The cloying sweetness of stead milk and the earthy perfu of black tea filled Mike’s senses. He was on his break, sequestered in the hazy, dimly lit interior of Cindy’s Smoking Tea Leaves. Seated on a worn bar stool, he cradled the heavy ceramic mug, a world away from the other patrons who lounged at low tables, their laughter muffled by the gentle gurgle of hookahs. Wisps of apple-scented smoke curled through the air, catching the dim light from mismatched lanterns.
As the first sip of Cindy’s signature milk tea touched his tongue, Mike closed his eyes, genuinely savoring it. It was the perfect temperature, the spiced base cutting through the creamy sweetness with a hint of caralized sugar. It was, without a doubt in his mind, the best cup of tea in the city.
From her perch behind the high-top counter, Cindy watched him. Her arms were crossed, a damp cloth slung over her shoulder, and a knowing, almost skeptical smile played on her lips. She saw the way his shoulders, usually tense with the weight of the job, had dropped just a fraction.
Cindy: “I didn’t actually think you really liked my tea,” she said, her voice a low, lodic drawl as she leaned forward, resting her chin on her hand.
Mike opened his eyes, eting her gaze.
Mike: “I told you it was really good the last ti I was here.”
Cindy: “The last ti you were here,” she countered, her smile widening, “you were trying to get information about smugglers from . I just assud you were buttering up. Cops are good at that.”
Mike shook his head, a faint, weary smile of his own appearing.
Mike: “The flattery was for the information. The complint about the tea was separate, and honest. I even promised you I’d co back for another cup, rember? A man should keep his promises.”
Cindy’s eyes, sharp and perceptive, scanned his face. She took in the faint shadows under his eyes, the way he held the mug like it was an anchor.
Cindy: “Hmm. And you’re not here to mine my clientele for information on so other investigation you’re not telling about?”
Mike: “No,” he answered, his voice flat and final. It was the truth. He took another long sip. “And maybe,” he added, the word barely a murmur into his mug, “Joe won’t think to look for here.”
A slow, understanding smile spread across Cindy’s face.
Cindy: “Oh,” she drawled, the single syllable rich with implication. She picked up a glass and began polishing it with her cloth. “So that’s what it is. The great partnership finally has a crack in it. After all these years, Joe’s managed to piss you off, too.” She chuckled, a warm, throaty sound. “I suppose it was only a matter of ti. What did he do? Put you in a bad position? Or leave you with a ss you had to clean up?”
Mike didn’t answer. He just stared into the depths of his tea, the creamy surface now marred by the slow path of a single, stray tea leaf. It was answer enough.
Cindy: “Well,” she said, slapping the cloth back onto her shoulder with a soft snap. “You can hide out here as long as you need. On one condition.”
Mike looked up, a question in his eyes.
Cindy: “You finish that cup, and you tell if you think it needs more cardamom. I’ve been tinkering with the recipe.” It was a peace offering, a simple, human request in a world that rarely dealt in them.
The silence stretched between them, comfortable and thick as the steam rising from Mike’s mug. He swirled the dregs of his tea, watching the lone tea leaf circle the bottom. Cindy’s words had been a balm, but they’d also nudged sothing loose deep within him.
Mike: “Cindy…” he began, his voice quieter now, stripped of its professional cadence. “How do you get people to… let go of the past? When it’s eating them alive from the inside.”
Cindy stopped her polishing, placing the glass down with a soft click.
Cindy: “Is this about Joe?”
Mike’s silence was a louder affirmation than any word.
She sighed, leaning back against the counter.
Cindy: “You can’t get them to do anything, Mike. A person has to want to let it go. They have to be tired of carrying the weight.”
Mike: “But his obsession with Rob,” he countered, frustration edging his tone. “I thought for sure it would die out after a few months, a year at most. But it went on for years. And then even after Rob died, he didn’t stop. He just… shifted gears.”
Cindy: “Well, I can only speak from my own experience, when I wanted to get out of the smuggling life, and you helped with that, it was… easier for . I might have ripped people off, bent a few laws, but I didn’t kill anyone. I didn’t have anyone’s blood on my hands. So, I didn’t have that kind of guilt to carry with . Joe doesn’t have that fortune.”
