Black Magic Sanction. Ким Харрисон
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I went to ask him about Ivy, then reconsidered. He and Ivy? No way. Though if they were, they’d look great together. His height was just a shade more than hers, and with his trendy clothes and attention to detail, he could play the part of a living vampire’s boyfriend without missing a beat. Glenn was ex-military and worked at keeping his trim look. Right now, he’d gone no hair, and it made his stud earring stand out all the more, the glint giving him a hint of bad boy. The story he gave his dad was that he’d gotten it pierced so he could blend into the darker elements of Cincinnati, but I think he liked the small bit of bling.
Glenn looked up at my silence, his eyebrows raised as he indicated the rainbow mug. “I thought you’d want some coffee. This might take a while.”
“Okay …” He brought me coffee and rainbows, I thought as I reached for it and sat down, feeling the bump my phone made in my back pocket. “They’re pressing charges? For what? Killing a strawberry display? That wasn’t even my charm. I told you, I didn’t use magic. I know better. Get an I.S. team in there. None of the magic will have my aura on it.”
He chuckled, irritating me even more. The painfully slow sounds of him typing clicked key by key as he worked off the open file beside him. “The I.S. is ignoring the incident completely, so sending a team to ascertain it wasn’t your magic? You’re going to take the hit for this,” he said, his resonant voice dark and sexy. “Nice bit of passive harassment.”
My eyes flicked to my strawberry-covered bag and the little silver broach tucked inside. Passive harassment was a good story, but I think the reason the I.S. didn’t show was because the coven told them to back off while they brought me in themselves. Guilt and fear kept my mouth shut. Crap on toast, what if I’d ruined my only chance to rescind my shunning?
“I got the store to agree to disorderly conduct if you pay for the damages,” Glenn said, starting as he noticed the rat looking at him. “Unless you know who did it?” he added, gaze alternating between me and the critter.
I thought about the ID in my bag, and I shrugged. “Vivian Smith from California?” I volunteered. God, I’d called her Strawberry Shortcake. Could I dig my grave, or what?
Glenn made a sound of both amusement and sympathy, his eyes on the screen. “I hope you make more than I do. I had no idea strawberries were that expensive out of season.”
“Swell,” I said, then sipped my coffee. It wasn’t bad, but nothing tasted good since having that raspberry-mocha-whatever-it-had-been Al had ordered me last winter. I set the coffee aside and leaned over to get a look at Glenn’s neck. He might not know that he smelled like vampire, but any Inderlander could tell.
Glenn felt my gaze and looked up from his slow excuse for typing. “What?”
I pulled back, worried. “Nothing.”
Clearly suspicious, he pulled a paper from under the stack in the red folder and handed it to me. “Damages.”
Taking the paper, I sighed. How come my file is red? Everyone else had a normal-colored one. “Hey!” I exclaimed, seeing the total. “They’re charging me retail. Glenn!” I complained. “They can’t do that.” I shook it at him. “I shouldn’t have to pay retail!”
“What did you expect? You can keep that. It’s your copy.”
I sat back in a huff and shoved it in my bag with my sticky scarf as he typed his slow, painful way through my report. “Where’s this human compassion I keep hearing about?”
“That’s it, baby doll,” he said, voice smoother than usual. He was laughing at me.
“Mmmm. Can I go now?” I said dryly, not liking the “baby doll” tag but letting it go.
Glenn searched out a key and hit it with a sound of finality. Leaning back, he laced his dark fingers over his middle like I’d seen his dad do. “Not until Jenks posts your bail.”
I groaned. Damn it, Ivy must have stopped at home first. One more thing to owe the pixy.
“He seemed proud to do it,” Glenn said. “You can wait here, or go to the basement with the rest of the felons.” His smile widened. “I vouched for you,” he added, then leaned forward to answer his phone, now humming on the interoffice line.
“Thanks,” I said sourly, slouching down as he took the call. How was I going to pay Jenks back? My share of the sale of my mom’s house had been keeping me afloat lately, but I didn’t want to tap into that to post bail. Robbie’s half had gone to his upcoming wedding, and I was living on mine. It was hardly the statement of independence I’d wanted, but things would pick up. They always did around spring.
“Who?” Glenn said into the phone, his voice rising in disbelief, and then both Glenn and I looked toward the attention-getting tap on his door frame.
“Trent Kalamack,” the feminine voice on the phone said clearly over the faint office noise, naming the trim figure in his two-thousand-dollar suit now silhouetted in the doorway, his arm slowly slipping behind him from where he’d confidently tapped on the door. Suave and self-assured, the man smiled faintly at the woman’s awe.
“Next time, call before you send someone up,” Glenn said as he stood.
“But it’s Trent Kalamack!” the voice said, and Glenn hung up on her.
My breath slipped from me, almost a groan. Trent Kalamack. The obscenely successful, smiling businessman, ruthless bio- and street-drug lord, elf in hiding, and pain-in-my-ass-extraordinaire Trent Kalamack. Right on schedule. “Why is it you show up only when I need money? “I sat straighter, but I wasn’t going to get up unless it was to smack him.
Trent still smiled, but the faint worry pinching his eyes tickled the back of my brain. Trent wasn’t especially tall, but his bearing made people take notice, as if his baby-fine, nearly white hair, devilishly confident smile, and drool-worthy, athletic physique gained from riding his prize-winning horses wouldn’t. All that I could ignore—mostly—but his voice … his beautiful voice, rich in variance and resonant… That was harder—and I hated that I loved it.
Trent was Cincinnati’s most eligible bachelor, still single because of me. He’d thanked me for that in a weird moment of honesty when he thought we might die in a demon’s prison cell. I was still wondering why I’d bothered to save his little elf butt. Misplaced responsibility, maybe? That I’d saved his life didn’t seem to mean anything to him, since he had tried to make my skull one with a tombstone not three seconds after I got us safe.
Apparently my helping him get the ancient-elf DNA sample from the demons to repair his species genome had been enough to earn my right to live, but I was sure he was still mad at me for having messed up his city council seat reelection plans by trashing his wedding. Rumors in the Were community had it that he was going to make a bid for the mayoral position instead. My gut clenched, and I winced as I flicked a gaze at him.
Where there had once been only irritation, there was now satisfaction in Trent’s green eyes as he took Glenn’s offered hand extended across his cluttered desk. My pulse raced—he’d called me a demon and tried to kill me. I wasn’t. I was a witch. But he had a point—my children would be demons.
“Mr.