Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
remnant of magic lost to them was power. And power in the fae world meant safety. If they had a record of all the fairy-magicked items, then the Gray Lords could keep track of themâand apportion them as they chose. But the fae are a secretive people. I just couldnât see them making up a list of their items of power and handing it over.
I grew up in Montana, where an old, unregistered rifle was worth a lot more than a new gun whose ownership could be traced. Not that the gun owners in Montana are planning on committing crimes with their unregistered gunsâthey just donât like the federal government knowing their every move.
So what ifâ¦what if OâDonnell stole several magic items and no one knew what they were, or maybe what all of them were. Then some fae figured out it was OâDonnell. Someone who had a nose like mineâor who saw him, or maybe tracked him back to his house. That fae could have killed OâDonnell to steal for himself the things OâDonnell had taken.
Maybe the murderer had timed it so Zee would be caught, knowing the Gray Lords would be happy to have a suspect wrapped up in a bow.
If I could find the killer and the things OâDonnell had stolen, I could hold those things hostage for Zeeâs acquittal and safety.
I could see why a fae would want the walking stick, but what about OâDonnell? Maybe he hadnât known exactly what it was? Heâd had to have known something about it, or else why take it? Maybe heâd intended to sell it back to the fae. Youâd think that anyone whoâd been around them for very long would know better than to think youâd survive long selling back stolen items to the fae.
Of course, OâDonnell was dead, wasnât he?
Someone knocked on my doorâand I hadnât heard anyone drive up. It might have been one of the werewolves, walking over from Adamâs house. I took a deep breath, but the door effectively blocked anything my nose might have told me.
I opened the door and Dr. Altman was standing on the porch. The seeing eye dog was goneâand there was no extra car in the driveway. Maybe sheâd flown here.
âYouâve come for the walking stick?â I asked. âYouâre welcome to it.â
âMay I come in?â
I hesitated. I was pretty sure the threshold thing only worked on vampires, but if notâ¦
She smiled tightly and took a step forward until she was standing on the carpet.
âFine,â I said. âCome in.â I got the old stick and handed it to her.
âWhy are you doing this?â she asked.
I deliberately misunderstood. âBecause itâs not my stickâand that sheep thing wonât do me any good.â
She gave me an irritated look. âI donât mean the stick. I mean why are you pushing your nose into fae business? You are undermining my standing with the policeâand that may be dangerous for them in the long run. My job is to keep the humans safe. You donât know what is going on and youâre going to cause more trouble than you can handle.â
I laughed. I couldnât help it. âYou and I both know that Zee didnât kill OâDonnell. I just made sure that the police were aware that someone else might be involved. I donât leave my friends out to swing in the wind.â
âThe Gray Lords will not allow someone like you to know so much about us.â The aggressive tension sheâd been carrying in her shoulders relaxed and she strode confidently across my living room and sat in Samuelâs big, overstuffed chair.
When she spoke again, her voice had a trace of a Celtic lilt. âZeeâs a cantankerous bastard, and I love him, too. Moreover, there are not so many of the iron kissed left that we can lightly lose them. At any other time I would be free to do what I could to save him. But when the werewolves announced themselves to the public, they caused a resurgence of fear that we cannot afford to make worse. An open-and-shut case, with the police willing to keep mum about the condition of the murder victim, wonât cause too much fuss. Zee understands that. If you know as much as you think you do, you should know that sometimes sacrifices are necessary for the majority to survive.â
Zee had offered himself up as a sacrifice. He wanted me to get mad enough Iâd leave him to rot because he knew that otherwise Iâd never give up, Iâd never agree
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher