Pocket Books
A Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
I would like to thank JB Bell, Sam Jones, and Andan Lauber for their help in inventing Jayné Heller and for handing me Guilty Pleasures back during the heyday of the Abbey. I would also like to thank Jayné Franck for lending her name. I owe debts of service and gratitude to the members of the Santa Fe Critical Mass group, including S. M. and Jan Stirling, Emily Mah, Ian Tregillis, Melinda Snodgrass, Terry England, Walter Jon Williams, Sage Walker, Vic Milan, and the auxiliary presences of Carrie Vaughn and Diana Rowland. The book would not exist without the faith and hard work of my agents, Shawna McCarthy and Danny Baror, and my editor, Jennifer Heddle. The strength of the book is very much an honor to them. Any errors are entirely my own.
It was raining in Denver the night Eric Heller died. The clouds had rolled in late in the afternoon, white pillars ascending toward the sun with a darkness at the base that was pure threat. Seven minutes after five o’clock—just in time for the rush-hour traffic—the sky opened, rain pounding down onto the streets and windows. It was still going three and a half hours later. Falling water and flashing lightning hid the sunset, but Eric could feel it. It was a side effect; he could always feel the dark coming on.
“Something’s happening,” the voice from his cell phone said. “Something big.”
“Okay,” Aubrey said. “But if there’s something I can do, you’ll tell me. Right?”
“You want another one, Pops?” the waitress said.
“Yes,” Eric said. “Yes, I do.”
He’d finished the other one and moved on to a third when the door swung open. The curl of rain-chilled air moved through the bar like a breath. Then five men walked in. Four of them could have been simple violence-soaked gangbangers. The fifth one, the big sonofabitch in sunglasses, had a rider. Eric couldn’t tell by looking whether it was a loupine or nosferatu or any of the other thousand species of unclean spirit that could crawl into a human body, but he could feel power coming off the man. Eric’s hand twitched toward the gun in his pocket, wanting the reassuringly solid grip under his fingers. But that would be poor form.
“You’re Tusk,” Eric said. “Nice belt buckle you’ve got there. Shiny.”
“My name’s Eric Heller. I’m looking for someone to do a job for me.”
Eric reached up and plucked the sunglasses off the big sonofabitch. The black eyes met his. Eric pulled his will up from his crotch, up through his belly and his throat, pressing cold qi out through his gaze. The big sonofabitch tilted his head like a dog hearing an unfamiliar sound. The others stirred, hands reaching under jackets and shirts.
The big sonofabitch shook his head once, but it wasn’t really a refusal. Eric waited.
“What do you want for it? You want someone killed?”
Outside, the rain had slackened to merely driving. A black car pulled up to the curb, Chango at the wheel. The loupine and his three homies clustered around Eric, ignoring the downpour. Two of the three minions got in the back with Eric stuck between them. The loupine had a short conversation with the last guy, then took the front. The last gangbanger spat on the street and went back into the bar as the car pulled away. They drove east toward Park Hill. Eric didn’t speak.
What the fuck was he sitting next to?
As casually as he could, he brought a hand to his mouth. He crushed the fresh sage and peppermint leaves in the cuff and breathed in the scent. His mind clicked into trance, the aroma acting as trigger. His eyes felt like they’d been washed clean. Everything around him was intensely real, the edges sharp, the textures vibrant. He could hear the individual raindrops striking the car. He felt each fiber of his shirt pressing against his skin. And the glamour fell away from the others. The ink of their markings seemed to well up from inside them like blood from a cut. The driver was entirely bald, labyrinthine tattoos rising from his collar and crawling up over his ears. The two beside Eric were just as marked, their faces covered with symbols and sigils.
“This isn’t what you boys think it is,” Eric said.
“We know what you’ve been doing, Mr. Heller,” the other man said. “It stops tonight. It stops now.”
I flew into Denver on the second of August, three days before my twenty-third birthday. I had an overnight bag packed with three changes of clothes, the leather backpack I used for a purse, the jacket my last boyfriend hadn’t had the guts to come pick up from my apartment (it still smelled like him), my three-year-old laptop wrapped in a blanket, and a phone number for Uncle Eric’s lawyer. The area around the baggage carousel was thick with families and friends hugging one another and saying how long it had been and how much everyone had grown or shrunk or whatever. The wide metal blades weren’t about to offer up anything of mine, so I was just looking through the crowd for my alleged ride and trying not to make eye contact.
“Pretty much covered on that one,” I said. “Thanks, though.”
He looked surprised, then shrugged it off.
“Right. I’m parked over on the first level. Let me at least get that one for you.”
I surrendered my three changes of clothes and followed.
“Right,” Aubrey said with a smile that wanted badly to be comfortable but wasn’t.
“So,” Aubrey said. “I’m sorry. About Eric. Were you two close?”
Aubrey gunned the minivan, pulling us onto the highway.
“He protected me,” I said, soft enough that I didn’t think Aubrey would hear me, but he did.
I realized I’d gone silent. Aubrey was looking over at me.
“Yeah,” Aubrey said. “That sounds like him.”
“I just want you to know,” I said, “it’s okay with me that he was gay.”
“I know the type,” he said. The smile was actually pointed at me now, and it seemed genuine.
But Aubrey knew him well enough to have a set of spare keys, and he didn’t think Eric was gay. Maybe Dad had meant something else. I tried to think what exactly had made me think it was that, but I couldn’t come up with anything solid.
“Thanks,” I said, reaching around in the seat to grab my bag.
“Do you want…I mean, I can show you around a little. If you want.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Thanks for the lift.”
“If there’s anything I can do…”
I popped open the door. The dome light came on.
“I’ll let you know,” I said. “Promise.”
“Your uncle,” Aubrey said. Then, “Your uncle was a very special man.”
“Hey,” I said to nothing and no one. “I’m home.”
I NEVER would have said it to anyone, but my uncle had been killed at the perfect time. I hated myself for even thinking that, but it was true. If I hadn’t gotten the call from his lawyer, if I hadn’t been able to come here, I would have been reduced to couch surfing with people I knew peripherally from college. I wasn’t welcome at home right now. I hadn’t registered for the next semester at ASU, which technically made me a college dropout.
I didn’t have a job or a boyfriend. I had a storage unit in Phoenix and a bag, and I didn’t have the money to keep the storage unit for more than another month. With any luck at all, I’d be able to stay here in the house until Uncle Eric’s estate was all squared away. There might even be enough money in his will that I could manage first and last on a place of my own. He was swooping in one last time to pull me out of the fire. The idea made me sad, and grateful, and a little bit ashamed.
I found a closet with general household items, including a spare toothbrush. The food in the fridge was mostly spoiled, but I scrounged up a can of beef soup that I nuked in a plain black bowl, sopping up the last with bread that wasn’t too stale. The television was in the living room, and I spooled through channels and channels of bright, shining crap. I didn’t feel right putting my feet on the couch.
A few seconds later, the icon showed he was on the other end, typing.
I called the lawyer in the morning, and by noon, she was at the door. Midfifties, gray suit, floral perfume with something earthy under it, and a smile bright as a brand-new hatchet. I pulled my hair back when she came in and wished I’d put on something more formal than blue jeans and a Pink Martini T-shirt.
“Thanks,” I said. “You want to come into the kitchen? I think there’s some tea I could make.”
“That would be lovely,” she said.
“Everything’s fine,” I said, sitting.
“Okay,” I said, wondering what she was talking about.
“This is an inventory of the most difficult transfers. The good news is that Eric arranged most of the liquid assets as pay-on-death, so the tax situation is fairly straightforward, and we get to avoid probate. The rest of the estate is more complicated. I’ve also brought keys to the other Denver properties. I have a copy of the death certificate, so you only need to fill out a signature card at the bank before you can do anything with the funds. Do you have enough to see you through for a day or two?”
“These are all Uncle Eric’s?” I said. “He has a house in London?”
“He has property all over the world, dear. Didn’t you know?”
“No,” I said. “I didn’t. What am I…I mean, what am I supposed to do with this stuff?”
“You and your uncle didn’t discuss any of this?” she said.
“We didn’t talk much,” I said. “He left it to me? Are you sure? I mean, thanks, but are you sure?”
“Ms. Heller,” she said. “You are a very rich young woman.”
“Um,” I said. “Okay. What scale are we talking about here?”
She told me: total worth, liquid assets, property.
“Well,” I said, putting the mug down. “Holy shit.”
I THINK lottery winners must feel the same way. I followed everything the lawyer said, but about half of it washed right back out of my mind. The world and everything in it had taken on a kind of unreality. I wanted to laugh or cry or curl up in a ball and hug myself. I didn’t—did not—want to wake up and find out it had all been a dream.
Everything, in fact, but an explanation.
I took myself back to the kitchen table and read the will. Legal jargon wasn’t my strong suit, but from what I could tell, it was just what the lawyer had said. Everything he had owned was mine. No one else’s. No discussion. Now that I was alone and starting to get my bearings, about a thousand questions presented themselves. Why leave everything to me? Why hadn’t he told me about any of it? How had he made all this money?
I felt a little weird, wearing a dead man’s shirt. But it was mine now. He’d given it to me. I had the ultimate hand-me-down life. The thought brought a lump to my throat.
“Come on, little tomato,” I told the key ring. “You and me against the world.”
In the middle of the afternoon there wasn’t much foot traffic. The address was a warehouse complex converted into living space for the Brie and wine set. Five stories of redbrick with balconies at each level. Tasteful plants filled the three feet between the knee-high wrought iron fence and the walls. According to the paperwork, the apartment Eric owned—the one I owned—was valued at half a million.
I tried to look like I belonged there as I walked in and found my way to the elevators. It was like sneaking into a bar; I didn’t belong there, but I did. I kept expecting someone to stop me, to ask for my ID, to check my name against a list and throw me out.
“You aren’t Eric,” it said in a voice like a rusted cattle gate opening.
He repeated my name like he was tasting it. Zha-nay.
“My mother’s side,” I said. “People usually say it like Jane or Janey.”
“I was afraid of that,” he said. “Explains a lot. The little rat fuckers must have sussed him out.”
“Hey,” he said, “where are my manners, eh? You want a drink?”
“Um,” I said. And then, “Yes.”
“So,” he said. “He didn’t tell you a goddamn thing about all this, did he?”
“Not really,” I said, and sipped the brandy. I never drank much, but I could tell that the liquor was better than I’d ever had.
If I pretended I was listening to Tom Waits, his voice wasn’t so bad.
“That’s a long story,” Midian said.
Midian shifted his head to the side, his ragged lips pressed thin. He sighed.
“Yes. If he got killed, I know who killed him.”
“I’m not blowing you off. I just think better when I’m cooking,” he said. “Okay. So. There’s a guy calls himself Randolph Coin. He came to Denver about a year ago. He heads up a bunch of fellas call themselves the Invisible College, okay? They think that all the ghoulies and ghosties and long-legged beasties you’ve ever heard of really exist. Vampires, werewolves, zombies. People doing magic. You name it. You like onions?”
He put the peppers in with the browning onions. Wisps of smoke and steam rose from the black metal.
“I came to Eric because he’s the kind of guy who knows things. Helps people. I needed help.”
While he whipped eggs in a tiny steel mixing bowl, I sat hunched over the breakfast bar, brandy in my hands. I felt like I’d been on an amusement park ride one too many times. Confused and dizzy and a little sick. We both knew he was giving me time to think. Time, specifically, to decide he was a nut or a liar. My first guess was both. But he was the only thread I had that might lead to Uncle Eric and whoever had killed him.
“You were going to murder someone?”
“Coin’s dead, kid,” he said. “Coin’s been dead since the day they made him Invisible. We were looking to kill the thing that’s living in his body.”
“And killing the thing inside Coin would fix you?”
“That’s really good,” I said through my mouthful.
On the other hand, if anyone had asked me a week before what my uncle did, I would have guessed wrong. And even if every word coming out of Midian’s mouth was crap, it seemed to be crap he believed. And so maybe this Coin guy believed it too. I’d had enough experience with the kind of atrocities that blind faith can lead to that I couldn’t discount anything just because it was crazy. If Coin and the Invisible College believed that they were demon-possessed wizards and that Eric was out to stop them, that could have been reason enough to kill him. Things don’t have to exist to have consequences.
I put my fork against the side of the plate and looked up at him.
“I’m taking this to the police, you know,” I said.
Four figures poured into the front room. They wore pale shirts and loose pants, almost like a karate gi. Their skins were all pale, but covered with black markings. The swirls and designs looked like script. Two tall men stood on either side, a shorter man and a woman in the center. The shorter man shouted something I couldn’t make out. Midian yelped and bolted for the back of the apartment. Four pairs of eyes turned on me. Behind the elaborate tattoos, they looked surprised. Both of the tall men were holding pistols.
Fear shrilled through my veins. I should have been skittering away from them; I should have been mewling. Instead, I slipped off the wrought iron stool and spun my plate like a Frisbee. It shattered against the short man’s temple, but by then the stool was already flying through the air toward them. They dodged it as I jumped, rolling over the counter on my back and landing, on my fingertips and the balls of my feet, on the kitchen floor.
I didn’t know I intended to move until the skillet was in my hand. She leapt forward, the knifepoint moving for my body. I caught the blade with the skillet and spun, more gracefully than I had ever moved before, throwing the woman to one side, and then coming around to land the skillet hard on the back of her head. I heard the report of a pistol again and the refrigerator door over my shoulder puckered. I dropped and rolled, pressing my back against the cabinet, where I could neither see the front room nor be seen from it.
The woman groaned. Blood pooled beneath her head.
“Drop your guns,” I shouted. “Do it now.”
The pistol shot startled me, and I waited for the pain. Nothing came. Shock, I thought. It’s the shock. I’ll die in a minute here. But then a second bullet slammed into the man, and he slumped. Blood flushed the thick pale cloth of his gi, making it look like skinned meat. Midian stood in the hallway leading to the bedroom, what looked like a World War I Lugar in his hand.
He looked at me. His expression was cool and appraising.
“You’re pretty good at that,” he said. “Close the door, kid.”
“You don’t need to look at me like that,” Midian said as he stepped over her body and toward the small man crumpled in the middle of the floor. The attacker had shards of the plate in his hair, his legs bent under him. His eyes were closed. I could see him breathing. “These aren’t people. They’re qliphoth. Shells. They’re what’s left after a rider’s taken over.”
“Don’t,” I breathed. “Please. Please don’t.”
“Please,” I said. “Please.” I didn’t even know what I meant by it.
“The first time’s the worst, kid,” he said in his industrial ruin of a voice. “Killing someone isn’t like an action movie. You don’t just go bang real loud and they fall down. It does something to you. I understand that.”
For a moment, I couldn’t breathe.
“Take your time,” Midian said. “It’s gonna be okay. Just take your time.”
It wasn’t okay for a very long time. It felt like food poisoning, or worse. But eventually my strength gave out a little, and the violence of my reactions calmed. Midian had left me alone, so I locked myself in the bathroom and took a long, cold shower. The water seemed to ground me and pull me back to myself. When I stepped out and picked up a towel, I felt fragile, but I could function.
Aubrey picked up on the second ring.
“Jayné?” he said, pronouncing it wrong.
“Hey,” I said. “I need to ask you something.”
“Sure,” he said. “Anything. What’s up?”
I could hear something in the background. Voices. Traffic. The real world. I took a deep breath.
“What do you know about the Invisible College?”
There was a pause that lasted years.
“Jayné? Are you there? Are you all right?”
“You remember how you said I should call if I needed any help?” I asked.
