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I feigned a pout. “I think you just pointed out the delusion of grandeur part.”

She drank. “Without breaking a sweat, my friend.”

“So, I’m a power locus.”

“Maybe. Maybe not. Maybe Vize is. Maybe his destiny is bound to Maeve’s and yours to his. That doesn’t make you bound to Maeve. Destiny may be transitive, but that doesn’t mean you’re the most important link in the chain.”

“What if you’re wrong?” I asked.

She shook her head. “I didn’t say I was right. I’m poking holes in your assumption that Maeve’s interest in you is an either/or proposition. You could be a much bigger problem for Vize than you are to Maeve.”

I nodded. “Eorla Kruge said something like that to me once.”

“She’s a smart lady. Maybe too smart. She requisitioned the rune research I did for Nigel,” Meryl said.

“She’s trying to reconstruct the runes on the oak staff,” I said.

Meryl twisted her lips in thought. “I don’t know if I like that.”

“If it means the end of the Taint, yeah, it’s a good thing,” I said.

“What if it means she re-creates the spell that destroyed Forest Hills?”

“I don’t believe that’s her goal,” I said. “She had the opportunity at Forest Hills to take control, and she rejected it. I believe her when she says she wants peace. It’s why her husband died.”

She sighed. “I always have a hard time believing people with noble causes. It usually means someone’s gonna die.”

“Dying can be noble,” I said.

She made an exaggerated shiver. “Yeah, that’s what nobility turns into—the rationale for every authoritarian regime I’ve ever seen.”

“Anyway, I wanted to ask you something about the decapitation murders.”

Meryl leaned her elbows on the table and propped her chin in her hands. “Severed heads and dinner. Who said romance is dead?”

I leaned forward, lowered my eyes, and dropped my voice to a husky whisper. “Wait until I tell you about the rotting bodies Murdock and I found in the sewer.”

She closed her eyes and sighed. “Oh, Grey, I think something’s happening to my naughty bits. Tell me more, please.”

I tapped her nose. “You are a whack job.”

She picked up her beer. “That makes you a whack-job chaser.”

“You said the Dead can’t regenerate without the head, right?”

The server gave me an odd look as she placed our dinners in front of us. Meryl plucked a fry from my plate. “Honestly, it’s conjecture. Good conjecture, but still conjecture. In TirNaNog, the head didn’t matter. The Dead were in the Land of the Dead. No matter how they were killed there, they reappeared the next day. Here, though, if you killed someone fey and kept the head separate from the body, you denied them entrance to TirNaNog. That much I know for sure. Under the current situation, TirNaNog is closed. No one’s getting in. When someone Dead dies here, they regenerate here. So, by taking the head, I think the Dead can’t regenerate here. Make sense?”

“I think so,” I said.

“We can test it,” she said.

“How?”

She shrugged. “Let’s kill a Dead guy and see what happens.”

I considered the idea. “Is it better to use a sword or an axe to behead someone?”

“Sword. A nice big one.”

I tapped the edge of the table without looking at her. Meryl had access to all kinds of artifacts at the Guildhouse, including weapons.

“Can I borrow one?”

She stole another fry. “Sure.”

I nodded in deep thought. “Okay, after dessert, then. I want to behead someone tonight if you don’t mind bringing me a sword.”

“Okay.”

I sprinkled salt on my burger, tossed the tomato aside, and closed the bun. I took a big bite and stared at Meryl. She stared back. She ate a chicken finger. I put a solemn look on my face and chewed mechanically.

“You’re serious,” she said. I nodded.

“Wow,” she said.

I smirked. “Gotcha.”

Her jaw dropped, then she laughed. “You did, you jerk.”

I hooted and clapped. “It’s about damned time, I did.”

Embarrassed, she shrugged. “Yeah, well, too bad you don’t have witnesses.”

I shook my head laughing. “I think your theory is right. In fact, I think we can test it. We already have a beheaded body and its head.”

“You found the head of the sewer guy?” she asked.

“Yeah. We found a leanansidhe who was having it for lunch.”

She frowned and rolled her eyes. “I am so not falling for that.”

I grinned. This dinner was going to be deeply satisfying.

11

Meryl took off on one of her none-of-your-business evenings. I had a hard time understanding if our seesaw relationship was a game or a reality. Either way, it was very Meryl. She liked keeping me off-balance and, considering my history with relationships, that maybe wasn’t a bad thing. It made me pay attention, kept me curious and, dammit, interested. And she knew it. The one message Meryl gave me loud and clear was that she had a life without me, and giving that up was solely on her terms. I was cool with it because she allowed me my time alone, too.

Meryl’s absence was for the best anyway since later on Murdock and I were hitting the morgue now that we had both the head and the body of the Dead guy. Until it was time to leave, I scoured my library for whatever I could find on hellhounds, but I didn’t make much headway with Shay’s dog problem. Despite plenty of references in my personal library, twentieth-century texts added nothing new about them because the hounds hadn’t been seen since Convergence. A hellhound was what it was. You saw it; you died. I was convinced, though, that with it trapped outside of TirNaNog, its harbinger-of-doom status had to be compromised. With no Land of the Dead for anyone to go to anymore, what was the doom?

Lost in thought as I watched a plane take off across a dark sky, I jumped when the apartment buzzer went off. Murdock was picking me up so we could go down to the morgue and try the experiment with the decapitated Dead guy. I hit the intercom. “Hey, you’re early.”

“Are you really so poor you live in the Weird?”

Moira. My first impulse was to not respond. “Who gave you my address?”

“I’ve lived at court for years, Connor. I know how to get an address when I want one.”

“What do you want?”

“To talk. You left so abruptly the other day, and I don’t understand why,” she said.

“There’s nothing to talk about,” I said.

“Maybe I have something to talk about,” she said.

When it came right down to it, Moira Cashel was trouble, one way or another. Either she was Amy Sullivan and her interest in me was sincere and she had no idea of how I had become entangled with High Queen Maeve despite her current connection to Maeve, or she wasn’t Amy and it was all a ruse for Maeve to lay some kind of trap for me. Despite what Tibbet said, I didn’t want Moira wrecking my memories.

“Are you there?” she asked into my silence.

I had to know. Whatever Maeve’s strategy was, I was intrigued that I was still enough a part of it for her to dig into my past. “Okay, I’ll meet you.”

“I’m downstairs. Can I make it to the front door without being mugged?”

I snorted. Of course she was downstairs. “I’ve got a meeting. You can have until my ride shows up,” I said. I buzzed her in and went out to the hall. She came up the stairs directly to the top floor without having asked where my apartment was. It didn’t surprise me, but if she thought she was hiding that she knew about my current life, she was awfully sloppy. Wrapped in a full-length fur coat, she stepped onto the landing.

“Wearing animal fur is frowned on in the States,” I said.

She paused at my door, a deep frown on her face. “I’m beginning to wonder if this bitter, angry person is the same happy young man I used to know.”