are trying to confirm whether the couple in the parking garage are indeed the notorious serial killers, Enola and Alexander Duval, who made international headlines when they were charged with the deaths of three rival occultists seven years ago, known collectively as the Black Lodge slayings. The footage weâre about to show you was just released to us, taken this morning from a gas station near the airport.â
A clip from the surveillance video played. Clear as day, there were my parents getting into an SUV. What the hell were they thinking? They werenât supposed to be in the States; they hadnât been here in years.
Right after we faked our deaths and went into hiding, I saw them every few months. Then a few months turned into a year, and a year into three. I didnât think about them much, unless I heard their names mentioned in some true-crime-exposé rerun on basic cable.
The reporter continued. âThe fact that the killers are stillalive and in Texas after all these years is astonishing. Thereâs speculation that their daughter, also a member of their former occult order, could still be alive too. Now, back to the studio for Tomâs commentary. Tom?â
I stood stiff as a soldier and stared at the screen. I was dimly aware that my hands were trembling. My vision tunneled, then everything went black.
2
When I came to, I lay on the floor inside the Tambuku office looking at two pairs of feet; one was wearing purple sneakers ⦠Amanda. The other feet were bare and belonged to my business partner, Kar Yee. She never wore shoes at work. She would begrudgingly put them on if forced to meander past the bar, but that was her limit. No threat of broken glass and spills or health department requirements would sway her; she even drove her car without shoes.
The two women were arguing. Amanda was trying to convince Kar Yee that she could stand in for me at the bar, begging her not to call in a replacement bartender.
âI wonât screw anything up,â Amanda promised.
âYouâre too slow mixing drinks,â Kar Yee said. â
Too
.
Slow
. Do you know why? You talk too much.â A petite Chinese Earthbound, Kar Yee had perfect skin, catlike eyes, and a chin-length bob with severe, straight bangs. Two long, thin locks of hair framed her face, several inches longer than the rest of her bob, and she sculpted these into sharp points that dangled to her shoulders. All of this was surrounded by a stunning aqua-blue halo.
I cracked my neck and pushed myself up off the floor asthe two of them continued to squabble. âGive me a few minutes, then I can finish my shift.â
âOh, youâre awake,â Kar Yee noted without emotion.
Amanda groped my clammy forehead. âAre you okay? What happened? Are you sick?â
âIâm fine,â I said, pushing her hand away. Then I remembered what caused the blackout. A pang of worry tightened my chest. âI mean, uh, yeah. Probably getting sick, thatâs all.â
âYou want me to mix drinks for a few minutes?â Amanda asked me. âMika can handle my tables.â
Kar Yee made a perturbed noise and folded her arms across her slender chest. Amanda often played us like a mom and dad. If one said no, sheâd corner the other to get the answer that she wanted. Still, running the back office was Kar Yeeâs responsibility; managing the bar and our small staff was mine. My call, not hers, and I didnât feel like wrangling someone else to come in and sub for me on their night off.
âWhoâs watching the bar?â I asked.
âMika, and Bobâs helping her guard the cash register. Can I mix drinks? Please? I wonât touch your potions this time, I swear.â
âThey arenât potions â¦â Well, technically thatâs exactly what they were, but whatever. âUgh. Fine. Go. Donât let people talk you into adding extra shots without paying. Buzz if you
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