Tempting Danger

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Tempting Danger Page 4

by Eileen Wilks


  He ran a hand over his head. “He’ll be fuzzy after so long in Sleep. Of course, if he needs it—”

  “Rule, you saw his wounds. There’s nothing he can’t heal, but until he grows some of those bits back, his condition is not going to be stable. Unless you covet your father’s job—”

  He growled.

  “Don’t be so touchy. The plain fact is that you’re heir. If the Rho dies, you take over. And some will wonder if you wanted it that way.”

  “You’re giving me gristle—lots of chew, not much meat. How is he, really?”

  “Hardheaded. Worried. And older than he wants to accept. The pain’s too much for him, and he doesn’t heal as fast as he once did. He won’t go to a hospital—no, don’t bother to explain. I understand his reasons. But if he can’t use technology to keep him going while he heals, he’ll have to spend a lot of time in Sleep.”

  Rule swallowed his fear. He couldn’t be a child now. There was bloody little room to be a son. “If he must, he must.”

  “I shouldn’t have let him out of Sleep as soon as I did,” she admitted. “He faked me out. Got his vitals under control long enough to . . . well, never mind. Don’t worry about things here. Your father will heal, and the Council can handle things while he does.”

  He wanted to be at Clanhome, too, dammit. Tradition banned him from his father’s presence while he healed, but not from Clanhome itself. That was his big brother’s doing. Benedict’s authority to bar the Lu Nuncio from Clanhome was shaky in theory, firm enough in practice. No one argued with Benedict about security. Most people didn’t argue with Benedict, period.

  At least he knew the Rho was safe. Barring a strike by the U.S. Air Force, nothing and no one was getting to their father when Benedict was there. “Give Toby a hug for me,” he said. “I’ll be in touch.” He disconnected and tucked his phone in his jacket pocket.

  Then he just sat for a moment. He was scared. For his father, his people, and himself. This was a hell of a time for the Nokolai leader to be incapacitated.

  Which, of course, was exactly what Isen’s attackers had wanted. Rule stood and headed for the bar and the one scent that drew him right now. “Ah. My coffee’s ready.”

  “Don’t see how you can drink that crap,” Max said.

  Cullen grinned and slid a mug across the bar. It held coffee made from Rule’s private stock of beans.

  “It requires a palate.” He could keep his shoulders loose. He could control his expression, his voice, and to some extent his smell. But he couldn’t keep the nerves from crawling across his belly, making it as jumpy as a Chihuahua on caffeine. “This place looks like hell with the lights up,” he observed, sliding onto a stool.

  Max set his own mug—which would hold Irish whiskey, not coffee—on the bar and hopped up on the stool next to Rule’s. “That’s the point.”

  “But this is the morning-after kind of hell. Like a carnival before night falls and the lights and music turn tacky into mystery.”

  “It’s five o’clock in the goddamned morning, what do you expect? Anyway, I don’t want to hear about carnivals. Makes me think of the years I spent in the sideshow.”

  “You were in a sideshow?” That was Cullen, who’d stayed on the other side of the bar. He was in one of his restless moods, fiddling with first one thing then another. “Was this before the war, or after?”

  “Which war? Humans are assholes.” He tilted his mug, downed half of the contents, and belched contentedly. “Leave the damned glasses alone.”

  Cullen continued polishing the glass he’d picked up. “World War Two. That’s the one you always lie about.”

  “Jealousy.” Max shook his head sadly. “This younger generation is sick with it. Lacks respect, too.”

  Cullen paused. “You calling me a member of the younger generation?”

  “You’re all younger. Children, every one of you, running around like crazy so you won’t notice how soon you’re gonna die.” Max took a silver case out of his jacket, opened it, and selected one of the cheap cigars he liked to poison the air with. “Take the way you idealize truth—telling it, finding it.” He snorted. “Finding it! As if it were lying around somewhere, waiting for you to pick up. Childish. People live by stories, not truth. What you really want are answers so you won’t have to figure things out for yourselves.” He pulled out his lighter. “I admit, thinking takes time.”

  “Don’t,” Rule said wearily.

  Max paused, squinting at Rule for a moment. He put the lighter down. “Your father?”

