Kitty's House of Horrors (kn-7) Carrie Vaughn (philippa perry book TXT) đ
- Author: Carrie Vaughn
Book online «Kitty's House of Horrors (kn-7) Carrie Vaughn (philippa perry book TXT) đ». Author Carrie Vaughn
People were sitting on the sofas, looking up at us with interest. One of them was Joey Provost.
He stood and came toward me, hand outstretched for shaking. Another attack, Wolf growled. We were never going to appreciate aggressive human friendliness, were we? I gritted my teeth, smiled, and shook his hand.
âHi! Welcome, all of you!â He shook each of our hands in turn. His smile was ferociously pleasant.
âThanks,â I said, glancing around, taking it in. I smelled old soot and the smoke of many fires from the immense fireplace; dinnertime cooking smells from the kitchen, red wine in glasses, and people. Different kinds of peopleânot entirely human people. My nose was working overtime, trying to take it all in.
âWhy donât we come in and make some introductions?â That smile never dimmed, and I sensed an edge of anxiety to it. I didnât envy Provost his job here; he wasnât just going to be producing a TV show, he was going to be playing mediator and camp counselor.
Provost gestured to a large, aggressively muscled black man with a hooded glare sitting on a chair, a little ways from the others.
âJerome Macy,â Provost said.
âYeah, weâve met,â I said while the others nodded greetings.
The pro wrestler nodded at me. I nodded back, and we didnât meet gazesâwolf body language that said, Hey, weâre cool, nothing wrong here. He was another werewolf and understood how weird this all was. I might spend the next couple of weeks being more comfortable around him than anyone else.
âFinally, we get some eye candy,â said a guy I didnât know, scoping out Tina, Ariel, and me with a definite leer. I had to admit, we did sort of look like Charlieâs Angels standing together.
He smelled weird. Definitely not human, but a flavor of not-human I hadnât encountered beforeâand I was racking up quite the scent catalog. Not a vampire, not a werewolf, were-tiger, or were-jaguar. Iâd even met a wereâAfrican wild dog, but this wasnât any of those. He had a human and something-else smell, like all lycanthropes had. But the something else was kind of⊠fishy. Salty. Wild without the fur. Weird.
âLee Ponatac,â he said in response to my inquiring glare. He had dark hair, and his features were square, young, his eyes brown and shining. He had the scruffy appearance of someone who spent a lot of time outside and didnât care much about polish. It was a nice look, and he pulled it off well. My inquiring glare didnât go away, and he just kept his charismatic smile. âWere-seal. Children of Sedna, we call them back home,â he said finally.
My eyes widened. âReally?â
Provost said, âLee is a state legislator in Alaska. He may be the first publicly acknowledged lycanthrope elected to office in the country. Iâm a little surprised we discovered him before you did.â
âYeah. But hey, happy to meet you now. Were-seal? Really? And you donât think this gig will come back to haunt you if you ever decide to run for president?â
He smirked. âIâll cross that bridge when I get to it.â
I didnât think thereâd ever come a time when I couldnât be surprised, and he seemed pleased at my astonishment. Oh, this was going to be a fun couple of weeks.
The other man, a guy in his thirties, a little overweight and a little balding but not more than average, sat back in an armchair, arms crossed, frowning slightly as he regarded us all. He smelled human. But so did more than half the people in the room.
âAnd you are?â I asked.
âConrad Garrett,â he said.
âThe author?â I said. Iâd heard of Garrett, whoâd made a profession of writing books debunking the existence of the supernatural, claiming government conspiracy about the NIHâs Center for the Study of Paranatural Biology, calling foul on every shred of evidence proving the existence of things like, oh, werewolves. The public recognition of all this was still too newâof course skeptics came forward. âSo why donât you return any of my calls?â
âBecause acknowledging you only validates your claims,â he said, straightforward, like heâd practiced the line.
I huffed. âIf you donât believe any of us are real, what are you even doing here?â
âThatâs putting it a bit existentially,â he said. âI just donât believe any of you are what you claim you are.â
âWow. Extreme state of denial,â Ariel said.
I stared. âSeriously? Really? After everything thatâs happened? After Congress held hearings and all the stuff on TV?â
âVideo footage can be faked,â he said. âAs for Congressâtheyâre being manipulated by lobbyists. I think itâs pharmaceutical companies inventing new âdiseasesâââhe actually did the finger quotesââin order to get research funding that they have no intention of using for research.â
I couldnât help it; I giggled. âShit, youâre going to make me shape-shift right here in front of you, arenât you?â
âI look forward to it,â he said calmly.
Provost raised a hand to point at the cameras. âKitty, if you could watch the language? And pleaseâno shape-shifting. Not just yet.â
Lee crossed his arms. âThatâs the setup for the show. Weâre supposed to spend the next two weeks convincing him that all this is real. Then watch him freak out when he canât deny it anymore.â
âNo, seriously,â I said, still stifling giggles. âItâll only take five minutes. Iâll shift right now, take a little runâthatâs some great wolf territory out there. Then we can all go home.â
âKitty,â Provost said with forced patience. I had a feeling I was going to be hearing that tone of voice a lot.
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