9
The Girl Reporter and the
God
CACHITA LIVED IN AN OLD TWENTIES-ERA HOUSE, ALL
CURVED stucco arches and rounded corners, and the cracked tiles
were soft and sandy beneath Sylvie’s shoes. Cachita’s heels made
small gritty rasps as she led the way in. Sudden movement drew
Sylvie’s attention: In the tiny, overgrown garden, a cat streaked
after a pallid gecko that made the mistake of touching
ground.
As she watched, more sinuous forms took shape,
slinking curls of shadows; every bush seemed to have a cat beneath
it.
“My neighbor’s a cat lady,” Cachita said. She
seemed embarrassed. “So of course, her cats use my yard as their
litter box. If I were the house-proud type, I’d be on the phone to
the landlord so fast—”
She flipped on the light, gestured Sylvie inside,
and shut the door behind them. Paper rustled with their entrance,
and Sylvie blinked.
Cachita might be computer savvy, but she loved her paper. The living-room wall was a shaggy
mess of printouts stapled directly into the stucco.
Definitely not the house-proud type, Sylvie thought
with a hidden grin. Then she saw the subject of the files, and her
smile faded. There were easily two hundred sheets stapled on top of
each other, next to each other, overlapping, underpinned, a
combination of photographs and text, and one entire row seemed
dedicated to Sylvie herself.
Cachita even had a photograph of her, scowling into
a paper cup of coffee. Sylvie recognized that moment; she’d ordered
an Americano and been given a mocha. It was the morning she’d taken
Detective Lio Suarez to see what had become of his son’s killers.
She’d been tense and cranky and apparently careless enough to miss
someone snapping candids.
“Don’t get weird,” Cachita said. “I’m not a
stalker. I just believe in knowing my subjects.”
“I thought you were concerned with the missing
women,” Sylvie said. “Not a PI.”
“Hey, you’ve got a rep,” Cachita said. “You think
I’d just walk up to you without knowing what to expect?” She tapped
a cluster of papers, six deep, and said, “Testimonials, of a
sort.”
Sylvie yanked them from the wall, folded them
tight, and shoved them into her bag. “Leave me out of your
surveillance,” she said.
“Paranoid,” Cachita said. “Leave that alone and
look at this.” She kicked off her shoes, padded over to her laptop,
and plugged in the memory stick.
Sylvie took a couple of steps toward her, then
froze. A picture and a name. Jennifer Costas. A high-school glamour
shot, all soft focus and dreamy smile. Sylvie thought of Jennifer
screaming, burning beneath a god’s touch, and looked away.
Guess her research wasn’t that
bad after all.
Sylvie moved to the next picture—unfamiliar—and the
next—familiar. She compared the woman to
her memory and made a match. Lupe Fernandez, one of the spellbound
women. A college student at Miami Dade Community College, according
to Cachita’s notes, in the nursing program. Lupe grinned in her
photo, an arm slung around another girl, both of them wearing
rainbow beads.
She looked at the wall again. If each row was a
woman—
She swallowed. There were far more than five women
missing. And Cachita hadn’t had Maria Ruben on her list.
Christ, her city was under siege, and she hadn’t
even noticed.
“The first one, Ana Cortez, disappeared two months
ago,” Cachita said. Sylvie studied the picture, but it was
unfamiliar. If Azpiazu’s descendant had taken her, she was dead and
gone already, her body sunk somewhere in the Everglades, alligator
food.
“How many?”
Cachita lifted a shoulder. “There are seventeen
women who’ve gone missing in the city that I know of. Out of those,
thirteen seem like they might be related to this bastard. There’s a
type he goes for.”
“Young, Hispanic, female.”
“Atheist. At least, most of them.”
She gestured at a cluster of photographs. Sylvie
picked out three more familiar faces: Anamaria Garcia, student
teacher; Rita Martinez, bartender, single parent—a secondary photo
of a young girl was stapled beneath; and Jennifer Costas’s
replacement, stolen just the night before, Elena Llosa. The girl
was ridiculously young, made Sylvie think of Zoe. Her hand fell to
her cell phone in her pocket, but she refrained. What would she
say? “Just thinking about you”? “Hoping you’re careful”? At best,
she’d get a huff of irritation. At worst, a pissed-off teenager
asserting her independence.
