C. E. Murphy - Urban Shaman 1.5 - Banshee Cries

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Banshee Cries
C.E. Murphy
Taken from the Winter Moon Anthology
This one’s for my mom, Rosie Murphy, who wanted to know what the story with Jo’s mom was
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Dear Reader,
In September of 2004 I got an e-mail from my agent, the incomparable Jennifer Jackson, saying she’d
just spoken with my equally incomparable editor, Mary-Theresa Hussey, who wanted to know if I’d be
interested in participating in a LUNA Books anthology as one of three contributing authors. The other
two authors were to be (need I say the incomparable?)TanithLee and Mercedes Lackey.
Not being a great fool, I said yes.
A month of frenzied thought was interspersed with me singing, “One of these things is not like the
others,” followed by a flurry of frenzied writing. The result is “Banshee Cries,” Book 1.5 of theWalker
Papers. It fits chronologically between book one, Urban Shaman, which came out in June 2005, and
book two, Thunderbird Falls, due out in May 2006.
I hope you enjoy the story!
C.E. Murphy
Chapter One
Sunday March 20th, 2:55 p.m.
Cell phones are the most detestable objects on the face of the earth. Worse than those ocean-variety pill
bugsthat grow bigger than your head, which were on my personal top ten list of Things To Avoid.
My life had been a lovely, cell-free zone until nine weeks, six days, and four hours ago. Not that I was
counting. On that fateful day I got an official business phone to go with my bulletproof vest andbilly stick.
I’d even been given a gun to go with my shiny new badge.
I wanted those things about as much as I’d wanted to bonk my head on the engine block I’d sat up
beneath when the phone rang. I rubbed my forehead and glared at the engine, then felt horribly guilty. It
wasn’t Petite’s fault I’d hurt myself, and she’d been through enough lately that she didn’t need me
scowling on top of it all.
The phone kept ringing. I rolled out from under the Mustang and crawled to her open door, digging the
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phone out from under the driver’s seat. “What?”
Only one person outside of work had the phone number. As soon as I spoke I realized that a politer
pickup might have been kosher. The resounding silence from the other end of the line confirmed my
suspicion. Eventually a male voice said, “Walker?”
I turned around to hook my arm over the bottom of the car’s door frame and did my best to stifle a
groan.“Captain.”
“I need you—”
These were words that another woman might be pleased to hear from Captain Michael Morrison of the
Seattle Police Department. Then again, if he was saying them to another woman, there probably wouldn’t
have been the slight tension in his voice that suggested his mouth was pressed into a thin line and his
nostrils flared with irritation at having the conversation. He had a good voice, nice and low. I imagined it
could carry reassuring softness, the kind that would calm a scared kid. Unfortunately, the only softness I
ever heard in it was the kind that said,This is the calm before the storm, which happened to be how he
sounded right now. I crushed my eyes closed, face wrinkling up, and prodded the bump on my forehead.
“—to come in to work.”
“It’s my weekend, Morrison.”As if this would make any difference. I could hear his ears turning red.
“I wouldn’t be calling you in—”
“Yeah.”I bit the word off and wrapped my hand around the bottom of Petite’s frame. “What’s going
on?”
Silence.“I’d rather not tell you.”
“Jesus, Morrison.” I straightened up, feeling the blood return to the line across my back where I’d been
leaning on the car. “Is anybody dead? Is Billy okay?”
“Holliday’s fine. Can you get over toWoodlandPark ?”
“Yeah, I—” I tilted my head back, looking at the Mustang’s roof. Truth was,I’d been futzing around
under the engine block because I couldn’t stand to look at the damage done to my baby’s roof anymore.
A twenty-nine-inch gash, not that I’d measured or anything, ran from the windshield’s top edge almost all
the way to the back window. From my vantage, thin stuffing and fabric on the inside ceiling shredded and
dangled like a teddy bearwho’d seen better days. Beyond that, soldered edges of steel, not yet sanded
down, looked likesomebody’d dragged an ax through it.
Which was precisely what had happened.
