Jimmy sat in silence for a minute watching her, urging her to leave with his eyes. "Look, don't get me wrong, it has nothing to do with you. It's just that I work alone I don't like partners." Jimmy had left out the how and why he did not like partners. It was no secret though. Before coming here he'd been a New York City police officer.
Jimmy was handpicked to head a special task force assigned to track a serial killer the papers had dubbed The Clown Killer. The first three victims were clowns, and after that, each body was found dressed as a clown. The departments had been making strides and were getting closer to a suspect. He was sure it would only be a matter of days. Everything was pointing to a woman, although most serial killers had been men.
Sophia, his longtime partner, and Jimmy had been on a stakeout that seemed futile. New York City was being pounded by a blizzard and both partners agreed it was time to call it a night. Jimmy had driven Sophia back to her home in Huntington since he had a Blazer. The snow was already three feet deep and he struggled to keep the SUV on the road. Upon arriving at her home, they both noticed the lights and door were wrong. The lights were out, and the door was open to the blowing snow.
Sophia didn’t wait for backup; she charged the house even before Jimmy could get the car in park. She was the first in, while Jimmy called for backup. He had only been a few seconds behind her, but it was enough to change all their lives. Jimmy found all of Sophia's family slaughtered. In the living room was the dog laying as though it was asleep. Her oldest son was placed at the kitchen table, his throat sliced, and a red nose placed on his chin. Peter, her husband was nailed to the wall in the hallway leading to the back door. His intestines had been pulled through his mouth and fixed to the ceiling. This was the same fashion as the "Clown Killer's" MO. Jimmy held back the bile building in his throat. He searched the den, hearing a thud upstairs.
He climbed the steps to the second floor with his back to the wall and his ears ringing with the sound of his heartbeat. He couldn't breathe. His focus was on the door to his left. Peeking around the corner, he could see a pool of blood. But before he got a good look, a strange gurgling sound came from the bathroom. As he sidestepped his way to the door, he could see in the mirror a woman, not his partner, holding something just out of sight.
"Hold it right there, mother fucker," he called out kicking the door open. In a flash, the woman who he had seen seconds before was not there. Inching closer the barrel of the gun pushed the curtain back. In the shower was Sophia's baby, or what was left of the child.
A man can only handle so much shock before his mind starts to deny what he sees. Jimmy stood there looking at the running water coming from the baby's mouth. The killer had run the showerhead through the baby's head. Jimmy felt his stomach convulse. As he spun to empty it on the floor, as he did, he saw the bloody shoes step next to him. Before he could lift the gun, or see who it was, he had been struck at the base of the neck. He saw the EMS team next.
The killings had shocked the city as deep as it had shocked Jimmy. He was removed from the case, but it didn't end there for him. Sophia had not been found, and within a week from the massacre, Jimmy had started to receive body parts. Sophia was being mailed, bit by bit, back to Jimmy with notes attached. The killings had stopped with Sophia the last of the victims. Jimmy resigned from the force and relocated half a world away.
"Look go ahead and get settled in, there is a stack of cases on the cabinet. I was just heading out to deal with a witness." It was a lie. He had no witness in mind, he just needed space to recover from the memories of Sophia. He paused at the door looking back at Natalia. "If the phone rings let it ring, do not touch anything on my desk." He twisted the knob to open the door to leave.
"I do not think so," she said in English accented in thick Russian, so her words were stressed harder. "I do not like this any better than you, but we are without a choice."
"No, I have a choice, I am leaving, and you are not. Now be a good little girl and don't touch anything while I am gone." Jimmy started to open the door to leave when he heard feet thudding on the ground.
"Look, Verspea, you don't have to be an asshole about this. We can be friends, or we can be enemies. But I am here for one year, and I think you should knock that chip off your shoulder and pull your head out of your ass. We can work together."
