Stabenow, Dana - Powers Of Detection (Editor)

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Stabenow, Dana - Powers Of Detection (Editor) Page 5

by Powers Of Detection (Editor)(lit)


  Gunk said nothing. He tried to be invisible because he didnt really want to have to deal with Tawk while he was waiting for the fat human to kill something else.

  “Hey Gunk! Hey Gunk! Hey Gunk! Tawk came and settled next to him, causing the wire they were both on now to sway.

  “Gunk! Gunk! Hey! Hey! Hey! Tawk said. Tawk was one of the real creatures, but he was not exceptionally bright. “I heard there was a big dead thing somewhere down by the water shadows. Did you see it?

  “No, Gunk said, not taking his eyes off the fat man.

  “I thought I could smell it, but I wasnt sure, Tawk said, then he followed Gunks gaze, knowing that he was watching something important.

  “Does that fat man have something...

  “Listen, Tawk, Gunk cut him off quickly and pointed with his beak back toward town, “there is music in the big building. Someone playing piano. Its really quite lovely. I just heard it. You should go and listen.

  “Really? Tawk said, standing alert as if the music was happening right then, right now. “Big building, you say? And before Gunk gave him an answer Tawk was away.

  Real creatures love nothing so much as music. Tones rising and falling tickled a real creature as if those sounds contained the voices of all their relatives. When real creatures heard music they could barely think straight, so caught up were they in the flying tones. They loved music almost as if it were invisible food. In the summer the real creatures gathered near the back of the big building when the Dumpsters were full from the tourist lunches, and human beings played music inside with the doors open. Gunk didnt want to tell poor Tawk that it was only a school group listening to a recording of Glenn Gould playing the Goldberg variations. Tawk couldnt tell the difference between the Goldberg variations and a piece of cherry pie, but at least he wasnt distracting Gunk any longer.

  Yes, real creatures love nothing so much as music... unless it is some tasty dead thing ripening in the sun. When Gunk turned his attention back to the street, the fat man was gone. “Awww, said Gunk. Then he flew down into the street, to the stop sign where the streets crossed. There was no fat man. He flew to the top of the dead spruce behind the ball field. No luck. Then he flew to the buzzing electric pole near the hospital. Nothing.

  Deer can disappear up inside a mountain, and river otters can turn themselves into water, but everybody knows human beings cannot disappear. They can walk into buildings or crawl inside noisy machines, but they never leave without a trace. So the fat man must be in one of the buildings back on the street where he had been distracted by that stupid Tawk.

  As he began gliding through the air, Gunk was feeling guilty about how he had treated Tawk. Tawk was kind of slow, and Gunk certainly didnt want to share the first few minutes of his dead thing with him, but Tawk was a real creature, after all, a real creature and a loyal friend. He would be sure to let Tawk know when he found the new dead thing. He would let him know after he had had a few minutes alone with it.

  Gunk found the place he had last seen the fat man, and he landed in the middle of the sidewalk and began waddling down the street. Sometimes you had to get close to the ground and look carefully. “Hey! he said softly, not wanting to be heard by any other real creature. “Im looking for a fat man who smells like a dead thing. Anybody seen anything?

  The dog tied up in the muddy yard lifted his tired head and looked over. “Nope. Wasnt paying attention. Sorry. And he put his head back on top of his dirty paws.

  “Me. I might have seen him, a skinny brown cat with scars running across her face said from under the sagging wooden stairs. “Whats in it for me? She watched Gunk with a steady gaze. Cats cannot be trusted unless you are certain you are out of their jumping range, or offering them something well within the realm of their own self-interest.

  Gunk took two short hops backward. “He killed a human being just a bit ago, but he wasted it. Im assuming hes a decent hunter and must be going to kill something again soon.

  “And this means what to me? The cat hunched low on all fours.

  Gunk hopped up on the handrail of the porch. “When I find the new dead thing, I will tell you about it first. Ill tell you where to find it, and Ill give you five minutes before I tell the other real creatures.

  “Ten minutes.

