When
the Bough Breaks
by
Mercedes Lackey And Holly Lisle
A Baen
Book
Baen
Publishing Enterprises
P.O.
Box 1403
Riverdale,
NY 10471
When
the Bough Breaks
CHAPTER
ONE
Maclyn,
Knight of the High Court of Elfhame Outremer, leaned forward over the steering
wheel of his classic '57 Chevy and flicked on the radio. Q-103 FM was playing
two-fer-Tuesdays and had just finished up a set by Fleetwood Mac. The DJ cut
into the fadeout, chattering, "Coming up for all you April Fools\x97two-fers
by Phil Collins, The Beatles, and Grim Reaper. But first . . . a Guns N' Roses
two-fer. . . ."
"Aw
Gawd, not Guns N' Roses. If I want to listen to a garage band, I'll find a good
one. . . ." The engine growled and downshifted as his convertible pulled
out of the secluded dirt road into traffic. The driver of a late-model Ford
Taurus glanced over at them and did a classic double-take, jerking her head
around to stare. Mac flashed a grin in her direction, and she waved before
driving on.
His
elvensteed, currently taking the form of a Palomino-gold '57 Chevy convertible
with cream trim, was a traffic stopper. Rhellen didn't cause quite the
disruption to traffic he would have in his regular form, Mac reflected, but he
was still impressive. And women loved him.
With
any luck, he would impress the socks off of Lianne McCormick.
Mac
pushed his troubles with the Seleighe Court out of his mind. There would be
time to deal with Felouen and her demands. The present, as far as he was
concerned, wasn't the time.
"Okay,
Rhellen, let's make some time," he told the car. "Tonight\x97we
party!"
The
elvensteed growled affirmation and accelerated past two Fayetteville city
policemen and one North Carolina Highway Patrol trooper, hitting seventy-five
without causing so much as a chirp on their radar.
With
Rhellen in full charge, Mac made it to Lianne's apartment complex running
seemingly just under Mach One. She, the current human lady of his interest, if
not his dreams, was sitting on the deck of her apartment grading papers, a tiny
frown of concentration on her face. He pulled up silently and vaulted out of
the car in equal silence, which gave him a chance to admire her before she
spotted him. She was slender, with short, soft chestnut hair, deep blue eyes
and pale, flawless skin\x97she had the fragile, ethereal look frequently
attributed to one of his own people. She had, too, the blazing energy of a
human\x97she was, he thought, one of the delicate mayflies of the sentient world.
Like
all humans.
Here
today and gone tomorrow. He felt a moment of poignant loss and suppressed it.
But today will be a lot of fun, anyway.
He
intentionally crunched some gravel on the walk to let her know he was there.
She
looked up, and her face lit with an amazingly sweet smile. "Hey!" she
said. "Glad you made it. I was beginning to think you'd changed your mind.
Or come to your senses or something." She grinned when she said that, but
Mac felt the pain of old rejection masked in her voice.
"Stand
up a gorgeous gal like you?" he asked. "Not in this lifetime."
She
chuckled and arched an eyebrow. "Yeah, yeah\x97sure, sure. So are we going to
go someplace, or am I going to spend the rest of the evening checking math
tests?"
He
smirked. "You won't even remember what math tests are."
"I
could live with that." She shoved her papers inside the front door of her
apartment and locked it. "Let's go."
He
showed her to the Chevy, and waited for her eyes to light up. Which they did,
as predicted.
"Wow!"
she whispered, and ran her hand slowly along one gleaming fender. "What a
beauty. I've never seen one this color\x97or in such perfect condition."
Mac
felt Rhellen's pleasure and grinned. "Custom job. I'm pretty proud of
him."
"I'll
bet." A puzzled expression crossed her face. "Him?" she asked.
"I've never heard anyone refer to a car as him before."
"In
this case, it's appropriate," Mac assured her.
Lianne
stood back and crossed her arms over her chest. She tipped her head to one side
and studied the car. She went down on one knee and carefully examined the
undercarriage. Finally she nodded. "You're right. Definitely a him."
He'll
love you for that, Mac thought. I think, lady, that you've just won yourself a
friend.
Rhellen
preened under all the attention.
"By
the way," she said, as she climbed into the passenger's side, "you
haven't forgotten the field trip tomorrow, have you? I hope you're ready for
it; you're going to need all the help you can get."
He
laughed. "Forgotten, no. Worried? Also no. What's to worry about a herd of
kids who're probably car-crazy to begin with? It'll be a snap."
She
didn't reply; just smiled, the kind of enigmatic smile found on the Mona Lisa.
The smile that said\x97"I know something you don't know, but you're going to
have to find out for yourself."
The
kind of smile his mother Dierdre would give him\x97
For a
moment, he was taken aback by it, enough for a nagging little worry to intrude.
Then he
dismissed it. What could this mere human know that he, with all his centuries,
didn't? Ridiculous. He'd enthrall her little flock, dazzle her with his
cleverness, and it would all be a pleasant day for everyone concerned.
Right
now, he would concern himself with tonight. Tomorrow was not worth even
thinking about. . . .
* * *
Looks
like the troops have arrived. "Hey, beautiful!" Mac shouted across
the parking lot at Lianne as she jumped out of the first of the two bright
yellow school buses to arrive at Fayetteville International Speedway.
"What's a babe like you doing in a place like this? Sweetheart, where have
you been all my life? Come, let me take you to the Casbah, where we will make
beautiful music together. We will make lo\x97"
She
made a shushing motion at Mac and blushed. "Like tigers," he
finished. Neither the gesture nor the blush escaped the noisy herd of children
who followed her out of the bus.
"O-o-o-ooh!"
yelled one boy. "Miss McCormick has a boyfriend!"
"Miss
McCormick has a boyfriend," someone else repeated.
A chant
started. "Miss McCormick has a boyfriend\x97Miss McCormick has a boyfriend .
. . ."
Maclyn
regretted his impulsive teasing. He had obviously just made things difficult
for her, and he suspected she didn't appreciate the attention she was getting.
A
teacher from one of the other buses, a good-looking woman in her mid-thirties,
stared at him curiously, then walked over and whispered something to the
beleaguered Lianne. Lianne nodded slowly, and the other woman raised an
eyebrow. She gave Mac an appreciative once-over as she returned to her own flock
of children.
He was
used to getting those calculating looks from women. Usually, he enjoyed them.
This time, for some reason, he felt embarrassed.
Lianne
got her class lined up and led them across the pavement toward him. She sent
him a killing glare as she and the rowdy fifth-graders advanced.
"Lianne,
I'm sorry. I didn't realize that they would do that," he said.
"I'll
bet." The kids behind her had taken up a whispered refrain of "Miss
McCormick sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G," and Lianne did not look
mollified in the least by his apology. "The only way you wouldn't have
known they would do that is if you'd never been a kid in the fifth grade
before."
And
there, he thought, you have it. I haven't ever been in the fifth grade. So how
was I supposed to know? It's not my fault your class is a mob of little
barbarians. I'm innocent\x97this time. Unfortunately, there is no way in the world
that I could convince you of that without blowing my cover.
He
smiled at her, shrugged helplessly, and tried to look boyishly ingenuous.
"What can I say?" he asked. And then, in a louder voice that carried
to the last kid in the back of the last line, Mac introduced himself to the
class. "Hi. I'm Mac Lynn, and I drive race cars."
:Och,
and he drives the maidens wild, he does, too!: came an impish, entirely
uninvited thread of Mindspeech. :You have only to ask him, and he'll tell ye
so!:
:Mother!:
he snapped, trying to regain his aplomb.
:So
gallant, so regal, so handsome. And so modest he is\x97his hat sometimes even fits
him these days! Why, he drives race cars, does he? Sure and what a fine man he
must be!:
:MOTHER!:
Despite
Dierdre's teasing, it was a good opening line. The kids calmed down and studied
him, checking, he suspected, to see if they recognized him from television.
Mac
didn't mind. It wasn't likely that they would, but the moment of their
uncertainty would buy him their attention. He could take it from there. He drew
on his years of racing experience, and with purely elvish fervor, translated
his enthusiasm into terms that drew the sixty-plus fifth-graders in front of
him wholeheartedly into the world he loved.
"What
do you watch on television?"
Mac was
answered by a barrage of titles\x97almost all of them cop shows or adventure
cartoons. "See, now, on all of those shows, you get to watch car-chases,
or the heroes drive hot cars. Think of Don Johnson without the Daytona, or
Magnum without the red Ferrari\x97it just doesn't work, right? Hey, your folks
drive cars, you see ads on TV, there are roads practically everywhere\x97people
are in love with cars. Some of us love 'em so much we want to drive 'em for a
living. Think any of you would like to do that?"
A
chorus of "Yeah!" and "Sure!" came back at him.
They
were in his pocket. It was time to get them moving\x97show them the sights. He
asked them, "So . . . . do you want to go look at some race cars, or
what?"
They
cheered.
Nice
kids, he thought. I'm glad I decided to do this.
* * *
Gruesome
bunch of larvae, Mac thought. He'd spent the better part of two hours showing
the kids garages and pits, the medevac helicopter, the infield and starter's
tower, and introducing them to mechanics and crew chiefs and various race
drivers. Including his mother.
They'd
enjoyed his mother, who just happened to be his crew chief. D.D. Reed (not as
close to Dierdre as Mac Lynn was to Maclyn, but it would do) was ninety-five
pounds of lightning and thunder, all wrapped up in one coveralled, pony-tailed,
hellcat package. She took no guff from anyone and handed out twice the grief he
ever gave her. She also looked half his age.
She
gave him lip mental and audible, the mental over Lianne and his ego, the
audible over everything else\x97much to the entertainment of the rest of the pit
crews: his, and everyone else's within hearing. His crew knew the secret, of
course, and thought it hilarious. Of the rest, there were a few more SERRA
mages nearby that had a notion\x97and to those left, it was still funny to hear a
"girl" giving hotshot Mac Lynn a hard time. Those who couldn't
"hear" the telepathic comments were very nearly as amused as those
who could.
The
kids\x97little sadists\x97had loved it.
He'd
also spent the better part of two hours watching them stick chewing gum on
walls and under ledges when they thought no one was looking, kick each other in
the shins, poke and prod each other and then stare off innocently into space
when someone screeched. When he'd joked that some cars were held together with
bubble-gum, one kid actually, sincerely, offered him his. Freshly chewed. Mac
couldn't believe it.
He had
no idea how many lug-nuts would be missing by day's end. He'd listened to their
gross jokes. He'd answered their weird questions. He'd had more than enough.
Finally, it was time to sit down on the small stands and watch the drivers
speeding alone around the track in the time trials.
Mac was
ready for the break. As kids wiggled and squealed and squirmed and passed notes
and stuffed paper down each other's shirts, he knew a moment of sheer gratitude
that he had been spared the indignity of fifth grade.
:They'd
not have had you. You were worse than any of them.:
He
sighed. :Thank you, Mother.:
His
mother might have been right, he reflected. Nevertheless, he felt admiration
for the guts of the teacher who had to put up with this sort of nonsense on a
regular basis. He rolled his eyes and grinned over the kids' heads at Lianne.
She
raised her eyebrows in a mime of disbelief at her class's behavior and grinned
back.
Cars
roared around the track, and from their front-row seats in the pits, the smell
of oil, gasoline, exhaust, and hot rubber numbed the nose while the howling of
engines numbed the mind. The few fans in the stands screamed and cheered at
their favorites, as if by sheer volume they could push the drivers to better
times. The palpable electricity in the atmosphere always got to Mac\x97that
excitement was what had originally pulled him out of the timeless magic of
Underhill and into the very human world of auto racing.
In
between runs, the kids asked more questions.
One
stub-nosed kid with bright brown eyes waved his hand in the air at Mac and
bounced up and down on his bleacher seat until Mac was sure it was going to
have a permanent bow in it. "Yes?" he asked warily. He'd already had
more than a taste of what fifth grade boys considered reasonable to ask.
"I
want to drive a race car when I get out of school, but Mom and Dad say I have
to go to college. Did you have to go to college?"
That
question seemed pretty harmless.
Lianne,
however, gave Mac a warning look.
Oh,
yeah. College. That great baby-sitter of the post-adolescent masses. Naturally
Lianne is going to want me to be strongly in favor of it.
Mac
shrugged helplessly. "No. I didn't go to college, but I wish I had."
It was an easy lie. With luck it would mollify Lianne. "A college
education is a good idea. If nothing else, it will give you something to fall
back on if racing doesn't work out."
The
look in her eyes when he said that, though, made him think he should have quit
with a simple no.
And
just then, D.D. popped up. "Mac doesn't need college," she said, with
a sly look and a toss of her blond ponytail that told him she was going to zing
him again. "He doesn't even need a brain; he never uses the itty-bitty one
he's got. He has the rest of us to think for him. We don't believe in
overstressing anything that weak. Now me, I needed every mechanical engineering
and physics course I could cram."
The kid
looked confused. "Why?" he asked. "You're just a mechanic."
D.D.
cast her bright green eyes up to the sky. "Gloriosky. Just a mechanic?
Sweetie-pie, I not only have to know how every part in that car works, I have
to know why. This is leading-edge technology here; what we've got on our cars
your daddy won't be able to buy for ten, maybe twenty years. There's no manual
for what we're doing; we're working real automotive magic out there."
"I'll
say," one of the crew called out. "And D.D.'s the great high wizard
of Ah's. She can tell you what's wrong with an engine just by listening to
it."
"And
you don't get that kind of expertise working on a dune buggy in your back
yard\x97right, Mac?" she finished triumphantly, and vanished back behind a
stack of tires.
:There.
Saved you again.:
With
the sinking feeling that he was getting deeply mired in something he was never
going to escape from, he sought a graceful out. A flash of deep blue on the
track caught his eye and promised sudden salvation.
"Much
as I hate to admit it, my crew chief's half right. Here's the other half.
There's more to racing than driving fast\x97" he told them "\x97more even
than winning races. Racing is a business. And it's a tough one. If you can't
make that business pay off, you won't be racing." He waved over to the
starting line. "Look at Number Fifty-eight, the car getting ready to start
now. That's Keith Brightman. He's driving a '93 Lola Wombat right now. He owns
it himself. He has an efficient crew and a talented mechanic, and he's a very
good driver\x97but if he didn't know how to run a business, he wouldn't be able to
race his own cars."
D.D.
appeared from somewhere else. "And if he didn't know his engineering, he
wouldn't be able to trouble-shoot his vehicle while he's driving it. Half the
time he tells his crew what's wrong, which is a heckuva help, let me tell you,
and more than Tom Cruise here can do."
She
vanished again. Mac chose to ignore her.
"Keith
is a good example of somebody who is doing what he wants to do because he has
the smarts and the guts, and because he isn't afraid to work hard. If you want
to be a driver, use him as your example."
"Does
he have a college education?" the school-hater asked with a hopeful glance
towards the deep-blue Wombat.
"You
bet," Mac said. He'd picked Keith as his shining example of racetrack
virtue for precisely that reason. It was going to pay off, too, he could tell.
Lianne sent an appreciative glance in his direction. "College was where
Keith learned about mechanical engineering, and probably learned how to run a
business," he added. "And had fun doing it."
"Brightman,
K. Mech-E, Rose-Hulman Polytech, class of 1987, cum laude!" screeched a
voice that was getting tiresomely familiar, from just behind Mac.
The
Wombat took off with a roar, and the questions stopped. The kids watched the
car intently. Maclyn could tell they were impressed. Hell, he was impressed.
More than it ever had before, the Wombat moved; Keith was putting on a real
show. Mac could hear a difference in the engine, a rich, deep throb of power that
grabbed deep in his gut and twisted; the rookie's mechanic had made an exotic
modification somewhere. That damned Wombat was flying like it thought it was a
fighter plane and had forgotten the ground.
What
has Brightman done to that engine? Wonderful stuff, Mac mused. Magic with gears
and cylinders\x97and maybe something Mom can duplicate. I hope she's listening.
:I
am\x97what do you think I am, tone-deaf? I also happen to be Watching it. Teach
your grandmam to suck eggs, why don't you.:
Maclyn
had to give the Wombat's crew credit. On a shoestring budget and what amounted
to little more than native genius, they were putting themselves in a position
to give the big boys a run for their money.
Mac's
ears followed the car even after it was out of sight. :He's taking seconds off
of the best time we've had so far.: Mac commented to his crew chief.
:I'm
paying attention, Mac.: D.D. retorted. :Unless someone else comes up with a
miracle, he's just gotten the pole.:
The car
did a flawless lap and dove into the final curve as if it owned it\x97and there
was a sudden hollow, popping sound. It wasn't much of a noise really, but Mac's
throat tightened, and his mouth went dry. The sudden hush of the crowd in the
stand across from the pits was the first indication of the seriousness of the
problem\x97then the car became visible from the right side of the pits, and Mac
saw a tiny trail of smoke and sparks that streamed out from beneath the front
wheels.
D.D.'s
voice was in his head, all humor gone. :Sweet Daana\x97Mac, a control arm just
sheared! The lad's going to lose her any second\x97:
For one
timeless instant, the car continued as though nothing was wrong, and then it
seemed to bunch itself like a wild animal crouching for the attack. It swerved
wildly to the left, then fishtailed back to the right, and in the middle of its
rightward spin, collided with the outside wall. It rebounded and launched
itself into the air, bounding end over end like a skier doing stunts off a
ramp. The Lola disintegrated just as it was designed to, but in the direction
it was heading, it was going to hit the low retaining wall in front of the pits
nose-first at around a hundred miles per hour. And it was going to do it a mere
twenty yards from sixty-plus school kids.
"No!"
Mac heard someone bellow, and realized the voice was his own. Gods and demons,
he thought. Oh gods above\x97Keith isn't going to make it out of there, and we
aren't going to make it out of here!
A deep
bass whump marked the car's impact. Bits of car ricocheted back towards the
crowd, and others came over the retaining wall; flames spurted from the engine
pinwheeling across the asphalt. Screaming fans saw impending disaster and
panicked. They jumped off the sides of the stands and tumbled to the ground,
packing and running like frightened cattle in a slaughterhouse pen.
The
roll-caged cockpit skidded upside-down in the middle of the track, trailing
sparks. It followed the flaming engine unit as though they were strung
together, its trajectory matching the engine's\x97one of the worst possible
scenarios Mac could imagine.
They're
built to come apart to save the driver, dammit! Mac thought in anguish, as he
watched the cockpit collide with the engine right in front of the stands. Fuel
spurted from the ruptured fuel-cell, torn open lengthwise, next to the limp
driver. The spreading puddle of fuel inched nearer the shooting flames. I can
see the flames. Gods, I can see the flames\x97alcohol fuel should burn almost
invisibly\x97this is even worse than it looks. Keith's gotta be dead by now.
Mac
could only watch numbly. His puny magics were useless here. From the paddock,
vehicles were gunning to intercept the wreck before it had even stopped moving.
He heard a metallic whine, building in pitch, as the track medevac helicopter
started its engines. Now the whole tank goes, he thought. We have to get the
kids out of here\x97
There
was no way. Shrapnel would be filling the air in a second, and it would fall
everywhere, even in the paddock. "Get them down beneath the seats," he
shouted; he, Lianne, and the chaperons started pushing kids down.
He
became aware of a tingling at the base of his skull. The hair on his arms was
standing up\x97and he realized that he had first felt this sensation right after
the car started to go out of control. His mind gave the sensation a name.
Psi.
TK.
D.D.,
the Healer, the Empath, Mindspoke with quiet amazement. :No one has been hurt
yet by the flying debris. The car hasn't exploded yet. It's coming from near
you, Mac\x97but who's responsible? There isn't a SERRA Psi out here, and no elves
but us, and none of the mages have the right spells. . . . :
Somebody
nearby was keeping the car from blowing.
Mac
Looked around him. One fragile-looking little girl sat, transfixed, watching
the disaster. Motionless, silent, unblinking, she could have been a statue of a
fifth grader, except for the breeze that blew her wispy blond hair around her
face and caused her plaid skirt to ripple around the tops of her white
kneesocks.
And
from her poured incredible power.
* * *
In the
crowd across the track from the paddock, one woman ignored the people milling
around her\x97seemed even to ignore the accident. She read the face of a meter
whose needle was in the far right-hand side of the red zone; she wore a cool,
satisfied smile. Then she locked long, perfectly manicured fingers around a
voice-activated mini-recorder and whispered into it.
"The
accident went off flawlessly\x97shouldn't be enough left of the car to prove
sabotage. Rumors were right\x97definitely telekinetic activity here. Localized it
to the pits across from where I'm standing, but too many people around to get a
definite fix. TK is preventing the explosion of the car, though\x97bet anything on
that\x97think one of the racing people must be our target. This explains why the
Fayetteville track has such a good record, maybe. I'll try to move in for a
closer read."
She
stuffed the meter and the tape recorder, still on and ready, into her bag, and
worked her way out of the crowd.
* * *
The
fire crew sprayed foam on the blazing engine block and the spreading puddles of
fuel; Heavy Rescue cut away bits of twisted metal. Mac stood transfixed,
watching the kid who stared at the wreck.
:Catch
her before she leaves\x97I want to talk to her!: D.D. ordered.
He
agreed absently\x97then his attention was drawn to the racetrack, where one of the
rescuers gave a triumphant shout.
They
pulled Keith Brightman out of the car\x97and he stood on his own.
A
number of things then happened at once. From their hiding place beside the
stands, the crowd went wild. The rescuers and the young driver sprinted for the
pits and the little cover they provided. Lianne noticed that one of her
students was still in the path of potential danger, and Mac saw her pull the
girl down behind the bleacher.
And
that was when the fuel cell blew.
Shrapnel
flew across the infield and into the pits. Mac winced at the sound of
metal-on-metal as pieces of car went into the mesh that protected the stands.
The crowd's cheers became terrified screams.
:Dammit!:
Mac thought as he huddled for cover behind a stack of tires. :The kid's got to
be a line-of-sight TK. Lianne broke the contact when she moved the kid.:
There
was a pause. Then D.D. told him, :I can still feel the child, Mac. She's controlling
the shrapnel. And no one's been badly hurt yet.:
Mac
looked through the huddle of scared fifth-graders for the girl. Sure enough,
she was peeking over the bleachers, still intent on the wreck.
The air
cleared, and the crowd started climbing back into their seats. Several young
soldiers on leave from Fort Bragg organized the mob of fans, then moved quickly
through the crowd, looking for wounded. They escorted the three folks with
small lacerations down to the infield medic.
There
were no other injuries.
Down in
the pit, Lianne McCormick and the other fifth-grade teachers efficiently
rounded up their own crowd, herded them into a raggedy line, and marched them
toward the exit.
"Lianne!"
Mac bellowed. "Wait a minute!"
Lianne
came back\x97the rest of the field trip contingent kept going. "We have to
leave, Mac. This is the sort of thing parents have heart attacks over\x97we want
to have the kids safely back to school before any footage shows up on a local
newsbreak."
"But
I really wanted to talk to\x97"
"Gotta
go, Mac," Lianne interrupted. "See you soon?"
He
forced a smile. "As soon as possible."
She
hurried after her students.
Mac's
watched his little TK trooping away, way to the back of the line\x97when, as if
she felt his stare, she turned and looked directly at him\x97and the look in her
eyes became one of startled recognition.
"Elf\x97"
he read on her lips. "You're an elf\x97"
He
nodded, staring past her young face into her old, old eyes.
:My
name is Maclyn of Elfhame Outremer. My mother Dierdre Brighthair and I need to
talk with you.:
She
didn't respond to his Mindspoken request. She did, however, start to walk
toward him\x97
And her
face changed. Mac would have sworn that her eyes had been dark brown\x97but they
weren't. They were light green. The appearance of age and wisdom, the look of
recognition that had been in them, were gone. Instead, her face reflected pure
terror. She wrapped her skinny arms around herself and stared at him in
wide-eyed dismay. Then she fled. She disappeared into the crowd of kids,
leaving Mac standing open-mouthed and bewildered.
:Mother,:
he noted, :That was, I believe, the strangest encounter I have ever had with a
human being.:
D.D.
had witnessed the last part of the odd exchange, and for once she had no sharp
comeback. She only nodded, and replied, :Something is very wrong there, Mac. I
don't know what it is, but there is something seriously wrong with that child.:
CHAPTER
TWO
Although
he was attuned to his crew well enough that he would have known if any of them
were hurt, Mac checked on them anyway. Everyone was fine, though one of the
boys had sustained bloody knees from a slide across cement. D.D. was on the
ground beside him, hands full of gauze, with a roll of adhesive tape in her
mouth.
:If you
don't hurry up, you're going to lose our TK:, D.D. said acidly, as he slouched
against a tire-wall to watch her.
What
was the rush? He knew where the child was. She wasn't going to escape them.
:She's in Lianne's class. I'll find her later, it's no big deal.:
He felt
his mother's impatience at that assumption, and if she'd been acidic before,
her reply could have etched glass. :I want to talk to her now, Maclyn. That
makes it a "big deal.":
The
times Dierdre had taken that tone with him could be counted on both hands, with
fingers left over. It instantly became a big deal for Mac. He hurried after the
vanished fifth-graders, determined to hold up the buses long enough to borrow
Lianne's TK student for a few minutes. Instead, he careened into a woman who'd
been reaching to open the door Mac burst out of. She fell off her four-inch
spike heels and landed on her rump on the cement.
"Why
don't you watch where you're going, idiot!" she snapped.
She was
gorgeous, in her early thirties, with porcelain-white skin and a flawless
figure. She glared up a him through a tangle of waist-length red hair and
snarled, "You could kill somebody that way."
Real
red hair, too, he thought, distracted. Not bottled.
"I'm
sorry," he said, and offered his hand. "I was trying to catch
someone."
The
woman was fidgeting with something in her purse\x97some sort of little black box.
Suddenly she looked up, and seemed to actually see him\x97and her glare melted.
Eh?
"She
isn't too bright if she didn't let you catch her," the redhead drawled.
She gave him a slow, sensuous smile and extended her hand, allowing him to help
her up, taking her time about it, too. She was slow to let go of his hand,
holding onto it while she tested her ankles to make sure they still worked. Mac
suspected that the little wiggles were also so that she could make sure he took
a good look at her legs\x97which, painted into brown leather jeans, were
admittedly worth looking at. She flipped her hair\x97he found himself thinking of
it as The Hair\x97out of her face, and giggled.
"I
suppose I'll survive." She looked up at him through her eyelashes.
"You're one of the drivers, aren't you?"
Mac was
wearing his Nomex suit. It was a bright red one. He might have had
"RACECAR DRIVER" carved on his chest, and been a little more obvious,
but he doubted it. He sighed and nodded. Takes a real genius to figure that
out, he thought. Lovely package, but I don't think there's anybody home inside
the wrapper.
He had
lost interest in empty-headed humans a few hundred years before this one had
been born. There was one advantage to the Folk; the rare cases with nothing
between the ears but air tended to fall prey to Dreaming, which took them
effectively out of circulation. "I'm glad you weren't hurt," he told
her, doing his best to exude polite, distant sincerity. "I've got to run,
though. I've got to catch a kid."
She
pouted. She actually pouted. "If you wanted any of the ones on those
school buses, you're too late. They just pulled out."
"Damn!"
Mac muttered aloud, without thinking.
She
used his immobility as an excuse to come closer, and laid her hand on his arm.
"What's wrong? They steal something?"
"No,"
he said shortly. "Hell\x97probably . . ." He shook his head, then looked
down at her hand as if he was unpleasantly surprised to find it there.
She was
observant enough to take the hint and removed it.
I know
where to find the girl. And D.D. knows I can't outrun a bus. She should be
reasonable. "It doesn't matter, really," he told the woman.
"Sorry I ran over you."
"You're
the best-looking thing to run over me all week." She flirted with her eyes
shamelessly and giggled again, though she didn't make a second attempt to touch
him.
The
giggle grated on Mac's nerves. It sounded false\x97and anything that false made
Mac very wary. It felt like\x97bait. And bait meant a trap.
And a
trap meant that there was a lot more under The Hair than she was letting on.
"I'll
let you get back to whatever you were doing," he said, taking a cautious
step backwards.
"Oh,
you don't need to leave. I was lookin' for you anyway . . . Mr. Lynn." She
looked at him with those big blue eyes, and leaned towards him, exuding a sweet
sexuality.
That's
bait, all right. Wonder how many poor fools took it?
He took
another step backwards; she was oblivious to his sensitive nerves. "I . .
. write\x97free-lance, y'know. And I just had to interview someone who knew about
racing after that accident. It was just like magic the way nobody got hurt,
don't you think? I mean, that looked like a terrible accident."
What is
she getting at? What's she after? "It looked worse than it was," he
murmured, looking for a way to get past her without knocking her over again.
She
ignored his remark as if she hadn't heard it. "And the way the driver
walked out of there\x97I've never seen anything more unbelievable in my life. And
all that metal flying everywhere, and not hitting anyone\x97well, I simply have to
know how often a thing like that happens. You'd have to have nerves of steel to
have a job like yours and run the risks you do every day. And I just knew you
were the person to help me, Mr. Lynn. I mean, I've always been a big fan of
yours."
"I'm
sure you have." Big fan of mine, eh? So why have I never seen you at the track
before? And why didn't you recognize me? And what were you looking for in here,
if it wasn't me?
She
finally paused long enough to take a breath. "So will you let me interview
you? I can't promise national publication, but I'll do my best. And the
publicity would be wonderful for you, I'm sure."
She was
lying, and he knew it. It wasn't just her tone, or his shrilling nerves. He'd
seen her eyes flickering to the name tag on his suit just before she called him
Mr. Lynn; he'd caught the awkward pause in her speech when she told him what
she did. And he didn't believe for one minute the Sweet-Southern-Honey
Vapor-Brained-Belle routine she was laying on him. She was no more from the
Deep South than he was. That accent was as assumed as the one Dierdre used
among mortals. The odds that she was a writer were slim\x97the odds she was a free
lance were even slimmer. She was working for someone. And that look in her
eyes\x97no, she wasn't anywhere near as dumb as she was playing. But now Mac was .
. . curious.
:Curious?
Curious, are you! Is that what you're calling it now? Were you curious with
Lianne last night, hmm? An' would ye be carin' what was between this one's ears
if ye had her between the sheets, then?: His mother Sent him a wicked laugh. :I
think not. Och, my laddie! He's a curious one for sure. Always mighty curious
with the ladies.:
:Mother,
you will die young if you keep that up.:
:Too
late for that, child. Besides, I'm only trying to teach you something\x97the next
trap might be baited so attractively that you forget it's a trap.: But then his
mother's tone became serious. :I saw you couldn't catch the child. Another time
for that, then. If you really want to know about this little fishie, though,
reel her in. I'll have a look at her.:
:Right.:
And suddenly Mac was all warmth and admiration. "Call me Mac," he
told the redhead, and held out his hand. "Come on back and I'll introduce
you round."
She
shook his hand and turned up the wattage on her smile. "And you can call
me . . . Jewelene. Jewelene Carter."
:Yeah,
sure,: D.D. snickered. :And you can call me Dolly Parton.:
* * *
Gawd,
what a day.
Lianne
unplugged the hot-air popper and carried her buttered popcorn into the living
room. She sprawled on the couch and stared out the sliding glass door at the
dappled sunlight on the grass of the apartment quad. I ought to go outside and
sit in the sun on the deck and grade papers and listen to the birds, she
thought guiltily. It's a gorgeous April day, and they're singing like mad, and
love is in the air, and tomorrow it might be too cold or too wet to sit
outside.
I need
to unwind. Fresh air will do me good. I'll regret it if I waste this weather.
Platitudes exhausted, she sighed, but she didn't move. She was too wrung out to
move.
She
couldn't concentrate on grading papers. She couldn't concentrate on averaging
out grades. She was still mentally at the racetrack, with Mac shouting for
everyone to take cover, a car about to blow up in their faces, fire, smoke,
people screaming\x97and Amanda Kendrick sitting up on the bleacher staring at the
disaster and trying to commit suicide. The entire business ground one more time
through the seemingly endless loop it had worn in her memory.
It had
been close. Amanda was no more than behind the bleachers when the motor
blew\x97and there had been hot metal flying everywhere.
Except
where there were people, Lianne mused. But that was luck. Amanda isn't
stupid\x97not really. She had to know she was in danger. So why did she just sit
there like a\x97what?
It was
a bizarre accident. Everything had been stacked against them. It was a wonder
somebody wasn't dead. She'd heard later that only three people had been
injured, and those had been fixable with a stitch or two. It seemed impossible.
There had been no dead kids whose parents had to be phoned, no trips to the
emergency room in the back of a wailing ambulance holding some bloody little
hand, no six-o'clock news rehashes with plenty of gory film. There could have
been. In fact, she didn't see how any of those nightmares had been avoided.
Lianne decided she was about ready to believe in miracles.
So,
really, it had ended very well.
I'll
never go on a field trip again, though. Anybody who takes fifth-graders on one
of those things should automatically get a prescription for Valium from the
Board of Education.
Lianne
sighed again and snuggled further into the plush cushioning of the couch. Her
mind flicked back to Amanda Kendrick.
Something
is wrong with this picture, kiddo. Amanda wasn't frozen in shock at the sight
of the accident. She was watching\x97fascinated\x97eating it up. She was furious when
I pulled her down from her seat. And after the explosion, she was watching
again.
Lianne
munched popcorn and pondered. It wasn't the first time she'd caught Amanda
doing something odd, only it was the first time it had been anything so
ghoulish.
She
needed to talk to Amanda's family. Again. Her nose automatically wrinkled at
the thought. The Kendricks were one of Fayetteville's good families. Daddy was
a corporate lawyer, Mama was Vassar, Junior League, Arts Council\x97and raised
champion Arabian horses. They were both Old Money, and both times Lianne had
talked with them, she walked away from the conference feeling undereducated,
poorly dressed, that her hair was messy, her makeup was smudged, and she had
runs in her hose.
That's
not being fair to them, though. They're also concerned, attentive, and
determined that their kids won't get a hothouse view of the world from
education in Fayetteville's exclusive\x97and sheltered\x97private school. They want
both of their girls to get a real-world education.
The
Kendricks were always frustrated and somewhat at a loss when they discussed
Amanda. Lianne could understand that. Amanda's IQ and achievement tests said
she ought to be the hottest thing in school since the handheld calculator\x97and
her grades were erratic, to put it kindly. She was slipping through the cracks
of the educational system in spite of her family's concern, in spite of her
teachers' attention\x97in spite of everything.
As she
thought about the family, something finally clicked.
Mama
was actually Step-Mama, wasn't she? Doing yeoman work, as far as Lianne could
tell\x97but not even Super-Step-Mom could work miracles if Amanda was getting twisted
ideas from somewhere else. Lianne wondered if the problem might stem from the
real mother or the step-father.
It
would be worth discussing with the Kendricks at their next conference. She
decided she would set that up in the morning.
Better
yet\x97I have the number here somewhere. Why don't I call now? Then I'll be able
to work.
The
phone rang only twice.
"Kendricks'."
The voice was female, cultured, and clipped.
Ah,
joy, Lianne thought. None other than Amanda's step-mother.
"Yes,
Mrs. Kendrick. This is Amanda's homeroom teacher, Lianne McCormick. I've called
to see if I could set up an appointment to meet with you and Amanda's
father."
"Again,
Miss McCormick? I'm beginning to wonder where the problems are. Andrew and I
have visited with you more this year than we have with all of Amanda's other
teachers put together. I think there is something significant about that."
Great.
Obviously the assumption now was that Amanda's problems were her teacher's
fault. Lianne took a deep breath, prayed for patience, and sternly stepped on
the nasty little thought whispering that they might be right. "I regret
having to call you. However, I'm noticing some odd behavior from Amanda, and
I'd like to discuss it with you."
"I'm
not sure I have the time to get away," the voice on the other end of the
line said. "There's been some trouble with the horses, and we don't like
to leave the stable unwatched."
Lianne
saw an opening to get a closer look at Amanda's home life. She leapt at it.
"I do understand that you've both been in a great many times this year,
and I appreciate the difficulty that causes you. I'd be happy to come out to
your home after school and talk with you. In fact, I think that might reassure
Amanda that I do care about her progress."
There
was a long pause. "Well, that's kind of you, Miss McCormick\x97"
Lianne
heard an evasion coming and headed it off. "I don't mind. In fact, why
don't I stop by tomorrow\x97say, six o'clock?"
There
was another pause. "I do have plans tomorrow\x97I've scheduled an afternoon
with the trainer to look at my two-year-olds\x97we're getting ready for some of
the national shows." Then, perhaps realizing that she'd just put her
horses' show status in front of her child's welfare, she immediately added, "But
the day after tomorrow, I'm free, and I'll see if Andrew can wrap up with his
clients in time to be home by six. Does that sound suitable?"
Lianne
smiled. "That will be fine, Mrs. Kendrick. I'll see you at six on
Friday."
She
hung up the phone and pressed her back against the wall. Feels like I just won
the first round of the International Chess Championship.
* * *
The
room was enormous, beautifully decorated, absolutely immaculate\x97a sweet,
perfect, peach-and-white little girl's bedroom as envisioned by a top designer.
Stranger was unimpressed. Stranger knew the cost of the perfect bedroom.
Downstairs the battle raged, and soon it would be time to pay the price.
Gods,
they're fightin' again. That bodes no good for her. Stranger bit the bottom
lip, tried to figure out a strategy that one of the others would be able to
carry out.
Strategy
was what Stranger was best at; even before\x97hundreds of years before\x97Stranger
had been able to plan, to devise\x97to win. But a winning strategy required a
willing army. The three-year-old, even if she could be lured out of hiding,
would be no help\x97but if the three twelve-year-olds could be introduced to each
other and enlisted, Stranger might be able to work something out. Stranger
thought the elf would help\x97if the others could be made to go to him. They
wouldn't trust anybody, but then, they didn't believe in elves. Maybe they
would trust someone they thought didn't exist.
Her
name wasn't really Stranger. It was Cethlenn. But she was a newcomer, and at
first, the others refused to acknowledge her existence. Then she'd done them
some favors. They'd reacted by giving her a name. To them she was Stranger. It
was her badge of honor, and she wore it proudly.
Stranger's
eyes watched twelve-year-old hands form numbers on the paper, carefully shaping
out a long division problem. Stranger didn't know a thing about long division,
and didn't care. The math could wait. Someone else would come along later and
do it. Stranger was more interested in the fighting downstairs.
The
Father was raising bloody hell, the Step-Mother was cold and hateful.
The
Father's voice carried clearly up the long, curving stairwell and through the
carved wood door. "You don't do a goddamn thing with her. That's the
reason her teacher keeps calling, wanting conferences!"
"She's
yours\x97not mine. I didn't marry you so I could be caretaker for that psychotic
little rodent, Andrew. You deal with her." The Step-Mother didn't like
Amanda, but that was nothing new.
"She
needs discipline from you, too, Merryl!" The Father's voice dropped an
octave. A bad sign.
The
Step-Mother sneered; she had wealth enough on her own that the Father couldn't
cow her. "I'm sure she gets more than enough discipline just from you\x97and
I have Sharon to look after. I can handle normal children."
"Sharon
is getting big enough that she could stand a bit of discipline. You coddle her
too much." The Father's voice turned threatening. Stranger had heard that
tone of voice before.
The
Step-Mother's voice could have frozen boiling water\x97and was just as
threatening. "You keep your hands off of Sharon. I won't have you turning
her into another Amanda."
"Worthless,
useless, frigid bitch! If you were any kind of a woman, we wouldn't be having
this problem with Amanda!" the Father yelled, losing control, thus losing
the argument. The Father wouldn't like that.
The
kitchen door slammed. Then Stranger heard the tread of heavy footsteps on the
stairs.
"Amanda,"
the Father's voice shouted from the other side of the door, "Your pony is
standing in filth. Get down to the barn and clean out his stable. Now."
Stranger
tried to hang on, tried to control what happened next, but the others were
panicked. They pushed to get in. Stranger tried to tell them what to do, but
they wouldn't listen. They were too scared. They hid in the closet, wrapping
their arms around themselves, and ignored Stranger.
"No,
no," they whispered. "No, Daddy, no." The little voices crying
inside Stranger's head made the hair stand up on the skinny little-girl arms.
Stranger shivered and screamed at the others to listen, to run, to get away\x97to
find the elf. She was so preoccupied with trying to rouse them that she ignored
the real enemy standing outside the door.
But
finally, when the Father got tired of yelling outside the door and came in to
get Amanda, Stranger went away instead.
* * *
"Mel,
I've got a winner on this end."
Melvin
Tanbridge rocked back in the soft glove-leather chair and watched the sun set
over the ocean through the tinted glass wall in his office. "Secure
line?" he asked.
"Scrambled,"
the other voice affirmed.
"Then
tell me more, baby."
"Our
target, I'm almost certain, is a racecar driver named Mac Lynn. I had too big a
crowd to eliminate all the noise, but he's the best possibility. I got a chance
to talk to him later, and even latent, he flicked the needle on the meter. I
don't think he's too bright\x97all glands and no brains\x97but he has plenty of
talent. And, my Gawd, Mel, the film I have of this accident\x97you'll have to see
to believe. There's no chance that this one's just a fluke. Besides, the
readings on your little monitor were all red-zone. I'm FedEx'ing the film, some
taped notes, and an `interview' I got with the driver to you\x97it will be on your
desk tomorrow."
"Fine."
Mel tapped one manicured nail on the ebony desktop and smiled. "Nobody
said we needed a nuclear physicist anyway. If he's stupid, he'll be easier to
control. So\x97get a little background on him so we know what we're dealing
with\x97then bring him in."
His
agent chuckled. "On it already. I'm running a couple of goons that I
brought with me today on the off chance I'd get lucky\x97maybe I'll be able to
FedEx him to you tomorrow."
Mel
laughed. "Sounds good. Who are you running?"
"Stevens
and Peterkin." The voice sounded pleased.
Mel
nodded and shifted the phone to his other ear. He picked up a pencil, started
writing on a yellow legal pad. "They'll do. At least for pulling in a dumb
jock."
"I'm
going to need an alibi, and my clearance."
"First
make sure he's the one. I don't want to have to feed any more mistakes to the
sharks." Mel made another note under the first on his paper. "You set
for money?"
"For
the time being. If things get expensive, I'll let you know. But the cost of
living here is nothing compared to California."
Mel's
attention drifted from the phone to the scene outside his window. A girl in a
wetsuit rode her board in on the crest of a breaker.
"Mel?
You still there?"
He
dragged his attention back. "Yeah. I'm here. Report in tomorrow, let me
know what happens." He hung up the phone, and pulled a dull black box
identical to the one the woman at the racetrack had from the top drawer of his
desk. He aimed it at the girl on the surfboard and depressed the switch. The
needle on the meter didn't twitch.
He
shrugged and put the box back in his drawer.
* * *
Mac sat
on a folding chair beside the Victor III while D.D. and her current human
boyfriend, a twenty-six-year-old engineer-turned-biker, tinkered on it. They
lay underneath the car, only visible from the knees down. An occasional thunk
issued from under the car, but the three were otherwise, to all appearances,
companionably silent. The human boyfriend\x97Redmond something-or-other\x97was
concentrating on the car. And probably, Mac thought, sneaking an occasional
grope of D.D.
None of
it interrupted D.D.'s inaudible conversation, but then she had a lot of\x97skill.
Mac wondered if the boyfriend knew how old she was. . . .
Probably.
D.D. didn't believe in keeping that kind of secret from someone she let into
her bed. Chances were he was one of the changelings from another Elfhame. Maybe
Fairgrove, birthplace of the Victor III; they grew a lot of mechanics down
there.
:Your
little fish is no fish at all,: D.D. remarked.
No
surprise there. :I knew that. But what is she up to?:
:My
impression, laddiebuck, is that she's out a-hunting\x97and with you her quarry.
Nathless, you needna think 'tis your handsome body she's lusting for. Nor your
mind, though I doubt that occurred even to you. I'd say from the smell of her,
'tis magic she's hunting.:
He
tightened his jaw; that was unwelcome news. :Dangerous?:
Mac
heard an audible snort from under the Victor. :Not to such as you and me.
Merely amusing. But to another human, now\x97aye, there's danger there. And I'm
not for certain that she knows her target. There was, after all, the child
today. Not a shield on her, and projecting like a woman full-grown. Sure, I'd
wager you were nothing but a convenient bit of misdirection.:
:So
much for my masculine charms, hey, Mother?:
The
snort this time was derisive. :I always thought you sold yourself too dear.:
D.D.
rolled out from under the car and stared intently into her son's eyes. "Go
make yourself useful somewhere," she told him out loud, and added in
Mindspeech, :Lead your little not-fish a merry swim. No doubt she's waiting for
you. Be sure she thinks you're her quarry for true. While she's chasing you\x97who
are old enough surely to take care of yourself\x97you'll be keeping her away from
that child\x97who cannot protect herself.:
:A good
point.: The woman had looked expensive, from the clothing to the perfume.
Someone was paying her well, if she was a hunter. A child would have no chance
against her.
:And no
forgettin' now!: she reminded him. :About that child; you may deceive the woman
all you like, but we need to find her.:
* * *
He
headed through the parking lot with the late afternoon sun baking his back and
the glare of reflection angling inconveniently into his eyes from the few cars
that were left there.
And as
D.D. had anticipated, the woman was waiting, Hair and all.
Mac
suppressed a smile. The self-named "Jewelene" lurked in the shadows
of a closed concession stand near where Rhellen was parked. He couldn't
actually see her\x97but her anticipation was palpable. She wasn't going to be a
problem\x97
A
tingle at the base of his neck slowed him down.
No, she
wasn't going to be a problem. The two men who were sneaking up on him from
slightly behind and to either side could have been, however, if he hadn't been
expecting something.
How to
play it?
A
vision of the Three Stooges, chased by villains, succeeding by sheer
ineptitude, came to him from his last hotel room cable-TV binge. He smiled
slyly.
Rhellen,
old friend, you and I are going to have some fun.
His
step became jaunty. He whistled a cheery rendition of "Laddies, There's
Trouble, Oh, Trouble A-Comin'." The tune was one he and Rhellen had used
as a signal when tavern-hopping back in his days as a colonial rakehell. It had
always been useful for assuring a backup or, if need be, a quick getaway.
He took
in the slight change in attitude in the elvensteed, and felt his partner signal
that he was ready.
Mac
grinned and, without warning, bolted for the concession stand.
"Jewelene!" he yelled. "Hey, baby! You waited around for me!
Fabulous\x97and, gorgeous, it's your lucky day. I've got the whole afternoon
free."
The two
gorillas who'd been casually working their way through the parking lot,
following him, changed direction. "Jewelene" looked wildly for some
place to hide, and realized there wasn't one. She looked straight at him, made
an "Oh-what-a-surprise!" face, and smiled.
He
caught her lightly by one wrist.
"Mr.
Lynn," she said, and forced a bright smile, "I didn't expect to run
into you again."
He
leaned against the concession stand and gave her his best come-hither look.
"Baby," he purred, "we both know that's not true. Why else would
you be waiting around by my car after everyone else has gone home? And it's
Mac\x97remember?"
"Right\x97Mac."
He slid
an arm around her waist and moved her towards Rhellen. "You don't have to
pretend with me. The first time I saw you, I knew we were meant for each other.
And I could tell that you knew it, too." He gave her a quick little
one-armed hug that threw her off balance. She fell against him.
Out of
the corner of his eye, he caught the panicked glance she threw at her two
goons.
"Uh,
Mac . . ." She tugged ineffectually at his arm, then gave up. "I'm
glad to see you. Really. But I was waiting to talk to some of the other
drivers\x97for my interviews. I think I can sell this story to Playboy, but I need
more, ah, input."
"Honey\x97Jewelene\x97why
didn't you say so? None of the drivers are here right now," Mac lied
fluently. "But I can take you to a bar where most of us hang out. I'm sure
we can round up some other drivers for you to interview. And the atmosphere of
our hangout will be great for your story. And I can give you any kind of `input'
you want." He tugged her toward the Chevy.
"Well,
hey, that's\x97ah, really nice of you. Go ahead, and I'll follow you in my
car."
Mac
laughed. "I'm a professional driver, babe. You couldn't keep up with me if
you wanted to."
Her
goons were finally in position behind Rhellen, crouched down against his rear
fender. "Jewelene" relaxed.
"Okay
then, Mac. Thanks. Very much."
Mac had
a hard time keeping himself from laughing aloud. He wrapped his arms around her
tightly and pulled her into an extended kiss. "Wonderful. And after you
get your interviews, we'll go home and interview each other."
She
smiled back, and he noted a vindictive gleam in her eye. "Yes," she
agreed. "We'll do that."
He
escorted her to the passenger side of the car and opened the door for her. She
climbed in, completely confident. He walked around the front of the car, and
noted the movement of one of the men around to Rhellen's driver's side. The
other, of course, would be sneaking around behind him. He patted the hood.
Everybody
ought to have an elvensteed, he thought\x97
Rhellen
radiated satisfaction and chuckled in agreement.
:Ready?:
he asked the elvensteed. He waited long enough to catch Rhellen's assent, and
then made the single step forward that changed him from target to missile.
As he
rounded the front of the car, both men lunged for him. The driver's door swung
open and flung the first one back, and Rhellen edged forward just enough to
knock the second one down. Mac slipped into the seat to find
"Jewelene" trying with all her strength to open her door and get back
out. He grinned. His door closed, the car started itself up, and
"Jewelene's" head jerked around.
"The
weirdest things have been happening around here lately," he told her, as
he drove Rhellen away from the two bewildered goons, who were scrambling for
their own car. She stared at him, wild-eyed and open-mouthed. "I've found
out it never pays to let your guard down." He laughed. "So,
beautiful, are you ready to get your interviews?"
She was
staring behind them at the dwindling parking lot. Mac glanced into the rearview
mirror; there, two hairy guys in jeans, t-shirts, and ball caps were jumping
into an incongruously clean, expensive navy-blue sedan. They came tearing out
of the parking lot like they'd been bitten by denizens of the Unseleighe Court.
She
nodded slowly. "Yeah. Yeah, let's go."
"Okay,
Rhellen," Mac drawled. "You heard the lady. Let's go."
Rhellen
accelerated to his top speed. They launched into Raeford Road's six-lane roller
derby, shouldering aside a steroidal poser-mobile and causing the owner of a
brand-new Mercedes to jam on brakes to keep from marring its expensive paint
job.
Mac
rested his hands lightly on the steering wheel but let the car do the actual
work. "Jewelene" yelled, "Jesus, slow down!" and started
fumbling around the seat and the doorframe.
"What
are you doing?" Mac asked.
"Looking
for the seatbelts. Slow down! Where are the damned seatbelts?"
"Honey,
this is a mint-condition fifty-seven Chev-ro-let," he drawled. "There
ain't no seatbelts. They were an option back then."
Rhellen
dodged a Porsche, weaved on two wheels past a semi, darted into a hole exactly
two inches longer than he was, then bolted in front of a cop car and
accelerated. Mac casually took one hand off the wheel and flicked on the radio.
"Come
on, baby, come on! You've just got to release me\x97" Wilson Phillips sang
cheerfully.
His
passenger was white beneath the painted blush, and looked as if she agreed
wholeheartedly with the trio. "Jesus God! Mac, slow down or let me out of
here!"
He
chuckled, exuding machismo. "Relax, baby. I'm a professional. I do this
all the time."
She
turned to him, pupils wide with real fear. "Not with me in the car!"
He gave
her his best impression of a man whose masculinity has been called into
question. "Look, baby, if you don't like my driving, you can walk."
She
grabbed his arm and shook it. "Dammit, that's what I already said! Let me
walk!"
Rhellen
whipped out of traffic into a Kwik Stop parking lot and hit the brakes so hard
he almost stood on his grille. "Jewelene" was flung against the dash,
then back into her seat. The contents of her purse erupted into the interior of
the car and bounced everywhere.
Mac hid
his delight. Under the auspices of throwing things back into the bag to get her
out of his car, he managed to pocket her driver's license and also got a look
at some very esoteric toys she was carrying.
Voice-activated
tape recorder, stun gun, brass knuckles, Mace, thumbcuffs, little packet of
fake ID's . . . all sorts of neat stuff\x97plus the mysterious little black box.
Interesting. I'd love to get a look in her closet sometime.
Then he
shoved her toward her door\x97which opened smoothly.
He
sneered at her. "Have a nice walk. It's too bad about your attitude, baby.
You would have had a terrific time\x97but it's your loss." He slammed the
door on her heels. "Have a nice day, bitch," he called after her.
"Arrogant
pig!" she screeched. Or at least, that was part of what she screeched. The
rest was incoherent, and probably not Webster's English. She spun away as he
laughed at her, then flounced toward the road.
Several
G.I.'s leaned out of the windows of a passing car and yelled. She shot them the
bird, and they retorted with a jeering obscenity. Another car full of G.I.'s
right behind them slowed and tried to offer her a ride. He saw her take out her
can of Mace. The driver of the car shrugged and grinned, and he and his friends
drove on.
Her
goons would probably find her soon enough. And if they didn't, Mac figured she
would enjoy her little hike in the nice April weather. Especially in this
neighborhood, and with sunset coming on\x97and looking the way she did. That
wouldn't be the last offer of "temporary employment" she'd get before
she found a cab. This was a G.I. town, and G.I.'s have two things on their mind
when they get off base. . . .
And
"Jewelene" was certainly dressed for the part. Between The Hair and
the Spandex, she'd be lucky if the cops didn't pick her up and run her in just
on general principles.
Mac
looked at the driver's license he'd stolen. "Rhellen," he told the
elvensteed, "I think Ms. Belinda Ciucci of Berkeley, California, is going
to love Fayetteville\x97what'cha think?"
The '57
Chevy rumbled a deep chuckle of affirmation and cruised on.
CHAPTER
THREE
Thank
heavens it's only an hour till lunch.
Lianne
eyed her students with weariness that bordered on desperation. And I'll have
several minutes of blessed silence while we do the spelling test. Of course, I
could have a lot more silence if I just shot them. Nice idea. I like it a lot.
The
three-minute pencil-sharpening break was over. It was time to get everyone back
in order.
