3
Monsters
ALEX MADE WAY FOR THEM AND THEIR PARADE OF BOXES,
PROPPED herself up on the desk, and watched as the boxes stacked up
in the kitchenette. “Is that Tierney Wales?” she asked on one of
Sylvie’s trips in that coincided with one of his exits.
“Yeah,” she said. “That’s the Ghoul.”
Alex frowned. “He’s skinny.”
“So feed him a sandwich. Just don’t adopt him,”
Sylvie said. She dropped the box she held, listening to the
rustling of dried flesh scrabbling at cardboard; she’d picked the
damn short straw again. She kicked the box toward the closet,
wanting to wash her hands of an imaginary contamination. And Wales
carried these things in his pockets.
Alex was still rubbernecking, watching Wales stack
boxes outside the door. “He doesn’t look like a necromancer. He
looks like a stressed-out grad student.”
She caught Sylvie’s scowl and flushed. “Okay, okay,
necromancers don’t wear black robes and chant all the time. I get
it. Just . . . he looks . . . scared. I didn’t think necromancers
got scared.”
“Yeah, about that,” Sylvie said. “You up for a
vacation?”
“What?” Alex narrowed her gaze. “You’re trying to
get me out of the way again.”
“Better me than Odalys,” Sylvie said. “Someone
tried to flambé me in the office last night.”
“Is that what happened to the bell?” Alex asked. “I
saw it had gone all melty.”
“And you just stuck around?”
“I figured whatever happened had happened, and I
knew you were all right. So it didn’t seem that important.”
“It’s important,” Sylvie said. “I think it’s
Odalys. She sent someone out to slice and dice Wales. There was
even some mention of taking out Zoe. Thank god for Val.” She
grimaced at the welling of gratitude in her breast. Not her usual
sentiment when it came to the witch. But after Val had seen Zoe’s
occultly stained hand and forearm, she’d decreed that Zoe needed
protecting.
“And you, you’ve been caught in the magical cross
fire before, Alex. You need to be more careful.”
Alex waved a dismissive hand. “I am careful.
Besides, Odalys doesn’t even know I exist. Sucks about Zoe and
Wales, though. What are we going to do to protect them?”
That was Alex all over. An abundance of caution.
For other people. Reckless trust in her own safety. It made no
sense at all. It wasn’t like Alex had led a charmed life even
before she’d become Sylvie’s partner.
“Zoe’s in no trouble right now,” she said. “Not
tucked under Val’s wing. The Cassavetes estate is proof against
pretty much anything but nuclear magic.”
“If she stays there,” Alex said. She surged off the
desk and opened the door for Wales, helped him steady the last few
boxes. “Hi. Tierney, right? I’m Alex. Sylvie’s partner and
all-around researcher.”
He blinked at her, her bleached-blond hair, her
bright makeup, the pink-nailed hand held out toward him the moment
the boxes were down, and took a step backward. “Hi?”
Figured, Sylvie thought. Give him death, give him
antagonism, give him trouble, and Wales was mouthy and cynical.
Face-to-face with a friendly smile, his personality locked
up.
“So did Sylvie tell you what was going on? Bears?
That’s new. I mean, I get werewolves, I’m used to werewolves at
this point, but bears?” Alex chattered easily, pushing Wales toward
the kitchenette. “Guess it’s ’cause we don’t have bears around
much. You think there are more shape-shifting bears in the West?
Were-bears? Like Care Bears, only not?”
Wales looked back at Sylvie, eyes wide and
entreating as they hadn’t been even when faced with a
knife-wielding assassin. Sylvie smothered her desire to laugh and
didn’t step in to bail him out. Wales gnawed his lip, then said, “I
don’t know. I’m mostly about necromancy. I don’t . . .
Shape-shifters? Shadows, I don’t know anything about
shape-shifters. If that’s what you brought me here for, then you’re
wasting my time and yours.”
“I do know about shape-shifters,” she said. “I know
they don’t play dead well enough to be body-bagged before they wake
up and change shape. These women were dead. Cold and dead. You need
to pay better attention, Wales. I told you that on the road.”
His response was a petulant huff better suited to a
teenager than an adult and was followed by another spew of backchat
that made Sylvie wish he was as tongue-tied around her as he was
around Alex. “Well, you’ll have to excuse me some since I was still
thinking on the man that came to knife me. Normal people need
recovery time for that sorta thing.”