The bodies were lined up on the wooden floor of the front room. Midian had erected a levee of towels around them and draped black plastic trash bags over their heads. I was grateful for that. The curtains were closed, cutting us off from the street and the city. With the windows covered, I realized how small the apartment was. Aubrey was leaning against the interior brick wall. Midian sat on the couch beside a rough pile of history books and loose papers, his cigarette filling the air with a dim haze. His clothes were streaked with blood. I perched on the remaining kitchen stool. The one I’d thrown in the fight had bent enough that it wobbled now. I knew how it felt.
“O-kay,” Aubrey said. Then, “Wow.”
“Brick walls,” Midian replied with a shrug.
Midian smirked at the mispronunciation of my name, but didn’t correct him.
“Hey, hey, hey,” Midian said, standing up. “I wasn’t keen on it when the kid invited you in. Who the fuck are you calling?”
“Friends,” Aubrey said. “We’ve all worked with Eric one time or another. They know the score.”
Aubrey’s clean-up crew arrived twenty minutes later. There were two of them, both Aubrey’s age, both men, both unfazed by the corpses on the floor. The first looked vaguely Japanese, his head shaved to stubble, in a sand-colored shirt and pale, worn jeans. He said his name was Chogyi, but to call him Jake. The second, with white-blond shoulder-length hair and black clothes, only nodded to me. Chogyi Jake said his name was Ex.
“Ex?” I said. “Like in ex–football player?”
“Ex-priest,” Chogyi Jake said.
“I did,” Midian said. “The kid there kept them busy while I got the gun.”
“She was doing a pretty good job,” Midian said.
“Adrenaline,” I said. “It was the adrenaline.”
“Must have been pretty good adrenaline to give you that much precision and control,” Ex said dryly.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “What?”
I waved my hands at the room, the corpses, the four men who I barely knew.
“It doesn’t work like that,” Ex said. “You think Eric put some kind of protection on her?”
Midian looked at the newcomer with distrust, then shrugged.
“He left her the whole joint,” Midian said. “Be all kinds of stupid not to watch out for her too.”
Ex stood up. There was blood on his fingers. There was blood everywhere.
“You can come with us,” Ex said. “Help dig.”
“What about getting me to shelter?” Midian asked.
“We can keep you covered,” Ex said.
Midian shrugged. Aubrey nodded his approval.
“I’ll get Jayné back to Eric’s place. When you’re done, you can bring Midian too.”
“You think that’s safe?” Chogyi Jake asked.
He drove the same car he’d had at the airport the day before. I strapped on the seat belt and leaned against the window as he pulled into traffic. The moon looked more or less the way it had before I’d been attacked, before I’d been part of killing someone. The city lights obscured the stars. Aubrey didn’t speak, and neither did I, but I was sensitive to all the small movements and sounds he made. Shifting his weight as he accelerated or touched the brakes, clearing his throat. My body felt heavy, like I’d had the flu and was still recovering. A police siren wailed but Aubrey didn’t seem worried by it, so I let myself ignore it too.
“No,” I said. “I’m pretty fucked up. I’ve never…I’ve never been part of anything like that.”
“I don’t have powers. Whatever they said, I’m just a normal girl who—”
“Don’t worry about it,” Aubrey said. “We’ll make sense of the loose ends later.”
“They really are the ones who killed Eric, aren’t they?”
“What are they, then. I mean, not good. No cookies. Check.”
“And Coin did it all for shits and giggles?”
“You’re like him,” he said. “You’re…impressive in the same way.”
“Well, it doesn’t show. And food and sleep can’t hurt, right?”
I was aware of how badly I wanted to kiss him. I could feel his arms around me, my face against his shoulder as if it had already happened.
The voice, when it came, wasn’t his. It came from the back of the house, and it was Uncle Eric’s.
“Hey,” it said, “you’ve got a call.”
Aubrey walked back into the darkness. I followed. Eric’s voice led us to the bedroom. A huge, elaborate cell phone glowed on the bedside table, its screen the size of my palm. The voice was Eric’s ringtone. I picked it up. The incoming call wasn’t a number I recognized. Aubrey shook his head; he didn’t know either.
The voice sighed, as if giving up something. When she spoke again, she sounded resigned.
She left her number, said thanks, and hung up. I looked over at Aubrey.
“Helped people with their dogs?”
Aubrey chuckled, then smiled, then sobered.
“I should call her back,” I said, “and tell her that we can’t help.”
Before I could press the button, he reached out, putting his hand over mine.
“Let’s hold off,” he said. “Just in case she’s really with the Invisible College.”
“Right,” I said. “I should have thought of that.”
“I’m going to try to scare up some food,” he said. “Then you should sleep, if you can.”
“I’ll be here,” he said. “Don’t worry.”
I expected to fall asleep quickly, but as tired as I was, I couldn’t wind down. Instead, I punched the pillows into new shapes. I shifted to my back or my belly or my side. I got up and did sit-ups to tire myself out. I looked out the windows. I wondered what my parents would think.
I wondered if they would let me. The Invisible College. I remembered the blue-eyed woman. I saw her die again, and if my heart sped up and my throat closed down, it wasn’t as bad as it had been before. She’d been dead before she walked in. She’d been possessed by something from outside the real world and sent to finish the job they’d started when they killed my uncle. She was a victim, not of me but of Randolph Coin. Or whatever evil spirit had taken over Coin’s body.
I looked at the window, and the darkness had made it a mirror. Here was a woman on the trailing edge of twenty-two with no friends left. No family left. A shitload of money from nowhere, and the man who’d given it to her—who, judging from the way he’d put her name on everything, had always meant for her to have it—had been murdered.
“Yes, little tomato,” I said to the key ring. “I’ll check you out too.”
I was asleep when the others arrived. I woke up to the sound of voices and the smell of fresh coffee. I pulled myself together: quick shower, fresh clothes, and out to the kitchen. Midian, his ruined face seeming oddly comforting only because it was familiar, stood at the stove wearing a buff-colored apron. Ex and Aubrey were sitting at the table where the lawyer and I had been just the day before. Chogyi Jake smiled at me in greeting while he poured coffee into a black mug.
It was like walking into someone else’s home. The four of them all seemed perfectly at ease. It was like they all belonged there and I was the intruder, awkward and out of place. I hadn’t bothered with shoes. The kitchen tile was cool against my soles, and the coffee almost too hot to drink.
In answer, he held up a package of bacon, his desiccated face taking on a querying expression.
“Yes, I’d love some bacon,” I said. “Thanks.”
“We were just going over strategy,” Aubrey said. “How to proceed from here.”
“The…um…” I said, gesturing vaguely with the coffee.
Midian coughed out his derision.
“It’s fine,” I said, trying not to look at Ex or Aubrey. I was sure my embarrassment was showing, and it only made me more embarrassed. “And I’m not…I don’t see how I’m in a position to cut anyone loose or keep anyone on, for that matter. But I am a big girl. All grown up. I don’t want any of you in trouble over me.”
“Eric was a friend of ours,” Aubrey said. “Of all of ours. This isn’t just your fight.”
“We know the risks,” Chogyi Jake said.
“Better than you do,” Ex finished.
“Thank you,” I said. I actually meant about the food, but Ex was the one who replied.
“Not needed,” he said. It was the kindest tone he’d taken all morning. “This is what we do.”
The conversation barreled ahead as I ate. By the time I used the last crust of the toast to sop up the last golden trail of egg, Aubrey had a game plan in place. He would take me to run my errands—bank and Eric’s storage facilities both—while Ex went back to the apartment on Inca to make sure everything that needed cleaning was cleaned and also to retrieve the books and whiteboard I’d seen when I was there. Chogyi Jake and Midian were going to stay at the house and go over Eric’s wards and protections, including digging up any information that would explain why I’d suddenly gotten good at fighting and hadn’t set off Midian’s alarms. We would reconvene that evening with any new information in hand and decide what we were going to do.
“Ex?” I asked, nodding at the sports car.
“Ex,” Aubrey agreed. “You’ve got the directions to your banks?”
I held up three MapQuest printouts.
“Oh,” I said, then laughed. “You know, I never really thought of you as having a job. What do you do when you aren’t fighting the forces of darkness?”
“Seriously? And you’re studying what? The biomechanics of ghosts?”
“Parasitology,” he said. “Did you say Seventeenth Street?”
“And Stout, yeah. So you work with…what, stomach worms?”
“It’s a really cool organism,” he said. “Pretty much the classic example of parasitic mind control.”
“Parasitic mind control?” I said. My flesh crawled a little.
“So what does it do to the cat’s mind?” I asked.
“The thing that’s interesting is what happens once it’s inside the mouse,” Aubrey continued. “Normally, mice avoid anyplace that smells like a cat’s living there. Just good sense. But infect a mouse with T. gondii, and it isn’t afraid anymore. In fact, it starts liking the smell. The infected mouse starts hanging out where cats are more likely to be. Good for the cat, because it’s more likely to get a meal. Good for the parasite. It can get into a fresh host. Lousy for the mouse.”
The light turned green. Traffic started moving.
“The way your amoeba thing changes mice,” I said.
Aubrey glanced over at me and then back at the road.
“Sex,” he said. “It makes women more affectionate and prone to…ah…”
“So Eric read your paper and tracked you down?”
“Yeah,” Aubrey said. He seemed relieved not to be talking about sex. I wasn’t sure whether I was or not. “He was working on an idea about riders. See, there are some things about riders that look a lot like biological agents. And then there are things that really just don’t. What we were doing was sort of reverse-engineering riders. Figuring out what kinds of constraints are on them from the way they act.”
“Hey, that was Stout,” I said, pointing back at the street sign we’d just passed.
“It’s a one-way. They all are downtown. We’ll go down Champa and turn around.”
“Okay,” I said. “Sorry. You were saying? Reverse engineering something?”
“Yeah, like cicadas. Did you know cicadas have prime-numbered cycles?”
“There isn’t one,” he said. “At least not now. But that the prime numbers show up suggests that there was one, even if it’s already gone extinct. So when primes show up in riders, maybe it’s because there’s something out there that they’re avoiding. The Invisible College is actually a good example of that. They have this ceremony every seven years. Why seven?”
“Because it’s a prime, and they’re avoiding something?” I said.
“Midian said they’re an infection,” I said.
“Midian has some simplistic ideas about infection,” Aubrey said.
The bank was down a very short block. As if we’d agreed on it, Aubrey and I dropped the subjects of parasites and spirits when we entered the dry, cool desert of the financial world. The lawyer had given me the name of the woman to ask for when I got to the desk. I expected to be put in one of the little wood-grain cubicle offices that competed for space with the line of tellers, but instead Aubrey and I were escorted to an elevator, and then up to a plush private office where I presented my paperwork, signed theirs, and was given access to the first of Eric’s cash accounts. They promised me an ATM card in about a week. Just to see if I could, I withdrew ten thousand dollars in cash. The woman didn’t blink.
“Dinner’s on me,” I said as we walked back out onto the street. Aubrey looked stunned.
“Okay,” I said. “This one’s on Eighteenth Street. That should be pretty close, right?”
“What? Oh. Yeah, that’s over by the Children’s Hospital. We could almost walk to that.”
“Let’s drive anyway,” I said. And then, “Hey, are you all right?”
“Me either,” I said as we pulled out into traffic. “Turns out there was a whole lot I didn’t know.”
“The people who have the thing,” I said. “They don’t know it, do they?”
“The T. whatever. The parasite,” I said.
“No. I mean, you could test for antibodies and find out, but generally there aren’t many symptoms.”
“Except that it changes who they are,” I said.
“Is something wrong?” he asked.
I tightened my grip on the handle and pulled. The garage door shrieked in metallic complaint and rose up. Daylight spilled into a concrete cube behind it, smaller than an actual garage. White cardboard boxes were stacked three deep against the walls, and an industrial-looking set of steel shelves at the back supported a collection of odd objects. A violin case, a duffel bag, two translucent bowling balls, a stuffed bear with a wide pink heart embroidered on its chest.
This is nice,” Midian said, chambering a round with the rolling sound that only shotguns make. He looked down the barrel and nodded his appreciation. “Good workmanship.”
“Iron filings,” Ex said. “According to this, he loaded them with silver, salt, and iron.”
So now we had a countdown. Seven days.
“No room in the car,” Aubrey said.
“I’ve got to…” I said, standing and heading for the back door. “Excuse me.”
The door slid open behind me, and then just as quietly shut.
“I can’t do this,” I said. “We’re talking about murdering someone.”
He came to my side and lowered himself to the ground, legs crossed.
“I thought you understood,” he said. “These aren’t people. Not anymore. They’re—”
I closed my eyes and saw Midian fire his Lugar into the back of the woman’s head.
“I just don’t believe it,” I said. “I want to. But I don’t.”
Aubrey was quiet. I wanted to brush the hair away from his eyes. I wanted to ask him to forgive me.
“If you knew that riders were real,” he said. “If you had evidence that the world really does work the way we all say it does, could you trust me about Coin and the Invisible College?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “Probably.”
“What? No! No, I’m not mad. I’m just thinking.”
“No,” Aubrey said. “He had to prove it to me.”
I put my head in my hands and hoped that my mind would clear. It didn’t.
“Who?” I asked, taking the phone. It was warm.
“The woman that called. The one with the dog.”
I looked down at the phone. The icon for voice mail was still there.
“What if she’s with the Invisible College?” I said.
“Hello?” a woman said. I thought the voice was the same, but it seemed tighter.
“Hi,” I said. “This is Jayné Heller. I think you called my uncle Eric?”
“Oh, thank God,” the woman said. She sounded like she was crying. “Oh, thank God.”
I’D EXPECTED at the soonest, we’d arrange to meet the woman and her dog sometime in the morning. But ten minutes after I ended the call, Aubrey and I were in his minivan headed north for Boulder.
“Did she tell you anything about what was going on?”
“She was pretty upset, sounds like.”
“I know enough to start,” Aubrey said. “Hopefully it’ll be simple.”
We turned onto Highway 36, and then sooner than I’d expected, we were pulling onto the South Boulder Road exit. A knot was tying itself in my belly, embarrassment and fear.
“Candace Dorn? I’m Jayné,” I said. “This is Aubrey. He’s here to help.”
“Please come in,” she said, standing back. I wondered whether she’d have done the same thing if we’d had a shotgun. Something made me think she would. “Thank you for coming out. I don’t…I just don’t know what to do. I don’t believe any of this is really happening.”
“Can you tell us what exactly is going on?” Aubrey asked.
“What did the vet say?” I asked.
“I don’t believe in…voodoo or whatever,” Candace said at last.
“What makes you think this is voodoo,” I asked. “Or, you know, whatever?”
“That isn’t Charlie in there, is it?” I asked.
“No,” she said. “Nothing happened. It was just one day…”
“And when did your fiancé start beating you up?” I asked.
The silence was total. When Candace spoke again, she sounded defeated.
“After I called you,” she said. “After he found out that I’d called.”
Candace Dorn stepped forward, her hand out as if she was stopping us. The unease in her expression made perfect sense to me. We’d just come into this sudden surreal hell that her life had become and started talking like we understood it.
“What are you saying?” she demanded. “What’s going on here?”
Candace and her dog needed a moment alone.
Aubrey sat on the couch, explaining the situation in fast, telegraphic sentences. I could hear Ex’s voice compressed to a thin, synthesized version of itself coming from the phone. I stood with my arms crossed, looked out the window into the hot August night, and tried to make sense of my own heart.
And that, oddly, was the answer I’d been looking for. The warmth in my heart was pride that he’d chosen me to take up his work. To step into lives like Candace’s. It beat the crap out of being a college dropout with a bad reputation and no family. And maybe he’d known that too.
He came up the same path I’d walked with Aubrey half an hour before, the palm of his hand resting on the butt of his pistol. The flashing lights silhouetted him and hid his face. At my side, Candace was staring out the window and murmuring a constant string of syllables equal parts prayer and vulgarity. The dog stood between her and the door, still and silent and thoroughly undoglike.
