FIVE
“You wanna tellme where you’vebeen?” Clarence
said. He was sitting cross-legged in front of my apartment door.
“I’ve been calling and calling, and you’re not even answering your
damned cell phone.”
“I turned it off,” I said. “Sorry. I didn’t think.
I—” I ran my fingers through my hair and made an effort to look
frazzled. It really wasn’t hard. “I’ve had a rough day.”
“Day? You’ve been gone for more than twenty-four
hours. I’ve been pacing a damned path in this shit carpeting
they’ve got in your hallway.”
And the weird thing? There really was a worn
pattern in the carpet. Not, I’m sure, because he was pacing with
worry. More likely he was afraid his newly sworn Pawn of Evil had
gone AWOL.
I slid my key in and opened the door. He slouched
inside ahead of me, then plopped himself down in one of Alice’s
armchairs. “Make yourself at home,” I mumbled.
He sighed, then kicked his feet up on an ottoman
and took a long, slow breath. “Can’t help it,” he said. “I’m too
damn relieved you’re okay.” His fedora was slanted down over his
bulgy eyes, and stretched out like that, he looked less froglike
than usual. He looked casual. He looked comfortable.
And I hated him all the more for waltzing into my
life and looking like an ordinary guy. Because he wasn’t ordinary.
He was evil. He was the frog-faced little worm who’d gotten me into
this whole mess, and before this thing was over, I would see him
dead.
Not now, though, I thought, even as the
weight of my blade in the thigh holster tempted me. Not now,
because I’ve made a deal with an even worse devil.
What was it they said about the devil you
knew?
Briefly, I wondered if I wasn’t screwing up
big-time by not telling Clarence what Johnson was up to. Tell
Clarence, and get him and Penemue working behind the scenes to
figure out a way to get Johnson out of Rose. And they’d do it, too,
because I was Prophecy Girl. The über-warrior chick with Rand
McNally blood.
More than that, there was no way they’d want
Johnson and Kokbiel to succeed with their plan.
I was tempted. So, so tempted.
But in the end I kept my mouth shut.
Being a double agent was one thing, but I wasn’t
sure I had it in me to be a triple agent. More than that, I simply
wasn’t willing to take the risk. Because if I took it and failed,
I’d pay with Rose’s life. And that was unacceptable.
So instead of saying anything to Clarence, I did
what I was supposed to do: I played it cool.
I drew in a breath and tried to act like a girl
whose entire system of reality hadn’t once again been turned askew.
A girl whose sister hadn’t been violated by a demon.
A girl who wasn’t slowly, with every kill, becoming
the thing she most despised.
“So?” he said, his arms tossed out to the sides,
his shoulders rising in a deep shrug.
“Uh . . .”
“Your story? Where have you been? Egan’s dead,” he
said, referring to Alice’s uncle. “There’s evidence of a ritual in
the pub’s basement, and you’re nowhere to be found. So, yeah. I’ve
been worried.” He exhaled loudly. “Damn glad to see you’re okay,
but you scared the crap out of me. So where the hell have you
been?”
Where I’d been wasn’t a topic I intended to delve
into in depth. Instead, I wanted to scream that I wasn’t okay. That
it would never be okay until I got my hands around Johnson’s
neck—his neck and not Rose’s—and squeezed until I felt every
last drop of life ooze out of him. I wanted to take a knife and gut
him. I wanted his blood spilled, and I wanted to be the one to
spill it.
“Yo? You gonna answer my question?”
I blinked, realizing that Clarence had not only
stood up and moved to the window, but that he’d been talking, and I
hadn’t been listening. “What question?”
“I talk, talk, talk. But do you listen? Nope. I’m
only Clarence, your handler, your mentor. Not like I’d be worried
about you. Not like I’d—”
“Clarence. What question?”
“I asked where you’ve been. I asked what happened.
Bodies all over the damn pub, and I can’t find you anywhere.”
“Bodies?” As far as I knew, there was only one
body, Alice’s uncle Egan, aka the man who murdered Alice. Once I’d
figured that out, I wasn’t terribly inclined to show him any
sympathy. And, yeah, I killed him.
Not that I wanted Clarence to know that.
Fortunately, Deacon and I had come up with a story that mixed fact
with fiction. I only hoped it would fly.
“I’ve been with Rose,” I said, keeping a keen eye
on him as I gauged his reaction.
“Rose? Your sister Rose?” The shock on his face
seemed legitimate, but I’d learned not to trust anything tossed at
me by the little beast. “I thought I made it crystal clear that you
gotta cut yourself off from your old life. You can’t be Lily
anymore. You need to let it go, kid.”
“I did,” I lied. “I have.”
“And yet you went flouncing off to the Flats?” he
retorted, referring to the Boston neighborhood where I’d grown up.
