Dark Currents (18 page)

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Authors: Jacqueline Carey

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Urban

BOOK: Dark Currents
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An image of my father’s face flashed behind my eyes. Belphegor, lesser demon and occasional incubus.

I had an unhealthy suspicion that I shouldn’t have unleashed my temper to
quite
this extent.

Belphegor wasn’t here, not really. Not in physical form, anyway. But my rage had weakened the Inviolate Wall and called out to my father across the ether, and it felt like it was real. Black eyes, as black as the pits of hell, bored into mine.

Daughter
.

“I’m busy!”

His head dipped forward, inclining the curved, pointed horns that sprang from his temples in my direction. Although I’d never admit it aloud, they were actually sort of cute in a totally demonic way.

All that you behold, you could become. You have but to ask.

My shoulder blades twitched involuntarily, mourning their lack of wings. Yeah, wings would be nice. Even bat wings. So would a fiery whip.

I sighed.

With a truly prodigious effort, I wrestled my temper under control. I did the visualization thing, wrapping my anger into a tight package of butcher’s paper, tying it with twine, and throwing it into the algae-covered pond, where it bubbled and sank beneath the depths.

Belphegor’s presence faded, and the real world came crashing back to the sound of a gunshot.

On the shore, barefoot in jeans and a T-shirt, Cody took careful aim at Meg Mucklebones and fired again, sending a second bullet through her chest. It sent her staggering and opened a hole in her torso like a knot in a moss-covered tree trunk.

“Stupid wolf!” the marsh hag screeched at him. Dripping slime sealed the wound closed with a distinctly unpleasant sucking sound. “You should know better! You cannot kill me that way!”

He fired again. “Oh, yeah? I can try.”

She reeled under the impact, flailing and sending up gouts of foul-smelling stagnant pond water.

“Brandon!” I called, taking advantage of the distraction. “Come down!”

He pried his eyes open. “I
can’t
.”

I held my left hand out to him. “Yeah, you can.”

After a long, agonizing moment of hesitation, he climbed down and took my hand, his fingers folding into mine, his brown eyes wide and terrified. “I’m scared.”

“Yeah,” I said softly. “I know. But it’s okay. It’s going to be okay.”

I wished it were true. I wished there weren’t things in Brandon’s life so scary that he fled to a marsh hag’s lair for sanctuary.

As we began inching down the trunk, Meg Mucklebones made one last desperate lunge, reaching for us with her huge, dripping hands. And I didn’t hesitate. Shielding Brandon with my body, I did what Cody had taught me and struck without thinking. Wielding
dauda-dagr
in a sweeping blow, I slashed it across her slimy green fingers and watched Meg shrink back to cradle her seeping hand against her chest, wisps of frosty mist rising from the wounds. Unlike bullets, apparently
dauda-dagr
was capable of inflicting actual damage.

“You hurt me.” Her voice was small with disbelief. “You
hurt
me!”

“Sorry,” I said in an unapologetic tone. “Here’s the deal, Meg, or Jenny, or whatever your name is. I don’t care what the rules were back in the olden days on the old sod.” I pointed
dauda-dagr
at her. “This is Hel’s domain. And there will be
no
drowning and eating of children. Ever. Understand?”

The marsh hag sank low into the pond until only her head protruded, weedy hair floating atop the bright green algae. Her sunken eyes glowed a reptilian yellow in their woody sockets, and she licked her lips with her withered tongue. “Can I still frighten them?”

“Yeah,” I said. “You can still frighten them. So do we have a deal? Do I have your word?”

Meg Mucklebones sank even lower into the murky water, submerging the bottom half of her face. “Yes.” The word rose in a dank, sullen bubble, bursting on the surface with a whiff of vegetal putrescence—another vocabulary word Mr. Leary would be proud of me for remembering. A series of equally smelly, equally sullen bubbles followed. Her eyes held a resentful glow. “You have my word.”

I smiled. “Excellent.”

Twenty-eight

W
ithin seconds, I had Brandon down from the trunk, both of us standing on what passed for solid ground in the wetlands.

Jen gave her brother a fierce hug, alternating between exclaiming over him in relief and scolding him. He endured both with an eleven-year-old’s guilty embarrassment, squirming in her embrace.

Cody and I exchanged a glance.

