DEATHSINGER
by
Rickey R. Mallory

 

The building looked just as bad inside as it had outside.  He took a last pull on the cigarette, more to mask the odor of urine, feces, and rotten food, than from any real enjoyment. Exhaling through his nose, his mouth pinched tight, he flicked the butt onto the body of a dead mouse.
        Then he stomped on the mouse's head, wishing it were the head of the nameless voice on the cell phone.
        We've got your daughter.  Don't make any mistakes.
        Penny!

        He ground his heel, feeling bone crunch, feeling the slipperiness of fresh blood and tissue.  Take that, you sick bastard.
        If there were any other way to save his daughter, he wouldn't be here.  He knew enough about Devyn Charles to know she wouldn't help him, but he had to try.  He was running out of time.
        He took the stairs two at a time.  On the landing, he dodged a crack-head who reached out with a skeletal hand.
        "Money?" 
        He ignored the genderless lump with its cocaine-bright eyes, and squinted at the faded numbers on the doors.  With fingers that already felt dirty, he turned the knob.
        Surprisingly, the door opened.
        The stairwell was that sickly noncolor that old buildings get when too much dirt and not enough light collects, but Devyn Charles' apartment was black.
        Pitch black.  Black hole black.  Bottomless black that spilled out of the doorway to fill up the hall.  He hesitated, afraid of falling into the blackness. 
        "Your money's on the table, Bobby. Toss me the cigarettes." Directionless in the dark, the voice creaked like a rusty hinge.
        He squinted, not that it helped, and took a hesitant step, watching in fascination as the toe of his shoe got sucked up by the dark.
        "Bobby?"
        He slid his hand over the wall until it connected with the light switch and flipped it up, not really expecting anything to happen. 
        Something did.
        A sphere of light erupted in the middle of the darkness.
        She cursed.
        It took a beat for his eyes to focus.  He closed the door and turned the deadbolt key, then slipped it out of the cylinder and into his pocket.  Security.  Then he turned around.
        She lay on the couch, her lanky body draped across it like a discarded shirt, one arm thrown up to shield her eyes. 
        Damn.  He'd figured her to be in bad shape, but she looked worse than the crack-head.  Bone thin.  Shrouded in black.  Brows like black cuts over a face pale as death.  His insides twisted in sudden fear. 
       Penny.
        What if Devyn was too far gone?  What if she'd lost the songs?
        Without really expecting an answer, he called her name.
        She didn't move. 
        His gut clenched, preparing for panic.
        Then she pushed stringy black hair out of her eyes, and opened bleary eyes.
       "Who the hell are you?"
        It was rhetorical.  She didn't really care.  One clawlike hand groped for a cigarette.  She lit it, then lay her head back and closed her eyes.  He could have been a murderer or a burglar. He could have been the angel of death, for all it mattered to her. 
        Groping again, she curled scabbed fingers around a glass. Her nails were ragged and bitten into the quick.  Red and brown specks dotted the cuticles where she'd chewed.
        "Cheers," she said, then gulped the contents.  She gasped.
        The gasp surprised him.  In the six months she'd holed up in here, at least twenty bottles of vodka had been delivered.  And that was just from one store.
        "Devyn Charles."  He said it quick, flat, certain, like the start of an arrest.  He knew who she was.  He wanted her to know that, even if she didn't recognize him.
        The hand holding the cigarette jerked, sending ash tumbling to the gray-streaked coffee table.  "Don't . . . call me that." 
        He recognized that shake.  Too many cigarettes, too much booze, too little fresh air.  It had taken a year to stop his own shakes, a year and a whole lot of painful, lonely nights after his wife left and took his baby with her.
        Penny--.
       He shoved away the shred of compassion that tried to break surface at the sight of Devyn Charles' trembling, ragged fingers.
        Relief loosened his gut as he saw the shadows of calluses.
