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Freak Show (Episode One: The Nightshade Cases)
Freak Show (Episode One: The Nightshade Cases)
Freak Show (Episode One: The Nightshade Cases)
Ebook184 pages2 hours

Freak Show (Episode One: The Nightshade Cases)

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In Silver City, sometimes friendship can be murder.

Step into a world where the ordinary intertwines with the extraordinary, and mysteries lie hidden beneath the surface. Dive into the captivating pages of Freak Show by Patti Larsen, a contemporary paranormal police procedural mystery that will keep you on the edge of your seat from start to finish.

When the lifeless body of exotic dancer Aisling is discovered, Detective Geraldine Meyers is thrust into a web of enigma that defies explanation. As the lead investigator, Gerri is determined to uncover the truth, but this is no ordinary murder. With every piece of evidence, it becomes clear that something far more sinister is at play in the heart of Silver City.

Guided by the brilliant insights of medical examiner Dr. Rachel Hunter, Gerri embarks on a journey into the supernatural, where logic battles against the inexplicable. Yet, as the shadows deepen, Gerri finds an unexpected ally in anthropologist Dr. Kinsey DanAllart. Reluctantly leaning into Kinsey's expertise in symbology, Gerri must confront the uncanny and the unsettling possibility that Silver City holds secrets beyond imagination.

In a town where the line between reality and the supernatural blurs, the trio of friends joins forces to unravel the threads of Aisling's demise. But the path is treacherous, and the stakes are higher than they could have ever imagined. As they peel back the layers of deception, one truth becomes crystal clear—Silver City harbors a darkness that thrives on secrecy, and there are those willing to go to great lengths to ensure that the truth remains buried.

Freak Show is more than a mystery—it's a pulse-pounding exploration of friendship tested against the backdrop of the paranormal. Patti Larsen weaves a masterful narrative that will enthrall fans of both police procedurals and the supernatural. Get ready to lose yourself in a tale where the bonds of friendship can be a source of salvation or lead to destruction, where reality is a tapestry woven with threads of the unknown.

Are you prepared to confront the eerie and embrace the unexplained? Venture into a world where friendship can turn deadly, and where the truth is as elusive as the shadows themselves. Your new addiction awaits—a thrilling journey that will leave you breathless and questioning the limits of what you thought was possible.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPatti Larsen
Release dateJun 13, 2014
ISBN9781927464656
Freak Show (Episode One: The Nightshade Cases)
Author

Patti Larsen

About me, huh? Well, my official bio reads like this: Patti Larsen is a multiple award-winning author with a passion for the voices in her head. But that sounds so freaking formal, doesn’t it? I’m a storyteller who hears character's demands so loudly I have to write them down. I love the idea of sports even though sports hate me. I’ve dabbled in everything from improv theater to film making and writing TV shows, singing in an all girl band to running my own hair salon.But always, always, writing books calls me home.I’ve had my sights set on world literary domination for a while now. Which means getting my books out there, to you, my darling readers. It’s the coolest thing ever, this job of mine, being able to tell stories I love, only to see them all shiny and happy in your hands... thank you for reading.As for the rest of it, I’m short (permanent), slightly round (changeable) and blonde (for ever and ever). I love to talk one on one about the deepest topics and can’t seem to stop seeing the big picture. I happily live on Prince Edward Island, Canada, home to Anne of Green Gables and the most beautiful red beaches in the world, with my pug overlord and overlady, six lazy cats and Gypsy Vanner gelding, Fynn.

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    Freak Show (Episode One - Patti Larsen

    Chapter One

    The stage door squealed softly on unoiled hinges as Aisling’s fake French manicure scraped over the edge.

    Well, damn it all to hell, girl. She wobbled on her new Prada knockoffs, one knee buckling briefly before her natural balance kicked in. Her eyes struggled to focus on the partially torn edge of her nail. She turned with more enthusiasm than she should have risked in her mind-altered condition, upper body swaying as she flashed the offending gray, dented exit her damaged middle finger. And snorted out a giggle. Showed you. Asshole.

    She’d only had one drink, shouldn’t have been this messed up. Her nose twitched as she sniffed. Oh, right. And a whole lot of cocaine for 3AM. Aisling giggled again, hands sliding down the front of her skintight red dress. Her fingers skimmed the fake leather, pausing on the way back up on her newly inflated chest. The trip to Tijuana cost her a fraction of plastics in the States. And the handsome Mexican doctor knew his shit. Gave her stunning breasts where once she’d been flat enough to pass for a boy.

    Worth his weight in gold, that doc. One of her own kind, understood her situation perfectly. Had no qualms about the fact she wasn’t exactly… normal. Like that word even meant anything.

    She brought lots of drugs home with her, over the border, for her friends, naturally. But, for her, coke was better than painkillers.

