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Authors: Laura Anne Gilman

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BOOK: Staying Dead
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“But when I stirred them up, they came shooting out, like they were hoping whatever it was had come back.”

And once they had come to her hand, she had been able to stroke them into giving up the residue from that burst of magic. That was another one of her stronger skills—reading magic like some people could read Braille, or maps, or any other code. It made her useless in a really powerful thunderstorm, stoned like kitty on catnip from the overload of power, but the rest of the time it was part of her stock-in-trade. Where one magic-user had gone, she could go, recreating their trail with remarkable accuracy. Well, mostly. Unlike her other skills, which had names and entries in the skillbooks her mentor had shown her, this one seemed to be particular to her and the way her brain worked. Or if other Talents had it, they were keeping just as quiet about it as she was. The end result either way was that she had no real idea how it worked, or why, or how to control it.

Then again, she didn't understand any of that about her computer either, and it still worked fine. Most of the time.

“I skimmed off a decent enough emotional memory of the thief to recognize him or her again. Pretty sure of it, anyway.”

Sergei made an unhappy-sounding noise in the back of his throat. She didn't think he was aware he did it—she couldn't imagine him making it during negotiations with clients, or the highbrow, hoity-toity art collectors who made his gallery so obnoxiously successful, which meant it was a Wren-specific complaint. The thought made her grin again. “Even if you were sure, that doesn't help us unless you actually run into him—”

“Or her.”

“Or her, in the near future. Wren…” A sigh, and she knew he was fiddling with one of the slender brown cigarettes he carried with him everywhere and never smoked.

“Yeah, I know. Doesn't help worth diddly, realistically. But what, you expected this guy to leave a calling card? It happens, sure, but not real often. Which is good, otherwise we'd both be out of work.”

Sergei made a noncommittal noise that might have been agreement, amusement or a growl.

“Look, all I need is a reasonably-sized list of people with something to gain by the client losing his big block o' protection, and I can backtrack from there. We do a little digging, to see who has the skills, or the money to hire a mage of that power, and then I can retrieve the cornerstone, which you know I can do in my sleep. Easy money. So no worries.”

“So, who's worried?” Sergei asked, sounding worried.

Wren hit the disconnect button, not bothering to say goodbye. Swinging her legs back down to the floor, she winced a little at their stiffness. Time to hit the gym—she had gotten a little too out of shape over the winter again. Too many of their recent cases had been deskwork, not action.

She filed the thought under
“when I have a spare hour,”
pulled out the keyboard drawer and went to work composing and sending out e-mails to contacts, some human, and some not quite so, looking for any chatter happening in the
Cosa Nostradamus.

The one advantage to being part of a community that the majority of the world didn't even know existed was that you didn't have anywhere else to talk about what was going on. So the gossip network was tight, fast, and frighteningly efficient. She'd lay decent odds with her own money that she'd have a lead by lunchtime.

Speaking of which…Wheels set in motion, she sat back and dialed the phone again.

“Hi, yeah, it's Valere in 5J. Medium sausage, and a liter of diet ginger ale. Just slap it on the tab.” She listened for a moment, laughed. “Yeah, you too. Thanks.” Taking off the headset, she draped it on its stand, running fingers through her hair to fluff it up again.

Her mother's photo managed to emit waves of disapproval despite the smile still fixed to her lips. “Ah, come on, Mom. Breakfast of champions, right? What's the point of having a 24-hour pizza place on the corner if you don't take advantage of it?”

Besides, it was either that or leftover Thai from the back of the fridge, and she'd mentally tagged that for lunch.

She had about half an hour before Unray's buzzed with her pizza. Might as well make it a billable half hour. Pulling the 'corder out of her jacket pocket, she put it on the desk and swung the keyboard into position. With a quick, silent prayer that her moderate use of current while the 'corder was in her pocket hadn't totally futzed the batteries, she hit Play and began to transcribe her notes, wincing a little at the static that had crept into the tape just because it was near her body.

“Come on, brain cells,” she muttered as her fingers hit the keys. “Give me something I can use. Momma wants to wrap this up fast and have the weekend free, for once!”

three

T
he room was remarkable for being completely unremarkable. The walls were painted a soft matte white, the floor made from wide planks of fine-grained wood. The lighting came from discreet spots that directed attention rather than illuminated.

