Black Magic Woman (29 page)

Read Black Magic Woman Online

Authors: Justin Gustainis

Tags: #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Mystery Fiction, #Paranormal, #Fantasy, #Horror, #Witches, #Occult Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Occultism

In the basement of a house in Salem, Massachusetts, Christine Abernathy sat peering into a large ceramic bowl on the table before her. The vessel was decorated with a variety of cryptic symbols that had been applied with fresh baby's blood shortly after the bowl had been made, some two hundred and eighty years earlier.
Five squat black candles burned on the table, their light reflecting on the surface of the dark liquid that filled the bowl almost to the brim. The odor given off by the liquid was a pungent combination of kerosene and sulfur.

She added ingredients from several jars and bottles nearby, making complex signs with each addition and murmuring all the while in ancient Chaldean, a tongue that was archaic when Christianity was still young.

Some say that it was the language used by a certain serpent when it came to tempt a naive young woman, in a garden long ago.

After the fifth ingredient had been added, the liquid suddenly cleared. On its surface appeared a moving image, almost as if a small television had been somehow turned on within the bowl itself.

The image showed a slim man with black hair and a tall, brown-haired woman. They each carried a suitcase and appeared to be walking along an urban sidewalk.

The powerful fetish she had been expecting from Cecelia Mbwato had not been delivered the night before. Christine Abernathy very much hoped, for everyone's sake, that nothing had gone wrong, and that her two associates had only been delayed. She would wait until she had the fetish in her possession before taking definitive steps against the LaRues, but overnight she had developed an idea for dealing with Morris and Chastain. It was now time to make it work.

Christine Abernathy spoke three more words and made a gesture with both hands over the bowl. The focus of the image began to broaden, as if a lens were being adjusted and pulled back for a wider view.

She could see the street now, and the busy traffic that traversed it, stopped now for a red light. She scanned the line of cars quickly, then seemed to settle on one, a blue SUV. Eyes narrowed, Christine began to speak loudly and very fast, all her considerable power focused on that one vehicle—and its driver.

* * * *
Arch Tracy was worried. Traffic was backed up, and if he was late again, which would be the third time this month, he was going to get a load of shit from Puckett, the foreman. They wouldn't fire him, not for that—he was one of the best welders they had, even that fucking Puckett had said so once. Besides it was a union shop, which meant to get fired Tracy would have to stick his torch up Puckett's fat ass and then give the gas valve a good, hard squeeze. A smile twitched across Arch Tracy's face as his mind entertained the image.
Might almost be worth it. Hell, I can always get another job
.
Some impulse caused him to look off to the right, where the pedestrians were making their way along the sidewalk. This being New York and rush hour, most of them were moving along pretty briskly.

Cooper's gaze suddenly focused on two people walking together, a man and a woman. He'd never set eyes on either one before, but somehow looking at them now set his teeth on edge. He couldn't have said what it was—they were probably just a couple of wage slaves on their way to work, a tall guy and a woman who was almost the same height.

But there was something about them that just pissed Arch Tracy off.

As they drew closer to where the SUV sat stuck in traffic, Tracy's irritation quickly progressed to anger, and then rage. He found himself consumed with irrational hatred for that tall asshole and the bitch with him, and they were suddenly all the people who had ever hurt him, scared him, embarrassed him, made him feel like nothing more than a dog turd fit only to be scraped off your shoes.

Tracy was staring at the couple now, seeing them as if through a red haze. His breath was coming in short gasps, his pulse pounding like a crazed drummer in his ears.

Suddenly, without any conscious decision on his part, Arch Tracy wrenched the wheel of the SUV hard to the right, making the power steering scream with the strain. A moment later his foot, seemingly of its own volition, moved from the brake pedal to the gas.

And then he floored it.

* * * *
It was the screech of overburdened power steering that caused Quincey Morris to glance toward the street, and that was the only thing that saved him. He saw the blue SUV suddenly pull out of the line of idling cars and make a screaming beeline for the sidewalk, picking up speed alarmingly fast.
It was headed right at him and Libby.

Even Morris's hair-trigger reactions gave him precious little time to do anything. As the SUV bore down on them, he yelled "Libby!" and shoved her hard to his left, an instant before making his own desperate dive to the right. In the midst of this flurry of movement he got a fraction of a second's glimpse of the SUV's driver, whose face was distorted into a mask full of the kind of rage and pain that you rarely see outside of an asylum.

