grimaced and nodded. “Da, I know. That did not happen.”
I sighed. “Marcone. I’ll look into it.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yeah. I know those people. I’ll go see them right now. Though I was looking forward to going home for a while.” I pushed my hips up off the counter they leaned on. “Well, what’s one more thing, right?”
“Two more things,” Sanya said. He vanished and returned a moment later.
He was carrying Amoracchius in its scabbard. He offered it to me.
I lifted both eyebrows.
“Instructions,” Sanya said. “I’m to give it to you and you will kn—”
“Know who to give it to,” I muttered. I eyed the ceiling. “Someone is having a huge laugh right now at my expense.” I raised my voice a little. “I don’t have to do this, You know! I have free will! I could tell You to go jump in a lake!”
Sanya stood there, offering me the sword.
I snatched it out of his hands, grumbling under my breath, and stalked out to my Volkswagen. I threw the sword into the back. “As if I didn’t have enough problems,” I muttered, slamming the passenger door and stalking around to the driver-side door. “No. I gotta be carrying around freaking Excalibur now, too. Unless it isn’t, who knows.” I slammed the driver-side door, and the old paperback copy of The Two Towers Uriel had left me, and which I’d dropped into the pocket of my duster, dug into my side.
I frowned and pulled it out. It fell open to the inside front cover, where there was writing in a flowing hand: The reward for work well-done is more work.
“Ain’t that the truth,” I muttered. I stuffed the book back in my pocket and hit the road again.
It took a phone call and an hour to set it up, but Marcone met me at his office on the floor over Executive Priority. I walked in carrying the sword to find Marcone and Hendricks in his office—a plain and rather Spartan place for the time being. He had only recently moved in, and it looked more like the office of an active college professor, functional and put together primarily from expediency, than that of a criminal mastermind.
I cut right to the chase. “Someone is backstabbing the people who saved your life, and I won’t have it.”
Marcone raised his eyebrows. “Please explain.”
I told him about Thorned Namshiel and the coin.
“I don’t have it,” Marcone said.
“Do any of your people?” I asked.
He frowned at that question. Then he leaned back in his chair and put his elbows on the arms of it, resting the fingertips of his hands together.
“Where is Gard?” I asked.
“Reporting to her home office,” he murmured. “I will make inquiries.”
I wondered if Marcone was lying to me. It wasn’t a habit of his, but that only meant that when he did tell a lie, it was all the more effective. I wondered if he was telling the truth. If so, then maybe Monoc Securities had just acquired their own Fallen angel and expert in magic and magical theory.
“The child,” Marcone said. “Is she well?”
“She’s safe,” I said. “She’s with people who care about her.”
He nodded. “Good. Was there anything else?”
“No,” I said.
“Then you should get some rest,” Marcone said. “You look”—his mouth twitched up at the corners—“like a raccoon. Who has been run over by a locomotive.”
“Next time I leave your wise ass on the island,” I said, scowling, and stalked out.
I was on the way out of the building when I decided to make one more stop.
Madam Demeter was in her office, dressed as stylishly as ever.
“Hello, Mister Dresden,” she said as she put several files away, neatly, precisely ordering them. “I’m quite busy. I hope this won’t take too long.”
“No,” I said. “I just wanted to share a theory with you.”
“Theory?”
“Yeah. See, in all the excitement and explosions and demonic brouhaha, everyone’s forgotten a small detail.”
Her fingers stopped moving.
“Someone gave the Denarians the location of Marcone’s panic room. Someone close to him. Someone who would know many of his secrets. Someone who would have a good reason to want to hurt him.”
Demeter turned just her head to face me, eyes narrowed.
“A lot of men talk to the women they sleep with,” I said. “That’s always been true. And it would give you a really good reason to get close to him.”
“He’s like a lot of men,” Demeter said quietly.
“I know you’ve got a gun in that drawer,” I told her. “Don’t try it.”
“Why shouldn’t I?” she said.
“Because I’m not going