by S. M. Reine
Her voice echoed through the air.
I see you…
Elise’s eyes flew open as her hand closed on a wrist. She wrenched her attacker off his feet. Her other hand went to the back of her shorts, where she kept a knife.
“It’s me, Elise, it’s me!”
The haze lifted, and she realized the blurry face in front of her belonged to James.
Suddenly, she wasn’t in that dark place anymore. She was in a quiet hospital with tan carpeting, bare walls, and murmuring nurses. She released him, sat up, and cradled her head in both palms. “Sorry,” she said, blinking hard to clear her vision. Her heart thudded as though she had been running.
James sank to his knees next to the chair. He had ashy smudges on his chin and a bandage across the back of his neck. “Are you okay?”
“Fine.” She wiped sweat off her upper lip with the back of her glove. “I’m fine. What do the doctors say?”
“I’m all right, so I’ve been discharged, but Betty needs to stay the night. She inhaled a lot of smoke and has second-degree burns on ten percent of her body. Anthony will be here soon to stay with her.” He offered Elise his hand. She ignored it and got up on her own.
“Will she be okay?”
“Yes, but she’s in a lot of pain. They’ve sedated her so she can sleep.” The careful way he spoke told Elise there was more to the story that he didn’t want to say. They took the elevator to the first floor and went outside, and he continued once they were alone in the parking lot. “I think she was poisoned. Drugged.”
Elise got into the car. “The wine.”
“Most likely. That fire was meant to kill her.”
“No, it was meant to kill me.”
“He was surely tracking the cross and knew you weren’t there. If Mr. Black wanted us dead, he would be more overt. I think he’s trying to—well, punish us.”
Her jaw clenched. “Fantastic. Where are we going?”
“The studio. You can’t stay at the duplex anymore, and it’s one of the only places with strong enough warding to stand up to Mr. Black.”
That was optimistic of him. Elise wasn’t sure an entire fortress would be strong enough. “Thanks. I’ll find a hotel or something tomorrow. There isn’t enough room for Betty and Anthony at the studio, and we’re all homeless now.”
“Actually…” He hesitated. Cleared his throat. “There are two bedrooms in my apartment, and I’m staying with Stephanie. That leaves plenty of room for all of you.”
“You should stay with us. Stephanie’s house isn’t warded, either.”
“Her old house wasn’t,” James agreed.
She shot a sideways look at him. He had always taken their lifestyle with grace. Even covered in soot, he didn’t seem as beaten as she did. His black hair looked artfully tousled, while hers was a tangled mess of curls.
“But?”
“She’s moved.”
The terse response made her uneasy. But it wasn’t until they got to the studio again that she realized exactly what it meant.
The last couple of times she had been there, she assumed the disarray meant he was cleaning. But now she saw that his most important belongings were gone. The photography prints, his kitchen utensils, his altar. She followed him into his bedroom and realized half of his bookshelves were empty. She didn’t have to check the closet to know his clothes would be gone, too.
It didn’t look like a place where someone lived. It looked more like long-term storage.
Why hadn’t she noticed earlier?
James gathered fresh blankets from the linen closet and tried to get a fitted sheet over the mattress. Elise took the other end and helped him pull it over the corner.
He changed pillowcases and folded the comforter at the foot of the bed. “There you go. Should be comfortable.” When she didn’t respond, James studied her face with deep furrows carved into his forehead. He misinterpreted her angry silence. “We’ll figure this out. We defeated Mr. Black once, and we can do it again.”
“I’m not worried about it,” she said.
“You don’t have to lie to me.”
That almost made her laugh. Funny, coming from the man who had moved out of his apartment and hadn’t bothered to tell her. “I should rest.”
He nodded. “I’ll sleep on the couch. I’m too tired to drive, and heaven knows where Mr. Black is right now.”
“I can take the couch.”
“You need the rest much more than I do.” James reached out to tug on one of the curls in her ponytail. “You look terrible, Elise.”
“Yeah. Thanks. We can talk more about Mr. Black when sunrise hits.”
“A whole two hours of sleep,” he said. “I can hardly wait.”
Elise watched his retreating back before shutting the door. His room felt strangely vacant without him in it.
She wasn’t sure if the tension in her shoulders was from James or Mr. Black. Either way, her urge to sleep had completely vanished. She changed into a spare t-shirt and sweat pants from her laundry pile and splashed water on her face in the bathroom, trying to cool her parched skin.
In the light from the vanity bulbs over the mirror, she really did look terrible. Hollow eyes stared back at her from a face that seemed gaunter than it had the day before. Her auburn hair was fraying from its ponytail. Her tan skin was gray. There was no color to her lips or cheeks. A droplet of water shivered from the hard point of her chin, and she brushed it off.
All those worries crept back in twofold. Insurance company. Landlord—both for her office building and her duplex. The police would have even more questions. Her dwindling client list. All those unpaid bills.
Her gaze traveled to her wallet where she had dropped it on the back of the toilet. Denied credit cards.
A sense of foreboding filled her as she went back to the bedroom and turned on his laptop. She could hear James moving around downstairs, just as restless and unwilling to sleep as she was.
