CHAPTER SEVEN
Strike navigated the minivan through a twisty
series of increasingly narrow streets made narrower by strategic
piles of trash. The slow summer dusk had caught up with him, and he
flicked on the rental’s headlights. The yellow beams picked out the
last landmark he’d been given— the freshly burned-out shell of an
apartment building, with the busted-out windows and debris that
went with such an event.
According to Carter, the fire had broken out the
night of the solstice. Strike hoped to hell that was a
coincidence.
The buildings on either side didn’t look much
better than the torched wreck. Their windows were blank, broken, or
boarded up—sometimes a mix of all three— indicating that they were
empty . . . or at least not occupied by tenants of the paying
variety.
Strike parked nose-out in case he had to make a
quick exit, and made sure the night dwellers got a look at the
autopistol when he climbed out of the mom-mobile. He set the alarm,
and the minivan gave an ineffective-sounding beep-beep and blinked its lights twice, like an
obedient poodle sit-staying in the middle of a minefield. The
lights did that delayed-off thing, lighting Strike’s way to what
used to be the front door of the burned-out wreck.
When he heard the slide of footsteps and the
clink of metal-on-metal behind him, he said, ‘‘You don’t want to
mess with me. It’s been a long damn day and I just want to do my
business and get out of here.’’
He didn’t expect a response, so it was a surprise
when a shadow detached itself from a doorway and sauntered toward
him. It was even more of a surprise to see that it was a woman, and
a hell of a sexy one at that.
She was long and lean, her face sharp enough to
be interesting instead of pretty. Her hair was blue-black and
slicked away from her face, and she wore a white halter top along
with tight black leather pants and tall boots, an outfit that
would’ve gotten her in trouble in this sort of neighborhood if she
hadn’t accessorized it with a Beretta nine-millimeter on one side
and a cute little .22 chick gun on the other.
By the time she reached him the minivan
headlights had clicked off. In the reflected moonlight, he saw her
tilt her head and give him an up-and-down. ‘‘What sort of
business?’’
‘‘My own.’’
‘‘Try again.’’
‘‘Don’t have to.’’
He thought she’d insist. Instead, she curved her
lips in a sweet smile and melted back into the darkness, until all
that was left of her was a faint, mocking chuckle. ‘‘Well, then,
Strike. Have at it.’’
Which meant either she worked for Snake Mendez,
or she was prescient. With the general dearth of actual magic among
humankind, Strike was betting on the former as he headed into the
damaged building, kicking in the door when the knob jammed.
It wasn’t like he was going for stealth. He just
wanted the meeting over with.
Cinders crunched underfoot when he strode into
the building, damning himself for a fool for not having brought the
basics, like night-vision goggles or—duh— a flashlight.
‘‘Sloppy,’’ he said to himself, and halfway
thought of trying a quick light spell. But although teleporting
came naturally, he’d been struggling with some of the other basics
and didn’t want to risk a misfire. So he worked by moonlight,
moving farther into the building, trying to make out the shapes of
what had once been walls and doorways.
‘‘You Strike?’’ a deep voice said without
warning, seeming to come from all around him.
Strike raised the MAC, though there was nothing
to shoot at but dark and more dark. ‘‘You’re a hard guy to track
down, Mendez.’’
‘‘A smart man would’ve taken the hint.’’
A roadside flare hissed to cherry red life,
sputtering as it was tossed in a spinning arc. It landed on a pile
of fire debris off to Strike’s right, bathing the scene in an eerie
red glow. In the blood-colored illumination, a tall figure
materialized out of the shadows, staying close to what looked like
a door, or maybe a busted-out window. An escape route. Which made
sense, given that Mendez had a warrant outstanding on him.
‘‘I need you to come back to New Mexico with
me,’’ Strike said. He lowered the pistol. ‘‘I can tell you about
your family.’’
