last few minutes: everything except, evidently, the rat.
Several of his buddies laughed and gave him a hard time.
Anna smiled; she couldn't help it - he sounded about six years old. "I can smell him." And that started another round of questions.
It wasn't exactly a fun evening - Anna felt like she'd spent most of her time walking a tightrope. But it was better than being stuck in the condo while Charles buried himself in electronics. And it wasn't all bad. She enjoyed meeting Leslie's husband, who was funny and smart - and offered to stuff Chuck in a wastebasket. The fish and chips were superb and so was the stew.
Eventually the fascination with werewolves seemed to wear off and Anna found a quiet table in a corner where she could relax and watch everyone.
The crude Chuck's friend saw her and came over to apologize again. "He knows he's stupid when he drinks, so he usually doesn't. It was just a bad day today, you know? The last call we took before coming here was a domestic abuse call - some lady's boyfriend beat her up and then started in on her toddler. Chuck has a little boy he hasn't seen since his ex-wife moved to California, and he took it pretty hard."
"I have bad days, too," Anna told him. "I understand. Don't worry about it."
Chuck's friend nodded and wandered off.
She closed her eyes for a minute. She was a little short on sleep thanks to Charles, and it made her eyes dry.
Someone came over and sat on the chair opposite her. Anna opened her eyes to see Beauclaire pouring himself a glass of beer.
"Isaac said he invited you," she told him. "But we were pretty sure you weren't coming."
"Lizzie's out of the operating room," he told her, sipping his beer as if it were fine wine. "Her mother and stepfather are there - and Lizzie will be drugged and sleeping until tomorrow." He took a bigger sip. "Her mother thinks it is my fault that she was taken. As I agree with her, it was difficult to defend myself, and so I retreated here."
Anna shook her head. "Never accept the blame for what evil people do. We are all responsible for our own actions." She was lecturing him, so she stopped. "Sorry. Hang around with Bran too long, and see if you don't start passing around the Marrok's advice as if he were Confucius. How is Lizzie doing?"
"Her knee was crushed." He looked at the wall behind Anna where there was a very nice print of an Irish castle. "They might repair it enough so she can walk, but dancing is definitely out."
"I'm so sorry," Anna said.
"She's alive, right?" Beauclaire said, and took a long, slow drink. "The things they carved in her skin...In time, the surgeons might be able to get rid of them, they think. Until then, every time she looks in a mirror she'll have the reminder of what she went through." He paused. "She knows she'll never dance again. It broke her."
"Maybe not," said Leslie. She sat down beside Anna on the dark brown bench seat and put her purse on the table. "Someone gave something to me, a long time ago - and I've never used it. I think mostly because I was afraid. What if I'd tried to use it and it failed?"
She opened her purse, dug down until she found her wallet, and slipped a plain white card out, handing it to Beauclaire. It looked like a business card to Anna, but instead of a name, the word GIFT was typed in the center of the card.
Beauclaire took it and rubbed his fingers across it, and a faint smile crossed his face. "And how did you get this?"
Leslie looked uncomfortable - almost embarrassed. "It's real, right?"
He nodded, still playing with the card. "It's real, all right."
She took a deep breath. "It happened like this," she said, and spun a tale of monsters who ate children and childhood dreams - including Leslie's puppy - and a fierce old woman who knew a little of the fae, and about a debt owed and a bargain made.
"You can use it to fix your daughter's knee?" Leslie asked.
Beauclaire shook his head and handed the card back to Leslie. "No. But I'll remember you offered - and I'll give you some advice, if you don't mind. The fae who gave that to you did it with the best of intentions. For all that we do not reproduce, we