There was one door. No windows. The overall impression was of endless space somehow made cozy. An architect had labored over the lines and arches of this space, a designer had meditated on the perfect shade of white for the walls and ceiling, a feng shui specialist had dictated the ordering of the floor's wooden planks, the exact placement of the three objects which resided therein in relation to the door.

It was for those three objects that the room existed.

In one corner, reaching from floor to ceiling, was a simple green marble pillar, three feet around and seven feet high. Etched onto its surface were crude symbols that hadn't seen the light of day for over three thousand years.

In the opposite corner, an ebony wood pedestal was lit from above, highlighting a chunk of clear, unfaceted crystal that looked as though it had just been pulled from the ground, hosed down, and dropped onto that base.

And in the farthest corner, two men maneuvered a low wooden tray set on wheels into position. It was a mover's trolley, its bed covered with a quilted pad similar to the kind used for fine furniture and grand pianos. Another pad wrapped up over a four-foot by six-foot square, and was sealed with heavy gray tape. The hard rubber wheels moved soundlessly on the floor, despite the weight they bore.

The two men were burly, but not brutish looking. One was perhaps forty, with graying hair cut short. The other was ten years younger, and completely bald. They wore simple white coveralls that had only one pocket in the left sleeve, too small to carry anything larger than a cigarette lighter. There were no names sewn over the chest: no logos, cute or otherwise on their backs.

They finished adjusting the trolley, and the younger man knelt by its side, producing a slender but sharp-looking pocket knife from his sleeve pocket, carefully cutting through the tape, peeling it away from the pad and unfolding the pad from its enclosed prize. About the length of a small bench, the marble's silvery-gray surface was marked and pitted, making the once-glossy surface look dull and battered. A smaller rectangle on the top surface looked as though it had been carved out and then filled in with concrete.

“All this, for that?”

The older man sounded disgusted. No one else was in the room, but his partner cast a worried look over his shoulder, as though expecting someone to appear there and overhear the criticism.

“If the owner says it's art, it's art,” he told his older companion firmly. “Let's just get it settled, and get out of here.” Personally, the object gave him the creeps. Hell, the entire place gave him the creeps. But he was a professional, damn it. He was going to act like one.

A low matte black platform, installed when the room itself was built and unused until now, waited to receive its burden. The two men took wide canvas slings that had been hung on the trolley's handle, and fitted them around two corners of the marble block. The younger man's hand brushed the surface of the stone where the cement plug was, and he shuddered involuntarily, stopping to look down at his hand as though expecting to see a spider, or something else less pleasant on top of it.

“Will you stop that?” the other man snapped. “Concentrate on the job. I don't need you getting sloppy and dumping it all on me.”

Stung, his co-worker glared at him, shook his hand out unobtrusively, as though to get feeling back into a sleeping limb, and counted to three under his breath, just barely loud enough to hear. On three, they heaved, and with a seemingly effortless movement and a pair of grunts that destroyed that illusion, the stone settled into its new home.

“That's strange. Wonder if it's been hollowed out? I thought marble that size would be heavier.”

“Don't complain, man, don't complain! And for God's sake, don't ask,” the younger man begged, his eye closed against the sweat that was rolling off his forehead. “We on the mark?”

The stone was square on its base, with a full three feet between it and the walls on two sides; room enough for a person to walk around it, should they so desire.

“Yep,” the other workman replied. “Perfect, as always.” It was as close to a compliment as they would get from anyone. They were hired via the company's Web site, informed of the details by e-mail, paid by wire transfer, and never knew what any of it was all about. And they liked it that way. Some folk you just didn't want to know any more about than you had to.

Their work completed, the two rolled up the quilted pad and tossed it onto the trolley, pushing it out ahead of them as they left. They didn't look again at the object they had delivered, nor did they pause to consider the other two objects already in place.

No one waited at the door to show them out; they had been given their instructions before arrival, when they were assigned the job. They would walk down the bland, security-camera-lined hallway they had entered through, down a flight of stairs, and follow a row of lights through a basement maze that would deposit them through a four-inch-thick metal door in a ten-foot-high wall that ran along an unpaved country road. A livery car with darkly-tinted windows waited there to take them back to the city, where they would be dropped off without once having seen another person.