‘‘I know everything I need to know.’’ But Mendez
moved forward into the light. The flare showed a big, towering man
with a shaved-bald head, sharp features, and pale, intelligent
eyes. None of that was a surprise— all of the Nightkeepers were
larger than average and practically oozed charisma. The other man’s
loose gray long-sleeved T-shirt, jeans, and skids weren’t
surprising, either, though they were tamer than Strike would’ve
expected, given the setting. What was surprising were the tattoos,
both because the narrow cuffs of arcane symbols at his wrists were
vaguely familiar, and because it was one of the rules the winikin had been charged with upholding: The young
Nightkeepers weren’t supposed to mark their skin. The skin was
sacred to the gods, as was blood.
The big man followed Strike’s gaze. His eyes
flashed as he lifted his hands, crossing his wrists so the tattooed
cuffs formed a world cross, the ancestor’s icon for the ceiba tree.
‘‘You don’t approve, Nochem?’’
The word for ‘‘leader’’ or ‘‘king’’ in the old
tongue rocked Strike back. ‘‘You know?’’
‘‘What do you think?’’ Mendez uncrossed his
wrists, shoved up a sleeve, and offered his forearm, holding it
near the light so Strike could see the serpent bloodline glyph,
along with the warrior and another, unfamiliar mark. ‘‘Kinda cool
how it’s working now, after all these years.’’
Shock jolted through Strike. ‘‘How did—’’
‘‘The gods showed me the way.’’ Mendez snapped
his fingers, and a green glow ignited from the tip of his index
finger, curled up into the darkness, then guttered and winked
out.
In its wake, magic rippled on the air.
Power.
Impossible, Strike
thought. The winikin were sworn not to
teach the magic outside the training compound. Yet Mendez knew the
old language and the glyphs. If his winikin
had broken those dicta, what others might he have ignored?
‘‘Let’s just say Louis pointed me in the right
direction, ’’ Mendez said, as though Strike had spoken his
thoughts. He shot his sleeves, so the marks were once again
covered. ‘‘And don’t bother hauling him up on charges or anything.
His sanity checked out a few years ago.’’ He circled a finger at
his temple. ‘‘Last I knew, he was in the Parker House of Nuts.’’ He
paused. ‘‘Dude was bonkers. Kept babbling on about the end of the
world.’’
‘‘He was right,’’ Strike said.
‘‘I know.’’ Mendez grinned with zero humor.
‘‘Thing is, I don’t figure I owe humanity much of anything, and I
sure as hell don’t owe you. Unless, of course, you’re offering
something in return for my services.’’ Another snap, another flame,
and though Strike could manage something similar, the color worried
him.
Nightkeeper flame was yellow or red. Green and
purple were the colors of the Banol Kax and
the makol, but he didn’t get that sense off
Mendez, either; it was as though he had dark tendencies, but hadn’t
yet chosen a side.
Strike had a feeling that when he did, it was
going to mean trouble. He didn’t really want this guy in the
compound, but he didn’t want to fight him, either. And thirteen was
their magic number. There had to be a way to make it fly, because
he couldn’t walk away from one of the surviving Nightkeepers.
‘‘Come with me,’’ he said finally. ‘‘We’ll work something
out.’’
Mendez snorted. ‘‘Here’s how it’s going to work.
You take care of the cops and the ass-pain bounty hunter bitch
they’ve got tracking me, and I’ll take a look at your setup. If I
like what I see, I’ll stay and let you convince me to fight on your
team. If not, I’ll give you a chance to buy the spellbook off
me.’’
A nasty feeling twisted down Strike’s spine
alongside a jolt of adrenaline. Did Mendez somehow have one of the
lost spellbooks? How? That should’ve been impossible. ‘‘Where’s the
book now?’’ he asked, as if he’d known about it all along.
‘‘Safe,’’ Mendez replied. ‘‘So why don’t
you—’’
‘‘Sorry to interrupt,’’ a new, female voice said
unexpectedly. ‘‘But I’m interrupting.’’ There was a zap-hiss, and an arc of blue light flared behind
Mendez. The big man bowed, going rigid on a silent scream, and then
collapsed.