    The filthy alleyway stank of decaying food, waste from the bar she’d just left. Didn’t help the bums who lived under the bridge liked to peep at the dancers and used this place for a toilet after jerking off to the memory. Aisling’s finely crafted nose turned up, ruby lips parting as she half strutted, half wavered her way past the rusting dumpster, shoe slipping in a patch of reeking fluid leaking out of the damaged corner.

    She caught herself with a gasp, the loud clang of her heavy, metal bangle slamming into the side of the dumpster ringing like a bell. It made her pause after her start, hum the same note. Tottering on four inches of stiletto, she sashayed her narrow hips from side to side, spinning at last just past the dumpster with a flourish.

    Use that sweet move tomorrow night, she told the open, humid air and dark California night. It made her smile, even as she wobbled on, deeper into the alley. Music and dancing were her life and had been since she was a little girl. Okay, so maybe not stripping for dollar bills in a dive. But at least she was living the dream, right?

    Snort.

    Screw it. Small, fine-boned hands adjusted her new rack again. When she was ready, she would give up the drugs and this crappy shithole of a strip bar and go find a real job as a real dancer. On the East coast maybe. New York. London, even.

    Silver City could kiss her ass.

    Aisling giggled again at the visual image her stoned mind came up with. It took her a moment to drag her focus back, sniffing delicately, the faint tingle of the drug still in her nostrils. A giant bag—matching her shoes, of course—swung against her hip as she frowned down into it, swaying while she dug into the dark interior.

    Damn it. What did she do with her car keys?

    The door squealed for a second time, spinning her around. And, in that instant, everything changed. Fear raced through her, clearing her mind. Aisling's fingers located the small, square box of her Taser buried at the bottom. She hated being sober and being afraid even more. Too many years of hiding, of having fellow dancers fall victim to fans who took things too far. Her free hand settled over the center of her chest, pressing into the silence there. No matter the reason for her fear, it left her with a cold and terrible pit of anxiety she knew she’d never shed no matter how much work she had done to this body of hers.

    Or how well she hid what she really was.

    Until she spotted the person walking toward her, down the alley, with steady, reassuring steps. She smiled, ruby lips separating, feeling her body warm in response to the sight. The coke resurged and made everything all right again. That empty place inside her chest, under her quivering hand, filled with longing, a hunger so powerful she could barely stand it. That was the true hole she tried to fill. That only a certain kind of attention could feed. And here was the perfect meal, falling into her lap.

    What are you doing here? She licked her lips, chest tightening, heating in anticipation. I wondered if you’d come looking for seconds. She was almost grateful for the loss of her full-on buzz. There were better ways to get high. Much better ways.

    It wasn’t until a shadow fell over her, the flash of a silver blade cutting through the dark between them, Aisling understood. And even then, she was so shocked all she could do was stare as the knife plunged, Taser forgotten in her hand, the vague and distant scream in her head only begging her killer to spare her brand-new boobs.

    ***

    Chapter Two

    Sweat ran in distracting paths down Gerri’s face, rivers trickling to soak the neck of her academy T-shirt. The treadmill flew by beneath her pounding sneakers, miles run at a standstill since she climbed on board forty-five minutes ago.

    Detective Geraldine Meyers ignored the steady drip of saltiness, the clang of someone dropping weights behind her. She liked the early morning quiet of the 9th Precinct gym. Even more now the 10th had that fancy new setup thanks to a wealthy family whose daughter their detectives rescued. Her precinct’s facility might have been dingy, the worn floor and patched benches signs of age and use, but she preferred the quiet to a packed new gym full of macho cops with something to prove.

    She’d never admit she was one of them.

    Choosing to become a cop like her dad hadn’t been much of a choice. Gerri sped up the treadmill, thighs burning as her mind flashed to the badge in her locker, the gun in her desk upstairs. She’d finished college, thought about the FBI, maybe. Even the CIA at one point. But, solving street level crimes, following in her father’s footsteps, won out over other ambitions. Not that she blamed Sergeant Dutch Meyers for pushing his oldest into the family business. It saved her brother and sister from a life behind a badge. And she really was uniquely suited to the job.

    Gerri hit the speed button again. As if running meant she would outpace the fear stirring in her when she thought about her uniqueness. Anything to avoid thinking about the burning inside her, whispering to her she could run so much faster.

    The narrow bank of windows at the top of the wall across from her threw reflections from the early morning sun on the hubcaps of passing cars. Down here, she could forget about who she was, what she feared inside her. The way her father pressed her about it all through high school, with a gleam in his eye telling her he knew more about it than she did. That they shared some bond beyond the usual father/daughter connection. But her beloved father never, ever talked about it and, though she won meet after track meet, match after boxing match, and excelled at every single sport she ever tried, Dutch refused to tell her why he watched her succeed with haunted eyes.

