When I first straddled the chasm between the land of the dead and the world of the
living, I accidentally raised the shade of our recently deceased Pekinese. The former
champion dog floating around our backyard resulted in my father shipping me off to a wyrd
boarding school. Seventeen years later, I still reached across that chasm, but now I got
paid to do it.
“That isn’t a body, John,” I said, staring at the open black bag. “It’s a foot.” A
pale, bloated, waterlogged foot.
John Matthews, personal friend and one of the best homicide detectives in Nekros City,
nodded. “It’s a left foot, to be precise, and I have two more back at the morgue. What can
you tell me?”
I frowned and nudged the toe of my boot at a clump of grass sprouting between chunks of
loose gravel. My business cards read: ALEX CRAFT, LEAD PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR AND GRAVE
WITCH FOR TONGUES FOR THE DEAD. I was actually the owner and only employee of the firm,
but that was beside the point. I raised shades and gave the living a chance to question
the dead—for a fee. My work tended to take me to a lot of graveyards, the occasional
funeral home, and to the Nekros City morgue. The parking pit for the Sionan Floodplain
Nature Preserve was most definitely not my typical working environment. Nor was a
single severed appendage my typical job.
“Sorry, John, but I need more than a foot to raise a shade.”
“And I need some better news.” His shoulders slumped as if he’d deflated. “We’ve been
scouring this swamp for two days and we’re turning up more questions than answers. We’ve
got no IDs for the vics, no obvious causes of death, and no primary crime scenes. You sure
you can’t give me anything?” As he spoke, he shoved the flap on the body bag farther open
with the butt of his pen.
The foot lay in a sea of black plastic. The sickly scent of rot filled the humid
afternoon air, coating the inside of my nose, my throat. The bloodless skin had sloughed
off the exposed ankle, the strips of yellowish flesh shriveling. My stomach twisted and I
looked away. I’d leave the physical inspection to the medical examiner—my affinity for the
dead was less for the tangible and more for the spectral. Memories hid in every cell of
the body. Memories that my grave magic could unlock and give shape as a shade. Of course,
that depended on having enough of the body—and thus cells—at my disposal for my magic to
fill in the gaps. I didn’t need to cast a magic circle and begin a ritual to know I
couldn’t pull a shade from the foot. I could sense that fact, the same way I could sense
that the foot had belonged to a male, probably in his late sixties. I could also sense the
nasty tangle of spells all but dripping from the decaying appendage.
“The foot is saturated with magic. Some pretty dark stuff from the feel of it,” I said,
taking a step back from the gurney and the sticky residual magic emanating from the foot.
“I’m guessing you already have a team deciphering the spells?”
“Yeah, but so far the anti–black magic unit hasn’t reached any conclusions. It would
really help if we could question the victim.”
But that wasn’t going to happen with such a small percentage of the body. “You said you
had a matching foot back at the morgue? Maybe if we assemble all the parts, there will be
enough to—”
John shook his head. “Dancing jokes aside, unless this guy had two left feet—literally—
neither of the other feet belong to him.”
Three left feet? That meant at least three victims. “You’re thinking
serial?”
“Don’t say that too loud,” John said, his gaze flashing to a passing pair of crime
scene technicians headed toward the dense old-growth forest. “No official determination
yet, but, yeah, I’m thinking serial.” His grizzly bear–sized form sagged further and his
mustache twitched as he frowned. The mustache had been a thick red accent to his
expressions as long as I’d known him, but in the weeks since he’d woken from a spell-
induced coma, slivers of gray had joined the red. He pushed the flap of the body bag
closed. “Park rangers found the first foot yesterday morning when they were checking the
paths after the recent flooding. We got wardens and cadaver dogs out here, and the second
foot turned up. When we found the third, I pulled some strings to hire you as a
consultant.”
“Do you want me to stick around? Wait and see if your guys find more of the body?”
“Actually”—John rubbed a hand over his head, wiping away the sweat glistening on his
spreading bald spot—“I was hoping you’d join the search.”
I hesitated. I probably even blanched. Wandering around with my shields down sensing
every dead creature most definitely was not my idea of a good—or safe—time.
John didn’t miss my pause. “You’ve located DBs before,” he said. DBs as in dead
bodies. “And the paperwork you signed covered the possibility of searching the swamp,
so you’ll be paid for your time.”
