its usual speed.
Deathâs unlovely perfume drew my attention to a closed door. If Iâd been on my own, I could have opened the door easily enough, but I believe in making use of others. I whined (coyotes canât bark, not like a dog) and Zee obediently opened the door and revealed the stairs going down into a basement. It was the first of the houses that had had a basementâunless theyâd been hidden somehow.
I bounded down the stairs. Zee turned on the lights and followed me down. Most of the basement looked like basements look: junk stored without rhyme or reason, unfinished walls and cement floor. I padded across the floor, following death to a door, shut tight. Zee opened that one without me asking and I found, at last, the place where the fae who had lived here was murdered.
Unlike the rest of the house, this room had been immaculate before the resident had been murdered. Underneath the rust-colored stains of the faeâs blood, the tile floor gleamed. Cracked leather-bound tomes with the authentic lumpiness of preâprinting press books sat intermingled with battered paperbacks and college math and biology texts in bookcases that lined the walls.
This room was the bloodiest Iâd seen so farâand given the first murder, that was saying something. Even dried and old, the blood was overwhelming. It had pooled, stained, and sprayed as the fae had fought with his attacker. The lower shelves of three bookcases were dotted with it. Tables had been knocked over and a lamp was broken on the floor.
Maybe I wouldnât have realized it if I hadnât just been thinking about them, but the fae here had been a selkie. I had never met one before that I knew, but Iâd been to zoos and I knew what seals smelled like.
I didnât want to walk into the room. I wasnât usually squeamish, but lately Iâd been walking in enough blood. Where the blood had pooledâin the grout between tiles, on a book lying open, and against the base of one of the bookcases where the floor wasnât quite levelâit had rotted instead of dried. The room smelled of blood, seal, and decaying fish.
I avoided the worst of the mess where I could and tried not to think too much about what I couldnât avoid. Gradually what my nose told me distracted me from the unpleasantness of my task. I quartered the room, while Zee waited just outside it.
As I started for the door, I caught something . Most of the blood here belonged to the fae, but on the floor, just in front of the door, were a few drops of blood that did not.
If Zee had been a police officer, Iâd have shifted then and there to tell him what Iâd found. But if I pointed my finger toward a suspect, I was pretty sure I knew what would happen to the person I pointed it at.
Werewolves dealt with their criminals the same way. I donât have any quarrel with killing murderers, but if Iâm the one doing the accusing, Iâd like to be absolutely certain, given the consequences. And the person Iâd be accusing was an unlikely choice for killing this many fae.
Zee followed me up the stairs, turning off lights and closing doors as we went. I didnât bother looking further. There had only been two scents in the basement room besides Uncle Mikeâs. Either the selkie didnât bring guests into his library, or he had cleaned since the last time. Most damning of all was the blood.
Zee opened the front door and I stepped out into full night where the silvered moon had fully risen. How long had I sat staring at the impossible sea?
A shadow stirred on the porch and became Uncle Mike. He smelled of malt and hot wings, and I could see that he was still dressed in his tavern-keeper clothes: loose ivory-colored khakis and green T-shirt with his own name in the possessive across his chest in sparkling white letters. It wasnât egocentrism; Uncle Mikeâs was the name of his tavern.
âSheâs wet,â he said,