        Where was the guitar?  A quick glance told him it wasn't near the couch.  His bowels cramped.  What if the booze and the cigarettes were working? 
        "Devyn . . . ."  This time he made it a threat.
        She opened her eyes to narrow slits.  Surrounded by black lashes and purple shadows, they were dull and cold as lead.  She pointed a finger at him.  "I -- said -- don't -- call -- me . . . that.  Devyn Charles is dead."  She squeezed her eyelids shut and made a fist, pressed it against her breastbone.
        He'd gotten to her.  A thrill of victory flared weakly, and he moved in for the takedown before she got her armor back up.
        "Devyn, I need your help."  He clamped his jaw on the word again.  Reminding her of the last time probably wasn't a good idea.
        The first time he'd seen her, he'd been struck by her strange, exotic beauty.  The straight hair that hung past her hips, so black it looked dyed against her milk-white skin.  Her disturbing eyes, bright and fast as quicksilver, defying anyone to hold their glance.
        Her music, though.  Her music was magical.  When had she first realized how magical it was?  He'd heard all her songs, but he'd only seen their effects the one time. 
        Once was enough.
        The Deathsinger, they called her.  She could recreate the entire scene like a courtroom artist, but her palette was the real world and her brushes were her voice and her guitar.
        He'd been investigating one of the most baffling murders in New York's history.  The youngest daughter of the mayor had been murdered in her bed as the household slept. 
Lifeblood Seeping, Child Lay Sleeping.
         Devyn Charles put the whole thing to music.  Her haunting song pinpointed the crucial piece of evidence that convicted the killer.  It still played on the pop stations once every few weeks or so.
        It was the last one, laid down on a portable tape recorder in the Thirty-Fifth Precinct office.  She'd refused to go into the studio anymore.  She'd long since broken her recording contract.  It didn't matter.  The scratchy single track had sold twenty-four million CDs to date, made a mint for the recording company.
        She dropped out of sight after that. 
        He knew where she was. He'd made it his business to know.  Maybe everybody knew.  Maybe they all just left her alone like they'd left Garbo alone, because that was the way she wanted it.  And because it was obvious even then that the singing was killing her.
        He jerked his brain back to the present just in time to duck the water glass.  It crashed against the wall, upping the smell of bourbon in the room to about a hundred proof.
        "Get out," she said flatly, as if she hadn't budged, as if she hadn't just thrown a glass with a pretty good right arm.  She reached for another cigarette, but the pack was empty.  Wadding it in her fist, she tossed it onto a pile of similar red packages.
        He stepped closer and dug out one of his.  The pack was old and crushed.  He was trying to quit.
        "Thanks.  Get out."
        "Devyn.  I need your help."
        "Screw you."
        "Thanks.  Maybe later." 
        He blinked.  Had the corner of her mouth twitched?  A surge of hope streaked through him like heat lightning in a hot summer sky.  He grimaced.  Hope hurt.  Hope dulled his senses. 
        I swear, Murdoch, you screw up and we'll kill her.  You give us Burgin and maybe you'll get your daughter back in one piece. 
        Daddy?  I'm scared.
        Penny.  My baby.

        The sense of helplessness was unfamiliar, paralyzing.  What good was being Police Commissioner if he couldn't save his only child?
        Devyn coughed and sat up.  Smoke streamed from her mouth and nose.  "Ugh, what are these?"
        "Devyn, I need you to sing for me."
        "I don't know what you're talking about."  She picked up a watch off the table.
         "Where's that damned delivery boy?  I thought you were him."  She glared at me.
        "A little girl's been kidnapped."
        She clapped her hands over her ears.  "No!"
        He grabbed her wrists. "Yes."
        She struggled and he caught a glimpse of quicksilver in her eyes.  Then she went limp.  He let go, afraid her weight would dislocate her shoulders.
        She crumpled back to the couch, grabbing the whiskey bottle, but only a few drops clung to the sides.  She turned it up and shook it.  "Damn you, damn you, damn you," she whispered. 
