Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
her in writing, Iâll take great pleasure in informing her of that.â
I sat up and rolled forward until I was up on all fours and my face was an inch from his. I kissed him lightly. He kept his hands on the cat.
âI like the way you operate, mister,â I said. âCan I interest you in the pancakes Iâm going to make after I shower?â
He tilted his head and gave me a deeper kiss, though he left his hands where theyâd been. When he moved away, neither of us was breathing steadily.
âNow you can tell me why you smell like Stefan,â he saidâalmost gently.
I raised my arm and sniffed. I did smell like Stefan, more than riding home in a van would have accounted for.
âWeird.â
âWhy do you smell like the vampire, Mercy?â
âBecause we exchanged blood,â I told himâand then explained what Stefan had told me about vampire bites on the way from Spokane. I couldnât remember which part was supposed to be secret and which parts werenâtâbut it didnât matter. I wasnât going to keep anything from Adam, not when heâd made me part of his pack.
Stefan was certain that neither he nor Blackwood would have been able to affect the wolves through me. But I didnât know enough about pack magic to be certainâand I didnât think he did either. The only thing I did know was that Adam would agree with what I had done, though I knew he wouldnât be ecstatic about it.
By the time Iâd finished, heâd dumped Medea on the floor (for which heâd have to atone if he wanted to touch her again today) in favor of pacing the room. He kept going a few rounds. He stopped when he was across the room and gave me an unhappy look.
âStefan is better than Blackwood.â
âThatâs what I thought.â
âWhy didnât you tell me about Blackwood after the first bite?â he asked. He sounded ... hurt.
I didnât know.
He gave a short, unamused laugh. âIâm trying. I really am. But you have to bend a little, too, Mercy. Why didnât you tell me what was going on until you were on your way back here? When it was too late to do anything about it.â
âI should have.â
He looked at me with dark, wounded eyes. So I tried to do better.
âIâm not used to leaning on people, Adam.â I started slowly, but the words came faster as I continued. âAnd ... Iâve cost you so much lately. I thoughtâa vampire bite. Ick. Scary ... But it didnât seem too harmful. Like a giant mosquito or ... the ghost. Frightening but not harmful. Iâve been bitten before, you remember, and nothing bad happened. If Iâd told youâyouâd have made me come home. And there was Chadâyouâd like him-this ten-year-old kid with more courage than most grown-ups, who was being terrorized by a ghost. I thought I could help. And I could stay out of Marsiliaâs hair so she would listen to you. It wasnât until Stefan was so worriedâand that was right before we came home, after the second biteâthat I realized that there was something more dangerous about them.â
I shrugged helplessly, blinking back tears that I would not let fall. âIâm sorry. It was stupid. Iâm stupid. I canât move without making everything worse.â I turned my face away.
âNo,â he said. The bed sagged as he sat down next to me. âItâs all right.â He bumped my shoulder deliberately with his. âYou arenât stupid. Youâre right. Iâd have made you come home if Iâd had to collect you myself with ropes and a gag. And your boy Chad would have died.â
I leaned a little against his shoulder, and he leaned a little back.
âYou never used to get into trouble like thisââamusement threaded through his voiceââexcept for a few memorable occasions. Maybe itâs like that fae woman, the one at Uncle Mikeâs, said.â He didnât say Baba Yagaâs name. I didnât blame him. âMaybe youâve absorbed a little of Coyote, and chaos follows you.â He touched my neck lightly. âThat vampire is going to be sorry for this.â
âStefan?â
He laughed, and this time he meant it. âHim, too, probably. But I wonât have to do anything about that. No. I was speaking of Blackwood.â
Adam stuck around until Iâd showered, and he ate the
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