Penelope"s sarcasm was almost lost around a mouthful of eel
and cucumber.
“No, no, Ray Ray!” Cal bounced on the desk. “You"re
missing the point of what Benny is saying. If it was a spell,
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51
despite the obvious strength of the killer, it had to be a
human.”
“And spells are unique. Like recipes, everybody always
adds that pinch of something special.” Benedict also fancied
himself quite the cook. Ray stared at him.
“Yeah, like extreme rage,” he quipped, and Cal rolled his
eyes. “So what"s your point?” He didn"t even really wait
before he sighed and gave in.
“Get us a list of suspects, and we might be able to
determine who. From their size, and also their personal
tastes and—”
“A list of suspects.” Penn"s voice was flat. She and Ray
looked at each other. Sometimes these two tended to forget
that he and Penn did work when they weren"t around. Ray
bent down to reach into the boxes filled with files at his feet
and dropped a stack on his desk in front of them.
“Help yourselves. He was not a popular guy.”
“I heard.” Cal sucked his lollipop like he was going to get
oil from it. Ray did
not
look at his mouth. “Didn"t you
threaten to break his neck a few months ago?”
“I—Yes.” Ray shrugged. The moon had been full twice
that month. Blue moons made him
tense
. And when Ray had
been on the stand, the guy had implied he was incompetent.
Ray flashed his teeth at the memory. “Yeah.” It had felt good
too.
Benedict and Parker both blinked.
“What? I didn"t say it when I was on the stand. I said it
later, outside the courtroom.”
“You should get therapy,” Cal finally remarked.
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52
“You should get a shirt,” Ray tossed back at him. “And
stop prying into my other cases.”
“Boys.” Penelope burped. “Let"s just split the stacks and
get started, okay?” She wasn"t really asking. And thankfully,
at last, Cal hopped from Ray"s desk to get an actual chair.
He pulled it over next to Ray"s desk, but he wasn"t
on
Ray"s
desk, and Ray could pull in the occasional breath that
wasn"t full of sugary need.
“The M.E. confirmed the size of our perp, by the way.
Broke the neck in one clean jerk, then twisted it all the way
around. With some broken ribs that would have lead to some
serious internal bleeding if he hadn"t been dead already.
And….” She paused as they all glanced at Ray again.
He
was
probably strong enough to do it even without
shifting. “It wasn"t me,” he insisted anyway, annoyed and
just a little hurt because they"d all known him for years,
enough to discount those horror stories from black and
white movies.
For a second he was ten again, trying to explain to kids
in the schoolyard that even if he did bite them they weren"t
going to turn Were and that being Were wasn"t a bad thing
anyway.
“Of course not.” They all murmured in unison. Then,
damn it, Cal left this chair and came back to perch on his
desk in a show of solidarity that Ray—and his dick—did not
need.
“I"m not a murderer,” he grunted anyway, but quietly.
Cal was looking down at the files in his hand, scanning
quickly over the details. It was, as always, startling to see
Cal focus. Amazing, really. He was barely even twitching,
though those wings were creating a breeze.
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“Weird, isn"t it?” Cal remarked suddenly, under his
breath and so low it had to be just for Ray"s ears. Ray looked
up. Cal didn"t look directly at him. “When someone assumes
things about you like that based on no evidence
whatsoever?”
Ray stopped, and only then did Cal glance sideways at
him, almost serious, eyes intent like he was waiting for Ray
to answer. Ray closed his mouth, regretting it as the
heavenly scent blanketed him. But when he didn"t speak Cal
tossed out a dizzying smile and dropped his attention back
to the files.
“What about Nasreen?” Penn called over to him. Ray
kept his eyes on Cal, who didn"t seem to hear, but of course
he had.
Ray briefly thought back to a time before when he would
have never suspected such things from any fairy.
“There was no answer when I tried to call her,” he told
Penn, his eyes on the line of Cal"s jaw, the slight point to his
ears. “I"ll have to go see her, make sure she"s ready for
whatever happens. If she"s really okay.”
Cal"s momentarily cherry-red lips curved, just a bit. He
smelled indecently pleased and a touch jealous, all at the
same time.
“I can go. You worry too much.” Penn was being
generous. Ray absently touched his nose and looked at her.
He felt Cal"s gaze on him, on the gesture, reading it and
knowing what it meant.
Cal already knew enough about him, so he tried not to
react, but he still flushed. Ray could smell himself too, after
all, not just Cal. And
welcome
and
warm
didn"t begin to
describe the possessive, hungry scents emanating from him.
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54
He was vaguely surprised Cal wasn"t humming. Ray had
seen that look in his eyes before.
Somewhere, some part of him was panicking at the
memory. The rest of him was just warm. He couldn"t ever be
that naked in front of Cal again.
“No, I will,” he told Penn distantly, after swallowing.
“When we have a moment.”
“Softie,” Cal whispered, and Ray hurriedly looked back
down at his work to stave off the memory yet again. He
stared at his lunch, which had lost some of its appeal. He
snuck a few glances up as the minutes ticked by, oddly
fascinated by the sight of Cal Parker motionless and
concentrating.
