“I’ve been hearing things, the last couple of weeks,” he said. “Nothing definitive – it’s what you’d have to call circumstantial evidence, but it still bothers me. Some people that the Chief’s been seen having lunch with, a few things he’s said at meetings, the fact that he’s talking about retiring next year –
to Bermuda
.”
“Holy fucking shit,” said. “You think the Chief of Police is in Wilson’s pocket.”
“Can’t prove a damn thing,” McGuire said. “But, yeah, I do. So you see the problem. I ask the Chief to authorize a big raid out on Lake Scranton, and he’s gonna turn me down flat – which he might well have done anyway. But more than that…” He let his voice trail off.
“He’ll tell Wilson we know where he is,” I said.
“Fucking Wilson’d turn that place out there into Fort Knox,” Karl said. “You’d need an armored division to take it.”
“Either that, or he’ll just disappear again,” I said. “And if he does, what do you figure the chances are we’d find the bastard again, before election day?”
McGuire snorted. “Snowball in Hell – if the odds are even
that
good.”
“Which means we’re fucked,” Karl said.
“No,” I told him. “It means we’re
royally
fucked.”
 
We got sent out on a call that turned out to be a false alarm. A woman living on Kaiser Avenue reported a werewolf prowling around her house. Karl and I didn’t turn up any werewolves, but we did find a guy from the neighborhood – he could’ve used a haircut and a beard trim, but he was still human – who liked to peek through windows. We sent the jerk home with a warning that Karl reinforced with a little bit of vampire Influence.
It was about time for our break then, so we headed for Jerry’s Diner, which was nearby. The mood I was in, I almost
hoped
somebody would try to stick the place up while we were there.
I was stirring sugar into my coffee when a thought occurred to me. “Karl, that Influence you laid on the peeping tom a little while ago….”
He put down his mug of Type O and looked at me. “Yeah?”
“Could you use it on Wilson’s guards? Maybe get them all to drop their guns and take a nice nap?”
“All of them?” He shook his head slowly. “No way, Stan. If there’s a technique for controlling a bunch of guys all at once, I never heard of it. I’d have to do them one at a time, and I don’t think it would take long before the others tumbled to what I was up to. They’d open up on me – and since those fuckers work for Wilson, I wouldn’t be surprised if they
are
packing silver bullets.”
“Shit,” I said. “Well, it was worth a try. I was hoping you could put them under your spell long enough for us to–”
“Wait – what did you say?” Karl was looking at me with an odd expression on his face.
“Just this crazy idea that you’d be able to–”
“I know what you meant,” he said, and stood up abruptly. “I’ll be right back.”
I watched as he went to the rack near the front door where Jerry keeps all the free print material that’s available for customers to take. I thought I remembered several books of realty listings, as well as the
Pennysaver Press
, a local rag that’s full of cheap classified ads from people with stuff to sell. The Chamber of Commerce puts some of its publications there, too.
But when Karl returned to our table, he was carrying a copy of
The Weekender
, which bills itself as “The Wyoming Valley’s #1 Arts and Entertainment Free Weekly.” It’s also the only such paper in the area, so the distinction of being number one doesn’t mean too much.
Karl sat down again and began rapidly flipping the pages. He didn’t bother to explain what the hell he was doing.
“If you’re looking for the ‘gentlemen’s club’ ads, I believe they’re towards the back,” I told him.
“Figured you’d know that,” he said, without looking up. “But I’m pretty sure they also keep track of what bands’re playing at the local bars… Yeah, here we go.”
He began scanning the page he’d stopped at. Then his eyes stopped moving. “Good – we’re in luck. They’re still in the area. Got a gig in Wilkes-Barre, starting tomorrow night.”
“You’re gonna let me in on this great discovery sooner or later, right?”
“Sooner,” he said, closing the paper and dropping it on the table in front of me. “Our big problem is all these heavily armed dudes guarding Wilson. We can’t fight ’em, so we’ve gotta find the way to get the fuckers out of there.”
“Tell me something I don’t already know.”
“OK, how’s this – what would you say if I told you I know where we can find us a Siren?”
