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Spell Blind - eARC

Page 16

by DAVID B. COE


  “Where can I find him?”

  “Like I said, it’s not far. He has a place just off of Thomas; I think it’s on 18th. It’s white, but it needs paint. There’s —” He stopped and waved his hand, in the general direction. “You’ll see the wardings on it. Pale green; very weak.”

  I handed him the two twenties. “Thanks.”

  “Did you mean what you said before? Is this hell sorcerer really targetin’ you?”

  I rubbed the back of my neck, wishing I’d kept that bit of information to myself. “Yeah,” I said. “At least I think it was him. It felt like someone was about to use assailing magic against me. I warded myself both times, but no attack ever came.”

  “Both times,” Orestes said. “It’s happened twice?”

  I nodded. He grimaced.

  “Have you considered whether you might be better off leavin’ him be?” he asked.

  I didn’t bother to answer. Instead, I reached for the door. “Thanks again.”

  “Brother Q has one favor that he’d ask of you* * *”

  This one I’d heard before; his standard parting line. “Please don’t tell a soul that you heard it from Q,” we said together.

  “You got it,” I told him. “Stay safe.”

  “You, too. Keep your head down.”

  Right. I got back in the car and drove east on Thomas and then turned onto 18th. Antoine Mirdoux lived in Mountain View’s 733 beat, another garden spot. To a civilian—one crazy enough to be walking these streets—there wasn’t a whole lot of difference among the beats in this part of town. A person could drive from one to the next without knowing it. But to the cops working the neighborhoods, each beat had a personality, a flavor. I’m sure the seven thirty-three was like that, a place that cops came to know and even like, in a perverse sort of way. To me though, these were just streets and ramshackle houses, places where a dark sorcerer could be waiting, watching for me. The area around Orestes’s place I knew; I’d been there enough times before to make even those rough streets feel familiar. But as I drove the Z-ster up and down 18th, looking for a house that glowed with pale green magic, I felt like a soldier entering an urban war zone for the first time. These streets were alien to me, and I could almost feel the danger crawling up my arms and legs, making me shiver. As I drifted past, kids and old people stared at me, grim and hostile. They knew I didn’t belong there; they might even have sensed an ill omen in my coming. I kept my speed the same, trying not to make eye contact as I searched for Antoine’s house.

  I spotted it about a block short. Like Orestes’s house, it was dripping with magic—between Orestes and Antoine, I was beginning to feel like I should go home and put a few spells on my place. It seemed there were some heavy clouds looming on the magical horizon.

  I couldn’t tell for certain in the daylight, but Antoine’s magic did appear to be a very pale green, about the same color you might see on a traffic light. At least I knew that he wasn’t our killer.

  I drove past the house and parked two doors down, not wanting to spook him. I tucked my weapon into my shoulder holster, walked to the door, and knocked.

  No answer. I raised my hand to knock again, and as I did, several things happened at once.

  I felt a pulse of magic aimed at me through the door—an assailing spell—and without even thinking, I warded myself. When in doubt, go back to what you know best. I used a deflection spell.

  I didn’t know what ‘Toine had in mind for me when I redirected his assault at the first thing I thought of: his door, to be precise. But given the way the door exploded inward, I guessed that he wanted me blown up. The wood shattered with a sound like thunder from a too-close lighting strike and fragments of the door and flecks of old white paint flew through the house like flakes in a snow globe.

  My initial thought was that Orestes had sold the kid short, making him sound like some kind of hack conjurer. He wasn’t a master yet—if he had been, I’d have been killed by the explosion—but he was better than Orestes had made him sound. I should have recognized Brother Q’s attitude for what it was: professional jealousy. ‘Toine was every bit the sorcerer Orestes had been the first time I busted him. Give the kid a few years, and he’d be a force in this town.

  In the next instant I realized that I’d heard another sound after the door vaporized. A second door had opened on the far side of the house and a moment later a screen door had slammed shut. I sprinted through the house and out the back in time to see a young black man disappear around a corner. It was Robby-freaking-Sommer all over again. And my leg still hurt.

