Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
not.
I holstered the revolver and walked slowly toward him.
âAdam,â I said, because he had his back to me. It is never a good thing to startle a werewolf. âAre you all right?â
Unsurprisingly, he didnât answer.
I crouched and touched the wet fabric, and he grabbed my wristâhis movement so fast that he was just suddenly there, on his back. I donât remember seeing him roll over. His eyes were yellow and cold, but his grip was light.
âYouâre safe,â I told him, trying to stay calm. âJesseâs here, and sheâs safe, too. Weâre going to get you on your feet in fighting shape, then weâre getting out of here.â
âItâs the silver,â said Shawn, awed. âThatâs why the shirt is turning gray. FuâI mean, damn. Damn. Heâs sweating silver. Damn.â
Adam didnât look away from me, though he flinched subtly at the sound of Shawnâs voice. His blazing gold eyes held mine, somehow hot and icy at the same time. I should have looked awayâbut it didnât seem like a dominance contest. It felt like he was using my eyes to pull himself up from wherever the drugs had forced him. I tried not to blink and break the spell.
âMercy?â His voice was a hoarse whisper.
â Câest moi, câest moi, âtis I,â I told him. It seemed appropriately melodramatic, though I didnât know if heâd catch the reference. I shouldnât have worried.
Unexpectedly, he laughed. âTrust you to quote Lancelot rather than Guinevere.â
âBoth of them were stupid,â I told him. âArthur should have let them marry each other as punishment and gone off to live happily on his own. I only like Camelot for the music.â I hummed a bit.
The mundane talk was working. His pulse was less frantic, and he was taking deep, even breaths. When his eyes went back to normal weâd be out of trouble. Except, of course, for the small matter of a warehouse full of enemies. One trouble at a time, I always say.
He closed his yellow eyes, and momentarily I felt cutadrift and abandoned until I realized he was still holding my wrist as if he were afraid Iâd leave if he let go.
âI have the mother of all headaches,â he said, âand I feel like Iâve been flattened by a steamroller. Jesseâs safe?â
âIâm fine, Dad,â she said, though she obeyed the urgent signal I made with my free hand and stayed where she was. He might have sounded calm, but his scent and the compulsive way he was holding on to my wrist contradicted his apparent control.
âBruised and scared,â I said. âBut otherwise unhurt.â I realized that I actually didnât know that and gave Jesse a worried glance.
She smiled, a wan imitation of her usual expression. âFine,â she said again, this time to me.
His sigh held relief. âTell me whatâs been going on.â
I gave him a short versionâit still took a while to tell. Except for when I told him about David Christiansenâs invasion of my home, he kept his eyes shut as if it hurt him to open them. Before I finished he was twisting uncomfortably.
âMy skin is crawling,â he said.
âItâs the silver thatâs bothering you.â I should have thought of that earlier. Touching his shirt with my free hand, I showed him the gray metal on my index finger. âIâve heard of sweating bullets before, but never silver.â I started to help him remove his shirt when I realized he couldnât run around naked with Jesse here. âI donât suppose you have any extra clothes, Shawn? If that silver stays against his skin itâll burn him.â
âHe can have my shirt,â he said. âBut I canât leave to get clothes; Iâm on guard duty.â
I sighed. âHe can have my sweatpants.â The T-shirt I was wearing hit me halfway down my thighs.
Shawn and I stripped Adam as quickly as we could, using the shirt to wipe most of the silver off his skin before covering him in my sweats and Shawnâs green T-shirt. Adam was shivering when we finished.
The thermos cup had dumped its sticky contents all over the floor when I dropped it, but both it and the thermos hadsurvived. I had Jesse pour hot coffee down her father as fast as heâd drink it, and, with something to focus on, she steadied. When the coffee was done, she fed him the raw
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