“PR concerns, I suspect,” J said. “There has been someâ¦unpleasantness toward the fatae recently.” He shifted, leaning forward from the hips. It was a tell he had, a giveaway sign when he was thinking hard about something. “In New York, and in Philly. Nothing here in Boston that I've heard. Minor annoyances, mostly, although some have become physical. Bigotry picking up a stick. I can imagine that the Council is concerned that this incident of yours not spark a greater conflagration. As it might, with a ki-rin involved.”
I forced myself to focus on his words, not the echo of tingling on my skin. “Yeah. I can see why they'd want this handled without a hint of impropriety on their part.” And that would explain the crowd that had gatheredâthey
weren't there for the ki-rin, not to support or gawk at it, anyway. And the Council boys had been there to protect it, not confine it. “Nice to know the Council thinks we can be of some use, even if it's only to use us.”
All right, so I was bitter. The Council was split into regional areas, and half of them had refused to authorize their members to hire usâ¦but the leadership was willing to use us when it suited their needs, to protect their privileged asses.
“Bonita⦔ J's tone of voice was the same he'd used when I was missing the point during a lesson.
“Yeah, I know. It's going to take time to win them over. I know.” My stomach wasn't queasy anymore, and my skin didn't tingle, but now my entire body was so very cold, so cold I couldn't even shiver. It didn't feel like shock or trauma, thoughâI knew those. It wasn't even the emptiness of waiting to break, from before. It felt more likeâ¦like something had been cut out of me, where the outrage and fear should have been.
Weird. Very weird, discomforting, and I did not like. But if I said anything at all about it, J would freak.
I took a hit off my beer, and tried to wash the feeling away. “Well, we're on the job now, and first look says this probably won't take more than a day or two to wrap up and write a report. Yay us. What do you think will happen to the ki-rin?”
“For killing his companion's attacker? A slap on the hooves, maybe. He would be within rights to demand reparation from the dead man's kin, on the girl's behalf. Every Council from here to Beijing would back him on that, if he
did, and lonejacks⦔ He made a palms-up gesture. “Well, who knows how lonejacks will react to anything.”
I shook my head, rolling my beer bottle back and forth between my hands. I love J, but he's a bigot in his own liberal way. Council and lonejack and fatae: the carefully delineated, political world that J lived in. I'd never had to worry about any of this before I became a Pup.
“And the girl?” I asked him, instead. “What rights does she have in all this?”
“She can take the survivor to court, if she⦔ J's voice trailed off.
The bitterness surged to the fore again, and I grabbed onto it; anything other than that cold empty feeling. “Yeah. Take him to court, and not only does she have to relive the attack, but she has to explain what happened to the other guy, the one who actually attacked her. Oh, my oversize, horned intelligent magical companion killed him. With his horn. Yeah, a single slender horn, right in the middle of his forehead⦔
I hiccupped, and took a long pull of the beer to cover the crack in my voice. “J?”
“Yes, Bonita?”
“Why?”
He didn't pretend not to know what I was asking; he'd known me too long. “I don't know, Bonita.” J had been a great mentor; still was, in a lot of ways. He'd always been straight with me, never lied, not even when I almost wished he would. “There are theories, and psychological jingo, but I've never understood how it translates into the human mind, thank god. I've just always been thankful that you grew up
without encountering that sort of male, firsthand.” His voice was quiet, but I could hear the sorrow in it, for that girl, for me, for every girl who had something beautiful and joyful and honest taken from them for nothing more than selfish cruelty.
The cold forming under my skin cracked a little under the touch of his voice, and the itchy heat in my eyes promised a buildup of tears, but they didn't come. We just sat there, and breathed in the quiet security of the library, of civilized behavior, until the daylight faded, leaving us in the shadows.
J reached out and turned on a lamp, bringing an amber glow into the room. “You'll stay for dinner.”
It wasn't a question, but I nodded anyway. “Please.”