Alex’s eyes widened in sympathy, and her urgings
that he sit down and have a pastelito and a
coffee overrode Sylvie’s reflexive snort of, “You’re holding
yourself up as normal now, Ghoul?”
When Alex’s fussing looked like it might drive
Wales away, Sylvie said, “Alex.” It was more than a reprimand;
Sylvie had Odalys to deal with, and her idea didn’t look any better
now than it had earlier, but it was all she had.
“You need something?” Alex said.
“You still got . . . Wright’s contact info?”
In the kitchenette, Wales shot to attention, nearly
dropping the paper plate Alex had pressed on him. “Hey, I nearly
forgot about your possession case. You got rid of his ghost all
right?”
Sylvie snapped, “Mind your own business. Alex, you
got it?”
“Yeah,” Alex said, slowly, a drawl that nearly
matched Wales’s natural speech and was alien in her mouth, a mark
of her uncertainty. “But didn’t you . . . I mean, you’ve got it,
too, right?”
“You’re the one who’s going to call, though,”
Sylvie said. “Just let him know about Odalys’s bid for power, would
you?”
She wanted to call; her fingers itched for the
phone. She wanted to hear the cadences of his speech in Adam
Wright’s voice. But Demalion had a job to do—two jobs, neither
simple. Better to wait until he’d dealt with one or the other. ISI
or Wright’s family.
Wales shook his head. “What do you think a Chicago
cop can do about a Miami necromancer? You’re grasping at—” His gaze
narrowed. “That ghost of his was from the ISI. You gave the body to
the ghost?”
“Gave isn’t the word I’d
use,” Sylvie said.
“Christ,” Wales said. “And the man inside, the man
who owned the body? What’d you do with his
soul?” He set the plate back on the counter, the pastry
untouched.
“It’s none of your business,” Sylvie said
again.
“Death magic is my business, and if I’m going risk
myself in the swamps with you, I’d like to know that you’re not
going to sell me out for your own—”
“She didn’t.” Alex stopped
them both. She slammed herself into her seat, her coffee mug onto
the desk. It sloshed but didn’t spill. “It wasn’t her fault. Wasn’t
anyone’s fault. Wright died. Demalion got the body, but there was
no taking or stealing or anything like that.”
“Were you there?” Wales asked. “Or is that what she
told you?”
Sylvie gritted her teeth. “Alex. Call him. See if
he can get a word to the ISI gossip chain; see if they can be
bothered to take an interest. Maybe we can make her their problem.
Wales, I’m going to say this once more. Leave this topic
alone.”
“He came to you for help,” Wales pushed.
Sylvie said, “I did what I could.” Her throat felt
tight, a little ragged, but the conviction shone through,
surprising even her. The guilt she’d been afraid of for days
crumbled. It was true. She could grieve for Adam Wright’s death;
she could be uncomfortable seeing his body walking around with a
new owner; but ultimately Wright had chosen to die as he’d lived:
helping people.
If she could summon his spirit back from whatever
afterlife he’d found, she thought that Wright’s regrets would be
sharp but few. It might be self-serving thinking—Wales clearly
believed she was to blame—but Sylvie was going to cling to it. She
was tired of grief and guilt.
“So, monsters and dead things that kill cops. You
ready, Ghoul?”
Alex said, “Call Suarez first. He wanted to talk to
you. Wouldn’t leave the message with me. You might let him know
that I’m in on the big stuff; it makes message taking a lot
easier.”
“Hey,” Sylvie said. “Caution’s a nice trait.
’Sides, you ever think that it wasn’t you he was worried about but
whoever might have been listening in on his end? Cop who talks
about magic like a real thing might get a bad reputation pretty
quick.”
She dialed as she spoke, hoping that Suarez’s call
meant he was out of the hospital, hoping he’d be more lucid, could
give her more to go on. She was willing to go out to the Everglades
and play monster-hunter, but she’d prefer all the information she
could get.
The phone clicked over. Lourdes answered. Sylvie
bit her lip, and said, “Adelio Suarez, please,” hoping if she kept
it short, kept it professional, there’d be a chance that the woman
wouldn’t recognize her voice. Lourdes sighed but passed the phone
over.
“Shadows?” Lio asked. “Are you at the site?”
