This close I could smell the blood. Not his, I realized. Charlie's.
The thought caused me to stiffen, then attempt to pull away. He only held on more tightly.
"Where you goin', cher? The police will want to talk with you, I'm thinkin'."
I couldn't seem to put the pieces of the puzzle that was him together quite right. I knew his voice, remembered the way he'd called me cher, recognized the bracelet surrounding his wrist and the drift of his hair against his shoulders. But his face was that of a dream man long dead.
He frowned, gave me a little shake. "You OK? Think you might faint?"
"Wh-what - "
I couldn't catch my breath to ask... Who was he? What was he?
"Happened?" I blurted.
"What happened?"
I nodded. He shrugged. If he hadn't been so bloody, I might have gone gooey at the sight of ail those rippling chest muscles.
"Heard a scream. Found him. Tried CPR. Didn't work."
Emergency procedures could explain the blood. Made a lot more sense than this man having killed that one. Still, I was too spooked to trust him completely.
"You didn't see anything?" I pressed. "Anyone?"
He looked away, then back. His eyes were such a brilliant blue, I was reminded again of my dream. How could I have dreamed his face, his eyes, when, at the time, I'd never seen them?
That dream was starting to creep me out almost as much as the dead Charlie.
"Something big went crashing that way." He let me go to point into the depths of the swamp.
"How big?" I asked, and my voice shook.
He didn't answer, instead moving across the grass, then kneeling to get a better view of the body.
I didn't want to, but I followed.
"Animal, most like." He tilted his head, staring at the torn throat. "Men don't do that"
True, but - "What kind of animal would attack a man? Tear out his throat?"
"One you don't want to meet."
I was beginning to get used to his compact sentences and the cadence of his accent.
"Got a cell phone, cher?"
"Huh?"
That voice did funny things to my insides.
He smiled. Or at least I thought he did. His lips turned up, but his teeth never made an appearance and the sadness in his eyes didn't lighten. Then again, what could lighten this situation? Charlie was dead.
"A phone. To call de police."
Good idea. Except my phone was on the boat
"Damn," I muttered.
He merely lifted his dark brows.
"I left it on the boat. In my bag."
I didn't want to admit I was afraid to go back there alone, but I didn't have to. He gave a sharp nod and strode toward the sound of the idling motor and the blare of the spotlight
Darkness closed in without him. The swamp was both damp and chilly. Even if it had been hotter than a Louisiana July, I'd still have shivered. There was something out here, and as Cassandra had said, it killed.
My gaze went to Charlie. I'd seen dead bodies before. But not like this.
Several quick splashes near the boat were followed by a low, warning growl that seemed to flow over the swamp grass. I swung in a circle, searching for movement, finding none. I missed Charlie's gun almost as much as I missed Simon. I was never going to find the thing out here. It had probably already sunk to the bottom of a murky, muddy hole.
I started for the boat, just as - hell, I didn't even know his name - burst into the clearing. The blood was gone; his skin still sparkled with moisture. His hair was slicked away from his face.
The splashing I'd heard must have been him washing off the blood in the tributary. But the growl?
"Did you see anything? Hear anything?" I seemed doomed to repeat myself.
"Gators." He handed me the phone. "Keep an eye out."
Did alligators growl? I couldn't recall.
"You'll need to call the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff's Department"
In Louisiana a parish is the equivalent of a county. Has been for over two centuries.
"Should you have washed up?" I asked. "Wasn't that evidence?"
He stiffened. "Evidence of what? You think I killed him?"
I didn't, not really. Charlie had been attacked by an animal, and while I was searching for a loup-garou - a werewolf - I didn't really believe one existed. The very idea that this man could have morphed into a wolf, killed Charlie, then morphed back into a human being and hopped into his pants before I got here was ludicrous. But something was strange about this place, the deaths, even him.
He wandered to the edge of the clearing and peered into the darkness. "What did you hear while I was at the boat?"
I hesitated. Had I heard a growl? Considering the nature of Charlie's wound, I thought so.
Black coyote, Louisiana wolf, ABC, or an undiscovered cryptid - whatever was out there, if it could kill, it could certainly growl.
"An animal," I answered. "Didn't sound like an alligator. More like something with claws and fur."
He continued to stare, and I took the opportunity to call information for the number of the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff's Department. I had them connect me and after I stated my problem and my location, I was promised help would arrive within minutes. Considering someone had died here not more than a few days ago, I wasn't surprised a police car cruised nearby.
I shut off the phone, dropped it into my pocket, then contemplated the distractingly gorgeous back of the man whose name I had yet to discover.
"Who are you?" I whispered.
"You know."