Monster

Monster by A. Lee Martinez Page A

Book: Monster by A. Lee Martinez Read Free Book Online
Authors: A. Lee Martinez
Ads: Link
think I left some rice on the stove. I gotta go check it. See you, Jude.” He skipped away. Goodday lowered her head and watched him go from under her hat brim.
    “Would you please relate to me your recollection of the events, Miss Hines?” said Goodday.
    Judy puffed on her cigarette. “Sure. There were these trolls and this… uh… big red thing. I think they called it a codger.”
    “Kojin,” corrected Goodday. “So there were these things,” said Judy, “and they came out of my closet and ate the apartment manager. Guy was a dick, but that doesn’t really make it right.”
    It was slipping away. She struggled to find her focus. “Shit, I can’t remember the rest.”
    Goodday waved the fingers of her right hand in a small circle and poked Judy in the forehead. “Is that better, ma’am?”
    The memories snapped back into sharp and perfect clarity. The details spilled from her lips in a steady stream, almost against her will. It was like recapping a movie she’d just seen that she wasn’t particularly interested in. It took a few minutes. Goodday wrote it down without a single note of personal interjection.
    “In your opinion, ma’am,” asked the officer, “did Mr. Dionysus behave in a responsible manner?”
    “Who?”
    Goodday gestured over her shoulder at Monster. “Mr. Dionysus, the freelance cryptobiological rescue agent. Did he perform in a negligent manner?”
    “You mean because of that guy getting eaten? I guess he’s not responsible for that. If the moron had listened, he’d probably be alive still.” Judy mulled it over. “No, it wasn’t Mr. Dionysus’s fault. Not really.”
    Goodday snapped her notebook shut and marched away. Judy wasn’t sure if the interview was over, so she stuck around and smoked three more cigarettes while watching the Reds do their job. They talked to Monster for half an hour, then waved wands around the overturned van and parking lot.
    Monster walked over and sat on the car beside her. “Thanks,” he said. “For telling them it wasn’t my fault. Can’t really afford more demerits on my license.”
    “No problem.” She caught him staring at the pack of cigarettes on the car. “I’d offer you one, but I’ve only got eight left.”
    “It’s all right. I quit.” He glanced at the ruins of her apartment. The Reds were inside, using a staff dangling with charms to do some forensic work. “Sorry about your place.”
    She shrugged. “Sorry about your van.”
    She rubbed her temples. “It’s the memory enhancement,” said Monster. “It’ll give you a helluva headache in another twenty minutes.”
    Judy slouched and grumbled.
    The Reds continued doing all that weird stuff that Judy didn’t understand. They walked around the parking lot swinging pendulums, drew more runes, and took reports. It took two hours for them to finish, and in the meantime, Judy and Monster had to wait.
    They didn’t talk.
    The Reds had Monster and Judy sign some papers and told them they could go.
    “Is there somewhere we can reach you, ma’am?” asked Officer Goodday. “In case it’s decided this incident needs further investigation.”
    Judy cast a look at her ruined apartment. Everything she owned in the world (admittedly, not much) was gone. Except for her car. She gave them her sister’s phone number, not because she would be staying there. It was just easier.
    Since his van was ruined, Monster was going to call a cab. But Judy offered him a ride. She knew that as soon as this night was over, she’d forget it. She wanted to hold on to it as long as possible. And having a purple guy in her passenger seat and a talking piece of paper in the back helped to keep her focused.
    “How long have you been doing this?” she asked. “Four years.”
    “Do you like it?”
    “I don’t know. Maybe. Sometimes. It’s okay.”
    “How’d you get into it?” she asked.
    Monster was beginning to regret not calling that cab. “A girl,” he said. “When I was getting my rune

Similar Books

The Shunning

Susan Joseph

After: Dying Light

Scott Nicholson

If Only We

Jessica Sankiewicz

Moments of Reckoning

Savannah Stewart

Encounter at Cold Harbor

Gilbert L. Morris