Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen

Inked

Titel: Inked Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Karen Chance , Marjorie M. Liu , Yasmine Galenorn , Eileen Wilks
Vom Netzwerk:
cargo pants and a long-sleeved black tee. Except for the stench, which was enough to clear the sinuses. I gagged and looked around for another perch, but the place was packed.
    “Thanks. I’ve been wanting to do that since I caught him,” the bounty hunter said. I realized he was talking to me, and glanced over. His prisoner’s matted mane now littered the floor around his feet, like long fuzzy brown snakes. Uh-oh.
    The man clutched his head. “My hair!” he screeched. “What did that bitch do to my hair?”
    The bounty hunter raised an eyebrow as the guy’s remaining locks sheered off. “You should learn some manners,” he chided.
    “Witch! I said witch!” the guy told me desperately. Too late, because I couldn’t regrow hair. Not even when my magic was working properly.
    “Been to Tartarus recently?” I asked him, as he felt around his now-bald head.
    “What?” The guy looked at me like I was crazy.
    “I picked him up in a bar there this morning,” the bounty hunter told me, collecting his payout.
    “What’s the charge?”
    “Possession, suspicion of dealing,” he said, on his way out the door.
    “Possession of what?” I asked baldy. He ignored me. “What were you dealing?” I demanded, jerking him closer.
    “You got no proof! I had nothing on me,” he spat, glaring at me. “And anyway, punch shouldn’t even be illegal. You’d think it was dangerous or something—”
    “It is.”
    “Punch” was the street name for a mind-altering concoction derived from a distilled wine made by the Fey. It was said to give a wicked high and to enhance latent magical abilities. But like all drugs, it carried risks—addiction, mental instability and, for longtime users, insanity.
    “Only if you get greedy,” baldy sulked. “You can drink yourself to death, too, you know, and nobody cares.”
    “Alcohol doesn’t give humans the ability to curse each other into oblivion,” I pointed out. “A couple brothers did just that last week. Seems they had some mage blood back in the family tree. They got into an argument over some girl after an irresponsible asshole sold them punch, and one of them wished the other would go to hell.”
    Baldy winced. “Yeah, but you got him back, right?”
    “Not yet. We don’t know which hell dimension ended up with him.”
    I tightened my grip on baldy’s arm as a harried-looking Apprentice hurried over. As packed as this place was, it would take them most of the day to process and release him, which would seriously mess up my plans. I dug battered credentials out of my back pocket and flashed them.
    “I know who you are,” the kid said, looking a little freaked.
    Sheesh. Kill one department head and they never let you forget it.
    “I need to question this one,” I told him. The kid nodded, already backing up. “I’ll bring him back later,” I called, then hustled my new guide out the door before anyone with seniority noticed what was going on.
    “I’m not going anywhere until I see my lawyer,” the guy told me. “I know my rights! You can’t just shave my head!”
    “Take it easy. It looks good on you.” Well, better than the dreads.
    “Didn’t you hear me?” he demanded, starting to struggle. “I want a lawyer. I want—”
    “You want to shut up before anything else comes off,” I said, dragging him into the locker room.
    “Mage de Croissets to the CMO’s office immediately.” The magically enhanced voice was loud enough to make me jump.
    Shit.
    I parked the guy on a bench and yanked open my locker. A sawed-off shotgun, two handguns, a couple of potion grenades, four throwing knives, a stiletto that fit nicely down my boot, my potion belt secured around my hips, and I felt more like myself. That lasted until I opened the little packet on the top shelf, the one I’d sworn never to use again.
    The two foil halves separated and something black and slimy oozed out onto my wrist. “Okay, that’s nasty,” baldy informed me, as a ward in the shape of a large black leech sank into my skin.
    “This from someone with a tongue stud,” I said, right before the power drain hit.
    It was like a blow to the gut, immediate and brutal. So that’s why they had me lie down last time, I thought dimly. I sank to the bench, waiting for the nausea, the dizziness and the all-around ick factor to die down a little.
    My fingers ached to rip it off, with the skin if necessary. It’s worse at first, I reminded myself as the tat pulsed clammily against my

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher