CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
March 13
When Rabbit awoke the morning after the opposition,
he found himself lying on a camping cot in a square, empty room
that was paneled in wide, rough-cut pine boards. There were barred
windows on each wall, through which he could see a cloudy gray sky
and a smattering of pine branches. As he watched, a bright red
cardinal bounced onto one of the branches and away, placing him
somewhere north of the snow line, far from either Skywatch or New
Orleans. The air was so cold that his breath fogged on each exhale,
though he was covered in a couple of blankets, and warm
enough.
Which was so not the point. What the hell was he
doing in a camping cabin?
His head spun with the worst postmagic hangover
of his life, and his body throbbed from his fight with the
nahwal. For reasons known only to the gods,
the magic healed cuts but not bruises.
“Screw the bruises. You’re lucky to be alive
after the stunt you pulled,” a voice said from behind him.
Jolting hard in panic, Rabbit turned and
scrambled to his feet in a single motion, calling the fire to his
fingertips in an instant. He took one look at the redheaded man
sitting in a folding chair and let rip with the fire magic.
The flames stopped dead three feet or so from
Iago’s face, spreading along an invisible liquidlike barrier,
shield magic the likes of which Rabbit had never seen before.
Groaning with the effort, he increased the power, but though the
fire magic roared higher, it still wasn’t denting the shield.
“Cut the blowtorch, will you?” the other mage
called over the crackle of fire. “I’m not going to hurt you. Hell,
I’m the one who pulled your ass out of that funnel last
night.”
Rabbit called back the fire but kept it close to
his fingertips as his heart drummed against his ribs and he tried
to remember what’d happened after the nahwal collapsed. He came up blank aside from a wash
of terror and the sound of his own screams. Ignoring the chill that
brought, he demanded, “Where the hell are we? What do you want? And
how did you know I was thinking about the bruises?”
“We’ll get to all that.” Iago leaned his chair
back against the wall and stacked his hands behind his head, all
casual. He was wearing black canvas flannel-lined pants, and heavy
work boots that had tracked wet spots across the floor, along with
a black turtleneck and a heavy blue fisherman’s sweater. The
sleeves had pulled some when he stretched his hands over his head,
baring the bloodred quatrefoil on his arm. The mage’s dark red hair
was partially hidden by an earflap hat, which would’ve looked dumb
if it weren’t for his eyes, which were hard-edged emerald.
“You look like a lumberjack.” Rabbit jammed his
thumbs in the pockets of his jeans and whistled a few bars of the
transvestite lumberjack song from Monty Python, pushing back the
fear some with ’tude.
“Stuff it, kid. I was a bigger snot at your age
than you’ll ever hope to be.” He paused. “Besides, the digs are
only temporary. We’ve got a sweet homestead down south. We’ll leave
as soon as you’re ready.”
“How about I leave now and you go fuck
yourself?”
Iago just rolled his eyes. “Hello? You’ve
torched more real estate than a California wildfire, turned the
museum job into a train wreck, and killed the three-question
nahwal . If I were you, I’d be looking at
my options right about now, because the Nightkeepers give fuck-all
what happens to you.”
“Shut up,” Rabbit snapped, but his voice cracked
on the words.
“It’s not like they came looking for you when
you took off, right? And that was before you nearly got the new
Godkeeper and her mate killed.” One reddish eyebrow climbed at
Rabbit’s confused look. “Oh, right. You were unconscious for that
part. Congratulations, two of your former teammates tried to use
the three-question spell right after you offed the nahwal. They got barriered instead. Barely made it
out alive.”
Rabbit pressed the heels of his hands against
his ears as the guilt amped. “I said shut up!”
“Reality sucks. Get used to it.” Iago stood and
moved toward him. Rabbit tried to throw up a shield, but he’d lost
the magic to emotion. Getting inside his space, the mage leaned
down to him, his face so close that Rabbit could see the flecks of
magic that flickered in Iago’s green eyes. “I’m offering you a
choice, kid. You want to switch sides, we’re happy to have you.
Otherwise you’re going to be our guest until the equinox. We could
use some powerful blood for the sacrifice we’re planning.”
“Fuck you,” Rabbit spat, but all of a sudden his
words were slurring and the floor was doing a slow roll beneath
him. He couldn’t tell if he’d just hit the end of his reserves, or
if there was something else going on—drugs, maybe, or sleep magic.
