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"I know Santeria doesn't condone human sacrifice, but if w

e're dealing with a wannabe, maybe they're bending the rules. If chickens don't work, try dead girls. Any link with the crime-scene stuff?"

"That bead Claire was clutching could be significant for the pewter or from the symbolism. Could even be a cheap stand-in for silver. I'll keep looking. Anything else?"

"No, Jesse's doing the background checks."

"Got the guys doing the grunt work, huh?"

"After years of doing it for you, Paige, and Lucas, I'm liking this a whole lot better."

"Just don't get used to it."

EVIDENCE OF SANTERIA did not mean we'd found our killer, any more than if I'd found evidence of a Catholic mass. But these ritualistic religions did attract fringe types who misunderstood the beliefs and focused on the occultlike aspects.

Now I needed to figure out who was the practitioner. The best place to find evidence of that would be in the house. If there was an alarm, I'd be out of luck, but I could always hope they were the sort who left without turning it on.

Even better--the back door was latched but not locked. I eased it open, bracing for the squeal of an alarm. Silence. I slipped in and looked around. I found a security panel, but it was green. Unarmed.

As I crept into the hall, a phone rang. On the third ring, it stopped. I paused, expecting an answering machine.

"Hello?" A man's voice. Alastair. Shit. That's why the door was open and the alarm off.

The voice came from the front of the house. I cast a blur spell, and began a slow retreat to the kitchen door. That sleep spell would have come in really handy right about now. Damn. I needed to find a cemetery.

"Ice cream, huh?" He laughed. "No, that's fine. They could use the break and I could use the peace and quiet to finish this ledger. Take as long as you want, Meg."

Okay, he was busy in his office and the girls were enjoying after-lunch ice cream.

I took off my boots, cast another blur spell, and zipped up the stairs, boots in hand. Padding around in socks, I searched all six bedrooms. The closest thing to talismans I found were a four-leaf clover pendant on a dresser and a dream catcher hanging in a window. For drugs, I only found a stash of pot and a cache of diet pills. Whoever was practicing Santeria was keeping it out of the house.

I headed back downstairs. As I passed the living room, the doorbell rang. I darted into the living room, dove behind an armchair, and cast a cover spell. As long as I didn't move, I'd be okay.

When Alastair opened the door, I recognized the visitor's voice. Tiffany Radu.

"I met your new girl in town," she said. "She gave me a coupon for a dozen cookies. Getting a little bold, aren't you? It would be much easier to call."

Alastair laughed. "I wish I could take the credit, but no, Megan must have given Amy those to hand out. A nice way to introduce herself. Come in, please."

Tiffany pushed the baby buggy into the living room and returned to the hall.

"So, do you want those cookies?" he asked.

"Is that the only thing on the menu?"

A chuckle. Then a crash, like a body hitting a wall. I jumped, startling the baby, who stared at me, her blue eyes wide. From the hall came a grunt, then the whir of a zipper. A groan. A sucking noise. Another groan.

Okay, no one was getting killed. And I would have been less surprised if someone was.

The baby craned her head, trying to see her mother. I really hoped she couldn't. Seeing Mom blowing a guy who isn't your dad really isn't an experience any kid needs imprinted on her young memory.

I slid from behind the chair and tugged the buggy toward me until I was certain the baby couldn't see Tiffany. It's a sad day when I'm more concerned for a child than her mother is.

The baby started whimpering now. There was no way Tiffany could hear her--Alastair was too vocal in his appreciation. When a baby isn't heard, though, a baby gets louder, and I didn't want them coming in here.

I murmured an incantation. A light ball appeared on my fingertips. The baby's eyes rounded. I tossed it to hover over her buggy and she giggled and crowed.

"Mama, Mama!" she said, bouncing as I made the light ball dance.

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