"You think you are so full of yourself, with your long hair and green eyes." He touched the tips of her hair on her shoulder. "But let me paint the picture for you, I don't need a partner, and I don't need you." He didn't give her time to retort his words, instead, he just walked out the door letting it slam hard behind him.
He heard curses in Russian and he knew his new partner was going to be taxing. He walked from the squad room and onto the street just as the sun began its nightly descent. The night was his time; he was friends with the darkness. Jimmy found his way to a corner café near Market Street and Chestnut Drive in 'old town'. He sat drinking his coffee when his cell phone rang.
"Verspea," he said, looking out the window half expecting Natalia to be standing there with some sick smug smile.
"Sir, we have a body in the alleyway behind Turner's Restaurant," Morris said.
"I'm on my way. Do me a favor, tell the women in my office to meet me there, and get her a map."
"Sir, she got the call before I could and is already on her way."
Jimmy replaced the phone on his hip as he downed the coffee; he dug into his front pocket for money. He tossed a ten on the table and carried the coffee cup through the cafe and finished off the last few drops before setting it on the counter. "Honey, I'll be back later, keep my table free," he called out watching the cup swirl from the force it landed.
Honey was the name of the server. Jimmy had been coming here for almost two years now, and every night the same woman greeted him. She was older, in her sixties, and she was still the best server around. Jimmy had little trouble tipping her heavy; after all, she was his source of contacts and happenings on the street.
Turners was only ten blocks away, he had made great time getting there and as he opened his car door, he saw his new partner pulling up. He waved to her while he placed his badge in plain sight on his hip. "Hey Mike, do me a favor," he said calling out to a young patrol officer. "You see that woman over there? Make sure she gets through." Jimmy nodded to the man as he walked down the alley.
Mike walked over to the crowd line and let the woman in with a nod. "Over there, ma'am," he said holding back an onlooker who had tried to enter with her.
Jimmy was an experienced officer; he had been on numerous crime scenes, so, he knew to start looking for clues in the area before the body. He stopped at an overturned trash can before noticing the bags were crushed. He moved further into the alley and found fresh blood. With a nod, he motioned his hand to Natalia, and then to where he had just been looking. "Start here," he pointed to the blood splattering.
Jimmy walked to the body, or what was left of it. It looked like it was a man or used to be a man. The head had been bashed in making it hard to tell the features. He walked around in a circle and side-stepped splatters of biological matter. The body was missing an arm. It looked as though it had been ripped from the socket.
"What do we have here, Curtis?" He asked.
"Well, it looks like our Mr. Doe here," he flicked his thumb to the body, "used to be: One, Franklin Carter, of 101 South Highland Way, and it appears Mister Cater was attacked by an unknown animal and one large person." Curtis knelt and using the edge of his pen pulled back the collar and exposed what could only be called teeth prints. “And the head wound might mean Mr. Carter here had another visitor. It almost looks like he has been curbed stomped, but I won’t know until I get him on the table.
"That is one big dog to do this much damage," Jimmy commented while kneeling beside the officer. "I found imprints on those bags over there. We may have a witness,” he looked to Josh who was just arriving. “Get your boys to do the normal search. I know the street people don't like us, but if one of them saw who did this, they could be next. Let's use that to our advantage. Maybe it will loosen someone's lips. And oh yeah, call Maggie Johnston, over at the zoo, and see if she knows what type of animal could have done this.”
Joshua gave a nod and side-stepped Natalia as she walked to Jimmy.
“Have we found the arm yet?" He asked.
“Not yet, but I’m still looking. She glanced at the body and then walked to the fair end of the ally. "Verspea," Natalia called. "Over here, I found the missing limb." She was crouching on one knee as she slipped on a pair of latex gloves.
Jimmy and Curtis walked the short distance to join her. Jimmy slipped on gloves before looking over the ground and noticed just off to the left of the limb was a partial track mark. It looked like a large dog print. "Natalia, make sure they get pictures of that," he nodded towards the print. "So, Curtis, do you have any ideas on what happened here?"
