Skin Game: A Novel of the Dresden Files

I grunted and slid it down the table. Nicodemus promptly passed it over to Grey.

 

Grey opened the file and started reading it. Those odd eyes of his flicked over pages as if he could take in their entire contents with a glance, then moved to the next. He finished it in maybe six or seven seconds.

 

“Well?” Nicodemus asked.

 

“For the simple part, that’s enough,” Grey replied. “But to pull it off properly, I’ll need a sample. A fresh one.”

 

“We’ll add that to today’s list,” Nicodemus said. He nodded to Deirdre, who got up and went around the table, passing out thin manila folders labeled DAY TWO. We each got one. I opened mine up to find a top page that simply read:

 

PHASE ONE PREPARATION:

 

WEAPONS

 

SPELLS

 

ENTRY

 

“We have considerable work in front of us today,” Nicodemus said. “Binder, I’ve already had the weapons brought in for your associates to use, but we’ll need to see to their maintenance and loading. Perhaps Miss Murphy will be willing to assist with that.”

 

“Sure,” she said. “Why not.”

 

Nicodemus smiled. “Miss Valmont, you’ll find a schematic for a vault door in your folder. You’ll need to be able to open it without damaging it. Today will be the day you plan your approach and requisition whatever equipment you need. Just make a list and give it to one of the squires.”

 

Valmont flipped to the next page, frowning, and studied a diagram. Then she said, “This is a Fernucci.”

 

“Yes.”

 

“I’m not going to say it’s impossible,” she said. “But what I will say is that I’ve never cracked one successfully before and I don’t know anyone who has. Easier to blow it.”

 

“But we will not be doing so,” Nicodemus replied calmly. “Life is challenge. Rise to it.”

 

“Great.” She shook her head. “What, are we hitting Vegas or something? Who has a vault door like this around this town?”

 

“We’ll discuss that at the evening meeting,” Nicodemus said. “Miss Ascher, Mr. Dresden. Phase One will require us to breach a secure building. We may need to make entry through a wall, neatly, without an explosion, and we will certainly need a loud and obvious distraction to occupy the attention of local security forces while we enter. Those tasks will fall to you two.”

 

I grunted and eyed Ascher. “You want walls or noise?”

 

“He said loud and obvious,” Ascher replied, her voice light. “That screams Dresden to me.”

 

“And we don’t want the building collapsing on us,” Karrin added in a murmur.

 

I sniffed and said, “Fine. I’ll make the noise, then.”

 

“Releasing enough energy to open a hole without an explosion? That’s tricky,” Ascher said. “I can adapt a spell I know, but I’ll need some time to practice it.”

 

“You have until sundown,” Nicodemus said. “Deirdre, you will take Mr. Grey to the factor’s address and assist him in obtaining a sample.”

 

“No,” I said. “These two stay. I’ll go get the sample.”

 

Nicodemus looked up at me sharply.

 

I showed him my teeth. “Grey’s a shapeshifter, isn’t he?” I asked. “You’re going to use him to duplicate poor Harvey there.”

 

“If we are?” Nicodemus asked. There was an edge of frost to his words. He didn’t like that I’d figured out the next step of his plan.

 

“Harvey lives in my town,” I said. “You turn these two psychos loose on Chicago, and Harvey winds up dead somewhere. So I’ll do it. I’ll get the sample your doppelg?nger needs without killing anyone.”

 

“Where’s the fun in that?” Grey wondered aloud.

 

“The fun part is where you get to live,” I replied. “Besides. If his death is discovered before we pull the job, don’t you think someone’s going to be able to put two and two together and figure out that the place is about to get hit? So we do it smart.”

 

Grey sighed and looked at Nicodemus. “Honestly. Where do you find these people?”

 

Nicodemus never took his eyes off me. “Agreed,” he said finally. “Finesse seems a wiser option.” His dark eyes sparkled maliciously. “The three of you should have no problem accomplishing the task.”

 

“What?” I asked.

 

“Grey, Deirdre, and Dresden will run this particular errand,” he said, “while the rest of us busy ourselves here.” He paused. “Unless, of course, Dresden, you wish to cease lending me your support.”

 

I ground my teeth. I wanted to give him a solid punch in the nose—but that would not be upholding Mab’s honor. “No,” I said.

 

“Deirdre and Mr. Grey will bear witness to your sincerity.”

 

My eyes tracked over to Deirdre, who was regarding me with a wide, intense smile that made her dark eyes too bulgy and conveyed a number of awful things. Her hair had begun to slither back and forth over her suit jacket’s shoulders.

 

Grey just looked at me with that calm smile. He made a little motion of his hand, pantomiming sticking a pin into something. Or maybe pulling it out again.

 

“Oh, goodie,” I muttered. “Field trip.”

 

 

 

 

 

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