17
Simple Plans
THEY HAD TO BACKTRACK TO GET TO THE ISI GARAGE,
AND IT MADE Sylvie’s nerves prickle every step of the way. Marco
was powerful, but he wasn’t an infallible weapon. A single
necromancer in the building, or an agent who understood some basic
protection spells, and their ghost-shield could be neutralized in a
heartbeat.
Cachita’s breath warmed her ear; she was getting
too close again, blocking Sylvie’s range of motion, and Sylvie
shoved her off.
Marco moved before them, an icy fog shot through
with roiling motion, endless hunger, endless appetite. He took out
the agents on guard in the garage, leaving Sylvie free to pick and
choose among the car keys on the peg board.
She chose a black SUV, wanting as much space
between Marco and her as possible while they hunted for Wales. He
drifted into the passenger seat, and Cachita crawled into the back
without a single protest.
Marco raised an arm, a bar of cold shadow pointing
south. Sylvie took the SUV into the twilit streets of Miami,
streaks of neon beneath the freeway flickering to life.
Cachita leaned forward, her hands tense around
Sylvie’s seat. “You really think the ghost can find Wales?”
The question hurt. A sudden sharp pinch of
awareness. She didn’t want to lose Wales. She had grown to like
him. Was one long lunch away from calling him friend.
He might be a necromantic Ghoul, but Alex was
right: Wales was a good guy.
She forced calmness. “I think Marco’s better than
nothing. I think Marco’s the only game in town. I never got a
chance to give Erinya Azpiazu’s scent.”
“But I have yours,” Erinya
said from the backseat.
Cachita shrieked. Sylvie grappled with the wheel;
the SUV slewed just enough to elicit a series of horn blasts and
multilingual curses.
“Eri,” Sylvie said. “Don’t. Do. That.”
“Better than Alekta,” Erinya said. “She would have
appeared in front of the truck and been surprised when you hit her.
Not that it would have stopped her from climbing aboard.” She poked
her head forward, shoved Cachita back with a careless hand. “Why do
you have a killer’s ghost in your car? Is it for me? Can I eat
it?”
“No,” Sylvie said. “He’s our guide to
Azpiazu.”
Erinya snarled. “I’m your
guide.”
“You’ve been replaced. You took off,” Sylvie said.
“And not that I’m not grateful—the ISI’s going to be on my ass
enough about one dead agent—but what the hell did you do with
Alex?”
“Alex?”
Sylvie stared at her, cold horror crawling down her
spine at the utter confusion in Erinya’s voice. If Erinya hadn’t
taken Alex, then . . . had they left her in the ISI’s untender
care? “My assistant? Blonde? Eros’s chosen—”
“Oh. Her. I took her to Eros. He wouldn’t want her
hurt, and I like to make him happy.”
“Of course you do,” Sylvie muttered. Everyone wanted to make the god of Love happy.
“Wait. You took her to him? You took her off
earth?”
“Just for a little bit. Eros’ll send her back,
soon. Probably. Unless he really likes her. He gets bored. Justice
is busy busy busy trying to straighten things out up there and
fighting with Zeus.”
Sylvie swallowed. “Erinya. The moment we are all
done with Azpiazu? You will bring her back.
In one piece. Not transformed, enchanted, or lovesick.”
Erinya shrugged. “Whatever.”
Sylvie changed lanes at Marco’s prod, a cold spur
into her shoulder that made her fingers tremble as if he’d shocked
her. “Jesus, all right. Turn here. I get it.”
Cachita shivered. “Sylvie, we need to hurry.”
“I’m aware,” Sylvie said. There were time
strictures all over their little plan. They had to race Azpiazu’s
spellwork. They had to race Tepeyollotl’s impatience. On top of it
all, sooner or later, the ISI agents would start waking from
Marco’s soul shock, and they were going to be pissed. The SUV would
be easy enough for them to track, what with the government GPS a
standard part of its equipment. “Eri, you still going to be part of
this?”
“Can’t kill another god’s chosen,” Erinya said.
“Even if the god wants him dead. Can’t hunt Demalion, ’cause you
won’t tell me where he is.” She slumped back into the shadows of
the car, the very picture of a teen who’d been unfairly
grounded.
