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A Fistful of Charms
A Fistful of Charms
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A Fistful of Charms

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A Fistful of Charms
Kim Harrison

From New York Times best-selling author, Kim Harrison, comes the fourth book in her brilliant series, The Hollows; packed with vampires, werewolves and witches - don’t miss out on this sexy urban fantasy.There's no rest for the wicked, even when the taint on your soul isn't your fault.It would be wise for witch and bounty hunter, Rachel Morgan, to keep a low profile right now. Her new reputation for the dark arts has piqued the interest of Cincinnati's night-prowlers, who despise her and long to bring an end to her interference, one way or another.Nevertheless, Rachel must risk exposure. Her ex-boyfriend, Nick, has stolen a priceless Were artefact, and, as tempting as it may be to let the Weres him apart, Rachel feels obliged to attempt a rescue. But other sinister forces also covet the relic Nick has hidden. Some who desire it so badly, they will take the city – and everyone in it – apart to wield its frightening power.

A Fistful of Charms

Kim Harrison

Copyright (#ulink_d4dadc82-3878-5d4b-b1b5-8775da9a9477)

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

HarperVoyager

An Imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd.

1 London Bridge Street

London SE1 9GF

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

Published by Voyager 2006

Copyright © Kim Harrison 2006

Kim Harrison asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins ebooks

HarperCollinsPublishers has made every reasonable effort to ensure that any picture content and written content in this ebook has been included or removed in accordance with the contractual and technological constraints in operation at the time of publication

Source ISBN: 9780007236138

Ebook Edition © JUNE 2010 ISBN: 9780007301843

Version: 2016-11-22

To the man who invariably says, “Really? Okay,” instead of, “You want to do what?”

Contents

Cover Page (#uc2cc4cdb-c6e3-548a-9587-bc6f9fc20d70)

Title Page (#u4533c2c8-54e1-54f6-9bfa-57c4298a8aa6)

Copyright (#ub2c138be-9f06-57f7-8d78-213e0177ef34)

Dedication (#u46ffeb67-5a12-54a6-acdf-4342c4c22df5)

One (#u38ec7cfc-75b6-558b-9886-e9bd10e1bbbd)

Two (#ufd9fa89d-f2d9-52db-89a6-dbe28b5da1ac)

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Four (#ub1722511-c646-5cbf-b378-fe6cfe7c374e)

Five (#uad6d7faa-84c2-51d0-8fd2-e57312954b8d)

Six (#u6e0eaa75-aef4-5be1-97c3-72fd694d0189)

Seven (#u6ec8900f-5d7c-5d56-a1f3-996bb4d12c67)

Eight (#u868abf45-0c05-5274-bd8c-e3275eddfa0a)

Nine (#u20c3e00f-2884-5d36-8683-b680b4390c71)

Ten (#u3310934b-1970-590b-b8f6-558c581338e2)

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Thirteen (#u663ff089-456c-552e-bbf6-2b9b76c8411d)

Fourteen (#u18bdd073-02d4-5453-85f2-7f20f42667b6)

Fifteen (#uca1a41e7-aacd-55ca-9e32-a7638fa2cc14)

Sixteen (#uc37066f3-78e7-57c1-a3b7-424e776df9cb)

Seventeen (#uee8c0b6c-ddc1-55ae-8e71-cb30b7fc12ab)

Eighteen (#u0d6c6872-4c4e-5c3e-825e-f9a770fe09af)

Nineteen (#u648175bc-fe8b-5358-afc6-7143da0fb6cb)

Twenty (#uc03c72f6-dcd9-5eca-a559-ea0bbee200e2)

Twenty-one (#u390d20cb-f2c8-5573-8e41-76e93e3b7218)

Twenty-two (#ud0119f7a-221c-5542-8318-d7b1985ac65a)

Twenty-three (#udf48fcb8-6d36-557e-96cd-99ae23745acd)

Twenty-four (#u9664ef18-1684-5ee3-a300-aa1be8409a8e)

Twenty-five (#u82b201fc-5a1a-502c-af22-6a7f9935047e)

Twenty-six (#u774ebd4c-99dc-5826-87df-39d5c10e4263)

Twenty-seven (#ud4160916-cfd7-51c8-9142-8f8c03e2f8c5)

Twenty-eight (#u60245e11-1e41-53a8-998c-9a0c03fd7003)

