Dog Eat Dog World: Limited Edition Bundle (Black Dog) Page 6
So much for the Richardsons being uninitiated.
The spirit pinched his lips together.
I braced on the wall until I got my feet under me. “We haven’t been formally introduced.” I showed him my left palm, let him wonder at the soft light pooling on the glossy oak floorboards between us as I gathered power in my hand. “I’m Marshal Thackeray with the Southwestern Conclave’s Special Operations Division.” His hands went to his vest, smoothing the fabric while he ignored me. “Your mistress is under investigation for poaching.” I tagged the bloody bed with my gaze. “And the list is growing.”
Hammering at the bedroom door sent relief coursing through me. My hand was a last resort. My power didn’t come with an off switch. Every time magic pulsed through my runes, it meant kill or be killed. Right now I was lit up, glowing, and I wasn’t sure I could diffuse the energy without feeding.
“Thierry,” Shaw called. “Are you all right in there?”
“I’m fine.” I jerked my head at the boggart. “Step away from the door so my partner can enter.”
“What is that smell? Dirt and oranges?” The spirit sniffed. “What is he?”
Species was up to Shaw to disclose or not. “A conclave marshal, just like me.”
Beady eyes darted to my hand then to the air vent overhead. “That is not an answer.”
I snorted. “And here you’ve been so forthcoming.”
The boggart straightened his shoulders. “I will speak to you only with my mistress present.”
Great, he had just pulled the boggart equivalent of asking for a lawyer. Before I could bluff him into a corner, he turned to vapor and drifted into the vent. At least the stink dissipated once the twerp went airborne.
“The door’s locked.” The wood muffled Shaw’s voice. “Do I need to open it or can you?”
“Give me a minute.” I shouldered aside the mattress and twisted the lock with my right hand. “I was just wrapping up an interview with the help.” When he glanced around the empty room, I said, “Mrs. Richardson enslaved a boggart.”
He brushed past me on his way inside the bedroom. “So the Richardsons are initiated after all.”
“Bethany is at least. With their separate living situation, I’m not sure how much the husband knows about what his wife is up to.” I circled him. “Also? We have a tiny problem.”
He frowned at my hand, at the shine encasing it. “Turn it off.”
“You know it’s not that easy.” I flexed my fingers. “It’s all charged up with nowhere to go.”
“No one said it was easy. Learning to use my lure was a pain in the ass, but I did it and you will too.” He stepped closer. “Slow your breathing. Shake off the residual energy. Release it into the air.”
I shut my eyes, focused on each inhale and exhale. Power fizzled in my palm.
“That’s it,” he soothed. “Relax. Let it go.”
His nearness, the soft rumble of his voice, distracted me.
“I can’t.” Magical residue clung to my skin, softly lighting my runes. “It won’t release.”
“Do you want me to help?” His voice lowered.
I was afraid to open my eyes as I breathed, “Yes.”
His coarse, thick fingers threaded with those on my left hand. My eyes popped open on a gasp when Shaw’s lips brushed mine. His taste was warmth and comfort, and it lulled me deeper into his embrace. I was floating when the first tugs registered. My palm stung, the skin burning. From the corner of my eye, I watched as my runes flared brighter before another long draw through my hand extinguished the light. I broke away from Shaw.
His eyes were cloudy. The hand that had held mine was sharp from the growth of his nails.
“Thanks,” I rasped.
“Any time,” he answered, voice as ruined as mine. He turned to go.
“You didn’t have to kiss me.” He could have stopped when our hands joined.
“I know.”
“Well.” I cleared my throat and followed him into the hall. “Okay then.”
Chapter 9
Shaw kept his eyes glued to the digital display as it counted down the floors we whooshed past on our way back to the lobby. I bit my lip to keep quiet. No sense in risking the fallout from what I had to say to him if the booth was wired for sound. They hadn’t bothered hiding the cameras. They hung in corners, watching silently.
