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Swallowing Darkness (Merry Gentry #7)(8)

By:Laurell K. Hamilton

The younger cop asked, “Can we have our guns back?”
The older cop gave him a look that said clearly that you don’t ask for your weapon back. They were probably each carrying at least one hidden gun, or the older cop would be. Regulations can say what they want, but I don’t know many police officers who don’t double up. Your life too often depends on being armed.
“If you promise not to shoot any of our people, yes,” Doyle said. “Is the woman all right?” the older cop asked, motioning with his head at Gran, still held by Sholto, his extra bits, and his arms, but I was pretty certain that neither officer was looking at Sholto’s human-looking arms. I’d have bet nearly anything that if asked to describe him later, they would have seen only the tentacles. Cops are trained to observe, but some things are just too eye-catching even for people with a badge.
Rhys came to us, smiling. “She’ll be fine. Just a bit of magic.” He did that “hail-fellow-well-met” smile, and I noticed that he was wasting glamour to hide his ruined eye. He wanted to look harmless in that moment. Scars make some people think you must have done something to earn them.
“What does that mean?” the older cop asked. He wasn’t going to let it go. He stood with his partner, surrounded by what he would think were nightmares. They’d taken their guns. And you would have to be a fool to not see the physical potential in Doyle and the rest of the men in the room, let alone the extra bits that Sholto was showing. The policeman was no fool, but he also saw Gran as a little old lady, and he wasn’t leaving until he knew that she was all right. I was beginning to see how he’d survived in the job for more than a decade, and maybe why he’d never gotten out of uniform. If I were him, I’d have left the room and called for backup. But then, I was a woman, which makes you more cautious around violence.
“Grandmother,” I said, and it may have been one of the few times I’d used her full title. She was just Gran. But tonight I wanted the police to know that we were family.
She looked at me, and there was pain in her eyes. “Oh, Merry, child, do nae call me by a title.”
“The fact that you don’t approve of my choice in men doesn’t give you the right to use your magic to trash my hospital room, Gran.”
“It was the spell. You know that.”
“Do I?” I let my voice hold coldness, because I wasn’t sure. “The spell was designed to simply magnify what you truly feel, Gran. You truly do hate Sholto, and Doyle, and they are the fathers of my children. That will not change.”
“Are you saying the ol’…woman made the stuff float and hit everyone?” the older cop asked. He sounded doubtful.
Gran pulled at Sholto’s grip. “I am meself again, Lord of Shadows. Ya can let me go.”
“Swear. Swear by the Darkness that Eats all Things that you will not try and hurt me, or anyone in this room.”
“I’ll swear ta no hurt anyone in this room, at this moment, but I will nae promise beyond that, because ya are the murderer of my mother.”
“Murderer,” the older cop said.
“He killed her mother, my great-grandmother, about five hundred years ago, or am I off by a century or two?” I asked.
“You’re off by about two hundred years,” Rhys said. He was in front of the policemen, smiling, pleasant, but he didn’t have a magic that could go with the smile. Someone else in the room did though. “Why don’t you talk to the nice policemen, Galen?” Rhys said.
Galen looked puzzled, but he moved the small distance to the policemen. If it bothered him to be standing directly under a crowd of nightflyers it didn’t show. Which meant it didn’t bother him, because Galen was almost incapable of lying that well.“I’m sorry that you had to see our mess,” he said, and he sounded reasonable, friendly. One of his abilities was to truly be pleasant. Most people wouldn’t think of that as a magical ability, but to be able to charm people wasn’t a small thing. I’d begun to notice that it worked really well on humans. It also worked to a certain degree on the other sidhe and some of the lesser fey. Galen had always had a bit of this kind of charm, a kind of glamour, but since we’d all gotten our powers boosted, his “friendliness” had grown to the level of real magic.