Their employer wanted his privacy. They were paid well enough not to wonder why. And the legalities of what they had done never entered their minds at all.

 

When the last echoes of the workmen's feet had faded into silence once again, silence reclaimed the building. In another wing, a door opened, and footsteps sounded, walking calmly, with no apparent haste or urgency, the owner of all within those walls. Occasionally the walker would pause to admire a painting, or caress a sculpture, but for the most part the priceless objects were accorded no more attention than the carpet underfoot, or the ceilings above.

Eventually, the door into the white room was pushed open, and the owner of the house entered, walking with those same unhurried strides to the corner holding the newly-installed fixture. He paused in front of it, cataloguing every detail and comparing it to his expectations.

“You're not much to look at, are you?”

The slab of stone didn't respond to the voice.

“But they do say, you can't judge something by its looks. It's not what's on the outside that counts, after all, but the inside. Isn't that right?”

The figure knelt by the cornerstone, trailing one well-manicured finger along its rough surface, shivering pleasurably at the sensation. “But no matter. No matter. I know what you are, what you were. And all that really counts is that you're mine, now.”

four

“H
ey. Babe. Let me in!”

The very first time Wren had met P.B., she had giggled. The second time, she had screamed. By now, when he showed up on her fire escape, she merely flipped the safety latch on the kitchen window, and let the demon come in.

“Thanks. Man, this neighborhood of yours is totally not safe anymore. Some loon started chasing me down the street, yelling something about a cleansing to come. You got much business with Holy Rollers, Valere?”

She shrugged. “You must just bring it out in 'em, pal. You got something for me?”

P.B. shook out his fur, a faint mist coming off him. “Damn, I hate rain. Makes my skin itch.” He took a battered-looking manila envelope out from the messenger's bag strapped across his barrel-shaped chest and tossed it on the table, then scooped up a slice of the remaining pizza. The slice was halfway gone by the time Wren had opened the envelope. She sighed, and shoved the rest of the grease-lined box closer toward him. “Here. Eat. You're looking frail.”

The decidedly unfrail P.B. snorted, but didn't hesitate in devouring his first slice and reaching for a second one. “I get first prize for speed?” he asked in between slices, referring to the material in her hand.

“As always,” she said, licking one finger and using it to sort through the pages, scanning the delicate copperplate that seemed so incongruous coming from P.B.'s clawed hands.

P.B.'s real name was all but unpronounceable. The nickname came from an inauspicious moment back in the early days of their acquaintance, when an innocent bystander had been heard to shriek, “Oh my God, it's a monster!” To which Wren, somewhat short-tempered at the time, had snapped back, “No, it's an effing polar bear!” The description had been apt, and the nickname had stuck.

P.B. wasn't her only source, but he was one of the best. Certainly the most reliable. Demons mostly made their living as information conduits, there not being much of a job market for them outside of bodyguarding and freak-show gigs. There wasn't anything that one of them didn't know, or couldn't find out, and what one of them knew, another would hear, sooner or later.

Sooner, if the money was right. And they didn't play politics: you got what you paid for, no matter who—or what—you were. It was refreshing, in a disgustingly capitalistic pig kind of way. She wished more of the
Cosa
worked that way. But no, the ineptly-named angels had their endless feuds, and the various fatae-clans their more-special-than-thou attitudes, and humans—sometimes she thought humans were the worst of all, with the mages and their rules and regulations and Shalt Nots worse than Sunday School for fear of someone breaking rank and having a little fun. “Someone” in the mages' case mostly being the lonejacks, the Talents who refused affiliation. Unions and scabs, Sergei had described it, but it wasn't that simple, really. Everyone had a different reason for going lonejack.

And, tossed into that mix, always the snarling between the races, like they weren't all in it together, more or less. But some people—humans
and
fatae—just couldn't handle the idea of something shaped or colored a little differently walking, talking and working alongside their precious selves. Wren didn't have much patience with that. You do your job, stay out of her way, she didn't much care if you lived in brimstone or used your hind paws at the dinner table.

