Kate Daniels 02 - Magic Burns
kid, nailed to the crates by four crossbow bolts.
âFreaky,â Julie said.
No kidding. For one, the skeleton had too many ribs, but only five pairs attached to the sternum. For another, not a shred of tissue remained on the yellowed bones. If I hadnât known better, I wouldâve said it had weathered a year or two in the open somewhere. I leaned closer to examine the arms. Shallow bone sockets. I was no expert, but Iâd guess this thing could have bent its elbows backward. At the same time, Iâd probably dislocate its hips with one kick.
âYour mom ever mention anything like this?â
âNo.â
The bolts anchoring the skeleton were red and fletched with black feathers. One punctured the skeleton through the left eye socket, two went through the ribs on the left, where the heart would be if it was human, and one between the legs. Precision shooting at its best. Just to make sure the odd humanoid aberration doesnât get away, always pin it through the nuts.
I grabbed a crate from the pile, planted it in front of the skeleton, and climbed atop it to get a better look. Fewer of the neck vertebrae fused than normal, which provided for a greater flexibility of the neck, but made it fragile. No incisors, no canines, either. Instead I saw three rows of teeth, long, conical, sharp, used to puncture something struggling and keep it in the mouth.
The crate snapped under me with a loud pop. I dropped with all the grace of a potato sack, grabbing at the skeleton on the way down. My fingers passed through the bone and snagged a bolt. I landed on my ass in a pile of shards, the shaft in my hand and light powder on my fingers.
A hole gaped in the skeletonâs left side, between the third and fourth rib. It held for a second, grew, melting, and then the entire skeleton imploded into dust. The dust outline lingered in the air for a moment, taunting me, before melting into the breeze. âShit!â There goes my evidence. Smooth, Kate, real smooth.
âWas this supposed to happen?â Julie asked.
âNo,â I growled.
A round of enthusiastic applause echoed behind me. I jumped to my feet. A man stood leaning against the wall. He wore a leather jacket that wanted very much to be leather armor. The business end of a crossbow protruded over his left shoulder.
Hello, Mr. Bowman.
âGood form!â he said, clapping. âAnd a lovely landing!â
âJulie,â I said, keeping my voice level, âstay put.â
âNo need to worry,â Bowman said. âI wouldnât hurt the little lass. Not unless I had to. And maybe if I was really hungry and there was nothing else to eat. But then sheâs so thin, Iâd be picking out bones from between my teeth all day. Hardly worth the trouble.â
I couldnât tell if he was kidding. âYou want something?â
âJust came to see who troubled my bolts. And what do I find? A mouse.â He winked at Julie. âAnd a woman.â
He said âwomanâ in the same way Iâd say âMmmmm, yummy chocolateâ after waking up from hunger pains and finding a Hershey bar in an empty refrigerator. I flicked my sword and backed away a bit so the hole would be to my right. If he knocked me into it, it would take me a long time to climb out.
The man approached. He stood tall, at least six three, maybe six four. Broad shoulders. Long legs in black pants. His black hair fell in a tangled mess on his shoulders. It looked like he mightâve cut it himself with a knife and then tied a leather cord across his forehead to keep it somewhat pinned. I looked at his face. Handsome bastard. Defined jaw, chiseled cheekbones, full lips. Eyes like black fire. The kind of eyes that jumped from a womanâs dreams right into her morning and made trouble in the marriage bed.
He gave me a feral grin. âLike what you see, dove?â
âNope.â I hadnât had sex in eighteen months. Pardon me while I struggle with my hormone overload.
Shave that jaw, brush the hair, tone down the crazy in the eyes, and he would have to fight women off with that crossbow. As it was he looked like he prowled in dark places where the wild things were and they all ran away when they smelled him coming. Any woman with a drop of sense would grab her knife and cross the street when she saw him.
âDonât worry. I wonât hurt you,â he promised, circling me.
âIâm not
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