'Hello, Ms. Sarong,' he said. 'It's a pleasure to meet you.'
'Mr. Hue,' the young woman said, her brown eyes amused.
Mrs. Sarong looked at me, her face questioning at my impertinence.
'Would you like something to drink?' I asked, thinking my rusty host skills were going to get a workout this afternoon while dealing with a woman so clearly raised on etiquette and form.
'No,' she said lightly, her businesslike air returning. 'What I want will take only a moment.' She looked at her daughter pointedly, and the young woman gestured for the men to back out of earshot. They went, sullen yet obedient, but when Mrs. Sarong glanced at David, I sent my gaze to her daughter, standing at her side.
'Fine,' the older woman said in concession. 'I simply want to contract your services.'
Expecting this, I nodded, but a surge of morality tugged at me, and I found myself saying, 'I'm already working with the FIB to find out who murdered your aide.' I gestured for her to sit at one of the small tables. 'There's no need for you to contract me as well.'
She settled herself gracefully, and I took the seat across from her. David and Patricia remained standing. 'Splendid,' Mrs. Sarong said, clearly making an effort not to touch the top of the table. 'But I want to contract your
Confused, I stared at her blankly.
'Your older profession, dear,' she added.
From my shoulder came a tinkling of pixy laughter, and my eyes widened.
'Mrs. Sarong…' I stammered, feeling my face flash red.
'Oh, for Cerberus's sake,' the woman said in exasperation. 'I want you to kill Mr. Ray for murdering my aide. And I'm prepared to pay handsomely.'
Shock zinged through me as I finally got it. 'I don't kill people,' I protested, trying to keep my voice soft, but with a bar full of vampires and Weres, I was sure someone else heard me. 'I'm a runner, not an assassin.'
Mrs. Sarong patted my hand. 'It's okay, dear. I understand. Shall we say seventy-five thousand? Place the appropriate bet the next game and let me know. I'll take it from there.'
The woman's eyes narrowed, and she pursed her lips, her gaze going to her daughter. 'Has Simon Ray already hired you?' she asked, her voice vehement. 'A hundred thousand, then. Damn, he's a bastard.'
I looked at David, but he seemed as shocked as I was. 'You misunderstand,' I stammered. 'What I meant is, I don't do that kind of thing.'
'And yet,' she said, each syllable clear and precise, 'people who annoy you seem to die.'
'They do not,' I objected, leaning until my back hit the chair.
'Francis Percy?' she began, ticking names off on her fingers. 'Stanley Saladan? That mouse of a man… ah, Nicholas Sparagmos, I believe?'
Her spread fingers closed elegantly, and alarm hit me. 'I didn't kill Francis,' I said. 'He managed that all by himself. And Lee was dragged off by a demon he summoned. Nick went over a bridge.'
Mrs. Sarong's smile widened, and she patted my hand again. 'Very well done on the last one,' she said, glancing at her daughter. 'Leaving an old boyfriend to clutter future relationships is investing in trouble.'
For a moment I stared. She wanted me to kill Simon Ray? 'I didn't kill them,' I protested. 'Really.'
'But they are nevertheless gone.' Mrs. Sarong gave me a perfect smile, as if I had done a fabulous trick. She suddenly straightened, the comfortable companionability that had wreathed her expression shifting to blank questioning. The hair on the back of my neck prickled, and I watched her pull the air deep into her. 'Simon!' she barked, rising to her feet.
I jumped up when her entourage dived into motion, heading right for us. She knew. She knew Mr. Ray was here.
'Rache!' Jenks shrilled, leaving my shoulder in a sparkle of gold dust. I backed into David, but Mrs. Sarong's pack wasn't concerned with me.
A shout quickly followed by a muffled thump shook the air. Kisten lunged in from the kitchen, his steps holding that eerie vampire quickness. He was headed for the back room, but before he could get there, Mr. Ray stormed in.
Eighteen
'You pompous little
Mrs. Sarong pushed past the men who had put themselves in front of her. 'Arranging your removal,' she said, her voice sharp and her eyes glaring.
Removal? As if he were an overgrown tree clogging the sewer line?
The short businessman seemed to choke on his own breath, becoming choleric. Mouth gaping to look like one of his prize fish, he struggled to respond. 'Like hell you are!' he finally managed. 'That's what I wanted to talk to her about!'
From my shoulder came a small, 'Holy crap, Rache. How did you become Cincy's assassin of choice?'
I stared at the two packs separated by little round tables.
The clicks of cocking weapons startled me from my shock.
'Grab some air, Jenks!' I shouted, kicking over a table and filling the space it had been in.
Jenks left me in a dazzling burst of gold sparkles. A whiff of musk and David had my back, that freaking big- ass rifle in his grip making him look like a gunslinger out for revenge. Kisten leapt forward. Blond hair swinging, he stepped between the two packs, his arms up in placation but his expression hard. The air pressure shifted, and suddenly Steve was there, too.
Everyone froze. My pulse hammered, and my knees went watery. It was too much like the time I had stormed in here looking for Piscary after he had blood-raped Ivy. Except this time there were a lot of pointed guns.
Sweating, I watched Kisten force the visible tension from his face and stance until he was the casual, confident bar manager on the surface. 'I don't give a rat's ass if you kill each other,' he said, his voice carrying well. 'But you'll take it out of my bar and into the lot, like everyone else.'
David pressed into my back, and with his warmth grounding me, I took a deep breath. 'No one is going to kill anyone,' I said. 'I called you here, and you are
Mr. Ray took a step forward, a short finger pointing at Mrs. Sarong. 'I'm going to rip—'
A burst of angst lit through me. 'I said
'I'm not going to kill Mrs. Sarong,' I said to Mr. Ray.
To my left, Mrs. Sarong stiffened, but she looked pissed, not afraid.
'And I'm not going to go after Mr. Ray for you,' I added.
Mr. Ray harrumphed, wiping his brow with a white handkerchief. 'I don't need your help to pin the whiny bitch,' he said, and the men surrounding him tensed as if to rush her.
That just ticked me off. This was my party, damn it. Weren't they listening? 'Hey!