Read Fire Touched Online

Authors: Patricia Briggs

Fire Touched (14 page)

It was only for a moment. His voice was faintly cheerful as he
said, “So your buddy opened the door, and he had Dad with him—and this kid. He told us that was as much as he could do, but that the kid could get us out and on our way. The kid, Aiden, had agreed to do this in return for my father's help in gaining him a little time—twenty-four hours of safety under the pack's protection. Hoping—as you probably have figured out—to see if he could finagle that into something really useful, like getting him away from here to somewhere else. Somewhere that he's not so likely to end up back with the fae”—the darkness was back, just for that one word—“who would like to take him apart to see how he works.”

“We'll see,” said Adam, as if Tad had asked him a question. “We need to know a lot more about him than he's told us. I'm not unhappy to thumb my nose at the fae—but I won't do it over someone who will turn around and stab my friends in the back. Not even if that someone looks like a helpless little kid.”

Tad looked down at his computer screen and brushed it with a forefinger. “Sometimes it's hard to remember he's not just a kid, Adam. He was just human, not witchborn or anything. No one knows how he can do fae magic the way he does—not even the fae. They know it's something Underhill did, and they're jealous—as if Underhill stole something they thought belonged to them and gave it to a human.”

Like Tad, I thought. Mostly the half fae were just messed up, but Tad had come out with a powerful talent for metal magic—which was rare even in full-blooded fae. Were they jealous of that, too?

Tad rubbed his face. “He's just human. But all I can think of is
Star Trek
and ‘Charlie X.'”


Star Trek
?” I asked, puzzled.

Adam grunted. He put a hand on my shoulder. “Charlie is a
kid who survived a spaceship crash and was rescued by aliens,” he said grimly. “They gave him powers so that he could survive. And, after a very long time, the
Enterprise
and her crew show up and rescue him. So he survived and is rescued . . . but he has all of this power and is turned loose on the universe without the experience of growing up human. He doesn't understand how to interact with people, how to listen when someone tells him ‘no.' And because of his power, no one can make him stop. Eventually, the aliens have to come and take him back with them, where he will be alone for the rest of his life—because it's not safe for him to be out with the rest of the universe.”

Tad nodded earnestly. “Now, your buddy who was repaying a favor to you, for a fae, he is pretty softhearted. I think he couldn't stand to watch what the fae were prepared to do to figure Aiden out. They killed the last one of these kids they found—last year. That one was water touched. They told Aiden that the water-touched boy was crazy, but from what your buddy told me, he wasn't crazy when he came out of Underhill. That happened later.” He took a breath. “I don't think your buddy knows any more about what this kid is like than you or I do. I think he felt sorry for him. I do, too. He sure deserves a chance, don't you think? After surviving Underhill for all those centuries?”

“But ‘Charlie X' weighs on your mind,” Adam said. “Are you guarding him from harm, or us from him?”

Tad smiled. “Both, if you don't mind.”

“You need to sleep,” I said.

He nodded around the room at the occupied chairs and sofas. “I'll sleep down here just fine. Let Zack have the bedroom.” He took a breath and smiled brightly. “I'd just as soon not be alone for a while anyway.”

Paul glanced at him obliquely, met Adam's gaze, and nodded. Our pack had Tad's back. Tad could keep Aiden safe, and us safe—and the pack would keep him safe.

—

I made Adam strip and let me look at his shoulder.

There were bruises and swelling—a testament to how bad it had been. There had been other hurts, too. Places where I could see the faint remnants of bruises and damage. I touched those to make sure that what I was seeing was true healing and not some inner bleeding finding its way out.

Something that had been tight since I watched him run up the bridge for the first time relaxed. He was okay. He'd fought a troll and come out okay.

“Your turn,” he said, while I ran my hands over a bump on his lower ribs.

“My turn?” It was an old bump, gotten before he'd become a werewolf. He'd told me that it used to be much worse: ragged, purple-edged scars over a broken rib where someone had shot him in another life on another continent. Some of his scars had disappeared overnight after he was Changed. But that one was fading gently. Someday it would be gone.

“Your turn.” His voice was dark with something other than pain. “That's how we do this, remember. You check me out, I check you out.”

I looked up at him to meet his eyes and saw heat that had nothing to do with the room temperature. “I don't think you are looking for bruises,” I told him.