‘‘Freeze!’’ Strike shouted, levering the MAC as a
smaller figure crouched over Mendez’s prostrate form. When the
figure shifted, he saw black leather and high boots, and recognized
the hottie from the alley. ‘‘Back off before I put a round in
you,’’ he said.
Dual clicks sounded next to his head, one in each
ear, as two huge dudes came up behind him on damn silent feet with
damn big guns. ‘‘Don’t be stupid,’’ Leftmost Dude said. ‘‘She
doesn’t want to hurt you. Said you’re too pretty to mess up, and
the car is a hoot.’’
Gods, Strike thought on a
groan. Saved by a minivan. ‘‘Okay.’’ He
held up the MAC and opened his fingers in the universal gesture of
no harm, no foul. ‘‘Maybe we can make a
deal.’’
‘‘I’m the bounty hunter the cops have tracking
Snake here,’’ the hottie said without looking up. ‘‘Trust me, with
what they’re offering, you can’t afford me.’’
Mendez groaned and sucked in a harsh, rattling
breath. ‘‘Bitch.’’
‘‘Back atcha,’’ she said, and hit the button on
her Taser, sending another fifty thousand volts or so shooting
through his system.
When he was finished twitching, she gestured to
her men. ‘‘Let’s get this meat loaded on the wagon and get the hell
out of here.’’ She crossed to Strike, stopping just shy of him.
‘‘Can I give you a word of advice? Whatever you’re looking for,
find an alternative. Snake here is . . .’’ She trailed off, as if
searching for exactly the right word. ‘‘Let’s just say that of all
the seriously screwed-up people I deal with on a daily basis, he is
by far the most damaged. He’s like a rottweiler that had a really
bad puppyhood . . . you can gentle it all you want, but when it
comes down to it, the thing’s going to be just as likely to bite
your arm off as wag its tail.’’
Strike looked down at the unconscious man.
‘‘Shit.’’
‘‘Couldn’t have said it better myself.’’ She
turned away. ‘‘Stay cool, minivan man.’’
‘‘Wait!’’
She turned back. ‘‘What? You want to kiss him
good-bye or something?’’
Despite everything, Strike found himself
grinning, enjoying her. ‘‘No. Your name. For reasons I can’t even
begin to decipher, I’d like to know your name.’’
She sketched a bow. ‘‘Reece Montana at your
service. Now, bugger off.’’
And just like that, the bounty hunter—and the
thirteenth Nightkeeper—were gone.
‘‘Well, shit,’’ Strike said, and headed back for
the minivan. It was sitting right where he’d left it, and still had
all four tires in good working order. He’d be paying to have the
thing repainted to cover up a particularly creative suggestion
spray-painted across the back door, but what the hell. It could’ve
been worse, given the neighborhood.
He checked his voice mail once he was on the
road, and found one from Jox. The message was a simple, ‘‘Call
me,’’ but the winikin’s tone was off.
A bad feeling tightened Strike’s gut as he phoned
home and punched it to speaker. ‘‘What’s wrong?’’ he said the
moment Jox picked up.
‘‘Carter found the twins,’’ the winikin reported, his voice flat with grief.
‘‘They’re dead.’’
Strike yanked the wheel and sent the
soccer-mobile screeching across the highway, ignoring the blare of
horns behind him. When he was stopped at an angle across the
breakdown lane, he slapped the minivan into park. Sat and breathed.
‘‘Gods damn it.’’
‘‘They were in New Jersey, headed along Skyline
Drive the night of the solstice,’’ Jox said. ‘‘They went off the
road near midnight.’’