She logged onto her bank’s website. Her heart skipped a beat at the account totals.
Two dollars and fifty-three cents.
Impossible.
She should have had hundreds in checking and thousands more in savings. But it was all gone. There were errors where her credit card statements should have shown.
Somehow, she knew if she called the bank, they would have her on record as having made the withdrawals.
“Burning my home wasn’t enough?” she whispered.
Of course not. Mr. Black didn’t do things halfway.
She stared blankly at a pair of loafers James had left behind. Without money or her home, all she had left was her car—and she could imagine waking up the next morning to find that stolen, too. The only clothes she had were exercise gear, which were now covered in dirt and debris, and some tattered sweats. Besides that, her total assets amounted to two dollars and fifty-three cents and a pair of falchions locked in a gun safe.
No money. No house. No job.
She dialed a number on her cell phone before she realized she had made the decision.
“That didn’t take long,” purred the Night Hag. That hard, ancient voice gave Elise chills.
“I’ve changed my mind.”
“And why is that?”
“It doesn’t matter. But if I’m going to work for you, I need a salary. Money isn’t a problem for you. I know; I’ve seen your books. You own all the demon businesses in the city.”
A snort. “Greedy, hmm?”
“The bills don’t pay themselves.”
“And everybody has a price. Apparently I’ve found yours.” The demand didn’t seem to anger the Night Hag. If anything, she sounded appreciative. “Consider yourself salaried. But if I’m bleeding money for you, I’ll expect you to earn it. And I need a commitment.”
Elise braced herself. “I know.”
“Excellent.”
She heard a snap on the other side of the line.
Something whip-cracked through the air, something intangible that reek
ed of ozone, and Elise felt a hot sting on her shoulder. She pulled down the strap of her shirt and twisted around to peer at the shoulder blade. A brand the size of a penny had appeared, comprised of eight curling lines inside a circle. Blood trickled down her back.
She was marked—just like any demon in the service of a master.
“My witch will be visiting soon. Can’t wait to get started.”
The Night Hag chuckled as she hung up.
PART THREE
Loyalty
MAY 1999
Shortly after meeting with Mr. Black at the Pledger Bistro, Elise told James she needed to see a doctor.
“Have you been injured?” he asked, propping his head up on an arm. James was stretched out on the floor, paralyzed by early summer heat in a hotel room that had no air conditioner.
Elise tossed a knife with a long, slender blade back and forth between her hands. She had just trimmed her hair to an inch short again, and reddish curls stuck to her gloves.
“No.”
“It’s not going to be easy to see a doctor. We don’t have insurance. We don’t have money.”
“It’s important,” she said, and her strange tone of voice made him give her a second look. Elise was serious. “I need to see a—an obstetrician.”
He almost choked. “Are you pregnant?”
“No. Mr. Black said girl kopides are unusual, and I was thinking…” Elise was so stiff that she might have acquired spontaneous rigor mortis. “I’ve never had a…” She stuttered. Stopped. Tried again. “I’ve never had a period.”
A knot inside of him relaxed. “Ah. In that case, you want a—uh, a gynecologist, not an obstetrician. I’ve told you that I danced with a professional ballet company as a teenager, didn’t I?”
The rapid change in subject made her blink.
“No.”
“For three years. Between the stress of touring and low body fat, most of my female counterparts were like you. They didn’t… you know. In any case, they were healthy. It’s nothing to worry about.”
She folded her arms. “I’m going to see someone.”
And that was that.
Finding “someone” was easier than expected. There were few doctors who knew anything about kopides, but a phone call to his former coven gave him the number of a nearby practice owned by witches. An appointment was arranged for the next week. The doctor was excited to see one of the only female kopides.
Which was how James ended up with the world’s greatest demon hunter in a waiting room decorated with posters of babies.
Elise kept trying to draw her knife. He cleared his throat to remind her to stop. He wished he could have kept her from going to the gynecologist’s office with concealed weapons, but he had no control over her—much less her decisions—and she arrived armed in the same way she might have while facing a pack of werewolves.
After ten minutes of waiting, and several attempts at pulling a knife on the office staff, he whispered, “The pregnant women aren’t going to attack you.”
She glared at him. Her cheeks were red.
A nurse came into the waiting room. “Elise Kavanagh,” she called.
Elise hesitated by the chair. “Come with me,” she whispered to James. Her arms were locked at her sides.
“I don’t think they’ll let me. I’m not—”
She shifted on her feet, staring at the potted plant furiously as though she could set fire to it with her gaze. “Please.” James could tell it pained her to ask. The tendons in her neck were rigid.
She was scared. Elise was scared.
Up until that moment, he had never seen her as anything but cold and detached—or, occasionally, furious and blood-thirsty. Yet being subjected to a physical examination petrified her. He couldn’t see how his presence would help. She made it clear she didn’t trust him. On most days, he thought she didn’t even like him.
“Elise,” the nurse called again.
Her cheeks burned red.
“Okay,” he replied. What else could he say?
They walked into the back together.
The nurse, whose nametag said “Laura,” took Elise’s height, weight, and blood pressure, asked her to leave a urine sample in the bathroom, then led them into an exam room with a window overlooking the city.
