Hey, everyone, this is, as hinted at, going to be my side series. I've wanted to write this one for a while now, and this was the product of hanging out in coffee houses and writing on napkins. I hope you enjoy!
*
Most college seniors don't immediately evaluate the tactical situation of the bars they cruise. But I'm not the average college senior, either.
I sat at the edge of the booth, sipping on my beer. I'd been invited out with my roommate and his friends, and since it was a Friday, and I had nothing better to do, I had decided on it. There was just one problem.
I don't get drunk. My parents had both been witches. And as witches, with the ability to do magic, I had been slammed with the metabolism required to do it. Alcohol, for some reason just went through my system. It really defeated the purpose of going to a bar, but I also liked to get out of the dorm.
I nursed my beer, ignoring the conversation about dumb professors and who got shot down by who. I'm not one for gossip. I was glancing around the bar. No monsters tonight. There had been a vampire a few weeks ago, that had been picking up co-eds and dumping them in random places after getting his fill.
I'd chased him off, for now, I hoped. I wasn't a supernatural big shot, even in the relatively small college town of Calvin, Oregon. I'd come into my gift late for a witch, or so I've been told. But even so, with limited resources, limited abilities, and almost no support, I'd somehow ended up becoming a monster hunter.
Nothing really stood out for me. No excessively pale people, nobody who particularly looked like a serial killer.
My night got ruined, though, when the cops came. Detective Greg Carsten walked straight for my booth. He was a blond man, tall and with features like a bulldog. He had almost pink skin that seemed to burn whenever get got in any form of sun.
"Jake Sinclair," He said as he walked to the table.
All of my roommate's friends turned to look at me, and I immediately felt once more like the social pariah tended to establish myself as. "Yea, Greg. What can I do for you?"
He looked down at me. "I'm going to ask you to come with me."
That made everyone at the table stare. I was new on campus, relatively. Where my roommate and his buddies had been here for three years, I was a transfer student. I hadn't been around for long. And here I was, with a cop asking me to come along.
"Yea, sure," I stood up. "Want to pat me down?"
"No, nothing like that." He said. Greg cleared his throat. "I'll tell you in the car."
Greg led me out to the car. He hadn't cuffed me or anything, so that only left two possibilities. Either he didn't want to embarrass me in front of the fellows-unlikely-or he needed my help.
We walked out to the parking lot of the bar, where his police SUV was parked illegally. I nibbled on my lip, a nervous moment as I watched him unlock the doors. "In front." He grumbled.
That told me what this was. I was a consultant, not a suspect. I got into the passenger's seat. Once we were underway, I spoke. "Want to tell me what's going on, Greg?"
"Arson." Greg grunted. "It happened in one of the dorms." He must have noticed my expression in the dark, because he said. "Don't worry, kid. It isn't yours."
We started to drive back to Cascade University. Once we got onto the large expanse of land the campus inhabited, he started towards the dorms. He parked us out in front of one of the Greek houses. I don't know my Greek. Latin, Gaelic, some old English? Sure. Greek wasn't a really magical language, so I had never bothered with it.
We got out of the car, and the stench of smoke, burnt objects, and several more natural smells reached my nose. "God, I hate frat houses."
"Hate it enough to torch one?"
"You'd have to really hate someone to use magic like this." I answered. 'If it was a fire mage, well, I'll be able to tell when we get inside."
Greg walked us over to a CSU van. It looked like the whole Calvin County Sheriff's Department was here, in addition with the city's Fire Department. Calvin was a college town, primarily, and so because university was in session, it meant that this was treated like a national emergency.
"Hey, Greg," Said a crime tech. "Who's the kid?"
"Consultant." Greg said, tonelessly. "I need gloves and booties for him."
The crime tech looked me over, and shrugged. "Sheriff know about him?"
"Yea, don't you worry about that." Carsten glared at the crime tech.
Properly cowed, the tech handed out plastic foot coverings and rubber gloves to me. I put them on, and we started off towards the frat house. As we walked, Carsten dug into his pocket and pulled out a box of Tic-Tacs. "Here."
"What's that for?" I asked, furrowing my brow.
Greg rolled his eyes. "So you don't smell like booze."
"Don't get drunk." I rolled my eyes. "But whatever." I grabbed the box, and emptied out a couple of mints to pop them in my mouth. "Sheriff know I'm coming?"
"Yea. He's not happy, but he's still not convinced you're the real deal."
"Took care of that vampire for you." I smiled a little.
Greg glared at me. Even if I was four inches taller than him, he made me feel like I was a foot shorter when he glared. He was simply a big, mean bastard.
We walked inside of the frat house. There were a few kids in the house's living room, giving statements to deputies. I ignored them, as Greg leaded me upstairs. "Hey, can I get a consultant's badge?"
"No," Carsten grunted. "We don't pay you."
"Yes, as my wallet likes to remind me. Why not? I offer a service entirely unique."
He snorted. "Yea, we're a small county, that mostly consists of one college town. We've got the money to toss out for a witch."
I sighed. "Of course."
We walked up to the second floor. The fire's remnants weren't hard to find. The smell of smoke was prominent in the air. We walked to the second floor on the left, which didn't have a door any more. We walked to the door, my feet squishing against the carpet. It was wet, a sign that the sprinklers and a fire extinguisher had made relatively short work of the fire, as there was one on the floor next to the door.
Sheriff Timothy Kim squatted next to a charred corpse. He was a short, plump Asian man with a friendly face. He was a hometown boy, one of the reasons he'd been elected Sheriff, along with the promise of keeping the college safe and running Γ’β¬" the main income for the county.