The next morning, Bryce was sitting at the reception desk in the galleryâs showroom, staring at her list of Danikaâs last locations, when her phone rang.
âThe deal with the leopard went through,â she said to Jesiba by way of greeting. The paperwork had been finalized an hour ago.
âI need you to go up into my office and send me a file from my computer.â
Bryce rolled her eyes, refraining from snipping, Youâre welcome, and asked, âYou donât have access to it?â
âI made sure this one wasnât on the network.â
Nostrils flaring, Bryce rose, her leg throbbing slightly, and walked to the small door in the wall adjacent to the desk. A hand on the metal panel beside it had the enchantments unlocking, the door swinging open to reveal the tight, carpeted staircase upward.
âWhen I want things done, Bryce, youâre to do them. No questions.â
âYes, Jesiba,â Bryce muttered, climbing the stairs. Dodging the reaching hands of the leopard shifter yesterday had twinged something in her bad leg.
âWould you like to be a worm, Bryce?â Jesiba purred, voice sliding into something eerily close to a Reaperâs rasp. At least Jesiba wasnât one of themâeven if Bryce knew the sorceress often dealt with them in the House of Flame and Shadow. Thank the gods none had ever shown up at the gallery, though. âWould you like to be a dung beetle or a centipede?â
âIâd prefer to be a dragonfly.â Bryce entered the small, plush office upstairs. One wall was a pane of glass that overlooked the gallery floor a level below, the material utterly soundproof.
âBe careful what you ask of me,â Jesiba went on. âYouâd find that smart mouth of yours shut up fairly quickly if I transform you. You wouldnât have any voice at all.â
Bryce calculated the time difference between Lunathion and the western shores of Pangera and realized Jesiba had probably just come back from dinner. âThat Pangeran red wine is heady stuff, isnât it?â She was almost to the wooden desk when the firstlights flicked on. A rack of them illuminated the dismantled gun hanging on the wall behind the desk, the Godslayer Rifle gleaming as fresh as it had the day itâd been forged. She could have sworn a faint whine radiated from the gold and steelâlike the legendary, lethal gun was still ringing after a shot.
It unnerved her that it was in here, despite the fact that Jesiba had split it into four pieces, mounted like a work of art behind her desk. Four pieces that could still be easily assembled, but it put her clients at ease, even while it reminded them that she was in charge.
Bryce knew the sorceress never told them about the six-inch engraved golden bullet in the safe beside the painting on the right wall. Jesiba had shown it to her just once, letting her read the words etched onto the bullet: Memento Mori.
The same words that appeared in the mosaic in the Meat Market.
Itâd seemed melodramatic, but some part of her had marveled at itâat the bullet and at the rifle, so rare only a few existed in Midgard.
Bryce powered up Jesibaâs computer, letting the female rattle off instructions before sending the file. Bryce was halfway down the stairs again when she asked her boss, âHave you heard anything new about Lunaâs Horn?â
A long, contemplative pause. âDoes it have to do with this investigation of yours?â
âMaybe.â
Jesibaâs low, cold voice was an embodiment of the House she served. âI havenât heard anything.â Then she hung up. Bryce gritted her teeth as she headed back to her desk on the showroom floor.
Lehabah interrupted her by whispering through the iron door, âCan I see Athie now?â
âNo, Lele.â
Heâd kept his distance this morning, too. Good.
Look toward where it hurts the most.
She had her list of Danikaâs locations. Unfortunately, she knew what she had to do next. What sheâd woken up this morning dreading. Her phone rang in her clenched hand, and Bryce steeled herself for Jesiba calling to bitch that sheâd fucked up the file, but it was Hunt.
âYeah?â she asked by way of greeting.
âThereâs been another murder.â His voice was tightâcold.
She nearly dropped the phone. âWhoââ
âIâm still getting the details. But it was about ten blocks from hereânear the Gate in the Old Square.â
Her heart beat so fast she could scarcely draw breath to say, âAny witnesses?â
âNo. But letâs go over there.â
Her hands shook. âIâm busy,â she lied.
Hunt paused. âIâm not fucking around, Quinlan.â
No. No, she couldnât do it, endure it, see it againâ
Bryce forced herself to breathe, practically inhaling the peppermint vapors from the diffuser. âThereâs a client comingââ
He banged on the gallery door, sealing her fate. âWeâre leaving.â
Bryceâs entire body was taut to the point of near-trembling as she and Hunt approached the magi-screens blocking the alley a few blocks away from the Old Square Gate.
She tried to breathe through it, tried all the techniques sheâd read and heard about regarding reining in her dread, that sickening plunging feeling in her stomach. None of them worked.
Angels and Fae and shifters milled about the alley, some on radios or phones.