“I’m sure there’ll be things you can fight,” Sylvie
said. “Stick around?” She took the next road Marco suggested,
irritated at the slowness of his navigation. For all she knew, he
was taking her the slowest route possible. But short of pulling the
car over and trying that memory merge again, she didn’t know
another way.
Wales had been beneath the water. Not deep. Tiles
at his back, slimed with algae that tore under his struggles. The
water just above his reaching hand. Not a swimming pool, not a
natural pond. Large enough for five adults. Isolated.
She studied the roads they were on, the slow
changeover from full city skyscrapers to smaller shops and slower
streets. To old-fashioned streetlamps and shady walks. Coconut
Grove.
And water everywhere. Biscayne Bay butted up
against the seawalls there. But he wasn’t in salt water; his eyes
hadn’t been stinging. Not the ocean.
Erinya cocked her head, sniffed the air, and Sylvie
said, “Eri? You getting something?”
Erinya sucked her lower lip into her mouth, pouting
as if she were nothing more than the twentysomething goth girl she
appeared. “You gonna come work for Dunne if I tell you?”
“I think I’ll just wait for Marco,” Sylvie said.
Safer, but less informative. Erinya twitched, ran her claws down
the leather seats, fidgeted. Sylvie hid a grin. Erinya wanted to
tell. All Sylvie had to do was wait.
“Close to the sea,” Erinya said. “Something’s
twisted. Something’s rotten. Cruel. I can taste prey and
fear.”
“Azpiazu,” Sylvie said.
Marco pressed closer just as a familiar landmark
began to appear on Sylvie’s left. Vizcaya Gardens.
Sylvie choked back a laugh. It fit in a terrible
way. Lots of water features, shallow ponds, lots of archaic luxury.
She just wondered what he’d done with the tourists. Here was hoping
he’d set up after hours.
She pulled the SUV to a halt, let her strange
passengers unload into the tree-dark lot—Erinya bounding out,
animal grace in a human form, Cachita clambering out on shaky
limbs, and Marco oozing through the door.
Sylvie hadn’t been to Vizcaya since her high-school
days, remembered it as a green expanse of blind grottos and ponds,
of stone stairways and carefully patterned gardens. A safe place to
play.
Now, while the sky purpled about them, closing them
into darkness, the gardens felt anything but safe. The air pressed
close to her skin, dark, hot, humid like an animal’s fetid breath.
Hungry and predatory, giving her the sense of something larger
moving behind the darkness.
The gardens themselves felt dead, suffocating in silence and stillness. There
were none of the sounds Sylvie expected from tropical night
settling in—no frog creaking, no bird wings rustling as they
perched and preened, no owls calling through the dark—only silence
and weight.
Erinya sniffed the air, wrinkled her nose. “It
smells like rot.”
“What does?”
“Everything,” Erinya
said.
Cachita shivered and her shiver was echoed by the
world, a tremble in the gravel pathway they stood on.
“Hold it together,” Sylvie said. “You lose it, we
get Tepeyollotl’s attention.” She wanted Cachita to wait in the
car, to stay out of the conflict, stay calm. Given the way Cachita
clutched Sylvie’s sleeve, leaving her behind would only send her
into panic faster.
“Cachita!” Sylvie snapped. “C’mon. I expect more
from the woman who was trolling the streets for a sorcerer armed
only with a Taser.”
Cachita blinked, released Sylvie’s arm, put her
chin up. “Right. Right. I’m sorry.”
“Erinya,” Sylvie said. “You smell Azpiazu?”
Erinya shook her head, dark hair flying. “Only
death.”
Cloaked by spells, Sylvie wondered. Some type of
sensory illusion hiding him? It would be well within his abilities
and his predilections.
Sylvie looked ahead. From the parking lot, there
was only one entrance, one way in. The gardens lay beyond that, but
if Azpiazu was set up where Sylvie imagined he’d be—at the main
reflecting pool—he was going to see them coming long before they
could get to him.
Marco jabbed her with cold fingers at her spine,
shoving her forward. A clear urging to move.
Sylvie checked her borrowed guns, reassuring
herself that the clips were full. She stepped forward; the ground
crumbled at Sylvie’s feet, grass withering where it should have
held the soil together. Earthworms lay slack and dry; the ancient
sinkhole beside the entry gate shifted, pulling dirt downward.
