Mean Streets

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Mean Streets Page 1

by Jim Butcher




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  THE WARRIOR - JIM BUTCHER

  THE DIFFERENCE A DAY MAKES - SIMON R. GREEN

  ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  THE THIRD DEATH OF THE LITTLE CLAY DOG - KAT RICHARDSON

  FOR TEAM SEATTLE AND THE DENVER MOB

  NOAH’S ORPHANS - THOMAS E. SNIEGOSKI

  ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  TWELVE

  THIRTEEN

  FOURTEEN

  ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  Praise for Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files

  “Think Buffy the Vampire Slayer starring Philip Marlowe.”

  —Entertainment Weekly

  “What would you get if you crossed Spenser with Merlin? Probably you would come up with someone very like Harry Dresden.”

  —The Washington Times

  Praise for Simon R. Green’s

  Nightside Novels

  “Sam Spade meets Sirius Black . . . inventively gruesome.”

  —Entertainment Weekly

  “Fast-paced and amusing, as well as packed with inventive details.”

  —The Denver Post

  Praise for Kat Richardson’s

  Greywalker Novels

  “A great heroine.”—Charlaine Harris

  “A creepy and original addition to the urban-fantasy landscape.”

  —Tanya Huff

  Praise for Thomas E. Sniegoski’s

  Remy Chandler Novels

  “Tightly focused and deftly handled. . . . Fans of urban fantasy and classic detective stories will enjoy this smart and playful story.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “The most inventive novel you’ll buy this year . . . a hard-boiled noir fantasy by turns funny, unsettling, and heartbreaking.”

  —Christopher Golden

  ROC

  Published by New American Library, a division of

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

  New York, New York 10014, USA

  Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto,

  Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)

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  Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices:

  80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  First published by Roc, an imprint of New American Library,

  a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  First Printing, January 2009

  “The Warrior” copyright © Jim Butcher, 2009 “The Difference a Day Makes” copyright © Simon R. Green, 2009 “The Third Death of the Little Clay Dog” copyright © Kathleen Richardson, 2009 “Noah’s Orphans” copyright © Thomas E. Sniegoski, 2009 All rights reserved

  REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Mean streets / Jim Butcher . . . [et al].

  p. cm.

  eISBN : 978-1-440-69994-8

  1. Occult fiction, American. 2. Private investigators—Fiction. I. Butcher, Jim, 1971-

  PS648.O33M43 2009

  813’.0876608—dc22 2008044845

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  PUBLISHER’S NOTE

  These are works of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the authors’ rights is appreciated.

  http://us.penguingroup.com

  THE WARRIOR

  JIM BUTCHER

  I sat down next to Michael and said, “I think you’re in danger.”

  Michael Carpenter was a large, brawny man, though he was leaner now than in all the time I’d known him. Months in bed and more months in therapy had left him a shadow of himself, and he had never added all the muscle back on. Even so, he looked larger and more fit than most, his salt-and-pepper hair and short beard going heavier on the salt these days.

  He smiled at me. That hadn’t changed. If anything, the smile had gotten deeper and more steady.

  “Danger?” he said. “Heavens.”

  I leaned back on the old wooden bleachers at the park and scowled at him. “I’m serious.”

  Michael paused to shout a word of encouragement at the second baseman (or was that baseperson?) on his daughter Alicia’s softball team. He settled back onto the bleachers. They were covered in old, peeling green paint, and it clashed with his powder-blue-and-white shirt, which matched the uniform T-shirts of the girls below. It said “COACH” in big blue letters.

  “I brought your sword. It’s in the car.”

  “Harry,” he said, unruffled, “I’m retired. You know that.”

  “Sure,” I said, reaching into my coat. “I know that. But the bad guys apparently don’t.” I drew out an envelope and passed it to him.

  Michael opened it and studied its contents. Then he replaced them, put the envelope back on the bench beside me, and rose. He started down onto the field, leaning heavily on the wooden cane that went everywhere with him now. Nerve damage had left one of his legs pretty near perfectly rigid, and his hip had been damaged as well. It gave him a rolling gait. I knew he couldn’t see out of one of his clear, honest eyes very well anymore, either.

  He took charge of the practice in the quiet, confident way he did everything, drawing smiles and laughter from his daughter and her teammates. They were obviously having fun.

  It looked good on him.

