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Authors: Karen Marie Moning

BOOK: Bloodfever
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Each auction participant was given a folder, detailing the item's provenance, a chain of custody that had my eyes popping out of my head when I read it over Barrons' shoulder. Every owner of the amulet down through time figured prominently in history or mythology—even I who'd slept through most of my history classes recognized them. Some had been heroically good, others epically bad. All had been immensely powerful.

The auctioneer's eyes twinkled as he spoke of the amulet and its “mystical” ability to grant its owners' deepest desires.

Is it good health you seek?
he asked the wheezing, wheelchair bound man softly.
Longevity? One of its owners, incidentally a Welshman like yourself, sir, was reputed to have lived for hundreds of years.

Perhaps you have political aspirations,
he offered the famous man.
Would you like to guide your great nation? How about greater wealth?

Could he get any wealthier? I wondered. If I were him, I'd go for better hair.

Perhaps you seek a return of sexual desire and desirability?
he crooned to the faded beauty with bitter grooves bracketing her mouth and smoldering embers for eyes.
Your husband back? His new young wife … shall we say … receiving her comeuppance?

Perhaps,
he teased a man in the fourth row wearing the most haunted, hunted expression I'd ever seen,
you'd like to vanquish all your enemies.

Bidding exploded.

The entire time Barrons sat motionless, staring straight ahead. I, on the other hand, rubbernecked shamelessly. My heart was pounding, and I didn't even have anything vested in the situation.

I kept waiting for Barrons to bid and grew increasingly alarmed when he didn't. Cruz was obviously Cruce, the legendary creator of the Cuff V'lane had offered me. It was a Fae relic, unbelievably powerful, and even if we weren't going to use it ourselves, it shouldn't be out there in the world. It was an OOP. Every
sidhe
-seer instinct in me wanted it withdrawn from the world of Man where it never should have been in the first place and in the wrong hands was capable of aiding great evil, as evidenced by a German dictator who'd once owned it.

I leaned into him and pressed my mouth to his ear. “Say something,” I hissed. “Bid!”

He closed his hand around mine and squeezed. Bone ground gently upon bone. I shut up.

The bids reached astronomical proportions. There was no way Barrons had that kind of money.

I couldn't believe we were just going to let it go.

The bidding narrowed down to five fervent contenders. Then two: the famous man and the dying one. When the bidding reached eight figures, the famous man laughed and let it go.
I already have everything I want,
he said, and I was pleasantly surprised to see he actually meant it. In a room of malcontent, covetous people, he genuinely was happy with his Klimt, and his life overall. He rose considerably in my estimation. I decided I liked his hair and admired that he didn't care what anyone else thought of it. Good for him.

An hour later, the auction was over. A few hours after that, via a private plane—you can hardly transport illegal goods on a public one—we were standing outside the bookstore, shortly before dawn. Exhausted, I'd slept through the flight, waking only when we'd landed, to find my mouth slightly ajar on a soft snore and Barrons watching me with amusement.

I was pissed that he'd let the OOP go. I wanted to know the extent of the power it conferred. I wanted to know if it could have protected me even better than the Cuff V'lane was offering.

“Why didn't you at least bid on it?” I asked crossly, as he unlocked the front door.

He followed me inside. “I purchase what I must to maintain a façade, to continue receiving invitations. Any acquisition made at such an auction is observed and recorded. I don't like other people knowing what I have. I never buy the things I want.”

“Well, that's just stupid. How do you get them, then?” I narrowed my eyes. “I am
not
helping you steal that thing, Barrons.”

He laughed. “You don't want it? The auctioneer was incorrect, Ms. Lane. It's not the Amulet of Cruce. The Unseelie King himself fashioned that trinket; it's one of the four Unseelie Hallows.”

A few months ago I'd never have believed in anything like the Hallows, but a few months ago I'd never have believed myself capable of killing, either.

The Hallows were the Fae's most sacred, powerful, and obsessively coveted relics. There were four Light or Seelie Hallows: the spear, the sword, the cauldron and the stone, and four Dark or Unseelie Hallows: the amulet, the box, the mirror, and the most terrible of them all, the
Sinsar Dubh.

