January 23rd 6:25pm
Fresh snow could make even the dingiest, most urban part of Manhattan into a magical place. The colors and noises all faded away, the cityâs usual frenetic pace slowing to a more studied waltz of snow falling, white against the bare black limbs of trees and outlines of buildings. Drifts pushed up against maildrop boxes, covered fire hydrants, and shut down traffic except for the unstoppable city buses and madman-driven taxi cabs zipping through the night.
It might have been lovely, but Wren Valere wasnât paying attention to the scenery. She was a professional working her craft. Or trying to, anyway. Two new high-end locks had hit the market, supposedly proof against the âbump-and-enterâ method, and she wanted to make sure she understood how they worked before she actually encountered one in the field, when time might be against her. In her particular profession, you didnât get many second chances, and Wren was pretty sure the past twelve months had used up all the ones she was going to get in a lifetime.
Sometimes, honestly, she didnât know what got into her. For a mind-her-own-business Retriever, sheâd spent a hell of a lot of time muddling around in things she should have left alone. Curses and politics and meetings, for Godâs sake.
Never mind that sheâd done it to save her own skin, after the Mage Council tried to use her and her partner, Sergei; never mind that sheâd done it to help out her friends among the fatae, the nonhuman members of the Cosa Nostradamus. All of that might have made what happened inevitable, but none of it made it smart.
âHey, Valere.â The voice came from the other side of the room, about three feet to the right and a foot down. And speaking of fataeâ¦.
Wren Valere didnât sigh, but she wanted to.
Retrieval wasnât easy. She had studied her craft, learned from masters, and kept up-to-date on all the most recent developments, not only in her own field, but anything that might come in handy. In addition to mastering the current-magic that flowed from within her, she had trained her body, as well; toning and strengthening her muscles, increasing her lung capacity, maintaining her flexibility. She had forced mind and body into partnership, more than once spending hours waiting in a cramped, close situation, anticipating the perfect moment to move on a job. She knew all about patience. About focus. About dedication.
And that focus and dedication was being destroyed, not by a stubborn client, or impossible mark, or even the weight of the snow outside and what was happening in the city beyond, but by her companion.
She didnât bother looking in the direction of the voice, not wanting to encourage him.
âValere,â the voice said again. âWhat does this do?â
She looked, then, briefly. âOpens locks.â
The roomâs other occupantâand the subject of her irritationâput the tool back down on the small table next to him and picked up another. âAnd this?â
She reached for patience, found it. âOpens a different kind of lock.â
âAnd this one?â
Patience threw up its hands in disgust and fled the room. âIt gets the gunk out from between my teeth. Damn it, P.B., will you please leave my kit alone? Those extremely delicate tools youâre paw-handling cost me a fortune, and half of them are custom-made.â She reached up from her cross-legged position on the floor, and snagged the instrument in question out of P.B.âs paws. A thin ceramic shape with a non-reflective black coating, it actually did look like something that might be found in a very trendy Gothâs toothbrush holder, except that the fiberglass pick at the end was attuned to more delicate vibrations than enamel generally gave off.
âSheesh. Someoneâs snappy.â The short, white-furred demon settled on the padded bench under the roomâs single window and stared at her with his dark, dried-bloodred eyes. He wandered over to the corkboard that hung above her desk and tapped one curved black claw on a color pencil sketch tacked there. âThis the bansidhe-horsie you been chasing? How long you been working that case?â
âFive years.â She refused to look up from her notes, hoping against hope he would finally take the hint and go elsewhere.
P.B. snorted, a wet, vaguely disgusting noise his flattened snout of a nose seemed designed to make. âThatâs dedication. You get paid for any of that time?â