Twenty-nine (#u4d60f568-994d-5ec1-8b01-fd1a21227cef)

Thirty (#u0d297749-edf5-5750-b3e3-7b79b13b3d90)

Thirty-one (#u42f43bd8-0c39-5783-98a9-d9c5daeb01f5)

Thirty-two (#u74ea385f-6067-5a52-ae35-0170aaf2cc0c)

Thirty-three (#ub01a2790-9839-55dd-9d87-65fcbc7343e6)

Thirty-four (#u2899b85c-2da7-5105-b916-0207e308f0b7)

Thirty-five (#u0e43ee6c-69e8-5b3a-9adb-daab6b645480)

Keep Reading (#ua2566a77-4b3b-5e96-bf2a-3c40080e3cdd)

Acknowledgements (#uc43bbf81-a991-57a7-b4f5-1f265e2a0142)

About the Publisher (#u7a63c916-8dae-5005-b5c0-119dfac297db)

One (#ulink_f2a4c41f-2b3c-5b09-9499-576a69bd9f08)

The solid thud of David’s car door shutting echoed off the stone face of the eight-story building we had parked beside. Leaning against the gray sports car, I shaded my eyes and squinted up at its aged and architecturally beautiful columns and fluted sills. The uppermost floor was golden in the setting sun, but here at street level we were in a chill shadow. Cincinnati had a handful of such landmark buildings, most abandoned, as this one appeared to be.

“Are you sure this is the place?” I asked, then dragged the flat of my arms off the roof of his car. The river was close; I could smell the oil and gas mix of boats. The top floor probably had a view. Though the streets were clean, the area was clearly depressed. But with a little attention—and a lot of money—I could see it as one of the city’s newest residential hot spots.

David set his worn leather briefcase down and reached into the inner pocket of his suit coat. Pulling out a sheaf of papers, he flipped to the back, then glanced at the distant corner and the street sign. “Yes,” he said, his soft voice tense but not worried.

Tugging my little red leather jacket down, I hiked my bag higher on my shoulder and headed to his side of the car, heels clunking. I’d like to say I was wearing my butt-kicking boots in deference to this being a run, but in reality I just liked them. They went well with the blue jeans and black T-shirt I had on; and with the matching cap, I looked and felt sassy.

David frowned at the chunking—or my choice of attire, maybe—steeling his features to bland acceptance when he saw me quietly laughing at him. He was in his respectable work clothes, somehow pulling off the mix of the three-piece suit and his shoulder-length, wavy black hair held back in a subdued clip. I’d seen him a couple of times in running tights that showed off his excellently maintained, mid-thirties physique—yum—and a full-length duster and cowboy hat—Van Helsing, eat your heart out—but his somewhat small stature lost none of its presence when he dressed like the insurance claims adjuster he was. David was kind of complex for a Were.

I hesitated when I came even with him, and together we eyed the building. Three streets over I could hear the shush of traffic, but here, nothing moved. “It’s really quiet,” I said, holding my elbows against the chill of the mid-May evening.

Brown eyes pinched, David ran a hand over his clean-shaven cheeks. “It’s the right address, Rachel,” he said, peering at the top floor. “I can call to check if you want.”

“No, this is cool.” I smiled with my lips closed, hefting my shoulder bag and feeling the extra weight of my splat gun. This was David’s run, not mine, and about as benign as you could get—adjusting the claim of an earth witch whose wall had cracked. I wouldn’t need the sleepy-time charms I loaded my modified paint ball gun with, but I just grabbed my bag when David asked me to come with him. It was still packed from my last run—storming the back room of an illegal spammer. God, plugging him had been satisfying.

David pushed into motion, gallantly gesturing me to go first. He was older than I by about ten years, but it was hard to tell unless you looked at his eyes. “She’s probably living in one of those new flats they’re making above old ware-houses,” he said, heading for the ornate stoop.

I snickered, and David looked at me.

“What?” he said, dark eyebrows rising.

I entered the building before him, shoving the door so he could follow tight on my heels. “I was thinking if you lived in one, it would still be a warehouse. Were house? Get it?”

He sighed, and I frowned. Jenks, my old backup, would have laughed. Guilt hit me, and my pace faltered. Jenks was currently AWOL, hiding out in some Were’s basement after I’d majorly screwed up by not trusting him, but with spring here, I could step up my efforts to apologize and get him to return.