Either way, he was fading fast.
“Think about it,” Iago said. “I’ll have some
food brought for you. No sense trying to figure it out if you’re
half dead.” The mage headed for the door, which swung open at his
approach. He looked back and smirked slightly at Rabbit, as if to
say, See how much more powerful I am than your
precious Nightkeepers?
“Wait,” Rabbit croaked when he was partway out
the door.
Iago turned back. “What?”
“Why me?”
That seemed to startle the Xibalban. Then he
started laughing. “Have they honestly not told you? Gods, that’s
pathetic.” He turned back, eyes alight with mockery. “Why do you
think they’re so afraid of your magic? Your mother was one of
us.”
The kick of emotion that hit Rabbit square in
the chest and drove the breath from his lungs probably should have
been surprise, only it wasn’t. Something inside him said, Of course, as though he should’ve known all along,
or maybe a piece of him had guessed long ago. “Oh,” he said, only
it came out more like a groan.
“Think about it, kid. I’m offering you a family,
and more power than you could possibly imagine.” Then Iago turned
and left. Moments later the door swung shut and a lock clicked into
place from the outside. A few seconds after that, Rabbit felt a
buzz of unfamiliar ward magic settling into place, sealing him into
the cabin.
He lay there for a long moment, unmoving,
thinking about Iago’s offer of more power than he could possibly
imagine.
Well, Rabbit could imagine a whole lot of
power.
As far as Nate was concerned, by inviting Iago
for a parley, the Nightkeepers were just asking for trouble.
Strike thought it was imperative that they at
least talk to the bastard, given how few Nightkeepers there were.
Nate thought it was fucking stupid, and told the king that in so
many words the day after the opposition ceremony, when he was still
running hot on magic and frustration, and an edge of hurt that
Alexis didn’t need him anymore. He and Strike had gotten into it,
had gotten loud, and then Alexis had waded in, shouting right back.
Nate wasn’t sure if she really thought the meeting was a good idea
or if she just wanted to argue with him, but they’d gone at it for
a bit before the king separated them and announced that he wanted
Nate to be part of the group that would meet Iago outside the front
door of the training compound, beyond the wards.
Which was why, two days after the opposition
ceremony that’d nearly killed him and Alexis and had liberated her
instead, Nate found himself standing beside her, with Strike and
Leah on his other side. Anna was there too. She and the members of
the royal council had spent a chunk of the prior evening hashing
something out, so Nate had a feeling they were planning more than a
simple parley, but he wasn’t in on that piece of things. He was
just window dressing, another body standing by the front gate,
waiting for Iago.
Who was late.
“Maybe it’s a trick,” Nate said after ten
minutes had turned to fifteen and there was no rattle of ’port
magic in the air. “A distraction.”
“Allowing them to do what?” Alexis asked. “If he
had the ability and the desire to ’port straight into Skywatch, he
would’ve done it by now.” She didn’t look at him; at least, he
didn’t think she did. It was hard to tell, when she was wearing a
pair of three-hundred-dollar sunglasses that shaded her eyes and
hid her expression.
“Isn’t the whole point that we don’t have a clue
what he can and can’t do?” he challenged.
Before she could say anything, Strike
interrupted. “Incoming.”
Moments later Nate felt it too: the rattle of
magic that felt like Nightkeeper power, but wasn’t. It geared up to
a roar, displaced air exploded outward in a cloud of brown smoke,
and Iago and a striking-looking woman appeared several feet away,
zapping in with their feet planted on terra firma with no
stumbling, no awkwardness.
Wearing hiking boots, jeans, and a white
T-shirt, with a long black duster over the top, Iago looked like
just another guy with a bit of cool on. But Nate saw disdain in his
face, and thought how he’d promised the old woman in the doily
cottage that he would make sure her killer was punished.
Iago’s eyes skimmed over the Nightkeepers,
pausing briefly on Nate as though feeling the hatred, or maybe
seeing it in his eyes. Then he moved on, his message clear:
You don’t scare me.
No? Nate thought on a
flare of anger. We’ll have to fix
that.
The woman at his side locked onto Anna
immediately, and her lips tipped up in a small, mean smile. That’d
be Desiree, then. Nate wasn’t sure who she was to the Xibalbans, or
why she was at the meeting, but one thing was for sure: Malice
radiated off her in waves. Anna, in contrast, seemed detached,
disinterested, standing there with her eyes unfocused and her hands
jammed in her pockets. Which didn’t totally make sense, given that
she’d flown all the way to New Mex in order to go at it with her
enemy on the Nightkeepers’ turf.
