by Lyn Benedict
“Fine,” Sylvie said.
“Hey, that was easy. I thought I’d have to bribe you to—”
“Why did you come here? Riordan decide we need a babysitter?”
Demalion said, “Sylvie. Interrogate her after the spell is lifted?”
“Nah, it’s okay. I get it,” Marah said. She shivered all over, her face going grey, her eyes rolling back in her head. “Jesus, this Val is a real bitch. That was a bad one. Feels like my guts just rolled around. Feels like there are rats chewing me up from the inside; oh God, what if there are—”
“You could have hit the intercom,” Sylvie said. “Asked to be let in. Demalion, bring her.”
“No, wait, what?” Marah protested. “Back outside? I don’t want to—”
“Shut up,” Sylvie said. “We put you out; the spell drops off. Then I invite you in. Easier than trying to remove the spell while it’s active.”
Marah spasmed again, her hand clenching tight on Demalion’s shoulder. He winced; her nails raked his skin. Sylvie took advantage of the moment to take Marah’s gun from her. Or at least, that had been the plan.
For a woman fighting off a magically induced panic attack, she was damn fast. Sylvie found her outstretched hand grabbed, wrenched behind her, and her body shoved into face-first into the wall, Marah a trembling line against her back. “Don’t make me shoot you, Sylvie. You owe me favors. I intend to collect. But instincts are hard to fight.”
“Tell me about it,” Lupe said, entering the conversation for the first time. “At least you don’t turn into an animal. Sylvie, what the hell is going on? Alex only told me that we were all in danger.”
“I am, Demalion is. Alex is by proximity,” Sylvie said, easing herself out from Marah’s grip. Marah let her go, but stepped back, wary. “You’re…
“Collateral damage. Again. Brought to someone’s attention because of you. Fuck you,” Lupe said, and stormed off toward the back of the house.
“Great, glad to know why we’re all here,” Marah said. “Spell. Off. Now.”
Sylvie flung the door open, stalked down the moonlit driveway, wincing as her bare feet hit crushed rock, listening to Demalion telling Marah that it’d be all right, just a little bit longer. Platitudes. To reassure an assassin. Sometimes, she really wondered about him.
“So how’d you find us?” Sylvie said.
“Studied you, remember? I’ve got as many files on you as Demalion does, I bet. I know about Val. This was a logical place to regroup before going after Graves.”
The wrought-iron gates, looming before Sylvie, still held a tiny residual warmth from the long-set sun. She keyed it open, shoved Marah out.
The woman whooped for air, dropped her hands to her knees, and just breathed. “Holy crap, I feel better.”
“Great,” Sylvie said, and closed the gate. “Why did you come?”
“You’re going after Graves,” Marah said. “I want in. C’mon, Syl, it’s a win-win. You help me kill an asshole, and I help you get your sister, my itty-bitty baby cousin, back home safe.”
“Do you know where Riordan’s keeping her?” Sylvie opened the gate again, extended a hand to Marah. “Come in.” Her heart thumped hard in her chest; Marah’s hand in hers was cold with lingering shock, but her grip was firm.
“No. His boy’s hiding and hiding good. I tried to find him. I figured you’d be sure to let me play if I brought Zoe with me. But no dice. C’mon. I want to help. I know Graves.”
“Riordan said you liked the man.”
“He said that?”
“No,” Demalion said. “He said your instincts couldn’t be relied upon when it came to Graves.”
Marah grinned. “Now that just depends on whether or not the instincts go against orders. Right now, they’re in sync. I want to scoop his eyeballs out with my fingernails and feed them to him. Riordan wants him dead.”
“So he says,” Sylvie said.
She felt like she was surrounded by power plays. It seemed quite possible to her that Riordan would send Sylvie off with marching orders to kill Graves, secure in the knowledge that she wouldn’t, not without proof that might be hard to find. That would explain why he didn’t send Marah. Riordan’s games were hard to figure.
Marah stepped forward gingerly, burdened by the memory of fear and sickness. Demalion scanned the surrounding area, keeping an eye out for anything that might take advantage of the open gate, ready to usher them back to the fragile safety of Val’s house.
“So? What’s the plan?” Marah said.
“Haven’t gotten that far yet,” Sylvie said.