"Not yet, but I am working on it," Curtis said kneeling beside Natalia. Even in this position, Curtis was taller than the woman.
"You know what I think; I think Mister Carter was meeting someone down here. I think it went wrong and our mystery visitor brought along a large dog. Those teeth spacing on his shoulder are too big for an ankle bitter," he paused while looking again at the limb and gnaw marks, "that leaves what?"
"Could be almost anything from an English Mastiff to a Rottweiler, wolf, or even a bear?" Natalia offered. "The print is too large for a normal canine, and knowing the force needed to rip the arm off, I would have to think it was a very large animal."
“Get many wolves and bears around here Curtis asked very puzzledly. This was Georgia after all and maybe a coyote or two sneaks into the city but a wolf or a bear was a little farfetched.
“She is here from Russia,” Jimmy said. “And because we don’t know I’m calling Maggie in to help us. She is a local animal expert. If she doesn’t know what it is, she will call Anthony over at the animal shelter for help.” He stood slowly. “All right let's wrap this up. Let's get the cleanup crews in here. I want everything you find bagged, checked, and logged before daybreak." He looked at the police line thinking the chief was going to pop Tums over the overtime they were going to pull. As he watched the crowd a thought came to him it had been his experience that killers normally came back to admire their handy work. "And let's get a muzzle on the press. I don't want tomorrow’s headline to be about this. I can see the papers now and headlines about animal attacks. The mayor would flip and all of us will be looking for jobs."
"I'll have the full report on your desk by tomorrow night when you come on," Curtis stated with a nod. "And no way am I pissing her off again, do you remember last year, when she flipped out because of the museum fire at the height of the tourist season?"
"Yeah," Jimmy laughed, walking back over to the body.
"Jimmy," Natalia said, joining him at what was left of Mr. Cater. "I have seen things like this before back in Russia. I have a few friends who may be able to help point out what type of animal could have done this."
Jimmy didn’t answer her instead he leaned down to look at the victim's arm. The inner lining of his shirt was ripped open. It looked like the victim's clothing had simply spilt apart. "Have you ever seen that before? He is wearing a new Gucci and it looks," he paused baffled, "shredded."
"Da I have seen things like this. I will do some checking. So where are we headed now?" Natalia said, snapping the gloves from her hands.
"Coffee," was his only answer. He started to walk away but stopped. "I think we started on the wrong foot. Care to start again?"
"Coffee I can manage, you, I'm not so sure about yet," she smirked.
As the light from the lone candle faded, Jimmy was aware of someone standing with him. He glanced over his shoulder, half expecting the voice from the journal to greet him. To his surprise, it was Natalia. He sat there, unsure what to say to his wife. "How did you know to find me here?" Finally his voice broke the awkward silence. The tall woman walked forward laying a hand on his shoulder to comfort him. "I'm your wife and your partner; I always know where you go." She smiled. “I called BJ and she told me you were here.” She glanced over the room and then back to him. "It has been many years since I came here." She looked up seeing ghosts that weren't there. "Why did you come here, Jimmy?" "I was checking on a stolen car when I stumbled across this house. I also found out an officer on the force had a case dealing with this place, so I decided to check it out. But, somehow, I get the impression you already know the case, and you know what happened to everyone who lived here."
