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"Nathanuel and the boys came by the office, coerced me into finding our wayward angel."

Lazarus leaned out over the railing of the bandstand, lifting his face to the early morning light. "I knew something was up," he said, eyes closed, sniffing at the air. "Smells all wrong. Out of balance. Now it makes sense."

"I was hoping you might have heard something," Remy said, before the jangling of Marlowe's collar interrupted the two men. Remy turned as the dog bounded up the stone steps. "There he is," he said, a smile that he couldn't have stopped even if he had wanted to spreading across his face.

Marlowe's tail wagged as he headed toward Remy. "Catch anything?" he asked, rubbing the panting dog's neck.

Lazarus clapped his hands together and squatted down as the dog trotted over to him. "How's my boy?" He rubbed and patted Marlowe as the Lab twisted and turned, making sure Lazarus hit all the hot spots, before finally stopping as the man began to scratch that spot just above his tail.

"How come I always end up scratching your ass?" Lazarus asked.

"Like it," the dog answered, as he wiggled his hindquarters, claws clicking on the cement floor of the bandstand.

"What did he say?" Lazarus asked Remy.

"He says that he likes it."

"Then that's good enough for me," the immortal said, scratching with both hands now.

"As I was saying before we were interrupted for more important things," Remy said sarcastically, his dog looking up at him with hooded, pleasure-filled eyes, "I was hoping that you might've heard something."

Lazarus gave the dog a final pat before rising to his full height, knees cracking noisily. "Nothing," he said. "But I'll see if I can't flip over a few stones. Might be able to find something."

"I appreciate it," Remy said, reaching into the pocket of his sweats again and coming out with some more folded bills, which he handed to the man.

"Ditto," Lazarus said, slipping the money into his own pocket. "I'll be in touch."

Remy looked to his dog, who was now lying beside Lazarus' feet. "You hanging with Lazarus today, or are you coming with me?"

Marlowe tilted his head curiously. "Going now?"

"Yeah, you coming?"

"Coming," Marlowe answered, climbing to his feet and following Remy, Lazarus already forgotten.

They had just reached the brick path when Remy heard Lazarus call out to him. He turned to see the immortal man leaning over the metal railing.

"Have you talked to them yet?"

"Them?" Remy asked, before realizing who it was that Lazarus meant. "Oh, them," he said, shaking his head. "No, I haven't."

"Might not be such a bad idea. They usually have a good handle on what you Heavenly types are up to. You know, birds of a feather and all that shit."

Remy nodded. "Yeah, birds of a feather," he repeated, turning away with a wave.

And all that shit.

Remy and Mulvehill sat on either side of a small metal table outside Starbucks at the corner of Cambridge and New Chardon streets. Remy sipped his coffee, watching Mulvehill over the brim of his cup.

"Are you all right?" he asked, as his friend reached for his own cup, not quite able to hide the tremor in his hand.

"I'm fine," Mulvehill said, making an a

Remy remained silent, tearing a piece from a ci

"Last night," Mulvehill finally began, "I caught a case — guy took an aluminum baseball bat to his five-year-old daughter. Beat her so badly that nearly every bone in her body was shattered, and even though there wasn't any logical reason for it, she was still alive. Crying for her mommy, and still alive." He shook his head. "Christ, I need a cigarette. Goddamn city — pretty soon it'll be illegal to smoke in your own house." Instead, he took a long drink from his coffee cup.





"How the fuck could the Angel of Death walk away from his job?" Mulvehill asked, leaning forward and dropping his voice.

Remy ripped another hunk of bagel away and fed it to the drooling dog. "I don't know," he replied. "But the Seraphim have their suspicions."

"Suspicions?" Mulvehill asked. "What? Better benefits package? More time off?"

Remy drank from his large cup of coffee. "They didn't come right out and say it, but they're blaming me."

"What do you have to do with it?"

"They suspect that Israfil may have been seduced by the ways of humanity, like they believe I was."

"What do you think?"

Remy shrugged. "I don't know."

"So this could all be your fault?"

"If you want to look at me as some kind of angelic role model, then yeah, I guess it is."

Mulvehill was silent for a few moments, staring off into space. "The other guys on the job are talking. They're all freaked out by what's happening around the city — around the world — and here I am with the answer to the fifty-thousand-dollar question." He paused before continuing, as if weighing what he was about to say. "You know, I shouldn't know about this shit."

A woman with a baby carriage walked by, and a sudden cry from within the stroller sent a spasm through Mulvehill's hand, causing him to knock over his coffee cup, what little remained inside it spilling over the table. "Son of a bitch," he hissed, grabbing up some napkins from an empty table nearby to absorb the mess.

Remy stood, adding his own napkins to the spill. His eyes locked with Mulvehill's and he could see the fear there. "It's going to be all right," he tried to reassure him.

The cop smiled, picking up the saturated napkins and putting them inside his cup. "See, I wouldn't be having such a fucking hard time if I didn't know what was actually going on." He waved a hand in the air. "All this shit would be just that… Weird shit that I wouldn't know a damn thing about… just as much in the dark as the next guy."

It was his turn to stare into Remy's eyes.

"I know too goddamned much," he said, looking away before Remy could even respond, taking the trash to a nearby barrel.

Remy stood, grabbing Marlowe's leash as Mulvehill returned to the table. The Labrador watched him with dark, excited eyes, his muscular tail wagging.

"Let me know if I can help," Mulvehill said. "Anything at all." He gave Marlowe one last pat. "There's not that much for a homicide cop to do when nobody's dying."

Perhaps he's right, Remy thought, watching as his friend walked away from him. Maybe he does know too much.

Chapter seven

He knew what he had to do, and the knowledge nagged at him for the remainder of the morning.

Remy returned to his Beacon Hill brownstone, called Madeline to wish her good morning, showered, dressed, and got Marlowe settled for the day, leaving him a banana and a couple of cookies to hold him over until supper.

Marlowe lay on his back on the couch, front paws sticking straight up into the air, back legs splayed.

"I should be back around di

Marlowe stared at him, upside down, with complete disinterest. Remy was interfering with his nap time.

"If I can't make it by then, I'll call Ashlie and ask her to feed you and take you out."

Marlowe's tail thumped happily on the cushion. He loved the teenaged girl who lived on the next street over. Remy thought she was pretty awesome himself, lucky that he had been able to find somebody he could trust completely with his four-legged pally.

"Don't work too hard today," he called over his shoulder as he left the house, locking the door behind him.