A Kiss of Shadows

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A Kiss of Shadows Page 7

by Laurell K. Hamilton


  Then something floated down from the mirror. It was a tiny black speck, but it held my attention, compelled it. It got closer, and I could see that it was a small spider, hanging from a silken thread. I watched the spider float slowly to Alistair’s shoulder. The spider was small and black and shiny like patent leather. My body was cooler, my head clearer. Jeremy had managed to get something through to me. I knew now that the magician on the other end of the spell had kept them all trapped outside the house.

  I felt the smooth head of Alistair’s penis slip around the edge of the panties, touching my swollen wetness. It made me cry out, but I could still talk, still think. Now if I couldn’t get away, it really was going to be rape. “Stop it, Alistair, stop it!” I struggled to get out from under him, but he was too big, too heavy. I was trapped. He started to push inside me. I got a hand between his groin and mine. He could have penetrated me, but it seemed to distract him. He fumbled at my hand, trying to move it, so he could finish.

  I screamed, “Jeremy!”

  Alistair and I fought over where my hands were, and I glimpsed the mirror. It was full of grey, swirling fog. It shivered, rippling like water. It bowed out like a bubble. It was only then that I knew that the magician was sidhe. He or she was hiding themselves from me, but the mirrors, that was sidhe magic. Then Alistair won the fight and slid the tip of himself inside me. I cried out, and it was half protest and half pleasure. My mind didn’t want this, but the oil still rode my body. I screamed, “No!” but my hips twitched under him, trying to help him slide inside me. I wanted, needed him to be inside me, to feel his naked body inside of mine. Still, I screamed, “No!”

  Alistair flinched and pulled out of me the small distance he’d won, rising to his knees, brushing at his back. He came away with a small smear of crimson. He’d crushed the spider. Another small black spider crawled down his arm. He batted it away. Two more spiders crawled over his shoulders. He tried to touch the middle of his own back and turned like a dog chasing its tail, and I saw his back. The skin had split open, and a wave of tiny black spiders poured out. They swarmed over him like black water, a moving, biting second skin. He screamed, clawing at his back, crushing some of them, but there were always more, until he was a moving mass of them. They poured into his open mouth as he shrieked, and he choked, and still he screamed.

  All the mirrors were pulsing, breathing, the glass stretching out and in like something elastic and alive. I heard a man’s voice in my head: “Get under the bed, now.” I didn’t argue. I rolled off the bed and crawled under it. The red sheets spilled down over the edge, hiding everything but a thin sliver of light.

  There was a sound of breaking glass, like a thousand windows breaking all at once. Alistair’s screams vanished under the sound of falling glass. The glass burst on the carpet like brittle hail, a tinkling, sharp sound.

  Silence filled the room by degrees, as the glass settled over the room. There was a sound of splintering wood. I couldn’t see it, but I thought it was the door. “Merry, Merry!” It was Jeremy.

  Roane yelled, “Merry, dear God.”

  I crawled to the edge of the bed and lifted the rim of the sheet to see the floor glittering silver. I called, “I’m here. I’m here.” I reached my hand out from under the bed, waving it, but unable to move farther without getting cut on the glass.

  A hand gripped mine, and someone laid a suit jacket over the glass so that Roane could pull me out from under the bed. It wasn’t until he was cradling me in his arms that I realized I was still covered in Branwyn’s Tears, and what that might mean for us. But I’d gotten a glimpse of what lay on the bed, and it stole the words from my mouth. I think I forgot to breathe for a second or two.

  Roane carried me toward the door. I stared back over his shoulder at what lay on the bed. I knew it was a man. I even knew it was Alistair Norton, but if I hadn’t known what I was looking at, I’m not sure I’d have known it was human. The shape was as crimson as the sheets it lay on. The glass had turned him into so much raw meat. I couldn’t see the spiders under all that blood. I knew two things, maybe three. First, the magician on the other end of the spell was sidhe; second, he or she had tried to kill me; third, if it wasn’t for Jeremy getting a spell through the ward, I’d be just a smaller red lump on the blood-soaked bed. I owed Jeremy a very big favor.