“Jesus,” Marah snapped. “It’s been ten hours since Riordan gave you orders. What the hell have you been doing?”
“Mostly? Sleeping,” Sylvie said.
“Look, we need to move fast. Graves has ears everywhere. Even in Riordan’s crew, and he’s notoriously cautious about who he talks to. I think that’s why Riordan recruited his son. Just to have a single ally he could trust. I killed Powell.”
Powell. It took Sylvie a moment to recall the agent. Last she’d seen him, he was holed up in the elevator taking potshots at everyone who passed. “You did.”
“Graves’s man. I’m pretty sure.”
Demalion groaned. “You’re pretty sure?”
“Well, he tried to shoot me.”
Demalion and Sylvie traded glances.
Marah headed up the path to the house, said over her shoulder, “Graves is a bastard, but he’s a clever one. He’s got a serious yen for using and disposing of the magical freaks. And he loves spies. I used to spy on Riordan for him. Hell, he tried to have me killed the moment I stopped saying Yes, sir and wanted to work under Yvette, and I register pure human. He’ll know we’re coming, and he’ll have access to all our weaknesses. It’s gonna be an ugly fight. Can we get your Fury in on it? Wait, no. Never mind. I want to kill him myself, and she looks like she’d be selfish.”
Sylvie and Demalion trailed after her, listening to her eager and bloody plans for Graves.
* * *
BACK IN THE HOUSE, SYLVIE EXCUSED HERSELF TO RAID VAL’S closet; she left Marah and Demalion bending their heads together, making quiet plans. She tugged Alex aside, and said, “Keep an eye on her.”
“Who is she?” Alex narrowed her gaze as Marah ran a hand through her short, dark hair and stepped closer to Demalion. “Is she hitting on him? In front of you—”
Sylvie sucked in a breath. Alex knew who Marah was. She’d been told twice, once just minutes ago. Alex’s memory was getting worse. But she was within Val’s wards—the spells should no longer reach her. Unless she was forcing the memories by digging at the cases, which seemed entirely likely, knowing Alex.
“Just watch her. She’s not a homewrecker. She’s an assassin. She’s dangerous.”
Alex crossed her arms over her chest, nervously. “What am I supposed to do if—”
“Yell,” Sylvie said. “Loudly.”
She padded down the hallway, the tiles smooth beneath her feet. The room she’d crashed in with Demalion was a guest room. Alex looked to be camped out in the living room. Her laptop hummed industriously on the huge modular sofa, a woodcut image of a mermaid on the screen; a blanket was crumpled at one end of the couch, next to a bottle of aspirin and a clutter of small plates, as if Alex had gotten up for more than one snack while working. Sylvie’s stomach growled. Food. Soon.
She heard Lupe swearing, detoured toward it. Found Lupe and her destination all at the same time. Lupe, apparently, was bunking down in the master bedroom.
Lupe jerked away from the mirror when Sylvie came in. “What do you want?”
“Clothes, mostly. How are you doing?”
“You’re really going to ask that?” Lupe threw out her hand toward the mirror; her talons, longer than she’d accounted for, scored four lines through the mirror glass. “Am I going to turn into that thing that attacked me?”
“Absolutely not,” Sylvie said.
Lupe tilted her head in a ge
sture more predatory than confused. “What aren’t you telling me?”
“That thing,” Sylvie said, “is a god. A slightly mixed-up, violent-tempered, but ultimately lonely god. She likes you.”
“Can she fix me?”
“Maybe. She’s being a little bit difficult about it, though. Be patient.” Sylvie opened Val’s closet. Blinked at the size. There were walk-in closets; and then there were closets that were as large as bedrooms. This closet had a window, endless drawers, hung clothing, and a shoe rack that took up more room than some library bookshelves. There was even a department-store-worthy mirror stand and two chairs. Everything was cream or white or beige or grey, linen or silk or heavy, smooth cottons that felt like satin to her fingers.
Sylvie looked at the sheer quantity and thought she’d always mocked Zoe for being a clotheshorse.
Zoe.
Sylvie pushed the fear back. They’d deal with Graves and Riordan, and Zoe’d be home safe by the next day at the latest.