From my glimpses through the window, I guessed the man was around two hundred pounds. He had a Taser, Mace, a pistol. He had a badge. For all I knew his murmured conversation on his lapel radio had been calling more police to his cause. Plus which, he was a supernatural beastie capable of God only knew what.
We had Aubrey, me, Candace Dorn, and a very intelligent dog. I didn’t like our chances.
“Okay,” Aubrey said nervously. “We’re going to be okay. We’ll just…we have to just…”
The man reached the door and pounded on it. The house itself seemed to tremble.
“Candace!” the man shouted. “Open the door!”
“That isn’t Aaron,” she said. “It’s his body, but that isn’t Aaron.”
“I know,” I said. “Leave this part to us. Just get out. Do it now.”
The dog nuzzled her hand, whining slightly, then jerked its muzzle toward the kitchen. Let’s go. Candace drew a long, shaking breath while the thing in her fiancé’s body hammered the door again. She nodded, pulled me into an embrace as sudden as it was brief, and then she and Charlie the dog were gone.
“How long until Ex gets here?” I asked, trying hard to keep my voice from shaking.
“Ashes and salt,” he said. “It may help block or absorb anything it tries to do.”
“You mean besides shoot us,” I said. The bag was heavier than I expected.
“Besides that,” Aubrey agreed.
“Open this fucking door and do it now!” the cop shouted.
The shots weren’t like the ones you hear on TV or in the movies. Two dry cracks, quieter than the pounding of the thing’s fists, and the wood around the doorknob bloomed into splinters. The ridden policeman kicked the door open so hard it almost came off its hinges. Aubrey leaped back, diving for cover. I stepped around the corner, the cloth bag gripped tight in my hand.
“She’s upstairs,” Aubrey lied. “Just leave me out of it.”
The impact when it slammed me against the wall drove my breath out. Its eyes were fixed on me. I saw Aubrey diving toward it, saw its leg lash out, saw Aubrey fall again. Its good hand was around my throat. The air was getting thin. I scratched at its eyes, my arms faster than I would have thought possible but still not fast enough. I didn’t see its wounded hand cut into my side; I only felt it.
“Jayné! Stay back!” Aubrey shouted, but I was already in motion. It caught my leg as I tried to kick it, lifting me up like a twig. My knee shifted, and I shrieked with pain. I caught a glimpse of Aubrey—red-faced, his teeth bared in rage—flailing at the thing’s back with the poker. I was airborne. The plaster and lath wall gave when I hit it, but the sound of the fight was muffled now. Aubrey’s yelling was distant and soft, the beast’s answering howl no more than unpleasant. I tried to rise to my knees, but it didn’t go as well as I’d hoped.
I almost didn’t see the dog attack.
I wavered there on the edge of consciousness, and when I came back, the beast was grabbing at the German shepherd, whose teeth were buried in its neck. I raised the gun, but Aubrey put his hand over mine, pushing the barrel away.
“Can’t kill the body,” he grunted. “Need the body. Aaron! Close your eyes.”
I crawled over, putting my hand on Aubrey’s thigh. He was trembling.
“Is it dead?” I managed to croak.
“Bound,” he said. “Sleeping. Should be okay until Ex gets here.”
“Could have tried it a little earlier, though,” I said.
“You’re hurt,” Aubrey said from the doorway.
“No. I’m…” I looked down at my blood-soaked side. “Oh. Hey, yeah. I’m hurt.”
“No, I mean I’m sorry I brought you here. This was way more than I expected. It was stupid of me.”
“I think this is going to need stitches,” he said.
“Yeah,” I said. “I think you’re right.”
The dog yipped once and rose to its feet. I heard the front door swing open then closed, and Ex came in, his pale eyes wide. Aubrey raised a hand in greeting, and Ex mirrored the gesture with an autonomic air.
“Turned out it was a little hairier than we thought,” I said. “Who knew?”
“And I need to go to a hospital, get stitched up,” I said. I thought I sounded very calm.
“Right,” Ex said, then a moment later, “Okay. I’m on it.”
Closer by, Randolph Coin—or the thing inside him—had already started leading its seven-year swarm into a dance that would take more bodies away from people like Aaron the German shepherd and Candace Dorn and give them over to these unclean spirits. At Eric’s house, Midian was probably frying up steak and eggs, with Aubrey and Ex either at his side drinking coffee or sleeping off the night’s exhaustion. Chogyi Jake murmured something and shifted his weight without spilling his coffee. I smiled at the man’s sleep-peaceful face and let myself sink back down into my amazingly expensive, thin, uncomfortable pillow. I had expected to greet this particular morning with a sense of despair and isolation, and instead I felt at home in my life for the first time I could remember.
It was Sunday, the fifth of August, and it was my birthday. I was twenty-three.
The doctors in Boulder released me that afternoon with precautions about not doing anything to pop my stitches or aggravate my knee. Chogyi Jake took me home in his van, but I was already fading. I fell asleep almost as soon as I got back home, and when I woke up Monday morning, the house was silent.
I slipped out of bed, careful of my various wounds, pulled on a thick wool robe that was a little too large for me, and padded out into the hallway. The door of the guest bedroom was ajar, and Aubrey was in the bed, his eyes closed and his mouth hanging open. I watched him sleep, watched his chest rise and fall and rise again. Part of me wanted to step in, slip into the bed, and curl up beside him. Before I could act on the impulse, I heard the front door open and familiar voices fill the space. Ex and Chogyi Jake. And then Midian, welcoming them.
“The one thing we know for absolute certain is that it didn’t work,” Ex said.
Midian coughed once and shrugged his shoulders. He nodded to me as I walked through the doorway.
“Can we stay on point here?” Ex snapped. “We can’t hold to Eric’s plan. It already failed.”
Before I could say no, he hadn’t, Ex broke in.
“But we don’t know the details yet, and the point still stands that Eric got killed.”
“No offense, Jake,” Midian said, sitting at the table. “Your friend there? He’s a prick.”
“He’s angry with himself,” Chogyi Jake said. “He deals with it poorly. Give him time to work it through. He’ll be back.”
“What’s he pissed off about?” I asked around a mouthful of sugar.
“He feels otherwise,” Chogyi Jake said.
“Well, he’s paying the price of that little fuckup,” Midian said.
“What do you mean?” I asked. “What price?”
“Jesus wept,” Midian said. “He used a tool that was stronger than he was, and it smacked him one. It’s no worse than smoking a few thousand cigarettes. That’s as much as you need to worry about, okay?”
“How badly did it hurt him?” I asked, my eyes on Chogyi. He didn’t look away.
Now it turned out Aubrey had done himself permanent damage saving me, and I was furious with myself because of it. Furious and guilty and a little frightened. I’d brought him into the situation. My need to understand, my need for proof that had seemed so important before seemed petty now. If I’d just had faith, he wouldn’t have been hurt…
Aubrey was still asleep. Now that I knew to look for it, I noticed his skin had a gray tinge I didn’t remember. His breathing was deep and slow. I sat on the edge of the mattress, my weight pulling Aubrey toward me. He looked younger when he was asleep. None of the small lines that time was starting to etch in the corners of his eyes or mouth showed. I could see what he’d looked like when he was a child. I drew a lock of hair back from his face with my finger. The swelling around his left eye had gone down, but there was still the darkness of a deep bruise like a shadow inside his skin. A scab ran from his collarbone to hide under the sheet.
“Yeah,” I said. “You totally are.”
“Could someone get me up to speed here?” I asked, sitting down carefully.
“I don’t want to do something that’s going to hurt anyone. I mean any of us,” I said.
“I think that sounds good,” I said. “But first I think I’d like to know a little more about how this spirit magic stuff works. You guys mind running me through the tutorial?”
The smaller man—Randolph Coin—closed the passenger door and said something, nodding toward the warehouse and then to the train tracks beyond it. His face was wide and round, heavy at the jowls, and sparkling with a bright animation. When the big man answered, Coin laughed. He looked like a successful businessman, only without the soul-crushing grayness. Even with the pounding heat of the afternoon, he wore a dark jacket. The big one wiped an arm across his inscribed forehead, and I realized that Coin wasn’t sweating.
“He isn’t marked,” I said. “I don’t see any tattoos on him.”
“It’s a glamour,” Ex said. “Changes how people perceive him.”
There was a physical sensation that went with it that reminded me of watching a cat slink along under a bedspread. I opened my eyes again, and Randolph Coin was transformed. Swirls of ink eddied at the corners of his eyes. Black marks darkened his lips. At the warehouse door, he paused, turning back toward the car like he’d heard something. Startled, I let the smoke dissipate. My eyes became my eyes again, and his face was only flesh-colored. I put down the binoculars.
“All right,” I said. “That’s good. Let’s get out of here.”
Randolph Coin, who wasn’t afraid of us.
He glanced over at me, no more than a flicker, then his ice-blue eyes were back on the road.
The lines around his mouth softened a little bit. Not much.
“It worked,” I said. “The thing would have killed us if Aubrey hadn’t done what he did.”
“Yeah,” Ex said, and gunned the engine, passing a semi and cutting back into traffic in front of it.
“We’ll do better next time,” I said.
The plan was simple, and even easier because it was already laid out. Instead of Eric luring Coin free of his hive, Chogyi Jake would do the work. Instead of Eric’s hired muscle attacking Coin, Ex and Aubrey and I would do the honors with sniper rifles and custom ammunition designed to disrupt riders. I pulled up satellite photos of the warehouse and everything around it from Google Earth and printed out copies for everyone. Ex diagrammed where each of us would be and worked out the timetable. I kept expecting him to tell us to synchronize our watches, but since all of our cell phones pulled the data from the same satellites, that part was really covered already. I’d just been watching too many old movies.
It was a depressing exercise. When I’d gone to college, all bridges to my parents and church reduced to cinders and ash behind me, I’d thought I was starting my real life at last. I’d thought that everything I did, every person I met or hated or fell in love with, mattered. And now that I’d left that behind too, I could see that I’d been wrong. The drama and the experiments and the passionate lack of direction were all doing just fine without me. It was like pulling my finger out of water. My absence hadn’t left a hole.
When the sunlight streaming through the windows woke me, I felt like crap. I made my way out to the main part of the house to find Ex and Aubrey had gone. Midian lay on the couch, hands folded corpselike on his chest. Only Chogyi Jake was there and awake, working on a crossword puzzle and drinking green tea.
“Probably a good call,” I said, hiding a pang of disappointment. “So. What are you up to?”
“That’s certainly the assumption, yes,” he said, folding the half-finished puzzle.
“So. There’s no real reason we couldn’t go shopping?”
CHOGYI JAKE’S van smelled like a mechanic’s shop: motor oil and WD-40 and the cold, subtle scent of steel tools. The windows all had a thin coating of old grease that made the world outside seem like a movie with the focus just barely off. The bucket seats were cracked, the foam stuffing peeking through. The back compartment was dark as a cave. Perfect for moving corpses. The dead woman’s face—the blue of her eyes, the black marks inscribed on her skin, the surprise on her face—flickered in my mind for a moment. I shook myself, hoping movement could dislodge the image.
“Pretty clothes first,” I said. “Mind-improving literature later.”
Saks Fifth Avenue. Neiman Marcus. Abercrombie & Fitch. None of them was safe from me. Victoria’s Secret gave up a half dozen of the great-looking bras I had never been able to afford. I got blue jeans, I got suits, I got the little black evening dress that my mother had said every girl needs, but said quietly so my father couldn’t hear. I bought a black leather overcoat that I wouldn’t be able to wear for months and steel-toed work boots I didn’t need. I got a new swimsuit—a one-piece, because halfway through trying on the bikini, I got irrationally embarrassed about the stitches. I bought four hundred dollars’ worth of makeup even though I never wore any.
“I’m not really like this,” I said. “I mean, I never do this kind of thing.”
“Well, almost never,” Chogyi Jake said, laughter in his eyes.
“Yeah,” I said. And then, “Why do you think it’s about fear, though? Why not just greed?”
“He knows,” Chogyi Jake said. “He knows what he does and why he does it.”
“You knew Eric, right? You worked with him before. What did he do?”
Chogyi Jake smiled and leaned forward. The chrome and mirrors of the restaurant seemed too hard and bright for an expression as gentle and compassionate as that.
He raised his eyebrows in a question.
“For fear. The anxiety,” I said. “What do you do?”
“These days, I meditate,” he said. “Before that, it was heroin.”
I didn’t know that it was what I’d expected until he said it, and then it was perfectly clear. I smiled at him, and he smiled back. We didn’t say anything more about it. I paid the bill, shouldered the burden of my purchases, and we went out to the van. The sun was blazing down on us now, the light like a physical pressure on my face. He opened the back door of the van. The compartment was almost full of shining bags, plastic wrap, boxes. Clothes hung from hooks in the roof like a little mobile dry cleaner’s. I ran a hand through my hair, a little stunned to see it all at once this way. Chogyi Jake was silent.
“No,” Chogyi Jake said. “If it’s true, it isn’t stupid. It’s just who you are right now.”
“I don’t want…I don’t want them to see all this. I don’t want them to think I’m like this,” I said.
“I know a shelter,” he said. “They’ll be grateful for whatever you want to give.”
“Okay,” I said, nodding. “Okay, good.”
“EIGHT HOURS for that?” Midian said as Chogyi Jake closed the door. “Fuck me, sister. Did you have to try on the whole store before you picked something?”
“Where did you get these?” I asked.
I hadn’t noticed the box until he pulled it out from under the coffee table and put it in between the rifles. It was carved rosewood with a finish so rich and subtle it seemed to reflect the light of a nearby fire. Ex opened it and let the cartridges spill out. The bullets were all black and engraved with script that looked like Arabic. I stepped closer, putting out my hand, but hesitated before I touched them. They were beautiful, but the prospect of holding one made my flesh crawl. They smelled like fire, and I had the uncanny sense that they were aware of me.
We all nodded together, even Midian. Ex looked pleased.
“I’ve arranged some time at the practice range for you two,” he said, nodding at me and Aubrey. “You don’t want the first time you use this to be in the field. That’s tomorrow morning. We’ll leave from here at noon. It’s going to take five or six hours, so don’t plan anything for the afternoon.”
Aubrey’s eyes flickered, recalculating something, but he nodded his agreement.
“Nice work,” Midian said. “All this in place, I think we’ve got half a chance.”
It’s just fear, I told myself. This is only fear. You can deal with it.
“Hey,” I said, heart in throat, “after the practice range tomorrow, can I take you out to dinner?”
“Sure. We should check with the guys and see what they want, but I know a great Indian place that—”
“You singular,” I said. “Ixnay on the uralplay.”
The nightmare was like being assaulted.
The sound came again. A deep rushing, like beating wings the size of mountains. When I looked up, the sky was a single eye, staring back down. The pupil was a terrible blue, and the blood vessels in the white spelled out words and phrases that made me want to scream. The massive eye darted this way and that, searching for me. I huddled under a filthy blanket, trying not to breathe. Slow footsteps, echoing like something from a hospital corridor, came slowly closer and closer. My hands were balled in fists so tightly I knew I was breaking bones, and if he heard them snap, he’d find me. But I couldn’t unclasp them. My hands wouldn’t respond to me.
“You too, eh?” Midian asked as I stood there, staring at them.
“I had a rough dream,” I said.
“Caught in the dark, sound of huge wings?” Aubrey asked.
“God’s eye looking down,” Ex said. His voice was bleak.
“Wasn’t God,” Midian said. “That, ladies and germs, was Randolph Coin. He’s looking for us.”
