Down These Strange Streets

Down These Strange Streets by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois Page A

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Authors: George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois
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author of the eleven-volume Nightside paranormal series, which takes an intrepid PI to “the dark heart of London, where it’s always three A.M.” and monsters and creatures from myth and legend meet and mingle—and sometimes hire you to take on a dangerous job. The Nightside books include Something from the Nightside , Agents of Light and Darkness , Hex and the City , Hell to Pay , and seven others. Green has also written fantasy series such as the seven-volume Hawk and Fisher sequence ( No Haven for the Guilty , Devil Take the Hindmost , The God Killer , and four others) and the three-volume Forest Kingdom sequence ( Blue Moon Rising , Blood and Honor , Down Among the Dead Men ), science fiction series such as the five-volume Deathstalker sequence ( Deathstalker: Being the First Part of the Life and Times of Owen Deathstalker , Deathstalker War , and three others) and the related three-volume Deathstalker Legacy sequence ( Deathstalker Legacy , Deathstalker Return , and Deathstalker Coda ), and fantasy/spy story series such as the five-volume Secret Histories sequence ( The Man with the Golden Torc , Daemons Are Forever , The Spy Who Haunted Me , From Hell With Love , and For Heaven’s Eyes Only ). He also has written stand-alone novels such as Shadows Fall and Drinking Midnight Wine , and he has started a new paranormal series, Ghost Finders, with Ghost of a Chance and his most recent book, Ghost of a Smile .
    Here private detective John Taylor, long accustomed to dealing with ghosts and wizards and ghouls in the Nightside, takes on his strangest case, that of a witch who lost her heart—and wants it back .
     
     
    T HE CITY OF LONDON HAS A HIDDEN HEART; A DARK AND SECRET PLACE where gods and monsters go fist-fighting through alleyways, where wonders and marvels are two a penny, where everything and everyone is up for sale, and all your dreams can come true. Especially the ones where you wake up screaming. In London’s Nightside it’s always dark, always three o’clock in the morning, the hour that tries men’s souls . . . and finds them wanting.

    I WAS DRINKING WORMWOOD BRANDY IN THE OLDEST BAR IN THE WORLD when the femme fatale walked in. The bar was quiet, or at least as quiet as it ever gets. A bunch of female ghouls out on a hen night were getting tipsy on Mother’s Ruin and complaining about the quality of the finger buffet. Ghouls just want to have fun. A pair of Neanderthals who’d put away so many smart drinks they were practically evolving before my eyes. And four Emissaries from the Outer Dark were playing cutthroat bridge and cheating each other blind. Just another night at Strangefellows—until she walked in.
    She came striding between the tables with her head held high, as though she owned the place, or at the very least was planning a hostile takeover. She slammed to a halt before my table, gave me a big smile, and let me look her over. A tall, slender platinum blonde, late teens, Little Black Dress . . . big eyes, big smile, industrial-strength makeup. Attractive enough, in an intimidating sort of way. An English rose with more than her fair share of thorns. She introduced herself in a light breathy voice and sat down opposite me without waiting to be asked. She tried her smile on me again. On anyone else, it would probably have worked.
    “You’re John Taylor, private investigator,” she said briskly. “I’m Holly Wylde, and I’m a witch. My ex stole my heart. I want you to find it, and get it back for me.”
    Not the strangest thing I’ve ever been asked to find, but I felt obliged to raise an eyebrow.
    “I’m being quite literal,” she said. “All witches learn how to remove their hearts, and keep them safe and secure in some private place, so that no one can ever fully kill us. As long as the heart stays safe, we always come back. Hardly sporting, I know, but if I believed in things like fair play I’d never have become a witch in the first place. My ex, bad cess to his diseased

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