“Doesn’t sound to me like you’re walking away from the old
Lily.”
“Rose came to me,” I said. “She came to the pub.” I
paused, both for dramatic effect, and also because the truth still
ate at me. She’d come to the pub looking for me. “She came, and the
demons got her.”
“What the fuck are you talking about?” Clarence
asked, sounding genuinely perplexed. “I send you out to kill a
demon. I don’t hear from you for more than a day. And now you come
back with some story about how the demons snatched your
sister?”
“It’s not a story,” I said. “There were three of
them, and they had Rose in a room in the basement strapped to a
slab, and she was about to be some demon ass-hole’s
sacrifice.”
“You’re sure?”
“I was there,” I said. “Hard to miss.” I managed an
offhand shrug. “Not like this is coming out of the blue, right? I
mean, the pub’s always had a freaky reputation.” The Bloody
Tongue—now half-owned by me in light of Egan’s untimely demise—has
been around for centuries and is a staple on Haunted Boston tours.
Before I dipped my toe into the wonderful world of demons and hell
and darkness and light, I’d assumed that was all hype and
hoopla.
I’d assumed wrong.
Turned out that Alice’s family had been deep into
the dark arts for generations, and though Clarence had assured me
that Egan scorned such devilish things, the truth was exactly the
opposite: Egan was in tight with the demons, going so far as to
pull homeless girls and runaways off the street and sell them to
the demons, a little fact that had pissed off his sister, Alice’s
mother. Her mom had been trying desperately to extricate herself
from the family business, and her efforts were not appreciated.
When it became clear that she was going to be trouble, Egan
murdered his sister.
When the demons insisted that Egan provide them
with a specific girl for a sacrifice—his niece Alice—he’d gone
along, undoubtedly fearing their wrath more than he loved his
niece. What the demons didn’t tell him was that Alice was part of a
whole big scheme to create a fancy, schmancy warrior. All he knew
was that he sent his niece off to be a sacrificial lamb one
Saturday night. And on Monday evening, her body came strolling back
into the pub for her shift. Granted, the new Alice was me, but Egan
didn’t know that.
To keep Egan from asking a bunch of messy
questions, the demons did what I actually considered a pretty smart
thing: They told Egan the sacrifice had failed, that Alice was
tainted goods, and that Egan needed to provide another. When Rose
had wandered in looking for Alice, Egan had snatched the
opportunity and delivered my little sister to the demons.
“So tell me exactly what happened,” Clarence said.
He was leaning forward, his brow furrowed, which had the effect of
making his eyes bulge out even more than usual.
“Rose called while I was fighting the demon
priest.” There was a big fat lie. I’d killed a priest, all
right, but he hadn’t been demonic. “And by the time I checked my
messages, it was too late. She’d already left her house.”
“What was the message?”
“She was going to the pub and wanted me to meet her
there.” Not an outright lie, but the real truth was that I’d
already learned about the sacrifice and was racing to the pub to
stop it when I got Rose’s message.
“And she was there,” Clarence said.
“I didn’t see her right away, but Deacon Camphire
was there.”
“The filthy demon got ahold of your sister,”
Clarence said, instilling so much fury into his voice that I almost
broke out into applause at his stellar acting abilities.
“Guess so,” I said, saying a silent apology to
Deacon, despite the fact that he and I had planned out my cover
story for Clarence long ago. Even when I’d been planning to kill
Clarence, I’d still needed a solid story. Because to kill a beast
like Clarence, you had to be sneaky. And you had to get
close.
“I know for a fact Deacon killed Egan,” I added. “I
saw him over the body, but he took off. Got away before I could
slam my knife through his slimy, black heart.” Okay, maybe that was
pouring it on a little thick. “Anyway,” I continued, hurrying on
before he could put too much thought into my story, “Egan told me
that they’d taken a girl downstairs. And when I ran down, I found
two demons standing over Rose, and there was someone else escaping
out the back.”
Once again, I saw surprise flash in his eyes. “Do
you know who?”
“I’m going to go out on a limb and guess it was a
demon.”
“Lily, this is—”
“She’s staying with me,” I said, my voice flat and
firm and designed to brook no argument.
“No. I don’t think—”
“She stays,” I said. “She stays, and I protect her.
She was supposed to be sacrificed to demons, Clarence. You think
they’re just going to give up on her? She’s in their sights now,
and no way am I leaving her unprotected.”
Clarence was shaking his head slowly from side to
side. “I can’t agree to that.”
“It’s not your choice,” I said firmly. “I killed
the demon priest before he could open the gate, right? I think I’m
entitled to a little leeway here. And what I want is to keep an eye
on my sister.”
“She has a father. You can’t just pull her
away—”
“Joe isn’t going to give a flip,” I said, my heart
light in my chest. Because my alcoholic stepfather really wouldn’t
care. I’d won. I knew it, and Clarence knew it. All I needed was
for him to acknowledge it.