“Nochem,” Iago said to
Strike, who stood slightly ahead of the others and had rolled up
the right sleeve of his black T-shirt to reveal the hunab ku, the geometric mark of kingship that was
located on his upper arm, where only kings and gods were
marked.
“Call me Strike.”
“Then I’m Iago.” The mage looked past the king.
As he did so, a faint rattle of background magic started up, an
annoying buzz that made Nate’s jaw ache. “I assume these are your
advisers?”
“Yes,” Strike said simply.
Nate quashed a knee-jerk protest. It didn’t
matter what they called him; he was just there to counteract some
of Alexis’s less rational ideas. That didn’t make him an
adviser.
Iago snorted. “Fine, I get it. You’re not
inviting me in for tea and cookies or whatever. You’re the one who
asked for a meeting, so let’s meet. What do you want?”
Strike nodded. “Okay, here goes. Your order has
gotten some seriously shitty press over the millennia, but I’m
thinking that we may have a common goal at this point. Doesn’t do
you any good to have the world end any more than it does us. So I
thought we might be able to come to terms, maybe cooperate. You’ve
got some of the demon prophecies; we’ve got some of them. What if
we combined our forces?”
Iago smirked. “You’ve got one of them, and I’ve
got the other six, you mean. I should thank you for the last three,
by the way. Your archives must’ve contained info that mine didn’t,
because I couldn’t find Cabrakan’s bowl, the Volatile’s knife, or
the Ixchel statuette for love or money until your archivist started
Googling them and my filters caught the keywords.” He grinned and
flexed his fingers. “Gotta love the Internet.”
Which unfortunately meant he’d already found
Kulkulkan’s altar stone, Nate realized, his gut knotting on anger
and disappointment, made worse by the annoying subsonic buzz of
magic. Gods damn it. But some of the other information was new,
namely that the knife they’d almost gotten in New Orleans was
connected to the Volatile. Which meant it was vital that they get
the thing back.
“We have a common goal,” Strike persisted. “Both
groups want to stop the apocalypse.”
Desiree shifted her attention from Anna to
Strike and sneered. “You’re trying to stop the inevitable.”
“Perhaps,” Anna said, and Nate got the distinct
impression that she wasn’t just talking about the end-time. “But
what’s the alternative? You think you’re going to rule in hell?
Think again. The Banol Kax don’t deal that
way.”
“And how do you know that for certain? From your
precious gods? Not exactly an unbiased source.” Desiree bared her
teeth. “Speaking of sources, how is Lucius getting along? Tell me,
has he—”
“Enough.” Iago’s voice was quiet, but it
silenced her immediately. Focusing on Strike, he said, “I have ten
times your numbers, Nightkeeper, and I have the other six
prophecies. Moreover, I’m not bound by the traditions that you are.
We have no winikin, no writs. We’ve
adapted. We’ve grown. We need nothing from you.”
“Then why even bother to come?” Strike asked,
his frustration obvious. “I fail to see—”
Automatic weaponry chattered behind them, coming
from inside the compound.
“Son of a bitch!” Nate snapped, making the
connection between the buzzing sound and the sense of magic. “He’s
overriding the wards. He’s got someone inside the compound!
Bastard!”
Without stopping to think, Nate lunged at Iago.
With surprise on his side, he nailed the mage waist-high with his
shoulder, sending them both to the ground. He wound up astride
Iago, and got in three good punches before the chirr of dark ’port
magic surrounded him.
Roaring, Nate grabbed on to the lapels of Iago’s
jacket and hung on, intending to go with him. He didn’t have a
plan, didn’t have a weapon, knew only that he owed it to the old
lady, to his king and his people. Seconds later he was flying
through the air, slapped aside by an unseen giant’s fist to land
hard, face-first in the dust.
Iago and Desiree had vanished.
“Come on!” Alexis was dragging him up and along
before he could get a breath. Strike and the others were gone,
undoubtedly having ’ported into the compound the second the gunfire
started.
It’d stopped, leaving ominous silence
behind.