âA jogger found the remains,â Hunt said as people parted to let him pass. âThey think it happened sometime last night.â He added carefully, âThe 33rdâs still working on getting an ID, but from the clothes, it looks like an acolyte from Lunaâs Temple. Isaiah is already asking the temple priestesses who might be missing.â
All sounds turned into a blaring drone. She didnât entirely remember the walk over.
Hunt edged around the magi-screen blocking the crime scene from view, took one look at what lay there, and swore. He whirled toward her, as if realizing what he was dragging her back into, but too late.
Blood had splashed across the bricks of the building, pooled on the cracked stones of the alley floor, splattered on the sides of the dumpster. And beside that dumpster, as if someone had chucked them out of a bucket, sat clumps of red pulp. A torn robe lay beside the carnage.
The droning turned into a roar. Her body pulled farther away.
Danika howling with laughter, Connor winking at her, Bronson and Zach and Zelda and Nathalie and Thorne all in hystericsâ
Then nothing but red pulp. All of them, all they had been, all she had been with them, became nothing more than piles of red pulp.
Gone, gone, goneâ
A hand gripped her shoulder. But not Athalarâs. No, Hunt remained where he was, face now hard as stone.
She flinched as Ruhn said at her ear, âYou donât need to see this.â
This was another murder. Another body. Another year.
A medwitch even knelt before the body, a wand buzzing with firstlight in her hands, trying to piece the corpseâthe girlâback together.
Ruhn tugged her away, toward the screen and open air beyondâ
The movement shook her loose. Snapped the droning in her ears.
She yanked her body free from his grip, not caring if anyone else saw, not caring that he, as head of the Fae Aux units, had the right to be here. âDonât fucking touch me.â
Ruhnâs mouth tightened. But he looked over her shoulder to Hunt. âYouâre an asshole.â
Huntâs eyes glittered. âI warned her on the walk over what sheâd see.â He added a touch ruefully, âI didnât realize what a mess itâd be.â He had warned her, hadnât he? Sheâd drifted so far away that sheâd barely listened to Hunt on the walk. As dazed as if sheâd snorted a heap of lightseeker. Hunt added, âSheâs a grown woman. She doesnât need you deciding what she can handle.â He nodded toward the alley exit. âShouldnât you be researching? Weâll call you if youâre needed, princeling.â
âFuck you,â Ruhn shot back, shadows twining through his hair. Others were noticing now. âYou donât think itâs more than a coincidence that an acolyte was killed right after we went to the temple?â
Their words didnât register. None of it registered.
Bryce turned from the alley, the swarming investigators. Ruhn said, âBryceââ
âLeave me alone,â she said quietly, and kept walking. She shouldnât have let Athalar bully her into coming, shouldnât have seen this, shouldnât have had to remember.
Once, she might have gone right to the dance studio. Would have danced and moved until the world made sense again. It had always been her haven, her way of puzzling out the world. Sheâd gone to the studio whenever sheâd had a shit day.
It had been two years since sheâd set foot in one. Sheâd thrown out all her dance clothes and shoes. Her bags. The one at the apartment had all been splattered with blood anywayâDanikaâs, Connorâs, and Thorneâs on the clothes in the bedroom, and Zeldaâs and Bronsonâs on her secondary bag, which had been left hanging beside the door. Blood patterns just likeâ
A rain-kissed scent brushed her nose as Hunt fell into step beside her. And there he was. Another memory from that night.
âHey,â Hunt said.
Hey, heâd said to her, so long ago. Sheâd been a wreck, a ghost, and then heâd been there, kneeling beside her, those dark eyes unreadable as heâd said, Hey.
She hadnât told himâthat she remembered that night in the interrogation room. She sure as Hel didnât feel like telling him now.
If she had to talk to someone, sheâd explode. If she had to do anything right now, sheâd sink into one of those primal Fae wraths andâ
The haze started to creep over her vision, her muscles seizing painfully, her fingertips curled as if imagining shredding into someoneâ
âWalk it off,â Hunt murmured.
âLeave me alone, Athalar.â She wouldnât look at him. Couldnât stand him or her brother or anyone. If the acolyteâs murder had been because of their presence at the temple, either as a warning or because the girl might have seen something related to the Horn, if theyâd accidentally brought her death about ⦠Her legs kept moving, swifter and swifter. Hunt didnât falter for a beat.
She wouldnât cry. Wouldnât dissolve into a hyperventilating mess on the street corner. Wouldnât scream or puke orâ
After another block, Hunt said roughly, âI was there that night.â
She kept walking, her heels eating up the pavement.
Hunt asked, âHow did you survive the kristallos?â
Heâd no doubt been looking at the body just now and wondering this. How did she, a pathetic half-breed, survive when full-blooded Vanir hadnât?
âI didnât survive,â she mumbled, crossing a street and edging around a car idling in the intersection. âIt got away.â
âBut the kristallos pinned Micah, ripped open his chestââ
She nearly tripped over the curb, and whipped around to gape at him. âThat was Micah?â