    Gerri scowled at the rising miles on the treadmill readout, not really seeing. She’d felt like a freak her entire life. All but that brief, blissful stint she spent in college. Four years in residence, befriended by the most unlikely pair of girls she could ever imagine would attach themselves to her. Thinking of Kinsey and Ray actually put a smile on Gerri’s face, smoothed out her angry, heavy stride. Though they’d only had a few years together at the outset, she couldn’t think of two people she’d rather have in her life.

    Sure, she was guilty of spending the next ten years sending birthday cards and Christmas cards and only throwing out the odd phone call. Life was busy, not just for her. Kinsey went on to be some hot-shot young professor, a doctor of anthropology. And Ray became a doctor of another kind, first as a physician, then as a medical examiner. Gerri threw herself into her police work, making detective two short years after putting on her uniform. Just like her father wanted. And she was willing to admit as she flew over the track of the treadmill with her heart and lungs pumping in happy coordination, what she really wanted, too.

    Gerri wiped at the sweat running down her face with the shoulder of her T-shirt. Eight years as a detective in Boston, bounced around from division to division, gave her a unique perspective on the darkness of the human soul. And, though Gerri excelled at every single one of them, she had a particular preference for homicide.

    She laughed to herself, without humor. It took a specific kind of freak to get her rocks off on the deaths of others. And yet, with every call, every new case, Gerri loved her job more.

    The treadmill groaned under her. The faint odor of burning plastic and odd hum rising from the belt warned her she’d pushed the old piece of crap to its limit. She ignored the fact she’d topped out its 12.4mph. Despite the sweat she shed, she still felt like she could run forever. Instead, she powered down and stepped off as the thing hummed to a stop.

    She could swear she heard it sigh in relief.

    As she turned, heading for the heavy bag, she didn’t miss the quick glances her way, the hostility from one of her fellow officers, the near worship on the face of the single woman in the gym. Gerri ignored both, tossing her towel to the side, jerking on her gloves. Let them stare, judge, wonder what was wrong with her. Let the guys she worked with think she was a butch. Gerri lived with worse her entire life. And wasn’t about to let it bother her now.

    Besides, she’d never had it so good. Two months ago, she’d been a mid-level detective in Boston, before the call came in. Within a matter of days, she received an offer from Silver City, lead detective, her own homicide team.

    Got to take it, kiddo, Dad said, serious face stern over the cup of coffee they shared when she told him the news. Mom wouldn’t meet her eyes, but she seemed resigned to her leaving. You have a job to do.

    He was always so damned serious about things, made it sound like life and death. Well, she did work homicide. Despite his odd behavior, the exciting prospect won over her guilt at leaving her family behind on the East coast.

    Which led her to the best news of all. Gerri tested her gloves against each other before settling in to beat the crap out of the heavy bag hanging in front of her. Her right fist connected with a solid whack as she grinned. Imagine her shock, two weeks after arriving in Silver City, running into her old friend, Ray, working a crime scene as a medical examiner. Then, to bump into Kinsey over a case involving a dead prof at the university.

    Her grin faltered as she spun and delivered a roundhouse kick to the bag, sending it swinging. Such a coincidence, the three of them ending up here. Especially since the detective in her didn’t believe in coincidences.

    Gerri bounced on her toes, smile gone completely, the tingle inside her burning brighter, vision narrow, focused on the center of the bag. There were times she was sure she could destroy it, rip it apart if she really let go. Which made her retreat further, drop her hands to her sides and pant while her mind spun away from the reunion of three friends and into the reason for their connection.

    She hated to think of the night her partner died. The captain settled her in with veteran Detective Joe Mutch her first day in the bullpen. She immediately liked him, with his neatly shaven face and careful suit and tie. His talk about always looking professional. He reminded Gerri a lot of her dad, if an older version. She’d done her best to hide the fact, though. Wouldn’t do to have her partner think she was a softie. Still, he was easy going and damned good at his job, two traits that endeared him daily to her.

    And made what came next all the harder. Three months from retirement and the former lead, Joe’s job was to teach her the ropes. Told her she’d better keep him out of trouble, that he had a fishing trip planned to end all fishing trips the day after he got his gold watch.

    Gerri offered a half-hearted whack to the heavy bag. He didn’t make it.

    This time, when Gerri’s fist connected with the worn leather, she felt her glove split, the bag itself vibrating from the end of the heavy chain holding it aloft. One of the guys behind her swore, but she didn’t bother turning around to find out if he was aiming his shock at her.

    He was. Had to be. Like she didn’t know otherwise, hadn’t lived with such observation her whole life. She drew a shaking breath, pulled her lifelong temper problem under control. Doing so left her open to thinking about Joe. About the night he died. The druggie asshole who stuck a knife in the old man’s

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