“Eri, the gate?”
Sylvie squeezed out of Erinya’s way, brushed up
against a hand-lettered sign on the iron gate: Closed for alligators. She shook her head. Only in
Miami was that an excuse. She wondered if they were real gators
encroaching on tourist land or some illusion Azpiazu had created.
For once in her life, she hoped for magic.
Erinya ripped the entry gate from its hinges, a
metallic shriek in the quiet night, and flung the twisted iron into
the brush. Leaves fell like rain.
Maybe the stink of rot was no illusion. Maybe
everything was dead. Sylvie touched a fallen leaf, and it smeared
beneath her fingers, its cellular integrity gone, a pulpy mass of
rot.
Not a good sign.
Azpiazu had to be on the very edge of
god-transition. Close enough that Tepeyollotl’s power, filtered,
warped, changed, was bleeding out through him.
Sylvie headed through, keeping to the trembling
stone path, her gun before her.
Five steps in, something enormous hissed and roared
out of the bushes, scattering branches and pebbles. Sylvie jerked
back, firing directly through Marco. Her hand went cold and numb.
Bullets did no good. Not when you were faced with a two-headed bull
alligator in full charge.
Sylvie focused on the grey-green-black blur, aimed
at the gaping mouth on the right, and realized abruptly what was
bothering her beyond the two-headed nightmare of it. The alligator
had no eye shine on either head. Four eyes at twilight? Should be
full of shine.
“It’s dead,” Cachita said, gagging. “Your Fury was
right. Everything’s dead.” Her lips trembled.
It was worse than that. Sylvie got a quick glance
of the alligator’s legs as it lumbered toward them for another try.
Instead of claws, it had hands. Human-style hands. At least they
slowed the gator, buckling and breaking under its weight, made
evading it a possibility.
Azpiazu’s fight for shape-shifting integrity was
warping the world around him.
Erinya changed form, grew claws and thick scales to
rival the alligator’s hide, and attacked with an eldritch screech.
The alligator snapped furiously, even as Erinya tore gobbets of
dead flesh away, sent reeking bits into the air like piñata
stuffing.
Erinya shook the alligator in her mouth until its
bones snapped, until it broke, shrieking the entire time.
So much for the element of surprise.

MARCO PRESSED UP AGAINST SYLVIE’S NECK, A COLD,
URGENT touch, and she jolted into movement, thinking flashlights.
She should have brought flashlights. The alligator had been hard to
see, had been lurking just beneath the shadows. What else might be
there? Not breathing. Eyes invisible. Soundless until it
attacked.
Shoot to kill and don’t worry
about what it is, her dark voice suggested, and Sylvie took its
advice. Soothing. Simple.
“Erinya, you see all right?”
“Yup,” Erinya agreed. She flicked alligator off her
leather jacket and wiped her boots on the gravel path.
“Go first,” Sylvie said. “Clear the path.”
Erinya rolled her eyes. “Bossy. Who’ll watch your
back?”
“I watch my own,” Sylvie said. “Cachita, follow
her. Not too close.”
Marco drifted by her, an ice-cube shiver along her
side. “And Marco does whatever he wants as long as he stays away
from Cachita,” Sylvie finished.
It all made her edgy. Erinya was help. Sylvie
didn’t have to worry about her, didn’t have to protect her.
Cachita, on the other hand, was a liability. Vulnerable and worse.
Gateway for a god.
Holding the knife was a nice reassurance that
Cachita couldn’t call the god but probably a futile one.
Tepeyollotl was paying attention, would come at Cachita’s first
whisper of his name, whether she had the knife or not.
Erinya trotted swiftly along the limestone path,
heading toward the main garden, sniffing. “I smell blood.”
Sylvie’s heart picked up pace. Convenient that it
was already racing when, a moment later, another dead reptile fell
heavily across her shoulders.
Dead, but quite active.
The python, twice her length, and as heavy and hard
to move as sandbags, wrapped around her shoulders, its two heads
hissing, showing a pair of leprous mouths ringed with curved
teeth.
“Get off!” she yelled, like it could listen or
obey. She shoved at it. Heads hissed and struck, stunning, bruising
blows against her thick jacket. Cachita jumped in, wrapped her
hands tight around softening scales, grimacing. Erinya cocked her
head, decided the zombie snake was too small to interest her, and
kept moving.
