absolutely motionless, his arms flung out to his sides, his legs twisted awkwardly beneath his body. Frustration filled me that Fedora had gotten to him, that sheâd infiltrated his house as quickly and easily as, well, I could.
My plan had been to stake out McAllisterâs mansion and capture anyone the Circle might send to kill him, since he was the most obviousâand so far onlyâloose end that might lead back to them. Then I would have taken my sweet, bloody time questioning that person about her bosses. But Fedora had been faster and far more clever than Iâd expected, and I was once again left with nothing. Just another in my growing string of failures when it came to the shadowy group.
I was sick and tired of losing to those bastards, whoever they really were.
I started to move past McAllister and leave the office to search the rest of the mansion for Fedora, even though I knew that she was already gone. But then I noticed that no blood had pooled under his body. In fact, I didnât see any blood anywhereânot oozing across the floor, not spattered on the chairs, not even sprayed on top of the papers that had slipped off his desk and fallen around him like oversize snowflakes. So I stopped and took a closer look at him.
Jonah McAllister was much thinner than the last time Iâd seen and confronted him in this office. Black circles ringed his eyes, and his cheekbones poked out like arrows trying to punch through his face, as though heâd lost thirty pounds overnight. Even his skin, which he took such pride in and kept young, tight, and baby-smooth with a strict regimen of expensive Air elemental facials, seemed old, loose, and wrinkled, like wet paper that was barely clinging to the rest of his skull.
His silver mane of hair was as glorious as ever, though, artfully styled and as bright and burnished as holiday tinsel even when the rest of him was littering the floor like a broken toy. I wondered how much product heâd used to keep his hair so firmly, perfectly anchored in place even as heâd been shot. Even Finn would have been impressed with his do.
But the thing that caught my eye was the Christmas sweater that covered his chestâbright green with a grinning brown reindeer stretching across the front, complete with a red-sequined nose. Not McAllisterâs usual slick suited style at all. In fact, the sweater looked handmade, although I couldnât imagine who would take the time and trouble to knit Jonah a sweaterâ any sweater, much less one this hideous.
Given how skeletal the rest of him was, the sweater seemed suspiciously thick and bulky, and I realized exactly what was underneath it. Of course. McAllister might be a weasel, but he was a smart weasel. He knew exactly how angry folks still were with him over the Briartop robbery, and he would have taken precautions against being murdered in his own mansion.
So I crouched down, drew back my hand, and slapped him across the face. McAllister winced at the sharp, stinging blow, but he didnât open his eyes.
So I slapped him again, harder this time.
McAllister let out a little squeak of pain, but he still didnât open his eyes, determined to play possum as long as possible.
âWakey, wakey, Jonah,â I drawled. âYou can either open your eyes, or I can keep slapping you. Iâm okay with that. I still need to get my cardio in for the day.â
McAllisterâs brown eyes popped open at my threat, then narrowed to slits as he recognized me. âBlanco?â he said. âWhat are you doing here?â
âWell, I was hoping to capture your would-be assassin, but she managed to escape. I canât decide if Iâm happy or disappointed that youâre still alive.â I nodded at his ugly Christmas sweater. âI didnât realize that Rudolph came equipped with a bulletproof silverstone vest these days.â
âIt seemed like a wise precaution.â He wet his