  “The Rho is healing. Sorry. Didn’t mean to make you think something was wrong.” Rule grimaced. “That something more was wrong, anyway.”

  “You’re shook,” Cullen said, surprised.

  Rule took a moment to sort out what to say. Max and Cullen were his friends. At the moment they were colleagues, too, of sorts. But they weren’t Nokolai. “None of us expected them to act this soon. And I didn’t expect it to be this personal.” He thought of Rachel, her eyes red and swollen, empty of everything but grief. “Perhaps I should have.”

  “Regrets are the most useless form of guilt,” Cullen said. “They always arrive too late to do any good.”

  “That’s their nature, isn’t it?” He pushed that aside and spoke formally. “The Rho extends Nokolai’s gratitude, and offers you the aid and comfort of the clan for a moon cycle.”

  “I thank the Rho,” Cullen said, his voice light, his fingers tight on the glass he’d been polishing. “Canny old bastard that he is. I’m surprised he didn’t offer me money.”

  “The Rho has a great respect for money—and an understanding of what it can and can’t buy. The offer wasn’t meant as an insult, Cullen.”

  The other man shrugged and slid the glass back in its overhead rack. “Perhaps not. I’m tempted to show up at Clanhome for a month just to make his hackles rise.”

  “You need a bodyguard,” Max said suddenly. “We knew they’d targeted Isen. Why wouldn’t they try to get rid of you, too?”

  “Killing Carlos is an uncertain means to that end. Besides . . .” Rule paused, frowning. “It doesn’t fit. Why risk an investigation?”

  Max shrugged. “Might be cocksure.”

  “Might have reason.” Cullen was messing with the wine bottles now, rearranging them to suit some arcane sense of composition. “So far they’re batting a thousand.”

  “Not even five hundred. They tried to kill Isen and failed. Now they’ve tried to get Rule put away, but the frame’s sloppy. Quit that,” Max snapped when Cullen moved another bottle. “My bartender won’t be able to find anything.”

  “You’re assuming we know their goals,” Rule said slowly. “Isen isn’t dead, but he’s out of the picture for awhile. That may serve their purpose just as well. And we don’t know why Fuentes was killed—or that I’ll manage to stay out of jail.”

  “You’re not going to jail,” Max insisted.

  Cullen turned. “Stop playing Pollyanna. The role doesn’t suit you. Rule is right. Our opponents are subtle, and we can’t afford to underestimate them.”

  Max snorted. “You been tuning in Mission Impossible on your crystal ball? Subtle’s another way of saying convoluted. In real life, the fancier the scheme, the more likely it is to fall apart.”

  “Some do.” Cullen picked up Max’s lighter, flicked it, and studied the flame. “There’s a rumor of a banshee sighting in Texas.”

  “Is that what this is about? Signs and portents?” Max cackled. “The big, bad werewolf has his panties in a twist because some idiot can’t tell marsh gas from a banshee. And in Texas!” That, apparently, was the best part of the joke, for Max slapped his knee and nearly fell off his stool laughing.

  Cullen didn’t say a word, but his face tightened, his pupils contracted—and the lighter’s flame suddenly shot up a foot and darted toward Max.

  “Hey!” Max did fall off the stool this time, landing on his butt. “Are you crazy? You want to set off the smoke alarms? Burn the place down? Li
ke I really need to explain to the fire department and the insurance company about my crazy were friend who has this little problem with anger management.” He stood up, muttering and rubbing one hip.

  “Cullen,” Rule said.

  The other man looked at him. After a moment his eyes went back to normal, and the fire died.

  “I’m not laughing,” Rule said. “What are you suggesting?”

  “I tossed the bones after the cops left.”

  Max rolled his eyes. “Teenage tricks.”

  Rule knew little about divination, but everyone tried tossing the bones at some point—usually, as Max had said, as a teenager, when the lure of the forbidden was strong and common sense was short. The results were unreliable, at best. Or so he’d always thought.

  But done by a sorcerer of the Blood? His eyebrows went up. “And . . . ?”

  “I asked for information about your enemy. And got . . . this.” He pulled a handful of dice out of his pocket and tumbled them onto the bar.