“Nice work,” he said to me.

“Thanks.” I was filthy, spattered with muck and slime from head to toe, but I actually felt pretty good. Nothing like a surge of pure adrenaline to chase away a hangover, I guess. “You, too.”

He holstered his gun and pulled a clean bandanna from his back pocket. “Might want to clean off your magic dagger, Pixy Stix.”

I wiped
dauda-dagr
’s gleaming blade clean of sticky green ichor before sheathing it. “Thanks. Love the belt, by the way.”

Cody’s mouth twitched. “It suits you.”

I peered down at it. “Really?”

“Uh-huh.” Shoving his hands into the front pockets of his jeans, he rocked back on his bare heels. “Is it just me, or did something weird happen out there? Weirder than usual, I mean?”

I winced. “You saw it?”

“I saw
something
.”

“Yeah, I know what he means. I didn’t exactly see it, but I heard it. Halfway up the tree trunk, you yelled, ‘I’m busy,’” Jen supplied helpfully. “What was that all about?”

I sighed. “Dad.”

Both of them stared at me, with Brandon dividing his attention between the three of us, his gaze darting back and forth. In the pond, Meg Mucklebones continued to lurk, mostly submerged, her eyes glowing across the scummy water.

“Temptation scenario?” Jen asked in a low voice.

See, there are reasons to stay good friends with the people who know you best in the world.

“Yep.”

Her luminous brown gaze was steady. “But you passed?”

I nodded. “I passed.”

Jen gave me an approving punch in the arm. “Good job, Daisy-cakes. Hey, Brandon!” She nudged her brother. “This is Officer Fairfax. He helped us find you even though he’s off duty, so say thank you to him, okay?”

“Thank you,” Brandon said in a contrite tone. “I’m sorry.”

There was no indication that he’d noticed anything unusual about the particulars of Cody’s involvement in his rescue. We were lucky he’d had his eyes closed through most of the altercation. I hadn’t thought that part through either.

Cody gave him a brusque nod. “Just don’t do it again, okay?”

“I won’t.”

Together, we trooped, sloshed, and slogged our way back across the marsh and through the damp woods to the Cassopolis household. My sandals were a total loss, having vanished into the mire. Cody was able to retrieve his neatly arranged Timberlands and socks, tugging them onto his muddy feet.

“You want to tell me about this temptation scenario?” he asked me.

I shook my head. “Maybe later.”

Mr. and Mrs. Cassopolis were grateful and relieved to have their son restored to them, although I could see the threat of paternal anger looming.

Cody could, too. He fixed Mr. Cassopolis with a steely stare. “I hope you’re not thinking of punishing the boy.” He laid a protective hand on Brandon’s thin shoulder. “He’s had a pretty bad scare.”

“Of course.” Mr. Cassopolis reined in his temper, affecting a smooth charm. He was good-looking for an older guy, with the shiny black hair and rich olive-hued skin tone Jen and her older sister, Bethany the blood-slut, had both inherited. “I’m just sorry he caused such trouble.”

“It’s no trouble,” Cody said briefly. “It’s my job.” He handed one of his departmental business cards to Mrs. Cassopolis. “If you ever need anything, call me,” he said to her. “Day or night.”

With a furtive glance at her husband, she tucked it into her apron pocket.

“Just to be on the safe side, you might want to tack some cold iron over your doors,” I added. “An old horseshoe or whatever you have handy. I don’t think Meg’s going to be a problem anymore, but . . .” I shrugged. “You piss off one fairy, others might take issue. They can be pesty.”

Jen followed Cody and me into the driveway. “Thank you,” she said to him. “Thank you
so
much. I know—”

“Thank Daisy.” His voice was still curt.

“Oh, yeah, of course!” She sounded surprised. “It’s just—”

Cody glanced at his watch, then at me. “Look, I’ve got to go. Daisy, anything to report?”

“Actually, I do. You?”

He nodded. “Yeah. Go home; wash up. I’ll do the same and meet you at the station in half an hour.”

“Okay.”

“Hey!” Jen’s voice rose as Cody turned to go. “I don’t know how you were raised, but when someone thanks you, you say, ‘You’re welcome,’ Officer Fairfax. And, um . . .” Now her voice dropped until it was barely audible. “I’m not going to say anything, okay? Daisy’s not stupid; she knows she can trust me.” An unexpected flush touched her cheekbones. “And just so you know, you make a beautiful wolf.”

