TWENTY-ONE
As I stared at Jin, I
could hear a vehicle coming close, the engine grumbling while snow
tires roared on the road’s rough surface. I wanted to keep on
questioning Jin, but I figured the only person who would be driving
this way now was the sheriff’s deputy on his way to pick me up. I
grabbed my wet coat and scarf and struggled into them as we went
outside.
“You’d better get out of here and lock up when
I’m gone. I’ll find you again tomorrow.”
Jin made a face. “Bring something nice with you
or I won’t come.”
I wanted to smack him with the heaviest object I
could find, but I didn’t have anything but my bag and I didn’t have
time, either. “I’ll meet you at the hot springs gate. I need to
talk to the ley weaver and you’re coming with me.”
The demon looked unhappy but nodded and slid
away around the corner of the lodge, lopsided and strange in his
torn, legless suit and limping, barefoot, past the soup of ghosts
and lambent magic along the shore. I gave a bitter laugh and the
ghastly shadows in the yard echoed it as headlight beams swept down
from the road and caught me on the porch.
A white Crown Victoria with Clallam County
sheriff’s office stripes and decals rolled into the parking lot. I
stepped into the rain and onto the asphalt, away from the building,
hoping to discourage the deputy from inspecting the lodge and
seeing any telltale boot prints.
The man, whose name tag read TRIPP, wasn’t too
pleased with his errand, especially when he saw how wet I was, but
he bundled me in and drove the thirty minutes to Sol Duc so I could
get my Rover. He waited with his lights on while I approached the
car. The noise and light of the ley weaver’s work had dwindled,
banked like a fire for the night, I guessed. If it had been
brighter or louder, I might have missed the lingering streaks of
gray, red, and blue that clung to the edges of the driver’s door. I
paused and stared at it, not caring that I was getting further
soaked in the persistent rain. I pressed the automatic lock switch
on the fob, which I usually ignored since I’d long ago developed
the habit of locking doors manually and hadn’t broken it, in spite
of the Rover’s automated lock-and-alarm system.
The car honked once, already locked and armed.
But I knew there hadn’t been any tattered threads of Grey on it
when I’d left it. Unless the ley weaver’s work had rubbed up on the
truck in some way and left the energetic shreds behind, someone
magical had been in my truck.
I unlocked it from a distance—another thing I
rarely did—and let myself in, checking for further signs of the
intruder as I got into the driver’s seat. A few things had been
moved around, but I could have written that off to the rough road,
if I hadn’t seen the other indicators first. I checked the glove
compartment and under the seats. Then I made the deputy wait while
I got out and went around to check the back. I couldn’t see that
anything was missing, nor did there seem to be anything new. . . .
But something had happened.
I checked my pockets. Something was missing: my hotel key card. I’d had it earlier.
I could remember it in my hand when I’d been trying to persuade
Ridenour to take me with him to the greenhouse. I’d tossed it on
the passenger seat, but it wasn’t there now. I got back out and
walked to the Crown Vic.
Tripp lowered the window and gave me an
expectant stare. “Something wrong?”
“Yeah, I think someone’s been in my truck. My
hotel key’s missing and I left it in there. Would you follow me to
my hotel? Just in case?”
“I can do that. Strother wanted to talk to you
anyhow, and I can have the dispatcher call him to meet us there.
That way I’ll know you got there all right.”
“And didn’t run away,” he implied, but he was
polite enough not to say so. “Thanks,” I said. Whatever his
motives, I would be glad to have some backup if anyone was lying in
wait for me at my hotel. I was wet and tired and sore from my hike
down the mountain, running from zombies, and sitting in an ice-cold
cabin while bargaining with a demon. I was not too proud to ask for
help. I’d keep an eye out for Grey things at the hotel while the
deputy played tough guy. That suited me fine.
I took off my wet coat and grabbed a dry jacket
from the rear so the drive to Port Angeles wouldn’t be quite as
itchy and miserable as the stretch from East Beach to Sol Duc had
been. I cranked the heat up to maximum as I drove. The deputy
followed me down Highway 101, keeping a safe but observant distance
all the way to the hotel.
My room was on the back of the building and I
drove around to park the Rover near it before walking up to
reception. I don’t know if Tripp was afraid I’d bolt or if he
thought I was being silly, but he stuck with me every step of the
way. He’d been chatting into his radio as I asked for a new key,
and as the clerk handed it over, the deputy stepped up beside
me.
“Pardon me,” he said to the clerk. “Has another
sheriff’s deputy been in asking about this woman here?”
The clerk looked a bit nervous and gave me a
sidelong glance. “Um . . . yeah.”
“About when was that?” the deputy asked.
“ ’Bout an hour ago, maybe an hour and a
half.”
“Where’d he go after that?”
“He . . . uh . . . he headed on back to her
room. ’Cuz he asked for her and she didn’t answer the phone when I
called her and he said he’d just go on back and try the door
himself, so I told him the room number and he started walking that
way.”
Tripp nodded. “Thank you. And he hasn’t come
back up here to leave a message or passed by on the way out?”
The clerk shook his head.
The deputy bit his lip. Then he added, “All
right, then. We’ll go take a look ourselves.”
This time, Tripp walked in front of me with his
flashlight in one hand and his other resting on his gun. I looked
for things in the Grey but didn’t see much I hadn’t seen the night
before. The only things new in the thin soup of mist and a small
cluster of ghosts were a few streaks of black and red near the jamb
of my steel-clad door. There were no bright lines of magic or bolts
of streaking light; no knots of pain or spiked figures of
malevolent spells.
I stood to the side and unlocked the door. Tripp
pushed it open and took a step inside.
“Ah, shit.”
He stepped back out, trying to pull the door
closed, but I stuck my foot in the way and swung it open
again.
“Ma’am, don’t go in there.”
I just stopped in the doorway and doubled over,
not from the sight, which was bad enough, but from the blast of
recent death that hit me like a giant fist. I spun back out of the
doorway and let the door slam closed, wishing I hadn’t
looked.
I collapsed in a crouch against the wall and put
my head between my knees, trying to squeeze away the pain in my
chest and gut and the nausea that twisted through me. I retched. I
hadn’t seen it coming. The steel door had blocked it, holding in
all but the tiniest threads of horror.
Even in the dim light from the hallway, there’d
been enough illumination to see the man lying facedown on the
floor, a few thin strands of blond hair showing above the gruesome
pulp someone had made of the back of his head. The uniform, the
height and build, all told me who it was; I didn’t even need the
confused, aching tangle of ghost hovering there to know it was Alan
Strother.