His voice was sharper than it had been yesterday,
less blurred by shock, pain, or drugs. Agitated, though. Sylvie
regretted calling; she knew how this was going to go. Cop stuck in
bed when there were problems to solve—he wanted to backseat
drive.
“Not yet,” Sylvie said. “Did you remember anything
else?”
“Make sure you’re not seen. By the cops, or the
damn strange suits that showed up. And the press is swarming, so
stay out of their way also.”
“Lio—”
“And don’t use my name if you get caught, or call
on me for help. Odalys’s lawyer is screaming, and my name’s not
what it should—”
“Suarez! I get it. Call me if you have something
new to tell me.”
“Tell me what you find.” Suarez got out a final
demand just before Sylvie disconnected. Her nerves felt stung and
jostled; she loathed being treated like an idiot, like a
subordinate. Lio needed to remember he was her client, not her
boss.
“Do you need any stuff before we head out?” Sylvie
asked Wales. He jerked as if she’d caught him doing something other
than eyeing Alex sidelong, then flushed brick red across his pale
cheekbones.
“Stuff?” he asked.
Alex grinned, and Sylvie reminded herself to have
the talk with Alex. No dating necromancers. She took another, more
objective look at Wales. No dating necromancers even if they were
halfway to good-looking by daylight.
“Magical tools?” Sylvie said. “To help at the
scene?”
“Now, see, let’s chat about that for a bit. What
exactly do you want me to do?” He held up a hand, said, “Not that
I’m saying I won’t help. I just want to know what you expect of
me.”
Sylvie sat on the desktop, swung her feet for a
second, thinking. It was a fair question. “To be honest, Wales,
that depends on what you can do. At bare minimum, I’d like you to
take a look at the scene and see if you can sense and/or identify
whether necromancy was used and what its purpose was.”
He frowned, twisted his hands over, stared at his
knuckles. “Yeah,” he said. “I can do that.”
“Special equipment?”
“Just me. And Marco.”
“Marco?” Alex asked.
Sylvie said, “You want to show her Marco?”
Wales rose abruptly and went outside, stood
squinting up at the sun.
Alex wrinkled her brow, gnawed her lip. “So what’d
I say?”
“Marco’s his pet ghost,” Sylvie said. “He carries
Marco’s Hand around in his pocket.”
“His . . . Oh,” Alex said. Her lips tightened. She
pushed her coffee cup away from her as if the cream and sugar had
gone bad.
“Necromancer,” Sylvie said. “Not a clean magic.
Something to remember, Alex.” She pushed off the desk, ambled out
into the sunlight after Wales, and left Alex with something to
think about.
Necromancy left a bad taste in Sylvie’s mouth, more
so than any of the other branches of human magics she’d come
across. It seemed . . . cannibalistic in a way the other branches
didn’t. Witchcraft and sorcery were all about turning the world to
suit yourself. Necromancy was about the unhealthy mingling of life
and death, going so far as to elevate the dead above the
living.
Sylvie climbed into her truck and found Wales
waiting for her, Marco’s Hand in his lap. The sight of it—withered
and dried flesh drawn up tight over muscle turned to jerky, the
fingers curled tight against the palm, the nails rusty gold with
the remnant of old flames—made her already tightened jaw clench
until her teeth creaked.
“So, new deal with Marco. Anything I need to know
about that?”
“Marco and I can interact at will now,” Wales said.
“He doesn’t sleep anymore. Is that what you wanted to know?”
“Jesus, Wales. Does that mean he can soul-bite
people at will? I can’t let—”
“No, no.” Wales shook his head in extra emphasis.
“I still light him up for that. Just . . . he’s around now. That’s
all I’m going to tell you.”
Sylvie licked her lips, tasted cool air on her
tongue, and wondered with a shudder if the chill was Marco’s
influence or her laboring air conditioner. “You must have been
crazy lonely when you thought that mod up,” she said, and got a
glare in response.
“Look,” she said. “You didn’t approve of Odalys’s
modifying the Hands. What am I supposed to think when you start
messing around in the same—”
“I’m not her,” Wales said. “I know what I’m doing.”
And that was the first taste of sorcerous arrogance he’d ever given
off. Pride in his abilities. Interesting.
Sylvie pulled the truck out into traffic, and said,
“So you’re more powerful than you like to let on. That’s fair. I
understand the urge to fly under the radar. Got a question for you,
though. Can you yank a possessing ghost out of a body?”