        He ripped the bottle from her hands before she could throw it.
        "Who are you anyway?" she asked, her voice dull and uninterested.  But she wasn't just making conversation.
        "Murdoch.  We worked together once."
        Her gaze finally met his.  The hopelessness in her gunmetal eyes terrified him.
        "Lifeblood Seeping," she whispered, then shuddered.  It shook her whole body, feet to head.  "I can't any more.  You don't know . . . ."
        "Tell me."  Help me.  Save my baby.  If she wanted to talk, he'd listen, as long as he could.
        You've got twenty-four hours, Murdoch.  Make 'em count.  
        "I can't . . . you don't know . . ." Devyn shook her head back and forth slowly, her eyes staring, dull.
        Murdoch jumped when the knock sounded. 
        Devyn didn't even flicker. 
        He unlocked the door and handed the guy a twenty.  "Give me the cigarettes.  Take the whiskey back.  We don't need it." 
        He tossed her the cigarettes. 
        She caught them in midair, surprising him.  "I'll go into DTs," she warned.
        He just laughed.  "Not on a fifth a week."
        She shrugged and pulled the string on the cigarette pack.  Her fingers shook as she lit one.  She lay back, squinting  through her black hair and the blue curling smoke.
        "Help me," he begged.  Penny.
         She dropped her gaze to the glowing tip of the cigarette, twirling it in her fingers like a television detective.  "I can't," she muttered.  "I can't watch them die any more."
          She shook her head slowly.  "They all die.  They all die. . . die. . . die. . ."
        Murdoch stared at her, replaying her words in his mind.  Something she said--  "Watch them die?  What do you mean, watch them die?"
        She threw an arm over her eyes.  "Go away."  The words formed in blue smoke.
        Murdoch's brain spun.  The Deathsinger.  Her songs were about murders.  Slowly, through his grief-dulled brain, her words began to make sense.  "You watch them die.  That means you see them before they die."
        Hope sucker-punched him. "I don't have time for this," he grated between clenched teeth.  He grabbed her, surprised at her substance.  Sunk into the couch, draped in black, with only her thin wrists and ankles and hollowed cheeks visible, she looked fragile.
        Holding her by her upper arms, he shook her.  "Tell me!"
        She didn't resist, went with it, her hair whipping his face and hands like soft, punishing quirts.  He stopped, afraid her neck would snap.
        Hanging boneless from his grip, she whimpered.  "Leave me alone.  I'll call the police."
        "I am the police.  Now talk to me."  He tossed her back onto the couch and sat on the coffee table in front of her.
        "What do you want from me?" She dug frantically into the cigarettes, shoving one between her colorless lips, lighting it with those pathetic, bloody hands.  "What the hell difference does it make whether I sing or not?  They die all the time."
        His mouth went dry.  "This one is my daughter." 
        Devyn recoiled as if he'd hit her.  Her eyes went dull again, but her lips clamped into a thin line.  She whispered something too low to hear.
        "What?"  He jerked her by her hair. 
        "Nothing.  Get the hell out of here."  She pulled her hair out of his grasp and buried her nose in the couch.
        Disgusted, terrified, he left her there and did a quick search of the apartment.  The bed was rumpled and the bathroom was filthy, a rancid pile of dirty towels behind the door.  The whole place looked and smelled like a crack house, a mausoleum for someone who'd given up on life.  The spark of hope that had managed to stay alive flickered and died -- almost.
        Something didn't fit.  Something about her, about the apartment, didn't mesh with the filth and neglect.  Murdoch returned to the living room.
       It struck him like a fist in his face.
        The plants.  Over against the curtain-shrouded window, on stools and chairs and even the floor, were dozens of plants.  He jerked open the curtains, squinting in pain as sunlight flooded the room.  Behind him, Devyn moaned.
