Cool Hand (38 page)

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Authors: Mark Henwick

BOOK: Cool Hand
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Chapter 46

 

A little over an hour later, I turned off Highway 518 onto a dirt track and stopped out of sight of the road.

It was cold and dark. I killed the headlight and leaned the bike on its kickstand. Mixed pine covered the hills, painted silver and black in the moonlight. They whispered all around us.

Tullah shivered. “What’s up?”

I hadn’t been talkative while we’d been riding.

Tullah was too smart for me to lie, and part of the truth would have to be enough.

“You have to turn around here and leave me,” I said.

“No! I won’t. You need—”

I ignored her. “First, we break the lock on your powers.”

She went quiet. Kaothos stirred at the edges of my mind, eager. Tullah was eager too, but she was scared as well.

“You don’t know if you can,” she said.

“Well, here’s where we find out.”

She stared at me. “Why? I mean why now? Why here?”

“The
here
, because I wanted to get close to Taos, but not too close. Not so close that the Adepts in Taos come looking to find what’s happening. I’m worried they’re working with Amaral. And close enough so I can run there using a back route into the town.” I pointed with my chin down the dirt track. “That’s the old Spanish Trail. I’m betting that Amaral will be watching the roads in, but I’m also betting he hasn’t got anyone watching the trail.”

I guided her over to some flat ground. We sat cross-legged on crunchy beds of old pine needles.

“The
now
, because there’s a risk. And if I’m caught there are things I need you to do. Things only you and Kaothos might be able to do.”

“Don’t talk like that. Anyway, Kaothos and I aren’t that strong.”

“Maybe not yet. Maybe this is insurance for the future.” I sighed and unfastened the necklace. I held it in my hand. It was warm and heavy. “Olivia will need help very soon. I know we haven’t figured out the first thing about this ritual yet, but you and Mary have the best chance of doing it.” I leaned forward and put the necklace on her. “Promise me you’ll try.”

She rested her hand on it.

“I won’t need to. You’ll make it and you’ll know what to do when the time comes.” She looked away. “But I promise.”

“Thanks. And once we break the lock, never let them put it back on you. They’ll want to. I’ve heard all Mary’s tales about how terrible the dragon spirit can be.” I laughed. “As bad as being Athanate, the way she tells it.”

Tullah joined me, her laughter uncertain.

“I don’t trust Weaver,” I said. “I’m getting so I don’t trust Adepts, apart from Mary and Liu. And Chatima. So, if things go wrong, I don’t want you to go to the Adepts; I want you to meet with Naryn and Felix. Give them all the support you and Kaothos can, because if Amaral wins, Basilikos wins. And everything down that path is bad.”

“You’re right about
some
Adepts,” Tullah said. “Weaver has still got them all dazzled in Denver. And news from home is they’ve heard that the Taos Adepts community are in with Amaral. Weaver has links with them.”

“All the better for us to break the lock out here.”

“And after?”

“After, you go return the bike and pick up the Hill Bitch. Load everything back in and pick these up.” I handed over a sizeable cut of my poker winnings and a list of even more things we needed.

“Steel barrels, denatured alcohol, petroleum jelly, electronic circuits, welding kit? What the hell?” She frowned.

“Put together with good ammonium nitrate fertilizer, courtesy of Larimer Agricultural Fertilizers, which we have waiting back at Drake’s Salvage?”

Tullah’s eyes widened. “You’re going to make bombs.”

“Yeah. No doubt Naryn will bring firepower when he gets here, but maybe we’ll need it earlier.”

I wasn’t exactly lying. But my real reason was I needed Tullah to be far away for a while. Let the Taos Adepts feel Kaothos near Santa Fe, concentrate on that, while I snuck in the back way.

Kaothos? Speak privately.

Yes, Amber Farrell?
I could hear puzzlement in her voice.

I will free you if you promise me one thing.

What is this thing?

If Amaral wins, kill me and Diana and keep Tullah safe.

That’s three things, Amber Farrell, and Tullah will not agree to the first.

Don’t tell her.

There was a long silence. I covered by getting up and fussing with attaching the motorcycle helmet I no longer needed to the handgrip on the back of the Kawasaki.

But this is lying,
Kaothos said.
You warned me—

I know. I’m an Athanate, I’m evil.
I grimaced. This wasn’t how I wanted to say it.
I know,
I said again,
and I’m sorry, but it’s important.

Kaothos sank into unhappy murmurings.

 

Tullah and I sat again, closer so our knees were almost touching.

This wasn’t a spirit place like Bitter Hooks or Coykuti Mountain, but the hush of the pines seemed to make it easier for me to fall into the trance-like feeling where I visualized the energy flowing through me as sand. In the forest of night, the energy came alive.

But it didn’t feel right. I tried to ignore it and study the shape of the flickering darkness that wove in and out of Tullah.

The lock was like a Celtic knot, a pattern of threads turning and folding in on itself.

If there was just a loose end, I felt I could tug it and the knot would slip apart.

No such luck.

Leaning closer, I attracted some of the darkness itself, like the reverse of a candle flame swaying toward me.

The sensation of sand became uncomfortable, as if the grains were scratching underneath my skin.

It was wrong. The image of sand had been too easy. It was a wrong turn.

Your whole life has been a path leading to this one point.

I had no more than an hour or so training with Tullah. What else on my path had led me here?

Chatima.

She wouldn’t have any trouble with this lock.

