Not one for counting gift horses, I pasted a smile on my face and turned to walk away. My best option was to get out of sight before the cop changed his mind. I scooped up the cat sidhe, tossed the packet of herbs in my pocket, and strode south toward Congress Street. Claws dug into my leather jacket and I swore under my breath. I kept the smile on my face and moved stiffly down Joysen Hill while a wheezing snicker echoed inside my skull.
Chapter 3
I found an empty lot behind a pool hall and set the cat on the lid of a trash bin. Grass grew incongruously through broken pavement, seeming to glow green in the fog and thickening shadows. The apparent glow was a reminder that I had unfinished business regarding my fae heritage. The cat sidhe may enjoy goading me by calling me Princess, but the title was apt. My father was the king of the wisps and I was a half-breed with no knowledge of how to glamour myself. I needed to remedy that problem before I ended up enslaved or dead.
If I continued to lose control as I did earlier, risking humans witnessing my glowing skin, someone or something would come for me. I could be forced to live in the Green Lady’s realm, if they let me live at all. Faerie assassins could be watching me now, waiting for their chance to take me out. I hunched my shoulders and dragged my eyes away from the shadows.
The cat sidhe’s claws scraped the metal can lid as he shook vigorously. His fur stood on end making him look all the more scrappy. An overhead street lamp flickered on, illuminating white ribbons of wax-like flesh which laced the fur along his sinewy body. But the scars were nothing compared to the condition of his face and head.
A ragged scar above the faerie cat’s left eye bisected the brow ridge, leaving him with a perpetual look of disdain. He was, in fact, lucky to still have the remaining eye. His ears were not so fortunate. The cat’s left ear was filled with holes and tears, like the storm ravaged sail of a ship lost at sea. But the damage to the cat’s tattered left ear was outdone by a lump of scar tissue where his right ear should have been. The ear looked to have been torn savagely from his head.
I looked away. This cat sidhe had obviously seen battle and had the scars to prove it. That was something I’d be smart to remember.
“I can’t believe you made me roll around like some drug-crazed house cat,” he said.
“What?” I asked. “I didn’t make you do any of it. Though I appreciate you turning up when you did, I never asked for your help.”
Which now that I think of it was strange indeed. Most fae don’t lend their assistance without making sure they get something out of the deal, but the cat and I had entered no pact for his help. I’d know if I sealed another faerie bargain. It wasn’t the kind of event that went unnoticed. The debt I already carried was wrapped around my soul like choking vines.
My gaze returned to the scars that striped his body and I swallowed hard. I definitely didn’t want to owe this faerie a boon. I was pretty sure that fulfilling that kind of favor would get me killed.
“No, but you didn’t leave me much choice, Princess,” he said. The cat sidhe stretched forward, resting his chin on his front paws, tail waving hypnotically above his head. “Your clumsiness sealed my fate. As soon as you dropped that bag, I had one chance to snatch it back or you’d have been hauled downtown—with no glamour. I’m thinking that the stress of such a trip would have set your wisp skin to glowing.”
“But what do you care?” I asked.
“Who says that I care?” he asked. He lifted a paw to his mouth and yawned. “I do, however believe in self preservation. Letting humans know we exist would be foolhardy, especially in light of recent events.”
“Such as?” I asked.
I wasn’t sure what recent events might have stirred up human suspicion. Vamps had erased the memories of all the humans who stumbled onto the waterfront during the each uisge invasion. Hadn’t they?
“Don’t you listen to the mortals?” he asked. The cat sidhe’s tail danced an archaic pattern above his tattered ears and I forced myself to look away. Becoming ensnared by a cat sidhe was not on my to-do list. Fae blood may run through my veins, but my human genes left me vulnerable to faerie enchantments. I gripped the vial of cold iron in my pocket. Thankfully, my human half did have its perks—an immunity to iron being one of them. “Sightings of spectral beings have been reported all over the city. Graves are rumored to have been disturbed in local cemeteries. If street corner gossip is to be believed, the dead walk the streets of Harborsmouth.”
“But ghosts don’t exist,” I said, body going rigid.
