The Good, the Bad, and the Undead

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The Good, the Bad, and the Undead Page 21

by Kim Harrison


  My mom’s bathroom looked eerily like Ivy’s—minus the fish in the bathtub. I found the amulet, and after washing off the Covergirl, I invoked the spell, pleased at the result. A final primp and sigh at my hair, and I hustled back to the kitchen. No telling what my mom would tell Nick if I left her alone with him too long.

  Sure enough, I found them together with their heads almost touching as she pointed at the photo album. He had a cup of coffee in his hands, the steam drifting between them. “Mom,” I complained. “This is why I never bring anyone over.”

  Jenks’s wings made a harsh clatter as he rose from my mother’s shoulder. “Aw, lighten up, witch. We’ve already got past the naked baby pictures.”

  I closed my eyes to gather my strength. Moving with a happy swing in her step, my mother went to stir the alfredo sauce. I took her place by Nick, pointing down. “That’s my brother, Robert,” I said, wishing he would return my phone calls. “And there’s my dad,” I said, feeling a soft emotion fill me. I smiled back at the photo, missing him.

  “He looks nice,” Nick said.

  “He was the best.” I turned the page, and Jenks landed on it, hands on his hips as he strolled over my life, carefully arranged in neat little rows and columns. “That’s my favorite picture of him,” I said, tapping an unlikely looking group of eleven-and twelve-year-old girls standing before a yellow bus. We were all sunburned, our hair three shades lighter than usual. Mine was cropped short and stuck out all over. My dad was standing beside me, a hand on my shoulder as he smiled at the camera. I felt a sigh slip from me.

  “Those are all my friends at camp,” I said, thinking my three years there had been some of my best summers. “Look,” I said, pointing. “You can see the lake. It was way up in New York somewhere. I only went swimming once, since it was so cold. Made my toes cramp up.”

  “I never went to camp,” Nick said, looking at the faces intently.

  “It was one of those ‘Make-a-Wish’ camps,” I said. “They kicked me out when they figured out I wasn’t dying anymore.”

  “Rachel!” my mother protested. “Not everyone there was dying.”

  “Most were.” My mood went somber as my gaze roved over the faces, and I realized I was probably the only one in the picture still alive. I tried to remember the name of the thin black-haired girl standing beside me, not liking it when I couldn’t. She had been my best friend.

  “Rachel was asked to not come back after she lost her temper,” my mom said, “not because she was getting well. She got it into her head to punish a little boy for teasing the girls.”

  “Little boy,” I scoffed. “He was older than everyone else there and a bully.”

  “What did you do?” Nick asked, a glint of amusement in his brown eyes.

  I got up to put coffee in my mug. “Threw him into a tree.”

  Jenks snickered, and my mother rapped the spoon on the side of the sauce pot. “Don’t be modest. Rachel tapped the ley line the camp was built on and threw him thirty feet up.”

  Jenks whistled and Nick’s eyes grew wide. I poured out the coffee, embarrassed. It hadn’t been a very good day. The brat had been about fifteen, and was tormenting the girl whose shoulder my arm was draped over in the picture. I had told him to leave her alone, and when he pushed me down, I lost it. I hadn’t even known how to draw on a ley line; it just kind of happened. The kid landed in a tree, fell, and cut his arm. There had been so much blood, I got scared. The young vamps in the camp all had to take a special overnight trip across the lake until they could dig up the dirt he had bled on and burn it.

  My dad had to fly up and sort things out. It was the first time I had used ley lines, and basically the last until I went to college since my dad had tanned my hide but good. I’d been lucky they hadn’t made me leave right then and there.

  I went back to the table, looking at him smiling at me from the photo. “Mom, can I have this picture? I lost mine this spring when—a misaligned spell took them out.” I met Nick’s eyes, the shared understanding in them reassuring me he’d say nothing about my death threats.

  My mom sidled close. “That’s a nice one of your father,” she said, pulling the photo out and handing it to me before she went back to the stove.

  I sat down in my chair and looked at the faces, searching for a name for any of them. I could recall none. It bothered me.

  “Um, Rachel?” Nick said, peering down at the album.

  “What?” Amanda? I silently asked the dark-haired girl. Was that your name?