"Sit
down in your seats, facing forward. Be quiet, get out your pencil, get out your
paper. Use your pencil to write on the paper\x97write the following things. Your
name\x97yes, Keith, when I say your name, I do mean the name your parents gave
you, not any name you think is really cool today. The date. Today's date. It's
on the board. Look at the board. Copy the date. Get it right. Your life depends
on it."
Lianne
tapped the blackboard with a piece of chalk for emphasis and counted mentally
to ten. The fifth grade Mafia had apparently declared that today was Silly
Day\x97every simple chore required detailed instructions. Even usually
well-behaved kids like Latisha McKoy and Marilee Blackewell were misbehaving.
The first time she told the class to sit down, almost all of them sat on the
floor. It was a bad moment\x97for the continued existence of the kids, as well as
for her.
She
hadn't done anything to them\x97yet\x97that would lose her this job. Her guardian
angels were probably taking bets on how much longer that could last, though.
"Fold
the paper neatly in half, longwise. Write the numbers one through twenty-five,
down the left side of the paper\x97Arabic numerals, William, not Roman
numerals\x97no, Snyder, you may not go to the bathroom during a test\x97I don't care
if your big brother did tell you it's your Constitutional right. He lied. Write
the numbers twenty-six through fifty down the fold in the center of the
paper."
Because
we have learned never to say the words "center fold"\x97in any
context\x97in a room that holds fifth-grade boys, haven't we, Lianne?
"Jennifer,
Latisha, you do not talk at any time during a test. Not even if you dropped
your pencil, Jennifer\x97getting it back does not require conversation. Maurice,
close the book!"
Ten
minutes of orders. Now, finally, she could give the test.
"Number
one\x97concentration. CON-cen-TRA-tion. School work requires concentration."
Not
murdering you little monsters requires CON-cen-TRA-tion. Lianne felt her teeth
grinding and tried to relax her jaw before she splintered something. Crowns
were expensive, and they didn't come under the heading of "injuries in the
line of duty."
She
studied her charges. Twenty-six heads bent over their papers. Twenty-six hands
wrote out creative versions of the spelling words, some that would bear no
relationship to any word ever written in the English language. The Death Row
Five snuck surreptitious glances in her direction to see if it was safe yet to
use their microscopically handwritten cheat sheets. If they spent half the time
studying that they did in cheating, they'd be straight-A students. Beth Hambly
sat primly in the front row, carefully guarding her (surely perfect) answers
from the prying eyes of less perfect classmates. William Ginser, foiled in his
plan to number his paper with Roman numerals, was misspelling his words in some
ornate style that bore a striking resemblance to German Blackletter.
If he'd
just put that kind of energy into learning to spell the damn words in the first
place\x97She sighed. Then he wouldn't be William.
Amanda
Kendrick, sitting in the back corner of the classroom, stared out the window.
"Eight.
Contradiction. CON-tra-DIC-tion. If you say something that means the opposite
of what I have said, that is a contradiction."
Amanda
didn't move. Lianne had noticed, on and off during the morning, that Amanda was
quieter than usual\x97but usual was awfully quiet. Now, though, she looked closer.
The
total absence of expression on Amanda's face made Lianne shiver. Is she
breathing? Yes, she is\x97a little. Good God, she looks dead. She is breathing\x97but
she sure as hell isn't here. And I don't think I'd want to be wherever she is
right now. She hasn't done a single spelling word\x97no, screw the spelling test.
I don't want to call her down in front of the rest of the class. Not right now.
She doesn't look like she feels too well.
Lianne
cruised through the words on the test, making up sentences on autopilot. She
couldn't stop looking at Amanda.
The
dead look is in her eyes. They're glazed\x97could she be having some sort of a
seizure? Maybe I need to call a doctor. But she doesn't look physically sick.
And the few times I've called on her, I have been able to get an answer out of
her\x97she just drifts away right afterward.
Lianne
bit her lip.
We're
going to take a break after this test, and I'm going to talk to her.
"Thirty-nine\x97"
Decision made, her attention snapped back to the rest of the class. Her loss of
vigilance had not passed unnoticed. "Snyder, Maurice\x97I'll take those
papers, gentlemen, and you may sit out the rest of the test. You've just earned
yourselves F's. Anybody else like to try? No? Thirty-nine. Interception.
In-ter-CEP-tion. What you have just seen, folks, was the interception of two
cheat sheets."
The
rest of the test went without incident.
Lianne
got everyone started reading Thomas Rockwell's How to Eat Fried Worms, a book
she had fought long and hard to get on the fifth grade required reading list.
It proved to her students that reading really was fun\x97she'd converted more
book-haters with that\x97plus A Light in the Attic, and the Alvin Fernald
books\x97than with anything else she used. They wallowed in the gross-out joys and
Machiavellian plotting of a kid who got dared into eating a worm a day and the
friends who'd bet him he couldn't.
With
their attention fixed on their books, she was free to take care of Amanda.
She
walked to the back of the room, squatted down beside Amanda's desk, and waited.
Amanda kept staring out the window. There was no sign that the child knew she
was there.
"Amanda,"
Lianne whispered. "I need to talk with you."
She got
no response.
Lianne
rested her hand lightly on Amanda's shoulder, and said, "Amanda, is
something wrong?"
The
girl's whole body shuddered, and her face turned toward Lianne\x97and Lianne
pulled her hand away, horrified. Pale, pale jade-green eyes stared back at her,
stared through her, lips pulled back from teeth in an animal expression of
fear, or rage\x97or both. The face was not Amanda's face, not a child's face\x97if it
was human at all. The expression was fleeting\x97there, and gone so fast Lianne
wondered if she'd really seen it\x97then one of the girls behind her and towards
the front of the class started shrieking. Others yelled, desks squeaked, and
something hard hit Lianne on the back of the neck. She spun towards the front
of the class, started to yell at the kids to stop fighting, and froze.
Impossible.
Loose
chalk flew from the chalkboard as if thrown by an angry child. Closed chalk
boxes opened themselves, spewed their contents into the air\x97the liberated chalk
rained against walls and ceiling and floor and kids. Bulky blackboard erasers
pelted students and furniture, fell to the floor, and leapt up to attack again.
The
neatly stacked spelling tests on her desk launched themselves into the air, to
join with piles of loose construction paper from the bulletin board corner and
reports on The Planets of Our Solar System that had suddenly come to life.
Books
fell off of desks to the floor. Pens and pencils leapt from desks to smack
against the windows. The classroom door opened, then slammed shut, then opened
again to allow a stream of paperwork to escape out into the hall.
The
children's screams didn't cover the sound of paper snapping in the nonexistent
wind.
Lianne
had just enough time to realize that what she saw was real; it actually was
happening. Then it stopped.
Projectiles
in mid-course slammed into some invisible wall and dropped to the floor. Papers
swirled downward like rainbow-colored autumn leaves. The door shut with a soft
click.
There
was silence.
Everyone
waited. Scared, big-eyed kids looked at her for direction.
She
didn't know what to do. So she cleared her throat, bent down, tentatively
picked up a piece of chalk, then another. They didn't attack. She picked up a
handful of paper.
"Okay,
folks\x97everyone all right?" There were tentative nods from the kids as they
looked themselves over and made sure they were still intact. "Good. Then
let's . . . let's get this mess cleaned up." She tried to sound brave. God
knew, she didn't feel it. "Whatever happened, it's over now. When we've
finished, you can all read until the lunch bell rings."
Lianne's
knees felt weak. She made her way to the front of the class, put all the chalk
and loose erasers around her desk back on the blackboard, then sagged into her
seat and rested her head in her hands.
Two
days in a row. Right now, I could be convinced to give up teaching forever. The
racing accident, the Attack of the School Supplies, Amanda's weird behavior\x97
Amanda!
I forgot about her!
Lianne
looked up, expecting to see Amanda frozen at her desk. Instead, she saw the
girl chatting with Brynne Lassiter as the two of them cleaned up one corner of
the mess.
Amanda
glanced in her direction, saw Lianne watching her, and smiled brightly. She
bounced up to the desk, and handed the young teacher her gold Cross pen.
"Your
pen fell beside my desk."
Lianne
tried to smile. "Thank you, Amanda," she said.
"That
was really strange, wasn't it, Ms. McCormick?"
"Strange
doesn't begin to describe it." Lianne looked closer at the girl, then
closed her eyes and rested her forehead against the back of her hand.
"Are
you okay, Ms. McCormick?" Amanda asked. She sounded so normal!
"I'll
be fine, thank you. Just\x97just go back to your desk now, please." Lianne
felt herself struggling to breathe, felt the room starting to reel, but her
skin felt cool to her touch. No fever.
She was
light-headed\x97certainly sick. She had to be.
Amanda's
eyes are blue.
* * *
Mac
woke up with sunlight streaming through the sheers in the window of his hotel
suite.
Dammit.
Forgot to pull the drapes again. What time is it?
He
looked at his clock on the tacky vinyl-veneer almost-Scandinavian dresser that
sat in a puddle of sunshine. Green digital numbers, muted to pastel by the
light, glowed reassuringly back at him. He stretched with feline grace.
Eleven-fifteen. No hurry. I've got plenty of time for room service.
He
rolled over to the phone that rested on the equally cheap nightstand and
dialed. A bouncy-sounding girl at the other end took his order for French toast
and bacon and orange juice and the fruit plate. It would be up shortly, she
assured him.
Mac
smiled and rolled over on his back. A nice hot shower, I think, while breakfast
is getting here\x97then maybe a little TV. Out in time for the maid to straighten
the place up, take Rhellen for some exercise down Bragg Boulevard, drive over
to the school to see where Lianne works. Then a stop by the track so Mother
doesn't think I've vanished into the ozone. I'll tell her about the outcome of
the Belinda Affair. She'll enjoy that.
It felt
like the start of a wonderful day.
Of
course, any day that started out with room service and a maid couldn't go too
far wrong. Maclyn approved of room service.
He
lolled in bed, not quite ready to plunge into the pounding spray of a shower,
when he noticed a flash of blue and a dull gleam of gold on the other side of
the open door that led to his usually-dull-beige suite living room. Curious, he
crawled out of the bed and went to take a look.
:Not a
very early riser, are you?: The Mindspeech was female, frosty\x97condescending,
too.
Felouen\x97beautiful,
irritating Felouen\x97lounged on his couch. She wore a cobalt blue silk Court
jerkin heavily embroidered with gold over a soft, pale-blue silk blouse.
Gold-and-sapphire chains draped around her neck and wove through her pale amber
hair. Her long legs\x97in matching blue trews\x97were thrown indecorously over one of
the couch's overstuffed arms. She hadn't bothered to take off her knee-high
blue leather boots. She lay her head back on a cushion and stretched, sending a
languorous, sexy smile in his direction.
"A
little overdressed for the area, aren't you?" Mac remarked.
:And
you're a little underdressed.:
It was
a legitimate comment. Mac was stark naked. "You didn't make an
appointment. You don't let me know you're coming, you take your chances."
She
smiled. :And this time I won.:
Mac
refused to be amused or flattered. "I have plans for the day, Felouen. Go
home."
:I have
plans for the day, too, Mac. I want you to come Home with me.:
He
glared at her. "What is this? You can't get me to play warrior for the
Court by guilt, so you fake lust? I don't believe you, dear."
She
laughed out loud, delighted. :Fake lust! You'd suspect that, with every other
elvish maiden sighing after your broad retreating back? My bonny lad, I needn't
fake lust.:
She sat
up. :But the Unseleighe Court\x97:
He
blanked out her Mindspeech and turned his back on her. "I won't play
defender of the lands with you, Felouen. The lands don't need a defender."
Unable
to continue her conversation in the more compelling Mindspeech, she shifted
with bad grace to physical speech. "It isn't play," she snapped.
"The minions of the Unseleighe Court surround you, even now."
"Ooooh,
minions," he mimicked. "I'm terrified." He crossed his arms over
his chest. "They don't bother me, I don't bother them."
If
anything, her voice grew colder. She sounded like his old sword-instructor, Siobhan:
deadly, deathly serious. "You know evil doesn't work that way, Maclyn. The
Unseleighe Court grows stronger with every back that's turned to it. The
darkness has spread to our corner of Underhill\x97the filth is leaking through
even there. Soon enough, it will be able to conquer even the strongest and best
of those who could have defended against it. If you don't face it now, you will
face it later\x97on its terms."
There
was a knock at the door. "Room service," someone called.
"Yeah\x97just
a minute." Mac pointed into the bedroom. :Get in there\x97then vanish:, he
told the elven warrior. He pulled his bathrobe off of its hook on the coatrack,
put it on, and opened the door.
A
smiling busboy pushed the cart into the room. "Mornin', Mr. Lynn," he
said. "All ready for the race Saturday?"
"You
bet, Sam. You gonna be there?"
"Nah."
The young man shook his head, disgusted. "Cain't. I'm scheduled to work.
I'm pulling for you, though."
"Thanks."
He signed for the food\x97on the Fairgrove account, of course\x97and grinned as the
busboy left. But the grin vanished with the closing of the door. Mac turned and
stalked into his bedroom, expecting to find Felouen waiting for him.
She was
gone. Good, he thought. The day is looking up.
But the
feeling of Presence hadn't abated\x97
On his
bed, gold gleamed. He could feel it. He didn't need a closer look. He knew
exactly what she'd left.
Shit.
The day is looking down.
Mac
felt pretty much the way someone who'd just found a leaking radioactive
canister in his house would feel. He stared at the lovely gold circle and swore
creatively.
Finally,
he picked it up. Uh-huh. I should have known she'd pull something like this.
One of the Rings. He pulled a scrap of silk out of a drawer, and carefully
wrapped the bit of jewelry in its insulating folds. Then he shoved it into the
leather pouch he kept with him. Well . . . maybe D.D. will take it off my
hands.
* * *
In
spite of Mr. Race-Driver's machismo, he doesn't drive so damn-all fast. That
stupid shit yesterday must have been to impress me. Ooooh, ooooh, I was so
impressed. Gonad-brained jerk-off!
Mac
Lynn's '57 Chevy with its custom colors was about as easy to keep track of in
traffic as if it sported strobe-lights. She'd always been good at tailing\x97this
was so simple it was dull.
My
commission is the same whether I have it hard or easy. I guess I shouldn't
knock it.
Belinda
downshifted and slipped in behind a pickup as her target slowed and turned into
the elementary school parking lot. She chose an unobtrusive spot about a
hundred yards down the road, U-turned, and parked. Then she settled back with a
bottle of mineral water and a packet of fresh sliced vegetables to wait Mac
out.
Her old
partner in the Berkeley P.D. had given her endless grief on her choice of
stake-out munchies. Ed had hated rabbit food. His idea of stake-out rations was
a cold Philly steak sandwich, a stack of Domino's pizzas, and a carton of
Mountain Dews. Of course, Ed had given her good-natured hell about almost
everything. Sometimes she even missed him.
She
missed him at that moment. He would have loved trailing a race-driver with a
classic car. He would have known Mac's racing stats and would have tried
endlessly to get her to be interested in them. They could have had a wonderful
argument about racing, and what it did to the environment. That argument would
have segued into solar versus fossil fuel, and Middle Eastern politics, and
even\x97she grinned thinking about it\x97psychic phenomena. Ed wouldn't have believed
the accident yesterday was anything but an accident. He would have argued until
his last breath\x97in spite of her neat gizmo, in spite of the lack of casualties,
in spite of everything. Ed had loved to argue.
Debate,
he'd called it.
She bit
her lip, and glared out the window.
In the
end, he had died arguing\x97debating. He'd had a lot of practice, and he was very
convincing, too. She'd wanted to believe him. But he hadn't had as much
practice lying as he had at arguing. He'd caught her with the dead mark in the
alley, taking her cut to look the other way, and no matter what he said, old
Honest Ed could not have meant it when he said he wouldn't turn her in.
She'd
hated killing him.
The job
wasn't the same after that\x97it was ruined for her.
She bit
viciously at the carrot stick.
Damn
Ed, anyway!
She
could have been happy in the police department for years.
* * *
It was
Moonchange, tide change, sea ebb at Fayetteville's Loyd E. Auman Elementary,
where the thundering outrush of the pounding surf of children battered against
the lone swimmer-to-shore, who was Mac Lynn, Mighty Racecar Driver\x97
Or
maybe it's more like the charge of the lemmings, Mac thought, as he watched
small children trample all over each other in their race to leave.
Fascinated,
he stopped to watch.
Teachers
bellowed and directed and commanded in voices that would have done a drill
sergeant proud\x97Mac wondered how many of them joined the Marines following a few
years of teaching so they could get a vacation. Parents leaned out car windows
and screamed for their youngsters to hurry up. Kids shrieked and yelled insults
and questions and promises to call each other, fighting to be heard over the
general uproar. The school bus engines rumbled bass counterpoint.
The
odors of asphalt and bus fumes and new-mown rye grass mingled with the smells
of books and stale baloney sandwiches and sweaty gym clothes. Noise, commotion,
odors: all were overpowering. For a moment, he wished he was Underhill.
But if
I went there right after all of this, it would feel like someone had plugged my
ears and my nose, muffled my brain in silk, and put dark glasses on me. It
would be too subtle, like that awful French food.
There
was rarely anything subtle about the world of humans.
The
buses filled slowly, then, abruptly pulled away\x97little pockets of traveling
riot. Parents drove off with their young, the few walkers vanished into the
distance\x97and quiet returned suddenly, like the descent of the theater curtain.
Mac watched as teachers sagged with relief against the building or their cars,
or turned with slow and tired steps to head back inside.
He went
inside after them.
* * *
Lianne's
head rested on her desk. Her eyes were closed and her hands were locked over
the back of her neck. To Mac, she looked pale.
"Bad
day, huh?"
The
teacher looked up at him, blearily, too exhausted to register surprise at his
appearance. "Hell day."
Mac
grimaced by way of showing sympathy. "I'm sorry. You want a back rub? Or
maybe you'd prefer that I drive you home?"
Lianne
buried her head in her hands again. "I want to crawl into my bed and
die."
Mac
shook his head. "The first part of that idea doesn't sound too bad. Tell
you what. We'll go over to your place and crawl into bed, and I'll bet I can get
you to change your mind about dying."
"I
doubt it," Lianne groaned. She sounded sincere. She sounded frightened.
Mac
leaned his palms on her desk and waited until she looked up, then stared
intently into her eyes. "It can't be that bad. What's wrong?"
Lianne
pushed away from her desk and started gathering up her things. She turned her
back to him. There was a long pause, filled mostly with the sounds of her
stacking papers and breathing rapidly. Finally, she said, in a small, hesitant
voice, "Mostly, it seems that my classroom is haunted."
Mac
started to laugh, but stopped himself when he noted the tension in her
shoulders. "You aren't kidding."
"God,
Mac, I wish I were." She sighed and turned, and he could see the
brightness of impending tears in her eyes. "You're\x97you're going to think
I'm crazy, but it happened! All the kids were so scared\x97"
And so
were you\x97"Tell me," he urged. "Lianne, I've seen plenty of
things that seemed crazy at the time." He grinned at her, the lopsided,
very Celtic grin that always won women's trust. "I may not hang crystals
in my car like Bill Gatlin, but I'll go along with Will Shakespeare."
"
`There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your
philosophy'?" She managed a tremulous smile. "You know, I think I
believe you. . . ."
Mac
said nothing, only continued to smile encouragingly.
She
took a deep breath and relaxed, just a little. "Partway through reading
today, papers and chalk came to life and started flying around the room on
their own, attacking people. The door opened and slammed shut\x97it was a madhouse
in here. Then it just stopped. I was terrified."
"I'll
bet." He put warmth into it, so much that Lianne smiled at him. Mac felt a
twinge of excitement. Something was up\x97it seemed a bit of a coincidence that he
should be hunting a telekinetic kid when inanimate objects suddenly came to
life in that kid's homeroom teacher's class. Mac was willing to bet that
something about the visit to the track had triggered the girl. Maybe the
accident.
Time to
do a little fishing, he decided.
"What
were you doing when it started, baby?" he asked, urging her to keep
talking. "Do you remember?"
She
nodded. "Oh, yeah. It was weird. One of the kids in my class had been lost
in space all morning\x97I'd assigned everyone to read, and I went back to her seat
to talk to her. I didn't get the chance to, though. I hadn't any more than
gotten Amanda's attention when the classroom just\x97blew up."
That
name sounded familiar. "Amanda . . . is the name of the kid?"
Lianne
didn't notice his increased interest. "Yeah. You might remember her from
our little disaster yesterday. She was the skinny blond girl who wouldn't get
down behind the bleachers. She's an odd kid."
Mac
felt a surge of triumph. There are no coincidences. I knew it. Same child\x97and
the accident was the trigger.
He
nodded casually. "I remember her\x97she always act like that?"
Lianne
picked up jacket, bag, and papers and headed out the door. Mac followed.
"Yes,
no, and maybe," she told him. "Nothing about her makes sense. Her
aptitude tests indicate that she should be one of the smartest kids I've ever
taught. . . ."
"And?"
he prompted, taking her elbow.
Lianne
sighed. "And sometimes she is. One minute she's sweet and chatty and
willing to discuss the lesson, and the next she doesn't even seem to realize
there is a lesson. Her spelling tests are a trip. She'll either slaughter the
words entirely, or she'll get them all perfect\x97and sometimes she'll kill the
first half of the test and ace the second half. As far as I can tell, she has
no attention span. And sometimes she really likes me, and sometimes she really
hates me\x97and I don't have any warning before she goes from one attitude to the
other."
Mac
frowned; there was something about those symptoms. . . . "That is
strange."
"She
has parents that care\x97they have lots of money, she has all the
advantages\x97" Lianne shrugged. She waved to another teacher who was coming
down the long hall toward the stairs from the other direction. "I'm not
the only one she's this way around. Her health teacher says she went into a
rage during sex ed the other day. Said that she started screaming that anyone
who could do something that disgusting was a whore or a slut or worse\x97I guess Amanda
used a few words Nancy had never heard before. What's funny was, they were
talking about where babies come from. Really low key, really mild\x97and all of a
sudden, there goes Amanda, right off the deep end."
A sick
feeling had started in the pit of Mac's stomach when Lianne began describing
Amanda's behavior. It grew worse with every detail. By the time she'd finished,
he was sure something was horribly wrong with the child. He just didn't have
any idea what.
They
walked out of the hot hallways, redolent with chalk dust, ink, schoolgirl
perfume, and sneakers, into baked-asphalt parking lot heat.
Mac
held onto her elbow as she started towards her own car. "Let me drive you
home," he urged. I have to find out more about this child\x97or better yet, get
Lianne to take me to her.
But
Lianne shook her head with a stubborn determination he was beginning to know
well. "Mac, I appreciate it\x97but I'll be fine. I have to get some
groceries, and I want to go home and just soak in the tub and think for a while."
A bit of breeze touched the little tendrils of hair that had escaped from her
French braid. Not enough breeze to cool, just enough to be annoying.
Azaleas,
dogwoods, and a goddamned heat wave, all blooming at the same time. Welcome to
April in North Carolina, he thought.
He
persisted, in the forlorn hope that she had been worn down enough to give in to
him. "Are you sure?"
This
time her nod was quite determined. "I'm sure."
Mac
shrugged. "Okay. I really guess I ought to stop by the track before D.D.
sends out search teams, anyway." Try a different tactic. "May I see
you tonight?"
She
finally gave in to his persistence, yielding with a willing heart, if the smile
that answered his was any indication. "I'd like that. But\x97how about just
an evening in? I'm too tired for anything that involves going out in
public."
He
pretended to consider it. "Hmm. Never tried one of those before. . .
."
She
lifted a skeptical eyebrow, and he laughed. "It's a date," he said,
and gave Lianne a tight hug and a kiss. She returned the kiss with startling
enthusiasm, and Mac caught his breath.
They
are so warm, so bright . . . so enchanting\x97
And so
fleeting\x97
He
pulled away quickly and forced a grin. "Gotta run, babe. See you
tonight," he told her, and turned away. He didn't want her to see the pain
in his eyes.
\x97And
they die so soon, he thought. So soon . . . and anyone who loves them dies a
little bit with them. Not again. I won't ever let myself hurt that way again.
* * *
Redmond
Something-or-other was pawing Mac's mother again, back in the corner behind the
tire stacks. Mac heard D.D. giggling and whispering, and her young lover's
erratic breathing. It was, he reflected, a hard life that gave a man a mother
who looked ten years younger than he did\x97when she was nearly two hundred years
older.
"Hey,
D.D.," he yelled. "You're never going to get my car ready doing that.
Chase your stud-muffin off with a nice big tire iron and get out here."
"There's
more to life than cars," she yelled brightly, but she and the stud-muffin
appeared. Redmond, looking flushed and flustered, was struggling with his
buttons. Mac suspected he'd gotten the zipper back in place before he came out
of hiding.
D.D.,
of course, was unfazed. "I didn't think you were going to join us poor
peons today," she said, flaunting her pony-tail. "And Redmond and I
didn't see any reason to waste a perfectly good day if you weren't even going
to show up."
"Mmmm-hmmm."
Mac looked over at the dark corner of the garage. "Fooling around on the
cement behind the tires has got to be one of the more romantic ways I could
think of to spend a day."
She
laughed at him. "We pump grease our own way, we do. You're too stuffy,
Mac. You wouldn't know a good time if it bit you on the ass."
Mac
smiled agreeably and made a tsk-ing noise. "That's the difference between
you and me, D.D. If it bit me on the ass, I wouldn't call it a good time."
D.D.
laughed and flipped him the finger. "You'll never know what you're
missing."
He cast
his eyes up to heaven, as if asking for help. "Gods, I hope not. You're
one short step above delinquent, and if you weren't such a good mechanic\x97"
"But
I am," she replied impudently. "So you indulge me."
"So
I do. Hey, D.D.\x97I just remembered. A friend of yours stopped over at my place
this morning\x97she had a present for you, but she couldn't find you, so she left
it with me." Mac fished the scrap of green silk out of the bag in his
pocket, and started to hand it to D.D. . . .
But
D.D. kept her hands shoved firmly into her pockets. :Bullshit, Maclyn, my
love.: "What friend was that?" she asked out loud.
"Felouen,"
Mac said. He saw no point in lying. :I'd appreciate your help here, Mother.:
:No
doubt\x97but I'm not going to interfere in your relationship with the Court. You
have some responsibilities that you're evading\x97I won't force you to live up to
them. I also won't help you get out of them.: Out loud, D.D. lied for Redmond's
benefit. "Felouen and I can't stand each other. I wonder what she's up to."
:She
stuck me with a Ring, Mother. Won't you please take it off my hands? Before it
calls too much attention to me?: Mac proffered the silk again. "She wants
to be friends, D.D. Why don't you just take her present? You can always give it
back to her later if you don't change your mind about her."
:You
deal with it, kiddo.: "If she wants to be friends, she can find me
herself. If you see her again, give her present back to her. And tell her what
I said. I'm sure she'll be seeing you again."
Mac muttered,
"I'm sure she will."
He held
the Ring in his fingers and wished that it would go away. It radiated warmth,
power, assurance\x97and a broadcast beam that would tell every Unseleighe thing in
the area that a Seleighe warrior was among them.
Just exactly
what I needed for Christmas.
CHAPTER
FOUR
Elementary
school. The racetrack. Penney's at the mall. Barnes' Motor and Parts.
Three\x97count 'em, three\x97fast food joints. No\x97she thought, watching with
disbelief as Mac pulled into a Kentucky Fried Chicken, Make that four fast food
joints.
"You
sure know how to show a girl a good time, fella," Belinda muttered.
"If this is how hot-dog race-drivers spend their days, I'll pass."
She'd
never tailed anyone duller in her life. She'd spent her entire afternoon
driving in circles around Fayetteville, watching Mac gorge on junk food and run
apparently pointless errands. It was getting dark, she'd put monster miles on
her little silver Sunbird, she had to go to the bathroom, and she was, for the
second time, almost out of gas. Mac hadn't taken a potty break or fueled up his
accursed Chevy once. Belinda would have given anything to know how he'd
accomplished that second trick. Those beasts were supposed to guzzle gas,
everyone knew that. His gas tank couldn't be that big.
He
hadn't spotted her. She knew he hadn't spotted her. Except a suspicion kept
nagging that nobody, absolutely nobody, could or would spend a day in such a
boring manner unless he was trying to mislead a tail.
But
finally, at about seven-thirty, Mac's aimless wandering ceased, replaced by
apparent commitment to a single direction and increased speed. Now we're
getting somewhere, Belinda rejoiced.
She had
to fall further and further back as they left the center of Fayetteville and
traffic thinned. For twenty minutes, they sped along roads that became
increasingly deserted. Suddenly, on a narrow country lane, Mac left the
pavement entirely, bounced along a sand two-rut through a fallow field, and
screeched to a halt in front of a stand of stunted hardwoods along the field's
back perimeter. There were no buildings anywhere around. There were no cars
passing by.
This is
going to be good, Belinda gloated. If he has something going on back there,
I'll make sure he finds a nice little surprise waiting for him the next time he
drops by.
Belinda
saw him creep out of the Chevy and sneak into the woods. She turned off her
headlights, drove in as close as she dared, then rolled down her window. She
left the keys hanging from the ignition in case she needed to get out fast,
crawled out of the window to keep from making any unnecessary noise, then
trailed him on foot.
Bless
him for wearing light colors, she thought. His white windbreaker nearly glowed
in the dark. She edged past the Chevy\x97cautiously\x97she still couldn't explain the
incident with Stevens and Peterkin\x97and slipped into the trees. She moved
quietly. She'd had plenty of woods experience. Mac apparently hadn't. He
sounded like a buffalo dancing on potato chips\x97she'd never heard such a racket
from one person. She could have followed him blindfolded.
He
worked his way up a rise and into a clearing. She saw him plainly. He stopped,
illuminated by the light of the half-moon riding almost overhead. Then he
turned. Fifteen yards behind him, she froze.
With
preternatural clearness, she saw him look right at her. She saw him grin. His
eyes fixed on hers, he mouthed the words "Hi, babe," and he waved at
her\x97
Then he
vanished. Poof. He didn't hide, he didn't move, he just\x97plain\x97vanished.
For one
stunned moment, she couldn't think at all.
Then
her mind started working again, beginning with a long list of things she'd like
to call the sonuvabitch.
The
boss, Belinda thought with some bitterness, ought to be thrilled by this.
From
back where she'd parked, she heard a whinny and the sound of horse's hooves on
dirt. She heard the "ding, ding" sound that could only be caused by
someone opening her car door with the keys in the ignition. Still in a state of
shock, she listened as a motor\x97her motor\x97kicked over.
What?
Mac had
vanished and now someone was stealing her car!
Released
from her trance, she turned and broke into a full-out gallop, screaming,
"Get the hell away from my car, you thief!" as she ran. Branches
slapped her face and tore at her clothes. Thorns ripped at her hands and
tangled in her braid. Full-sized trees seemed to jump in front of her. She
arrived in the field in time to see her car, headlights on, back out into the
highway. The driver flipped the interior light on for a moment, just so she
would be sure to recognize him. It was Mac. He waved, and tooted her horn, and
drove off.
There
was a light-colored horse running behind him. Pacing him, she'd have said.
"Give
my car back, you bastard!" she shrieked. She pulled her gun out of her
shoulder holster and fired one shot in sheer frustration. She heard the crack
of shattering glass, and a laugh. Red tail lights disappeared in the distance.
Now her
nice little rental car had a bullet hole in it. And a broken window. For which,
no doubt, she'd be charged the worth of the entire car.
Shit!
But, no\x97it doesn't matter. He stole my car, he didn't have anyone with
him\x97therefore, he had to leave his. The Chevy. He'll have taken the keys\x97but I
learned a lot from the P.D. I'll just hot-wire his damned Chevy.
She
turned to walk back to Mac's car\x97and found hoof-prints and emptiness.
There
was no car.
* * *
Mel
Tanbridge grinned and fished out a pen and a yellow legal pad from his desk.
He'd just mined a new sure-thing cash-crop angle out of his latest issue of
Science News, and he wanted to get it down on paper while the idea was still
fresh. The members of Nostradamus Project's auxiliary organization, Nostradamus
Foundation International, paid well to get their pseudo-science delivered to
their doorstep, and he worked hard to make sure it arrived full of juicy
tidbits that would keep the money rolling in.
He
looked over the SN article, which, in very careful terms noted a variance in
the ability of rhesus monkeys to pick symbols shown on a computer screen when
the symbols were chosen by a human researcher compared to random assignment of
the symbols by the computer. The article, "High-Level Pattern Recognition
in Rhesus Monkeys," noted that the monkeys picked the correct symbol from
a random stream about 13 to 17 percent more often when the human researcher was
choosing the symbols. The article noted that this happened even when the monkey
was not able to see the researcher, eliminating the chance of visual cues from
the human. The article suggested that the human researchers' attempts at
randomness displayed a subconscious choice pattern picked up by the monkeys,
and noted that the rhesus monkeys had a strong affinity for pattern
recognition.
Mel snorted.
"Telepathic
Contact Between Humans and Monkeys Confirmed In Independent Studies," he
scratched down on the legal pad. "Rhesus monkeys are the first non-human
species to demonstrate telepathic abilities\x97reading the minds of researchers in
carefully controlled double-blind experiments conducted by\x97" He paused.
One wanted to be very careful about naming names in these things. Some of his
pet flakes, he suspected, also read Science News. "\x97by an independent
simian research facility in Florida." He carefully copied in the
statistics and a few, slanted quotes, referred to Science News as a
"professional journal for scientists," and hit his pitch.
"Nostradamus
Foundation International must raise\x97" He thought about it. How much did he
want to raise this time? A couple million dollars would be nice. A couple
million dollars would permit him to put out glossy four-color fliers and
advertise in all his favorite magazines and expand his carefully cultivated
list of fools who could be parted from their money. It would also permit him
some breathing room to continue with his covert and highly illegal, but real,
search to acquire a stable of TK's and other psi talents. "\x97two point four
million dollars to continue its exciting research into projects like this."
"Like" was an important word in Mel's vocabulary. He used it a lot.
With that one little word, he could infer, without actually stating, that his
foundation was involved in simian psychic research. My ass! Simian psychic
research. What an angle. God, I love it.
"Finally,
paranormal phenomena have become a legitimate domain of scientific exploration,
and NFI is spearheading that exploration. Your participation has been essential
to NFI's research in the past. We need your help now."
He
drafted out a series of boxes, starting with twenty dollars and ending with a
thousand, and noted that he wanted a place at the bottom of the fund sheet for
"participants" to check "current areas of research" they
would particularly like to see expanded, with a write-in line for
"other." Those little mini-surveys were great. He'd been on the
lookout for an animal project ever since some lady had written requesting that
NFI expand into "telepathic research with other life forms." She'd
added a long, handwritten letter (on pink cat stationery), with her check for
twenty dollars, stating that she firmly believed her cats could read minds. Mel
made sure she got a nice note back stating that NFI thought psychic cats were a
good subject for research. He'd added "non-human psychic research" to
his list immediately.
Mel
loved New Agers.
He spun
the soft leather executive chair to face out the window, leaned back, and laced
his fingers behind his head. The taste of success was sweet. The last letter,
scavenged from a National Geographic article on Eskimo shamans, had netted him
about a million-five. This one, his instincts told him, was good for easily
that much.
"Fran!"
he yelled.
His
secretary leaned in the door. "Yes?"
He
indicated the legal pad. "Get Janny to set that up in bulletin
format\x97yellow paper and black ink, a line drawing of a telepathic monkey\x97tell
her to keep it understated and scientific-looking. Make sure the drawing is of
a rhesus monkey," he added. He closed his eyes and sighed. "Some of
these people might notice."
"Okay.
Mel, do you want to look at your mail? You have a FedEx package, some bills,
some junk, and a few responses from the last mailer."
"Bring
'em in." The bills would wait, the responses he loved to open
personally\x97money in the mail was a wonderful thing. And the FedEx package ought
to be Belinda's TK film. He felt a rush of adrenalin. There might be nothing to
what she had\x97but Belinda wasn't one of the true believers. She thought the
whole Nostradamus Project was a dodge. If she was convinced she had something
real\x97
He
suppressed that line of thought. No sense setting himself up for a
disappointment. "Bring in the VCR from the conference room while you're at
it."
* * *
Lianne
opened the door, wearing an oversized pink t-shirt with Garfield on it and a
pair of tight blue jeans, minus knees. Her deafeningly pink socks bagged around
her ankles, and her hair was tucked behind her ears and held in place by
barrettes. She looked about twelve. Mac had really been hoping she'd be wearing
something from Victoria's Secret\x97or maybe nothing\x97but he hid his disappointment
bravely.
"Hey'ya!"
She looked him over and grinned. "You look like a man who expected to be
greeted by a woman wearing Saran Wrap." She winked. "I don't go to
the door that way, you know. If I did, my mom would be on the other side."
Mac
squeezed her to his chest and kissed her passionately. "That wasn't what I
was thinking at all," he lied. "I was just thinking you were the
prettiest bag lady I'd ever seen."
He
followed her into her apartment, admiring the way she walked, and kept close as
she led him to her television set.
"I
went for comfort, I'll have you know. I had a very bad day." Lianne gave
him a wan little smile and a tight hug. "I'm glad you're here. I rented a
couple of movies, got a huge bag of popcorn, and I've got all the makings for
daiquiris\x97unless you'd rather have diet soft drinks\x97?"
"Decaffeinated?"
he asked cautiously.
"Nah\x97I
like my caffeine." She made a face. "Why have a cola without caffeine?
You might as well not bother."
He
answered her face with one of his own. "Whereas I like to sleep at night.
No, really, I'm allergic to caffeine. Daiquiris will be fine."
She
pointed out the bag on the TV cabinet. "So. Pick the movie you want to see
and get it ready\x97I'll do the daiquiris."
She
vanished into the little apartment kitchen. Mac pulled three clear plastic
boxes out of the paper bag she'd indicated and studied the titles. He grinned
as he peered at the first label. The Man With One Red Shoe.
He'd
seen that one at least a dozen times. He closed his eyes, replayed the opening
credits, recalled the slinking, skullduggerous beat of the score, and chuckled
softly. Tom Hanks, Lori Singer, Carrie Fisher, Dabney Coleman, Charles Durning
and Jim Belushi. A casting miracle, and a great script, and hilarious, too;
elvish nominee for an all-time Oscar. He put the movie on top of Lianne's VCR.
Probably that one, he decided.
Violent
machinery sounds ground out from the kitchen. Mac's smile took on a bemused
air. What was she doing in there? Was that making daiquiris? It sounded more
like chainsawing down a Buick. He shrugged. The ways of humans were
inscrutable.
He
glanced at the next title she'd rented. He liked Bette Midler a lot, and Danny
DeVito\x97nasty little man, in this one at least\x97was well cast. Ruthless People
wasn't quite in the same league as her first choice, but on the whole, he
approved.
When he
saw what her third pick was, though, he dropped the other two movies back in
the bag without another thought. He put that cassette into the VCR's slot,
checked to make sure it was rewound\x97gloating all the while at his competence
with human machinery\x97and flashed a Cheshire grin at Lianne when she came out of
the kitchen with a mammoth bowl of popcorn balanced in the crook of her elbow
and a bright pink daiquiri in either hand.
"Strawberry,"
she said. "Fresh strawberries my mom picked and dropped off
yesterday."
"Sounds
tasty." It did\x97and it smelled tasty, as well. The fresh strawberry-smell
was mouthwatering.
She
smiled at his expression. "I already tried mine. It's pretty good. I can't
think of a better combination than strawberries and popcorn. So\x97what are we
watching?"
He set
the bowl of popcorn and one of the frothy pink drinks on her coffee table, and
hit the on button of the remote. "Just wait and see." He favored her
with a sly smile.
"I
rented them, you doofus. I already know what the choices are." When he
still wouldn't tell her, she rolled her eyes and snorted. "Mysterious men
just give me goosebumps."
* * *
Belinda
sat on the berm of the dark, lonely road, reloading the chamber of her handgun
and wishing Mac were standing in front of her so she would have a target.
Reloading was mostly an excuse to sit down for a minute. After all, she'd only
used the one bullet. But she'd been hiking along the road for nearly an hour
and a half. Her feet hurt, she was tired, she was pissed off, and she really
would have liked to have taken time for a good long scream, but that wasn't
practical.
Besides,
police training had left an indelible mark on her subconscious when it came to
firearms. She firmly believed that one empty chamber would be the one she
needed\x97so it would never, never stay empty.
I hate
him, she thought, rage coloring everything she did. If he wasn't worth a ruddy
fortune to me alive, I'd kill that two-bit jock just for the fun of it.
But
he'd proven to her that he was exactly the person she was looking for. His
psychic tricks verged on the magical\x97that vanishing act, even more than the
business he'd pulled with his car doors\x97had guaranteed his fate in Belinda's
book. That slimy little shit Tanbridge would be willing to pay through the nose
for Mac Lynn. And soon. Real soon\x97because her patience wasn't going to hold out
much longer.
She
sighed and got up. She was spending a lot of time walking on this job\x97something
she would pay Mac Lynn back for. At least this time when he stranded her, she
hadn't been wearing high heels and tight leather pants.
Ten minutes
further down the road, after a wide detour past an abandoned house that would
have to be repaired before it would even be suitable for ghosts, she spotted a
gleam of silver off to her right, reflected in the moonlight. As she drew
nearer, the gleam resolved into the shape of a Sunbird.
My car!
she thought. I don't believe it!
Suspecting
a ruse, she dropped into the woods and edged up to the vehicle from the
passenger side, working her way through grass and weeds that reached to the
Sunbird's door handles. He hadn't locked the car. She checked for booby traps,
held her breath as she opened the passenger door, and\x97heart racing\x97eased
herself onto the passenger seat and across to the driver's side.
My God,
the keys are in it. And the tank still shows half full. She smiled, bemused.
I'll be damned. Maybe I won't have to skin the soles of his feet with a rusty
knife after all.
She
turned the key in the ignition, and the motor kicked right over. She put the
car in gear and gave it some gas. It moved\x97sluggishly\x97onto the pavement.
Flop-flop-flop-flop,
flop-flop-flop-flop.
She hit
the brake, turned the motor off, and leapt out.
She
stared for a full minute at the car's tires, tires that had been completely
hidden by the tall grass. Her anger grew to monumental proportions. In a blind
fury, she kicked the door, and screamed "You son-of-a-bitch!" into
the empty night.
"I'll
kill you," she ranted. "I'll kill you, I'll kill you, I'll kill you!
I don't need the money this bad\x97I don't need anything this bad. You bastard!
You rotten, stinking, stupid, sneaking bastard!"
She
stared at her car again, and hot tears of pure rage rolled down her cheeks. The
tires\x97all four of them\x97were flatter than soggy pancakes.
* * *
After
the ordeals of the day, Stranger watched the children with apprehension. They
huddled, separate and isolated, in the darkness of the beautiful little-girl
room and wept in silent, tearless rage. Her heart went out to them.
Och, if
there was but a way to show them each that they are not alone\x97she thought.
She
knew all of them\x97Anne, battered and abused, always angry, who lived only to
deal with the Father in all his giant horror; Abbey, the sheltered, the
brilliant, charming scholar who loved learning; Alice, the repressive puritan
who hated everything that failed to meet her impossible standards of
righteousness\x97and the silent, frozen, tortured husk that was all that remained
of the original Amanda. Each of the first three would acknowledge her
presence\x97none would admit that their "sisters" existed. The
three-year-old Amanda was unreachable, hiding forever inside her frozen shell
of fear. Amanda would never come out, without a miracle.
But
they need each other sa' badly\x97if they could only come t'gether, they'd be
whole again. And then\x97Stranger stared up at the milky reflection of moonlight
on the wall\x97then they could fight back, couldn't they? For all that they're
only children.
Well,
then, it's up to me to introduce them, isn't it? A bloody nightmare that's
likely to be, but best begun is soonest done.
Abbey
was the easiest to reach. She stayed in the frilly pink bedroom, and did not
ring her world with guards and traps. Alone of all the girls, she still
retained the childish wish to please. She would listen to the ancient voice of
Stranger.
:Abbey,
can you hear me?:
Abbey,
blue-eyed and blond, sniffled and nodded. :Yes, Stranger. Wh-what do you
w-w-want?:
Cethlenn
made her thoughts as gentle and persuasive as she could. :I have a surprise for
you.:
Abbey
perked up a little. :Is it good?: she asked hopefully. She alone of all of them
retained the ability to hope.
Stranger
reflected on the answer to that and sighed. Was it good that there were four
little girls and one ancient Celtic witch living in the body of one child?
Probably not\x97but it felt necessary. Stranger had come late to this little
drama. She had her own ideas about what had shaped the weirdling child in whom
she found her own spirit suddenly awakened. She had ideas, too, of what cures there
might be.
:Och,
it's good enough, I suppose. I've a giftie for you, little Abbey. Secret
sisters, hidden from all the world save you. Would you like to be meeting them,
then?:
The
child pondered. :Are they little kids like Sharon?:
:Not at
all,: Stranger assured her. :They are like you\x97almost magical.:
That
was the key word. Abbey's eyes widened. :Oh, yes, Stranger. When can I meet
them?:
Cethlenn,
the Stranger, smiled grimly. :Come with me, child. I think now would be a good
time.: She enveloped Abbey's spirit in her own, and with some difficulty
slipped both of them through tiny cracks in the barrier that grew between the
children. On the other side, Anne curled in a ball, silent, rocking back and
forth, staring at nothing. Anne's world was unremitting gray, with all the
shifting featurelessness of unformed nightmare\x97except for the walls. Everywhere
in Anne's world, walls crawled up and up and up until the eye couldn't see any
further. They were brick or stone or shiny black glass, but they were
everywhere.
When
Stranger and Abbey appeared, Anne looked up and shrieked with fear. Her eyes
dilated, and she jammed herself up against one of her omnipresent walls.
:Anne,
I've brought a friend for you,: Stranger said, her voice soothing. :You don't
have to be alone anymore.:
Anne
cowered and stared. :A-lone,: she crooned. :A-lone, a-lone, a-lone . . .:
Objects materialized in the hazy space that surrounded the three of them and
began to spin through the air. Lit cigarettes and burning matches, ropes and
riding crops\x97all took up a stately waltz around Abbey's thin body, then darted
in one by one, charging closer and closer to the other child's face. Abbey
winced away.
:Stop
it, Anne,: Stranger demanded, and moved next to the child under attack. :This
is Abbey, your sister.:
:Sis-ter,
sis-ter, sis-ter,: the green-eyed child chanted. :I\x97don't\x97want\x97a\x97sis-ter.:
The
flames grew bigger, the coals at the ends of the cigarettes brighter and more
menacing. The riding crops became bullwhips that cracked like thunder. The
ropes coiled and struck out, serpents of hemp. All of them wove around Stranger
and Abbey in a tighter and more lethal dance, faster and faster, until Abbey
began to scream.
:Out!:
Cethlenn commanded, and with the flick of her fingers, she and Abbey were
through the barrier, back in Abbey's safe haven.
Abbey
sat on her bed and sobbed, while Cethlenn sat next to her and stroked her hair.
:I don't want any more surprises, Stranger,: the child told her gravely.
:No,:
Stranger replied softly, :I rather imagine you don't.:
Cethlenn
sat, the tearful child cradled in her arms, and stared off into space. Well
then, lassie, she thought to herself, will ye be havin' any more bright ideas
this evenin'? Let's hope not.
* * *
"I
love The Princess Bride. I could watch the sword fight scene all by itself a
million times." Lianne snuggled deeper into Mac's shoulder and munched
popcorn. On the screen, the fight raged. Inigo made a remark about Bonetti's
defense. The Man In Black laughed. The swordsmen battled across the rocks, near
the cliff\x97Inigo switched the sword from his left hand to his right, and the
tide of battle turned.
"Probably
reminds you of your job," Mac drawled.
Lianne's
left eyebrow flickered upward, and she snorted. "I should have it so easy.
Even the Fire Swamp and the Rodents of Unusual Size would be a piece of cake
compared to fifth grade at Loyd E. Auman."
Mac
punched a button on the remote and the TV went off.
"Hey,"
Lianne yelped. "You can't turn off The Princess Bride!"
He
turned to her wearing the most serious expression he could muster. "We've
already watched the whole movie once and the sword fight three times. Lianne, I
want to hear about what happened in your class today. This is important."
Lianne
sighed. "I know, but . . ."
He
shook his head. "No `buts'."
She
considered his expression, then stiffened her shoulders. "Okay. It just
sounds ridiculous, but it was real. Stuff was flying around the room,
Mac\x97books, chalk, pens and pencils, paper\x97it couldn't have been a draft or a
breeze. I don't know what it could have been. I have no logical explanation for
what happened."
"Life
doesn't require a logical explanation, Lianne," he replied as persuasively
as he could.
But she
shook her head, violently. "Yes, it does. I refuse to sink to the level of
the Shirley MacLaines of the world. I don't flitter after every goofball
anti-intellectual guru who promises the keys to universe\x97no math required. I
don't approve of all this New Age mumbo-jumbo. The real world doesn't need it.
The real world needs mathematicians, scientists, artists, builders, writers,
teachers, nurses\x97the real world doesn't need any more flakes." She drew a
deep breath. "There are already enough of those."
Mac grinned
wryly and hugged her closer. "Oh, I don't know, baby. I think the real
world could use a bit of magic. You know, a few elves and fairies, some bogans
to play the bad guys, some ghosties and ghoulies. . . ."
"Life's
too short to waste on fantasy," she said, but he could tell she was
weakening.
This,
from a woman who watches The Princess Bride? "Life's too short to waste on
math. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something." He grinned.
She
frowned. "You'd make a great fifth-grader."
"The
world will never know." Mac kissed her cheerfully on her nose, then took a
more serious tone. "This morning you were as upset by your student,
Amanda, as you were by the stuff flying around in your room. Why?"
Lianne
rolled over and looked directly into Mac's eyes. "I want to understand
what's the matter with her. As a matter of fact, I'm going out to her house on
Friday to talk with her folks. You'd know the place, I'll bet. Kendrick's
Bal-A-Shar Arabian Stables. I know it is going to sound silly\x97but you know what
bothered me most today? I just had the craziest feeling, with that poltergeist
business going on in my classroom, that Amanda was really the one
responsible." She stopped and pursed her lips. She was watching him for a
reaction. "Now I really sound nuts, huh?"
Mac
brushed his finger along the line of her eyebrows and slowly shook his head.
"Nope\x97you sound like you have good instincts."
"You
think Amanda might have had something to do with\x97oh. Stupid me. You're humoring
me." She turned her back to him, grabbed the remote control, and turned
the TV back on. The Man In Black leapt from the cliff, did one great swing from
a vine, followed up with a back-flip, and landed next to the sword he'd tossed
point-down into the sand.
"Who
are you?" Inigo pleaded.
The Man
In Black smiled. "No one of im\x97"
\x97Click.
"Don't
turn the TV off, Mac," Lianne snapped. "I want to watch this."
He
snapped back. "Don't pout. I can't talk to you with the TV on, and I want
to discuss this."
She rounded
on him, fury in her eyes. "Well, I don't! I don't want to be patronized, I
don't want to be humored\x97I don't want to be remembered as that amusing little
schoolteacher you dated once upon a time who had a problem with poltergeists in
her classroom and bats in her belfry! I'm going to watch the movie. If you
don't want to do that, you can just leave."
I don't
want to leave. I had a lot of other plans for this evening, Mac thought, and
sighed, mentally. Give up on the child for a moment. Now that I know who and
where she is, there are other ways of reaching her.
He
slipped his hands under her giant t-shirt and nibbled gently along one side of
her neck. He felt her shiver, then start to pull away.
"I
wasn't making fun of you. I believe in poltergeists and fairies and\x97" he
dropped his voice to a low whisper "\x97even elves. I think that part of the
universe is real, even if you don't. But you're tired, and you probably want to
forget about work for a while. I'm sorry I brought it up. Let's find something
else to talk about."
"Like
what?" she asked, suspiciously.
He
breathed into her ear. "Oh, you\x97and me\x97and maybe a little snuggling."
Lianne
smiled and rolled over against him. "I have a better idea," she
whispered. "Let's skip the talking entirely."
* * *
It was
painfully early. Mac stared at the dull green glow of the alarm clock, then
rolled over to look at the woman asleep by his side. She slept on her stomach,
the sheet tangled around her knees, her face buried in the crook of her left arm.
Her breathing was soft and regular, almost inaudible. Even asleep, she glowed
with vitality.
Fascinated,
Mac stroked the soft skin of her back and lightly caressed the smooth curves of
her buttocks.
She
wriggled against his touch, moved closer\x97and her breathing told him she was
awake.
"Hi,
there," he chuckled.
She
squinched one eye open, smiled at him, and sighed. "Hi, yourself,"
she said softly. "It isn't time to get up yet, surely?"
"Not
really. And don't call me Shirley."
"Oh
gawd. It's too early for Zucker jokes."
He
softened his smile and caressed her cheek. "I was just watching you
sleep."
"And
so you decided to wake me up." Lianne giggled. She had a charming giggle.
"Mac, you are such a fink. But, boy-oh-boy-oh-boy, I don't want to get up
yet\x97"
An idea
occurred to Mac. "Tell you what. I'm completely awake, and I won't get
back to sleep again. Why don't you go back to sleep, and I'll put together a
terrific breakfast for you\x97you can eat in bed, and then the two of us will take
a nice long shower together, and then we'll go off to work. Okay?"
Her
muffled response reached Mac through the baffling of her pillow, under which
she had buried her face. "How could I refuse an offer like that?"
He
laughed. "You can't, so don't try."
Mac
rolled out of the bed and started to walk to the kitchen.
Lianne's
voice stopped him.
"You
didn't really mean it about the elves, did you?"
He
looked back at her. She was propped up on her elbows, studying him intently.
"Mean
what about the elves?" he asked carefully.
Her
eyes were wary. "That you believed in them."
Mac
grinned at her and winked. "Of course I meant it."
She
snorted and buried her head back under the pillow. Mac laughed and went on into
the kitchen.
* * *
Bacon,
an omelet, hot croissants, some waffles\x97or maybe crepes covered with powdered
sugar and fresh whipped cream\x97fresh-squeezed orange juice . . . mmmmm. Sausage.