A little knot of agony tied itself around my heart and squeezed, just like it did every time I looked at my
poor car. The war wounds were almost three months old and killing me, but the insurance company was
dragging its feet. Full coverage did cover acts of God—or in my case, acts of gods—but I’d only said
she’d been hit by vandals, because who would believe the truth? In the meantime, I’d already spent my
meager savings replacing the gas tank thatsomebody’d shot an arrow through.
My life had gotten unpleasantly weird in the past few months.
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I forced myself to find something else to look at—the opposite garage wall had a calendar with a mostly
naked woman on it, which was sort of an improvement—and sighed. “Yeah,” I said again, into the
phone. “I’mgonna have to take a cab.”
“Fine.Just get here.North entrance. Wear boots.” Morrison hung up and I threw the phone over my
shoulder into the car again. Then I said a word nice girls shouldn’t and scrambled after the phone,
propping myself in the bucket seat with one leg out the door. Bedraggled as she was, just sitting in Petite
made me feel better. I patted her steering wheel and murmured a reassurance to her as I dialed the
phone. A voice that had smoked too many cigarettes answered and I grinned, sliding down in Petite’s
leather seat.
“Still working?”
Y’know, in my day, when somebody made a phone call, they said hello and gave their name before
anything else.”
“Gary, in your day they didn’t have telephones. Are you still working?”
“Depends.Is this the crazy broad who hires cabbies to drive her to crime scenes?”
I snorted a laugh.“Yeah.”
“Is shegonna cook me dinner if I’m stillworkin ’?”
“Sure,” I said brightly. “I’ll whip you up the best microwave dinner you ever had.”
“Okay. I want one of them chicken fettuccine ones.Where you at?”
“Chelsea’s Garage.”
Garygroaned,a rumble that came all the way from his toes and reverberated in my ear.“You still over
there mooning over that car, Jo?”
“I am not mooning!” I was mooning. “She needs work.”
“You need money. And snow tires. And more than six inches of clearance. Youain’tgonna drive it till
spring, Jo, even if you do get it fixed up.”
“Her,” I said, sounding like a petulant child. “Petite’sa her , not an it, aren’t you, baby,” I added,
addressing the last part to the steering wheel. “Look, are yougonna come get me or not? It’s even a
paying gig. Morrison called and wants me to go over toWoodlandPark .”
Arright.”Gary’s voice brightened considerably. “Maybe there’ll be a body.”
Morrison glared magnificently when I arrived withGary in tow. The two of them facing off was wonderful
to behold: Morrison was pushing forty and good-looking in a superhero-going-to-seed way, with graying
hair and sharp blue eyes.Gary , at seventy-three, had Hemingway wrinkles and a Connery build that
made him look dependable and solid instead of old, and his gray eyes were every bit as sharp as
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Morrison’s. For a few seconds I thought they might start butting heads.
But Morrison pointed atGary and barked, “You stay here.”Gary looked as crestfallen as a wet kitten. I
actually said, “Aw, c’mon, Morrison,” and got his glare turned on me. Oops.
“It’sarright , Jo.”Gary gave me a sly look that from a man a few decades younger would’ve had my
heart doing flip-flops. “I bet there’s a body. You can tell me about it at dinner. You need a ride home?”
“I’ll take care of it,” Morrison said in a sharp voice.Gary winked at me, shoved his hands in his pockets,
and sauntered back to his cab, whistling. I choked on a laugh and turned to follow Morrison, tromping
through a truly unbelievable amount of snow. It had started snowing in mid-January and, as far asSeattle
was concerned, hadn’t stopped in the two months since. Even the weathermen merely looked stunned
and resigned, mumbling excuses about hurricane patterns in the South having unexpected consequences
in thePacific Northwest .
“What is it with you two?”
“So what’s going on, Captain?” We spoke at the same time, leaving me blinking at Morrison’s shoulders
and starting to grin. “What is it with us?Me and Gary? Are you serious?”
“He answers your phone.” Morrison was talking to the footprints in the snow in front of him, not me. My
grin got noticeably bigger.