He put his hand under my chin, and without any kind of force,
lifted me to my feet. “I've been a soldier,” he told me, his home state of Alabama thick in his voice. “Been Alpha longer than that. Sometimes I think that I've been on the front lines for most of my life, one way or the other. And no one, but you, wants so badly to keep me safe. You'll have to forgive me if I find that sexy.” He kissed me, and when he pulled back, the Southern gentleman was gone. “But I am not blind, so although I want you naked in the worst way,” he told me conversationally, “I've also been watching you limp around all evening. So strip down and let me take a look.”

I snickered. “You get many girls with that line?”

“Which one? The ‘sometimes I think I've been on the front lines'?”

I waved my hand. “Nope. The”—I dropped my voice down in imitation of his—“‘strip down and let me take a look' line.” In my own voice, I said, “On the other hand, if you pulled out the wounded-soldier line, you'd be batting them off like flies.” I paused, frowned at him. “You do know that the time for your using that line is gone, right? No more pickups for you. Alpha or no, I'll torture you to death, one day at a time.” I looked at him, and he didn't seem to be taking me seriously. “Drip. Drip. Drip,” I said. “If you even think about another woman like that.”

He waited, a small smile on his face. “I understand,” he said after waiting a courteous moment to make sure I was finished. “And just to keep such matters on the up-and-up, if I catch you flirting seriously with someone, I will rip out his throat.”

“Fair enough,” I said. “For the record, the ‘strip down and let me take a look' line is not very sexy.”

He raised an eyebrow. “Mercy”—he deepened his voice—“strip down and let me take a look.”

I shook my head. “That's not fair. The voice doesn't count.” But as I talked, I stripped down. Because underneath the sexy voice was worry, as if just because he'd hidden how bad his wounds were from me, I would have done the same to him.

My knees were skinned, one shin was bruised, and when Adam touched my chin, it hurt.

“From tripping while I was carrying you,” I told him.

He nodded and turned his attention to a scrape on my hip. He was tanned, but my skin was still a shade or two darker than his, so mostly my bruises don't stand out as much as his. “This didn't come from a fall.”

“It's just a scrape,” I said.

He raised an eyebrow. Okay, it was a scrape and bruises that were still blossoming in glorious profusion.

“I honestly have no idea,” I said.

He put his forehead against mine. “I'm sorry.”

“About what?” I asked.

“Fussing,” he said.

I wrapped my arms around him, trying not to see the troll lift a car over his head. “I fussed first,” I said shakily. “I fussed first.”

When he kissed me, it was a gesture of comfort. But with the both of us naked, it didn't stay that way for long. We made love on the soft carpet, and afterward, he fell asleep on top of me. Exhausted, I thought, from the fight and from the healing that followed. I held him and wondered what I'd done to us. Wondered what changes the boy would bring.

Coyote had told me once that changes were neither good nor bad—but brought with them some of both.

I closed my eyes and prayed for more good than bad, for Adam's safety, for Jesse and the pack. Then I thanked God for helping to
return Tad and Zee out of the hands of our enemies. I fell asleep before I was finished.

—

The phone rang at four in the morning. My face was buried in my pillow—though I didn't remember moving from the floor to my bed. Adam moved, and the phone quit making that annoying noise—I almost fell back asleep.

“They told me,
Wulfe
told me, I should call you. That you're taking care of such matters now,” said a high-pitched but sexless voice.

Wulfe's name had me sitting upright on the mattress.

“I see,” said Adam.

The voice said, “We are paid to watch the hotels and motels around town and to call the Mistress's people when one of their kind shows up.”

“I see,” said Adam again.

There was a pause. “Are we going to get paid?”

“I am sure you will,” Adam said. “I will call the Mistress and discuss the matter with her further. Is this a good number to reach you at?”

“Yassir,” the voice said.

Adam ended the call.

“Do you know who that was?” I asked.

“Probably a goblin,” Adam replied. “But I'm going to call and check.”

Wulfe answered the phone himself. “Adam,” he purred. “How lovely to hear from you.”

“Goblins?” Adam asked.

“I see they contacted you,” Wulfe said. “They are a little unreliable, so I wasn't sure they would.”

“How much are you paying them?”

“Three hundred for every stray vampire they find,” Wulfe told him. “And a thousand a month to keep them looking.”

