Kingfisher

The restaurant would be closed.

Incredulous, he wondered if the restaurant was closed only to him. Other

people entered when his back was turned, ate and drank, were spoken to and

served by the long-limbed, rippling-haired beauty with her eyes full of

secrets, her air of one moving imperturbably through her tasks while listening

for a distant voice. Somehow the chef had seen Pierce’s heart among her

possessions; somehow, through the power of his arts, he denied only Pierce

entry to his enchantments.

Or maybe, Pierce thought in saner moments, they were just taking a vacation.

He could wait.

He wandered into a scruffy bar along the waterfront one twilight, a place

where faces grew blurred on entry since nobody came there to be seen. He would

sit and have one beer, he decided, then take the shortest route to the

restaurant, just like any other diner expecting to be fed, expecting

Stillwater’s to behave like any other restaurant. Maybe if he changed his

attitude, stopped slinking through the streets, sending an aura of guilt and

confusion ahead of him, the sadistic chef wouldn’t recognize him. He would

just step in, sit down as easily as he had taken a stool in this shabby cave

where nobody expected him and nobody cared. He—

“It’s not you he wants,” the man beside him said. “That’s why he won’t

let you in.”

Pierce froze. The voice seemed something out of a vague, half-forgotten past,

which, he realized as his head turned stiffly, reluctantly to face it, had

been only a scant few days ago.

“Merle.”

The man’s eyes held only a faint, friendly smile. “Thought you left town.”

“I had car trouble.”

Merle nodded, took a sip from his bottle. The stolen knife hung between them,

an unspoken word haunting the air. I wanted it, Pierce explained as silently,

so I took it. Now I want a man’s wife. So.

“Is it fixed?”

“Yes.”

“Then you might as well get back on the road. Nothing for you here. Oh.” He

reached into a pocket, pulled out a credit card. “You left this behind. You’

re family; Tye wouldn’t charge you for anything. You might need this, south.

I hear cities can be expensive.”

“How did you know?” Pierce asked helplessly. “Why I’m still here? How

could you know something like that?”

Merle shrugged, beads in his hair speaking softly together. “I know

Stillwater.” His eyes slid away from Pierce’s face, gazed over his shoulder

at the night gathering across the water. “What he wants has nothing to do

with you.”

“But Sage—I can’t just walk away from her—”

“He doesn’t think you will. That’s why he bothers tormenting you. It’s

just a game.”

Pierce swallowed. “Is it a game to her?” he asked painfully.

“Oh, no.” He gave Pierce’s shoulder a reassuring pat. “No. But you can’t

do anything for her. He knows that. He just likes having you around, wanting

what he has. Think about this: Maybe you’ll learn something in Severluna that

will help you here. But you need to go.” He grimaced slightly, touched his

temples, rattling beads again. “And call your mother. She’s been on my mind.



“Who are you?” Pierce whispered, trying to see into the pale eyes, fathom

the mists there. “Who are you?”

Merle lifted his beer. “I go back,” he said simply. “Find your way to

Severluna. See what you can do with that knife.”





6


Carrie was ruthlessly and shamelessly ransacking her father’s possessions.

She had seen very little of Merle since he had turned into a wolf. She pursued

his human voice through the trees in the bright dawn, in the twilight mists;

he lured her but refused to let her find him. She glimpsed him a couple of

times through the swinging doors between the bar and the grill, leaning

against the mahogany and looking at her, his eyes unreadable. When she hastily

dumped the tray of silverware and napkin holders she carried, and went out to

find him, he would be gone. Vanished. Disappeared. Wherever he slept, it wasn

’t at home.

He was a mystery. She would solve him, she swore, if every other mystery

clinging like the old year’s dead wet leaves to the Kingfisher Inn eluded

her. This mystery was her father. He had loved her mother once. They had made

her, Carrie, with his dark hair, his eyes, and her mother’s urge to run.

“Well, I’m not,” she whispered tersely to the boxes she pulled out of

closets, dragging their frayed lacework of cobwebs adorned with desiccated sow

bugs into light. “I’m not running yet.”

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