Authors: Lisa Jackson
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Suspense, #Thrillers
with New Age religion, had solid roots in Catholicism. Another lapsed believer, but
one, Olivia sensed, ready to return to the fold. Wasn't she one herself? "It's not going to be as easy as I thought to sell this place." She glanced around her grandmother's cabin with its gleaming wood walls and floors shining with over a hundred years' worth of patina. Tall windows with narrow panes offered a spectacular view of the bayou. The insulation was practically nil, the plumbing and electricity added decades after the original construction and now were outdated and probably dangerous. "I have a lot of work to do before I put it on the market and then I'm not sure I want to. It's been in my family forever."
"So you haven't decided if you're going to stay in New Orleans?"
"I know I'll stick it out until I finish my master's. Then, who knows?"
"Still working for that little store in the square?"
"Part-time. Around school." She leaned a hip against the counter and thought of the eclectic clientele of the Third Eye. Located in a cubbyhole across from Jackson Square, the store boasted an inventory of everything from dried alligator heads to religious artifacts. New Age to voodoo with a smattering of Christianity in between. "How's business in Tucson?"
"Great," Sarah said as if she meant it. "I met with a new artist who's going to display her things in the back nook. Consignment, and I've got a couple new lines of crystal pendants that are selling like crazy. But I miss you.
It's not the same."
"Didn't you hire someone?"
"Oh, yeah. I hired a girl, not a partner. A girl with tattoos on her arms and not just rings in her nose and eyebrows, and wherever else she can find a tiny fold of skin, but safety pins! Can you imagine? She looks like she should be working for a tailor, not a New Age shop."
Olivia laughed. For the first time that morning. "Careful, Sarah, your parochial school roots are beginning to show."
"Forbid the thought."
"The first thing I know, you'll be wearing a plaid skirt, blazer, and knee socks to work."
"Very funny." "I thought so." Olivia glanced at her grandmother's tattered cane rocker at rest near a pot overflowing with the shiny leaves of an ever-growing jade plant.
"Oh, I've got a beep, I'd better go ... "
"Talk to you later," Olivia said, knowing that Sarah was eager to get off the phone and check the other line. Sarah, the eternal optimist, probably thought the caller would be a recalcitrant Leo, tired of the new woman and ready to crawl back on his hands and knees, to beg forgiveness from his loving saint of a wife.
hairy gave off a bark and twirled in tight little circles at the back door. "Wanna go out?" Olivia asked as she swung the door open and the dog scurried outside. Storm clouds gathered on the horizon and the air was sticky with the threat of rain. The dog ran the length of the porch to disappear into a thatch of tall grass and cypress, sniffing the ground searching for squirrels or possum or whatever marsh bird he could scare up.
Olivia's stomach rumbled. It was ten in the morning and she'd been up for seven hours, existing only on coffee and adrenalin. She opened the refrigerator and scowled at the lack of groceries--two eggs, a chunk of cheese, a halfloaf of bread, and a bottle of catsup. "Omelette time," she remarked, as she heard hairy pad inside. "How about you?" She opened the pantry, where a half-full bag of dog chow was tucked beneath three shelves of canned peaches, apricots, and pears that her grandmother had preserved. At the thought of the old woman, Olivia felt a pang of sadness.
It was just damned hard to lose someone who loved you so unconditionally.
After measuring a cup of dry food into Hairy's dish, she added parrot seed to Chia's cage and stroked the parrot's smooth green feathers.
"Isn't she beautiful?" Grannie had asked when she'd first brought the bird home. "They're messy as all get-out, I know it, but Wanda owed me some money and offered me Chia. I couldn't resist." Grannie's eyes had twinkled and Chia had been a member of the family ever since.
"Grannie was right, you know. You are beautiful," Olivia told the bird, who stretched her brilliant wings and picked up some of the seeds in her dish.
Olivia turned on the radio and stuffed two slices of bread into the toaster. As the dog made short work of his breakfast, she fired up the stove and whisked the eggs together. Patsy Cline sang about love lost.
Great. Just what I need to hear.
