PROLOGUE
June 21
Twenty-four years ago
Two big clocks hung high at one end of the great
hall, counting time. One ran in reverse, measuring out how long was
left until the end-time: almost exactly twenty-eight years and six
months. The other was a normal clock, and it was creepy-crawling to
nine fifty-three p.m., the moment of the summer solstice. The
moment King Scarred-Jaguar and two hundred other Nightkeeper
warrior-priests would take their places in the sacred tunnels
beneath Chichén Itzá and cast the king’s spell, sealing the
intersection of the earth, sky, and underworld.
Three minutes and change to go.
Scarred-Jaguar’s loyal servant, Jox, stood guard,
along with fifty other winikin, all spaced
around the edge of the huge hall, watching the seconds tick down.
The Nightkeeper children who were too young to fight were gathered
in the center of the room. Some of them were watching a Michael
Jackson video on the big screen.
The rest were watching the clock.
‘‘Nothing yet,’’ Hannah said from beside Jox. The
pretty brunette glanced down at the marks on her right inner
forearm, rows of tiny lizard glyphs, each representing a member of
the bloodline she was sworn to protect.
The winikin weren’t magic
users, but the marks themselves were magic. Every time a member of
the bloodline died, one of the glyphs disappeared.
So far, so good. Two minutes to go, and nobody
had lost a glyph.
‘‘You should be with the baby,’’ Jox murmured.
‘‘Just in case.’’
‘‘I know.’’ Hannah glanced down at the infants’
area, where she’d gotten her best friend, Izzy, to watch her tiny
charge for a few minutes. Instead of hurrying away as the countdown
continued, though, she took Jox’s hand and pressed his palm to her
cheek. ‘‘Be safe.’’
His heart tightened in his chest, heavy with the
knowledge that he couldn’t put her first, not when he was
blood-bound to the king’s son and daughter. But when she released
his hand, instead of letting it fall away from her soft, warm skin
like he knew he should, he slid his grip to the back of her neck
and drew her closer.
‘‘Maybe after,’’ he whispered, and touched his
lips to hers.
She hesitated for a fraction of a second, as if
wondering whether he actually meant it after all this time. Then
she returned the kiss with a sharp edge of fear. Of hope.
Maybe after. It was what
they were all saying— Nightkeeper and winikin alike—if not aloud, then in their hearts.
Maybe after the intersection was sealed, they’d be able to break
away from lives ruled by ancient roles and prophecies. If the
end-time could be prevented from ever beginning, then the
Nightkeepers wouldn’t need to protect mankind anymore. The
winikin wouldn’t need to serve anymore.
They could all disband, disperse, go off to live as they chose. Jox
figured he’d start his own business, maybe a garden center. He
could run the front with Hannah while their rug rats played tag in
the shrubbery.
And he was so getting ahead of himself.
As the final minute began to tick down, he broke
the kiss and gave her a little push. ‘‘Go on. Get back to
work.’’
He didn’t watch her go. He watched the clock.
Forty-five seconds. Twenty-five. Fifteen. Five. Three. Two. One.
There was a collective indrawn breath when half the wristwatches in
the room went off in a chaos of digital bleats as the solstice
came. . . .
And absolutely nothing happened.
The second hand on the big clock swept past the
critical moment and kept going. Thirty seconds. One minute. Two.
Three.
After five minutes there was a collective exhale
and a few cheers, and the kids in the middle of the room started
talking, only a few at first, then more and more, the volume
building as the tension released and excitement took hold.
The winiken to Jox’s
immediate left, a sturdy guy named Kneeland who was bound to the ax
bloodline, said, ‘‘Hannah, huh?’’ He elbowed Jox in the ribs.
‘‘Rock on. We didn’t think you had it in you. Ever since the prince
was born, you’ve been so caught up in— Shit!’’ Kneeland went dead pale and clawed at his
arm, pushing up his sleeve. ‘‘Oh, no. No! Please, gods, no!’’
