Total pages in book: 97
Estimated words: 91002 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 455(@200wpm)___ 364(@250wpm)___ 303(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 91002 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 455(@200wpm)___ 364(@250wpm)___ 303(@300wpm)
He flinched when the rock was nearly to him, and his hand darted up, but he was too late. It hit him square on the chest, nearly at his throat. He jerked backward before catching himself and stopped.
Most people would’ve rubbed the offending spot, but Niamh knew he wouldn’t give her the satisfaction. He stared at her menacingly, his arms flared, his wings fluttering dangerously.
She started chuckling while reaching for another rock, an idle threat. He’d react too quickly for her to hit him a second time, and then she’d have to retrieve another rock. Best to bluff this time around.
He picked up the offending rock while taking something out of his jeans pocket. He kept it concealed in his big hand, disappearing the rock into his fist as well. His free hand dipped into the inside of his stylish bomber jacket and grabbed something out of a pocket. After he started walking again, he fiddled with whatever he’d retrieved before lobbing the whole lot back to her.
“What in the…” She snatched it out of the air.
One of Edgar’s worst doily efforts was wrapped around her rock and secured with tape.
“Ye’ve lost the plot now, boy,” she said as Tristan walked into her yard and stalled at the bottom step of her porch. “It’s bad enough that Edgar makes these things, but now ye walk around with them?”
He smirked. “I figured handing these out as gifts would darken everyone’s day.”
“Is this ye crying out for help, then?” She held up the concoction. “Ye haven’t got to lead battles or torture mages, so ye go around with these horrible excuses for arts and crafts?”
“Maybe.” He shrugged. “Or maybe I’m a giving sort of person.”
“Giving sort of person, me arse,” she grumbled. “C’mere, what of yer latest efforts to find the mages?”
That knocked him down a peg. He sighed and leaned against the banister, looking out at the bright street in the crisp late morning. “I’m still coming up empty. I enjoy playing in the shadows—”
“Clearly,” she muttered, unwrapping the rock and slipping it back into her basket.
“—but I can’t hold a candle to Natasha’s technology prowess.”
“Same as that. What about the essences or energy or yer cosmic connection or whatever la-la ye’re always on about?”
His eyes took on a distant look. “I can’t properly get in tune with that if I don’t have contact. Everything is echoes. Sometimes, I can connect through dreams if the other party reaches halfway. She isn’t reaching, though. She doesn’t know how—or even of the possibility, probably. I have more books to send her, but I can’t find her to send them. I’m reaching from my side, and the dreams…” One of his hands balled into a fist. “They’re dark. Full of turmoil. It feels like she’s hurting worse than ever. They’re both hurting. Emotionally, I mean. Internally.” He shook his head. “But honestly…I can’t tell if that’s her, or if it’s my anxiety about her well-being. The emotions feel too…enormous, somehow. I can’t get an accurate reading. I need contact with her to sort it all out.”
“Jaysus. Forget the doilies—ye need to be givin’ out crystals and salt lamps.”
“I tried that. People seemed too happy about it. I had to stack them all in weird designs in the graveyard to freak them out again.”
She huffed out a laugh. “No wonder ye’ve taken such an interest in those doilies. Ye’re following that vampire around the bend. Ye’ve gone pure fruit loops.”
“Yeah. Edgar stole all my marbles.”
“Janey Mack,” she breathed, grinning. Niamh could get under most people’s skin, and she’d made a lifelong art of manipulation, but this gargoyle-monster seemed impervious to her “charms.” He purposely muddled the banter so that she couldn’t get a toehold to control it. He definitely needed to be at Jessie’s side. Jessie was much too gullible. She needed people who couldn’t be manipulated to help steer her.
“But seriously, I don’t know how she’s doing,” Tristan said. “How either of them are. I catch traces of acts they might have done, or rumors of where they might be, but nothing comes of it. I thought I was good with technology, but she’s far better. And smarter.”
Niamh resumed her rocking, feeling the breeze ruffle her hair. Letting her mind drift as it had been. “Aye. She is both of those things.” Not even that computer clown they’d hired downtown could keep up with her. Niamh needed someone better.
“The deeds they’ve claimed—the deaths and whatever—have gotten the right people nervous, did you see that?” he asked. “She’s good at working the underbelly, and Sebastian is good at knowing the right pressure points to push at any given time. They’re a damn good team.”
Niamh didn’t slow in rocking. Didn’t focus her vision. Did shake her head.
“She is great, I’ll give her that. But he’s a child in that role. He hasn’t been at that job—or even on this earth—long enough to properly understand motivations. He understands the human condition to a point, but only as it concerns mages. He’s blind to most of the magical world and all of the Dick world. Ye can’t get a clear picture unless ye’re looking at the whole landscape. He’s barely fit to be an apprentice; don’t even talk to me about being a master. And subtlety? He hasn’t a hope of understanding that one! Subtlety is nothing but a tool in the toolbox. Ye need to know when to use it, o’course ye do.” She held up a finger. “More importantly, ye need to know when not to.”