Read Playing With Vampires - An Izzy Cooper Novel Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
“There’s a lot you don’t know about me,” he said, before downing the last of the whiskey in his glass.
“Then I guess you have a lot to learn about your new family … unless you change your ways somehow.” He chuckled, as if the mere thought was amusing.
Maybe I was still holding out the ridiculous hope that there was a side to him that wasn’t demonic.
My bitch switch shirt had a big picture of a light switch in the on position, with the words, Bitch Switch scrawled above it.
I figured that should rankle Ayden’s nerves enough to get even for the early mornings.
Once I was dressed, it was time for the rest of my morning routine, which I could have done with my eyes closed. It was a good thing too, since I usually did.
Brushing my teeth and hair was the next step. Of course I couldn’t forget my jeans and shoes.
My usual reaction to something so gruesome was to push it out of my thoughts, but it wasn’t working this time.
Although there was probably no connection to the homicides that had occurred earlier in the summer, I couldn’t help but wonder.
For a community that had gone the last hundred years with only a few murders, to have as many in less than six months wasn’t normal.
I figured since I needed a caffeine fix anyway, I might as well question whoever was working. Maybe one of Polly’s fellow employees would have some idea of what she’d been doing on Anchor Avenue.
I was glad to see that Janet Spencer was working. If anyone at the Quick Stop would know about Polly, it would be Janet. Whenever I’d seen the two girls working together, they’d seemed pretty close.
Much like Polly had been, Janet seemed like the perfect employee. She wore her chestnut brown hair pulled into a bun, and dutifully tucked her white and red uniform shirt into her pants, nice and neat like.
“Hello,” I said, giving her one of my most disarming smiles.
The only response I received was one of those mechanical, customer service smiles.
“Do you mind answering a couple of questions about Polly Nielson?” I asked, sliding my money across the counter.
“I guess it would be okay.” Janet shrugged. “But Sheriff Bourne already stopped by my house last night to question me.”
“It will only take a minute.”
“How well did you know Polly?”
“We talked a lot while working … and sometimes we’d go hang out on our days off.”
“So would you have any idea what Polly would have been doing on Anchor Avenue so late?”
Now we were getting somewhere.
Getting a nighttime job was one thing, but getting a job that had to be kept secret meant that whatever she’d been doing, it couldn’t have been good.
“So she never gave you any idea who it was she was working for?” I prodded, hoping that somehow my questions would jar the girl’s memory.
I hated playing my, threaten the witness hand, but I was sure Janet was holding back something.
Janet’s eyes scanned the store, as if she were worried someone would overhear her. “Well you know Polly’s grandfather is a warlock, right?
I nodded. “Do you think there’s a connection?”
Janet shook her head. “I don’t think there’s a connection to her grandfather being a warlock … at least not directly. But …” her voice trailed off.
To remedy this, I took a couple sips of the rich brown liquid, managing to scorch my lips in the process.
“Don’t you think that Polly’s grandfather might have had some enemies?” she answered my question with a question.
Damn I really hated that.
I assumed it wouldn’t anyway. It wasn’t as if I’d had a lot of time to look over the cases to find a connection. That was one thing I’d learned while working with the FBI. When it came to serial homicides, there was always a connection between the victims, even if it wasn’t apparent to the average person. The connection might be the color of their hair, or as simple as accessibility.
“So Polly never gave you a single hint about what her job was?” I asked again.
“I know it had something to do with the new owner of the Marsh estate. That’s really all she would tell me about it.”
I had a bad feeling, and usually when I had bad feelings, chocolate did wonders.
This time the chocolate didn’t do much of anything, except cover my hands with a sticky substance that was going to bug the hell out of me until I got to the office and washed it off.
Although the road had lots of twists and turns, I could practically drive it with my eyes closed, which meant I could divide my attention between my blasting radio, and the road. That’s exactly what I was doing when all the sudden the radio went bonkers and filled with static.
Startled, I swerved and nearly took Lady Luck and myself off a hundred foot cliff that would have landed us right into the swirling gray waves of the Pacific Ocean.
When my heart slowed enough that I could think straight, I glanced into my rearview mirror.
“What the hell are you doing in my backseat?” I asked, in a not so friendly manner.
This was the second time Muriel had nearly killed me. The last time had been on the stairs to the lantern room of the lighthouse.
She’d claimed it was an accident, but I was no longer so sure.
“Sorry,” she apologized. “I wanted to talk before you got to work.”
“Well next time warn me before you pop in like that,” I grumbled, pushing my words home with an angry scowl.
A sudden thought popped into my head. “I thought you couldn’t leave the lighthouse?”
Muriel shrugged. “I don’t know. I was thinking about you and the next thing I knew, I was in your car.”
Leaning down, I studied the horizon through the windshield. There were lots of gray black clouds, but as far as I could tell, no lightning.
“You look dead,” I commented. What’s up?”
“So there’s been another death, hasn’t there?” Muriel asked, not bothering to answer my question.
I hated that too.
“What makes you think so? Have you seen the captain again?”
Muriel nodded. “I saw him last night. He was sitting in a rowboat just offshore … and he was watching the lighthouse.”
I wasn’t sure how much of what Muriel said I could believe, but if she did see this ghost haunting the shore of Shipwreck Point, then it was a bit odd.
Muriel rolled her eyes. “It’s not like he couldn’t get there in a hurry, if he wanted.”
That part was true, but what was even truer was that ghosts rarely killed the living. They preferred to hang around and spook them. Why the dead liked doing things like that, I still hadn’t figured out yet.
“You want to know what I think, Muriel?”
“What?” she asked in a particularly wary voice.
Apparently she’d grown accustomed to my bitchy moods, and knew what to expect when I happened to be in one of those moods.
“I think you probably overheard Tim and Ayden talking about the case, and you just want to pin it on the old captain.”
“Whatever!” she said before dissipating into thin air.
Even after I’d explained to Muriel that the last case really had nothing to do with Captain Marsh, she’d insisted that there was a connection, though she couldn’t tell me what that connection was.