Some Kind of Magic |
R. Cooper
2
Some Kind of Magic
ABOUT three thirty a.m., in Hillcrest Hospital, which, true to
its name, had been built on a bluff overlooking the rest of
their coastal town, Ray stopped outside the door to their
victim"s room and rubbed his nose. He hated hospitals, the
attempt at sterility in the smells, the subtle layers of
disinfectant and urine and sickness, the constant noises
that meant no one got any rest.
Not that he was here for rest, or that he would have
slept well even if he had been. He turned away from the
nurse, though she was still talking, and glanced down at his
partner, wanting a moment of exhausted sympathy and not
getting it because her focus was already back on the case.
Penn seemed unperturbed, but then, she wouldn"t care
about any lectures from stern, unpleasant nurses or notice
the smells or the distant noises. There wasn"t much that
could
rattle her, not that he"d seen in the five years they"d
worked together. She calmly took a sip of saltwater and then
sealed the bottle and stuck it in her oversized purse. Only
then did she look back up at him before knocking on the
door.
She looked like she wished her water had been coffee.
Or possibly ouzo, which was a favorite of hers on nights off.
Personally, Ray thought it tasted like a particularly nasty
type of licorice, but, with certain exceptions, he"d never cared
much for sweets, so he was a bad judge.
Savory was really what he craved, or what he needed,
and his stomach growled at the thought. If he"d known a
place to get some carne asada at this time of night—
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3
morning—he would have gotten some and shoveled it down.
He would possibly even take a fast food burger, though it
wouldn"t exactly be
meat
.
But he was getting used to going without and decided
he"d make do with something from a vending machine later,
if there was anything in there more solid than candy. For
now they had a job to do.
There was a uniform outside the door, a kid only a few
months out of the Academy, who had nodded as they
approached and then took off. Perhaps a little quicker than
he might have for any other two detectives, but without
comment. He smelled young and nervous, revealing his
inexperience with one wary stare, and his pale face said he
hadn"t recovered from finding their victim on the floor in her
own blood—or from seeing her recover so quickly.
Fairies. They could be disconcerting. Delightful and
surprising and beautiful, sure, but the amount of magic
surrounding them made many uncomfortable. The kid"s
training officer had mentioned that, fairy or not, the rookie
had held her hand and stayed with her even after she"d been
loaded into the ambulance. Which made it strange to find
him
outside
the room and not still in there with her.
At least the kid had held it together long enough to
ensure her safety and see that her wounds had been
properly documented, and for that, Ray made a note of his
name for his report.
Before he could finish the thought, the rookie was back,
glancing between the two of them before flashing a cautious
smile.
“She"s okay, just wanted her privacy, I forgot to tell you
that. I didn"t know they wanted that. You know what they
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4
say about them. You know, fairies….” He trailed off at Ray"s
expression and outright blanched at Penn"s, then quickly
amended his statement. “But she was really nice once she,
uh, woke up. Anyway, could you tell her Tim said
goodnight?”
Tim
was hopeful, but not quite brave enough to go in
there himself. Ray didn"t agree to anything, but Penn
mumbled something under her breath the rookie took for an
affirmative. Ray had excellent hearing, which she knew, and
so he was the only one who heard the snide comment about
men wanting things they were afraid to ask for.
He also heard the hushed movements inside the room,
so this time he knocked and ignored Penn"s not-very-subtle
jab at him at the same time.
There wasn"t an answer from inside, and Penn frowned
before opening the door and looking carefully in.
Their angry nurse had assured them the fairy inside
was dressing to leave, but when Penn entered the room, Ray
peered in over her head and saw that the fairy was already
dressed. Fully dressed, surprisingly, considering she was
Fairy, wearing a long skirt and a silky wraparound top that
wouldn"t get in the way of her wings. It made Ray wonder if
she was feeling vulnerable after her ordeal, and he looked
her over more carefully.
She was sitting up on the bed, with one hand tight on
the phone on the table at her bedside, as though she"d made
a call or was thinking about making one. Her gaze swept
over both of them, widening when they displayed their
badges and closed the door behind them, but she didn"t
flinch or jerk.