Screams ripped through the winikin, echoing at the perimeter of the hall, then
in the middle as the kids reacted to their protectors’ alarm.
A second later, pain seared along Jox’s arm.
Cursing, praying, he shoved up his sleeve and stared at the black
tattoolike marks on his right forearm.
There was a ripple of motion as the jaguar glyphs
disappeared one by one.
Blood red washed across his vision and his pulse
stuttered. Agony vised his body. Fear. Disbelief. Crushing, awful
grief.
No! He wanted to scream
for his people, for himself, but instead clamped his teeth on the
cry as tears ran down his cheeks. Then, like a switch had been
thrown, the pain was gone. So were almost all of the glyphs,
including two of the four royal marks.
The absence of the pain echoed like silence. Like
sorrow.
The king is dead, he
thought. Long live the king.
The hall was in chaos. The girls—most of whom had
the sight to one degree or another—screamed at the things they saw
in their minds, or wept for their parents, or both. Most of the
boys were shouting, running around, banging on the gun cabinet and
hammering at the locked and warded exterior doors, ready to fight
the enemy, the demons called Banol
Kax.
Kneeland grabbed Jox’s arm, his fingers digging
down to the bone. ‘‘We’ve got to do something! They’re dying! What
do we do? What do we—’’
‘‘Focus!’’ Jox grabbed the other man and shook
him hard. ‘‘The kids are the priority. We’re safe here. The hall is
protected, and if we batten down—’’
Yellow light flared all around them as the
protective wards fell. Jox’s heart froze in his chest. Impossible, he thought. The wards had been set by
blood sacrifice from the strongest of the Nightkeepers. The only
creature capable of breaching them was one of the Banol Kax, or their lava creatures, the—
‘‘Boluntiku!’’ shouted a
winikin named Olivar as a dark shadow rose
from the floor, radiating terrible magma-borne heat that set the
parquet aflame. The creature coalesced out of a nightmare, rising
up from the bowels of the earth, a swirling image of red-brown
scales that remained translucent as it formed a six-fingered hand
tipped with razor-sharp claws, and swung.
In the moment before it touched Olivar, the thing
flared bright orange and turned solid. Blood geysered and Olivar’s
body arched like a crossbow strung too tightly, suspended from the
boluntiku’s six-clawed grip.
A chatter of gunfire rang out, sounding loud even
through the screams. Olivar’s body jerked with the impact of
bullets fired by a terrified-looking winikin, who’d unlocked the gun cabinet and grabbed
an autopistol loaded with jade-tipped bullets.
Jade was to the Banol Kax
as garlic was to the mythical vampires, or silver to the werewolves
of legend. While the demons and their ilk were impervious to most
other nonmagical weapons, jade could pierce their psi armor and do
some damage.
The bullets had to hit to work, though, and these
didn’t. The boluntiku puffed to vapor so
the jade-tips passed harmlessly through, and Olivar’s limp body
dropped to the floor. Then the lava creature turned on the shooter,
going solid in the moment before it attacked.
Seconds later, the winikin was dead and the weapons cabinet was a mass
of shattered wood and twisted metal. And the floor nearby was
aflame.
Jox was moving before he’d even processed what
was happening, running toward his charges, nine-year-old
Striking-Jaguar and his fourteen-year-old sister, Anna-Paw.
Scarred-Jaguar’s attack must have failed. The
Nightkeepers were all dead and the intersection was wide-open. The
Banol Kax had sent their creatures to kill
the children, to wipe out any chance of resistance when the Great
Conjunction arrived. And it wouldn’t matter if the winikin got the kids out of the training center and
hid—the boluntiku could smell magic.
They could also smell royalty.
Acting in concert, the boluntiku zeroed in on Anna, who was fighting her
way toward Strike through the crush piled up near the exit, where
children struggled to unlock the doors and winikin scrambled to get to their charges, everyone
screaming as more boluntiku erupted from
the floor.