Which probably meant the barrier had reached out
to them just like it’d grabbed him, Strike thought. The twin link
would’ve made them more susceptible to the lure, and more powerful
once they were jacked in. But fucking bad luck—destiny,
whatever—had put one of them behind the wheel next to a sheer drop
at exactly the wrong moment. And now the Nightkeepers were down to
eleven. Ten, if he counted out Mendez.
Heart heavy, Strike said something reassuring to
Jox, who sounded like he was taking it way hard, and rang off.
Cranking the minivan into drive, he pulled back into traffic and
headed for the car rental place. Once he’d dropped off the keys, he
found a secluded spot for the ’port magic. He didn’t particularly
want to go back to the training compound, but he had a duty, damn
it. It was like the king’s writ said: His first duty was to the
gods and his people, then to mankind and his family. His own needs
barely made the list.
Closing his eyes, he touched the barrier for a
boost of power and imagined his mental turbines coming to life.
Once he had enough magic to work with, he thought of home, and a
yellow travel thread shimmered into existence in front of him. He
reached out and touched it, felt the power sing through him. When
it peaked, he sent himself into the thread, into the barrier.
There was a blur of gray-green, a gut wrench of
sideways motion, then the jarring halt he didn’t think he’d ever
get used to. Displaced air slammed away from him as he materialized
a few inches off the ground, and he stumbled upon landing,
windmilling his arms to keep his balance when he tripped over a
hump of grass.
Except there shouldn’t have been any grass. For
that matter, it was dark out, when New Mex would’ve still had
light, and the air was moist and verdant rather than desert
dry.
Ergo, he wasn’t in New Mex.
Heart hammering, Strike looked around. He’d
zapped in at the front of a three-story house that towered over its
ground-level neighbors on either side, which were nearly hidden
behind tall, leafy hedges, as though the owner of the three-story
liked privacy. The street out front was lined with palm trees, and
the car parked by the front door had a sleek and somewhat dated
silhouette.
He’d bet his next meal she was a ’67 Mustang
named Peggy Sue. He’d thought of home and his powers had brought
him, not to a place, but to a person.
To Leah.
Leah knew she was dreaming, but she couldn’t be
bothered to wake up when the dream was so much better than
reality.
Reality was a roomful of cops looking at her
sideways. Reality was Nick’s empty desk chair across from hers, and
a cardboard box where her partner’s things should have been.
Reality was the memorial service, and the funeral, and Selina
asking her to say something at the service when she couldn’t, she
just couldn’t. And reality was Matty’s memory fading bit by
bit.
Basically, reality sucked.
The dream, though . . . Wow,
and hello, baby. Where have you been all my life?
In tonight’s installment of her fantasy life, her
dream warrior stood in the shadows of the attic eaves, staring at
her. He was tall and dark, with high, slashing cheekbones, piercing
eyes, and the aristocratic line of a thin beard. He was wearing
black combat pants and boots and a white oxford, and held himself
like a leader, like he didn’t take crap from anyone. She
appreciated that in a guy, as long as he didn’t take it too far
into Neanderthal territory. But this was her dream, wasn’t it? Her
rules, her desires.
She lay on the futon mattress up in the attic,
where she’d slept since Nick’s death. In her bedroom she’d felt
hemmed in, restless. Up here, she could stretch out beneath the
wide skylight and feel the starlight on her skin.
Naked, she turned on her side and let the light
sheet fall away, baring herself to her dream lover, needing to let
loose of the grim control she kept on herself during the day so her
recent frustrations wouldn’t have her lashing out at the people
around her. But here, with him, those frustrations turned to pure
heat. A strange hum built in her bones, in her ears, in the air
around her, and a flush climbed her skin, warming her, prickling
when her pores opened and her neurons flared to life, as though
they’d been dead numb all day and were just now awakening. The moon
caught the edge of the skylight, dimming all but the brightest
stars, and the tiny points of light called to her, sending heat
throbbing beneath her skin.
Daring him, she crooked a finger. ‘‘Come
here.’’