Link sausage. What else? Mac's imagination reviewed the possibilities. I think
I'll do this one without magic. No point in wasting the power when there is a
kitchen full of human food to use. He flipped on the light in her kitchen,
wandered over to the fridge, and opened it. Wonder where she keeps the
croissants.
None
were evident. In fact, he didn't see any bacon or link sausages either. No
waffles. No crepes. The orange juice was plainly marked, but when he tasted it,
it most definitely wasn't fresh-squeezed. He found eggs, but the steps
necessary to change them from raw egg to tasty omelet eluded him.
He did
see a Betty Crocker cookbook. I've seen June Lockhart making breakfast for
Timmy and his dad on Lassie. How hard can it be?
He
picked up a cookbook at random, opened it, and paged through the index.
Eggs
And Cheese\x97page 101. He thumbed through the pages until he found comprehensive
descriptions on how to buy and store eggs, how to measure and use egg
equivalents, and a mass of information on cheeses. There were pictures of a
woman's hand over a big, flat pan, and instructions that described the making
of poached eggs, shirred eggs, fried eggs, scrambled eggs, souffles, egg foo
yong, and dozens of varieties of omelets.
Good
enough. He rummaged through the kitchen until he found a pan that resembled the
one in the picture. He put together as many of the listed ingredients as he
could locate. He couldn't find any fresh green peppers, but he did find a jar
labeled "Hot Red Chili Pepper\x97Ground." In the tradition of the
cookbook, he substituted a cup of red peppers for the suggested cup of green
peppers. Lianne had an eight-ounce can of tomato sauce in her cupboard, but it
didn't have a pop-top on it, and Mac couldn't figure out how to open it, so,
with the competent smile of a man who can adapt, he added eight ounces of
tabasco sauce\x97which, he reasoned, was bright red and should be the same thing.
He broke the three required eggs with enthusiasm, and very carefully picked out
most of the pieces of shell. There didn't seem to be enough omelet for two
people though, so he added another three eggs.
Satisfied,
he stirred his ingredients around in the little flat pan, and following
instructions, located the knob on the stove that said "oven," and
checked the instructions. It was supposed to take forty minutes to cook an
omelet, but he really didn't want to spend that much time on it. He thought for
a moment. The instructions called for 350 degrees. If he doubled the
temperature, he should be able to halve the time. But the oven wouldn't go any
higher than 550. Well, actually, it did go to BROIL. That must be about 600-700
degrees. He turned the knob to broil. Carrying his embryonic omelet carefully
by the pan's plastic handle, he placed it into the oven.
Nothing
to that. I might as well see what else I can whip up.
He
paged through the cookbook. Pictures of delicious roasts and beautifully
prepared fowl caught his eyes. He read down the instructions for some of the
dishes. I could do that, he thought, fascinated. The world of humans was
amazingly accessible, if one simply knew where to look. Page after page of
substantial human dishes\x97that anyone could make.
He
became absorbed in pictures of London Broil and Sweet-and-Sour Meatballs,
Broccoli-Tomato Salad and Swedish Tea Rings. The time slipped past.
The
sudden shriek of the smoke alarm brought him out of his reverie. The kitchen
was redolent with the stench of burning plastic. Smoke roiled from the front of
the oven.
"Shit,"
Mac muttered, admiring the succinctness of human vernacular. With a glance, he
silenced the smoke alarm. With another, he formed the smoke into a compact
ribbon and sent it trailing out the entryway in a neat, steady stream. He
pulled open the oven door, surveyed the melted ruins of the skillet handle and
his prodigiously grown and dreadfully blackened omelet with dismay. He made a
gesture of dismissal, and skillet, omelet, and mess vanished.
Lianne
called from the bedroom, "Was that the smoke alarm?"
So
much, he thought, for doing a fabulous breakfast the human way.
"That
was your imagination."
"I
suppose it's my imagination that I smell smoke, too."
"Absolutely.
I'm bringing breakfast in now." To blazes with it. I'll do it my way. Mac
visualized his own breakfasts from the hotel, and out of thin air and elven
magic, recreated an exact duplicate of the best one he'd ever had, down to the
little rose in the cut crystal bud vase. Then he doubled it. He lifted up the
heavy silvered serving tray he'd materialized, and trotted into the bedroom
with it.
Lianne
rolled over and sat up, and her eyes grew round. "Wow! When you talk about
breakfast in bed, you aren't kidding." She looked over the steaming
croissants, the huge, cheese-filled omelet, the two steaks\x97broiled, medium
rare, the big crystal glasses full to brimming with fresh-squeezed juice, and
the bowls of fresh fruit. "And where did you get fresh cherries this time
of year?" she asked.
Mac
shrugged and grinned. "You like?"
"I
like." She took one of the cherries and bit into it, and closed her eyes
with ecstasy. "God, that's good." She looked at Mac with eyes that
seemed to see right through him. "I'm beginning to realize why you believe
in magic, though. The fancy trays and the cut crystal aren't a bad trick,
considering I've never owned anything like them in my life, but these\x97" She
indicated the little bowls of rich red fruit. "There won't be any cherries
available around here till the middle of June. I know, because I haunt the
grocery stores for 'em every year. If you found these\x97that's magic."
"You
bet it is." Mac dug into his omelet and steak. "Stick with me, kid.
You ain't seen nothing yet." He grinned at her. The wincing he saved for
inside.
Carelessness
like that, he thought ruefully, eyeing the out-of-season cherries, will blow
your cover all the way to Elfhame Outremer. And beyond.
CHAPTER
FIVE
D.D.
had MIX 96 turned way up. She was sprawled under the engine of the disassembled
Victor, tinkering with something, singing along at the top of her lungs with a
Creedence Clearwater Revival cover of "I Heard It Through The
Grapevine" that Tank Sherman had dug out of the Golden Oldies box. Mac
grinned. He wouldn't admit it to her, but D.D. didn't sound too bad on backup
vocals.
He
waited until the song was over and something odious by Madonna started to
play\x97then he turned the radio off.
"Hey!"
D.D. yelled without looking up. "Turn that back on. I'm listening to
it."
:Mother,
Mother, what would they be sayin' back home if they could see you right now?
The shame\x97och, the shame of me own fair mother disgracin' herself so.:
:Can
it, kiddo.: Dierdre was unfazed. She stood, wiped her hands on her overalls,
and turned to face her offspring. "I'm not believin' me own eyes,"
she said for the benefit of everyone. "Mac Lynn, the perennially late, is
in here at eight o'clock in the morning. Ye gods, man, fetch me water before I
faint."
"Ha-ha."
:Stopping in to let you know\x97I found the homebase of our little TK. I'm going
by there later today to see if I can talk to her.:
D.D.
turned back to her engine block and returned to her tinkering. Mac sat down on
a stack of tires to watch her.
:Good,:
the pony-tailed terror remarked as she loosened bolts. :'Bout damn time. I may
graduate you to nearly-competent.:
Mac
grinned. :Actually, there is something you can do that would be a lot more
help.:
:If
you're still hoping I'll talk to Felouen for you\x97:
Mac
snarled out loud, and realized a comment was necessary for the benefit of the
non-elven who were present. "While you're working on the steering, D.D.,
tighten it up. It felt like you had it patched together with rubber bands and
wishful thinking on Wednesday." Inwardly, he added another snort. :Not
even close, Mother. I think I know how to take care of Felouen. This is
something else entirely. I suspect Belinda Ciucci will be back. And after last
night, she's going to be looking for my hide nailed to a board. Unfortunately,
that might put an edge on her. Entertain her and her two goons for me, if you
would. I don't want her getting close to the kid.:
Dierdre
chuckled. :She still haunting your backtrail, is she? That I'll be happy to
help you with.:
* * *
Maclyn
was out on the track when Belinda showed up. D.D. spotted her making nice to
Brad Fennerman from the SpelCo team, batting her lashes and leaning forward
just enough to give him a really clear view of her cleavage.
D.D.
wrinkled her nose with disdain. The woman was a menace\x97and an embarrassment to
both her species and her gender. She decided to watch, though, to see what
Belinda's angle of attack would be.
It was
only when she caught the girl's gaze skim past a point in her own pit area that
she noticed a pale, hulking shape hovering in the shadows over Mac's thermos
holding a little baggy full of something white and powdery. Interesting. No doubt
Mac's young admirer has a Borgia event planned here. Probably not true poison\x97I
suspect they want darlin' Mac alive. D.D. grinned and made sure the intruder
thought she was far too involved in her work to notice him.
White
powder went into the Gatorade. She saw a steady stream of it pour in\x97saw the
man carefully twist the cap back on the thermos, then slink out along the row
of stacked tires\x97saw him signal Belinda. The girl didn't acknowledge the
signal, but she abruptly looked at her watch, gave a dramatic sigh, and
wriggled away on her high, high heels.
She'll
be around a while yet, D.D. figured. She's got to have some plan for draggin'
him out of here under everyone's noses. Och, this ought to be delightful.
Mac did
three more laps before he roared in.
:She's
been by,: D.D. informed him without preamble. :Such a sweet, innocent lass she
is, too, I canna imagine why you're suspectin' her at-all. Be sure to drink all
your Gatorade\x97your friends went to such trouble to drug it for you.:
Mac
smiled slyly. :Did they now? Well, then\x97: He went straight to his thermos,
groaned, "God, it's so hot out there today, I could drink almost
anything," and drained the contents in two long gulps.
:Now,
Mother, do I pretend that it affected me and bug the hell out of them when I
disappear from their car\x97or do I just go about my business and drive them
really nuts?:
D.D.
shrugged and grinned. :Your call.:
* * *
Tucked
into a dark corner of the pits, Belinda waited. Mac had swallowed every blessed
drop in his drugged drink\x97she tried to keep her glee in check, and failed\x97and
Peterkin had dumped a whole twelve hundred milligrams of Seconal into the stuff
just to make sure the jackass got enough to knock him out even if he only drank
half. In fifteen to thirty minutes, according to Belinda's drug reference, Mac
should start getting sleepy. In an hour or two, if they didn't get him to a
doctor, he'd end up in a coma. In between that time, she needed to get him out
of town.
She had
her story worked out to perfection. The line would be that she and the boys
were one off-duty EMT and two friends who just happened to be racing fans\x97they
could take good care of their hero, the big racecar driver, and get him to the
E.R. faster than an ambulance could hope to arrive. They would claim expertise
and supplies on hand. There would not be anyone who would doubt that Mac Lynn
was on his way to the hospital. There would be no interference from the airhead
mechanic or any of the other crew. The first of several switch-cars was waiting
outside. The plan was perfect. She didn't doubt that Mel had a doctor on his
payroll somewhere\x97she wondered, however, how long she could leave Mac in a coma
without Mel considering the package he received "damaged goods."
She
entertained herself with images of what she was going to do to Mac when he was
helpless and in her care. She wondered briefly about the mechanics of
castration. The idea appealed to her, and it wouldn't damage his TK ability
any\x97would it? With my luck, it would finish his talent off for good. After all,
that's where men's brains are. Maybe she should leave his balls alone and just
cut off his head.
Feeling
more cheerful, she glanced at her watch. With a shock, she realized that almost
an hour had passed. Mac was still working\x97and there was no visible sign that
the drugs were affecting him. She looked over at Peterkin and Stevens in their
hiding place across the pits. Both shrugged.
She bit
her lip and stared at the wide-awake driver. He drank it, dammit! I know he
did. I saw him with my own eyes.
Could
Peterkin or Stevens have double-crossed her? Yes, obviously\x97but why would they?
Unknown.
However, the easy way to tell would be to try an equal dose of Seconal on them
and see how it worked. If there was something wrong with the prescription she'd
finagled out of the doc-in-a-box in LaJolla, Peterkin and Stevens would be
fine. If they had double-crossed her, they would get what they deserved. Either
way, she didn't lose anything.
She
made a curt signal and slipped away from the pits. Her two stooges followed her
out to the parking lot.
* * *
Felouen,
in a cream silk blouse and tailored cashmere skirt and blazer, her hair pulled
back in a classic chignon, appeared behind Maclyn and D.D., smiling wryly.
"What charming friends you have. No wonder you'd rather spend your time
here than in Underhill."
D.D.,
her face and overalls dirt-smudged, torque wrench in one gloved hand, smiled
politely. "We all have our little hobbies, dear." Her smile widened
as she watched Felouen wince away from the Cold Iron wrench. Mac wished he
dared smile.
Instead
he sighed. "Still overdressed, hey, Felouen? Why don't you go home and
change into something more appropriate?"
She
frowned. "I'm here on business. Dierdre, you've served your time on
Council\x97I really do not need to speak with you. But I must speak with Maclyn
for a moment."
D.D.
nodded, and lost the smug smile. "I'll leave you two, then."
Whistling a Killderry reel, the delicate mechanic moved back to her prized
auto, leaving her son to fend for himself.
:Thanks,
Mother.:
:You
know where I stand on this.:
Mac
shrugged and turned to glare at Felouen.
The
elegant warrior gifted him with a frosty smile. "I need your company for a
few moments, Maclyn. Please come Home with me; I'll show you what you need to
see, and then, if you still feel that I am imposing needlessly on you, I will
take back the Ring and the Council will decide on your standing within the
Court."
Maclyn
didn't quite grimace. "More signs and portents?"
Felouen
didn't change her expression by so much as a twitch of her eyelid.
"Please\x97just come with me. If you choose to scoff after you have seen what
I have to show you, so be it."
Maclyn
sighed. "You are so damned irritating\x97you and your bogeys and
doom-crying." But he followed Felouen into the office, and through the
temporary Gate she'd formed there.
They
appeared at the border of Elfhame Outremer, where the edges of order collided
with the infinite black Unformed, next to the Oracular Pool. The border,
usually firmly fixed and still, billowed unsettlingly while Maclyn watched,
pushing dark tentacles into the shield that walled the Ordered Land. The effect
looked enough like something big trying to break through that Maclyn cringed
when one tentacle brushed within a few inches of his thigh. More tentacles
pressed suddenly from the same spot, as if they had become aware of his
presence.
"What's
doing that?" Mac asked, more disturbed than he cared to admit.
"There's
nothing out there that I or anyone else can find," Felouen said.
"That's all just unformed energy\x97and a feeling of fear and rage and
hatred. It's been getting worse."
"I
see where you might be worried," he admitted.
She
shook her head. "Not yet, you don't. I'm afraid there's more. Look into
the Oracular Pool."
Mac
turned and studied the flat, deep blue sheet of water nestled in its shallow
concave of mossy rock. After a moment, his reflection disappeared, replaced by
darkness. For a long moment, nothing was visible in the Pool; then, with jerky,
shambling movements, blood-spattered horrors streamed out of the
Unformed\x97misbegotten nightmares with gape-jawed lopsided heads jammed neckless
onto narrow shoulders, sticklike arms and legs terminated by terrible claws,
sketchily formed bodies that bore no resemblance to anything Maclyn had ever
seen, or ever heard of. They bared monstrous fangs and ran screaming after
tall, blond, graceful runners that fell before them, bleeding from jagged,
terrible wounds\x97and the Pool dimmed, and once again Maclyn looked at his own
reflection.
He
stood, speechless, staring into his own eyes.
"It's
time to let go of the memories, Maclyn," Felouen whispered. "It's
time to stop pretending that you'll find her again, and come back to your own
kind. We need you here and now. I need you. Those humans do not, nor do you
need anything of theirs."
"I
still love her," Maclyn said, still staring stiffly into the Pool. That
isn't the only reason I stay, but it's a reason. I know you wouldn't understand
the others.
"She's
dust these last two hundred years, Maclyn," Felouen said, reasonably,
calling up a despair he'd begun to forget. "Sure and she loved you\x97'twas
your own folly you loved her, too. You were both young, but she grew old and
died, and you're still young\x97and still searching for her among mortals who are
destined to leave you just as she did."
Despair
turned to anger, and he turned on the source of that anger. "Have you ever
loved anyone, Felouen?" he snapped, restraining his wish to strike that
impassive face. "Has anyone ever really gotten through to you?"
For a
time, Maclyn got no answer. Finally the slender warrior responded, turning a
face full of a loss that matched his own, speaking in a dull, lifeless whisper.
"Yes. I've loved without hope for more than two hundred years\x97" Her
voice cracked, and she fell silent.
Maclyn
turned and studied her. She had her back to him; her shoulders were stiff and
her spine was rigid and erect. His hands clenched and unclenched. "I'll
hold on to the Ring, Felouen. I have something else I need to take care of
now\x97and it may be important; I don't know yet, and I'm not taking on anything
else until I do know. The fact is, I'm not sure what this thing I'm involved
with means, or how much trouble it's going to entail for all of us. There is a
child involved, and you know I can't turn my back on a child. I'm not promising
to get involved in this problem here. But I won't say that I won't,
either."
Felouen
nodded but said nothing, and kept her back to him.
Maclyn
Gated back to the garage, and the Gate closed off behind him.
In the
office, he stared at the plain round wall clock that ticked off the seconds and
minutes and hours that formed the limits of humans' lives, and he bit his lip.
He could not keep himself from remembering that one of the elves that fell to
the shambling things in the Oracular Pool's vision had been Felouen.
* * *
Amanda-Anne
slipped off the bus and hurried down the lane, between the long lines of neatly
painted fence, the gentle green, clovered swells of pastures, black and bay and
glossy chestnut Arabs who stood head to tail, grazing peacefully and swatting
flies from each other's faces. She detoured around the stables, moving
carefully along a route that not only hid her presence from anyone working in
the barns, but also from anyone who might be in the house or the yard. Sharon
was still in primary and got home from school half an hour before she did; it
was essential to keep close watch for her. Sharon would tell the Father and the
Step-Mother where she went. Sharon was a big tattletale, but she couldn't help
it. The Step-Mother made her that way.
The
grass grew taller back of the stables. It edged a woodland dark and cool and
quiet even in summer, with stands of pines marching in long, neat rows,
bordered and filled in by scrub oak. Amanda-Anne moved across the beds of pine
needles in near-silence, being sure she went a different way than the times
before, consciously leaving no path. The pines merged with swamp on the right,
full of snakes and cypress, with older hardwoods on the left\x97not first growth,
but large, sturdy trees nonetheless: oak and magnolia and sycamore, ash and
gum. Amanda-Anne went to the left, up a gentle incline.
At the
top of the little hill sat an immense, ancient holly. Patches of pale green
moss spotted its dappled silver-white bark, a few red berries still hung on in
defiance of the season. The old tree's branches bent so low they touched the
ground, and spiny evergreen leaves formed a screen so that the base of the tree
became a fortress, well protected, with only one narrow entrance. That
entrance, invisible except from a difficult approach through a stand of scrub
oaks and blackberry canes, was formed from a branch that arched higher than the
others and left a narrow gap that could be crawled through by a small,
determined child.
Amanda-Anne,
experienced in the delicate negotiation of thorn and thicket, got inside
without snagging her school clothes or getting dirty. Once inside, she breathed
deep and stood up straight. Amanda-Anne retreated to the background and
Amanda-Abbey came out.
Things
sparkled under the tree\x97decorations hung on bits of thread and string that
decorated Amanda-Abbey's magpie nest. Tiny glass beads scavenged from an
outgrown pair of Sharon's moccasins and a green carved glass bead saved from a
broken necklace that was the only token she had of her real mother hung next to
little round mirrors glued back-to-back, rescued from a favorite sweater that
Daddy had ripped apart when he was mad once. Bluejay feathers, bits of fragile
shell brought back from trips to the beach house at Ocean Isle, a broken, but
still pretty, stained glass suncatcher of a hummingbird, the cut glass baubles
from a pair of discarded earrings, one rhinestone pin\x97all swayed and glittered
and turned with every scant breeze. There were comic books wrapped carefully in
plastic and hidden in the tree's only reachable knothole. A worn saddle blanket
served as a rug.
Amanda-Abbey
leaned against the tree trunk in her secret home and watched her collection
catch the light. Amanda-Anne's fingers stroked the cool, almost smooth bark,
her ears drank in the hushed murmurs of safe, isolated, protected woods. No one
would find her; no one would hurt her\x97not while the tree guarded her.
The
child closed her eyes and felt the warmth of the sun on her face and studied
the cozy speckled yellow glow of the inside of her eyelids. A few birds chirped
and fluttered; squirrels raced along aerial throughways and chattered pointed
squirrel insults at each other.
The
light that flickered through her closed lids grew brighter\x97much, much brighter.
She
opened her eyes.
Something
was happening in front of her. Her green carved bead was glowing with warm,
glorious inner light. A swirling mist began to curl out of it, emerald-green
shot through with flecks of gold bright as tiny suns. The mist stretched and
grew, and within it a form took shape\x97a form wrapped in rich green-and-gold
tapestries, taller than anyone Amanda knew and handsome and smiling, with eyes
bright as new leaves, long blond hair held back by a gold, jewel-studded
circlet, and the neatest pointed ears Amanda had ever imagined.
"Wow,"
Amanda-Abbey whispered. "That's really cool."
* * *
Amanda-Alice
sensed something that required her attention. From her white, pure castle, she
stretched out feelers, then, finding what she sought, withdrew them again in
shocked disgust. It's magic. Magic is evil.
* * *
The
green man produced a shimmering wand and waved it in a circle in front of her.
Sparkles of light scattered and danced in front of the child, weaving patterns
in the warm spring air.
"Magic,"
the child whispered. Then, There's no such thing as magic, she thought.
Amanda-Abbey was sure of this. So this isn't a real elf. It's just imagination.
* * *
Amanda-Anne
kept quiet, watching, paying close attention, taking notes. Appearing out of
thin air was a good trick. If she could learn it, she could hide from the
Father. The magic lights were pretty, but they didn't look useful. Even so,
Anne could sense power in them. Power was something she wanted.
* * *
The
amazing man seemed to look right through the scrawny child in the tartan plaid
skirt who stared at him\x97and then, silently as he had come, he folded into the
scintillating fog from which he had emerged and was drawn back into the glowing
bead. The light in the bead gleamed an instant longer, and then flickered and
died.
"Gone,"
Amanda-Abbey said, wistfully. "I want him to come back." She thought.
If I can figure out why he came here, maybe I can bring him back.
She
inched over to where the bead hung. She blew on it once. Nothing happened. She
walked around it, staring. It remained just a bead on a string. She pushed it
once with a single index finger, and watched it swing in a few short arcs, then
stop. Still, nothing happened. She closed her eyes and wished the magic back
into the bead again, without luck. Tentatively, she reached out and broke off
the fine strand of thread at the branch, then tied the makeshift bracelet
around her wrist. Almost immediately, the single bead on its weathered thread
sprang back into glowing life, and the mist spiraled forth once more.
The
green-garbed man reappeared right in front of her and winked at her, then
laughed soundlessly and hid behind the holly's trunk.
She
walked around the tree, stooping under low branches and her dangling
decorations. He was gone.
A flash
of green light from behind her alerted her, and she turned to see him again,
this time on the outside of her tree-fortress. He waved, and she waved back and
watched him, but she did not follow him beyond the protective circle of the
tree's branches.
Stranger's
voice broke into her thoughts, making herself known. :Don't fear him, lass\x97'tis
good luck to meet one of the Fey folk.:
:He
isn't real, Stranger.:
There
was gentle laughter in her head. :Of course not, child. 'Tis still good luck.:
Amanda-Abbey
giggled at the apparent nonsense in that, and when the green-garbed elf
vanished again, she rubbed the bead on her wrist, like a waif summoning a genie
from a bottle.
The
bead glowed again, and the elf reappeared in his gorgeous robes and glowing
green cloud, but this time he settled cross-legged in front of the girl,
floating an inch off the ground.
He
smiled shyly.
Amanda-Abbey
smiled back. "Can you talk?" she asked.
"Of
course," he answered. "Can you?"
She
giggled. "What a silly question. I just did."
"And
so did I," he retorted, and winked.
"But
you aren't real," she pointed out. "So I thought maybe you couldn't
talk. Do you have a name?"
The elf
pulled back his shoulders and in solemn tones, announced, "I am Prince
Maclyn Arrydwyn, son of the fair Lady Dierdre Sherdeleth and of the Prince of
Elfhame Outremer. I am rider of great metal steeds and horses of air and magic,
guardian of the Twilight Lands, immortal walker among mortals." Maclyn
bowed slightly from the waist. "And who are you?"
"Everyone
calls me Amanda\x97but my name is really Abbey." Amanda-Abbey returned the
bow gracefully.
The
elf\x97Maclyn\x97nodded seriously. "I see. So then, shall I call you Amanda, as
everyone else does, or shall I call you by your true name?"
The
child grinned. "Call me by my true name. Nobody else but Stranger knows
it."
"Very
well." Once again he bowed, gracefully. "And who, by the way, is
Stranger?"
Amanda-Abbey
giggled. "If I knew that, she wouldn't be Stranger, now would she? Do you
grant wishes, like in fairy tales?"
He
considered her request. "Hmm. I do magic. Would that be good enough?"
"Magic
isn't real," she insisted.
:Magic
is wicked, wicked, wicked!: A voice screamed in Amanda-Abbey's head, but
Amanda-Abbey refused to listen to it. Magic was just silliness and tricks with
mirrors. Everyone knew that.
"Isn't
it, now? Let me show you, and you be the judge." Maclyn touched the string
that held the bead to Amanda's thin wrist, and it glowed softly. When he pulled
his hand away, the bead was strung on a beautiful, intricate gold chain.
* * *
Yes-s-s!
Amanda-Anne watched closely and whispered to herself. The elf pulled energy
from somewhere, made it do things. I can . . . almost . . . see how\x97but . . .
whe-e-e-re?
* * *
"Oh,"
Amanda-Abbey gasped. "How beautiful, and how wonderful. Do something
else."
But
Maclyn smiled and vanished.
"Wait!"
Amanda-Abbey cried.
The elf
reappeared in the woods a little way off. He beckoned, and the girl hurried out
of her hiding place, heedless of the thorns and the briars. Her blouse snagged,
and she got some pulls in her sweater, but the elf had vanished again and
reappeared still farther off, and she couldn't take time to be worried about
mere clothes.
She
darted through the woods with the elf always appearing and disappearing in the
dimming light just ahead of her. Suddenly Amanda-Abbey noticed that she was
moving through fog that got thicker with every step she took, and that she
didn't recognize anything about the part of the woods she was in. The trees
were farther apart, and taller than any trees that she had ever seen, and
incredibly beautiful. Leaves of silver and gold brushed against her and rang
gently with every touch or puff of the faint breeze. Lights in soft greens and
muted blues, gentle reds and bright yellows, flittered and danced through the
branches high overhead, and the sound of a tiny waterfall somewhere nearby
tinkled merrily in her ears. Voices whispered from above her, and at a
distance, there were sounds of laughter, and dancing, and a jig played inhumanly
fast by virtuoso performers.
:I know
where this is,: Stranger told Amanda-Abbey with a satisfied voice.
Amanda-Abbey
whispered, "Really? Where are we?" Suddenly she was no longer so
certain that elves and magic were impossible. She was no longer certain of
anything.
From
right beside her, Maclyn said, "Welcome to Elfhame Outremer, Abbey. This
is my home."
"It's
beautiful," the child whispered, in a voice full of wonder.
* * *
Evil,
evil, evil, thought Amanda-Alice. Only the devil does magic; that's what the
Sunday-school teacher said. This green man is the devil, and this place must be
hell. I'm telling Father about this. He will know how to punish the devil\x97I
know he will.
* * *
Amanda-Abbey
felt a vague sensation of disquiet. It seemed as if part of her mind wanted to
rebel, to run away from the lovely haven in which she found herself.
"Yes,
it is beautiful," Maclyn answered. "I thought a special girl like you
would be able to appreciate such a magical place."
Amanda-Abbey
raised her eyebrows. "Why me?"
He
spread his hands wide. "Because of the magic you do," he said, and
his words had a ring of sincerity about them.
She
stared at him, puzzled. "I don't do magic. Magic isn't real."
He
shook his head. "Wasn't it magic that kept the race car from hurting
anyone at the track the other day? Wasn't it magic that sent all the erasers
and papers in your classroom flying?"
Amanda-Abbey
giggled; where had he gotten these stories? Race cars? Erasers? What was he
talking about? She didn't remember anything like that. "I don't know what
you mean."
* * *
Amanda-Anne,
satisfied that she had figured out the elf's magic tricks, looked up and
noticed the darkened, twilight sky. Fear gripped her. The Father would be
furious\x97the Step-Mother would tell him that she was late. She shoved her way to
the front, grabbed control of the body, and stood, rigid and trembling. Her
eyes met those of the elf, and she shivered. "Home!" she wailed,
suddenly terrified. Late! I'm . . . late! Home! She used the information she'd
garnered from watching the elf to draw in the earth-energy that pulsed through
Elfhame Outremer, and promptly removed herself to the safety of the holly tree
hide-out.
* * *
Amanda-Abbey
was back in control and back in familiar surroundings. She didn't even flinch.
"Wow!" she whispered, crawling out of her nest in the muted sunlight
of early afternoon, still impelled by a powerful urge to get home, "What a
neat dream." She studiously avoided noticing the green bead on the gold
filigreed chain that hugged her wrist, or the dirt and snagged threads on her
school clothes.
* * *
Amanda-Anne
took over control as Amanda walked through the woods. She trotted home by a
different route, alert for watchers of any kind.
* * *
Cethlenn
had been aware of the elf's presence, but she had been unable to wrest control
of the body away from the children long enough to beg for help. Now, hurrying
back to the child's terrible home, she swore softly and wondered what she could
do to save her child host.
* * *
Lianne
drove up the long, winding lane past carefully tended fences and manicured
pastures, well-maintained, picturesque old barns, and a riding ring set up for
trail training, with jumps and bridges and barrels. Over to her right, a young
man put one lean gray filly through her paces on a lunge line, while two
hawk-faced men in tweed jackets and caps watched and commented.
She
noted the exquisitely kept ornamental gardens, the flawless landscaping, the
elegant half-timbered home that bespoke good breeding and old money\x97and she
shook her head in bewilderment. This Eden was more than she could ever hope to
aspire to. In her whole life, she could never hope to live so well, to have so
much. Where was the worm that gnawed away at Amanda? And how could it survive
in such a place?
She
parked her little yellow VW bug to one side of the house, clambered out of the
car, and smoothed her skirt nervously. She felt suddenly shabby and plain\x97and
on very shaky ground.
Stomach
in knots, she strode up the walk and rang the bell. After a long wait, she
heard the click of heels in the hall. The door swung open noiselessly, and
Lianne pasted a confident smile on her face.
Merryl
Kendrick gave her a cool, polite nod and said, "Won't you come in, Miss
McCormick? Amanda is upstairs doing her homework\x97I can call her if you would
like."
"Not
just yet, please," Lianne answered, and found herself following Merryl
through a long, perfectly kept maze of glossy mahogany halls and
decorator-perfect rooms. She studied Mrs. Kendrick's back and winced. Merryl
Kendrick would have been a good six inches taller than Lianne in flats. In
heels, the other woman towered over her. Amanda's step-mother was casually
dressed, the elegance understated\x97but every article of clothing spoke of more
money than Lianne could put into her wardrobe in an entire year. She shouldn't
let all that money have a psychological effect on her, Lianne knew, and knew at
the same time that should was a meaningless word. All that money, all that
power, did have an effect on her. It weakened her position, it weakened her
credibility. As much as she would like to pretend otherwise, she was not an
equal among peers in this world. And she would have to act as if she were, for
Amanda's sake. Because whatever was wrong with Amanda was wrong in spite of all
these evident advantages.
* * *
"Tea?"
Merryl asked.
"Thank
you." Lianne took the seat the other woman indicated and glanced around
the sun-room. It seemed to her that she had seen it in a Better Homes and
Gardens spread. With its Mexican tile floor, hand-adzed timber-framed beams,
and walls of glass looking out over a scenic view of the estate and a lovely,
wild patch of woods, it was breathtaking.
And
sterile.
There
were no family pictures, no knickknacks, no personal touches whatsoever to mar
the carefully conceived vision of the designer. As she ran her memory back over
what she had seen of the rest of the house, she realized it was all the same.
The house was lovely, but it looked as if no one lived there, or ever had.
That's
a middle-class prejudice, she told herself. Only the middle class insists that
a bit of disorder is healthy.
Merryl
returned and placed a heavy pottery teapot and a matching cup in front of
Lianne.
"Thank
you." The young teacher poured herself a cup of tea and sipped at it
gratefully.
"Of
course." Merryl Kendrick nodded gracefully. "Andrew will be home any
time. In the meantime, we can drink our tea, or you can fill me in on what you
perceive to be the problem."
What I
perceive to be the problem. That's nicely put. The problem is no doubt going to
be my perception, and not the problem. Ah, well, face it right out.
She
decided on a frontal assault. "To the best of your knowledge, Mrs.
Kendrick, is there any history of mental illness in Amanda's family?"
The
other woman's lips curled in a faint smile over her own cup of tea, and one
eyebrow raised slightly. She leaned back in the peach-and-mint wing-backed
chair and crossed her legs. After a moment, she chuckled. "Well, that's
certainly getting to the point." Merryl Kendrick sipped slowly at her tea.
"Actually, yes\x97there is. Funny you should ask. Andrew's first wife had a
long history of psychological problems\x97paranoia, delusions, depression, psychoses.
She was hospitalized\x97Andrew obtained a divorce, but made sure she was well
taken care of until her death."
At
Lianne's startled expression, Amanda's step-mother nodded slowly.
"You
see, she died about two years ago. Suicide. I understand these problems are
sometimes . . ." Merryl picked delicately around the word ". . .
hereditary."
Lianne
held her breath, closed her eyes, and let it out again, slowly.
"Sometimes," she agreed.
"Dana's
parents\x97Amanda's natural grandparents\x97aren't quite normal, either. We've done
the best we could for Amanda\x97limited her contacts with them ever since her
mother's death. . . ." Merryl Kendrick seemed to be actually relishing
this. "It doesn't seem to be helping, does it, Miss McCormick?"
Lianne
blinked, choosing her words with care. "Amanda is having serious problems
in school this year, behavioral as well as academic. I'm not the only teacher
that has noticed this. It's in her records, if you'd care to see them."
There. So much for "my perception." "I can't say that her
problems stem from her mother, or her mother's death, or heredity, or anything
else. All I can say is that she needs help, and I don't know that I am able to
give her the help she needs."
There
were thundering feet on a stairway, and Amanda burst into the room. Her sweet,
blue-eyed face lit up when she saw her teacher, and she ran over and hugged her
vigorously. "I didn't know you were coming over tonight, Miss McCormick.
Don't you like my house?" The child turned to face her step-mother, still
smiling. "I got all of my homework finished, Mother. May I go outside for
a while?"
"Not
now, Amanda," Merryl said. "I'm expecting your father home any
minute."
"As
well you should, darling," Andrew Kendrick said from the doorway, slipping
a cigarette pack into his crisp breast-pocket. "I'm sorry I'm late\x97one of
my clients was quite distraught and needed a bit of extra time."
Lianne
had been watching Amanda, bemused by the girl's cheerful countenance and normal
manner\x97so she didn't miss the change. Amanda's face turned from her step-mother
to her father, and a series of unreadable expressions flashed across her
features. Her mouth fell slightly open, giving her a dull, witless look.
And her
pale, pale green eyes stared at the man in the doorway with a cross between
canny hatred and stupefied terror.
The
flesh stood up on Lianne's arms, and chills raced up and down her spine.
There
was a crash from another room. Andrew and Merryl looked at each other, and
Merryl cleared her throat. "You evidently let one of the cats in with you
again, Andrew."
His
eyes focused on his child. "No doubt," he agreed. "Amanda, I see
you've been playing in your school clothes again. You've soiled them and ruined
the fabric. Please go upstairs and change into your stable clothes, then go
clean your pony's stall. I'll be out to check on your work when your mother and
I have finished speaking with your teacher."
"Yes-s-s
. . . Father," the child said. Her voice grated; low, animal-like. She was
as much a different child as if Amanda had been picked up and physically
replaced.
Lianne
felt her pulse begin to race. Wrong, her mind screamed at her. This is wrong!
It's weird! It's awful! It took every bit of control for her to keep her seat,
to keep smiling while Andrew Kendrick crossed the room, took a seat next to his
wife, and smiled at her and said, "Well, ladies, what solutions have you
reached?"
His
voice was cheerful, his eyes bright and kind and concerned\x97so why did every
nerve in Lianne's body insist that some invisible force was dragging monstrous
talons across a giant blackboard?
"Miss
McCormick deduced Dana's problem from Amanda's classroom behavior." Merryl
looked into her husband's face. Her body posture and gestures indicated sincere
concern. "She says she isn't the only teacher to have seen problems with
Amanda."
Her
husband dropped his eyes. "Dana," he said, and Lianne would have
sworn she could hear real anguish in those two labored syllables. Her instincts
told her that, no matter what she saw, or thought she saw, Andrew Kendrick was
a phony. Merryl was the perfect foil for him, and the two of them had snowed
her from the beginning\x97would have kept her convinced that the problem was in
other directions. But Lianne knew kids. She'd been well acquainted with
thousands of them in her eight years of teaching, and she'd seen that unguarded
expression of Amanda's before. The look in her eyes, the little girl's actions,
the abrupt change in her attitude\x97those things had given Lianne a name for the sick
feeling that weighted her down and dragged on her every breath.
Child
abuse.
She
needed to get out of the house, get help\x97but first, she needed one more tiny
reassurance that she'd really seen what she thought she'd seen.
"I
think Mrs. Kendrick and I have stumbled across the problem. And I think I may
have thought of a solution." She had to have parental permission for this
first step. Unless the child revealed something on her own, or there were
physical evidences, there wasn't anything that could be done that Andrew
Kendrick with his money and influences couldn't counter. "I can't promise
anything, but I'd like your permission anyway. I'd like for Amanda to be seen
by one of our counselors. I think there are a great many things troubling her,
probably related to her mother's death, and I think that having some time with
the counselor, starting on Monday, would give her a chance to talk those
problems out. It would at least give us an idea of what we're dealing
with."
Lianne
waited. She watched concern crawl across Merryl's features like a spider,
watched Andrew's eyes harden, watched them glance at each other\x97we have to keep
our secret expressions that gave the teacher her answer.
"I
don't think so, Miss McCormick," Andrew said, still smiling\x97but with the
smile artfully condescending. "I think you may be right, that
psychological help would be in order for Amanda\x97but I don't think that a school
counselor who works for peanuts and sees his, ah, clients in the sardine-can
atmosphere of public education would be of much use. While we want Amanda to be
mainstreamed in a public school, and not sequestered away in a private and
privileged academy, I don't think my open-mindedness runs to welfare-quality
counselors. I'm sure we can find someone much more suitable through our
contacts."
Bingo,
Lianne thought. And dollars to donuts she'll never go to see anyone, because
they can't take a chance of Amanda talking to anyone. Outwardly, though, Lianne
kept her expression neutral. "Of course, Mr. Kendrick. I wasn't suggesting
that our counselor could provide therapy\x97only that she might be able to give us
a direction in which to look for the problem. However, I'm sure that your
choice of counselor will be even better. Just let me know when you come up with
someone."
The
teacher stood. "I've taken enough of your time. Thank you for talking with
me. I think we've come up with some positive avenues to explore, and I'm sure
Amanda will benefit."
Merryl
and Andrew walked her back through the maze to the front door and showed her
out, making small talk all the while.
And
when I get home, you creeps, I'm calling Social Services. And we'll see if you
get away with blaming your kid's behavior on your ex-wife to them.
CHAPTER
SIX
"You
didn't ask to be excused," her step-mother called from the dining room.
"Amanda
Jannine Kendrick, get back to this table at once!" yelled Daddy.
Amanda-Abbey,
halfway up the steps to her room and running headlong, reluctantly turned and
plodded back to the dining room.
"Where
were you going in such a hurry, young lady?" her daddy asked her.
He
glared at her from the head of the table. Her step-mother, lingering over hot
tea and a wafer-thin slice of pound cake, shook her head with annoyance. Sharon
sat next to her real mother, looking secretly pleased that Amanda was in
trouble again.
Amanda-Abbey
looked from one adult to the other, and her fingers twisted against each other.
She took a deep breath.
"May-I-please-be-excused-I-have-to-go-clean-the-pony's-stall,"
she said in a rush.
Her
step-mother nodded curtly. "Wear your coveralls. I don't want those
clothes ruined any more than they are."
Her
daddy just smiled, playing with his lighter, tumbling it end-over-end between
two fingers.
"I
won't get them dirty. Promise."
Amanda-Anne
took over, hurling the child's scrawny body out of the dining room and up the
stairs two at a time and into her room at breakneck speed. She grabbed worn
coveralls from their spot behind the hamper and darted into the closet, closing
the door behind her. Trembling and breathing hard, she flung on the coveralls
in the darkness, then crept to the door. She listened, soft ear pressed against
the cool, white wood. On the other side, there was nothing but silence.
Silence,
Amanda-Anne knew, was very bad.
There
were two sets of steps, one on either end of the hall. Both had landings
halfway, and closets at the top and the bottom\x97
Amanda-Anne
closed her eyes and thought. No answers came to her, no pictures. And every minute
she wasted gave the Father one more minute\x97
She
bolted out her door and to the left, heading for the front stairs, which were
farthest from the dining room, praying that she had guessed right.
Past
the top closet and down the stairs\x97safe.
Around
the landing\x97still no sign of Him.
Down
the rest of the stairs\x97only a little further to go.
Past
the partly-open door of the closet at the bottom of the stairs\x97and an arm shot
out and grabbed her and dragged her into the closet.
"Boo,"
the Father whispered. He laughed softly in the darkness of the closet, and his
hands pinned her against the smothering piles of coats. "You're lucky I'm
not a monster."
Amanda-Anne
struggled to get away from him. The Father tightened his grip until her arms hurt.
"Monsters wait in the dark for bad girls, Amanda. Getchells and
morrowaries, slinketts and fulges. Big, drooly monsters with bloody red teeth
and sharp claws and white eyes that glow. Slimy, slippery shapeless things that
slither and drip burning goo and won't even leave your bones behind for anyone
to find you, Amanda. And it's almost dark outside, Amanda. They'll be there any
minute. Hungry monsters. When you go outside to clean your pony's stable, be
sure the monsters don't get you."
* * *
Someone
picked up after the seventh ring. A masculine voice said, "Hello?"
Lianne
closed her eyes and leaned her head against the wall next to her phone. Getting
through to the government agency after-hours had been a morass of answering
machines, people who were home but not on call, and people who were on call but
not at home. The hospital emergency department's Cumberland County Social
Services' after-hours emergency phone numbers were one week out of date. The
person she'd finally reached, after an hour of trying, had given her four
numbers that might put her in touch with the person she needed. She had tried
three of the numbers, and they hadn't. This was her last hope, and she clenched
the receiver in her hand until her knuckles went white. The real live voice on
the other end of the line wasn't getting out of this until Amanda's rescue was
guaranteed.
"Hello,"
she said. "This is Lianne McCormick\x97I'm a teacher at Loyd E. Auman Middle
School."
"Don
Kroczwski. What can I do for you?"
Lianne
took a deep breath. "I suspect that one of my students is being abused. I
want her family checked out."
"What
kind of evidence do you have of the suspected abuse?" The man on the other
end of the line sounded tired; bone-tired and heartsick.
Lianne's
voice went tense on her. "Evidence?"
"Do
you have reason to expect imminent danger to life or limb?" he asked\x97or
rather, recited.
This
wasn't what she had expected. "For example\x97?"
Kroczwski
sighed deeply. "For example, does the kid say either of his or her parents
said they were going to kill him or her? She or he have any old cigarette burn
scars, rope burns, broken bones, bruises on the face or body, brothers or
sisters who have died or been hospitalized in the last few weeks\x97anything like
that?"
Lianne's
stomach contracted at his list of horrors. "She. Her name is Amanda
Kendrick. And no. Nothing like that."
The
voice on the other end of the line sighed. "You got any reason to think
the kid will be dead tomorrow if I don't go over there tonight?"
The
teacher bit her lip. "No," she said softly. "She shows
psychological damage\x97personality problems\x97but nothing that makes me think her
parents will murder her."
"Okay.
That's a problem, Ms. McCormick. I know that you know your students. I
understand that you probably can tell when something is wrong, and I trust your
judgment and your instincts, but I have to have something tangible. Bruises,
something the kid told you, something I can show a judge. I can't walk up to
her parents' house and tell them they are being investigated for child abuse
because their kid's teacher has a bad feeling."
"But
I know something is wrong."
"Ms.
McCormick, I believe you, but let me give you an idea of how wrong things can
be. I have a neighborhood outbreak of syphilis among three- to nine-year-olds
that I'm investigating; I just got a call from the Cape Fear Emergency Room
about a little girl whose mother dumped hot oil on her because she wouldn't be
quiet. I have a five-month-old baby with broken arms and broken legs that the
mother's boyfriend threw across the room and whose four brothers and sisters
have to be gotten out of that situation. I have a dead kid who showed up in the
morgue whose body hasn't been claimed. I have a list of call-in's from
concerned neighbors and teachers and relatives as long as my arm with
complaints that may or may not end up with a bunch of little bodies in little
body-bags if I don't take care of them yesterday\x97and it's already almost
tomorrow. Child abuse is the year's biggest growth industry. I understand
wrong\x97I really do. You give me something to go on, and I'll be out there to
check on your kid in a heartbeat. Okay?"
Lianne's
throat tightened. "Okay," she whispered. "If I can find
anything, I'll call you back."
The
voice sounded even wearier. "Day or night."
Tears
started down Lianne's cheeks. "Okay. Thanks." She hung up the phone.
Images of infants with arms and legs in plaster casts, little children with
burns given to them by the people they wanted to love, with bruises and cuts
and old scars and new wounds\x97kids who'd been shaken, beaten, screamed at,
starved, tortured, raped, neglected\x97those images swirled around in front of her
eyes, blurred by tears. And all those children began to have Amanda's face.
* * *
Amanda's
pony was not kept in the main barn with the pedigreed Arabians Merryl Kendrick
raised. It had its own quarters\x97a neat little doll-house version of the bigger
barns, one Andrew Kendrick had ordered to be built for Amanda when she was
five. It sat next to the main stables but did not connect with it in any way.
Its cheerful, red-painted sides and white trim gleamed in the twilight; warm,
yellow light spilled out of the opened top half of the front Dutch door. The
neat, cedar-chip path crunched under Amanda-Alice's feet as she scurried down
to finish cleaning the pony's stall.
"Lazy
slut," Amanda-Alice muttered under her breath. "You should have
cleaned the barn when you got home from school. Then he wouldn't have made you
come down here now. Stupid, wicked, worthless tramp\x97out chasing evil elves when
you should have been working. You deserve to be punished. You deserve it."
Amanda-Anne
didn't have time for guilt. In the near-darkness, things moved. Shambling
phantasms pressed close, deformed grotesqueries chittered in her ear,
and\x97"Come to us, Amanda\x97we're hungry," unseen things whispered from
the shadows, while their awful stomachs growled.
No!
Amanda-Anne thought, and lurched into a gallop.
Out of
the corner of her eye, she saw that the darkness gained. The horrors were
almost upon her\x97she could feel their breath on the back of her neck\x97
"No!"
she shrieked, and heard them laugh.
And
then somehow she was through the barn door, intact and uneaten, and the door
was closed behind her. The heavy wooden bolt dropped into its brackets, and
Amanda-Anne was safe from the monsters.
In the
stall, she picked up the pitchfork and began loading manure and straw into the
little wheelbarrow. Her pony, Fudge, poked his head into the barn from the
pasture entrance and whickered.
"Vile,
filthy beast," Amanda-Alice snarled. "You leave these messes to get
us in trouble, don't you? You don't deserve supper."
She
ignored the bin of sweet feed in the corner, avoided looking at the little
Shetland, and continued mucking the stall with short, sharp, angry jabs.
* * *
Andrew
Kendrick paced the living room floor. Merryl curled in one of the overstuffed
chairs, contracts spread on the floor around her.
The man
punched one closed fist into the palm of his other hand. "That child is a
disgrace. When I was a child, my behavior was excellent. I never had a visit
from one of my teachers. And for that woman to suggest school
psychiatrists\x97"
"Counselors,"
Merryl corrected. "Only counselors. Public schools don't keep
psychiatrists on staff."
"It
doesn't matter. How dare that child cause me this sort of humiliation? How dare
she?" A scowl carved itself deeper into Andrew's face, and his complexion
flushed a hotter, uglier red. "She obviously hasn't had enough discipline,"
he growled.
"Jesus,"
Merryl muttered. "Leave the kid alone for once."
Andrew
turned his anger on her. "Stay out of it, you bitch! She's my child, my
responsibility. As you keep reminding me. It's up to me to make sure that she
grows up to be a useful adult. She won't if you ruin her with your lax
attitude. Look at Sharon. She's getting old enough that she needs firm
discipline, and you let her run wild. She'll be worthless when she grows
up."
Merryl's
voice went flat and dangerous. "Leave Sharon alone."
Andrew
stiffened and glared at his wife. "We'll see," he told her. He walked
heavily toward the outside door. "I'm going to make sure Amanda does a
good job on that stall. She's going to clean it until it's done right, even if
she's out there all night\x97she's going to learn that I'm in charge around here.
And she's going to learn that she has to do what I expect." He stopped and
stared at his wife with cold, ugly rage. "That's something you could stand
to remember, too, Merryl."
He stalked
out, slamming the door behind him.
* * *
Belinda
sat cross-legged on the bed in Peterkin's shoddy hotel room, two decks of cards
spread in front of her on the cheap polyester bedspread. "Black three on
the red four . . . okay, and that opens up the red jack to the black queen . .
. hah! Moves that to there\x97yes!" She briskly restacked, completed, and
removed piles of cards.
A
rustle from the foot of the bed distracted her. She looked over from her game
of Napoleon's solitaire to the floor, where Stevens and Peterkin were turning
blue. "Oh\x97hi, guys." Her voice was bright and cheerful. "I
thought you were dead already. Would you mind hurrying it up a little? I have
plans for the evening." She grinned\x97perky, sexy, and charming, obviously a
woman having a good time\x97and turned back to her cards.
She
played a few more moments and sighed with minor annoyance. "Dammit! I
almost won that one." She riffled the cards together, staring at her two
thugs.
"Seems
my prescription was okay, huh? At least it's working pretty well on you two.
Well, fellas, I don't know why you wanted to double-cross me, but I guess we've
proven that wasn't a good idea." She smiled at the dying men and began
laying out the cards again. "Jerks."
She
spread out a deck of poker cards and began another game of solitaire,
latex-gloved hands shuffling with some difficulty.
Peterkin
made strangling noises, then quit breathing. Froth foamed out of his mouth.
Belinda smiled and flipped her hair back out of her face.
"That's
good\x97that's very good. You did that nicely, Joe. One down, one to go,
Fred-ol'-buddy. Let's see if you die well, too."
Fred
Stevens lay on the dingy green carpet, sucking air like a beached fish for over
half an hour after his partner threw in the towel. When his breathing ceased,
Belinda folded up her cards, took both men's wallets, changed the ID's and
other important papers, and dumped the wallets back on the dresser. Then she
walked down to her car. When she came back, she carried a large shopping bag. She
emptied the bag onto the bed and strewed her purchases around the room: a small
packet of crack cocaine and the attendant drug paraphernalia, a white feather
boa and a large, skimpy leopard-spotted negligee, a queen-sized pair of fishnet
hose and patent leather shoes with six-inch spike heels\x97sized 12EE\x97a black
leather men's bikini, battered handcuffs, and a well-worn bullwhip.
Then
she cut the clothing off of both men with a pair of heavy-duty bandage
scissors, the kind EMT's and paramedics used, rolled the clothes into a ball
and stuffed them into her now-empty bag. She rolled Stevens onto Peterkin in
the best "compromising position" she could manage, considering he was
the smaller of the two corpses and weighed more than twice what she did. But
police training came in handy. When she had them more or less posed, she put
the shoes on Peterkin's feet and the handcuffs around his wrists, and draped
the feather boa once around Steven's neck. Then she stood, breathing hard, and
chuckled softly.
"That
ought to amuse the investigators for a while," she whispered, and grinned
cheerfully. She looked at her watch. Time to see what my race-driver is doing.
I need to be able to collect him tomorrow.
* * *
The
front doors of Amanda's barn rattled. The child was busy shoveling manure into
the wheelbarrow and didn't notice the noise the first time. The second time,
however, she stopped and cocked her head to one side, listening. The noise did
not recur a third time, and after waiting a moment, she nodded with satisfaction
and resumed her cleaning.
She
didn't realize the Father had come into the barn through the pasture door until
she heard the top Dutch doors click, and the heavy thud as he carefully dropped
the door-bar into the brackets.
Inside
the pony's stall, all the Amandas stiffened. Cethlenn noticed the change in
their attitudes and froze, listening.
A
series of light clicks followed\x97the sound of a key in a lock, the sound of
light furniture being moved, the clink of metal.
Suddenly,
Cethlenn realized that Amanda-Alice and Amanda-Abbey were gone. The only one
who remained with her was Amanda-Anne.
Thud,
thud, thud\x97the Father's heavy steps left the storage room, walked slowly
closer\x97
Then
the Father was right there, standing in the doorway of the stall, completely
filling it. Cethlenn watched with Amanda-Anne, staring up and up and up at the
huge form of the man.
"The
stall looks very dirty, Amanda," the Father said. "What a very lazy,
nasty, dirty little girl you have been." He smiled, his lips pulled back
across his teeth so that they gleamed in the light of the naked, dangling light
bulb.
Inside
their head, Amanda-Anne made a mewling sound that died before it reached their
lips. Cethlenn shuddered.
"I
ought to make you lick the floor clean," the Father said. "Would you
like that?"
Knives
and whips and ropes and sharp, hot things danced in Amanda-Anne's head, and
dull red rage blurred the child's vision. Cethlenn was forced back by the
spreading fury, and fear clutched at her.
The
Father's smile got bigger, and he took a step toward them. "I said,"
he whispered, "would you like that?"
Oh,
gods, just answer him, child, Cethlenn thought.
"No,"
Amanda-Anne said.
"No,"
the Father mimicked, his voice a chilling falsetto. "Oh, no. You wouldn't
like that. But you're a dirty little girl, aren't you, Amanda?"
