Who knew there were so many dead things in Madison,
Wisconsin?
As I peeked over the top of the tarot card display, I saw a
zombie standing at the register holding a copy of The
Complete Idiot’s Guide to Voodoo.
I struggled to not smack my forehead against the bookcase
in frustration. Given how my day started, a zombie customer
was just the icing on an already screwed up day. I’d spent
the pre-dawn hours dealing with the fact that I had one too
many men in my life, and neither of them was alive.
Sebastian, my current vampire lover, dropped me off at my
apartment around five a.m. I had to get into work early
today, and, of all stupid things, I’d managed to forget my
store keys at home. This would have been only minor on the
hassle scale, except that I happened to notice Parrish--my
vampire ex-lover, who Sebastian wasn’t supposed to know was
still alive, much less in town, even much more less living
in my basement--skulking around the hedges of my backyard
obviously wanting to talk.
Sebastian, of course, had wanted to come in, help me unload
my bike from his trunk, steal several more kisses, and all
sorts of deliciously gentleman-like things that were
completely the opposite of what I needed if I was going to
find out what the hell Parrish wanted so badly that he
would risk exposing his presence to Sebastian. I ended up
handing Sebastian some lame lie about wanting time to
decompress before work, which I could instantly tell he
didn’t buy, but he was too well-mannered to argue. After
all the contorting I did in order to talk to Parrish, I
found out all he wanted was to cop a snuggle himself before
going off to bed. Worse, when I fended Parrish off with
just a hug, he smelled like cheap sex and booze, and I
swore the scent still clung to me despite a very hot
shower. The whole thing had put me in a foul mood. I’d
already mis-shelved several books and managed to knock over
and break one very expensive blown-glass chalice.
Zombies just added to the suckiness of the day.
To the untrained eye, I’m sure the zombie looked like your
average University of Wisconsin hockey jock riding a wicked
morning after. Glassy-eyed and slack-jawed, his German
farmboy blond hair hung in wilted clumps across his broad
forehead. His jersey seemed threadbare and slept in, and
his jeans had unidentifiable sludge ground into the knees
and where the cuffs brushed the floor. All fairly
unremarkable, really, until you noticed the blackened
toenails on bare feet and the slight grayness of his skin.
But I could smell the grave dust from two aisles away. This
poor boy had partied a little too hearty one night and
woken up dead. Well, mostly dead, drugged, and possessed.
As somebody’s slave.
Which begged the question -- what was an active voodoo
sorcerer doing in Madison, Wisconsin?
Granted, Madison is an exceptional place to live,
especially if you are out of step with the ordinary.
Despite the fact that cornfields and cow pastures are less
than twenty minutes away from the center of town, the
politics lean toward the frighteningly left. Madison is
home to the Great Midwestern Marijuana Festival and
birthplace of the satirical newspaper “The Onion,” for
Goddess’ sake.
Thanks to all the students at UW, few people ever look at
me funny when I walk down the street in full Goth mode.
Piercings and tattoos are commonplace along State Street.
You’d be more likely to get gawked at if you strolled along
in a business suit, but, then again, given that the Capitol
building is just up the road, maybe not.
The thing was, Madison is so accepting--so, well, liberal--
that black magic really doesn’t jive with the shade-grown,
fair-trade, bicycle-delivered coffee drinking crowd.
Slavery is really not okay, you dig? And zombies are slaves
to their voodoo masters, no question about it.
Plus I had to wonder what good was a jock zombie? Did he
still go to classes? Had his grade point average slipped?
Or did his professors just write him off as a slacker boy
gone bad? The zombie’s blunt fingers dragged slowly along
the titles on the bookshelf. When I noticed the spittle
hanging from his lower lip, I felt a pang of pity.
I shook my head. I couldn’t afford to start thinking like
this. If I took in every ghost, golem, or ghoul that
wandered into Mercury Crossing, Madison’s premier occult
bookstore and herb emporium, I’d be one seriously busy
little Witch. Ever since I’d cast the spell that made the
Vatican Witch hunters think Sebastian and I were dead, my
life had been inundated with the denizens of the spirit
world. It was like they recognized me as some kind of
kindred spirit -- a fellow not-quite-dead thing. That
thought gave me a shiver.