He moved out of the shadows into the moonlight,
his steps soundless on the wide attic floorboards. Slowly, so
slowly, he dropped to his knees beside the mattress and bent over
her, but didn’t touch.
‘‘Leah,’’ he whispered, his voice rasping across
her name like a caress. Like a prayer.
‘‘I don’t know your name,’’ she said softly,
lifting a hand to touch his jaw, and finding it warm and solid and
masculine beneath her dream fingertips.
‘‘You don’t need to.’’ Something flickered in his
eyes—sorrow, perhaps, or guilt.
She wanted to argue, wanted his name, but that
small desire didn’t seem as important as the larger roar of lust
brought on by the feel of his strong jaw against her palm, and the
rasp of his close-clipped beard as he leaned over her, leaned into
her. And touched his lips to hers.
The kiss was a whisper at first, though not a
question. It was more like a test, though she didn’t know if he was
challenging himself or her.
Heat came quickly, digging her with sharp claws
of need, and she arched up to him, offering. Demanding. And the
moment of hesitation was gone.
He came down on her with a muttered oath, and
then his hands were everywhere—touching and stroking and shaping
her. She arched into him, gasping as pleasure flared, hard and hot.
The intensity of his touch and her response would’ve been too much,
too soon if it hadn’t been for the edge of tenderness in the way
his tongue touched hers when she opened her mouth, strong and sure,
but coaxing a response rather than demanding it.
There was no need for either a coax or a demand,
though. She was right there with him. Hell, she was powering past
him, ahead of him, waiting for him to catch up.
Then again, this was her dream. Why shouldn’t she
be in charge?
As the kiss spiraled hotter, harder, she
plastered herself against him, feeling his strength through his
clothing, the nap of the fabric an exquisite torture against her
bare, sensitized skin. He stiffened and hissed out a breath as she
hooked his shirt from his waistband and slid her hands beneath,
walking her fingernails across the hard ridges of his abs and
lingering on the trail of rough, masculine hair leading down. But
when she made a move for his belt he caught her wrists in one of
his hands and broke the kiss to say, ‘‘Relax. This is about you,
not me.’’
Of course it is, she
thought. It’s my dream.
Bathed in the warmth of desire, she lay back at
his urging and spread her legs, offering herself to the night sky
and feeling the weight of his eyes, the pressure of a thousand
stars burning down from above.
Heat roared within her when they kissed. Need
hammered when he touched her breasts, which were heavy and ached
with desire. The world spun when he touched her with his clever
fingers, his agile tongue; then she felt the rasp of his beard
against the skin of her belly, and lower. Then he was tonguing her,
nipping at her sensitized flesh and making her squirm, making the
heat spiral harder, making the world contract inward until there
was nothing but the two of them and the dream haze.
She turned toward him, lifting and bending one
leg to tilt herself more fully open to him, and her breath came in
short, staccato bursts as tension coiled within, tighter and
tighter still until she couldn’t breathe. She buried her fingers in
his hair and urged him up her body, so they were pressed
chest-to-chest, tangled in each other, wrapped around each other.
She tasted herself on his lips, tasted him, his need and frustrated
desire, and though he’d said it was about her she wanted it to be
about the two of them. Together.
When she opened her eyes to say as much, she
found his eyes open as well, found herself caught in their depths.
Then he touched her where his mouth had just been, slipped two
fingers inside her, and set a hard, fast rhythm that mimicked the
beat of her heart, and matched the stroke of his tongue against
hers.
Gasping, she strained against him as a rush of
sensation built, coalescing around his fingers, around them both.
Then the universe exploded. Golden light flared in her mind, in her
body, warming her, pleasuring her. She cried out and clung to him
as the orgasm gripped her, rolled over her, washed through
her.
When it was done, the world spun around her and
she clung to him still, his solid body her only anchor in an
existence suddenly gone unsteady. She stirred against him, opened
her eyes to look at him and found them still in her attic, still in
each other’s arms.
