urges, Ray had let himself be lulled into curiosity, fairy-led
ever closer to that shimmering presence and had forgotten
that a fairy wouldn"t understand.
He shook himself out of it in time to hear the rest of
Cal"s question. “Like the bad guy?”
“I… no. I can only smell—”
You.
Ray stopped.
“The
people here. And maybe something like metal. Not blood.”
Something hateful, but he couldn"t quite name it and didn"t
want to around Cal.
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44
“Oh, well.” Cal suddenly released Ray and fluttered back
toward his best friend. “It was just a thought. Why don"t you
go eat? Benny and I are done anyway, aren"t we Bens?”
“Hell yeah. It"s creepy in here.” Ray exchanged another
look with Penn,
civilians
, and a sigh, then moved.
There was a wave of mixed feelings as Cal stepped aside
to let him go, and a
butter/syrup/pancakes
smell, driving
Ray crazy. It was Sundays and morning-after breakfasts and
everything that was
good
, even with the hint of very real,
very human sweat underneath it, and the soda on Cal"s
breath, and that popping rock candy just at the edge of his
lips.
What Parker had had for breakfast. Probably in the car.
There were shadows under his eyes too, like a late night, and
the vague trace of ink on his wrist that meant he"d gone out
in the past few days.
Ray couldn"t smell a man or a woman on him this time,
but he was so beautiful he"d be popular when he was out.
Exotic to humans and Beings alike. And as a fairy he would
have seen as little difference between them as men and
women, ready to sample anything and everything before
flitting off to try something else.
If only that were the way Ray"s kind worked.
He pulled back before he could lick candy from Parker"s
mouth and walked out with Penelope on his heels. To the
station—no, to get a bite—
then
to the station.
“That"s enough, Dandelion. We have work to do.”
He should have known he wouldn"t get the last word.
“One of these days, Branigan, you"re going to tell me
what it will take to get dragged off to your love cave!” Parker
called out at his back, so everyone could hear, and Ray
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45
closed his eyes, then opened them in time to catch Ross"s
scowl, but the man"s issues were the least of Ray"s problems
today.
Fairies.
AS LUNCH places hadn"t been open yet, he and Penn had
ended up driving back to the station, where word had been
waiting for them that Perretti would probably get bail and
would get out if the amount wasn"t set large enough. At this
point his scent was familiar enough that Ray could probably
track him down by that alone if he had to.
But when Penn had gone down to the M.E. for the
preliminary report, alone, to save Ray"s nose the aggravation
of the morgue, which was itchy death and chemicals and the
same fake sterility of the hospital to him, he"d stopped by the
courthouse to see a friend before heading out to get some
sushi.
It was the one food he and his partner could always
agree on, and the thought of raw fish was making his mouth
water. He put her order on her desk for her but paused at
his, inhaling the faint hint of
warm
and
welcome
, like fresh
cinnamon rolls.
He smiled as he took off his coat and sat down and had
about half a second to realize that his blood was pounding in
a familiar, uncomfortable way and that what he was smelling
all over his things was Cal Parker,
my/Cal/mine
, and then
that it was getting stronger because Cal was in the station
somewhere.
He lifted his head, listening, and heard their footsteps
and approaching banter before he saw Benedict and Parker.
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46
Of course. So he couldn"t eat in peace. He froze just the
same when he did finally lay eyes on them, on Parker, who
had lost that shirt in the past few hours and whose bare
skin fairly glistened.
And the bastard was sucking on a lollipop. Cherry.
Shining and wet and red.
Ray"s pulse quickened, and he set his jaw. That was all
he needed. His mother had tried to warn him it was like this,
but he hadn"t believed her. He suspected no one did until it
happened to them. Fucking hell. He was too tired to deal
with this. Tired like he"d been running for two years, which
wasn"t an inaccurate description.
He didn"t much care that he was growling when he
spoke, though if you knew Weres, it was a dead giveaway.
“Have you been around my desk today, Parker?” he
demanded. “Sitting in my chair?”
“Yes!” Benedict stopped in his tracks and answered. Ray
didn"t give a crap if it was fear or respect.
“Traitor!” Parker hissed as Benedict held up his phone
to show what looked like videos of Cal Parker wriggling,
wriggling
, in Ray"s chair, laughing and saying something and
rubbing his tight ass all over it as he wheeled the chair
around. Grinding that ass like he was about to do on Ray"s
desk now.
“No.” He barked when Cal"s ass was inches from the
desktop. “Off. Now.” He"d never be able to work otherwise. Or
stand up for that matter.
The lower lip came out for another pout, but Cal
stopped and pulled back. For about three seconds, and then
he plopped his butt right back down on the edge like he
always did. Like his ass belonged there. As though it wasn"t
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47
bad enough Ray"s reports sometimes shimmered and smelled
like double rainbow orgasms.
Like what Cal would smell like with him, Ray"s instincts
told him. He was almost fully hard just thinking about it.
Luckily, Parker broke the mood by dropping his sticky
lollipop onto the desk. Ray grimaced and carefully picked it
up to drop it in his trashcan.
“I am not going to ask why you"d do that,” he pushed
out and got waved away.
“Even you know why, Ray Ray, and you aren"t as smart
as Benny and I… me… I? Are.”
