Mark Del Franco - Connor Grey 01 - Unshapely Things.pdf

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UNSHAPELY THINGS
Mark Del Franco
1
The alley was slick with rain and a rainbow-hued slop I didn't want to think about. As I ducked under
the yellow crime scene tape, something brown oozed away from my feet, and I almost tripped trying to
avoid slipping on it. Hashing lights illuminated the dark end of the alley where an ambulance van and a
couple of police cars waited. About forty people milled around, a good three-quarters of whom probably
had no other reason to be there than to check out the latest victim.
As I came around the nearest car, Detective Lieutenant Leo Murdock of the Boston P.D. waved me
over. "Hey, Connor, it's another fairy," he said.
Fairy.Not that there was anything wrong with that, I thought sardonically. Not down by the docks of the
Weird , where a dead fairy in the middle of the night was becoming all too common. He didn't have to tell
me anyway. I had smelled the blood back when I turned the corner from the main street.
"Same MO?"I asked. We walked over to where the medical examiner crouched, doing nothing to the
body.., Murdock shrugged. "You tell me." The naked body lay on its back staring up at the empty night
sky. He was a pale-skinned male, not particularly well-endowed, but you can never really tell when
someone's dead and leaking blood all over the place. Blood still dripped from the edges of his split-open
torso, the lights glittering on the pool it formed around his waist. A shock of long white-blond hair fanned
out around his head, little bits of organ tissue flecking it. At the center of the wound in his chest, a gaping
hole showed the mangled evidence of a missing heart. His wings lay flat against the ground, a ward stone
resting on each of them.
I nudged the medical examiner out of the way and crouched. The rank smell of alcohol wafted up from
the body. Damn fairies never learned. They so much as look at a bottle, and they're drunk, but they still
keep drinking the stuff. Putting on a latex glove, I eased a couple of exposed arteries aside and found the
small stone I expected. I felt an odd null zone to my left and glanced up at Murdock. His holstered gun
hovered over my head.
"Back off, buddy," I said. "Your gun's screwing me up."
Murdock put on anembarrassed face as he stepped off a ways. He never remembered about cold iron,
and I never remembered to remind him, so I guess we both were to blame. As soon as he was a few feet
away, the essences started to assert themselves.Nothing unusual, just the dead guy, maybe another fairy
 
with him earlier in the evening, maybe an elf or two. His crotch reeked of human. He must have had a
busy night—usually humans barely register.
Other than the heart, nothing else seemed to be missing. A slash across his right palm looked like a
defense wound. It wasn't too deep and glanced off to the side. Probably too drunk to put up much of
fight.A couple of rings on each finger and most of the toes. The killer hadn't been interested in money.
I glanced around. The alley was a classic dead end, all the doors and lower windows boarded up tight.
As I started to get up, I caught sight of something red shoved between a dumpster and a box. It looked
too clean to have been there very long. I stepped carefully around the body and leaned in. It was some
kind of fabric with residue of the same essence as the dead guy. "Bag this and check the dumpster," I
said to no one in particular.
As I started to turn away, I paused, sensing something. The dumpster sat against a blank brick wall. I
climbed up on it and inhaled. Bingo.A flit. Flit essence fades fast, so it couldn't have been there very long.
I mentally kicked myself as I jumped down on the pavement. I hadn't thought to check very high up at
the other crime scenes.
"Any flits around when your guys showed up?" I asked Murdock.
He shook his head. "Body was found by someone who called 911. People were everywhere when we
got here."
I just nodded.Didn't mean anything in particular. If a flit was here when the cops arrived, people would
have remembered it. Flits made it their business not to be seen too often. They were pretty good at it,
camouflaging their scent, too, unless they had no reason to. Like if they didn't think anyone would look
for them fifteen feet above a rank-smelling dumpster. It was a small lead, no pun intended, and I knew
just who to go to ask about it. I decided not to tell Murdock. It was bad enough that he didn't
understand why I couldn't just wave a magic wand to solve these things. Nouse having him terrorize the
flit population if it was just a coincidence.
"It's the same MO," I said. I snapped off the latex glove.
Murdock nodded and frowned. A lot of people think Murdock's dismissive. I knew him well enough to
know that he cared about the freaks in the Weird. He'd been on the detail too long not to be able to
transfer out anytime he wanted. But he didn't. Just another thing I admired about him.
We walked back to his car. "You want to wait for a lift?" he asked. ,-¦- "Nah, even I'm not that lazy. It's
just a couple of blocks." He turned back to the crowd at the barricades. "Suit yourself. I'll send you the
file."
"Thanks," I said.
At the end of the alley, I pushed my way through die motley crew of gawkers that were held back by a
police barricade. A huge woman, easily seven feet, towered over everyone, her hair flowing up even
higher, tight green span-dex straining against an enormous bust. I shook my head. Someone once said
when it comes to murder, there's always a woman. I didn't mink so in this case, though. Besides, in the
Weird, half the time you didn't know if the woman in front of you was the real tiling or even what species
she was.
As I made my way through the maze of streets, I couldn't help but think what a waste it all was. Every
 
