“No. I don’t think so.”
Nick’s words were a shade too fast, and I ran my gaze down his carefully casual stance. Nick had been here before, and I didn’t think it had been to pick up his tickets to the FIB’s yearly fund-raising dinner.
“You sure?” the man questioned, running a quick hand over his bristly hair.
“Yeah.”
The older man eyed him. “Yes,” he said abruptly. “I’m thinking of someone else.”
Nick’s posture eased almost imperceptibly, piquing my interest further.
Captain Edden’s gaze turned to my neck, and I wondered if I ought to try and cover my stitches with a scarf or something. “If you would come back with me?” the stocky man said. “I’d like to speak with you before I release the pixy to your custody.”
Nick stiffened. “His name is Jenks,” he muttered, just audible over the lobby noise.
“Yes. Mr. Jenks.” Edden paused. “If you would come back to my office?”
“What about Ivy?” I asked, reluctant to leave the public lobby behind. My pulse was racing with just the effort to stand here. If I had to move quickly, I’d pass out.
“Ms. Tamwood will remain where she is. She’s to be turned over to the I.S. for prosecution in the morning.”
Anger overpowered my caution. “You knew better than to touch an angry vamp,” I said. Nick’s grip tightened on my arm, and it was all I could do to not try to jerk away from him.
A hint of a smile drifted over Edden. “It still remains that she assaulted FIB personnel,” he said. “My hands are tied concerning Tamwood. We aren’t equipped to deal with Inderlanders.” He hesitated. “Would you come with me to my office? We can discuss your options.”
My worry deepened; Denon would love to get Ivy incarcerated dead to rights. Nick handed me my bag, and I nodded. This was not good. It almost seemed as if Edden had goaded Ivy into losing her temper to get me to come down here with my hat in my hand. But I followed Edden to a glass-walled corner office off the lobby. At first it looked tucked out of the way, but with the blinds up, he would have a view of everything. Right now, they were closed to make his corner less of a fishbowl than it was. He left the door open, and the noise filtered in.
“Have a seat,” he said, gesturing to the two green upholstered chairs opposite his desk. I gratefully sat, finding the flat padding marginally more comfortable than the plastic chairs in the lobby. As Nick stiffly lowered himself, I ran my eyes over Edden’s office, noting the dust-covered bowling trophies and stacks of folders. File cabinets lined one wall, photo albums stacked on top of them to nearly the ceiling. A clock hung behind Edden’s desk, ticking loudly. There was a picture of him and my old boss, Denon, shaking hands outside City Hall. Edden looked short and common next to Denon’s vampire grace. They were both smiling.
I brought my attention back to Edden. He was slouched in his chair, clearly waiting for me to finish my evaluation of his office. If he cared to ask, I would have told him he was a slob. But his office had a cluttered efficiency about it that said real work was done here. It was as far from Denon’s gadget-strewn, sterile office as my old desk was from a churchyard. I liked it. If I had to trust someone, I’d rather it be someone as unorganized as me.
Edden pulled himself straight. “I’ll admit my conversation with Tamwood was intriguing, Ms. Morgan,” he said. “As a former I.S. operative, I’m sure you know what bringing Trent Kalamack in under the suspicion of anything—much less manufacturing and distributing illegal bioproducts—could do for the FIB’s image.”
Right to the point. Snap my fingers if I wasn’t starting to like this guy. Still I said nothing as my stomach knotted. He wasn’t done.
Edden put an arm on his desk, hiding his sling in his lap. “But you understand I can’t ask my people to arrest Councilman Kalamack under the advice of a former I.S. runner. You’re under a death threat, illegal or not.”
My breathing quickened to match my whirling thoughts. I had been right. He had thrown Ivy into custody to get me down here. For one panicked instant I wondered if he was stalling me. If he had the I.S. on their way to tag me. The thought vanished in a painful rush of adrenaline. The FIB and the I.S. were in a bitter rivalry. If Edden was going to claim the bounty on my head, he’d do it himself, not invite the I.S. into his building. Edden had brought me down here to evaluate me. For what? I wondered, my worry tightening.
Deciding to take control of the conversation, I smiled, wincing as the swelling on my eye pulled. Giving up on my dazzle-them-to-distraction approach, I faced him squarely, pushing the tension from my shoulders down to my stomach, where he couldn’t see it. “I’d like to apologize for my associate’s behavior, Captain Edden.” I looked at his bandaged wrist. “Did she break it?”
The barest wisp of surprise crossed him. “Worse. It’s fractured in four places. They’ll tell me tomorrow if I have to get a cast or simply wait for it to heal. Damn infirmary won’t let me take anything stronger than an aspirin. It’s a full moon next week, Ms. Morgan. Do you realize how far behind I will be if I have to take even one day off?”
This chitchat was going nowhere. My pain was starting to flow back, and I had to find out what Edden wanted before it was too late to move on Kalamack. It had to be more than Trent; he could have dealt with Ivy alone if that was all he wanted.
Steadying myself, I took off one of my amulets and pushed it across the desk. My bag was full of spells, but not one of them was for pain. “I understand, Captain Edden. I’m sure we can come to an agreement that would be mutually beneficial.” My fingers left the small disk, and I struggled to keep my eyes from widening at the rush of pain. Nausea twisted my stomach, and I felt three times as weak. I hoped I hadn’t made a mistake offering it to him. As witnessed by the desk clerk, few humans approved of Inderlanders, much less their magic. I thought it worth the risk. Edden seemed unusually open-minded. It remained to be seen how far.
His eyes showed only curiosity as he reached for the charm. “You know I can’t accept this,” he said. “As an FIB officer, it would be considered …” His face went slack as his fingers closed upon the amulet and the pain in his wrist was deadened. “… a bribe,” he finished softly.
His dark eyes met mine, and I smiled despite my pain. “A trade.” I arched my eyebrows, ignoring the pull of tape. “An aspirin for an aspirin?” If he was smart, he’d understand I was testing the waters. If he was stupid, It didn’t matter, and I’d be dead by the end of the week. But if there was no way to convince him to act on my “tip,” I wouldn’t be sitting in his office.
For a moment Edden sat as if afraid to move and break the spell. Finally an honest smile came over him. He leaned to his open door and bellowed out into the hall, “Rose! Get me a couple of aspirin. I’m dying in here.” He leaned back, grinning as he hung the amulet about his neck and hid it behind his shirt. His relief was obvious. It was a start.
My worry grew as a harried-looking woman walked in, her heels clicking on the gray tile. She visibly jerked at finding us in Edden’s office. Pulling her eyes from me, she held out two paper cups, and he pointed to the desk. The woman’s brow furrowed, and she set them next to his hand and silently left. Edden reached a foot out after her and kicked the door shut. He waited, shifting his glasses higher up his nose before crossing his good arm over his bad.
I swallowed hard as I reached for the two cups. Now it was my turn for trust. There might be anything in those tiny white pills, but finding relief from my pain was beyond expectation. The pills rattled as I brought the cup close and peered down at them.
I’d heard about pills. I’d had a roommate who swore by them, keeping a bottle of white tablets next to her toothbrush. She said they worked better than amulets, and you didn’t have to stick your finger. I had watched her take one once. You were supposed to swallow them whole.
Nick