Â
A few hundred miles south in Manhattan, the same dusk was settling over the skyscrapers and brownstones, the sunset reflecting off the water and flashing last spears of light against the glass walls and windows of the financial district. Uptown, traffic was at rush-hour peak, but in the halls outside the PUPI offices, it was quiet. The seven-story building housed a dentist, a handful of CPAs, two lawyers, and a few offices whose signs didn't give away their contents or purpose. On the bottom floor, there was a photographer who was rarely there, and a literary agency. Neither office had many visitors outside of UPS and FedEx deliveries, although those seemed to come every day.
By contrast, the office across the hall had a steady stream of people going in and out, the same seven people, usually in a group and often, as now, in the middle of a seemingly continuous conversation.
“We could⦔
“No.”
“But⦔
“No.” Venec's growl warned the speaker not to push further. He had been itchy all day, morose and snappish, as though someone had shoved unbalanced current into his core, and he was in no mood to deal with the carping of overtired puppies.
There was a moving tangle of arms being thrust into coat sleeves and bags and backpacks being swung carelessly, and then they exited the office, Venec closing and locking the office door behind them.
“I don't see why you don't let us,” Nifty said, his voice calm and reasonable in a way that set Venec's teeth on edge. “It's not likeâ”
He cut the overeager PUPI off midsentence. “Because I said no and how many times will it take for me to say that until at least one of you listens?”
“Seven.” Sharon was positive.
“Four,” Nifty contradicted her.
“Eleven?” That was Nick, looking thoughtful.
Venec shook his head, feeling the exasperation simmer just under his skin. He really should know better by now, he really should. He'd scouted each of them, chosen them, trained them. The talkback came with the other traits he'd selected them for, no way around it. Mouthy and Talented, the pack of them.
On that thought, he paused and looked around for Pietr, who was the only one who hadn't ventured a guess. “Where
the hell is Pietr? Did we leave him in the bathroom or something?”
“I'm here.”
Sharon jumped, as the voice seemed to come from just at her left shoulder.
“I swear, I'm going to bell you,” she muttered. “Can't you cough on a regular basis, or something?”
“I would, but you wouldn't hear me.”
Venec frowned, listening in, this time intentionally. That had to be getting to be a sore pointâPietr swore he didn't intentionally disappear when he got stressed, it just happened. God knew, there was enough stress in the office right now, after the day they'd had.
The usual reaction to having a stressful problem was to chew at it until it was solved. That was good, if they were on a hot trail. But they didn't have enough information yet to solve it, so they'd start chewing on each other, instead. Part of his job was to prevent that. Bonnie's need to get the hell out had been one he supported, even though he wished she'd said something to him beforehand. Now he needed to get the rest of them to go home as well, before he had to put a boot under their tails.
“Children, enough.” He put extra exasperation into his tone, not difficult to do right then. “Everyone go home. Or go to a bar, or a strip club or whatever it is that you do to blow off steam. You just can't stay here.”
That was the rule he had invoked to get them to leave: nobody stayed late, not when neither of the Big Dogsâand yes, he knew what the team called themâwere around. He had made that rule after their first investigation. His partner
believed that, with his sister scolded and publicly shamed for her part in the death of the Null boy, her posse of anti-PUPI protesters wouldn't do anything more against them. Ben was less certain of that, and not willing to trust any of his team on that chance. Besides, it gave him a good excuse to make sure they got a decent night's sleep. His pups thought they were tough and tougher, and they were, but it wasn't a much-older couple this time, or disembodied bits packed neatly in a cooler. It was a young girl, their own age. He might only be ten years older, but he had seen more than all of them put together. The case was shaking them, even if they didn't realize it. Better they take a step away now, get a breath, do something normal.
“We go to Bonnie's,” Nick said in response. “But she's not home. I called and got her answering service, and she's not responding to a ping.”
“Oh, god, she's not still dating what's-his-name, is she?” Nifty asked, distracted. “The doink with the goofy smile?”
Nick threw up his hands in a dramatic gesture of disgust. “What, you think she tells me everything?”