Two Hours Later"Jimmy, I know you wanted to go home early, but we have a situation I think you should handle quietly." The Chief's voice was strained; he began chewing Rolaids again motioning Jimmy into his office. A few heated words could be overheard through the door. There was a series of shadows moving across the window before Jimmy flew out of his office.Jimmy looked at his partner for a long time before speaking. "You and I get to play babysitter. It seems NARC busted some kids tonight, and one of them just happened to be Marvin Olsen-Myers's daughter. He has put heat on the Mayor, who placed heat on the chief, who is now giving her to us.""Isn't he the Ambassador to the United Nations?" Natalia paused, already knowing what type of political event this w
Yada woke up with the worst headache she had ever known. She could tell she was face down, and from the smells flooding her senses, she was in some heap of trash. Lifting her body in weak arms, she could vaguely see through the darkness, although she could hear men fighting. The noise became louder and louder.She rolled over to look up to the stars; it was still night or early morning gauged from the skyline's color. She sat up letting the wall hold her weight. Those voices she had heard moments before seemed to become more heated and drew her attention. She glanced to her left only to see the silhouette of a man growing into a large creature. The scream followed by a roar forced Yada to pull back into a small ball. The sound of thick footfalls coming her way alerted her that she was not alone. She shifted her weight only enough to pull back from the alleyway into a shadow. Holding her breath, she closed her eyes. The sound of her heart became louder. The thudding came closer an
Present Day Jimmy had read enough for now. He laid the journal on the couch and went to find Natalia. The journal had him right back at the house. Slowly his mind was clearing about a few cases. It came back to Yada, this mystery writer, and his now wife. He had to know more, but he also needed sleep, but the one big mystery needed to be solved. What he had read about the Wolfin, and the people in the home only reassured his mind, something had happened in the house. “Natalia, are you ready to tell me what you know?” Jimmy asked, sitting down across from her at the kitchen table. “That depends on how much you already know,” Natalia said. “Well, I know that Yada and the author of the journal saw the killer. I also can assume that the killer knew at least two of the kids who lived in that home. What I don't get is how you were involved. I saw the case notes from your files. I saw where you went out there to talk to a suspect, but there is nothing after that meeting. It was
Yada awoke on the beach in a makeshift shanty. She looked around the room disoriented. Her eyes focused on the door and then she remembered this was where she lived when she was a younger teen. This was the home she and Amos had made a few years before. Yada was nine years old when she woke up for the first time in this place. There had been a kid with her, both had been covered in blood, and both had no clue who they were or who the other was.Yada sat up slowly and tried to recall just how she got here this time. Had she been on the streets smoking some new drug? Had she simply walked off in a haze and ended up here? "Note to self, never smoke that shit again," she said to no one.She stood up feeling like she had been beaten. Her head and neck hurt, and her right knuckles were purple as though she had been fighting. There was a small cut on the inside of her wrist. "What the hell did I do last night?" She walked from the beach uncertain."Hey Carl," she called out as sh
The car gave her pause. “Did you steal it?” She asked, chewing on the side of her left thumb. “And nothing other than some strange dreams of emerald seas filled with floating bodies.” She sounded a little sarcastic but truthful. She had been alone in a boat on the water and the moon was casting a green light. Among the waves, just below the surface were dead bodies."What did you dream of?" He asked for clarification."What does this have to do with anything?" She asked, finally settling into the car."What did you dream of?" He said again, more urgent than before."Fine, I had dreams of a man who said he was my father. I also had a dream
~~~"What questions could you have for me?" She finally asked in a hollow tone."When I first asked you your name, when you were young, you told me it was Walker, Shadow Walker. Do you remember how you got that name?""No. And to tell you the truth the name is a fleeting memory now.” Yada picked the glass off the floor and set it on the desk before looking for anything to clean the drops of whisky that jumped out of the glass. Not finding anything she walked to the window. Staring at a tree she spoke again. “Why do you ask?""There is a legend of a lyceum, he is called Night Terror, and now we think he is going by The Howling One. He is the oldest of the ly