  Chapter 6

  THE POLICE WOULDN’T LET ME SHOWER. THEY WOULDN’T EVEN LET ME wash my hands. Four hours after Roane carried me out of the bedroom, I was still trying to explain to the police exactly what had happened to Alistair Norton. I wasn’t having much luck. No one believed my version of events. They’d all watched the tape, and they still didn’t believe me. I think the only reason I hadn’t been charged with Alistair’s murder was that I’d been outed as Princess Meredith NicEssus. They knew and I knew that all I had to do was claim diplomatic immunity and I could walk out the door. So they were taking their time about charges.

  What they didn’t know was that I was almost as eager to avoid bringing in the diplomats as they were. Once I claimed diplomatic immunity, they’d contact the Board of Human-Fey Relations. They would contact the ambassador to the sidhe courts. The ambassador would contact the Queen of Air and Darkness. He’d tell her exactly where I was. Knowing my aunt, she’d tell them to keep me “safe” until her guard could arrive to bring me back home. I’d be trapped like a rabbit in a snare until someone came along to snap my neck and take me home like a prize.

  I sat at the small table with a glass of water in front of me. I had a blanket that the paramedics had given me draped over the back of the chair. The blanket had been to keep me warm in case of shock and to cover the ruined front of my dress. I’d spent part of the last few hours being cold and needing the blanket, but the rest of the time it was as if my blood ran hot. I was either shivering or almost sweating, a combination of shock and Branwyn’s Tears. Going from one extreme to the other had given me an amazing headache. No one would get me anything for the headache because they were all planning on getting me to the hospital soon—always soon, never now.

  I’d still been glowing softly when the first police backups had arrived. I wouldn’t be able to do glamour as long as the oil was in my system. So I couldn’t hide. Some of the first uniforms recognized me; one of them had said, “You’re Princess Meredith.” The soft California night had taken a breath around us, and I knew it was only a matter of time until the Queen of Air and Darkness sent someone to investigate this latest whisper. I had to be out of town before that happened. I had at least one more night, maybe two, before my aunt’s guard would arrive. I had time to sit here and answer questions. But I was getting tired of answering the same questions.

  So why was I still sitting in the hard-backed chair, looking across a small table at a detective I’d never met before? First, even if I walked out of here without being charged or claiming diplomatic immunity, they would contact the politicians. They’d do it to cover their asses. Second, I wanted Detective Alvera to believe me about Branwyn’s Tears and just how serious it would be if there was more of the oil out there. Probably it was a gift from whatever sidhe had set up the leech spell. The one bottle may have been all anyone outside the courts had. That was the best-case scenario. But if there was even the slightest chance that humans, with or without sidhe help, had figured out how to manufacture Branwyn’s Tears and it was out on the market, then it had to be stopped.

  Of course, there was another possibility. The sidhe that set Norton up in his little magic-rape scam might have been giving Branwyn’s Tears to lots of others. This was probably the more likely of the two worst-case scenarios, but I couldn’t tell the police that another sidhe had been involved with Alistair Norton. You do not take sidhe business to the human police, not if you want to keep all your body parts attached.

  Police are good at smelling lies, or maybe, to save time, they just assume everyone is lying. Whatever the reason, Detective Alvera didn’t like my story. He sat across from me, tall, dark, slender, with han
ds that looked too big for his narrow shoulders. His eyes were a solid brown with a fringe of dark lashes that made you notice them, or maybe that was just me tonight. Jeremy had laid a warding over me to help me control the Tears. He’d traced runes across my forehead with his finger and his power. Nothing visible to the police, but I could feel them like a cold fire if I concentrated. Without Jeremy’s spell, Goddess knew what I’d have done by now. Something embarrassing and slutty. Even protected by the runes I was very aware of all the men in the room.

  Alvera stared at me with lovely, distrustful eyes. I watched how the shape of his lips formed words, such a generous mouth, a kissable mouth. “Did you hear what I just said, Ms. NicEssus?”

