J did.
âVet. His stomach decided to disagree with him. Iâm having them do a full checkup, just in case. Heâll be home tomorrow morning, donât worry.â
Rupe was almost fifteen. Anything that required an overnight stay at the vet worried me. And I knew it was worrying J, but if he didnât want to talk about it, we werenât going to talk about it. Time to change the subject. I thought about regaling him with the story of Jennieâs party last night, or the way the hot doctor across the way from my apartment threw her most recent lover out wearing only his boxers and one sockâbut finally had to accept the fact that I hadnât come here for distraction, but after-the-fact mentoring.
âWe have a new job.â Heâd heard already; I knew heâd heard from the way his expression didnât change at all. J was a damned good listener, though; he just sat back and let me talk, or not, as I wanted.
I didnât want. It came out anyway.
âGirl, a Talent, barely out of mentorship, probably. Companion to a ki-rin.â J was one of the most traveled, most experienced Talent Iâd ever met. He knew how rare they are, here and in their native country. Itâs not like griffons, breeding two kits at a time, or the damned piskies, who populate like squirrels. Ki-rin are magical, even to us. If the perps had hurt itâ¦I shuddered at the thought. If the ki-rin had been hurt, those rubberneckers would have been an angry mob of fatae, not human looky-loos. âThey were out for a night clubbing, or she was, and heâs keeping her company. Two guys, Talent, jump them on the way home. Jump her. The ki-rin had fallen behind a little. It was late, his mane is pure white so he isnât a youngster anymore, I guess.â I paused, suddenly struck by the thought. âHow old do ki-rin get, anyway?â
J hadnât moved while all this was pouring out of me, sitting in his usual armchair, legs crossed at the ankle. âI donât know. Itâs considered quite rude to ask.â
âHuh. Well, itâ¦didnât get to her in time. Killed the first attacker, wounded the second, I guess it didnât kill him because he didnât get the chance to do anything?â My hands were colder than the bottle I was holding. âThe story seems straightforward, you know? Bad guys do bad thing, are killedâor maimedâby the good guy, survivor gets jail time. Weâve been asked to investigate only to make sure everythingâs clean, that it was self-defense, I guess. Stosser didnât say outright, but the only one whoâd hire us for something like this, where thereâs no money involved, or a revenge motive, would either be family or Council, and I got thefeeling it wasnât family. Donât know why Council would be taking such a hard-line interest, though.â
Council was for Council members, which meant human, not fatae; even if a ki-rin was involved, their instinct would be to sweep it under the rug as fast as possible to protect their people. Had the dead guy been Council? It wasnât impossibleâCouncil was the country club association of Talent, and there were as many ass-wipes in country clubs as there were hanging on street corners. But then theyâd be trying to cast blame away from their man, not hire us to find out the actual facts.
No, something didnât feel right. I wondered what Venec thought of this case, and in that thought I could almost feel his hand on mine again, the smooth, firm touch sending another round of current-shock through my system, then flowing back out again, leaving me with a hitch in my breath.
âPR concerns, I suspect,â J said. âThere has been someâ¦unpleasantness toward the fatae recently.â He shifted, leaning forward from the hips. It was a tell he had, a giveaway sign when he was thinking hard about something. âIn New York, and in Philly. Nothing here
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