Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
garage. It wasnât two people with spray paint, so I was pretty sure it was whoever painted a pair of crossed bones on my door.
His image was oddly shadowed, unrecognizable. The miscreant kept his face out of camera rangeâimpressive since there was a camera placed just in front of the door to catch the face of anyone breaking in.
The only thing the camera got a clear shot of was the gloves he woreâthe old-fashioned kind: white with little buttons on the wrist. There were odd glitches in the pictures, jumps where the camera turned off because there was no movement for it to follow. By the timers, it took him forty-five minutes to paint the bones on my doorâof which the cameras caught about ten minutes. Part of the missing time covered how the painter got there and how he left.
I didnât think he knew the cameras were there, and he still avoided them. Some supernatural creatures just donât film well: by tradition, vampires are among them. The height was right for Wulfe, who would be my first choice in any vampire magicking. Since Wulfe was the vampire who knew for certain that Iâd killed Andre, he was also my top suspect for the informer who had told Marsilia about my crimes.
The camera caught movement again.
âStop it,â Tony said.
Two figures, still indistinct, froze on the edge of the lights of my parking lot, and the little numbers on the lower right of the screen read 2:08 A.M. Time had jumped almost a half hour from when the bone painter had last been there.
âWhat was that all about?â he asked. âThe person at your door?â
âI donât know,â I told him. I almost said that his guess was as good as mine, but it wasnât. âMaybe someone was trying to break in, but didnât make it.â Impossible to tell what heâd been doing from the camera shot. âIt doesnât matter, though, because he obviously wasnât the one who graffitied all over.â
Tony stared at me. Cops were almost as good as werewolves at sensing lies. He turned abruptly and opened the door to examine it. Like Zee, he traced the crossed bones with a light finger.
âWho have you been ticking off besides Bright Future? This looks almost like something the old Mob might doâclassy, but designed to frighten the hell out of whoever received it.â
I sighed, shrugged. âNo one wanted me to get Zee out of the murder rap. But itâs not the kind of thing a fae would doâtoo visible. And a werewolf who was ticked off that badly would just attack. Iâve got some people whoâll look into it for me better than the police can.â
Frowning, Tony made an irritated noise. âIs this another one of your âItâs too dangerous for you mere human cops?ââ
I rubbed my arms, but I wasnât cold, just chilled. I was under no illusions. Marsilia could have just killed me, but she was playing. But no matter how playful the cat is, the mouse is just as dead in the end.
And the end would be whenever she decided. The only question was how many peopleâhow many of my friendsâshe decided to take down with me.
Maybe I was panicking prematurely. Maybe she would settle for a punishment. Stefan was hers, there was no reason for the gut-deep feeling that he wouldnât be the last to suffer for my sins. I didnât know Marsilia well enough to make that kind of prediction.
âMercy?â
âI donât know what the crossed bones mean.â Other than bad news. âZee tells me it is magical but probably not fae magic.â Zee was out, anyone who cared to would know that he was fae, which was the reason that the garage was mine now, instead of his. There was a lot of prejudice against the fae. âHe has a few contacts whoâll take a look at it for me. I know a few other people I can ask, too.â Adam had a witch on the packâs payroll for cleanup. She was good, but it would cost me a lot to hire her if Uncle Mike and Stefan didnât know what it was. This was shaping up into a real macaroni-and-cheese month. âHowever, none of them will come within a hundred miles of a police investigation. Do you have anyone on the KPD who is an expert in magic?â
Tony held my gaze for a minute before giving up with a sigh. âHell no, Mercy. You should have seen the brassâs faces when they watched that videoââ He stopped and gave me a guilty look. It was a video
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