Airianna stared at her father, and the two detectives. She had a feeling about who they were on the phone with and knew why she wasnât allowed to talk during the call. If her grandmother heard her voice, she could claim her as a part of their clan and take her from her father, or thatâs how she understood it happened. She wasnât sure about the details.
âWhat did Grandmother say it means?â Airianna asked, watching the three men in the room.
Nash looked at her, and she could tell he was confused. She looked at the other two men and saw they also looked a bit confused.
âTell me,â Airianna said, watching them.
Nash moved over to her and took her hands into his. He explained to her what her father had feared it meant. Airiannaâs mouth opened as she looked over at her father.
âShe didnât need to know that part,â her father grumbled.
âPapa, you should have told me.â Airianna frowned at her father. âI have the right to know when it is my time to go.â
Nash turned her face to face him and told her about the conversation they had with her grandmother. She blinked up at him, her mind working overtime. Airianna had figured it was something like that. Thatâs why sheâd run to her father for answers.
âI think my grandmother is right. The same man killed the woman in the older dream, and now heâs going to strike again. But how many times has he killed, and I didnât see it?â A tear slid down her cheek.
She sucked in a breath when Nash caught the tear on the pad of his thumb. He looked at the tear, then into her eyes.
âYou have no control over other peopleâ¦.â
She looked away from him. âBut if Iâd dreamedâ¦.â
âOr your dreams,â he said, forcing her to look at him.
âButâ¦â
He kissed her to shut her up, and she sighed against his mouth. He could silence her with his lips any time he wanted. Her father cleared his throat. Nash lifted his head and smiled down at her.
âWhat did you realize about the paintings that had you running to your father?â he asked, looking deep into her eyes.
Airianna swallowed. âThe same thing as my grandmother,â she whispered.
Nash grinned. Heâd figured as much.
âThis means that there is an unsolved case at the station. We need to check out,â Smitty said from his side of the living room.
Nash looked up at his partner, then back down at Airianna. He repeated his partnerâs words to Airianna, and she nodded.
âLooks like Iâll be looking through the old cases sooner than we thought.â
Nash grinned as he lightly kissed her lips.
Smitty chuckled as he watched his partner with the young seer. âIt appears weâll be killing two birds with one stone.â
~ð®~
âOkay, so how do we find the case if the body was moved?â
Nash looked up at his partner. Theyâd been shuffling through files for hours, and he wondered the same thing his partner had just questioned.
âGood question.â Captain Dish looked up from the folder he was looking through.
Nash looked to his captain. When theyâd told him about Airiannaâs newest dream, heâd been thrilled that they would be solving an old case and a new one. Heâd insisted on joining them.
âWhatâs going on?â Airianna asked, looking between the three men.
Nash turned her to face him and told her what Smitty had asked.
Airianna looked at Smitty, then back at Nash. âMaybe I could try and paint the victimâs face clearer?â
âCan you do that?â Smitty asked, tossing yet another file onto the table.
Nash repeated Smittyâs question so Airianna could understand him.
Airianna shrugged her shoulders. âI have never tried.â
âTake her home and see if she can help with her paintings. Take the old one with you and leave the new one here for us to observe,â the captain ordered Nash.
Nash nodded and told Airianna what the captain suggested, even though Nash knew it was more than a suggestion.
Airianna nodded, and they grabbed her old painting and headed out to his car. Once the painting was secure behind her seat, they got in, and he headed to her fatherâs house.
âThank you for believing in me,â she whispered, not looking at him.
Nash smiled as he took hold of her hand and held it. His heart skipped a beat when she didnât pull back but instead intertwined her fingers with his.
They continued down the road in silence. She never looked at him so he could answer her. She sat in her seat, looking out the window, her fingers still attached to his.
âPull off there,â she said, pointing to a dirt road.
Without a word, he pulled off onto the dirt road and followed her directions to what looked to be a lake.
Airianna reluctantly let go of Nashâs hand and opened her door. Before she was fully out of her seat, Nash was beside her, helping her exit the car.
âWhy are we here?â he asked, looking into her eyes as he talked slow enough that she could easily read his lips.
She loved when he looked into her eyes. It made her feel⦠normal. Or as normal as a deaf girl with the sight can be. Other people looked at her nose, or her throat, or her tits. Theyâre either afraid sheâd suck out their soul if they looked into her eyes or scared sheâll see the evil they have done.
But she doesnât work that way.
She has no control over her dreams; they have control over her. And she canât get a dream by looking into someoneâs eyes. Sometimes sheâs had a vision from someone touching herâbut that was rare and dangerous. Because if sheâs not somewhere she can draw or paint, she will have a seizure. Her father had talked about the ones whoâve gone into a coma because they couldnât release their dream before it took them under.
âIt is peaceful,â she whispered, looking up into Nashâs deep brown eyes.
