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- I slammed the book back onto the shelf. Hard.
- "Hello?" called a woman's voice from behind me.
- I nearly jumped out of my skin. My staff clattered to the ground, and when I spun around my shield bracelet was up and spitting sparks, and my.44 was in my right hand, pointing at the office.
- She was young, mid-twenties at most. She was average height, dressed in a long wool skirt, a turtleneck, and a cardigan sweater, all in colors of grey. She had hair of medium brown, held up into a bun with a pair of pencils, wore glasses, and had a heart-shaped face that was more attractive than beautiful, her features soft and appealing. She had a smudge of ink on her chin and on the fingers of her right hand, and she wore a name tag that had the store logo at the top and HI, MY NAME IS SHIELA below it.
- "Oh," she said, and stiffened, becoming very pale. "Oh. Um. Just take what you want. I won't do anything."
- I let out my breath between my teeth, and slowly lowered the gun. For crying out loud, I had nearly started shooting. Tense much, Harry? I let go of the energy running through the shield bracelet, and it dimmed as well. "Excuse me, miss," I said as politely as I could manage. "You startled me."
- She blinked at me for a second, confusion on her features. "Oh," she said, then. "You aren't robbing the store."
- "No," I said.
- "That's good." She put a hand to her chest, breathing a little quickly. It had to be a fairly generous chest, given that I could notice the curves of her breasts even through the cardigan. Ah, trusty libido. Even when I am up to my ears in trouble, you are there to distract me from such trivial matters as survival. "Oh. Then you're a customer, I suppose? May I help you?"
- "I was just looking for a book," I said.
- "Well," she said with businesslike cheer, "flick on that lamp next to you, to begin with, and we'll find what you're looking for." I did, and
- Shiela smoothed her skirts and walked over to me. She was average height, maybe five-six, which made her approximately a foot shorter than me. She paused as she got closer, and peered up at me. "You're him," she said. "You're Harry Dresden."
- "That's what the IRS keeps telling me," I said.
- "Wow," she said, her eyes bright. She had very dark eyes that went well with skin like cream, and as she got closer I saw that her outfit did a lot to conceal some pleasant curves. She wasn't going to be modeling bikinis anywhere, but she looked like she'd be very pleasant to curl up with on a cold night.
- Man. I needed to date more or something. I rubbed at my eyes and got my mind back on business.
- "I've wanted to meet you," she said, "ever since I came to Chicago."
- "You new in town? I haven't seen you here before."
- "Six months," she said. "Five working here."
- "Bock works you pretty late," I said.
- She nodded and brushed a curl of hair away from her cheek, leaving a smudge of dark ink on it. "End of the month. I'm doing books and inventory." Then she looked stricken and said, "Oh, I didn't even introduce myself."
- "Shiela?" I guessed.
- She stared at me for a second, and then flushed and said, "Oh, right. The name tag."
- I stuck out my hand. "I'm Harry."
- She shook my hand. Her grip was firm, soft, warm, and tingled with the energy of someone who had some kind of minor talent to practice.
- I'd never really considered what it might be like for someone to sense my own aura. Shiela drew in a sharp breath, and her arm jumped. Her ink-stained fingers squeezed tight for a second and smudged my hand. "Oh. Sorry, sorry."
- I rubbed my hand on my fatigue pants. "I've seen worse stains tonight," I said. "Which brings me to the books."
- "You stained a book?" she said, her face and voice distressed.
- "No. That was just a bad segue."
- "Oh. Oh, right," she said, nodding. She absently rubbed her hands together. "You're here for a book. What are you looking for?"
- "A book called Die Lied der Erlking."
- "Oh, I've read that one." She scrunched up her nose, eyes distant for a second, then said, "Two copies, right-hand shelf, third row from the top, eighth and ninth books from the left."
- I blinked at her, then went to the shelf and found the book where she'd said. "Wow. Good call."
- "Eidetic memory," she said with a pleased smile. "It's... sort of my talent." She gestured vaguely with the hand she'd touched me with.
- "Must come in handy during inventory." I checked the shelf. "There's only one copy, though."
- She frowned, then shrugged. "Mister Bock must have sold one this week."
- Dead Beat Chapter 7, Page 69-71
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