Morris tried to turn his dive into a tuck and roll, but the small suitcase hanging on his shoulder made that impossible. He hit the pavement with the suitcase underneath him, bounced off it, and slid several feet—until he was abruptly stopped by the impact of his head against the base of a lamppost.

After that, things got kind of hazy for a while.

He was vaguely aware of the sounds of impact as the SUV smashed headlong through the front of Del Floria's Tailor Shop, which lay just beyond where Morris and Libby had been walking. He could hear the SUV's horn then, a blaring monotone that went on and on until somebody must have pulled the driver's body off the steering wheel. A while after that, Morris couldn't have said how long it was, came the peal of sirens which gradually grew louder before suddenly ceasing altogether, to be replaced by a hurly-burly of flashing lights, slamming doors, and shouted orders.

And, semiconscious though he was, Morris lay there on the pavement and grieved. Because from the section of sidewalk where he had desperately shoved Libby Chastain, there was silence. And silence. And silence, still.

* * * *
It had just gone one in the afternoon when Fenton and Van Dreenan followed Route 1 through Peterborough, Massachusetts. The pointer on Van Dreenan's magical device was aimed straight ahead, so they assumed they were still on the right track.
"I don't know where our friends are headed," Fenton said, "but they sure as hell don't seem to be in any big hurry to get there. We haven't hit anything bigger than a two-lane road since we left Cranston."

"It is curious," Van Dreenan said. "Regardless of where their rendezvous is, there are surely faster ways to get there than the route they are following. One assumes they would be in a hurry."

"I don't suppose this would be a good time for me to wonder aloud whether that magical doohickey is doing what it's supposed to?"

Van Dreenan shrugged his big shoulders. "You either believe, or you don't," he said. "Me, I believe—perhaps because I have nothing else left. In any case, my friend, we are surely committed now."

"I just hope somebody in the upper echelons of the Bureau doesn't end up deciding that we ought to
be
committed." Fenton have a shrug of his own. "You're right, though. Fuck it. The cards've been dealt, and we put down our bets. All we can do now is play them."

A few minutes later, Van Dreenan's stomach made a noise like a small building collapsing. "Excuse me," he said with a grimace.

"Hungry?" Fenton asked. "Me, too. I haven't eaten since dinner yesterday, which was—" he checked the dashboard clock, "about seventeen hours ago."

"I don't think that stopping for food is a good idea, considering the circumstances. I imagine you have been hungry before, as have I. We survived it. We will this time, too."

"Yeah, but hunger equals low blood sugar, which equals loss of concentration and slower reaction time. And if we do catch up to these motherfuckers, we had damn well better bring our 'A' game, 'cause from what I've seen we are sure gonna need it."

"I did not understand that in all its particulars," Van Dreenan said, "but I believe I grasp your meaning. And I do not disagree. But I still do not think we can spare—"

"Tell you what," Fenton said. "Let's keep our eyes open for a fast food place that doesn't look busy. We stop, run in—well, maybe I run in, while you stay here and babysit that thing—I buy a bunch of food to go and bring it back here. Since eating while driving isn't real safe, you eat while I drive, then I pull over someplace, we switch places, and I eat while you drive. Total time lost, five minutes, tops. What do you think?"

"I think I want you at the table the next time my police union is negotiating its contract with the government," Van Dreenan said. "You're right, it's a good idea. Let us, as you say, keep our eyes open for a likely place."

A few minutes later, Fenton was stopped for a red light at an intersection and peering ahead through the windshield. "That looks like a Wendy's, up there on the right. See it? I'll cruise the parking lot, and you take a look inside, see how crowded it is."

"Fine with me," Van Dreenan said. He began to stow the magical tracker back inside his briefcase.

The light changed, and Fenton eased into the intersection. Perhaps his blood sugar really was low, or it may have been that thoughts of a double cheeseburger and large fries had him distracted.

For whatever reason, he reacted slowly, far too slowly, when the teenage boy in the pimped-out Camaro ran the red light and came streaking right toward them.

* * * *
The small, bright light shined into Morris's right eye, went away, then came back. A moment later, the same procedure was repeated with his left eye.
"You're a lucky man, Mr. Morris," the doctor said, replacing the penlight in the pocket of his starched lab coat. "There's no sign of concussion, your reflexive responses are normal, and the EEG results are negative. How's the head feeling?"