She could easily get lost in his eyes.
âHow do you know how peaceful it is when you cannot hear anything around you?â he asked, his eyes roaming over her face.
Airianna smiled as she slid her hands up his chest. A shiver ran down her spine when his muscles rippled beneath her touch. Her hands slid up his shoulders and around to the back of his head. Her fingers played in his hair, making him take a breath.
Airianna smirked. âDo you hear anything around here?â
He looked around them, then back at her, and shook his head. âItâs peaceful.â
She chuckled. âIt is. I may not hear much, but the ocean is calm when Iâm here, and my hearing aids pick up the crickets and birds. Because it is so peaceful here.â
âI see.â He grinned and moved closer to her. âYou can hear when youâre here. That must put you at ease.â
She nodded. âIt does.â
âI thought we were going back to your fatherâs house so you could try and paint the woman in your paintingâ¦.â
âShh,â she whispered, leaning into him. âDonât talk.â
She kissed him and felt him give up as he wrapped his arms around her and slipped his tongue past her lips.
âYouâre so beautiful,â he mumbled against her mouth, and she heard every word.
~ð®~
âThis is ridiculous,â Smitty grumbled, tossing another dead end onto the table.
âDonât give up now, Son.â The captain picked up another folder to go through.
âWithout the womanâs face, there is no way for us to find her.â
âNot true.â The captain looked at his detective. âIt will just make things easier.â
Smitty grumbled with agitation. âI bet they arenât even at her house. I bet theyâre somewhere making out.â
Captain Dish chuckled. âI have a feeling you are probably right. Those two have been inseparable since they made up.â
âI told the fool what he was giving up,â Smitty mumbled.
Captain Dish nodded. âMaribelle told him as well. But heâs too stubborn. Thatâs one of the things I like about him and what makes him a good detective.â
Smitty sighed. His captain was right. His partner is stubborn, and it helped make him one of the best detectives in their district.
âLook at this.â The captain handed Smitty a picture from one of the folders.
âHey, Iâve seen her before.â He squinted his eyes as he studied the picture.
âThat is your partnerâs mother.â
Smittyâs head snapped up to the captain. âYeah, I saw it in his fatherâs den on the mantle.â
Captain Dish nodded.
âSheâs an unsolved case,â Smitty whispered, looking down at the picture again.
âShe is. And maybe, just maybe, our little seer will see where her killers may be.â The captain took the picture from Smitty and placed it back into the folder.
Smitty watched his captain place the folder away from the other files. To save it for later, or hide it from Nash?
~ð®~
âIt really is peaceful here,â Nash said with a deep sigh.
He was sitting on the ground against a large rock, Airianna between his legs, her back against his chest. Occasionally, when she moved, her breast rubbed against his arm, and his cock had a mind of its own as it came to life. He had to think of stupid things to get it to go away. But it wasnât easy.
âI felt your chest vibrate. I know you spoke, but I have no clue what you said.â
He chuckled, and she turned her head, smiling up at him. He held her chin so she wouldnât turn from him.
âI said, itâs peaceful here.â
She grinned at him and leaned forward so her lips touched his.
âI told you so.â
He grinned as she turned from the kiss and nestled against his chest again.
âI come here when I have trouble with my dreams. Some of them arenât for the weak of heart. Not that mine is weak.â
He squeezed her arms, letting her know he knew she was not weak.
She sighed and cuddled deeper into his embrace. âIâve never been here with anyone before,â she whispered.
His heart swelled, knowing she had never brought a man here before.
âNash,â she whispered, panic in her voice.
âWhat is it?â he asked, lifting her and turning her to face him.
âI need paper and pen,â she whispered.
Nash set her back and jumped to his feet. He ran to his car and searched through the vehicle until he found a pad of paper and a pencil. He ran back to Airianna and gently pressed the items into her hands. Sheâd told him about this before. When she feels a dream coming on, she needs something to draw or paint on right away. He watched her eyes gloss over as her right hand connect to the paper and the pencil scrawled out her dream. He watched in amazement as a small circle turned into a face. Long straight hairâhe wished he knew the colorâbut the face was so detailed they didnât need the color of hair or eyes. They will be able to find her in the system if she was reported missing or her body was found.
Airiannaâs eyes cleared. She blinked at him, then looked down at the notebook in her hand.
âThatâs her,â she whispered. âThe girl from the painting. The one I painted when I was twelve.â She looked up at himâelation in her eyes.
He smiled and placed his hand on her shoulder. âWeâll find her,â he promised, then helped her to her feet and headed back to the car.
âI will be able to solve a puzzle,â Airianna whispered as she looked out the window at the scenery buzzing by.
Nash smiled as he drove down the road. The captain wasnât the only one anxious to solve old cases. For Airianna, the paintings are what the old cases are to his captain.
Unsolved mysteries.