time the papers said things were getting better, I knew it was a lie. As long as there were desperate
people, there would be the Weird. And as long as the Weird existed, I had a reason to get up in the
morning. So maybe it wasn't such a bad thing, at least for me. I never fooled myself into thinking I did
more than gnaw around the edges. Even before my accident, I only kept the flashpoints from turning into
conflagrations like everybody else did. I may not work in the big power leagues anymore, but I still pull
my weight even if now I'm poor Connor Grey, crippled druid. At least I didn't have to deal with the
politics of the Ward Guild anymore. And tiiey do send disability checks.
My career at the Guild had been moving pretty fine. The Ward Guild monitors the fey—the druids and
fairies, and the elves and dwarves—and acts as a policing agency as well as a diplomatic corp. Every city
with a major concentration of fey has a Guildhouse that serves as headquarters for the locals. Ultimately,
all the Guildhouses report to the top inIreland . Good old Maeve, High Queen Mucky-Muck atTara .
I miss some of it though.The money.The big apartment.A date any night of the week if I wanted.My
picture in the paper. In my time, I got to handle most of the high-profile crime investigations. But that's
over.All gone now. Washed away the moment I met up with an environmentalist elf at the nuclear
reactor. Asshole had a power ring he didn't know how to use. He lost control, and some kind of
feedback loop with the reactor happened. The next thing I know I'm waking up in the intensive care unit
at Avalon Memorial with a migraine and most of my abilities gone. I could have cared less that the entire
Northeast power grid went down. Nobody died. Not even the stupid elf.
The doctors are baffled. They know the problem is a dark smudgy mass in the middle of my brain, but
they can't figure out if it's organic or not. No diagnostic, technological or otherwise, has been able to
penetrate it. They offered to go in physically and look, but no one knows enough about the interface
between living tissue and ability for me to trust them. They can use someone else to experiment on and
get back to me. Having the power ring would go a long way toward helping figure it out, but it
disappeared with the elf. I'd wish the jerk were dead if I didn't hope to find him someday. I just hope
Murdock isn't around when I do. He'd just go all ethical on me and stop me from killing the guy. But
then, he's just as upset about the whole situation as I am. Or at least thinks he is.
Murdock's a good guy.Sometimes too good for his own good. He knows I won't take charity, but that
doesn't stop him from dangling interesting cases in front of me. The system was set up for the Guild to
handle any crimes involving the fey—meaning anyone with the ability to manipulate essence—while the
municipal police retained their usual jurisdiction over everyday humans. The way everything plays out,
though, is that the Guild wants only fey-on-fey cases.The glory cases. Petty crimes, whether they involve
fey or not, get punted to the local P.D. Whenever the Guild considers a crime a human matter, and most
times it does, Murdock's unit picks up the slack. Human police have to take care of the Weird because
the Guild doesn't much care about the fey here, unless someone important gets caught doing something.
Between the disability and the occasional check Murdock squeaks out of his consultant account, I can
pay the rent.
I hit the front door of my building just as dawn started creeping up. Home is an old mill warehouse in the
twilight zone at the edge of the Weird, barely describable as converted. The elevator up to the fifth floor
is slower than walking, but I usually don't bother with the stairs. It's cheap and it's quiet and the neighbors
are not prone to scrying in the middle of the night, which wakes me up. Most of the other tenants are
retirees and art students, and I think we still have dwarves in the basement, though I haven't seen them in
a while. My apartment's on the top floor corner. I used to have a cool retro sanctum sanctorum, but now
I make do with a one bedroom overlooking a rotting pier. The view of the harbor beyond that is nice,
though.
I do my living in the main room, the larger one, and my working in the smaller one, which sits at the
 