The front lobby was spacious, full of gray marble and little else. My heels sounded loud in the tall-ceilinged space. Creeped out, I stopped chunking and started walking to minimize the noise. A pair of black-edged elevators were across the lobby, and we headed for them. David pushed the up button and rocked back.

I eyed him, the corners of my lips quirking. Though he was trying to hide it, I could see he was getting excited about his run. Being a field insurance adjustor wasn’t the desk job one might think it was. Most of his company’s clients were Inderlanders—witches, Weres, and the occasional vampire—and as such, getting the truth as to why a client’s car was totaled was harder than it sounded. Was it from the teenage son backing it into the garage wall, or did the witch down the street finally get tired of hearing him beep every time he left the drive? One was covered, the other wasn’t, and sometimes it took, ah, creative interviewing techniques to get the truth.

David noticed I was smiling at him, and the rims of his ears went red under his dark complexion. “I appreciate you coming with me,” he said, shifting forward as the elevator dinged and the doors opened. “I owe you dinner, okay?”

“No problem.” I joined him in the murky, mirrored lift, and watched my reflection in the amber light as the doors closed. I’d had to move an interview for a possible client, but David had helped me in the past, and that was far more important.

The trim Were winced. “The last time I adjusted the claim of an earth witch, I later found she had scammed the company. My ignorance cost them hundreds of thousands. I appreciate you giving me your opinion as to whether she caused the damage with a misuse of magic.”

I tucked a loosely curling lock of red hair that had escaped my French braid behind an ear, then adjusted my leather cap. The lift was old and slow. “Like I said, no problem.”

David watched the numbers counting up. “I think my boss is trying to get me fired,” he said softly. “This is the third claim this week to hit my desk that I’m not familiar with.” His grip on his briefcase shifted. “He’s waiting for me to make a mistake. Pushing for it.”

I leaned against the back mirror and smiled weakly at him. “Sorry. I know how that feels.” I had quit my old job at Inderland Security, the I.S., almost a year ago to go independent. Though it had been rough—and still was, occasionally—it was the best decision I’d ever made.

“Still,” he persisted, the not unpleasant scent of musk growing as he turned to me in the confined space. “This isn’t your job. I owe you.”

“David, let it go,” I said, exasperated. “I’m happy to come out here and make sure some witch isn’t scamming you. It’s no big deal. I do this stuff every day. In the dark. Usually alone. And if I’m lucky, it involves running, and screaming, and my foot in somebody’s gut.”

The Were smiled to show his flat, blocky teeth. “You like your job, don’t you?”

I smiled right back. “You bet I do.”

The floor lurched, and the doors opened. David waited for me to exit first, and I looked out onto the huge, building-sized room on the top floor. The setting sun streamed in the ceiling-to-floor windows, shining on the scattered construction materials. Past the windows, the Ohio River made a gray sheen. When finished, this would be an excellent apartment. My nose tickled at the scent of two-by-fours and sanded plaster, and I sneezed.

David’s eyes went everywhere. “Hello? Mrs. Bryant?” he said, his deep voice echoing. “I’m David. David Hue from Were Insurance. I brought an assistant with me.” He gave my tight jeans, T-shirt, and red leather jacket a disparaging look. “Mrs. Bryant?”

I followed him farther in, my nose wrinkling. “I think the crack in her wall might be from removing some of those supporting members,” I said softly. “Like I said, no problem.”

“Mrs. Bryant?” David called again.

My thoughts went to the empty street and how far we were from the casual observer. Behind me, the elevator doors slid shut and the lift descended. A small scuff from the far end of the room sent a stab of adrenaline through me, and I spun.

David was on edge too, and together we laughed at ourselves when a slight figure rose from the couch set adjacent to a modern kitchen at the end of the long room, the cupboards still wrapped in plastic.

“Mrs. Bryant? I’m David Hue.”

“As prompt as your last yearly review claims,” a masculine voice said, the soft resonances sifting through the darkening air. “And very thoughtful to bring a witch with you to check your customer’s claim with. Tell me, do you take that off your end-of-the-year taxes, or do you claim it as a business expense?”

David’s eyes were wide. “It’s a business expense, sir.”

I looked from David to the man. “Ah, David? I take it that’s not Mrs. Bryant.”