The
child stared at him, silent.
"I
said, you're a dirty little girl, aren't you?"
"Yes,"
Amanda-Anne said.
"And
we know what dirty little girls really like, don't we, Amanda?"
Amanda-Anne
wrapped her frail arms around herself and stared up at the Father in silent
terror. Cethlenn felt sick.
"Don't
we, Amanda?"
"Yes,"
Amanda-Anne whispered.
"I
can't hear you."
"Yes,"
Amanda-Anne said.
"Dirty
little girls like to make their Daddy happy, don't they?"
Amanda-Anne's
throat tightened, and she nodded.
"Good,"
said the Father. "Then come here. I know what you like, don't I, you dirty
little girl? Tell me you like it."
Amanda-Anne
walked forward, moving like a creature drugged.
"Say,
`I like it, Daddy.' "
The
child was silent.
The
Father grabbed her and shook her. "Say, `I like it, Daddy.' "
"I
like it . . . D-D-Daddy," Amanda-Anne croaked.
"I
know you do, you little whore." He picked the limp child up and carried
her into the storage room.
Oh,
gods, Amanda, I'm sorry\x97I can't stay here\x97I can't watch this! Cethlenn
shrieked, and vanished.
* * *
Lianne
sat at her little kitchen table and dried her eyes. She had done what she could
for Amanda for the time being. It was Friday night\x97she couldn't do anything
else about the child until the next morning at the earliest\x97so she needed to
get herself under control.
I've
been under an awful lot of stress lately, she thought. It isn't like me to cry
like this. There have just been too many unexplained things happening in the
last few days.
She
leaned back in her chair. I've taken care of this now, though. Things will get
back to normal. I know they will.
Her eye
strayed to the kitchen sink\x97to a rainbow sparkle and a flash of white metal.
And the
feeling of otherworldness returned. She got up and walked over to the sink, and
picked up the crystal carafe that Mac had produced\x97seemingly out of thin
air\x97for their delightful breakfast in bed. She hefted it in both hands,
studying the flawless faceting of the crystal and the incredible quality. One
eye closed, she gnawed on her lip as she appraised it, and a whole number
followed by a surprising quantity of zeros ticked off in her brain. She
fingered the silver serving tray, and then picked it up and studied it. It was
real silver, and solid, too, not plate\x97and Lianne pondered the odds of finding
such exquisitely crafted silver with nary a maker's mark on it. She picked up a
cherry pit and studied it as if it were something likely to burn her fingers.
She tilted her head, and her eyebrows furrowed, and then, with a thoughtful
expression on her face, she turned out the kitchen light, went into the living
room and plopped down on her couch and stared off into nothingness.
"When
you have eliminated the impossible, whatever is left\x97no matter how
improbable\x97is the truth," she said softly to no one.
* * *
Amanda-Anne
lay in the bathtub, staring up at the ceiling. Steam swirled around her, and a
thick layer of sweet-scented bubbles pressed against her skin like fat kittens.
Amanda was oblivious to the warmth and the sweetness and the light. Her mouth
still tasted of oily cotton, her wrists and ankles still stung and chafed, and
she hurt.
And in
her mind's eye, nothing existed but the storage room, with its little cot and
its dim light, and its supply of ropes and rags, and its awful locking door.
She
rubbed absently at her wrists\x97and her fingers brushed across her real mother's
bead, still strung on the lovely gold chain.
And the
image of the elf pouring himself out of the bead in a stream of green mist came
to her. She sat up in the tub and stared at the bead. Let Abbey pretend that
the elf wasn't real. Let Alice complain that he was evil. And let that
goody-two-shoes Stranger think that the elf would help them. They didn't know
about Anne, but Anne knew about them. And she knew better than to believe their
silliness. Amanda-Anne knew that Alice was stupid, that Abbey was wrong, and
that Stranger meant well but was looking for help in the wrong direction; the
sweet-faced elf was too soft and too gentle to do what was needed. But he had
shown her the trick of his magic without meaning to. Without even knowing that
he had done so. Her eyes narrowed as she considered the possibilities of the
scene that played itself out in her mind, and softly, the child began to laugh.
Don't
want . . . the elf, she thought. Just . . . the smoke. And the wind.
She
stared at the bead, forcing unfamiliar patterns into the rhythm of her will,
and slowly her green eyes glowed.
For a
moment, nothing changed.
Then a
flicker of light came to life in the heart of the bead\x97not the pure green light
of earlier in the day, but a throbbing, pulsing, angry red light. Without
words, Amanda-Anne spoke to the red light and carefully explained to it exactly
what she wanted. Then she waited.
The
bead grew brighter, and the bathroom was suffused with the ugly, bloody red
glow. Then heavy smoke poured out of the bead and hung over the bathtub. It
swirled around the child, threatening, menacing.
Amanda-Anne's
eyes grew lighter, her pupils constricted to pencil-points of darkness in the
centers of the white-green, and as if it had suddenly seen something to fear,
the red cloud recoiled. With a kind of reluctance, it crawled in a thin line up
the wall and out of the bathroom through a slight gap in the window high
overhead.
Amanda-Anne
held her breath as the last traces vanished from the bathroom. She listened,
every muscle tense and straining to catch the slightest sound in the still
night air.
Then,
from the direction of her barn, there came a very satisfying crash, followed by
thunderous clattering and the scream of a full-sized hurricane compressed into a
tiny box. The noise and the destruction raged for as long as Amanda-Anne could
maintain her concentration.
When
she reached the point of exhaustion, she released the storm she had summoned,
sending it back to wherever it had come from. Then, a diamond-hard smile on her
tiny face, Amanda-Anne settled back into the bath-water and relinquished her
place to Amanda-Abbey, who actually liked stupid, childish bubble-baths.
* * *
Mac
left the track late and with too much on his mind. There was Felouen, with her
strange and completely unexpected intimation of unrequited love, and the
Oracular Pool, with its images of terror and disaster. There was the sensation
of intangible evil at the border of the Unformed World, and the turbulence of
the shield. There were his problems with the Seleighe High Court, and with that
low and vile woman who had tried to poison him. There was beautiful, ephemeral
Lianne, whom he suspected was falling in love with him. And last, but certainly
not least, there was the child, Amanda, who had followed him into Underhill
without flinching, and who had then promptly returned to her own world on her
own power and of her own accord\x97in spite of the fact that there was no way she
should have been able to do that. Maclyn was tense, and unsettled, and somewhat
scattered.
And so,
for the first time, he failed to notice a sleek brown Ford Thunderbird that
maintained its position four cars behind him all the way from the street beside
the racetrack parking lot to Lianne's apartment.
Lianne answered
the door with an unnervingly perceptive expression in her eyes. "Hi,"
she said, gave him a brusque kiss, and immediately asked, "Where's the
movie?"
"The
movie?"
"The
movie. C'mon, Mac\x97just this morning you said, and I quote, `I'll pick up the
movie tonight. I think I'll get The Man With One Red Shoe, since we didn't
watch it last night.' After breakfast, and before we headed out the door.
Remember?"
"Of
course I remember," said Maclyn, who remembered no such thing.
"So
where's the movie? You forgot it, didn't you?"
"I
just forgot to bring it in with me. It's in the car. I didn't forget to rent
it."
Like
hell, I didn't forget, he thought while he trudged back to Rhellen. What in
Oberon's name was I thinking this morning?\x97I burned breakfast, I fixed
something else, we rolled around on the bed awhile, we took a shower, we ran
out the door\x97I still don't remember anything about a movie. At least, he mused,
I promised one I've already seen. Be a bitch to pull it out of thin air if I hadn't.
He
opened Rhellen's door, concentrating hard, and a VCR cassette in a clear
plastic cover appeared on the seat. He picked it up and returned to the
apartment.
Lianne's
expression as he handed her the tape was decidedly weird. He started to ask her
what was wrong, then thought better of it.
She
walked over to the VCR without a word, and pushed the eject button. A movie
popped out. She opened the plastic case of the tape he'd provided for her, and
turned her back to him.
She
stood silently for a long moment, while Mac grew more and more tense.
"Jesus, that's a neat trick," she said finally, and turned around.
"Who are you\x97really?"
Maclyn
hedged. "Why do you ask?"
She
smiled. "You were very close with this. Your label is almost perfect, except
you're missing the copyright date, and there's only a gray box where the small
print would be\x97if I hadn't had an original here to compare, I bet I never would
have noticed the difference."
He
nodded, maintaining a calm exterior while his brain raced wildly. In her hands
she held two copies of The Man With One Red Shoe. One of them had been obtained
from a video rental store. The other\x97well, it hadn't. He felt the tempo of his
pulse increase. "Maybe the copy I picked up was pirated."
"Oh,
I'm sure of it," she said with a wry smile. "Out of thin-fucking-air.
We never said anything about movies this morning, Mac. I only said that to see
what you would do\x97because there is something very odd about things that have
happened in my life since you showed up. It strikes me as uncanny, for example,
that neither of us said a word about you picking up this movie, and yet, when I
asked you about it, you happened to have it in your car. Wherever this came
from, Mac Lynn, it wasn't a rental place."
He
stalled for time, trying to think, but unable to make his mind work. This
wasn't the way it was supposed to happen\x97it wasn't supposed to happen at all,
actually. "I see. So I was correct in thinking I hadn't said anything
about movies in our rush this morning? How interesting. You see, I have an
imperfect memory for minutiae. It usually isn't a problem."
Her
arms were crossed in front of her chest. "Perhaps more of a problem than
you realize. There is, of course, the silver tray\x97real silver, of incredible
quality, with no maker's mark. I don't buy it. There are the out-of-season
cherries. And of course we can't forget your willingness to believe that papers
were indeed flying around my classroom of their own accord." She took a
step toward him. "You are very interesting, Mac Lynn. You are charming,
you are handsome, and you are great in bed. But you are not what you seem to
be. Now I want an answer on this, and I want it right now. Who\x97or what\x97are
you?"
* * *
Finally,
she was getting somewhere.
From
her position behind the shrubs outside of the apartment window, Belinda stared
through the slatted mini-blinds at Mac Lynn and his girlfriend. She recognized
the girl\x97had seen her before, in connection with Mac Lynn. She frowned,
determined to remember where she had seen that face, and suddenly she recalled
the girl striding across a parking lot\x97
Bingo!
She's one of the teachers at Loyd E. Auman. I followed him there that one
time\x97and that explains why he was over there in the first place. That's where
his piece of ass works.
Belinda's
face lit up with a beatific smile. His girlfriend could give him to her. Just
grab her and stash her someplace, then tell him his girlfriend was dead unless
he did exactly what she said, and have him follow instructions that would
deliver him voluntarily to Mel's doorstep.
Voila,
she thought, a nice paycheck for me and a well-earned vacation that doesn't
involve chasing spookies\x97preferably someplace far away, with mountains and
ocean and deferential waiters.
Cozumel,
she decided, or maybe Greece.
They
appeared to be arguing. That was good from Belinda's point of view. He might
stomp out, leaving her alone tonight. In which case, I'll just knock on the
door and grab her when she answers it, thinking he's come back to apologize. If
he stays the night, of course, I'll just pick up Little Miss Teacher sometime
tomorrow\x97or after school Monday.
That
seemed like a good, sound, workable plan, and much less complicated than trying
to drug him again. It also meant she didn't need to sit in the damp shrubbery
catching a cold. Belinda stood up and headed back to her new rental car.
Stake-outs were much more pleasant when accompanied by Perrier, Bach, and
croissants.
She
moved into the area of darker shadow that lay between the teacher's apartment
and the parking lot, and noticed two disturbing things as she did. The first
was that Mac's car wasn't in the parking lot anymore.
The
second was that what had seemed, out of the corner of her eye, to be laundry
hanging out between the apartments, wasn't. It was a big, light-colored horse.
And no
sooner had she identified the horse for what it was than it had her jacket
between its teeth, and she was flailing through the air to land on the beast's
back. She reached for her gun, the creature bucked, she grabbed the beast's
mane to keep from hitting the ground\x97
And
things got a little hazy from there.
Belinda
decided pretty promptly that she must have fallen off the horse anyway and
knocked herself silly and wandered around a bit. It was the only explanation
that made any sense. Otherwise, she would have had to admit that the horse had
turned into a car that drove itself, and that it had driven her onto the street
in front of the old abandoned Fox Drive-In, and dumped her by the side of the
road before cruising off into the night. It would have implied that the car had
chosen to abandon her where hookers plied their trade and G.I.'s and
out-of-town businessmen and restless locals went looking for action.
It
would have implied that the fight Belinda got into with the pimp and the big
buxom blonde and the transvestite and the two horny guys in the red Camaro was
the fault of a goddamned '57 Chevy.
And no
matter how spooky things got, Belinda wasn't ready to admit that.
* * *
Mac
faced Lianne, and swallowed hard. Humans weren't anywhere near as gullible as
they'd once been\x97at least some of them weren't, he decided. The room felt
uncomfortably warm.
"I'm
a racecar driver," he said with an ingenuous smile.
Lianne
nodded, her expression grave. "A racecar driver is the least of what you
are, Mac Lynn. I've always made it a point to date within my species before
this, but I think I've not even managed to live up to that one simple rule this
time. Have I?"
Maclyn
stood, studying her, thinking fast.
Lianne
saw the evasion coming and headed it off. "Mac, I'm to the point where I
won't believe anything but the truth. And please give me credit for being able
to tell the truth from a lie\x97remember, I deal with ten-year-olds on a daily
basis." She smiled wryly. "Besides, I doubt that the truth is going
to be anywhere near as ludicrous as what I've suspected."
"Wanna
bet?" Mac muttered.
Lianne
heard him. "No," she said. "But lay out your cards anyway and
let me take a look."
"Okay."
He took a deep breath and studied her. "You've heard of Faerie, of
course."
"One
of my best friends is one."
"Not
that kind of fairy."
"I
was being facetious. I've heard of Faerie. Up to this point I've found its
purported existence likely to be the product of hallucination and overdoses of
wheat-smut, but I'm a logical soul. Presented with sufficient proof, I'll
believe just about anything. I suppose you're going to tell me you're the
elf-king of Fairyland or something."
Mac's
right eyebrow arched up. "I'm an elf. Not `or something.' And I'm fairly
high up in the line of succession, but I'm not the king, or even the
prince."
Lianne
sighed and said to whatever higher powers inhabited the ceiling, "I'm
taking this rather well, aren't I?" She studied Mac for a long, silent
moment, then said, "Granted I've already seen enough to convince me that
you aren't normal\x97but would it be too much to ask for some proof that you are
what you say you are? Seeing that we've been sleeping together and all?"
Maclyn
gave her a very Gallic shrug\x97and his human seeming faded away. He presented
himself to her in his full elvish glory, from the gold circlet on his head to
the sweeping white folds of his ermine cloak, to the rich white-on-white
textures of his silk-embroidered tunic and velvet leggings. He showed her
himself, pointed ears, pale green slit-pupilled eyes, and inhuman smile.
"My
lady," he said, inclining his head with courtly grace. "Is this
sufficient proof?"
Lianne
sat down sharply on the coffee table. Her eyes went round and she whistled
softly. "I'll be damned," she whispered. "An elf. A damned sexy
one."
She
cocked her head to one side and studied him closely. "A question,
then."
"I'll
answer it if I can."
"What
are you doing hanging around me?"
And
isn't that just the question? Maclyn thought. I wish to hell I knew the answer.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
Andrew
Kendrick heard the first sounds from the barn just as he was locking up the
house for the night. He ran to the window and stared out at the hellish red
glow in the dark that held the stable area. It was clearly coming from the pony
barn. At first his mind couldn't recognize the disaster for what it was\x97but
then he shook himself out of his paralysis and reacted.
"Fire!"
he shouted to Merryl. "There's a fire down in the pony barn! Call the fire
department, now!"
He
pulled on boots and sprinted out the back door. If anything, it looked and
sounded worse now that he was outside. He could barely hear the terrified whinnies
of the pony above the roar that came from within the shed.
He
goaded himself into a run, heading down to the barn, wondering if he would be
able to get into the secret storeroom and thinking of the money that was going
up in smoke in there. Thinking of all the\x97special things\x97that were going to be
destroyed, and that were going to be even more difficult to procure the second
time than they had been when he'd first obtained them.
Merryl
passed him on the path, flew to the right and to her own barn, full of
pedigreed mares and foals, her prize stud, her champion filly\x97the objects of
her real passion and her love. Andrew heard her throwing open her barn doors,
chasing the horses out into the pasture and away from the impending disaster.
He clenched his fingers into tight fists, outraged at her care for the animals
and her indifference toward him.
He
watched her working frantically, momentarily distracted from his goal. She has
a lot of nerve, ignoring me. Amanda's mother learned what happens to people who
ignore me. I've been too easy on Merryl. He fumed with smoldering rage as he
raced towards the pony barn, wondering if he could save anything without Merryl
seeing it. He wasn't really thinking about the barn, nor about the fire\x97not, at
least, until was he nearly at the structure.
Realization
that there was something very strange going on stopped him like a stone wall. I
don't smell any smoke, he thought. It sounded like there was a war going on
down there, and it certainly looked as if the place was being overrun by the
fires of hell\x97wind that screamed like a damned and tortured thing, the crash
and thud of heavy objects hitting against the walls, the screech of nails
ripping loose from beams\x97and the terrible red light still gleamed through cracks,
but there were no tongues of flame visible and no smoke to smell.
What
the hell\x97? he wondered.
A piece
of board blew past him, and some unidentifiable bit of shrapnel grazed his
cheek\x97and Andrew watched dumbfounded as gaps appeared, as if something or
someone from inside battered away at the barn. The night air was thick with a
sense of rage, of hatred so dense and palpable he could feel it brushing
against his chilled skin like damp, drowned hands. His heart pounded with fear
that was not even his own, and his mouth went dry and his breath came fast in
spite of his struggles to control his emotions. He found himself backing away
from the barn, and found that he could not stop himself, could not make himself
walk back toward it.
From
behind him, he heard the wail of sirens and the squeal of tires turning into
the lane. The fire engines' flashing red lights joined the peculiar
illumination that came from the barn\x97the night pulsed red. Blood, he thought,
clutching his arms around himself. The world is bleeding.
The
firemen were unrolling their hoses, shouting to each other, pointing out their
target. Merryl was still loosing horses out into the field.
Andrew
saw none of it; instead, he had been inadvertently thrown back to his own
childhood.
He saw
the little beagle puppy he'd "bought" when he was eleven from the kid
down the road\x97bought with marbles and a brand-new baseball glove and a
brand-new football. The puppy he'd smuggled home and made a wonderful soft bed
for and hidden under the house because his father had said, "No
dogs," but he'd wanted it so bad\x97
His
puppy, laid out on a board, belly up; its little muzzle wired shut, its eyes
wide and staring, its paws nailed into place. And his dad, furious, shouting at
him, "Now you'll know to listen to me, won't you, you little bastard! Next
time you disobey me, this will be you!" And the knife, in his father's
hand, slitting the little beagle's white belly open, and the pup's eyes rolling
in terror and pain\x97
And the
blood pulsing red and redder around his father's fine doctor hands, pulsing
like the lights from the fire engines\x97and again he tasted the anguish and the
fear\x97
And the
red glow in the barn just\x97went away.
Thick,
suffocating silence crowded in to fill the void and darkness. The firemen
paused, and stared. The horrible noises that had been coming from inside had
stopped, abruptly, almost as if a switch had been flipped. The terrible feeling
of rage and fear made the same abrupt departure.
Then
sounds rushed back and revived the night: the chirping of crickets and the
whinnies and stompings of the horses out in pasture, the stamp and crunch of
one fireman's boots as he walked, flashlight in hand, down to the barn, and
pulled the battered and sagging door open.
And his
voice, awestruck as he aimed his flashlight into the dark recesses of the
structure\x97"Je-e-e-e-ZUS, Johnnie, get a load of this!"
* * *
The
rippling motion of the border had lulled her into a near-trance. Felouen sat,
her back pressed against the smooth rock base of the Oracular Pool, staring
into the nothingness, and she worried. Maclyn might come around. He might help
against whatever was coming. Then again, enchanted by his other interests, he
might leave her to fight and die alone.
There
had been more to the visions of the Oracular Pool than the one brief glimpse it
had shown Maclyn. War was coming\x97a long and savage battle with the outnumbered
elvish forces lined up against hordes of Unseleighe unlike anything the Kin had
ever seen before. Her friends would fall, and she would fight on, uselessly,
would herself be gravely wounded, would flee and be captured, would suffer at
the hands of the unstoppable things from the Unformed. And only then would she
die. She had seen her own death. It was not a good one.
She had
seen another vision as well, an alternate future in the inscrutable reflections
in the Pool. Maclyn would stand at her side, with the battle raging as
before\x97but the enemy would be fewer and weaker, the tide of battle would turn
in the Kin's favor, and she would live. So she sat and pondered, staring out
into the non-place on the other side of the border with loathing.
Felouen
sensed the change before she saw it.
A
presence born of fear and rage and hatred swirled into being in the Void,
reached out and clawed at her from that nothing-world. It sent her to her feet,
recoiling from the tentacles that reached with sudden intent directly for her.
From
the Nothing, flickers of blood-red light began to glow.
* * *
".
. . so you see, she was human, and I loved her, and when she died, I thought
that everything about me that had mattered had died, too," Mac said. He
sat on one side of Lianne's couch, again wearing his human seeming.
"Everything about her was so brief and so painfully fleeting, and the
harder I tried to stop time, to hold her life in my hands and keep her with me,
the faster I saw the years tear her into shreds. She died nearly two hundred
years ago, but there are still times when the thought crosses my mind that if I
went back to Tellekirk, I'd find her there."
He
locked his hands together, and he stared at his shoes. "In you, I see that
same frightening beauty, that same\x97life\x97that burns so hot and so fast. I cannot
stay away from you. And I find myself longing for your brief, blazing beauty,
and wondering how you can burn your life so fast."
Lianne
pursed her lips and blew a soft sigh through them. She got up and walked over
to one of the bookcases that lined the walls of her bedroom, and perused the
shelves. Finally, with a nod, she pulled down a deep green leather volume and
flipped through the pages.
"We've
done some thinking about that ourselves," she said, and looked down at the
page she'd chosen. "Here\x97" she pointed, and read aloud.
"For
a man cannot lose either the past or the future: for what a man has not, how
can anyone take from him? These two things then thou must bear in mind: the
one, that all things from eternity are of like forms and come round in a
circle, and that it makes no difference whether a man shall see the same things
during a hundred years or two hundred, or an infinite time; and the second,
that the longest liver and he who die soonest lose just the same."
She
paused to let the quote sink it. "Marcus Aurelius\x97a Roman philosopher and leader
from way before your time\x97said that, and I suspect he's right. Even though I'll
live\x97at most\x97a hundred years, and you'll live God-only-knows how long, we were
both born, we will both live the span of our days, and we will both die. I
mean, you will die eventually, won't you?"
"It's
been rumored," Mac said, a faint hint of the beginning of a smile at the
corner of his mouth.
She
gave him a real smile. "Don't pity us humans, then. Time runs at a
different pace for you and me, but my life will be as full as yours. It will
just happen faster. It won't seem to me that I got cheated\x97I'm doing things
with my life that matter to me and to other people. I'm teaching children, and
to me, that is an important and meaningful job. I have friends who care about
me, and a family that loves me, and I'm doing what I can to make the world a
better place. And as for your long-gone love, I guarantee you that if she lived
her life, and could see where her presence made a difference, she didn't feel
cheated either."
Lianne
sat back on the bed, put the book down beside her, and pulled her knees up to
her chest so she could wrap her arms around them. Now was the time for a little
noble self-sacrifice, and it made the smile she had given him fade away
entirely. "I think you're doing yourself an injustice hanging around
humans, though, Maclyn." She did her best to hide the tears that brimmed
in her eyes; she didn't want to give him up. She really didn't. But it was for
his own good. "Look for someone who exists in your own timeframe\x97who won't
get old and die between two blinks of those gorgeous eyes of yours."
She did
her best to look brave and happy\x97but all she could manage was a smile as
transparent and empty as a soap bubble on the wind.
* * *
Maclyn
listened to her words and tried to find some hope or comfort in them. She
looked so beautiful. Mac's gaze roamed from the curve of her ankle to the full
swell of her breast, to the plainly-written pain in her eyes, and words surged
from his lips before he could stop them. "You don't have to get old so
fast. I could take you into Elfhame Outremer, Lianne. There, you would live at
the pace of my years." He faltered, and further brilliant suggestions died
in his throat.
What in
all the hells of the Unformed Planes had he said that for? Did he love her?
Really, truly love her\x97as an equal and a companion with whom he could sustain
interest for some significant span of his own long life? Was he infatuated with
her humanness? Or was he\x97even less noble\x97burning with desire to fix the
long-dead past?
An
unbidden memory of Allison\x97fair, dainty, dark-eyed Allison, two hundred years
dust\x97choked his throat and stopped his tongue. To Allison he had said those
same words, had begged her to let him stop time for her. Allison had refused
him, had told him about her God and her Church and her Bible, about God's
demand that only he had the right to count the measure of a man's life. At
first he had argued with her\x97fruitlessly, and then he had stayed at her side,
using what time she let him have, while she grew old quickly. Allison had not
lived her life fully. She had spent her days railing at an unjust Deity who
gave life unequally. He had watched her turn bitter, as she wrinkled and
fattened and her tongue went acid. Suffered, as she studied him secretly from
beneath her lashes, hoping some sign of age would scar him. Mourned, as
eventually she hated him because it never did. Yet, often enough, even in the
old woman, the young girl who loved an elven prince could be found. And in those
moments, Maclyn had felt his heart ripped to tatters.
He
remembered Allison while he stared at Lianne, wondering at his motives, trying
to guess what she hid inside her shielded thoughts.
"That's
a hell of an offer," the young teacher finally breathed. "What's the
catch?"
He
shook his head. "I'm not certain. For Allison, it was her religion. She
didn't think God would forgive her for thwarting death."
Lianne
grinned, a devilish, teeth-bared grimace that was half humor and half wry
self-deprecation. "Not my problem." The strange smile vanished, and
the woman rested both hands on his thigh and stared into his eyes. "Let me
think about ramifications\x97especially what this would mean to the two of us. And
give me a while, okay? I've got a kid in school who's in trouble, and that's
left me with a lot on my mind."
Mac
heard only the first part of what she said and nodded. Then her last statement
she'd made caught his attention. "What do you mean, `a kid in trouble'?
You haven't said anything about it to me before, have you?"
She
frowned a moment. "Sort of. Do you remember Amanda\x97the little girl from
the racetrack who wouldn't get out of the way of the explosion?" She
looked at him, her eyes uncertain.
Only
too well. "I remember her."
She
grimaced. "Yeah. Probably you do. That was pretty bad. Well, I went to
talk to her parents today. Something is very wrong there\x97I suspect abuse. I
called Social Services and reported it, but the guy I talked to said that,
since I don't have any hard evidence, he can't go out there to check on
her."
Chills
ran along Maclyn's spine. "Abuse?" he asked in a voice gone ominously
flat.
Lianne
must have heard the change in his tone and laughed without any humor.
"That's how I feel, too. Every time I see something like this, I want to
kill the people responsible. God, I wish I could prove she was being abused, to
get that guy out there\x97but I'm on such thin ice. I've never seen any bruises,
she's never said anything to me about it\x97although that's normal for abuse cases,
actually\x97she doesn't miss a lot of school. It's just, her personality isn't
right. Not right at all."
What
would happen, Mac wondered, if he told Lianne everything he knew about Amanda?
Would she be able to believe in Amanda's magic?
Why the
hell not? he decided. She believed I was an elf easily enough.
"I'm
willing to bet Amanda is the reason everything in your classroom came to life
on you the other day," he told her. "I know for a fact she is the
reason nobody got seriously hurt at the racetrack."
Lianne
gave him a long, clinical look. "What\x97exactly\x97do you mean by that?"
He
licked his lips. "She does magic\x97controls inanimate objects. Makes them
move."
"Tele\x97um\x97telekinesis?"
Lianne asked. "Moving things with her mind?"
He
nodded. "I think that's the term."
Lianne's
expression grew harried. "Aw, c'mon," she snarled. "I bought you
as an elf. You don't want me to believe in that, too! Next you'll be insisting
on the validity of Bigfoot, flying saucers, and the effectiveness of the two-party
political system."
Mac
snorted. "No, I won't. I'll just want you to believe in your student.
She's special\x97but she is hiding something. She wouldn't admit she could do
magic."
"Mac,"
Lianne replied as if she were talking to one of her students, ". . . maybe
that's because she can't."
"Sensible,
logical theory\x97except that I saw her," he persisted stubbornly. "I
watched\x97and sensed\x97her work her magic."
"Ergo
sum ergo," Lianne muttered. "It is, therefore it is."
"Don't
get grouchy. While she was looking at Keith's car, she kept it from exploding.
As soon as you pulled her out of the way, it blew\x97but she was able to see it
again at that point, and she controlled almost all of the shrapnel. I saw her.
More than that, I sensed the flow of power."
Lianne
still looked skeptical, but Mac sensed she was weakening. "So what you're
saying is that if I had left her alone, the car wouldn't have blown up at
all?"
Mac
shrugged. "Who knows? I am saying that the SERRA drivers were lucky she
was watching the race that day. Keith owes his life to her."
"Great.
Fine. She's a helpful little brownie. So why did she send everything in my
classroom flying?" Lianne set her jaw stubbornly.
Mac
sighed. "I don't know. There are a lot of things about her that I don't
know. But I think we can find some answers. Tomorrow\x97well, I'm racing
tomorrow\x97why don't you come out and watch me? You can keep my mom company in
the pits\x97"
Lianne
forgot about the child entirely. "Your mom?" she said, her jaw
dropping.
"Oh
. . ." He smiled weakly. "I forgot to mention that, didn't I?
Uh\x97D.D.'s my mother."
Silence
for a moment, while Lianne absorbed the information. Then\x97"She looks five
years younger than me," Lianne wailed.
Mac
deemed it time to get the discussion back to more serious subjects\x97or, at
least, subjects he could do something about. Getting D.D. to change her
apparent age was not one of them. "Don't let it bother you. She looks at
least that much younger than me. Anyway, after the race, we can all three go
out to Amanda's house and poke around a little. We'll see if we can find out
anything. D.D.'s been concerned, too, ever since the day of the accident."
Lianne
flung herself backward and down onto the bed and slapped herself dramatically
on the forehead. "Gosh, what a brilliant idea! It becomes obvious why
elves rule the world. Why didn't I think of that? I mean, why would Andrew or
Merryl Kendrick ever notice two racecar-driving elves and their daughter's
schoolteacher tromping around on their posted, private property, looking for
magical mystery clues like something out of Scooby Doo\x97on a Saturday, no less,
when they're probably home all day?" She scrunched her eyes closed in
mock-agony.
Mac
formed his will into a familiar shape and draped that shape around himself.
"I don't see the problem," he said.
"You're
kidding." Lianne opened her eyes to stare at him, then looked all around
the room. She sat up, and her expression became more and more puzzled.
"Mac?"
"I'm
right here," he said from the spot he'd occupied since the moment they
both sat down.
"I
don't see you."
He took
the little "I'm not here" spell\x97pirated from a human mage named
Tannim\x97off of himself, and smiled at her as her eyes went round. "And I
don't see the problem."
She
sighed and flopped back again. "Maybe there isn't one."
* * *
Mel
Tanbridge waited three hours beyond his absolute cut-off time, and still
neither of the two calls he was expecting came. With growing disbelief, he
acknowledged that they might never come.
He was
more than willing to accept the fact that either Stevens or Peterkin could be
bought off, if enough sweeteners were added. He was not willing to admit that
Belinda could buy them both off\x97not on the money he was paying her, and
certainly not at the same time. He knew they weren't the brightest guys in the
world, but he couldn't imagine them making the sort of world-class bumble that
would alert her that they were both reporting to him on her activities, even if
she realized that one of them was.
And
they didn't realize that he was paying each of them the same bonus to report on
the other.
So why
hadn't at least one of them called in?
The
answer was fairly obvious.
The
three of them had captured Belinda's race-driver TK, and he was even better
than anyone had hoped for. Belinda had seen dollar signs and had convinced
Stevens and Peterkin that they could make a lot more money if they joined
forces with her and kept their catch to sell to the highest bidder, instead of
handing him over to the man who rightfully owned him.
Mel
considered that scenario from all angles. It was the only one that made sense.
Considering the healthy mix of bribes, threats and terrorism he'd used on
Belinda's two assistants, they should have stayed loyal under almost any
circumstances. Therefore, Belinda must have convinced them she was coming into
an unbelievable fortune to get them to double-cross him. For that matter,
knowing what he had on her, she had to have convinced herself of the same
thing, in order to forget how important it was for her to remain loyal.
None of
them had stayed loyal. Therefore, Mac Lynn was the biggest telekinetic find
ever\x97and Mel was more determined than ever to own him.
Belinda
had only had two days to hide her trail and her booty. However, with both
Peterkin and Stevens in her camp, all three of them knew how many bases he'd
had covered, and how little he'd trusted any of them. They would be more than
careful, they'd be paranoid.
He
glared out his smoked glass window at the night and watched the ghost breakers
run up the beach, the white of sea-foam all that was visible in the clouded
dark. He planned for ten minutes, and when he was satisfied, he dialed a number
from memory. Moments later came a drowsy hello.
"This
is Tanbridge. Set things up to fly to North Carolina tonight. I'm going to
Fayetteville. I'll meet you on the strip in two hours."
He hung
up, then glanced around the office. Not much lying around that he'd need to
take with him. As a matter of fact, there were only two things in the office
that he was going to need. The TK meter.
And the
gun.
* * *
Andrew
forced himself to walk to the barn. He stood next to the fireman with the
flashlight and stared in at the devastation. It was all-encompassing and complete\x97but
his first feeling, on looking in at the destruction, was one of relief. Nothing
inside of the barn was recognizable anymore\x97including his large collection of
special items. The pony's stall was ripped to shreds, and the pony had
evidently kicked through the back doors to escape; he was out at the far side
of the pasture cropping grass. Lucky for him, Andrew reflected. He wouldn't
have survived whatever did that.
Whatever
it was, it hadn't been a fire. Vandals? Only if they had come equipped with a
log chipper and managed to run every item in the barn, including tack, feed
barrels and hardware, through it in a matter of minutes.
The
presence of other people around him, talking to him, gradually seeped into his
awareness. He turned and found that while he'd been lost in his shocked
reverie, two sheriff's deputies and the sheriff himself had arrived.
"Can
you think of anyone who would want to do this to you, Mr. Kendrick?" the
sheriff asked.
Andrew
thought for a moment. "Dozens of them," he said. "Merryl won't
sell her horses to just anyone\x97maybe someone who didn't measure up to her
standards wanted to see if he could force her to lower them. For that matter,
I've helped my clients acquire a number of profitable enterprises through hostile
takeovers in past years. I've made enemies on the way. However, I can't think
of any of them who would be able to do . . . that." He nodded back toward
the barn.
One of
the deputies said, "We've seen it, sir. It's pretty unbelievable. I don't
know how they could have been so destructive."
The
other deputy said, "The firemen said they saw red light coming from inside
the building, but that it went out suddenly."
Merryl
spoke up. "We all saw it. Apparently, whoever did this wanted us to think
it was a fire. It looked like one."
Andrew
agreed. "It was a very convincing special effect. The whole setup was very
realistic, and very frightening\x97I'm not ashamed to admit I was terrified.
However," he yawned "it's over now, and it's late, and we all will
have plenty of time in the morning to hash over the details of this. I don't
think there is anything more we can do tonight. So if you don't mind, I'd
rather deal with it tomorrow."
"That's
reasonable, sir," the sheriff said, "It's a clear night. Any tire
tracks or other evidence will still be available in the morning. We'll be out
first thing. Until then, I'll be glad to leave someone here overnight to keep
an eye on things."
"Not
necessary," Andrew said dryly. "There's an old line about horses and
unlocked barn doors that seems appropriate right now\x97"
The
sheriff shrugged. "That's up to you. If you see or hear anything out of
place, though, let us know right away."
Andrew
nodded shortly. "I'll do that."
Watching
them leave, Merryl said, "I think you should have let them post a
guard."
He
sneered. "Do me a favor and don't waste your time on thinking. It isn't
what you're best at. I had reasons for not wanting them here."
The
knowing look she turned on him made him suddenly uneasy. "I'll bet. What
were you hiding in there?"
He
reacted to his unease by issuing threats. "Don't push your luck, Merryl.
Don't ever forget, you can be replaced."
* * *
From
her bedroom window, Amanda-Anne watched the police cars leave, and watched the
Father and the Step-Mother trudge slowly toward the house. She smiled. The
Father's secret place was gone. Now he couldn't hurt her anymore. He would
never hurt her again.
She
felt the power of her own dark magic coursing through her and savored the sweet
taste of revenge. No one, no one, would ever hurt her again.
* * *
Under
the covers, Lianne tossed and turned. Mac's warmth next to her was, at the
moment, more disturbing than comforting. She almost wished that he hadn't spent
the night. She would have liked to sit up, to drink hot tea and stare off into
space knowing that she wouldn't have to try to explain to him why she wanted
to. She would have liked to pace\x97but stalking around the apartment would wake
him up. She listened to him breathe, slow and steady, deep in sleep, and tried
not to resent his presence.
He's
not human, she thought. He's very wonderful, but he's not human. No matter how
well we get along, there are things we can never see in the same way. His
mother is hundreds of years old, he says. She's still young\x97he says she'll live
until she gets tired of it. My mom and dad are nearing sixty, and might have
another twenty.
What
about children? Could we have them? What would they be? She winced, rolled over
and buried her head under her pillow. That's unpleasant, thinking of your own
possible children as "what," not "who." More than likely,
from my understanding of genetics, there could be no children.
He
loved children\x97he said the elvenkind intervened in the lives of battered and
abused human children because they rarely had children of their own, and they
valued them so. He would want to have them someday, wouldn't he?
He said
that time in Underhill was changeable, that a day there could be a minute here,
or a day, or a year, or a hundred years. Lianne tried to imagine dropping into
Elfhame Outremer for a quick visit with the in-laws, and returning to find
everyone she'd ever known dead a hundred years ago. Like the old fairy tales.
She shuddered and tried to think of something else.
When I
divorced Jim, I thought I could save myself from stupid mistakes. I promised
myself, "I'll never fall for someone who's wrong for me again\x97I'll never
let myself get hurt like this again." I was so goddamned sure that I knew
something finally, dammit! I thought I'd learned my lesson, that I was only
going to go out with men who wouldn't lie to me, who could be trusted. Now look
at me. I'm in love with the wrong person again.
That
was the worst of it\x97never mind that he wasn't human, never mind that he would
live damn near forever and she would be gone in no time, never mind all her
doubts and her confusion. The cold, bare fact that scared her the most was that
one: she really did love him.
She
burrowed deeper into the covers and pressed her back against his. It was going
to be a very long night.
* * *
Mel
Tanbridge surveyed his hotel room with distaste. At four-thirty a.m., anything
should have looked good, but the fact was, he expected quality. No, dammit, he
expected the best. The best he could do on no notice wasn't good enough\x97he
hadn't been able to get the penthouse in Fayetteville's Prince Charles hotel,
just a suite\x97and while it was a nice old hotel, it wasn't a nice old five-star
hotel. He hadn't stooped to anything below five-star accommodations in years.
The service was good and the suite was clean and spacious, with furniture of
excellent taste, but the room didn't have a private jacuzzi\x97and there wasn't a
sauna in the entire hotel. He hadn't had time to check out the amenities in the
gym\x97or even if there was a gym\x97but he doubted that they would be of the
technical level or variety he was used to. After all, this was a military town.
He doubted that a military town would have accommodations anywhere that he
would find acceptable. That was just the way they were.
There
would be a gym somewhere, he decided. And he would find it in the next day or
two. After all, he needed to stay in shape. A healthy body equaled a healthy
mind\x97and he had the healthiest. It was his competitive edge.
That
edge was important, especially in light of his subordinates' betrayal. Their
trail was probably a full two days cold. All the more reason, he decided, not
to start down it without sufficient sleep. A healthy body, and all that. . . .
He left a wake-up call at the front desk for noon, climbed into bed, and was
instantly asleep.
* * *
Belinda
checked herself out of the Cape Fear Emergency Department and slipped into the
waiting cab. She gave the driver the address to the school teacher's apartment
complex, then sank into the back seat, thinking ugly thoughts. The stitches in
her scalp throbbed, and knowledge of what the wound looked like hurt her just
as much. She'd borrowed a mirror from one of the nurses to check out the damage
to her hair, and had been appalled. A patch the size of a monk's tonsure had
been shaved around the slash that guy in the miniskirt and fishnet hose had
made when he brained her with a handy beer bottle. She wore a huge bandage of
white gauze and bulky pads that covered the shaved spot for the time being, but
when it came off, she was going to be left with an awful mess. She'd been eight
the last time she'd had short hair.
Mac
Lynn and Mac Lynn's girlfriend, and Mac Lynn's car crew, and anyone else
Belinda could think of were going to pay for her hair.
Soon.
However,
the anesthetic was wearing off, and she felt dizzy and sick and tense. She
needed to find a drugstore to get her pain medicine and her antibiotic
prescriptions filled, and then, she had to admit, it would be really nice to
take a day off. Maybe even two. The idea of lying in a soft bed taking drugs
and not getting kidnapped by horse-cars, beaned by drag-queens, or scalped by
bored young doctors was an idea she found appealing right now.
Maybe
she could consider her time off the clock as workman's comp. Mel could
basically go screw himself if he didn't agree. After all, he was taking it easy
out in his beach complex in California. What was he going to do about it?
Her
immediate future more or less settled, she closed her eyes and tried her best
to ignore the breaking day. The motel and bed, she thought. And no more
stinking adventures, not for a while.
A few
drops of rain spattered on the cab's windshield, mixing the fine coating of
dust into thoroughly opaque mud. Belinda looked at the sky, startled. It had
been clear the last time she'd seen the sky. The clouds must have moved in
really fast.
She
smiled. Rain was a good omen for her. People didn't look around when it rained.
They ran to their cars and got straight in. They didn't sightsee. She
considered revising her morning plans. She'd take a free ally any day.
Mac's
car was parked where she remembered it. The cabbie pulled up where she directed
him, but suddenly Belinda found that she didn't want to get out of the cab. I'm
almost convinced that damned Chevy is watching for me. Which is ridiculous,
except that I don't have any other way to explain what happened last night.
I have
to pick up my car, though. I need it.
The
cabbie gave her an impatient look. "You're on the clock, ya' know,"
he drawled. "No big deal for me\x97but you're gonna find it right expensive.
I ain't gonna sit here all mornin' for free."
"Yeah,
right," she answered. The rain was no longer just a few splashes on the
windshield. Now it slashed down in sheets, whipped across the front of the car
by gusts of wind. "Drive closer to that brown Thunderbird." She
prayed that nothing had happened to the latest of her rental cars. She couldn't
afford to experience too much more of Mac Lynn's version of fun and excitement.
The
cabbie rolled his eyes, but moved his vehicle so that it formed a screen in
front of the T-Bird's driver-side door.
Belinda
paid him off, then jumped out of the cab. Once in the T-Bird, she locked the
doors. She ignored the cabbie's raised eyebrow. He hadn't had her night. He
wouldn't understand.
Belinda
sat in the dark safety of her car, watched the raindrops sheeting down her
windshield, and listened to their soothing thrumming on the roof. Outside, the
world lightened in tiny increments, gray on gray on black, revealing shrubs
heavy with water and pines swaying in the driving rain.
The
monotonous brick-box apartments were laid out in a grid, with parking lots with
separate entries at each square. She moved to the last parking slot three rows
away from the teacher's place, cut off the motor, and watched. She was
comfortably hidden behind cars parked in the lines ahead of her, and scattered
tall Carolina pines\x97trees that reminded her of the California palms with their
trunks that soared thirty feet before the first limb sprouted. Her position
gave her a clear view of anyone leaving the apartment.
It
couldn't have been more than fifteen or twenty minutes before Mac and his
little teacher came flying out of the apartment and dove into the Chevy.
A good,
hard rain will never fail you. I knew it. Belinda smiled and, when they pulled
out, followed them at a discreet distance.
* * *
At the
Fayetteville International Speedway, the first fat drops of rain hissed onto
the tarmac. More followed, faster and faster, and the patterns made by the
first drops were obliterated by water that fell in steady streams, and then
sheets, and then in waterfalls that whipped sideways in the steadily increasing
wind.
Dierdre,
already at the track and doing final pre-race work on the Victor, sighed with
resignation at the roaring deluge outside of the garage. The weather station
had hinted at this\x97but torrential rains weren't supposed to be part of the
picture until Sunday. She closed her eyes and concentrated on feeling the
shifts of air currents and pressure cells. After an extended time, she opened
her eyes again, and surveyed the rich red Victor with dismay. Surprise, she
thought. We're going to have a whole weekend off, whilst the be-damned weather
craps on our heads. Oh, joy. 'Tis not a natural rain, either. This has been
pulled in by heavy magic somewhere nearby.
Time to
call her son, the slug, and tell him he wasn't going to have to get out of bed.
She
headed to the phone, then stopped. She could have sworn that she'd just heard
Rhellen's familiar rumble from the parking lot\x97even over the rain. She queried
her own elvensteed, who was leaning against the back wall keeping dry.
Afallonn
rumbled her surprised affirmation.
D.D.
looked up at the wall clock, just to make sure time hadn't slipped past without
her noticing. It was six-oh-four in the morning, a good three hours before
Mac's earliest voluntary wake-up hour. Will miracles never cease? she wondered.
Maclyn
swung into the garage, a sheepish grin on his face. Behind him was his
schoolteacher girlfriend, and the expression on her face was patently
unreadable.
"Well,
Mac, shouldn't surprise me that the first day you show up early for a race is
the day they're sure to cancel the whole show."
"Hi,
Mom," he said.
:Mom?:
D.D. was sure her jaw had hit the floor. :What the bloody hell\x97?: she asked for
his ears only.
He
sighed. "Rule number one, Mom\x97never date a pragmatist. Slips of logic and
technique convince them that the impossible isn't, whereas girls who operate on
blind faith never will believe you're anything but what you appear to be. She
figured the whole thing out."
Well.
The cat was out of the bag\x97for now. It wouldn't take but a wee spell to put it
back in, but she doubted Maclyn had told his girlfriend that. No harm in
waiting to see if she might be a useful addition to the SERRA folk. "In
other words, you dated somebody smarter than you for a change." D.D. snorted.
"I keep telling you you've not the brains to keep company with any but the
dim girls\x97but you won't listen to me, will you?" She grinned at Lianne.
"Sons know everything, whether they're elven or human, I imagine."
"My
mom made a few similar remarks concerning my brother," she said.
"All
this came as a shock to you, no doubt," D.D. added.
"Oh,"
Lianne agreed. "Rest assured."
D.D.
gave Lianne a wary look and braced herself for what she felt sure was the
impending "big news." "Well, if you're here with my brilliant
son, and you know our wee bit of a secret, I expect there's something the two
of you will be wanting to tell me."
Surprise
flashed in Lianne's eyes. "Uh\x97not really\x97ah, D.D. Nothing like that, in
any case. Actually, Mac mentioned that you were interested in a student of
mine. Amanda Kendrick. He said you wanted to find her because she was, um,
telekinetic."
Dierdre
tried not to make her relief too obvious. "Quite," she said. I sense
the need for a spell of forgetfulness, once we have the wee bairn.
But
Lianne's next words drove all that out of her head. "I have reason to
believe her father is abusing her. Mac is going out with me today to her house.
He thought you might like to come along."
D.D.'s
face had flushed at the mention of abuse. She swore softly in Gaelic, then said
slowly, "That explains a great deal, my dear. This\x97wouldna be the first
time I've seen something like this. It breaks my heart, lass, that humans who
do not appreciate children have them and hurt them because they don't want
them, while we, who would give anything to be able to have more, cannot. Aye,
I'll go with you. Do you plan to take the child, Maclyn?"
Maclyn
frowned. :Not now, Mother. She doesn't know about the changelings yet.:
"No. Lianne has the Social Service people taking care of that. She simply
wants to get information that will hurry them out to Amanda's house faster. I
showed her Tannim's spell-gift, so we can stay unseen."
:Well,
we'll see,: Dierdre told him. :If the situation's bad enough, we'll take the
child and befuddle your light-of-love.:
He
winced.
"This
rain won't stop today, nor tomorrow either, most likely," D.D. said.
"There won't be a race. So we might as well leave."
* * *
Belinda
pressed the button on her little black box as Mac hurried by, and the needle
waggled to around nine-point-five and stopped. That was only what she expected.
She couldn't get excited about Mac anymore. He was too-fucking-much trouble.
She pressed it again at the teacher, and nothing happened. No surprises there,
either. But when she tried a third time on Mac's little blond mechanic, the
needle danced like a fish on a line and dove across to ten.
"I'll
be damned," she muttered. It couldn't be any harder to get hold of the
mechanic than it had been to abduct that son-of-a-bitch Lynn. Granted, she
hadn't seen the mechanic do anything\x97but after the demonstrations she'd gotten
from the driver, she was willing to trust the meter, skip the dog-and-pony
show, and just collect the warm body and go home.
She
waited as the three pulled out of the speedway's parking lot, then followed
them again.
Visions
of herself as Marlin Perkins on safari danced in her imagination, and she
wondered momentarily if it would be possible to get Mel to send her one of those
hypodermic dart guns and a big supply of knock-out dope. Probably not. Mel was
starting to get cranky about finances the last time I talked to him.
She
wasn't worried about that, either, though. The FedEx people would be trotting
in with her next cash payment, as well as Stevens' and Peterkin's money, on
Monday. Since she didn't have to pay either Stevens or Peterkin this time\x97and
since I haven't mentioned their unfortunate demise to Mel yet\x97she could just
hang on to the whole thing. Their cash would make a nice addition to her
finances.
That
reminded her that she really needed to call Mel and assure him that things were
progressing nicely. It would be a shame if she didn't keep this job long enough
to collect her bonus\x97especially after all she'd suffered through to get it.
CHAPTER
EIGHT
Cethlenn
"woke" with no memory of anything since her escape from the Father in
the barn. It was early morning, she knew\x97light came through the bedroom windows
in the morning. Whether it was the next day, or a day in the next week, or in
the next month, she had no way of knowing. Time was a fluid thing to her in
this body; hard to catch, impossible to hold. She wondered if she would ever
get used to it.
Rain
poured down outside of the little pink-and-white bedroom, framed in the ruffled
curtains like an illustration from a child's book. The teddy bears sat on the
windowsills, just so\x97the Step-Mother insisted that they stay in the windowsills
because that was where the decorator had placed them. The expensive handcrafted
doll-house was filled with porcelain dolls which smiled with sweet insincerity.
Everything in the room, in fact, was just so except for Muggles, the terrycloth
dog a child had traded to Amanda-Abbey for a small, exquisite porcelain
figurine. Amanda-Abbey had smuggled the figurine out of her room for
show-and-tell when she was in first grade, and made the deal in the school
cafeteria. Muggles looked like the last remaining survivor of a battle between
Cethlenn's own folk and the Roman invaders, but he had three advantages none of
the other toys in the room had. One, he was eminently huggable. Two, he could
be smooshed down to fit in the tiny space between the headboard and the wall,
where no one could see him. Therefore, he couldn't be thrown away. And three,
he belonged to no one but Amanda, and she could do anything she wanted with
him. He did not have to be kept nice\x97he was not a decorator dog.
Cethlenn
liked Muggles, and since she had been left in control of the body, she hid him
carefully in the place Amanda-Anne had shown her. Then she slipped into the
closet and listened to the sounds from Sharon's room next door. Sharon's
television was on, and the chaos of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles reverberated
off the walls\x97Saturday noise. Saturn's Day. Proof that the gods-be-damned
Romans won. She frowned, briefly wondering at the events that had changed the
world from the place she'd known to the place she now found, and wondering what
she'd missed. Then she shrugged off her curiosity.
The
last thing she remembered from her own life was taking a knife in the gut, and
pain. The next moment, she woke in the body of a child a long, long way from
home. Even though the devices and customs in this land were alien, it was
better being an unhappy child than a woman with a knife in her. Better than
being a woman in a world ruled by Romans.
So it
was Saturday. Good. Then perhaps it was the next day, and she hadn't lost much
this time. She dressed in the closet\x97clean white cotton underwear, blue jeans
and a white t-shirt, white socks and red Halston designer hightops. Dressing
was one of the things that had improved greatly since her days with the Druids.
Most everything else was worse\x97but houses were better, and so were clothes.
She
debated the merits of going downstairs for breakfast versus staying hungry. She
decided against breakfast\x97there was no telling where the Father might be, or
what mood he might be in, and she would just as soon not remind him of Amanda's
existence. Instead, she nibbled on cheese crackers bought from another
schoolchild, purchased with scavenged and stolen change and carefully hidden.
Thinking
of the Father brought back fleeting images from what she suspected had been the
night before. She wondered how Amanda-Anne had fared in the barn\x97and was
fearful for the child. She could feel bruises and raw spots that hadn't been
there before, and dull aches that she knew the meaning of well enough. It was
strange that she should wake up "alone" in the body\x97usually when she
was awake, she was watching Amanda-Abbey or looking over Alice or Anne's
shoulder, so to speak. She decided to see if she could find Amanda-Anne, just
to check on her. Cethlenn peered cautiously into the walled-off space that
Amanda-Anne kept for herself.
At
first, what she found puzzled her. Over the wall, there were usually more
walls, towering constructs of brick that enclosed and protected the child and
kept everything away from her. But the scenery wasn't like that this time. It
stretched away in all directions, vast nothingness, gray and empty without
ground or sky, without markers\x97except for the single wall to Cethlenn's back.
It was,
the witch realized, a part of the Unformed Plane, although how the child had
reached into it and made it a part of herself, Cethlenn had no idea. Initially,
she couldn't see the child anywhere. Gradually, however, faint movements off to
her left convinced her that something was there.
Cethlenn
blended herself with the mist. Her last confrontation with Amanda-Anne on her
own territory was still fresh enough in her memory that she had no wish to
repeat it. As part of the mist, she floated toward the place where the movement
seemed to originate.
