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Dante Valentine

Page 15

by Lilith Saintcrow


  “Stop!” I yelled, and the demon paused, though the gun didn’t move.

  “Are you injured?” he asked, and his eyes didn’t waver from Jace. I thought for one lunatic instant that he was asking Jace if he was injured.

  “Call him off, Danny,” Jace said grimly. He carried a larger sword than mine, a dotanuki instead of a katana; the steel shimmered under the full-spectrum lights. Second-guard position, balanced and ready, Jace’s jaw was set and his eyes burned blue. Burning—but still human.

  I curled my left hand around Japhrimel’s shoulder. The subliminal hum of that much Power in such a confined space roared through me, heady whine like the kick of a slicboard’s speed against my stomach. “It’s okay,” I said. “Really. Stand down, Jaf, it’s all right.” It was an effort of will to keep from using more of his name. When had I started to think of him as human?

  Japhrimel considered Jace for a few moments, then eased the hammer down with his thumb. The gun was bright silver, glittering under the lights. “You’re all right?” he asked again.

  “I think so,” I replied, taking another deep breath. “Where were you?”

  “Returning from my feeding,” he answered, still not looking at me, his eyes glued to Jace. “I felt your distress.”

  “I’m not distressed. Just pissed off and tired and hungry and wishing this was all over.” I kept my hand on his shoulder. If he dove for Jace, what would I do? Stab him in the back? “Okay? Thanks, Jaf. I mean it. Easy, okay?”

  The gun disappeared. Japhrimel half-turned, examined me with one laser-green eye. His mouth turned down at both corners. “You have no further need of me?”

  My chest tightened. “Thank you.” I meant it. “I’m going to go do some recon.”

  Japhrimel’s shoulders tightened slightly. If I hadn’t been staring at his throat, I wouldn’t have seen it. What’s with him? He looks ready to explode. “I will accompany you, then, as is my duty.”

  I decided it would be wiser not to fight over this one, set my jaw. My head rang with the tension and Power humming in the air. If Jace moved on Japhrimel, or if Japhrimel decided Jace meant to hurt me—

  “Danny.” Jace’s sword slid back into its sheath, whispering. “Get something to eat. And I’ll spar with you tomorrow, I’ll even let you kick my ass if it’ll make you feel better about this.”

  “Good,” I slid my hand down Jaf’s arm, found his elbow. “I’ll do that. I’ll be back in a few hours.”

  “Hey, demon.” Jace’s chin tilted up. “Take care of her.”

  Japhrimel studied him for a bare second, then nodded once, sharply.

  I don’t need anyone to take care of me, Jace, shut your stupid mouth. I hauled on Japhrimel’s elbow. “Shut up, Jace. Just shut up. Have a nice fucking dinner and I’ll talk to you tomorrow, okay?”

  He didn’t respond. Japhrimel followed me obediently out into the hall, then pointed to the right. “The front door is that way.”

  “I need my boots,” I said, harshly. My throat hurt, for some reason. As if there was a big spiky lump in it.

  “The stairs.” Japhrimel pointed, again. I was grateful, even though I had Jace’s house mostly figured out. I’ve deciphered enough city street grids that one overblown Nuevo Rio mansion wasn’t a hassle.

  I nodded, and we set off. Just to be sure, I kept my hand on his elbow. He didn’t object.

  CHAPTER 25

  Once we alighted from the hovercab Japhrimel had somehow had waiting for me at Jace’s front door, I chose a few streets at random. Walked along feeling my shields thicken and thin, taking in the atmosphere. It’s a strange process to get accustomed to another city; it takes normal people months. Psionics process a lot faster; it takes up a few days—or if we deliberately sink ourselves into a city’s Power-well, a few hours.

  We walked, the demon and I, his coat occasionally brushing me. I sweated freely, heat still trapped in the streets, my coat’s Kevlar panels heavy against my back. My bag’s strap cut into my shoulder. I carried my sword, tapping my fingernails on the hilt.

  I might not have held back this time, I thought, as we turned into the redlight district.