The zombie started moaning.
I replaced the Aquarian deck in its plastic holder and made
my way behind the counter to the register. The smell of
freshly turned grave increased the closer I got to the
zombie. My eyes watered, but I made an effort to
smile. “Can I help you?”
“This,” he hissed, flopping the book onto the counter
clumsily.
I didn’t even pretend to look at the price, I just stowed
the book under the counter and came back up with a bag of
sea salt. The zombie looked confused, but then they always
did.
“I think you’ll find this more to your taste,” I said,
hoping he’d buy the clue and open his mouth enough so I
could splash a few grains on his tongue. Salt was the going
cure for zombies. It was that or red meat, which was really
not very practical to store in any kind of quantity behind
the register. Besides, I’m a vegetarian.
“Book,” he insisted. The Neanderthal ridge of his brow
knitted into a frown.
I put the salt down on the counter. “Are you sure?”
The zombie nodded slowly, as if I was the one with the
addled brain. “Book.”
I thought about arguing with him. In his eyes, however, I
saw an intensity that made me think he wouldn’t be swayed.
Even so, I was about to try again, when he held up a wad of
mud-streaked dollar bills. Did I even want to know where
those came from?
He dumped the money on the counter. A spider scurried out
from between the curled and soggy bills to shelter itself
somewhere under my register. I thought I saw a family of
sow bugs scuttle along the edge of the countertop and head
for the safety of a dark shadow.
Ew. Even the creepy-crawly people didn’t want to hang out
with this zombie. The magic holding him must be seriously
ugly.
Retrieving the book from under the counter, I rang it
up. “The customer is always right.”
#
Two minutes later, I realized I’d been played. The damn
zombie had given me counterfeit money. I didn’t notice
right away because of all the dirt, but the whole thing
just looked wrong. There was no holographic picture or
metallic strip, and the left-hand seal was blue instead of
green. The more I looked at it, more discrepancies popped
up. The top read “silver certificate” instead of Federal
Reserve Bank. What seemed strange to me was that there was
something about the zombie’s dollar that made it seem real,
despite all the oddities -- like it had its own internal
consistency. Which was a strange way to forge money, I
thought, though I was certainly no expert.
Covering the bill in grave sludge, on the other hand, was
very clever. I hardly wanted to touch the stuff, much less
examine it too closely.
I was still comparing the zombie fakes to real bills, when
I heard the jingle bells on the door chime.
Glancing up, I saw a cop.
He wasn’t wearing a uniform, no shiny badge hung off a Sam
Brown belt, but I could tell. He wore a trench coat, a
button-down shirt, black tie, slacks, dress shoes. Nothing
flashy -- no earring, no necklace, not even a wedding ring.
Though, for some reason, I had the impression gold would
look good against his warm, brown skin. Inky black hair was
clipped short over his ears. He looked clean, respectable --
normal. That was the big give-away. Nobody dressed that
mundane walked into an occult bookstore.
So with a squint, I checked out his aura. He held it close
to himself like a gambler not wanting to show his hand. The
color was pure gold.
Whoa. This cop was psychic.
Even my best friend Izzy, who was a fairly strong, if
latent psychic, only had flashes of gold in her aura. I’d
never met anyone with an aura so pure, so magical. If he
hadn’t had the purposeful stride, the firm set in the jaw,
and the intense so-blue-they-were-almost-gray eyes that
caught mine and wouldn’t let go, I might have reassessed my
opinion that he was a cop.
“Good timing,” I told him. I mean, wow -- it had been less
than ten minutes since the zombie scammed me. If he
hurried, he might still be able to catch the guy.
“Garnet Lacey?”
“Dude,” I said, impressed. He knew my name, and full-blown
peek-in-your-mind-and-know-what-you’re-thinking stuff was a
one-in-a-million talent.
Normally cops weren’t my favorite people -- mostly because
my interaction with them has typically involved apologizing
for hosting a rambunctious party or jaywalking. However,
being a telepathic cop was really using your powers for
good. I mean, he could be out in Vegas making a mint
hustling poker, but instead here he was tracking down
zombie counterfeiters. “Wicked cool,” I said.