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“Pari-Nasreen al-Nihar?” Penn asked politely, pausing at
the bed. Ray stayed back, well aware that his size could be
alarming, and fairies were sometimes easily startled. Ray
didn"t blame them. It was their nature to run from
unpleasantness, not face it. They weren"t fighters. This fairy
should never have had to deal with such violence as she"d
faced tonight.
He clenched his jaw at the idea of anyone destroying the
happiness of a fairy and concentrated on the woman in front
of him. The victim… he grimaced. He"d been a cop for over a
decade, and he still hated that word. The fairy"s healing
abilities were the reason she"d been rushed to the hospital
for pictures and scans for evidence. She"d been struck twice
in the head, with force. A human would have been killed, but
enough time had passed that there wasn"t a mark on her
anymore. The only sign that she was even upset was the lack
of sparkle in the air around her, and her scent,
wary
.
“Nasreen,” she corrected, frowning imperiously for a
moment before sweeping back the hair that was blue and
black and indigo. It just reached the base of her long amber-
colored wings. Her eyes were coal black. As was the way of
fairies, she was almost unnaturally beautiful and alluring.
Ray inhaled. Aside from the lingering fear, she smelled
like a good day in that hard-to-define way that fairies always
did, like rain on the pavement or a fresh bouquet of flowers.
In her case, her scent was like a high mountain spring. He
rubbed his nose again. Sometimes the wolf made him sound
like some kind of wannabe poet, but there was honestly no
other way to describe it.
“I"m Detective Del Mar. This is Detective Branigan. Los
Cerros PD. We"re investigating the break-in in which you
were attacked.”
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6
“Obviously. And that human boy outside told me that
there would be questions, but I don"t really remember
anything, you know.” Nasreen waved it, them, off. “Is Audrey
okay? Her shop, I mean. He was robbing the place, right?
Her shop is everything to her.”
“He?” Penn didn"t take out her notebook because they
had learned that it tended to distract people when someone
was writing down their words, but she did lean forward.
“Why did you
assume it was a robbery?”
“Oh, you know….” Fairies really weren"t good at
deception. Most didn"t try. Ray almost thought Nasreen
might be making the attempt, and then he realized she was
just trying to focus.
She paused for half a second, then hopped over to stare
out the window. Fairies didn"t lie, but as Ray had learned
from dealing with a certain half-fairy, they could omit
whatever they felt like, even as the truth stayed all over their
faces.
Obvious, shining truth. A gift, or a curse, depending on
whatever it might be. Truth, according to Cal, was the
business of fairies. Ray had never contested that.
“I know you don"t trust the police, but we"re here to
help,” he spoke up suddenly, mostly to move his thoughts
back to the case, but also because she was being skittish.
When he"d said
police
, he"d meant the
human
police, and
they all knew it.
Nasreen jumped and stared at him. It could have been
for speaking at all, but it was probably for acknowledging
that some of those in law enforcement could be less
understanding to Beings, though Ray liked to think that if he
had
been human, he would have been one of the good ones.
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Nasreen blinked rapidly before squinting at the two of
them, and Ray realized that she hadn"t known he and Penn
weren"t human. The attack had seriously distracted her.
Fairies were flighty but not stupid. Seeing through disguises
was something most of them excelled at.
In fact, it was reputed that they saw through anything,
straight down to the heart of the matter, but since Ray had
seen them get just as confused as anyone else, he took that
as yet another legend of Beings that had been disproven by
experience. But he
would
admit that they did
see things
differently.
He and Penn weren"t disguised, exactly, but they weren"t
in their natural forms either, and, according to Cal, that did
things to a fairy"s vision.
A fairy"s vision. Ray almost snorted. That was something
safer not to try to imagine.
“Pari-Nasreen.” He didn"t
quite
growl, but he used the
honorific to soften his words in case it seemed that way. “We
will catch this person.”
“Let"s start over, shall we?” Penn was gentle. “You work
at Zucchero, where you make candy. According to Audrey
Conti, the owner, when you"re creating something new, you
usually work at night, alone in the kitchen in the back of the
shop.”
Nasreen gave a careless shrug but then came over to be
closer to Penn. She just looked intrigued now. Fairies. At
least they were easily distracted. Ray would have smiled, if
the thought wasn"t like an arrow to his heart.
“You park in the back. You have a key and the alarm
code. Tonight, someone broke in and surprised you.
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8
Something happened, we"re not quite sure what yet, but they