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“All right,” Alex said. “What else?”

“Do you still have that file? Woman who went missing on Alligator Alley?”

“Alien-abduction lady?”

Wright, sipping at a bottle of water he’d liberated from the fridge, choked.

Alex took the change of direction with good grace. She rummaged through the recycling, came up with a photocopied flyer with the woman’s details and picture. “I thought we were passing on it.”

“While I’m out at Long Pine Key, I thought I’d show Tatya the pic, see if she’s stumbled over anything, maybe catch us a fee.”

And it wouldn’t hurt to ask Tatya, even if the area the woman had gone missing in was a hundred miles off. It would be a nice little reminder that Sylvie cared about women in jeopardy. A nice little reminder that Tatya had once been a woman in jeopardy herself, and Sylvie had helped her for the asking. Might make Tatya cooperative. Tatya had moods. Not all of them were nice.

* * *

TATYA’S RV WAS THE OLDEST ONE AT LONG PINE KEY CAMPGROUND, had been seated so long that the road to it had been swallowed by saw grass and fescue. Sylvie parked as close as she could, hoping to spare herself and Wright the mosquitoes that were swarming for a last meal at twilight.

She hadn’t intended on bringing him along, but he’d settled into the passenger’s seat of the truck with a forced grin and the hint of attitude, a glint that said getting him out again was going to be an actual struggle. While she thought she could take him—meanness won out more often than not—it would set a bad precedent. She didn’t manhandle her clients.

A brief memory flash from her last case, for once not Demalion’s tattered corpse, but a young god sobbing in the rain as if his soul had broken. She’d done that, hurt an innocent because she had deemed it necessary. The shame that washed over her then flushed her cheeks now, and she reminded herself to be gentle with Wright. His world was fragile. She didn’t want to be the one who broke it, or his faith in it.

He trailed behind her, studying the rising moonlight, the quiet surroundings, Miami only a golden glow in the distance. The ’Glades were miles and miles of isolation and secrets, a veil laid over the state.

Scrubby pines dropped needles with every breeze and littered the walkways between campsites, rained gently on their heads. Small brown lizards rustled across their path, and somewhere in the distance, an owl hooted. Wright’s steps slowed almost to a halt, and Sylvie paused inquisitively, the briefcase bumping against her calf. She cringed, but with her luck, if she’d left them in the truck, she’d find them gone when she came back. She didn’t want to hunt them twice.

“It’s really alive down here. Chicago, we get birds and rats, squirrels, but here . . . I feel like I’m going to step on something at any moment.” Wright shot another glance upward, where something gave a creaky cry, and added, “Or have something fall on my head.”

“Anole, I think,” she said. “It’s the tropics. And we’re on the edge of the ’Glades here. I’m surprised we didn’t see gators on our way out.”

“Alligators,” he said, a small boy’s delight in his voice. “Think we’ll see any?”

“We get these cases dealt with, and I’ll take you sightseeing,” Sylvie said. “First things first.”

Tatya’s RV was a grey blur against the thick grey-green backdrop of the pines, hard to see in the low light.

Sylvie led the way up the walk, briefcase bumping her knee, casting wary glances at the sky and cursing traffic. They’d taken longer getting here than she wanted, and some nights were better than others for a visit. It was off-season for the campsite; they didn’t offer electrical hookup, and more and more people were opting for the air-conditioning, hotels, and Wi-Fi. The isolation might also have something to do with the way Tatya and Marisol guarded their privacy.

Sudden crashing through the underbrush made her spin, briefcase coming up to fend off the attack, but it was too late.

Wright yelped; the big black wolf engulfed his hand in her jaws. Foamy saliva flecked her teeth, speckling his skin, luminous in the dark. It wasn’t a maiming bite, not yet. Sylvie dropped the briefcase and pulled her gun.

“Bite down, and I’ll give you a headache you’ll never forget, Mari.” She rested the muzzle of the gun on the bitch’s broad skull.

Wright tentatively tugged; Marisol snarled, and Sylvie said, “Goddammit, Wright, have some patience! Stop struggling. Tatya! I know you’re watching.”

“You brought a wolf to our door,” Tatya said, fading out of the shadows. Wright twitched, despite his efforts to remain still, obedient to Sylvie’s commands. Sylvie couldn’t blame him for the flinch. Tatya made her twitchy, too.

“Mari,” Tatya said. The wolf released Wright; he yanked his hand to his chest. It was bloody, shallow punctures, still oozing, but whole. She’d seen lots worse—she’d seen men torn apart by savage jaws—and judging by his relief, so had he.

“Chill, Tatya. He’s not a werewolf.”

Wright’s brows skied upward in incredulity.

“Easy, Wright. Just breathe.”

“I’ll get right on that when I’m done with the freaked-out part!” Wright snapped.

Relax. That whole bite-and-become thing? Just a myth.” She turned back to Tatya, said, “Not a wolf, just a client. My client.” Anyone else and she would have coupled her disclaimer with a shrug and a smile, but it was better not to show teeth around Tatya. Not unless you meant it.

Tatya’s eyes never left Wright, and he shivered, stepped back beneath the weight of it.

In the usual run of things, Sylvie enjoyed watching the show. Tatya was a tiny scrap of a woman, five-three tops, dark-skinned, and as sweet-faced as a model. The kind of woman men usually lined up to protect. Until they saw her eyes. Disquietingly light-colored at the best of times, during the full moon they were black-rimmed and gold, as reflective and unyielding as metal.

Sylvie had met her when Tatya had come seeking a new life for her and her girlfriend, a life away from the rest of her pack. “I’m tired of being pushed down all the time,” Tatya had said, Mari a silent, wary presence behind her with two black eyes and a bitten-up arm. Some cases were worth taking, even pro bono.

“What do you want, Shadows?” Tatya asked. Mari leaned up against her hip, her muzzle of a height with Tatya’s heart.

“I need some information,” Sylvie said. “A name. I need a witch who’s familiar with necromancy. A good one.”

“Are there any good necromancers?” Tatya asked.

“I’ll settle for reasonably sane,” Sylvie said.

“Always wanting something. You never just come to dinner, Sylvie. Why’s that?”

“I like my meals a little less . . . fresh.” She heard Wright gasp quietly behind her, but sense kept him silent beyond that telltale quickened breath.

Tatya grinned with very strong teeth. “Raw foods are healthy living. You’re soft, Shadows, soft.”

“Don’t start thinking that,” Sylvie said. “You just remember who took on a wolf pack for you and won.”

Tatya lifted a dismissive shoulder but brought the subject back to where Sylvie wanted it, which was acceptance enough. Their posturing should be done for now. “What do you want a witch for? Thought you had that bloodless Cassavetes girl on your team.”

“Little misunderstanding,” Sylvie said.

“That why she’s locked herself up in her palace by the sea? How little was this . . . misunderstanding? If I help you, will she take offense? Want a wolf-skin rug for her little brat?”

“Little enough not to concern you,” Sylvie said. “I swear by moonlight.”

Tatya sighed, rolled her head on her shoulders. “Don’t know why we make time for you. It’s always work, always bad news.”

Beside her, Marisol growled, a long, rolling, guttural agreement.

Sylvie said, “I don’t speak dog, Mari. You got something to say? Say it so I can understand.”