Morris rubbed the back of his skull, where he could feel a lump the size of a ping-pong ball. "I've had a few hangovers that were worse," he said. "Although not recently."

The doctor nodded without smiling. He was a short, freckled redhead who reminded Morris of a leprechaun. His name-tag read "Rosenbloom."

"Lucky, as I said." Rosenbloom glanced at the file he was holding. "I understand you've been asking about the woman who was with you, Elizabeth Chastain."

"Yes."

"I'm afraid Miss Chastain was not so fortunate."

Morris felt a tight, hard knot form in the pit of his stomach. Trying to hold his voice steady he asked, "Dead?"

"No, she's alive, although I'm told it was touch and go there for a while."

The knot loosened, a little. "Is she going to make it?"

"She's not my patient, you understand. Doctor Stanhope headed the team that treated her, and he's currently in the middle of treating a gunshot victim. But I was able to get a look at Miss Chastain's chart before I came in here. She sustained severe injuries, but they've got her stabilized now. I'd say the prognosis is… fair."

"You said 'severe injuries.' How severe?"

Rosenbloom frowned with concentration. "The chart mentioned a ruptured spleen, perforated large bowel, and some kidney damage. Internal bleeding, but that's under control. Plus two, no, three cracked ribs and a fractured right fibula."

"Come again on that last one?"

Rosenbloom made a face. "Sorry. Broken arm."

"Can I see her?"

"She's in the ICU. Normally, they don't admit visitors who aren't members of the immediate family. They're pretty anal about it."

Morris closed his eyes for a moment. Through clenched teeth, he began, "Doctor—"

"Of course, since Miss Chastain was unconscious when admitted, they were unable to ask the usual questions about marital status, and so on. Lots of women keep their last names when they get married. If you were her husband, I could get you into the ICU to see her."

Rosenbloom looked at Morris for a long moment. "Tell me, Mr. Morris, are you Elizabeth Chastain's husband?"

Morris nodded, his face expressionless. "Yes, Doctor. Yes, I am."

"All right, then." He made a note in the file. "I'll see that you're informed as soon as she comes out of the anesthesia. In the meantime, I believe there are some people waiting to talk to you."

"Who's that?"

"A couple of detectives from the NYPD."

* * * *
"You sure you don't want to go to the hospital? Either of you?" Sheriff's Deputy Tom Bernardi's eyes went from Fenton to Van Dreenan and back again. "You guys don't look so great."
"You should've seen the other guy," Fenton said, then remembered what the teenager had looked like when the emergency rescue crew had peeled him out of the wreck of his Camaro. The kid had not, apparently, been wearing his seatbelt, nor did he have the protection of airbags. "Sorry," he said. "Bad joke. No, Deputy, we're all right. Really."

Fenton had developed a bloody nose from the car's air bag exploding in his face, but the bleeding had just about stopped now. Van Dreenan, who was sitting next to him in the back of the deputy's cruiser, had a welt on the side of his face from slamming into the side window, but the ice pack provided by one of the EMTs was helping to reduce the swelling, and the South African was not exhibiting any signs of concussion. Their car, however, was likely headed for the junkyard.

"Well, if you gentlemen are going to decline transportation to the nearest medical facility, I'll need to get some information from you for the accident report."

Bernardi produced a clipboard with a number of forms clipped to it. Long, complicated-looking forms.

"Deputy, I would be really grateful if you would let us get back in touch with you later to complete the paperwork," Fenton said. "I understand that you have rules and procedures to follow, and I'm not disrespecting those. But as I told you, we're on official business, and Detective Sergeant Van Dreenan and I really need to get going."

"Are you claiming the existence of an emergency, Agent Fenton? Keeping in mind that I will be obligated to ask you for the nature of that emergency, which I will later have to verify with your superiors?"

Fenton thought about trying to explain that he and Van Dreenan were pursuing a couple of serial killers using a magical device made by a white witch, and then he thought about asking his boss at Behavioral Sciences to back him up on it.

Fenton dabbed at his nose, which no longer needed his attentions. "Can we at least expedite this as much as possible?"

"Yes, sir," Deputy Bernardi said impassively. "I'll sure do my best."

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