jewelry?â
âMaybe,â I said.
His head quickly bobbed up and down. âThatâs good. Very good. If itâs been worn on the body, itâs a good tracker. Ilike working from jewelry.â He considered this for a moment, staring off into the distance, then he focused on me again. âLa Sirena is a smaller town. Much easier to track bodies there than in the city. Yeah, I can probably do it.â
âGreat,â I said, with trepidation. Because finding a bunch of dead bodies wasnât exactly my idea of good time. After a few seconds of uncomfortable silence, I asked him about his success rate.
âPretty high,â he answered in a noncommittal tone.
ââPrettyâ?â I repeated.
âI donât keep a fucking pie chart on my jobs,â he said sourly. âIf you know another dowser, feel free to hire him instead.â
Point taken. âHow long will this whole tracking thing take?â
He shrugged. âA couple of hours to all afternoon. Maybe longer. Depends on how fast I can catch the thread.â
That gave me hope. I relaxed a little. My eyes wandered to the TV. Metropolis , 1927. The scene where the robot is seated in front of a pentagram.
âOne of my favorite movies,â Hajo said.
âHow do you watch something with no sound?â Bob asked, piping up for the first time since heâd introduced us.
âItâs got a score,â Hajo said. âAre you deaf?â
âI meant talking,â Bob said, wiping sweat off his brow.
âIâve seen it several times,â I admitted, then nodded at the screen. âThe restored version is so much better. Easier to see all the details in those elaborate sets.â Funny thing was, Jupe and I had talked about it a couple of weeks ago. I was so proud to be familiar with a movie that he hadnât seen and memorized already. So I bought him the DVD, one of the birthday presents I was planning to give him next week.
Hajo smiled, his eyes gentler. Almost merry. âYou have good taste.â
Common ground with a junkie. Good taste, indeed.
His smile withered as he addressed Bob. âCady and I need to discuss payment arrangements. Would you please join Cristina in the kitchen?â
As Bob stuttered a vague response, Hajo called out for Cristina, who promptly appeared and herded Bob through the dining room, closing a heavy curtain over the doorway.
I glanced at Hajo. An uneasy chill slid down my spine.
âI donât have money on me,â I warned, suddenly acutely aware of his expensive drug habit and all the news reports featuring desperate sømna addicts whoâd passed tribulation and were stealing or killing for money.
Hajo chuckled. âI donât want your cash, calm down.â
âWhat do you normally charge?â
He didnât reply right away, his attention momentarily distracted by the movie. âI make all kinds of alternative arrangements,â he answered at length. âMy other jobs provide me the cash I need.â
My pulse spiked. âAnd what other jobs would those be?â I asked.
âNothing to worry about,â he said. âFor dowsing, I prefer the barter system.â
âFree drinks at Tambuku for a month?â I offered.
He shook his head very, very slowly. His eyes trailed over me again, languid and dangerous. âMaybe you and I can negotiate a mutually beneficial . . . intimate arrangement,â he suggested in a low voice.
âNo thanks. Iâm taken.â
He glanced at my hand. âDoesnât look that way to me.â
âSorry, try again,â I said as my phone chimed. I tugged itout of my pocket and glanced at the message on the screen. It was from Lon, asking for an update, as if he sensed something wrong all the way from the coast. âLike I said, taken.â I held up my phone and wiggled it as proof.
Hajo made some indecipherable noise as he observed me for several
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