Part 12 (1/2)
”Jacob wasn't here long before he was discovered,” Leslie said. ”Not a lot of places to hide a body around here and-as you can see-there are a lot of people this time of year. The harbor breeze keeps the temperatures to a reasonable level and the fis.h.i.+ng is supposed to be pretty good.”
”Do you think he was dropped in the harbor by boat?”
”That's the theory. Too many people around to drop him off unseen, and the ME says the body was in the water for at least a full day. Jacob was found a number of days ago. I suspect that if there was something we missed initially, it's too late now.”
”Probably this is useless,” agreed Anna. ”But I'm not clear on what else we can do right now that is more helpful.”
There were all sorts of people out and about-joggers, dog walkers, people watchers. The sound of kids yelling in the distance competed with airplanes from the airport across the harbor and seabirds.
They were pa.s.sed by a woman with a Pekingese coming the other way. Her little dog hit the end of his leash and started barking hoa.r.s.ely at Brother Wolf.
”He's perfectly friendly,” his owner said. ”Now stand down, Peter.” To his owner's obvious embarra.s.sment, the dog growled, keeping himself between the werewolves and his owner in a brave but misguided attempt to protect her, until they were long past.
”Peter,” said Anna, smiling involuntarily. ”Peter and the Wolf.”
”Is that reaction usual?” Leslie asked.
”Most dogs have troubles with us at first,” Anna admitted; then she smiled. ”He was all of ten pounds, wasn't he? Pretty brave of him when you think of it. After insults have been exchanged it usually works out fine. Cats...cats don't like us. And they don't adjust, ever.” She grinned at Leslie. ”Just like Cantrip agents, I expect.”
”Heuter is just one man,” Leslie pointed out. ”Hard to judge all of Cantrip by one man.”
”I don't know about that,” Anna said. ”Who else would join an agency like Cantrip except for people who are afraid of the dark?”
”People who need jobs?” Leslie suggested dryly. ”Cantrip takes a lot of Quantico graduates who don't get on with the FBI. As a job, Cantrip is less time-consuming than the FBI or Homeland Security, and it pays better than most police departments. It's less dangerous, too-because they don't actually do anything but collect information.”
”Not yet,” Anna said affably. ”My father says that government unchecked is like a s...o...b..ll; you can always count on it getting bigger and gathering more power.” She walked a few paces. ”Heuter was going to shoot someone in the morgue. If he could have gotten the shot off before it became obvious Charles wasn't going to hurt anyone, he'd have shot Charles. If you hadn't been there, he would have done it. I thought at the time he was going to go for the witch, but I've changed my mind. Cantrip carries weapons loaded with silver bullets.”
”Mine is, too,” admitted Leslie, sounding sheepish.
”Good for you,” Anna told her. ”You didn't even think about drawing, though.”
”I don't know why not. I really should have.”
”Charles did what you wanted to,” Anna suggested. ”Got the witch's hands off that poor boy. She was preparing to feed off him, and Charles stopped it.”
”Feed?”
”Suck up the residual magic the killers left behind.”
”That doesn't sound appetizing. Sounds necrophilic.”
”Mmm,” agreed Anna. ”But you and I are not witches.”
Leslie stared out in the harbor for a moment, then smiled. ”I suppose that was it. I wanted to smack her, and your Charles did it for me.”
There was a monument up ahead that looked something like the Was.h.i.+ngton Monument in miniature-or, since they were in Boston, like the Bunker Hill Monument. It was a tall, sea-battered, narrow-sided rectangle that lifted to the sky and ended in a point. On the ocean side of the path were some wharfs with a few people fis.h.i.+ng from them.
”Still, Heuter...” Anna said. ”You know Senator Heuter's views on werewolves, right? He's one of the proponents of that bill to include us as an endangered species.”
Leslie frowned. ”Endangered species?”
”And therefore not citizens,” Anna said. ”I don't suppose it would be of as much interest to you as it is to us werewolves. He also wants to RFID tag us as if we were pets who might go astray.”
”RFID?”
”That one hasn't made it into a bill yet,” Anna said. ”But it's been in a couple of his speeches.”
”That wouldn't be const.i.tutional,” said Leslie.
”It would if we were an endangered species.” Anna looked at Brother Wolf. ”I'd like to see someone try to put a radio control collar on Charles. It might be fun to watch on YouTube.”
He gave her a look.
Anna raised the hand that wasn't holding the leash. ”I'm not saying I'd do it. I'd just pay money to watch someone try.”
Leslie gave her a thoughtful look as she stopped. ”I thought that you were mismatched when I first met you two. But you aren't, are you?”
”No,” Anna agreed. ”I'm the only one who knows when he's teasing.”
”If you say so,” said Leslie, amused.
Anna looked around. ”Is this where Jacob was found?”
”Over here.”
Between the sidewalk and the sea stood a two-rail decorative pipe fence that the salt water had colored green and rust. Beyond that, a short rocky sh.o.r.eline edged in green sea gra.s.ses gave way to a bit of water and a wall of worn wooden poles stuck side by side like soldiers keeping the waves off the land. Leslie pointed to a small patch of dirt between the wharf wall and the wooden poles.
Jacob would have been sheltered a little from the weather. Anna bent down a little closer than she needed to when she unclipped Charles's leash, and she breathed in his familiar scent to comfort herself. He waited until she stood up before he hopped over the fence and down to the strip of land below. Anna made no attempt to follow.
Leslie gave her a searching glance. ”He can scent things better in wolf form than you can in human?”
”Yes. But he's also better at this than I am.” Anna didn't feel a bit defensive about it. He'd taught her a lot, but...”He has a lot more experience than I do. Scents don't come with a label-this is the villain; here is a lady with a dog; here is a police officer and that sticky-sweet-and-sour-milk smell is someone's old banana ice cream cone. Charles can pick out what he's smelling better than I can, and date them, too, usually.”
Brother Wolf trotted down to the isolated bit of dirt that Leslie had pointed out and then followed it toward them with his nose on the ground.
A jogger approached them and stopped, jogging in place. ”Your dog should be on a leash,” he said in politely disapproving tones. ”It's the rules. There are lots of kids here and a big dog like that might scare someone.”
”Werewolf,” said Anna blandly, just to see what he would do.
He stopped jogging and looked, his jaw dropping. ”s.h.i.+t,” he said. ”You're kidding me.”
”It's a werewolf,” said Leslie.
”It's red. Aren't werewolves supposed to be black or gray?”
”Werewolves can be whatever color,” Anna told him.
He bent down, stretching his legs and breathing deeply. ”It's beautiful. Hey, that's where they found that little boy, isn't it? I saw the police tape out here a couple of days ago. Are you with the police?”
”FBI.” Leslie gave him a sharp look. ”You run here all the time?”