  I looked down at the envelope and wished I couldn’t imagine the photos contained inside it quite so clearly. They were all professional, clear—Michael, walking up the handicap access ramp to his church. Michael, opening a door for his wife, Charity. Michael, loading a big bucket of softballs into the back of the Carpenter family van. Michael at work, wearing a yellow hard hat, pointing up at a half-finished building as he spoke to a man beside him.

  The pictures had come in the mail to my office, with no note, and no explanation. But their implications were ugly and clear.

  My friend, the form
er Knight of the Cross, was in danger.

  It took half an hour for the softball practice to end, and then Michael rolled back over to me. He stood staring up at me for a moment before he said, “The sword has passed out of my hands. I can’t take it up again—especially not for the wrong reason. I won’t live in fear, Harry.”

  “Could you maybe settle for living in caution?” I asked. “At least until I know more about what’s going on?”

  “I don’t think His plan is for me to die now,” he replied calmly. It was never hard to tell when Michael was talking about the Almighty. He could insert capital letters into spoken words. I’m not sure how.

  “What happened to ‘No man knows the day or the hour’?” I asked.

  He gave me a wry smile. “You’re taking that out of context.”

  I shrugged. “Michael. I’d like to believe in a loving, just God who looks out for everyone. But I see a lot of people get hurt who don’t seem to deserve it. I don’t want you to become one of them.”

  “I’m not afraid, Harry.”

  I grimaced. I’d figured he might react like this, and I’d come prepared to play dirty. “What about your kids, man? What about Charity? If someone comes for you, they aren’t going to be particular about what happens to the people around you.”

  I’d seen him display less expression while being shot. His face turned pale and he looked away from me.

  “What do you have in mind?” he asked after a moment.

  “I’m going to lurk and hover,” I told him. “Maybe catch our photographer before things go any further.”

  “Whether or not I want you to do it,” he said.

  “Well. Yes.”

  He shook his head at me and gave me a tight smile. “Thank you, Harry. But no thank you. I’ll manage.”

  Michael’s home was an anomaly so close to the city proper—a fairly large old colonial house, complete with a white picket fence and a yard with trees in it. It had a quiet, solid sort of beauty. It was surrounded by other homes, but they never seemed quite as pleasant, homey, or clean as Michael’s house. I knew he did a lot of work to keep it looking nice. Maybe it was that simple. Maybe it was a side effect of being visited by archangels and the like.

  Or maybe it was all in the eye of the beholder.

  I’m pretty sure there won’t ever be a place like that for me.

  Michael had given a couple of the girls—young women, I suppose—a ride home in his white pickup, so it had taken us a while to get there, and twilight was heavy on the city. I wasn’t making any particular secret about tailing them, but I wasn’t riding his back bumper, either, and I don’t think either of them had noticed my beat-up old VW.

  Michael and Alicia got out of the car and went into the house, while I drove a slow lap around their block, keeping my eyes peeled. When I didn’t spot any imminent maniacs or anticipatory fiends about to pounce, I parked a bit down the street and walked toward Michael’s place.

  It happened pretty fast. A soccer ball went bouncing by me, a small person came pelting after it, and just as it happened I heard the crunchy hiss of tires on the street somewhere behind me and very near. I have long arms, and it was a good thing. I grabbed the kid, who must have been seven or eight, about half a second before the oncoming car hit the soccer ball and sent it sailing. Her feet went flying out ahead of her as I swung her up off the ground, and her toes missed hitting the car’s fender by maybe six inches.

  The car, one of those fancy new hybrids that run on batteries part of the time, went by in silence, without the sound of the motor to give any warning. The driver, a young man in a suit, was jabbering into a cell phone that he held to his ear with one hand. He never noticed. As he reached the end of the block, he turned on his headlights.

  I turned to find the child, a girl with inky black hair and pink skin, staring at me with wide, dark eyes, her mouth open and uncertain. She had a bruise on her cheek a couple of days old.

  “Hi,” I said, trying to be as unthreatening as I could. I had limited success. Tall, severe-looking men in long black coats who need a shave are challenged that way. “Are you all right?”

  She nodded her head slowly. “Am I in trouble?”

  I put her down. “Not from me. But I heard that moms can get kind of worked up about—”

  “Courtney!” gasped a woman’s voice, and a woman I presumed to be the child’s mother came hurrying from the nearest house. Like the child, she had black hair and very fair skin. She had the same wary eyes, too. She extended her hand to the little girl, and then pulled her until Courtney stood behind her mother. She peeked around at me.