Sure
enough, Amanda-Anne was there, as happy as that child ever got, contentedly humming
some monotonous tune in a minor key. There was no sense of fear or
anger\x97instead, the child gave the impression that she was extremely pleased
about something.
Without
doing anything that would alert the little girl to her presence, Cethlenn
thinned herself out to a fine thread of pure consciousness and eased closer.
The
child was working on something, a sort of a doll, perhaps\x97
Cethlenn
focused on the details of the "doll" until she realized what she was
looking at. What had seemed innocent child's play became sinister. The
"doll" the child made was nothing of the sort. It was a creature
formed of fury, molded out of all the darkness in Amanda-Anne's soul\x97Cethlenn
felt the ancient magic like a fire in her chest, felt a horror from memories
burned into her centuries before. It was something derived from the magic of
the Sidhe\x97and it must be linked to the visitation by the elven warrior the
other day.
The
child had copied the elf's magic by watching him, Cethlenn realized. She had
discovered how to use the energy of the Unformed Planes to create a thing of
order out of the chaos\x97but what she formed was horrifying. The user of such
energies had to take her will and her experience to form the energy into
whatever she desired. Cethlenn knew the strength of will it took to do such a
thing\x97and in Amanda-Anne's short life, she had experienced no joy, no love, no
laughter\x97nothing but pain and humiliation and fear and hatred. The thing she
molded between her fingers was a misshapen nightmare formed of those emotions,
and only those emotions.
Cethlenn
watched the child with growing unease, as she played with the stuff of the
Unformed Plane as other children would play with dough. She had molded a round,
lopsided, lumpy head, rolling it into a rough ball, poking in eyes and a nose
and scratching a gash of a mouth with a fingernail. She had formed the body in
the way children made dough snakes, and then jammed the head onto it. The arms
and legs she created in the same fashion while Cethlenn hovered and watched.
When the thing was finished to the child's satisfaction, the little girl stared
at her homunculus, all of her concentration and focus centered on it. At first,
nothing happened. Then Cethlenn saw that the seams where the arms and legs and
head were joined to the body had become thinner and smoother. The arms and legs
began to move with weak, spastic shudders, and embryonic digits grew out of the
flattened pancakes that were hands and feet. With a sudden flash, the thing's
eyes flew open, and glowed with white light. Red fangs sprang from the wide,
grinning mouth; a wet, pink tongue darted between them along the lipless rim.
Fingers and toes sprouted black, rapierlike claws, and hair sprouted from the
round, neckless head as if it had been scribbled there with a pencil.
Amanda-Anne
giggled, and the thing giggled back at her: a high, empty, chittering imitation
of a little-girl laugh. The child stood her creation on its feet and sent it
walking. As it walked, Amanda-Anne stared after it, muttering "Big-ger\x97big-ger\x97big-ger,"
in her whining, nasal voice.
And it
grew bigger, and stretched and filled out so fast that it seemed the creature,
walking away, grew nearer with every step. First it was tall as a child, then
as a small woman, and then as a large man.
The
golem shambled off into the mist\x97and Cethlenn knew that the movement that had
led her to Amanda-Anne had come from another of its kind, moving out. Once she
knew what to look for, she realized there were more of them moving around in
the mist\x97impossible to mark and count because of their aimless drifting and the
perpetual fog of the Unformed Planes, but still . . . many. Cethlenn repressed
a moan as, cross-legged and happy, Amanda-Anne began to build yet another one.
Oh,
gods, Cethlenn thought. Oh, gods, I've got to get help. She left the child
sitting in the gloom making her monsters and singing her discordant songs and
shot toward the wall that marked the boundary of Amanda-Anne's space.
Once
free from the eerie gloom of the Unformed Planes, Cethlenn discovered she was
still alone and in control of the body. She would have worried about the
whereabouts of Amanda-Abbey and Amanda-Alice if she had more time, but she had
to admit there were things she could accomplish more easily if she didn't have
company. Setting up a spell that would summon the Seleighe elves was one of
those things.
Cethlenn
dug through the closet and found galoshes and a neon-pink raincoat in the back.
There was a part of her that dreaded the raincoat as too bright, too much of a
beacon for the Father, who might see her moving through the woods and follow
her. There was another, more practical part of her that insisted that the
Father would want no part of the pouring rain, but that she would surely regret
whatever happened if she came back into the house soaked to the skin and dirty
from the rain and the woods. She decided on a compromise. She rolled the
raincoat up in a ball and stuffed it in her black nylon book-bag. Then she
gathered up her kit\x97cords of various colors, a white candle, one of the
Step-Mother's filched cigarette lighters, a bright blue crayon, and a vivid
green crayon. Last of all, she looked around the room for a gift. The tales she
remembered of elvenfolk, and incidents from her own rare dealings with them,
all indicated that they were shifty and tricksy, and a favor asked had to be a
favor repaid. She recalled tales from her childhood in the old world\x97tales of
the fey folk who appeared, offering the heart's desire, and desiring in return
the one thing a human had that an elf didn't: a soul. She wanted to have
something to offer that wouldn't cost her that. Her own continuing existence
was proof enough to her that her soul might be a real thing, after all, and
worth hanging on to.
Gifting
elves was a chancy business by all accounts. Stories indicated that there was
rarely anything one was likely to have that the elf didn't already have, and of
better quality to boot.
She
thought back on her mother's tales. Elves were supposed to be fond of silver
and gold, fine fabrics, good music, good drink and good food. She had, quite
frankly, nothing to offer in any of those categories\x97except, she thought with
sudden joy, for the giant chocolate bar Amanda-Abbey had bought from one of the
band students who was selling them to raise money. The last time Cethlenn had
been around, none of the Amandas had yet gotten a chance to eat it. Perhaps it
was still intact.
She
rummaged through the school pack, and indeed, it was still there. She pulled
the blocky gold-wrapped bar out of the pack. It was somewhat wrinkled and
battered from its trip home on the bus, and she could tell that it had broken
into several fragments, but it was good chocolate. Chocolate, she decided, was
a gift worthy of elves, being the other thing about this era that was an
improvement over the days with the Druids. And since it was the best she had to
offer, she hoped any elves she might draw in would give her credit for effort.
With
her pack slung across her shoulders, she opened the window on the right side of
her room and scooted out of it. Then she pulled the window closed, slid around
until she dangled off the sill by her fingertips, and dropped the final six
inches between her feet and the sun-room roof which ran out at right angles from
her own room. She scurried like a lizard along the peak of the wet, slippery
roof to the very end, then slid down the steeply pitched side and shinnied down
the old pecan tree that had grown too close to the house.
From
there, she kept under the cover of the evergreen azaleas and the rhododendrons,
which took her straight into the woods. The Father hadn't found her escape
route yet. She hoped he never would.
Once in
the woods, she put on the loud pink raincoat. Her t-shirt wasn't too dirty, she
decided. The Step-Mother wouldn't like it, but she wouldn't fuss terribly,
either.
Cethlenn
beelined for her tree, not following the usual devious route. She didn't have
time. Amanda-Anne was still sitting in the Unformed Planes making golems as far
as she knew, and that had to be stopped. At least the creatures were still
there, but for how long?
Inside
the safe barrier of the holly tree's limbs, Cethlenn took out her prizes. She
wondered if the spell she'd learned for summoning the Faerie folk was any good
anymore\x97or if it ever had been. After two thousand years or more, maybe the
elvenkind wouldn't pay attention to cords and candles. Maybe they preferred the
new technologies\x97the answering machines and car phones of this strange age.
That would be unfortunate, the witch thought\x97because she didn't have access to
car phones or answering machines. She just barely had access to cords and
candles.
She
spread out the cords\x97one green, one red, one black and one white. From the
hollow of the tree, she removed Abbey's forbidden comic books. She placed the
candy bar and the candle inside the hollow, wedging the candle in so that it
stayed upright. She put the cigarette lighter beside it. She lay the blue and
green crayons at the base of the tree.
Preparations
made, she offered up a quick, sincere prayer to her Lord and Lady, then took
the green cord in hand, and took a slow, deep breath to steady her nerves.
While
her fingers worked the cord into the patterns of a Celtic knot, she sang in the
Old Tongue:
"Fair
folk who have danced in the wood, on the green\x97
I would
call, I would beg, to your king, to your queen,
To you
who listen, all unseen,
I bind
your ears with my knot of green."
She lay
the elaborate knot at the periphery of the tree and pressed it firmly into the
dirt with her foot.
Next
she took up the black cord, walked one quarter of the way around the tree, and
while working the cord into her second pattern, chanted:
"Faerie
folk with the strength I lack,
I dare
not run, nor dare attack,
But I
summon you still, and call you back\x97
I bind
your eyes with my knot of black."
She
took up the red cord, walked to the far side of the tree, and with her fingers
weaving, sang:
"Fey
folk drawn from board and bed,
Gifts I
offer to quick and dead,
Think
of me kindly whom I have led;
I bind
your oath with my cord of red."
At the
fourth quarter of the tree, she took up the white cord, and knotted it, and
said:
"Old
ones come from the long twilight,
Brought
to the world of day and night,
I ask
your aid to make wrong right;
I bind
your power with my cord of white."
When
the last knot was in place at the periphery of the tree, she moved back to the
candle and lit it.
"Now
you who are drawn from your Faerie mound,
And led
by my beacon to this ground\x97
To my
circle shall you be bound
Until
my knots are all unwound."
She
melted the tip of the blue crayon in the flame and drew a protective rune on
the palm of her left hand. With the melted tip of the green crayon, she copied
the same device on the palm of her right hand. Then she picked up the chocolate
bar, huddled on the ground in the incongruous pink raincoat, and began her
vigil.
* * *
Gwaryon,
one of the original settlers of Elfhame Outremer, sat beside Felouen at the
side of the Oracular Pool and stared with her at the ominous changes in the
curtain of the Unformed that rippled in front of them. He was going through an
Egyptian phase, and was at the moment dressed as an ancient pharaoh\x97from the
massive amber scarab pendant around his neck to the draping see-through robes
which Felouen found annoyingly pretentious, though she had to admit they showed
his body off to good effect. His gold bracelets jangled with a flat heavy sound
as he rested his arm around Felouen's shoulders.
She
sighed. The effect was so completely\x97Gwaryon.
"I
am grateful," Felouen told him, and rested her head against his shoulder.
"Your presence here is a comfort to me\x97the visions from the Pool these
last few days have left me feeling very much alone."
Gwaryon
smiled, happily. "You are never alone, dear one. You know I would be with
you always if you would say the word."
Felouen
sighed and studied the lean, sinuous elf with deep sadness. "I know. And I
cannot give you reason to hope in vain for that day to come\x97it will not. You
are dear to me, but you are not the one I desire the most."
Gwaryon
laughed and sprawled on his back in the deep, soft grass that grew beside the
Pool. "Och, dearest lady, I know that well enough\x97but still I hope. You
cannot extinguish hope, while we both breathe. And even if you don't want me
forever, surely a moment's dalliance would relieve your mind of the weight of
your duties." His grin broadened, and he arched his eyebrows suggestively.
She
tried a smile, but it didn't feel convincing. "Ah, Gwaryon, you are ever
considerate of the weight of my burdens," she told him with heavy irony,
and absently stroked the hilt of her jeweled dagger. She ceased that, point
made, and rested her chin in her cupped hands. Gwaryon's offer of pleasure
didn't fit well with her mood. Her worry was even stronger and more pressing
than it had been. The red glittering of the Unformed had deepened and seemed
angrier, somehow. And at rare intervals, she was almost sure that she could see
shapes moving through that fog-shrouded realm of nothing, where no living
things should be. Not even the Unseleighe creatures wandered at will through
the Unformed\x97it was more a state of mind than a place, and it welcomed only
madness with open arms.
Something
was going to happen\x97she was sure of it. And soon.
"Ho!"
Gwaryon whispered. "Feel that?"
Felouen
stiffened. "A pull . . ."
He
nodded emphatically. "Human magic. I haven't felt its kind since long
before you were born."
"I
want to go toward it." She glanced at Gwaryon, and her eyes filled with
worry.
He
nodded. "Once it would have been very dangerous to do so, but now\x97"
He sat up and shook his head. "The knowledge is there, but not the
strength. We aren't being summoned by some great mage, nor anyone whose power
will overwhelm us. And sometimes these things were calls for help from those
who had no other recourse."
Calls
for help? "Should we arm ourselves for battle?"
Gwaryon
laughed. "I would guess that the human who dug that ancient spell out of
an old tome doesn't even suspect that it is real\x97much less that we exist. Such
a human won't be a threat to us. Let's just go and take a look."
* * *
A
stirring in the forces she had woven into her net of hopes roused her from her
trance of concentration. Cethlenn turned from her spell-making to find herself
staring into the faces of two of the Old Folk, who were studying her with mixed
bemusement and disbelief.
Well,
she thought, mouth agape, At least I know it still works.
* * *
Lianne
McCormick was keeping a wary eye on her companions, when both of them suddenly
started, as if they had heard something she couldn't. D.D., perched on
Rhellen's sumptuous back seat, cocked her head to one side, birdlike. "Oh,
my," she whispered. "Maclyn, my love, my darlin' boy, do you feel
that?"
Maclyn
ground his teeth audibly. "All over, Mother. It's coming from out where
we're heading, more or less."
She
looked grim. "And a good thing, too. I think otherwise we wouldn't be able
to go there\x97it would pull us to wherever it was."
"What
are you two talking about?" Lianne asked.
D.D.
rubbed both temples with her knuckles, as if she had a headache. "Mac
feels something tugging at him, but he isn't old enough to recognize what it
is\x97I haven't felt this particular sensation in so many years, I would have
thought I'd forgotten what it was. And I've never felt it on this side of the
ocean. I thought such summonings were left behind in the Old Country."
"Summonings?"
Lianne asked, startled.
D.D.
nodded. "Oh, aye. Someone has cast a spell to draw and bind the elvenkind.
Such binding spells were known to a few priestesses and witches in the Old
Country long ago, and to even fewer mages\x97but those who were willing to demand
our presence were rare. We grew weary of being drawn into the world of Cold
Iron against our wills, and we began to attack first and ask questions later.
It took only a few toasted humans before that spell fell out of favor."
Lianne
rested her head against Rhellen's door. She stared at the neat subdivisions
they drove past, and at the stands of tall pines and the orderly young rows of
cotton and soybeans that grew in the square, predictable fields.
"Witches," she muttered, speaking to no one but herself. "And
spells. Elves and telekinesis. Magic. Did I mention that I never cared about
magic when I was growing up? Did I ever say that I was the kid who didn't give
a damn about unicorns? I like science: nuclear physics, math, chemistry. I always
liked the world when it was rational. Didn't I make that clear?"
D.D.
looked at her son with concern.
Maclyn
shrugged. "She's had several difficult days. She'll snap out of it."
"I
thought I was dating a human," Lianne said, as Maclyn turned the Chevy
down the dirt road that paralleled the Kendrick's property. "I thought
this was a guy I might potentially take home to meet my folks."
"This
is bothering you, isn't it, babe?" Mac asked, flippantly.
Lianne
quit talking to the four winds and centered her attention on Mac. She glowered
at him with disbelieving eyes. "No-o-o-o-o!" she drawled.
"Having elves screw with my brain is just my favorite thing ever. Having
my worldview and all of science refuted in two days' time has done wonders for
my morale. You ought to try it sometime."
"You're
welcome to keep thinking that the world is a nice, logical, rational, safe
place," Maclyn said with a helpful smile. "You'll be wrong, but that
hasn't stopped anyone else who thinks the same way."
Lianne
growled something profoundly obscene, and Maclyn and Dierdre both laughed.
"If
it makes you feel better, Lianne, magic works by laws, too. Think of it as
another kind of science you don't know yet."
Lianne
fumed.
Maclyn
drove Rhellen up to the very edge of the woods, out of sight of the road or any
houses. Behind them was a fallow field, standing tall with weeds. Maclyn got
out of the car, and Lianne slid out after him.
"She
would be safer here with Rhellen," D.D. said, as if Lianne wasn't there. Lianne
hated being talked around.
"I
probably would be," Lianne agreed, studying the woman who would probably
not end up as her mother-in-law. "But I don't intend to stay here with the
car\x97with Rhellen."
"Only
until we see who has summoned us," D.D. said, placatingly. "Then you
can join us and help us find the wee child's home."
"No
thanks. I'd like to see that myself." Lianne pulled her gray mackintosh
tight, noticing that the rain fell all around her but not on her. The cold and
the damp still blew straight through her, and the low keening of the wind
gnawed at her nerves. Great day for this sort of thing, she decided. Make a
believer out of even the staunchest pragmatist. Wind sounds like a banshee, and
I think I could see ghosts in broad daylight on a day like this.
She had
to remind herself that this was an attempt to find information that would
rescue an abused kid\x97not a midday ghost hunt. Amanda needs help, she reminded
herself. But it made her nervous that Mac and D.D. were being drawn against
their will toward something that called from the same direction as Amanda's
home. Could that bastard of a father be summoning them?
Bad
thought, Li. Very bad thought.
Lianne
watched the two of them walk, faces grim and tense, ducking around the dripping
greenery\x97scrub oak and sassafras and willow; blackberry bramble, grapevine and
kudzu\x97that made up this part of the woods. She walked a step behind them,
staying quiet. They did magic, and this was something that frightened them. She
was out of her element, way out of her area of experience, much less expertise.
It was as if there was something out there that didn't want them to help Amanda
and was trying to prevent them from interfering. That made her profoundly
nervous.
* * *
Cethlenn
stood with her back pressed against the trunk of the tree, the chocolate bar in
her outstretched hand. Though it still rained all around her, no rain fell on
her, nor did any fall on her\x97guests. She stared at the two elves, the woman in
clothing similar to that which elves had worn in her earlier life\x97the man in a
foreign-looking gown of some gorgeous filmy material she would have killed for
once upon a time, and covered with gem-crusted gold jewelry.
"Child,"
the male elf said, "the last time I heard that bit of doggerel was a good
two thousand years before you were born. And it had become uncommon then."
The
female elf shook her head. "I didn't realize anyone could summon us."
Cethlenn
shivered. She would have preferred to have been less of a novelty. She held out
the chocolate bar and waggled it a bit. "I gift thee, lord and lady."
The
female\x97one with the look of a warrior about her\x97studied the proffered bar, and
shuddered. "Oooh, chocolate. Loaded with caffeine, and you wouldn't
believe the empty calories in that thing."
"Summoning
price has gone down a bit since the old days, Felouen," the male muttered
with dry amusement. "It used to be that they greeted us with baskets of
gold and jewels and fine silks and rare spices. But then we needed a bit more
placating back then\x97too many calls for no good reason. No, child," the
elven male added. "We won't take your candy. There is another gift we will
require instead, for having come when you called us forth."
Och,
and there goes my soul, Cethlenn thought with dismay.
Her
face evidently mirrored her fear, for the female elf said, "We won't hurt
you. We don't hurt children."
The
strangely dressed male looked into Cethlenn's eyes and said, "That isn't
what she's afraid of\x97oh, this is rich. Just rich. They used to think we stole
souls, and that's what she is afraid of. It is! Look at her\x97that's exactly what
she was expecting." He grinned at the witch in the child's body, and said,
"Kid, if you had a really hot 486 with a VGA monitor, a solid keyboard, and
a ton of software, I'd steal that in a heartbeat. But you can keep your soul. I
would like to know where you found that old string-and-knot song and
dance."
Cethlenn
could hardly believe her ears\x97or her luck. "That's all?"
The elf
nodded. "That's my trade. Information for our arrival."
Cethlenn
smiled, confidently. "I learned it from the MacLurrie's first witch, when
I earned my place as one of his advisors."
The
elves stared at each other, and the female elf mouthed the name
"MacLurrie?"
"An
old warrior and rake who was a bit before your time, child," the male elf
said, and nodded to his female companion. "He was a bit before her time. I
remember the young boaster well enough, but I can't imagine how you
could."
Cethlenn
drew herself up as tall as she could stand\x97which was not very\x97and said,
proudly, "I am Cethlenn, daughter of Martis and witch at MacLurrie's
circle. I was not always this child, though how I came to be here, I know
not."
The
male's brow creased with thought, and he absently played with a great beetle of
amber that hung about his neck. "Cethlenn . . . hmm. I vaguely recall a
charming, dark-eyed creature named Cethlenn from around the time of the battles
of the Gauls and the Gaels\x97as a matter of fact, now that I think of it, she was
sharing her favors between MacLurrie's bastard son and one of our folk.
Bryothan, was it? Or Prydwyn?
"Eodain
was my other suitor," Cethlenn corrected. "Eodain. But he wasn't
elven."
"Eodain
. . . Eodain . . . It's been so long, I've forgotten." He stared off into
space, while his long, graceful fingers twined in the many layers of his gold
jewelry. "By Oberon's steed, girl, I believe you're right. It . . . was .
. ." His eyes narrowed and fixed on Cethlenn, and he glared at her from
beneath lowered brows. "Eodain. Who was one of our folk, although you
certainly couldn't expect him to tell a mortal like yourself that. No tales of
his little tryst were barded about\x97it was mere court gossip, which means\x97"
"That
she either made an extraordinarily lucky guess, or she is what she says."
The one called Felouen frowned.
The
male gave his companion a somber look. "Then the price is met and our oath
is bound."
"No!"
Felouen snapped. "If this is not a child but a witch of the Old Country,
then she has not called us in idle sport. She would have known the dangers. No
matter how unlikely, and no matter how innocent she seems, she is a danger to
us. You stay, I'm leaving."
The
elven woman shimmered, but stayed solidly within the child's hiding place. She
made another obvious attempt to leave, and when that, too, failed, she turned
on her companion with a snarl. "We're trapped here, Gwaryon!"
The
male elf shrugged. "She means us no harm."
But
there was veiled panic in the female's expression. "I don't care! I want
out of here!"
Gwaryon
looked at Cethlenn, and his face grew stern. "I also dislike this spell
that holds us here."
There
was no point in acting contrite. Not with those\x97things\x97out there, shambling
around in the Unformed Planes. "I've met your price. Besides, 'twas the
only way I knew of callin' the Fair Folk," Cethlenn said. "I need
help. I am not the only one in this child, you see. . . ."
Cethlenn's
voice faltered in mid-sentence, and a furious presence pushed her back and
usurped her control of the body. :No!: Amanda-Anne screeched to the ancient
witch. :You . . . c-c-c-can't . . . tell . . . them about . . . us!:
:They
could help,: Cethlenn said, soothingly. :They could take you away from the
Father.:
But
Amanda-Anne was not about to be soothed. :No-o-o-o! Stopping . . . is . . . not
helping! They . . . w-w-w-would . . . only call us . . . bad girl. Make us . .
. weak again. They would take . . . our m-m-m-magic.:
:No,
Anne,: Cethlenn told the child, her thoughts pleading. :Let them help you. They
can take you away from him, make the bad things go away\x97they can hide you
someplace safe.:
Amanda-Anne
had quit listening. She looked at the elves who were held\x97trapped\x97in the
circle, and her voice rose in a shrill sing-song. "I m-m-m-made me . . .
gletchells and . . . sl-sl-slinketts . . . and m-m-m-morrow-w-waries . . . and
. . . f-fulges. F-f-friends of me . . . friends . . . of me. And . . . you . .
. w-w-want to hurt my . . . f-f-friends," she wailed on a rising note.
The
elves stared at each other, amazement and confusion written clearly on their
faces. Oh, Lord, Cethlenn thought. What have I done?
Amanda-Anne
knelt in the dirt, and rubbed her fingers across Mommy's green bead on its new
gold bracelet. Without words, she summoned her "friends" and brought
them through the bead and out into the charmed circle that was Amanda-Abbey's
safe place.
The
homunculi spewed into the haven under the holly tree in a cloud of black smoke,
giggling as they took solid form. Their wide, grinning mouths split open, and
their fangs gleamed red. They shambled and staggered on uneven legs, ducking
gracelessly under the sheltering boughs of the holly. Their scimitar fingers
grasped toward the elves.
Amanda-Anne
waited until five of her pets were through the bead-gate. Then, laughing, she
slipped out of the tree-shelter, and darted home.
* * *
To
Felouen, her arrival in the child's spelled circle had been discomfiting. The
spell was carefully wrought, so that her eyes saw nothing but the world inside
of the magical boundaries, and her ears heard nothing but the sounds of the
child's voice and the few creakings that the old holly tree made. Its branches
blew in a wind she knew to be present, but neither felt nor heard. Her world
narrowed to the tree itself, which soared upward, its dark, leathery leaves
contrasted with the brilliant light green of new spring growth, and with the
startling reds of the few remaining berries not yet picked away by the birds.
And in the center of the circle, the child: frail, blond, brown-eyed, with
skinny arms and legs covered by wet clothes, who stared at her with awe\x97but not
surprise. All else was hidden in the obscuring darkness of the spell. Her
senses and her magic were bound\x97she could not leave. She was trapped\x97by a child
who, in all sincerity, said that she was a witch from the Old Country.
And
then the witch in the child's body changed\x97no, change was not the precise word.
The witch, Cethlenn, disappeared, or was abducted, and was replaced by
someone\x97terrible. Felouen felt the newcomer, the child\x97for this one was a
child\x97arrive, full of rage and fear and confusion. This green-eyed human, who
was terrified of the elves without knowing fully what they were, knew only that
she wanted to hurt them. Wanted to hurt everything. Felouen felt her slashing,
unfocused rage like a blow to the face, sensed her hatred and wondered, in the
brief instant before the child brought forth her monsters, what could have
twisted the youngling in such horrible and deadly ways.
After
that, she didn't have time to wonder about anything.
It was
not the vision from the Oracular Pool\x97Felouen wasn't defending the Elfhame
Outremer grove. She and Gwaryon fought to save their own lives. There were no
armies of elvenkin at her sides; but neither were there armies of the great
shambling things.
Her own
situation, however, was no less grave than the vision of the Pool.
The
Pool had made a true showing of the monsters. They were just as malformed and
frighteningly senseless as they had appeared in the glassy surface of the
water\x97and the ratio by which they outnumbered the elves was as bad.
Felouen
regretted Gwaryon's casual response to the summons and her own willingness to
follow along. Now, between the two of them and the child's nightmares-made-real
were only two little silver elven-blades, knives pitifully small when compared
to the claws of their opponents. Felouen and Gwaryon scrambled up the trunk of
the tree into its upper limbs, hoping at best to escape the monsters' talons
completely, and at very worst for a defensible place in which to make their
stand.
Unfortunately,
the things could climb\x97and they did. Their glowing, pupilless white eyes
gleamed in the pouring rain, and their high-pitched and horribly childlike
giggles carried over the pounding rain and the low moans of the wind. They were
slow climbers and clumsy, but deliberate, and they seemed to stick to the tree
as they moved upward.
The
leading monster reached a point just under Felouen's ankles. It screeched with
sudden wild intensity and slashed out at her legs. Its talons ripped through
the sturdy leather of her boots as if it was silk, and dragged into her flesh.
Felouen cried out once at the sharp stab of pain and pulled her feet higher.
Gwaryon threw his knife, and Felouen saw the little blade bury itself in the
pallid thing's eye.
The
monster grabbed for the knife with both hands, lost its balance, and fell. Even
falling, it giggled, until the noise was cut short by the thud as it hit the
ground.
Felouen
slashed at the next golem within reach. The blade cut deeply and lopped off
three of its fingers, but the wound didn't bleed and the creature showed no
signs of pain. It kept climbing, and she was forced to climb still higher, onto
a weak, green branch that bent alarmingly under her weight. The golem stopped
and looked up at her, and its giggling became shriller. It grasped the branch
to which she clung and began rocking it back and forth.
"Stop
it!" she screamed. "Damn you!"
Beneath
her and to one side, Gwaryon was fighting his own battle. He had wedged himself
tightly into a crotch of a sturdy branch and was kicking the monsters in the
head as soon as they were within reach. His legs were bloody ribbons, and his
sandal-clad feet were unrecognizable as feet. His skin, at least that which
wasn't bloody, was gray. Felouen saw the beads of pain-sweat standing out on
his forehead\x97but his face never lost its determination. She watched one golem
fall to the ground as Gwaryon kicked it loose from its perch. It hit heavily,
lay still for a moment\x97then rose, and begin its climb back up the tree. It had
already been replaced by the next monster.
Felouen
realized with horror it was the one that had taken Gwaryon's knife in its eye. They're
unkillable, she thought with sudden, overwhelming despair, and clung tighter to
her branch. The monster beneath her kept rocking it, swinging it in faster and
further arcs. Its hysterical laughter never stopped.
* * *
"Stop
it! Damn you!" someone screamed from ahead of them, and the sounds of a
desperate struggle and a bloodcurdling chittering made the forest sound like
something out of a horror story. In front of her, Maclyn apparently heard it,
too. He started to run. "Weapons and armor," he told his mother.
Silver swords materialized in their hands, and chased and enameled armor
appeared around them.
God, I
wish I could do that, Lianne thought, breaking into a run behind them.
They
were faster than she was. They ran effortlessly, appearing to do no more than
jog\x97yet they pulled away from her at an impossible rate. She ran flat out,
putting everything she had into the effort, yet she fell further and further
behind. The two elves darted through a thicket without slowing, and she stopped
completely to disentangle herself from the inch-long thorns that held her
clothes in fast embrace.
By the
time she was out of the thicket, the elves had disappeared from sight, but she
still heard the fighting, and the\x97other noises. The sounds came from the other
side of the small hill she was climbing. She slowed to a trot, by necessity
picking her route more carefully than the elves had. She wondered now what in
hell she was doing out here. What good was she, an unarmed human, in a fight
where at least two of the combatants were well-armed and armored elves? She
suspected she would be more of a liability\x97someone who would end up needing to
be rescued. By the time she'd reached the crest of the hill, she had decided to
find a safe spot in which to wait out the fight.
Close
up, it sounded even worse. Unfortunately, she couldn't see much. The holly's
leaves blocked most of her view, but a steady green glow from the tree's center
backlit shadowy forms; the fight was more terrible than she could have anticipated.
In the cramped space under a holly tree's branches, Maclyn and Dierdre battled
misshapen horrors that looked from the brief glimpses she got like the most
awful nightmares the folks from Industrial Light and Magic could have
concocted. She saw two elves she didn't recognize, stranded in the thin upper
branches of the tree, fighting more of the things. She saw one of the
white-eyed monsters then, and squeezed her eyes shut until she realized she
couldn't wish the nightmare away. The elves in the tree were wounded and
bloody\x97the monsters they fought appeared unscathed.
Lianne
saw Maclyn bring his sword straight down on top of one monster's head in a
two-handed blow that should have split the thing in half, but the monster never
fell.
A
scream of pure anguish drew her attention back to the treetop. One of the
monsters had overcome the male elf and had severed one of his arms. It dropped
like some macabre fruit to land against the tree roots. The elf screamed once
more as the horror gnawed through his remaining forearm. Lianne shoved her fist
against her mouth to silence her own screams; one last slash of the thing's
claws and the elf's severed head hung from its grip.
The
body tumbled from the tree, with unreal slowness. The golem threw the head in a
lazy overhand toss that sent it soaring in a slow, graceful arc toward Lianne.
As it passed beyond the spread of the holly tree, it winked out of existence as
if it had never been.
Lianne
stared at the spot where it disappeared and shuddered.
It was
only the steady repetition of someone calling her name that brought her out of
her stunned reverie.
"Lianne?
Lianne? Can you hear me?" Dierdre shouted. Lianne could make out her
shadowy form, back pressed against Maclyn's, keeping the monsters at bay with a
steady barrage of swordstrokes.
"Maybe
she ran off," Maclyn yelled. He parried a talon-strike aimed at his face
and landed a stop-thrust that did no apparent damage to its victim.
"Maybe
we just can't hear her because of this damned spell. I hope that's the
case."
"I'm
right here!" Lianne yelled from her hiding place.
None of
the combatants paid her any attention.
Certain
that she was exposing herself to attack by the monsters, Lianne did the bravest
thing she had ever done. She stood up and ran toward the fight, again yelling,
"I'm right here."
It was
if she didn't exist to those battling under the tree. And that was as horrible
as all the rest combined.
"Lianne,"
Dierdre yelled between swordstrokes, "if you're there, listen\x97a spell
traps us in here. Look for knotted cords around this tree\x97probably four or
five. If you\x97"
One
monster got inside her defense, and the sound of talons raking across armor
screeched through the woods.
"If
you find the knots, untie them!" Dierdre yelled. "And hurry!"
Lianne
heard the elves parrying claws and Maclyn's voice asking, between panted
breaths, "What if she's not out there?"
She
heard Dierdre answer, "Then we die."
Lianne
stared at the headless, armless torso that lay under the tree, and then through
the branches, at Dierdre and Mac. Then she looked up at the bleeding, exhausted
elf stranded in the upper branches. The one tireless monster who was trying to
dislodge her had shifted tactics and was scraping across the branch with his claws.
Bits of wood flew away with every stroke. It wouldn't be long until the branch
broke.
Cords?
she wondered. Made into knots that I should untie?
She
could not imagine what good untying knots would do\x97but she was willing to
concede that this was not an ordinary situation, and that the rules she knew
didn't apply. She ran to the periphery of the tree and scouted around the
branches.
In a
moment, she had located one knot. It was tied in a heavy, glossy black cord,
and it wove in and out around itself half a dozen different ways. It took her a
bit of fumbling even to discover where the ends had been tucked, and once she
had found them, even longer to return the cord to its unknotted state.
As soon
as the knot was unraveled, however, Lianne heard Maclyn yell, "There she
is!" One of the monsters suddenly noticed her, too, and charged toward
her. Mere inches away, it broke through the branches and was brought up short
by an invisible barrier. It shrieked in frustration, and charged again.
She backed
away frightened.
"Get
the rest of the knots," Dierdre shouted.
"What
will happen when they are untied?" Lianne asked.
Dierdre
looked puzzled, then shouted, "I can't hear you."
Lianne
shrugged and hurried around the periphery of the tree. A flash of red caught
her eye, and she stopped. The monster that charged at her as she pulled the red
cord out from under the branches sent her heart leaping into her throat, and
the other creatures' incessant chittering giggles made it almost impossible to
concentrate\x97but with trembling fingers, she managed to untangle the second
knot.
"If
we survive this," Dierdre suddenly remarked, "I'm going to severely
damage the person responsible."
"I
know how you feel," Maclyn agreed.
There
was a creak, and the branch that supported the third elf sagged.
"Felouen!" Maclyn yelled, "Hang on!"
"I'd
figured that out already, thanks," Felouen shouted back.
Giggles
grated along her nerves. Third cord, she thought, and refused to let herself
consider what would happen when all the cords were unwound.
It took
a bit of digging in the spot where she thought it might be, but she did locate
the third cord. It was white.
She
ignored the crash that indicated the branch had broken through, ignored the
scream of fear and pain and the heavy thud that followed. Lianne fumbled with
the complex knot and worked it loose.
"Magic
works again," Dierdre muttered, and that terse statement was followed by a
flash of brilliant blue light and a loud sizzling sound.
Lianne
ran to the fourth quarter of the imaginary circle the unknown magician had laid
out, and within seconds had discovered a twisted length of green cord. Familiar
now with the permutations the knots had taken, she quickly pulled it apart.
There
was a low rumble, and the air around her shimmered like air over pavement on a
hot day. For an instant, the situation under the tree continued unchanged. The
monsters slashed at the elves, the one who had broken the hapless Felouen loose
from her tree clambered down after her, chuckling evilly. The monster that had
been charging at Lianne broke free of its circle and came straight for her, and
Dierdre and Maclyn fought their way toward the body of their fallen comrade.
Then,
with a resounding "crack," the monsters and the dismembered remains
of the dead elf vanished.
Dierdre
looked around as if she couldn't believe it was over, then sagged against the
tree trunk. Maclyn charged to Felouen's side.
Lianne
crawled through the holly's low-hanging branches with some difficulty and
joined him.
Felouen
was badly hurt. She lay, unresponsive, on the woodland floor, her breathing
ragged and irregular. Dark blood seeped into the fabric of her shirt, and
through a tear in the cloth, Lianne could see the white gleam of ribs and the
dark bubbling of a large, open wound.
"Mother!"
Maclyn's voice was hoarse. He knelt beside the downed woman, probing for hidden
injuries. "Hurry!"
"Do
you need me to get an ambulance?" Lianne asked. She felt foolish asking
that question when, looking at the woman, the answer seemed so obvious\x97but she
wasn't dealing with humans, she reminded herself. Elves might have other ways
of dealing with emergencies.
"D.D.
will take care of her," Maclyn said.
Lianne
watched D.D. moving around the tree toward them. Her armor flickered once, then
vanished, replaced by clothes that looked like the ones the other woman wore.
D.D.
bit her lip and knelt beside her son. "How bad?"
Mac's
voice was without expression. "We may lose her."
The elven
woman nodded and rested her hand on Felouen's shoulder. "I'm taking her
back. You and Lianne find out what you need to about your child. I'll meet you
in the Grove when you're done."
Maclyn
did\x97something. He sketched a kind of arch with his fingers, anchnd, I\x92ve never had any direct contact with them, but it\x92s Sidhe magic, but
twisted, so I suppose that\x92s what it feels like. . . .\x94 He hesitated
before saying more. \x93And there\x92s a lot of death here. Human death. Beyond
that . . .\x94 His voice trailed off again.
\x93So what you told me about really is happening,\x94 Jimmie said
unhappily. \x93But why? And how, especially here? Don\x92t the Dark Elves have to
follow the same rules as the Light?\x94
\x93They\x92ve got the same limitations,\x94 Eric agreed. The taint of
inside-out magic was starting to make his head hurt. \x93But I kind of think the
Unseleighe Sidhe would like the City, if they could stand to be here.\x94
\x93Can you tell what kind of working this is?\x94 Jimmie asked
urgently. \x93Its purpose?\x94
\x93It\x92s a Gateway,\x94 Eric answered slowly. \x93It isn\x92t finished.
If nobody messes with it for a few days it\x92ll probably fade away. But someone was here\x97an elf-mage or another
human Bard\x97trying to open a Gateway between Underhill and the world.\x94
He explained what he could about Nexuses\x97how they gave
elvenkind a way to tap the power of Underhill that was life itself to them, how many of the Elven Court, especially
the Lesser Sidhe, could not survive away from a Nexus, and that even the High
Elves needed frequent access to one in order to replenish their magic. And that
someone, appar\xADently, was building one here.
\x93Well, that\x92s something to go on with, anyway,\x94 Jimmie said
when he was finished talking. She shook her head. \x93Now we just have to figure
out what to do about it. I wonder what you bait Sidhe-traps with?\x94
\x93Power,\x94 Eric said bleakly. \x93At least in this case. Not your
kind, though. That\x92s at least partly learned, I\x92m guessing, and pretty well
shielded. He isn\x92t really interested in that. He wants the raw stuff, the
innate Gift some people are born with and don\x92t know they have.\x94
\x93Well, that\x92s a relief,\x94 Paul said dourly, then forced
himself to smile. \x93At least we know more than we did before. Thanks for coming
out on such short notice, Eric.\x94
\x93Why don\x92t you let me get rid of it for
you?\x94 Eric offered, reaching for his flute.
\x93No!\x94 Paul and Jimmie spoke at once. There was real pain on
Jimmie\x92s face\x97and more. Fear. He remembered their conversation at the bakery: If
anybody takes a bullet, it should be me.
Was that what she was worrying about? Him?
Paul held up a hand. \x93No, that\x92s okay. Now that we know what
it is, we can keep an eye on it. It\x92s more important to stop who\x92s doing it
rather than scare them off.\x94
If you think you can scare off the Unseleighe Sidhe, you
haven\x92t met many of them, Eric thought. \x93I still think I should\x97\x94
\x93C\x92mon, Eric. I\x92ll drive you home,\x94 Toni said briskly, taking
charge of the situation before it could degenerate into an argument. \x93Paul, you
want a lift?\x94
\x93No,\x94 Paul said. \x93I think I\x92ll stay out here a little while.
You two go on ahead. Jimmie can drop me when she heads back to the station
house.\x94
\x93I still think I ought to do something about it,\x94 Eric said.
Most people wouldn\x92t notice anything out of the ordinary here, but anybody with
any amount of Talent would have a natural aversion to the place. Or an
attraction to it. . . .
\x93I\x92m not bringing any more civilians onto the fire-line. Do what
your friends told you, Eric. Stay out of this one, for your own sake,\x94 Jimmie
said urgently.
There
was a world of pain\x97and bitter self-recrimination\x97in Jimmie\x92s voice, and Toni
was hovering over him as if she were about to pick him up and carry him. Reluctantly,
Eric allowed himself to be led back to the car. He couldn\x92t force his help on
them if they didn\x92t want to accept it, and Dharinel had all but ordered him to
stay uninvolved. He let himself be led out of the park and deposited back on
his own doorstep after another hair-raising ride in the Toyota.
But the sense of unfinished business, layered on top of the
unsettling evening with Ria, made sleep particularly hard to find that night.
EIGHT:
THE
CITY OF
DREADFUL NIGHT
Chesley
Kurland did not believe in miracles, even though he was holding one in his
hands right now. Free samples. Hell, he hadn\x92t seen anything like that since
the Sixties, and unlike most of the crowd on the streets these days, Chesley
had been there for the Summer of Love and retained fond memories of it today.
As dark and grey and unfriendly as the world had gotten, there were times when
the memories were all that kept him going.
Chesley made his living as a free-lance mechanic. He could
repair any kind of engine, the more complicated the better. Anything mechanical
just talked to him, always had, the same way some people knew what horses
wanted just by looking. He was a man of no fixed address, and currently lived
in the back of an old Ford van parked in the back of Ralph\x92s Niteowl Garage up
in Inwood. Ralph paid him in cash, and Chesley liked to say that he was taking
his retirement in installments, a line from an old book that he\x92d particularly
liked.
Earlier this evening he\x92d been hanging out down at the old
Peacock Coffeehouse on the edge of the Village, and this dude who looked like
he\x92d wandered out of the last Terminator movie had made the scene,
offering little bundles of joy to anyone with a sense of adventure. And if
there was one thing Chesley still had, it was a sense of adventure.
The garage was fairly quiet as he walked across the floor.
Despite the optimism of its name, there wasn\x92t often enough work to occupy a
full crew 24/7, and tonight was one of those times. He saw no one as he made
his way to the van and climbed in through the back.
Most of all, he didn\x92t see the dealer who had been offer\xADing
free samples, and who now stood concealed in the shadows with another man
beside him, both of them watching Chesley as he climbed into his mobile home.
Inside the van was everything Chesley needed in this world: a
mattress to sleep on, his toolcase, his stashbox, and a towering blue glass
bong. You could buy them on Main Street in the bad old days, Chesley
remembered. What had happened to the world since he was a kid? It seemed as if
all the joy were slowly draining away from everything, like somebody\x92d pulled
out the plug in the Bathtub of the World. Well, in a few moments they\x92d see if
modern chemistry was there to meet the challenge.
Sitting cross-legged on the floor, he prepared the bong for
use with the ease of long practice. He filled the upper half of the pipe with
bottled water and packed the bowl with pipe tobacco and slivers shaved from a
block of Turkish Blonde. Over that, he sprinkled the contents of the little
packet. The powder glistened brightly, like a fresh fall of Vermont snow.
\x93T-Stroke.\x94 That was what the guy at the Peacock had called it. Well, the proof
was in the smoking, he\x92d always said. When the mixture was smoldering brightly,
Chesley picked up the mouthpiece and took a deep drag.
The iron all around him made his skin crawl and put him in a
foul temper, but Aerune was not to be deterred from his quest. He had chosen to
follow the chief of the underlings that bore the Bardmaking elixir himself, and
watched as the humans succumbed to its lure one by one. Two so far tonight had
not died immediately nor manifested the insensate fury that not even Aerune
could shape to his own purposes. But he had not been quick enough to seize either
of them, and so they had both been spirited away by his great enemy.
It had puzzled him for a short while why these men wasted
their time giving their elixir to so many who would simply die, until he
realized that he could see what they could not\x97the blue light, so feeble as to
be nearly invisible, that crowned those who possessed gifts that could be
aroused by the elixir. That faint flame burned above the head of the
grey-haired mortal whom he had followed here, and Aerune was determined that
the mortal men should not have this prize. To his elf-sight, the corners of the
garage were not dark, and he could plainly see the two men lurking there. From
Urla\x92s thoughts, he recognized one of them as the man in the black chariot who
had first stolen Urla\x92s prey.
\x93There is your quarry, my fine hunter,\x94 Aerune said softly,
his fingers brushing the redcap\x92s head. \x93Take him as you will.\x94
Just then there was a flash of the blue light invisible to
mortals from within the van, and the sharp ears of the Unseleighe Sidhe heard a
stifled cry.
Urla darted forward, its long arms swinging, lips spread in a
toothy grin. It bounced toward its victim, its expression vacuous and innocent.
\x93What the hell? You\x97 Kid\x97 Get outta heeeere\x97!\x94 one of the men
shouted. Aerune turned away. There was a sound of gunfire. The man\x92s words
faded into a scream as Urla seized him.
Aerune hesitated at the door of the van. A modern car would
not have given him nearly as much trouble, but the old van\x92s panels were of
heavy sheet steel, perilous to touch. He would have no more than a moment\x92s
grace, he knew, before the surviving mortal minion was upon him.
Aerune grasped the door handle and wrenched it from its
hinges with inhuman strength. His gauntlets smoked as they touched Cold Iron,
but they were dwarf-forged, and his skin did not burn. Within the fetid kennel
lay the prize he sought\x97a skinny, unlovely mortal man, his face distorted with
the ravages of age. The dark lord seized him, lips drawn back in a snarl of
distaste, and flung the human over his shoulder. His elvensteed was waiting in
the street outside. With one leap, Aerune gained the saddle and galloped away,
toward the place he had chosen for his Nexus.
Michael knew he was in trouble. He and Keith had followed
Geezerboy back to this chop shop from the coffeehouse where Keith had been
doing his candyman imitation. The two guys who were there\x97waiting for tonight\x92s
shipment of Gone In Sixty Seconds, Michael had no doubt\x97had been easily
persuaded to go in the closet and stay there, and the decks were clear for a
sweet little snatch-and-grab. They\x92d been about to make their move when
everything went wonky. Some kid wandered in from somewhere and made a beeline
toward Keith.
Only it wasn\x92t a kid. It
was . . . something else. It\x92d bitten Keith\x92s throat open
with one chomp. It bathed in his blood, and it laughed, a high terrible sound
like broken glass on a blackboard. Michael had emptied half his Glock into it
with no effect, though he knew the Teflon-coated bullets hit it.
Then he saw the other guy.
Tall. Dark like Darth Vader was dark. Menace radiating off
him like chill off a chunk of dry ice. And Michael had made a command decision,
right then and there. He\x92d run for his life. Out the side door, up the hill
onto Riverside, yelping at every shadow.
But he wasn\x92t followed.
His hands shook as he got his Star-Tac open and dialled the
private number they\x92d been given for emergencies.
\x93Boss? Boss! We\x92ve got a situation here\x97\x94
It
was not much of a greenwood, but it was all these mortal drones deserved.
Aerune reined in and dropped his burden ungently to the ground before vaulting
down himself. A moment later he crouched on the turf beside the mortal.
The human creature twitched and muttered, still caught in a
web of the elixir\x92s spinning. Aerune could see the nimbus of power grow
brighter around him as the tiny guttering spark of the human\x92s innate magic
grew and flowered under the effect of the draught he had imbibed.
Here is power indeed. Aerune basked in its presence
as the mortal might bask in the warmth of a fire. It purged the Sidhe\x92s cold
bones of the ache of Cold Iron all around him, and fed Aerune\x92s resolve with
the siren song of power ripe for the taking.
It was a simple thing for one of the Dark Court to drain the
vital essence of a mortal, though few of them had enough Power to make it
worthwhile. This one was different. Aerune bent his head low and sealed the
mortal\x92s doom with a kiss. Spin for me, little Singer. Weave the web of your
race\x92s doom.
The veil between the worlds began to thin, and the lattice
that would anchor Aerune\x92s Nexus began to take shape on the midnight air. First
the pattern must be completed, then the veil itself pierced, and then Aerune
and his Court would be able to call up the power of Elfhame into the World of
Iron with no more than a thought. The power poured through him from its mortal
wellspring: intoxicating, vast. . . .
And then it stopped.
Aerune roared his displeasure, turning on the mortal in a
fury. But the man was dead beneath his hands, his body wasted away, his skin
and bones crackling like a handful of autumn leaves in Aerune\x92s grip.
Dead. And of no more use to me, Aerune
realized, choking back his rage. The mortal alchemist\x92s elixir gave them access
to their Power, he realized, but no way to replenish it from Underhill\x92s
eternal wellspring, and so they burned out quickly, their bodies feeding on
their own life-force.
The ghost of the Gateway, less than a shimmer on the winter
air even to Aerune\x92s Sight, mocked him with its incompletion. But there are
others. They are mine of right, and I will have them. Aerete, beloved, soon
they will repay your death in the last full measure!
He whistled for his mount and was away again, in a clatter of
hoofbeats so swift they sounded like one long drum roll.
Four
of the containment cells in the underground warren at Threshold were full. It
had been a busy\x97and potentially profitable\x97Saturday night, and Jeanette felt an
excitement that had little to do with Robert\x92s glorious future.
Her drug was working. Not as well as she\x92d hoped, but
working. She\x92d tweaked the last batch a little, hoping to shorten the time the
subjects spent unconscious, and that yielded a kind of sorting mechanism.
Ninety percent of those who received T-Stroke still died, two-thirds of them
instantly. The thirty percent of the Survivors that were going to manifest
berserker rage came up out of the drug within minutes. But the ones who were
going to manifest some kind of useful Talent slept for an hour or so, and
Jeanette had decided that the deep sleep was necessary to allow the neural
pathways for handling the Gift to be reconfigured without the interference of
outside stimulus.
And we have four: telepathy, teleportation, psychokinesis,
and I wonder what this one is going to be?
Intently, she watched the monitors for the containment cells.
The telepath, Vicky Moon, had been the first to awaken, screaming at the voices
inside her head and begging them to stop. Jeanette had her lightly sedated, and
at least the screaming had stopped, though she doubted the voices had. The PK
and the teleport\x97Plummer and Langford\x97were less trouble. Langford had gotten
out of his cell four times before they figured out what he could do, but he
hadn\x92t been able to \x92port far and the effort had left him exhausted. He was
sleeping now; no action there.
Jeanette watched in fascination as Plummer played with the
test objects in her cell, a set of child\x92s building blocks. Lost in a world of
her own imagination, the PK talent made the brightly-colored cubes swoop and
dance through the air like a flock of strange butterflies, perfectly content.
The alarm began to beep as the fourth subject returned to
consciousness, and Jeanette waited to see what he\x92d do, her mind wandering over
the evening\x92s harvest. Four, out of how many doses handed out in Soho and the
East Village tonight? At least two hundred, and even assuming the sweepers
missed half of them, there should be ten bodies down here in the cells, not
four. She knew she\x92d been generalizing from pitifully inadequate data\x97was her
viability rate closer to 5% than 10%?
Or were the others going . . . somewhere
else?
Just then a scream riveted her attention on Cell Four, and
Jeanette uttered a startled yelp of disbelief at what the monitors showed her.
There were things in the cell with Hancock. Coiling,
horrible, impossible things. Things that glowed with their own light. Things
that dripped blood. Things that moaned and mewed in the voices of tortured
children, pressing up against the door and beginning to flow under it as if
they had no bones.
Jeanette\x92s heart hammered in terror, and for a moment all she
could think of was flight. But wherever she ran, these things would find her,
find her and hurt her, hurt her, hurt her. . . .
Unable to tear her eyes from the screen, Jeanette fumbled for
the row of covered buttons, scrabbling blindly to release the safety cover.
More of the things were sliding under the door now, creeping and
slithering down the corridor, drooling blood and pus and other, less nameable
fluids. They twittered like birds and mewed like kittens, and some of them were
speaking words that in moments she was terrified she would begin to understand.
Please, God, I have to be right about this, please, please, please. . . .
The guard at the end of the corridor saw them too. His eyes
bulged with disbelieving terror, and he dragged at his sidearm, firing wildly
and without effect into the mass of nightmare moving toward him as he screamed
for mercy.
She found the button for Cell Four and stabbed down at it
hard enough to break a nail. The display above it turned from green to red and
began to flash; she could see it pulse out of the corner of her eye.
The guard in the corridor shot himself just before the first
of the things reached him.
And
then the gas with which Jeanette had flooded Hancock\x92s cell did its work.
Hancock slumped to the floor, unconscious, and all the nightmares began to fade
away.
I was right. Oh, thank God, I was right.
Jeanette blinked back tears, furious with her own weakness as the crippling
terror receded. An illusionist, that was all. Some kind of mental projections,
and a really sick mind behind them all.
She
turned and picked up a handset on one of the other consoles. She needed to
clear her throat several times before it would work. \x93Housekeeping. This is
Campbell. I need you down on Level Three to pick up a body. And send Beirkoff
down with some euphorics\x97strong ones.\x94 I want Hancock thinking about nothing
but white fleecy clouds and little pink bunnies until the T-Stroke has worn
off.
\x93What are you doing here?\x94 Robert demanded abruptly from
behind her.
Jeanette spun her chair around with a strangled shriek, her
nerves still raw from the brush with Hancock\x92s mind.
\x93My job, Robert,\x94 she said in a harsh voice. \x93We\x92ve got three
usables from tonight\x92s trials. Cell Four\x92s no good unless you want to drop him
behind enemy lines to drive the bad guys mad. I\x92m wondering if my original
model is off, though. There should be at least a dozen more Talents from
tonight\x92s sweep.\x94
Robert grimaced in impatience. \x93That\x92s what I\x92m trying to
tell you, you stupid bitch. Michael just called in. There\x92s someone\x97something\x97out
there that\x92s stealing our Talents.\x94
His words dovetailed so neatly with her earlier thoughts that
Jeanette was startled. \x93What? How?\x94 I barely know about this
project\x97how can anyone else have figured it out so fast? Not to mention picking
off the Survivors with that kind of accuracy.