Sometimes, she thought it would have been a lot easier being Null. Then she watched the Suits scuttle to work every morning, hustling for a window office, and decided she was happy where and what she was.

P.B. burped, the sound like baritone chimes rising from his rotund stomach. “So what's the job?”

She just looked at him, a wealth of disbelief in her expression. He stared back, his flat, fur-covered face blandly innocent. Anything she shared with him without a for-hire agreement would be sold to his next client before she'd had a chance to act on it herself. Not in this lifetime or the next three, pal.

“Right. Don't tell me anything, just send me out to fetch like a dog….”

She considered responding, then decided that it really wasn't worth the effort. It was enough that she wasn't pitching him out the window already.

Wren had only met three demons in the flesh in her lifetime—that she knew about, anyway. Looks varied wildly, and she was told that some of them could pass for human, if you weren't looking carefully. The three she had encountered weren't those kind. And of those three, P.B. was the only one she could deal with for more than a few minutes at a time. It wasn't that she was prejudiced; she simply couldn't handle the relatively high voltage most of the full-sized demons emitted, like some kind of ungrounded magical wire that set her teeth on edge. Fatae—the elves and piskies and whatnot—were, by contrast, easy on the nerves. And angels never hung around long enough to do more than freak you out.

For a few moments, the only sound in the kitchen was P.B.'s jaws chewing crust, and the scritching-soft noise of paper against paper as she read what he had brought her. Finally she reached the last page, and shook them back into order and replaced them in the envelope, folding the metal closure back down again. Names, jobs, capabilities…P.B. had done his usual bang-up job of getting exactly what she needed. Some of the names on the list were familiar, in the heard-about-them kind of way.

And one was all too familiar, in a gut-clenching way. She forced herself not to focus on it. All the names were equal possibilities right now. Don't jump to conclusions. Conclusions without facts get people killed, possibly even her own very important self. File it, Valere. File it and deal with it later. When you're alone.

“Thirteen names?” She raised an eyebrow at the fur-coated being now lounging in her other kitchen chair.

He belched, then shrugged. “Lotsa folk interested in your boy,” he said unapologetically. “He's made himself some enemies. And those're just the ones who have a profile with us.”
Us
being the entire magic-using community, the
Cosa Nostradamus.
Human and nonhuman alike.
We might squabble amongst ourselves, often to the point of a passing wave of bloodshed, but in the end it was always us against them
—
“them”
being what her long-gone mentor used to call Kellers; the Nulls, who were mostly blind and deaf to what was around them. Not much love lost there. To some of the
Cosa,
her working with Sergei on an equal footing was betrayal. He wasn't too fond of them, either.

P.B. went on. “Probably lots of otherwise upstanding humans who hate his guts too.”

“What, he kicks old ladies and molests farmyard animals?” She'd gotten info on the client, but it was all public relations bullshit, not anything actually helpful. Sergei usually did a full write-up highlighting anything she needed to know, but this looked like a time-of-urgency kind of deal. Besides, he was the client, not the mark. They didn't ask too much about the clients.

“Nah.” The demon cleared a piece of cheese from between his serrated teeth and flicked it into the garbage can. “Sounds like he gets his jollies the old fashioned way—with money. Preferably other people's money, which he then turns into more money for himself. Real power-hungry, in the nasty-with-it way.”

Wren shrugged one shoulder, the tilt of her head conveying supreme indifference. “Most people with power are, that's why they get to stay on the top of the predator heap. Anything I don't already know?”

“Yeah. He's apparently in real bad odor with the local wizzart's gathering.”

“Wow.” Crossing wizzarts took serious guts. Or a total lack of brains. Possibly both. Unless of course he didn't know what he was doing. If he only knew about the public face the Council sold…. Wizzarts weren't exactly talked about outside the
Cosa.
Not too much inside it, either, truthfully. Mention not, see not, become not.

In fact, “gathering” was an ironic term to refer to wizzarts overall. The only time you got more than two wizzarts gathered anywhere was if they were all using the bathroom. And even then most of them would rather burst a bladder than share space with their own kind. And they weren't much sweeter on other humans. Most wizzarts didn't want to live within a hundred miles of another person. They were all crazy, chaos-ridden by taking too much current into their brain. From what little she'd been able to learn, the entire human race made them feel like she did around P.B., and twice that for another of their kind. It almost gave her some sympathy for them.