  “Seven, Gunk said immediately, in a tone that betrayed just enough impatience. “And only if what you tell me turns out to be accurate.

  The cat stretched and licked her front paw. “Fine, she said, “he went in the door across the street. Just a few minutes ago.

  “Thank you, Gunk said, and he stood up straight to glide over.

  “And... the cat added, “someone else followed him in there. And she motioned with her flat nose to the automobile left running in the street.

  Why hadnt he noticed it before? There was that weird hissing of voices coming from inside, and no one was sitting in it. The car had lights on top, and they were alternating blue and white. “Awww, Gunk said. He hoped he wasnt too late.

  The doors, of course, were shut tight, and the windows were down. He could hear human beings talking through the windows. He walked straight over to the glass and knocked once. “Hey, Hey, Hey. Any dead thing in there is mine! He couldnt believe that another human being was going to get to his prize first. The fat man was in there, he was sure. He walked stiffly to the window and craned his head as far as he could around the corner of the window frame. There was another man in the house. This man had a big leather belt and a bunch of jangly things hanging from it.

  He had to get inside. Gunk looked around, and the very top window was open just a crack. Now, usually real creatures will not go anywhere there is not lots of sky, but this was an emergency, so he pushed through the crack and walked down to the edge of the stairs. He looked down and saw no one, so he risked flying down to the next stair landing. There he saw the fat man slumped in a chair and the other man with the creaky leather belt standing over him. The standing man was angry. The fat man had both hands on his lap. He had taken off his coat and it was resting just under his hands. It didnt look or smell like there was fresh blood anywhere. Gunk could make out the faint smell of the old dead thing this stupid, wasteful man had rolled into the ocean back under the wharf. It gave Gunk hope that there wasnt a new, lovely dead thing yet.

  “Come on, Stan. Its a little hard for me to believe that you just found the money on the sidewalk, the standing man said.

  “I dont care what you find hard to believe. Its the Gods truth.

  “Stan, you know youre not under arrest. Im here in your own house to ask you to tell me the truth. It will go a lot easier for you if you do. It will go a lot easier for his family if we recover his body. Where did you put him, Stan. Please tell me.

  “I have no idea what youre talking about, Officer.

  “So thats your story then? You found the five hundred dollars you say he owed you lying on the sidewalk in front of his business?

  “Its not my story. Its the truth. Now Im asking you again, either put me under arrest or leave.

  “Well, Stan, Im going to leave for a minute anyway. But I have to tell you Im going to have a lot more questions.

  “I aint afraid of questions, the fat man said, still sitting in his chair, but with one of his hands now under the coat that was lying across his lap.

  “Okay then, Ill be going, the standing man said, and he turned his back on the fat man with his one hand under the coat on his lap. Gunk noticed that the sitting man seemed a bit more relaxed, and that worried the hungry bird.

  The standing man was almost out the door and Gunk could stand it no longer.

  “Hey! Hey! Hey! Kill him. Kill him. Kill him, Gunk screamed from the top of the staircase.

  The sound scared the fat man, and he jumped out of his chair with a gun in his hand.

  “Drop it... NOW, someone yelled, and Stan looked for a long moment at Gunk on the stairs. He looked at him as if he recognized both him and what was coming next.

  “Well somebody sho
ot, for crying out loud! Gunk screamed, while the fat man turned with the gun still in his hand and two loud blasts came from the doorway. Blood spatter as lovely as summer-ripened raspberries sprayed across the room.

  It wasnt until the smoke had cleared and the chiming in his head had stopped that Gunk realized that there was music playing. The police officer pressed his hand down into the fat mans throat and shook his head slowly back and forth. All Gunk could hear was the sound of a cello. The great fat man had been listening to Pablo Casals playing one of the Gamba Sonatas, and when the police officer left the room Gunk found himself quite alone with the corpse of this wonderfully abundant human being. It was nearly perfect. He was dimly aware of the sirens and footsteps outside, but Gunk didnt care, even if he couldnt see the sky or hear the treacherous cat padding down the stairs for her payoff.

