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| Photo by Serafima Lazarenko on Unsplash |
Lily is missing, and Meryl want Harry to help find her. They live together, because Lily isn't very good at taking care of herself, and would you believe me if I told you this was the first read during which I considered that there might have been something gay going on there? Anyway, she hasn't contacted the police because the supernatural elements would be a little too difficult to either explain or extricate, and, I suspect, although she does not say this to Harry, because Lily works as a nude model, and is therefore likely to be written off as a sex worker or similar, and therefore disposable, by the mortal cops. Realistically, the response is likely to be "are you sure your girlfriend, who routinely gets naked for other people, and who you yourself acknowledge is not overburdened with survival skills, didn't just run off with a man?", and that's no help at all. It's also established in this conversation that all four of the kids are changelings whose fae parents are in the Winter Court, and that they're under Reuel's protection because Maeve was hurting them for fun, and no one in Winter, or at least no one with propensity for that kind of petty cruelty, was willing to cross the Summer Knight. Oddly, at some point, Maeve also told Lloyd Slate, who had it out for Lily specifically, to back off, which if I have the timeline right may have been part of the impetus for his betrayal. Meryl thinks Slate might have come after Lily again now that Reuel's gone - someone broke into their place, and there were signs of a struggle. At one point, Billy interjects to ask whether Meryl's fae father couldn't have done something, which is interesting inasmuch as it implies that Billy is the kind of person who expects parents to be both present and useful.
Despite this being, in ordinary course, exactly Harry's kind of case, he's on the point of refusing and walking away when Meryl says she can pay him. A thousand up front, which she has on her person, and triple his fee, although she may not be able to pay that right away. So now I'm thinking maybe Reuel did have life insurance or some other arrangement for these kids, but it's being held up by legal nonsense, which is not a huge surprise when a high-profile figure leaves substantial money to four random young adults that aren't related to him. What eventually makes the call for him is that he's very hungry and won't otherwise be able to afford food, and that while Meryl may not meet his criteria for "lady in distress", Lily certainly does. He gives her his card, telling her to call his office and let him know how to get in touch with her. He doesn't ask if she has anything of Lily's that he could use for a tracking spell, which strikes me as an odd oversight, but he's been having a bit of a day.
Harry and Billy head back to the funeral home, since that's where Harry left his car. He's going to call Murphy and see what she knows about Lloyd Slate, presumably whether he has a mortal-side criminal record, and he wants Billy to start calling morgues and see if any unidentified women with green hair have shown up. Billy complains a little about not doing something more exciting, but Harry points out, not too harshly, that this is a lot of what private investigation is. He's almost back to his car before he notices the blood. Elaine is curled up, mostly unconscious and actively bleeding out, on his passenger seat.
Sorry I don't have more like, thoughts, about this one. It's a short chapter. I'll get you the next post as son as I can. Until then, be Gay, do Crimes, and read All The Things!

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