“It’s not a good idea.”
“It’s a great idea,” I countered. The point was
non-negotiable.
“I can’t allow it.”
I smiled broadly, pretending I hadn’t heard him.
“Then it’s settled. I’ll keep doing your kill-the-demon errands,
and you let Rose move in with me.”
“I don’t like it,” he said.
“Get used to it,” I countered.
He stared at me, hard. Then his head tilted slowly
to the side. “What else have you been up to?”
I swallowed, hoping my face didn’t show my guilt.
“Nothing. What do you mean?”
“You’re thinking one hell of a lot softer these
days, Lily,” he said. “What did you do?”
“Oh?” I pretended shock. “No way? You mean you
really can’t get into my mind anymore? I don’t have to sing
‘Conjunction Junction’ in my head to keep you out of my thoughts?”
From the first second I’d known him, Clarence had had the ability
to poke around in my head. An ability I’d thwarted by going out and
killing a Secret Keeper demon—a fortuitous kill, as that was how
I’d learned about the plan to sacrifice a girl in the pub
basement.
I had no intention of telling that to Clarence,
however.
“I didn’t do anything.” I shrugged, hoping for
casual. “Maybe it’s a little present to me for a job well-done. The
Big Boss giving me my privacy.”
His lips thinned, but his expression was
thoughtful. Maybe my suggestion wasn’t outside the realm of
possibility.
“What’s the matter,” I pressed. “Don’t you trust
me?”
I waited one beat, then another. Finally, he
nodded. “Of course I trust you. I’m just used to hearing all the
prattle from your mind buzzing around me. It’s damn quiet in here
now.”
I rolled my eyes, my entire body sagging in relief.
“And Rose? We’re cool there, right? She stays with me.”
I held my breath, waiting for his response.
Finally, he nodded. “But you’re Alice,” he said. “Not Lily. You’re
not that girl’s dead sister.”
“Sure thing,” I said. “No problem.”
“Did she see the demons? When you killed them? Did
she see them melt away?”
I shook my head. “She’d passed out by then. No
worries about explaining demon goo to my little sister.”
“What about explaining who she is to Rachel?
Alice’s sister will wonder when you bring a young girl home. And
what about taking care of her while you’re at the pub? Finding
someone to watch over her while you’re off fighting demons?”
“Well, listen to you,” I said. “You’ve really got
the lowdown on child care. But she’s fourteen, not six. And I swear
I’ll work it out.” Of course, I was going to have to break the news
to Johnson that he would have to fake being fourteen. I stifled a
wicked grin. Finally, something I was looking forward to.
“I suggest you put some thought into the care and
feeding of your sister. I need you focused, Lily.”
“See, this is what I don’t get,” I protested. “When
you first sold me this gig, you told me I was the girl who could
prevent the gate from opening. That I’d stop the Apocalypse. You
said that was my mission. My purpose.”
“And it was,” Clarence said, his expression
slightly concerned, as if he wasn’t sure where I was going with
this.
“I did all that,” I said, working to keep the rage
and self-loathing out of my voice. Because I didn’t do that,
as Clarence damn well knew. “So why aren’t I done? Lily Carlyle,” I
said in a newscaster-style voice, “you just saved the world. What
are you going to do now?” I peered hard at Clarence. “I should be
going to Disney-land, not working harder.”
“You locked the Ninth Gate, kid,” he said, his lie
making me sick to my stomach. “And a big high five to you. But you
think that solved all our problems? You think the world is all
peachy keen now?”
I had to agree it was not, and I tried not to hold
my breath as I waited for him to tell me about my new mission,
searching for this funny little key that would lock the
gates shut. Yeah, right.
“Like I said. We got work. We got demons on the
streets, infiltrating themselves into the lives of the innocent.
And, yeah, we got demons plotting another Armageddon.”
“The fun never stops,” I said. “What are they up
to?”
“The other eight gates,” he said. “They’re running
around trying to figure out how to open them before the
convergence.”
I grinned. Score one for the cynical girl.
“Is that even possible?” I asked, keeping my face
serious, my expression concerned. “I thought they were locked
tight.”
“It’s not easy,” he said. “But it’s possible. And
we need to make sure it doesn’t happen.”
“How?”
“They’re looking for a key,” he said. “The Oris
Clef. This one unlocks all the gates,” he said. “The three
pieces are scattered, but once they’re assembled, we’re talking
some serious mojo.”
“Oh,” I said, actually impressed that Clarence
wasn’t trying to hide the basic nature of our quest from me. “So
what’s our plan?”
He grinned at me, then said exactly the words I
wanted to hear. “Give me your arm, Lily. Because we’re going to
find those pieces first.”