  “Lovely, lovely, he said to himself, and as the sonata came to rest he waddled over to the dead mans open eye and just before plucking it out he added one more time: “lovely.

  The Price

  ANNE BISHOP

  “Well, shit, sugar. Someone had a party and didnt invite me. And it was the kind of party I used to like. Nasty.

  And yet, as I stood in the doorway, looking at what had been a nicely decorated sitting room, I felt edgy, uneasy. Theres no law against murder among the Blood, and if Id come upon a room like this when I lived in the Realm of Terreille, I wouldnt have thought twice about it. But in the Realm of Kaeleer, the Blood still live by the Old Ways, and the whole dance of Protocol and power usually works to keep confrontations from becoming fatal.

  So what happened last night that ended with three men being hacked to pieces, resulting in a room now redecorated in a blood-and-gore motif?

  And why did I think hacked? Using Craft and the power that makes the Blood who and what we are, a person could do just as much damage to a human body. But something in the room whispered to me that this was... not personal, exactly, but definitely a hands-on killing. There was a lingering sense of fury and hatred here.

  I know those feelings well, and my past contained rooms just as messy. But there was something else here that I almost recognized but couldnt quite name.

  Of course, that could have been nothing more than annoyance with myself for being at the scene. If Id stayed home this morning, I would have been tucking into breakfast right now. But Id gone for a walk and ended up at this establishment because they serve a fine breakfastand because this place was the closest thing to a Red Moon house in Kaeleer. So Id come here to take a look at my past, which had contributed to my recently failed romance.

  The Blood have a saying: Everything has a price. The price for my first attempt at a physical relationship with a man where money didnt change hands was a bruised heart. Funny how the heart gets bruised when someone tells you youre not what he wantseven when you already know hes not what you want either.

  But theres nothing like a bit of slaughter to take a persons mind off her own problems.

  Using Craft, I stepped up on air so that I was standing a handspan above the carpet. I walked into the room. Three male bodies were splattered over the carpet, the walls, the furniture, and the painted screen that turned one corner of the room into a private area. I assumed there were only three because I found three left handsand I found other body parts in triplicate.

  “Lady Surreal?

  As I turned toward the doorway, I lowered my right hand and called in my favorite stiletto, using Craft to keep it sight shielded so it wouldnt be obvious I had a weapon ready. A moment later, when I recognized the man in the doorway, I vanished the stiletto.

  “Prince Rainier.

  Rainier was an Opal-Jeweled Warlord Prince from Dharo, another Territory in Kaeleer. Id seen him a few weeks ago at a party here in Amdarh and, more recently, enjoyed dancing with him at a family wedding. Id also noticed him in the dining room this morning, reading a book while he ate breakfast. A fine-looking man with a dancers build, fair skin, dreamy green eyes, and a mane of brown hair, he stood out in Dhemlans capital city, where the residents had the common coloring of light-brown skin, black hair, and gold eyes. Which was, actually, the common coloring of all three of the long-lived races.

  Being half-Hayllian, I had the black hair and light-brown skin, but my eyes were gold-green and my ears came to delicate pointsthe legacy of my mothers people. I was also a Gray-Jeweled witch, so my power was darker and deeper than his. That didnt mean I could afford to be careless. Warlord Princes were natural predators and also very protective. That should have been a contradiction, but it wasnt; it just made them extremely lethal.

  “Why did they ask you to see this? Rainier said as he looked behind the painted screen. He paled, and I didnt imagine his breakfast was sitting well, but when he moved away from the screen, he studied the room with a hunters eyes.

  “Maybe because I wear the Gray, I replied, shrugging. Or maybe because the owners of this place had heard a few things about me and wanted my professional opinion. “And you?

  Grief tightened his face. “I had an appointment here after breakfast.

  Here. Not just in this establishment, but here. “You knew them.

  “If these are the same young men who reserved this room, then, yes, I knew them.

  “What were they doing?

  “A weekly lesson. I was hired as a secondary instructor.

  It was better not to ask about that while I was still in this room.

  “They didnt deserve this, Rainier said quietly.

  “Are you sure?