\x93I don\x92t know and I don\x92t care,\x94 Robert snarled. \x93What I do
know is, we\x92re going to catch the bastard and make him sorrier than he\x92s ever
been in his life. Come on.\x94
Having
touched one such Empowered life, Aerune knew the scent of his prey now. He
whistled up his pack of red-eared, red-eyed hounds, and set them on the hunt.
With each of the Crowned Ones he found and took, his wrath increased, for the
power in each of them flickered and guttered in moments, its mortal vehicle
consumed by the body\x92s own fires before the work of building the Gateway to
anchor the Nexus could be well begun. Each desiccated shell Aerune cast aside
with the others, filled with a ravening lust for victory, now that victory
seemed so close. The night had been long and its rewards meager. It was nearing
dawn now, and in his diminished condition, the light of the sun was as much the
Unseleighe Sidhe\x92s enemy as Cold Iron was.
But there was time enough to take one more of the Crowned
Ones tonight before retiring to plan his assault upon the stronghold from which
that power flowed.
His hounds took the scent and began to give tongue. In the
sleeping city around him, animals and even insects fled in terror, and the
pent-up hounds of the mortals barked and howled in a frenzy of helpless terror
at the presence of their ancient enemy. But no mortal could see him as he rode,
unless he wished it.
Somewhere ahead, Aerune sensed several of the Crowned Ones
gathered together, but saw only one. His prey sat alone upon a bench in one of
the city\x92s many open spaces, his head bowed in sleep or submission. Aerune
whistled his dogs to his side, and dismounted from his elvensteed, dropping his
cloak of confusion and shadow. He stepped forward. . . .
And all the world was filled with blinding light.
\x93Freeze, bastard! We\x92ve got you covered!\x94 a mortal voice ordered.
Who dares to command the Lord of Death and Pain?
Oh, my God, Jeanette thought numbly.
Caught in the blaze of the handheld searchlights was
something off the cover of one of the books she\x92d read in high school.
He was tall and slender, with skin as white as an Anne Rice
vampire\x92s. He was wearing some kind of medieval costume\x97black chain mail and
plate armor that glinted like hematite, and his long black hair was held back
by a silver circlet that plainly revealed a pair of long pointed ears. He looked
like Frank Langella done up as a Vulcan in a really bad mood.
\x93Moon!\x94 She pinched the arm of the handcuffed woman standing
at her side. \x93Read his mind! Now!\x94
The girl whimpered. Jeanette slapped her, hard.
\x93Aerune. His name is Aerune. He\x92s\x97\x94 Moon broke off, moaning.
\x93It hurts!\x94
\x93Do
it, or I\x92ll lock you in Bellevue and give you something to whine about!\x94
Jeanette snarled. Moon cringed away from her anger. \x93The Lord of Death and
Pain,\x94 she moaned.
\x93You!\x94 Robert strode through the ring of armed men toward
the . . . elf. Jeanette watched him in horror. Robert had
been so convinced that it was the Feds who were \xADhijacking their project that
the stranger\x92s exotic appearance didn\x92t even slow him down. \x93Who are you, and
just what the hell do you think you\x92re doing here?\x94
The stranger\x97Aerune\x97drew himself up to his full height. His
black cloak billowed in the wind.
\x93I am the Lord Aerune mac Audelaine of the Dark Court, and
this man is mine. Contest with me at your peril, mortal lordling.\x94
He turned his back on Robert, and reached for Hancock again.
Jeanette saw the glitter of the .45 in Robert\x92s hand and
stifled a cry of warning, though she wasn\x92t completely sure who she wanted to
warn. Robert jammed the barrel into Aerune\x92s back, and even from where she was,
Jeanette could see a curl of smoke rise up from Aerune\x92s cloak, as if the
pistol barrel were red-hot.
\x93It burns! It burns!\x94 Moon cried, as Aerune whirled around
with a roar, his face twisted in an inhuman mask of fury. He lashed out at
Robert with a backhand blow.
\x93You will pay dearly for that insult!\x94 he snarled in a voice
like broken music. Robert jumped back, motioning his troops forward to deal
with the intruder.
But Aerune wasn\x92t there.
\x93Fan out! Find him!\x94 Robert shouted, sounding too furi\xADous to
be rattled. \x93I want him alive!\x94
You won\x92t find him, Jeanette thought. \x93Moon,\x94 she
said gently. \x93Moon, what happened? Can you tell me who he is? What he wants?\x94
The girl looked at her, and now there was something almost
serene in her expression. \x93He\x92s what you think he is, Jeanette. He\x92s a lord of
the Unseleighe Court. He wants all the Crowned Ones\x97us\x97the ones you call
Survivors. He needs us. . . .\x94 She sighed, her head lolling on her
shoulders as if exhaustion had suddenly overwhelmed her. \x93He needs us to kill
you all.\x94
Jeanette led her over to the bench and let her sit down
beside Hancock. Moon curled up, instantly asleep. Her face looked haggard, and
there were dark bruises of exhaustion beneath her eyes.
This
one isn\x92t going to last long either, Jeanette thought clinically. Something about
T-Stroke worked like putting a penny in an old-fashioned fusebox: people could
access their hidden potential, but it burned them right out within a matter of
minutes. She was glad she\x92d brought Moon along anyway. This was probably as close
to a field trial as they were going to be able to manage with any of the
Survivors. Their Gifts made them too unpredictable to let out of their cells.
She glanced warily at Hancock, but the projective telepath
was still in the Land of Nod, happily quiescent under the influence of the
euphorics Beirkoff had given him. That was one good thing out of this whole
mess. They didn\x92t need any Monsters From The Id cluttering up the place.
She sighed, running a hand through her hair. An elf. She\x92d
never believed she\x92d see one. She\x92d stopped believing in them years ago\x97forced
herself to stop believing, because it just hurt too damned much. But looking
into Aerune\x92s fallen-angel eyes, skepticism was impossible. He\x92d been here. He
was real. He burned at the touch of Cold Iron, just like all the books said.
And boy, was he mad. Madder than Jeanette had ever seen
anyone get, in a serious career devoted to shining people on.
No, she had no problem believing in his reality. She had
another problem entirely. Elves were supposed to be magic, and she\x92d certainly
seen Aerune do magic, just now.
So what did an elf want with her retread junkies?
She blinked, blinded by the headlights of the big truck that
pulled up, driving across the grass of the park. Robert jumped out of the
passenger seat.
\x93Come on! We\x92ve got to get back to the lab\x97and hire some
decent help,\x94 Robert added, his voice hoarse with disappointment. \x93These losers
couldn\x92t find a pig in a one-room schoolhouse. The target gave them all the
slip.\x94 For the first time, he seemed to notice Moon. \x93What did she get? Did she
read his mind?\x94 he demanded eagerly.
\x93Yes, she got something,\x94 Jeanette answered, busy unlocking
Hancock\x92s handcuffs. \x93And no, you\x92re not going to like it.\x94 She glanced up at
the sky. It was already turning light. She glared back at Robert. \x93What do you
want me to do, carry them? Get me some help here. And once we get back, you and
I have got to talk.\x94
\x93An elf. Jesus, Campbell, you been sampling your own stuff?
Elves! Next you\x92re going to be telling me the Smurfs are after us.\x94
Robert paced back and forth in front of Jeanette\x92s desk in
her office down in Threshold\x92s Black Labs. It was a little after six a.m. Saturday morning. The Talents\x97the
four they\x92d managed to keep\x97were all back in their cells sleeping off the last
of their T-Stroke, and everything was tidied away before the city was fairly
awake. And now Robert was looking for someone to blame for tonight\x92s fiasco.
\x93An elf,\x94 Jeanette repeated patiently. \x93That\x92s what Vicky
Moon said. That\x92s what Aerune is.\x94 Somehow she thought it was very important to
convince Robert of that fact. She\x92d read a lot about elves when she was a kid.
They weren\x92t the twee little Disneyfied things that Robert seemed to be
thinking of. When mankind was still living in caves, they\x92d ruled the world,
until Cold Iron had driven them Underhill. Even then, they were still
formidable enemies.
\x93Or
thinks he is,\x94 Robert said, still unconvinced. \x93Campbell, there\x92s no such thing
as elves, so this guy can\x92t be one. Q.E.D.\x94 He smiled at her patronizingly.
Jeanette sighed.
\x93Well, he thinks he is. You want to argue with him?
What else fits the facts? You burned him. With your gun barrel, because it was
steel. Didn\x92t you see the smoke?\x94
\x93It was . . . it
could be some kind of psychosomatic reaction. Or an allergy of some kind,\x94
Robert said, floundering just a little.
\x93The only thing with an allergy to iron is an elf,\x94 Jeanette
repeated in a dull voice. \x93And besides, he vanished right in front of us. So
either we\x92ve got ourselves an elf, or David Copperfield is looking for outside
work.\x94
\x93Yeah, okay, this Aerune\x92s an elf,\x94 Robert said hastily,
unwilling to bother continuing the argument. \x93If he\x92s allergic to iron, that\x92s
good. It\x92ll give us some way of handling him. The important thing is to get him
back. He\x92s obviously found some way to use his psi powers without burning out
the way your test subjects keep doing. Do you think there are more of them?
There has to be. If we can get our hands on them we could stop wasting our time
with these trials and go right to the source.\x94
Jeanette stared at him blankly. Did Robert actually think
Threshold had the faintest chance of controlling someone like Aerune? His voice
echoed again through her mind: \x93I am the Lord Aerune mac Audelaine of the
Dark Court\x97contest with me at your peril.\x94
The Lord of Death and Pain, Moon had said. Oh,
yeah, definitely somebody I want mad at ME.
\x93And how are you planning to do that, Robert?\x94 she asked,
just to be asking.
\x93We\x92ll set another trap for him tonight,\x94 Robert said in a
crisp managerial style. \x93If he\x92s after our Talents, you can shoot them up again
so they\x92ll attract him, and this time we\x92ll be ready for him. No pointy-eared
mutant is going to thumb his nose at me!\x94
Great. I\x92m now living in an X-Files
LARP. Mutants are so much more realistic than elves, right? Jeanette
thought. She made one more attempt to get through to him.
\x93But we\x92ve got something he wants, Robert\x97and he has
something we want. We could summon him, yes, but then we could talk to him,
strike a bargain. . . .\x94 Elves were \xADalways making bargains,
Jeanette remembered. It could work. And he could teach them so
much. . . .
\x93We don\x92t have to bargain. We hold all the high cards, and
after tonight, we\x92ll have this Aerune mac Whasis too. This Highlander
reject won\x92t be so high and mighty once he\x92s got an iron collar around his
neck. In fact, I think he\x92ll tell me everything I want to know,\x94 Robert
gloated.
\x93Uh-huh.\x94 Robert\x92s refusal to negotiate frustrated her.
Aerune was pure power\x97and Robert was talking like he was some kind of special
effect that could be captured between commercial breaks. All Robert could see
was what he wanted to see\x97not what was there.
This was not going to end well. It was time to cut her
losses.
\x93Look, I\x92ve got to finish up some reports on our lab rats and
tweak the T-Stroke mix before I go home and grab some Z\x92s. What time should I
meet you back here tonight?\x94 she asked brightly.
Robert smiled, sure he\x92d won his point. \x93Be back here around
nine. We\x92ll set things up in the Park this time\x97after midnight there\x92s nobody
there but the muggers. We\x92ll have plenty of elbow room and plenty of peace and
quiet. And a few surprises for our mutie friend.\x94
\x93Sounds good.\x94 Jeanette forced another smile. \x93See you then.\x94
After Robert left, Jeanette spent a long time staring at her
reflection in the black mirror of her office wall, making up her mind for sure.
She\x92d always known that someday it would be time to leave this little party
Robert was throwing, and actually, she\x92d been here longer than she thought
she\x92d be. But she could smell disaster ahead, and with her own survivor
instincts, Jeanette decided she didn\x92t want to be here when it hit.
Aerune haunted her thoughts. Power. Promise. Danger. She felt
the temptation to stay just to see him again beckon to her, and quashed it
firmly. It\x92s time to go.
She\x92d always known that someday it\x92d be time, and planned
accordingly. Jeanette opened her guitar case and felt around in the lining
until she found what she was looking for\x97a red plastic diskette with a
smiley-face sticker on it. She loaded its contents to her computer and
hesitated for a moment before pressing \x93Send.\x94
Has to be done. She pressed the button. The
virus began working its way through the system, erasing every hint of her
presence\x97and her work.
Next she went through her desk, pulling all her paper files
and shredding them. She took the bags to the incinerator herself\x97in her outlaw
days, Jeanette had never relied on anyone else to cover her tracks: when you
wanted something done right, you did it yourself.
When that was done, she took a last look around. The office
where she\x92d spent so much of her time was completely sanitized. No trace of her
presence remained, except for her guitar and sound system, a rack of CDs, and a
few posters on the walls. She wasn\x92t going to take anything but the guitar with
her, but she couldn\x92t leave the other stuff down here. This place wasn\x92t
supposed to exist.
Because it was Saturday, most of the day staff wouldn\x92t be
coming in at all. She commandeered a cart from the laundry and loaded the rest
of her personal gear into it, and took it upstairs where it belonged.
Her \x93official\x94 office cubicle looked strangely virginal,
since she was almost never there. She took a few minutes to set up the stereo,
scatter the personal things she was abandoning around it, and hang her posters
on the walls. She took the cart back down to the laundry (details were
important when you were planning to vanish) and came back up to the office to
turn on her computer.
She tested her worm by logging in with her Black Projects
user code, and was relieved to see the message \x93No Such User.\x94 She reset the
time on her computer to a date last week and logged in under her rarely-used
official, abovestairs account. Then she spent a few minutes writing memos that
would \x93prove\x94 she\x92d gone on vacation a week ago, and wouldn\x92t be back for two
more.
Let Robert start a war with Faerie. I hope Lord Aerune makes
hash of him. And either way, I\x92m covered, and he\x92s left holding the bag.
Bye-bye, Lintel. I can\x92t say it\x92s been fun, because it hasn\x92t.
When everything was arranged to her satisfaction, she took
her guitar and went home. Her apartment had always been just a place to store
her stuff, and Jeanette wasn\x92t the kind of person who accumulated a lot of
stuff she really cared about\x97she\x92d learned that lesson early and too well. She
threw a couple of pairs of jeans and some T-shirts on the bed, and pulled her
studded leather jacket and engineer boots out of the back of the closet. She
took a moment to strip the vest with the Sinner Saints colors off the
jacket\x97it\x92d been years since she\x92d worn her colors, and she didn\x92t want to run
into any old friends now\x97before diving back into the closet for her saddlebags.
She packed quickly\x97clothes, music, and cash, lots of that\x97before putting on her
boots and jacket.
Time to go. If that idiot wants to commit suicide, he can do
it without me\x97and if he manages to survive, he\x92ll still need me and maybe we\x92ll
do the dance. But I\x92m not taking any falls for him. Survival of the fittest.
I\x92m sure Robert would agree.
* *
*
Her Harley was waiting for her in the garage below\x97a cream
and maroon touring beauty she\x92d named Mystery, on which she\x92d blown most of her
first paychecks when she\x92d come to Threshold. She stripped off the protective
cover and slung her saddlebags over Mystery\x92s back, buckling them into place
before lashing her guitar down to the pillion seat. It would make an awkward
load, and she might have been willing to leave the instrument behind if she\x92d
been sure she was coming back.
But she wasn\x92t.
She wheeled slowly out of the underground garage, blinking
owlishly at the winter sunlight even through the tinted face-shield of her full-coverage
helmet. She debated where to go for a moment, but given her mode of transport,
it was pretty much a no-brainer.
South. Somewhere warm, with no snow and fewer questions.
Campbell didn\x92t show up at the lab at nine o\x92clock. At
nine-thirty Robert checked her downstairs office, found it stripped, and called
her house. At nine-forty-five he let himself into her apartment with a passkey
he didn\x92t think she knew he had, and looked around. The place looked like a
hotel room that had been trashed by gypsies.
God, how can anyone live like this? You can take the girl off
the street, but you can\x92t take the street out of the girl, he
thought in disgust.
She wasn\x92t here either. He looked around. There were signs of
hasty packing, and the ice-cream carton in the back of the fridge where
Campbell kept her stash of ready cash was empty. He felt a wave of smug
disdain. So she\x92s bolted. Da widdle girly got scared and ran. Jesus, isn\x92t
that just like a woman?
But did this really change anything? Robert thought about
that for a moment, making up his mind. It wasn\x92t like she\x92d be going to the police, not with what he had on
her. Actually, Campbell\x92s bailout wasn\x92t entirely a bad thing. Ever
since the drug trials had started panning out, Campbell had been acting pretty
skittish, and that mutant-guy from last night showing up had obviously been
more than she could handle. After all, Robert Lintel thought sagely, it\x92s
one thing to read about psychic powers in a fiction book and another altogether
to see them in front of your face.
He\x92d probably scared her into running by talking about
setting a trap for the guy tonight. Women just weren\x92t any good in military
situations. Oh, she faked it better than most, but Robert had seen the flash of
fear in her eyes when the guy in the cloak had showed up. She\x92d just lost her
head and panicked. How typical. Women were all like that.
But I don\x92t need her anymore. I\x92ve got more than enough
T-Stroke to turn a sample over to a good research chemist and find out the
proportions\x97and more than enough to finish the trials without her.
And once he\x92d done that, he could write his own ticket
anywhere in the world and kiss Threshold good-bye.
In fact, maybe it\x92s better to wait a day or two before trying
to trap this Aerune again. He\x92ll be sweating, and I\x92ll have time to rope in a
few more pieces of bait.
Pleased with his conclusions, Robert Lintel left the
apartment.
Everything\x92s going to work out just
fine. . . .
NINE:
A GAME OF
CHESS
Though
his dreams were only dreams, they were haunted by the Unseleighe taint Eric had
felt in Central Park and the nagging sense that there was something he was
missing. He woke up late on Sunday morning, rumpled and disgruntled and aware
that somehow he\x92d blown most of the weekend without getting his coursework
done. His mind felt fuzzy\x97the mental equivalent of indigestion\x97and he badly
wanted someone to talk it out with. But Greystone wasn\x92t available\x97when he
looked, the gargoyle wasn\x92t even on its perch outside his window\x97and Toni and
Jimmie had both made it pretty clear last night that the Guardians wouldn\x92t
welcome his involvement in the situation.
But the more he thought about it, the more Eric was convinced
there was something back there in the Park that they\x92d all missed. Something
important.
Well, if they won\x92t talk to me about it, I know someone
who\x92ll at least listen.
Even the most avaricious capitalists took Sundays off, and
Ria Llewellyn knew from long experience that you got better work out of people
if you didn\x92t ask them to give 110 percent all the time. She\x92d been on
everybody\x92s back most of the week, getting a feel for her New York companies
and finishing up with dinner with Eric last night\x97which, while fun, could not
by any stretch of the imagination be called restful\x97and today Ria was looking
forward to a leisurely day of shopping and sightseeing. Maybe she\x92d even
succumb to the impulse to go down and see the giant Christmas tree at
Rockefeller Center. She\x92d forgotten how much she liked New York\x97it was such a
human city, so un-elvish, that she actually found herself preferring it to
L.A., where not even the special effects were real, let alone the people. Too
many bad associations there: tragedy and betrayal and her long painful climb
back to life.
Besides, Eric will be here for at least another
year. . . .
That was certainly one of the attractions. They\x92d made a good
start last night. He wasn\x92t as indifferent to her as he\x92d tried to pretend. And
he wasn\x92t out to kill her, either on his own behalf or someone else\x92s. In Ria\x92s
opinion, both of those things made a good start to a relationship.
The windows of her sitting room at the top of the Sherry gave
her a magnificent view over the Park, an unexpected oasis of green in the steel
and concrete forest of the City. The trees were winter-bare, the grass a faded
brown-green, but at night the lights shining down into the park gave it an air
of mystery\x97a man-made fairyland, in sharp contrast to the inhuman beauty of
Underhill. Ria preferred it.
She was lingering over a last cup of coffee, a legal pad on
her lap, when her phone rang. Few enough people knew where she was that she had
no hesitation about picking up the phone instead of letting the front desk take
the call.
\x93Hello?\x94
\x93Ria? It\x92s Eric!\x94
Eric! She allowed herself a small smile of
triumph. The first one to pick up the phone lost. And your loss is my gain.
\x93Eric,\x94 she purred. \x93How wonderful to hear from you so soon.
Did you sleep well?\x94 she asked, layering a double meaning into the innocent
phrase.
She heard a rueful chuckle on the other end of the line. \x93Not
really. I\x92d like to talk to you.\x94
And do more than talk, I\x92ll wager. Should
she lead him on for awhile to demonstrate her power? Or would immediately
giving him what he wanted be more effective? Deci\xADsions, decisions.
\x93Of course. Why don\x92t you come over here? I\x92m at the
Sherry-Netherland. The view of the Park is spectacular. I\x92ll order a fresh pot
of coffee. Or would you prefer tea?\x94
\x93Central Park?\x94 For a moment Eric sounded completely
nonplussed. Then: \x93Sure. Give me about forty minutes.\x94
\x93I\x92ll be waiting.\x94 And to hell with the coffee.
Eric hung up the phone, staring at it as if it were about to
do something strange and unusual. He didn\x92t know what he\x92d expected when he
decided to call Ria, but it wasn\x92t this, well, blatant an invitation.
What was she up to this time? Other than the obvious, and if there\x92s one
thing you can say about Ria, it\x92s that she isn\x92t. Anyway, he was committed
now. And there couldn\x92t be any harm in going up to her place to talk, now,
could there? Besides, if he went there, he wouldn\x92t have to risk stirring up
the Guardians by poking his nose into their business. He thought the best thing
might be to stay out of their way if they\x92d stay out of his.
Time to get dressed, but in something a little less warlike
than what he\x92d worn to their last encounter.
He
pulled out a chunky oatmeal-colored fisherman\x92s sweater, and hesitated for a
moment between slacks and jeans. Ria wasn\x92t a jeans kind of person, he decided,
and went for a pair of dark grey slacks. He grabbed the leather jacket he\x92d
worn last night, and dumped the contents of his messenger bag out on his bed to
make room for the flute. He gave the books and notebooks a resigned glance.
Rector wouldn\x92t cut him any slack; he\x92d better get his paper\x97or at least, some
kind of paper\x97done before 2 p.m.
tomorrow.
Somehow.
He\x92d been past the Sherry-Netherland a few times in his
rambles, but he\x92d never been inside. It was an imposing structure, like
something out of an Edith Wharton novel: very repressed, very Old New York. He
almost expected the gaudily uniformed doorman to refuse to let him in.
He made his way across the lobby to the elevators, found the
one that serviced Ria\x92s floor, and got in. The elevator was an express, and
took off with a swoosh! that left Eric\x92s stomach far behind, though it
mercifully released him a few moments later. The corridor outside its doors was
painted a tasteful rose-beige that reminded Eric of something you might find at
a mortician\x92s. Ria\x92s penthouse suite was at the end of the hallway, and as he
approached it, Ria opened the door.
She was wearing a man-tailored blouse of heavy white silk
that she\x92d wrapped, kimono-style, instead of buttoning, and it was pretty
obvious that there was nothing under it. It was tucked into the waistband of a
pair of wide-legged cuffed and pleated pants of bronze hammered silk, and on
her feet she wore a pair of high-heeled gold mules. Eric could see that her
toenails were painted Jungle Red. With her blond hair hanging loose in a
Veronica Lake sweep, Ria looked like the Bad Girl from every film noir ever
made.
\x93Nice to see you again,\x94 she said briskly. Spoiling the
illusion? Or breaking a deliberate spell? With any other woman, he\x92d know.
\x93Come on in.\x94
Eric
followed her into the main room of the suite. Her perfume hung in the air, the
same subtle understated floral she\x92d worn last night at dinner. He tried to
ignore it. He\x92d come here to talk over a problem, not be a slave to his raging
hormones.
There was a coffee service set out on a low table bordered on
three sides by loveseats in a pale shadow stripe. As Ria had said, there was
also a splendid view of Central Park. Eric tried to locate the spot where he\x92d
stood last night and failed. It wouldn\x92t be hard to find again, though.
\x93Coffee?\x94 Ria asked, and when Eric nodded she poured. He
still found something deliciously perverse about drinking coffee, since what
was harmless to him was so deadly to Kory and his other elven friends.
\x93I didn\x92t mean to interrupt your day,\x94 Eric began, \x93but
something pretty weird happened last night, and, well, I wanted to talk about
it to someone who\x92d understand. You see\x97well, to begin with, the place I live
isn\x92t an ordinary apartment building.\x94 Lame, Banyon, really lame!
But Ria didn\x92t zing him on it, the way Beth or some of the
Sidhe would have.
\x93So I gathered, after I met your stony friend,\x94 she
commented, sipping her own coffee. She regarded him over the rim of the cup
with steady emerald-green eyes, their vivid color one of the many legacies of
her mixed blood.
\x93Well, Greystone\x92s just the tip of the iceberg,\x94 Eric said
glumly, belatedly realizing how much he\x92d have to explain before he got to the
Unseleighe Nexus, and how little Ria was probably going to like any of it. \x93You
see, there are these folks called Guardians. . . .\x94
Quickly he sketched out as much as he knew of the Guardians
and their mission to protect the average run of humankind from the Dark Powers.
He told her about Dharinel and Kory\x92s warning of Unseleighe activity in the
city, and of his own strange, possibly prophetic, dream about the goblin tower
overshadowing Central Park amid the ruins of Manhattan.
\x93I told Jimmie about it, but with the Sidhe you never know when.
Right now? Next year? Next century? But last night after you left, Toni came to
see me because the Guardians had run into something funky out in the Park that
they wanted my opinion on. When I took a look, I found that the whole place is
lousy with Unseleighe magic\x97and something else I couldn\x92t quite put my finger
on\x97and it looked to me like somebody was trying to open a Nexus.\x94
\x93In Central Park?\x94 Ria\x92s voice was rich with disbelief.
\x93Using what for a Bard? And leaving aside the question of what kind of Sidhe
maniac would want to open up a Nexus in the middle of one of the biggest cities
in the world? Sidhe magic would be almost worthless with all the iron and
steel\x97and man-made electro-magnetic fields\x97around, even if they lived long
enough to use it. Even a human sorcerer has trouble in a big city, with all
those minds around clogging up the Etherial Plane.\x94
\x93Seleighe magic wouldn\x92t work here,\x94 Eric admitted. \x93At least
not consistently. But Unseleighe power runs a little differently, doesn\x92t it?\x94
He knew Perenor had been acting pretty much as a lone wolf in his vendetta
against Terenil, but someone that ruthless must have made overtures to the Dark
Court at some point.
Ria considered, worrying at her lower lip with her teeth as
she thought. \x93I don\x92t know that much about the Dark Court, but I\x92d have to say
that most of the power they use isn\x92t that different. Not in kind, anyway, or
ultimate source. But in degree, yes\x97the Dark Court isn\x92t squeamish about
feeding off other peoples\x92 life-force. And in a city this size, I\x92d have to say
there\x92d be enough prey available to take the edge off any discomfort Cold Iron
would give them. Enough deaths would allow them to punch through any kind of
interference, at least for a short time. But whoever it is that\x92s trying to put
up a Nexus here, he\x92d have to know he couldn\x92t just maraud around and not
expect to be stopped\x97by your Guardians, or the police at the very least. And
for all that either of us knows, there\x92s some alphabet agency out there like
the Men In Black to save the world from the scum of Faerie. This isn\x92t the
Stone Age!\x94
Eric grinned slightly, savoring the mental image of a posse
of sunglasses-wearing Feds in Lincoln Green Armani suits armed with high-tech
wizard\x92s staves and magnetized steel sword-phones. It\x92s almost weird enough
to happen. . . . Then he turned serious again.
\x93Maybe whoever it is doesn\x92t realize what he\x92s actually up
against. If you\x92re Sidhe\x97and practically immortal\x97and living Underhill
anyway\x97you might not really have noticed the last two or three centuries go by,
even though it\x92s made a helluva lot of difference here in the world. Meanwhile,
you can\x92t deny he could do a lot of damage before someone stopped him\x97and what
would happen if the Feds got real concrete proof that the Sidhe existed? I
tried to warn Jimmie and the others, but those Guardians are way in over their
heads\x97and they won\x92t even consider the possibility that this is something they
can\x92t handle. Quietly, I mean.\x94 Or at all. Guardians die as easily as anyone
else, and the Dark Court can put a lot of resources into the field.
But Ria\x92s attitude had changed while he was making his point.
She looked almost disapproving, now.
\xA0\x93I\x92m flattered that
you\x92d want to use me as a sounding board,\x94 Ria said, sitting back in her seat
and regarding him with an unreadable expression. \x93But frankly, Eric, I don\x92t
see what this has to do with you or me, other than meaning we ought to get out
of here before the fireworks start.\x94
Eric
stared at Ria in disbelief. He\x92d just naturally assumed that once he\x92d told her
what the problem was, she\x92d immediately have some suggestions for what to do
next to take care of it.
\x93If a Sidhe Great Lord starts a war with the United States,
we\x92re going to be drawn into it no matter what,\x94 he finally pointed out. \x93This
is entirely leaving out the people who\x92ll get killed, or hurt, or sucked dry
before he\x92s stopped.\x94
\x93The Guardians think they can handle it. You said yourself
they\x92ll probably stop him eventually. And you\x92re the one who\x92s living here, not
me,\x94 Ria said. \x93Besides, there\x92s a faint possibility you\x92ve misread the
situation. Maybe a few disappointments will change your Nexus-builder\x92s mind
about moving here before he throws down for a full-scale war. So why not let
these Guardians do what they\x92re here for? You said it was their full-time job.
They probably have lots of experience.\x94
\x93Not with this,\x94 Eric said stubbornly. \x93They don\x92t get many
Sidhe here in the city. They\x92ve never seen this kind of magic before. You have,
and so have I. You know what kind of damage a situation like this can do.\x94 He
leaned forward, willing her to understand how important this was. But even
before she spoke, he knew he\x92d failed.
\x93Eric,
people are dying horribly every day, all over the world. Even if I devoted my
every waking moment to making things better for them, it\x92d be a drop in the
bucket compared to what they\x92re doing to themselves. I have responsibilities
closer to home\x97to my employees, to my
staff, to the people who depend on me personally to be there, and not go
haring off on some kind of damnfool idealistic crusade designed to get someone
close to me out of a midterm exam.\x94
\x93Is that what you think this is about?\x94 Eric demanded,
recoiling in hurt. Ria of all people knew how much trouble a Nexus in the wrong
hands could be. He\x92d been sure that the moment he explained things to her she\x92d
be ready to help.
Ria smiled gently. \x93No, Eric, not entirely. But I think it is
part of the reason you\x92re trying so hard to push yourself into someplace you\x92re
obviously not wanted. Dharinel told you to stay out of it. These Guardians told
you the same thing. Why not listen to somebody for a change?\x94
I\x92ve
already been doing too much of that! Eric felt a stubborn anger rising inside him,
and tried to push it aside. He\x92d been open and honest with Ria, and she seemed
to be treating this as if it were all some sort of meaningless game!
\x93Okay. All right. I guess I deserve some of that. But at
least come and look at the place in the Park with me. Make up your own mind
about how bad this could be. And if you don\x92t want to get involved then, I\x92ll
respect that.\x94
He leaned forward, willing her to say yes. To that much, at
least.
Ria sighed. \x93Okay, Eric, you\x92ve won me over. I\x92ll come and
look. But I can\x92t do it today, and Monday\x92s looking pretty full, too. I have
companies to run; give me a few days. I\x92ll clear a space in my schedule.\x94
A few days could be too late! Eric
took a deep breath and regained control of himself with an effort. He felt
oddly disappointed\x97in Ria, in himself\x97as if a door that might lead to something
wonderful had just been unexpectedly slammed in his face. He\x92d thought\x97well,
maybe he hadn\x92t actually thought. He\x92d been upset about what happened at
the Park last night, he\x92d wanted to see Ria again, and he guessed he\x92d let his
hormones do at least some of the thinking.
\x93Okay,\x94
he said grudgingly, hating how hurt, how betrayed he felt. \x93I guess
that\x92s fair. Why don\x92t you give me a call when you\x92ve got some free time?\x94 He
got to his feet. \x93I won\x92t bother you any more. I\x92m sure we\x92ve both got a lot of
things to do.\x94
Ria rose gracefully, her face a cool social mask of
politeness. Bard or not, Truth-sense or not, he couldn\x92t get a peek at anything
behind her shields to judge her feelings. \x93I\x92ll see you later, then, Eric.\x94
With as much dignity as he felt he could muster under the
circumstances, Eric left.
Out
on the street again, Eric took a few moments to catch his mental breath. Those
mis-cues just now had been at least partly his fault\x97and more than partly, if
he were being \xADtotally honest with himself. He realized that he\x92d been thinking
of Ria as a sort of natural ally against the Guardians who\x92d fall in with
anything he proposed\x97well, she\x92d disabused him of that \xADnotion pretty quick.
Then I\x92ll do it myself, said the Little Red Hen.
He managed a smile. It would have been nice to have company
and a little backup, but he was a Bard, after all. He could do his own
investigating. And I\x92m right here, and the Park is pretty safe during the
day. All the muggers are probably out Christmas shopping, too.
And it wasn\x92t really going against Dharinel\x92s advice. Not
yet. Whoever\x92d put up the Nexus didn\x92t seem to be around during the day, and
Eric would be sure not to leave any trail that could lead an Unfriendly back to
his doorstep. The guy was after Talents, and Eric didn\x92t fool himself about the
fact that his own power made him a pretty enticing mouthful. And he wasn\x92t
interested in being anybody\x92s lunch, thank you ma\x92am.
But a little looking around wouldn\x92t hurt. And Ria was right
about one thing. With a quick glance in the dark and a bunch of other people
around, he might have misjudged how serious the situation was. He waited
for a break in the traffic and crossed the street, heading into the Park.
From the window high above, Ria watched him go. She felt an
irritated mixture of anger and regret over what had just happened.
Just who the hell did Eric Banyon think he was, anyway? The
Lone Ranger?
Not the old Eric Banyon, that\x92s for sure. The
old Eric, the one she\x92d kept as an intriguing pet, wouldn\x92t have thrown himself
into things this way. That Eric had waited to be led, or told what to do. This
one made his own choices, and his own rules.
But I\x92m not going to play by them. He can be the Lone Ranger
if he wants, but he\x92ll have to find another faithful Indian companion!
She respected him enough to send him away today, rather than
teasing him into bed. It would have been a sweet sort of triumph to distract him that thoroughly\x97Eric had always been
a generous lover, and this new maturity made him even more interesting as a
potential bed partner\x97but she wanted him as an equal, not a conquest. And that
meant equality on both sides. If she didn\x92t want Eric as a submissive follower,
then he was going to have to learn that he wasn\x92t automatically the leader,
either. Living in the real world meant negotiating for what you wanted\x97and if
Eric wanted her as much as she wanted him, he was going to have to learn that
little lesson. And hope it doesn\x92t kill either of us.
That didn\x92t mean she was going to hang him out to dry,
either. He\x92d been right about one thing: she knew this enemy better than he
did. She hesitated a moment, coming to a decision, and then picked up the
phone.
\x93Jonathan? Ria. Look, I\x92ve run into a little something out
here that needs looking into, and I\x92m going to need some backup. Yes. Armed and
very discreet. Who do we use in New York? Call me back when you have the
number. I want to make the call myself.\x94
About an hour later there was a knock on her door. She
checked through the peephole, and then opened the door.
\x93Gotham Security,\x94 the man said, holding open a photo ID for
her to look at. Raine Logan, read the name below the photo.
He was only a few inches taller than she was, but he carried
himself as if he were six feet tall. He wore a dark blue nylon bomber jacket
and jeans, with an army surplus duffle slung over his shoulder. His black hair
was brushed straight back from a deep widow\x92s peak, there was a day\x92s worth of
black stubble on his jaw, and beneath his bulky clothing, he had the trim,
sculpted body of someone who worked out with weights for more than show. When
she\x92d called the service, she\x92d specified needing someone who could keep her
safe anywhere in New York\x97and blend in on the street. The man they\x92d sent more
than fit the bill. You wouldn\x92t give him a second glance anywhere from Spanish
Harlem to Crown Point.
\x93Come in, Mr. Logan,\x94 she said, closing the door behind him.
\x93Just Logan. And you\x92re Ria,\x94 he said. \x93These are for you.\x94
He held out the bag. \x93The service has your size and your profile; you\x92ve used
our West Coast service in the past.\x94
She opened the duffle and pulled out the contents. Worn jeans
with the extra gusset at the crotch that would give them as much flexibility as
a pair of dance tights, a tight black T-shirt, and a jacket. It looked like a
cheap vinyl imitation of a black leather jacket, but when she lifted it, it was
heavier than she expected. She checked the lining, and found it was lined in
Kevlar\x97enough to stop anything up to a Black Talon cop-killer.
\x93The dispatcher said you\x92d be going into some rough
neighborhoods. You don\x92t want to go looking like money,\x94 Logan said.
\x93Thanks,\x94 Ria said, meaning it. Gotham Security was the best.
They turned down more clients than they accepted, and the reason they still
accepted her commissions was because she never argued with their decisions once
she\x92d set the parameters. Ria respected competence in any field. When you hired
an expert to keep you safe, there was no point in telling him how to do his
job.
\x93Help yourself to some coffee. I\x92ll go change.\x94
She\x92d worn running shoes on the plane, but they weren\x92t some
expensive brand someone would try to kill her for. She stripped off the
seduction outfit she\x92d worn for Eric and changed into the street clothes the
bodyguard had brought, then braided her hair severely back and pinned it into a
tight bun. She looked in the mirror, frowned, and then went into the bathroom
to scrub off every trace of makeup. There were thin gloves in the pocket of the
jacket, and she put them on. Satisfied at last, she came back into the sitting
room of the suite.
Logan was standing where he could watch both the doors and
the windows, a cup of coffee in his hand. He regarded her impassively, and then
gave a short nod of approval.
\x93Let\x92s go.\x94 He held out a black watch cap. \x93Wear this.
Blondes aren\x92t that common in some parts of town.\x94
Eric hadn\x92t told Ria exactly where the unfinished Nexus was,
but once she got into the Park, the trail of Unseleighe taint was fairly
obvious. Logan followed her like a silent shadow as she cast around, working
her way into the center of the magic.
Here.
The partial Nexus shimmered in the dry winter air, \xADinvisible
unless you were Gifted and knew what you were looking for. Its twisted
magic made even Ria shudder \xADinwardly. This was Unseleighe work, fuelled by
death, \xADhuman death. She could still see the faint smudges of levin
bolts on the grass where the Sidhe Lord had destroyed the bodies of his
victims.
The surrounding trees looked faintly haunted. If the Nexus
came fully into being, this would become a bonewood, the trees taking on a
malicious life of their own in imitation of their dark master.
So he\x97whoever he is\x97was here. But where did he come from, and
where did he go? In and out of Underhill, of course. She wouldn\x92t be able to
track his movements Under\xADhill from here, and even if she\x92d had the power to
force an entry into Underhill from a standing start, she knew too little about
her foe to make it a good idea. She turned her attention to another part of the
problem. Eric had been here as well, and recently. Had he seen what she saw,
she wondered? And if he had, where was he now?
Not chasing the Unseleighe, that\x92s for sure. There\x92s nothing
to track.
She
circled the area, frowning faintly. This wasn\x92t Unseleighe Sidhe work alone.
There was something else here as well.
Her hands wove small patterns through the air as she called
upon her magic\x97not the Gift that was the birthright of the Sidhe, but sorcery
that she\x92d learned painstakingly over the years. She worked slowly and
carefully, and at last she had banished everything that was wholly of Underhill
from her perceptions.
But something remained, the human taint
she had noticed at first.
And that left a trail she could follow.
An hour before Ria left her hotel room with Logan, Eric
headed into Central Park. He stopped just inside the grounds to dig his flute
out of his bag and put it together. He blew a soft note into the mouthpiece to
warm the cold silver, and seemed to feel the trees around him shiver in
response. More proof, not that he needed
it, that someone had been using major magic here\x97enough magic to wake
the trees, let alone the dead.
Carrying his flute in his hand, Eric walked deeper into the park,
back to the place Toni had brought him to last night. The scorch marks were
still there, and in the daylight he saw something he\x92d missed the night
before\x97the deep cuts of horses\x92 hooves in the frozen turf.
And sure, there are bridle paths through the park, but
they\x92re clearly marked and the riders stick to them. And these tracks sure
weren\x92t made by any New York Rent-a-Nag. Where were you going, Mister Dark Lord
of the Sidhe? And who were you after?
Let\x92s see just how you\x92ve been spending your time. . .
.
He lifted his flute to his lips and began to play. A few
trills and runs first, just to warm up, and then he segued into \x93Sidhe Beg,
Sidhe Mor,\x94 letting the plaintive demand of the music speak for him.
The
light seemed to shift, some colors growing brighter, others vanishing entirely.
The hard brightness of the afternoon sun became muted, fading almost into the
unchanging silvery light of Underhill, while the latticework of the unfinished
Nexus burned bright and clear, like a sculpture of purest purple-black neon.
The constant background noise of New York\x97sirens, traffic, and the hum of a
thousand conversations all taking place at once\x97faded to silence. Now Eric
could see the magic plainly, yet he himself was as invisible to mortal eyes as
magic normally was. Cloaked in his music, Eric could pass through the city
unseen, even by his quarry. He turned, casting about.
The whole park was dotted with hoofprints that glowed with a
deep scarlet light\x97the Unseleighe Lord, whoever he was, had been making himself
right at home, him and his elvensteed. The creature\x92s glowing scarlet trail
crisscrossed the grass from a dozen directions, giving the dry winter grass a
spuriously festive look.
I can\x92t follow all of these! Eric
shifted his bag higher on his shoulder. He had to pick one\x97but which?
At last he saw one set of hoofprints of a slightly different
color than the rest\x97almost maroon, instead of the bright vermillion of the
others. As he stepped into them, he caught a faint whiff of
something . . . something almost raw and primitive next to
the ancient malice of the Unseleighe Sidhe.
As good a way to make a choice as any, Eric
decided, and began to follow the dark track.
The track quickly took him across town and out of the
high-priced spread. He could see splashes of magic along the way\x97as if someone
had been carrying it in a bucket that kept slopping over, staining the
sidewalks and buildings. When he got further downtown, a fine red mist seemed
to hang in the air like a fog of magic\x97too thin to really have any effect, but
more evidence that its source\x97or even many sources\x97had passed through here, all
leaking magic like a sieve.
What is this? A mage\x92s convention? And if so, why wasn\x92t I
invited? he thought whimsically.
The odd thing was, the \x93splashes\x94\x97for lack of a better
word\x97seemed to be concentrated around the street people. None of them seemed to
be the source, but somehow they\x92d been near the source, and not very
long ago. Eric guessed the Nexus point in the Park hadn\x92t been started more
than a day or so\x97the timing of its building coincided perfectly with his
dream\x97and the traces he was following would fade away completely in another day
or so.
Cold weather to be on the streets, Eric
thought, watching an old man pushing along a grocery cart full of bits and
pieces of unnameable junk. A Sidhe Lord down here. Now THAT\x92s culture clash.
The contrast between the busy, purposeful shoppers\x97all of
whom had homes to go to\x97and the shabby homeless that cowered back from them like
hungry ghosts was jarring. He didn\x92t remember there being so many street people
the last time he\x92d been in New York\x97hell, he didn\x92t remember there being any,
but the Upper East Side tended to run them out of the area pretty rigorously.
He\x92d gotten used to seeing them in the last few weeks\x97as used as you could get,
anyway\x97but as he headed east, he realized that the ones in his neighborhood
were just the tip of the iceberg. As he left Yuppieland and entered the area of
clinics, flophouses, and SROs6 the tribe
of the disenfranchised seemed to multiply, and for the first time Eric realized
how very many people in this city had no other home than the streets. Not
hundreds. Thousands.
And not just people living in slums or in welfare housing,
but people who didn\x92t have any place to go at night at all. He walked past a
man in a tattered overcoat who might have been any age from forty to seventy
and was carrying on an angry, animated conversation with the empty air. His
hands were covered with small unhealed sores, and there were flecks of spittle
on his cheeks. Greyish stubble covered his cheeks, and even in the cold he
stank of urine, unwashed body, and illness.
Isn\x92t
anybody helping these people? That guy shouldn\x92t be out on the street. But even as he wondered,
Eric knew the answer. These were the \x93borderline\x94 people, the ones who\x92d been
dumped out onto the streets from the institutions where many of them had spent
their entire lives to make their way as best they could in the world. The idea
was that they\x92d have caseworkers and live in supervised housing, but there
weren\x92t enough beds or caseworkers to go around, and so most of these walking
wounded ended up alone on the streets. Add to that the junkies who stayed away
from social services for fear they\x92d be jailed, the street kids damaged by
predators or the homes they\x92d run from, and you had thousands and tens of
thousands of people living on the streets\x97the population of an entire shadow
city living invisibly in the cracks of the city most people saw.
A bright flare caught his attention out of the corner of his
eye. Magic\x97the same magic he\x92d been following. It ended at a brick wall, the
glare of it so bright it nearly hurt his eyes. He touched the flaking
brickwork, and recoiled when his fingers came away sticky and dark. He rubbed
his fingers together. It was blood. Old, but not that old.
This wasn\x92t Unseleighe magic he\x92d been following, but human
magic. Eric blinked, bringing up the image of the human city to overlay his
mage-sight, and bent over to inspect the wall and the sidewalk. Now he could
see that there were bloody handprints on the concrete. The wall itself was
covered with blood, great arcing gouts of blood, as if somebody had tried to
batter his way through the bricks with his body.
And I\x92m betting that\x92s exactly what happened, Eric
thought grimly, straightening up. He felt nauseated. Echoing through his mind,
preserved in the stone, were ghostly screams of fury, as if the raging spirit
were still trapped here. He scrubbed his hand on his jeans and raised the flute
to his lips, playing the first tune that came to mind, an old folk tune called
\x93She Moved Through The Fair,\x94 the sweet wistful lament seemed to soothe the
energies here, sending the spirit on its way in peace, washing away the
death-fury that had happened here.
\x93Mister? Hey, mister?\x94
Eric lowered his flute. He\x92d put so much of himself into the
music that he\x92d lost his cloak of magic, and with it, his invisibility. He
turned in the direction of the voice. There was a man watching him, a man only
a few years older than Eric with haunted, lost eyes. That could be me,
Eric realized in pitying horror. A little more bad luck, a few more missed
chances . . . not meeting Beth, or Kory. Missing out on the
Faire-circuit. That could be me.
\x93That\x92s pretty music,\x94 the man said, when he had Eric\x92s
attention. \x93I\x92m Gary.\x94
\x93Hello, Gary,\x94 Eric said quietly, so as not to startle his
new friend. Though his body was full grown, it was clear that the mind behind
the eyes was much younger. \x93Do you know what happened here?\x94
Gary\x92s face turned sad, as transparently as a child\x92s. \x93Fury
died. We always used to call him that. He got sick and yelled at everybody, and
then he started to fight with the wall.\x94 Easy tears glinted in Gary\x92s eyes.
\x93Nobody fights a wall,\x94 he said sadly.
Not with any chance of winning, Eric
thought, glancing at the bloodstains. He was tempted to slip back into his
magic and leave, but he\x92d already seen enough to know that he had a lot of
urgent questions without answers. Maybe Gary had some of the answers.
\x93Have a lot of people died lately? In just the last couple
days? People like Fury?\x94
Gary stared at him blankly, a sudden sourceless fear growing
in his haunted eyes. \x93The angels take them\x97the night angels. I have to go,\x94 he
said suddenly.
\x93Hey\x97wait! I didn\x92t mean to\x97\x94
Gary turned away and scuttled quickly down an alleyway,
vanishing from sight.
\x93\x97scare you,\x94 Eric finished, gazing at the empty street.
He could run after the homeless man, but he didn\x92t think Gary
had any more to tell him. Fury\x92s death hadn\x92t fed the Nexus\x97those deaths had
occurred back in the Park. And what were the night angels? Unseleighe Sidhe? If
the Dark Court was using Manhattan as a hunting ground, there should be
unadulterated traces of their magic all over, but the only thing he\x92d found
here was the magic he\x92d followed.
Nothing was adding up. It was as if he had all the puzzle
pieces\x97and they all turned out to be from different puzzles. He sighed and
looked around. At the end of the block a blue neon cross shone into the night.
Eric raised his flute to his lips again, gathering his cloak of invisibility
around him once more. The light at the wall was gone now, thanks to Eric\x92s
music, but somehow the neon cross shone even brighter in his Shifted sight. It
was a sign for a mission, one of the places that tried to feed and shelter New
York\x92s rising tide of homeless. Reluctantly, Eric turned toward it. He didn\x92t
want to see any more horrors, any more forgotten men and women, but he needed
to find out why Sidhe magic was tangled up with the homeless here.
The inside of the mission was warm and welcoming. Tables were
set up where men\x97and women, some with children\x97sat spooning up soup. At the
kitchen in the back, volunteer workers doled out more soup, sandwiches, and chunks
of bread to a long line of those patiently waiting. They were talking among
themselves in low voices where the diners couldn\x92t here. Eric crept closer.
\x93Not a lot of people here tonight,\x94 a woman said. Her
companion sighed, rolling his shoulders to take the kinks out.
\x93There\x92s something bad out there on the streets. A lot of our
regulars are afraid to come in. I heard Johnnie Rags talking to Lindy earlier.
They think we might be poisoning them.\x94
\x93Poisoning them?\x94 The woman recoiled in shock.
The man shook his head grimly. \x93I\x92ve heard from some of the
other soup kitchens and flops. A lot of people are dead. And more have
just . . . vanished. All in the last \xADseventy-two hours. I
thought at first that a shipment of bad drugs might have reached the street\x97but
where would our guys get the money for drugs? They can\x92t even afford beds, most
of them.\x94
\x93Unless the dealers have started handing out free samples
like the tobacco companies.\x94 The two of them laughed together in disbelief,
sharing the bitter joke.
\x93And what are the cops going to do? A lot of people die down
here every day,\x94 the woman went on.
\x93Not like this,\x94 the man said grimly, shaking his head. \x93Not
like this.\x94
Eric turned away. The answers he wanted weren\x92t here, but he
couldn\x92t escape the feeling that he\x92d just been handed another
clue . . . if he could only understand it.
Even Shielded as he was, Eric was reluctant to leave the
light and warmth of the mission for the cold gloom outside, but he knew he had
to move on, see if he could follow this trail to where it
began . . . or ended.
As he turned to go, a young woman sitting at one of the
tables got to her feet, heading for the door. She was \xADskeleton-thin, but she\x92d
made some attempt at looking pretty. She wore a down jacket a dozen seasons out
of date and a thin bright summery dress. Her legs were bare.
\x93Where you going, Annie?\x94 the man behind the soup cauldron
called.
\x93Got me a date,\x94 Annie said belligerently. Eric could see
they wanted to stop her, to call her back, but before they could do anything
she was outside, hurrying up the street.
Eric followed her. She didn\x92t go far. There was an alleyway a
few doors down from the mission. Annie ducked into it with an ease borne of
long familiarity. There was a crude shelter there, made of flattened cardboard
boxes, and Annie scuttled inside, squatting down and digging into her jacket.
\x93Got me a free sample, got me a free sample,\x94 she sing-songed
under her breath. Eric could see the glitter of a small packet of white powder
in her hands. It radiated a kind of non-magical malignity that made Eric blink.
\x93Hey\x97don\x92t do that,\x94 he protested, making himself visible
again. He dug in his pocket for his wallet. \x93Don\x92t take that. Here\x97I\x92ll buy it
from you. Okay?\x94
Seeing him, Annie crouched back with a feral cry of alarm.
Before Eric could react, she\x92d torn open the packet and poured the contents
into her mouth.
Its effect was immediate and drastic. Her eyes rolled up in
her head and she slumped down, unconscious.
Oh . . . God. Eric
stared at her, sure for a moment that she was dead. I\x92ve got to help her.
He pulled out his flute. The people at the mission knew her.
They\x92d know what to do. But their help wouldn\x92t be any good to Annie if she was
dead.
He let the magic flow down into him, reaching out to the
flicker of magic\x97Eric experienced it as music\x97that every living thing had. Her
song was faint, the contents of the envelope poisoning her nearly to death. It
was as if two songs were playing at once, creating a jangling discord. Imposing
a third one wouldn\x92t help much.
He listened as hard as he could for the original tune, there
in the cold alleyway, and slowly began improvising a counterpoint around it,
strengthening it without overwhelming it. The music became stronger\x97he could
almost identify the tune\x97when suddenly he was knocked off balance by a blast
of . . . music?
It reverberated through his head, soundless yet loud enough
to make his teeth ache, overwhelming all other sounds. The music wanted him to
follow\x97it was a call, a command, dark and powerful and magical. Resisting it
was like trying to stand still in the path of a cyclone. Annie still needed
help, but Eric couldn\x92t \x93hear\x94 his own magic against the howl of the magestorm.
He ran toward the mission. He could at least summon worldly aid. The pull of
the Summoning grew stronger by the moment; he pushed open the door to the
mission and half staggered, half fell inside.
\x93Hey,\x94 Eric croaked, half-deafened by the buffeting he was
receiving. \x93Annie\x92s out there in the alley. She\x92s sick.\x94
The woman who\x92d been talking as she served the soup ran over
to him. Dizzy and battered by the dark undertow of the magical Summoning, Eric
clung to her for support.
\x93Are you hurt? Can you tell me your name? Come over here. Sit
down\x97\x94
\x93No,\x94 Eric gasped. \x93I\x92ve got to\x97I\x92ve got to go. Help her.
She\x92s in an alley up the street, in a box. She took something. Something bad.\x94
It was hard to get any words out against the call of the Unseleighe magic, and
finally Eric abandoned the effort. He pushed the woman away and thrust himself
out into the night once more, turning in the direction of the summons.
