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Jim Butcher - Dresden Files Omnibus

Page 74

by Jim Butcher


  The smart thing to do would have been to fall back. I could get Bob and work on this, research it, figure out how to get the wire from around Micky without hurting him. But he had already been suffering through this for hours. He might not make it through many more—his sanity was going to be hard-pressed to survive the spiritual mauling he had taken. Adding another day of this torture onto it all might send him someplace from where he’d never come back.

  I closed my eyes and took a breath. “I hope I’m right, Micky,” I told him. “I’m going to try to make it stop hurting.”

  He let out a whimpering little giggle, staring up at me.

  I decided to start at his ankle. I swallowed, steeling myself again, and reached down, getting my fingers between the burning cold barbed wire and his skin. I clenched my teeth, forcing will, power, into the touch, enough to be able to touch the material of the spell around him. Then I started pulling. Slowly, at first, and then harder.

  The metal strands burned into me. My fingers never went numb—they just began to ache more and more violently. The barbed wire resisted, barbs clinging at Micky’s flesh. The poor man screamed aloud, agonized, though there was that horrible, tortured laughter added to it as well.

  I felt tears burn into my eyes, from the pain, from Micky’s scream, but I kept pulling. The end of the wire tore free of his flesh. I kept pulling. Barb by barb, inch by inch, I tore the wire-spell free, drawing it up through his flesh at times, pulling that dead, cold energy away from Micky. He screamed until he ran out of breath and I heard whimpers coming from somewhere else in the room. I guess it was me. I started using both hands, struggling against the cold magic.

  Finally, the other end slithered free from Micky’s neck. His eyes flew open wide and then he sagged down, letting out a low, exhausted moan. I gasped and stumbled back from the bed, keeping the wire in my hands.

  It suddenly twisted and spun like a serpent, and one end plunged into my throat.

  Ice. Cold. Endless, bitter, aching cold coursed through me, and I screamed. I heard footsteps running down the hall outside, a voice calling out. The wire whipped and thrashed around, the other end darting toward the floor, and I seized it in both hands, twisted it up and away from attaching itself at the other end. The loose strands near my neck started rippling, cold barbs digging into me through my clothes, my skin, as the dark energy tried to attach itself to me.

  The door burst open. Murphy came through it, her eyes living flames of azure blue, her hair a golden coronet around her. She held a blazing sword in her hand and she shone so bright and beautiful and terrifying in her anger that it was hard to see. The Sight, I realized, dimly. I was seeing her for who she was.

  “Harry! What the hell?”

  I struggled against the wire, knowing that she couldn’t see it or feel it, gasping. “The window. Murph, open the window!”

  She didn’t hesitate for a second, but crossed the floor and threw open the window. I staggered after her, winding the frozen wire around one hand, my mind screaming with the agony of it. I fought it down, dragged it into a coil, my face twisted into a snarl as I did it. Anger surged up, hot and bright, and I reached for that power as I jerked the wire from my throat and threw it out the window as hard as I could, sending it sailing into the air.

  I snarled, jabbed a finger at it, took all that anger and fear and sent it coursing out of me, toward that dark spell. “Fuego!”

  Fire came to my call, roared forth from my fingertips and engulfed the wire. It writhed and then vanished in a detonation that rattled the house around me and sent me tumbling back to the floor.

  I lay there for a minute, stunned, trying to get a handle on what was happening. Damn the Sight. It starts blurring the lines between what’s real and what isn’t. A guy would go crazy that way. Fast. Just keep it open all the time and let everything pour in and really know what everything is like. That sounded like a good idea, really. Just bask in all the beauty and horror for a while, just drink it all in and let it erase everything else, all that bother and worry about people being hurt or not being hurt—

  I found myself sitting on the floor, aching from cold that had no basis in physical reality, giggling to myself in a high-pitched stream, rocking back and forth. I had to struggle to close my Sight again, and the second I did, everything seemed to settle, to become clearer. I looked up, blinking tears out of my eyes, panting. Outside, dogs were barking all over the place, and I could hear several car alarms whooping, touched off by the force of the blast.