  But ‘Toine had tried to kill me, and I was pissed. It was amazing what a bit of anger could do to strengthen a person’s magic. Turning that same corner, I saw Mirdoux running away from me, and I tried the most basic assailing spell I could think of, something so simple that he never would have expected it, something so harmless that if he reflected it back at me, it wouldn’t do any damage.

  Three elements. My hand, his foot, his momentum. As I’ve said, the words don’t matter; it’s all visualization.

  ‘Toine went down in a heap, the way he would have if I’d been close enough to grab his foot in the middle of his stride.

  I ran toward him, warding myself as I did. I almost pulled out my Glock, but then I thought better of it. I didn’t want him panicking, and I didn’t want to give him another target for his magic.

  As I got near him, I slowed to a walk. He had sat up, and was glaring at me. I expected him to cast a spell my way at any moment.

  “Don’t even think about it, Antoine,” I said, still easing toward him. “I’m a better conjurer than you are.”

  “The hell you are, man!”

  “Have you seen your door lately?”

  He said nothing, but if he’d been able to turn that glower into magic, I’d have been little more than ash.

  Antoine couldn’t have been more than twenty-five years old, and he was surprisingly clean-cut for a kid who’d tried to splatter me all over his front steps. His hair was short and neatly cut, his face was square, his skin smooth. It was hard to tell with him on the ground, but I don’t think he would have stood much more than five-six or five-seven. He was broad in the shoulders and lean, and he wore a diamond stud in his left ear.

  “Who the hell are you?” he asked. ‘Toine may have been from Haiti, but he had no accent, and I had the feeling that he could have spoken like a news anchor if he’d chosen to.

  “You’re trying to kill me, and you don’t even know?”

  “I know you don’t belong ‘round here. I know you got no business knockin’ on my door.”

  “So you’d have tried to blow me up even if I’d been selling Bibles?”

  “You don’t look like no Bible salesman.”

  “No? What do I look like?”

  “A cop.”

  I guess it never really goes away. It’s not like I could argue with the kid. “It would have been pretty stupid to blow up a cop.”

  “Man, what are you talkin’ about with that blowin’ up shit? I didn’t try to blow up nobody.”

  “No? Then what was that spell you threw at me through what used to be your door?”

  “Nothin’ you ever heard of, man.” He grinned. “It’s one of my own. It would have felt like somebody shattered a beer bottle on your head. Would have put you out cold.” The smile vanished. “Instead, you gotta go and destroy my house.”

  Either he was lying, or I was far more powerful than I’d ever thought and had unwittingly found some way to amplify his assailing spell. Guess which one I was betting on.

  “I’m not a cop, Antoine,” I said. “I’m a private investigator.” I pulled out my wallet and showed him my PI’s license. “My name is Jay Fearsson. I’m doing some work on the Blind Angel murders.”

  He stared past me. “Never heard of them.”

  “No? Maybe you heard that Claudia Deegan was killed.”

  “Never heard of her, neither.”

  Well, now I had to reconsider,
because ‘Toine was about the worst liar I’d ever met. What the hell had happened to his door?

  “You know what? I think you’re full of shit. I think you ran away from me because you’re into something that you can’t handle and you’re scared out of your mind.”

  “Whatever, man.”

  “Claudia Deegan was killed with magic.”

  “Bad luck.”

  “Every Blind Angel victim was killed with magic.”

  His eyes narrowed. “How do you know that?”

  “I used to be a cop. And I’m a weremyste, too. Remember? I saw the magic on them.”

  “Then you know it’s not mine, don’t you?”

  “Yes, I do. I know that it belongs to someone with real power.”

  “Fuck you, man!”

  “The magic that killed those kids was red. Deep red, almost the color of blood. And the magic on Claudia Deegan had faded nearly to nothing in the span of about two days. There can’t be more than five people in the entire country with power like that.”