“Does it matter?” he asked. “If mortals go poking their noses into shadows looking for ghosts, they may just discover who they really share this city with. That is one secret I’d rather we kept.”
“So you helped me back there to protect the secret of our kind,” I said. “To save your own hide.”
That scarred hide was beginning to wink in and out of existence as if made of shadow. Watching parts of the cat sidhe’s body appear and disappear made me dizzy, as if the ground at my feet were becoming less solid with each flickering wave of shadow. I wrenched my gaze from the faerie cat’s body and focused on his face.
“Yes, Princess,” he said. The faerie leapt gracefully from the metal bin to the pavement and began crossing the empty lot toward the main road. “And let me give a free word of advice, since I’m in a generous mood. Don’t go throwing cold iron around these streets. You’re likely to attract the wrong kind of attention.”
The cat sidhe flashed a razor sharp smile in my direction then melted into the fog. The last I saw of him, he was a shred of shadow twining around the ankles of shoppers on Market Street.
“And what kind are you?” I muttered.
The bored kind. His voice whispered in my ear. I spun around, but the faerie was nowhere in sight.
“Wait,” I said. “The iron shavings were for self defense. Didn’t you see the seven foot tall, angry lamia?”
The sound of rush hour traffic was my only reply. I’d waited too long to ask my question and now the cat was gone. But the realization nagged at me as I trudged through back lots and alleys, avoiding throngs of shoppers as I made my way back to the clurichaun’s shop.
Unlike the crowd of humans who only witnessed my side of the near-battle, the faerie cat should have seen through Melusine’s glamour. So why hadn’t he mentioned her? Ceffyl’s ex had been there, hadn’t she?
I shoved gloved hands into my pockets and ducked my head, avoiding the curious stares of dish washers and line cooks as they each sucked down one last cigarette before the busy dinner rush. The alleys of Joysen Hill were never completely empty, but at least there were no obvious threats in sight. Of course, that didn’t mean I was safe.
Melusine was out there somewhere. She was in Harborsmouth, wasn’t she? I’d seen the bitch with my own two eyes, so why was doubt creeping in like an unwelcome guest?
I bit the inside of my cheek and shook my head. No, I trusted my second sight. No one else had witnessed a seven foot tall woman with a serpent’s tail on a busy city sidewalk? So what, that was business as usual. I was used to being the only person who could see the monsters who roam our streets.
I rounded the corner onto Catch Lane behind Dead Man’s Catch and dropped into a crouch. Knives slid into my gloved hands from custom sheaths hidden beneath my coat. Clurichaun’s were good at crafting more than gloves. The sheaths had been skillfully designed with two functions in mind; protecting my skin from contact with my new weapons and easy release. The grip end of twin throwing knives, balanced silver blades with sharp iron tips, hit my palms before I could blink.
Was that…? A large form loomed, emerging from a gap in the thick fog. I adjusted my grip on the knives, spinning each knife a half turn, and pinching the tips of the blades with shaking fingers.
I breathed in slowly, filling my nostrils with the fetid smell of frying fish and stale beer, relaxed my stance, and assessed the distance to where Melusine loomed in fog thickened shadow. The decision to switch my hold
on the knives from the grip to the blade depended on range. If I misjudged the distance, the knives would bounce off my target. I’d lose the element of surprise and end up with one pissed off lamia.
I squinted at Melusine who hadn’t moved since my intrusion into Catch Lane. That was weird. When the bitch stared daggers at me through the Clurichaun’s shop window, her serpent tale had lashed back and forth like a cat watching a tasty bird just out of reach. But the only thing moving now was a mouse as it scurried beneath a rusting dumpster.
Still holding my knives, wrists cramping, I peered through the shifting mist at the unmoving form. I shook my head and slid my blades back into their custom sheaths. It wasn’t Melusine leaning against the brick building, just a large coil of rope beside a stack of wooden barrels. I rubbed my eyes and straightened, cheeks blossoming heat. I’d nearly murdered a pile of rope. What the hell was wrong with me?