“You saw who owned it in the past,” Barrons said. “Even if you don't want it, can you abide a Dark Hallow out there, loose in the world?”

“That's not fair, using my
sidhe
-seer-ness against me to get me to commit a crime.”

“Life isn't fair, Ms. Lane. And you happen to be up to your ears in crimes. Get over it.”

“What if we get caught? I could get arrested. I could end up in jail.” I wouldn't survive prison. The drab uniforms, the lack of color, the rut of penitentiary existence would unravel me completely in a matter of weeks.

“I'd break you out,” he said dryly.

“Great. Then I'd be on the run.”

“You already are, Ms. Lane. You have been ever since your sister died.” He turned and disappeared beyond the connecting doors.

I stared after him. What didn't Barrons know?
I
knew I'd been running since then, but how did he?

After Alina was murdered, I'd started to feel invisible. My parents had stopped seeing me. With increasing frequency, I'd caught them watching me with a heartbreaking mixture of longing and pain, and I'd known it was Alina they were seeing in my face, my hair, my mannerisms. They were
hunting
for her in me, summoning her ghost.

I'd stopped existing. I was no longer Mac.

I was the one who'd lived.

He was right. Justice and revenge had been only part of my motivation for leaving Ashford. I'd run from my grief, from their pain, from being a shadow of another person, better loved for bitterly lost, and Ireland hadn't been nearly far enough.

The worst of it was that now I was caught up in a deadly marathon, running for my life, desperate to stay one step ahead of all the monsters behind me, and there was no finish line in sight.

NINE

S
peaking of the better loved for bitterly lost, I had one day left to clean out her apartment. By midnight all of Alina's belongings had to be out, or the landlord had the right to set them to the curb. I'd packed the boxes up weeks ago. I just needed to drag them to the door, call a cab, and pay a little extra to have the cabbie help me load and transport them to the bookstore, where I could wrap them and ship them home.

I couldn't believe I'd so completely lost track of time, but I'd had monsters to fight, a police interrogation to deal with, a graveyard to search, my dad to send home, a mobster's brother's death to avert, a new job to learn, and an illegal auction to attend.

It was a wonder I got anything done, really.

And so Sunday afternoon, August 31, the last day of Alina's lease, the day she
should
have been packed and waiting for a cab to take her to the airport and, finally, home to me and Georgia, and endless summer beach parties on the cusp of fall, found me propping a dripping umbrella at the top of her stairs and wiping my shoes on the rug outside her door. I stood there a few minutes, shuffling aimlessly, taking deep breaths, digging for my compact to remove the speck from my eye that was making them water.

Alina's apartment was above a pub in the Temple Bar District, not far from Trinity, where she'd been studying, at least for the first few months that she'd been here, when she'd still been going to class, before she'd begun looking stressed and losing weight and behaving secretively.

I could understand how I'd forgotten about cleaning out her apartment, but now that I was standing outside it, I couldn't believe I'd forgotten about her journal. Alina was a diary addict. She couldn't live without one. She'd been keeping one ever since she was a little girl. She'd never missed a day. I know; I used to snoop and read them and torment her with secrets she'd chosen to confide to some stupid book over me.

During her tenure abroad, she'd confided the biggest secrets of her life to a stupid book over me, and I needed that book. Unless someone had beaten me to it and destroyed it, somewhere in Dublin was a record of everything that had happened to her since the day she'd set foot in this country. Alina was neurotically detailed. In those pages would be an account of all she'd seen and felt, where she'd gone and what she'd learned, how she'd discovered what she and I were, how the Lord Master had tricked her into falling for him, and—I hoped—a solid lead on the location of the
Sinsar Dubh
: who had it, who was transporting it, and for what mysterious reason. “I know what it is now,” she'd said in her final, frantic phone message, “and I know where—” The call had ended abruptly.

I was certain Alina had been about to say she knew where it was. I hoped she'd written it down in her journal and hidden the journal somewhere she thought I, and only I, would figure out how to find it. I'd been finding them all our lives. Surely she'd left me a clue for how to find the most important one.

I slid the key into the door, jiggled the handle trying to turn it—the lock was sticky—pushed open the door, and gaped at the girl standing inside, glaring at me and wielding a baseball bat.