  Snake eyes. All of them. All six dice had a single dot on every side.

  There was silence for a moment, then Max breathed, “Jesus.”

  Rule’s mouth was dry. “I don’t suppose there’s a chance you did that yourself? Accidentally?”

  “About the same chance you have of turning into a kitty cat at the next full moon.”

  “Another sorcerer?”

  Cullen’s lip curled. “I don’t think so.”

  “There’s some of the Fae could do it,” Max said. “Don’t know why they would, but who knows why a Fae does anything?”

  “Or we can consider the obvious.” Cullen looked at Rule.

  “Yes.” Rule drew a deep breath. “Maybe one of the Old Ones has woken, and is stirring this pot.”

  FOUR

  THE low ceilings and twisty ramps of the subbasement parking at headquarters always made Lily feel as if she were traveling through the guts of a concrete behemoth. Her cell phone rang as she pointed her old Toyota down yet another rigid intestine.

  She glanced at the Caller ID, grimaced, and answered anyway. “Hello, Mother. I’m a bit pressed for time. I’m due in the captain’s office at nine.”

  “The captain’s office? Are you in trouble?”

  Why did her mother assume that? It’s not as if Lily had been in trouble all the time as a kid. Just the opposite. “It’s a briefing. Kind of like a meeting, you know? Like people with real jobs have.”

  Dead silence on the other end. Lily’s breath huffed out. Her mother could cram more reproach into silence than most people managed by screaming curses. “Sorry. I’m short on sleep.”

  “This will just take a moment. You left last night before I got a firm date from you for the fitting.”

  “I’m being digested by the parking garage at the moment. I don’t have my planner handy.”

  “Then you will call me once you do. Really, Lily, my cousin’s friend is a very busy woman, and she’s given us a handsome discount. You must show some courtesy. You’ve already missed one appointment, and your bridsesmaid gown simply has to be altered. The bodice looked terrible on you.”

  Lily wanted to say that no amount of alteration would make her look good in puke green, but she was already in trouble. “I’ll check my schedule and E-mail you, okay? That will be quicker for me than calling.”

  Her mother wasn’t fond of E-mail but grudgingly accepted the compromise and launched into a detailed description of the newest wedding crisis. Lily’s older sister was going to be married in grand style if it killed their mother.

  Lily pulled into her parking place deep in the belly of the garage, most of her attention on the report she’d pulled together before leaving her apartment. “Mm-hmm,” she said as she grabbed her backpack, shut and locked her car door. Then what her mother had just said sank in.

  It seemed the menu for the rehearsal dinner had to be changed. The groom’s sister was allergic to ginger.

  “Lily? What is it?”

  She realized she’d made some small noise. “You mentioned ginger, and it reminded me. I saw Ginger Harris last night.”

  Her mother made one of those very Chinese exclamations, sort of a short eh! It was a sure sign of distress. Normally Julia Yu sounded as Californian as The Beach Boys. “Ginger Harris? Why would you want to see her? What’s going on?”

  “I didn’t want to see her, I just did. It was in connection with a case. Do you know what happened to the Harrises, where they moved?”

  “This is not healthy. I thought you’d put all that behind.”

  “I have.” Except for the nightmares, but they were rare. “This is for the job, Mother.”

  “I don’t know where they went. I don’t remember. I suppose I could ask Doris Beaton.” The offer was obviously dragged out. “I believe she kept in touch.”

  “I’d appreciate it if you would.” Lily punched the button for the elevator.

  “I don’t understand why you need to know about the Harrises.”

  “I’m not sure yet. Police work would be a lot easier if we knew ahead of time which leads were important.” Was it intuition or the past crawling across Lily’s shoulders? She rolled them, trying to dislodge the sensation. “Thanks, though, for offering to check with Mrs. Beaton. I know the subject distresses you.”

  “This isn’t about my feelings. I worry about you.”

  “I know. I’m fine.” But it had always seemed to Lily that it was about her mother as much as herself. So many threads spinning out from that one event . . . no matter how she tugged, clipped, or tried to untangle them, the knots remained. “The elevator’s here. I’d better go.”

  Julia reminded her to check her planner and said good-bye. Lily slid her phone in her backpack and stepped into the little metal box.

