Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
locking barristerâs bookcases. âThis is where I keep the more valuable stuffâsigned books and older oddities.â He pulled up a bench and climbed on it to unlock the topmost shelf, which was mostly emptyâprobably because it was difficult to reach.
He pulled out a book bound in pale leather and embossed in gold. âI donât suppose you have fourteen hundred dollars youâd like to pay for this with?â
I swallowed. âNot at the momentâI might be able to scrape it up in a few days.â
He shook his head as he handed the book down to me. âDonât bother. Just take care of it and give it back when youâre finished. Itâs been here for five or six years. I donât expect that Iâll have a buyer for it this week.â
I took it gingerly, not being used to handling books that were worth more than my car (not that that was saying very much). The title was embossed on front and spine: Magic Made .
âIâm loaning this to you,â he said slowly, considering his words carefully, âbecause it talks a little about that walking stickâ¦â He paused and added in a âpay attention to this partâ voice, â And a few other interesting things.â
If the walking stick had been stolen, maybe more things had disappeared, too. I clutched the book tighter.
âZee is a friend of mine.â He locked the bookcase again and then got off the bench and put it back where it had been. Then in an apparent non sequitur he said casually, âYou know, of course, that there are things that we are forbidden to discuss. But I know that the story of the walking stick is in there. You might start with that story. I believe it is in Chapter Five.â
âI understand.â He was giving me all the help he could without breaking the rules.
He led the way back through the store. âTake care of that staff.â
âI keep trying to give it back,â I said.
He turned and walked backward a few steps, his eyes on the staff. âDo you now?â Then he gave a small laugh, shook his head, and continued to the front door. âThose old things sometimes have a mind of their own.â
He opened the door for me and I hesitated on the threshold. If he hadnât told me that he was part fae, Iâd have thanked him. But acknowledging a debt to a fae could have unexpected consequences. Instead I took out one of the cards that Gabriel had printed up for me and gave it to him. âIf you ever have trouble with your car, why donât you stop by? I work mostly on German cars, but I can usually make the others purr pretty well, too.â
He smiled. âI might do that. Good luck.â
Â
Samuel was gone when I got back, but heâd left a note to tell me he had gone to workâand there was food in the fridge.
I opened it and found a foil-covered glass pan with a couple of enchiladas in it. I ate dinner, fed Medea, then washed my hands and took the book into the living room to read.
I hadnât expected a page that said, âThis is who killed OâDonnell,â but it might have been nice if each page of the six-hundred-page book hadnât been covered with tiny, handwritten words in old faded ink. At least it was in English.
An hour and a half later I had to stop because my eyes wouldnât focus anymore.
Iâd turned to Chapter Five and gotten through maybe ten pages of the impossible text and three stories. The first story had been about the walking stick, a little more complete than the story Iâd read off the Internet. It also had a detailed description of the stick. The author was obviously fae, which made it the first book Iâd ever knowingly read from a fae viewpoint.
All of Chapter Five seemed to be about things like the walking stick: gifts of the fae. If OâDonnell had stolen the walking stick, maybe heâd stolen other things, too. Maybe the murderer had stolen them in return.
I took the book to the gun safe in my room and locked it in. It wasnât the best hiding place, but a casual thief was a little less likely to run off with it.
I washed dishes and mused about the book. Not so much about the contents, but what Tad had been trying to tell me about it.
The man at the bookstore had told me that the fae treasure things like the walking stick, no matter how useless they are in our modern world.
I could see that. For a fae, having something that held the
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