“Atheist,” Sylvie said. That was unusual. Most of Miami’s Hispanic
population were brought up in a dozen shades of religious.
Everything from holiday devotions to daily prayers. Young women who
were atheist enough to make it a real point in their lives were not
that common.
It made sense, though, went with Jennifer Costas’s
ghostly lament. If Azpiazu was bartering with the women’s souls for
a god’s aid, the women would have to be atheist. A god stealing
another god’s follower was more than a divine faux pas; it was an
act of war that could ripple through the pantheons.
“I was hoping to find a smoking gun, something I
could use to warn his next targets. But atheists are still a huge
pool,” Cachita said. “No way to get the word out, no way to home in
on his next victim. And with this many, I have to assume there are
going to be more.”
Sylvie looked back at the older “missings” and
shuddered. Cachita had found thirteen that fit the sorcerer’s need.
“He’s burning through them. They’re not lasting long enough.”
“Burning—”
Sylvie bit her lip, and Cachita said, “Please,
Sylvie. I need to know what he’s doing.”
“Why do you care so much?” Sylvie said. “You a
Magicus Mundi junkie? Can’t get enough of
magical mayhem?”
Cachita yanked a photo from the older column; the
staple stayed behind, a shiny scar in the soft plaster. Sylvie
stared at it, and reluctantly took the slick paper. She let her
gaze drift down. Elena Valdes.
Valdes.
Elena Valdes.
Caridad Valdes-Pedraza.
Sister? Cousins?
It was a common enough name, but Cachita’s face was
clenched tight, all her confidence washed away and replaced by
misery. “She’s been gone for seven weeks. I think she’s dead. I
know she’s dead. She wouldn’t leave her
family otherwise. You said he’s burning through them?”
Sylvie closed her eyes. Fuck, but she hated giving
out bad news. “The sorcerer’s cursed. He’s using the women to
control his curse. Binding them into the spell. Filtering the
inimical power. The curse comes in, strikes the women, and he pulls
out enough cleaned-up power to control his shape-shifting. But it’s
hard on them, and eventually, they . . .”
They didn’t just die. He killed them. Took their
hearts, devoured their souls. But why? How did that match with the
assumption that he was offering their souls to the god?
It didn’t.
Soul-devourer, Wales had said. He dealt with the
dead. He’d be familiar with the leftovers after a god took a soul.
No one called that soul-devouring. That was just the natural state
of things.
The sorcerer was doing more than just bartering the
women’s souls.
Sylvie’s stomach churned with fury. She was working
for this son of a bitch. Helping him when he’d already killed more
women than she could save.
“Is that how he’s doing it?” Cachita murmured.
“That bastard.”
Her body was one tight shiver of emotion. Sylvie
couldn’t read it, but it looked painful. Cachita might be a
crusader for truth, but that didn’t mean truth couldn’t hurt
her.
“We have a lead on him,” Sylvie said. She didn’t
mention that she’d met the sorcerer. The shame of it lingered in
her skin. She was helping him. But not for any longer than
necessary. If Wales could break the spell. If they could free the
women. If she could put a bullet in his brain. “There’s a sorcerous
Basque lineage—”
“Eladio Azpiazu,” Cachita said. “I know.”
“How’d you find that name?” Sylvie said. “Alex tell
you?” Bad enough that Alex had told Cachita where to find her. To
share case info?
Cachita said, “You’re standing in the middle of
weeks of research. Do you think I need to crib info from your
assistant? I have my sources. You made yourself unpopular with the
sorcerous community, and Alex is well-known as your girl Friday.
I’m an unknown. They talked to me.”
“Share,” Sylvie said. She pulled out a chair from
the dining-room table; the wood scraped unpleasantly along the tile
and made her tight nerves wind tighter. Cachita folded herself onto
it, resting her hands on the heavy arms of the chair, leaned her
head back.
