it had been two hundred years since he’d last thought to buy something for a female.
Shahar would have smiled at the opal—and forgotten about it soon after. She’d had troves of jewels in her alabaster palace: diamonds the size of sunballs; solid blocks of emerald stacked like bricks; veritable bathtubs filled with rubies. A small white opal, even for joy, would have been like a grain of sand on a miles-long beach. She’d have appreciated the gift but, ultimately, let it disappear into a drawer somewhere. And he, so dedicated to their cause, would probably have forgotten about it, too.
Hunt clenched his jaw as Bryce strode for a hide stall. The teenager—a feline shifter from her scent—was in her lanky humanoid form and watched them approach from where she perched on a stool. Her brown braid draped over a shoulder, nearly grazing the phone idly held in her hands.
“Hey,” Bryce said, pointing toward a pile of shaggy rugs. “How much for one of them?”
“Twenty silvers,” the shifter said, sounding as bored as she looked.
Bryce smirked, running a hand over the white pelt. Hunt’s skin tightened over his bones. He’d felt that touch the other night, stroking him to sleep. And could feel it now as she petted the sheepskin. “Twenty silvers for a snowsheep hide? Isn’t that a little low?”
“My mom makes me work weekends. It’d piss her off to sell it for what it’s actually worth.”
“Loyal of you,” Bryce said, chuckling. She leaned in, her voice dropping. “This is going to sound so random, but I have a question for you.”
Hunt kept back, watching her work. The irreverent, down-to-earth party girl, merely looking to score some new drugs.
The shifter barely looked up. “Yeah?”
Bryce said, “You know where I can get anything … fun around here?”
The girl rolled her chestnut-colored eyes. “All right. Let’s hear it.”
“Hear what?” Bryce asked innocently.
The shifter lifted her phone, typing away with rainbow-painted nails. “That fake-ass act you gave everyone else here, and in the two other warehouses.” She held up her phone. “We’re all on a group chat.” She gestured to everyone in the market around them. “I got, like, ten warnings you two would be coming through here, asking cheesy questions about drugs or whatever.”
It was, perhaps, the first time Hunt had seen Bryce at a loss for words. So he stepped up to her side. “All right,” he said to the teenager. “But do you know anything?”
The girl looked him over. “You think the Vipe would allow shit like that synth in here?”
“She allows every other depravity and crime,” Hunt said through his teeth.
“Yeah, but she’s not dumb,” the shifter said, tossing her braid over a shoulder.
“So you’ve heard of it,” Bryce said.
“The Vipe told me to tell you that it’s nasty, and she doesn’t deal in it, and never will.”
“But someone does?” Bryce said tightly.
This was bad. This would not end well at all—
“The Vipe also told me to say you should check the river.” She went back to her phone, presumably to tell the Vipe that she’d conveyed the message. “That’s the place for that kinda shit.”
“What do you mean?” Bryce asked.
A shrug. “Ask the mer.”
“We should lay out the facts,” Hunt said as Bryce stormed for the Meat Market’s docks. “Before we run to the mer, accusing them of being drug dealers.”
“Too late,” Bryce said.
He hadn’t been able to stop her from sending a message via otter to Tharion twenty minutes ago, and sure as Hel hadn’t been able to stop her from heading for the river’s edge to wait.
Hunt gripped her arm, the dock mere steps away. “Bryce, the mer do not take kindly to being falsely accused—”
“Who said it’s false?”
“Tharion isn’t a drug dealer, and he sure as shit isn’t selling something as bad as synth seems to be.”
“He might know someone who is.” She shrugged out of his grasp. “We’ve been dicking around for long enough. I want answers. Now.” She narrowed her eyes. “Don’t you want to get this over with? So you can have your sentence reduced?”
He did, but he said, “The synth probably has nothing to do with this. We shouldn’t—”
But she’d already reached the wood slats of the dock, not daring to look into the eddying water beneath. The Meat Market’s docks were notorious dumping grounds. And feeding troughs for aquatic scavengers.
Water splashed, and then a powerful male body was sitting on the end of the dock. “This part of the river is gross,” Tharion said by way of greeting.
Bryce didn’t smile.