  Jenks’s wings flashed into motion, sending my hair to dance about my face. “Holy crap!” he exclaimed.

  I looked down to the picture that had been under the one now in my hand and felt my face go white. It was the same day, since the background was of the bus. But this time, instead of being surrounded by preadolescent girls, my dad was next to a man who was a dead ringer for an older Trent Kalamack.

  My breath wouldn’t come out. The two men were smiling, squinting against the sun. They had an arm companionably about each other’s shoulders and were clearly happy.

  I exchanged frightened looks with Jenks. “Mom?” I finally managed. “Who is this?”

  She came close, making a small sound of surprise. “Oh, I had forgotten I had that one. That’s the man who owned the camp. Your father and he were such good friends. It broke your dad’s heart when he died. And so tragically, too, not six years after his wife. I think that was part of the reason your dad lost the will to fight. They died only a week apart, you know.”

  “No, I didn’t,” I whispered, staring down. It wasn’t Trent, but the resemblance was eerie. It had to be his father. My dad had known Trent’s father?

  I put a hand to my stomach in a sudden thought. I had gone to camp with a rare blood disease and left every year feeling better. Trent dabbled in genetic research. His father might have done the same. My recovery had been called a miracle. Perhaps it had been outlawed, immoral, genetic manipulation. “God help me,” I breathed.

  Three summers at camp. Months of not waking until almost sundown. The unexplained soreness in my hip. The nightmares I still occasionally woke from, of a cloying vapor.

  How much? I wondered. What had Trent’s father taken from my dad in payment for the life of his daughter? Had he exchanged it for his own?

  “Rachel?” Nick said. “Are you okay?”

  “No.” I concentrated on breathing, staring at the picture. “Can I have this one, too, Mom?” I asked, hearing my voice as if it weren’t my own.

  “Oh, I don’t want it,” she said, and I slipped it out, fingers trembling. “That’s why it was underneath. You know I can’t throw anything of your father’s away.”

  “Thanks,” I whispered.

  Fifteen

  I wedged one of my fuzzy pink slippers off and dismally scratched the back of my calf with my toe. It was after midnight, but the kitchen was bright, gleams of fluorescent light reflecting off my copper spell pots and hanging utensils. Standing at the stainless steel island, I ground the pestle into the mortar, pulping the wild geranium into a green paste. Jenks had found it in a vacant lot for me, trading one of his precious mushrooms for it. The pixy clan that worked the lot had gotten the better end of the deal, but I think Jenks felt sorry for them.

  Nick had made us sandwiches about a half an hour ago, and the lasagna was put away into the fridge still hot. My bologna sandwich had been tasteless. I didn’t think I could blame it all on the fact that Nick hadn’t put ketchup on it as I asked, saying he couldn’t find any in the fridge. Stupid human foible. I’d find it endearing if it didn’t tick me off so much.

  Ivy had yet to show, and I wouldn’t eat the lasagna by myself in front of Nick. I wanted to talk to her but I’d have to wait until she was ready. She was the most private person I knew, not even telling herself what her feelings were until she found a logical reason to justify them.

  Bob the fish swam in my next-to-the-largest spell pot beside me on the counter. I was going to use him as my
familiar. I needed an animal, and fish were animals, right? Besides, Jenks would flip out if I so much as hinted at a kitten, and Ivy had given her owls to her sister after one narrowly escaped being torn apart when it caught Jenks’s youngest daughter. Jezebel was fine. The owl might be able to fly again. Someday.

  Depressed, I continued to grind the leaves to a pulp. Earth magic held more power when made between sunset and midnight, but tonight I was having difficulty concentrating, and it was already past one. My thoughts kept circling back to that photo and the Make-a-Wish camp. A heavy sigh escaped me.

  Nick looked up from the opposite side of the counter, where he was perched on a bar stool finishing off the last of the bologna sandwiches. “Give it up, Rachel,” he said, smiling to soften his words, clearly knowing where my thoughts lay. “I don’t think you’ve been tampered with, and even if you were, how could anyone prove it?”

  I let the pestle fall still and pushed the mortar away. “My father died because of me,” I said. “If it hadn’t been for me and my damned blood disease, he’d still be here. I know it.”

  His long face went sad. “In his mind, it was probably his fault you were sick.”