“Only the once.That was like six weeks ago, Morrison. And who told you that, anyway?” I wanted to
laugh.
“I’m just saying he’s a little old for you, isn’t he?” Morrison’s shoulders were hunched, as if he was
trying to warm his ears up with them. I grinned openly at his back and lowered my voice so it only just
barely carried over the squeak and crunch of snow as we walked through it.
“All I’ll say is,you know how they say old dogs can’t learn new tricks? Turns out old dogs have some
pretty good tricks of their own.”
Morrison’s shoulders jerked another inch higher and I laughed out loud, the sound bouncing off tree
branches black with winter cold. Snow shimmered and fell off one, making a soft puff and a dent in the
snow below it. Morrison flinched at the sound, head snapping toward it as his hand dropped to his belt,
like he’d pull a weapon. My laughter drained away and I followed him the rest of the way to a park
baseball diamond in silence.
He climbed up snow-covered bleachers, making distinct footprints in the already walked on snow,
compacting it further. I put my feet in precisely the same places he’d stepped, fitting my sole print to his
exactly. We had the same size feet, and in police-issue boots his prints were indistinguishable from mine,
at least to the naked eye. A forensics officer could probably tell there was a weight difference between
the two of us—in Morrison’s favor, thank God—but for the moment I enjoyed the idea of stealing along
behind the captain, invisible to anybody trying to track me.
Morrison stopped on the step above me and turned so abruptly I nearly walked into him. I rocked back
on my heels, one step below him,my nose at his chest height as I frowned up at him. “Thanks for the
warning.” I hated looking up, physically, to Morrison: we were the same height, down to the half inch that
put us both just below six feet, and any situation that made me look up to him made me uncomfortable.
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Of course, the reverse was also true, and I’d been known to wear heels just so I’d be taller than he was.
No one said I was a good person.
“Tell me what you see.”
Assuming he didn’t want me to describe him—which, had he not been so antsy about the snow falling
from the tree a few moments ago, I’d have probably done just to annoy him—I turned away, looking
over the baseball diamond.
It was buried beneath two feet of the wet, heavy snow that had made my jeans damp from tromping
through it. I shook one foot absently, knocking snow off my boot. I’d lived inWisconsin for a winter, so
snow wasn’t entirely new to me, but this was ridiculous forSeattle , and I said so. Morrison huffed out a
breath like an annoyed bull and I puffed my cheeks, muttering, “Okay, fine. I see snow.”
Well, duh. Clearly Morrison wanted more than that. “Snowmobile tracks. I didn’t even know people
inSeattle owned snowmobiles.Um. Footprints around the diamond, likepeople’ve been playing
snowball.” I thought that was pretty clever. Snowball, like baseball, only with snow, right? Morrison
didn’t laugh. I sighed.Poor, poor put-upon me.
“There are cops, there’s some teenagers over there, there’s—” Actually, there were a lot of cops, now
that I was looking. Picked out in dull blue under the gray sky, they worked their way around the baseball
diamond and stumped their way through the outfield. “There’s, um.” I frowned. “I don’t hear anything,
either. There aren’t any people around. Dead trees…”
“No,” Morrison growled, full of so much tension that I looked over my shoulder at him, feeling my
expression turning worried. “What do you see,” he repeated, and suddenly I got it. A drop of ice formed
inside my throat and spilled down into my stomach, like drinking cold water on an empty belly. I folded
my arms around myself defensively, shaking my head.
“Shit, Morrison, it doesn’t—it doesn’t work like that. I mean, I’m not, like, good enough to make it
work, I don’t know how, I don’t want to—”
“God damn it,Walker , what do you see!”
I turned back to the field, stiff as an automaton, my lower lip sucked between my teeth. One of my arms
unfolded from around me completely of its own will, hand drifting to rub my sternum through my winter
jacket.
There was no hole in my breastbone, no scar to suggest there’d ever been one. But I found myself
pulling in a very deep breath, trying to rid myself of the memory of a silver blade shoved through my lung
and the bubbling, coppery taste of blood at the back of my throat. I’d nearly died eleven weeks ago, and
instead found that buried within me was the power to heal myself, and maybe a great deal more. More
than one person had called me a shaman since then. I didn’t like it at all.