 
The Banshees were beginning a two-night engagement at the Palace, a club in South Wilkes-Barre that looked like no palace I’d ever heard of. We’d called ahead, and the manager had told us that the band was expected to finish its last set around 2am.
I hadn’t been in Wilkes-Barre in a while, and returning now made me feel kind of depressed. Lacey Brennan lived here – or she used to, before taking an extended vacation to visit her sister. I wondered where Lacey was at that moment, what she was doing, and how she was feeling. I also wondered if she was ever coming back.
Then I told myself to suck it up and focus on the job at hand. The stakes were too high for me to fuck up now because I was feeling moony over a woman. Even if the woman was Lacey.
The Palace’s dressing room for performers was located in a basement that looked like it hadn’t been swept out since Bush was President – the first one. It was ten after two when I knocked on the door, which was answered by the lead singer, who I remembered went by the name of some insect – Daddy Longlegs, that was it.
He looked at me and said, “What?” His voice sounded hoarse.
“We’d like a few minutes of your time,” I said. Politeness pays, especially when you want a favor from some people who probably don’t like you very much.
He stared a couple of seconds longer. “Hey – I know you.”
“Yeah, you do.” I held up my ID folder and let him see my badge. It was meaningless here, since Karl and I were out of our jurisdiction – but I was hoping a bunch of musicians wouldn’t know about stuff like that. “Mind if we come in?”
“Yeah, OK. Sure.”
He stepped back and let us into a twenty-by-twenty windowless room with concrete floors, harsh fluorescent lighting, and heating pipes running across the ceiling. There were some beat-up gray lockers, a couple of long benches, and another door through which I could hear water running.
The other two guys in the band looked up from the task of putting their instruments away. They didn’t seem happy to see us, but nobody went for a weapon. That was about the best I figured we could expect.
I looked at Daddy Longlegs. “Where’s your bass player – the girl?”
“She’s in the shower.”
“You mind getting her for me?”
He took a couple of steps toward the open door and called, “Hey, Scar! Come on out – we got visitors.”
The sound of running water stopped. A minute or so later, the young woman – whose real name, I knew, was Meredith Schwartz – came out, using a towel to wipe down her buzz-cut blonde hair. Apart from the towel, she was naked, but the guys in the band showed about as much interest as if she’d been wearing a suit of armor.
She looked at Daddy Longlegs. “Hey – who called five-oh?”
“Nobody,” he told her. “Guy said he wants to talk to us.”
She turned to me. “What about?”
“Why don’t you put something on first?” I said. I was trying to keep my gaze focused on her face, but one quick glance below told me that she had several more tats – besides the human heart on her arm that I’d seen before – and no pubic hair.
“How come?” She gave me an evil grin. “This ain’t in public or nothin’.”
According to the research Karl and I had done on the band the night before, Meredith Schwartz was an honors graduate of Mount Holyoke College, but she sure didn’t act or talk like a typical Seven Sisters grad – at least, I hoped she didn’t.
“We appreciate that you got the right to dress however you want in private,” Karl said. “But we were hoping to have a conversation, and you’re kind of… distracting.” Then he gave her a big smile.
“Hey, you’re a vamp!” she said with delight. “I didn’t know there were any vamp cops.”
“There’s at least one,” Karl said. “So, you mind getting dressed, or what?”
I couldn’t tell if he put any Influence behind the request, but Meredith shrugged and said, “Sure.”
She walked over to one of the lockers and pulled out a sleeveless T-shirt, jeans, and a pair of old Adidas running shoes. Without wasting time, she put them all on.
I, of course, didn’t stare at her tight young body while all this was happening. I’m not some creepy old man. But I do have good peripheral vision.
Meredith finished tying her shoelaces and straightened up. “Better?”
“Less distracting, anyway,” Karl said. “Thanks.”
She gave him a look that said she might not be averse to distracting him again sometime, but turned toward me as I said, “We’re not here to give you guys a hard time – about anything. Truth is, we need to ask you for a favor.”
One of the other guys said, “Favor? What kind of favor?”
“We want to make use of your band’s special talent – more precisely, Scar’s ability to drive men into a frenzy by her singing.”