“They say,” Cachita said, “that the Eladio Azpiazu
who’s around now is the same Eladio Azpiazu who was around then.
That there’s only ever been one of him. A murderous power-hungry
monster who experimented on and took the heart of every
shape-shifter that crossed his path. The soul-devourer.”
“It’s not the same man,” Sylvie said. “It might be
the same name.” Sorcerers weren’t immortal. They weren’t even
particularly long-lived. Their lifestyle tended to be hard on them,
and their apprentices usually turned against them.
“They say it is,” Cachita said. “They say he got
cursed by another sorcerer; that all his stolen power would
backfire and make him the monster forever. A punishment he richly
deserved—” Her voice dropped to a growl. “And now he’s pushing it
off onto innocents!” The wall of photos should have withered
beneath the heat of her gaze.
“It doesn’t work that way,” Sylvie said. “Think
about it, Cachita. If sorcerers could grant immortality, don’t you
think they’d apply it to themselves first? Not their
enemies.”
Cachita’s angry gaze shifted. “I’m telling you the
truth,” she snapped. Then she let out her breath. “Sorry. That’s
what they told me.”
“Did they tell you anything about the sorcerer who
cursed him? Tepé?”
Cachita chewed her lip, white teeth denting red
gloss, taking on a bit of the color. “They say . . . They say that
he cursed Azpiazu in the eighteen hundreds.”
Sylvie frowned. That couldn’t be true either. Not
if Azpiazu expected her to deal with Tepé in modern day. Sylvie
might have gaps in her mundi education, but
that was one thing she was certain of: Immortality was bestowed by
the gods, and only by the gods. Even the
Sphinx wasn’t immortal. Only impossibly long-lived.
Cachita looked up from beneath dark lashes, and
said, “They say that Tepeyollotl cursed him because Azpiazu took
his last acolyte.”
Sylvie went abruptly cold. Acolyte wasn’t a regular word in the sorcerous
community. Apprentice. Follower. Novice. Yes.
Acolyte was a godly word.
And Tepeyollotl was a far cry from the simple and
fairly mundane Tepé. Sylvie knew that name
from Mesoamerican history. Tepeyollotl was an Aztec god.
No wonder Azpiazu had been coy about his enemy. No
wonder he had recruited her. The new Lilith. The one who could kill
the unkillable. She hadn’t been drafted to break a curse, no matter
his claims. Azpiazu expected her to kill a god.

SYLVIE PULLED OUT ANOTHER HEAVY CHAIR AND DROPPED
INTO IT. Tepeyollotl. A god.
She put her face in her hands. Going up against a
sorcerer could be difficult enough. But a god . . .
“Sylvie?” Cachita said. She squeaked when Sylvie
jerked to her feet, started pacing the room. The movement felt
good, eased the shake in her bones. A god.
Maybe she didn’t have to approach him as an
enemy.
Yeah, right, her little
voice growled. He’s not going to care about
five mortal women.
Depressingly true. It was like one of those damn
SAT analogies. God is to man as man is to insect. Interaction was
based on either ignoring the lesser creature, controlling it, or,
occasionally, swatting it.
Still. He cared enough about a mortal to curse
Azpiazu in the first place, Sylvie thought. Assuming Cachita’s
thirdhand story had truth to it. Tepeyollotl might care that
Azpiazu had found a loophole in his punishment.
Or he might be on the other side of the magical
divide, mourning his glory days, too lazy to be bothered with human
insecta.
Azpiazu had told Sylvie that Tepé would follow him;
but then again, Azpiazu expected attention, demanded it. Sylvie had
only met the sorcerer once, but she had that much of his
personality figured out. Sociopath. Attention whore. It was all
about him. Either his fear of Tepé was inherent and false, or a
frightening possibility. Gods ruined every party they
crashed.
It still didn’t make sense. If Azpiazu was cursed
by Tepeyollotl, bartering with another god couldn’t happen: “Curse”
or “claim,” the words meant the same thing in divine circles.
There was no way that Azpiazu was bartering with
one god to keep another one at bay. But if he was dedicating the
souls to Tepeyollotl, if he was trying to appease the god . . .