I watched the policemen’s faces smooth out. The younger one smiled, all the way to his eyes. I couldn’t even hear what Galen was saying, but I didn’t need to. He’d understood what Rhys had wanted him to do. With Galen’s pleasant magic easing the way, we got the policemen their guns, and they left, happy with the nightflyers still hanging like bats from the ceiling, and the tentacles still writhing in the window like some sort of really good 3-D. Though Sholto letting go of Gran had been the thing that had made the older cop succumb to Galen’s charm. I think if the older cop had continued to see anyone in danger, he wouldn’t have been so easily won over.
Oh, and Sholto had put his tentacles away. Once he would have had to use glamour to hide them, but they would have still been there. He’d been able to hide them, even if you were touching his chest and stomach. They had felt smooth and perfect. Strong glamour, that. But when the wild magic escaped, or was called into being by Sholto and myself, he had gained a new ability. His tentacles could look like a very realistic tattoo, and it was a tattoo, but with a thought he could make it tentacles again. It was similar to the tattoos on Galen and myself that looked like a butterfly and a moth, respectively. I’d been grateful when they stopped being alive, but trapped in our skin. It had felt very wrong.
Several of the men had tattoos, and some of them could become real. Real vines to twine down the body. None were as real as Sholto’s mark, but then it was the only mark that had begun life as part of his own body.
Galen’s winning personality didn’t work if the person was too afraid, or was looking directly at something too frightening, so Sholto smoothed his extra bits back into the delicate tattoo. Galen’s was a mild magic by our terms, but it was very, very useful in situations where the more spectacular powers were useless.
At Rhys’s suggestion Galen turned to the doctor next, and it worked even better with her, but then she was a woman and he was charming. She might get to another patient or two before she finally realized that she hadn’t said everything she’d wanted to say, but by then, she might be too embarrassed to admit that a nice smile had made her forget so much. One of the real benefits of subtle magic was that most humans assumed that it wasn’t magic, but just how handsome the man was, and what doctor wants to admit that they can be befuddled so easily by a pretty face? 
When we were alone again, just us, we all turned to Gran. I asked the question. “You said you knew who did the spell? Who?”
Gran looked at the floor, as if she were embarrassed. “Your cousin, Cair, she comes to visit now and then. She is me granddaughter.” She said the last in a defensive tone.
“I know that you have more than one grandchild, Gran.”
“None so dear to me as you, Merry.”
“I’m not jealous, Gran. Just tell us what happened.”
“She was very affectionate, touched me several times, stroked me hair, said how lovely it was. She joked that she was glad she got something lovely out of the family genetics.”
My cousin, Cair, was tall, slender, and very sidhe of body, but her face was like Gran’s, very brownie, noseless, and with all her smooth pale sidhe skin, her face looked unfinished. There were human surgeons who could have given her a nose for real, but she was like most sidhe. She didn’t have much faith in human science.
“Did she know you were going to visit me?”
“Yes.”
“Why would she wish me harm?”
“Perhaps it is not you she wished to harm,” Doyle said.
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“I would nae have harmed ye on purpose, but these two,” and she jabbed her thumb back at Sholto, and forward to Doyle, “I would happily have killed these two.”
“Do you still feel that way?” I asked, voice soft.
She had to think about it, but finally she said, “No, not kill. You have the King of the sluagh as your man, and the Darkness; they are powerful allies, Merry. I would nae part you from such strength.”
“The fact that they are the fathers of your great-grandchildren holds no weight for you?” I asked, studying her face.
“It means everything that you are with child.” She smiled, and her face was illuminated with joy. It was the smile I’d grown up seeing, and treasured my whole life. She gave that smile to me, and said, “And twins, it is too good to be true, a’most.”
Her face sobered.
“What’s wrong, Gran?” I asked.
“You carry brownie blood in ya, child, and now one is the child of the sluagh, and Darkness can claim a mixed bag of genes too.” She looked past them all to the nightflyers still clinging inside the room.
I knew what she meant. There were some potentially interesting genetics at work inside my body right this moment. I couldn’t be anything but happy about it, but the concern in her face wasn’t the comfort I needed.
She shook herself, as if suddenly cold. “I am no longer privy to the Golden Court, but I know someone offered Cair something she wanted greatly for her to do this. She risked me life, putting me again’ these two.” Again she used her thumb to point at both of them.