What an upper, she thought as the eggs began to bubble and she grated the wedge of cheese. The final notes of the song began to fade, and
"Ramblin' Rob," the deejay, cut in to give some story about the old country classic recorded shortly before the star's death. His deep, baritone voice slid easily out of the speakers and he spoke as if he knew all of his listeners personally. Which Olivia liked.
In the few short months she'd been back in Louisiana, Olivia had come to recognize some of the local newscasters and deejays. The radio station she listened to more often than not was WSLJ, the same station where Samantha Leeds aka "Dr. Sam" dispensed her nightly advice to her callers, the same station she'd "heard" last night during the vision.
The damned vision.
She felt that same icy presence rush through her soul each time she thought about that horrifying murder. So don't.
Don't think about it. But even as she was mentally reprimanding herself, a jagged memory of the victim begging for forgiveness skittered through Olivia's brain. Distracted, she slid her knuckles along the side of the grater. "Ouch.
Damn." Blood oozed up from her skin and quickly she sucked on her fingers, then turned on the faucet and let cold water run over her hand.
"I'm an idiot," she muttered at Hairy "Truly an idiot."
The truth of the matter was Olivia was troubled because she couldn't put the nightmare behind her. She'd hoped talking to the police would help. But Bentz's blatant doubts had stopped her cold. She'd thought, from reading the article in the paper, that he might be different, more receptive, but he'd been nearly as bad as Brinkman. "Jerk," she muttered.
Maybe Bentz's doubts are well founded. Maybe it was all just a dream, a really horrible, bad dream.
"Yeah, and maybe I'm the Queen of England," she growled as she wrapped a paper towel around her fingers and managed to sprinkle a handful of mozzarella onto the eggs.
The toast popped.
Olivia slid the slices onto a plate and was reaching for the tub of margarine when she heard the newscast. "... a three-alarm fire last night took the life of one woman who has yet to be identified. The blaze broke out near three this morning near Bayou St. John ... "
Olivia sank against the counter and listened to the short bit of information. The press had only the basics. A fire. A woman dead.
Suspected arson. Nothing about homicide.
Nothing about a murderer escaping into the night.
But Rick Bentz knew.
And he'd be calling.
She didn't have to be a psychic to know that much.
Chapter Seven.
The real estate management firm wasn't much help. Bentz stopped by after grabbing his own car at the station only to learn that Oscar Cantrell, the owner of Benchmark Realty, was out. But the secretary, Marlene, a spacey brunette in red plastic-rimmed glasses, assured Bentz that the house where the fire had taken place had been vacant since September when some students at Tulane University had skipped out on several months' rent.
"It's always a crap shoot when you rent to college kids," Marlene confided, and added that the five boys who had rented both sides of the building had turned out to be partiers.
They'd done some damage to the house which the cleaning and security deposits hadn't covered. Now the owners, a brother and sister who lived in separate states, were thinking about selling.
Marlene had talked a little breathlessly, all the while chewing gum and gesturing wildly with her hands. "We handle everything as the owners are out of state. Wes, that's the brother, he lives in Montgomery, and Mandy--she's married I and her last name is Sieverson now--she's in Houston. They can't get along to save their souls." She popped her gum.
"Mandy, she wanted to upgrade the place--it was really two units, you know, but Wes didn't want to put a dime into it." Dark, heavily penciled eyebrows rose above the I thin red rims, as if she were about to impart the wisdom of the ages. "His mother wasn't even cold in her grave when he called up and asked about selling the place. He was pretty adamant, let me tell you, but Mandy wouldn't go along with it She's married, as I said, and she wants to keep the house for an investment--you know, fix it up. But with Wes, now that's a different story. He went ballistic when those last tenants skipped out, let me tell you. Had himself one tremendous hissy fit and wanted the boss to make up the difference." She rolled her eyes and clucked her tongue.
"Oh, yeah, like that was gonna happen."
"I'd like a list of anyone who's been interested in the house since it's been vacated as well as anyone you hired ; who did the work to repair the place."
"No problem," Marlene assured him as her fingers flew over the keyboard of her computer. "It'll be just a sec. We keep a log on each property--kinda like a diary, you know."
An ancient printer chugged out a few pages in counterpoint to her rapid gum chewing, and within minutes, the secretary, far more efficient than she'd first seemed, handed him the printout.