  Murphy stood over me, her eyes wide, her gun held in one hand and pointed at the door. “Jesus,” she said, softly. “Harry. What happened?”

  My lips felt numb and I was freezing, all over, shaking. “Spell. S-something attacked him. L-laid a spell on him after. H-had to burn it. Fire even burns in the s-spirit world. S-sorry.”

  She put the gun away, staring at me. “Are you all right?”

  I shook some more. “H-how’s Micky?”

  Murphy crossed the room to lay a hand on Micky’s brow. “His fever’s gone,” she breathed. “Mick?” she called gently. “Hey, Malone. It’s Murph. Can you hear me?”

  Micky stirred, and blinked open his eyes. “Murph?” he asked quietly. “What’s going on?” His eyes fell closed again, exhausted. “Where’s Sonia? I need her.”

  “I’ll get her,” Murphy breathed. “You wait here. Rest.”

  “My wrists hurt,” Micky mumbled.

  Murphy looked back at me, and I nodded to her. “He should be all right, now.” She unfastened the cuffs from him, but it looked as though he had already fallen into a deep, exhausted sleep.

  Murphy drew the covers up over him, and smoothed his hair back from his forehead. Then she knelt down on the floor beside me. “Harry,” she said. “You look like …”

  “Hell,” I said. “Yeah, I know. He’s going to need rest, Murph. Peace. Something tore him up inside, real bad.”

  “What do you mean?”

  I frowned. “It’s like … when someone close to you dies. Or when you break off a relationship with someone. It tears you up inside. Emotional pain. That’s kind of what happened to Micky. Something tore him up.”

  “What did it?” Murphy asked. Her voice was quiet, steel-hard.

  “I don’t know yet,” I said. I closed my eyes, shaking, and leaned my head back against a wall. “I’ve been calling it the Nightmare.”

  “How do we kill it?”

  I shook my head. “I’m working on it. It’s staying a couple steps ahead of me, so far.”

  “Damn,” Murphy said. “I get sick of playing catch-up, sometimes.”

  “Yeah. So do I.”

  More footsteps came pounding down the hall, and Sonia Malone burst into the room. She saw Micky, lying quietly, and went to him as if she feared to stir the air too much, each movement fragile. She touched his face, his thinning hair, and he awoke enough to reach for her hand. She held on to it tightly, kissed his fingers, and bowed her head to rest her cheek against his. I heard her crying, letting it out.

  Murphy and I traded a look, and rose by mutual consent to leave Sonia in peace. Murphy had to help me up. I ached, everywhere, felt as though my bones had been frozen solid. Walking was hard, but Murphy helped me.

  I took a last look at Sonia and Micky, and then quietly closed the door.

  “Thank you, Harry,” Murphy said.

  “Any time. You’re my friend, Murph. And I’m always up to helping a lady in distress.”

  She glanced up at me, a sparkle in her eyes underneath the brim of the baseball cap. “You are such a chauvinist pig, Dresden.”

  “A hungry chauvinist pig,” I said. “I’m starving.”

  “You should eat more often, beanpole.” Murphy sat me down on the top step and said, “Stay here. I’ll get you something.”

  “Don’t take too long, Murph. I’ve got work to do. The thing that did this comes out to play at sundown.”

  I leaned against the wall and closed my eyes. I thought of dead a
nimals and smashed cars and frozen agonies wrapped around Micky Malone’s tortured soul. “I don’t know what the hell this Nightmare is. But I’m going to find it. And I’m going to kill it.”

  “That sounds about right,” Murphy said. “If I can help, you’ve got it.”

  “Thanks, Murph.”

  “Don’t mention it. Um, Harry?”

  I opened my eyes. She was watching me, her expression uncertain. “For a minute there, when I came in. You stared at me. You stared at me with the strangest damned expression on your face. What did you see?” she asked.

  “You’d laugh in my face if I told you,” I said. “Go get me something to eat.”

  She snorted and turned to go down the stairs and sort things out with the excited S.I. officers roaming around on the first floor. I smiled, remembering the vision, sharp and brilliant in my mind’s eye. Murphy, the guardian angel, coming through the door in a blaze of wrath. It was a picture I wouldn’t mind keeping with me. Sometimes you get lucky.

