Magic Strikes(75)
She looked at it for a long moment, dropped it into the tin, and looked at the body.
«Here.» Her slender finger pointed at Derek's mangled thigh.
A scalpel flashed in Doolittle's dark fingers. He made a neat incision, pulled it open with his
fingers, and dipped artery forceps into the cut. I held my breath.
He pulled the forceps free. A bloody shard gleamed under the harsh light of the lamp.
«Thank you, Jesus.» Doolittle dropped the shard into the tin.
It's over. Finally.
«Here.» Julie pointed to Derek's left side.
Doolittle hesitated.
«Cut here.» The pale finger touched Derek's ribs.
The doctor cut again. Another shard joined the first.
«Here.» The finger pointed to the center of Derek's chest, where the black burn scar crossed his
pectorals.
Fuck, how many of those things did they stick into him?
Doolittle cut. «Nothing.»
«Deeper,» Julie said.
Dark blood gushed from the cut.
I flinched.
An eternity later Doolittle said, «Here it is.» I heard the quiet sound of the shard falling into the
tin.
«Are there more?» Doolittle asked.
«No,» Julie answered.
I looked up. Nothing had changed. Derek lay unmoving. «What now?»
«Now we wait,» Doolittle said.
I SAT IN DARKNESS, IN A LOW CHAIR, WATCHING Derek's body. It had been three
hours since Doolittle had removed the shards. Derek hadn't moved. His body showed no change.
In the room across the hallway Doolittle slept in a La-Z-Boy, his face haggard and worn-out
even in his sleep. He'd stayed awake for two days straight, trying to keep Derek alive, but it was
feeling helpless that finally did him in. For the first hour after Julie had found the shards, we waited
on the edges of our seats. Then hope slowly turned into depression. I watched it take its toll on
Doolittle until finally he abandoned his vigil and retreated into the room. I had checked on him on
the way to the bathroom: he was slumped in his chair, sunken deep into a dream.
Julie appeared in the doorway, carrying two mugs. She approached, handed one cup to me, and
sat by my feet. I sipped from the mug. Hot tea, with lemon. I had taught her how to make it
properly. Apparently, it stuck.
«Why the cage?» she said, pointing to the hole in the floor, where the silver and steel bars glinted
weakly. «I almost walked into it.»
«It's a loup cage. Every shapeshifter safe house has one, just in case.» If Derek went loup, Jim
and Doolittle wanted to contain him quickly. It wasn't a thought I cared to contemplate. And
certainly not a thought I cared to discuss with Julie.
«How did you meet?» she asked softly.
«Hm?»
«Derek and you. How did you meet?»
I didn't really want to talk about it. Still, it was better than wallowing in my despair. «I was
looking for Greg's killer. The Order had given me the last file my guardian was working on, and I
had retraced his steps, trying to find out why he was killed. The file led me to the Pack. I didn't
realize this at the time, but Greg had worked very closely with the Pack. There was a feeling of
mutual trust between him and the shapeshifters. But they didn't know anything about me and I
didn't know anything about them. I only knew that Greg had been torn to pieces by somebody's
claws.»
I took a swallow of my tea. «I had access to Jim-we had worked together in the Guild-and Jim
told Curran about my investigation. Curran decided to find out what I knew and had Jim arrange to
meet me. In Unicorn Lane of all places. It didn't go well.»
Julie snorted quietly. «Big surprise.»
«Yeah. Now when I look back at it, I realize it was a test. His Furry Majesty was trying to gauge
what I was made of and I showed him.» I shrugged. «Live and learn.» So many problems could've
been avoided if I hadn't crouched down in the darkness and called out, «Here, kitty, kitty, kitty.»
«What happened next?»
«Eventually the Pack invited me to one of their gatherings to discuss things in greater detail.
You've seen how they treat outsiders. Bite first, apologize later. They brought me to their Keep in
the middle of the night and led me underground to this huge room. I stepped inside and found half a
thousand shapeshifters and they weren't happy to see me.»
«Were you scared?»
«I was scared I'd blow it. I realized by this point that if I couldn't get the Pack to work with me,
I'd make things a lot harder for myself. I had gone from a no-name merc to making arrangements
with the head of the People and the Beast Lord, and I was seriously outclassed. I wasn't used to
that.»
«I know what you mean,» Julie murmured. «You try your best and only make yourself feel