“I’m not any good at this, Morrison. I don’t know if I can do it on purpose.” My voice was strained and
thin, full of reluctance. Morrison didn’t say anything. Once upon a time—not that long ago—the only
thing he and I had had in common was a complete disdain for the paranormal and people who believed
there were things that went bump in the night. I’d been struggling for the past three months to get back to
that place.Back to a world that made sense, where I didn’t feel a coil of bright power burbling in the core
of me, waiting to be used. I desperately wanted to believe it had been some kind of peculiar dream.
Most days I was able to cling to that.
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Morrison was not helping me cling. I could feel the tension in him, not with any extrasensory perception,
but with how still he was holding himself, and the deliberate steadiness of his breathing. He wasn’t any
happier than I was about asking, which perversely made me willing to play ball. I put my teeth together,
muttering, “Only you could get me to do this.”
That struck me as being alarmingly accurate. I found myself abruptly eager to do it, so I didn’t have to
think about what I’d just said.
Unfortunately, I was at a complete loss as to how to proceed. I’d pulled denial over my head like a
blanket the past several weeks. Now that someone was asking me to use my impossible new gifts, I
didn’t know where to start.
Just thinking about it made the power inside me flutter like a new life, full of hope and possibility. I
swallowed against nausea that was as unpleasantly familiar as the idea of life inside me, and tentatively
reached for the bubble of power.
A spirit guide called Coyote had suggested to me I work through the medium I knew best: cars. In
reaching for that bubble of energy, I tried to do that. Morrison wanted me to see. Well, if I wasn’t seeing
clearly, then the windshields needed washing.
Power spurted up through me, a sudden warm wash that felt startling against the cold winter afternoon.
A silver-blue spray swished over my vision, just like wiper fluid. I closed my eyes against the brightness
and a perceived sting and, without really meaning to, envisioned windshield wipersswooping the liquid
away, leaving my vision clear. The sting faded and I opened my eyes again.
The world was beautiful. Even the gray sky glimmered with light, sparks of water shimmering above me.
As I brought my gaze down, trees whose branches were weighted with snow flickered with the
greenness of waiting life, only cold and dead to the mundane eye. Sap waited torise , leaves prepared to
bud, all a promise of explosive activity the moment winter let go its hold. The chain-link fences that
surrounded the ball field had their own resolute purpose, created and placed to do a specific thing. A
distinct sensation of pride in doing the job emanated from them.
The people on the field radiated different energy, swirling colors that bespoke worry or fear or
determination, the rough shapes of their personalities hammering into me and leaving nothing taken for
granted. I wanted to turn and look at Morrison, to get a sense of him with this other sight I’d called up,
but I was afraid if I moved, I’d lose it again. I dropped my gaze to the field itself, still not knowing what I
was looking for—
And a wave of maliciousness slammed into me like a tornado. It whipped around the core of power
inside me and dug claws in, sharp knife-edges of pain cramping my belly. It sucked the heat out of me,
draining the coil of energy in sudden throbs, faster than a heartbeat. My knees crumpled,
light-headedness sweeping over me.
Morrison caught me under the arms so easily he might have been waiting for me to fall. I twisted toward
him, grabbing his coat as he slid an arm around me more firmly.
“You’re all right.” His voice sounded like it was coming from unreasonably far away, given that I knew
he was right behind my ear. “I’ve got you.”
I didn’t want to move, desperately glad for the support he offered, both physical and other. His
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presence was solid and comforting, a wall of commitment and strength in deep, reassuring purples and
blues. I doubted he knew he was projecting his own personal energy in a way that let me borrow some,
but I was incredibly grateful for it.
I managed a shaky nod, hanging on to the flow of strength he offered, using it to shore up my own
depleted silvers and blues. After a few seconds I was able to get my legs under me again, though
Morrison didn’t quite let me go. I locked my knees and made myself turn to look at the field again.