  I blinked at him and realized I hadn’t. “I’m sorry, Detective. Could you repeat it?”

  “I think this interrogation is coming to an end, Detective Alvera,” my lawyer said. “It’s obvious that my client is very tired and in shock.”

  My lawyer was a partner at James, Browning, and Galan. She was Galan. Usually Browning handled the Grey Detective Agency’s legal affairs. I think Eileen Galan was here because Jeremy had mentioned the rape part. A woman would be more sympathetic, or at least that was the theory.

  She sat beside me in her dark pinstriped skirt suit, so neat and pressed she looked like she’d just been unwrapped. Her greying blond hair was styled perfectly; her makeup was flawless. There was even a shine on her black high-heeled pumps. It was two o’clock in the morning, and Eileen looked like she’d just finished a power breakfast and was eager to greet the day.

  Alvera’s gaze went over me from the push-up bra shoving my breasts in plain view to my eyes, last. “She doesn’t look like she’s in shock to me, Counselor.”

  “My client was raped, Detective Alvera. Yet, she has not been taken to a hospital, or examined by a doctor. The only reason I have not demanded these things is my client’s determination to answer your questions and aid you in this investigation. Frankly, I’m beginning to think my client is not capable of protecting her own interests tonight. I saw how she was brutalized on the tape. I must step in for Meredith’s rights even if she doesn’t want me to.”

  Alvera and I looked at each other across the table. He spoke the next words staring directly at me, major eye contact. “I saw the tape, too, Counselor. It looked like your client was enjoying herself most of the time. She said no, but her body kept doing yes.”

  If Alvera thought that I was going to crack under the pressure of his steely gaze and his insults, he just didn’t know me. Even normally it wouldn’t have worked, but tonight I was too numb to rise to such poor bait.

  “That is insulting, not just to my client, but to women everywhere, Detective Alvera. This interview is over. I’ll expect a police escort to the hospital for the rape kit.”

  He just looked at her with those pretty, jaded eyes. “A woman can keep saying no, stop, but if she’s playing with a man’s dick, you can’t blame him for getting mixed messages.”

  I smiled, shaking my head.

  “You think this is funny, Ms. NicEssus? The tape may make a case for rape, but it also shows you turning Alistair Norton into so much raw meat.”

  “One more time, I did not kill Alistair Norton. About the rape, you’re either trying to be deliberately insulting to get me angry enough to say something indiscreet, or you’re a male chauvinist asshole. If the first is true, you’re wasting your time. If the second is true, you’re wasting mine.”

  “I’m sorry that answering questions about a man you left to bleed to death in his own bed at his own house is a waste of your time.”

  “What kind of man has a house that his wife doesn’t know about?” I asked.

  “He was cheating on his wife, so he deserved to die, is that it? I know you fey have a thing about marriage and monogamy, but execution seems a bit harsh.”

  “My client has said repeatedly that she did not do the spell that caused the mirrors to crack.”

  “But she’s alive, Counselor. If she didn’t do the spell, then how did she know to take cover?”

  “I said already that I recognized the spell, Detective Alvera.”

  “Why didn’t Norton recognize the spell? He’s got a rep as a big-time magician. He should have seen it coming, too.”

  “I told you that Branwyn’s Tears effects humans more strongly than it effects the sidhe. He wasn’t paying as much attention to his surroundings as I was.”

  “Where did the spiders come from?”

  “I don’t know.” I wasn’t telling him that Jeremy had done the spiders because then they’d start blaming him for the mirrors, or maybe charge us both as conspirators.

  He shook his head. “Just say you did it. It was self-defense.”

  “The only reason I am still sitting here is because I want you, the police, to understand how dangerous this spelled oil can be. If there is more Branwyn’s Tears out there, you need to find it and destroy it.”

  “Lust spells don’t work, Ms. NicEssus. Aphrodisiacs don’t work. Some magic potion that’ll make a woman drop her pants for a man she doesn’t want is bullshit. It doesn’t exist.”