  Down in the smoking well of Nuevo Rio, I found a taqueria and ordered in passable pidgin with a soupçon of pointing. The demon stood uncomfortably close, his heat blurring and mixing in with the heat of the pavement giving back the fierce sun of the day. He said nothing as we stood aside between a bodega and a closed-up cigar shop. Crowds pushed past, Nuevo Rios in bright colors, most of them wearing grisgris bags. Vaudun and Santeria had taken over here after the collapse of the Roman Catholic Church in the great Vatican Bank scandal in the dim time between the Parapsychic Act and the Awakening; the revelation that the Church had been funding terrorist groups and the Evangelicals of Gilead had been too much for even the Protestant Christians traditionally opposed to the Catholics. And the Seventy-Day War had put the last nail in the coffin of the tradition of Novo Christos.

  Nuevo Rios understood a little more about Power than other urban folk, and would no more go outside without defense from the evil eye or random curse than they would go out without clothing. So Nuevo Rio was heat and the smell of tamales and blood, copper-skinned normals with liquid dark eyes speaking in Portogueso, old crumbling palatial buildings standing cheek-by-jowl with new plasteel skyscrapers, pedicabs and wheelbikes making a crush of traffic on the streets. Sweat, heat, and more heat; I could see why the city seemed to move so damnably fast and slow at the same time. Slow because the heat made everything seem like it took forever to do; fast because the natives seemed unaffected by the thin sheen of sweat on everything.

  I bolted the food, hoping I wouldn’t get sick. I had the standard doses of tazapram in my bag, but I rarely needed them. Most Necromances had cast-iron guts. You’d think that a bunch of neurotic freaks like us would have delicate stomachs, but I’d never met a queasy Necromance.

  When I finished, licking hot sauce from my fingers, the demon glanced down at me. “Did he hurt you?” he asked, incuriously. But his shoulders were tense; I saw it and wondered why. Of course, if anything happened to me Jaf was screwed… I wondered if he thought Jace was that dangerous.

  I shrugged. “Not really.” Not physically, anyway, I added, looking away from the demon’s green gaze.

  He handed me a cold bottle of limonada and watched as I opened it with a practiced wrist-flick. We stepped out into the flow of foot traffic, the demon still uncomfortably close, moving with weirdly coordinated grace so he didn’t bump or jostle me. “Why was he holding you?” Japhrimel asked in my ear, leaning close so he didn’t have to shout.

  “I don’t have any idea,” I said. “I think he’s upset at me.”

  “Do you?” Even though the street was crowded, we were still given a few feet of breathing room. My emerald glowed under the streetlamps, and my rings swirled with color, my shields adjusting to the different brand of Power pulsing out from the people and pavement. “Why did he leave you?”

  I shrugged. “I have no idea. I came home from a job and he was gone. I waited for him to come back for a few weeks and…” I glanced up as slicboards hummed overhead. The hovertraffic here was chaotic outside of a few aerial lanes, taxis screeching through banzai runs, gangs of slicboarders whooping as they coasted through the smoggy air. “I got over it.”

  “Indeed.” The demon bumped my shoulder slightly. I wished I’d thought to tie my hair back—a stray breeze blew a few strands across my nose. “He seems very attached to you, Dante.”

  “If he was attached, he wouldn’t have left. Don’t you start in on me, too.”

  “Understood.” He sounded thoughtful. We started to walk, oddly companionable.

  I stopped to watch a three-card-monte game, half-smiling when I saw the man’s brown hands flick. Streams of liquid Portogueso slid past me. The demon leaned over my shoulder, his different heat closing around me and oddly enough making the sweaty smoggy atmosphere a little easier to handle.

  Down the street fro
m the monte, a babalawao drew a vevé in chalk on the pavement. The crowd drew back to watch, respectful, or hurriedly slipped away, giving her a wide berth. The woman’s dusky hair fell forward over her dark shoulders, her wide-cheeked ebony face split with a white smile as she glanced up, feeling the demon’s glow and my own Power.

  I nodded, the silent salute of one psionic to another. She was too engaged in her own work of contacting her guardian spirit to do much more than give the demon a brief glance—and anyway, Shamans aren’t nearly as scared of demons as they should be. To them, the demons are just another class of loa. I didn’t think so—if demons were just another type of loa, Magi techniques for containing a spirit should work for the spirits like Erzulie and Baron Samedi. They don’t—only the Shamanic practice of going through an initiation and gaining an affinity for a loa of your own does.