By the time we hit the street, I had worked up a good head of steam. “Why did we leave?”
He kept walking, his long legs outpacing me. “We gathered all the information we could.”
“How can you say that?” I grabbed his arm. “Their boggart is a—”
“—slave who would die before incriminating its mistress. It’s part of their compulsion. They hate humans, hate fae too, but they’re trapped by their nature…” he exhaled, “…just like the rest of us.”
I recoiled, a wave of nausea bubbling in my stomach. “I guess that explains the kiss.”
He stopped so suddenly I smacked into his back.
“I wanted the kiss.” Shaw backed me against a wall of glass, the front of a coffee shop, I think. His palm slapped the pane over my head, pinning me with his body as much as the fury simmering in his dark copper eyes. “Hunger does not control me.”
“That was a cheap shot.” I rested my hand on his chest. “I shouldn’t have taken it.”
“Your aim is too good sometimes.” He covered my hand with his and gently removed it. He let me straighten, lowered his hand and got himself under control. “If the Richardsons left any evidence behind, the boggart would have hidden it in his den until they returned. By law we can’t question an indentured house spirit without its masters present, otherwise their testimony is coerced at best.”
“They killed someone there,” I reminded him.
“They killed a human.” He turned to leave. “That’s a matter for the human authorities.”
I darted around in front of him. “The Richardsons are human.”
He sidestepped me. “They’re suspected of committing crimes against Faerie.”
A cold realization settled in my chest. “You don’t care about them, do you?”
Pinching the bridge of his nose, Shaw regrouped. “I was raised to view humans as food. I might enjoy their company, I might have been fond of a few in my time, but at the end of the day they are a breed apart. They’re safer as far from our world as they can get. Don’t act like you don’t know this.”
“If Mac had stuck around,” I snarled, “Mom would have been fine in our world.”
“You know half their story.” He touched my cheek. “Don’t judge your father too harshly before you hear his side. Your mother did the best she could by you. She loves you. Your father might too.”
I scoffed. “He loves me so much he ditched both of us, so much I’ve never met him.”
“He’s old. He was born in Faerie and has lived among the fae most of his life. You can’t judge him by human standards. If you do, he’ll fall short every time.” Shaw started walking, slower this time so keeping up was easier. “I’ll make a note on the file, okay?”
“If the Richardsons are proven guilty, they aren’t walking away from this.” I said it out loud to make it real.
“No, they won’t.” He took my arm and crossed the road.
I glanced at where his hand gripped me. “You’re humoring me.”
“Yes.” He scanned the stores lining the street. “Your fondness for humans is dangerous.”
“Seeing as how I am half human,” I emphasized, “I do have a vested interest in that part of my heritage as well.”
His exhale closed the subject.
A footnote in a report was all dead humans would ever be to most fae. Either I accepted that mortal lives were worth less and turned a blind eye or I bided my time. My partner was temporary. After OJT I could work solo, and I would never let a case with fae-on-human violence get swept under the rug. I owed humans that much. They deserved an advocate. One who wouldn’t tolerate t
his footnote bullcrap.
All of a sudden, I was invested. This wasn’t just work, it was an actual, physical need to see justice served.
I guess I had more of Mac in me than I realized.
“Come on.” Shaw shoved inside a bagel joint. “We’re eating breakfast.”
“Now?” I tugged against him. “We’ve only got four hours left.”
“You need to eat.” He studied the menu board. “How about a bacon, egg and cheese bagel?”
I recognized that tone. It was easier to humor a man on a mission than to argue with one.
“Yes, that sounds delicious.” I nudged him into line. “Make it a double, and let’s go.”
He dragged me closer and bent to my ear. “You need something to settle your stomach.”
“My stomach is fine.” I turned so our noses touched. “Have you lost your ever-loving mind?”
“When I feed,” he said quietly, “the women are always starving after.”
I thumped his ear. “Have you ever considered it was the sex and not the feeding?”