Laura pulled sheets out of a drawer and began setting tools on a wheeled tray. Elise stood by the bed and glared at the room like she was awaiting execution.
“And you are?” the nurse prompted James.
Even though the doctors in the practice were witches, he wasn’t sure what the rest of the staff knew, so he didn’t try to explain the unusual relationship between a kopis and witch. “I’m her boyfriend.”
Whatever Laura thought of a teenage girl dating an obviously older man, she kept it to herself. “I’m going to ask you some personal questions, Elise. Would you like your boyfriend to leave the room?”
She shook her head.
Laura asked about her health and her family’s history. She asked about alcohol and drugs, too. When she asked if Elise was sexually active, she shook her head again, and the nurse gave her a skeptical look. She made a note on the clipboard.
“You’ll need to strip down, but keep your socks on. It’s chilly in here. This one is a vest,” she told Elise, setting one folded sheet on the counter, “and this one is a blanket to cover your hips. Dr. Kingsley will be right in.”
She shut the door behind her. Elise picked up the vest. It was made of flimsy blue paper.
James studied the city through the window while she changed. He waited to face her again until the paper on the bed crinkled and Elise said, “Okay.” She had pulled extra sheets out of the drawer to protect herself and left her gloves on. She looked frail and childlike on the raised bed, and stared mistrustfully at the waiting stirrups.
“I can leave,” he said.
She shook her head again.
They waited together without speaking. James shifted her clothes to the counter, careful to leave her knives concealed, and took the chair by the bed.
When the door opened again, a short man with a bushy beard entered with Elise’s chart. He ignored James. “So you’re the female kopis,” said Dr. Kingsley. “Excellent! I’d say that I’ve wanted to examine one of your type, but that would sound odd, wouldn’t it? The good news is that your pregnancy test came back negative. Can’t imagine a pregnant demon hunter, eh?”
Elise looked horrified.
“Let’s see what we can find. Lay back and slide to the end of the bed.”
He positioned the stirrups and rolled his stool to sit between them. She moved stiffly, settling back against the bed with jerky motions. She was shaking.
“James,” she said.
Elise held out a hand. It took him a moment to realize what she was asking, but then he took it and squeezed her fingers.
She didn’t let go for the entire examination.
Elise retrieved the bowl that evening.
She didn’t want to stay at the hotel with James. It was too hard to face him. On the other hand, finding Mr. Black again was easy. She stood on a street corner until his slender, whip-like aspis appeared on the other side.
She walked to a bakery and looked in the window. His reflection appeared behind hers.
“I’ll do it,” she said, pretending to study green apple cupcakes. The sight of food made her stomach give a hard cramp, like it was trying to digest itself.
A thick roll of paper was pressed into her hand. By the time she turned around, Alain was gone.
He had given her a note wrapped around a roll of money. She didn’t need to count the bills to know that she could buy all the cupcakes in the bakery if she wanted. Elise sat on a bench to read the note while savoring a flaky, buttery croissant.
So glad you came around to my way of thinking. Here’s where you can find the bowl. See you tonight.
Numbers were written at the bottom. Coordinates.
She sneaked into the motel where James was s
howering, grabbed her hiking boots, and stuffed most of the money into the bottom of her backpack. The sound of water traveling through the pipes shut off. She left a handful of twenties on his pillow, tucked her spine sheath and swords under one arm, and slipped out the door.
Using a map from a corner gas station, she pinpointed the coordinates Mr. Black had given her. They were centered on grassy plains bisected by freeways, where great native civilizations had once occupied the land—civilizations that had since been destroyed—and left nothing behind but pottery fragments and earthen mounds.
Elise took a cab to the edge of town. There were no exits from the freeway directly to the mounds, so she climbed over a concrete barrier and walked along the rolling hills.
Cars whispered along the overpass. An occasional horn honked. She moved deeper into the hills without worrying anyone would see. The moon was nothing more than a yellow sliver glowing between wisps of clouds.
The grass grew long and lush as she moved into a valley between mounds. Dew misted on her bare legs. Mud slurped under her soles.
She had brought the map with her, but there wasn’t enough light to make out the place she had marked. It didn’t matter. A strange quiet settled over her as she approached the eastern mound. It pressed inside her skull like wool. She could tell she was getting close when she found signs of an archaeological dig: leveled ground, a few posted signs, strings stretched between stakes.
Elise hopped a low fence meant to keep tourists away from the excavation and beelined for bushes at the back that hadn’t been cleared out yet. She pushed through the branches.
The hole she found was only a few inches narrower than her shoulders. It could have been mistaken for an animal’s burrow that had been worn away by rain.
She grabbed fistfuls of mud and threw gobs of it over her shoulder. Once the hole was widened enough for her to fit in with the sheath on her back, she squirmed inside. Mud scraped against her shoulders, her hips. Elise dropped to the bottom of the hole just a few feet down and straightened.
Her vision adjusted to the darkness, but there was nothing to see. Roots dangled from the ceiling. Shards of rock pocked the uneven floor. It was small enough that she couldn’t straighten fully. But the pressure inside her skull had worsened, and she knew she was in the right place.