“Thought you didn’t blame your man—Demalion, was
it?”
“Not him,” Sylvie said. “Odalys had one success.
There’s a teenage body walking around Coconut Grove with an old
murderer in her skin.”
“Double-souled?”
“No, the original’s gone. Devoured.”
“So, you just want to drop her dead in her tracks?
But you’ll let your boyfriend keep his new body?”
“He didn’t kill anyone to get it. Look, can you do
it or not?”
Wales shrugged. “Depends. A soul that’s crossed
death shouldn’t fit all that well in living flesh. But it adapts.
Like a new organ, rejection’s a risk, especially in the
beginning.”
“Can you eyeball that? Get me an idea of how
fragile she is?”
“I ain’t killing her,” Wales said. “I got some
sense of self-preservation. I don’t want the cops coming up with my
name when they’ve got a body they can’t explain.”
Sylvie said, “Fine.” She could work on changing his
mind later. Hell, he’d been angry on Wright’s behalf—how much
angrier would he be once he saw Bella? Or the body that had been
Bella. Wales was a man and a Texan at that. Young, attractive . . .
murdered? She bet Bella would push all his buttons.
“All right. We’re going to give the cops and the
press a little bit longer to get out of the Everglades. We’re going
to swing by and visit Patrice. If I’m paying you a consulting fee
for the day, I’m going to get my money’s worth.”

SYLVIE PULLED UP JUST AS PATRICE WAS LETTING
HERSELF OUT OF her house. It was worthy of a photo shoot, the young
woman in a sheer sundress on a picturesque front stoop, all
smoothed Mexican-tile steps, wrought-iron banister, and flowering
bougainvillea.
Patrice saw Sylvie’s truck and hesitated, her hand
on the door latch. Then she closed the door behind her, stepped out
into the sunlit day, and turned her face up as if to bask in it, a
gloat that she was alive to enjoy the day. Silver hoops dangled
from her ears, small rubies glinting at the bottoms of the
curves.
Sylvie climbed out of the truck; Patrice cocked one
hip, leaned up against the banister, and waited for Sylvie to reach
her.
“Shadows,” she said, taking the battle directly to
Sylvie. “I could have a restraining order taken out against
you.”
“So why don’t you? Afraid your new parents wouldn’t
understand? How’s that working out for you . . . Bella? You all
still a happy family? Or do they get it, deep down, that you’re not
their daughter? You’re the woman who killed her.” Sylvie’s voice
was thin and tight, a thread of rage well controlled. Patrice could
in fact have a restraining order signed out; the Alvarezes were
rich, well connected, played golf with an entire courtroom’s worth
of judges and lawyers.
Wales stepped out of the truck, impatient,
graceless, drawing Patrice’s attention. Patrice stiffened all over
as if she recognized Wales. Or at least the threat he might pose to
a newly embodied ghost. She relaxed when Wales lounged back against
the side of the truck, squinting at her.
“You know,” Sylvie said, “you’re a cliché, Patrice.
An old woman clinging to youth, and really? A dress that short? At
your age?”
Patrice growled, a rattle in her throat that
sounded like Death given voice and nothing like a teenager.
“Having trouble keeping up the part?” Sylvie asked.
“You’re not a good actor. How’s the body fitting? Chafing? Coming
loose around the edges?”
“Is that your plan?” Patrice said. “Shake me from
my flesh? It is mine. I’ve taken
precautions to keep my soul in this flesh. This very lovely flesh.
So your pet necromancer can’t do squat. I don’t think I ever
enjoyed my body this much before. When I was a teen, it was the
thirties. Good girls didn’t get spray tans, hair extensions, bikini
waxes. . . . And the cosmetics are to die for.” She pulled a
lipstick from her pocket, glossed her lips, and blew a kiss at
Sylvie.
She shot a quick glance at Wales, who dropped his
chin in a reluctant nod. Patrice was telling the truth. She’d
stolen that body, and now she’d strung it tight with antitheft
security.
Her temper flared as red-hot as the lipstick.
Sylvie snatched it away from Patrice, then found herself possessed
by a wicked inspiration. “Trusting to magic to protect you? Let’s
see what it can do against this.” She sketched a bloody symbol with
the lipstick across the yellow enamel paint of the front door. A
rough, enigmatic image, two flat circles, two attached triangles, a
line binding them together. Patrice drew back, her breath slipping
through clenched teeth as if waiting for an axe to fall.
