“Hi, Sophe,” I said, leaning over the bar to give her a kiss on the cheek. “How are you?”
She shrugged. “Eh, not bad.” She had white hair, warm brown eyes, and a smile that could melt glaciers. Like all weremystes, she had that slightly blurred appearance, though the effect was pretty weak on Sophie, probably because she wasn’t a powerful sorcerer. I imagined that the Blind Angel Killer would have looked like little more than a smudge.
Sophie’s face was lined and she wore too much makeup, but I could tell that she’d been a great beauty as a young woman.
“What’ll you have, dear?” she asked me.
“Beer. The darkest you’ve got on tap.”
She grinned, her eyes twinkling in the dim light. “We just got something new in. I think you’ll like it.” She had to use a step stool to get a mug down, and then she walked to the tap and started to fill it. “You here on business or out for a drink?”
“Business.”
Sophie nodded, but didn’t say anything more until she’d filled the mug and put it in front of me. “Whaddya wanna know?”
“You heard about the Deegan kid?” I asked in a low voice.
“Oy.” She grunted the word, as if she’d been punched in the stomach. “’Course I have. Who hasn’t?” She narrowed her eyes. “You still think those kids are bein’ killed with magic?”
“Yeah, I do.”
Sophie shook her head. “People around here didn’t like it when you were saying that a couple of years ago. They won’t like it any more now.”
“I know.” I stared back at her, waiting for her to tell me something, knowing that she’d give in eventually. Sophie had always liked me, and whatever the rest of the magical community thought of my efforts to find the weremyste responsible for the Blind Angel murders, she wanted this guy caught.
At last she sighed and began to wipe up the bar with a white towel. “Luis is in back,” she said, her attention on her cleaning. “He’s playing cards, but he’ll talk to you. I think.”
“Thanks, Sophe.” I tasted the beer. “That’s good.”
She grinned. I dug into my wallet and threw a ten spot on the bar before walking to the back room. It was filled with cigarette and cigar smoke, which barely masked the smell of stale beer. Five men sat around a table playing poker with those old chips that always reminded me of Necco Wafers. Luis Paredes sat at the far end of the table behind a wall of chips, chewing on a stogie and staring hard at his cards. He was a short, barrel-chested Latino, with a scruffy beard and mustache, and dark eyes that were hard and flat, like a shark’s. I saw that heat-wave effect with him, too, and with the other guys at the table. It was strongest by far with Luis.
The other poker players were all Latino, and they turned to stare at me as I stood in the doorway. I can’t say that they made me feel welcome.
“Fearsson,” Luis said. “You want to sit?”
“I want to talk.”
Luis said to his friends, “El gringo no tiene el cajones jugar con nosotros.” The gringo doesn’t have the balls to play with us.
They all laughed. I kept my mouth shut.
Luis met my gaze again, his smile fading. I’d busted him years ago for possession of pot, and he’d managed to get probation and community service. Later, after I’d opened my business, I helped him track down an employee who had stolen from the bar. So he had as many reasons to like me as not. And he knew that I wasn’t someone who would have shown up here without good reason. At last he muttered, “Maldita sea,” and put his cards on the table, face down. “Nos dan cinco minutos.” Damn it. Give us five minutes.
The other men eyed me again, with even less warmth than before. Then they put down their cards, stood, their chairs scraping on the wood floor, and filed out of the room.
Luis indicated the chair nearest his own with an open hand. “Mi amigo,” he said. “What can I do for you?”
I sat and sipped my beer. “You’ve heard about Claudia Deegan?”
Luis’ expression hardened, if that was possible. “No tengo nada hacer con eso.” That’s not my problem.
“I know that, Luis. But I think she was killed by magic, like all the other Blind Angel victims. So that makes it a problem for all of us.”
He scowled, but after a moment he nodded for me to go on.
“You know of anyone in town who’s been playing with dark magic? Maybe showing signs of power that he shouldn’t have?”
Luis shook his head. “No.”
I would have preferred that he give the question more thought, but I didn’t sense that he was hiding anything from me. Even if I had, I wouldn’t have been fool enough to call him a liar in his own place, with his friends in the next room. Luis was as skilled with his magic as I was with mine, maybe more so. And I didn’t think the weremystes listening from the barroom would be siding with me if it came to a fight.
“Can you think of any reason why someone would kill with magic on the night of the quarter moon?”
He sat forward. “The first quarter?” Clearly I’d gotten his attention. “El Angel Ciegos?”
“Yeah,” I said. “Every time.”
He sat back again, rubbing a hand over his mouth.
I took another sip, watching him. “What does that mean, Luis?”
“No estoy seguro.” I’m not sure. “The first quarter-that’s a powerful night. Not like the full, but strong, you know? If I was doing magic and I needed it to be just right-perfecto, you know? — that’s when I’d do it.”
“I think he’s using these kids to make himself stronger,” I said. “I have no proof, and I don’t know what kind of magic he’d have to do, but that’s what I think. Call it the hunch of an ex-cop. I’d appreciate any help you can give me.”
“I don’t talk to cops, Jay. You know that. And private eyes are no different in my book. But this. .” He shook his head. “Esto suena mal.” This sounds bad. He stared at the table for several seconds, seemingly deep in thought. “You talked to Quinley yet?”
“Brother Q?” I said with genuine surprise.
Luis laughed. “Yeah, Brother Q.” He said it in a way that made me think he didn’t like Q very much.
Orestes Quinley was the weremyste Kona and I arrested after my first conversation with Namid. He was a minor conjurer then, still new enough to his power that a jail would hold him, and he served a couple of years at Eyman State Prison.
Within a few months of his release, he started getting in trouble again; small time offenses primarily. He’d never been a violent guy, and for the most part he was accused of stealing esoteric stuff-strange pieces of jewelry, unusual gems and stones, rare herbs and oils. On several occasions, the victims dropped the charges as soon as they recovered the stolen goods. Many of them seemed reluctant to tell us too much about why Orestes might have wanted them, or why they were so anxious to have them back. Even in those cases where the charges weren’t dropped, it never seemed that we could find enough evidence against him to get a conviction. And since I was the one guy in the PPD who could track magical crimes, after I left the department he stopped getting caught at all. Those twenty-six months at Eyman still represented the only time Orestes had ever done.
To this day, whenever something strange happens in town-strange in a magical sense-Kona will ask me to go around and speak with Orestes. On a few occasions he had been able to help us out, but always for a price, and, of course, never in any way that implicated himself. To be honest I was glad I hadn’t been able to prove anything against him. I liked Orestes, and despite the fact that our friendship began with me arresting him, I believe he liked me, too. But I hadn’t talked to him about the Blind Angel case since I’d left the force, and before then he hadn’t been particularly helpful.