“Hand it over,” she demanded, holding out a hand and nodding at the key. “I heard you out there and I already called the police. How'd you get a key to my place?”

I pocketed my key. “Who are you?”

“I live here. Who are you?”

“You don't live here. My sister lives here. At least she does until midnight today.”

“No way. I signed a lease three days ago and paid up front. You have a problem with that, talk to the landlord.”

“Did you really call the police?”

She assessed me coolly. “No. But I will if I have to.”

That was a relief. I hadn't seen Inspector Jayne yet today and was savoring the respite. All I needed was for him to show up and arrest me for breaking and entering, or some other trumped-up charge. I glanced past her. “Where's my sister's stuff?” I demanded. All my carefully packed boxes were gone. There was no fingerprint dust on the floor, no broken glass scattered about, no sliced and diced furniture, no shredded drapes. All of it was gone. The apartment was spotless and had been tastefully redecorated.

“How should I know? The place was empty when I moved in.”

“Who's the landlord?” I was stunned. I'd been shut out. While I'd vacillated in indecision about whether or not to destroy the walls and floors in a thorough but damagingly expensive search for her journal, then been sidetracked by other things, I'd lost all my sister's personal possessions!

Someone was living in her apartment. It wasn't fair—I had one more day!

I would have continued to argue until the sun had gone down, the clock struck twelve, and the final bell finished chiming if the new tenant had said anything other than what she said next.

“The guy downstairs at the bar handles things for him, but it's probably the owner you'll need to talk to.”

“And who's that?”

She shrugged. “I've never met him. Some guy named Barrons.”

 

I felt like a rat in a maze and everyone else was human, wearing lab coats and standing outside my box, watching me run blindly up and down dead-end corridors, and laughing.

I left the new tenant without another word. I stepped outside, into the alley behind the pub, backed myself into an alcoved, bricked-up door to avoid the drizzle, and rang up Barrons on the cell phone he'd left outside my door last night with three numbers programmed in.

One was JB. That was the one I used now. The other two were mystifying: IYCGM and IYD.

He sounded angry when he answered. “What?” he snarled. I could hear the sound of things crashing, glass breaking.

“Tell me about my sister,” I barked back.

“She's dead?” he said sarcastically. There was another crash.

“Where's her stuff?”

“Upstairs in the room next to yours. What's this about, Ms. Lane, and can't it wait? I'm a bit busy right now.”

“Upstairs?” I exclaimed. “You admit you have it?”

“Why wouldn't I? I was her landlord and you didn't get the place cleaned out in time.”

“I
was
on time. I had through today!”

“You were beat up and busy and I took care of it for you.” A thunderous crash punctuated his words. “You're welcome.”

“You were my sister's landlord and you never bothered to tell me? You said you didn't know her!” I shouted to make myself heard above the din coming out of the earpiece. Okay, maybe I shouted because I was furious. He'd lied to me. Baldly and blatantly. What else was he lying to me about? A clap of thunder above me made me even madder. One day I was going to escape Jericho Barrons and this rain. One day I was going to find myself a sunny beach, plant my petunia on it, and sprout roots. “Besides,” I snapped, “your name wasn't on the letter we got about the damages to the apartment!”

“The man who handles my rentals sent the letter. And I didn't know your sister. I didn't know I was her landlord until my solicitor called a few days ago to tell me there was a problem with one of my properties.” There was a soft thud and Barrons grunted. After a moment he said, “He'd been calling your house in Ashford and no one was answering. He didn't want to be responsible for setting a tenant's property to the curb. I heard the name, did the math, took care of it.” There was a soft “oomph,” and it sounded like Barrons' phone went clattering across the floor.

I was curiously deflated. I'd had one of those “aha” moments upstairs: I'd been immediately convinced he was hiding some personal connection between him and my sister, that I'd found evidence of it, it was proof of his villainy, and now things would fall miraculously into place and finally begin making sense, but his reply was perfectly logical. Two of my patrons at The Brickyard owned multiple properties and never got personally involved in the running of them unless there was a problem. They didn't see any of the paperwork unless something had to go to court, and they never had any clue who was renting one of their apartments.

“You don't think it's terribly coincidental?” I demanded, when I heard him on the other end of the line again. He was breathing heavily, as if running, or fighting, or both. I tried to imagine who or what Barrons could be fighting that was giving him a run for the money and decided I didn't want to know.