When nothing happened except Sylvie throwing the
ruined lipstick at her feet, Patrice laughed. “What’s that supposed
to do?”
“You’ll find out,” Sylvie said. “Watch your back,
Patrice. I will be.”
She turned, dragged Wales away from his
brow-wrinkled contemplation of the lipstick sigil, and drove them
off.
It was a mile or so down the road that he spoke.
“So what all was that about? What’d you try to bring down on her
head?”
“Nothing at all,” Sylvie gritted out. “It was a
bluff. She just pissed me off. If I can’t kill her, and you can’t
evict her—”
He shook his head. “She’s wrapped up good and tight
in some type of protection spell. I don’t have the magic to even
slow her down.”
“Then the least I can do is scare her, maybe make
her day run rough.”
“A bluff?”
“It’s a petty victory,” Sylvie said. “I know that.”
God, did she know that; her internal voice was still demanding
bloodshed, hadn’t been appeased at all. Its appetite had only been
sharpened by the brief fear on Patrice’s face. “Sometimes,” she
told Wales. “Sometimes, just making’em flinch feels good.”
Another several miles, and he said, “Are you sure
it was random? It’s just . . . It kind of struck me familiar like.
Something I’ve seen before.”
Her hands tightened on the wheel. It felt familiar
to her, too. Not the look of it, but the creation, the motion of
it. It mimicked the blade work her little dark voice had guided her
through in her dream.
“Probably,” Sylvie agreed. “It’s not like I wander
around memorizing random magical sigils. It’s probably some
company’s logo. I’ve probably just invoked the wrath of Starbucks
on her ass.”
Wales’s lips twitched, creased in a smile.
“Starbucks is a curse all on its own.”

BY THE TIME THEY MADE IT OUT TO THE EVERGLADES,
THE SUN WAS AT full zenith, and the road before them was smudgy
with heat mirage. Sylvie wondered if it was the idea of slogging
through the heat of the day or a fear of the unknown that made
Wales relax into a tiny smile when the nearest access point to the
crime scene was still jammed with cars—cops and press alike.
“Don’t get your hopes up,” Sylvie said, driving by.
“We’re going around back. The route Tatya took me.” She cast
another glance over her shoulder at the huddle of press drinking
sodas out of their cars, AC cranked high, and thought maybe Cachita
had a point. Reporters should be like Kipling’s mongoose, filled
with the need to “Go and find out.”
He sighed, and said, “You sure about this? It’s not
wise.”
“Client wants what the client wants,” Sylvie said.
It was easiest to think of Suarez that way. She owed him a favor;
he had things he wanted explained. Therefore: client. Though she’d
better set Alex on to a bunch of the littler cases—spouse
shadowing, background checks, and the like—or they wouldn’t have
enough money to pay Wales and Tatya, not to mention the rent and
themselves.
Bright side was, keeping Alex out and about made
her less a sitting duck should the nameless witch make another
attempt on the office and Sylvie. Downside, Alex would bitch. She
hated doing research on the run.
Sylvie turned off the main road two miles farther
on, trading asphalt for dirt and limestone gravel, a sandy, weedy
stretch of lane just wide enough for her truck.
“They won’t notice us coming ’round the back?”
Wales asked, found his own answer as the track they were on curved
abruptly, taking them away from the scene of the crime. Sylvie
continued the drive for another few minutes until she spotted the
tiny yellow flag planted near the base of some scrub.
She pulled the truck over and cut the engine; it
gave a diesel cough and left them in silence. “ATV track. We’ll
have to walk it, but it should bring us up pretty close, then we
can just wait for them to clear out.”
He whined in his seat, and she said, “I brought
snacks?”
He opened the door, and said, “Hope you brought
water. Hot as fuck out there.”
“A Texas boy complaining about the heat?” Sylvie
said.
“A Texas boy smart enough to make a career in Web
design. Indoors. You know. Before.”
Before the Magicus Mundi
stuck its fingers into his life, changed his path.
“There’s water in the lockbox; never travel without
it.” She chucked the keys at him. “Come on, Tex.”
“Tex?”
“You rather I go back to calling you Ghoul?”
