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I listed the options I wanted and then said, "Black, inside and out. He'll need it by next week."

"That's not poss--"

"I've picked common options and colors. You'll find one on a lot somewhere. Have it here next week, and in the meantime . . ." I waved at their stock. "He'll borrow one of those."

"We can arrange a loaner, but first we need to settle financing."

"It's a cash sale," Gabriel said.

Despite the cool June morning, the guy began visibly sweating. I'll blame it on the fact that a big guy in a suit wanted to pay cash for a new Jag, suggesting . . . well, it suggested he might not really be a lawyer.

"I know your previous car is a write-off," the salesman said. "But it will take time to get the insurance money."

"It's a cash sale regardless." Gabriel lowered his shades, fixing the man with a cool stare. "Is that a problem?"

"N-no. Of course not. Come inside, and we'll do the paperwork."

--

The dealership visit lifted Gabriel's mood immensely. I think my handling of the situation amused him. While I'd been following in the career footsteps of my philanthropist mother, I really was Daddy's girl. My father had turned the family business--the Mills & Jones department store--back into the Chicago landmark it'd been in the fifties, and he hadn't done that by letting salespeople tell him he couldn't get stock in until next month.

We had an hour before our appointment with Chandler, so Gabriel decided to swing by the office. It's a Garfield Park greystone, a beautiful building but not exactly the prestigi

ous address you'd expect from a guy who pays cash for a six-figure car. It is relatively close to the Cook County jail. Given Gabriel's clientele, that may be the main attraction.

We parked my car and his rental Jag in the narrow lane between buildings. I was telling him a story as we walked inside.

"My poor mother was on the verge of cardiac arrest," I said. "Here we are, at this thousand-dollar-a-plate dinner, and Dad's wrangling exclusive rights for a line of designer handbags from another guest at our table. He doesn't see the problem because, to him, if you're going to shell out that kind of money, you'd damned well better get the chance to schmooze someone who can give you exclusive rights to his handbag line."

"I would agree," Gabriel said, opening the office door for me.

"So my dad says . . ."

I trailed off as I saw three people in the reception area. One was expected--Lydia, Gabriel's executive assistant, a trim woman in her late sixties who looked as if she had a yoga mat and green-goo health shake behind her desk and could throw a would-be mugger over her shoulder.

In front of her stood an elderly couple. Handsome and well-dressed, but not overly so. They looked like retired professors--perfectly pleasant people. Except they weren't any of that. Not professors. Not elderly. Not particularly pleasant. Not people, either.

Ida and Walter Clark were Tylwyth Teg. Welsh fae. Fairies, though they didn't like that word. With others of their kind, they'd founded Cainsville centuries ago and interbred with select humans. That's how a population survives when the "other" outnumber them. Not everyone in Cainsville had fae blood, but enough did for Tylwyth Teg to work their compulsions and charms and keep us from asking questions. Now I knew better, which is why I'd left Cainsville--and the resident fae--behind.

Lydia rose from her desk. "I was just telling the Clarks here that you weren't expected at the office today, Mr. Walsh. I presume you're just stopping by?"

"I am, but I suspect I'm not the one they came to see."

"Actually, we would like to speak to you as well as Olivia," Ida said. "We won't keep you long."

Gabriel visibly struggled to refuse. It shouldn't have been difficult, all things considered, but we both had fae blood and that inbred compulsion demanded we listen to them.

He glanced at me. I nodded, and he turned to Lydia. "Olivia didn't get her mocha this morning. Could I impose on you . . . ?"

"I'll go grab one." She stood. "When I return, though, there's a case we need to discuss before you leave for your appointment." Which was her way of putting the Clarks on notice that this meeting would indeed be short.

As soon as the door closed behind Lydia, Walter said, "We understand that you're upset, Olivia."

"Mmm, I'm not sure upset is the right word." I perched on Lydia's desk. "I mean, I completely understand why you wouldn't tell me what you were. What do you say? 'Hello, I'm a fairy.' Sorry, fae, right?"

"Actually, we prefer Tylwyth Teg," Ida said. "You are upset."

"No, upset is what I'd get from learning that people I trusted aren't what they seem to be. Pissed off is what I get when my life is in danger, on account of said people not telling me what the hell is going on. Cainsville welcomes me with open arms and I think, 'Huh, that's really nice,' only to discover the town is run by supernatural beings. The reason they're being so nice to me? Well, I haven't quite figured that all out yet, but I know I sure as hell can't trust any explanation you give, so I'll keep digging. I know my family is connected to Cainsville, on Pamela's side. I know you two had something to do with getting me adopted by the Taylor-Joneses and making me disappear from the system--and from my birth parents. I know that's all somehow connected to my parents' alleged crimes. And I know that, apparently, I'm very, very special."

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