  That made me feel a whole lot better, and I slumped where I stood.

  “Maybe they were just friends, like your mom said,” Nick offered.

  “And maybe Trent’s father tried to blackmail my dad into something illegal and died because he wouldn’t do it.” At least he had taken Trent’s dad with him.

  Nick stretched his long arm out to snag the photo still on the counter where I had dropped it. “I don’t know,” he said, his voice soft as he gazed at it. “They look like friends to me.”

  I wiped my hands off on my jeans and leaned to take the picture. My eyes crinkled as I scanned my dad’s face. Sealing my emotions away, I handed it back. “I didn’t get well because of herbal remedies and spells. I’ve been tampered with.”

  It was the first time I had said it aloud, and my stomach tightened. “But you’re alive,” he offered.

  I turned away and measured six cups of springwater. The tinkling as it ran into my largest copper spell pot sounded loud. “What if it got out?” I asked, unable to look at him. “They’d pack me up and put me away on some frozen island like I was a leper, afraid whatever he did to me might mutate into something and start another plague.”

  “Oh, Rachel…” Nick slipped from his stool. Anxious, I busied myself needlessly drying the measuring cup. He came up behind me, giving me a backward hug before turning me around to face him. “You’re not a plague waiting to happen,” he cajoled, meeting my eyes. “If Trent’s father cured your blood disease, then he did. But it was just that. He fixed it. Nothing’s going to happen. See? I’m still here.” He smiled. “Alive and everything.”

  I sniffed, not liking that it bothered me so much. “I don’t want to owe him anything.”

  “You don’t. This was between your father and Trent’s, and that’s assuming it even happened.” His hands were warm around my waist. My feet were between his, and I laced my fingers behind his back and balanced my weight against his own. “Just because your dad and Trent’s father knew each other, it doesn’t mean anything,” he said.

  Right, I thought sarcastically. We let go of each other at the same time, stepping reluctantly away. While Nick stuck his head in the pantry, I checked over my recipe for the transfer medium. The text I had for binding a familiar was in Latin, but I knew the scientific names of the plants enough to follow it. I was hoping Nick would help with the incantation.

  “Thanks for keeping me company,” I said, knowing that he had a half-day shift at the university tomorrow and a night shift at the museum. If he didn’t leave soon, he wouldn’t get any sleep before he had to go to work.

  Nick glanced at the black hallway as he sat down on his stool with a bag of chips. “I was hoping to be here when Ivy came back. Why don’t you spend the night at my house?”

  My lips curled in a smile. “I’ll be fine. She won’t come home until she’s calmed down. But if you’re going stay for a while, how about sketching some pentagrams for me?”

  The crackle of plastic stopped. Nick looked at my black paper and silver chalk stacked suspiciously on the counter, then to me. Amusement lit his eyes, and he finished rolling down the edges of the bag. “I’m not going to do your homework, Ray-ray.”

  “I know what they look like,” I protested, putting the clippings of my hair into the spell pot and pushing them down with my ceramic spoon until they sank. “I promise I’ll copy them myself later. But if I don’t hand them in tomorrow, she’ll flunk me and Edden will deduct the cost of tuition from my fee. It’s not fair, Nick. The woman has it in for me!”

  Nick ate a chip, skepticism pouring from him. “You know them?” I nodded, and he wiped his hand on his jeans before pulling my textbook closer. “All right,” he challenged as he tilted the book so I couldn’t see. “What does a pentagram of protection look like?”

  My breath escaped me in a relieved whoosh, and I added the sanicle decoction I’d prepared earlier. “Standard graph with two braided lines in the outer circle.”

  “Okay … How about divination?”

  “New moons sketched at the points, and a mobius strip in the center for balance.”

  The amused glint in Nick’s eye turned to surprise. “Summoning?” he prompted.

  I smiled and dropped the pulped wild geranium into the brew. The bits of green hung suspended as if the water were a gel. Cool. “Which one? Summoning internal power or a physical entity?”

  “Both.”

  “Internal power has acorns and oak leaves in the midpoints, and summoning an entity uses a Celtic chain binding the points.” Smug at his obvious surprise, I adjusted the flame under the pot and dug in my silverware drawer for a finger stick.