‘‘No!’’ Jox shouted, his voice breaking as he
fought his way toward the king’s children. Terrified cries rose up
around him, and the floor was slick with blood, but he was entirely
focused on the prince and princess he was blood-bound to
protect.
Then a huge boluntiku
rose up from the middle of the crush, rearing up and flaring its
claws to swing at Anna, who was trying to shield her little
brother.
Too late, Jox thought,
desperation pounding in his veins as he struggled through a sea of
panic and gore. He was going to be too late.
The creature went solid, killing everyone who’d
been inside the confines of its vapor body. But in the second
before the six-fingered claws raked the children, gunfire chattered
and jade-tipped bullets struck home.
The boluntiku jerked back
with a shriek that sounded like a thousand fingernails scratching
across a giant blackboard, and spun toward its attacker. Jox
turned, too, and saw Kneeland standing in front of the big-screen
TV, holding a dented autopistol while tears rolled down his cheeks.
When the winikin caught Jox’s eye, he
flashed his forearm.
It was bare. His protectees—and their bloodline—
were gone.
With nothing left to live for, Kneeland lifted
the weapon in salute, then ran across the raised platform and
leaped straight for the huge boluntiku. The
thing stayed solid and caught him in midair with its claws,
hoisting him to its gaping, hundred-toothed mouth.
The moment before it bit down, Kneeland let loose
with the autopistol, emptying the clip. The back of the creature’s
head blew out in a spray of blackish blood and rust-colored scales.
But, still, its jaws closed with an audible crunch.
Kneeland’s body went limp, then fell to the
ground in a bloody heap when the boluntiku
vaporized in death, opening up a corpse-filled hole in the panicked
mob. Retching, Jox hurdled the bodies and tried not to think of
them as people who’d been alive only seconds earlier.
Around him the screams and
fingernails-on-blackboard howls continued and the air smelled of
blood and death. Then he was at the doors, and Anna grabbed him,
and she was hanging on to Strike, and all Jox could think about was
getting the hell out of there.
Someone must’ve hit the panic release—shit, he
should’ve thought of that—because the doors weren’t locked anymore;
they were wide-open and survivors were running out into the starlit
crevasse where the training center was hidden, deep within Chaco
Canyon. Winikin were dragging their
children away from the carnage, running for their lives, but the
boluntiku pursued with single-minded
ferocity, their vapor bulks partially submerged beneath the ground
as they gained strength from the magma flow at the earth’s
mantle.
‘‘Jox, come on!’’ Anna pulled him toward the
door. ‘‘Jox!’’
Three boluntiku were
closing in on them, drawn by the smell of royalty.
‘‘Not that way.’’ Most of the escapees were
headed toward the forty-car garage, or for the barns and the high
canyon trails beyond. Jox’s heart hurt with the knowledge that
they’d never make it to the vehicles or horses. More important, it
wouldn’t matter if they did, because distance was nothing to the
boluntiku. Only smell mattered.
He had to get the children to the secret
blood-warded room beneath the archives, which only the royal
winikin knew of.
‘‘This way,’’ he said, making the only call he
possibly could, though it nearly killed him to turn away from
everyone else he’d ever known.
Making sure Anna was right behind him, he grabbed
a dazed-looking Strike by the waist and arm, half carrying, half
dragging the boy across the great hall to the covered walkway
leading to the mansion. It’d been locked all night, but now the
doors stood open, one hanging halfway off its hinge. ‘‘Don’t
look,’’ he ordered as their feet slid in the bloody wetness that
seemed to be everywhere. He lifted Strike higher and the boy
trembled and clung to him like a limpet, pressing his face into the
winikin’s chest.
Jox heard fingernails on blackboard behind them,
heard an infant’s wail and a familiar feminine voice screaming a
battle cry. Something deep inside him wept— Hannah. But he didn’t turn back to help her.
He took the king’s children and ran for his
life.