When dawn finally came, I was surprised that it woke me. I hadn’t expected to sleep again that night. The others were all moving a little slower too, the weight of Coin’s presence still lingering in the backs of our minds. As the day grew bright and hot, the sun commanding the profound blue sky, the oppressive sense of threat faded a little. It didn’t ever quite go away. We got on with the work at hand.
I’d never really thought about fighting supernatural evil as a lifestyle choice. Still, I was surprised that it felt so much like planning a crime. The range Ex had in mind was less a formal police-style building with individual runs and paper targets than an open field down a dirt track halfway between Denver and Colorado Springs. Aubrey’s minivan looked out of place in the wide, rough terrain.
“I wish you’d change that ringtone,” Ex said as I answered it.
“Hello?” I said, putting my free hand against my other ear and walking to the back of the minivan.
“Hi,” Candace said. “I’m sorry I didn’t call back earlier. Is this Jayné?”
I hadn’t realized he’d been in, though in retrospect it made sense. Dog bites, the haugtrold cutting its own face, whatever damage Aubrey and I had managed to inflict. I glanced over at Ex as he laid out the rifles and two boxes of less arcane ammunition on a blue tarp. I wondered what exactly the exorcism process entailed.
“Good,” I said. “I’m glad to hear that. And Charlie?”
It was the first time the thought had even crossed my mind. Eric’s money had to have come from somewhere; that was true. And since this was what he did, I suppose it followed that whatever he’d charged for his work had to have been pretty astronomical. I didn’t know what to say. From the little empire that I’d inherited, I had to think the money had been huge. On the other hand, I hadn’t talked to the lawyer about it. Maybe the money had come from someplace else. Maybe Eric had some sort of sliding scale. I was caught flat-footed, and I felt stupid for not knowing the answer.
“Don’t worry about it,” I said. “It’s on the house.”
Whatever Candace had expected to hear, it wasn’t that.
“I owe you,” she said. “If you ever need anything, please call me. You saved my life. You saved me.”
I dropped the call and shoved the cell back into my pocket. Ex frowned down at the rifles as I came back. Aubrey raised an eyebrow, asking wordlessly what the call had been.
“Follow-up,” I said. “Nothing important. What did I miss?”
“It doesn’t really matter how good a hit you get on Coin,” he said as we broke down the rifles and folded up the tarp. “We aren’t trying to kill him with the shot. Graze his pinky finger, and as long as it breaks skin, we’re fine.”
“He’s not a real person, though,” I said. “He’s just a rider in a stolen body.”
“It’s still going to be hard,” Ex said. His voice didn’t leave room for discussion.
“Jayné,” he said. “Look, if you want to postpone…well, postpone tonight. I absolutely understand.”
“No,” I said, surprised by how much I meant it. “I really don’t.”
A small knot of tension was building in my gut. I wanted to get back to the house, get out of my sweat-soaked clothes and into something clean. I wanted to go out with Aubrey and drink and dance and show the world that I wasn’t scared. I wanted Saturday to be over, and the thing that lived inside Randolph Coin’s body defeated. The traffic moved languidly, shifting forward, pausing, then shifting again. My mind moved between unease at the still not quite faded memory of the monstrous eye looking down at me and a deep, slow-rising desire that came from the immediate, distracting presence of Aubrey’s body and breath. We reached our exit, and Aubrey pulled us off the highway and onto surface streets that easily went twice as fast.
I was glad I’d donated most of yesterday’s purchases. The debate over the handful of outfits I had kept was painful enough. If I’d had the full wardrobe, I would have melted down completely. I settled on a red skirt with a white scoop top that showed off a little cleavage without screaming slut. A little lipstick and eyeliner. Nice leather shoes with a heel low enough I could still run in them if something happened. I considered taking Eric’s cell phone, but decided against it for the small, petty reason that it was too bulky for the purse I wanted to carry and I sure as hell wasn’t taking my leather backpack on a date. Besides, Aubrey would have his cell.
“Well, now,” Midian said. “Our little girl cleans up pretty nice.”
“You don’t have to sound surprised,” I said, willing myself not to blush.
“Leaving the warded house is a mistake,” Ex said.
“It’s their mistake to make,” Midian said. “And your subtext’s starting to show.”
“I know this Cuban place,” he said.
“Anything,” I said. “You’re driving.”
“Thanks for not postponing,” he said.
“Welcome,” I replied, smiling to myself.
When I got to ASU, I didn’t have any idea how to deal with men. I didn’t have any experience or any friends. All I could do was fake it and hope. My first lover had been a graduate student who was the teacher’s assistant in my biology class. I found out later he’d been going through the roll in alphabetical order, and made it through the early Ns before the end of the semester.
“This feels a little awkward, doesn’t it?” I said.
Aubrey shook his head, denying it, and then said, “Well. A little, maybe. First dates.”
“Tell you what,” Aubrey said, “you keep watch behind me, I’ll keep watch behind you.”
The anxiety in my belly softened a little.
I raised my hands, trying to make a gesture that would express what I couldn’t find words for.
“Yeah,” I said. “I know what you mean.”
“I’m sorry,” he said. “That’s not very good first-date chatter, is it?”
“How so?” I asked. “I mean, what kinds of things did he say about me?”
Aubrey thought about that for a second.
“He wasn’t wrong about any of it. It’s just the person he was talking about was a kid, and you aren’t. He said you were smart. Mouthy. That his brother was about the worst match for you as a father that he could imagine,” Aubrey said. “I didn’t get the feeling that they particularly got along, Eric and your dad.”
“Cats. Dogs,” I said. “Our family has had its Jerry Springer moments.”
“I heard a little bit about that. There was some static when you stopped believing in God.”
“It didn’t start out that way,” I said. “It’s where it ended up. Maybe it’s where it had to end up.”
“About twelve, I think,” I said. “I tried to explain it to my dad, but he didn’t think much of it. Eventually, I figured out that I shouldn’t talk about it. But then I started thinking about other things that didn’t make sense. I looked at the world, and it just seemed…I don’t know…bigger than what they were telling me. And somewhere in there, I woke up and thought, you know, if Jesus died for my sins, that’s not really something I asked him to do.”
Aubrey laughed. It was a warm sound, and I relaxed a little, just hearing it.
“It sounds like you didn’t lose faith in God as much as in your church,” Aubrey said.
“So,” he said when I put down my fork, “you think Midian’s cleaned them out yet?”
“Yeah,” he said. “Me neither.”
We went to a nightclub in an old church that played well-mixed techno. Despite my expectations, the Goth contingent was in the minority. Most of the people seemed like young-professional types and college students. I danced for a while, Aubrey near me, but not so close that we were really dancing together. Then the floor began to get crowded, the bodies of strangers pushing us closer. My anxiety about the Invisible College and Coin and the nightmare was all still there, but instead of spoiling the night, it made things sharper. More real. I could see how someone could wind up addicted to danger.
I had a second martini, and then another drink that I couldn’t quite identify. When I started feeling light-headed, I went up to the rooftop deck for some air. The city lay spread out before me in the darkness, glittering black and orange. The night had cooled down to comfortable, the breeze warm against my skin like Denver itself exhaling gently against me. I heard Aubrey come up behind me; I could already recognize his footsteps. When he put his hand on my shoulder, I leaned back against him.
“You know,” I said softly, “you never did show me your apartment.”
There had been times I’d seen a naked man and thought it was exciting or funny or weird. Lying on Aubrey’s half-made bed and seeing him lit only by the soft light that filtered in from the street was the first time I’d thought a man was beautiful. My body had a warm, relaxed feeling, the bruises and cracked ribs only a seasoning on a rising tide of pleasure. Aubrey’s skin against mine was rough and sweet and perfect. His fingers were gentle, and even with stitches holding my side together, I felt beautiful. I came once before he was in me. He had a three-pack of condoms in his bedside table in an unopened box. We went through two of them.
My clothes were in knots on the floor, and I didn’t bother trying to untangle them. I took myself to his bathroom, had a quick shower, and wrapped myself in his robe—soft green terry cloth that smelled like him. When I went to the kitchen, I didn’t turn on the lights for fear of waking him. Between the shower and the deepest part of the night, it was cool enough that a cup of tea sounded good. I boiled some water, found a cup and a box of tea bags by the light of the gas flame, and took myself out to the couch while the tea steeped.
Her name was Kimberly. She had her PhD from UC Berkeley, several papers listed in the indexes of things like Clinical Microbiology and The Journal of Parasitology. From what I could tell, she was presently on staff with a research project out of Grace Memorial Hospital in Chicago. And she had cowritten at least two papers with Aubrey. One was called “Patterns in Parasitic Modification of Host Behavior,” and the whole thing was posted on a newsgroup, ripped off from a magazine called Nature. The other one I found was “Cystic Extent as Behavioral Metric in T. gondii Infection.”
In the pictures of her that I found online, she had shoulder-length auburn hair and surprisingly blue eyes. When she smiled, she looked a little like Nicole Kidman. I found a website with pictures of a rafting trip that she and Aubrey both went on a few years before. There were four other couples, but I kept staring at Aubrey, who was laughing, his arms around his wife. In the photograph, his wedding ring seemed to glow.
I left the laptop on the couch. I managed to get all of my clothes up off his floor without waking him. I dressed in the bathroom with shaking hands. I thought I might cry or throw up, but I just pulled on my underwear and my skirt. The scoop top was badly wrinkled, but I wasn’t going back in to steal one of Aubrey’s shirts. If I looked like I was on the walk of shame, that was pretty much dead accurate. I pulled the top on, put my feet in my low, comfortable heels, and grabbed my purse on the way out.
Okay, I felt stupid. Okay, I’d been humiliated. It wasn’t the first time. It probably wouldn’t be the last. I’d let myself fall for a guy who had lied to me, or at least omitted a great big honking truth that pretty much anyone would have seen as worthy of mention. I wondered whether I would have done anything different if I’d known he was married. I was fairly certain I would have.
“Sweet fucking Jesus,” Midian said as soon as I walked in. “I figured you for dead.”
“Not dead,” I said, and tossed my purse on the couch. “Where is everyone?”
“Well, you can tell him I’m back,” I said. “I need to get into some clean clothes.”
I’d changed into jeans and one of Eric’s white button-down shirts when I heard Aubrey and Ex arrive. Their voices were harsh, like they’d been fighting. I stretched, summoned up my righteous anger, and headed out to take the bull by the horns.
Ex was livid. He wheeled on me as soon as I appeared in the living room.
“What exactly was that little stunt supposed to—”
“Jayné,” Aubrey said at the same time, “we need to talk about—”
I put my palm out toward Ex, shutting him down, and turned to Aubrey.
“Yes,” he said. “Please, I understand what happened, and I know what it seems like, but—”
“Are you and Kimberly divorced?” I asked.
“And you didn’t tell me,” I said.
“No,” Aubrey said. “I should have.”
“Okay,” I said. “We’ve talked.”
I brushed past Ex and into the kitchen. It was probably only my own embarrassment and humiliation that made me read Ex’s expression as delight. When he and Aubrey followed me in a moment later, they were both perfectly sober. Midian was sitting at the kitchen table, the telephone handset to his ear.
He paused, frowned, and shook his head.
“Yeah, probably not,” I said. “Let’s go over the plan again.”
No one suggested anything else. I took out the maps and schematics, and Ex walked through the whole thing again, quizzing the three of us. Aubrey answered his questions in a clipped, hard voice and sat with his arms crossed. When Chogyi Jake appeared with a bag of groceries, Ex made him go through the whole thing by himself while Midian made ham sandwiches with fresh tomatoes and hot mustard for lunch. My brain was a storm of anger, betrayal, and humiliation, but I forced myself to follow the details of the plan. Midian and Chogyi Jake at the southeast edge of the property. Ex in his car to the north, me in among the railroad tracks to the west, and Aubrey in his minivan to the south. Three different angles, so that no matter where Coin stood, at least one of us would have a clear shot. When Chogyi Jake and Midian had drawn Coin out past his protections, Midian would give the signal by raising both hands. If for any reason he couldn’t do that, Chogyi Jake would drop to the ground. The plan to go out and look at the place physically seemed to have fallen by the wayside in the day’s drama. I didn’t bring it up.
“I’m going to crash for a while,” I said. “Knock if something happens.”
The silence that accompanied me out of the kitchen told me that the house would have to be on fire before anyone disturbed me. That suited me just fine.
I imagined myself going back. Driving up to the dorms in a chauffeured Rolls-Royce, maybe. I pictured Cary’s reaction, seeing me rising like a phoenix from the ashes and salted earth I’d left behind me. I slid from that to going home, paying off the mortgage on my parents’ house, buying my mother a car, telling my father that I wouldn’t go to church on Sunday if I didn’t want to, and watching him realize that his power over me was gone. Even his power to drive me away. Somewhere in it, I had become the primary funding behind the hospital in Chicago, dressed in a good Armani suit with Nicole Kidman–esque Kimberly asking my permission to go ahead with her work. I didn’t notice the shift between daydream and dream until I found myself in the nightmare of wings and Coin’s massive eye and woke with a shout.
“I’m okay!” I shouted back. “Leave the door alone. I’m fine.”
“What the fuck is going on in there?”
“Bad dream,” I said. “I’m fine. I’ll be out in a minute. Just calm down.”
“You’re all right?” Ex’s voice sounded like he was expecting me to lie. “Was it Coin again?”
Ex’s silence seemed untrusting, but I ignored it and pulled myself into the bathroom. If he broke the door down to rescue me from a bad dream, I’d throw him out of my house. I was deeply weary of dealing with male bullshit. I felt tired and sluggish. Happily, I had my old leather backpack in the bedroom with me. Going out to hunt for tampons wasn’t something I particularly wanted to deal with at the moment.
“Ex,” I said, folding my arms.
“I need you to make peace with Aubrey,” he said softly.
“I really don’t see how that’s any of your business,” I said.
“Not especially, no,” Ex said. “But I want you two at peace with each other.”
“Okay,” I said. “I’ll do the olive branch thing. But I’m not looking to forgive and forget.”
I waited until I’d eaten dinner. Midian had cooked steaks in red wine and black pepper. The onions were sweet and tart, and he’d done something with butter and garlic that made broccoli taste good. We sat on the back porch, drinking wine and watching the stars come out. Aubrey sat a little apart, his smile tight and restrained. Chogyi Jake and Midian were both taking up the slack in the conversation by trading jokes and stories, cajoling Aubrey out of his funk and me out of my rage. I was almost feeling human by the end. Ex kept looking over at me, prompting me to make a move. I’d promised to make peace, but I still resented it.
It wouldn’t have killed Aubrey to open the discussion. He could start by apologizing again.
I knew I wasn’t being fair or even particularly rational. I tried to suck it up.
“Aubrey,” I said, and his head came up like he’d heard a gunshot. “You got a minute?”
“Why don’t you tell me about your wife,” I said.
“We’d been married for about two years when Eric showed up,” Aubrey said. “She was still here back then. We were both at the university, and she was doing some work on a study at the medical center. The money wasn’t great, but we were doing all right. Eric sent us both e-mail at first. He said he’d read our work and had some questions about the logical structures of parasitism. How parasite-host systems worked, what kinds of patterns you’d see in host behavior modification. He was really interested in reverse-engineering things.”
“But Kim wasn’t interested,” I said.
“You told her she was being religious,” I said.
He chuckled, but there wasn’t any mirth in the sound.
“You had to choose between Eric and her,” I said.
“Sort of,” he said. “Anyway. She moved out, got a job in Chicago. It was one of those situations where you had to still work together, because so many of our studies were interlinked. Things cooled off, and we stayed on decent terms. About a year and a half ago, she told me she was seeing someone else. I agreed that it was over, and we had a kind of agreement in principle to finalize the divorce. File the paperwork, all that. But she’s insanely busy, and I was spending half my time working on my research and the other half helping Eric.”
