The young man nodded, disappearing back down the hallway while Frank snapped shut his black bag.
“That’s my cue for a quick exit.”
Duncan grinned. “Scared?”
“Damned straight,” the older man said without apology. “Freaks give me the heebie-jeebies. I don’t know how you can be in the same room with one.”
A bitter smile touched Duncan’s lips. Like draws to like ...
No. He grimly crushed the mocking words in the back of his aching head. He wasn’t like those mutants from Valhalla.
Lots of people could see the souls of others, couldn’t they?
He swallowed his grim urge to laugh, tilting his head toward the sheet on the floor. “You can be in the same room with a corpse, but not a necro?”
Frank shrugged. “I respect the dead. No one should be screwing around with their heads.”
“Even if it takes a murderer off the streets?”
“I like getting my criminals the old-fashioned way. Necros should be abolished along with the rest of the—”
“I prefer the term ‘diviner’ if you don’t mind,” a soft, compelling voice whispered through the room, turning both men toward the door like a magnet.
Even prepared, Duncan felt the air being jerked from his lungs at the sight of Callie Brown.
It wasn’t just that she was a stunning beauty with her short, spiky hair that was so dark red it shimmered like fire in the sunlight. Her pale features were perfectly carved with a sensual invitation for a mouth and a proud nose.
And her body ... hell, it was slender with just enough curves to make a man think of black silk sheets and long weekends. Today it was displayed to perfection in a pair of black spandex pants and a white stretchy top.
But for Duncan it was the white aura that flickered around her diminutive body that made his blood burn.
So pure. So completely and utterly innocent.
And like any bastard, he ached to be the one who debauched that wholesomeness even as he savored the rare beauty of her soul.
“Shit,” Frank muttered, heading for the door leading to the back patio. “Adios, amigo.”
His entire body vibrating with an awareness that went way beyond sexual attraction, Duncan barely noticed the hasty departure of the coroner. Not that he wouldn’t have Callie flat on her back and her legs wrapped around his waist with the least hint of encouragement.
It was a sensation that should have scared the hell out of him. Instead a wicked smile curved his lips.
“Hello, Callie.”
She turned her head, regarding him through the reflective sunglasses that hid her eyes, her expression unreadable.
On the half dozen occasions Duncan had worked with Callie, he’d never seen her be anything but serene. Which, of course, only encouraged him to try and provoke a response from her. Anything to know there was a flesh and blood woman beneath that image of calm.
Why it was so important to find that woman was another one of those things he put on the list of “don’t f**king care.”
“Sergeant O’Conner,” she said, moving with an unearthly grace to stand beside the sheet.
“Duncan,” he insisted, shifting to stand across the body, his gaze never leaving Callie’s pale face.
“Has the body been processed?”
“As much as can be done in the field. You’re free to do your thing.”
“Time of death?”