Karen Chance - Hunt the Moon

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Hunt the Moon: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Cassandra Palmer recently defeated a god, which you'd think would buy a girl a little time off. But it doesn't work that way when your job description is Pythia—the world's chief clairvoyant. Cassie is busier than ever, trying to learn about her power, preparing for her upcoming coronation, and figuring out her relationship with the enigmatic sexy master vampire, Mircea.
But someone doesn't want Cassie to become Pythia, and is willing to go to any lengths to make sure the coronation ceremony never happens—including attacking her mother before Cassie is even born.

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“That mage is here,” Marco warned me.

“Pritkin?” I asked, my head coming up.

“Naw. That old one. And some slick-haired guy.”

I didn’t know who Slick Hair was, but That Old One was Jonas Marsden, acting head of the Silver Circle. Of course, Marco knew that perfectly well, but the vamps were never happy whenever a mage showed up. And that went double for their leader.

Jonas rose to help me after I stumbled into the lounge, and I shot Marco a look. That got a kiss blown in my general direction and a promise to be right outside aimed at the mages. In case they intended to use some nefarious wizard trickery to make off with me or something.

“Sorry I wasn’t here, but I thought we weren’t meeting until three,” I panted.

“No matter. I should have called,” Jonas said genially. “But I did want to talk to you, if you have a moment.”

“About last night?”

“Oh, I do truly hope not,” he said, which would have sounded odd coming from anyone else. But Jonas was always odd.

For one, he was the only person I knew with hair worse than Pritkin’s. It was extra poufy today, a magnificent silver-white ball of static electricity that appeared to have a life of its own. Like some alien creature had happened to light on his head and decided to stay a while. In contrast, his face was surprisingly normal, with pleasant features, rosy cheeks and fewer lines than one would expect for his age, whatever that was. Jonas usually just described it as “damned old.”

“And Niall did so want to meet you,” he added, as I stumbled toward the bedroom.

“Niall?”

“Niall Edwards.” A sharp-faced brunet with slickedback hair came forward, and I managed to get a hand out. But either he didn’t see or he ignored it. “Have you thought about losing five to ten?” he asked, circling me.

I turned, trying to keep him in my field of vision, and dropped a heavy shoe box on my foot. “Five to ten what?” I asked, wincing.

“Pounds. The camera adds at least that much and, frankly, you could use some more definition in your face.”

“I—what?”

He pulled out a computerized notepad. “What do you weigh?”

“That’s none of your business!”

“It is if I have to sell the idea of you as Pythia to the masses,” he said sourly, his fingers flying over the keys.

“Niall is our leading public relations expert,” Jonas explained, as I limped into the bedroom and tossed the packages on the bed.

“I don’t need a PR person,” I said, sitting down to examine my toe.

“Oh, of course not,” Slick said, following me in. “You were brought up by a vampire mob boss, you go around looking like a cross between Paris Hilton and a homeless person—”

“I do not look like Paris Hilton!”

“You’re wearing sparkly pink nail polish,” he pointed out. “On your toes.”

I looked down at the offending digits, which were sticking out of a pair of sandals. “I don’t see anything wrong with—”

“Exactly. And if that weren’t bad enough, you’re suspected of being a dark mage. But you don’t need PR.”

“I’m only suspected of being a dark mage because you people told everyone I was!” I said furiously.

Until recently, the Circle had been headed by a mage named Saunders, who had been cooking the books in favor of himself and his buddies. And he hadn’t wanted a Pythia in place who wasn’t firmly under his thumb, in case she outed his little moneymaking scheme. So while his operatives were busy trying to hunt me down, he was planting nasty stories in the press about my family background.

It didn’t help that most of them were true.

“And we did our usual good job,” Slick said proudly. “Everyone now knows that your mother was a ruined Initiate, your father was a dangerous dark mage and that you yourself have received absolutely no training for the position you hold.”

“I wouldn’t say no training,” Jonas demurred.

“It will be the triumph of my career to bring you back from that. But I will. Make no mistake.”

He disappeared into the walk-in closet, leaving me staring at Jonas. “You have got to be kidding.”

“Niall is a bit abrupt, I grant you—”

“A bit?”

“But he does have a point, Cassie. Your public image”—Jonas shook his head, causing the alien hair to waft about luxuriously—“it would be difficult to imagine how it could be worse, you know.”

“Then why haven’t you guys worried about it before?”

“Because we were waiting for things to cool down,” Niall told me, emerging with a heap of my clothes. “The public has a very short attention span and they forget details easily. Trying to eradicate or even amend their impression of you right after the story broke would have been impossible. Now it’s merely impractical.” He threw my clothes out the door.

“Hey!”

“Considering the damage, I would prefer another fortnight to pass, at the very least, before the ceremony,” he said, going back for another load of my belongings. “But I was told that we were at war and it couldn’t wait.”

“I just bought that!” I said, snatching an off-white slip dress out of his hand.

“For what?” he demanded.

“If you must know, I have a date tonight!”

“Really?” Jonas looked delighted. “May I ask with whom?”

“Mircea,” I said, only to see his face fall.

“Ah.”

“What does that mean?”

“Nothing, nothing. None of my business, after all.”

“Well, it is my business!” Slick said. “We can’t afford any more bad press. Such as you being seen with a vampire, particularly dressed like that!”

I looked down at the dress. It had a draped front and little spaghetti straps, but no sparkles, sequins or any decoration at all. Unless you counted what looked like the vague outline of tree branches that swayed across the silk, like shadows on a wall. It was beautiful and tasteful and one of my favorite purchases.

“And just what is wrong with this?” I demanded.

“On the hanger? Nothing. On you?” Slick looked me up and down and shook his head.

“What the hell does that mean?”

“Two words: ‘foundation garment,’ ” he said, and snatched it back.

“There are such things as strapless bras, you know!” I told him furiously.

“And do you own one?”

“That’s also none of your—”

“That would be a no, then,” he said, and swept out.

I was about to chase him down and possibly beat him to death with a shoe—assuming he’d left me one—when Jonas piped up. “Of course, there are those who will agree with Niall,” he said diffidently.

I narrowed my eyes. “What is this?”

He took off his thick glasses and polished them on an already rumpled sleeve. Maybe they really were dirty, but it looked like a stalling tactic. Like he knew I wasn’t going to like whatever he’d come to say.

“This is my pointing out, however clumsily, that when one is Pythia, personal relationships are often . . . tricky.”

“Like yours was with Agnes?” I asked archly. Because Jonas and the former Pythia had apparently been an item back in the day.

“Yes, in fact. That was why we kept it a secret, from all but a few very close associates. Had we openly been a couple, people might have thought that she was under the influence of the Circle.”

“People already thought that,” I pointed out. “They think that about every Pythia.”

“No, they suspect. Which is a very different thing.”

“So you’re saying what? That I can’t date Mircea?” I asked, and heard someone outside smother a laugh. I suspected Marco.

Jonas apparently heard it, too, because he shot an irritated glance in the direction of the living room. “No, dating can be spun as savvy intelligence gathering on your part. Or as an attempt to bring the vampires into a closer alliance with the Circle. Or as a way of showing your impartiality toward the species.”

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