corner of the building. That way I can work without the sun coming up in my eyes in the morning and
have a view of theBoston skyline and the airport from my desk. They make ample diversion anytime, day
or night.
I slipped into the squeaky chair in front of my computer and booted up. Opening the case notes, I gave
the new victim his own database file, made notes on the scene and the body, and plotted the crime scene
location in the map file. Murdock would send me more particulars as soon as he had them. Tonight's
victim was number three in a weekly cycle, so Avalon Memorial had agreed to give any new cases top
priority.Big of them.
The latest victim could have been either of the first two. Male fairy, prostitute by trade, found in a remote
alley with his heart missing. A stone was placed in the chest cavity and ward stones set on his wings. The
ward stones I could figure. Even a drunk fairy could manage some kind of flight, so the perpetrator
needed the wards to nullify the wings. The stones were obviously some kind of talismanic replacement
but not part of any ritual I ever knew. They weren't charged with anything, either, except normal body
essence. If any real power were involved, the residue would have lasted a lot longer than the time I took
to get to the scene.
I leaned back in the chair and skimmed the bookshelf that ran around the room along the top of the wall.
Ancient leather spines fought for space with cheap trade paperbacks in a profusion of incantation
primers, spellcaster workbooks, grimoires, rune dictionaries, pronunciation guides for fourteen
languages—three of them technically dead and one that never was—and a complete set of first edition
Lloyd Alexander. The ritual I needed to know very likely lay buried somewhere in the pages. As I
contemplated an old Celtic handbook of spells perched close to the edge, I decided three hours' sleep
was way too few for ogham reading—or anything else.
I got up and went into the kitchen galley off the living room. The fridge bulb made it abundandy clear I
needed to get some groceries. I pulled out a thimble-size bottle with a little yellow point of light in it.
"Glow bees" most people called them, the poor man's sending. Humans with fey friends used them
mostly, though they didn't work for everyone. Even when they did, the average human had to hold them
for a couple of hours to get a decent charge on them. Email was quicker. I have to use them now. Most
of my sendings go astray these days.
I slipped it in my pocket to warm it up. By the time I got the futon open, my pants were humming. As I
took the bot-tie back out, the little light danced up and down inside, emitting its characteristic faint buzz.
Carefully, I took off the lid and cupped the ball of light in my hands. I brought my hands to my lips and
said, "Stinkwort.The Waybread.Noon." Opening my hands, the glow bee shot up and hovered a
moment, then popped through the window. I crashed on the futon and was asleep before the morning
news began. Four hours later, I was seated in The Way-bread, eating lunch for breakfast. A Chinese
couple had opened the place a few years back, hoping to tap into the elf market. They didn't know
honeycomb pie from scallion pancakes, but the burgers were pretty decent. It catered mostly to teenage
tourists on a day jaunt to the bad-ass part of town. I liked it because I wasn't likely to run into anyone I
know. Most of the friends I had left had better taste.
Noon came and went. I sat twiddling a coffee straw and watching the completely human crowd. Every
time the door opened, their heads would bob up only to return to their plates without a wing or pointy ear
sighting. No one bothered me. Druids aren't obviously different. We look human but have more sensory
abilities and, of course, can tap into essence. After another twenty minutes, my bladder would no longer
stand being ignored. I went to the restroom.
I was just about to take care of business when a voice over my head observed, "At least you're not
 
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