September 17 Quinn has told me there are those among the wolfin' who can breed with wolfin and create a new generation. These breeders are called kin, sometimes referred to as kinfolk. Quinn was trying to explain how wolfin society works, and as best I can tell, the wolfin are created through genetics. There are recessive genes and dominant genes and they, the wolfin, can smell it on others. I still don't understand any of this; I am a little over my head, but I am learning. I have discovered something interesting though. It seems all kin are born with a mark, kind of an imprint on their body. Whether they are aware of the birthmark or birthright is unknown. I was told that all wolfin could smell their kin or kin from other tribes. They try to protect all of them, collecting them before the lyceums can. I found a legend on the internet about wolfmen marking their packs with symbols; I think this legend started when mankind found the marking on all breeders. Various packs beg
May 1991I spent the better part of two weeks with Jessica. She was devastated by her father’s death. I think seeing her crushed brought back emotions I had denied for many years. I’m still human, after all. I cried with her, and when she and I could cry no more, we began to talk. I told her I worked for an eccentric older man. She told me she was starting classes this fall at Albany University. Life just seemed to calm down for the two of us.Mason never did contact me again. But somehow I knew he was watching. He was always going to be watching Jess.I'm going to miss Jess.March 1996I met a very interesting character tonight. He asked me to call him Hound, so I figure he is probably one of Gabriel’s men. Gabe once told me about some of his men, and even regaled me with tales of his private guard, nicknamed The Black Horde. I got the impression from Hound, he may have been part of the Horde. It was quite like a distant memory coming back to me from nowhere. It’s hard
Yada sat on the bench as the day drifted into night. She continued to sit as the moon moved higher, threatening to devour her. Looking over the calm waves, she saw a flock of birds changes direction as if avoiding a predator and finally land to her left. Reaching for her cigarettes, she didn’t notice someone standing behind her. Several minutes passed before, Yada turned around. “Gabriel, my lord,” she quickly said, shifting to one knee before looking at the ground near his feet. “Forgive me, please,” Yada begged, still looking at the ground. Gabriel did not say a word. He simply sat at her side. “Formalities of title have never been part of our relationship before. Do not allow it to come between us now.”“My lord,” she began. “I should have never acted as impulsively as I did. I am a child lost in your world.”“Are you going to refer to me as ‘My Lord,’ all night?” He finally asked.“No,” she whispered. “I’ve been lost this last week without you. I don’t know what is r
I left the apartment today. I could not handle it anymore. I had to get away from the same four walls. I left shortly before sunrise, so he couldn’t follow me. I walked along the beach this morning as the sun began to climb over the city. It was there on the sandy shore I came to an understanding. I now understand what he expects of me. I have searched a lot of memories. He is old. I mean really old. He and his brother Michael were the original vampires--A punishment from the gods. I would never have believed this if I had not relived that moment. I also noticed he has never taken a sahead before. Not once in any memory did I see one. It means something to me. He chose me. I’m honored. But the flood comes and goes and I cannot control what I see. So I left.I continued to walk until I noticed I was being followed. The man stayed far enough behind me so I couldn’t see his face. I kept having the feeling I knew him though. When I confronted him, I wasn’t ready fo
2500 B.C.“Hurry up, Alu. We are going to be late. He won’t be happy if we are late… again.” The tall man spoke over his shoulder, climbing hand-carved steps two at a time.“Time is the only constant. We are never late nor are we early. We arrive when we are expected to.” Alu said, catching up with his brother on the top step.“You sound like you have been studying the stars again, brother.”“Perhaps,” he said with a light smile. “There is a sense of being in the stars. It is said Ra fancies the heaven and stars.”Akar regarded his brother silently before a guard walked them into the chamber.“Pharaoh,” they both said, moving to one knee before their ruler.“Rise Alu and Akar,” Pharaoh dismissed the rest of his court.“You summoned us, Pharaoh?” Akar began, still looking at the hand-carved titles before Pharaoh.“Rise Akar, you are a friend here.” Pharaoh’s words were soft and warm. “Pharaoh, what is your wish, we are here but to serve.” Alu began as he folded his arms beh