“I've been choking on coincidences longer than I care to think about. You?”

“Yes,” I agreed. “And I intend to get to the bottom of them.”

“You do that, Ms. Lane.”

He sounded positively hostile. I could tell he was about to hang up. “Wait a minute. Who's IYCGM?”

“If you can't get me,” he gritted.

“And IYD?”

“If you're dying, Ms. Lane. But if I were you, I'd call that one only if I was sure I was dying, otherwise I'll kill you myself.” I heard a man in the background laugh.

The line went dead.

 

“You see them, too,” I said in a low voice, as I sank down onto the bench next to the lightly freckled redhead.

I'd found a
sidhe
-seer on the campus of Trinity—a girl, like myself.

On the way back to the bookstore the weather had cleared so I'd detoured to the college to people-watch. Although the sun was only weakly pushing through the clouds, the afternoon was warm and people had gathered on the commons, some studying, others laughing and talking.

When you see something from Faery,
Barrons had advised me,
look not at the Fae, but the crowd to see who else is watching it.

It had proved sound advice. It'd taken me a couple of hours, but I'd finally spotted her. It helped that there were so many Fae in the city. It seemed every half hour or so, a Rhino-boy walked by with one of his charges. Or I saw something totally new, like this one we'd both been watching.

The young girl glanced up from her book and gave me a blank look that was sheer perfection. A halo of curly auburn hair framed slight features, a small straight nose, a rosebud mouth, an impudent jaw. I pegged her for fourteen, fifteen at the most, and already her
sidhe
-seer façade was nearly flawless. It made me feel downright gauche. Had she taught herself or had someone else taught her?

“I'm sorry, what?” she said, blinking.

I glanced back at the Fae. It was stretched on its back on the edge of a multitiered fountain, as if soaking up the intermittent rays of sun. It was slender, diaphanous, lovely. Like those dreamy, translucent images of Fairy that are so popular in today's culture, it had a cloud of gossamer hair, a dainty face, and a petite, slim boy-body with small breasts. It was nude and not bothering with a glamour. Why should it? The normal human couldn't see it, and according to Barrons, many of the Fae believed
sidhe
-seers had died out long ago or dwindled to inconsequential numbers.

I handed the girl my journal, open to the page on which I'd been sketching it.

She flinched, clapped it shut, and glared at me. “How dare you? If you want to put yourself in danger, have a fine go at it, but don't be dragging me into it with you!” She grabbed her book, backpack, and umbrella, sprang up, and bounded off in a flash of feline grace.

I dashed after her. I had a million questions. I wanted to know how she'd learned what she was. I wanted to know who'd taught her, and I wanted to meet that person. I wanted to learn more about my heritage, and not from Barrons, who had agendas within agendas. Who was I kidding—even though she was years younger than me, it was lonely in this big city, and I could use a friend.

I was a good sprinter. It helped that I was wearing tennis shoes and she was in sandals. Though she dashed down one street after the next, pushing through tourists and vendors, I continued gaining, until finally she ducked into an alley, stopped, and whirled around. She tossed her fiery curls and shot me a glare. With a cat's luminous green-gold eyes, she performed a lightning quick scan of the alley, the pavement, the walls, the rooftops, finally the sky beyond.

“The sky?” I frowned, not liking that at all. “Why?”

“Blimey! How did you survive this fecking long?”

She was too young to be cursing. “Watch your mouth. My mother'd wash yours out.”

She shot me a look of pure belligerence. “
My
mum would have turned you over to the council and had them lock you up for being a danger to yourself and others.”

“Council? What council?” Could it be? Were there that many of us? Were they organized, like Barrons said they'd been in olden days? “You mean a council of
sidhe
—”

“Stow it,” she hissed. “You'll be the fecking death of us!”

“Is there one?” I demanded. “A council of … you know … people like us?” If so, I had to meet them. If they didn't already know about the Lord Master and his portal, they needed to. Perhaps I could turn this whole nasty affair over to someone else, a whole council of someone else's. Wash my hands of it, single-mindedly focus on my revenge, maybe get some help pursuing it. Had my sister known them, met with them?

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