Not much, though. Last time she dealt with a wizzart, he'd tried to throw her over a cliff.

“Nice. And the Council?”

Dangerous or not, Wren would take a wizzart over a Council mage any day. Mages—cold, calculating bastards that they were—made her feel like she needed to take a bath after talking to one. And scrub hard.

“Street rumor is he stiffed 'em once, but managed to squirm out of retribution. No word on how, and believe you me there are folks who want to know that little trick, if it's true.” The demon extended one three-inch-long claw and dug into the thick white fur on his neck, sighing in satisfaction when he hit the itch.

Wren watched in amusement. P.B. looked like an escapee from some demented toy shop, four feet of thick white fur and button-black nose offset by four sets of lethal claws and a voice that could scrape tar off the highway. But if the initial impression was of a cuddly bear, it was his eyes that were the giveaway to his true nature: oversized and pale red, with pupils that were slitted like a cat's. Occasionally, he would don a hat and trench coat, which made him look like a diminutive Cold War-era spy, but more often than not he wore a pair of jeans, and not much else. She didn't ask how he managed to get around in public like that without, as far as she could tell, the slightest bit of Talent beyond his own demon nature, and he didn't volunteer the information. Professional courtesy, such as it was.

“That it?” she asked, indicating the material.

He nodded. “That's it.”

“Great.” Her tolerance level had reached its breaking point and she was starting to get a headache. “Sergei will do the usual deposit. Now get out.” She was already reaching for the kitchen phone, her back turned to him when she added, “And leave the rest of the pizza.”

“Spoilsport,” he muttered, but left the box untouched. He also left the window open, in petty retaliation, and the sounds of an argument from the apartment below floated up to her over the pad-clatter of his clawed feet on the fire escape.

A tenor: voice spoiled and high-pitched by anger. “And another thing, I don't like the tone of your voice!”

Oh wonderful. The couple in 1B were on that rant again. She was convinced the landlord paid them to leave their apartment whenever prospective tenants looked at a place. That had been the last time she hadn't heard them. They were either arguing, or having sex. And one rather memorable morning, they had managed to do both.

Wren held the phone at arm's length, dialing Sergei's number with her thumb as she leaned backward to shut the window. “I have enough drama in my own life, thank you very much. I don't need yours too.”

“Yes?”

“Me again,” she said into the phone. “Take me out to dinner.”

There was a pause. Warily…“And I should do this because…?”

“Because you haven't actually seen me in, what, ten days? Two weeks, maybe, and are worried that I'm not eating properly.”

Her partner snorted. She was joking, but there was some truth to it; she had forgotten to eat for two days once when she was on the job, and Sergei had totally freaked when he found out. “And the other, more convincing reason?”

Wren made a snarling noise that completely failed to impress him. She thought maybe once it had. Years ago.

“Look, Genevieve—” She rolled her eyes. He rarely used her hated given name, usually only when he wanted her to think he was pissed off about something. “I have other accounts, responsibilities which require my attention. I can't just walk out when you whistle.”

Ooo, someone
was
pissy. Market must be down again. “Yeah, yeah, you're a hotshot high roller. This is work stuff, okay? Do I have to remind you that I make you more on one job than all your other clients, thereby keeping you in your suits and toys, and that—as you're so often telling me—if I don't get the job done—I—and you—don't get paid?”

Sergei made a noise that might have been a protest—or could have been suppressed laughter. You never could tell with Sergei, not even when he was sitting in the room with you. Part of his incredibly annoying charm, and why she was never bored around him.

As amusing as this game was, she didn't want to risk frying the lines by talking too long. “Just get your well-dressed rear up here, okay? Seven-thirty, Marianna's. And bring whatever info you have on the client's business compadres, so I can cross-reference the players before I do something stupid.”

“Thought before action. What a refreshing novelty.”

“Oh, bite me,” she said rudely, and broke the connection before she could hear him laugh. She sat and looked at the phone for a few moments, smiling absently. He was a pain in the posterior, but he was
her
pain in the posterior.

BOOK: Staying Dead
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