Gabriel bit into his wrist and offered it to her. When she brought it to her mouth, he held her tighter. Her body started to reject his blood. It happened every time he fed her. The human body does not accept the blood of the undead. Out of instinct, the stomach convulses, trying to expel what is ingested. Gabriel told her eventually it will subside. Gabriel waited until the fight ended before biting into Yada’s wrist. The moment he did, Yada’s mind began to fill with images from Gabe’s past.~~~August 2, 1701“Gabriel.”It wasn’t his real name, but a name he decided to use some years ago, after the birth of Christianity, when he settled into a small area outside of Rome. He and his brother were mistaken for a pair of Angels. Some hesitant locals said they could only be the hand of God and referred to them as the Fallen Michael and Gabriel. The thought had always amused them, and the pair decided to keep the names as long as they brought fear to man. As long as man feared
“That went well,” she whispered, leaning her head against the wall after shutting his door. Yada knew she would have to deal with other vampires, but she didn’t expect to tonight. Not all the training had prepared her for an actual face-to-face meeting with someone of Vincent’s age. Sure, she had met a few others and even attended a council meeting once, but she was not allowed to speak. Pushing off the wall, Yada found the restroom and splashed water against her face. She looked in the mirror, seeing a pale-faced woman with thick eye makeup standing behind her. The woman’s face powder was heavy, giving her the appearance of the undead. Yada splashed more water on her face and rubbed the back of her neck. The meeting with Vincent proved more stressful than she cared to admit. The light above her head suddenly crackled and flickered before going out. The window behind the woman allowed enough pale light to seep through the blinds, so she could see faint outlines. Beside the
April 19, 1991I made my first real kill tonight. I thought killing an undead thing would make me feel some sort of remorse. I don’t, though. I feel more alive than I have ever felt. I feel like I was born to do this job. The feeling scares the hell out of me and at the same moment electrifies me.I’ve given careful thought to my attacker. I was unprepared for the fight and nearly lost my life. I realized that if it had not been for fast thinking and skill, I would now be dead. I guess in the heat of the moment you don’t have time to think, you can only react to your training. I have heard people say the fight or flight instinct takes over. I have to agree. Survival, my survival, was the only thing I had in mind.I wasn’t as fast as he was, and the trophy he earned will mar my thigh forever. I learned tonight that if I am to live in this world, I need to become a better killer. I don’t mean the type of killer that pulls a gun and gets the job done. I mean the type of kil
We killed my father tonight.He didn’t leave me any choice. James, or that is what he called himself in human form, was a killer. He attacked five wolfin across the region before he finally captured me. He taunted me for several days before I knew what I needed to do.I could not allow him to go on. I couldn’t have more blood on my hands. I already had too much blood on my hands with Anos death. James killed him because he was my friend. I still do not understand Lyceums or their thinking, but I am learning. Daily I am learning about the war on the streets between the Wolfin’s and the Lyceums. And I dislike what I am finding out.My education started the day he kidnapped me. It was the day he killed Jake. I rather miss Jake, even if he was a real pain in the ass. A second event happened that day. It was the day Gabriel entered my life. Rescuing me from James set into motion a chain of events that lead me back to the warehouse tonight.My mate Noah was there. He and Quinn had figured
A gentle breeze from the south brought a thick cloud cover, which blocked the afternoon sun. Jessica Gotti had not noticed the changing weather until the mail carrier appeared and handed her a bound stack. Flipping through the pile, she took a select handful to her car and dumped them in the passenger seat. Looking over the front window of the gallery, she felt a tickle on the back of her neck, as though someone was watching her. Quickly turning around and finding nothing out of place she rubbed her temples, dismissing the sensation as a sign of stress from the extra work she’d put in, so the opening date would not be delayed again.Realizing it was almost 3:00 P.M. She decided to head home. The drive lulled her mind from the hectic schedule she had been living by. The rhythmic sound of the tires erased all the stress of the last few days. Moreover, for the first time, she knew in her heart that the opening would go off as planned with no backlashesShe was listening to a Final