Sylvie cursed, her hands barely wrapped around two
thick throats. Scales slimed off in her hand, rotten and flaking
from dead meat. It was even odds for a moment whether she was going
to be choked by the snake or by the stink of it. Then Cachita got
her hand beneath the heaviest coil, and the two of them levered it
off, dropped the python hissing and striking on the pavement.
Sylvie blew off its two heads, panting, wasting
ammo, and wondering if it would go hydra on them—regrow and double
its heads and attack again. She’d never dealt with zombie animals
before. After this, she never wanted to do so again.
Cachita swallowed hard. “Tepeyollotl can’t be worse—”
“Oh yes he can,” Sylvie
said. “Right now, we’re dealing with small shit. Warped
reptiles.”
“Two-headed zombie reptiles are small shit?”
Sylvie thinned her mouth, nodded brusquely. She
didn’t want to get into it. But yeah. Small stuff. Worse, she
didn’t even think the zombie reptiles were arranged as deliberate
traps. Anger spiked. Outrage at being ignored.
Even though he had taken Wales, taken her ally and
friend, even though he knew Sylvie would be coming after him,
Azpiazu didn’t care enough to try to stop her. It argued extreme
confidence. Sylvie wanted to make him eat that confidence.
Sylvie yanked Cachita back into movement. “Less
gawking, more moving.”
“Give me a gun,” Cachita said.
“Should have picked up your own,” Sylvie
said.
“Sylvie,” Cachita said. “You have more than
one.”
“Fine. You know how to use—”
“Yeah.”
“Just remember who you’re aiming at,” Sylvie said.
“We’re fucked enough without friendly fire.”
Any response Cachita would have made was buried
under Erinya’s growl, a soft, moaning rattle deep in her throat.
Sylvie’d heard that sound once before; a Fury laying eyes on an
enemy. Even directed elsewhere, it made the hairs on her neck stand
up and take notice.
Azpiazu.

THE GARDENS STRETCHED OUT BELOW THEM, AN EXPANSE
OF DARKNESS broken by Azpiazu’s setup. He’d set up his ritual
exactly where Sylvie had thought he would: the squaredoff
reflecting pool at the base of two stone stairwells leading up to a
hilly balustrade.
Torches marked the stone surround of the pool, cast
bloody light over the darkness, over the shapes drifting in the
waters, over Azpiazu’s hunched and inhuman form. The firelight
reddened the stone stairs, made Sylvie think of Tepeyollotl’s reign
and human sacrifices in such numbers that the stairs to the altars
ran dark and wet with blood.
Azpiazu raised his head and snarled. She steadied
her gun, studied the distance. Thirty feet or so. Easily in
range.
She sighted along the barrel, aimed.
He didn’t even bother to get out of her way, just
laughed as she sent one, two, three shots in his direction. Didn’t
even jerk as they touched him. In her earlier confrontation, she
hadn’t seen how he’d survived what should have been lethal heart
shots. Here, lit by torches, with the hiss of magic in the air, she
did. The bullets rusted, crumbled as they touched him, dusted his
fur with powder. Ineffective.
Her little dark voice echoed Erinya’s growl.
“Eri, can you?” Sylvie asked.
“No,” the Fury said. Her body quivered with the
urge to hunt, long shivers rattling her spines. “He’s still the
god’s chosen. His god’s whipping boy. But . . . soon.”
Soon would be too late. By the time Azpiazu was
free from Tepeyollotl’s claim, he’d be a god.
“Shadows,” Azpiazu said. “Come to watch?”
He dragged one of the bodies out of the water—long,
lanky, too thin to be anyone but Wales.
Cachita stepped up beside her, fired with a
satisfying competence. Not at Azpiazu directly, but at the stone
coping. Ricochets spattered sharp shards of limestone and old
coral, and Azpiazu flinched. “Get away from him.”
“Tepeyollotl’s agent,” Azpiazu said. “I felt you
sniffing around on my tail. If I’d known you were so attractive, I
might have let you catch up with me sooner, so I could carve out
your heart and soul from your living flesh.”