  “You’ll wish it didn’t if it gets out into the general population. Maybe Norton had the only bottle, but just in case there is more of it out there, please look for his friends.”

  He riffled back through the notebook that had been lying untouched on the table for a very long time. “Yeah, Liam, Donald, and Brendan, no last names. Two of them have faerie ears, all of them with long hair. Yeah, we’ll be able to find them, no problem. Of course, they might be a lower priority since they aren’t wanted on murder charges.”

  Eileen stood again. “Come on, Meredith, this interview is over, and I mean it.” She looked at both of us as if we were naughty first graders, and we would not dare argue with her. I was tired, and they weren’t going to believe me about Branwyn’s Tears. I stood up.

  Alvera stood, too. “Sit down, Meredith.”

  “Are we on a first name basis, Alvera? I don’t know yours.”

  “It’s Raimundo. Now sit down.”

  “If,” I said, “if I claim diplomatic immunity, I walk out of here and it doesn’t matter who’s right or who’s wrong.” I looked at him, and thanks to Jeremy’s ward, I was able to just meet his eyes. If I concentrated, I hardly noticed the line of his upper lip.

  He looked at me a long time before saying, “What would keep you from claiming diplomatic immunity and walking out that door, Princess?”

  “You believing me about the lust oil, Raimundo.”

  He smiled. “Sure, I believe you.”

  I shook my head. “No joy, Detective. A lie won’t keep me in this room.” I was bluffing, sort of. I hoped he didn’t call it.

  “What will?” he said.

  I had an idea. I needed to prove to the police just how serious Branwyn’s Tears could be. Sex with a sidhe would haunt a human forever, but a taste of it wouldn’t do permanent harm. Some dreams, perhaps, or extra eagerness in the bedroom for a while, but nothing bad. You needed the joining of flesh and magic in a major intimate way to be beyond the point of safety. If we all shared the merest taste, everyone would survive.

  “What if I could prove to you that the lust oil worked?”

  He crossed his arms over his chest and managed to look even more cynical, which I hadn’t thought possible. “I’m listening.”

  “You believe that no spell can make you instantly lust after some stranger, right?”

  He nodded. “That’s right.”

  “Do I have your permission to touch you, Detective?”

  He smiled, his gaze roaming over the front of my dress. I hoped he was being deliberately insulting because otherwise he wasn’t very bright, and I needed him to be good at his job. With a politically sensitive case like this one, Alvera was either the best they had or the worst. They either hoped for super detective to clear it all up or were offering him up as a sort of preemptive scapegoat for when the shit hit the fan. I’d hoped for
super detective, but I was beginning to lean toward scapegoat. Of course, since I was lying about several things, maybe I didn’t want him to be good at his job. But I wasn’t lying about what he thought I was lying about. Honest.

  “A minute ago I was Raimundo. Now you want permission to touch me and I’m back to detective.”

  “It’s called a distancing technique, Detective Alvera,” I said.

  “And here I thought you wanted to get up close and personal, not distant.”

  I heard Eileen Galan draw a breath to speak and I stopped her, holding up my hand. “It’s okay, Eileen, he can’t be this stupid and still have made detective, so he’s baiting me. I don’t know what he hopes to gain from it.”

  The humor drained from his eyes, leaving them cold and dark, unreadable as stone. “The truth would be nice.”

  “You behaved yourself for hours in here. Suddenly in the last thirty minutes you’ve managed to insult me sexually several times, and you’ve been staring at my breasts. Why the change?”

  Those cold eyes stared at my face for a heartbeat or two. “Being businesslike and professional wasn’t getting me shit.”

  “I’m listed as a rape victim in the initial reports whether you believe that or not. Your conduct in the last half hour could get you on the wrong end of a sexual harassment suit.”

  His eyes flicked to my still silent lawyer, then back to me. “I’ve seen rape victims, Princess. I’ve taken them to the hospital, held their hands while they cried. One girl was only twelve. She was so traumatized, she couldn’t speak. It took me nine days, working with a therapist, to get her to name her attackers. You don’t act like a rape victim.”

 

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