  “Yes, Im sure. His voice sharpened. Everything about him sharpened.

  I nodded and looked around again. He knew these men; I didnt. “So. Three men were killed for no apparent reason. If there wasnt a reason, there wasnt a payment. Which means no one hired a professional to get rid of them.

  “A professional? You mean an assassin? How do you know it wasnt?

  “Because I am a professional. Was a professional. I shrugged. “Theres not much call for assassins in Kaeleer.

  “Id heard He fumbled, belatedly remembering that I was related to the most powerful Warlord Princes in the Realm of Kaeleer.

  “That I was a whore? I was that, too. You could say one career led to the other.

  Wariness in his eyes now.

  “I didnt kill them, I said. “If I had, I would have done a better job of it. Lets go. Theres nothing more to do here.

  He was under no obligation to go with me, but he followed me out of the room, stayed with me while I talked to the owners, and made suggestions about who they should talk to in the Queen of Amdarhs court to report this incident.

  When I left the building, he went with me, walking on my lefta signal to everyone who saw us that I was the dominant party. As a Warlord Prince, he belonged to a higher caste than I, a mere witch, did. But my Gray Jewels outranked his Opal. In the knife-edged game of power the Blood play on a daily basis, which of us held the high card in terms of authority could change in the blink of an eye.

  I turned a corner, heading away from the theater district with its playhouses and music halls. Those streets would be quiet at this time of day. I wanted the bustle of people and the distraction of shops.

  Even this early in the morning, there were plenty of people in the shop district, plenty of faces...

  “We didnt find their heads.

  “They were behind the screen, Rainier replied grimly.

  “Damn. It might have helped to see what theyd looked like. Might have given me a clue about why the murder had happened. Of course, I could have used a clue about why I was still chewing over this. Id made a good living killing men. I should have been able to shrug these deaths off. I couldntbecause something just wasnt right about the kills.

  “It wouldnt have helped, Rainier said. “Their faces were burned past recognition. He paused, then added, “Witchfire.

  Knowing how fiercely witchfire can burn, I swallowed hard, glad I hadnt managed to get breakfast. Did make me reassess my companions
nerves, though. Hed looked at those faces and had kept his breakfast down.

  “So, what kind of lessons were they getting? Maybe knowing why the men had been in that room would help me figure out why they died.

  “Sex, Rainier replied.

  I stopped walking. People flowed around us. “How many women? I could feel my blood chilling, feel the old rage rising.

  He looked puzzled. “One.

  Some of those messy rooms in my past had occurred when the males had thought the odds were in their favor for rough sex without the females consent. They learned how deep and pure female rage can be. Of course, they died learning it, so the lesson didnt do them much good.

  Rainier shook his head. “Its instruction, Surreal. Frank discussion about what a woman wants from a lover. Some demonstration.

  “Demonstration. Maybe the little bastards had gotten exactly what they deserved.

  Rainier took my left hand in his right and lifted it, his eyes never leaving mine. His lips, warm and soft, surrounded one knuckle. The tip of his tongue stroked my skin.

  A sweet, unexpected feeling flowed through me, banishing anger.

  He released my hand, and said quietly, “Demonstration.

  Hells fire, Mother Night, and may the Darkness be merciful. He must have been a dedicated student when hed been learning those lessons. I had to clear my throat in order to get my voice back. “So. I couldnt think of anything else to say.

  His smile was pure male as he took my arm and started walking again.

  “Understanding what pleases is just as important in a mans personal life as it is if he serves in a court, Rainier said.

  Hard to argue, since that little demonstration made me feel deliciously female and desirable. But it also plucked at the edgy, uneasy feeling Id had in the room, so I looked for something else to talk aboutand stopped walking half a block from a corner.

  “Whats he doing? The boy was shepherding females from one side of the street to the other. That was obvious. Why he was doing it wasnt.

  “Who? Rainier looked around, then grinned. “Oh. Hes training. Since there are two boys about the same age at the other corners, their instructor is probably sitting in that coffee shop across the street, keeping an eye on them.

 

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