  “Okay. I’m impressed.” The book slipped down and he grabbed a handful of chips.

  “You’ll copy them for me?” I asked, delighted.

  “Promise you’ll do them yourself later?”

  “Deal,” I said cheerfully. I had already finished the short essays. Now all I had to do was make Bob my familiar and I’d be set. Piece of cake. I looked at Bob and cringed. Yeah. Piece of cake. “Thanks,” I said softly as Nick straightened my black drawing paper by tapping the ends on the counter.

  “I’ll make them sloppy so she thinks you did them,” he said.

  I gave him a raised eyebrow look. “Thanks a lot,” I amended dryly, and he grinned. Done with the brew, I jabbed my finger and massaged out three drops of blood. The scent of redwood blossomed as they plunked into the pot and the spell quickened. So far, so good.

  “Earth witches don’t use pentagrams,” Nick said as he sharpened the chalk by rubbing it against a piece of scrap paper. “How come you know them?”

  Careful to keep my bloodied finger clear, I polished my scrying mirror with a velveteen scarf borrowed from Ivy. A shudder sifted through me at the cold feel of it. I hated scrying. It gave me the willies. “From those pentagram jelly glasses,” I said. Nick looked up, the lost look on his face making me feel good for some reason. “You know. Those jelly jars you can use for juice glasses when they’re empty? These had pentagrams on the bottom and their uses written on the side. I lived on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that year.” My mood went soft at the memory of my dad quizzing me over toast.

  Nick rolled his sleeves up and started sketching. “And I thought I was bad for digging to the bottom of my cereal box for the toy.”

  I was done with the prep work and ready to do some serious spelling. Time to set my circle. “In or out,” I asked, and Nick looked up from my homework, blinking. Seeing his confusion, I added, “I’m ready to set my circle. Do you want to be in or out of it?”

  He hesitated. “You want me to move?”

  “Only if you want to be out of it.”

  His look turned incredulous. “You’re going to enclose the entire island?”

  “Is that a problem?”
/>
  “No-o-o-o.” Nick scooted his bar stool closer. “Witches must be able to hold more ley line power than humans. I can’t make a circle much bigger than three feet across.”

  I smiled. “I don’t know. I’d ask Dr. Anders if she wouldn’t make me feel like an idiot. I think it depends. My mom can’t hold a circle bigger than three feet, either. So … in or out?”

  “In?”

  My breath slipped from me in relief. “Good. I was hoping you’d say that.” Leaning over the counter, I plunked my spell book down beside him. “I need your help translating this.”

  “You want me to do your homework and help you bind your familiar, too?” he protested.

  I winced. “The only spell I could find in my books was in Latin.”

  Nick looked at me in disbelief. “Rachel. I sleep at night.”

  I glanced at the clock above the sink. “It’s only one-thirty.”

  Sighing, he slid the book to him. I knew he wouldn’t be able to resist once he started, and sure enough, his mild annoyance shifted to hot interest before he had read more than a paragraph. “Hey, this is old Latin.”

  I leaned across the counter until my shadow covered the print. “I can read the plant names, and I’m sure I made the transfer medium right, as it’s standard, but the incantation is iffy.”

  He wasn’t listening anymore, his brow furrowed as he ran a long finger under the text. “Your circle needs to be modified to resolve and gather power.”

  “Thanks,” I said, glad he was going to help. I didn’t mind muddling through most things, but spelling was an exact science. And just the idea that I needed a familiar made me uncomfortable. Most witches had them, but ley line witches needed them as a matter of safety. Dividing one’s aura helped prevent a demon from pulling you into the ever-after. Poor Bob.

  Nick went back to sketching pentagrams for me, glancing up as I pulled my twenty pound bag of salt from under the counter and set it thumping on top. Acutely aware of his eyes on me, I scraped a handful from the clumping mass. At Ivy’s insistence, I had blown off the security deposit and etched a shallow circle in the linoleum. Ivy had helped. Actually, Ivy had done all of it, using a string and chalk contraption to be sure the circle was perfect. I’d sat on the counter and let her have at it, knowing it would tick her off if I got in her way. The result was an absolutely perfect circle. She had even taken a compass and marked true north with black nail polish to show me where to start my circle.

 

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