Nate and Alexis ran for the mansion together,
dragging each other along. When they reached the main room he heard
a babble of familiar voices all talking over one another, and
followed the sound. He found the winikin
and Nightkeepers gathered in the hallway outside the archive, with
some inside the first room. He pushed through, with Alexis right
behind him, and stopped dead when he got a clear view. “Oh,
shit.”
The archive was a disaster area.
It looked like somebody had unloaded two or
three MAC clips into the bookcases holding centuries’ worth of rare
texts. Lucius was folded up in one corner, looking shell-shocked
but alive, and clutching an autopistol. Jade was standing in the
middle of the room with tears tracking down her face, her mouth
open in an “O” of horror, a bullet-riddled book clutched against
her breasts. The locked door leading to the second room hung from
one hinge, and blast marks marred the doorframe.
Nate didn’t even need to ask. He already
knew.
“Ixchel,” Alexis whispered, taking two steps
toward the battered door and stopping. She raised her hand to her
mouth, then let it fall away. She turned to Nate, reached out for
his hand, and he felt her sorrow in the link of palm to palm. “They
took the statuette.”
“Yeah.” He wrapped an arm around her shoulders,
figuring their problems had been momentarily back-burnered by the
disaster. Glancing over at Strike, who looked royally pissed, he
asked, “Was anyone hurt?”
The king shook his head. “No, thank the gods.
And we’ve still got all the translations from the statuette,
right?” He directed the question at Jade.
It was Lucius who answered, “Yeah. And digital
pictures from every angle, under both natural light and starlight,
which means we still have a chance of figuring out how to block the
first prophecy.”
“It’s not just the first one we have to worry
about,” Anna said, pushing through the crowd, looking way more
connected and focused than she had during the meeting.
Strike stiffened. “You got something?”
“It wasn’t easy.” She pulled her hands out of
her pockets. They dripped with blood and held crystals.
“Jesus, Anna!” Strike caught her hands in his,
expression thunderous. “This wasn’t what we talked about you doing.
What the hell were you thinking?”
“That I needed to do whatever it took to punch
through the mental blocks guarding my powers.” She was pale,
swaying a little on her feet, but she smiled. “I did it. I got
inside his head. I saw what he saw.”
“Jox, get in here,” Strike snapped, and the
crowd stirred as the winikin pushed
through, took one look at Anna’s hands, and started dragging her
out of the archive.
But she dug in her heels and pulled away. “No,
wait. Let me say this first. We’re not just talking about a single
prophecy anymore. That’s why Iago wanted all the statuettes. He’s
not trying to stop us from defending against Camazotz’s sons one at
a time. He’s going to use the artifacts to bring all seven of them
through at once, during the vernal equinox. He wants to jump-start
the end-time by a couple of years.”
Which meant they had a week to mount a defense,
or the next stage in the end-time countdown was going to be coming
very early.
“Son of a bitch,” Nate growled.
“We’ve got to find him,” Leah said quickly, her
face gone very pale. She looked at Strike. “Are you sure you can’t
lock onto him? What about Desiree?”
He shook his head. “No. I couldn’t even lock on
when I was standing there, staring at them, which means they’ve got
some way of fouling ’port lock, maybe a version of whatever they
used to jam the wards.” He glanced at Anna. “Did you see . . .
anything else?”
They all knew he was asking about Rabbit. The
teen’s absence weighed heavily on the king.
“No, I didn’t,” Anna said softly. “But that
doesn’t necessarily mean anything good or bad.” She held out her
hands, where the deep sacrificial cuts were starting to heal. “I’m
an itza’at, not a mind-bender or a ’path.
Even if I were full strength and all the way trained, there’s no
guarantee that I’d have seen anything but what was at the forefront
of his mind, which was the image of bringing all seven of the
artifacts together during the vernal equinox.”
Sven said from out in the hallway, “Gods damn
it. If I hadn’t dropped the bowl—”
“Don’t,” Alexis said firmly. “Don’t anybody go
there. We’ve made the mistakes we’ve made, and most of them have
been because we haven’t had enough information.”
As usual, Nate thought
but didn’t say. Whether or not he bought into the writs,
information loss was a recurring theme with the Nightkeepers, as
they had been victimized by cyclical acts of genocide that had not
only wreaked havoc on the population, but also pretty much cut off
info transfer from one phase of their history to the next. For a
culture that believed in the recurring nature of time and liked to
say crap like, “What has happened before will happen again,” the
lack of forethought was pretty sad.