  “What do you think you’re doing?” she demanded—or tried to. It came out as a nervous question. “Who are you?”

  “Just trying to keep your little girl from becoming a victim of the Green movement,” I said.

  She didn’t get it. Her expression changed, as she probably wondered something along the lines of, Is this person a lunatic?

  I get that a lot.

  “There was a car, ma’am,” I clarified. “She didn’t see it coming.”

  “Oh,” the woman said. “Oh. Th-thank you.”

  “Sure.” I frowned at the girl. “You okay, sweetheart? I didn’t give you that bruise, did I?”

  “No,” she said. “I fell off my bike.”

  “Without hurting your hands,” I noted.

  She stared at me for a second before her eyes widened and she hid behind her mother a little more.

  Mom blinked at me, and then at the child. Then she nodded to me, took the daughter by the shoulders, and frog-marched her toward the house without another word. I watched them go, and then started back toward Michael’s place. I kicked Courtney’s soccer ball back into her yard on the way.

  Charity answered the door when I knocked. She was of an age with Michael, though her golden hair hid any strands of silver that might have shown fairly well. She was tall and broad-shouldered, for a woman, and I’d seen her crush more than one inhuman skull when one of her children was in danger. She looked tired—a year of seeing your husband undergoing intensely difficult physical therapy can do that, I guess. But she also looked happy. Our personal cold war had entered a state of détente, of late, and she smiled to see me.

  “Hello, Harry. Surprise lesson? I think Molly went to bed early.”

  “Not exactly,” I said, smiling. “Thought I’d just stop by to visit.”

  Charity’s smile didn’t exactly vanish, but it got cautious. “Really.”

  “Harry!” screamed a little voice, and Michael’s youngest son, of the same name, flung himself into the air, trusting me to catch him. Little Harry was around Courtney’s age, and generally regarded me as something interesting to climb on. I caught him and gave him a noisy kiss on the head, which elicited a giggle and a protest of, “Yuck!”

  Charity shook her head wryly. “Well, come in. Let me get you something to drink. Harry, he’s not a jungle gym. Get down.”

  Little Harry developed spontaneous deafness and scrambled up onto my shoulders as we walked into the living room. Michael and his dark-haired, quietly serious daughter Alicia were just coming in from the garage, after putting away softball gear.

  “Papa!” little Harry shouted, and promptly plunged forward, off my shoulders, arms outstretched to Michael.

  He leaned forward and caught him, though I saw him wince and exhale tightly as he did it. My stomach rolled uncomfortably in sympathy.

  “Alicia,” Charity said.

  Her daughter nodded, hung her ball cap on a wooden peg by the door, and took little Harry from Michael, tossing him up into the air and catching him, much to the child’s protesting laughter. “Come on, squirt. Time for a bath.”

  “Leech!” Harry shouted, and immediately started climbing on his sister’s shoulders, babbling about something to do with robots.

  Michael watched them exit with a smile. “I asked Harry to dinner tonight,” he told Charity, kissing her on the cheek.

  “Did
you?” she said, in the exact same tone she’d used on me at the door.

  Michael looked at her and sighed. Then he said, “My office.”

  We went into the study Michael used as his office—more cluttered than it had been before, now that he was actually using it all the time—and closed the door behind us. I took out the photos I’d received without a word and showed them to Charity.

  Michael’s wife was no dummy. She looked at them one at a time, in rapid succession, her eyes blazing brighter with every new image. When she spoke, her voice was cold. “Who took these?”

  “I don’t know yet,” I told her. “Though Nicodemus’s name does sort of leap to mind.”

  “No,” Michael said quietly. “He can’t harm me or my family anymore. We’re protected.”

  “By what?” I asked.

  “Faith,” he said, simply.

  That would be a maddening answer under most circumstances—but I’d seen the power of faith in action around my friend, and it was every bit as real as the forces I could manage. Former presidents get a detail of Secret Service to protect them. Maybe former Knights of the Cross had a similar retirement package, only with more seraphim. “Oh.”

  “You’re going to get to the bottom of this?” Charity asked.

  “That’s the idea,” I said. “It might mean I intrude on you all a little.”

  “Harry,” Michael said, “there’s no need for that.”

  “Don’t be ridiculous,” Charity replied, turning to Michael. She took his hand, very gently, though her tone of voice stayed firm. “And don’t be proud.”

 

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