Gunmetal Magic

“Give me back my son!” the man demanded.

 

Curran just looked at him.

 

“It’s in the boy’s best interests that he stay in our custody,” Ghastek said. “We have better facilities.”

 

“It’s not the quality of your facilities I doubt,” Curran said. “It’s your ethics and your intentions.”

 

“What is that supposed to mean?” Ghastek narrowed his eyes.

 

“It means the necklace is more important to you than the boy,” I said. “You’ll slice the flesh off his neck to get it.”

 

“That’s a gross exaggeration.” The Master of the Dead crossed his arms. “I’ve never murdered a child.”

 

“Oh, it’s never murder when you do it,” I said. “It’s a regrettable accidental casualty.”

 

“You can’t do this!” Amanda’s father thrust himself before Curran. “You can’t take my son.”

 

“Yes, I can,” Curran said. “We’ll keep him safe. If your wife decides to explain what’s going on, I’ll consider returning him.”

 

“Go fuck yourself,” the golden-haired woman said. “Crawl back into whatever dark hole you came out of. I have no care for you or your kind.” She turned and walked out of the restaurant.

 

Her husband froze, caught for a moment between his son and his wife. “This isn’t over,” he said finally and chased after Aurellia.

 

“Give us the boy,” Ghastek said, his tone reasonable.

 

“I don’t think so,” Curran said. “If you want to examine him later, you’re welcome to visit the Keep.”

 

Around us the People tensed. In the corner two vampires leaned forward.

 

I unsheathed Slayer. I had a lot of practice and I did it fast. The lawyer woman jerked back. The opaque blade smoked, sensing the undead. Come on, Ghastek. Make our night.

 

Ghastek sighed. “Fine. I’ll make the necessary arrangements later.”

 

Curran headed out through the door. I waited a second and followed, walking backward for the first two steps to make sure that no undead would come leaping out of the darkness at Curran’s back.

 

The door of the restaurant swung shut behind us. Ghastek’s voice called out, “Alright, people, back to work. Let’s process the scene tonight.”

 

“What’s your name?” Curran asked.

 

The boy swallowed. “Roderick.”

 

“Don’t be afraid,” Curran told him, his voice still laced with snarls. “I’ll keep you safe. If anything threatens you, I’ll kill it.”

 

The boy gulped.

 

A giant scary man with glowing eyes and an inhuman voice just took you from your parents, but don’t be afraid, because he’ll kill anything that moves. Kick-ass calming strategy, Your Majesty.

 

“He might be less scared if you stopped snarling and turned off the headlights,” I murmured.

 

The fire in Curran’s eyes died.

 

“It will be okay,” I told Roderick. “We just want to take off that necklace, and then you can go back to your parents. It’ll be alright, I promise.”

 

If the necklace snapped his neck, there wasn’t a damn thing I or Curran or anybody else could do about it. We had to get him to the Keep’s infirmary right away. We drove there in silence.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 3

 

 

 

 

Doolittle bent over the boy, studying the necklace with a magnifying glass. Dark-skinned, his hair salted with gray, the Pack medic looked to be in his early fifties. Doolittle was the best medmage I had ever met. He had brought me back from the edge of death so many times, we’d stopped joking about it.

 

There was something so soothing about Doolittle. Whether it was his manner, his kind eyes, or the soft Southern accent, tinted with notes of coastal Georgia, I didn’t know. The moment he walked into the room, Roderick relaxed. In thirty seconds they had struck a bargain: if Roderick stayed on his best behavior, he would get ice cream.

 

Not that Roderick had to be bribed. It took us almost an hour to get to the Keep and the entire ride over, he did not say a single word. He didn’t move, didn’t fidget, or do any of the normal things a seven-year-old kid would do in the car. He just sat there, quiet, his brown eyes opened wide, like he was a baby owl.

 

Doolittle pressed his thumb and index finger just above the necklace, stretching the boy’s skin. A vein stood out, burrowing from the gold band under his skin into the muscle of his neck like a thin root.

 

“Does it hurt when I press here?” he asked.

 

“No,” Roderick said. His voice was barely above a whisper.

 

Doolittle probed a different spot. “And now?”

 

“No.”

 

The medmage let go and patted Roderick’s shoulder. “I do believe we’re done for tonight.”

 

“Ice cream now?” Roderick asked, his voice quiet.

 

“Ice cream now,” Doolittle confirmed. “Lena!”

 

A female shapeshifter stuck her red head into the room.

 

“This young gentleman is in need of ice cream,” Doolittle said. “He’s earned it.”

 

“Oh boy!” Lena made big eyes and held out her hand. “I better pay up, then. Come on.”

 

Roderick hopped off the chair and took her hand very carefully.

 

“What kind of ice cream would you like?” Lena asked, leading him through the doorway.

 

“Chocolate,” the boy said quietly, with a slight hesitation in his voice.

 

“I’ve got loads of chocolate…”

 

The door swung shut behind them.

 

Doolittle looked at the door and sighed. “The necklace is rooted in the sternomastoid. If I try to remove it surgically, he’ll bleed out. You said his mother put this atrocity on him?”

 

“Yes,” Curran said.

 

“The collar glowed when the husband came near,” I said. “He was reaching out for it and she yanked it away from him and snapped it on the boy.”

 

“So it was probably intended for her husband,” Doolittle said.

 

“That, or it’s an equal opportunity offender,” I said. “Any neck will do and the boy was the closest.”

 

“And it killed the girl instantly?” Doolittle asked.

 

“Pretty much,” Curran said.

 

“Strange. It doesn’t seem to be actively harming the boy at the moment beyond rooting in.”

 

“Does it hurt him?” I asked.

 

“Doesn’t appear so.” Doolittle leaned against the chair. “I poked and prodded at it a bit. It seems that the ‘roots’ shift under pressure so any attempt to cut the necklace will likely cause it to contract and strangle him. I don’t want to fool with it.”

 

“The woman,” Curran said, “she knew better than to touch it.”

 

I thought out loud. “She was unaffected by the glow, so either she’s immune or she knows how it works.”

 

“The boy didn’t cry when you took him from his mother?” Doolittle asked.

 

“No,” I said.