Ninety-five dollars for sunglasses? He had to be kidding. A group of mourners were taking the family away at last. The mother was smothered in well-meaning male relatives. They were literally carrying her away from the grave. The children and Grampa brought up the rear. No one listens to good advice.
A man stepped away from the crowd and walked towards us. He was the one who reminded me of Peter Burke from the back. He was around six feet, dark-complected, a black mustache, and thin almost goatee like beard framing a handsome face. It was handsome, a dark movie-star face, but there was something about the way he moved. Maybe it was the white streak in his black hair just over the forehead. Whatever, you knew that he would always play the villain.
"Is she going to help us?" he asked, no preamble, no hello.
"Yes," Jamison said. "Anna Blake, this is John Burke, Peter's brother."
John Burke, the John Burke, I wanted to ask. New Orleans's greatest animator and vampire slayer? A kindred spirit. We shook hands. His grip was strong, almost painfully so, as if he wanted to see if I would flinch. I didn't. He let go. Maybe he just didn't know his own strength? But I doubted it.
"I am truly sorry about your brother," I said. I meant it. I was glad I meant it.
He nodded. "Thank you for talking to the police about him."
"I'm surprised you couldn't get the New Orleans police to give you some juice with our local police," I said.
He had the grace to look uncomfortable. "The New Orleans police and I have had a disagreement."
"Really?" I said, eyes wide. I had heard the rumors, but I wanted to hear the truth. Truth is always stranger than fiction.
"John was accused of participating in some ritual murders," Jamison said. "Just because he's a practicing vaudun priest."
"Oh," I said. Those were the rumors. "How long have you been in town, John?"
"Almost a week."
"Really?"
"Peter had been missing for two days before they found the … body." He licked his lips. His dark brown eyes flicked to the scene behind me. Were the grave diggers moving in? I glanced back, but the grave looked just the same to me.
"Anything you could find out would be most appreciated," he said.
"I'll do what I can."
"I have to get back to the house." He shrugged, as if to loosen the shoulder muscles. "My sister-in-law isn't taking it well."
I let it go. I deserved brownie points for that. One thing I didn't let go. "Can you look after your niece and nephew?"
He looked at me, a puzzled frown between his black eyebrows.
"I mean, keep them out of the really dramatic stuff if you can."
He nodded. "It was rough for me to watch her throw herself on the coffin. God, what must the kids be thinking?" Tears glittered in his eyes like silver. He kept them open very wide so the tears wouldn't spill out.
I didn't know what to say. I did not want to see him cry. "I'll talk to the police, find out what I can. I'll tell Jamison when I have anything."
John Burke nodded, carefully. His eyes were like a glass where only the surface tension kept the water from spilling over.
I nodded to Jamison and left. I turned on the air-conditioning in my car and let it run full blast. The two men were still standing in the hot sunshine in the middle of summer brown grass when I put the car in gear and drove away.
I would talk to the police and find out what I could. I also had another name for Dolph. John Burke, biggest animator in New Orleans, voodoo priest. Sounded like a suspect to me.