Cal was good at this job, despite his initial reluctance to
do this work. He hadn"t wanted to do what would make his
father happy, until he"d realized just how good at it he really
was, and that it made him happy too. It turned out, when
something made a fairy happy, they didn"t like to give it up.
At the very least, it was a possible explanation for all
those old stories about fairies kidnapping innocents, even if
there was no fairy realm where time stood still. It probably
just felt that way, getting swept up and letting yourself be
seduced into forgetting that a fairy"s attention didn"t last
forever.
“Detective!” Ray was so distracted, Ross"s voice made
him jump. The officer was smiling at him and waving some
paperwork. He stepped wide around Cal to reach Ray"s desk
and hand him the papers. “I got those results from the print
lab for you.”
Uniforms were often nosy and sometimes hung around
in the hopes of sucking up or learning something. Ross
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55
always smelled like strong ambition, but he was one of the
officers who had never had anything to say against
werewolves, even if he"d had plenty to say about fairies, so
Ray gave him a vague smile and started to flip through the
first report. No prints found but the lawyer"s, his secretary"s,
and his last client of the day, who had already been
accounted for.
“Why, thank you so much, Officer Ross.” Cal was overly
sweet, probably flirting with Ross too. Ross
was
good
looking, in a clean-cut way. Short hair, square shoulders.
Cal"s wings were moving like mad now and didn"t slow until
Ray pointedly thanked Ross again, and the man reluctantly
moved back out into the bullpen.
Ray knew Cal was studying him, likely irritated, but
with someone as driven as Ross around the wolf was
screaming for him to mark Cal as his, to bite his sweet skin
and drag him away, piss at his feet, do whatever it took for
the rest of world to understand and back off. He didn"t dare
respond. He already felt the ache under his skin, the itch,
like he ought to shift.
Too smart to look up this time, Ray just moved his
pencil holder to hold his papers down in the mini-Cal
windstorm and finished eating in the hopes it would make
him feel a little less starving. Then, when he felt a fraction
calmer, he opened a file too.
BY END of the day they had a short list of suspects. All with
above average build. All with anger issues and who were at
ease around Beings or magic. Not that the last requirement
meant that someone who didn"t know magic couldn"t have
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56
learned it. After all, plenty of convicts learned the law in
prison too. Nor did it explain what spell they"d worked in
that room or why. Maybe just one to avoid detection. Though
that could have been worked anywhere and not only at the
scene.
Whatever it was, after a day working a case in Cal
Parker"s presence, Ray was too tired to think about it for
now. Penn had left too, about two hours after Benedict had
announced he had to go home since he had a lot of work to
do in the morning, and taken Cal with him. Not quite kicking
and screaming, but close.
Not for the first time, Ray wondered how the man did it.
It was like Benedict was immune to Fairy allure and to Cal"s
in particular. Or not, because Cal frequently embarrassed
him, but he kept coming back. In fact, their friendship
seemed to have remained solid and unshakeable for nearly
their whole lives in a way that Ray envied.
When Ray had just made detective, Calvin Parker had
once made it a point to invite him out with the other
detectives when they"d gone to a bar after work. It had been
an honor and a public statement of support for the new
Being detective, and until then, Ray hadn"t realized the guts
it must have taken the man to get involved with a fairy at all,
even if it hadn"t lasted. It had been, if not a scandal, then a
dent in the man"s sterling reputation.
Calvin Parker had never gotten a promotion after that,
but Ray had never seen even a hint of regret in him. Not
much else either, to be honest. Calvin Parker was a hard
man to know. But brilliant and respected, and Ray had been
pleased to have been singled out for his attention. And after
several glasses of black label, Detective Parker had taken out
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57
his wallet and showed him a picture of his son and Benedict
as children, a Halloween picture of all things, with both of
them dressed as cowboys.
They"d had the same easy, friendly body language then
that they did to this day. Best friends and soul mates in a
different way than Ray was used to thinking of the term.
“They stand together,” was how Calvin Parker had put
it. “But not enough,” he"d added, his voice cracking for a
moment before the single malt had smoothed it out. “It takes
a lot to keep a fairy grounded.”
At the time Ray had been more than buzzed and very
confused. Now he just assumed it was the forethought of a
smart man, who knew his son better than his son would
admit. Ray hadn"t even met Cal yet, and he"d already been
warned away.
He sighed. If Calvin had really felt that way, he should
never have introduced them. But then, like Ray, he"d been
more vested in justice being served than in worrying about
any broken hearts.
Three days into knowing his son, Ray had realized the
obvious, right there in his living room, and he"d been trying
to save himself ever since.
It didn"t help to be alone in his house now with the
scent of Cal all over him.
Ray"s “love cave” as Cal had repeatedly called it, was
just a house. A lair only in the sense that it was his, and
safe, but a regular house otherwise. Living room, kitchen,
bedroom, bathroom, and spacious closets because he was on
the large side. Fridge full of beer and steak which, though
pricey, was really the only thing that eased the cravings
between hunts.
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58
He thought about avoiding his living room, but with Cal