Crimson lines, bleeding with pain and rage, flowed up from the field, following the lines of the baseball
diamond. Points of vicious black stabbed behind my eyes, making marks that seemed to shoot up into
the sky and fade somewhere beyond the stars. Looking at the field felt like someone was digging talons
into my innards, trying to pull them out and bind me to the death that had already been wrought there.
Garywas wrong. There wasn’t a body.
There were three.
Chapter Two
“C’mon,Walker .Tell me what you see. Talk to me, Walker.”
“How many have you found?” My voice was groggy, as if I was talking through pea soup. Morrison let
out a breath that sounded like it meant to be a curse.
“Just the one.What’re we missing?”
“Two more.”I slid out of his grasp and to the snow-covered bleachers. My jacket wasn’t nearly long
enough for sitting on, and cold started seeping through my jeans immediately.“All women. There and
there and there.” I pointed blindly at the field, unable to convince myself to lift my eyes and study it again.
Not that it would’ve helped: the snow was only snow again, not breathing with its own chaotic pattern of
lights. I was just as glad that I couldn’t hang on to the second sight for long. “What the hell made you call
me in for this?”
“Holliday.”
That explained a lot. Billy Holliday—besides having one of the more unfortunate names I’d ever
encountered—was the department’s number-one Believer. I’d played a mocking Scully to hisMulder
until my own sensible world turned upside down. He’d been remarkably kind, all things considered, in
not giving me too much shit since then. If something struck him as genuinely abnormal about the murders,
it made a certain amount of sense for him to think of me.
God, how I wished he hadn’t. I slumped down, forehead against my knees, which reminded me that I’d
smacked my head earlier. I pressed my palm against it, trying—not very hard—to call up just enough of
that energy inside me to smooth the bump away. It didn’t work. I was almost grateful. It suggested I
wasn’t as completely weird as the past couple of minutes proved me to be. My silence drew on long
enough to prompt my boss to keep talking, something I hadn’t intended but for which I was also grateful.
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“Some teenagers found the first body. Holliday was on call and when they dug her free—you should
probably see for yourself.”
“Do I have to?” My voice was still thin. “I’m a beat cop, Morrison, not a homicide detective.” I’d never
wanted to be either, despite having attended the academy. I’d been a mechanic, and the short version
wasMorrison’d hired my replacement when I had to go overseas for a while. But thanks to my mixed
ethnic heritage—I was half Cherokee—I looked too good on the roster to actually fire. Instead, I’d
gotten an upgrade from mechanic to actual living breathing cop. Morrison figured—hoped—I’d spit in his
face and quit.
I couldn’t stand to give him the satisfaction.Which left me sitting in the snow, whining and praying he’d
give me a break.
“You have to.”
So much for praying.I got up, brushed snow off my cold bottom, and stumped down the bleachers.
Billy’dobviously been on duty when the kids called in about the body, because he was wearing sensible
shoes. Typically, when he got called unexpectedly he came in wearing a pair of great heels, which I still
noticed because he had better taste in shoes than I did. I’d never heard anybody tease him about
cross-dressing, partly because he was a hell of a detective, and partly because he was something over six
feet tall and looked like he could break you in half. It didn’t hurt that his wife could’ve beenSalma
Hayek’s slightly more gorgeous sister. At the moment, though, he was wearing regulation boots and
crouched over a frozen woman whose insides were no longer in. I stopped several feet back and said,
“Jesus,” by way of announcing my arrival.
The woman’s intestines stretched out of her belly and into the snow, ropy frozen lines of blackness
buried in the cold. Her stomach had been cut open in an efficient X, and judging from therictus her face
was frozen in, she’d probably been alive when it happened. If it’d been summertime, I probably would
have lost my lunch, but the icy strands and beads of cold on her face looked so surreal I couldn’t quite
wrap my mind around it having been a person once. She looked like a prop on a sound stage for a movie
set in theArctic .
“Hey,Joanie .”Billy was watching the guys from forensics brush snow away from the woman’s body,
careful detailed work that gave lie to the fact that the weather had almost certainly destroyed any
available evidence. “Glad you could make it.” He pursed his lips and shrugged. “Well.”