She t his eyes again, her expression grim.
Cindy: “When Rob killed Jeff and Blake, Joe carried that. He still carries it. He was their leader; he feels he should have been there, should have seen it coming. This obsession with finding Rob… it’s not about justice, Mike. It’s a penance. It’s him trying to outrun the guilt.”
Mike: “But it should have ended when Rob died,” the officer insisted, the logic of it feeling like a solid wall he kept running into. “The chapter was closed. Now his obsession has just found a new target. It’s not healthy.”
Cindy: “It’s him running away. It’s easier to focus on a new target, a new mystery, than it is to sit quietly and reflect on the loss. To actually feel it.” Her voice softened. “Mike… I don’t particularly like cops. You know that. But Jeff and Blake… they were good n. When they died, I was sad. I worked through that grief years ago. I suspect Joe never did. So when that ti cos—and it will—when he finally stumbles and has to face it, the best thing you can do is just be there. Be a supportive friend. Not a detective.”
Mike absorbed her words. They weren't a revelation; they were an echo of a truth he already knew, a suspicion he’d carried in his own gut. But hearing them voiced by soone else, soone outside the force, gave them a new, solid weight. It was the difference between knowing sothing and understanding it.
Mike: “Thanks, Cindy,” he said, the words heartfelt.
Cindy: “No problem.” She picked up another glass, her tone shifting back to its practical, no-nonsense cadence. “Also, just so we’re crystal clear, you make sure Joe knows he’s still not welco here. Especially after the bullshit he pulled with Wren.”
Mike: “Did you and Wren make up?” he asked, a faint smile touching his lips.
Cindy: “Yeah, I did,” she said, her eyes flashing with a fresh wave of irritation. “And then I heard from him what Joe did—dragging Crowley into his store and spilling Wren’s secrets to that priest. Seriously, fuck Joe. So lines you don’t cross.”
Mike’s smile widened into a dry, knowing grin.
Mike: “Don’t worry. That last… interaction you had with him all those years ago left a lasting impression.” He recalled the scene with vivid clarity: a furious Cindy, not much taller than Joe’s shoulder, physically shoving the stunned detective out of her shop, her voice a low, dangerous promise as she threatened to beat the living snot out of him if he ever darkened her doorway again. “He still rembers. I think he’s more scared of you than half the criminals in this city.”
Cindy: “Good. Now. More cardamom. Yes or no?”
Mike: “No,” he said, his own focus returning to the simple, sensory present. “It’s perfect as it is.”
Cindy gave a curt, satisfied nod at Mike’s verdict on the tea and moved down the counter, returning to the rhythmic work of wiping down the already-clean surface. The quiet hum of the hookahs and the low murmur of conversation reclaid the space, wrapping around Mike like a familiar blanket. For the first ti all day, the knot in his shoulders began to truly loosen. He cradled the warm mug, allowing the fragrant steam to soothe him, his world narrowing to this small, hazy sanctuary.
The spell was broken by the sharp, cheerful jingle of the bell above the front door.
Mike noted the sound but didn't turn, filing it away as just another patron seeking their own respite. He heard the firm, asured footsteps on the wooden floor.
It was Cindy who broke his reverie.
Cindy: "Um, sir? I'm sorry, but dogs aren't allowed in here."
Her tone was polite but firm, the voice of a business owner who had clear rules. Mike glanced over, his detective's instinct piqued.
???: "Oh, um, but Lunar here is my companion dog. He's terribly well-behaved, I assure you. He won't be any trouble at all."
The man's voice was smooth and cultured, with a placid, almost lodic quality that felt… practiced. It was a voice designed to disarm.
Cindy hesitated, her eyes flicking from the man's earnest expression to the animal at his feet. Mike saw her weighing the potential scene against her policy.
Cindy: "Well…" she relented, "as long as he causes no trouble, I suppose it's fine."
???: "Thank you. Much appreciated."