That wasn’t it either.
Somehow, Azpiazu was using Tepeyollotl’s own power
against him. Using Tepeyollotl’s strength to hide from
Tepeyollotl’s curse.
The god wouldn’t stand for that. He’d come
searching for his prey. Azpiazu had said as much.
“Sylvie?” Cachita said again. This time, when she
spoke, Sylvie ceased her pacing all at once, found her breath
rasping in her throat.
If Tepeyollotl were in the area, the world would
bend around him. When the god of Justice had walked the streets,
the world had rippled and changed according to his will. And he’d
been trying to keep the damage minimal.
If Tepeyollotl were in Florida, there would be
signs. Undeniable signs.
“Cachita,” she said.
The woman jumped. The chair rattled against the
floor like a chattering of teeth, and Sylvie said, “You brought me
here to show me your files.”
Cachita nodded. “The women—”
“You’ve got more on the board than just the women,”
Sylvie said. She’d get to the women later. Their information could
be easily digested. Tepeyollotl required more thought.
“Where they were last seen, that sort of
thing.”
“You’ve been hunting Azpiazu. How?”
Cachita frowned. “You know
how—”
“How do you choose the clubs you do?”
“Oh!” Cachita said. “Weird shit happening around
them. Like the Casa de Dia restaurant. A man who was a monster. Or
a wolf seen in the streets. A street where all the lights failed at
once. No explanation. Or other things that might be magic.”
Sylvie graced the woman with an honest smile.
Cachita wasn’t Alex. Lacked the intuition that made Alex a gem. But
she wasn’t that bad. “Things that might be magic. Like . . .”
Cachita said, “Like a murder?”
“Are you asking?” Sylvie said. “Or telling
me?”
Cachita shook her head. “Sorry. I meant, there have
been some weird murders in the last couple of days. People with
their heads torn right off—”
“That’s . . . special,” Sylvie agreed. “But not
what I’m looking for.” Murder was pretty direct for a god; she was
expecting smaller, more pervasive things. World-warping
things.
“You don’t think so?” Cachita asked. “There are
some strange circumstances—they were all killed behind locked
doors.”
“Were they bastards?” Sylvie said. “’Cause murder’s
easy. Sorcerers. Witches. Human hit men. Hell, corrupt cops can
call a crime scene secured when it’s not. I’m looking for really
weird. Like el monstruo.”
Cachita said, “I’ll keep looking. It would help if
you’d let me in on your epiphany. Tepeyollotl means something to
you.” Eagerness sharpened her voice. “You know something about him.
Tell me. How do you deal with him?”
Sylvie dropped into a chair, studied Cachita across
the table, trying to figure out how this was going to go. There was
a quantifiable difference, Sylvie had noticed, between someone
accepting the sorcerers and monsters of the Magicus Mundi and accepting the gods.
“If the stories you heard are true—if Azpiazu is
the original recipe, then Tepeyollotl is a god.”
Cachita’s lips parted. She looked . . . rapt. “A
god,” she whispered. Sylvie fought off a shiver. Cachita was a
junkie for the Magicus Mundi, which meant
working with her was about as safe as working with a known spy. She
could go double agent at the drop of a hat, or magical bribe.
“How do you deal with a god?” she went on to ask.
“How do you talk to one? Do you think he’ll help you?” Lip-lick.
Dilated eyes. Could be fear; could be excitement. Could be both.
Cachita seemed like the type to enjoy a scare. “Help us?”
Sylvie grimaced briefly. “Gods are bad news,
Cachita. They don’t make a habit of helping. At least not in my
experience. Tepeyollotl cursed Azpiazu. I don’t think asking him to
remove the curse is going to go over well. Gods don’t like to
change their minds.”
Cachita said, “But Azpiazu’s not suffering. He’s
pushing it onto others. That’s not what Tepeyollotl intended. He’s
probably furious. Probably ready to punish Azpiazu all over again.
If he could find him. And if you, if we,
tell him about the binding spell in detail, I bet he could find
Azpiazu again. . . .”
