there was no need for the three of them to intimidate one woman.
Thank you, Custer. Iâll remember this.
âLarry, Moe, and Curly?â I guessed.
âShut your mouth, bitch,â the thinner man said.
âNow, now.â The thicker bravo smiled. âLetâs be polite. Iâm Bryce. That over there is Mory and my buddy with the chain over there is Jeremiah. Weâre just here to make sure you pay your way. Or the thing will get ugly. And nobody wants that.â
âMove on,â I said. âI already paid for the information.â
âFrom where Iâm standinâ, you didnât pay enough. Make it two fifty: another hundred for the entrance fee and some to us for the trouble of walking here.â Bryce put his hand on the cop baton thrust into his belt. âDonât make this hard. You got a little girl with you. You wouldnât want anything to happen to her.â
Julie hid behind me.
Bryce smiled like a pit bull before a fight. âThe more we work, the higher the bill will run. Time to be smart about this.â
The chain trembled. An eerie metallic rustle came from behind the trailers. Jeremiah leaned back and tugged the chain. A hoarse growl answered him. The chain snapped taut and his feet slid a little.
Judging by Bryceâs eyes, they wouldnât leave until someone bled. I still had to try. âYou think youâre tough guys,â I said, moving off the porch to the ground. âI can respect that. But I do this shit for a living. Iâve had a lot of practice. You wonât get more money out of me.â
âThis hereââthe beefier bravo stomped his foot in case I failed to get his pointââis our fucking turf. Keep running your bitch mouth, and Iâll put something in there to shut you up.â
The chain slacked, and metal links rattled on the ground, as something large moved toward us. A clawed paw bigger than my head appeared from behind the trailer, followed by a grotesquely muscled shoulder. Another paw emerged, and a dog trotted into view. He had to be over thirty inches at the shoulder. Muscle bulged on his forequarters and barrel-wide chest, so broad that his hips seemed disproportionately narrow by comparison. His square head sat low on his shoulders as if he had no neck at all.
The dog jogged forward with a faint metallic jingling, like loose change shaking in a pocket. Long blue-gray spikes protruded from his chin. Another row of spikes ran along his spine to the long tail, forming a crest.
The dog halted and stared at me with intense aquamarine eyes. Rage shivered in the wrinkles of his flat muzzle. His maw gaped open and the beast showed me his teeth, long, jagged, and gleaming. He tensed, legs thrust wide, chest open. His spikes snapped upright with an iron click. All over his body metal needles stiffened, like raised hackles.
Nothing kills a party like an oversized metal hedgehog.
Bryce and Mory shuffled to the flanks, giving Jeremiah and his puppy room to work. Mory was out of my reach, but Bryce ended up only eight feet away. Theyâd done this before. One small flaw in their reasoning: there was thirty-five feet between me and the dog, and the chain would slow him down.
The puppy jerked his head and roared.
âThe money, skank,â Jeremiah said.
âNo.â
Jeremiah shrugged the chain loop from his arm. The links hit the dirt with a thud.
The dog charged.
I moved, pulling Slayer from its sheath. I slammed its pommel into Bryceâs throat, while hooking his left leg with my right. He toppled. Before he hit the ground, I spun, clamping the metal feather with my fingers and jerking it from the knife sheath. It cost me a fraction of a secondâI couldnât afford to cut myself, not with the Honeycombâs magic swirling around usâand I caught the dog in midleap. I stabbed the feather shaft into his vicious beryl eye, twisted past him, and hammered a kick into