  And then I thought of that barbed wire, the hideous torment I’d seen and briefly felt. The ghosts rising of late had been suffering from the same thing. But who could be doing it to them? And how? The forces used in that torture-spell weren’t like anything I had seen or felt before. I had never heard of any kind of magic that could be slapped on a spirit or a mortal with the same results. I wouldn’t have thought it possible. How was it being done?

  More to the point, who was doing it? Or what?

  I sat there shivering and alone and aching. I was starting to take this business personally. Malone was an ally, someone who had stood up to the bad guys beside me. The more I thought about it, the more angry and the more certain I became.

  I would find this Nightmare, this thing that had crossed over, and destroy it.

  And then I would find whoever or whatever had created it.

  Unless, Harry, I thought to myself, they find you first.

  Chapter

  Fourteen

  “No,” I said into the phone. I tossed my coat onto a chair and then sprawled out on the couch. My apartment lay covered in shadows, sunlight filtering in through the sunken windows high up on the walls. “I haven’t gotten the chance yet. I lost a couple of hours detouring to pull a spell off of Micky Malone, from S.I. Someone had wrapped barbed wire around his spirit.”

  “Mother of God,” Michael said. “Is he all right?”

  “Will be. But it’s four hours of daylight lost.” I filled him in on Mort Lindquist and his diaries, as well as the events at Detective Malone’s house.

  “There isn’t much more time to find this Lydia, Harry,” Michael agreed. “Sundown’s in another six hours.”

  “I’m working on it. And after I get Bob out the door looking, I’ll see if I can hit the streets myself. I got the Beetle back.”

  He sounded surprised. “It’s not impounded?”

  “Murphy fixed it for me.”

  “Harry,” he said, disappointed. “She broke the law to get you your car back?”

  “Darn tootin’ she did,” I said. “She owed me a favor. Hey man, the Almighty doesn’t arrange for me to be anywhere on time. I need wheels.”

  Michael sighed. “There isn’t time to debate this right now. I’ll call you if I find her—but it doesn’t look good.”

  “I just can’t figure it. What would this thing have to do with that girl? We need to find her and work out the connection.”

  “Could Lydia be responsible for the recent disturbances?”

  “I don’t think so. That spell I ran into today—I’ve never seen anything like it. It was …” I shivered, remembering. “It was wrong, Michael. Cold. It was—”

  “Evil?” he suggested.

  “Maybe. Yeah.”

  “There is such a thing as evil, Harry, in spite of what many people say. Just remember that there’s good, too.”

  I cleared my throat, uncomfortable. “Murphy put out the word to the folks in blue—so if one of her friends on patrol sees a girl matching Lydia’s description, we’ll hear about it.”

  “Outstanding,” Michael said. “You see, Harry? This detour of yours to help Detective Malone is going to help us a great deal. Isn’t that a very positive coincidence?”

  “Yeah, Michael. Divine fortune, yadda, yadda. Call me.”

  “Don’t yadda yadda the Lord, Harry. It’s disrespectful. God go with you.” And he hung up.

  I put my coat away, got out my nice, heavy flannel robe and slipped into it, then went over to the rug against the south wall. I dragged it away from the floor, and the hinged door there, then swung the door open. I fetched a kerosene lamp, lit it up and dialed the wick up to a bright flame, then got ready to descend the folding wooden ladder into the subbasement.

  The telephone rang again.

  I debated ignoring it. It rang again, insistent. I sighed, closed the door, put the rug back in place, and got to the phone on the fifth ring.

  “What?” I said, uncharitably.

  “I have to hand it to you, Dresden,” Susan said. “You certainly know how to charm a girl the morning after.”

  I let out a long breath. “Sorry, Susan. I’ve been working and … it’s not going so well. Lots of questions and no answers.”

  “Ouch,” she said back. Someone said something to her in the background, and she murmured a response. “I don’t want to add to your day, but do you remember the name of that guy you and Special Investigations took down a couple months ago? The ritual killer?”