Sylvie and Cachita fired as one, aiming at the
stone, and Azpiazu gestured sharply. The women rose from the water,
a living shield; Sylvie jerked her gun up.
As the water streamed over their skin, limned
scarlet and orange, the women changed shape, growing monstrous.
Snarling. Preparing to defend their captor.
Beyond them, Azpiazu lost control of his human
shape, bulked into the mangled chimera, and dragged Wales toward
his makeshift altar, the base of the stairs.
Sylvie rushed forward but found her way blocked.
The two women-wolves—Lupe Fernandez and Anamaria Garcia—closest to
her turned, heads lowered, eyes trained on her throat.
Not dead—Sylvie saw their sides heave and
flutter—but dead-eyed. Zombies by default if not fact. Rita
Martinez rose up, warped, until a bear rose upward to full
dismaying bulk, water streaming, red-tinged, like shedding
lava.
Erinya snarled back and pounced just as the fourth
woman—Elena Llosa, by default—in jaguar form, lunged at Sylvie.
They tumbled over each other, a snarling, taillashing blur of spots
and scales. Erinya shook the cat by its scruff, flung it into the
far trees. The cat groaned as it landed, tried to stand, sprawled
again, shaking its head.
“Don’t hurt them!” Sylvie shouted. “They’re
innocents.” Hard to remember, but under that spotted pelt was a
high-school girl. Sylvie should have thought, should have planned
better. If the ISI hadn’t snatched her, maybe she would have. She
needed tranquilizer darts, not bullets.
Erinya swapped end to end with the wolves, taking
on two at once. Her hindquarters thickened, ran stiff with heavy
scale just as one of the wolves tried to hamstring her.
The bear charged Sylvie, and she turned and ran.
What else was there? She wasn’t willing to shoot her—single parent,
she remembered—wasn’t willing to just stand still and let the woman
kill her either. She leaped upward, snatching at a tree branch, and
had it betray her, puffing rottenly loose, dropping her right
before the bear.
Cachita screamed. The cat had staggered to its feet
enough to lash out at Cachita. It raked her calf with savage claws,
set blood spurting into the night.
The world started to shake; dirt dancing like water
on a hot skillet. Tepeyollotl on his way. Cachita’s blood call
enough.
Sylvie rolled out of the way of the bear’s clumsy
first strike, saw that the fur on the heavy brow was patchy,
revealing the binding sigil that linked Rita to Azpiazu. She seized
a handful of sharp gravel, ignored all common sense, and lunged
into the bear’s reach. She scrubbed the gravel over the mark, a
tumble of jagged edges, bear’s scalding breath on her skin, and
thought if this didn’t work, if it didn’t at least slow the bear,
the last thing she was going to see was the spurt of her arteries
as her throat was torn out by a woman she was trying to save.
The world shuddered around her; the cough of an
angry jaguar sounded. Bigger, louder than the shadow Erinya had
scared off. Tepeyollotl heading to the scene. The bear staggered,
and Sylvie forced her focus back.
Be damn stupid to die because she got
distracted.
She lunged upward, climbed the bear’s thick coat,
and slashed. The binding sigil, a silvery leaden mark in the bear’s
skin, spat blood. The bear collapsed backward, convulsing, slime
and saliva spewing.
It lay still, sides heaving, and Sylvie counted it
a win.
Or as close as she was going to get. They were both
alive. For now.
She shuddered. The ground trembled with her. But
Tepeyollotl . . . wasn’t here yet.
Gratitude washed over her, even if it was
short-lived. She didn’t have time to wonder why. Didn’t have time
to think.
Erinya had put down one of the wolves with a
vicious slash that had taken out the sigil by chance, but the
jaguar had rejoined the fight, had leaped onto Eri’s back, jaws
locked tight on the Fury’s neck.
A faint sound carried to Sylvie. A voice that had
screamed so much it was shredded, but still continuing. “No. No.
No.” Cachita was hunched, tight and tiny, her hands flung up above
her head, tight with tension, tight with effort, as if she were
pushing on a door that was trying to open.
Holding back the god.
Sylvie blinked, read the determination in her face.
“Cachita . . .”
“Kill Azpiazu,” Cachita husked. “I can do this. You
said it. A spell goes both ways. A door that opens can close.”
Tears lined her face like war paint, reflective in the light; her
jaw locked tight around her words. Her body shook.