As soon as he was moving with the pull of the magic, his head
cleared enough for him to throw up some stronger shields. The power of the
assault had taken him off-guard, but he had his bearings now. It would be a
simple thing to isolate himself from its pull entirely, but Eric wasn\x92t sure he
wanted to do that. He\x92d come down here looking for the source of the magic that
had befouled the city\x97and now, it seemed, the magic was looking for him.
Sorry Master Dharinel. I know you wanted me to stay out of
this one, but a Bard\x92s gotta do what a Bard\x92s gotta do. I just hope I\x92m around
afterward to get yelled at for it.
And I think I\x92m glad after all that I didn\x92t get Ria to come
with me. . . .
The only way Ria could follow the magical trail was on foot,
and that was a slow process. The trace was faint, and easily confused, but Ria
always managed to find it again. It led her south and east, down into some of
the worst neighborhoods in New York. She was glad more than once to have Logan
at her back. Most folks who saw him just tended to veer off from whatever
mischief they were contemplating.
Night came early in the winter, and by the time they finally
crossed Houston Street it was already getting dark. Ria was footsore and
hungry, but unwilling to give up the hunt just yet. She felt more alive than
she had any time yet since her recovery. Ria was a born hunter, and if more of
her stalks were in the world of finance than on the city streets, well, the
instinct was the same.
On the Lower East Side a lot of the buildings were red brick
dating back a century and more. New York had moved slowly uptown from the foot
of the island since its founding, leaving behind outgrown neighborhoods to fall
into decay. With taxes rising astronomically, many landlords found it more
economical to let buildings rot where they stood rather than invest the money
to make them livable again. The ever-growing population of those who had
slipped between the cracks of what had once been touted as the Great Society
had taken over the abandoned buildings, forming new tribes outside of the
protection of society. As Ria and her shadow had moved downtown, out of the
affluent neighborhoods, the number of homeless had increased. They huddled in doorways
or crouched on the steam vents that led down into the subways, watching Ria\x92s
progress with empty eyes.
With Logan behind her, Ria headed eastward, across the
Bowery. More than a hundred years ago, this had been the northernmost boundary
of Manhattan, its then-cobbled streets filled with gracious ladies, fine
gentlemen, and horse-drawn carriages. Of that era, only a few landmarked
buildings still remained.
The trail she followed was stronger here, but her puzzlement
was growing. What would a mage, human or Sidhe, be doing here, in the middle of
such poverty and despair? There was nothing down here but crack houses, squats,
and a few brave homesteading yuppies. Soon enough urban development would sweep
through here, just as it had elsewhere, leaving a litter of Starbucks and
Barnes & Nobles in its wake, but for now, the area looked like a bombed-out
city in the aftermath of a war it had lost.
Yet here was where the trail began\x97or ended. Ria stopped in
front of the old building her stalk had led her to. It didn\x92t look particularly
promising. Even in the cold, she could smell the pervasive fug of rotting
garbage and old urine. She cast around, looking for some hint that the trail
continued, but there was nothing. She would have been more reassured to find a
Nexus here than what she had found. A blank wall.
What the hell is this? Some kind of magical roach motel?
\x93Mages check in, but they don\x92t check out?\x94
It was impossible.
It was the truth.
\x93Lady. Hey, lady. Gimme dollar?\x94
A man\x97a boy, really, younger than Eric\x97came shuffling out of
the alleyway to her left. He had the look so many of the homeless had, as if
he\x92d been sucked dry of some vital component; prematurely haggard, but no less
dangerous for that. There were two more behind him, obviously there to follow
his lead and share in any bounty he acquired.
She held her ground. To back away would only encourage them.
Most predators\x97including the human predator\x97would chase anything that ran.
\x93You one a\x92 them angels. You come down here, you gotta gimme
dollar. Whaddya say, angel? Gimme dollar?\x94
He was close enough for her to smell him now. His hands were
stuck in his pockets, clutching a knife, a club, or even a gun. She knew he
didn\x92t plan to hurt her, only to take what she had, but when did life ever go
according to plan?
And why had he called her an angel? The incongruity of it
made her smile. Almost.
\x93You don\x92t want to do that.\x94 Logan appeared between her and
the would-be predator like a drift of smoke. She couldn\x92t see his face, but he
held his hands out, open-palmed, defusing the situation with his presence and
his will. The man stopped.
\x93She come down here, she gotta give me money,\x94 he whined,
focussing on Logan. But he was hesitating now, uncertain. \x93She an angel. Angels
take, they gotta give.\x94
\x93No.\x94 Logan\x92s voice was gentle and final. \x93You need to get on
and take care of business somewhere else. Go on.\x94
\x93Bitch. Uptown bitch.\x94 His companions had already melted back
into the alleyway, discovering that Ria wasn\x92t an easy mark. Their leader
glared at Ria in frustrated disappointment. \x93Bitch! Angel bitch!\x94
\x93Go on,\x94 Logan said, still in the same calm voice. As if
he were dealing with a child or a lunatic, Ria thought. And I suppose
these people qualify on both counts. He dropped one hand to his side and
flicked his fingers at her. Obedient to his signal, Ria backed away, stepping
off the curb into the street. She crossed to the other side, turning her back
on them reluctantly. Behind her, Ria heard a faint scuffle, and a cry, and when
she turned back, the man was lying on his back on the sidewalk, and Logan was
turning away.
\x93Let\x92s go,\x94 he said when he reached her. \x93Unless you need me
to take him all the way down.\x94
\x93No. I\x92m finished here. Let\x92s go find a cab.\x94
A few blocks took them back to Broadway. It was like crossing
into another world. Broadway was one of the city\x92s main arteries, running all
the way from the Battery at the southernmost tip of the city, all the way into
Upstate New York. It was fairly safe even at midnight, lined with boutiques,
shops, and all-\x93nite\x94 delis. Ria did a small Summoning magic, and a few moments
later, a cruising cab turned the corner and stopped.
The ride uptown covered in minutes the blocks it had taken
her hours to walk. On Sixth the trees were strung with fairy lights. The bright
shops and well-dressed shoppers were a universe away from the war zone she\x92d
just left.
And Ria had more questions than she had answers to.
A
human drug addict doesn\x92t just suddenly turn into a magician without a cause.
And an Unseleighe lord doesn\x92t just start building a Nexus in the middle of one
of the most densely populated human cities on Earth without some expec\xADtation
of being able to finish it. There\x92s a connection there, somewhere.
So . . . find it. Find the root cause.
I think I need to do some more research.
Aerune had been patient, and now his patience was to be
rewarded. After his last defeat, he realized he had violated the first rule of
war. Always make the enemy come to you. No longer would he follow the human cattle
into their puny traps to gain what he needed. His prey would come to him. And
so he had woven a dark spell, a \xADcalling-on, that would bring every creature
with the wit to hear it to a place of his own choosing. The Crowned Ones would
hear it . . . and so, he had no doubt, would those who
sought to keep his rightful prey from him.
And then he had waited with Sidhe patience, his dark piper
playing, until the prey should walk into his snare. At last he\x92d caught the
scent he sought\x97the scent of raw untrained Power bleeding flagrantly into the
air. This one was more powerful than any he had taken before, and Aerune needed
that power to build his Gate.
And
if the mortals should think to set a trap for me, then I will lesson these
human upstarts well in the ways of \xADHunting. . . .
Drawing his horn, Aerune blew a long, deep note. It blended
with the Calling-on Song, making that melody a part of itself, grew and
reverberated against the buildings of the city streets, taking on a power and a
life of its own, growing until it filled the world.
Come, my children! Come to your master!
The
hounds came first, and then his hunters on night-black steeds of their own\x97the
lesser Unseleighe lords who did him homage, the Lesser Sidhe to whom his magic
was life itself.
Aerune lowered the horn from his lips, but its call continued
to sound, filling the air. He drew his elvensilver sword and swung it in a
circle over his head. \x93We ride!\x94 he roared, spurring his mount.
Behind him the Hunt followed.
They\x92d
had to work damned hard to do it in less than a day, but this time his men had
prepared the perfect trap, and Robert had the perfect bait. There was no reason
to wait any longer. He\x92d instructed the men thoroughly about what they were to
do, and sent Beirkoff and Hancock out with them. When every\xADthing was in place,
Beirkoff was to give Hancock a second dose of T-Stroke\x97a bigger dose this time.
This Aerune would come after Hancock again as soon as he smelled him. Robert
was sure of it. Whatever the guy was, he wanted these Talents as much as Robert
did, and Robert was making sure he had a tight grip on the only source. He\x92d
pulled in his field-test operation. There wasn\x92t any more T-Stroke out on the
streets, so little chance of any other random Talents appearing for Aerune to
poach. If he wanted what Robert had, Hancock would be his only source.
Let the games begin. . . .
\x93What\x92re we doing out here?\x94 Angel asked Elkanah.
\x93Waiting,\x94 Elkanah answered, out of the boundless well of
patience that was (in Angel\x92s opinion) the senior Threshold operative\x92s
singlemost irritating quality.
\x93Yeah, I know we\x92re waiting,\x94 Angel echoed sarcastically.
\x93Waiting for some nutcase on a horse to come kidnap our geek. But what\x92s with
the chain mail? The spears? Just because this guy thinks he\x92s King Arthur
doesn\x92t mean we have to go along with it.\x94
Angel twirled the six-foot spear with the steel head back and
forth between his fingers as if it were a quarterstaff. When he shifted
position, his chain mail jingled slightly. God only knew where the boss had
come up with this stuff on such short notice. But he\x92d worn weirder things in
his time.
\x93We\x92ve got orders. This guy shows up, we throw a net over him
and switch on the generators,\x94 Elkanah answered. Like Angel, he wore a silvery
shirt of chain mail beneath a dark sweater. Even if they were seen, there
wasn\x92t anything to ring warning bells in any civilian mind. And this deep in
the Park, this late at night, there was little chance of them being seen at
all.
\x93Like he\x92s going to back off because of a steel and copper
net and a little electricity,\x94 Angel grumbled, but fell silent.
There were twenty-four men\x97all of Threshold\x92s Black-level
security operatives\x97gathered here, though only eight of them had chain mail
shirts. Four of the others were carrying longbows with quivers full of
steel-tipped arrows. Most of the men and the trucks they\x92d come in on were
concealed now by heavy camouflage netting. They\x92d been in place for hours,
waiting, told to stay out of sight in case any stray tourists wandered past.
The bait had come in an hour ago in an unmarked car. The
technician with him had shackled him to an iron stake driven deep into the
frozen ground. The bait was wearing a straitjacket and a gag, and heavily
sedated besides, but he didn\x92t look like he could be much trouble. A catheter
port had been inserted into his neck, and Angel watched as the lab geek stuck a
needle full of something into it and rammed the plunger home. Angel was glad he
wasn\x92t the bait.
A
few moments later the night began to shimmer, and Angel looked away from the
bait, resting his eyes. Your eyes played funny tricks on you at night, and
because of the searchlights mounted on the trucks, they hadn\x92t been issued
night goggles. There\x92d be plenty of light to see by once the balloon went up.
They\x92d be as visible as a frog on a birthday cake, but Mr. Lintel had been very
clear on the fact that this operation wasn\x92t supposed to take long. They were
going after the guy who\x92d made trouble for Mr. Lintel before, and this time he,
whoever he was, was going to be way outgunned. Angel smiled. The hard men were
the most fun to crack.
\x93Move up! Get into position!\x94 Elkanah whispered urgently.
\x93Why? I don\x92t\x97\x94 Angel said.
And chaos came.
One moment the clearing was empty. The next, it was filled
with men on horseback, men with dogs, shouting and screaming and blowing horns.
Angel didn\x92t waste any \xADeffort wondering how they\x92d gotten here. He rushed
forward, his spear raised, looking for a target. If they wanted to come in like
the U.S. Cavalry, he\x92d make sure they went out like General Custer.
A dog leapt at him, and Angel smashed it down with a
Kevlar-reinforced glove. It backed off with a yelp and he hefted his spear,
looking for a target. There. One of the horses.
He thrust his spear into its flank, pushing hard. There was a
scream\x97horses screamed just like people\x97a flash of light, and the horse was
rearing and dancing away uncontrollably, its rider shouting and flailing as he
fought for control. Angel grinned, and thrust again, no longer caring who these
people were or why they were here. He got to hurt them. That was all that
mattered. Another rider tried to rush him. He got his spear into the horse\x92s
belly, twisted, and jerked back. Its guts spilled out onto the grass and it
screamed and thrashed, adding to the noise of the battle.
Suddenly the searchlights came up, flooding the clearing with
harsh white light. He could see his opponents clearly\x97men in fantastic armor,
carrying shields and wearing swords.
The man on the horse he\x92d killed jumped free, dragging at his
sword. He was wearing an ornate helmet, like \xADsomething out of a Conan movie,
and beneath it, his eyes glowed red in a bone-white face. So what? All the
fancy makeup and special effects in the world wouldn\x92t save him once Angel got
close enough. All around him there were cries and screams, flashes of light
when the steel drove home, and a smell in the air like ozone. Angel stepped
back, \xADmomentarily worried. A heavy sword could slice his spear-haft in two,
and it would take him moments he didn\x92t have to get to his Uzi. But just then
there was a hiss, and three arrows appeared in the attacker\x92s chest. Angel had
thought that archers were a dumb idea, but now, seeing the smoke billowing from
the screaming man\x92s chest, he changed his mind. Mr. Lintel had been right as
usual. Iron turned these guys into wimps.
Something struck him full in the chest, burning away his
shirt, but the steel mail beneath glittered unharmed. Angel laughed, and moved
forward, searching for fresh targets.
As swiftly as they\x92d attacked, the riders pulled back. Now he
and the other pikemen were between the bait and the horsemen, and the backup
troops in the trucks were moving up. In the blinding light of the headlights,
Angel could see fantastic armored shapes on horseback, like something out of a
bad movie, and around them the turf seemed to flow like water. A mist was
rising, making it difficult to see clearly. There was a scream from behind
him\x97one of theirs\x97and he turned to see someone go down beneath the jaws of a
dog the size of a small pony. There was another volley from the archers, and
more screams. Hefting his spear, Angel ran to help.
Elkanah saw Angel run past him, shirt still smoking from one
of the lightning-blasts the Bad Guys were using. As the Boss had promised,
their chain mail protected them, but God help them the moment these guys
figured out how few mail shirts they had. A couple of the men were already
down, and there were things out there he didn\x92t even want to look at.
He\x92d seen the briefing tapes about what Hancock could do. The Boss had said
he\x92d be on their side. Elkanah wasn\x92t sure about that.
A
dog leapt at him, taking Elkanah\x92s spear full in the chest. It howled, smoking
like it had just scarfed a doggy-treat full of napalm, no longer a threat. But
the force of its attack knocked him to the ground, and its death-\xADagonies
jerked the spear out of his hands. He rolled away, fighting to clear his
street-sweeper from its harness. Still supine, he yanked it up and fired. It
caught one of the armored warriors full in the chest, blowing away armor and
flesh with impossible force. For a moment, Elkanah could see the heart beating
in the enemy\x92s chest before he burst into flame, burning with a pale blue
light. In the momentary breathing space Elkanah rolled to his feet, looking for
his own lines.
\x93No order of battle ever survives first contact with the
enemy.\x94 Got to hand it to old Clausewitz. The man knew what he was talking
about.
Aerune roared his disapproval, his injured mount dancing and
shying beneath him, half-blinded by the harsh white light. Try as he might, the
Unseleighe Lord could not break through the ring of steel that surrounded his
prey, and his magic seemed to have little effect on the humans who sought to protect
it. He\x92d already lost too many men. There were archers at their back, their
death-metal arrows taking a fearsome toll of his Hunt\x97and worse, the human Mage
who had been the bait in the trap was summoning creatures of madness, creatures
who preyed on mortal and Sidhe alike. But his attackers were few, and there
were other ways to win this battle. He could make the mortals pay for their
impertinence.
And he would.
\x93Flank them!\x94 he shouted over the roar of battle. \x93Let none
escape!\x94 In the name of Aerete the Golden, kill them all!
TEN:
FOR ALL THE
MARBLES
\x93Well,
what do you know?\x94 Eric muttered under his breath.
The summons was coming from within the Park.
He\x92d had the brainstorm to summon Lady Day as he jogged
uptown, and so had managed the rest of the trip quickly. At the edge of the
park he\x92d dismounted.
\x93Go home,\x94 Eric said firmly.
The elvensteed quivered, her lights flashing in disapproval.
She wanted to go with him. \x93Home!\x94 Eric repeated firmly. \x93I\x92ll call you when I
need you.\x94
It had taken a moment to force his will on the elvensteed,
but at last she\x92d submitted, turning in the direction of home. The good thing
about elvensteeds was that they followed orders, most of the time. And at least
he wouldn\x92t have to worry about anything happening to her.
Hostages to fortune. . . .
Something Jimmie had said, about keeping innocents off the fire-line, came back
to him now, and he smiled grimly. Now more than ever, he understood what she
meant. He was prepared to risk his own life, but not anyone else\x92s.
He turned back to the park. It was fully dark now, and the
streetlights in the park cast faint cones of illumination around themselves. He
wasn\x92t sure what time it was, but the streets had fewer people on them than
before, and the park itself was deserted.
And something was waiting for him there.
Eric thought again about turning back, catching a cab and
just going home, but sheer stubbornness egged him on. The Guardians didn\x92t want
his help. Ria didn\x92t want to help him. Underhill didn\x92t want to get into a
fight. Dharinel had told him to stay clear. But Annie\x92s face was fresh in his
mind. Whatever it was that was out there on the streets, he had to stop it.
So I\x92ll do it myself, said the Little Red Hen.
Inside the low stone wall that bordered the Park the call was
stronger, and Eric was willing to bet that it was coming from somewhere near
the unfinished Nexus point. He headed toward it, more slowly now, wary of
ambush from something else that might have answered this Call.
Suddenly there was a flash of light ahead of him, bright
continuous light, and a sudden blast of sound as though someone had suddenly
turned the volume on a television all the way up. Eric ran toward it.
:Man. Mortal man . . . :
The voice in his head stopped him halfway to the clearing. It
sounded like World War Three was going on there, but Eric didn\x92t dare go on
leaving this at his back. He turned toward it.
A pool of shadow at the base of one of the trees rose up.
Eric had the fleeting impression that it wanted to be a woman but didn\x92t quite
know how. It reached out for him yearningly, and Eric felt his teeth begin to
chatter at the sudden sub-arctic cold as the creature sucked the last mote of
warmth out of the winter air. He raised his flute to his lips, blowing a long
steady low note. He let the magic flow up into the sound, caging the creature\x92s
power and letting it drain away.
She\x97it\x97vanished with a thin despairing cry. But there were
more like it, heading toward him. Half-finished things that crawled and
slithered and flopped along the ground, radiating fear and pain and a kind of
magic he\x92d never sensed before. The woods were alive with them, just like the
woods in his vision\x97filled with gibbering shadowy shapes that were all red eyes
and hunger seeking his magic, his soul, and his blood. They weren\x92t
Nightflyers\x97thank all the odd gods for small favors\x97but there were more of them
than he could count.
And they all wanted him. Eric summoned his shields,
just in time as something like a wolf but six times bigger slung into the
clearing, growling. The creature crouched on its haunches, unwilling to attack
alone, but still far from foiled. Eric raised his flute to his lips again and
blew a quick waterfall of notes. The wolf-thing sprang up onto its hind legs,
twisting and howling as the magic tore it into fragments that drifted away on
the air like a skirl of autumn leaves.
But there were more to take its place, an army of darkness
seeping up like water out of the ground of this \xADsuddenly accursed place.
I need something to get rid of all of them at once. What? The
magic creating them had a source; he could feel it, like cold and deadly
sunlight. Slowly Eric began backing toward it, dropping his shields enough to
lure them in. He had to stop whoever was making these things, and hope it
stopped the creatures as well. They might be a part of whatever fight was going
on, but plainly they had no interest in it.
Inspiration struck. He began playing the slow opening notes
of a Bach cantata as the monsters gathered in a ring around him. Come to
papa, babies. It\x92s lunchtime! Bach was cerebral, mathematical, human\x97the
antithesis of the nightmare Unseleighe power that he faced. Eric focused on the
music, letting it fill him completely. He had time for one last coherent
thought\x97if any of these gets past me into the\xA0 City, there\x92s going to be a bloodbath even the Guardians can\x92t
stop\x97before he let the music take him, shutting out everything but the
battle before him.
As Aerune\x92s Hunt eddied about the edges of the human warriors
seeking an opening, the Unseleighe Lord suddenly heard a bright waterfall of
music\x97Human magic, Bard magic, a thousand times more powerful than the pitiful
flickering about the Crowned One before him. He turned toward the source and
saw . . . a Bard.
The man walked slowly toward the tangle of human and elven
warriors as if he saw neither, destroying the nightmares that had taken a heavy
toll this night on mortals and Hunt alike. Here in full measure was the power
Aerune sought, power to build a thousand Gates. Not crippled and half-complete
like the others he\x92d harvested\x97no, here was\xA0
power enough to play all of Aerune\x92s dark dreams into \xADreality.
The crazed Crowned One he\x92d sought was only an annoy\xADance in
the face of this greater prize. Raising his hand, Aerune slew him with a
gesture. The levin bolt sparked and crackled through the iron the Crowned One
wore, arcing and spitting in great wasteful fountains as it seared his flesh
into bubbling ruin, consuming him utterly.
\x93Take him!\x94 Aerune roared, gesturing toward the Bard. He blew
his horn, summoning back his Hounds and lesser creatures.
The monsters he\x92d been fighting melted away like ice in a
blast furnace and Eric stopped playing, feeling the magic he\x92d been following
simply . . . stop. For the first time he became aware of
his surroundings.
Searchlights. Gunfire. Elves on horses. Men with guns.
What the hell have I stumbled into?
The bait went up like a roman candle,
dead in an instant. When Aerune turned, Elkanah took the break in the stalemate
as an opportunity to move his men back toward the trucks. Their iron bodies
should provide some cover, and he was still holding in mind the Eleventh
Commandment: Don\x92t Get Caught. They\x92d lost the bait, they\x92d lost half a dozen
men, but if they could get the net over the guy on the horse, they still might
be able to salvage something out of this mess.
The horsemen were ignoring his guys for the moment, and
Elkanah was thankful for small favors. He yanked the net out of the back of one
of the trucks, gesturing for those still on their feet to help him. The net
hissed along the grass behind him like a metal serpent.
Then he saw what it was that had made Aerune pull back. An
ordinary guy wearing street clothes, with what looked like a flute in his hand.
The searchlights made the silver radiate like a chunk of burning phosphorus,
but even in the brightness, the guy glowed, a bright blue as deep as the
October sky. Instantly, Elkanah made up his mind.
If Aerune wants this guy, then so do we.
\x93Get him!\x94 Elkanah shouted, gesturing toward the
flute-player.
Eric heard sounds behind him and risked looking away from the
Unseleighe Lord on the horse. Behind him were half a dozen guys in commando
suits. Some of them were wearing chain mail and carrying spears. All of them
had guns.
\x93Sir? Step this way, please. You\x92re going to have to come
with us,\x94 their leader said with surreal politeness.
Eric
backed away again, trying to keep both sides in sight. He couldn\x92t imagine why
the commandos hadn\x92t run \xADscreaming\x97he\x92d never seen elves like these, but he
knew what he was seeing\x97a Wild Hunt.
\x93Choose quickly, Bard!\x94 the leader of the Hunt called to him,
holding out his hand. \x93You will have no second chance, and I think your shields
will not hold against their weaponry! Choose! Them\x97or us!\x94
The hell I will!
He had to get out of here, and knew he\x92d only have one shot
at escape. He reached inside himself, to where the music ran like a deep
underground river and pulled up a melody for which there were no earthly terms.
As it filled him, he reached out for the half-created Nexus, twisting it around
him as a stage magician might swirl a cape.
And he vanished.
The Bard was gone! Aerune snarled his displeasure, his breath
coming in a serpent\x92s hiss. So close! And yet the Bard had dared to defy him!
He would have liked to slay all those witnesses to his humiliation, but without
a Nexus to draw from, he dared not waste the power. His vengeance must wait,
and be all the sweeter for being so long denied. He wheeled his steed, slashing
a Portal to Underhill open in the very air. His mount staggered beneath him,
energy bled from every pore\x97he could hold this gate for seconds only, but it
would have to be enough. Wielding his sword as if it were a whip, he drove the
Hunt through the Portal ahead of him, letting it seal itself behind him.
Angel stared at Elkanah for a long moment in the sudden
surreal silence. The guy with the flute, the guys on horses, had all gone pop
like a soap bubble. The Threshold operatives were alone in Central Park, and in
the distance Angel could hear the sound of sirens. Their little excursion here
hadn\x92t quite gone unnoticed.
\x93Does anyone have an explanation for what just happened
here?\x94 he finally asked.
\x93We can worry about that later,\x94 Elkanah said. There was a
livid burn along the side of his face, and he looked like he\x92d been through the
wringer. \x93Right now we\x92ve got to sanitize this place and get out of here before
the cops show up. Get out the flamethrowers\x97and get the wounded into the
trucks!\x94
Those still on their feet hurried to obey, hosing down the
dry grass to eliminate bloodstains, grabbing dropped equipment as fast as they
could. Someone scattered a carefully prepared litter of expended fire-crackers
and beer cans to dress the site for the police. In less than five minutes they
were on their way, running dark through the Park to one of its northern exits.
He was not looking forward to the report he was going to have
to make.
At six o\x92clock this evening, Robert Lintel had been a man
well-pleased with himself and the world. It was midnight now.
Things had changed.
His men had vacated Central Park moments ahead of an army of
cops. They\x92d lost Hancock. Beirkoff was a gibbering wreck. They hadn\x92t caught
Aerune. And when another wild card had turned up\x97someone Aerune wanted more
than he\x92d wanted Hancock, by all reports\x97they\x92d lost him, too. Half his men
were dead\x97burned by lasers or hacked to death by swords\x97and all the survivors
could tell him were a lot of confused tales about armored men on horseback,
giant wolves, and monsters.
Monsters. He\x92d thought better of them than that.
They were supposed to be elite troops, the best soldiers of fortune that money
could buy. And they ran away like a pack of frightened schoolgirls.
Robert shook his head, pacing the expensive carpet of his
top-floor office. He knew they were good. They\x92d never failed him before. So
what had really happened out there?
Before Campbell took off, she\x92d been babbling about elves and
the hordes of faerie, but those things that had been in the park tonight
certainly didn\x92t act like anything Robert had ever seen in a cartoon. Still,
maybe she and her stupid telepath hadn\x92t been as crazy as he\x92d thought. Maybe
there was something in what she\x92d been saying\x97maybe there were some kind
of space aliens living here on earth, space aliens that had been the source for
a bunch of legends about gods and elves and things, like that von Daniken guy
said.
Robert relaxed, pleased to have thought his way through to
the truth. That had to be it. Not elves. Space aliens. He\x92d have Dr. Ram turn
Vickie Moon inside out to find out what else she knew.
Because whoever they are, they\x92re poking their pointy noses
in where they\x92re not wanted, and if they can appear and disappear the way
they\x92ve been doing, it won\x92t be long \xADbefore they come here.
He sat down in the cushioned leather chair behind his desk
and pushed a button. \x93Find Beirkoff and get him up here. Bring Moon. I don\x92t
care what time it is. That\x92s what I pay you for.\x94
He sat back, thinking furiously. He was on the right track
with T-Stroke, he knew it. That young guy who\x92d wandered into the middle of
things\x97Elkanah said that this Aerune had spoken to him. If Aerune wanted him
that badly, then so did Bob Lintel. The guy could obviously do everything the
Survivors could do, and he didn\x92t seem to be in any danger of shrivelling up
and dying either.
If I get him and can find out how he does it, I can make
more. And then I can write my own ticket. I don\x92t know where he\x92s gone, but
he\x92s got to come back some time. And when I\x92ve got a stable of psychic
assassins who can kill with a thought, I\x92m not going to have to worry about the
Justice Department or the SEC anymore. I\x92ll be able to write my own ticket
anywhere on the planet . . . and I think the U.S.
Government would be more than interested in getting in on the bidding.
But why wait? Nobody ever made a profit sitting on their
hands. It was time to take the war to the enemy. . . .
Fortunately Logan was still with Ria when all hell broke
loose. She\x92d ordered up dinner from room service for both of them while she\x92d
made some calls to the Coast. If junkies were turning into mages, somebody, somewhere
was making the drugs that were turning them. And Ria wanted to find out who. It
wasn\x92t impossible that this was some Unseleighe plot. Some of them positively
doted on working through human pawns, using long convoluted plots like
something out of a James Bond novel when a simple bullet to the head would be a
lot more cost-effective.
She was standing by the window, looking out over the city,
when she saw the flash of light deep in the park. Seconds later the riptide of
unexpected magic washed over her\x97Bardic, Unseleighe, and every shading in
between. Ria staggered back, caught off balance by the sudden assault on her
shields, and went down.
She woke up as Logan was lifting her onto a couch. His dark
face was impassive and wary. \x93Are you all right?\x94
\x93Yes.\x94
She didn\x92t elaborate. Her shields had gone to full strength in the second after
the assault, but she could already tell that whatever it had been was gone now.
Waving Logan away, she got to her feet again and walked
carefully back to the window. There were four police cars pulled up on the
street outside the park, lights flashing.
\x93My,\x94 Ria said coolly, eyebrows raised.
Logan was already on the phone, calling his office. She heard
him give his location and ask for a weather report. He listened for a moment,
then hung up.
\x93There\x92s been a report of shots fired inside the park and a
lot of bright lights,\x94 he said tersely.
And more than shots, Ria thought. \x93I want to go
down there. But I don\x92t want to get involved with the police.\x94
He glanced at her, and she saw him think the problem over.
\x93Let\x92s
give it a while. I\x92ll check back with my office in a few minutes and see what
the cops are reporting,\x94 Logan said.
Fifteen minutes later the police cars were gone. According to
the frequencies Gotham Security monitored, the NYPD figured the disturbance was
caused by some kids setting off fireworks. Ria knew better. The only question
remaining was: what exactly had it been?
She entered the park cautiously, Logan taking point. He was
wonderfully incurious about what was going on . . . but
then Ria was paying good money for that. She only hoped his perfect manners
weren\x92t going to get either of them killed.
By the time they reached the spot Ria had marked from her
window, there was nobody in sight. She wasn\x92t particularly surprised to find it
was the place Eric had been so interested in, but now the half-built Nexus was
gone as if it had never been.
Suddenly there was a shadow above her\x97something big coming in
for a landing. A pistol appeared in Logan\x92s hand\x97a Desert Eagle .60, capable of
taking down a moose with one shot or punching right through a car\x92s
engine-block.
\x93Wait,\x94 Ria said, raising her hand.
The creature landed, and bounded toward her, talking all the
way. It was Greystone, the talking gargoyle from Eric\x92s apartment.
\x93Blondie, we got trouble, big trouble\x97Eric just went \x91poof\x92
on us, and somebody was holding a real brawl here when he went!\x94
Running
up behind him were a fortyish Latina woman and an exotic dark-skinned woman in
a patrolman\x92s uniform. Neither of them looked surprised to see Greystone. So
these must be the Guardians Eric told me about, showing up a day late and a
dollar short. So much for the safety of the Free World. Ria glanced toward
Logan, but his Desert Eagle had vanished as if it\x92d never been there. His face
was impassive. Like a good bodyguard, he faded back behind her, where he could
watch what happened without intruding.
\x93Greystone, who is this? What\x92s she doing here?\x94 the Latina
asked.
\x93She\x92s Eric\x92s ladyfriend, Ms. Hernandez,\x94 Greystone
answered.
\x93She\x92s okay. Her name\x92s Ria.\x94
\x93What\x92s happening? Where\x92s Eric?\x94 Ria demanded.
\x93Gone,\x94 Greystone repeated, sounding as rattled as a gargoyle
ever got.
\x93We\x92re friends of Eric\x92s, too,\x94 Hernandez said. \x93We, um,
heard he was having trouble up here, but when we got here it was all over. And
what brings you here?\x94
\x93My hotel room overlooks the Park,\x94 Ria said. It didn\x92t count
as an answer, but at least it was a response. She knew what Eric had told her
about the Guardians, and wondered what he\x92d told them about her. And, of
course, how much of it they believed. . . .
\x93I\x92m going to take another sweep around,\x94 the patrolwoman
said. \x93Nobody\x92s done a real search of the area. Maybe there\x92s a clue.\x94
You
certainly look like you could use one, Ria thought, but didn\x92t say anything out loud.
If this was Toni Hernandez, then her friend the cop must be Jimmie Youngblood,
another of the Guardians. But even if Youngblood was no ordinary cop, it never
paid to antagonize the police. When Youngblood walked away, Ria returned her
attention to Hernandez. It wouldn\x92t hurt to be sociable, especially since she
wanted something from them.
\x93Hello,\x94 she said, holding out her hand, and smiling. \x93I\x92m
Ria. Eric\x92s told me so much about you.\x94
\x93I\x92m
Toni,\x94 the other woman said, smiling faintly at the inane exchange of social
pleasantries. Ria took the proffered hand. Toni\x92s grip was dry and warm.
\x93Jimmie and I are trying to figure out what happened here. And just now, we
wouldn\x92t turn down any help.\x94 She studied Ria consideringly.
\x93I\x92ll do what I can,\x94 Ria said, looking around. Whether
I\x92ll tell you about it remains to be seen. \x93Maybe you could start by
telling me what you do know? I know that Eric was very interested in
this . . . location.\x94
Toni sighed. \x93We asked him to take a look at it last night.
Let\x92s just say there\x92s been some weird stuff happening, and this spot seems to
be the eye of the hurricane. Eric said there were Dark Elves involved, building
some kind of doorway . . . would you know anything about
that?\x94
From
the look on her face, it was clear that Toni Hernandez would rather have cut
off her hand than asked, but it was equally clear that she knew she was in over
her head.
\x93Less than you\x92d think, but some,\x94 Ria said. \x93I can
tell you right now that the doorway you\x92re worrying about is no longer a
problem. It\x92s gone.\x94 And Eric\x92s gone with it, damn the man. \x93Let me look
around a little, okay?\x94
\x93Sure,\x94 Toni said, taking a step back. \x93But you won\x92t mind if
Greystone keeps an eye on you, will you?\x94
\x93As long as he doesn\x92t step on my feet,\x94 Ria said, composing
her face into another pleasant but totally unmeant smile. She turned away from
Toni and began walking in a slow circle around the area where the Nexus had
been, frowning in concentration. Both the other women had brought flashlights,
but Ria could see clearly in dimmer light than this.
The ground was cut up and torn in a wide area, almost as if
someone had been trying to plow it, or to dig something up, and there were wide
burn-scars defacing the grass that remained. Ria blinked, summoning up her
mage-sight. Now she could see that a lot of magic had been thrown around here.
There were the scars of levin bolts on the grass and the trees, and the entire
place reeked of Unseleighe magics and human death.
And as if that weren\x92t trouble enough, the Wild Hunt had been
here as well. Perenor had sometimes spoken of the Unseleighe rade\x97he\x92d
had the right to call one, but had never done so, dismissing the Hunt as too
flashy and undis\xADciplined for his needs. More to the point, Ria thought now, it
would have motivated the drowsing Court of Elfhame Sun-Descending as nothing
else could have, creating an opposition that Perenor hadn\x92t wanted to face.
Every Elfhame within a thousand miles must know about this one\x97she was only
surprised that the park wasn\x92t crawling with Highborn.
But Central Park is in the middle of New York City. No elf
would come here without a damned good reason. And you walked right into the
middle of it, didn\x92t you, Eric?
The Wild Magic she\x92d followed down into the slums was
everywhere, stronger than she\x92d ever seen it before. Someone with Power had
died here, in addition to humans and Sidhe. Ria could still see the dead
wizard\x92s ghost, hovering like a plume of red smoke in the air. Dead, and
recently, and slain by the levin bolt whose backlash she\x92d been hit with.
But it wasn\x92t Eric, which was some small relief.
Once she\x92d sorted out the Wild Talent and the Hunt, the
remaining traces were easy to read. The lingering effects of very neatly done
magic, all wrapped up with no loose ends, spelled Eric as plainly to her Second
Sight as if it were a neon sign twelve feet high. He\x92d been throwing Bard-magic
around as if he\x92d been trying to put out a fire, but even in the middle of a
fight, his work was neat, disciplined, careful, the work of a fully trained
Bard, confident in his skill. He hadn\x92t killed the Wild Talent\x97that wasn\x92t his
style\x97so it had to have been the Unseleighe rade. But from what she\x92d
seen before, the Wild Talent and the Unseleighe were allies of some kind.
She glanced over her shoulder. Both Toni and Logan were
giving her a lot of elbow room.
Someone else wasn\x92t.
\x93You gonna do a spell, Blondie?\x94 Greystone asked \xADhopefully.
Ria shot him a deadly look. \x93I haven\x92t seen everything that\x92s
here to see, yet\x97something else was here besides your Dark Lord and Eric, but
it wasn\x92t magical, so it isn\x92t leaving traces.\x94
\x93Does this help?\x94 On its stony palm, the gargoyle held out an
expended shell casing. \x93I found it on the ground.\x94
Ria took it from him with a gratitude she was unwilling to
show. \x93It might.\x94 She held it in the palm of her hand, gazing intently down at
the small piece of brass. :Speak to me, smith-wrought forging. Who has
touched you? Where have you been?:
The shell casing was too small to retain much information,
but Ria gained a blurry impression of men with guns\x97many guns\x97all holding
shells like this one.
\x93There were soldiers here,\x94 she said slowly for Greystone\x92s
benefit. \x93Some kind of paramilitary group, anyway.\x94 She handed the casing back
to Greystone.
She frowned, trying to piece the puzzle together. Eric, the
Hunt, and a wild Talent had been here. So had a team of purely human
mercenaries. Since she couldn\x92t imagine Eric allying himself with either group,
the best guess was that Eric had been caught between the two and needed to get
out of the way fast. The half-built Nexus would have been the weakest point in
local reality, so he must have used it to escape to Underhill, which would
explain why it had vanished so neatly. . . .
Ria relaxed slightly. He was alive. Eric had a lot of \xADallies
in Underhill, and even enemies would treat a Bard with respect and probably be
willing to ransom him back to his own people. So if he was in trouble at the
moment, it wasn\x92t urgent trouble, and she could call in a few favors to make
things easier for him if it wasn\x92t possible for her to track him down herself.
She walked back over to where Hernandez stood. She wasn\x92t
interested in the situation here any further, but she supposed she owed Toni a
hint of what the Guardians were dealing with.
\x93Do you know what a Wild Hunt is?\x94 Ria asked.
Toni blinked, as if she were taken off-guard by the question.
\x93Some kind of a . . . it\x92s when the dead ride out to hunt
down the living, isn\x92t it?\x94
\x93Close enough,\x94 Ria answered. \x93Except that it\x92s usually the
Unseleighe Sidhe riding, not human dead. Bottom line: a Hunt has ridden through
here recently. It looks to me like they clashed with some men with guns\x97the police
had a report of gunfire here in the park about half an hour ago, didn\x92t they?\x94
\x93Yeah. They checked it out and didn\x92t find anything. Decided
it was kids with cherry bombs. But why would elves be fighting humans here? Or
maybe that question should be asked the other way around: how did the men know
the elves would be here?\x94
That\x92s your problem, not mine, Ria
thought. You\x92re the ones who didn\x92t want Eric\x92s help when he offered it, and
I\x92m not a public utility. \x93I don\x92t know. But apparently Eric didn\x92t think
you were taking his warning seriously enough and decided to look into things
for himself. I know he came back here today around noon, but I wasn\x92t with him
so I don\x92t know where he went from here.\x94 Not that I can\x92t find out if I
have to.
Toni Hernandez looked as though she were going to press Ria
for more details, and Ria was debating how much more to give her, when the
other woman\x97Jimmie\x97came running back.
\x93Look!\x94 she said with excited self-mockery, \x93a genuine clue.
Somebody\x92s been moving trucks\x97big trucks, heavy enough to leave tracks even
with the ground being frozen\x97through the park. I found this near one of the
sets of tracks. Someone must have dropped it while they were bailing.\x94 She held
it out to Toni. Toni took it, and held it up so Ria could see it.
\x93It looks like one of those magnetic hotel-room keys,\x94 Toni
said, turning it over in her fingers. \x93But there\x92s no name on it. Just a logo.\x94
\x93May I see it?\x94 Ria said, keeping her voice even with an
effort.
She schooled her face to blankness, inspecting the card. It
was grey, easy to miss in the dark on a quick inspection, and anyway, the
police that\x92d been here earlier had been looking for perpetrators, not
evidence. The card had a gold logo stamped on it . . . a
logo Ria had become very familiar with over the past few days.
Threshold Labs. That\x92s a LlewellCo subsidiary!
Someone is going to pay for this. Dearly.
\x93No, I\x92m sorry,\x94 she said, smiling sweetly as she handed the
key-card back to Toni. \x93I travel a lot on business, and I thought I might
recognize it, but I don\x92t. Sorry.\x94 And with her shields at full strength, not
even a telepathic gargoyle could get through them to see that she was lying
through her teeth.
\x93Oh.\x94 Toni sounded disappointed. \x93Can\x92t you tell anything
else? You\x92re one of them, aren\x92t you? An elf?\x94
Ria winced slightly. \x93No, sorry.\x94 Just a mongrel that
neither side wants to claim. \x93I\x92m sorry I can\x92t be of more help, but I\x92m
afraid I\x92m not on the Unseleighe Sidhe\x92s Christmas card list, and this isn\x92t
really something I\x92ve got much experience with.\x94 She tried to keep her
impatience from showing. Threshold was her problem, her
responsibility. She intended to deal with it without any kind of New Age Occult
Police help.
\x93You\x92ve been a lot of help already,\x94 Toni said meditatively.
\x93I just wish we knew where Eric was.\x94
Ria
raised her eyebrows in surprise. \x93I thought I\x92d explained that. He took the
Gate into Underhill with him. But I\x92m sure he\x92ll be back as soon as he can.\x94
\x93I guess you\x92re right.\x94 Toni looked as if she had more
questions to ask, so Ria spoke quickly to forestall them.
\x93If there\x92s anything else you need, Eric has my number.\x94 She
turned and walked quickly away, leaving the two Guardians and Greystone staring
after her.
All of a sudden, everything was quiet.
Eric straightened out of his half-crouch, lowering the flute
to his side and blinking in the deafening silence. The elves and the soldiers
were gone, it was \x93day\x94 instead of night, and it was warm enough that he was
perspiring in his sweater and leather jacket. Eric was alone, somewhere
Underhill. He looked around cautiously.
He stood in the middle of a primeval forest, one lit by the
sourceless silvery light of Underhill. Trees that had grown unmolested since
the beginning of Time rose high into the sky, and the ground beneath his feet
was carpeted with a thick pale moss filled with tiny glowing blue flowers,
making it look as if the earth beneath his feet were carpeted with stars.
Despite its beauty, the forest had the faintly unloved air of a theater between
performances; a stage without actors. None of the High Elves were in residence
here, then\x97only the Lesser Sidhe, the Low Court, those which could not survive
except in Underhill or near a Nexus grove. The low elves were scatterbrained at
best; he could expect no help there.
As if the thought had summoned them back, he began to hear
faint far-off birdcalls, and slowly, the forest filled with sound once more. An
enormous purple butterfly, silver crescent moons upon its wings, wafted regally
past, and at Eric\x92s feet, something small and grey and furry exploded into
action, zipping into hiding before Eric could quite see it. He grinned in spite
of himself.
He was better off than he\x92d been a moment before, and even if
the terrain was unfamiliar, there was plenty of magic here to play with. Unless
he ran into a High Magus in a real bad mood, Eric could handle anything this
stretch of Underhill had to throw at him.
But since I\x92m not going to be staying, the situation isn\x92t
going to come up.
He could open a Gate right here and step back into the mortal
world, but without a Nexus to anchor him\x97and with no idea of where \x93here\x94
was\x97he might find himself appearing on Earth centuries in the past\x97or the
future, or thousands of miles from where he went in. It would be better to have
an experienced conductor for this little trip, and Eric knew just where to find
one. Elvensteeds were created for situations like this.
But first, he had to change his clothes before he fried.
That was a lot easier here than it would have been back in
New York. Here there was so much magic in the air that it was like breathing
pure oxygen. Eric concentrated for a moment, considering what he should wear,
and settled on just getting rid of the heavy sweater and turning his wool
slacks into a pair of jeans that wouldn\x92t get ruined so easily by a walk
through the woods. He might need the jacket if he Gated to someplace colder,
and besides, he was more attached to it than he was to either sweater or
slacks. There was no guarantee that having once banished them, he\x92d ever get
them back; magic was funny that way.
Having switched to cooler clothes, Eric breathed a deep sigh
of relief. He rolled his shoulders, easing out the kinks.
Now to get out of here. Maestro, a little traveling music. . . .
He raised his flute to his lips and began to play. First a
few trills to reassure the forest that he meant it no harm, then he segued into
his Calling. The forest around him shivered, half-wakened by Eric\x92s magic, and,
as if from far in the distance, he heard Lady Day\x92s faint acknowledgement
inside his head. The elvensteed would find him wherever he was, and reach him
as soon as she could.
Now all he had left to do was wait\x97which was just as well, as
he had a lot of thinking to do about recent events. Eric looked around, walking
through the forest a bit until he found a comfortable place to sit. One of the
great trees had fallen (or more likely, a fallen tree had been created by one
of the Sidhe at just this spot the way the Victorians used to build \x93ancient
ruins\x94 in their gardens), and its trunk provided a pleasant seat from which to
think matters over\x97and if he got hungry waiting, he could just conjure up
whatever he wanted to eat or drink from the magic in the air. While Eric hadn\x92t
mastered kenning, the ability to create exact duplicates of anything he
knew well out of pure magic, he could certainly summon up anything within a
reasonable distance to come to him.
So it\x92s a great place to visit, but I don\x92t think I\x92d
actually want to live here. All things considered, Eric preferred the
\x93real world,\x94 even though New York didn\x92t seem to be a healthy place to be at
the moment, at least for elven-trained Bards.
He\x92d blundered into something big and nasty back there in the
Park\x97something even worse than Dharinel\x92s gloomy warnings about conquest-mad
Unseleighe\x97and if he didn\x92t want to have his head handed to him the next time
he ran into the Guys With Guns, he\x92d better stop and think things through now,
while he had a breathing space. Dharinel always said that a moment of thought
could save a year on the battlefield.
The Guardians said there was trouble in Central Park, and I
found out that the Dark Sidhe was trying to put up a Nexus about where I
dreamed of the goblin tower, but when I followed the trail of the magic he was
using, it seemed to be all tangled up with the homeless folks downtown. At the
Park, I think there was some kind of a mage with the soldiers that the Wild
Hunt was trying to get at, but when the Unseleighe Lord saw me, he killed the mage,
and that got rid of the monsters I was trying to take out. And I beat it out of
there, but the Sidhe\x92s already seen me. And EVERYBODY loves a Bard.
So . . . could things be any more of
a mess? Maybe, Eric decided with a sigh. But not easily. Guns and Sidhe
don\x92t mix. He kicked at the moss beneath his sneakers. Tiny beetles glowing
in a rainbow of colors scurried out of sight, and Eric watched them for a
moment, fascinated. The air was filled with birdsong now, making his fingers
itch for a notebook so he could try to get some of it down on paper. Whatever
he wrote would be a poor copy of the original, though. Still, it might be fun
to try.
At least his responsibilities in this mess were clear. He had
to get back to his own time and place, and once he did, he needed to contact
Elfhame Everforest and tell them about the Wild Hunt showing up in Central
Park. That should be enough reason for the Seleighe Sidhe to break the truce
and settle this particular Unseleighe\x92s hash, but that wasn\x92t the only problem.
There was still the matter of all those guys playing
soldier . . . the ones with the now-dead mage.
Back
in San Francisco, the Feds who were chasing him and Bethie had been tangled up
with a project that was trying to tap into natural psi powers. But most people
didn\x92t have much in the way of either easily tapped psi or innate Power: the
Gift usually ran deep in humans, most of the time needing magic or training to
bring it to the fore.
He flashed back to the packet of white powder he\x92d seen in
Annie\x92s hand in the alley outside the soup kitchen downtown. What if somebody
had figured out a way around needing magic or years of training to make a wizard?
What if they\x92d come up with some kind of drug that forced Talent to the
surface? That would explain the twisted mage he\x92d been fighting, and if the bad
guys had been testing their stuff on the streets, it might also explain all
those deaths that the Guardians\x97and the people at the kitchen\x97had been talking
about. Magery while you wait. No wonder that nut on the horse was so
interested. If that stuff can crank up a human into a mage, just imagine what
it would do for an elf?
Eric shuddered. That was something he\x92d just as soon not find
out about. But if the soldier-boys meant that the Feds were mixed up in things
again, he was in even more trouble than he\x92d thought. Because if they were
looking for Bethie, they were looking for him as well . . . and
his cover would be blown the moment anyone looked really closely.
Well, this is another fine mess you\x92ve gotten us into,
Banyon. Master Dharinel was right, not that his being right would have kept me
from meddling. But it doesn\x92t really look like I\x92ve improved the situation
once, and now both sides are after ME. Gee, Brain, what do we do now? Well,
Pinky . . .
He needed help and advice, and from someone who was as
comfortable with high-level human politics as Eric was with Bardic magic. The
trouble was, he didn\x92t know anyone who fit that particular bill but Ria. After
what he could tell her about today, he was pretty sure she\x92d help him if she
could, but that help might come at a higher price than he was comfortable with
paying.
Well, we can burn that bridge when we come to it, as Mason
said to Dixon.
All of a sudden the forest fell silent. The birds stopped
singing, and the creatures scuttling through the fallen leaves froze where they
were. Eric looked around quickly.
Trouble.
Nothing in sight, but his shoulders crawled. There was
someone behind him. He could feel it. Eric got to his feet, turning around
slowly, shields at full, to see what had startled the forest.
He stared. It looked like a giant lawn gnome brought to
hideous life. Upright, it would probably stand almost four feet high, but it
was bent over so far it was hard for Eric to judge its size, balancing on grimy
bare feet and the knuckles of its long, apelike arms. It was wearing human
clothes centuries out of date\x97calf-length leather pants and a long grimy smock
that might have been white once but was now soiled to a grimy brown. Its face
was a caricature of a human face\x97almost noseless, with tiny piggy eyes. On its
head it wore a crusty brownish-red cap that it had dipped in some thick liquid
that was flaking away now as it dried. The creature stank of undefinable
things.
When it saw Eric\x92s face, it smiled, the grin splitting its
nightmare face impossibly wide. Its mouth was filled with long yellow teeth.
Sharp yellow teeth.
ELEVEN:
LORD
OF THE
HOLLOW HILLS
Robert
Lintel regarded his temporary headquarters with disgust. Even in December, the
smell was incredible. It was filthy beyond anything he\x92d imagined
possible\x97interior walls torn down, some covered in graffiti, whole rooms used
as toilets, people sleeping anywhere, on torn mattresses or just piles of rags.
This abandoned building was a haven for runaways. That was why he\x92d picked it.
He stared at the terrified band of feral children huddled
together in the middle of the room. He was doing these kids a favor, he
realized. They should be grateful to him for putting an end to their whole
trivial sordid existence. For once in their useless lives, they\x92d get the
chance to do something that mattered, something that would benefit people more
important than they could ever be.
As
far as he had been able to tell from Jeanette\x92s notes and what he\x92d gotten from
the Survivors back at Threshold before he\x92d used them up, the younger you were,
the higher the initial dose, the better chance you had of surviving exposure to
T-Stroke and developing the Talents that Robert Lintel needed. He didn\x92t have
any more time to mess around handing out free samples to dozens of people to
get one or two Survivors. He needed broad-based success\x97and fast.
\x93Okay, you! Sabatini! Is this everyone?\x94 he barked.
\x93Everyone in the building, sir,\x94 Sabatini said. Robert had
brought the cream of his surviving security troops here with him. The eight of
them were loyal\x97and smart enough to know that they were implicated in
everything Threshold had done so far. They needed Robert\x92s protection\x97and
Robert needed what these children could provide.
\x93We\x92ve got all the exits sealed. Nobody goes in or out,\x94
Sabatini said.
\x93Good.\x94 Street hookers and runaways were no match for trained
professionals. His men had taken the place over before half of them realized
they were being invaded, and within minutes his operatives had searched the
whole building and rounded all of the squatters up and brought them here.
The funny thing was, not one of them had fought back. Robert
had seen this kind of behavior before. Most people took a certain amount of
time to work themselves up to physical resistance in a traumatic situation.
Often the difference between the amateur and the professional was their
quickness off the starting blocks, not their martial arts skill. The amateur
might be just as proficient as the professional, but it took him longer to make
up his mind that the situation required violence. And that was the difference
between success and failure. So to keep any would-be heroes off balance,
Robert\x92d had his prisoners slapped around a little once he\x92d gained control of
the squat, just to drive home who was boss now. The children huddled together
like a pack of orphaned kittens, wearing lace and leather, lipstick and
sequins, the tawdry finery of a pack of Lost Boys and Girls who would never
live to reach Neverland. They\x92d seen the uniforms and the guns, collected a few
bruises, and now not one of them was willing to do so much as complain, no
matter what he did to them.
They might get their spunk back in a few hours, but by then
it would be far too late. In fact, it was too late right
about . . .
\x93Now. Start dosing them.\x94
Angel and Sabatini shouldered through the circle of huddled
children. Of the twenty-four men who\x92d been in Central Park last night, only
these eight remained, but that was more than enough for his purposes. In fact,
when he got what he wanted here, they\x92d be disposable, too.
Robert had brought one of those pressure injectors with him
from the lab, and all the T-6/157 he could find. Even after the random doses
they\x92d put out on the streets over the last two days, there were several kilos
left\x97more than enough to build an army with. As Angel held a gun to their
heads, Sabatini injected the street kids one by one with a double dose of
T-Stroke. Most of them didn\x92t even make it into a sitting position before
passing out.
Robert smiled his approval as the last of the street kids
dropped unconscious to the ground.
