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A Lick of Frost (Merry Gentry #6)(3)

By:Laurell K. Hamilton

“You are evil!” Stevens screamed. His eyes bulged, his pulse was racing, and his face was pale and beaded with sweat.
“Is he sick?” Nelson asked.
“In a way,” I said, softly enough that I wasn’t sure any of the other humans in the room heard me. Whoever had done the spell on the watch had done too good a job, or a bad one. The spell was forcing Stevens to see nightmares when he looked at us. His mind wasn’t coping well with what he was seeing and feeling.I turned to Veducci. “The ambassador seems ill. Perhaps he should be taken to see a doctor?”
“No,” Stevens yelled. “No. Without me here they will take over your minds!” He grabbed Biggs, who was closer. “Without the king’s gift you will all believe their lies.”
“I think the princess is right, Ambassador Stevens,” Biggs said. “I think you are ill.”
Stevens’s hands dug into the inside-out designer jacket that Biggs was now wearing. “Surely you see them for what they are now?”
“They look like all the sidhe to me. Except for the color of Captain Doyle’s skin, and the princess being petite, they look like nobles of the sidhe court.”
Stevens shook the bigger man. “The Darkness has fangs. The Killing Frost has skulls hanging from his neck. And she, she is withered, dying. Her mortal blood contaminates her.”
“Ambassador…” Biggs began.
“No, you must see it, as I do!”
“They didn’t change at all when we turned our jackets inside out,” Nelson said. She sounded a little disappointed.
“I told you, we are not doing active glamour on any of you,” I said.
“Lies! I see the horror of you.” Stevens hid his face against Biggs’s broad shoulders, as if he could not bear the sight of us, and perhaps he could not.
“It is easier not to look at them, though,” Shelby said.
Cortez nodded. “I can focus better now, but they look the same.”
“Beautiful,” Bertram said.
Shelby gave him a sharp look, and the assistant apologized, as if that one word was totally out of line.
Stevens had begun to sob into Biggs’s designer suit. “You must get him away from us,” Doyle said.
“Why?” one of the others asked.
“The spell on the watch makes him see monsters when he looks at us. I fear his mind will break under the strain of it without King Taranis nearby to ease the effects.”
“Can’t you just undo the spell?” Veducci asked.
“It is not our spell,” Doyle said simply.
“Can’t you help him?” Nelson asked.
“I think the less contact with us, the better for the ambassador.”
Stevens had seemed to be trying to bury his face into Biggs’s shoulder. The ambassador’s hands twisted in the seams and lining of the coat.
“Being near us is hurting him,” Frost said, speaking for the first time since the introductions. His voice did not have the depth of Doyle’s, but the width of his chest gave it weight.
“Get some security up here,” Biggs said to Farmer. And though Farmer was a very powerful man in his own right, and a full partner, he moved for the door. I guess when your daddy is one of the founders of a firm and you are the leading active partner, you still have clout, even over other partners. 
We stood in silence, the humans’ awkward body language and facial expressions saying that they were terribly uncomfortable with the display of mad emotion. It was a type of madness, but the three of us sidhe had seen worse. We’d seen madness that had magic to it. The kind of magic that could steal the breath from your body on a laughing whim.
Uniformed security came. I recognized one of the guards from the entrance desk. They had a doctor with them. I remembered reading several doctors’ names on the board beside the elevator. Apparently, Farmer had exceeded his orders, but Biggs seemed very pleased to hand the sobbing man over to the doctor. No wonder Farmer had made partner. He followed orders to the letter, but built on them, made them better.
No one said anything else until they led the ambassador from the room and the door closed quietly behind him. Biggs straightened his tie and tugged at the wrinkled suit jacket. Inside out, or right side out, the suit was ruined until a dry cleaner got hold of it. He started to take the jacket off, then glanced at us and stopped.
I caught his eye, and he looked away, embarrassed. “It’s all right, Mr. Biggs, if you’re afraid to take your jacket off.”
“Ambassador Stevens’s mind seems quite broken.”