She answered a few more questions, but aside from being a purveyor of all kinds of gossip, when push came to shove, Marlene wasn't a helluva lot of help. Bentz made a note to check out the owners and their recent travel schedules, just to make sure they hadn't blown into town and had decided to torch the place for the insurance money.
Except that an insurance fraud didn't begin to explain why some woman had been tortured and killed in the house.
Stan Pagliano's words played over and over in his mind.
"Her hands and feet were chained ... but it's her head ... it was nearly severed." Later, Stan had asked him what kind of sick bastard would commit such a horrendous crime.
Bentz didn't know.
But there was someone who might.
Olivia Benchel The lady had called this one, right on the money.
"I'm tellin' ya, she's a nutcase pure and simple," Brink- man said when Bentz caught up with him in the hallway near one of the interrogation rooms. "I talked to her twice and each time she came in with these cockamamie, bullshit stories about murders she'd seen, visions about someone being killed. But she couldn't give me anything concrete. No body. No murder scene. No damned smokin' gun. Nothin'. If ya ask me, and
seem' as you tracked me down, then yeah, you did, she doesn't have all her wheels on the pavement ... and she might just be ridin' a unicycle."
Bentz wasn't in the mood for bad jokes. As they walked to the stairs, weaving then" way past a group of uniformed cops, he said, "I just want to see the reports. This time there was a body and a murder scene, and if not a gun, a sword, for cryin' out loud."
"I heard about that one. Over off Esplanade, right?"
"That's the one."
"Christ. And she called it?" Brinkman shook his head.
He was bald, a horseshoe of black hair surrounding a freckled bald spot, the lights over the staircase gleaming on his pate.
They climbed the stairs, their shoes ringing on the steps as a couple other cops descended. "Brutal."
"So why do you think she's come in with bullshit before and then came through this time?"
"Dumb-ass luck? Hell if I know." Brinkman walked through the doors to a reception area surrounded by offices.
"But I have to admit, I was curious about her. She seemed so certain she was right. So I did some checkin', called around. Turns out she comes from a long line of crazies.
Her grandma claimed she was a voodoo priestess or some such shit just because she was an octoroon, and her mother's been married four or five times, and then there's the father, who's spent most of his life in the State Pen in Mississippi-
"Hang on. What's that all about?" Bentz asked as they reached the doors on the second floor.
"You didn't know? Old Reggie Benchet iced a man," Brinkman said, shovin g his glasses up to the bridge of his nose, a smile creeping across his lips as he realized he'd imparted new information. "It's all in my report. Reginald Benchet got out earlier this year."
"And?"
"Far as I know, he's kept his nose clean." Brinkman smiled. "A real
model citizen. Found God, or something'.
I'll send the info to you and then you can decide how much of Olivia Benchet's story you believe. If she knew what was happening' when the girl was offed, I'd bet she was in on it ... nah, she doesn't seem like the murderin' type. Oh, I got it" Brinkman snapped his thick fingers.
"She saw it. In a dream." "That's what she says."
"And you buy that? If so, I got some land in Florida--"
"Forget it, Brinkman. Just send me your notes," Bentz said, irritated.
He didn't buy the vision theory either, but he couldn't believe that the woman was in on the murder in any way, shape, or form. "Maybe we should
give her the benefit of the doubt."
"Oh, Christ, now you're soundin' like one of them damned bleedin' hearts." He shook his head and snorted.
"Just when I was beginning to think you might be a decent cop after all."
"Just get me the report," Bentz snapped.
"Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned." The Chosen One knelt at the altar and saw his own distorted visage in the shiny surface of the chalice. Candles burned and flickered, and through the walls of his drafty sanctuary he smelled the river. Musty. Damp. The current moved restlessly and would not be deterred. They had a lot in common, he and the Mississippi.
They both held secrets beneath their surfaces, secrets that would never be revealed.
"I am prideful, Father, and I ... " He swallowed hard, knew he had to admit his horrid sin. "I ... I've lusted after those women, and though I feel your power, Father, my ... my flesh is weak. So weak. I pray for your strength and your forgiveness ... "