Wildfire
Page 47

 Ilona Andrews

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The arcane tiger nudged me. I fed another stick to Zeus. “I need to know if there are any hints that Brian Sherwood may have collaborated with his kidnappers.”
“Why?” Bern said.
I explained to them about the ear. As they listened, the frown on Bern’s face deepened.
“I believe it isn’t Brian’s ear,” I said. “It’s possible that Brian is innocent, and they somehow immobilized him and very carefully sliced his ear off, but I don’t think they would go to the trouble. It’s also possible that they decided not to mutilate him.”
“But?” Bern asked.
“It requires more preparation,” Cornelius said. “They would have to find a fresh corpse they could mutilate. Far simpler to just cut off Brian’s ear, and Alexander Sturm would have no problems slicing off an ear or a digit to make a point. He is . . . direct.”
I nodded. “Assuming this is Brian’s ear, it means they had an anesthesiologist and a surgeon ready. While I don’t doubt that Sturm’s money would buy both, it’s a complication they don’t need. Two more people aware of the kidnapping, extra risk to Brian’s life by putting him under, and so on. Far easier to just hack off his ear and be done with it. However, if Brian was an accomplice in his own kidnapping, they would leave his ears alone.”
I gave the last stick to the tiger-hound and wiped my hands against each other to show him that I was out.
“Are you sure of that?” Bern asked.
“Knowing Primes, they probably signed a contract, and they would stick to it.”
Cornelius grimaced. “Sadly, that’s accurate. We are a society of tigers. We are exquisitely polite and formal, because if we don’t spell out all of the rules from the start, an accidental misunderstanding will have fatal consequences.”
Tigers and dragons, oh my. And me without my ruby slippers.
But then, who needs ruby slippers when you can lobotomize people on the fly? I sighed.
“So I’m looking for any connection to Sturm or Harcourt,” Bern said.
“Or anyone else we know for a fact to have been involved in the conspiracy,” I said. “Howling. Rogan’s cousin.”
Her face flashed before me. For a second I was back in the car hurtling down the street as Rogan spun the wheel to avoid hitting Kelly Waller and the throng of small children she used as her living shield. Kelly Waller betrayed Rogan. She couldn’t get what was coming to her fast enough for my taste.
I turned to Cornelius. “You know this world better than us. Anything out of the ordinary could be important. A lunch in a place where Brian normally wouldn’t be seen. A function a man of his standing wouldn’t attend.”
“This will be very interesting,” Cornelius said.
“Do you want me to bring Bug in on this?” Bern asked.
“No.”
“Can I ask why not?”
“Because Rynda is working very hard on Rogan, and Bug resents her for it. If he thinks that Brian did cooperate, and we don’t know yet if he did or not, he may blurt it out at the point he thinks it will do the most damage.”
A chime sounded through the office. Someone was at the front door.
“That must be Scroll to pick up the ear.” I jumped up. “Hold on, I’ll just be a minute.”
I headed for the door.
“Nevada . . .” Bern called after me.
“One moment.” I checked the camera. A blond man in a dark suit stood with his back to me. I had expected Fullerton. Interesting.
I opened the door.
The man turned toward me. About thirty, he had a strong masculine face, so handsome it might as well have been chiseled out of stone. Square jaw, full lips, beautifully defined nose, and smart green eyes under the sweep of dark eyebrows. His blond hair, a few shades lighter than his eyebrows, and cut to a medium length, artfully framed his face, emphasizing its power. The effect was stunning. If I had seen him in a mall or on the street, I would’ve discreetly turned for a second look.
“Hello,” he said. “Are you Nevada Baylor?”
“Yes.”
He smiled, showing white teeth.
Wow.
“I’m so glad to finally meet you. I’m Garen Shaffer.”
Oh crap.
 
I had to say something.
“What a surprise.” Oh great. That was brilliant. “Please come in.”
Before Rogan sees you and decides to squish you with a random tank he has lying around somewhere in his industrial garage.
I stepped aside to let him pass. Zeus seized this opportunity to thrust himself in the space I vacated and give Garen a once-over.
Garen froze in place.
“Ignore him.” I nudged Zeus with my hip. He refused to budge. “He’s a recent rescue. We haven’t had a chance to train him. He isn’t used to strangers.” What the hell was coming out of my mouth?
“Houston animal shelter?” Garen asked, a little spark in his eyes.
“No. A summoner House, actually. Go see Cornelius.”
The massive beast twitched his ears.
“Zeus,” Cornelius called.
The tiger-hound turned and hurried into the conference room with liquid grace.
Garen stepped inside. I shut the front door and led him to my office. Sooner or later someone would report to Rogan that a person from House Shaffer appeared on my doorstep. Most likely they reported it the moment he drove up to the checkpoint. The consequences would be interesting.
I sat behind my desk. Garen Shaffer sat in my client chair. I touched my laptop. It came on. A message window from Bern opened.
Garen Shaffer, heir to House Shaffer, truthseeker Prime.
 
Better and better.
I put on my professional smile and clicked the small icon in the corner of the laptop, enabling recording. We had a hidden camera positioned on the shelf behind me. We’d had some trouble with clients who displayed selective memory, and it was amazing how quickly threats of lawsuits faded once we presented a recording of them saying the words they claimed they couldn’t remember.
“What can I do for you, Mr. Shaffer?”
He leaned back, throwing one long leg over the other. “I’ve come to hire you.”
Lie. This was a test.
“That would be a lie, Mr. Shaffer. Care to try again?”
“Would you mind?”
“No.”
Magic accreted around him. “I’m thirty-one years old.”