  I watched the vevé take form under her slender fingers, a curl of incense going up. A rum bottle stood to one side, and a wicker basket that probably held a chicken.

  “What will she do?” the demon asked, quietly, in my ear.

  “She’s probably fulfilling a bargain with a loa,” I replied, tilting my head back and turning so I could whisper to him while still watching the babalawao. My knuckles ached, I was gripping my sword so tightly. “Just watch. This should be interesting.”

  Little prickles of heat ran over my skin. It was uncomfortable, but being this close to a contained burst of Power would help me adjust to the city. I’d studied vaudun, of course, at the Academy. The Magi training techniques borrowed heavily from Shamanism, vaudun, and Santeria in some areas; vaudun and Santeria had been interbreeding ever since before the Parapsychic Act. Eclectic Shamans like Jace picked up a little here, a little there, and usually had two or three loa as incidental patrons; this babalawao would be sworn to two loa at the very most, and would probably intensely dislike being compared to Jace—who was, after all, only a gringo Shaman trained by the Hegemony, not heir to an unbroken succession of masters and acolytes like the babalawao would be. Even though the basic techniques were the same, this woman’s Power felt different; here in Nuevo Rio she was on her home ground, and her Power was organic instead of alien.

  I wish I’d thought to learn Portogueso, I thought, and blinked.

  The vevé to call the loa done, the woman took up the rum bottle, her bracelets and bead necklaces clicking together. She took a mouthful of rum, swirled it, then sprayed it between her lips into the air, the droplets caught hanging, flashing over the vevé.

  Power spiked, scraping across my shields and skin, prickling in my veins.

  A cigar laid across the chalk lines started to fume as the woman flipped open the wicker lid and yanked a chicken from the basket. The bird made a frantic noise before she cut its throat with one practiced move, blood spraying across the vevé.

  “She’ll cook it tonight and eat it for lunch tomorrow, probably,” I told him. A swirl of air started, counterclockwise, the chicken’s body still scrabbling mindlessly. The blood slowed from a spray to a gush and then to a trickle, and the babalawao’s voice rose, keening through a chant very similar to a Necromance’s. But this chant would complete the job of making the offering to the loa. The rum droplets vanished, eaten up by Power. I felt insubstantial fingers touch my cheek, saw a vague shape out of the corner of my eye—a tall man, with a top hat over his skull-white face, his crotch bulging, capered away through the crowd. A breath of chill touched my sweating back. I didn’t mess around with loa.

  Power tingled over my skin, a wash of fever-heat, the sickening feeling of freefall just under my stomach. The Power-burst would force my own energy channels to change to acclimate to the different brand of Power here if I just gave it enough time. I kept my breathing even. Just a few minutes, I told myself. It’ll go away. Just need to relax long enough for it to work, that’s all. Stay cool, Danny. Just stay cool.

  It was while I was staring at the vevé and waiting for my body to acclimatize to the resident Power, my mind tuned to a blank expectant humming, that the precognition hit.

  The demon had my shoulders, drew me back away from the clear space in the pavement, the babalawao’s chanting rising against the backdrop of city noise. “Dante?”

  My gods, does he sound concerned?

  “What’s wrong? Dante?”

  “Nothing,” I heard my voice, dim and dreamy. Precog’s not my main Talent; if it was I’d be a Seer. But I had enough of it to be useful sometimes. “Nothing.” Darkness folded over me, a quiet restfulness, the sound of wings. The vision trembled just outside my mental grasp. If I simply relaxed and let my minor precognitive talent work, it would come to me, and I would be warned… but of what?

  What did I need a warning for? I already knew I was in deep shit.

  “Nothing…” I whispered. Hot fingers touched my forehead; my fingers curling around my scabbard, head lolling, I sank into the candleflame of the future, guttering, held in a draft—

  “Don’t lie to me,” he snarled, and I found myself dimly surprised. Why should he give a shit if I lie to him? I thought. I snapped back into myself, hot prickles running over my skin, my stomach flipping uneasily, my eyes fluttering. “Dante! Dante!”

  “I’m fine,” I said irritably. “Just give me a minute, okay? Will you?”

