had done this. He got waves of surprise so strong that it
reached him over all the blood stench, and he glanced up at
the others in the room.
Ross was pushing past the rookie, relieving him to stand
at the door, and had his eyebrows up. Ray turned back to
Penn.
“Humans didn"t do this.” Ray sighed. A Were could have,
if driven to it, but wolves were precise, clean killers, not
savage, despite what people thought. And he would have
smelled a wolf. But the others couldn"t, and their eyes were
on him. Some of them wouldn"t even have blamed him if he
had done it.
Disgusted, he tossed his head again and nearly shook
off Penelope when she touched him arm. Then he looked
down at her, seeing the same rage in her eyes and strangely
calmed by it.
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“We"ll catch them.” She smiled, revealing rows of sharp
teeth, and then stepped away. She pretended not to see how
the M.E."s assistant moved around them. There was more
movement in the hall outside, and though the blood was
nearly overpowering, Ray inhaled the telltale traces of milky
caramel and honeymoons just in time to shout.
“No!” He growled at the two cops by the door. “They stay
out!”
Ross was only too happy to move to block them, even if
he jumped at Ray"s tone.
“Um, excuse me, the Captain sent us.” Benedict was
trying to reason with Ross. Ross decided not to be
reasonable. Ray would have patted him on the back if he"d
been a little less on edge.
“Detective Branigan says you stay out here, so you"re
staying out here.”
“Hey, Branigan!” Cal instantly called out. “What gives?”
His voice was thick with real hurt. Probably his pride. Ray
didn"t care. His heart was
just
slowing down now that it was
safe.
“No, Parker,” he repeated. Penelope was giving him an
odd look, but he ignored it and looked at the body.
“Absolutely not. I don"t want you seeing this.” Oh yeah, he
sounded nuts. But since no one was going to stand up to the
werewolf today, he was fine with that. Cal was
not
coming in
here to see this.
“Why not? Fairy stomach too weak?” Ross asked Cal,
and that was actually one of the reasons fairies weren"t ever
cops—the constant pursuit of happiness and the solving of
crimes didn"t go well together, which made Cal and his
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ability to handle most crime scenes all the more special. But
he shouldn"t have to handle this one.
“That"s enough, Ross,” Ray snarled without looking at
him. Penn was nodding, as though getting him now, and
crossed over to the door. Whatever she whispered made
Parker and Benedict lower their voices to answer. It sounded
like a yes, no, yes,
no
sort of argument, and then Benedict
stuck his head in to take a peek.
He gagged and disappeared. A few moments later, Ray
could
just
hear him vomiting but thankfully not smell it.
“He"ll be okay. He ate from a taco truck this morning.”
Cal excused his friend without making the same mistake of
looking in the room. He stayed on the other side of the door.
“I keep telling him no potable water…. And hello to you, too,
Officer Ross, sweetie. I"m fine. How are you?”
It was impossible for anyone to be that precious at a
crime scene like this one, but Cal came close. Ray felt his
mouth twitch. He straightened and relaxed his shoulders.
Ross grumbled. “Impeding an investigation, not real
cops, wasting the detective"s time….” Which Cal seemed to
take for his answer. He moved on to Penelope.
“Is it really that bad, Penn? He"s not just being a fussy
puppy?”
“Yeah, Cal. It"s that bad.”
“Oh. I suppose he wants me to go home? Don"t answer
that.”
Ray cleared his throat. “You know, you aren"t quiet
enough. I
can
hear you.” There was a slight pause, as though
Cal had forgotten that.
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“Of course you can, Ray Ray—er, Detective Branigan.”
That must have been for Ross, who was glowering. “I"m here
to help, you know, whatever others might think. Tell me.”
“Tell you what, Sunflower?” He had no idea why that
made his mouth go dry, but he had enough sense not to look
at Penn. He turned, looking over the pathetic little apartment
again instead.
“You know. Everything. What you see, smell, hear. The
layout. Everything. I can tell you there was magic here. A lot
of it.”
“You"re tingly again?” Ray asked, but paused to
consider. Penn was at the door. She"d make sure Cal didn"t
try anything, and describing it wouldn"t be as bad as seeing
it. He finally nodded. “Okay, it"s a crappy ass apartment.
Bars on the windows. Beer cans, a few illegal guns, none of
which smell like they were fired, which means he didn"t get a
chance or didn"t think he"d need them. The TV was off. The
door was unlocked, but untouched, like he let them in, no
questions asked.” He paused again.
“He was a big guy. Tough. Prison workout body. Covered
in tats. Spider webs, gang symbols. He"s dead on the floor.”
“That"s it?”
That was all he was telling Cal. Except, “It looks… it
looks like something with claws and possibly teeth did it.
Something large.”
Out loud like that, the M.E. and her assistant stopped
to glance at him, though she at least tried to offer him an
apologetic shrug. There wasn"t a sound from the cops in the
hall and doorway. Cal breathed out.
“Well,” his voice carried clearly. “It"s a good thing that
even if a werewolf
were
to lose control, it wouldn"t be until
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the full moon, and it"s only a half. And of course they don"t
kill unless provoked.”
Penelope"s grin was blinding as Ray turned around. “I
knew I liked you, Cal Parker.”
“Don"t be silly. Who could possibly believe that Ray Ray
would ever do anything like that?” Ray could see Cal"s hand
move in a sweeping, dismissive gesture, just in front of
Ross"s face. Ross flinched back and looked about half a
second away from whipping out his gun. “Okay, that"s what
you see. What do you smell, Branigan?”