The footsteps resud, closer now. Mike kept his gaze fixed on the dark surface of his tea, watching the man's reflection approach in the warped surface of a polished copper kettle on the counter. The newcor settled onto the bar stool just two seats over, the wood groaning softly under his weight.
Out of the corner of his eye, Mike took him in. The man was impeccably dressed in a tailored, dark wool coat, a stark contrast to the shop's bohemian vibe. His posture was unnervingly perfect. Then Mike’s eyes, almost of their own accord, were drawn upward to the man's face, and specifically, to his eyes. They were a piercing, unnatural shade of red— a deep, vivid crimson, like old wine or fresh blood. They seed to catch the dim lantern light and hold it.
A shiver, cold and unwelco, traced a path down Mike’s spine. He forced his gaze downward, to the white dog that settled silently at its master's side.
It was a beautiful creature, its fur pristine and fluffy, with an intelligent, almost serene face. But as Mike stared, the feeling of wrongness intensified. The dog was too still. It didn't pant, didn't sniff the air thick with unfamiliar scents, didn't twitch at the sounds of the shop. It simply sat, a statue of alabaster, its blue eyes fixed on nothing. There was no animal curiosity, no simple canine joy. It was a void in the shape of a dog.
“Wait a minute,” Mike thought, the pieces clicking together in his mind with the cold, final sound of a lock turning. “A well-dressed man. Red eyes. A white dog that gives you a weird feeling…”
It dawned on him then, not as a suspicion, but as a chilling certainty.
He hadn't personally t this man. But, Joe had. And, he had described all the strange features Mike just noted.
Without a doubt, the man sitting two stools away, now calmly perusing the nu as if he were any other custor, was John. And Mike’s brief respite had just beco very, very dangerous.
Cindy: “What will it be?” she asked, her voice cutting through the tension only Mike could feel.
John: “Oh, um. I have this coupon here.” He produced a slip of paper from his coat pocket, its edges crisp and clean.
Cindy took it, her eyes scanning the text.
Cindy: “Ah, the special. Coming right up.” She offered a brief, professional smile before turning her back to prepare the drink, blissfully unaware of the predator she was serving.
Mike’s mind raced, a frantic counterpoint to his forced stillness. He rembered the Nighthound syndicate encounter with cinematic clarity—the gun at his head, the Night Tower, Kyle, and the Night Queen herself, her voice a silken threat as she promised to personally weigh them down with cent and throw them into the murky depths. The ssage had been unequivocal: Stay away from John. And now, he was close enough to sll the man’s cologne.
Every instinct, every survival-honed nerve, scread at him to leave. To mutter an excuse to Cindy and walk out without looking back. He was staring into the eyes of a hurricane, and the slightest misstep could see him torn apart. The Nighthounds weren't a organization known for their nuance or forgiveness.
“But I didn’t seek him out,” he argued internally, clinging to the fact like a lifeline. “This is chance. A cosmic, terrifying coincidence. But, they won’t care, will they?” He knew, with a cold logic, that the Nighthounds were unlikely to care about such distinctions. Intentions wouldn't matter; proximity would be enough.
Yet, beneath the fear, another impulse stirred—the relentless curiosity of an investigator presented with the ultimate puzzle. Joe’s words echoed in his mory: "It didn't seem like he liked cops." A crucial detail. Mike was in plain clothes, his badge a hidden weight in his pocket. If he kept his profession a secret, if he played this just right, he might be able to talk to him safely.
The bits and pieces Joe had gathered, the whispers of John being sothing other, sothing ancient and powerful, suddenly felt less like paranoid ramblings and more like terrifying fact. If the Nighthounds held this man in such fearful regard, then there might be so truth to it, and the depth of his knowledge could be imasurable. It might even surpass the ancient dusty tos of the Arcanium Archive.
A dark, tempting thought crystallized in his mind: “This might be my one chance to ask him about deadly curses.”
The thought threatened to ignite a dangerous chain reaction. He could ask about the very thing that had consud Joe—the possibility that Rob’s death was not a simple murder but the result of an unforgivable curse. It was the obsession that was poisoning his partner.
