up Merlin and Spade.
âLate,â crowed Merlin. Then âCops coming ⦠cops coming.â He imitated the wail of a police siren. It pierced the interior of the duplex. She figured that the drug dealers had taught Merlin that warning. He had excellent hearing and could be shriller than an alarm system.
African GreysâMerlinâs breed of parrotâwere remarkably intelligent. When sheâd adopted Merlin, sheâd conducted an Internet study of parrots. Known as the best parrot at mimicry, African Greys actually understood and used the human language. They not only parroted words and phrases and sounds, but they also associated them with events. But often Merlin was simply an alarmist.
âNo oneâs there,â she assured Merlin.
He gave her his evil bird look, fastening his little beady eyes on her. âCops coming,â he insisted.
She very much hoped not. She did not want to see or hear from Detective Brady again. She took the envelope from her purse and slid it between newspaper pages on the bottom of the cage. âTime to go home. For treats,â she added.
âTreats?â he echoed with approval.
âOnly for good birds.â
âMerlin is a good bird,â Merlin asserted, then repeated the police car siren.
It was remarkably accurate. Sheâd had visits from neighbors more than once.
Then she heard a sound next door. In her supposedly empty home. She stilled.
Had Merlin been trying to tell her someone was in her duplex?
Kirke left Merlin and Spade inside Samâs apartment. She went outside and crossed over to her own door. She tried the doorknob. It was still locked, and it didnât look tampered with.
It was the only way in and out. There was no back door. One room led to another to another. Since it shared a side with another unit, the design allowed a minimal number of windows. There were several in the front room facing the street, one in the kitchen, and two in the bedroom in back.
The noise had probably been no more than her imagination.
âHelp!â Merlin screeched again in a womanâs voice from inside Samâs apartment.
Kirke hadnât heard Merlin repeat that particular word before. She wondered whether he had picked up on the sudden apprehension that had seized her. She hoped heâd learned it from the television set and not some victim of his previous owners.
She ignored him and listened at her door for a moment. Nothing. Apparently it was just one of Merlinâs spontaneous fancies.
âMaâam?â
She whirled around. A tall, loose-limbed man rapidly approached her porch. He had an interesting face. Strong features. Dark, piercing eyes. The slight cleft in his chin softened the angular cheekbones. A small scar was visible just above his right eye. His hair was dark, cut short and tinged with gray.
He reached the porch door and stood there. âI heard a cry for help. I thought it came from here,â he added as he looked around.
âA Good Samaritan?â she asked, amused that Merlinâs cry had brought such good-looking assistance.
He shrugged with a self-conscious smile. It was stiff, as if the expression didnât come easily.
âHelp!â screeched Merlin again. He sounded even more human than before.
âThat was Merlin,â she said, enjoying the puzzlement on his face.
âMerlin?â he echoed from his side of the screen door.
She left the screen door and went into Samâs apartment, returning with the parrot.
âHelp!â Merlin said in a womanâs voice, âCops comingâ in another voice, then he broke into a perfect rendition of a siren. He was obviously showing off.
âHeâs my guard bird,â she said, not quite containing a grin. âHe also bites.â
He shook his head. âI thought I heard a siren but â¦â
âEverything is â¦â She started to say fine , but there was still that nagging feeling that
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