The Other Crowd. Alex Archer

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Interesting.

      “You’re not going to accept the well-agreed-upon fact that the other crowd snatched her away?”

      Annja sighed. “Wesley, I know the Irish hold great reverence for…the fair folk. And sure, faeries like to steal humans, or trick them into their circles and make them dance for years and years.”

      “They steal babies, too,” he added, more seriously than she wished. “Leave behind changelings, sometimes nothing more than a dried old stump sitting in the cradle.”

      “Right. I don’t wish to challenge anyone’s pagan beliefs—”

      “Ooh, the Catholic chick is challenging my beliefs.”

      “What makes you say I’m Catholic?”

      “A guess. Almost twenty percent of the world is. And I’m not a pagan, just a believer in what feels right.”

      “Little people with wings feels right to you in this situation?”

      He smirked. “No. But if you’ve read anything about the Irish legends of the Tuatha Dé Danaan, they’re not so little. Our size, actually.”

      “I did do research on the flight here. They were warriors who landed in Ireland around 1470 BC.”

      “Right,” Wesley said. “And after many battles against the original Irish, or Fir Bolgs and Milesians, they were finally defeated and went to live underground with the Sidhe. They never reveal themselves to humans, unless you’re one of the old folk who do put credence in the myth. I bet every other farmhouse in the county still puts a bowl of cream out on their back step before turning in, to appease the other crowd.”

      “Bet the feral cats love that,” Annja said.

      “Meow,” Wesley said snidely. “So I’m guessing I’ll never see Annja Creed’s name connected with astro-archaeology?”

      “You got that right.”

      Some astro-archaeologists believed humans on earth were descended from aliens, or at the least, they’d been given alien technology to create some of the amazing architecture throughout history. A person had to possess a certain degree of belief in the unbelievable. No skeptics allowed.

      “Ever been to Puma Punku?” Wesley asked. “That site will make you wonder.”

      “I have, and it did.”

      The ruins in Bolivia were rumored to be seventeen thousand years old, yet they possessed remarkable stone technology. Some of the construction blocks were estimated at four hundred and forty tons. There was no known technology at the time that could have transported those blocks the distance from the quarry. The precisely cut stones stirred rumors of alien involvement in the creation.

      “You know anyone with the other dig who might talk? Someone friendly and not packing a Walther?” Annja asked.

      The sun beamed across Wesley’s face as he thought about it. Annja loved the rugged, adventurer look. He was a man of her kin. Happy under the open sky, and always with dirt under his fingernails, and a question that needed answering.

      “Nope, not a one. They’re mostly new since the camps have split. Don’t really know any other than Slater. He’s a Brit, you know.”

      “Got a problem with Brits?”

      “As a matter of fact, they don’t know how to dig correctly.” He tapped her trowel, which she had been absentmindedly scraping across the surface, and now realized she’d nicked a piece of something white. “What do you have there?”

      “Looks like a bone. Excellent. Let me show you how well I can dig.”

      “All right, American. Hey, what’s that?”

      Looking up from the find, Annja squinted and scanned the horizon. A crowd was gathering at the field edge where the grass grew high and both camps joined.

      “Let’s go take a look.” Wesley left her behind, but not for long.

      “Annja!” Eric appeared, gestured toward the commotion and took off, camera at the ready.

      The cause of the excitement wandered onto the dirt area in front of a parked vehicle. A woman about twenty-two. Surrounded by curious people, she held out her hands as if to ask for space, or maybe just to keep her bearings.

      “Beth,” Annja heard Wesley say.

      The missing girl? She quickened her steps to join the gathering. The crowd was keeping its distance, not blocking her in, yet one woman took Beth’s arm and led her to a stop.

      “Beth?” Wesley approached her. “Where have you been?”

      The bedraggled woman stared blindly at Wesley. A few leaves were tucked in the dirty blond strands of her tangled hair. Her fingers and palms were dirty, as well as the knees of her khaki pants. All in all, though, she looked healthy; maybe she’d just taken a stumble in the dirt.

      Annja recalled what Daniel had said about her disappearance. She had been missing a little over thirty-six hours.

      “Who took you?” someone called out from the crowd.

      “Yes.” Annja stepped forward and addressed the woman. “Do you know what happened? Who took you? Or did you get lost?”

      Beth looked up and when Annja thought the frail, shaking woman was looking into her eyes she realized she was focused just over her shoulder—where Eric stood with the camera.

      “The fair folk,” the woman said.

      The crowd nodded, muttering that they knew it. Didn’t want to believe it, but now it was a sure thing.

      Annja turned to Eric and rolled her eyes at the camera. “Cut,” she said.

      6

      Garin left the details of landing at the airport to his pilot. The man had never failed him, and always managed to land within minutes of his estimated arrival time.

      Garin planned to send his luggage directly to his Manhattan penthouse because he was headed straight for the auction house.

      Strolling toward customs, Garin mused over why he’d jumped so quickly at the snap of Roux’s fingers. He didn’t usually allow the old man to order him about. Hell, for more than five hundred years the two of them had embraced a sort of unavoidable acceptance of the other. Because they were the only five-hundred-year-old men walking the earth these days. They had a connection that neither would deny, and when one truly needed the other, all petty disagreements were overlooked.

      And if Roux thought Annja would appreciate the Fouquet, then Garin could see that—much as he never wanted to look at that painting again. Obtaining it would be no problem. So long as he made the auction in time.

      He checked his watch. Bidding didn’t start for another hour and a half. The limo could have him there in forty-five minutes.

      Annja Creed. Now there was a remarkable woman. She put the woman Garin had left in his bed to shame.

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