“In a house near Scranton,” Karl said, “there’s a very bad dude holed up, surrounded by a bunch of guys with guns who aren’t afraid to use them. If we went straight in after him, there’d be a bloodbath.”
“Even assuming we could get authorization to go in after him,” I said, “which we can’t.”
The beanpole who called himself Daddy Longlegs looked at me. “How come?”
“Politics,” was all I said, but his nod seemed to say that he understood.
“So you want Scar to sing to these guys,” he said, “so they’ll run after her and forget all about guarding this bad guy you wanna bust.”
“Yeah, that’s about right,” I said.
Scar looked at me, hands on hips. “So, what’s the catch?”
“It could be dangerous,” I told her. “Very dangerous.”
Her challenging expression slowly changed into a wide grin. “Shit, man – that ain’t the catch,” she said. “That’s the
fun
.”
 
We’d borrowed the flatbed truck from Karl’s cousin Ernie, who owned a John Deere franchise and used the vehicle to move heavy equipment around. Tonight it was being used to transport Banshee’s amps and instruments, along with a portable generator I’d brought to provide power. When I’d suggested that Scar just sing a cappella, the other band members had insisted on being there. I’d explained why this gig might be more risky than what they were used to, and Daddy Longlegs had spoken for the others when he’d told me, “No way, man! We’re a unit, an organic entity. Scar risks her neck, then we’re gonna be right there with her!”
Organic entity
. Right. Normally I don’t like being called “man”, but I was prepared to make an exception in the case of Daddy Longlegs, especially when he told me that he could drive a stick shift.
It was Wednesday night. Banshee had been committed to play at the Palace the night before, and although I’d offered to make up the eight hundred bucks they’d lose by not performing, they wouldn’t even consider it. “It ain’t just the money,” Scar had explained. “We punt this gig with zero notice, word’s gonna get around that we’re unreliable.
Then
who’s gonna hire us? We gotta think about the future of the band.”
We’ve all got our priorities. Mine was to put this crazy scheme into action as soon as possible, before one of Wilson’s pet cops found out what we were up to and warned him. If that happened, Wilson would be in the wind faster than a trailer park in a tornado.
But Karl had just come back from another scout of the Callaway estate, and he reported that all the guards were still in place, vigilant as ever. If Wilson had split, they wouldn’t have bothered. Probably.
For a staging area, we used a construction site where some new apartments were going up, about a mile from the Callaway place. There were no houses close enough for anybody to be disturbed as the band did its sound check. I was glad to see that the gasoline generator I’d rented was putting out enough juice to power Banshee’s big amps.
I also used the occasion to check my own hearing protection – it wouldn’t do much good for me to get caught up in the Siren’s song once it started. Vampire Karl was immune to it and didn’t need special precautions, but I’d bought a set of those metal and plastic earmuffs that airport mechanics use. They look like old-fashioned stereo headphones but give you about four times as much protection from ambient noise. I watched from twenty feet away as Scar and the boys did a sound check, and I could barely hear a thing.
When they’d finished, I took off the earmuffs and walked back to the truck. In my pocket I had two TracFones I’d bought at Vlad-Mart the day before. I handed one up to Scar. “Here, take this.”
She looked at it and said, “I’ve got my own phone, man. It’s lots better than this cheap piece of shit.”
“I’m sure it is,” I said. “But the only one who’s got the number of that particular phone is me. Put it in your pocket, will you? When that thing goes off, you’ll know it’s time to start the party.”
I went over to where Daddy Longlegs was sitting behind the wheel. “Once it starts, keep your eyes on the mirror. This works, a bunch of guys are gonna come bursting through those trees and make a beeline for the truck. They get within fifty feet or so, that’s when you start moving.”
“Keep the speed down to twenty or twenty-five,” Karl told him. “The objective is to keep them following you, not lose them.”
BOOK: Known Devil
3.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Blackstone's Bride by Kate Moore
A Deadly Business by Lis Wiehl
Night of Cake & Puppets by Laini Taylor
Alternative Dimension by Kirton, Bill
Ten Lords A-Leaping by Ruth Dudley Edwards
The Cult by Arno Joubert
Take Me for a Ride by Karen Kendall
The Day After Roswell by Corso, Philip J.