“I'll pay the three hundred,” Adam said. “But I won't pay the thousand.”

“Good luck finding the vampires who show up around here, then, darling,” said Wulfe.

“Oh, I'll find them all right,” Adam told him. “From what I understand, most of them are after Marsilia. I'll just keep an eye on the seethe, and when they find her, I'll find them.”

There was a little silence. “Smart boy,” said Wulfe, “aren't you just a smart boy. Fine. We'll pay the thousand. But they'll report to you, and you will pay for the actual sighting.”

“Yes,” Adam agreed.

The first change, I thought.

Adam disconnected and called the goblin back—explaining the new order to . . . him or her, I couldn't be sure from the voice alone.

Goblins, according to Ariana's book, were neither fish nor fowl. They qualified for status as fae—they could disguise what they were with illusion spells. But the fae didn't want them. For human purposes, the goblins counted themselves fae, without argument from the Gray Lords, but the goblins didn't want to be fae, either. Part of the problem seemed to be that goblins could reproduce as fast, if not faster, than humans, and the other part was that many of the fae considered goblin flesh a delicacy.

When Adam got off the phone, I said, “So the vampires are punishing you because I got uppity?”

He shook his head. “They're seeing if we're serious. Do you want to come with me to the hotel?”

I considered it. “Bran sends minions; he only goes himself if he needs to rain death and destruction down upon the world.”

“Yes,” Adam said. “But I'm awake, I might as well go check it out myself. I thought you might like to go along for the ride.”

I couldn't help smiling—and it was stupid. There was a strange vampire in town, and my own hasty words meant that we had to go confront him or her. But Adam wanted me with him on an adventure.

“I'm coming,” I said. I glanced at the clock. Six hours of sleep was
plenty.

6

Adam put on one of the suits he had for work, power suits designed to let people know who was in charge. That they looked spectacular on him was a bonus for me and a matter of indifference, if not embarrassment, for him. I'd chosen this one, so the colors were right—steel gray with faint chocolate stripes that brought out his eyes. The tie he wore with it was the same chocolate brown. He might not care about looking pretty, but he did care about the impression of power he made.

People who were impressed by him were not so likely to try to screw him over, in business or with fang and claw. He enjoyed fighting, though I didn't think he'd ever admit it to anyone else. What he didn't like was the way fights could spill over onto the people he was responsible for: the people, human and other, who worked for his security company as well as the pack. He preferred to stop trouble before it happened when he could—thus, the suits.

After some serious consideration, I put on a blue silk blouse, a
pair of black slacks, and shoes I could run in. Next to Adam, I didn't look underdressed, precisely—I looked like his assistant. But that was okay. Adam and I worked best together when he took point and I faded into the background. It suited our personalities. Adam was a “what you see is what you get” kind of guy, but I was happy to be sneaky.

We pulled into the Marriott parking lot, and I looked up at the balconies and sliding glass doors outside each room. The sky was still dark, but it wouldn't be in an hour.

“Unusual hotel for a vampire,” I murmured as I got out of the car. The Marriott was covered with huge windows. Not that there was much choice; the Tri-Cities had mostly grown up during and after the Second World War, when the old hotels of small-windowed rooms, chandeliers, and ballrooms had given in to the practicality of the motel, efficient and graceless—with lots and lots of windows. Still, it seemed to me that the Marriott was awfully light and airy for a vampire to feel comfortable with.

I tucked my arm through Adam's, and we started for the hotel. We hadn't gotten three steps from the car before the sound of hard wheels on blacktop had us both turning to see a skinny teenager approaching us rapidly. Casually, I dropped Adam's arm and stepped back. The kid hopped off the skateboard with a kick that threw the board up so he could catch it without bending down. He stowed it under one arm as he walked.

“Hey, man,” he said, his voice familiar from the early-morning call, but it was far more laid-back—less meth-head and more stoner. “I looked you up on the Internet to see why suddenly I'm dealing with the werewolves and not the vampires. Nice work on that troll.”

“Was it?” asked Adam. “There aren't many trolls left, I am given to understand.”

The boy spat on the ground. “They can all rot for all I care. Nasty pieces of work, trolls—killing 'em ain't no cause for tragedy. Now, I'd like to get paid and get out of here before someone wonders why I'm riding around on this toy at five in the morning.”

