Bitter Bite (Elemental Assassin #14)(58)
sound of my shuffling footsteps through the grass.
“Gin.”
“Lorelei.”
I stood beside her, and we watched the men work for a minute.
“Thanks for recommending Vaughn Construction,” she said. “They’ve done an
excellent job so far.”
“You’re welcome. Although it helps when you personally know the owner.”
Lorelei nodded, then jerked her head to the right. “Grandma is waiting for
you.”
I fell in step beside her, and we walked the length of the house before
rounding the corner and stepping onto a stone patio that overlooked a large
garden. All the trees had already shed their leaves, while most of the
rosebushes were just bare, brown clumps. But blue, white, and purple pansies
poked their heads up, standing tall despite the cold, along with pink mums and
other hardy fall flowers. Bird feeders had been set up here and there,
tempting cardinals, finches, and sparrows to sail over and snag a beak full of
seeds before flitting back into the woods.
Mallory Parker was sitting in a white wicker chair at the edge of the patio, a
blue fleece blanket draped over her lap and a couple of space heaters going
strong at her feet, driving back the chill. She was once again decked out in a
dazzling array of diamonds, the gemstones glittering like rings of ice around
her neck, wrists, and fingers. Her elbow was propped up on a glass-topped
table, which held a large jug and three mason jars, along with a thick, black
leather-bound book. Not exactly the afternoon tea I’d been expecting.
“Finally!” Mallory exclaimed. “I thought you were never going to get here.
”
The dwarf grabbed the jug and poured a couple of inches of clear liquid into
each of the mason jars. Caustic fumes rose from the liquid, bringing tears to
my eyes. Mallory didn’t even wait for Lorelei and me to sit down before she
grabbed her jar, chugged down the contents, and smacked her lips in
satisfaction.
I arched my eyebrows. “I thought we were having tea, not moonshine.”
“You can have whatever you like,” Mallory chirped, pouring herself another
drink. “But I am definitely having more moonshine. There’s nothing like a
little home brew to warm you up and loosen your bones on a cold day.”
“Home brew?”
Lorelei pointed to the left. Through the trees, the sun winked off a small
silver still. “One of Grandma’s more interesting hobbies.” She clinked her
glass against mine. “Cheers.”
“Cheers.”
I downed the moonshine and immediately wished that I hadn’t. I’d inhaled
elemental Fire more than once during various battles. This wasn’t much
different from that. In some ways, it was worse, since the moonshine scorched
my mouth and burned all the way down my throat, before smoldering in the pit
of my stomach like I’d swallowed a burning ember.
“Smooth,” I rasped, my voice sounding worse than Sophia’s broken one.
Mallory beamed at me. “Isn’t it?”
She grabbed the jug like she was going to pour me another, but I shook my head
and held my hand out over the top of my jar.
“Can’t handle your liquor, Gin?” Lorelei quipped.
“I can handle liquor just fine,” I wheezed. “But that is not liquor. That
is liquid torture.”
Lorelei laughed. “Amateur.”
I glared at her through the tears in my eyes, but she just laughed again and
took another sip.
While I tried to catch my breath, Mallory and Lorelei chatted about the
mansion renovations, the cocktail party at the bank, and the subsequent
robbery. I chimed in when appropriate, all the while trying to think how I
could steer the conversation around to what I really wanted to talk about:
Deirdre.
But Mallory did it for me. After she had poured herself a third serving of
moonshine, she sat back in her chair and gave me a sly look over the top of
her mason jar. “So tell me, Gin, how are you liking Deirdre Shaw invading the
Pork Pit every day?”
I blinked, and this time it wasn’t because my eyes were still watering. “How
do you know about that?”
Mallory grinned, then took another hit of shine. “I have my sources, just
like you do. So how is Deirdre? Still the same spoiled, selfish brat I
remember?”
A jolt zinged through me. “You actually knew her?” I’d hoped as much, but
after so many frustrating dead ends, it was a pleasant shock to hear it
confirmed.
“Oh, yes,” Mallory said. “I knew several generations of Shaws. Stuck-up
snobs for the most part, who thought that their family fortune made them
better than everyone else, especially folks like me who had to do more . . .
unsavory things to make a living.”
“So that’s why you were telling me that I should go talk to Finn during the
cocktail party. You saw him with Deirdre.” Another thought occurred to me. “