Embarrassment blossomed across his cheeks, even painting the tips of his ears bright red.
“Huh.” I studied him. “I expected a bigger ego from an incubus.”
Releasing me, he shifted his stance and waited. “Do you want the bagel or not?”
“Yes.” I sighed. “We can figure out our next step while we eat.”
“The boggart changes things.” He placed our order, added a coffee and a tall frappé then paid. If travel expenses weren’t on the conclave’s dime, I might have argued. “We assumed Mrs. Richardson would fly straight home once she was cut loose in Odessa, but that might not be the case. She would trust the boggart to do exactly what it did—conceal incriminating evidence and refuse to speak with us until she was present. That frees her up to head straight for her office on the other side of town.”
“Office?” I dropped into a sleek wooden chair at a table affording us a view of the Richardsons’ building. “I thought she worked from home. I didn’t see any copies of lease paperwork in her file.”
“The building is in her husband’s name. He owns it outright, but it’s the address she uses on her invoices.” The arrival of our food interrupted him. The waitress beamed at him, but Shaw only had eyes for me. The poor girl left in a huff. I smiled politely at her, but she didn’t take that well either. “With the ranch in ashes and a boggart protecting her apartment, our last hope is they got sloppy at the office.”
He passed me my food and set out my coffee before serving himself and sliding the tray onto the table next to ours. While unwrapping my bagel, I felt his gaze on me. “I’m fine.” I lifted my hand. “I have some joint pain, the skin burns, but it’s fading. I’ll pop some ibuprofen and be as good as new.”
“That can’t happen again.” He punished his sandwich with a sharp bite. “It’s too dangerous.”
“Which part?” I picked off a piece of bacon and nibbled on it. “The feeding or the kissing?”
After coughing into his fist, Shaw gulped his scalding coffee rather than answer.
“Here’s the problem.” I waited for his full attention. “I like you. At the risk of sounding twelve, I think you like me too. Whatever this is between us isn’t going away just because you told it to. If it was that simple, we wouldn’t be having this chat. You would have ditched those feelings a long time ago and lost the guilt I see in your eyes when you look at me.” When he could breathe again, I forged ahead. “I get that I’m young by fae standards. I’m young by human standards too, but I’m not a little girl. I stopped being a kid the night I killed my friends. I’m not innocent. I’m not fragile. If you think for one minute I’m letting you kiss me and then walk away, you’ve been sniffing your own lure for too long.”
Shaw sat there staring at me like he had never seen me before in his life. Maybe I shouldn’t have mentioned the crush. Maybe I should have let him off the hook. Maybe I should have smiled through OJT and then freed him. Let him have his old life back. Let him hop in his truck and pursue his own dreams. Let the only contact we had be in the office or as we passed one another in the hall.
“Okay,” he said.
The frappé I had reached for slid out of my hand. “Okay?”
“We’re both adults. We can…” he swallowed hard, “…try.”
“You date women all the time.” I had watched the parade from my dorm window. “It’ll be fine.”
“I don’t date.” He scratched at a dry mustard spot on the table. “I don’t—I just don’t.”
His palm was damp when I set my hand in his. “Trying sounds good.”
Shaw looked pale as he tucked into his meal. Not hungry pale, plain old queasy.
I picked up my sandwich and ate while butterflies pirouetted in my stomach.
With both of us battling to keep our breakfasts down, I had to question what exactly we had agreed to.
Chapter 10
With the world’s most awkward breakfast behind us, Shaw and I returned to our rental car. I put myself in charge of plugging the office district address into my phone’s GPS. When a man says he has a good idea of where he’s going, I suggest having directions ready for when he inevitably realizes he doesn’t.
Fifteen minutes of listening to a digitized voice chirp commands brought us to Sovereign Row.
The area was industrial, lots of tin and steel sheeting, but the Richardsons’ warehouse was brick and mortar. A lush strip of lawn in an elevated planter splashed color against an ocean of concrete.