\x93Sir?\x94 Elkanah asked. \x93What do we do with the ones that go
crazy? If we put them out on the street, they might lead someone back here.\x94
\x93Put them down in the basement.\x94 On his earlier reconnoitre
of the building, Robert had seen that the steps to the cellar were gone. Anyone
thrown down there\x97\xADassuming they survived the eighteen-foot drop\x97would have no
way of getting back out again. \x93Put the dead ones down there, too. They might
as well have some company.\x94
Sabatini was sorting the limp bodies now. Two thirds of the
kids were still alive. So I was right about younger subjects surviving
better. All to the good. There\x92ll be no lack of subjects. Thousands of kids
vanish every year, Robert thought.
Almost as soon as the dead bodies were cleared away, the
Screamers started to awaken. They were harder to dispose of than he\x92d expected;
supernatural strength seemed to go hand-in-hand with violent psychosis, and his
operatives had to play rough. Fortunately only five of the surviving subjects
needed that treatment, and with the doors between the kitchen and the front
room shut, he couldn\x92t even hear them screaming once they\x92d been dumped in the
basement.
And if their presence lured that pointy-eared claim-jumper
Aerune back again, that was all to the good. A steel knife through the gut
should settle him down and make him see reason.
Soon, the Survivors started to rouse, staring around
themselves with wide, disbelieving eyes. There was a skinny blonde brat who
seemed to be their leader. She glared at Lintel in terrified defiance, her
mascara running down her painted cheeks in thick black streaks.
It doesn\x92t get any better than this, Robert
thought gloatingly. This was always the best part, watching someone who was too
terrified of him to run away. Campbell had been an exemplary employee in many
respects, but she\x92d never been properly afraid of him. Maybe he\x92d look her up
and change that, once he had this situation squared away to his liking. He
looked around for some place to sit, found nothing, and resigned himself to
standing. He wouldn\x92t be here for more than a few hours, anyway.
After that, he\x92d be taking the war to the enemy.
\x93Now\x97\x94 he said, smiling predatorially at the Survivors. \x93This
is what I want you to do. . . .\x94
Ria hadn\x92t slept all night, and neither had a lot of people
in the West Coast offices. She\x92d dragged Jonathan out of bed with her midnight
phone call, but Ria was too angry about her discovery to care: she wanted
action and she wanted it now.
Jonathan delivered, gods bless him. It hadn\x92t taken him long
to get the first of the answers she wanted, and the more she found out about
Threshold Labs, the worse things sounded. The company had been draining even
more money from LlewellCo than she\x92d realized at first glance, its depredations
carefully camouflaged by the bright boys and girls in Oversight and Accounting.
And
as for what Threshold had done with all that LlewellCo cash . . .
\x93Since when does a pharmaceutical company need a private
army?\x94 she demanded into the telephone. \x93These invoices are ludicrous! We\x92ve
been shovelling money at them for five years and all we\x92ve gotten have
been glowing \xADpromises\x97I want to know exactly what Threshold\x92s been
doing with its time and my money and I want to know yesterday.\x94
Baker and Hardesty were behind this. Only someone high up in
LlewellCo could have covered things up for this long. Well, the two of them
were going to be looking for new jobs by the time the sun set in California,
Ria vowed.
As for Threshold\x92s CEO, Robert Lintel . . .
Jonathan\x92s people in Computer Security had gotten into the
Threshold computers without trouble\x97no surprise, as most of them were former
outlaw hackers, working for LlewellCo as an alternative to jail. According to
what they\x92d pulled out of the files so far\x97the data would take weeks to sift
thoroughly\x97Lintel had been running a black books research program for almost as
long as he\x92d been running Threshold, something about triggering psychic powers
in humans through the use of psychotropic drug cocktails.
And it looks like he got far enough with it to go to field
trials. I am going to crucify him for this\x97and anyone else I can get my hands
on!
She paced furiously, but she knew there was no point in
coming down on Threshold until she had absolute proof. It would be too easy for
them to start dumping records at the first sign of discovery\x97although, to Ria\x92s
fury, someone seemed to have anticipated her there as well.
Lintel certainly hadn\x92t been doing the research himself\x97not
with nothing more than a Harvard MBA\x97but whoever the production-end brains of
the outfit had been, he or she seemed to have jumped ship, because there was no
evidence of him or his research notes anywhere in the Threshold mainframe. If
Mr. X had gone to that much trouble to remove all trace of his former
employment, it was probably because he was on the run. Which meant that he was
out of the picture for the moment, and out of reach.
But I\x92ll find you, wherever you are. And when I do, you\x92ll
wish you\x92d gone down with Threshold!
She glanced at her watch, then over at the man sitting
silently on the couch. Logan looked like some kind of hyperrealistic sculpture
of a sleeping man, not that he was asleep. From time to time she surprised him
watching her, as if he were quietly assessing the situation. She wasn\x92t sure
why she\x92d kept him with her, but now she was glad she had.
\x93I\x92m going downtown to break into a lab,\x94 she said. \x93I own
it, but that probably won\x92t count for much just at the moment. I\x92ll need some
serious backup.\x94
\x93How serious?\x94 Logan asked. He got to his feet and stretched,
working out the kinks of a long sleepless night.
\x93They won\x92t have tanks,\x94 she thought, thinking back to the
scene in the Park. \x93Aside from that, assume the worst.\x94
While the team was assembled, Ria went off to change. This
assault would require armor of a different sort.
They arrived at Threshold just after the morning shift. The
Guardians still had the key-card someone had dropped in Central Park, but Ria
didn\x92t need it. She went in through the front door.
\x93Good morning. I\x92m Ria Llewellyn. I own this company. If you
want to have a job by tonight, you\x92ll keep your hands off that phone and buzz
us through,\x94 she said, her voice dangerous.
The receptionist took one look at Ria and the five men with
her and pressed the button. Ria went directly to the top floor, and forced her
way past a second receptionist and Lintel\x92s private secretary.
But all for nothing. Lintel wasn\x92t there. And from the look
of the place, he wasn\x92t coming back.
Ria swore feelingly. She\x92d been sure she\x92d get here in time
to nail the slimy bastard. Lintel had too much invested in Threshold to just go
slinking off leaving his turf undefended!
\x93Ma\x92am?\x94
The bodyguard she\x92d posted outside the door to watch the
secretary came inside, dragging someone by the scruff of the neck. The victim
was wearing a white lab coat, and looked absolutely terrified.
\x93I caught him coming out of the elevator, heading for
Lintel\x92s office. When he saw me he tried to bolt.\x94
\x93Bring
him over here,\x94 Ria said, leaning back against Lintel\x92s desk. Because she
thought she\x92d be facing a corporate raider this morning, she\x92d dressed to
match: a dark green Dior skirted suit with matching pumps. Dagger optional.
It didn\x92t take much in the way of Talent to read the man\x92s
mind. His name was Beirkoff, and he\x92d been one of the group in Central Park
last night. He\x92d also been Lintel\x92s inside man on the black budget op that
Lintel had been running, and now that he realized Lintel was gone, Beirkoff
knew he\x92d been cut off and left to twist in the wind. He\x92d be willing to do
anything to save his skin.
\x93Lose something?\x94 Ria asked mockingly. \x93Your safety net,
perhaps?\x94 Beirkoff\x92s face went grey, and for a moment, the bodyguard\x92s fist in
his collar was the only thing holding him up. The details of the project
flashed through his mind\x97an underground testing lab, some cells, too many
people dead. . . .
\x93Mr. Beirkoff, you have exactly one chance to save your life
and your freedom,\x94 Ria said, getting to her feet and leaning toward him. \x93Take
me down to the Black Labs and tell me everything you know about T-6/157.\x94
There was a slot for a key-card on the inside wall of the
Executive Elevator, and three unmarked buttons below it. Ria\x92d found the card
in Lintel\x92s desk, once she\x92d broken the lock. Beirkoff slid it into place and
pressed the third button.
Beirkoff hadn\x92t been good at forming coherent sentences, but
Ria\x92d had no trouble getting most of the story by skimming the surface of his
thoughts. Unfortunately, he had no idea what had happened after Eric had
vanished from the Park, nor what Lintel might be up to right now. Lintel had
sent him home for the night, and when he\x92d come back this morning, he\x92d walked
straight into Ria.
The level the elevator opened onto showed every sign of
having been hastily vacated. Doors stood open, files lay on the floor.
\x93Search it,\x94 Ria said crisply. Sorcerous telepathy wasn\x92t
admissible in court, and even direct testimony wouldn\x92t really hold up well
against a high-priced lawyer. She needed hard evidence to hang Lintel with.
She
got it when Beirkoff took her down to the holding cells. A man in a white lab
coat\x97Beirkoff\x92s thoughts identified him as Dr. Ramchandra, the only other
on-the-books Threshold employee with Black Level clearance\x97lay dead in the
hallway, shot neatly through the chest. Beirkoff was horrified, and Ria
suspected that he\x92d never seen anyone freshly dead before. Like so many
yuppies, his only encounters with death were via the media, or perhaps the
sanitized and beautified body of a friend or relative after the mortuary
professionals had made it accep\xADtable. Ria thought back to the battle in
Griffith Park. She\x92d seen violent death in every possible aspect. Bored with
his horror, she moved on.
All of the cells were full, and all of the occupants were
dead as well. They looked like the mummies from the Egyptian wing of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was hard to believe they\x92d ever been human.
\x93They were the ones who survived,\x94 Beirkoff said from behind
her in a shaken voice. \x93If the stuff didn\x92t kill them on the first shot and you
gave them a second dose, it was like they just . . . burned
out.\x94
\x93There\x92s no one here,\x94 Logan said, coming back down the hall.
He glanced at Ramchandra\x92s body and then back at Ria, his expression
unchanging. \x93But there\x92s a lab back there that looks like somebody used it to
cook up a major batch of something that isn\x92t there now.\x94
\x93Campbell did the cooking,\x94 Beirkoff said, recovering more by
the minute. \x93She got the stuff as far as field trials and then she took off.
But Mr. Lintel made sure she made up a big batch before she split.\x94
And Campbell was the only one who knew the recipe, though any
competent chemist could probably reconstruct it from a large enough sample, Ria
read in his mind. Campbell. Jeanette Campbell. I\x92ll remember that name.
Someday soon, Jeanette Campbell, you and I are going to have a short but
interesting talk.
It was time to call the cops and bust this situation wide
open. A part of her couldn\x92t help noting that this whole thing was going to be
a media bonus for LlewellCo\x97\xADvaliant chairwoman discovers illegal research
going on in one of her subsidiaries, does a Bernstein and Woodward, and turns
the results over to the cops. She\x92d be a Movie of the Week for sure. She\x92d also
be tied up in red tape and meetings for the next year, and Ria had other things
to do just at the moment. She turned to Lintel\x92s flunky.
\x93Listen to me, Beirkoff. You\x92d like to stay out of prison,
right?\x94
Beirkoff nodded, obviously more terrified right now of Ria
than of the dead body lying on the floor or the wrath of the absent Robert
Lintel.
\x93You
have exactly one hope of doing that. You are going to call the cops and report
what you found here, and tell them the following story: You came to me with
your suspicions. I sent you down here with a security team and orders to \xADnotify
the authorities if you found anything. I wasn\x92t here today. In fact, I\x92ve never
been here at all. There will be a lawyer here in an hour to handle LlewellCo\x92s
involvement, but you won\x92t wait for him. You\x92re going to give the police full
cooperation.
\x93Play it this way and you come out smelling like a rose. Cross me, and I guarantee that LlewellCo\x97and I
\xADpersonally\x97will do everything in our power to make the brief remainder of your
sordid existence a living hell.\x94
\x93Yes, sir! Yes, ma\x92am! I mean\x97yes. I can do that,\x94 Beirkoff
babbled.
\x93Good. I\x92m out of here. The rest of you, stay here and keep
Mr. Beirkoff honest.\x94
When she stepped out on the street again, the contrast was as
great as if she\x92d stepped through a Portal into Underhill. It was one of those
bright winter days that sometimes came in December, the kind that made you
think that New York was a nice place to be after all.
But right now it wasn\x92t a nice place for somebody. \xADBecause
somewhere out there right now, Robert Lintel was trying to turn ordinary humans
into mages using a drug that had a one hundred percent net fatality rate.
And he and Eric were on a collision course.
Eric drew himself up and did his level best to channel
Dharinel in a bad mood. The elven mage didn\x92t suffer fools gladly at the best
of times, and that damn-your-eyes arrogance was the only thing that would save
Eric now.
\x93It took you long enough to get here!\x94 he snarled at the
gnomish Unseleighe lackey in his best imitation of a pissed-off elven noble,
leaking a little magic past his shields to reinforce the effect. \x93Take me to
your Lord\x97at once, do you hear!\x94
And they said spending all that time at RenFaires would never
be good for anything. . . .
\x93Yes, High Lord. Urla hears and obeys. At once, High Lord!\x94
The creature knelt, pulling the cap from its head and kneading it between
enormous gnarled hands. Its wetness left brownish smears on Urla\x92s skin. Eric
had a sick feeling that he knew what it had been soaked with. Blood.
Not one of the good guys. That\x92s for sure.
But
for once Faire shtick wasn\x92t just a way of amusing travelers and filling his
pockets. This time he was playing for his life. His bluff had worked so far\x97it
was a safe bet that any of the Lesser creatures he encountered would owe fealty
to some High Lord or another, and even the Unseleighe Lords followed certain
rules\x97which was more than Eric could say for this Urla. He knew that Lady Day
would find him eventually, no matter where he went in Underhill. But until she
did, Eric was more or less trapped here, though rather less than more.
\x93Get up\x97get up!\x94 he said haughtily, waving the hand that
didn\x92t hold his flute. \x93I don\x92t have time for this nonsense!\x94
The redcap crawled backward submissively before springing to
its feet. Bowing and gesturing, it began to lead Eric through the forest. He
took the time to take his flute apart and put it back in its case in his
messenger bag before following. He didn\x92t know what he might encounter along
the way, and he didn\x92t want to lose the instrument.
Urla led him onward through the empty forest until they came
to an enormous tree. Its trunk was easily thirty feet around, and like many
trees this old and large, its lower trunk was hollow. Eric followed Urla
through the gap in the trunk, and when they came out the other side, the forest
was gone.
The place Eric found himself in now wasn\x92t nearly as nice.
For one thing, it stank. He and Urla were standing on a hummock of grass in
what seemed to be the center of a large swamp. Between the hummocks, the swamp
water glowed a faint toxic green, simmering languidly as bubbles of gas worked
their way to the surface and popped with an evil smacking sound. The
illumination here was dimmer than the light of the forest and had a reddish
cast. Thick mist hung from trees festooned with fleshy pale blossoms that gave
off a nauseatingly sweet scent, as if they were rotting instead of blooming.
Eric\x92s skin crawled; he was in Unseleighe territory now, and no mistake about
it. He could see large bat-winged things flying slowly through the distance,
and as he stood gazing around himself, a terrible scream split the air\x97whether
of predator or prey, he didn\x92t know.
Urla looked up at him to see his reaction, beady eyes
glittering. Eric glared back as arrogantly as he could manage, and the bluff
seemed to work. The redcap hurried off, bounding from island to island of dry
land. The islands were yards apart, distances Eric couldn\x92t jump, and he\x92d have
to be crazy to step down into the water. This was obviously some kind of test.
He summoned his power\x97he didn\x92t need his flute here, or even
music, but unbidden, a few bars of an old Simon and Garfunkel song skirled
through his brain as he wove the magic. Like a bridge over VERY troubled
waters. . . .
Silvery mist rose out of the swamp and coalesced, following
the redcap\x92s trail. Eric stepped out onto it cautiously. It gave slightly
beneath his feet, like the surface of a waterbed, but it held him comfortingly
far above the surface of the swamp. He stepped out onto the bridge and followed
Urla dry-footed across the bog.
The exit Portal here was in a bank of mist. Eric knew enough
about Underhill geography to know that the shortest distance between two points
wasn\x92t necessarily in a straight line. Navigating Underhill was more like
solving a maze, one where every turn could take you half a dozen different
places. The Unseleighe were a paranoid lot, defending their territories by making
them hard to find, and even harder to enter.
Urla walked into the mist and Eric followed cautiously. He
didn\x92t trust the redcap at all, and Urla would certainly think it was a great
joke to lead Eric into danger, but he didn\x92t think the creature was trying to
lead him into a trap. Not yet, anyway.
This time Eric found himself in utter darkness on the far
side of the Portal, and quickly summoned a ball of elf-light. By its pale
bluish illumination he could see that there was grass beneath his feet, short and
trampled as if herds of animals had been running across it. A chill monotonous
wind blew steadily, making him shudder more than shiver as he looked around. He
was in the middle of a broad and featureless plain that seemed to stretch a
thousand miles in every direction. When he looked up, there were no stars.
\x93I\x92m losing patience,\x94 Eric warned, in what he hoped was the
approved Unseleighe style. It seemed to be what Urla expected, because the
redcap grovelled again, swearing to the Great Lord that they were almost there,
indeed, their destination was mere instants away. The redcap turned away and
began to trot across the plain, picking up speed until Eric was hard-pressed to
keep up with it. Without the elf-light he\x92d summoned, he would have been unable
to follow at all.
A couple of times the ground shook silently as if something
huge and heavy were running across it\x97though Eric saw nothing\x97and a couple of
times he almost thought he\x92d heard something over the droning of the ceaseless
wind, but he didn\x92t dare stop to listen for fear of losing his guide. Bard or
not, he had a notion that it would not be a good idea to be lost in this
particular realm at the mercy of whatever it was that lived here. The swamp had
been bad, but there was something almost honest about its malignity. This was a
lot creepier.
At last they came to a henge: two black rough-hewn standing
stones supporting a third laid across their tops. The three stones were the
size of Greyhound buses, and seemed to be made out of some fine-grained stone. Basalt,
Eric dredged up from a dark corner of memory. Like in H. P. Lovecraft. I
just hope whoever lives here isn\x92t a fan of the classics.
Urla trotted between the menhirs and vanished. Having no
other real choice, Eric followed. As he\x92d expected, the landscape changed
again. Now there was light. He stopped, blinking as his eyes adjusted.
Wait. I know this place.
He stood now in the wood that he\x92d dreamed of before\x97the
black and silver wood where the winter-bare trees looked as if they were made
of black and polished bone, and the ground was covered with a thick treacherous
white mist. Urla was obviously on familiar ground now, for he moved more slowly
than before\x97as if he didn\x92t relish getting to his destination. Neither did
Eric. Such a direct route to his destination indicated that whoever lived here
felt he had little to fear from invaders, and that much confidence meant
something old, powerful . . . and dangerous.
Dangerous enough to think invading New York would be a
cakewalk. Oh, boy, Banyon. You sure know how to pick your
enemies. . . .
In the distance, shining through the trees like a baleful
moth-green moon, was the goblin tower of Eric\x92s vision, but oddly, instead of
worrying him further, he found himself with a treacherous desire to laugh.
Whoa! Who does the decorating here? Skeletor? That place
looks more like Castle Greyskull than any place has a right to. This
place was beyond over-the-top: it was just too grim and too
gothic for him to be able to take it seriously\x97as if a Hollywood set designer
had done a makeover on Hell.
You\x92d better take it seriously, Banyon. Because THEY sure
are, and I bet Unseleighe Sidhe don\x92t have much of a sense of
humor. . . .
As
they approached, Eric saw that the front gate of the castle was guarded by a
pair of armed knights in full ornate elvish armor that glowed like tarnished
silver. Both of them were holding long and wickedly barbed pikes, in addition
to wearing swords. Their eyes glowed red in the cavern of their helmets, but it
was plain to see that Eric\x92s arrival\x97at least on his own two feet\x97was
unexpected enough to disconcert them. More bad news: that meant they were
Sidhe, not some kind of created servitors, things little better than those
white-armored guys in Star Wars. If this lord could compel actual Sidhe to do
gruntwork like this, well . . .
Let\x92s just say I\x92ve got a bad feeling about this.
Urla hesitated, obviously expecting some kind of formal
challenge from the guards, but Eric was pretty sure it wouldn\x92t be a good idea
to stop for one. He pushed past the redcap and strode through the castle gates
as if he had every right to be there. He passed beneath the portcullis into the
outer bailey. There was a second set of guards standing before the inner doors,
as silent and rigid as the first.
The
inner door swung open as he approached, and Eric strode through, Urla scurrying
along behind him. Now he was in the outermost interior room, a space as vast as
a performance hall. It was bare and empty, its black stone walls polished to
mirror brightness and long narrow windows high upon the walls. An open gateway
beckoned Eric onward.
If
he hadn\x92t already spent so much time in various parts of Underhill, he would have been lost immediately.
But by now he knew enough of the interior layout of Sidhe castles\x97and
castles in general\x97to have a good idea of where the throne room was. He moved
quickly through the maze of corridors and
chambers, working his way upward. He saw several guards, all armored the way the first sets had been, but
no one challenged him. They probably think that if I\x92ve gotten this
far, I have a right to be here. One good thing about a really evil overlord is
that his underlings don\x92t tend to do a lot of thinking for
themselves. . . .
Urla seemed to have deserted him somewhere along the way, and
Eric wasn\x92t sure whether this was a good omen or not. At last he arrived at the
outer chamber of the throne room, and unlike the other rooms, this one was
inhabited. Fops in jewelled armor meant strictly for display lounged languidly,
most holding leashes that led to doglike and less nameable things. Ladies of
the court whispered and smiled, inspecting him over spread fans or beneath
embroidered veils. One of them looked more like a leopardess than anything on
two legs had a right to\x97she caught Eric staring and laughed, exposing a mouth
filled with sharp carnivore fangs. Beautiful they might be, but no one who\x92d
ever seen one of the Sidhe would mistake a member of the Dark Court for one of
the Bright.
Word of his arrival had preceded him\x97he could tell by the
whispers and glances exchanged by the elegantly dressed lords and ladies who
filled the outer hall. He thought someone might try to stop him\x97to curry favor
with their liege-lord, if nothing else\x97but no one did. Eric skirted the edge of
the silent group, carefully keeping his back to the wall. At the far end of the
outer hall, three steps led up to another
set of massive doors of enamelled silver that depicted a battle between
two groups of mounted elves. The red enamel drops of blood in the picture
glinted as if they were backlit, as if somehow light was shining through
the doors. It was a startling effect. Whoever this Unseleighe Lord is,
Eric thought, he had a helluva special effects budget.
He
skipped up the three wide steps\x97turning his back on the courtiers
reluctantly\x97and gestured at the door, summoning up a simple knock-spell. For a
moment he was afraid it wouldn\x92t open, but like the first, it yielded to his
power. A collective gasp went up from the watching Unseleighe Sidhe, and Eric heard
the babble of conversation begin behind him as he stepped through the doors. As
soon as he\x92d passed through them, the doors to the throne room closed behind
him with the soft finality of the doors of a bank vault. Not a good sign. He
bet they wouldn\x92t open again as easily.
Still, he\x92d come too far to back out now. He looked around.
The throne room was enormous\x97far too big to have fit into the
castle Eric had seen as he approached. For a moment he thought he was back
outside in the bonewood, but then he realized that the walls were only carved
in the semblance of a forest. The carven tree limbs spread to form a canopy far
above, making the vault of the ceiling look like a blackened crown of thorns.
Nice image, Banyon.
The floor looked as if it had been poured from a single drop
of liquid mercury, but Eric didn\x92t dare break his momentum or show a moment\x92s
indecision, and to his relief, it was solid beneath his feet. At the far end of
the chamber stood the same high throne he had seen in his dream. Only this time
it was facing him, and occupied by the Unseleighe Eric had seen leading the
Wild Hunt in Central Park. Refusing to think about what might happen next, Eric
strode boldly toward the foot of the black throne and its darkling occupant.
Like his guard knights, the Unseleighe Lord wore full ornate
field plate armor of a silver so dark it seemed black. On his head was a black
crown set with cabochon rubies that glowed as brightly as the blood drops in
the door had. Eric stopped at the foot of the throne and stared up at its
occupant. He forced himself to smile nonchalantly.
\x93Hi. We need to talk. Now.\x94
When Ria got back from Threshold, the package she\x92d asked
Jonathan to send was waiting for her at the hotel desk. She was just as glad
she\x92d left Logan with the others back at Threshold. What she had in mind now
wasn\x92t something a bodyguard could help her with, no matter how good a
bodyguard he was.
She signed for the package, and carried it upstairs to her
suite to open it. Bless Jonathan! Her own personal .38 snubnose revolver and a
lightweight chain mail vest\x97steel rings as supple and flexible as heavy
silk\x97lay inside. There was a box of steel-jacketed hollow points beside the
gun, a load that would bring serious grief to anyone\x97Sidhe or mortal\x97that it
hit.
There were two speed-loaders in the package with the gun. She
loaded them both as well as loading the gun, but left the rest of the box where
it was\x97any problem that eighteen bullets couldn\x92t solve, magic probably
couldn\x92t solve either.
A distant part of her mind was amused by her preparations.
Who would ever have thought that there would come a day when she\x92d come riding
to Eric\x92s rescue Underhill? He knew more about the Sidhe than she did, but it
was equally true that he had no idea of what people like Robert Lintel were
capable of in their sublime self-obsession. Lintel wouldn\x92t give up now that
he\x92d seen the kind of power Eric had and thought he saw a way to get it for
himself. And if Lintel caught up with him, Eric would be as helpless as a
child, no matter how gifted a Bard he was. Down deep, Eric was a nice guy, and
that would always put him at a disadvantage when dealing with people like \xADLintel\x97or
the Dark Court.
Fortunately, Ria thought, she wasn\x92t nice.
She stripped off her executive power suit and dressed again
in the outfit Logan had brought her to go slum-\xADcrawling in. She pulled on her
tightest T-shirt and slid the vest over it before slipping on the Kevlar-lined
jacket and zipping it up to her throat. The combination should stop anything
she might have to face, Sidhe or human. She slid the gun into her pocket and
inspected herself in the mirror. Neither gun nor vest showed.
She was ready to go to war. Now all she had to do was find
the battlefield.
Guardian House looked serene and untouched by recent events.
In order to track Eric, Ria needed something that was his\x97something attuned to
his personal energy that she could use as a link to him, and his apartment was
the best place to look. Ria wasn\x92t sure it\x92d let her in without a fight, but
fortunately she didn\x92t have to try. As she stood in the little courtyard of the
apartment building, she heard the frantic racing of a motorcycle engine coming
from behind the building, and over it Greystone\x92s gravel voice pleading with
someone.
\x93Aw, c\x92mon, sweetheart! Just\x97could you wait a minute here!
Hey! Here now, mo chidr\x97\x94
She ran around to the tiny private parking lot in the back of
the building and found Greystone standing in front of Eric\x92s bike. The
elvensteed was making frantic dashes at the gate\x97all by itself\x97but Greystone
kept blocking them, wings outstretched. The bike flashed its\x97her\x97lights
in frustration, and her attempts to get around the gargoyle grew more frantic.
\x93Hey! Blondie!\x94 Greystone called when he saw Ria. \x93This thing
can talk. Why ain\x92t she talkin\x92 to me, then?\x94
\x93It\x92s an elvensteed,\x94 Ria answered. \x93She won\x92t listen to you
or let anyone ride her but Eric. But elvensteeds can travel anywhere without
Gates or Portals, and if he\x92s called for her\x97\x94
\x93We can follow?\x94 Greystone said, brightening.
\x93Exactly. Just get out of her way before she decides to bite
you.\x94
Greystone stepped aside and folded back his wings. Lady Day
zipped around him like a bull avoiding the matador\x92s cape. By the time she was
halfway up the block, she was gone from sight.
But if I can follow Eric, I can certainly follow you, my
dear.
\x93She\x92s gone! Hey, Blondie! What do we do now?\x94
\x93We follow. And Greystone . . . ?\x94
The gargoyle looked at her hopefully.
\x93Don\x92t call me \x91Blondie.\x92 \x94
Aerune stared down at the bold interloper. It had never
occurred to him that the mortal Bard might dare to beard him in his stronghold.
\x93Kneel to me, mortal,\x94 he thundered, mantling himself with
Power and stretching out his hand. A massive ring gleamed, blood-red, on his
outstretched forefinger.
\x93I don\x92t think so,\x94 the Bard said. \x93We don\x92t do much kneeling
in the World Above these days. Or hadn\x92t you noticed? Things have changed since
the last time you led a Wild Hunt there. More iron, for one thing\x97but that\x92s
just the tip of the iceberg. Magic\x92s really impressive, but Cold Iron will stop
it dead, and we\x92ve got a lot of that in the World Above. We\x92ve also got
machines that can do things you\x92ve never even dreamed of, machines that magic
can\x92t stop. If you want a bunch of mortals to pay homage to you, you\x92re going
to have to have a lot more in your bag of tricks than a little flashy magic and
some big dogs. And I don\x92t think you do.\x94
Infuriated
by the Bard\x92s arrogance as he was, Aerune was an honest enough tactician to see
that there was much merit in what the mortal stripling had to say. The mortal Robertlintel
had been quick to defend himself with Cold Iron when Aerune had attacked him,
nor had his servants cowered at the sight of the Wild Hunt as Aerune had
expected. Fear and magic were the Unseleighe\x92s two main weapons against the
mortal kind, and if those proved ineffective . . .
\x93And the fact that you can\x92t take us over isn\x92t the worst of
what I\x92ve got to tell you. Those guys in the park? The ones with the chain mail
and the iron spears? They\x92re playing you, Dark Lord. I don\x92t know who sent them
after you, but I do know the kind of person he is. I\x92ve met people like him
before. He\x92s got hundreds of \x91warriors\x92 at his command, and he wants your
magic. He\x92s already killed I-don\x92t-know-how-many innocent people to get a
handle on it, and he\x92s getting closer to figuring you out every minute.
\x93And once he does, he\x92s going to be coming after you\x97here. If
humans figure out a way into Underhill, your intra\xADmural feuds won\x92t matter
anymore. Dark Court and Light\x97you\x92ll both be history.\x94
Such audacity and ruthlessness as the Bard described was
worthy of Aerune himself, but the notion of a mortal having the temerity\x97and
the weapons\x97to conquer Elven Lands was a sickening thought. Aerune considered
the mad wizard he\x92d faced in the Park, the crude-but-effective weapons that had
accounted for the lives of so many of his Hunt.
No. It is not possible. They were lucky, nothing more, he
decided. Now that I have taken their measure, I will cow them utterly. For
Aerete.
But the Bard was still talking, impervious to his own
immediate peril.
\x93So you\x92re going to have to choose. Work with me to take this
guy out and bury what he knows. Or end up serving him with an iron collar
around your neck.\x94
\x93You have gone too far, Bard!\x94 Aerune shouted, rising to his
feet in a swirl of black cloak. \x93I am the Great Lord Aerune mac Audelaine of
the Unseleighe Sidhe, and before I am done with you, you will beg me for death,
as will any of your kindred who dare to raise their banners against me. Guards!
Attend me!\x94
He would blast this mortal where he stood, hang his body on
the castle gates as a warning to other impertinent trespassers! Aerune drew
back his hand, preparing to strike.
And the throne room . . . rippled . . . as
the fabric of Aerune\x92s realm twisted sideways with a sickening and disorienting
lurch. Mage-quake! Aerune staggered, fighting for balance in the aftermath of
the disruption, as his tiny kingdom was destroyed and remade itself again in
obedience to his will and his magics. But the Bard who taunted him here could
not claim such power. . . .
\x93Told you so,\x94 said the Bard sadly.
Six of Aerune\x92s guardsmen now stood within the doorway,
obedient to his summons, but they were not the only ones within Aerune\x92s throne
room, nor was the Bard now the only human interloper.
A human man wearing the ugly grey clothing Aerune had seen in
the World Above stood in the middle of his throne room, staring about himself
with undisguised greed. With him were four human warriors wearing black and
bearing weapons of Cold Iron that glowed and smoked in the magic of Aerune\x92s
Underhill realm. At their feet lay half a dozen dead humans, their bodies
withered in the fashion of those Crowned Ones who had given up their power to
Aerune\x92s needs before.
\x93I will deal with you after I destroy them,\x94 Aerune growled
to the Bard. He gestured to his guardsmen. \x93Take them!\x94
This
is not good,
Eric thought, hoping his shields would hold against stray bullets as well as
spells, knowing that if the bullets were steel-jacketed they probably wouldn\x92t
after the first one or two. He\x92d been right, not that he was very happy about
it at the moment. With humans and their Cold Iron weapons down here in
Underhill, Seleighe and Unseleighe kingdoms alike would go under like wheat
under a harvester. And with elven magery running wild in the World Above, the
outlook for humanity wasn\x92t very good either.
The Unseleighe guardsmen started forward, seeing only spears
raised to stop them. One of the black-clad goons the Suit had brought with him
raised a pistol and fired, and one of Aerune\x92s guards staggered and fell to the
ground, screaming. In moments elven-fire had consumed his entire body as the
steel-jacketed bullet did its work.
Unfortunately, the Dark Lord Aerune didn\x92t seem to be
sufficiently impressed by this display to call off his men. More guardsmen
poured into the room, swords drawn, red eyes gleaming. The human mercenaries
turned outward, putting a ring of steel around the Suit. There was a chatter of
machine-pistol fire, the bright flare of disrupted shielding, and the guardsmen
moved in for close-quarters work. The mercenaries lowered their spears,
obviously ready for them. There was a sudden clatter of engagement.
Eric wasn\x92t sure what elvish swords were made of, but
whatever it was, in the magic-charged air of Underhill, it sizzled like an ice
cube tossed into hot grease when it met the iron blades of the spears the
humans were carrying. After the first time a parry sliced one of the elven
swords clear through, the guardsmen were more cautious about rushing their prey.
A couple of the Suit\x92s henchmen kept firing, covering the spearmen and choosing
their targets with care. The throne room echoed with the sound of gunfire, and
the faint acrid scent of gunsmoke filled the air. Elves fell beneath the
onslaught of Cold Iron until the silvery mirror floor of the throne room was
littered with elvish bodies, and the Suit and his hardboys were still standing.
Aerune sat watching the carnage as if it were a play staged for his amusement.
Because soon enough they\x92re going to run out of bullets, and
I don\x92t think they\x92ve got any way out of here now that they\x92ve used up their
\x93batteries.\x94 Aerune hasn\x92t even called up the heavy artillery yet, and he\x92s not
a very happy camper at the moment. . . . Eric
didn\x92t want to be here when Aerune \xADdecided to take out his frustrations on the
interlopers\x97and he wasn\x92t sure he could stop the Unseleighe Lord either. He
could issue a formal Challenge\x97that might slow Aerune down\x97but the Dark Lord
was on his home ground here, and magical duels had not been a major part of
Eric\x92s education.
He\x92d let his mind wander for a fatal instant. Suddenly there
was a lull in the fighting, and Eric found himself staring down the barrel of a
pistol.
\x93Work with me, big man, or the hippie gets it right here!\x94
the man in the suit called cheerfully. \x93You\x92ve seen what our weapons can do to
your people, so back off before it happens to you!\x94
Aerune waved a hand, and his guardsmen pulled back, forming a
ring around the interlopers. The room had grown darker in just the last few
moments: Eric could no longer see the walls of the throne room clearly, and it
seemed to him that there were things lurking in the shadows outside the
ring of Unseleighe knights. But despite that, the Suit was smiling, as if
things were going just the way he\x92d planned.
\x93Allow me to introduce myself, Mr. mac Audelaine. My name\x92s
Bob Lintel, Threshold Labs. You\x92ve got something I want, and I believe we can
work together to our mutual advantage. I have no problem with dividing
territory. You help me back home, I\x92ll help you here. If it\x92s psi you want, I
can provide you with a permanent supply. Let\x92s pool our forces.\x94
Whatever else Aerune mac Audelaine was, he was a \xADrealist. He
leaned forward on his dark throne, fixing Lintel with a burning gaze.
\x93You have an odd way of asking for favors, mortal man,\x94
Aerune rumbled, \x93but your arguments are . . . compelling.
Come here to me, and I will hear your petition. Perhaps you are right.\x94 Aerune
gestured in welcome, smiling chillingly. The man in the suit smiled back, but
didn\x92t move from the safety of his mercenaries.
Aerune and Lintel stood frozen, each testing the other\x92s
resolve in a high-stakes game of \x93Chicken\x94 as Eric watched in unconcealed
horror. This was the last thing he wanted\x97two killer sharks dividing up
Underhill and the World Above like an extra-large pizza, no anchovies. What
am I going to do now?
The Unseleighe guardsmen and the human commandos watched each
other intently, neither side moving. For a moment, the room was utterly silent.
And in the distance, Eric heard a faint sound that had no place in Underhill.
The sound of an engine.
A motorcycle engine.
Lady Day barreled through the open doorway to the throne
room, vaulting the dead and scattering the living as she headed for Eric. Here
in Underhill the elvensteed seemed to flicker back and forth between bike and
horse, the strobe effect making Eric\x92s eyes hurt. Headache or not, she was the
most welcome sight he\x92d seen in a long time. Eric started toward her\x97
And Aerune froze her in place with a gesture, trapping her
within a cage of flickering blue light. The elvensteed, fully in horse-form
now, stamped her foot, eyes flashing dangerously as she tossed her head in
frustration.
\x93Move, hippie, and I drill you right now!\x94 Lintel barked,
oblivious to the byplay. \x93You aren\x92t getting away this easily. Aerune wants
you, and so do I.\x94
\x93Too bad neither of you gets him,\x94 a new voice said coolly.
\x93I\x92d put that down if I were you, Mr. Lintel.\x94
Eric felt like cheering. Ria Llewellyn strode through the
door, followed by Greystone. If Ria experienced any surprise at her
surroundings\x97or the bodies all over the floor\x97she didn\x92t show it. She was
wearing black leather and blue jeans, and looked deadly and confident.
And she had a gun.
Almost before she\x92d finished speaking, Lintel swept his
pistol around and rapped off three shots directly at her chest.
\x93Ria!\x94 Eric shouted, aghast.
But she didn\x92t fall. She staggered back against Greystone,
and steadied herself against the gargoyle\x92s outspread wing, but she obviously
wasn\x92t hurt. She smiled a small wintery smile at Lintel.
\x93I\x92ve done plenty of corporate dueling in my time, but this
is a little extreme,\x94 she said. \x93Oh, by the way. I\x92m sure we haven\x92t met. I\x92m
Ria Llewellyn. Your boss.\x94
Then she shot Robert Lintel neatly in the knee.
He went down screaming, dropping his gun and scattering his
men in confusion. Aerune\x92s elven guards surged forward and stopped, uncertain
of whether they should try to take advantage of the moment. One of Lintel\x92s men
knelt to try to help him. Eric ran down the steps and made it across the throne
room to Ria\x92s side in the confusion.
\x93Glad you could make it,\x94 he gasped.
\x93Wouldn\x92t miss it for worlds,\x94 Ria answered. \x93Get back.\x94
Greystone lifted him out of the way just as a levin bolt
flung by an enraged Aerune struck Ria full in the chest. It popped and sizzled,
running all over her body like St. Elmo\x92s fire before sinking into the floor,
but Ria stood her ground, as unharmed by elven magic as by mortal bullets.
\x93Stainless-steel chain mail,\x94 Ria called toward Aerune. \x93The
least of mortal defenses. Very easy to make in the World Above\x97I\x92m sure
Lintel\x92s men are wearing it.\x94
To Eric she said: \x93I\x92m going to distract him. Can you get your
steed free? We\x92re going to need her.\x94
\x93I think so,\x94 Eric answered, his voice equally low. He
reached out, feeling at the edges of the spell that had trapped Lady Day. It
was a simple one, the Sidhe equivalent of a locked door. Now let\x92s see if I
can find the key.
As he concentrated, Ria stepped forward, away from
Greystone\x92s protection, and bowed her head, a conciliating, coaxing note
entering her voice.
\x93My Lord, your power is vast and mine is very small. I am no
match for you alone, even with weapons and armor of deathmetal from the World
Above. But the Bard and I together can hold you off indefinitely. He has
powerful patrons among the Seleighe Court who would much resent any harm you
might do to him, nor is the gargoyle entirely friendless. I pray you, of your
great mercy, allow us three\x97four\x97to depart your kingdom unmolested. We wish no
quarrel with you.\x94
Aerune looked at her measuringly, resuming his seat and
regarding her with bleak expressionless eyes.
\x93Ria!\x94 Eric hissed. She couldn\x92t be suggesting what he
thought she was\x97just abandoning those five guys and Lintel to Aerune\x92s
mercy? He looked behind him, through the open doors, but the rest of the
Unseleighe Court seemed to have vanished; the outer room was empty. \x93What about
Lintel and the others? We can\x92t just leave them here!\x94
Lintel\x92s agonized groans seemed to fill the room, setting his
teeth on edge. A shattered kneecap was just about the most painful and
crippling single wound possible to inflict.
\xA0\x93True,\x94 Ria answered,
her voice low. \x93I can\x92t afford to leave Lintel to strike a bargain of his own.
Saddle up as soon as you can, Eric. We may be leaving quickly. Greystone, you
too.\x94
\x93Check, boss lady,\x94 the gargoyle said.
Aerune spoke again, a faint admiring smile upon his face.
\x93Very
well, halfbreed. You, the Bard and his mount, and
this . . . creature . . . which
accompanies you, all have my leave to depart. But the others remain. Do these
terms suit you?\x94
The
magic around Lady Day dissolved, and the elven\xADsteed bounded toward the doorway
and Eric, changing form back into a motorbike as she did so. Aerune paid no
attention. Reluctantly, Eric swung his leg over Lady Day\x92s saddle. The
elvensteed thrummed her engine, impatient to be away.
\x93They do, My Lord, and many thanks to you for your mercy,\x94
Ria said. She raised her gun once more and fired, placing a bullet squarely
between Lintel\x92s eyes. The corporate raider slumped to the floor, silent in
death, and the commando squatting beside him reached for his gun.
\x93No!\x94 Eric was half off Lady Day\x92s back\x97though what he could
do, he wasn\x92t sure\x97when the elvensteed decided she\x92d had enough of this part of
Underhill. With a banshee scream she took off, Greystone close behind. Nothing
Eric could do could slow or turn her, and at the speed she was going, he didn\x92t
dare just jump off. Eric looked back wildly over his shoulder, catching a last
glimpse of the throne room before it vanished in the distance.
Ria stood alone before Lord Aerune.
\x93You are properly ruthless, halfling,\x94 Aerune said, getting
to his feet. Though irritated by his loss, he looked intrigued as well. She\x92d
counted more than a little on that. Elves were suckers for a grand gesture.
Not that Aerune was a sucker in any sense of the word.
He stepped down from his throne, and stood facing her across a
tangle of bodies, Sidhe and human. With a wave of his hand, he banished them
all to another part of his domain. No trace of the battle\x97or Lintel\x92s
men\x97remained to mar the chilly perfection of his presence chamber. The doors of
the throne room closed in the same moment, sealing Ria in with him.
Aerune held out his hand to her. The black mail gauntlet
gleamed in the unchanging radiance of Underhill.
\x93It has been too long since I encountered anyone with such
beauty who had yet the spirit to defy me. I do not think you have been properly
valued by your kin, halfling, nor by the World Above. Matters could be
otherwise. Have you considered\x97\x94
\xA0\x93And rejected, Great
Lord,\x94 Ria answered steadily. This powerful Unseleighe Sidhe was offering her a
seductive prize\x97his patronage, and with it, a place in Underhill. Once she
could have asked for no greater reward.
Once.
\x93I want no bargain with you beyond that which I have already
struck, Great Lord, though I prize your honorable offer for the tribute it is.
I will go now, by your leave, and molest your realm no more. Lintel was my
vassal, and he is well rewarded for his treachery. I leave you his men as my
gift, to do with as you choose.\x94
Taking a calculated risk, she turned her back on Lord Aerune
and walked away. The doors of the throne room opened before her, and she walked
out into the deserted castle. No one tried to stop her, but Ria didn\x92t breathe
completely easily until she\x92d reached the nearest Portal and taken herself
beyond Aerune\x92s reach\x97or at least, his immediate reach.
I know this isn\x92t over. Now that he knows there\x92s something
of value in the World Above, Aerune won\x92t stop until he figures out a way to
get at it. But that\x92s a problem for another day. Thank God for small favors.
TWELVE:
\xA0TO END WHERE
WE BEGAN
As
soon as Ria reached the World Above, everything that had happened in Aerune\x92s
court began to take on a vague air of unreality. After passing through several
Portals and nearly exhausting her store of Power, she\x92d come out in Sterling
Forest, near the Nexus of Elfhame Everforest, and had to hike more than a mile
before she found a phone she could use to call a car to take her back to the
city. It was late Monday evening by the time she arrived back in New York\x97time
ran differently in the World Above, sometimes to the World Above\x92s benefit.
The drive back to the City gave her a lot of time to think,
mostly about the look of horror on Eric\x92s face as she shot Robert Lintel.
There\x92d been no other choice, though. Aerune probably wouldn\x92t have let her
take Lintel without a fight anyway, and if she had managed to bring him
back to the World Above to face charges, the New York courts would probably
have let him off on a technicality. That was the way the legal system worked
when you had money and influence.
Ria had always preferred justice to law, and she\x92d spoken no
more than the truth to the Unseleighe lord. What Lintel had done was in some
sense her responsibility. Threshold was a LlewellCo company. Lintel had worked
for her. Ultimately, she was responsible for what he\x92d done. Now he\x92d paid the
dead for their loss in the only way possible, with his own life, and that
simplified matters. He\x92d never have the chance to use the information he\x92d
gained at the cost of so many innocent lives.
And if she had to lose Eric\x92s respect\x97and love\x97because of it,
Ria was willing to pay that price, though it would hurt more than she liked to
think.
I might as well find out now how it\x92s going to be as soon as
possible, she thought grimly. There was no point in waiting to get bad
news.
\x93I\x92ve changed my mind,\x94 she told the driver. \x93I\x92m not going
to the Sherry. There\x92s a stop I want you to make first.\x94
The ride from Aerune\x92s castle to New York passed in a
dizzying blur. After the first few seconds, he\x92d just closed his eyes and held
on tight, and finally the elvensteed had stopped.
When he opened his eyes, the world spun giddily. Eric slid
sideways off Lady Day\x92s saddle and into Greystone\x92s arms.
\x93Steady there, laddybuck. Strewth, that was the wildest ride
I\x92ve been on since I was a gleam in the stonecarver\x92s eye!\x94 the gargoyle said
cheerfully.
\x93Yeah,\x94 Eric said weakly. After a moment the world steadied,
and he could stand on his own two feet.
He looked around warily. He was back in New York, behind
Guardian House. It seemed strange that everything looked normal. It was dark.
Eric had no idea what day it was, though from the powdered-sugar snow that fell
lightly all around him, it was still December.
But what year? Not that I care right now.
\x93Let\x92s get you inside,\x94 Greystone said. \x93If ever a man could
do with a stiff drink, boyo, it\x92s you.\x94
\x93No,\x94 Eric said, feeling a little better. \x93Not a drink. But I
wouldn\x92t turn down a strong cup of coffee. Meet you upstairs.\x94
Greystone bounded skyward with surprising grace, settling
back into his place with a flourish and a bow.
A shower and a change of clothes helped. He was still trying
to sort everything out in his mind, trying to fit the events into some kind of
order. Eventually he was going to have to figure out something to tell Toni and
the other Guardians. They deserved to know how the story ended.
Greystone had joined him inside, his cheerfully ugly face
contorted into an expression of worry as he watched Eric move around the
apartment. Finally, coffee and sandwich in hand, Eric sat down on the couch.
\x93I can\x92t believe she did that,\x94 he said, sighing. As much as
he tried to avoid it, Eric\x92s thoughts kept returning to that one image of the
bullet hole in the middle of Lintel\x92s forehead, stopping him from thinking past
it. He set his sandwich down on the table untasted. She\x92d just shot him. No
hesitation, no remorse. Bam!
Greystone shook his head in sympathy. \x93I can\x92t either. Man,
talk about cold . . . !\x94
\x93No,\x94 Eric said, grudgingly fair. Somehow Greystone\x92s putting
his own thoughts into words made Eric see Ria\x92s side of things. \x93As much as I
hate what she did, I think she was telling the truth. She didn\x92t have a choice.
She couldn\x92t leave Lintel there in Underhill alive. Believe me, he and Aerune
were this close to making a deal. Cold Iron in Underhill\x97humans knowing
about elves\x97magic in the World Above\x97it would have been . . .\x94
It would have been just like my dream: New York a wasteland.
Thousands\x97millions\x97dead. And Underhill . . . gone. Humans
and Sidhe need each other. Our lives are too intertwined. One can\x92t really
survive without the other. But that doesn\x92t mean most people need to know about
Underhill, or magic, or the Nexuses, any more than they need to know how to
build a nuclear warhead. Ria knew that. She did what had to be done. But that
doesn\x92t mean I have to like it. . . .
\xA0\x93She could have
brought him back here!\x94 Greystone protested. \x93I could\x92a carried him. Easy!\x94
Eric shook his head reluctantly and drank his coffee. The
bitter warmth helped clarify his thoughts. \x93Then he\x92d be back here, alive,
still knowing what he knows, with his cache of designer poison still out there
somewhere. Sure, there\x92d be a trial, but he\x92d probably be out on bail while he
was waiting for his court date, and that means he could escape back Underhill,
strike a bargain with Aerune, or come up with something else horrible I haven\x92t
even thought of yet. And Ria would be stuck in the middle of it\x97if she did
anything to stop him here, she\x92d be the one who went to prison, not him.\x94
\x93Maybe,\x94 the gargoyle said grudgingly. \x93But I still think we
should\x92a brought him back here and let Jimmie and the gang sort him out.\x94
\x93I don\x92t know,\x94 Eric said unhappily. Maybe that would have
worked. But with the stakes so high, was it worth taking the chance? The worst
of it was, he probably wasn\x92t going to see Ria again. He still wasn\x92t sure how
she\x92d found him, but she had. She\x92d rescued him, given him all the help he\x92d
asked her for, and he\x92d thrown it back in her face\x97and deserted her, even if
that hadn\x92t exactly been his idea. He didn\x92t even know if she\x92d gotten out of
Aerune\x92s realm alive.
Good going, Banyon. So much for your vaunted leadership
abilities.
\x93I don\x92t even know where she is now, or if she even got out
alive. Greystone, can you\x97\x94
\x93Well,\x94 Greystone said abruptly, \x93guess I\x92d better get back
to work. No rest for the wicked, and all that. See you around, boyo. I\x92m going
back on duty before anyone \xADnotices I\x92m AWOL.\x94
\x93Hey,\x94 Eric said, getting to his feet as Greystone climbed
out the window. Maybe Greystone hadn\x92t wanted to be asked if he and the
Guardians could find Ria, but that didn\x92t mean he had to just run off like
that!
There was a knock at the door.
He stared after the gargoyle. The knocking continued.
Thinking it was Toni, knowing that Guardian House would never allow in anything
that could do its inhabitants any harm, Eric opened the door.
Ria was standing there, still dressed in battered denim and
leather. A few snowflakes lay on her hair and shoulders, melting slowly. She
looked tired, uncertain of her reception.
A vast relief filled Eric, as if he were finally able to set
down a heavy load he\x92d been carrying, and he smiled.
\x93Glad you could make it,\x94 he said simply.
Her face relaxed into a smile of sheer relief, as if she\x92d
gotten good news she\x92d hoped for but hadn\x92t expected. Eric stepped back,
gesturing for her to enter.
\x93Wouldn\x92t miss it for worlds,\x94 Ria answered.
Later\x97much later\x97there was time to talk it all out. Ria
explained the whole story from the beginning as she\x92d managed to piece it
together, about Threshold\x92s black-budget project to come up with a drug that
turned ordinary people into Wild Talents. How she\x92d tracked the project back to
Threshold, found Lintel gone, and then followed Lady Day to find Eric, knowing
that wherever Lintel was, he, too, would be hot on Eric\x92s trail.
\x93I still don\x92t like what you did,\x94 Eric said. \x93It wasn\x92t the
only solution. We could have taken him to the Seleighe Sidhe, made him their
problem. . . .\x94
Ria shrugged. \x93I don\x92t know that I trust them with Lintel
anymore than I did Aerune. He was too much of a wild card. This was more
expedient.\x94
Eric already knew he wanted Ria to stay a part of his life.
But if he let her set the terms for their relationship, they\x92d still be in the
same situation they\x92d been back in L.A., and that wouldn\x92t work for him.
\x93If we\x92re going to stay together, you\x92re going to have to
promise me that if we get into any more situations, you won\x92t do the expedient
thing anymore,\x94 he said firmly, but inside he was holding his breath, waiting
for her answer.
She regarded him with a raised eyebrow, for a frozen moment
looking more elvish than she did human. At last she smiled faintly.
\x93I\x92ll offer you a compromise, m\x92love. I won\x92t do the
expedient thing without consulting you and letting you have a chance to convince
me otherwise. Have we a bargain, O great Sidhe Bard?\x94
Eric thought about it for a moment. Things had changed
between them, he realized. He wasn\x92t her pet. She wasn\x92t his lackey. They were
equal partners. He found he liked the idea very much.
\x93That\x92ll work. I\x92ll be your conscience,\x94 he answered.
\x93Just like Jiminy Cricket,\x94 Ria said mockingly. She kissed
him lightly on the forehead and got to her feet. \x93Don\x92t forget the cricket
spent most of the movie as a ghost.\x94
\x93I\x92m not worried,\x94 Eric said contentedly.
Ria smiled, looking younger and softer\x97and somehow hopeful,
as if she\x92d been offered a new beginning.
\x93And now, the police are probably looking for me\x97and I\x92ll bet
you need to come up with an explanation for playing hooky from school today.
I\x92ll probably be out of touch for a while, but don\x92t worry. Watch for me on the
news. Then give me a call and we\x92ll have dinner. We\x92ve still got a lot of loose
ends to chase down.\x94
\x93It\x92s a date,\x94 Eric answered. He knew he was grinning like a
fool, but he didn\x92t care. He walked her to the door and stood in the doorway,
watching her walk down the hall, still smiling.
I can\x92t wait to tell Kory and Beth about all this, he
thought to himself. I wonder what they\x92ll say.
He heard the elevator cage rattle closed, and heard the
elevator start down. Louis, something tells me this is the start of a
beautiful friendship. . . .