“Your friend’s pretty big on island fashion, huh,” Lupe said, poking her head into the closet. She sidled around the three-sided mirror and looked out the dark window. “Ocean view, too. What is she, the witch to the rich and famous?”
“Hey, don’t snark,” Sylvie said, though her lips twitched. “If we can’t convince Erinya to think you make a better human than a shape-shifter, we’re going to be dependent on Val’s goodwill.”
“Guess I shouldn’t have broken her mirror.” Lupe didn’t sound like she cared. She slunk through the closet with an animal grace that reminded Sylvie of Erinya’s human form. No wonder Erinya was interested. Here was someone who reminded her of her sisters, who could give her the fight but came without the bossiness.
“Did Alex show you Val’s panic room?”
“You think I’m going to go monster again.”
“Try not to,” Sylvie said. “Demalion’s already taken a shot at you, and our new guest would take killing you as a personal challenge. She’s ISI. If I didn’t need her info, I wouldn’t have let her in.” She pulled open drawer after drawer and finally found khaki jeans that she didn’t think cost the earth. Sylvie dragged them on, wincing as she fastened them. Val had always been just that bit slimmer. They’d stretch.
She dragged a shirt over her black tank, sighed; Val’s wardrobe didn’t lend itself to black underclothing. It would do. She buttoned the shirt, realized Lupe hadn’t said much in the past minute or two, and turned. Lupe was huddled up on one of the chairs, being careful of her talons on the fabric.
Sylvie replayed the conversation and grimaced. “Sorry. They’re not trigger-happy or anything. You’re perfectly safe. You feel the changes coming on, right? So we just get you in the panic room at that point. No harm, no foul. No shooting.”
“Can’t really blame ’em,” Lupe said. “I’m a monster.” She blinked slitted eyes at Sylvie, showed fang teeth in a wry grimace. “You know the most bizarre thing? I think I could deal with the shape-shifting. With never knowing what I might become or when it might happen.
“What I can’t stand? Is not going back to human. I don’t know whether it’s vanity or what, but I look in the mirrors, and all I see is this… thing. When I’ve shape-shifted, I don’t care.”
Sylvie bit back her knee-jerk analysis: that Lupe didn’t care because the animal instincts were too strong, too centered on killing things. After the attacks on her girlfriend, her nephew, the witch, and Toro, Sylvie had no doubts that any shape Lupe took would be instantly predatory. Dangerous.
“Maybe we can work with that,” she said, instead. “At least, as a stopgap thing. Remove the side effects, make things more livable, let you be able to go out and about on the street. Worry about the actual curse-shifting as a separate thing.” It was far from ideal. Far from solving Lupe’s problem, and from the slump of Lupe’s shoulders, she knew it.
“Might be the best I can get is that what you’re saying?”
“Well, it gives us a more reachable goal,” Sylvie said.
“If you have time for it,” Lupe said. “Don’t think I haven’t noticed, Sylvie. Something big is going on, and you’re in trouble.”
“We’re all in trouble, all the time. The moment the Magicus Mundi notices you, your life is trouble. But you’re not wrong. The ISI grabbed my sister. I have to get her back.”
Lupe picked at the fabric on the chair; seams popped with each idle flick of her talon, shedding fluff and creamy threads. “The ISI. The same ones who’d put me in a cage or just shoot me?”
“I think you’re off their list for now,” Sylvie said. “They’re under attack from within.”
“And they took your sister? Why? Leverage against you?” Said in the weary tones of a cynical rich kid. The Fernandezes, Sylvie recalled, had spent nearly two years in Mexico City, where kidnappings were common.
“I don’t pretend to know how they think, if they even do. But I have to—”
“I get it,” Lupe said. “She’s your sister. She’s more important than me. I’m just a—”
“Lupe, lock it down,” Sylvie interrupted. The thread-picking had given way to gouging, and the skin along her shoulders was … sliding around like oil on water. “Or go sit in the panic room.”
Lupe sucked in her breath, let it out on a growl that she seemed surprised to hear. “All right.” She bolted for the panic room, Sylvie hot on her heels, and she got the door closed, just as Lupe went to her knees.
“Lock yourself in!” Sylvie said. Hoped Lupe would listen. Hoped her animal shape couldn’t learn how to deal with locks. She waited until she heard the hiss and thunk of heavy bolts sliding into place, then went to find the rest of her ragtag crew, with worry a bitter taste in her mouth.