        Here it was, the proof that she was still alive.  He inspected a spider plant, a philodendron, an African violet.  Perfect.  All of them.  Not a brown spot.  Not a withered leaf.
        He turned to stare at her, hope flaring painfully.  She hadn't given up on life.  She couldn't even stand to see a leaf wither on a plant. 
        "Can't watch them die . . ."
        Penny, hold on.
        Disgusted by her self-pity, he prowled the tiny apartment.  Something still didn't add up.  Where was her guitar?  If she hadn't given up on life, had she given up on her music?  He'd thought her music was her life.
        He opened a door.  There it was, propped against a chair, surrounded by piles of paper.  He flicked a string.  A sour note shattered the stale silence.  Crouching by the chair, he picked up a few sheets and shuffled them.
       Daddy's Bright Penny, scared in the night . . . .
        Oh God.  His fingers went numb.  The paper fell.

        A song, about his baby.  Hope and fear swirled around him like dueling cyclones.  Was Penny dead?
        "No!"  He'd know.  Flexing his lifeless fingers, he reached for the paper again.
The words were shaky, scraggly, the lines uneven.
        Daddy's Bright Penny, scared in the night . . .
        Daddy's Bright Penny, too weak to fight,
        Daddy's Bright Penny, water laps at her breast . . .

        That was all.  Shivering, he picked up a few more sheets, but they were different.  His head pounded.  His ears roared.  Several recent murder cases were chronicled in the words scattered around the room like fallen leaves.  Devyn Charles was still the Deathsinger.
        He confronted her, the guitar clutched in his fist.  She hadn't moved.  The cigarette dangled from her lips, ash almost an inch long, smoke undulating around her like sinuous dancers.  He jerked the cigarette out of her mouth and stuck the guitar in front of her eyes. "Sing."
        "No."  She tilted her chin defiantly.
        "You've been singing.  You haven't stopped.  Help me!"
        She glared at him.  "No.  I'm through watching them die.  The songs still come, but I'm learning to drink more."
        Murdoch sank to his knees.  "It's my daughter.  Please."
        She closed her eyes.
        "They want a scumbag named Burgin.  He's plea-bargained to testify against them, and they want him back, probably to kill him."
        Devyn's eyes darkened with pain, but she spread her hands.  "So, if she's your daughter . . . ?"
        He shook his head, his throat convulsed.  "My life, yours, you name it.  I'd trade anybody for that kid.  But Burgin's in federal custody.  They don't play those games."
        "Tell them."
        He laughed harshly.  "You're mistaking these bastards for people who have hearts," he bit out.  "There's only one choice.  They get their man, or Penny dies."  His voice cracked.  Since her mother died, they had managed together.  Buddies. Father and daughter.  He was a dedicated cop, but he'd trade it all for her.
        He took a deep breath, looking at his clenched fists.  "You see them before they die."
         She reacted.  Her fear radiated like heat.  Who could blame her?  What a curse, to know ahead of time about brutal murders, to feel death before it happens.
         "The first time was my dog.  Someone poisoned him."  She shuddered.  "Then a friend of mine in junior high drowned, at the exact time I was practicing my guitar."
         "Swimming with the Angels."  He knew that song.  He knew them all.
         She nodded, her hair a shredded curtain shielding her face. "It got so I couldn't even write normal songs.  My dad signed the record deal.  Finally, I couldn't do it any more. I just quit." 
         She laughed harshly.  "My dad's suing me," she said, her voice sounding alive for the first time.
         "Your father sold you out?"  Murdoch was surprised.  He'd thought some lowlife reporter had leaked the first song.
        She shrugged and slumped again.  "Lifeblood Seeping was the last.  I could have saved her.  I should have tried harder."  A dry sob escaped her lips.  "I need a drink."
        "You started Bright Penny.  Finish it.  Help me.  Together we can save her."  Did he believe that?  Tears welled.  He had to.  "Please.  She's only seven.  She's my whole life."