“Yeah.” Sharon, Pietr and Nifty all responded in the same instant. Venec just closed the door quietly behind him while they were all preoccupied. He had no interest in their personal lives beyond how it affected their professional behavior, not even their sharp young technician, had no interest in her at all beyond her skills in the office.
“Right. No, she's not,” Nick said. “I think we scared him off.”
“We did no such thing.”
“Of course we did,” Sharon said. “He took one look at us and ran for the hills. No great loss, he wasn't right for her anyway. Too⦔
“Stable? Sturdy? Much a productive member of society?” Nifty asked.
“Boring. Bonnie should not be with someone boring.”
“Right.” Nick rolled his eyes, still being dramatic. “And we're all having such good luck on the dating front, we can give her advice.”
It seemed that nobody wanted to touch that comment, from the brief silence that fell.
“So if she's not home where are we going to go?” Nifty asked.
“We might try our own homes?” Sharon suggested caustically. “Since Big Bad Dad here won't let us work any longer, 'cause he's got a hot date or somethingâ¦.”
There was a flyer stuck to the nameplate on the door. Annoyed, Venec plucked it off, telling himself that his annoyance had to do with the solicitation, and not the way Bonnie's love life was being batted around. Too young, too much an employee. Too much trouble, damn it.
“We've done everything we can right now,” he said to them. “Ian will be back in the morning with the girl's testimony and the ki-rin's depositionâ” he hoped; his partner hadn't pinged to say he'd be late, but Ian was not what you'd call a steady-goer “âand then we'll be able to start putting the pieces together for our report. Right now, you're just chewing on your tails, and that's starting to chafe mine. So. Go. Home.”
He shooed them down the hall, noting with concern
that they didn't even stop at the elevator, but headed for the stairs at the end of the hallway. He understood their aversionânone of them were going to forget the boy who had died anytime soonâbut it wasn't good that they were now so conditioned to avoid it. He was going to have to do something about that, as well as the situation with Pietr.
He stopped to push the button for the elevator, meaning to set an example, and realized that he still had the flyer in his hand. Curious, he unfolded the salmon-colored paper and scanned the text, and then stopped and read it again, more carefully. On the surface it was an advertisement for a fumigation service. On the surfaceâ¦
He had seen the wording before, on a different flyer, on his own door.
Do you have problems with unwanted creatures in your space? Looking for a way to evict them forever without chemicals or fuss? Call us.
He hadn't thought anything about it then, piled with the other flyers and junk mail that seemed to accumulate every week; current use was one of the best natural cockroach repellents, and his building didn't have a rat problem that he was aware of. Now, on its own, the wording seemed somehow moreâ¦something. He didn't know what, but it made him uncomfortable.
He was a cautious, suspicious sort by training as well as natural inclination, and he didn't believe in ignoring his instincts when they said something was wrong.
It was probably nothing; he might simply be overreacting. Or it could be important. That was his job, too; to scout things that might be important, and keep Ian informed.
More, he didn't like something about the wording of these flyersâor the fact that there was no company name on it, no website or email, only a phone number. That sort of thing raised a definite red flagâit meant someone was trying not to leave a trace. Pay-as-you-go cell phones were easier to dump than websites these days.
It wasn't all current, this gig. Sometimes you had to use Null methods, too.
“Sharon,” he called, stopping her before she went into the stairwell. “Hang on a minute. You still in contact with the legal types you used to work with?”
She had come to them via a Talent-heavy law firm, specializing in discrimination cases and medical malpractice.
The blonde stepped back into the hallway, letting the others go on down the stairs without her, and looked at him inquiringly, switching easily from off-duty grousing to professional competence. “Yeah, why?”
He uncrumpled the paper, and handed it to her. “I need you to do some digging for me. Quietly.”
Â
It had been a long day filled with not much of anything, and Aden was tired. She heard the door open, the sound of Carl's steps in the hallway, but felt no urge to get up and meet him. The divan she was sitting on was comfortable, and he would come to her if there was anything to say. There was a skitter of claws as the dog was released from its leash and went into the kitchen to see if there was anything in its bowl.