He didn"t have to think. Ray shut his eyes and inhaled.
He was quiet, forming the words to explain what he smelled,
everything and everyone presenting themselves in wolf terms
first.
Like this, he could even hear their heartbeats.
“Metal and burning. Sulfur? Like a match being
consumed. Like… something… being consumed.” Eaten up.
“It"s almost tangy. Dark. Like….” Hatred, but he didn"t say it
out loud. He inhaled again, sweeping the room. Penny was
salt water and fierce oceanic breezes. Ross, simmering
resentment, probably at Cal in his face. The medical
examiner and her assistant, harried and slightly nervous.
Somber around the dead man. Cal. Cal was all
want
. Need
and perfection floating to Ray from that doorway even now,
and for a second Ray flashed back to Nasreen"s words and
gasped.
Swallowing the air meant he could taste it too. Taste
Cal, what he was, and Ray cut himself off and opened his
eyes. He rolled his shoulders. “It was something big, but it
wasn"t human. There"s a hint of chalk on the kitchen floor as
well.” His voice was rough.
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“Chalk again?” Cal seemed almost disappointed. “Too
bad there"s no chalk monster.”
Penn snorted with amusement. Chalk monster. That
was like saying it was a vampire. Everyone knew vampires
didn"t exist. Zombies who drank blood to stay alive.
Ridiculous.
Ray scratched his nose, tried to clear his senses, but
then moved when he couldn"t. He headed out, pushing past
Ross without an apology and ignoring his offers of help.
He just needed out. Now. Fresh air. It had been too long
since a hunt or a trip beyond the city. And this case. Cal.
Ray just needed clean air.
A dirty parking lot would have to do. He gulped in
oxygen until his nostrils weren"t stinging and his blood
wasn"t hot with the need to hunt, and then he turned,
unsurprised to hear Cal approaching. He was dressed today,
in a tight T-shirt and jeans. How considerate of him. He
looked good, but it was nothing compared to how he smelled,
and he was studying Ray so carefully that Ray wanted to ask
what he looked like to Cal, if he shined.
“So Penn looked it up in the car, and she says there"s a
werewolf who lives in the woods outside of town that this guy
tried to beat up in a biker bar a few months ago.”
He didn"t seem to be reacting any differently than he
always did to Ray"s presence, so Ray nodded slowly,
returning to the present. “The case was pending.” He paid
attention to werewolf cases, rare as they were. This one had
been a simple assault charge, or not so simple, as the charge
had been against a human.
“So….” Cal shifted, came closer, bright and immediately
calming with his echoes of
cottoncandy/bubblegum
. Child-
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hood pleasure in what was in front of him. Need. No fear.
Why him?
Ray almost asked himself again, but couldn"t
when the funhouse, carnival-midway scent of Cal was so
near and dear to him. He was probably staring, mooning,
but for once Cal didn"t seem to notice.
“Maybe it"s not related, but she says you have to check
it out.” Cal shifted position again, staring out at the cars and
the road and not at Ray. They weren"t touching, but when
Ray glanced down he could see his shoes getting covered in
glitter. Cal abruptly, finally, looked at him again, reading
something in Ray"s face that made him sigh.
“What?” Ray demanded. It was as close as he could get
to asking the rest, what Cal saw when he looked at him.
There was too much hope in his voice as it was. Cal sighed
again, then shook his head.
“So I was thinking….” Cal paused, rolling one hand and
trying to look more beautiful, or persuasive. Ray wasn"t sure
how, but he managed to do both. “Road trip?” he asked
finally, then hopped when Ray lifted one brow. It wasn"t a no,
and they both knew it. “Sweet! I call shotgun!”
Damn, Ray wanted to smile. He had to fight to sound
stern, to wonder where his dark mood had gone.
“No way. You take the back again.” Then he stopped,
looking past the yellow tape and over at poor Benedict, who
still looked queasy, then to Penn, who was watching them
from the car. He looked back into green and gold and
chocolate eyes. Shiny. Yes, Cal was shiny to him. “You sure
you want to ride in a car with a savage, murderous werewolf,
Petunia?”
Cal wrinkled his nose. It was irritatingly cute.
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“You want to ride in a car with a hyper, weak, no good
half-fairy, Fifi?” he inquired smoothly, then danced toward
the car with a crazy pirouette.
Ray grinned after him, faintly.
“You forgot slutty,” he shouted.
“Please!” Cal didn"t even bother to turn back to him.
“Pixies are
way
sluttier. Besides,
half
-fairy, remember?”
BENEDICT stayed behind. Ray doubted they"d make an
arrest, but if they had to, they"d need the space in the car.
Anyway, the man was obviously still sick, and after a brief
consultation with Cal, had announced that he had some
more research to do.
It was less than an hour out of town to the woods, and
half an hour more to drive up the back roads. Time spent
swatting Cal"s hand away from the radio and discussing
some episode of some show that Ray
had
to see, and how
Penn should go dancing with Cal some time. Of course Ray
was welcome to come too, Cal had assured him, and would
have tried to demonstrate a dance move in the backseat that
he was going to do with him if Ray hadn"t changed the
subject back to the case.
What he had to ask was why anyone would be
interested in making it seem as though a Were had
committed that murder. There were two answers, both