Sadie's Spirit - CB Samet (important of reading books txt) 📗
- Author: CB Samet
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Alejandro Martinez sat in his car, staring at Dr. Crawford’s house as interior lights flickered inexplicably.
Moments later, a man Alejandro didn’t recognize used the back entrance to enter the house he had recently ransacked.
Alejandro was still parked nearby because he was waiting for instructions from the man who had hired him, El Jefe. His orders had been clear: once Ledo, Alejandro’s partner, gave the confirmation that the physician wasn’t home, Alejandro would search her place for a computer or disc drive.
An hour of turning the place inside out had yielded nothing. El Jefe had already searched her office, while Ledo had searched her car—the dead woman’s car.
Que Dios descanse su alma en paz eternal.
God rest her soul.
As far as Alejandro could tell, the only crime she had been guilty of was being a good doctor. He had seen glowing letters of praise from patients in one of her decorative collection boxes. He was comforted by the fact that her death wasn’t on his conscience, since Ledo had done the killing. Alejandro kept to thieving only. In this instance, he hadn’t yet accomplished his goal and couldn’t get paid until he did so.
The arrival of the unknown man had instantly made the job more complicated. Alejandro looked down at the newspaper clippings in his lap. Having stolen them out of sheer fascination over their headlines, he scrutinized them more closely.
He couldn’t believe his eyes. The mystery man matched the pictures from the newspaper clippings. According to the articles, Asher Brenner was a psychic consultant with the Atlanta police department.
The hair on Alejandro’s neck stood on end. This psychic detective entering Dr. Crawford’s home was no coincidence. Had she recruited him somehow? So soon after her death?
Que Dios apiade de mi.
May God have mercy on us all.
He kissed the pendant around his neck to ease his angst at the thought of the physician’s ghost soliciting help from a psychic. Alejandro was sure that Saint Anthony of Padua—the saint of lost and stolen articles—would hear his prayer.
If Ledo were with him, he would be scolding Alejandro for his ridiculous superstitions. If Alejandro’s great-aunt was still alive, she would be telling him it was a sign from God, and that he had better cut and run while he still could. He liked his great-aunt better than Ledo, whose soul was as black as his beard, but he had an obligation to finish the job.
He called El Jefe.
“What?”
“There’s a new development,” Alejandro replied.
“I’m listening.”
“A man arrived at her house. He went in the back. He hasn’t called the police.”
“He’s alone?”
“Sí, señor.”
“Did he see you?”
“No,” Alejandro answered.
“Who is he?”
“Perhaps a brother or a boyfriend. Mid-thirties. Brown hair.”
Alejandro wasn’t ready to divulge the man’s identity. Information and secrets held value.
A quien le cuentes tus secretos, a él renuncias a tu libertad.
He liked this old Spanish proverb: “To whom you tell your secrets, to him you resign your liberty.”
“She has neither a brother nor a boyfriend.”
“What do you want me to do?”
“I wanted you to find her computer. Since you failed at that, I want you to follow him. See what he does and keep me updated.”
The man disconnected the call.
Maleducado.
The boss didn’t need to be so rude; however, Alejandro had observed that those dictating the crimes for others to commit often lacked courteous behavior.
Alejandro watched the house with a mixture of anticipation and dread. He desperately wanted to know if his theory about how Asher Brenner had come to arrive at the physician’s home was correct.
He looked down at the article in his hand. The headline screamed: “Psychic Detective Solves Buck Farm Murder.”
Asher had been a firefighter, then a paramedic in downtown Atlanta. Then he had diverged from his career path for a year to become a psychic detective. After a failed case and public disgrace, he had moved to a remote town in northwest Georgia. Now he was back in Atlanta poking around a dead woman’s home. Alejandro wanted to know why, but he had a feeling he wouldn’t like the answer.
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