Aubrey took a deep breath and let it out slowly. He looked up at me. He was tired.
“You could have told me all this over dinner,” I said.
“Finding out about the wife online isn’t better,” I said.
“How about finding out by snooping through my e-mail?” Aubrey said. “That’s all fine and dandy?”
“Well, I’ve brought it up,” Aubrey said.
“I think being married is more than that,” I said.
“How long has Midian been under a curse?”
“A little more than that, but yeah.”
“Midian?” I said. “This is about Midian?”
Aubrey took out another shotgun, chambered a round, and looked up at me.
“Aubrey. Jayné,” Ex said. “Put down the guns.”
“It was the Bastille Day crack, wasn’t it?” he asked.
“The kids here just figured out I’m a vampire,” he said.
“BUT I’VE seen you in daylight,” I said.
“That’s nosferatu,” Midian said. “I’m vârkolak. Don’t let it bug you. Taxonomy’s always a bitch.”
“What else were you lying about?” I asked.
“Why would he think you’d fight against one of your own kind?” Ex asked.
“Drop it,” Ex said. “You can’t split us apart.”
I shifted my shotgun to rest on my leg. My arms were getting tired.
“I don’t believe you,” Aubrey said. “Eric would never make an alliance with something like you.”
“You never heard of the lesser evil?” he asked. “Well, that’s me. Didn’t you ever wonder why he didn’t pull any of you boys into this? It’s a dirty operation. Messy. Morally impure. But he thought it needed doing, so he was going to do it. He left you poor fuckers out to protect you from it.”
“He didn’t need to do that,” Ex said, but his voice sounded less sure now.
“Yeah, well,” Midian said with a shrug. “Take it up with him.”
“This changes things,” Aubrey said.
“It’s just that on balance, that’s more good than bad,” Ex said.
“Don’t trust me on it,” Midian said. “Trust Eric.”
“I have to think about this,” Ex said. “We need to set guard on him.”
Midian made an impatient sound, but Aubrey was already shifting position. Chogyi Jake walked into the kitchen and came back with a length of rope. I pressed back against the wall to let him pass. Midian rolled his eyes but held out his wrists like a man waiting for the police to cuff him. As Chogyi Jake bound the thin, frail-looking wrists, Aubrey looked over to me. This time last night, I’d been dancing with my hands around him. It seemed like longer ago.
“So,” I said softly. “What do you think?”
“I should have seen it,” Ex said angrily.
“Well, you didn’t,” I said. “What else do you think?”
“I don’t trust him. He’s a rider, and he has his own agenda.”
“Do you still think Coin killed Eric?” I asked.
Ex weighed the question for a moment, resting his chin against one knuckle. He nodded.
“Those people he sent to kill me and Midian? Those were part of the Invisible College?”
“I’m not saying he’s a body-stealing vampire or anything,” I said, feeling a twinge of distress left over from my interrupted talk with Aubrey. Had we broken up? Had we ever really been together? I wasn’t totally sure. I pulled myself back to Ex. “I’m just saying there’s kind of a parallel. But we can’t be divided or distracted. That was you talking.”
“We give him a head start,” I said. “A day, maybe.”
“He’ll vanish,” Ex said. “We might never find him again.”
“It could be the best thing,” Ex said.
Ex didn’t speak, but his expression was clear enough. Why not?
We split the night into four hour-and-a-half shifts to guard Midian. Mine was three to four thirty, which slated me for a longish nap before and a short one after. Midian, his hands still tied, ignored the situation except to sigh theatrically, stretch out on the couch, and get more sleep than the rest of us. I sat in the facing chair, Eric’s shotgun across my thighs, and listened to the small sounds of the night.
The clock in the kitchen ticked quietly to itself. Sirens rose and fell in the distance. Once, a helicopter chopped the air so far away I could barely make it out. And Midian—Midian the vampire, or vârkolak, whatever that was—breathed slowly in and out in the rhythm of deep sleep. In a few hours, I was going to be looking down a rifle at the thing that had killed Eric, but just now, the world was silent and still, and my mind was clearer than I had expected it to be.
I thought about the list of properties the lawyer had shown me. And those had been the tricky ones. There were others. More. I could have spent months going through all that. Years. And if I didn’t find some master record, I’d still wonder if it existed somewhere I just hadn’t thought to look. I was out of my depth. I’d known it from the moment Uncle Eric’s fortune fell out of the sky like something from an old Looney Tunes cartoon, and sitting alone in the dead of night, I felt it deeply. I was scared, I was faking it, I was probably in gut-wrenching danger that I didn’t understand. I’d spent the last few days as disoriented and dizzy as someone on her eighth time on the roller coaster.
“Everything okay?” he asked, his voice hushed.
“So we’re good?” Aubrey asked.
“We’re working on it,” I said. “I mean, you’re still married.”
“Good to know,” I said, and heard his wheezing chuckle.
THE FIRST difference I noticed was the air.
“Yeah,” he said. “I can feel it too.”
Something unreal moved past my legs. I felt its wake.
“I really want this over with,” I said.
By the time we got to the warehouse, I felt like the old high school science class movie of an ovum surrounded by a million flailing sperm. The air was full of unseen creatures bumping and pressing and shifting against me. There were so many, I stopped being able to tell one from another, my body just registering them as a constant, repulsive crawling. There was nothing in the early morning light to show that any of it was happening. If anything, the strangeness of the light made the world seem static, like we’d driven into a still frame from a movie. Aubrey dropped me by the train tracks. We didn’t speak, but as I lifted the rifle out of the back, his hand touched mine. The double sensation of real, human contact and the press of riders just outside reality moved me, and I was tempted to kiss him. He pulled back and I hefted the weapon, already loaded with its unpleasant black bullets. I made my way to the corner of the little building we’d picked, looking down on Google maps like God and angels. I leaned against the masonry block, the blue paint flaking away. The boxcars loomed to my left like great, blind, industrial cows. Nothing moved.
“Hey,” Uncle Eric said. “You’ve got a call.”
“Midian and I are heading in,” Chogyi said. “You’ll see us in just a moment.”
“Good luck, everyone,” I said, then I dropped the call, put the cell phone back in my pocket, and knelt down, the rifle held between me and the wall. A flock of pigeons rose from the far side of the tracks, swinging wide around the green-gray warehouse and then away, as if they wanted nothing to do with any of us.
The song that rose from them was one of the strangest sounds I’d ever heard. Sorrowful and accusing, it most reminded me of an Islamic call to prayer. The invisible things pressing against me shivered, paused, and then went wild. Their frenzy made me grit my teeth. I could feel them over every inch of my skin, writhing and beating against me. Chogyi Jake’s call rose again, seeming to echo against itself, like someone singing a round, even though there was only one voice. Midian wasn’t smiling anymore. His ruined lips were moving, his head shaking back and forth, his eyes shut. Sweat was pouring down Chogyi Jake’s face and neck. I could see the rivulets glitter in the light.
Coin turned his head, looking down the street, then gestured with one hand like he was shooing away a fly. Two gray streaks left him, trails of smoke spiraling back along the paths of the bullets toward Ex and Aubrey. I must have shouted, because he looked toward me. When I put my eye to the scope again, his face was turned toward the little building that I was half hidden behind, his eyes shifting rapidly as he tried to find me. I centered the crosshairs on his forehead, but he lifted his palms. Eyes stared out from them—not tattoos but real, human eyes. I froze. He opened his mouth wider than I would have thought possible and shouted a single syllable.
“What happened? What did he do?”
Aubrey’s eyes were glassy and vacant, his hands limp as wilted leaves. He didn’t even know I was there. I crawled back, half convinced he was dead. He had a pulse, though. He was breathing.
I sat on a low plastic chair. Aubrey’s hand lay limp in mine. The sounds of the emergency room made a kind of white noise around us. Someone was coughing. A nurse was asking someone where a chart had gone. Somewhere not too far away, a child was screaming. It might as well have been silence.
“You’re Jayné?” he asked, pronouncing it Janey. I didn’t correct him.
“Yes,” I said, repeating the lie.
“Okay,” the doctor said. “Could you tell me what happened?”
I’d given up hope that they’d find anything.
“Hey,” Eric said. “You’ve got a call.”
“Hospital. Aubrey’s in a coma or something. I don’t know. He’s…I don’t know.”
“You have to get back to the house. You have to get someplace warded.”
“Okay,” I said. “They took him off to get a CAT scan or an MRI or something, and as soon as—”
“Jayné!” he shouted. “You have to come here right now. You’re in danger.”
It’s all right, I wanted to say. Except that it wasn’t.
“Stable,” I said. “Just not in there.”
“I thought Coin was supposed to be vulnerable,” I said.
“Is that supposed to be funny?” I asked.
“Where’s Chogyi Jake?” I asked, a sudden stab of panic hitting me.
“Meditating,” Ex said. “He’s okay. I think he’s okay.”
“We made some assumptions,” Ex said.
My shock was starting to wear thin, numbness giving way to something less gentle.
“Look, kid, I don’t care if you want to candy-ass your way through life. You’ve got the cash. Do what you want. You want to take over Eric’s plans and then let everyone else do the work because they’re older than you are and they’ve got cocks? Fine with me. No trouble. But I’ve got a half a liter of crap leaking out of me right now that should have stayed inside, and I’m not in the mood to hear you bitch that the plan you couldn’t be bothered to make for yourself didn’t work out.”
“I said stop it,” Ex said, stepping between me and Midian’s accusing fingers.
“I’m going to ask you to sit down,” Ex said. “I’m not going to ask twice.”
Midian sank back into his chair, sneering but silent. Ex followed his descent with the gun. I leaned against the counter, arms crossed like I was hugging myself. I hated the tears tracking down my cheeks. They felt like traitors. Ex didn’t look back. It was only the shift in his shoulders and the gentle tone of voice that showed he was talking to me.
“There wasn’t anything you could have done differently.”
“The Invisible College is stronger now. How long do you think the wards will hold?” Chogyi Jake asked, leaning on the counter beside me. I could feel the warmth coming from his skin, and the smell of fresh soap.
“I’ve got some ideas,” Ex said.
“I didn’t say it’d be easy,” Ex said, “but I’ve got some ideas—”
“I know how,” I said. “I mean, we all know how to do it, don’t we?”
Midian coughed out a derisive laugh.
“Then you don’t have to do it,” I said.
And underneath that, I knew I had to try.
“Okay, we’ll wait until tomorrow,” I said. “But after that, I’m killing him.”
All around me, Eric’s things loomed like ghosts. His shirts, his furniture, his magazines. I turned on my laptop, checked my e-mail, Googled unsuccessfully for anything that talked about gunshots being fired in the Commerce City suburb of Denver, and tried to think of something else I should look for, some piece of data that would turn the whole world right again. I wound up staring at the screen with a feeling that there wasn’t enough air in the room.
The disappointment and despair were as familiar as coming home.
“How serious are you about going after Coin?” he asked.
“I think that you shouldn’t,” he said.
“And you’re in love with him.”
I looked down at my laptop screen.
“You do what you have to do to protect the people you care about,” Ex said.
The rage felt good. I broke every plate in the kitchen, china shattering against the tile floor. I screamed every obscene word and phrase I knew and then started inventing. I tipped the chairs over and threw a full coffee cup against the living room wall, leaving a dark stain on the paint and a gouge in the plaster. My muscles felt warm and loose and I was about three inches taller than normal, the righteous anger puffing my body larger and stronger and making me sure of myself. I nursed it because I knew that when it was gone, there wouldn’t be anything left.
“He meant well,” Chogyi Jake said. His voice was soft.
“He’s a fucking asshole,” I managed between sobs.
“He’s a fucking asshole who meant well.”
“I thought we couldn’t leave the house,” I said. “I thought it wasn’t safe.”
“It isn’t,” Chogyi Jake said. “Ex is risking himself to keep you from harm.”
“Or to keep me under his fucking control.”
I sat in the kitchen, my stomach too knotted for food or coffee. Chogyi Jake went to each of the windows and doors, chanting and pouring out lines of rice and salt. Propping up the wards. Buying us time.
I held the keys as he came down the hall. Midian was silent. I could feel him listening to us.
“I need to go out,” I said. “How dangerous is that going to be?”
“I’m going to risk it,” I said. “If I’m not back by nightfall, plan without me.”
I saw it. The rifle lay flat, its barrel still pointing roughly toward the warehouse. I inched forward, one eye on the warehouse, one on the rifle. The sun left it almost too hot to touch, but I got my hand around it and trotted back to the cover. I tried to remember how many times I’d fired while Coin walked back from the carnage. Three, I thought.
“If I let you go, are we going to be cool?” I asked.
“You’re serious?” he asked. “I’m a fucking vampire, you know.”
“For someone who’s totally fucked, you’re looking pretty chipper,” he said.
“Yeah, well,” I said. “I’m going to clean the place. You want to whip us up some dinner?”
The vampire shrugged, then stood up.
I dug a vacuum cleaner out of a closet and set to getting all the coffee cup fragments out of the carpet. I threw out the tray Midian had been using for his dead cigarettes, gathered up all the dirty glasses and dishes that had found their way to the flat surfaces of the house, and brought them home to the dishwasher. The bright spot on the wall kept bothering me. There was only one thing, I decided, to be done about it. I got my laptop out from the bedroom, hooked it up to Eric’s modest stereo speakers, and cranked up some music. China Forbes sang an old Carmen Miranda tune, and I started washing down all the walls in the living room while I danced to it. About twenty minutes and two walls later, Chogyi Jake came out from the back, surprised to see something happening that wasn’t about ruining the flatware.
“Check. New plates,” I said with a nod. “I’m on it.”
He shook his head in apparent disgust.
“I think mood swings run in your family, kid,” Midian said, but he smiled when he said it.
“Working meditation is always useful,” Chogyi Jake said around a mouthful of garlic and olive.
“I think we call that petty control over your immediate physical environment,” I said.
“Hey!” Midian said, putting down his glass.
Midian frowned, considered for a moment, then nodded.
“I’m not hog-tied and sleeping with a shotgun pointing at my skull,” he said. “I can deal with the trade-off. But back to the issue at hand.”
“Well, I was feeling pretty screwed over,” I said. “And now I’m not.”
“I can still tie you back up,” I said. Midian raised his hands in mock surrender.
“You were saying,” Chogyi Jake said.
I left the house in the best outfit to survive the shopping fiasco: a deep blue blouse with black slacks and a jacket. With my hair up and a little tasteful eyeliner and lipstick, I thought I looked the consummate professional. Right up until I reached my destination.
“Jayné!” she said, pronouncing it Jane. “I’m sorry to keep you waiting. I was in a meeting.”
“It’s my fault,” I said, standing up. “I should have gotten an appointment. It was just—”
“Nonsense. You’re always welcome. Come back to my office and tell me what I can do for you.”
Her office straddled the line between reassuring softness and a level of intimidation that bordered on class warfare. Her desk was carved wood, her carpeting was soft and lush in a way that made me think of tapestries, the north wall was an apparently seamless sheet of glass that looked out over Denver only because there wasn’t anyplace grander nearby. There was no computer on her desk. She was apparently too important for things like that. The receptionist, or someone so like her I couldn’t tell the difference, put my coffee and cookies on the corner of the desk for me and vanished.
“Anything I can do to help,” I said.
If my fairy godmother had been a shark, she’d have smiled like the lawyer did then.
“Is everything going well, then?”
“Actually,” I said, “there’s something I wanted to talk to you about.”
“Coin is spelled like nickels and dimes?” the lawyer asked.
“Do we know anything else about him?”
“…but he’s really good at covering them up,” I finished lamely.