“What did the vampire look like?” I asked.

He shrugged, but there was something sly in his eyes when he said, “Weren't me what saw him.” He held out his hand.

Adam handed him an envelope. The goblin in human guise dropped the skateboard back on the ground and hopped on the battered and scarred surface. He didn't stop it when it started to drift backward. He gave Adam a salute with the hand that held the white envelope, dropped a toe, and spun his board around to speed off into the night.

Three cars down from where Adam had parked there was a white Subaru Forester with California plates. I remember cars, a hazard of my job. I tugged Adam to a stop and examined it more carefully.

Subaru Foresters weren't uncommon—there were three others in the parking lot. But I'd followed this one for miles last winter. I sniffed at the driver's-side door and smelled a familiar vampire.

“Thomas Hao,” I said. I'd fought beside Thomas a couple of months ago, and we'd helped Marsilia destroy a nasty vampire. I wondered if Marsilia had known who he was when she turned him over to us this morning. I considered the goblin's half lie about not being the one who saw the vampire and decided she did.

“This should be interesting,” said Adam after a moment, but he'd relaxed a little, and so had I.

Thomas Hao was the Master of San Francisco. That's all I'd known about him the last time we met. But it turned out that he was something of an enigma, even by vampire standards. Like
Blackwood, the vampire I'd helped kill in Spokane, Hao ruled without other vampires in his city. Unlike Blackwood, Hao was the opposite of crazy. He'd never had a large seethe, but a couple of years ago he'd shooed the few vampires he controlled out to other seethes and remained in San Francisco alone. No one knew why, though there were lots of stories about Thomas Hao, about what happened when someone made a move against him. I'd seen him hold off two very powerful, very old monsters all by himself.

There was no question that Thomas was a very dangerous vampire. But he was also a man of principle and logic, not driven by ambition. It wasn't just me who thought so. As vampires went, Hao was almost a good man. I liked him.

It didn't take long to find his room. We got on the elevator that smelled of him and hit every button on the way up. His room was on the top floor. We followed Thomas's scent down the hall.

“There is a fae here, too,” I whispered. I'd first scented her downstairs, and her track followed Hao's too closely for coincidence.

Adam nodded and knocked softly at the door where Thomas's scent had led us. No need to bother the neighbors, and a vampire would hear us.

“A moment,” said Thomas's voice. It would not have carried to human ears, so he wasn't expecting room service.

The vampire opened the door and regarded us for a moment. He was dressed in a brown silk button-down shirt and black jeans. His feet were bare, and his hair was damp. I never had been able to read his face, but I could read his body language. Whoever he'd been expecting, it had not been us.

He was not a big man, but in vampires, that didn't mean much. His hair was cut short and expensively. He smelled of the fae
woman whose scent trail had paralleled his, as if he might have been touching her just before he answered the door.

He stepped back and gestured us in, closing the door behind us when we accepted his wordless invitation. His room was a suite with a pair of chairs and a couch in the living area and a view that, in the daylight, would be of the Columbia River. There was a door toward the back of the room, and it was shut.

“Please,” he said to us, “take a seat. May I get you some refreshments? If you do not enjoy alcohol, there is soda, I believe, as well as water.”

Polite vampire. It was a good thing that Adam and I had come, that we hadn't sent a pair of werewolves who could have misread Thomas and tried to issue threats—assuming Thomas would have been polite to other werewolves.

“Water,” Adam said. “Thank you.”

Thomas looked at me. “Water is good for me, too,” I said. “Thank you.” We all had good manners here, yes, we did.

He served us the water and took a glass and filled it from an already opened bottle of red wine. He took a sip of wine and smiled politely. “To what do I owe this visit?”

“I'm afraid that is our question,” Adam replied.

“You were expecting Marsilia or Wulfe, right?” I asked.

“I called them when we got in,” he said. “And Wulfe assured me that someone would be over before long. I did not expect to see the Alpha of the Columbia Basin Pack and his wife running errands.”

Marsilia had known who was here all right.

“Errands,” said Adam thoughtfully.

None of us had taken a seat, I realized.

“Marsilia can't send us on errands,” I told Thomas. “We inherited
this job.” I thought about that. “‘Inherited' is the wrong word. Co-opted. Not quite the right word, either. Had it dumped on us unexpectedly.”