        Devyn met his gaze, horror and resignation reflected in her weird, silver eyes.
        "Don't ask me," she whispered.  "Don't . . . make me . . . ."
        "Don't let her die."
        She squeezed her temples between her hands.  After an endless moment she pushed her fingers through her tangled, matted hair.  When she looked up, he saw every death she'd sung etched in her face.
        She took the guitar.  He sat back on his haunches.  His  hands hurt from clenching them.
        Her scabbed fingertips strummed a haunting melody, more compelling than Lifeblood Seeping.  The notes tore at Murdoch's heart.
        "Daddy's Bright Penny, scared in the night . . .
        Daddy's Bright Penny, too weak to fight,
        Daddy's Bright Penny, water laps at her breast,
        Daddy's Bright Penny drifts closer to --" she stopped.
        "Death," He finished. "Closer to death.  She's not dead."
        Penny.  Hold on.
        Devyn stared into space, her mouth slack, her body taut as a coiled spring, and strummed the haunting melody.
        "Devyn?" 
        She didn't acknowledge him.
        "Devyn, what else?  Come on, Devyn."
        "Daddy's Bright Penny can't breathe in the air,
        Daddy's Bright Penny can hear foghorns blare.
        She's hungry and frightened but she'll never see
        Her Daddy again if she's not broken free."
        Tears streaked her face and her long, black shirt was soaked with sweat.
        Murdoch whispered the words, over and over.  "Foghorns.  The docks."  His heart crashed against his chest.  He couldn't get a full breath.  "Come on.  We've got to get to the docks."
        "No . . . no . . . no . . ." she said pitifully, pushing against his hands.  "Can't watch her die."
        He jerked her up.  "Listen to me.  You are not going to watch her die.  We are going to save her.  Say it.  We're going to save Penny."
        She shook her head, back and forth, slowly.  Her tangled hair slithered around her shoulders like snakes.
        "Say it, damn you."
        "We're going to save Penny."  Her voice was toneless, unbelieving, but Murdoch let it go.  She'd said it.
        "I need a drink," she whined, her whole body suddenly trembling.
        "No way.  Let's go."
        He dragged her down the filthy stairs and stuffed her into his car, guitar and all.
        Murdoch drove like a bat out of hell.  He called the dispatcher for backup.  "Covert.  Have them at . . . hell, I don't know, Pier Four.  That's central at least.  Unmarked cars, armed.  Don't move til I say so.  You heard me, now do it."
        Devyn hummed like an autistic child.  She stared out the windshield. 
        Murdoch glanced at her.  What did she see from the prison of her mind?  "Out loud, Devyn.  Come on.  Don't let me down.  Don't let Penny down."
        We're coming, Penny.  Dear God don't let her die.
        Softly, tonelessly, Devyn continued.  "She's hungry and frightened but she'll never see --  her Daddy again if she's not broken free."
        Over and over, until he wanted to choke her.
        . . . . she'll never see her Daddy again . . .
        Pier Four came into view.  Foghorns blared, faint and deep. "Devyn, more.  Give me more!"
        She shook her head, her eyes as wide and flat as half-dollars.
        "Please." 
        Devyn's voice quavered. 
        "Daddy's Bright Penny, she shivers and cries. Daddy's Bright Penny smells coffee and sighs. The coffee reminds her of Daddy and she -- Is certain he'll save her, he'll come set her free."
        Coffee.  Murdoch jerked the wheel, lurching to the right, tires squealing.  He grabbed the microphone.  He missed the activation lever twice before he thumbed it to life.  "This is Murdoch.  Pier Six, the Gutierrez coffee warehouse.  Now!"
        Devyn gasped and choked. 
        "What?"
        She shook her head, her hands over her mouth.  She whimpered like a kicked dog.
        He grabbed a fistful of her shirt.  "What!" 