She couldn’t hold Tepeyollotl for long; it was
amazing she could hold him back at all.
Time was running out. Not just for Cachita. Not
just for Sylvie. For the city.
Erinya and the jaguar tumbled and snarled, a
whirlwind of mindless rage. The remaining wolf snapped at any flesh
it could reach.
Around Azpiazu, the world bent and shuddered,
drawing inward. Sylvie could sense it like a sound out of human
range, a stressed vibrato that made her skin tingle, made her want
to duck her head and howl like a frightened animal.
One more soul, one more
taste of filtered god-power . . . and she’d be front and center at
a god’s birth. Wales would be that last bite, the final thing that
filled Azpiazu to bursting and beyond.
But Azpiazu had Wales draped over his lap, his
knife held lax between paws, watching. Waiting.
Waiting for what?
A skiff of frigid air slicked her skin, welcome in
the putrid heat. Marco blew past her, strong and furious, filled
with energy stolen from the ISI agents’ souls, heading straight for
the sorcerer. Marco crackled with determination; his ghostly skin
rippled and flashed as he moved, like the firelight on the
water.
He hadn’t bothered to help Erinya or Sylvie or
Cachita. But Wales was his.
Sylvie tried to grab Marco as he passed,
understanding all at once why Azpiazu had waited. Why he hadn’t
sacrificed Wales while Sylvie and Erinya fought the bespelled
women. Why he had broken a lifetime of habitual misogyny.
Marco’s attack was a calamity waiting to happen. A
miscalculation that was going to cost them everything. Sylvie
lunged forward, but her grasping at Marco was literally grasping at
air. She fell, scraping her knees in the dirt, got her head up in
time to see Marco rush against Azpiazu, enveloping him like
fog.
Marco tried to take a bite out of Azpiazu, tried to
put the sorcerer into soul shock, and Azpiazu only threw Wales’s
limp body aside, laughing; his arms went wide, allowing Marco to
come closer.
Marco ignored her calling him back, moved forward
even more aggressively.
Azpiazu drove his knife into Marco’s ghostly shape.
Instead of passing harmlessly through him, steel through smoke, it
pinned him like an overlarge butterfly. Marco jerked, light and
color flashing within him, a shimmering oil slick comprised of more
than a dozen stolen pieces of soul. Azpiazu grinned, baring sharp
teeth, and turned the blade, baring the necromantic sigils carved
into the steel blade.
Azpiazu might just be the most adaptable villain
she’d ever faced.
How long had he been planning this? Since he first
saw Marco’s handiwork in the Everglades? The soul-nipped cops, and
realized that if he took a soul-eating ghost, it was more bang for
his buck? When he realized that Marco would defend Wales to the
death.
Wales wasn’t the final soul
Azpiazu needed. A necromantic soul might be a powerful one, but it
could fight back. Death, a familiar battlefield.
Marco’s ghost, on the other hand . . .
Marco was not only vulnerable; his was a soul
completely suited for Azpiazu, a serial killer and a misogynist.
And to make his soul even more palatable?
When Azpiazu took Marco, he laid claim not only to
the ghost, but to the ISI agents lying senseless in their white
halls, their souls nipped and made a temporary part of Marco.
Sylvie raised her gun, emptied the clip into
Azpiazu, not trying to hurt—she knew that was impossible—but trying
to distract. To disrupt the ritual. To stop Azpiazu from taking
those threshold souls.
The bullets were less than useful. They actively
worked against them. Marco, pinned by a magically infused
sacrificial knife, had gone tangible enough that each bullet danced
him like a puppet, tore him into shreds.
Azpiazu sighed, and all that humming energy in the
air, the electrostatic charge that danced over them all, an unseen
aurora, shifted and settled over Azpiazu’s shoulders like a mantle,
drawn in by Azpiazu’s easy absorption of Marco’s soul.
He raised his head, shook the animal from his
flesh, shed Tepeyollotl’s punishment like it was nothing at all, a
mist of water on a warm day. Around his feet, the grass withered,
going blackish at the roots and spreading upward like ink.
“So, Shadows,” he said. “You couldn’t stop me
before. Think you have any chance now? I am the god of Death and
Change. Be sensible, little Lilith. Run.”