“And the women?” Sylvie said. “I’m all for Azpiazu
getting his just deserts, but Tepeyollotl won’t care about the
women. Their souls are already his; living or dead, it’s the same
to him.” She wrapped her arms about herself, remembering the hotel
room, hiding from that angry, hungry force coming to claim
Jennifer.
“Look, Cachita, for all we know, Azpiazu’s
curse is specifically designed to feed
souls to Tepeyollotl. Aztec gods are big on sacrifice. So,
Tepeyollotl’s hitting the mundane world’s about as safe as standing
at ground zero when a volcano erupts. People will die. Depending on
how much power Tepeyollotl wields, a lot of people.”
Something brushed against the wall, a rasp behind
the paper, and Sylvie jumped, realized that Cachita had taped her
files right over the window. She peeled back the nearest sheaf of
files, and a cat leaped off the narrow sill, slinking back into the
depths of the overgrown yard.
“That bad?” Cachita said.
“With gods, it’s best to think worst-case scenario.
Best to solve it ourselves and keep Tepeyollotl from even getting
involved.”
Cachita said, “You make it sound like kids cleaning
up a mess before Mom gets home. How do you hide things from a god?”
Cachita had finally caught Sylvie’s growing fear. Her questions
were whispers; her eyes flicked around the room as if she expected
eavesdroppers.
“Azpiazu’s apparently found a way,” Sylvie said.
“But mostly, it’s about acting quickly and not getting their
attention in the first place.” She grimaced. Don’t get their attention. Easy enough to say, but
their entire plan—breaking the binding spell—hinged on doing
something that would set off the equivalent of a neon sign flashing
for Tepeyollotl’s attention.
“The binding sigils,” Cachita said. “Can I have
copies of them? Maybe I can get some help?”
Sylvie said, “I don’t have them with me.” It was a
lie, but the last thing Cachita needed was to start messing around
with magic. “I’ve got someone researching them.”
“The Ghoul?” Cachita asked. “He has them?”
Sylvie scowled. “Christ, you are a stalker.”
“I just . . . Those women are in danger,” Cachita
said. “I want to help.”
Sylvie sighed. As determined as Alex. She wanted to
be useful. Sylvie wanted to use her. Problem was, Sylvie couldn’t
trust her. From the furrow in her brow, Cachita was picking up on
that. The space between them, littered with names of dead or dying
women, grew tense.
“Tell me about those murders, again,” Sylvie said.
It was a peace offering of sorts.
“You’ll tell me what the Ghoul finds out?” Cachita
countered.
“Sure,” Sylvie said. She might. When Hell froze
over. Cachita might want to dive headfirst into the doings of gods
and sorcerers, but she didn’t know what she was asking for.
Gatekeeper’s a thankless
job, her voice reminded her. And often
futile.
Sylvie ignored it. Cachita might be overeager,
potentially treacherous, but she didn’t deserve to get ground up by
the Magicus Mundi. Later, when her first
excitement had burned off, she’d thank Sylvie.
Cachita eyed her, as if everything she’d thought
had been clear on her face, and she was deciding whether to let it
slide or pick a fight right then, right there.
Sylvie leaned back in the chair, listening to the
wood creak faintly, and put her feet on the table. “The
murders?”
Cachita caved. “Three of them over the last two
days. Two men, one woman. Heads—”
“—torn right off, I remember,” Sylvie said.
Interest sparked despite herself. Three people, two days. Someone
was busy. And strong. Cut off could be done by anyone with a sharp
enough tool and a strong enough stomach. Torn off was monster
territory.
If they’d all been women, Sylvie might have
considered Azpiazu for it, but Miami was a big city. Big enough for
multiple monsters. She reminded herself that she wasn’t a
crusader.
“No one’s freaking out about it because they
weren’t great people. A drive-by shooter who killed a kid. A rapist
who preyed on schoolgirls. A woman who drove her car through a
playground during recess. No one’s really mourning them.”
“Kids damaged each time,” Sylvie said. A signature.