  It was a relief to return her mind to the case, the facts and the possibilities. Threads. That’s what she had—a confusing tangle of threads, and not much in the way of hard facts to tell her where to tug. She’d taken a lot of statements, but there would be lies twisted in with the truth, and all sorts of evasions, omissions, and simple mistakes.

  Time of death was likely to be critical with this one. Maybe the lab would have a preliminary report soon. Not that they’d be able to tell much, but they should at least be able to confirm that the killer was one of the Blood.

  Science depended on things happening a certain way without fail. Water boiled at 100 degrees C at sea level no matter who did the boiling. Mix potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal together in the right proportions, and you ended up with gunpowder every time, no random batches of gold dust or baking soda to confuse matters.

  But magic was capricious. Individual. The cells and body fluids of those of the Blood—inherently magical beings—didn’t perform the same way every time they were tested. Which could make it possible to identify the traces magic left in its wake, but played hell with lab results.

  The elevator creaked to a halt on the first floor, where two people got on. Lily glanced at her watch. Maybe she should have taken the stairs.

  If the parking garage was the beast’s guts, the elevators were its circulatory system. Which meant the building was often in shock due to circulatory failure, because the elevators were notoriously slow and cranky. This one did eventually deposit Lily on the third floor. She checked her watch again as she shoved open the door to Homicide. If she hurried, she could grab a cup of coffee.

  “Hey, Lauren,” she said to the chunky blonde woman at the first desk. Three of the five desks in the bullpen were occupied. Mech’s wasn’t. “Is Mech here?”

  “Do I look like a receptionist?” Lauren squinted at her computer screen and kept typing. “Why does everyone mistake me for the goddamned receptionist?”

  “It’s your charming manner. Makes us feel all warm and welcome.” Mech was probably around. He would know she’d want to talk to him before reporting to Randall. She headed for the coffeepot.

  Sean Brady looked up from the folder he’d been studying, grinned
, and howled like a wolf.

  “For crying out loud,” the woman at the desk next to his muttered, “turn it down, will you? No one, but no one, is going to mistake you for a lupus.”

  T.J. poked his head out of his office. “Hey, has anyone seen my—oh, hi, Lily.” He grinned and exchanged a glance with Brady.

  T.J. had been a cop since God was young, and a detective almost as long. He had Santa Claus hair, gold-rimmed glasses, a face with more droops and folds than a basset hound’s, and an appalling sense of humor. Lily wondered if she should check her desk for booby traps.

  “Anyone seen Mech?” she asked. The pot was nearly empty. It was always nearly empty. The rule was that whoever emptied it had to make the next pot, so everyone tried to leave a little liquid in the bottom. Lily poured a few swallows of black sludge into a mug that read, UFOs Are Real. The Air Force Doesn’t Exist.

  “You talking to us peons?” Brady asked. “Should we tug our forelocks when we answer?”

  Lily rolled her eyes. “Heaven help us. Brady’s been reading his vocabulary list again.”

  “I just wondered. You’re consorting with royalty now. The prince.” He made another howling sound.

  “Someone put a muzzle on him, will you?” Lily headed for what she liked to call her office. It was really just a small ell off one end of the main room, lacking the dignity of a door or windows. But it was a private nook and had room for her desk, some filing cabinets, an extra chair, a struggling philodendron, and a pot of ivy out to conquer the world.

  “You know, Brady,” Lauren said, “I bet you have no idea what a forelock is.”

  “I’m sure I could find one. Hey, maybe this—”

  “You go tugging on that in here, I’m arresting you for indecent exposure.”

  “Mech’s guarding your domain,” T.J. said as she passed him.

  She paused. “Your eyes are twinkling, T.J. I don’t like it when your eyes twinkle.”

  He shook his head. “So young and so cynical.” Then he smiled. “Hope you enjoy our little present.”

  Oh, crap. Lily was on guard as she approached her office, though she couldn’t imagine what they’d cooked up. If Mech was there, she ought to be safe from practical jokes. Mech was the polar opposite of Brady and T.J., serious to a fault. He’d tell her if they’d rigged her chair to collapse.

 

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