Page 31 of Dirty Deeds


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And yet, I had never felt farther away from him. I hesitated, then picked up my binoculars and pointed them in Bigfoot’s general direction.

“So what’s our play?” Ryder asked.

“I think we need to sneak out in the middle of the night before anyone can find me and try to give me some new situation only I can handle.”

“With Bigfoot,” Ryder said. “What’s our play with Bigfoot? He’s checking out.”

I felt the blood rise to heat my cheeks and adjusted the binoculars. “Okay,” I said. “It just looks like groceries in his cart.”

“You expected something else?”

“Not really, but then again, I didn’t expect to be trailing Bigfoot with my fiancé in the middle of a storm.”

“It’s an exciting life you live, Delaney Reed.”

“Maybe… maybe too exciting,” I said quietly.

Instead of answering, his hand slid across the console to rest, warm and heavy, on my thigh.

“No. Exciting’s good. What do we do with our possible suspect, Chief?”

“I say we just go ask him if he stole the lights. Flip has a bit of a language barrier with English, but he is honest and tends to interpret things literally. So we should get a straight answer out of him.”

The wind shoveled rain across the parking lot. Huge, fat drops bounced off concrete like a million glass marbles.

We were going to have flooding for sure. The rivers couldn’t take this much rain all at one go this late into the rainy season. I made a mental checklist to be sure we had eyes on the main highway and people ready to respond to downed trees, mud slides, and flooded roads.

“You think he’ll tell you the truth?” Ryder asked.

I popped my hood up and latched the neck closure into place. “Let’s find out.”

Ryder had his hood up too. We got out and made quick work of intercepting Flip at his truck.

Bigfoot drove a beat-up Ford that blended right in with the cars in town. He’d parked under a tree where the streetlamp above threw more shadows than light. I scanned the open truck bed. Other than a toolbox bungeed down in the corner, it was empty.

Flip pushed the cart across the parking lot at speed, those long legs giving his lumbering gait a kind of grace one wouldn’t expect from a cryptid his size.

Somehow his hat stayed jammed on his head despite the wind, but his trench coat was absolutely soaked by the time he reached us.

“Oh, hello,” he said, his voice always a surprisingly soft singsong. As if he were more used to conversing with the sky or the wind or the small growing things below the trees than with people. With how reclusive he was, that was a pretty fair assessment.

“Hi, Flip,” I said. “Let me introduce you to Ryder Bailey.” I lined up my thoughts, wanting to get the order right for Flip: outward from the heart. “He is my love, my fiancé, a builder, and a reserve officer.”

“Hi there, Ryder,” Flip said.

“Nice to meet you,” Ryder said. I could hear the excitement in his voice. For all that Ryder liked to play it cool about the magic and supernaturals in town, he was still new enough to it to be surprised and delighted when he met a new supernatural.

And let’s face it, what person in the Pacific Northwest wouldn’t want to meet the real Bigfoot?

Or at least one of them.

“This is business,” I said, framing the conversation for Flip. My family had learned early on that details and, sometimes even subjects, got lost between Bigfoot’s language and English.

“Business, is this?” he asked.

I nodded. “Someone stole a traffic light. Red, yellow, green.” I held my hands so I could show him the approximate size of the thing. “Did you steal the traffic light?”

Flip frowned, which was a weird mashing of the spell-created human face, and his natural features which I could see beneath the spell.