“Me.” Benedict corrected. Ray flicked his eyes to him. It
was safer.
“Okay.” He wasn"t going there. Not today. Cal could pout
all he wanted. “Why are you two here?” He looked away from
both of them and opened his takeout to gobble down some
fish.
“After much research from my grimoire….” Benedict
began, just a touch on the pompous side.
“You looked it up online!” Cal tutted. “Don"t be silly.”
Ray kept his head down, just listening. Even aroused and
furious, he wanted to smile.
“Cal!” Benedict was all wounded pride. “Half this
business is the mystery. What have I told you?”
“Since when are you the business expert? You"re an
accountant.”
“I am a financial wizard.” Benedict"s words were precise.
“An accountant who studies magic isn"t a wizard.” Only
childhood friends could talk to each other like that. Or an
old married couple. But not once had Ray ever caught a
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48
whiff of anything more than friendship between them. He
wished he knew how Benedict managed it, living around the
beautiful, brilliant, manic freak that was Cal Parker and not
wanting him. Or killing him.
Maybe it was simply a matter of not liking men. Or that
Cal didn"t want Benedict in that way. If he had…. Ray
couldn"t imagine anyone refusing him for long.
Ray looked up, not lingering on Parker"s ass or thinking
about Audrey Conti. Or himself.
“An accountant who studies magic who
also
handles
Beings cases with the police!” Benedict had pulled out his
wand and was using it to indicate imaginary bullet points.
Now that could get dangerous. Ray twitched.
“Are you done?” he asked sweetly, and they both seemed
to recall his presence. “And the „mystery" only matters with
humans, and I"m not.” That was the reason he"d been
assigned to work with Penn—and why he ended up working
with these two so much. “Now spill or get out.”
“Whoa, rough talk.” Parker scooted closer and touched
his food before Ray could yell at him for it. That was just
gross, but then fairies didn"t have to worry about germs, so
why would Cal care that he was getting his fingers all over
Ray"s lunch? It would be more shocking if Cal ate it, but he
didn"t even attempt it, just leaned in and pushed a piece
between Ray"s parted lips.
His fingers were on Ray"s mouth. Half hard was no
longer the problem. Ray breathed in and darted out his
tongue, tasted
sweet/salty/Cal
, and looked up. It was a
mistake. With Cal"s eyes on him, the growl slipped out.
Fucking fairies. They needed to learn about boundaries.
Especially
with a sensitive Were. Especially this fairy, with
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49
this Were. Parker might be bi-species and only part fairy, but
he had the same need to be instructed on what was and
what wasn"t public behavior. In fact, the only difference
between him and a full fairy, aside from his useless, if pretty,
wings, was that he could be serious for longer than two
minutes, for all that he liked to pretend otherwise.
Ray"s teeth came out at the thought, and he bit, sank
his teeth in
just
enough, not drawing blood but inflicting
pain, because he still had
some
control, but Parker needed
to learn what it meant when he did these things. Ray wanted
to teach him this and everything else there was to know
about Weres, every time he bared his throat or generally
offered up himself on a platter. The idea made Ray"s head
swim, and then he went even dizzier at the hot,
fake
little
“Ouch” that Cal offered him, even as he turned the hand
next to Ray"s mouth to expose his slender wrist.
Fairies were long-lived, disease-resistant, quick healers.
But they could bleed like anyone else, something Ray, and
Cal, knew only too well.
He was completely aroused by the display just the same,
scent and instinct and the heartbreak of feeling so helpless
making him release Cal"s finger and sway forward to exhale
over his bared forearm. He could see the rain of sparkles at
the edge of his vision, feel them land on his skin, and
thought
Why him?
for the thousandth time. Why was his
mate this man? This…
half-fairy
?
It couldn"t be more wrong. Fairies lived for sunshine,
not the light of a fat, silver moon. They couldn"t even sit still,
everyone knew that, and they had no concept of long-term
monogamy. Why should they, living for so long? Ray had
never heard of a Fairy/Were mating anyway. Cal might want
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50
him, did want him. But not for life, however long it ended up
being for a half-fairy.
Ray closed his mouth and leaned back.
“I can feed myself,” he managed, in just a whisper. He
forced himself to look away. He already knew Cal would be
pouting. He breathed through his mouth to avoid the scent
of
hurt
. His Cal, in pain.
“Dude.” Benedict looked incredibly uncomfortable. Ray
didn"t blame him. “Can we please get back to the case, if you
don"t mind?”
“Fine. The case.” Penn swept back into the group,
plopping down at her desk and digging into her food without
hesitating. “The white stuff on the floor? Lab says plain old
chalk. The metal smell, they don"t know, possibly table salt,
of which they found minute traces. They didn"t have
anything else to work with.”
As though Ray didn"t know the smell of table salt. He
frowned, then frowned harder when Parker pulled yet
another lollipop from… somewhere. It was his one
unexplained ability, pulling food from nowhere. He sucked it
noisily into his mouth.
Focus
, Ray reminded himself. He had a murderer to
throw in jail.
“Only a few dozen spells need that.” Benedict was
commenting. “If it was related to the murder.”
“Wow, you"ve really narrowed it down, guys, thanks.”