He recoiled from the idea imdiately, a wave of self-disgust washing over him. What was he thinking? To feed Joe’s mania with forbidden knowledge obtained from a source that could get them both killed? To risk his life, and potentially Cindy’s peaceful establishnt, to chase a shadow that was already destroying his friend from the inside? He would be pouring gasoline on a fire he was supposed to be smothering.
He was a detective, sworn to evidence and reason, not a desperate mystic scraping for answers in the occult underworld. To engage with John was to step into Joe’s quicksand, and he could feel it pulling at him already. The temptation was a siren's call, promising answers while threatening to dash him against the rocks. He took a slow, silent breath, the scent of cardamom and black tea now tainted with the tallic tang of his own fear.
The internal debate was a silent war, raging within the confines of Mike’s skull. Every instinct scread for flight, while the detective’s cursed curiosity begged him to stay and engage. He was trapped in the no-man's-land between self-preservation and the relentless pull of the unknown, his body a statue of forced calm while his mind was a riot. He was so deeply locked in the struggle that the voice from his right seed to materialize from his own thoughts, smooth and intrusive as a needle.
John: “Are you all right, sir?”
The sound—polite, concerned, and impossibly close—jolted through Mike like a stray volt. He turned his head, the movent stiff, to find John’s piercing crimson eyes fixed on him. The man’s expression was one of genuine-looking concern.
Mike: “Huh?” he managed, the sound grating and unintelligent. He was buying a fraction of a second, his mind scrambling to reboot.
John: “My apologies if I’m being rude,” he continued, his voice a low, cultured hum. “I just noticed you seem to be sweating a lot since I took a seat.”
“Crap. He noticed staring at him, didn’t he? Mike thought with the friendly tone made the observation feel even more invasive.
A dozen lies, complex and convoluted, flashed through Mike’s mind. But under that placid, red-eyed gaze, complexity felt like a trap. Simplicity was his only shield.
He forced a laugh, a dry, brittle sound that caught in his throat.
Mike: “Oh! That.” He raised a hand, wiping his brow with exaggerated effort, the gesture allowing him to break eye contact for a precious mont. “It's nothing of concern. Just my own lack of foresight. I drank my tea a bit too quickly, I’m afraid. Fantastic brew, but it cos out steaming. Now I’m just… paying the price for my impatience. A little overheated, that’s all.”
To sell it, he gave an awkward smile and tugged at the collar of his shirt, fanning himself slightly.
Mike: “Gotta rember to slow down.” The performance felt flimsy under the gaze of those red eyes, but the man’s casual deanor made his own tension feel all the more obvious and out of place.
For a heart-stopping mont, John simply held Mike in that crimson gaze, the silence stretching thin. Then, the man’s expression shifted. Into a small, polite warm smile.
John: “I see,” his tone conceding the point without fully endorsing it. “The tea must be exceptional here then.”
Mike: “Oh, um. Yeah,” he stumbled, the inanity of the conversation a stark contrast to the alarm bells in his mind. “It’s the best.”
Before Mike could formulate an exit strategy, John stood up before settling onto the stool directly beside Mike. The space felt suddenly smaller, the air thinner. With that sa friendliness, he extended his hand.
John: “Where are my manners? It is a pleasure to et you. My na is John.”
The gesture was a trap disguised as a courtesy. To refuse would be an imdiate declaration of hostility, a confirmation that Mike knew more than he was letting on. His every instinct recoiled, screaming not to make physical contact. But the detective’s mask, honed over years of navigating dangerous situations, held firm.
Mike reached out and took John’s hand. The grip was firm. Mike’s smile felt like it was carved from wood.
Mike: “I’m Mike,” he said, feeling like admitting his na was a form of surrender.
As their hands parted, the reality of his situation solidified around him. The fleeting opportunity to make a quiet, unnoticed exit had vanished. He was now actively engaged, tethered to this mysterious and perilous man by the thin, strong thread of social convention. Whether he wanted it or not, the conversation had begun, and Mike was terrifyingly aware that he was now dancing on the edge of a blade.
User Comments
0 comments from readers