  He refused again to meet my gaze. But he was clenching his jaw, and I had the sense that he was considering another assailing spell.

  “Like I said, man, if you cast, then you know what my stuff is like. It ain’t red, and it don’t disappear after no two days. So you know it wasn’t me.”

  “Maybe, but I think you know who this sorcerer is.”

  “You think wrong, then, cop.”

  I squatted down and got right in his face, forcing him to look me in the eye. “Like I said, little man, I’m not a cop anymore. But I’ve still got friends on the force. And who do you think they turn to when they’re working cases that involve magic?” I tapped my chest. “Me. All I have to do is give the word and they’ll be all over you. You’ll spend the rest of your life rotting in jail, wishing you were a good enough conjurer to get yourself out, and wondering why you were so stupid as to piss me off.”

  He was working up to another attack. I could see it in his eyes; I could hear it in the rasp of his breathing. I pushed hard enough, and I got exactly what I expected. For all his talent and potential, ‘Toine was still just a kid, playing with toys he didn’t quite understand.

  The spell he threw at me was similar to the one Robby Sommer had used against me—a basic fire spell. Rudimentary stuff. But he was angry enough that this time he might have been trying to kill me, and so I went with deflection rather than reflection. I didn’t want to hurt him. But he needed to know that he didn’t want to be screwing around with me. I aimed the bounce at the wall directly behind him, so that ‘Toine’s own fire flew past the side of his head, missing him by maybe an inch and blackening the wall with the sound of sizzling fat.

  “Shit!” he spat, ducking away.

  “Next time, I won’t miss,” I told him. “Tell me who this guy is, or I’ll bring the cops down on you. I’m a PI; I just want to get paid. And all the cops care about is clearing the case. None of us gives a crap if you go down for it. Hell, if I tell them that it’s your color on Claudia Deegan, they’re not going to know any different.” I shrugged. “Now, as far as I’m concerned, I’ve got nothing against you. I’d rather see this other guy off the streets. And I bet you wouldn’t mind using a bit less mojo around the house.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about, man,” he said. “I don’t know any red magic sorcerer.”

  “I don’t believe you.”

  “Who sent you here, anyway? Somebody got it in for me?”

  “Who is he, Antoine? Why is everybody so afraid of this guy?”

  For a second I thought he’d spill it all. He was scared, terrified even. I glimpsed it in his eyes—I’d seen that fear before, in little kids who were being abused by their parents. Terror, helplessness, the memory of pain, the desperate desire to end the abuse, but all of it overmastered by the belief that no one could end the cycle and the certainty that if he tried, if he dared tell a soul, he’d be punished even more severely than before. ‘Toine felt trapped, and he had no faith that I could set him free.

  At last he fixed his eyes on the street. It was almost like he expected to see the sorcerer strolling past. “I don’t know nothin’,” he muttered again. “Whoever told you I did was bullshittin’ you.”

  He was lying. But again, as with Robby, I couldn’t do anything about it.

  I stood. “Fine.” I fished out my business card, and tossed one down to him. It was a waste of time and paper, but what the hell. “If you reconsider, give me a call.”

  He laughed. “Yeah, right, man. I’ll be callin’ you.”

  I started to walk away.

  “We can chat, man,” he called after me. “Like we’re old friends, you know?” He laughed again.

  I made my way to the Z-ster, Antoine’s laughter still ringing in my ears. I had been preparing myself all day, planning what I’d do if I felt the Blind Angel killer’s power again. But like an idiot, I allowed the kid to throw me off balance.

  And so, when the red sorcerer suddenly had me in his sights again, I was utterly unprepared. I tried to ward myself, knowing as I did that anything I came up with he could defeat, knowing as well what he was trying to do with these teasing encounters. But I made the effort anyway.

  The feeling was much more vivid this time. I knew he was close. Too close. I turned a quick circle, but I also knew that I wouldn’t be able to find him. I felt the hairs on my neck and arms stand on end. I felt my skin grow cold, as if I was in shadow and the rest of the city was in brilliant sunlight. If he had wanted to kill me in that moment, he could have, though I would have put up a fight.