Suddenly, the fantasy seemed awfully real. The
dreams had never taken her this far before, never continued through
completion to the aftermath. They’d never left her feeling both
satisfied and terribly alone.
‘‘This is real, isn’t it?’’ she whispered, not
sure whether the huge emotion that welled up inside her was hope or
fear.
His cobalt eyes went sharp with regret, and he
shook his head slightly. ‘‘No. It’s a dream. It’s all a
dream.’’
He touched his lips to her forehead and said
something, two words in a language she didn’t know, but which
sounded familiar somehow. But before she could ask how she knew the
sounds, gray-green mist crept to the edges of her vision, cocooning
her in warm lassitude.
She fought the pull, fought a sudden,
overwhelming sleepiness. ‘‘Wait! What—’’
‘‘Sleep,’’ he said softly. ‘‘This is all just a
dream.’’
He cut off her protest with a kiss. And as she
slid into the kiss, she tumbled off the edge to sleep, taking with
her the power of his touch and the safety of his arms.
Strike was hard and sore, and his body burned for
release, for completion, but he denied both and turned Leah in his
arms, fitting her up against him so they were nestled together
back-to-front. Then he pulled the light sheet off the floor to
cover them both.
The sleep spell wasn’t as comprehensive as
Red-Boar’s mind-wipe, but she’d already thought she was dreaming.
She’d wake and think of him as a pleasant fantasy, which would have
to be enough.
He knew he should feel guilty, and maybe that
would come later. For now, there was only the satisfaction of
holding her in his arms. She fit against him perfectly, small
enough that he could tuck her head beneath his chin, tough enough
that she could hold her own against him, against the makol.
Deep down inside him there was a faint warning
tug, a twitch of unease that his connection to her was too strong
to be anything but meant by the fates, by the gods.
‘‘No,’’ he said aloud. He wanted—needed—to claim
something for himself. A moment of private humanity. His feelings
for Leah, which he was careful not to examine too closely, weren’t
part of his being a Nightkeeper or the son of the king. Maybe they
had been at first, but not anymore. Now, the attraction was about
his being a man and her being a woman.
Jox was right—he’d always had a thing for edgy
blondes. More, he respected the loyalty to family and friends that
had driven her after Zipacna. Her need to fight for what she
believed in. She was a cop, a protector in her own right, one who
didn’t let herself get pushed around even in situations far beyond
her understanding. Yet at the same time, she was all woman in her
responses, in her unabashed enjoyment of her own body, and
his.
If he’d been nothing more than a man, or if it
were five years later, with the zero date come and gone without
drama, he would’ve done whatever it took to make her his own. As it
was, that was out of the question, a danger to both of them. So
he’d take this one time— and he swore to himself that it would only
be once— and let her go, hoping she’d dream of him.
He’d keep the protection spell in place and make
sure the ajaw-makol didn’t try to touch her
again. He’d watch over her, just as he was bound to oversee the
safety of the human race. But that was it for the two of them
together. Hell, he shouldn’t have even come into her house tonight,
but once he’d realized where he was, he hadn’t been able to
override the compulsion. Hadn’t wanted to.
Tomorrow, he would meet the new Nightkeepers.
Tonight, he’d wanted one last thing for himself. But when his cell
phone vibrated in his pocket, twice over five minutes, he knew his
time was up. Undoubtedly it was Jox wanting to know where the hell
he was, and when he’d be back. And though Strike was feeling
vaguely out of step with his winikin these
days, it wasn’t fair for him to disappear. There had been too much
of that already.
So he gathered himself and slipped out from
underneath the sheet, tucking the single layer around Leah as she
stirred and murmured something sweet and low. A faint frown touched
her lips and crinkled her brow, forming soft lines in the
moonlight.
‘‘Sleep,’’ he said in the language of his
ancestors, and touched his lips to hers. ‘‘Be safe.’’
Then he closed his eyes and tapped the barrier
for power, envisioned the training compound, and teleported
away.