“Like I said, I don’t want him getting ideas.”
“Go to bed. We’ll take the morning shift.”
Kasabian slinks back to his room, right next to the storage room where our guest sleeps.
“Good night, Kasabian,” he says. “Thank you for sitting up with me.”
“Sure. Glad to. Anytime.”
He closes and locks his door.
“Are you hungry?” says Candy.
Death turns away from the movie long enough to look at her.
“Yes, I am.”
“I’ll bring down the leftovers.”
I head back upstairs.
Julie calls while I’m in the kitchen. I tell her Death is awake and she should come over if she wants Thai food.
“For breakfast?”
“It’s this or the last of Kasabian’s donuts, and those have been around since ‘Steamboat Willie.’ ”
“I’ll pass on the food, but I’ll be right over.”
I thumb off the phone, get the food out of the microwave, and head downstairs with some plates. Candy clears all the crap from the top of the rental counter and puts it underneath. I set down the cartons and Candy digs in.
Death sticks his fork in each dish and sniffs. Touches the food to the tip of his tongue. I don’t think he’s gotten the hang of having human senses.
I pick at a couple of things, wanting coffee and a smoke more than curry. Julie arrives about twenty minutes later with a large messenger bag over her shoulder. Death straightens up and puts out his hand when he sees her.
“Hello. I’m Death,” he says.
Julie gives her best professional smile and shakes his hand.
“Yes. We met briefly at the bar where you found Stark. You look a lot better now than you did then.”
“I feel a lot better. Stark and his friends have been taking good care of me.”
He looks at Candy.
“I’m still not sure what I should call you. You have two faces and apparently two names. Which do you prefer?”
“Look at either face you want, but please, call me Chihiro.”
“Then Chihiro it is.”
“Thanks for recording the interview,” Julie says to Candy. “It was a good start.”
“Glad to be part of the team, chief,” Candy says.
Julie opens her bag, then looks at me.
“You were interested in the knife. Did you find out anything about it?”
I fill her in on what happened with Vidocq’s experiment and Marlowe’s reading.
“Have you ever seen that happen before?”
“Never.”
“All right. We’ll set the knife aside for now and concentrate on other areas. At least we have a starting point with our visitor’s identity.”
“We do?” says Candy.
“People still aren’t dying. Religious groups are up in arms, some calling it the end of days. There have been runs on grocery stores and banks. Hell, the president gave an address about it last night, saying the government is conferring with our allies to make sure this isn’t a terrorist act. This has been all over the Web and TV since it started happening.”
She frowns at me.
“You don’t pay much attention to the news, do you?”
“I make a point to avoid it.”
“Start watching TV, at least. It’s part of your job to have a clue what’s going on in the world.”
“I’ll take care of it,” says Candy.
“At least one of you is a grown-up.”
I take out a Malediction.
“I make a point to avoid that too.”
I open the side door, blowing the smoke outside so Death doesn’t choke and I won’t look bad in front of the boss. This is worse than Hell. I can’t even kill anyone to get on her good side.
“Where are your other clothes?” says Julie to Death. “The ones you woke up in.”
“There. In the room where I was sleeping.”
“I’ll show you,” I say, tossing the cigarette into the alley. Good-bye, old friend.
We go into the storage room and I flip on the light. Julie pushes past me, slipping nitrile gloves on over her hands.
“Have either of you handled the clothes?” she says.
“We both helped him undress,” says Candy.
I step deeper into the room, out of Julie’s way.
“And I searched his gear.”
Julie hands us each a pair of gloves.
“In the future, don’t touch any potential evidence barehanded.”
“Got it,” says Candy. Teacher’s pet.
Julie holds up Death’s coat, then his pants. There’s pale dirt or dust on the bottom of each, and more on the floor. She checks his shoes and finds more dust. From a padded compartment in her bag she takes out a gizmo that looks like an iPad crossed with a game controller.
A small tray pops opens on the side of the tablet and she carefully drips in a sample of the dust, then pushes the tray shut. The screen lights up, showing some kind of multicolor readout.
“What is that?” says Candy.
“It’s the chemical composition of whatever is on his pants and shoes. It doesn’t look like city dirt. Something drier and desert-like. I’ll collate the numbers with USGS maps of the area.”
“Awesome,” says Candy.
I angle for a better look at the tablet.
“That’s Vigil tech. How did you end up with it?”
Julie puts the tablet away and collects more of the dust in a paper envelope.
She says, “We have an understanding. Now that I’m a civilian, I can do things, go places, and ask questions the government can’t. In exchange, I get access to certain Vigil equipment and information.”
“Can you use your toy to tell you anything about the knife?”
“I doubt it,” she says, sealing the envelope and putting it in the bag. “I wonder if we loaned it to the Vigil they’d be able to come up with anything?”
I pick up an empty DVD case and toss it back on a pile of others.
“Forget it. Boss or not, there’s no way I’m handing over our only serious piece of physical evidence to those Pinkertons. We’d never see it again.”
She stops working, her hands still in the bag.
“I hate to say it, but you might be right. They wouldn’t want civilians to have access to a magical artifact that powerful.”
She turns to Death.
“Have you showered since you’ve been here?”
He shakes his head.
“Good. I’d like to take some samples of the dirt under your nails. Also, if you don’t mind, I’d like to take your fingerprints and do a quick physical exam. Is that all right