The silvered pines faded from view and instead I was back in the truck behind the fairground, sitting just like this, gathered around the single candle Chatima had lit. The touch of her hands, the way she’d cupped them, the sensation of the necklace gathering, all of it filled my mind.

Sunstone. Sky-fallen.
You
she’d said—not meaning me alone, meaning
both of you
, meaning me and Tara.

Life’s patterns dance in the candle. Be part of it.

The candle. Flame, not sand.

The scratching stopped.

Flame passes through me. Not burning. More like yellow smoke.

I was dizzy. Kaothos was speaking. I couldn’t hear. I was sweating.

I reached for Tullah. The sensation was like putting my hand into a bees’ nest. Heat rippled down my arm.

We’re not the flame. We’re the wick.
Tara/Sky-fallen. Bless her.

“Wait—” Tullah. Scared.

I plunged my hand into the dark knot of workings around her.

The shock passed through me in slow motion. I could feel it hit my heart, squeeze my lungs.

I got half-way up onto my feet. My heart had stopped. I was blind to the rest of the world. My whole vision was taken up with the intricate working that surrounded Tullah. So complex.

Kaothos roaring.

Then:
That strand. Weaker.

The knot pulsed. I could feel the strand. But it was pulling energy from Tullah to replace what I was draining away. It would kill her if I kept trying to suck the energy away from her.

There was a thump, like the side of a house falling down. Kaothos.

Tullah’s energy stopped feeding the lock.

The strand I was focusing on thinned. Broke.

I chased the end of the strand, sinking
into
it, hunting it down, down into the knot.

Another broke. Another.

Suddenly it wasn’t a knot. It had no complexity, no chilling beauty. It was a scatter of hot neon worms, wriggling away in the night, fading into nothing.

And I was looking straight into the dragon’s eye.

Time lurched.

My heart stuttered and fired again. I fell back onto the ground with a grunt, my body twitching and twisting as if the worms were crawling all over me.

“Amber! Amber!”

Tullah knelt over me, shaking me.

I pushed her back.

“Crap, that was fun,” I groaned.

I spat and drank from the water bottle in my backpack to clean out my mouth.

I didn’t need to ask if it had worked. Kaothos was all around, invisible but humming like overhead power cables. The pines shivered around us, their branches bent and tips thrashing with the passage of a wind we could not feel. Little dust devils kicked and spun in the starlight.

Tullah’s face and hands flickered as if she were shedding static electricity. She was jumping and shouting with happiness, then coming back to me and asking if I was all right, thanking me and then going back to jumping and shouting again.

Kaothos? You’re stronger than before.

I am.

We have a deal.

For a minute, there was nothing but the ebbing rush of wind through the trees.

If you survive, you will bite Tullah? You will provide her the prions that allow the channeling of more energy?

My turn to pause, but Tullah had told me that was what she wanted too.

“Amber?” Tullah was peering at me. “You okay? You’re looking spacey.”

“Yeah. Just thinking through what I need to do.”

When I know what I’m doing with my bite,
I said to Kaothos
. Not before. Do we have a deal?

We have a deal, Amber Farrell.

It all hurt.

It hurt because, after all that had been almost within touching distance for me—the Athanate, the Were, the Adepts—it felt as if I was deliberately pushing it all away or sabotaging it. I was in trouble with everyone. Tullah was one of those who still believed in me and supported me unconditionally. And I was lying to her in almost exactly the way I’d warned Kaothos about. I was risking her friendship and providing the worst possible example for Kaothos. And while I was sure Kaothos could come in and kill me and Diana to prevent us from being used by Amaral, I wasn’t sure that Kaothos and Tullah would survive the reaction when the Adepts realized there was a dragon spirit guide among them.

It hurt because I felt alone and committed to rescuing or killing Diana, whether or not I survived, because I had no faith that Naryn would be there in time.

I couldn’t see a way out of where I was at the moment.

So I got Tullah to stop jumping, hugged her and sent her on her way.

 

I had my HK and a change of clothes in my backpack. Binoculars and a tourist map of Taos. Water and high energy bars.

I was about eight miles away from the town center as the crow flies. There was enough light for my wolf eyes, and I had a flashlight if it got darker.

Getting into the town was the easy part. Figuring out where Amaral had Diana, in the time left—not so easy.

Just something I would have to do when I got there.

I pinned Mary’s marque-hiding bouquet onto my backpack and hoped it was still working.

Then I trotted down the old Spanish Trail, my body falling quickly into the rhythm.

Despite everything, it felt
good
.

I missed the running. I’d been able to run most days when I was still just a PI.

The Athanate needed my body to exercise more than I had been. Even my wolf was quiet, enjoying the feel of running. The echoes of discharging Tullah’s lock were still eddying pleasurably through my mind—the pain was gone and a glow of achievement remained.

For once, all parts of me were living together and liking it. It lulled me, diminished the problems, let me just
be
.

That struck me with such a force that I stopped.

I clutched at my necklace, but of course it wasn’t there.

I could still feel it, though. The subtle bumps and grain of the stones underneath my fingers. The paths that weaved through them. The patterns. That damned message, always just out of reach. Always…

Like the trail beneath my feet. Going a place I needed to be, full of twists and turns I could not see, and yet the way I needed to follow.

And suddenly I sank to my knees in the middle of the trail.

I knew the first pattern that Chatima had laid in the necklace.
Knew it
, like it was something carved into my bones.

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