The waiter returned with our plates. I assembled my burger. “I didn’t understand the mechanism of it. If it was bonded to me, it left me when I needed it most.”
Brokke pulled at his substantial ear. “Interesting. Where is the spear now?”
“I already answered that question. Your guess is as good as mine. It vanished when I sealed the veil between worlds.”
He rubbed his hands against the tablecloth, staring into his lunch. “Lost again,” he muttered.
“My turn. Why are you protecting Bergin Vize?” I asked.
Brokke cut his fish, took a bite, and looked at Frye as if he, too, were interested in the answer.
“We are not protecting him. He is in hiding,” he said.
“Where?”
Frye’s hooded eyes seemed to be assessing me. “My guess would be your own neighborhood.”
With everything else happening in the Weird, an on-the-lam terrorist elf would fit right in. “I’ll take that as confirmation coming from you. Things are not going well in the Weird, and lately when things are not going well in a big way, your friend Vize is lurking in the background.”
“If the events occurring on the waterfront are getting out of hand, perhaps the Guild might be of service,” said Frye.
“As you can imagine, that’s not reassuring. If he’s so unwelcome, why aren’t you looking for him?” I said.
Frye curled his lip in condescension. “As long as he does not make a threat to the Elven King, he is not my concern.”
“But threats against the Seelie Court and—What are we up to? A few hundred deaths so far?—those don’t concern you either?”
“That has not been proven,” he said. He shifted in his seat, arching an eyebrow as he withdrew a cell phone from his pocket. “You will excuse me,” he said.
As Frye left the table, Brokke leaned toward me. “We have only moments before he realizes the insignificance of that call, Grey. I have something to say to you alone. You know I am a seer. I have tried to see the events unfolding here, but no matter how I attempt it, I cannot see you.”
“You’re not the first person to tell me that,” I said.
He glanced toward the restaurant entrance. “I know. I’ve enlisted others in the attempt, to no success. I have seen something that I want you to know. Something will happen, and soon, that will affect the Grand Duchess. I cannot see it. That leads me to believe whatever it is involves you as well.”
“You know telling me that won’t necessarily change the future,” I said.
He nodded. “Truth. The future is the land of the possible, the outcome of choices, not inevitabilities. But sometimes those choices narrow to a point of significance. I believe a time is coming when you will have a choice that affects the Grand Duchess. It will cause a profound change in the Elven Court. When that time comes, Mr. Grey, I implore you to consider the consequences for more than yourself.”
“I’m not sure if you’re insulting me or warning me,” I said.
“Neither. I am a seer. I say what I see. What you do with it is your choice. Even now, I feel things shifting, becoming less certain. Remember that royal blood flows in Eorla Elvendottir’s veins, and no one wants that kind of blood on their hands.”
That startled me. “I’m going to do something that causes her death?”
He shrugged. “That outcome is likelier than I care to see.”
“Eorla Kruge is the last person I’d want to see dead,” I said.
He tapped the table. “I as well, but the Wheel of the World is a relentless Thing.” He placed a pair of workman’s gloves on the table. “You will thank me for these someday. I don’t know why. He returns.” Curious, I slipped the gloves into my jacket. Frye resumed his seat. “Is your presence required elsewhere?” Brokke asked.
Frye picked at his lunch. “It was minor. Mr. Grey, I will tell you this: You are being watched—by the Guild and by the Consortium.”
It was hard to miss the obvious elven security at the end of my street or the Danann agents that appeared overhead when I was home. “Tell me something I don’t know.”
“You are also about to be arrested by the Boston police force,” he said.
I dropped my burger. “For what?”
“A substantial list of violations including inciting a riot and murder charges related to the deaths that occurred on Samhain. A movement is under way to involve your federal authorities in a very novel conspiracy-to-commit-treason charge,” said Frye.
I pursed my lips. “I seem to have pissed someone off.”
Frey leaned closer. “What’s interesting is that the Guild is cooperating with the human authorities to the point of advocating your detention.”
“Is this a subtle way of telling me you’re not going to pay for lunch?” I asked.
Frye smiled, a thin predator smile. “On the contrary, Mr. Grey. I am willing to pay for this and whatever else you need. I am authorized by His Majesty Donor Elfenkonig to offer you asylum with an offer of Consortium citizenship.”
It took several heartbeats before I laughed. I couldn’t help it. To hear Bastian Frye, the man who ran counterintelligence activities for the Consortium, the same man I had worked against for years, offer me protection was damned funny. “I’ll keep it in mind.”
He gave me a sharp nod, either missing my sarcasm or pleased that I didn’t reject the offer out of hand. I didn’t clarify but let him think whatever he wanted. Keeping someone like Bastian Frye off-balance was not an easy thing.
Brokke perused the menu. “Let’s have dessert, shall we?”
I smiled. “Sure. Anything look good?”
He eyed me and passed the menu. “I’ll let you pick.”
I hate people who can read the future.
17
As I finished my dessert at the Ritz, Meryl texted me to meet her nearby at a local Guild watering hole. As usual, she was cryptic, but asked me to slip in the back unseen. To continue enjoying bars and restaurants, a good rule of thumb was never to go in the kitchen. The Craic House was no different than any other place in town. The rear entrance had the whiff of garbage, spilled beer, and bug juice. Sure, the Health Department had rules and inspections, but that didn’t mean the cockroaches read the manuals. The kitchen staff ignored me after their initial glances, as if it were perfectly normal for someone to walk in their back door and hang around. Guild employees frequented the restaurant, so maybe they were used to odd behavior.
Meryl strolled in from the front of the restaurant. Over the clanking and banging of the dish-washing machine and cooking areas, several guys called out her name. If I were a different person, the number of men Meryl knew would irritate me. But then, if I were a different person, I wouldn’t have gotten involved with Meryl in the first place. Besides, if I did say something, she would wonder aloud why I wasn’t worried about the number of women she knew, then tongue-kiss a random stranger to make the bigger point. With Meryl, I either accepted who she was and didn’t make assumptions—likely or asinine ones—or she wouldn’t give me the time of day. In all fairness, she respected and accepted my past the same way, although pointing out my flaws continued to be one of her favorite pastimes.
She tossed me a laminated ID badge for the Teutonic Consortium consulate with a picture of a security guard. A cool static settled over me from an essence charge on the badge. It was a glamour. The skin on my hands became smoother and paler, and my black jacket shifted to the regulation red outfit worn by elven security.
“How’s your elven accent these days?” she asked.
I held up the badge. “Perfect. Is this what I look like?”
She pursed her lips. “You’ve got a more quizzical look on your face than he does, but it’ll get you through the front door.”
“And I need that because . . . ?”
She smiled. “Because Eorla Kruge doesn’t want to be seen with you.”
“And you’re running errands for her because . . . ?”
She shot a glance at the kitchen staff. “She wants to see both of us.”