“Any word from Odessa?” I unbuckled and swung my bag across my shoulders.
His lips compressed as he checked his phone. “None yet.”
Our eyes met, transmitting a shared sense of unease without saying a word.
We stepped out of the car and scanned the empty parking lot before approaching the side door.
While I kept watch against windblown burger wrappers, Shaw used his all-key to gain access.
“I have got to get me one of those,” I mumbled.
“Guard the door.” He crossed the threshold into the building. “I’ll clear the space then circle back for you.”
I peered into the gloom where rolled-up carpets lined the walls like Aladdin’s version of a thrift-shop paradise.
“Not happening.” I followed a step behind him. “Last time I let you he-man through a building without me, you ended up flat on your back with second-degree burns covering your entire left side.”
“That chimera came out of nowhere,” he deadpanned.
I arched one of my eyebrows in response.
With a deliberate motion, he reached behind me and shut the door on my heels, inserting himself into my personal space. He lingered there with his arm propped behind my back, leaning toward me.
Suddenly I had trouble breathing. Damn my sensitive nose. The dust in here was killer.
A slight grin touched his lips. “According to cached pages from around the time of purchase, this place was renovated before Mr. Richardson bought it two years ago. Four office suites, each with its own half bath, a full kitchen and four dock doors sum up the amenities. I doubt it’s changed since.”
I sidestepped out of his hold and locked down my hormones. I had a job to do.
“Good to know.” I filled my lungs with musty air. “Smells clear to me. Nothing fae.”
A slim dagger glinted in his hand. He must have palmed it from his bag. “Follow my lead.”
Easing through the suite, I let my gaze wander. In addition to the rolled-up carpets were bolts of fabric, drapery material was my guess, and thick coffee-table-style books crammed with wallpaper samples extending past the binding. A brass plaque screwed into the outer door read Suite D. Three more to go.
Suite C opened into a collection of antique bedroom pieces with assorted tables thrown into the mix. Suite B was even less remarkable. Lamps sat on the floor against the walls. Sofas and loveseats occupied the center of the room. A few desks huddled in a corner. On th
e whole it reminded me of a staging warehouse full of stock for the fancy model homes Mom had loved to visit when I was a kid.
The kitchen sat opposite of Suite B, so we cleared it next. Empty cupboards, empty fridge. The sink carried the faint smell of rot and soy sauce. I checked the cabinets beneath it. Garbage disposal. For the scent to linger, somebody was using the place. Two weeks tops and that smell would be gone.
Shaw ducked out to check the last bathroom, leaving me to reach Suite A first. “The door’s locked.”
“Huh.” He jiggled the knob upon his return. “The door is locked.”
I cupped a hand to my ear. “Is there an echo in here?”
All-key in hand, he aimed for the lock. Metal screeched against metal. Second try, same result. “That has never happened before.”
“It must be spelled.” I pursed my lips. “Do you have the supplies to break a hex?”
“Several.” He patted his messenger bag. “It all depends on who or what Richardson wanted kept out.”
“She hasn’t taken any anti-fae measures so far.” I smoothed my left palm over the door. Tingles swept up my wrist when I gripped the knob, but the frame itself felt magic-free. “Stand back for a minute.”
With him out of the way, I turned sideways and kicked the door about a foot beneath the knob.
“That’s not going to work.” Shaw rifled through his bag. “Nothing is that easy.”
Starting to think he might be right, I gave it a second kick. Frustrated, I went for a quick third.
He pulled out a plastic bag of herbs and a lighter. “I hate to say I told you so, but—”
Fourth kick was the charm. Wood splintered, and the cheap door swung inward.
“Me too.” I tossed a smile at him over my shoulder. “Luckily, my foot just said it for me.”
“By the grace of the seven mothers,” he murmured, tucking away his supplies.
My head whipped toward the room I had been too busy being smug to examine. Rookie mistake. The spelled door should have put me on guard against worse traps inside, but I had let Shaw distract me.