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“Have the interns in records come up with anything on that full background check? I want to know everything about him right down to his shoe size.” Judging by the scruffy loafers the man wore this morning, Chase guessed a nine narrow. Haywood looked big and impressive, but standing next to petite Dusty as he exited the museum, he stood only half a head taller than her. That put him about five-nine. Five-ten tops.

What kind of wiry muscles did he hide under that thrift-store-reject tweed sport jacket?

A flicker of purple near the first rank of trees in The Ten Acre Wood drew Chase’s attention.

“Mabel?” Chase opened his radio again. “Anything show up on that deep background on Thistle Down?”

Mabel coughed long and hard. “Sorry, sweetie, I swallowed down the wrong throat. Who’d you say?”

“Thistle Down. The woman I brought in yesterday morning for dancing naked in Memorial Fountain.”

“Um, Thistle… Thistle… Thistle. Oh, yes, the darkhaired lady with purple eyes. Nope, nothing on her. No driver’s license or Social Security number under that name. No hits on three fingerprint databases. Signing off until I hear from records on that other check.”

No comments, no speculation, nothing. Very unusual for Mabel to cut him off rather than gossip a bit.

Chase’s shoulder mike crackled. “That high school gal summering down in records says she should have something for you by twoish,” Mabel said. She sounded wary, almost uncertain.

Definitely unusual.

“I’m walking a sweep of the neighborhood on the ridge, Mabel, checking on some of the elderly, make sure they’ve got fans and water. Not all of them got to their porches to watch the parade. I’ll make sure they’re okay. Don’t want to have any of them succumb to heat stroke.” Chase turned his back on the museum.

Dusty retreated inside, and Haywood walked off whistling something jaunty and hauntingly familiar.

Damn, now Chase had an earworm of that tune, and he couldn’t remember the words.

Dum dee dee do dum dum.

A burst of static on his shoulder mike interrupted the almost combination of three words in the song.

“Sergeant Norton. What do you have for me, Mabel?” That was quick.

“Get over to Mrs. Spencer’s on Fifth and Oak. Just got word of a break-in in progress.”

“On my way.” Chase ran like he had a football under his arm, the goal post in sight, and fullbacks closing in from each side.

Mrs. Spencer hadn’t watched the parade.

Twelve

THE NOISE AND CROWDS from the parade had dispersed. Dusty retreated inside the museum. Dick went off to do something he called work. That left Thistle alone, tired, hungry, and thirsty. She wandered back toward Dusty’s house, wishing she could just spread her wings and fly.

A laughing golden Pixie she didn’t recognize circled her head. At least he could see her.

“Go away. I’m not one of you anymore,” she cried, batting him away, much as she’d seen humans do to the Dandelions who got too close.

“And you never will be again,” golden boy taunted her. He flipped in midair and zoomed straight for her head, grabbing at a few tendrils of black hair. “Who ever heard of a black-and-pink Pixie. Looks diseased to me!”

Thistle slapped at her head where the pulled hairs stung her scalp. “Who are you? You’re bigger than most Pixies.” She squinted her eyes a bit to catch a glimpse of his aura.

Red-and-orange flames encircled his yellow, green, and brown life energy.

“You’re part Faery!” she gasped. She’d heard stories of such strange creatures. Myths of bizarre matings that took place before the Faeries went underhill. The half-breeds were bigger than either their Pixie or Faery parents, with more potent magic than a Pixie but less than a Faery.

That was long, long ago. Before Thistle was born. This jeering fellow looked too young to have come from the before times.

“You don’t exist. You can’t exist!”

“Neither do you!” He flew off, zipping in wild circles and loops, showing off the magnificent wings formed from splayed grain stalks.

“Lost. I’m lost to Pixie and lost to myself,” she cried.

Her stomach growled and her throat grew sour with thirst. She bent in front of a rhododendron no one had bothered to deadhead. The flower stamens still held their loads of pollen. A nice Pixie meal.

“Eew!” she spat out the sour grit. “That’s not what pollen is supposed to taste like.” Hastily, she sought a few drops of dew to rinse her mouth.

Nothing! The morning had grown too late and too hot. All the plants and gardens looked dry and sere. Ah, there on the side lawn of the big old house, a hose curled around a rack. A quick flick of the tap and she’d have a drink before trudging back to Dusty’s home.

A curtain flicked in the widow of a house across the street.

Thistle felt eyes following her every move as she stumbled while rising from her crouch. Damn, she’d depended upon her wings to right her and they weren’t there anymore.

“So, I’m as big and lumpy as a human. I need to be careful about trespassing and being seen. I can’t flit about, as unnoticeable as a dragonfly.” A tear welled up in her eye. She dashed it aside. That just made her thirstier.

So, she walked a few steps farther down the sidewalk until the itchy crawlies along her spine quieted. Her next step went sideways (where she tripped again with the shift in balance), on the other side of the overgrown rhododendron, onto the scraggly grass of the big old house with peeling gray paint and a sagging porch.

The tap didn’t twist easily. She tugged at it with both hands. Rust flaked off as she shoved it one quarter of a turn. Water gurgled lazily through the coils of the hose, leaking out of slits in the worn rubber. She captured a few drops with her fingertip and sucked the moisture greedily.

It tasted warm and acidic. A closer look revealed more rust in the water.

A dog howled from the shaded window above her.

“What’s up, boy?” she asked the graying muzzle that pushed aside the slats of the covering blinds.

Extreme distress gushed from the animal. Help us.

“I didn’t quite get that, Horace. That is your name, right?” When she was a Pixie, she could converse with all the dogs and cats. But she avoided the cats. They were mean alien monsters bent on murder. She knew them all intimately. Not this one.

Another whimper, this time in agreement. Help us.

“Um, I’m not supposed to come inside without an invitation, you know. Pixie Law. Human law, for that matter, too.”

Horace howled again.

“Okay, I guess that’s an invitation. Are the doors locked?”

Horace didn’t know.

Thistle rose on tiptoe and peeked through the tiny opening Horace had left between the slats. His muzzle still poked through, his whines becoming more urgent.

A bloated leg covered in a thick opaque stocking with a hole in the toe lay on the floor unmoving.

Thistle ran to the front door and knocked. She pounded her fist against the solid wooden barrier. The only sound of stirring that answered her was Horace’s claws on the other side. Mrs. Nosey across the street might object if Thistle waltzed into a stranger’s house through the front door. Was that a good or bad thing?

Thistle tried the doorknob. It remained solid, unyielding.

She jumped off the broad porch and ran along the side of the house toward the back. More signs of neglect here in the weeds running riot through the rose beds.

“Wonder if the rose pollen will taste any better than rhododendron?” she mused. “Or has my tongue changed now that I’m big?” She shook her head and proceeded through the sagging wooden gate. She had to help the old lady Horace companioned. The gate hung crookedly, no longer able to close completely or latch.