  “Oh, right. Him …” I closed my eyes, and grubbed about in my memory. “Leo something. Cravat, Camner, Conner. Kraven the Hunter. I didn’t really get his name. I tracked him down by the demon he was calling up and nailed him that way. Michael and I didn’t hang around for the paperwork afterwards, either.”

  “Kravos?” Susan asked. “Leonid Kravos?”

  “Yeah, that might have been it, I think.”

  “Great,” she said. “Super. Thank you, Harry.” Her voice sounded a little tense, excited.

  “Uh. Do you mind telling me what’s going on?” I asked her.

  “It’s an angle I’m working on,” she said. “Look, all I’ve got right now are rumors. I’ll try to tell you more as soon as I’ve got something concrete.”

  “Fair enough. I’m sort of focused on something else right now, anyway.”

  “Anything you need help with?”

  “God, I hope not,” I said. I shifted the phone a little closer to my ear. “Did you sleep all right, last night?”

  “Maybe,” she teased. “It’s hard to get really relaxed, when I’m that unsatisfied, but your apartment’s so cold it’s kind of like going into hibernation.”

  “Yeah, well. Next time I’ll make sure it’s a hell of a lot colder.”

  “I’m shivering already,” she purred. “Call you tonight if I can?”

  “Might not be here.”

  She sighed. “I understand. Potluck, then. Thanks again, Harry.”

  “Anytime.”

  We said goodbye, hung up, and I went back to the stairs leading down into the subbasement. I uncovered the trapdoor, opened it, got my lantern, and clumped on down the steep, folding staircase.

  My lab never got any less cluttered, no matter how much more organization I imposed on it. The contents only grew denser. Counters and shelves ran along three walls. A long table ran down the center of the room, with enough space for me to slip sideways down its length on either side. Next to the ladder, a kerosene heater blunted the worst of the subterranean chill. On the far side of the table, a brass ring had been set into the floor—a summoning circle. I’d had to learn the hard way to keep it clear of the other debris in the lab.

  Debris. Technically, everything in the lab was useful, and served some kind of purpose. The ancient books with their faded, moldering leather covers and their all-pervasive musty smell, the plastic containers with resealable lids, the bottles, the jars, the boxes—they all had something in them I either needed or had needed at one ti
me. Notebooks, dozens of pens and pencils, paper clips and staples, reams of paper covered in my restless, scrawling handwriting, the dried corpses of small animals, a human skull surrounded by paperback novels, candles, an ancient battle axe, they all had some significance. I just couldn’t remember what it was for most of them.

  I took the cover off the lamp and used it to light up about a dozen candles around the room, and then the kerosene heater. “Bob,” I said. “Bob, wake up. Come on, we’ve got work to do.” Golden light and the smell of candle flames and hot wax filled the room. “I mean it, man. There’s not much time.”

  Up on its shelf the skull quivered. Twin points of orangish flame flickered up in the empty eye sockets. The white jaws parted in a pantomime yawn, an appropriate sound coming out with it. “Stars and Stones, Harry,” the skull muttered. “You’re inhuman. It isn’t even sundown yet.”

  “Stop whining, Bob. I’m not in the mood.”

  “Mood. I’m exhausted. I don’t think I can help you out anymore.”

  “Unacceptable,” I said.

  “Even spirits get tired, Harry. I need rest.”

  “Time enough for rest when I’m dead.”

  “All right then,” Bob said. “You want work, we make a deal. I want to do a ridealong the next time Susan comes over.”

  I snorted at him. “Hell’s bells, Bob, don’t you ever think about anything besides sex? No. I’m not letting you into my head while I’m with Susan.”

  The skull spat out an oath. “There should be a union. We could renegotiate my contract.”

  I snorted. “Any time you want to head back to the homeland, Bob, feel free.”

  “No, no, no,” the skull muttered. “That’s all right.”

  “I mean, there’s still that misunderstanding with the Winter Queen, but—”

  “All right, I said.”

  “You probably don’t need my protection anymore. I’m sure she’d be willing to sit down and work things out, rather than putting you in torment for the next few hundred—”

  “All right, I said!” Bob’s eyelights flamed. “You can be such an asshole, Dresden, I swear.”

 

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