His jaw clenched, and he frowned at the tarot display I’d
spent all morning rearranging. I felt a flush
embarrassment. Ugh, I probably made him feel like an
exhibit on display at a zoo, acting so impressed with his
powers like that.
He cleared his throat and squinted at me Clint Eastwood
style. “Are you Garnet Lacey?”
I shot him a quizzical sidelong glance. Wasn’t he already
reading my mind? Maybe he wasn’t used to having his powers
so easily accepted. He should know that of all places to
show off, an occult bookstore was an easy “A.” To spare him
further discomfort, however, I got down to business. I held
up the bill to show him. “Can you believe the nerve? This
doesn’t even remotely look real.”
He peered distractedly at the dollar in question. I seem to
have derailed him in some way. So much for the attention-
span of Madison’s finest.
“I’m investigating a murder,” he said, pulling out one of
those flip wallets you see in movies about cops and
flashing me an ID. Except instead of a detective’s gold
badge like I expected, instead it had a photo on one side
and a seal on the other with the acronym FBI in big, blue
letters. “Special Agent Gabriel Dominguez,” he said by way
of introduction.
Right. Counterfeiting is a federal crime. Then something
clicked. “Wait,” I said. “Did you say murder?”
“Yes.”
Oh. The zombie. I shook my head, “Yeah, poor kid.”
I put the bill down on the mud streaked counter. I absently
rubbed at the smears of dirt on the glass wondering if I
should tell Special Agent Dominguez that the dead guy he
was looking for had just left.
I gave Dominguez another looking over. Being psychic didn’t
guarantee he’d had run-ins with the occult underworld. His
eyes hadn’t lingered overlong at the silver “L” in Theban
script that hung in the space between my breasts, and he
hadn’t startled the way some sensitives did when they felt
the dark presence of the Goddess Lilith behind my eyes.
In fact, sadly, Dominguez looked pretty square. I mean,
sure, it was a kind of hottie “Twern’t nuthin’, ma’am” Lone
Ranger kind of square, but he still seemed like the sort
who might choke if I started casually mentioning reanimated
corpses.
I double-checked his aura. This time I noticed flashes of
midnight blue, which gave him a very calm, very Zen spirit.
He’d definitely be the man to watch your back in a fight. I
bet the guys at Quantico or wherever found him very
steadfast and trustworthy. No Spooky Fox Mulder. This guy
was a Scully, through and through.
Hell, he might not even know how psychic he was. He might
just think he had extremely keen powers of observation or
imagine himself intuitive about human nature. Then again,
if he was reading my mind right now, he knew. I looked up
at him and thought really hard: zombie went that‘a way.
He frowned at me. I had the sense from the way his lips
pressed together that he was getting exasperated. It wasn’t
the look of someone who was merely annoyed that I just
shouted into their head; he had that why-can’t-we-
communicate-in-English look I’ve seen when I try to explain
the difference between horary and humanistic astrology to
someone who simply wanted to know what sign they were.
I began to suspect that my dear agent Dominguez was
blocked. Some traumatic event in his life had caused him to
completely ignore his abilities. I could mentally shout all
I wanted. He’d never listen me.
So, I tested him. I imagined myself leaning across the
counter and giving him a long, passionate kiss on the lips.
Then, I ran imaginary fingers through his short-cropped
black hair, feeling the sharp stubble on the back of his
neck.
He scratched behind his ear. “Um, several ‘guys,’ actually.
More than one,” he said as if correcting me, meeting my
eyes, but only just barely. “I’m investigating the murder
of six dead priests.”
I was so pleased to have gotten a reaction from him that it
took me a second to parse what he’d just said. Then, it
didn’t make any sense. “Zombie priests? No way was that kid
a priest. Seminary student, maybe in a stretch--if they
have a hockey program, but no way was he old enough to be a
priest.”
Special Agent Dominguez looked at me like I had gone
completely insane. There was a crack in his hard-core cop
persona, when a tiny smile played at the edge of his
lips. “Did you just say ‘zombie’?”
I hadn’t meant to. I knew this would happen. Either people
choked or they laughed at me when I mentioned the color of
their auras or noted that they might be feeling a bit
clumsy because Mercury had just gone retrograde.