Thomas frowned thoughtfully. “I saw a news program earlier,” he said. “You killed a troll and proclaimed the Tri-Cities your territory.”

He was looking at me. I cleared my throat. “I didn't kill the troll. That was Adam and some of the pack. And, technically speaking, the whole of the Tri-Cities has always been our territory.”

I caught something in Thomas's gaze, and I realized that he was highly amused—though it didn't show on his face except for a quirk of his eyebrow. But I was positive I was right.

“As you saw”—I was going to have to find the news clip myself so I would know exactly what people knew about it—“I made a true but unpolitic declaration on the bridge yesterday. The fallout of that is still settling.” I pinched the bridge of my nose hard to distract myself from that thought. No need to panic in front of a vampire. Adam's hand touched the small of my back.

“So when one of the vampire's snitches called us to tell us there was a vampire visiting,” I continued. Adam was letting me do a lot of the talking, and I wondered why. “We contacted the seethe. Wulfe indicated that Marsilia was ceding the job of policing stray vampires to us. He didn't say
you
had called them, just that his minions had found a strange vampire who'd checked into this hotel.”

“We'll have to discuss that with him,” murmured Adam.

Hao laughed then, showing his fangs in a manner that might have been accidental if he'd been a new vampire or someone less subtle. I'd noticed before that the vampire only laughed or smiled for effect rather than because he was actually amused or happy. I
was pretty sure that happy and he were seldom in the same room at the same time. He stopped abruptly.

“What do you need to feel that you have successfully defended your territory?” he asked.

“The usual,” drawled Adam. “What are you doing here and how long are you staying? Restrict your feeding to nonfatal and non-publicity-gathering ways. Be a good guest.”

Thomas nodded. “Fair enough. It's no more than I told Marsilia. I am here as escort for a friend traveling to Walla Walla. I will stand at her back while she tells the Gray Lords where they can stick their decrees.”

Apparently, we weren't going to pretend that he didn't have a fae in his bedroom.

“Marsilia,” Thomas Hao continued, “owes me on several fronts, which made the Tri-Cities seem safer to rest in than Walla Walla.” He paused.

“I have no quarrel with you,” said Adam.

Thomas inclined his head. “We'll stay here all day and one more day, then return home the following evening. I have no need to hunt at this time. If that changes, I will kill no one under your protection who has not harmed me or mine.”

“Thomas.” The door to the bedroom opened, and a woman came out. She walked steadily with the help of a pair of crutches, the kind that wrap around the forearm instead of the ones that fit under the armpit. “You sound like a fae driving a bargain.” She didn't sound as if she were complimenting him, even though she was fae herself.

The social temperature in the room dropped to well below zero. Thomas Hao lost his humanity, a very dangerous predator, with a half-empty glass of wine in his hand.

They weren't lovers, I didn't think. The body language and scent were wrong for that. The scents of lovers tend to blend rather than lie on top of each other. His fierce protectiveness told me that whatever their relationship was—he would kill to protect her, and he was ready to do so right now.

Like Hao, she was dressed in silk, an opaque shift that covered her from shoulders to midcalf. The gown was simple and might have been plain if it weren't for the color, which was white for the first few inches, then a yellow that deepened all the way down the garment to a rich, bitter orange at the hem.

Also like Hao, she was barefoot. Her eyes, as they met mine, were crystal-clear gray. Her hair was very close to the fiery color of the hem of her gown. With that hair and the milk-white skin, she should have had freckles, but I saw no sign of them—of course, she was fae. If she had freckles and didn't like them, she could have hidden them. But I suspected she just didn't have them, because she'd made no effort to disguise more egregious barriers to the out-and-out beauty that I suspected was hers by nature.

She was so thin that I could see both bones in her forearms. Huge red scars wrapped around her wrists and ankles as if she'd been bound and all but ripped off her extremities trying to get free.

“Introduce me, please,” she said. Adam glanced from the vampire to the fae. He took a step back. He reached out and grabbed my hand so that when he sat down on the overstuffed couch, he pulled me down as well. He settled back, letting the couch half swallow him. I sank down next to him, and he wrapped one arm around my shoulder. Even so, Thomas stared at Adam for a count of three until the fae woman made it to his side.

“Manners,” she said without reproof, though she repeated, “You should introduce us, Thomas.”

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