Time to retrieve Jinx and get off this damned hill before I got myself arrested. I didn’t think Officer Hamlin would take too kindly to a second run in with me, not in one day.
Chapter 4
I rubbed my arms as I walked up Joysen Hill, comforted by the blades that hid beneath my leather jacket. Jenna had been trying to convince me to start weapons training since we met last summer, but I didn’t take her up on the offer until the holidays. I had worked a job that could have gone south, fast. Even with Jenna’s expert assistance, the faeries we were hunting had managed to ambush us. I was lucky to be alive and had the nightmares to prove it.
I still woke to the smell of burning flesh, the awful memory of that night seared into my subconscious. The memories left me feeling weak and vulnerable. Facing a horde of bloodthirsty redcaps will do that to a girl.
So I had treated Jinx and myself to a month of battle training with Jenna. Four months later, we were still attending classes. Jinx was a perfectionist and an adrenaline junkie and I was determined to gain the skills necessary to protect this city, and my friends. I don’t make friends easily and wasn’t about to let those precious few I had get hurt because I wasn’t prepared.
I knew basic self defense, ran through a routine of moves to disarm and immobilize an opponent every evening while Jinx cooked dinner, but this was no ordinary self defense class. Having a skilled Hunter as a teacher was both enlightening and embarrassing. Jenna had discovered our weaknesses before our butts hit the practice mat.
I learned that my aversion to touch was a dangerous weakness when it came to hand-to-hand combat. I may know the moves, but when it came to executing those thrusts, flips, and punches, I held back. In close quarters fighting, a second’s hesitation can get you dead. Kicks and foot sweeps were less difficult, but I was a total mess when it came to using my hands. Forget grappling or throws. If a move involved getting up close and personal, and risking a vision, I froze. No matter how hard I drilled technique, I didn’t have the chops.
Jinx, on the other hand, was willing to follow through with her moves, but she lacked strength and experience. She was also the clumsiest person on the planet. Not that that stopped her. Jinx doesn’t give up easily. She still puts up with me, after all.
Thankfully, Jenna could spy our strengths as easily as weaknesses. That’s when she finally wore me down on my argument against the use of weapons. She put my physical strength and agility and Jinx’s enthusiasm to good use.
Jinx, surprisingly, had a skill for projectile weapons. With her steady hand and tenacity, I wouldn’t put it past my partner to master them all by next Christmas, but her current favorite was the crossbow.
Too bad she wasn’t carrying one right now. I’d be less worried knowing my roommate was armed. Instead, I pushed my legs to climb the hill faster. Night was closing in.
I reached the clurichaun’s shop and balked at the closed sign hanging in the window. Behind the sign, the shop lay dark and unwelcoming. Had the faerie locked up shop before taking Jinx into his bolt-hole? If so, I’d have a hard time getting my partner back. When someone has a secret hiding place they tend to keep it, well, secret. My only chance of finding Jinx was to enter the shop where I’d last seen the clurichaun.
In my haste to keep my friend safe, I’d put her life in the hands of a notorious drunkard. That was beginning to seem like a bad decision. I paced in front of the shop, trying to think. I needed to get inside.
I stepped forward and focused on the door, the letters on the sign swimming in my vision to reveal it hadn’t been flipped after all. The sign read “open” and the shop lights became visible, banishing the darkness. I let out a whoop of breath I hadn’t realized I’d been holding. The closed sign and lack of interior lights were an elaborate glamour. The spell was probably cast by preset wards that were tripped when the clurichaun opened his bolt-hole. If the shop wasn’t actually closed, then perhaps the door wasn’t locked either. A girl could hope.
I reached out trembling fingers. Was the glamour the only defense activated when the clurichaun left the shop? I was about to find out. I took a deep breath, the knob turning easily beneath my gloved hand. So far so good. I pushed the door inward and flinched as a small bell rang overhead.
Every time a bell rings, an angel gets its wings. The movie quote rose unbidden and I stifled a giggle. Thankfully, the shop wards hadn’t triggered the lock mechanism on the door—or any potentially deadly spell traps, yet. I cleared my throat and stepped inside.
