Asil had a baseball bat and was using it like a katanaturn and turn and never let the bastard get a good hard strike on your weapon. The Japanese had had lousy steel and had learned to compensate. Tad had a pair of kitchen knives and was keeping the fae from getting into a good rhythm with themunhappily, it was interfering with Asil, too.
The fae fought well. Like someone who had learned the sword when it was the weapon of choice.
Not all fae were long-lived. Some had lives comparable to insectsa few seasons, then gone. Most of those, Zee had told me once when he was a little drunk, were gone in truth. Their more fragile lives incapable of dealing with the steel and concrete that was conquering the earth.
Others lived nearly human longtwenty years for some, a hundred and fifty for others. Originally only a small percentage of fae were nearly immortal. The rise of humans and technology had selected for those tougher fae, and they now accounted for a far higher percentage of the fae than they ever had before.
A human lifetime was long enough to become an expert swordsmanmy own karate sensei was accounted quite good in various weapon forms, including the sword. But Asil was a famous swordsman with centuries of practice, and this fae was more than holding his own. He was old.
Tad wasnt doing badlyhis father had taught him, hed told me once. If Tad had had something bigger than kitchen knives, if he and Asil had fought together before, they could have worked together. As it was, they had difficulty staying out of each others way.
I slunk down low and, keeping to the outside edge of the room, slowly moved closer to the fight. I slid under the bed. Undermy bed, dust bunnies, underwear, and a random shoe or two were common residents, but Sylvia was more organized than I and all she had under her bed was one of those thin plastic containers full of wrapping paper. I crawled from the head to the foot of the bed and, with my nose under the bedspread, watched for a chance to be of use.
The fae, leaping back to avoid Asils baseball bat, hit Sylvias desk and rolled over it, sending monitor and keyboard crashing off the top, along with a small clay jar filled with writing implements. Several neat stacks of rubber-banded papers escaped the hit. The fae hissed and damn near levitated off the desk like a cat thrown in a swimming pool and all but crashed into Asil to get away.
In the TriCities, whose population has largely been employed by the government in one way or another for more than half a century, there is an abundance of those old, clunky steel desks straight out of the 1950s. Ive seen them at rummage sales and every other kind of saleand once, memorably, a good friend went to a government sale and thought she was bidding on a pallet with two desks and a dozen broken chairs, but ended up with a row of palletsnearly fifty desks, three hundred and fifteen broken office chairs, a nonfunctional electric pencil sharpener, and four boxes of pink erasers. My office chair at the garage was actually four of those chairs, all Frankensteined into one that worked.
These industrial-strength desks were painted various shades of gray and institutional green or yellow. Sylvias desk was of the yellow variety and, like all of them, made of steel.
Which meant that unlike the dead woman, and despite the big sword he was waving around so skillfully, this fae could not bear the touch of cold ironor steel.
Tad dropped his knives and lungedbut Asil had just pushed the fae directly in front of me, so I didnt wait to see why. I sprang out from my hiding place and buried my teeth in the faes left calf.
I dont have jaws like a bulldog, but I locked my jaws as best I could anyway. Asil swore at me in SpanishI knew it was me because he ended it with Mercedes. I knew it was swearing because, even in lyricalif to me mostly unfathomableSpanish, swearing sounds like swearing.
Asil also struck the sword on an upswing to keep the fae from hitting me with the pommel. The sword, edge against the wood of Asils weapon, sliced the bat in two, leaving Asil with eighteen inches of wood to fight the faes magicked blade. It hadnt felt any different to my senses than any other sword until the edge touched woodand then it tasted like Zees magic.
The fae laughed as my weight caused him to stumble. He said something in Welsh that in less dire circumstances I might have been able to translate or at least guess at. He aimed the sharp end of his sword toward me as he caught his balance.
Let go, yelled Tadand the steel desk hit the fae with a boom that would have done credit to a cannon. Papers, bills, bits and pieces of computer parts, and office detritus flew out the previously made hole in the wall, along with the fae and me. Landing jolted me enough that I lost hold ofhis calf, only then realizing that Tads let go had been aimed atme.
The desk landed right next to my head before rolling onto the fae, leaving me half-stunned on the grass.
The fae shrieked, a pain-filled, rage-filled sound that hit my ears like a blow. If Id heard it from a mile away, Id have known it didnt come from a human throat. I smelled burning flesh, and he lifted the desk off and tossed it into the road, where it bounced once and cartwheeled into a battered truck.
He started to reach past me for his sword, which lay a dozen feet from us where it had fallen, but someone else got there first. The fae hesitated for a bare moment, his eyes on the sword, but the sound of sirens up close and personalor maybe it was the face of the man holding his swordmade him turn on his heels and run. Tad called insults from the open hole in the wall of Sylvias bedroom.
The man who stood over me tossed the fae sword aside and dropped down to sit beside me. Gentle hands moved over me, but I couldnt focus, couldnt breathehoped so hard that it took longer to regain my ability to pump air into my lungs. As soon as I did, I shifted back to human and squirmed into his lap.
Adam, I said, clutching him like a ninny while something tight in the middle of my chest softened. Tears slid down my cheeks. It would have been humiliating if he hadnt been clutching me back just as hard.
I wiped my eyes and pulled away to look at him. He was a little the worse for wear, his beard at the scratchy stage, and his eyes were
It had been bad. However hed escaped, it had cost him.
He kissed me, and it was a hard, possessive kiss. He pulled back, and said,So I went hunting you and got here just in time to see you flying out of a hole in the third story of an apartment attached to a mans leg.
There were burns on his lips, and I reached up to touch them.
Silver, I said. It was important, because I didnt want to hurt Adam, but I lost track of what I was saying.
Hey, you two lovebirds, said Tad dryly. I couldnt help but notice that Mercy is buck naked and we have police arriving. So I fetched her clothes.
Adam looked up and smiled at Tad, but he spoke to me.Better get dressed, Mercy. Tads right.
I bounced out of his lap and grabbed the clothes from Tad and pulled them on with more speed than grace. Everything hurt andI looked at Adam, who was rising to his feetnothing hurt at all.
Tad strode over to the blade on the grass and looked at it assessingly.Come here, then, he told it, and held his hand up. The sword flew into his grip, then
disappeared. He closed his hand over a small bit of metal and shoved it into his pocket.
That will make it a little hard to explain the bat it cut into two, but its too dangerous to allow it to get put into police custody, he told me. Dangerous for the police.
My head felt fuzzy, but then Id just been tossed out of a third-story window and discovered Adam was safe. And here. And that meant I didnt have to be in charge anymore.