“I know what you mean.” I edged a few steps closer, staring down at the woman reluctantly. “Why’d
you want me?”
“Look at her.” He shrugged again.“Got ritual murder all over it.”
“Did the dead lady tell you that?”
Billy gave me a dirty look that I deserved. I’d only learned recently that some of his intuitive leaps in
homicide cases were courtesy of an occasional ability to converse with ghosts. It was not the kind of
thing I was comfortable with, even though—or particularly because—I could now do it myself. “No,” he
said. “The physical evidence did. Can you not make jokes right now,Joanie ? This woman deserves
some respect.”
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“These women.”I let out a long exhalation, looking at my feet. “There’s two more. I…saw them.”
Satisfaction showed in Billy’s voice for just an instant. “I knew bringing you in was the right thing to do.
You get anything else?”
Creepy-crawlies shivered over my skin, making me even more uncomfortable than a wet butt and dead
bodies did by themselves. Billy was much, much easier with weird shit than I was. The shamanic gift that
I hated having would have been far better off residing in him. “No. I’m sorry.” I forbore to mention I
didn’t have a clue how to get anything else. He looked disappointed enough as it was. I lowered my
voice, feeling like a member of aSekrit Brotherhood that dared not voice its name. “Did you get
anything?”
Billy shook his head. “Been dead too long. I never get anything from people who’ve been dead more
than forty-eight hours. They lose their connection with the world.”
I nodded,then frowned. “I thought you said your sister visited you three years after she died.”
“I guess blood’s thicker than ether.”
The wind picked up as he spoke, a hair-raising keen that had no business anywhere outside of a holler. I
instinctively lifted my shoulders against it,then felt a scowl crinkling my forehead so hard it ached. There
was no new chill in the air, no cutting cold through my coat, despite the shriek of sound. A shadow came
down over the world, making me look up at the sky, as if the sun wasn’t already hidden beneath
doomfully gray clouds.
There were no clouds. A window framed the section of sky I could see, scattered stars valiantly
struggling against the light of a brilliantly full moon. Irish lace curtains caught at the moon’s edges, making
it whimsical and delicate in the clear black sky.Seattle ’s snowbound chill was driven from my skin, and
the breath I took was full of warm air and the scent of tea.
Recognition jolted through me like needles under my fingernails. I knew the window; I knew the curtains,
and I knew that if I looked to my left I would see a near stranger, lying beneath a handmade quilt and
dying of nothing more than her own determination to do so.
I turned myhead, for all that I didn’t want to look at the woman on the bed. She had black hair, worn
much longer than mine. It lay in soft-looking waves against her white pillow, stark contrast in the
moonlight. Even in the blue-white light, her eyes were very green, and her skin was nearly as pale as the
pillowcase. I heard myself say, “Mirror, mirror, on the wall,” which I certainly hadn’t said in real life. I
wouldn’t have let myself, even if I’d dared.
I was a wildly imperfect reflection of the woman on the bed. Where her skin was uniformly smooth and
pale, mine was marked with a handful of freckles scattered across my nose; where her features were fine,
mine seemed too sharp or too blunt. She was tall, although not as tall as I was, and had a degree of
elegance to her that my long limbs and mechanic’s hands could never emulate.
Her skin changed color, a horridsallowness creeping in. I looked back at the moon to see blood draining
over it. Fear scampered through me, the pure childish terror of the unknown. My voice broke as I said,
“Sheila?” but when I turned to her, the woman was gone.
Joanie?”Billy’s hand on my elbow, big and warm, brought me back to the field with a start. I looked at
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摘要:

  BansheeCries C.E.Murphy TakenfromtheWinterMoonAnthology                Thisone’sformymom,RosieMurphy,whowantedtoknowwhatthestorywithJo’smomwas GeneratedbyABCAmberLITConverter,http://www.processtext.com/abclit.htmlDearReader, InSeptemberof2004Igotane-mailfrommyagent,theincomparableJenniferJackson,s...

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