The walk they took was quiet, almost pleasant—the
scuff of their shoes in the trail dust, carefully carved along what
passed for high ground in the ’Glades. Wales wasn’t a chatterer,
just slunk along beside her, studying the landscape—all grey-green
and gold—with the curiosity of a man who spent the better part of
his life between four walls. There was water moving nearby, some
slow tidal wash created by something moving through the river
marsh. Turtle, maybe a soft-shelled slider, all push and glide. Her
school field trips were years and an entire world away.
Even the heat wasn’t too bad, not yet; Sylvie felt
her bones relax like caramel beneath the sunlight’s weight.
It took her long minutes to realize that the sun
wasn’t doing its job any longer, that despite the peace and quiet
and the pressing warmth that urged languor, the muscles along her
spine were slowly tightening, the sweat-damp hair at her nape
prickling.
Beside her, Wales’s head was up, looking around
with more intent than before. No longer a tourist in a strange
world but prey sensing a predator. His lips moved silently, some
conversation not meant for her ears. Meant for his ghost companion,
maybe.
Sylvie swallowed, her throat dry with more than
heat and exertion. The sounds about them—plop of water, rustling
grass, the cry of distant birds—just reminded her of how much was
unseen around them. She settled a hand on her gun, the other locked
tight around a water bottle, and tried not to think about
alligators or panthers or any other predators that might be out
there.
“Wales?” she said.
He shook his head briefly, and she wasn’t sure if
it was in response to her implied question or if he was still
focused on Marco and hadn’t heard her at all.
Sylvie checked her mental map. They were nearing
the crime scene; some of the bird-cry sound might actually be human
voices twisted by distance and the wind over the water. She licked
her lips, thought, Go back? Give up because she got spooked? She
felt like something was watching them—so what? That was the state
of the world. Nature was nosy.
She stiffened her shoulders, twist-tied her empty
water bottle to a belt loop to get her hands free. “Pick up the
pace,” she said, and moved on. She didn’t give up, and she didn’t
turn tail without good reason. Sometimes, not even then.
They smelled the scene before they saw it, Wales
wrinkling his nose against the stinging, acrid scent of burned
metal and gasoline. Sylvie thought that was darkly funny. The
Ghoul, thinking a little bit of char was bad? Then the breeze
shifted and brought the underlying scent to her—burned flesh. She
dropped her gaze and concentrated on breathing, trying not to think
of the cops who had died.
The ground at her feet was growing dark and damp.
They were leaving the ridge of the ATV trail, and the water level
was rising. The saturated soil had taken on an oily sheen,
contaminated by the explosion. It made the footing more slippery
than it should have been, like a tattered carpet laid over grease.
The bird cry of voices stabilized, became the sporadic chatter of
men and women trying to piece together a puzzle they didn’t
understand, frustrated outbursts that allowed single words to drift
in Sylvie’s direction.
Not finding any signs of a
bomb.
Is that an alligator
tooth?
Should have brought a porta
potty.
Wales said, “So, what’s the plan?” His voice was a
whisper, and even then, she twitched at the sound of it. The sense
of being watched was still strong and sharp in her blood.
But there was nothing in any direction that she
could see. The slough ahead of them, ground ceding to water. The
hammock to their distant left, a low smudge of trees on the
horizon, crackling with birds.
Be careful, her little dark
voice murmured. Some things don’t need eyes to
see.
Sylvie shut it down. One paranoid companion per
expedition was enough. Another last glance—saw grass, hammock,
slough, the seeping track behind them, and sounds of life
everywhere: frogs, birds, the rustle of quick lizards. Maybe there
had been something or someone watching. Something that had been
still enough not to spook the wildlife. Or maybe it had been and
gone, and the only spectators they needed to worry about were the
police.
Stay careful.
“You getting anything at all?” she asked, keeping
her voice to a hush. “You picking up anything death-magical?”
“From this distance? No.”
“So we wait for the cops to leave, then.” Sylvie
hesitated. Waiting had sounded okay in her office, but in the
actual ’Glades? For one thing, they weren’t that well hidden, not
by the landscape, anyway. But if they retreated, they could miss
any narrow window of opportunity that might present itself.
“They look pretty damned entrenched to me. I’m not
really in love with the idea of waiting until past dark to do my
look around.”