“Hello?” I asked.
The shop was empty. I breathed in the pungent smell of leather and tried to remain calm. Jinx was fine. I just had to contact the clurichaun, right? I spun in a slow circle looking around the store’s well-lit interior. More than once I hesitated, mistaking a display of leather jackets for someone standing in my peripheral vision. And don’t get me started on the mannequins. I could swear that their dead eyes followed me as I walked around the room. The damn things were creepy.
I stifled a shudder and searched for anything out of place. For a barfly, the clurichaun kept a tidy shop. Leather goods were displayed artfully around the room. As far as I could tell, everything was in its place. Even the boxes and shopping bags I’d dropped to the floor were stacked in an orderly row.
I rifled through the bags, lifting shoe boxes and folded clothing looking for a note or some indication as to where Jinx had gone, but they contained only the remnants of today’s shopping trip. I thrust the items back into the bags and growled like a barguest. There were no clues to indicate where the clurichaun had taken Jinx.
I left the main showroom and examined the counter at the rear of the shop. Something seemed to be missing. The memory of my previous visit niggled at me. I tried to conjure up an image of the counter from earlier today, but the memory slipped away like smoke. I’d been too focused on Melusine and the threat she posed.
I scanned the countertop and stopped to examine the register. Kaye had a secret button on her till that opened the back door of her shop. Maybe the clurichaun had a similar setup. I pressed each button with a gloved finger, but nothing happened.
I risked a glance outside. The sun was setting and it was getting dark. The shadows and fog seemed to swallow the city lights, leaving only darkness and the denizens who lurk within.
I spun back to the register and pounded my fist on the counter. I had to be missing something. There had to be a way to contact the clurichaun. I slouched and let my head roll forward, hiding behind the curtain of hair. If I couldn’t find a way into the faerie’s bolt-hole, I’d have to start seeking visions. I stared at my gloved fist and did a double take.
I slid my hand back across the counter to reveal a circle scratched into the wood. The marks were faint, as if from something sitting there for years. Suddenly, I remembered what was missing from the counter. When I was here earlier, there had been a shiny silver bell—the type you ring for service.
A slow smile spread across my face. I knew what to look for. Where had the clurichaun hidden his bell? I dug around behind the counter, turning waste baskets and drawers upside down.
“Come on bell, where are you hiding?” I muttered.
I walked back out to the showroom and something shimmered in my second sight. I focused and the bell appeared, sitting on top of a creepy mannequin head. I lunged forward and grabbed the bell. It was solid beneath my gloved fingers.
I hurried to the counter and placed the bell on the circle of scratches. Raising my hand and holding it out flat, palm side down, I hit the bell. A loud clang rang throughout the shop. Should I ring it again, perhaps three times? Kaye was always explaining how three was a powerful number when it came to magic…
“Hell-o,” a voice hiccup burped behind me.
I spun to see the clurichaun wave his hand and totter toward me. Jinx was sprawled on the floor behind him. Jinx.
I rushed to my friend’s side and knelt on the polished wood floor. I steeled myself to remove my glove and check for a pulse—I’d never touched Jinx before, her secrets were her own business and not something I wanted to plunge into—when a lazy grin spread across her face. Jinx cracked opened her eyes and smiled even wider.
“Hey, girl,” she said. “Let’s go, hiccup, dancing!”
“Dancing,” I said. “Seriously? I doubt you can even walk.”
I imagined myself stumbling down Joysen Hill carrying my tall friend all the way home. The Old Port was a long walk from here and if I had to carry Jinx, my arms and legs would be useless in a fight. Running would also be impossible. I’d have to stumble down The Hill slow and defenseless. I grunted and sat back on my heels.
I raked a hand through my hair and pushed it out of my face while examining my friend. This wasn’t the first time I’d seen Jinx drink too much, but she didn’t usually get this trashed. Oh shit.
“I asked you to protect her,” I said. I looked over my shoulder and narrowed my eyes at the clurichaun, and pointed at Jinx. “What did you give her?”
Turning back to Jinx, I nudged her with my knee.