        "Hold on, little Penny.  Hold on and be brave.  Your daddy is coming, he's coming to . . ."
        "Devyn?  Talk to me."
        She just kept whispering behind her hands.  She wasn't talking to Murdoch.  She didn't even know he was there.
        "Hold on . . . be brave . . ."
        He vaulted out of the car as tires screeched in the parking lot behind him.  Light footsteps echoed behind him.
        "Get back in the car Devyn."  Her footsteps never wavered.  He couldn't worry about her.  Penny, hold on. Daddy's coming.
        There were lights in the warehouse, silhouettes moving inside.  Murdoch vowed to blow off a few heads before they got him.  He pulled his gun just as something caught the corner of his eye.  A small power boat at the warehouse dock, sitting low in the water.
        A pleasure boat, here?
        Devyn, coming up behind him, pointed and moaned.  "Oh, Penny," she breathed, "Penny . . . ."
        Murdoch switched directions and sprinted toward the boat.  When he stepped onto the deck, it sagged ominously.  It was almost completely swamped.  He pulled at the hatch covers.  Padlocked.  He shot the lock.  If he was lucky, the cars were his backup.  If not--
        He ripped away the hatch covers and lunged into the cabin. Water was waist deep. He looked around desperately.  A muffled moan.  A gurgle. Murdoch dove toward the sound, and found a crumpled blanket in the corner of a berth.  He threw off the blanket.
        "Baby.  Oh God, Penny!"  Water lapping at her filthy gag.  Her bright eyes were wide with terror.  She wailed and coughed.
        He slit the gag and cut the ropes.
        "Baby!"  He hugged and rocked her and probably scared her to death by crying in big, gulping sobs.  "Oh, God."
        "Daddy." Her voice was hoarse.  "Daddy, I knew you'd come.  I knew."
        "Murdoch . . . ."  It was Devyn.  She stepped down into the flooded cabin.  "They're coming."
        He pushed tangled red hair out of Penny's eyes.  "Penny, this is Devyn.  Can she hold you for a minute?"
        Penny had her little arms and legs wrapped around his torso,  but she went right to Devyn.
        "Penny.  Bright Penny," Devyn said, rocking her back and forth.  "Good girl.  You were brave.  Good girl.  I told you he'd come."
        Where was his backup? 
        "Stay down," he warned Devyn.  He moved toward the hatch just as a porthole popped.  He shot back.
        "Give it up," he shouted.  "I've got backup."
        "Dream on, Murdoch.  You let us down.  You and your pretty little girl are fish food."
        "Don't move.  Police."  It was the police bullhorn.
        Murdoch sagged.  His gun hand shook.  Tears of relief stung his eyes. 
        Then Devyn held out his little girl. Grabbing her, he struggled not to cry. "Penny, my little Penny," he muttered over and over again. 
        "We knew you'd come, Daddy."
        Suddenly, what Devyn had said to Penny sunk in.  I told you he'd come.
        "Devyn?" He lifted his head, but she was gone.  
        "Devyn," he yelled.  Water sloshed and the boat rocked.  She'd stepped off the deck.
        Penny snuggled into his side and turned his face toward her with her hand.  "She sang it to me, Daddy.  It kept me from being scared.  She sang 'don't worry Bright Penny, your Daddy will come.'"
        Murdoch stared at his daughter.  "She sang to you?"
        Penny nodded, pleased with herself.  She always liked it when she knew something her dad didn't know.
        He climbed up to the deck, cradling his daughter.  The place swarmed with police cars and uniformed officers.
        "Commissioner Murdoch.  Are you okay?"
        He nodded.  His gaze searched the distance.  There.  A movement.  A skinny black silhouette clutching a guitar disappeared into the darkness.
        "You don't have to watch them die," he whispered.  Thank you, Devyn.
        "Daddy."  Penny burrowed deeper in his arms.  "I'm cold."
        "Let's go home, Bright Penny."

The End