I guessed I should be grateful that Dominguez seemed to
have put me into the “she’s amusing” category. At least
that attitude could work toward “weird, but compelling”
or “cute, if a bit odd.” The people who choked or snorted
various beverages out their noses usually couldn’t even be
convinced of my entertainment value. Often they felt
obliged to try to “correct” my worldview by imposing their
own. I didn’t have a lot of patience for that. Besides,
sharing my body with the Goddess Lilith on a regular basis
made me feel pretty superior about the validity of my
claims. I knew magic was real. How many other people had
had their faith so profoundly proven to them? When I
called, a Goddess answered.
Still, being the resident weirdo isn’t always the first
impression I want to make with people like Agent Dominguez.
I don’t know. Maybe it’s the whole hidden shoulder holster
appeal, but just once I’d love to have a cop look at me and
say, “Which way did you say the zombie went, ma’am?”
Instead of giving me that did-you-get-a-load-of-her smirk.
And, dang it, Dominguez was kind of cute for a mundane. I
shouldn’t be looking (not to mention mentally kissing),
since I have a boyfriend. But, well, I’m a sucker for a man
with broad shoulders and a slender waist, and all I can say
is that this cop was not the sitting-around-the-donut-shop
kind of guy.
Plus, he was a psychic, even if he didn’t know it. He was
one of us. He shouldn’t have still been grinning at me like
that.
“What?” I asked a little belligerently, since I could feel
a blush heating up under his stare. “Like you’ve never
heard of zombies?”
“You’re kidding, right? You’re kind of taking all this
stuff”--he waved at the crystal balls and magic wands in
the display case--“a bit too seriously, aren’t you?”
“Yeah. Ha. Ha.” I didn’t want to get into all the reasons I
did with the Special Agent, so I reached under the counter
for the special cleanser I’d cooked up for my post-dead
things encounters. It was part moon-charged rose essence,
part holy water, with a dash or two of clove oil. I’d put
the concoction in a spritzer bottle on which I’d
marked “necromancy zapper” with a black Sharpie. It was
good stuff. It not only cleaned up any kind of spill
(outside of blood) and magically purified the place, but it
also smelled like pumpkin pie. I sprayed it liberally all
over the muddy counter.
I wasn’t really aiming for him, but I wasn’t terribly
disappointed when I splashed the Special Agent’s sleeve and
made him jump back.
“Hey, watch it,” he said. Then, using those psychic powers
of his, the Special Agent deduced that it was a good time
to get back on subject. “Actually, I’m looking for a gal,
not a guy. Have you seen this woman?”
I was expecting to get my first glimpse at this voodoo
sorcerer who’d been cooking up all these zombies I’d seen
lately, so I leaned in curiously as the agent pulled a
photo out of his wallet. He flipped it over, and I found my
knuckles tightening around the one-hundred percent recycled
paper towel I held in both hands. I gaped in horror.
It was me.
The photo was some kind of digital reprint from my driver’s
license, and it was a couple of years old, but it was me.
I wasn’t surprised Dominguez hadn’t recognized me; I barely
recognized myself. The photograph he laid down on a dry
spot on the counter showed a blond Norwegian woman in an
India-print dress. She looked innocent and sweet.
I did not. In fact, I’d been so grouchy after the
Sebastian/Parrish fiasco this morning that I’d decided to
play up the whole walking dead look. I’d powdered my face a
shade paler than normal, gone blood red on the lipstick,
and gelled my dyed-black pixie haircut into spikes. So much
eyeliner and mascara surrounded my eyes that they looked
sunken and bruised. When I’d left Sebastian’s house this
morning, I borrowed his best movie-vampire gear -- a white
poet shirt, black leather pants (mine, from a previous
sleepover), and a velvet great coat.
More distinctly, the woman in the photo had blue eyes so
pale they had almost been washed out by the reflection of
the camera’s flash. Mine were purple -- a deep, rich,
unusual shade, like the inner tongue of a bearded iris. The
new color was a magical scar left over from the horrible
Halloween night a year ago when I had called down the
Goddess Lilith and ended up fleeing Minneapolis after I
dumped the bodies of six Vatican assassins into the lake
inside Lakewood Cemetery.
Six priests.
Oh.
Oh, shit.