The lawyer made a noncommittal sound in the back of her throat before she spoke.
“All right. I’ll see what we can do. In the meantime, how’s everything else working out?”
“I was thinking that we could find out who rented the warehouse,” I said. “Even if it’s not him, it’s got to be someone connected to him. And I don’t know if it’s legal to track down what kind of plane tickets he’s bought, or if he’s even…”
“I was four,” I said. “When he left office, I was four.”
Her brows rose about a millimeter.
“Of course,” I said. “I’m sorry. I just got enthusiastic.”
“Enthusiasm is a wonderful thing,” she said as if she was agreeing. “As soon as I have anything that might be useful, I’ll have a report drawn up. I assume sooner is better than later.”
I GOT back to the house feeling a bit high. With the front door closed behind me, I took a silent bow and Chogyi Jake and Midian applauded. Afterward, I sat on the couch and gave them the blow-by-blow of the meeting. Chogyi Jake looked pleased, but the circles under his eyes were getting darker. He didn’t make a point of it, but I knew he was pouring himself into keeping the wards around the house strong. I wondered how many times he had saved us already without my even knowing about it.
While the pair of them cooked, I went to the back bedroom and turned on the laptop. I had a list of things I wanted to look up—what exactly a vârkolak was being near the top of the list. I waited while a metric assload of spam downloaded to my inbox. Nothing for me. Nothing personal. I checked my brother’s blog, but he hadn’t posted anything in months. I thought about checking back with my former friends again, but the more I turned the idea over, the more pathetic it seemed. The world had moved on. Several times. There wasn’t any point.
JAYNEHELLER: I’m great. Thanks.EXTOJAYNE: Good. Is Midian with you?JAYNEHELLER: He’s not in the room, if that’s what you mean. He’s off cooking. As always. Mind telling me where you are?EXTOJAYNE: I’m all right. I’m worried about you.
My hand reached out and tapped the backspace key, cutting back my message word by word.
I erased the whole thing and started over, my chest tight with fear.
JAYNEHELLER: Well, we’ve gotten the go-ahead from the guy with the rabbits. And your buddy from Texas should be here tomorrow about noon.
Come on, I thought, ask me what I’m talking about.
I’d known that they were out there. I’d known they were looking for us. Actually catching sight of one of the hunters shook me more than I’d expected it to. I started to wonder how big a risk I’d been taking when I went to see the lawyer. How were Coin and his people going to come after us now? Would he go after my family? I tried to imagine my mother at the mercy of tattooed wizards possessed by evil parasites. It would pretty much confirm everything my parents thought about me, and that was the lowest reason on the list for keeping it from happening.
I slept badly, every passing car or creaking wall startling me awake. At three in the morning, I came within two digits of calling home and telling my parents to take my brothers and get out of the house. The only thing that stopped me was knowing that they wouldn’t do it. I lay on the bed, drifting in and out of unpleasant dreams, and watched the curtains turn light again with the approaching dawn. At no point in the night did I even move toward turning on my laptop.
Midian and Chogyi Jake had been pretty quiet after I told them about the fake Ex, but neither had given me any grief for being taken in, even briefly. We agreed that the three of us would use the word elephant someplace in the first sentence or two if we were ever communicating across the net, and Midian made a joke about policy being the surest evidence that something had already been fucked up.
“You want me to get my Luger?” Midian asked.
Randolph Eustace Coin was born in Vienna in 1954, son of a grocer. His family moved to America in 1962, taking up residence in an ethnically homogenous enclave in New York City. He attended public school without any particular sign of excellence, though he was supposed to have been a pretty good clarinet player.
In late summer of 1972, Coin disappeared.
Over the next two decades, Coin had appeared in the company of religious leaders, poets, cranks, and captains of industry and finance. A list of names was included, and I recognized about half. It was never clear how he made his money, though he was on the board of two political consultancies, an international aid foundation, and a scientific equipment supply company. As far as the world was concerned, Coin was one of those entrepreneurs whose lofty status made it hard to say what they really did. While he might have had some kooky friends, he himself was a man of no particular beliefs.
“Turing?” Midian asked. “Go back. When was Coin born?”
“Nineteen fifty-four,” I said.
I flipped back through the pages.
Midian chuckled. It was a low, wet sound.
“Turing offed himself the same day,” Midian said. “Probably just a coincidence. Keep going.”
“There isn’t much more in this section,” I said.
“What’s next?” Chogyi Jake asked.
“Would have been nice to have someone who knew a little more about riders digging into these assholes, but on the whole…” Midian said. “So, kid. What’s your next move?”
HERE WERE the problems.
“Run away?” Midian said. “You’re serious?”
“We can’t do anything if he’s got the whole city locked down,” I said.
“I’ve been out twice,” I said. “The gun and the lawyer, remember? So far, nothing.”
“Your protections don’t apply to us,” Chogyi Jake said.
“Okay,” I said. “So we don’t run.”
“We don’t run,” Chogyi Jake said. “You still can.”
“So let’s look at the second thing,” I said. “Coin’s minions.”
“So how do we do that?” I asked.
Chogyi Jake’s sudden laughter was rueful and warm.
“Yeah, that’s a good plan,” Midian said, making it clear with his expression that he both agreed and thought we were doomed if that was our best strategy.
“But,” I started, then let it trail away.
“Let me think about it,” I said.
I made one furtive trip to the grocery store, scuttling through the soup aisle with my qi pulled up to my eyes, looking for tattoos and danger so intently I had a hard time shopping. When I was home, I meditated with Chogyi Jake. I practiced some simple cantrips with Midian. Here was how to project your qi to intimidate people who didn’t have any protection and why not to try it on people who did. Here was how to wrap yourself in qi as a protection. It felt more like a motivational speaker’s affirmations than magic, but Chogyi and Midian assured me that there would be more advanced work that grew out of it. And even that wasn’t enough to keep the close, hot summer air from bearing down on me.
“Maybe we could find some way to hide you guys? A ritual cleansing or something?”
“Then you’ve got no way to draw off the minions, and we’re still screwed.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Where’s Chow Yun Fat when you need him.”
“Chow Yun Fat. You know. Hong Kong action film star. He was in The Replacement Killers and The Corruptor. And Hard-Boiled. That’s the one where he had the gunfight while holding a baby. It was thoroughly over the top, but it was great.”
“I thought you led a sheltered life. How’d you get into gun opera?”
“College,” I said. “I had a boyfriend. Cary. He was into it, so I was too.”
“Huh. Fair enough. So how does the baby figure in?”
Something in the back of my head fell in place with a click I could almost feel.
The voice-mail message was short, and Candace Dorn’s voice was pleasant. I waited for the beep.
And a cop. I had at least one cop. Maybe more, if he had friends he trusted.
“Hello?” a woman’s voice said.
I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. I swallowed down the knot in my throat.
“Hello? Is anyone there?” she said, preparing to hang up.
“Hi,” I said. “You don’t know me. My name’s Jayné. Jayné Heller. Eric Heller was my uncle. He died. Someone killed him, and…um…anyway. I need help. I need your help.”
“Aubrey’s in trouble,” I said. “He could die.”
There was a moment’s silence. I could hear her breathing. When she spoke again, her voice was grim.
I met her at the airport just at sunset. In person, Kim looked a little less like Nicole Kidman. She wore gray slacks and a simple cream blouse that would have looked perfectly in place at a baseball game or a boardroom. Her eyes were a sharp blue, her mouth tight and a little angry. She came through baggage claim without pausing at the carousel, a generic black carry-on wheeling behind her and a tasteful black purse on her arm. She only looked around for a moment before homing in on me. When she stood before me, her head cocked to the left, her eyes clicking over me like a specimen she was trying to identify, I was surprised to see she was half a head shorter than me.
“I didn’t like Eric. I always knew that something like this was going to happen.”
“I want to go to the hospital,” Kim said. “I need to see him.”
“I need to see him,” she said again.
“Fine,” I said. “But we can’t stay long.”
“How long has he been like this?” she asked.
“Since last Saturday,” I said, “so a week tomorrow.”
A nurse came into the room, a strong-looking black woman in her midfifties. I remembered her vaguely from the earlier times I’d been here. She smiled at me, kindness and sympathy in her expression, and started changing out the roommate’s saline drip.
“Excuse me,” Kim said. “Where’s his chart?”
“I’m sorry,” the nurse said, “but we can’t give out his medical information to—”
That’s why he’s hurt and I’m not. That’s why you’re here. That’s why this is all my fault. Kim made a small sound of agreement so perfunctory that I didn’t know whether she was aware of it. She touched Aubrey’s cheek with the detachment of someone preparing for a dissection, then ground the knuckle of her right index finger into Aubrey’s sternum, hard enough to make the bed under him creak.
“Hey!” I said. “What are you doing?”
“I don’t hurt him for the joy of it,” she said.
I’ve seen him before, I thought, my body already in motion. I scooped up the little plastic visitor’s chair and swung hard. The huge man blocked the attack but fell a step back as I remembered where. He was the one who’d been with Coin that first day when Ex took me to see the warehouse. He was part of the Invisible College.
She was already moving. She slipped over the murmuring man’s bed, putting one of us on either side of the false nurse. I tried to remember how to use the training Midian and Chogyi Jake had given me while I kicked at the man’s kneecap. He moved fast as a cat, taking the impact on his shin instead. He drew in a deep breath, and I felt a prickling that had nothing to do with the physical as he drew in his willpower.
“Stairs,” I said, “but not the ones down there.”
We found another stairwell and Kim started down it, but I caught her hand.
“Up,” I said. “Let them pass us by.”
I was shaking. Behind and above me, Kim’s breath was ragged.
“Let’s go find another stairwell.”
“They’ll be watching for us,” she said. “They’ll be watching the exits.”
“What?” Kim murmured. “What is it?”
I hoped Midian had been right when he’d said I was hard to notice. I took her elbow and angled her down a side hallway. I didn’t dare look back, but no one seemed to be coming after us. We passed a gift shop full of stuffed animals and snacks, the cashier looking at us incuriously as we passed.
“Do you think they’ve spotted your car?” Kim asked.
The wide steel doors slid open, and four paramedics pushed out a gurney. The woman being wheeled past was drenched in blood, her neck encased in a stabilizing collar like something from an Egyptian tomb. The shreds of her jeans trailed after her like rags. Her eyes were blank. The paramedics moved quickly, professionally, into the emergency room. The doors clapped closed behind them even before the elevator began to close. The feeling hit my gut, a fist of fear and hope that tried to take my breath away.
“Come on,” I said, pulling Kim into the elevator.
“That one,” I said, nodding to the injured woman. “She came from upstairs.”
“Yeah,” I said. “There’s a helicopter up there.”
“He’s your lover, isn’t he?” Kim asked.
“I thought I should tell someone. In case we’re about to die.”
I didn’t mean to take her hand. It just seemed the right thing in the moment.
“Me too,” Kim said, and shrugged. “Sorry.”
“It’s a fallen world. You do what you can.”
“You,” she barked as we came near. “You’re the pilot?”
“I can’t do that, ma’am. We’re a medevac unit, not a transport. I’m not allowed.”
“There isn’t room for you in the cockpit, ma’am,” he said. “We’re gonna have to strap you two down.”
“Magic?” I asked. “That was a cantrip?”
I laughed, relief giving the sound a warmth I was surprised to feel. Her smile was less wintry.
Where’s the minivan?” Midian said.
“How do you lose a minivan?” Midian said as I walked into the living room.
“There we were running down the highway, and I said ‘Holy shit, Kim, I think I know why we’re getting so tired.’ Look, if it’s important, I’ll buy us another one.”
“I was starting to get worried,” he said.
“Yeah,” I said. “So was I. It’s okay, though. We’re here.”
“You don’t get to go out without a chaperone anymore,” Midian said.
“Kim,” Chogyi Jake said. “I’m glad to meet you. I think we all owe you a debt.”
“Kind of you to say so,” Kim said.
“You know about riders?” Midian asked.
“Any ideas how to beat the Invisible College?” Midian asked. Kim hesitated.
Kim considered the vampire without speaking.
“He’s really good,” I said. “Seriously.”
“Then yes,” Kim said. “That’s kind of you.”
“There are a couple of possibilities next week,” I said. “I mean, if the projections in the report are true. There’s the doctor’s appointment on Monday, and he’s speaking at an international aid foundation meeting on Tuesday night. I’ve got a request in for an updated schedule for him, though. There may be a better opportunity.”
“And the last time we went up against him, he didn’t even need that,” I said.
“Hey,” Midian shouted, “how do you feel about onions?”
I sat on the couch’s armrest and shrugged.
“Yeah,” I said. “You could look at it that way.”
“We don’t know,” I said. “He opted out.”
“I completely understand,” I said.
Kim lowered herself slowly back to her seat, her head bowed. Chogyi Jake was frowning at her, and Midian’s ruined eyebrows had lifted. I wasn’t the only one to think something interesting had just happened.
“He’s here now,” Candace said. “I’ll get him.”
I had a sudden flashback to sitting at my computer talking to not-Ex.
“Candace!” I yelled. “Hold on.”
“If there’s someone else there…I mean if you’re being coerced in any way, say ‘Yes, it’s okay.’”
She laughed. “It’s nothing like that. God. Were you thinking it would be?”
There was a fumbling sound on the far end. Someone new came on the line.
“Hi, Aaron,” I said. “I’m glad to hear from you. You’re doing okay?”
“I am. Had a long day today, but if there’s something going down, I can get a cup of coffee and be anywhere you need me in about fifteen minutes.”
“Thanks. There’s nothing going on right now, but I might need a favor pretty soon here.”
“Are you safe where you are now?”
“Is it another one of those fuckers that got to me?”
“Similar idea,” I said. “Bigger scale.”
“That the other resource?” Midian asked.
“Yeah,” I said. “We did a favor for a cop. It might be useful.”
“This time you actually can surprise them,” Kim said.
I CRAWLED into bed just before two in the morning, my body humming between the two poles of fatigue and residual adrenaline. The pillows were cool. The soft babble of a news channel in the front room meant Midian was taking the first watch. The ceiling above me seemed to glow a little, like an old television turned on but without a signal.
Somewhere in the city, the thing that looked out Randolph Coin’s eyes was waiting for me. Watching. I wondered if the rider ever got bored, got distracted, looked away. I tried to put myself in Coin’s place. Eric Heller had been gunning for me and died for the offense. Eric’s team had taken up his cause and failed. The enemy wasn’t gone—one of the fallen was in the hospital as cheese in the mousetrap, and another had already run. Would Coin know how many had been in the conspiracy by the warehouse? Would he know what resources I had?
The problem was…well, there were a lot of problems. I wanted to know exactly what Coin and his people were capable of, but my brief lessons in riders and qi and magic pretty much confirmed that was going to take a lot more time than I had. I could rely on Kim and Chogyi Jake to give me their best guess. I didn’t know how good that would be, but I didn’t have anything better. I wanted to know what Coin’s plans and intentions were so that I could navigate my way around them, but it wasn’t like I could ask him.
My eyes flew open as the thought came to me.
“I thought I said not to smoke in the house,” I said.
“You did,” the vampire said. “I’ve only been doing it when I was pretty sure you wouldn’t see me.”
“I let you guys make the calls last time, and we failed.”
“I’m not doing that anymore. Eric left everything to me. Not you, not Aubrey or Chogyi Jake or Ex. Me. This is my show now.”
“I’m making a decision,” I said. “I think it’s the right thing to do.”
“But if I’m wrong, I might tip our location to Coin and get us all killed.”
“You want to talk about it? Roust tofu boy and what’s-her-name out of bed, chew it over.”
“No,” I said. “I’d only convince myself not to do it.”
“So was there something you wanted from me?”