But not Azpiazu’s. She didn’t know enough about Tepeyollotl to make
a judgment. She didn’t think he was doing it himself, but gods
could radiate influence. When Kevin Dunne, the god of Justice, had
sought his missing lover, the police had turned all their energies
to doing his will.
“You think it means something?” Cachita
asked.
“Yeah. But not my something. Azpiazu’s enough to
deal with,” Sylvie said. “I can’t afford to be distracted.” Easy to
say, hard to do. She was distracted. Odalys
threatened her friends and family. Patrice was trying to kill
her.
Sylvie scrubbed at her face as if she could scrape
off the day’s accumulated frustrations. Outside in the garden, cats
screamed, and Sylvie twitched.
Cachita said, “It’s late. We can talk about it in
the morning. Are you staying? I’ve got a guest room.”
“Yeah, why not,” Sylvie said. Ungracious, but she
was thinking about being greeted at sunrise with Cachita’s
eagerness to go play with magic, as mindless as a puppy wanting to
chase cars on the freeway.
Her ringing phone gave her an excuse to wave
Cachita off; she picked it up, stepped out onto a back porch that
stank of tomcat.
“So, Shadows, you dead or what?” Wales asked. His
drawl clipped off most of the consonants, turned sarcasm into a
tired slurry of words.
“Not yet,” she said. His exhaustion was a weight on
the line; it made her confession that much harder to voice. She
never liked admitting she screwed up. “Hey, Tex? I slipped up. Let
that damned reporter know about the sigils. She might come sniffing
around, asking questions. For her own good, don’t talk to
her.”
There was a long pause on the line, a heavy sigh.
“You’re worried about her?”
“You’re cautious,” she said. “You know what can go
wrong. It’s all shiny, new, and exciting to her. She wants to
play—”
“Idiot,” he muttered. “Keep her away from me. Lois
Lanes get the good guys killed in the real world.”
“Speaking of getting killed,” she said.
“Aw fuck,” he said. “No good ever came of a
sentence begun like that, Shadows.”
“You remember that Tepé the soul-devourer talked
about?”
“You got a lead on him?”
“Tepeyollotl.”
Wales was quiet a long moment, then said, “Isn’t
that an Aztec god?”
“The very one.”
“Aw fuck,” Wales said again. Breathless this time,
no amusement in it.
“Thing is, Tex, he’s probably not in the world yet.
I’d like to keep it that way. And we might have sent up a flare
earlier—”
“The thing that came for Jennifer Costas—”
“Yeah,” Sylvie said. “Tepeyollotl come hunting a
soul that was dedicated to him.”
“So why is Azpiazu dedicating souls to him if
they’re enemies?” Wales said.
Sylvie sank down onto the rickety edge of the
porch, dangled her feet over the dark, tangled grass. “I don’t
pretend to know how gods think, but if I were Tepé, wouldn’t it be
part of punishment? To force your enemy to consecrate souls in your
name? A method of increasing your followers?”
“Except Azpiazu’s devouring the souls instead,”
Wales said.
“Hence the problem,” Sylvie said. “But the point of
all this—stay out of the ether, Wales. Don’t ghost hunt. Don’t draw
attention.”
“What about you?”
Sylvie said, “I’m staying at Cachita’s tonight. I
think if I tried to get to yours, she’d only follow.”
“I rescind my welcome,” he said. “I could use some
downtime anyway.”
“Just you and dead Marco,” Sylvie said. A week ago,
that would have been a taunt. Now it was nearly affectionate. Wales
might be a necromancer, but he was proving himself an asset. A
necromancer, but a good guy. One step from being her necromancer.
“You know it,” he said, and disconnected.
No sorcerers are good guys,
her little dark voice objected. Paranoia is
healthy.
Sylvie went back into the house, escaping her
circling thoughts and the garden stink; Cachita startled away from
the back entry, pasting a quick smile on her face. Sylvie gave her
back a tight grin. “Eavesdroppers rarely hear good about
themselves.”
“Even when they’re playing host?” Cachita
asked.
“Sorry,” Sylvie said. “I’m not so good at following
rules.”