on his belt and nodded. âThank you.â
A thumping sound made me turn my eyes back toward the house.
A man, burly, wearing a dark, hooded sweater and old jeans, was holding a long-handled crowbar in big, blocky hands. He shoved one hand into the space between the door and the frame, and with a practiced, powerful motion, popped the door from its frame and sent it swinging open.
Without an instantâs hesitation, Sir Stuart fired. So did the houseâs spectral defenders. A hurricane of ghostly power hurtled down upon the manâand passed harmlessly through him. Hell, the guy looked like he hadnât noticed anything at all.
âA mortal,â Sir Stuart breathed. He took a step forward, let out a sound of pain, and clutched at his side. His teeth were clenched, his jaw muscles standing out sharply. âDresden,â he gasped. âI cannot stop a mortal man. There is nothing I can do.â
The hooded intruder took the crowbar into his left hand and drew a stubby revolver from his sweater with his right.
âGo,â Stuart said. âWarn Mortimer. Help him!â
I blinked. Mortimer had made it clear that he didnât want to get involved with meâand some childish part of my nature wanted to snap that turnabout was fair play. But a wiser, more rational part of me reminded my inner child that without Mort, I might never be able to get in touch with anyone else in town. I might never find my own killer. I might never be able to protect my friends.
And besides. You donât just let people kick down other peopleâs doors and murder them in their own home. You just donât.
I clapped Stuart on the shoulder and sprinted back toward the little house and its little owner.
Chapter Six
T he gunman had a big lead on me, but I had an advantage he didnât. Iâd already been inside the house. I knew the layout, and I knew where Mort was holed up.
Oh. Plus I could run through freaking walls .
Granted, I think it would have been more fun to be Colossus than Shadowcat. But you take what you can get, and any day youâve merely got the powers of an X-Man canât be all that bad. Right?
I gritted my teeth and plunged through the wall into Mortâs kitchen and ran for the study, several steps ahead of the gunman.
âMort!â I shouted. âMort, they brought a hitter with them this time! Thereâs a gunman running around your house!â
âWhat?â demanded Mortâs voice from the far side of the ghost-dusted door. âWhereâs Stuart?â
âDammit, Mort, heâs hurt!â I called.
There was a brief pause, and then Mort said, as if baffled, âHow did that happen?â
I was getting impatient. âFocus, Mort! Did you hear me? Thereâs a frigging gunman loose in your house!â
Real alarm entered his voice for the first time. âA what?â
The gunman had heard Mort shouting at me. He came toward the door to the study, moving lightly for a big man. I got a better look at him, and noted that his clothing was ragged and unwashed, and so was he. He stank, enough that it carried through to me even given my condition, and his eyes were wide and wild, rolling around like those of a junkie who is hopped up on something that makes him pay too much attention to his surroundings. That didnât seem to have affected his gun hand, though. The semiautomatic he clutched in one big fist seemed steady enough to get the job done.
âMort!â I called. âHeâs coming toward your study door right now! Look, just get your weapon and aim at the door and Iâll tell you when to shoot!â
âI donât have one!â Mort screamed.
I blinked. âYou donât what ?â
âI am an ectomancer, not an action hero!â I heard him moving around in the office for a moment, and then he said, âUm. They cut the phone.â
The gunman let out a low, rumbling chuckle. âYou are
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