The Whispering Room. Amanda Stevens
is barely five months old. He doesn’t care where we live.”
“Yeah, but police work’s not such a hot profession for a single parent. With Johnny gone, you’re all that boy has left.”
And just like that, with his name spoken aloud, Evangeline’s dead husband was right there with them on the dilapidated porch.
She couldn’t see him, of course, but for a moment, his presence seemed so strong, she was tempted to reach out and grab him, hold on for all she was worth.
She knew only too well, though, that her fingers would clutch nothing but air.
Still, Johnny was beside her as she stepped into that chamber of horrors. The chill at her nape felt like the whisper of his breath; the gooseflesh that prickled along her arms was the brush of his ghostly fingers.
Whether she could see him or not, Johnny was there.
He was always there.
Inside the house, the techs were already hard at work. Two uniforms stood just inside the door talking to Tony Vincent, the coroner’s investigator, and Evangeline acknowledged them with a brief nod before she quickly scanned the litter-strewn room.
A few years ago, the squalor would have appalled her because the house she grew up in had always been spotless. Now the filth barely registered as her gaze came to rest on the victim lying facedown on the floor.
She took note of his size—average height, average build, but the suit he wore looked expensive and she would bet a paycheck his loafers were Italian. This was no derelict. This was a guy who’d had access to money, and judging by the flash of the gold Rolex on his left wrist, plenty of it.
“Do we know who he is?”
“His name’s Paul Courtland. We found his wallet,” one of the officers explained when she raised a questioning brow. “Still had cash in it, too.”
“Looks like we can eliminate robbery as a motive,” Mitchell muttered.
“He has a Garden District address,” another officer piped in. “One of the historic places on Prytania.”
Mitchell whistled. “Old house, old money.”
“Paul Courtland,” Evangeline murmured. “Why does that name sound so familiar?”
“He was all over the news last fall,” Mitchell said. “Sonny Betts’s attorney?”
“Oh, right.”
Sonny Betts. As slimy and vicious as they came and that was saying a lot for New Orleans.
Betts was one of the new breed of drug thugs that had flocked back to the city after Katrina. More ambitious and more brutal than their predecessors, guys like Betts no longer hid in the shadows to conduct their nefarious business practices because the city’s corrupt legal system and lawlessness allowed them to operate with brazen impunity in broad daylight.
“The feds put a lot of resources into building a case against Betts, and then Mr. Big-Shot-Attorney here goes and gets him off without even a slap on the wrist,” Mitchell said. “I think it’s fair to say they were more than a little pissed.”
“No kidding.”
He nodded toward the victim. “You think Betts had a hand in this?”
Evangeline shrugged. “Seems a poor way to thank a guy for keeping your ass out of a federal pen, but I wouldn’t put it past him.”
Tony Vincent walked up just then and Mitchell clapped him on the back. “Anthony! How goes the morgue business these days?”
He grinned. “Clients ain’t complaining.”
His gaze drifted to Evangeline, and she pretended she didn’t notice the lingering glance he gave her. She didn’t like the way he’d started looking at her lately. He was an attractive guy and he had a lot going for him, but she wasn’t ready to date. Not even close.
She couldn’t imagine herself going out to a movie or to dinner with anyone but Johnny. She couldn’t imagine another man’s lips on her mouth, another man’s hands on her body. She got lonely at times, sure, but never enough to betray the memory of her husband.
Which was not a very realistic or even sane way to spend the rest of her life, she freely acknowledged. But it was how she chose to live it at the moment.
Tony was still watching her. “Y’all ready to get this show on the road?”
Evangeline tried to ignore him, but, damn, the man really was something to look at. Almost too handsome in her book. She didn’t go for the pretty boy types.
Never in a million years would Johnny have been considered a pretty boy. Or even conventionally handsome. Not with his broken nose and crooked smile. But right up until the day he died, his boy-next-door looks had made Evangeline’s heart pound.
“What have you got so far?” she asked crisply, snapping on a pair of latex gloves.
“Advanced putrefaction and seventeen-millimeter maggots. This guy’s been here for a while.”
She wrinkled her nose. “We can tell that from the smell. Can you be a little more specific?”
“Best guess, four to five days, but in this humidity…” Tony shrugged. “We’ll know more when we get him on the slab.”
“Cause of death?”
His eyes twinkled. “Oh, you’re going to love this.”
Yeah, I just bet I will.
They moved in unison to the body and squatted. With his gloved hands, Tony turned the corpse’s head so they could see the right side of his face, which was severely swollen and discolored.
Extracting a pen from his pocket, he pointed to a spot near the jawline.
“What are we looking at?” Mitchell asked curiously.
“Puncture wounds. Skin necrosis is pretty severe so you have to look hard to spot them. See here?”
“What made them?” Forgetting about her previous wariness around Tony, Evangeline moved in closer to get a better look.
He gave her a sidelong glance when her shoulder brushed against his. “Would you believe, fangs?”
“What?”
He laughed at her reaction. “No need to sharpen the wooden stakes just yet. I don’t think we’re dealing with a vampire. See this dried crusty stuff on his skin? I’m pretty sure that’s venom, probably mixed in with a little pus.”
A thrill of foreboding raced up Evangeline’s spine. She had a bad feeling she knew what was coming next. And for her, dealing with the undead would have been infinitely preferable.
“Holy shit.” Mitchell stared at the body in awe. “You saying this guy died from a snakebite?”
“Bites,” Tony clarified. “They’re all over him.”
“Jesus.”
A wave of nausea rolled through Evangeline’s stomach, and her skin started to crawl. She didn’t like snakes. At all. It was an inconvenient aversion for someone who had lived in Louisiana all her life. Serpents in the South were almost as plentiful as mosquitoes.
Evangeline was pretty sure her almost pathological loathing could be traced back to a specific incident in her childhood, while she’d been visiting her grandmother in the country. They’d been fishing from the bank of a bayou, and Evangeline had been so intent on the bobble of her little cork floater among the lily pads, she hadn’t noticed the huge cottonmouth that had crawled out from underneath the rotting log she’d perched on.
“Evie, honey, don’t you move a muscle. You hear me?” her grandmother had said in a hushed tone.
Evangeline had started to ask