I opened my mouth to respond—while I might have qualms about opening my psyche to
whatever might be in the floodplain, we both knew I’d risk it—but I was interrupted before
I could answer.
“What’s wrong, Craft?” Detective Jenson, John’s partner, asked as he stepped around the
side of a black SUV. “Don’t want to get those tight pants dirty tramping through the
swamp? Got another TV appearance to run off to? Or maybe your magic eye license doesn’t
allow you to do any good old-fashioned legwork.”
I glared at him, and I had to unclench my gritted teeth to answer. “Way to be
hypocritical, Jenson, insulting me and in the same breath asking me to use magic to help.”
The term “magic eye” was derogatory slang for a witch PI.
“I’m not asking you for anything.” He leaned back on his heels and crossed his arms
over his chest. “And I think this city has seen enough of your magic lately, what with the
way they keep rebroadcasting that interview with you getting all touchy-feely with a
ghost.”
“What’s wrong? Jealous?” I asked, cocking a hip and tossing curls out of my face. Okay,
so I was goading him, but he was being an ass. A few days ago I’d participated in the
first studio interview of a ghost, and to keep said ghost visible I’d had to remain in
contact with him, but I’d most certainly not gotten “touchy-feely” or any such crap.
John cleared his throat. “That’s enough.” He glanced between us, then turned to his
partner. “Get Alex some hip waders and let the wardens know we’ll be joining them.”
Jenson sneered at me—an expression I returned—and said, “Sure. Boots for the two-legged
corpse hound. I’ll get right on that.” He disappeared around the side of the SUV.
I stared at the spot where he’d been standing. “What a jerk.” Things hadn’t always been
so antagonistic between us. In fact, we’d almost been friends. Then a month ago his
attitude had gone to shit. The change coincided perfectly with John’s taking a spelled
bullet aimed at me. Coincidence? Doubtful.
“I don’t know what’s going on between you two,” John said, turning back toward me, “but
let’s not forget we’ve got three severed feet and no leads. Now, before we go in there, I
suggest turning your shirt inside out.”
“You what?”
John waved a tech over to take custody of the bagged foot; then he scooped my purse off
the ground, where I’d set it earlier. He handed the red bag to me and nodded toward his
car.
“The park rangers warned us when we started searching that the local fae delight in
leading hikers astray. The unwary can end up wandering through the same patch of land for
days. Pixie-led, they call it. Turning your shirt inside out is supposed to confuse their
magic.”
I glanced down at my tank top, the shirt clinging to me in the afternoon heat. “Are you
thinking fae are involved in the murders?”
John’s mustache twitched. “That’s another thing you shouldn’t say too loud.”
“Right.” I ducked inside John’s car to shimmy out of the top. Not that I thought
reversing it would really protect me against fae magic. The fae relied mostly on glamour—a
belief magic so strong, it could reshape reality, at least temporarily.
By the time I’d re-dressed, Jenson had dropped off a pair of hip waders for me. They
were a thick, waterproof one-piece with suspenders and attached boots. I stepped into
them, pulling the brown material up over my clothes. They nearly reached my collarbone.
“We aren’t seriously planning to wade chest-deep, are we?” I asked as I adjusted the
suspender straps.
John, who’d also suited up in a pair of waders, handed me a plastic bottle of water.
“Nah. With the speed the water is retreating, we’d be in danger of getting swept away. If
you sense the bodies in the deep water, we’ll have to send a team out. Ready?”
I nodded and followed him toward the closest path into the floodplain. John collected a
couple of officers as we trekked into the forest, and I wasn’t the least bit disappointed
when Jenson didn’t join us. The forest canopy filtered the sun, but the humidity under the
trees hung heavy, making the air thick. Sweat coated my skin, and my blond curls clung to
my cheeks and neck. I cracked the seal of my water bottle, but took only one long swig—no
telling how long we’d be hiking.
“That is where the first foot was found,” John said after we’d been walking for half an
hour. He nodded ahead of him to where yellow crime tape ringed the path. “The second was
found about a quarter mile farther up the path; the third a mile or more to the south.
We’re not sure yet if the recent flooding unearthed shallow graves or if the bodies were
dumped farther upstream and floated into the floodplain, but with the speed the water is
retreating, every passing minute increases the chance of our evidence washing away. We
need to find those bodies.”