“I would advise the doctor to have a licensed practitioner of the arts look at the watch before you simply remove it.”
“Why?”
“He’s worn that watch for years. It may have become a part of his psyche, his mind. To simply remove it could do more harm.”
Biggs reached for a phone.
“Why didn’t you say something before he was led away?” Shelby asked.
“I only now thought of it,” I said.
“I thought of it before they left,” Doyle said.
“Why didn’t you speak up?” Cortez asked.
“It is not my job to protect the ambassador.”
“It’s everyone’s job to help another human in such a state,” Shelby said, then he looked surprised, as if he’d just heard what he’d said.
Doyle gave the smallest curl of lips. “But I am not human, and I think the ambassador is weak and without honor. Queen Andais has lodged several complaints with your government about the ambassador. She has been ignored. But even she could not have foreseen such treachery as this.”
“Treachery of our government against yours?” Veducci asked.
“No, King Taranis’s treachery against someone who trusted him. The ambassador saw that watch as a mark of high favor, when in fact it was a trap and a lie.”
“You disapprove,” Nelson said.
“Do you not also disapprove?” Doyle asked.
She started to nod and then looked away, blushing. Apparently, even with her jacket turned, she couldn’t help reacting to him. He was worth reacting to, but I didn’t like that she was having this much trouble. The charges would be hard enough without us making the prosecutors blush.
“What would the king have gained from poisoning the ambassador against your court?” Cortez asked.
“What have the Seelie always gained from blackening the name of the Unseelie?” I asked.
“I’ll bite,” Shelby said. “What have they gained?”
“Fear,” I said. “They have made their people fear us.”
“What did that gain them?” Shelby asked.
Frost spoke. “The greatest punishment of all is to be cast out of the Seelie Court, the golden court. But it is punishment because Taranis and his nobles have convinced themselves that once you join the Unseelie Court you become a monster. Not just in actions, but in body. They tell their people that they will become deformed if they join with the Unseelie.”“You talk like you know,” Nelson said.
“I was once part of the golden throng, long, long ago,” Frost said.
“What did you do to earn exile?” Shelby asked.
“Lieutenant Frost doesn’t have to answer that,” Biggs said. He had stopped fussing with his suit and was back to being one of the best lawyers on the West Coast.
“Is the answer prejudicial to the charges brought against the other guards?” Shelby asked.
“No,” Biggs said, “but since the lieutenant is not included in the charges filed, the question is outside the scope of this investigation.”
Biggs had lied, smoothly, effortlessly; lied as if it were the truth. He actually didn’t know if Frost’s answer would have been prejudicial, because he had no idea why anyone but the three guards in question had been exiled from the Seelie Court. (Though in Galen’s case, he hadn’t been exiled because he’d been born and raised in the Unseelie Court; you can’t be exiled from what you’ve never been a part of.) Biggs had carefully not allowed any questions that might interfere with a linear defense of his clients.
“This is a very informal proceeding,” Veducci said with a smile. He radiated harmless good-ol’-boy charm. It was a trick, bordering on a lie. He’d researched us. He’d dealt with the courts more than any of the other lawyers. He was either going to be our greatest ally or our most difficult opponent.
He continued, still smiling and letting us see those tired eyes. “We are all here today to see if the charges that King Taranis filed on behalf of the Lady Caitrin should be followed up with more formal proceedings. Cooperation would give strength to the princess’ guards’ denials.”
“Since all of the guards have diplomatic immunity, we are here out of courtesy,” Biggs said.
“We do appreciate that,” Veducci said.
“Do bear in mind,” Shelby said, “that King Taranis has stated that all of the queen’s guard, and now the princess’ guard, are a danger to everyone around them, most especially women. He stated that this rape did not surprise him. He seemed to think it was the inevitable outcome of allowing the queen’s Raven Guard unlimited access even inside faerie. One of the reasons he brought these charges to the human authorities, an unprecedented action in all the history of the Seelie Court, is that he feared for us. If a sidhe noble of Lady Caitrin’s magical powers could be so easily taken, then what hope did mere humans have against their…lusts?”