  “As you like.” Heat roiled over my skin. Was it him? A flood of hot, rough Power slid down my spine from the demon’s hands. It knocked the premonition—and my hold on relaxation—away like a jo staff slamming into my solar plexus. There went any hope of seeing the future.

  “—fuck—” was all I could say, digging my heels into pavement, curling around the scorching pain in my middle. The Power tipped back and slid into the hungry well of Nuevo Rio. “Gods damn it—”

  “What’s wrong?”

  It was too dark. What had—

  I opened my eyes slowly. The demon stood, feet planted, green eyes glowing like chips of radioactive gemstone. “I lost it,” I said. “A premonition, and I lost it. Ask me before you do that next time, all right?”

  The demon shrugged. I looked up. Brick, plasteel, cardboard, and aluminum sheeting, tenements sloped crazily up. Instead of the street, it was an alley. Why wasn’t I surprised? Had he dragged me here, thinking I was about to have some sort of fit? “I acted for your safety,” he said, quiet but unrepentant. “I feared you were being attacked.”

  “Who would be stupid enough to attack me with a demon right next to me?” I snapped, and wriggled out of his hands. He let me go, clasping his hands behind his back again, standing straight, his eyelids dropped, hiding his eyes. “Great. A premonition usually means something nasty’s on its way, and now I’m not even forewarned. Perfect.”

  Japhrimel said nothing.

  I sighed, filled my lungs with the heavy carbon stink of Nuevo Rio. Curdled smells of garbage and human misery rose around me. My shields were paper-thin, the premonition draining me; I forced myself to breathe through the stink. “Anubis et’her ka,” I breathed, shaking my head. “I’d better get back. I think I’m going to crash.”

  “Very well.” Japhrimel took my elbow, guiding me toward the mouth of the alley. “You should take more care with yourself, Dante.”

  “Nobody ever got rich by being cautious,” I muttered. “Besides, what do you care? As soon as we find this Egg, you’ll be on your way back to Hell, and I’ll probably be left to clean up the mess. I’ll be lucky to get out of this alive, and you’re telling me to be careful.” I snorted, concentrating on placing one foot in front of the other.

  “I would not leave you without being sure of your safety,” he replied, quietly enough. “It would grieve me to learn of your death, human.”

  “Bully for you,” I muttered ungracefully.

  “Truly,” he persisted. “It would.”

  “Fuck,” I said, the beginnings of a backlash headache starting behind my eyes. “Just get me back to Jace’s, okay? My head’s starting to hurt.”

  “Backlash,” he said. “Dant
e, there is something I would—”

  If he kept talking I was going to scream. “Just get me back to Jace’s, all right?”

  His hand tightened on my elbow. I closed my eyes. “Understood.”

  CHAPTER 26

  I stamped into the practice room just as the afternoon heat began to get thick and heavy, black-stacked clouds massing over the city. There would be rain soon, a monsoonlike downpour. Thunder and lightning would accompany the rain, and by the time full dark fell the steaming city might get some relief.

  I wasn’t wearing my bag or my coat, just jeans and a fresh microfiber shirt, boots and my rings. My hair was wet, braided back tightly, and I’d relacquered my fingernails with the molecule drip that made them tough as claws.

  The practice room was a long hall floored with tatami, weapons racked on the wall and three heavy bags ranged in a row near the door. One wall was mirrored, a ballet barre bolted to the mirror (Now that probably wasn’t here before, Jace must have put that in, I thought snidely) and Eddie faced Jace in the center of the room.

  Jace had a jo staff, and Eddie had one, too. They both wore black silk gi pants, and Eddie wore a white cotton tank top that did nothing to disguise just how hairy he really was. I stopped, leaning against the doorjamb to watch.

  Jace, stripped to the waist, held his staff with both hands. Muscle flickered under his skin, the scorpion tattoo on his left shoulderblade moving slightly, his golden hair plastered down with sweat.

  Gabe was stretching out, well away from them. She went into a full front split, then leaned forward to touch her forehead to her front knee. Showoff, I thought, the ghost of pain behind my eyes reminding me of backlash.

  Japhrimel, his arms folded, leaned against the wall on the other side of the heavy bags. The windows were covered with sheer curtains, but the sun pouring in still made it a little too warm. Nobody had flipped on the climate control in here.

 

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