“No, nothing,” I said. “I just thought I should tell someone that I’m making the decisions now.”
“Even the risky ones,” he said.
Midian looked up at me from the couch. Almost imperceptibly, he nodded.
“You sound like the old man when you say that,” he said. “Welcome to command, General.”
I nodded curtly, drew myself up an inch or so.
“Put out the cigarette,” I said, and went back to my room.
JAYNEHELLER: Ex! Where the fuck have you been? Why the fuck haven’t you been calling? We’ve been out of our minds here!
I sat back on the bed. This was stupid. This was a mistake. I should never have done it.
Someone on the other side started typing.
EXTOJAYNE: Complications. Nothing serious. I’m fine. Sorry I’ve been out of touch. What’s the status there?
JAYNEHELLER: The rabbit thing fell through. You were totally right about that one. Sorry I gave you grief. The big news is we tried to get Aubrey, but it was a no-go. The Invisible College folks are on that place like white on rice. We barely got away.
The second report came from the lawyer in the morning, about half an hour before Aaron and Candace arrived.
I had cut the conversation with the fake Ex off after about fifteen minutes with the promise that I’d be in touch again soon. Afterward, it had been hard to sleep, so I didn’t drag myself out of bed until almost noon. My eyes felt gritty and my mind was stuffed with cotton, and the scent of Midian’s coffee was like the promise of spring in February. I struggled with last night’s square knot on my robe, gave up, and pulled on a pair of blue jeans and one of Eric’s white shirts. It was a little too sheer for polite company and the only bra I could find was way past laundry day, so I put one of his suit jackets on too.
“You still need new dishes, kid,” he said. “We’re eating off bakeware here.”
“I’ll get right on it,” I said.
“Look,” I said. “There’s something I did that you guys should know about.”
I recapped Extojayne for Kim, then explained my plan to use the plant to mislead Coin. Chogyi Jake smiled all the way through it. I found myself wishing he would frown sometimes or express disapproval, just for variety’s sake. I topped off my cup.
“It’s a risk, but I think you’re wise to take it,” Chogyi Jake said.
The doorbell rang, and Kim started at the sound. So did I, a little. Midian sighed.
“I’ll get the gun,” he said, but by the time we got to the door, the courier was gone.
“If he thought we were worth bothering with,” Midian said. “He might just send his bully boys.”
My cell phone went off. Kim only tensed at Eric’s voice this time. When I answered, it was Candace saying that she and Aaron were coming up the front door, and not to freak out.
“I totally understand,” I said. “Come in. Both of you. I have some people I’d like you to meet.”
Kim and Chogyi Jake greeted Candace and Aaron. Midian had the good taste to look uncomfortable, the only inhuman beast in the room. We sat in the living room, all six of us, and I launched into what felt like the hundredth retelling of the situation—the Invisible College, Eric, Coin, Aubrey, Ex, Extojayne, Chogyi Jake and Midian’s house arrest, the bullets designed to kill riders, the reports on Coin’s schedule, everything. I talked for twenty minutes, Chogyi Jake, Kim, and Midian interrupting occasionally to clarify one point or another, Candace and Aaron asking infrequent questions. Along the way, I started to notice something that unnerved me.
“I’d thought of that too,” I said, pulling myself back from the strange sorrow that had distracted me. “I printed out some MapQuest directions.” I pointed to them on the coffee table. “According to those, it’s about a twenty-minute drive from Coin’s place to the convention center. I don’t know that he’ll be taking the computer’s route, though.”
I began to wonder if I’d underestimated the woman.
“You don’t think he’d take Speer?” Candace said.
“I’d take Colfax and I-25,” Aaron said. “I don’t know why you’d want to keep to surface streets.”
“What about heading out Federal and going south?”
“Better than Speer,” Aaron agreed.
I snuck back to my room. I didn’t figure there was time for a shower, but I did my hair up in a bun and put on clothes that looked less like I was dressing myself out of Eric’s secondhand shop. Jeans, T-shirt, tennis shoes. I even dug up a mostly cleanish bra that wasn’t so dark it would show through the white of the tee. I hung my leather backpack on one shoulder and considered myself in the bathroom mirror. Halfway to respectable, me.
“I accept,” he said without hesitation. “What was it you were apologizing for?”
I gestured ineffectively. Chogyi Jake gently pushed my hands back down toward my sides.
“You’ve had to put a lot of people behind you, haven’t you?”
“Your mother and father. The friends you had in college.”
I was more than a little embarrassed at the tears that sprang to my eyes.
“Okay,” I said. “Putting too fine a point on it now.”
I grabbed a sheet of paper towel and wiped my eyes. Chogyi Jake stood silently, bearing witness without offering to hold me or turning away. I loved him a little bit for that.
“And you’re going to be here. In the house. When I get back?”
“You aren’t going to take off on me.”
“Okay,” I said, loud enough for it to carry into the living room. “Let’s get this show on the road.”
The heat was worse than it had been before. Candace drove a two-year-old Saturn sedan, and even with the air-conditioning turned up high enough that Kim and I had to lean forward to hear and be heard, the backseat still felt like a sauna. On the streets, the trees seemed to wilt under the press of sunlight. Pedestrians reclined at the bus stops like prizefighters between rounds.
“There are going to be more wards and protections here,” Kim said.
“If we find the right site, it won’t be an issue,” Candace said.
“You sound like you’ve done this before,” I said.
“Nah,” she said, with a nod toward Aaron. “I’ve just been hanging out with him too long.”
“Okay,” I said after we’d ordered some food. “What have we got so far?”
“But he’s a rider,” I said. “He can do things that a human being can’t. We have to figure that in.”
“I’ve been thinking about that,” Kim said. “He’s going to outclass us when it comes to magic. There’s no way around it.”
“What options can you give me?” I asked.
“Tell me about that last one,” I said.
“What’s the downside?” I asked.
“I’ll be there,” I said. “If it’s a risk, that’s fine. I’ll take it.”
“No. Don’t just make a snap decision like that. Think about this,” Kim said. “We don’t know all of what Eric’s done. We don’t know what other work we might be interfering with. I don’t want…I don’t want to be responsible for breaking something I can’t fix.”
“Okay,” I said. “I’ll think about it. But right now, it’s the option that sounds the best to me.”
The street mall was permanently blocked to cars. We’d parked in the structure underneath the restaurant, so when we left, the direction was down. The garage was pretty full, but also offered the kind of cool that comes with being underground in the unkind heat of August. We angled for Candace’s sedan, and I fell into step beside Kim. She looked over at me, then away. A motorcycle whined.
I moved forward. The motorcycle was at the end of the row, pointing vaguely toward the exit. The man sitting on it was craning his neck, looking for something. Looking for us. He pulled something small and plastic out of his pocket, looked at it, frowned, and put it back. He was maybe in his early fifties, with salt-and-pepper stubble and a long, greasy ponytail. I gathered my qi, drawing it slowly up to my eyes. The image shifted. The glamour washed away, ponytail and stubble and decades flowing away from the man. I said something vulgar.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I shouted over the low roar of the engine.
He looked near exhaustion. His hair, tied back in a ponytail and held with a thick rubber band, was limp and greasy. His face was grayish around the eyes, like someone who’s been working around smoke and soot so long it’s been ground into the pores. Without the glamour, he was wearing a white shirt that looked as worn as he did, with old jeans and black boots.
“I’m not having this conversation here,” he said.
“We’re doing it?” Candace asked. “Tuesday night is the time?”
“I’ll be fine,” he said. “Put it on and we’ll go.”
Ex turned us onto Colfax, and then, to my unease, onto I-25 heading north. The Sunday traffic was light, and speed turned the asphalt to a gray blur beside me. I found I could tell from the subtle movement of Ex’s body when we were going to change lanes or shift direction. Before long, I was matching him without thinking.
The smaller details of the space began to register with me. The books in Latin and French stacked under the cot. The crucifix reverently hung by a small, dirty window. The mixed smells of dust, motor oil, and old laundry. Ex leaned against his car, his arms folded, his expression stern. In context, it was all I could do not to laugh.
“The house belongs to a friend. He lets me rent this when I need a place to stay.”
“When you need a place to stay?”
“It’s not like I’m carrying a mortgage,” Ex said.
“Why are you following me?” I asked.
“Because someone has to keep you safe.”
“They know you’ve left me,” I said. “The Invisible College? They know you left.”
“And yet you’re still alive,” I said.
“Partly,” he said. “I’ve got a talent for not being found.”
“He doesn’t know what,” I said.
I walked to the window. A simple weeping Christ on a rough wooden cross. The floor before it was cleaner than the rest of the place. Like someone had knelt there often.
“You don’t have to prove anything,” he said. “Not to anyone.”
“Don’t,” Ex said. “Don’t try. Be safe.”
He nodded, his cheek against my forehead. I squeezed him tight, then stepped back and let him go.
“You should take me home,” I said.
“You’re dropping this,” he said. “You’re walking away.”
“Nope,” I said. “If I go down, I’m going down with my teeth around that fucker Coin’s throat.”
“You don’t understand,” he said as I stepped past him toward the bike.
“I do,” I said. “I just disagree.”
BACK AT the house, I stood on the porch, sweat cooling on the back of my neck, and watched Ex drive away. I thought maybe he turned and looked over his shoulder at the last moment, but I might have been making that up. I went inside.
“Hey, kid,” Midian croaked. “We were wondering if you were coming back.”
“How’s the padre?” Midian asked.
“Yeah, well,” Midian said. “Probably for the best. He got on my nerves.”
“What do they call it?” I asked.
“Don’t you just love that there’s a name for that?” Midian cackled. “Renews my faith in mankind.”
Actually, it creeped me out, but I put my reaction aside.
“Are you sure we can make this look like a drug hit?” I asked.
“But the car that we use to run him off the road,” I said. “That’s an issue, right?”
“Actually,” Candace said, “we can kind of kill two birds with one stone.”
“Okay,” I said, pulling the word out to three syllables.
I laughed and sat down on the hearth.
“We may be a force for good in the world after all,” I said. “What about the Calling Malkuth thing?”
“There is a problem,” Kim said, her head turned to Chogyi and away from me. “Jayné’s protections. I don’t know what this will do.”
“Don’t worry about it,” I said.
“It is a consideration,” Chogyi Jake said.
“It really isn’t,” I said. “Are we thinking we’ll have two rifles?”
“One for each of us,” Aaron said, nodding.
“We’re on,” I said. And then a moment later, “Hey, can you guys ride motorcycles?”
My covert Monday morning coffee run failed. I went out alone in Chogyi Jake’s van, picked up a few bags of food, and headed toward the nearest Starbucks, my mind on a cup of coffee and a slice of pound cake, and I almost didn’t see the trap. Two middle-aged women sitting at the entrance, smiling and talking to each other. When I pulled my will into my eyes, their glamour faded, the tattoos on their faces and hands appeared, and I turned the van back out of the parking lot, shaking almost too hard to drive.
I didn’t tell anyone about it when I got back to the house. Aaron and Candace were back up in Boulder, taking care of things on that end. Midian was cooking. Chogyi was meditating and chanting, adding more spiritual sandbags to the levee. Kim was strewing ash and salt around the house until we ran out. Then she started pacing, her mouth set in a permanent frown. I sat on the couch, staring at the map of Denver and the calamity of streets that met downtown and trying not to think about how stupid it would have been to die at the coffee shop.
More than anything else, I wanted Kim to stop pacing.
“Hey,” I said. “You got a minute?”
“Are you going to be okay with this?” I asked.
“I’ll be fine,” Kim said. “It’s you I’m worried about.”
“No,” Kim said. “I mean, how did he find you?”
I blinked. It took a couple of breaths before I understood the question.
“If that’s his name. You’re supposed to be hard to locate with magic, right? So how did your priest friend evade the Invisible College, move to his own little bolt hole to keep a low profile, and still know where we were?”
“Maybe he’s good at it?” I said. “He does know where the house is.”
“Vârkolak,” I said. “Midian’s a vârkolak.”
“Freaked about tomorrow?” I asked.
She shook her head, then a moment later she nodded.
“This is why I left in the first place,” she said. “Eric and his covert world. The things he would do. That he would have us do. And now here I am, back in the middle of it. And he’s not even here.”
“What are you going to do if we win?” I asked. “What are you going to do afterward?”
“That isn’t the only question, though,” she said. “You can’t be sure what he feels for you.”
“I don’t know what he feels,” I said. “We were on kind of iffy footing when it happened.”
A tight smile flickered over Kim’s lips.
“With any luck, we’ll be able to worry about all this next week,” she said.
The plan this time was a lot more complex than our last one had been. We had the cars we needed for the actual assault, or would after Aaron had completed his work stealing the one he’d be driving. I had one rifle, and the second was coming with the stolen car. I’d picked out a place near the convention center that had free wireless access. Midian and Chogyi Jake were ready to act as decoys, drawing off as many parasitized victims of the Invisible College as they could.
“Is there anything else I can do for you, Ms. Heller?”
A cadre of priests chanting exorcism rites. The number of a really good pizza joint. Some groceries.
“No,” I said. “I think we’re good.”
“You’re a class act, kid,” Midian said. “You want to taste this sauce? I’m not sure it’s working.”
He held out a wooden spoon dripping with something brown and sweet smelling. I tried it.
“It’s working,” I said. “That’s really good.”
“Just like Ex,” he said. “The three bikers of the apocalypse.”
“I’ll be fine,” Chogyi Jake said, looking up at me.
“You? I didn’t think you got scared,” I said, trying to make it sound like a joke.
“Everyone gets frightened,” he said. “And tired. It’s been a hard week. I can’t…”
“It’s good that this will be over soon. The wards are going to fail. Soon.”
I nodded. Maybe I’d known that.
“Do you think I’m doing the right thing? Or am I just going to get us all killed?”
“I think that’s got a lot to do with what makes it stupid or not, yes,” I said.
“I’m not sure what I mean. Except I’m afraid of what happens if we fail out there.”
“It’ll all be fine,” he said, patting me on the head. “Don’t worry.”
“Okay. That so didn’t work,” I said. “But thank you. For staying with me. For trying to do this.”
“Thanks for being you,” I said.
“You’re welcome. And thank you for becoming who you needed to be,” he said.
“I’ve got a sun cover in the back,” he said. “Help me get it over this thing, would you?”
“It went okay?” I asked, following him toward the back hatch.
“Perfect. Jerk’s probably still wandering around the parking lot wondering what just happened,” Aaron said, then paused and turned to me. His face was serious. “I know this isn’t protocol. There’s about a thousand reasons I shouldn’t be doing it, and that it’s illegal and I’m one of the good guys is pretty much at the top of that list. But I have to tell you there is nothing in the world better than taking one of these can’t-catch-me motherfuckers and screwing him into the ground.”
“Yeah,” I said. “I can see how that might satisfy.”
It was Monday night. Aubrey had been in his coma for a week. Coin and his creatures were out in the rising darkness like sharks in a tank. Ex had abandoned me. Eric was dead. The friends and family who had been my life until now didn’t even know what had happened to me. And here I had a little constructed family, a group of people who I’d somehow gathered around me to eat and laugh and drink and fight against all the evils of the world. The big evils like Coin and the little ones too.
It was Monday night, and we were killing Randolph Coin tomorrow.
I was about to call it a night—I didn’t want my conversation with the fake Ex to go on long enough for me to screw it up—when a new window opened.
It was just past midnight when the knock came at my bedroom door. I was pretty well asleep, deep in a dream that involved a huge mountain and a sunrise that projected purification instead of light, and only half woke at the sound. I’d almost convinced myself that I’d imagined it when the bedroom door eased open. I sat partway up. I wondered where my rifle was, more with annoyance than fear.