  But he was toying with me. For a split second, I thought I could hear laughter. Not ‘Toine’s, though I heard that, too. This was deeper, more menacing, more elusive. I turned again, trying to pinpoint where it was coming from. But it was everywhere. Around me, above me, below me. It was in my freaking head.

  You’re mine now, I thought I heard someone say.

  And then it was gone. The laughter ceased, the sun shone on my face and arms, a warm wind touched my skin.

  Three times. Once outside of Robby Sommer’s place, once outside of Robo’s in Tempe, and now here, in front of Antoine Mirdoux’s house. Was there a connection there, something linking the three of them to one another and to this sorcerer with the blood-red magic? Or was it mere chance, the random choices of this bastard who was hunting me?

  I should have been concentrating on those questions, trying to figure out what Robby, Robo’s, and Antoine had in common with the Blind Angel victims.

  But all I could think was that he’d done this to me three times now. He’d touched my mind with his magic; he’d tested my defenses and seen how I would respond to an attack, how I would ward myself.

  Three times.

  There’s power in numbers. He knew me now. I was his. And the next time, if he chose to attack, there would be precious little I could do about it.

  CHAPTER 12

  I drove back to Chandler, my heart pounding out a salsa beat, and my hands sweating so much the steering wheel grew slick and I had to wipe my palms on my jeans every few seconds. I spent more time glancing up at my rearview mirror than I did looking ahead. I don’t know what I was watching for—maybe some red glowing car, driven by the bald guy I’d seen in my stone. Every time a car drew too close to my rear bumper I started to hyperventilate.

  By the time I reached my office, I’d stopped shaking, for the most part. But I was still jumpy; walking from my car to the office, I must have glanced back over my shoulder a dozen times. I hated this. I’m not one to go through life scared; I’d spent too long on the job for that. But this sorcerer had gotten into my head.

  More than anything else, I was mad at myself for letting him get the better of me. I knew full well that I couldn’t stay locked up in my house or office and still do my job.

  Usually when I was in a mood like this, Namid was the last person I wanted to see. But as soon as I was inside my office, I called for him, something I
had never done before. I didn’t even know if it would work.

  It did.

  His name was still echoing off the walls and wood floor when he began to take form in the middle of the room.

  “Ohanko,” he said. “You summoned me.”

  I took a breath. “Yeah, I did. He found me a third time.”

  “It was inevitable that he would.”

  For reasons I couldn’t explain that made me feel better. “I know that. But * * * I’m not sure what to do now.”

  “You do what you always do.” I thought I saw a smile creep over his glimmering face. “You tread like the fox, and you do your job.”

  “I heard him laughing, and I heard his voice.”

  Namid didn’t seem overly impressed by this, but he asked, “What did he say to you?”

  “Just that I was his now.”

  “It means nothing.”

  I nodded, glanced toward the bank of windows. Why had that gray sedan slowed as it drove past?

  “Listen to me, Ohanko.”

  I faced him.

  “It means nothing,” he said again, his tone more pointed this time.

  “We both know that’s not true.”

  “Yes, yes,” he said. “Three times. He knows you now. This increases his ability to do you harm. But he had that ability already. His main purpose in doing this is to track you, to know what you do from one moment to the next.”

  “So he can do that?”

  The runemyste nodded. “He can.”

  “And this is supposed to make me feel better?”

  “Yes, Ohanko,” he said, the way he might if he were explaining something to a ten-year-old. “If he wanted to kill you, he would have already. He tracks you to follow the progress of your investigation. There may come a time when his purpose is darker. You must be wary. You must learn to ward yourself at all times, with spells more effective than deflection. But this was true already.”

  I walked to the windows. The gray sedan was gone. It was just another day in Chandler, and no one on the street seemed the least bit interested in me or my case.

 

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