Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
to admit he was fae.â
She frowned at me. âAre you older than you look? Youâd have been a child when the fae came out.â
âAll of them didnât come out at once,â I told her. Her question settled my nerves. It was Zee whose life was at stake here, not mine. Not just yet. I kept talking so she wouldnât ask why Zee had come out. The one thing I absolutely couldnât tell an outsider was the existence of the Gray Lords. âZee only admitted what he was a few years ago, seven or eight, maybe. He knew that being a fae would keep people away from the shop. Iâd been working for him for a couple of years and he liked me so he sold it to me.â
I collected my thoughts, trying to tell her what she needed to know without taking forever about it. âAs I told you, he called me yesterday to ask for my help because someone had been killing fae in the reservation. Zee thought my nose might be able to pick out the killer. I gather I was sort of a last resort. When we got to the rez, OâDonnell was at the gate and wrote down my name when we drove throughâthat is on record. I imagine the police will find it, if they think to look. Zee took me through the murder scenes and I discovered that one man had been present at each houseâOâDonnell.â
Sheâd been taking notes in a stenographerâs notebook but stopped, set down her pencil, and frowned. âOâDonnell was present at all the murder scenes and you verified that by smelling him?â
I raised my eyebrows. âA coyote has a keen sense of smell, Ms. Ryan. I have a very good memory for scents. I caught OâDonnellâs when he stopped us as we went inâand his scent was in every one of the murder victimsâ houses I visited.â
She stared at meâbut she was no werewolf who might rip my throat out for challenging herâso I met her stare with one of my own.
She dropped her eyes first, ostensibly looking at her notes. People, human people, can be pretty deaf to body language. Maybe she didnât even notice that sheâd lost the dominance contest, though her subconscious would.
âI understand OâDonnell was employed by the BFA as security,â she said, turning back a few pages. âCouldnât he have been there investigating the deaths?â
âThe BFA had no idea there were any murders,â I told her. âThe fae do their own internal policing. If they had gone to the Feds for help, Iâm pretty sure it would be the FBI who would have been called in, not the BFA anyway. And OâDonnell was a guard, not an investigator. I was told that there was no reason OâDonnell should have been in every house that there was a murder in, and I have no reason to doubt that.â
Sheâd started writing again, in shorthand. Iâd never actually seen anyone use shorthand before.
âSo you told Mr. Adelbertsmiter that OâDonnell was the murderer?â
âI told him that he was the only person whose scent I found in all the scenes.â
âHow many scenes?â
âFour.â I decided not to tell her that there had been others; I didnât want to tell her why I hadnât gone to all the murder scenes. If Zee hadnât wanted to talk about my trip Underhill with me, I thought it would not be something he wanted me discussing with a lawyer.
She paused again. âThere were four people murdered in the reservation and they did not ask for help?â
I gave her a thin smile. âThe fae are not fond of attracting outside attention. It can be dangerous for everyone. They are also quite aware of the way most humans, including the Feds, feel about them. âThe only good fae is a dead faeâ mentality is quite prevalent among the conservatives who make up most of the rank and file in the government whether they be Homeland Security, FBI, BFA, or any of the other alphabet soup agencies.â
âYou have trouble with the federal government?â she asked.
âAs far as I know, none of them are prejudiced against half-Indian mechanics,â I told her, matching her blandness with my own, âso why would I have a problem with them? However, I can certainly see why the fae would be reluctant to turn over a series of murders to a government whose record for dealing with the fae is not exactly spotless.â I shrugged. âMaybe if theyâd realized sooner that their killer wasnât
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