Gathering Dark Candice Fox (e reader TXT) đ
- Author: Candice Fox
Book online «Gathering Dark Candice Fox (e reader TXT) đ». Author Candice Fox
âYouâre going to take the house, arenât you?â He turned her too roughly. âIs it just like that? They just give you the keys?â
âGet your fucking hands off me, Wally.â Jessica shoved him in the chest. âIâve had one phone call about this mess. One. I know as much as you do. Iâve got to meet with the executor of the guyâs will and see what itâs all about. This could all be a stupid goddamn mistake, you know that? Youâre treating me like Iâve taken the inheritance and moved to Brentwood already, and all Iâve got so far isââ
âEvery house in Brentwood has a pool,â Vizchen said. He was leaning against the car, his arms folded. âPlace has got a pool, right?â
âIf there was any justiceââWallert poked her in the chestââyouâd split the house with me. Itâs only fair. I was on that case, too.â
âYou didnât work it! Youââ
âI donât see any goddamn prowler.â Wallert stormed back toward the car and flung a hand at the surrounding neighborhood. âItâs a false alarm. Letâs get out of here. I need a proper drink.â He leaned on the car rather than getting in, big hands spread on the roof, his round belly pressed against the window. He looked at Vizchen. âEven if she gave me a quarter of what itâs worth, Iâd be set for life.â
âSet for life,â Vizchen agreed, nodding, smiling at Jessica in the dark like an asshole.
Jessica heard the whimper.
She thought it was Wallert crying and was about to blast him for a dayâs covert drinking ending in a mewling, slobbering, pitiful mess. But some instinct told her it was a sound carried on the wind, something distant, half-heard. Sound bounces around the poorer neighborhoods. All the concrete. She looked right, toward the silhouette of the mountains.
âDoesnât Harrison Ford live over there?â Vizchen wondered aloud. âI know Arnie does.â
âDid you guys hear that?â
âShe got on pretty damn well with the guy. The father. Beauvoir,â Wallert grumbled to Vizchen. âI mean, if youâd seen them together. She spent hours at his place. Just âtalking about the case,â about the dead daughter. Yeah, right. Now we know the truth.â
âShut the fuck up, both of you.â Jessica flipped her flashlight on. âI heard something. That way. We gotta go. We gotta check this out.â
âYou check it out.â Vizchen jutted his chin at her. âYouâre the hero cop.â
The sound returned, faintly this time, no more than a whisper on the breeze. Vizchen smirked at her as Wallert fished in the car for his cup.
Jessica headed east along the curve of the road, waiting for the sound to come again. Between the houses she caught a slice of gold light. Movement. Rather than continuing to follow the road around, she walked down the side of a quiet house, brushed past wet palm fronds as she found the gate leading into the yard. She vaulted it, jogged across the earth in case of dogs, vaulted the next fence. The house in Brentwood and Wallertâs rage were forgotten now. She could feel the heat. The danger. Like electricity in the air. She hit the ground and grabbed her radio as she headed for the garage of a large brick home.
A body. She knew the instant her boot made contact with it in the driveway, the sag of weight forward with the impact and then back against the front of her foot. It was still warm. Damp. She bent down and felt around in the shadows of a sprawling aloe vera bush that was growing over the low front fence. Belly, chest. Ragged, wet throat. No pulse. Jessicaâs heart was hammering as she grabbed her radio.
âWally, Iâve got a code two here,â she said. âRepeat. Code two at 4699 Lonscote Place.â
A sound in the garage ahead of her, up the driveway. The roller door was raised a foot or so, and from its blindingly bright interior she heard the whimper come again. A thump. A growl.
âWallert, are you there? Vizchen?â she whispered into her radio.
Nothing.
âWallert, Vizchen, respond!â She squeezed the receiver so that the plastic squeaked and crackled in her hand. Static. âFuck. Fuck. Fuck.â
Jessica pulled her gun and headed for the garage. Stopped at the corner of the building to radio command.
âDetective Jessica Sanchez, badge 260719. Iâve got a 10â54 and code three at 4699 Lonscote Place, Baldwin Village. Repeat, code three.â
There was a flash in her mind of Wallert and Vizchen laughing. Another officer might have wondered about the two of them, why they werenât responding. If they were in danger. But not Jessica, not today. Sheâd heard Vizchenâs words, knew she would hear them again in the coming weeks, from her brethren at the station. Youâre the hero cop. No one was coming to help her. Sheâd betrayed them all with the Brentwood inheritance. Sheâd marked herself as a traitor.
She sank to the ground, flattened, and rolled under the garage door, rose and held the gun on him. He was a big man, even crouching as he was, a heaving lump of flesh, bent back straining. At first she thought the old woman and the young man were kissing on the ground. Intimate. Mouth to throat. But then she saw the blood on his hands, all over his face, her neck. Jessica thought of vampires and zombies, of magical, impossible things, and had to steady herself against a pool table. Her mind split as the full force of terror hit it, half of it wailing and screaming at her to flee. The other half assessing what this was. A vicious assault in progress. Assailant likely under the influence of drugs. Bath saltsâtheyâd been hitting the streets hard in the past few weeks, making kids do crazy things: gouge their own eyes out, kill animals, ride their bikes off cliffs. She was watching a
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