Alex dithered in the hall as she approached. “You’re back? I can stop watching?”
“Yeah,” Sylvie said.
“Good.” Alex darted for the nearest bathroom. “Four cups of coffee!”
“Bring me some!” Sylvie yelled after her, then went in to talk to the rogue ISI.
Demalion looked up as she entered, grinned. “Nice pants.”
“Shut up,” she said. “They’ll stretch. Tell me about Graves.”
An unearthly howl resonated through the house, and Marah jerked for her gun. “What the hell is that?”
“Client,” Sylvie said. “Sit down. Graves, remember?”
“Can’t forget that bastard,” Marah said. “He’s mine to kill, you get it? Don’t make this a fight.”
“Saves me the trouble,” Sylvie said, “and the jail time. Go for it.”
Demalion shook his head but didn’t even make a pro forma protest. Guess turning traitor was what it took to get the okay from Demalion on planning murder.
“He was working out of Dallas,” Demalion said, “but they were the first hit.”
“So we hear,” Sylvie said. “Do we know that it’s true? If Graves is behind the killing, what better way to start by preemptively giving his people an alibi. Do we actually know they’re dead?”
Alex wandered back into the room, passed a steaming mug to Sylvie, who slurped at it, first for need, then for real appreciation. Rich friends. Excellent coffee.
“I’ve been looking into it. There are definitely bodies that hit the Dallas morgue,” Alex said. “Gas leak was the story put out. Death by asphyxiation. Or is it suffocation in that case? Whatever. There are a lot of creature stories about things that steal breath. So something happened.”
“Maybe it was a test sample,” Marah asked. “Graves is capable of that.”
Sylvie looked to Demalion. He said, “I can’t confirm that. I have serious doubts that anyone psychotic enough to kill his own men in an experiment would be recruited in the first place, much less rise through the ranks.”
Marah’s jaw ticced. Rage flashed through her eyes. Her fist clenched; the Cain mark seemed to undulate over her flesh. Then she reached out and patted Demalion’s cheek. “So sweetly naïve.”
“Hey,” Sylvie protest
ed. “Watch your tone.”
Marah shrugged. “Look, I know Graves. I worked for him. And yeah, he knows how to play the game. Knows how to keep himself looking clean. But he’s not. He’s the monster-catcher. He kills them. Experiments on them. Sylvie. You and I know killing. It gets easier each time. And we’re not zealots.”
“Fair enough,” Sylvie said.
Demalion looked like he might protest, and she dropped a hand on his thigh. A quiet not now. She had things she wanted to discuss, but Marah was exuding a hectic, violent cheer that made Sylvie think of ticking bombs. In the back of the house, Lupe howled and whined, quieter now.
Alex said, “You need plane tickets?”
“For the morning,” Sylvie said.
“Now,” Marah said.
“No,” Sylvie said. “You’ve invited yourself along. I can’t say I’m sorry, but that doesn’t put you in charge, Marah. We are not rushing this. The one thing we all agree on is that Graves is dangerous. If he’s behind the attacks, he’s a thinker, also. The kind of man who has contingency plans. We go in the morning. Well rested and researched.”
“I like that idea,” Alex said. “C’mon, Marah, is it? I’ll find you a room.”
Marah twitched like it was a physical pain to not go for Graves right away.
“Sheets are six-hundred-thread count,” Sylvie said. “Soft as silk. Hell, some of them even are silk. There’s no complaining about Val’s hospitality.”
Marah groaned. “Not fair, using sheets against me. I suppose she’s got scads of hot water also.”
“Tankless system.”
“I’m licked. Lead me to it. Revenge in the morning.”
Demalion reached across her and pushed the papers that Marah had been holding. “She brought blueprints of the Dallas ISI.”
“Do we really think Graves is still there? If he’s this rogue ISI terrorist?”
“You obviously don’t,” Demalion said.
“I don’t know,” Sylvie said. She slumped down next to him, butted her shoulder up tight against his side. He draped an arm over her shoulder and pulled her closer. “I’ve been saying that an awful lot of late. I don’t like it. I just feel like there’s more going on here. Riordan’s not impartial. He was slinging a lot of mud.”