Or rather, he realized with a sinking,
shimmering sensation, it was downright unbelievable.
“What is it?” Alexis murmured at his side,
warning Nate that his face had betrayed his thoughts. Or maybe
she’d picked up on something using the powers of the goddess—he
still wasn’t sure what she could and couldn’t do. He didn’t think
she was, either.
“A repository,” he said.
“Yeah, that was what Jade was just saying, how
she’d scanned almost all of the books into the computer system, so
this”—she indicated the bullet-riddled books— “shouldn’t cost us
too much in terms of total information. Given that we can
practically reproduce the statuette from the pictures and
measurements we’ve got, this wasn’t as much of a disaster as it
could’ve been.” She paused. “That assumes, of course, that all the
statuette had to offer was contained in the carvings and
starscript. I can’t help feeling like we’re missing something
there, like maybe there’s another layer of script somewhere that we
didn’t know to look for. Otherwise, why else was Iago so hell-bent
on getting his hands on all seven of the artifacts?”
Nate only half heard her; his brain was locked
on the idea of a repository. “Not a repository,” he said.
“Alexandria.”
Alexis frowned. “As in Virginia?”
“No.” He shook his head. “As in ‘the library
of.’ I was just thinking how there’s a central flaw in Nightkeeper
thinking if we can be so badly derailed over and over again by
catastrophic failures of the oral and written traditions.” He
barely even noticed that he’d used “we,” where before he’d held
himself apart from the Nightkeepers as much as possible.
Strike narrowed his eyes, considering. “You’re
thinking there’s a hidden library somewhere down south.”
Nate nodded. “Our ancestors cached artifacts.
Why not knowledge?”
“Which would be great if we knew where to start
looking.” Alexis turned her palms up, indicating that she didn’t
have a clue.
“I know.” Nate dragged his fingers through his
hair, thinking. He turned to Lucius, grateful to see that one of
the others had snagged the MAC from the shaken bond-servant, who
was on his feet now, pale but resolute. Nate asked him, “You ever
hear something that might’ve hinted at there being a hidden
library?”
But Lucius shook his head. “Can’t think of
anything, but Jade and I can certainly check through the books
and—” He broke off, scrubbing his hands across his face. “Or we
could’ve if I hadn’t just shot them to pieces. I can’t believe I
did that. I don’t know what the hell came over me.”
Strike and Anna exchanged a telling look.
“Wait,” Alexis said, her voice excited. She
turned to Nate. “You said it yourself when we were in the ATM
caves: Why were our parents there before us?”
He furrowed his brow. “Because they were trying
to find out—” He broke off as it connected. To Carlos, he said
“When Gray-Smoke and Two-Hawk left, right before the massacre, are
you sure they were casting an actual question spell?”
The winikin thought for
a second, then spread his hands. “It was a long time ago.” He
looked behind him at the other winikin,
then over at Jox. “Anyone?”
He got a round of head shakes.
Nate said, “What if they were trying to
investigate the king’s vision, not through magic, but by finding a
cache of information, codices and such, that our ancestors had
collected before the conquistadors started burning texts? We know
they warned the kings against letting the galleons lay anchor, and
we know they had prophecies warning of dark times ahead. Seems like
a good time to stockpile.” He paused, remembering the artifacts in
the ATM cave system. “Or maybe they cached their books even earlier
than that, back in the nine fifties, when the Xibalbans released
the Banol Kax and the empire fell. That was
when they cached the artifacts; why not a library too?”
Anna shook her head. “It’s a good story, but
you’ve got no proof.”
“Actually . . .” Lucius said, “I may have seen
something the other day, on that old map of the cave system.” He
cast around for a few seconds, then plucked a splayed-out book from
the floor where it had fallen in the melee. He righted one of the
chairs and used it as a desk, because the table was leaning on
three legs, with the fourth broken off midway. After flipping
through several battered pages, he stopped, tapping
Painted-Jaguar’s map. “Here. There’s a glyph hidden in the drawing
of the dead-end waterway beyond the temple. It could be the
jun glyph, which stands for ‘book’ or
‘folded codex’. ”
Jade leaned close. “I didn’t see that
before.”
The others crowded close to look. Nate didn’t
know the glyph, but he knew where Lucius was pointing, all right.
He muttered an oath. “Don’t tell me.”
“It makes sense,” Alexis murmured in return.
“Why set booby traps if you’ve got nothing to protect?”