The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) π
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- Author: Brad Magnarella
Read book online Β«The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) πΒ». Author - Brad Magnarella
She had been yanking disposable gloves and shoe covers from the cartons and now shoved a pair of each into my hands. She had everything on before Iβd even figured out the gloves. I had just pulled on the second shoe cover when a hairnet snapped over my ears. Detective Vega, in a blue hairnet of her own, stuffed my stray strands beneath the elastic with a studious frown that might have been endearing if she werenβt going about the job so roughly.
She stood back and looked me over. βI hope I donβt have to tell you that anything you see or hear is strictly confidential. You tell so much as your cat, and the dealβs off. Got it?β
βGot it,β I said.
I was pretty sure Detective Vega wasnβt aware I owned a catβmuch less one that talked.
βAt least we know blood doesnβt bother you,β she muttered.
She was referring to the fact Iβd been pretty well covered in it when she arrested me. Good one, Detective. Without waiting for a response, she stepped past the policemen and into the sacristy.
10
I was only aware Iβd begun to submit to the calming power of the cathedral when the room into which I followed Detective Vega blew the gathering quiet from my cells. I leaned against my cane, faint and breathless. Something must have come over my face as well.
βYou all right?β Vega asked. βNeed a mask?β
I shook my head. The smell of death was bitter, but it wasnβt that. I blinked and moved my gaze over the small room a second time.
The white sacristy, where the holy services were prepared, was blood-smeared and ransacked. Cabinets had been opened, drawers ripped from their slots, candles, chalices, and vestments spilled. To my right, old ritual books had been removed from a vault and torn asunder, the brittle pages scattered. On the other side of the room lay the murdered rector.
I had seen bodies beforeβI didnβt always get to amateur conjurers in timeβbut this wasnβt a case of a nether creature feeding to sustain its form. No, the scene spoke to fury, and something far more troubling. Glee.
My ears picked up the police chatter outside, apparently filling in a newcomer:
ββ¦gold chaliceβ¦β ββ¦face beaten to a jellyβ¦β ββ¦donβt hardly look like a person.β
The white sheet covering the rectorβs body featured a spreading red-brown stain over a misshapen mound of head. At the end closer to me, the dusty soles of formal shoes were splayed downward.
Though I cleared my throat, my next words came out as scratches. βWhereβs the writing?β
Detective Vega stepped toward the body, the first time Iβd seen her do anything gingerly, and lifted the sheet. I tilted my head. Having something to analyze helped. The words had been drawn vertically on his white-robed back, left and right sides. The ink of choice appeared to have been the rectorβs blood.
βArenβt there any photos?β I asked.
βTheyβre being rendered,β she snapped. βMean anything to you?β
βWell, your people were right. It is ancient. A precursor to Latin, in fact.β
βWhatβs it say?β
I pulled a flip-top notepad from a coat pocket and slid a short green pencil from its metal spiraling. βThe language isnβt one of my fluencies, unfortunately.β I wrote down the message, letter for letter. βItβs going to take a bit of research.β
Vegaβs eyebrows did the collapsing-down thing again.
I shrugged a sorry.
βYou done?β she asked from her stooped-over position.
I looked over the writing once more and made a couple more notes. Despite the chilling medium, the penmanship had a certain elegance. Farther up the tent Detective Vega had made of the sheet, I glimpsed what looked like a sticky flap of scalp. I looked away and nodded quickly.
Outside the room, we dropped our bits of protective covering into a trash bag.
βHow long?β she asked.
βTo figure out the message?β I made a puttering sound with my lips. βA couple of days? Itβs a rare language,β I explained before she could voice the protest gathering on her face.
She sighed harshly. βAny idea who else in the city would know it?β
βIβll add that to my honey-do list.β
She fixed me with another warning look as she reached inside a jacket pocket. βIβm taking you at your word.β Her first two fingers returned with a business card, which she held an inch from my face. βA βcouple of daysβ is Saturday. Iβll expect a phone call by then. You donβt want me to come looking for you.β
βI can think of worse things.β I flashed a grin.
The juvenile comment kept her chocolate-brown eyes on mine, which enabled me to accept the card with one hand while unclasping and hiding away the NYPD tag with the other. Classic misdirection.
Detective Vega didnβt notice. After telling me I could find my own way home, she left me for her investigative team. I looked around for Father Vick as I descended the steps of the chancel, but the nave was empty now of church officials. Maybe they were being questioned.
At the bronze doors of the cathedral, another uncomfortable wave rippled through me, but my powers were back. Which got me thinking. The murder probably hadnβt been the work of a supernatural entity. Even if one had managed to get itself invited into the sanctuary, the threshold would have stripped its powers. It wouldnβt have been able to maintain its form inside.
So we were dealing with a human. And given the excessive violence of the act, likely someone with a vendetta against the rector. But then what did the message mean?
I pulled out my notepad as I started toward the Wall and re-read my translation:
Black Earth
Yeah, Iβd held back on Detective Vega. But to get those six months wiped, I needed to not only interpret the message but point her in the direction of an arrest. And that second part was going to take time. Fortunately, I had a resource in mind. Iβd get that ball rolling while I worked on how and why a shrieker had been summoned the night before. Which reminded me, I
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