Kim was dressed in a bathrobe that had been Eric’s. Her hair was down and messy from where it had lain against her pillow. She walked toward me, hands deep in the robe’s pockets. Her expression was blank. I thought she was sleepwalking until she started to speak.
“Don’t say anything,” she said. “Just…just let me say this. All right?”
“Okay,” I said. Sleep-soaked, my voice sounded almost as bad as Midian’s.
She sighed and sat on the edge of the bed. She shook her head.
“Eric wasn’t a man I liked,” she said. “He wasn’t someone I trusted or admired. But there was something powerful about him, and I responded to it. I broke it off with him half a dozen times, but then a few weeks later, I’d be driving home and find myself turning right instead of left. Aubrey only saw that I was trying to pull away from Eric and the riders and the Pleroma. That whole secret world. We had the most ridiculous fights about the whole thing. And of course they never came to anything because I could never tell him what I really felt or the real reasons behind anything I did.”
“I didn’t know about you,” I said. “I didn’t know Aubrey was married.”
I sat up and drew the sheets around me like a robe. The darkened house clicked to itself, cooling. The distant hum of traffic competed with the ticking of a clock. I could still smell the last fading scents of Midian’s great feast, tainted by the smoke of his cigarette.
“You see?” she said. “Kindly.”
“You care for Aubrey,” she said. It wasn’t a question.
It was easy to think of him as being just Uncle Eric. I had my memory of him, my experience. Apart from seriously biffing it by assuming he was gay, I’d never considered his love life. His sex life. The other people in the world who he’d mattered to besides me. Of course he’d had lovers. Of course he’d had friends. I imagined his life being somehow neater and cleaner than my own had ever been. That was my mistake.
“Well, that’s just great,” I said to nobody.
“I was thinking that myself,” I said.
“Didn’t check the weather report when you put this whole thing together, did you?”
“Besides which, it’s not like we’ve got time for a plan B,” Midian sighed.
“That too,” Chogyi Jake said. Then, to me, “Really. It will be fine.”
I had hardly finished with my shower and pulling on my clothes when the doorbell rang. The dealership was there to drop off my new toys. I signed all the paperwork and took the titles and proof of insurance forms for both bikes, along with copies of the service agreements and owner’s manuals. I hadn’t thought to arrange insurance for them. I made a mental note to send my lawyer flowers or a thank-you note or something, provided I was still alive tomorrow.
“Well, they’re sexy,” Midian said, looking over my shoulder. “I’ll give ’em that.”
“Think you can handle it?” I asked.
Midian made a rough sound that might have been a cough or laughter.
“I don’t know. I’m fairly impressed,” Kim said. I raised my hand. We ate lunch, breakfast for me, making jokes about crotch rockets and wheeled vibrators. Midian and Chogyi Jake both tried on the protective gear—black leather and helmets. It was a nervous kind of hilarity, but it helped cover the fear.
There were still holes. There was still chance and contingency and a hundred ways it could go wrong. What if Chogyi Jake and Midian’s flight didn’t draw Coin out of his meeting? What if he was in a different car from the ones my lawyer’s report had identified? What if there were more people with him than Aaron, Candace, Kim, and I could manage?
“Don’t sweat,” Midian said. “It’ll be gone in time.”
“Your special vampire senses tell you that?” I asked.
“We were all stretched a little thin,” I said. “No harm, no foul.”
“You think Eric would have done it this way?” I asked.
“I miss the part I knew,” I said. “I just regret that I didn’t meet the other parts.”
“Deep,” Midian said. “You should write a poem.”
“Thank you,” I said. And then, softly, “Ah, fuck.”
“Yeah,” Midian agreed. “This is pretty much good-bye.”
“I don’t think that’d be such a good idea.”
“Don’t fool yourself, kid. This has been great. We’ve been friends. But next time you see me, we aren’t going to be on the same side. I’m one of the bad guys, remember? People like you and Ex and tofu boy? You hunt down things like me. Like Coin.”
A thin, wasted hand rested on my shoulder for a second, squeezed gently, and moved away.
A little before six thirty, the rain stopped. By seven, the clouds were breaking apart, a sky of fresh-scrubbed late summer blue showing for the first time all day. Aaron handed me a ski mask and I folded it into my pack. Chogyi Jake and Midian were in their riding outfits. I nodded to them both as I slipped my backpack over my shoulder. I couldn’t deal with any more emotional good-byes.
“Guns are in the car,” Aaron said. “We’ve all got masks, right?”
“I’m ready,” Kim said. She looked perfectly calm. I had the feeling I could have known her for years without learning how to read her expressions.
“Okay,” I said. “Let’s do this.”
Ten minutes later, Candace called.
“He’s there,” Candace said. “We’re by his car. I saw him going in.”
“Okay,” I said. “Hang tight. We’ll be right there.”
I dropped the call and dialed the house. Chogyi answered before I heard it ring.
“Yeah,” I said. “Spark it up. I’m pulling the trigger now.”
JAYNEHELLER: Ex! Are you there?EXTOJAYNE: Yes. I’m here. What’s up?
I closed the laptop, took a deep breath, and nodded.
“Hornet’s nest now officially kicked,” I said. “Let’s see what happens.”
If I’d guessed right, there were about a hundred things happening right now. Extojayne, whoever he was, was raising the alarm about an imaginary truck bomb cruising toward Coin’s house and the enemy—meaning us—meeting at the airport. Whatever resources the Invisible College had watching for Chogyi Jake and Midian were also getting action for the first time, the two of them heading fast in opposite directions. And, with any luck, someone was calling Coin.
We pulled out into traffic. I plucked my cell phone out of my pack and called Candace. Kim answered.
Candace’s voice came over Kim’s, talking loud.
“They’re pulling out. We’re going after them.”
Aaron gunned the engine, cursing under his breath. The downtown traffic was thick. We passed the Sixteenth Street mall, turned right on Fifteenth and then left again on Champa. I tapped my foot anxiously. We’d been right not to try taking him out down here. Too many people. Too much traffic. Someplace else would be better. I hoped that the right place existed. Kim reported in breathlessly. Coin was on Fourteenth, going the opposite direction. I cursed.
“Miss having a siren?” I said.
The voice that came from my cell phone was Candace’s.
“We’re past Eighth,” she said. “I think he’s getting on I-25.”
“Kim?” I said. “Are you ready?”
“We’re going to flip the car,” I said.
“Put your mask on,” he told me.
We buzzed past Candace’s car like it was standing still just as we passed under the great concrete bridge of a surface street. Coin’s car was six car lengths ahead of us, passing under the highway itself. We barreled toward it. My hands were on my knees, gripping so hard the knuckles ached. I couldn’t unclench my fingers.
Aaron drove up on Coin’s left, sliding the Hummer’s nose even with Coin’s back tires, as if we were going to pass him on the inside of the curve. Then, violently, he cut the wheel right. The impact jarred us, and then Coin’s car was fishtailing out in front of us, the driver’s side of the car at a right angle to our oncoming grill. Gray smoke came off their tires like clouds. Aaron stamped the brake as Coin’s car slammed into the concrete barrier. We were stopped in the middle of the long, slow curve that would lead to the highway. Aaron undid his seat belt and pulled on his ski mask. Of course he did. It was just physics. I undid my own, snatched my rifle up from the backseat, and slid out of the car.
Aaron dropped his rifle and motioned me forward. One of the bullets was gone. Used. One of the Invisible College’s riders was dead or cast out of the world. The only bullet left was in my rifle, and I walked toward the back of Coin’s car. Candace and Kim stopped by the Hummer. Kim was out of the car. I ignored them.
“Move it!” Aaron shouted, pointing me forward. “Get him! We’ve got to get out.”
“The car!” Aaron yelled. “Get in the car!”
“Leave him alone,” I said again. “He isn’t your problem.”
“And you are?” Coin asked. “My problem. It’s you?”
“Yeah, it’s me,” I said. “So leave him the hell alone.”
“You aren’t Eric Heller,” he said. “Who are you?”
“As you’ve left Alexander out?” Coin said. He meant the big one. The one we’d killed.
“Alexander was mine too,” I said. “They were all mine. You want this stopped? I’m the one. Just me.”
He closed his eyes, balled his fists, and shouted. The sound was deafening, a thousand times louder than anything human, and more complex. There were storms in his voice. Earthquakes. Huge beings moving underground. I felt my body tip back and thought I was falling.
Something profoundly cold touched the back of my mind, and the gray world went black.
I was cold.
The thing in Coin’s body looked over at me, then back at the artifact floating above its hand.
I tried to think, to focus. I had to say something.
It made a soft tsk-tsk and shook its head.
He knew how to pronounce my name, and for the first time since I’d come to, I felt the deep, penetrating rush of fear. Far to the south, a storm cloud still hung on the horizon, lightning flashing so far away there was no thunder. Coin nodded.
“You killed my uncle,” I said. My voice sounded steadier now.
“You’re going to kill me,” I said, sure as I did that it was the truth.
“Possibly,” it said. “If it’s necessary.”
Run, I thought. Wherever you are out there, get the hell away from here. Live.
“How much do you know?” it asked.
“Enough,” I said. It was silent for a long moment, then nodded.
“And you have made yourself part of this,” he said. It was almost a question.
“Yeah,” I said. The thing in Coin’s body sighed.
“You’re saying I could join up with you?”
“That’s an option,” it said, vaguely offended.
“What? ‘Oops, my bad. Won’t do it again,’ and you let me go?”
“You killed my uncle,” I said again, and shrugged.
Coin nodded, its expression resigned and unsurprised.
My blood was a song, my body a weapon. My mind let go and let my flesh take control without me. Coin blocked a claw-fingered swipe at his neck, but not the kick that I sent hammering into its knee. I wanted to see surprise in its expression, but there was only momentary pain and then grim determination. I danced back, and Coin flipped up a handful of gravel, the unnaturally powerful stones hissing past my ear like gunfire.
Coin stepped back, real shock in its expression now. Something metallic banged, and I got an ankle up over the parapet’s edge and hauled for all I was worth. I felt weak, but it was enough. I landed hard on my side just as I heard the first shotgun blast.
“Run!” I tried to shout, but it hardly came out louder than a groan. “He’ll kill you!”
As long as it breaks skin, we’re fine.
I stepped forward and pressed the bullet to the shotgun wound. Something between my fingers shifted and squirmed. Coin’s eyes opened in shock.
Kim came into view. A streak of blood darkened her cheek. I smiled at her.
“Jayné?” she said. “Are you okay?”
I managed a weak thumbs-up. My voice didn’t seem to be working. She knelt beside me, her hand smoothing back my hair. I had the weird thought that Kim would have been a good mother. A little June Cleaver for my tastes, maybe, but perfect for someone else. There was a scrape, a cough, and a grunted obscenity as Ex started to move. It reminded me of something.
I closed my eyes, frowned, opened them again.
“Creepy stalker bullshit,” I said. And then, “Thanks.”
“Aaron and Candace are downstairs guarding the stairwell,” Kim said. “Can you walk?”
I nodded, sat up, shook my head, and lay back down.
“I’m going to get the others,” Kim said. “Don’t go anywhere. Either of you. Just stay here.”
“We need to go now, okay? Jayné? Can you stand up?”
“I killed Randolph Coin,” I said. “I can do anything.”
Aaron grinned. He looked young when he did that. Like a little boy.
“Yeah,” he said. “I think you can.”
I rose slowly and started toward the open stairway. At the doorway, I stopped.
“Backpack,” I said. “I need my pack. We can’t leave anything here.”
“It’s okay,” Kim said. “We’ve got it covered.”
“The hospital,” I said. “Aubrey! We need to see Aubrey!”
“It’s okay,” Kim said. “We’ll take care of that once you’re all right.”
Later, Ex told me that Chogyi Jake had appeared on the doorstep of Eric’s old house the morning after Coin had died. His motorcycle was marred by deep, white scratches on the left side, and Chogyi Jake himself had a bruise on his back that looked like he’d been whipped by a bullwhip with legs like a centipede. The forces of the Invisible College had chased him just the way we’d hoped. They’d been in pursuit before he’d gotten six blocks from the house. He’d eluded them, but only just. Midian had never arrived at the airstrip that I’d reserved for his flight out. We didn’t know if he’d made it or not, a fact that haunted me for a long time. Chogyi Jake slept for fourteen hours, but I hadn’t noticed at the time, since I crashed for almost twenty.
He looked pretty good for a guy who hadn’t been in his own body for over a week. His eyes were bright, and his smile came out often and with almost no prompting. He even had his hair washed and cut. Apart from the skimpy little hospital gown, he was the picture of health. Way ahead of the rest of us. He flipped through the report, his eyebrows slowly sliding up his forehead.
“They’re falling apart,” Aubrey said.
“I wouldn’t be,” I said. “It was mostly not fun.”
“All the more reason I should have been there,” Aubrey said.
“Kim’s all right,” I said. “I like her.”
The atmosphere grew tense. Chogyi Jake cleared his throat and rose.
“I’m working on that part,” I said.
THE STORMS had broken the summer heat’s back. As I left the hospital, climbed up into Chogyi Jake’s van, and headed out toward the house, it felt like autumn. Still T-shirt weather, but not the assaulting sweat-down-your-back kind. It was like the city and the sunlight had reached some kind of peace. I rolled down the window as we drove, my arm lolling out into the wind of our passage the way it had when I was a kid.
“How’s the invalid?” he asked.
“Makes them think you’re a religious nut,” Chogyi Jake agreed as he closed the door.
“You should see a doctor,” Chogyi Jake said.
“It’s manly, at least,” Chogyi agreed, picking up on my teasing tone.
“I wish they’d stayed here,” I said. “Eric’s protections—”
Ex started to shrug, then winced and went a little pale.
“She left just after you did,” Ex said. “Called a cab. I figure she’s probably in an airplane back to Chicago by now.”
“I think she left a note or something in your room,” Ex said.
Tell him that I wish him well. Tell him that I blame him for nothing, and that I forgive him as I hope he will forgive me.
Later. I could deal with it later.
I sat on the bed, legs crossed, laptop humming quietly to itself, and thought. My fingers ran across the plastic keyboard, Googling a phrase at random, and then doing it again in a kind of Internet-based electronic daydreaming.
But it was over, and I could do anything.
I BOOKED us a private room at the back of what my lawyer promised me was a very good restaurant. The maître d’ escorted us through the dim, well-appointed hall, real candles burning in wall sconces and live music playing in the background. The table was set for four. I’d debated inviting Aaron and Candace too, but until the investigation of Coin’s death was completed, I decided it was better to keep social contact to a minimum. If Kim had stayed, I’d have brought her too.
As we ordered drinks, I considered the three of them. Chogyi Jake, with his freshly shaved scalp and constantly laughing eyes, asked for water. It arrived in a sculpted glass bottle, freshly opened. Ex ordered a gin and tonic. He was wearing all black again, the way he had the first time I’d met him. His hair was pulled back and tied with a length of leather. Aubrey sat across from me and ordered wine. I got the same thing he did.
“If not to a job well done, at least to a job done,” I said.
“And to Jayné,” Aubrey said. “Without whom I’d still be eating through a tube.”
“To Eric,” Ex said. Chogyi Jake didn’t offer a toast, so we gave the silence a moment, then drank.
“I suppose you’re all wondering why I asked you here,” I said, trying to lighten the mood a little.
“So,” I continued, “that’s why I’d like to hire you.”
Now it was Ex’s turn to look startled.
I took a sip of the wine and waited while it sank in.
“I have a job,” Aubrey said. “The lab…”
Chogyi Jake considered his water glass as if it were a piece of fine art. Ex leaned forward. No one spoke. They were going to do it. I could already smell it. They were in, all of them.