“You and me both,” Sylvie said. The idea of
lingering out there, exposed in the tall grass, was bad enough in
daylight. In the dark? “We’ve got to get closer.”
“All right,” he said.
He drew out Marco’s Hand and his lighter, and
Sylvie said, “Wait, what?”
“What’d you think I was going to do?” Wales asked.
“Put on a suit and pretend to be a cop? Sorry. I got just one spell
that’ll get us up close.”
Sylvie growled. “You want me to ignore the fact
that lighting up Marco is going to result in soul shock for people
who already feel fragile? Some of those cops are cleaning up bits
of their colleagues.”
Wales shrugged. “Then you should have brought a
different type of witch,” he said. “One who could send them off
chasing a will-o’-the-wisp or give them the compulsion to go back
to the station. But you pissed off the local witches, and now
you’ve just got me.”
You could have called on
Zoe, Sylvie’s little dark voice whispered.
That was enough to steel her spine. Bad enough her
little sister had gotten a yen for practicing magic, worse that she
showed talent enough she had to be trained, worst of all would be
Sylvie’s encouraging her.
Two types of pragmatism warred in her, and,
finally, she just shook it all off. “You light Marco, and I go
down, too. I’ve had enough soul shock for a while.”
Wales frowned. “There is that.” He set Marco’s Hand
down on the grass, fumbled through his pockets some more. Sylvie
kept a close eye on the Hand of Glory. Last thing they needed was
some random raccoon running off with it. Problem with nature. It
was always lurking, always hungry.
“Ah,” Wales said, drew out a pocketknife, a
convenience-store special, the kind that lived in plastic bins
beside the dollar lighters. “Blood’ll do it.”
“Yours or mine?” she murmured, but the question was
already answered. Wales dragged the thin, brittle blade across the
heel of his hand, left a bloody smile slowly forming. He wiped the
blade on his jeans, shoved it back into his pocket, then dipped his
fingers into the blood.
“Hold still,” he said, brought his fingers toward
her face.
She shied back. “Blood goes where exactly?”
“On your skin,” Wales said. “So Marco knows you’re
part of me.”
“Marco was licking your
blood earlier—”
“He won’t lick this,” Wales said. “Trust me.”
He touched her cheeks, two quick strokes and a
squiggle, some symbol she couldn’t see; the temperature of her
body, the heat of the day, was such that she didn’t feel the
dampness at first, only smelled the old-penny copper of it.
Then it started to trickle sluggishly down her
skin, nothing like sweat, sticky and already going rank. She had to
force herself to hold still for the next two touches, marking her
forehead and chin. No point in doing this half-assed, and she
really didn’t like the idea of having her soul munched on by a
ghost who wasn’t all that fond of her.
The last time she’d seen Marco—more than just his
remnant Hand—he’d gotten in her face and told her he killed women
like her.
If there was anything that would break the deal
between Wales and his pet ghost, it would probably be her:
Recidivism was more than just a word, after all, and while alive,
Marco had made a habit of killing women.
She was trusting Wales on two fronts here—that he
knew what he was doing and that his word was good—and that made her
nearly as edgy as the hunt they were on. She watched him, her
vision narrowing until the flick of the lighter, his long, pale
fingers, and bony knuckles, the quick and tiny spill of sparks, got
eaten by the wash of the Hand of Glory coming alight.
The last time she’d seen Marco, they’d been
confined and close in a single room. The last time she’d seen
ghosts, they’d been focused on their victims. Both events left her
utterly unprepared for the speed of Marco now.
Her breath went out in a rush, and Marco breezed
through the small crowd of policemen and technicians, bending
close, sending them into unconsciousness with a kiss—a bite—before they could even realize something was
happening.
Marco moved like wind, a grey shape in the air,
unfettered by human requirements of energy or space. He blew
through the equipment, set one machine to shrieking an alarm, and
took out the technician before she had time to turn her head. The
woman crumpled, face-first, and Wales hissed in disapproval.
“What is it?” Sylvie said.
“Hurry up, hurry up!” Wales
muttered more to himself than her, then broke, running with
graceless haste through the slough, going knee deep in places,
forcing his way through, leaving a muddy wake. Sylvie, finding a
drier path, finally saw what Wales, with his greater height, had
seen: The female technician was facedown in the water.
Marco hadn’t changed at all since his death. Sylvie
wished she could be surprised.