Cody looked startled. “You’re right. I’m sorry. You’re welcome. And, um . . . thank you.”

We watched him get into his pickup truck and drive away.

I glanced at Jen. “A beautiful wolf, huh?”

She folded her arms across her chest, looking slightly defensive. “I just wanted him to know I was okay with it. That I wasn’t freaked-out. You okay with that?”

I smiled wryly. “I don’t know. Are you ready to hug it out yet?”

Jen’s expression softened. “Duh. Daise, you were
awesome
. You totally kicked ass today. And I so totally owe you. If we hadn’t gotten there in time . . .” She shuddered. “I don’t want to think about it. Let’s just say you rock, girlfriend.”

“Deal.”

We hugged.

“You’ve really got to go?” Jen asked. “No chance of staying for a cup of coffee?”

“No. I wish.”

She blew out her breath, wisps of hair rising from her brow. “Okay, but when this is over, we
seriously
need to talk.”

I nodded. “You have no idea.”

Besmeared with muck and mire, I drove home and parked the Honda on a side street, padding barefoot to my apartment,
dauda-dagr
hanging in its scabbard from my new belt, tourists staring as I cut across the park. Mogwai emerged from beneath a rhododendron bush to greet me with a plaintive howl.

“You think you’re hungry?” I said, scooping him up ignominiously beneath one arm. “I don’t even remember my last meal.”

Dangling, Mogwai wailed.

Upstairs, I plunked him down and filled his bowl with kibble. I removed my belt and set it carefully aside, then stripped off my filthy clothing and climbed into the shower, letting hot water pelt me.

Clean and restored, I checked the time and realized I was due at the station in ten minutes. Scavenging in my refrigerator, I found a lone hard-boiled egg. I couldn’t remember how long it had been there, but it smelled okay when I peeled it, so I doused it with salt and pepper and ate it standing over the sink. When this was all over, I really needed to do some major grocery shopping.

Believe it or not, I actually do know how to cook. Mom taught herself from books she got out of the library, and she let me help from the time I was old enough to control my temper in the kitchen. But for now, a hard-boiled egg would have to do.

On the whole, I felt okay.

Yeah, I was tempted by my father’s scenario. Yeah, I liked the image he had shown me. But I didn’t need bat wings and a fiery whip. I was Hel’s liaison, dammit. That was enough. And she trusted me. That meant a lot.

I put on jeans and a scoop-necked T-shirt, buckling Cody’s belt through the loops,
dauda-dagr
hanging from my left hip, its leather-wrapped hilt at the ready, waiting for my hand. It felt good. It felt right.

I looked at myself in the full-length mirror in my bedroom. Damned if I didn’t look kind of badass. A magic dagger definitely went better with jeans than a miniskirt. And I’d used it. I’d actually wielded
dauda-dagr
. Okay, it wasn’t exactly in a major ending-the-life-of-the-undead way, for which I was grateful, but I’d done it. I’d drawn blood, or ichor, or whatever sticky green sap ran in Meg Mucklebones’s veins. I’d backed down a marsh hag and saved a kid.

“Yay, you,” I said to my reflection in the mirror.

My feeling of well-being lasted for as long as it took me to walk the few blocks to the station. There were half a dozen protestors outside the doors today, marching with their placards. Tourists were giving them a wide berth. This was definitely some bad publicity for Pemkowet.

Inside, the news got worse.

Detective Wilkes had come to inform us that the county sheriff’s office had issued an ultimatum. Come Monday, Sheriff Barnard was going to announce that his office was taking over the investigation in its entirety, and would no longer be collaborating with the local Pemkowet police department.

“So he’s throwing me to the wolves,” the chief said, his face impassive. “I’m sorry to hear it.”

“I’m sorry to tell you.” Tim Wilkes sounded sincere. “He’s under a hell of a lot of pressure.”

“Exactly how does he plan on getting the eldritch community to cooperate?” I asked indignantly. “They won’t talk to just anyone. They’ll just make themselves scarce.”

Wilkes glanced at me. “He’s not planning on following up on that angle. He’s trying to shift the focus back to the human element. He thinks it’s the best thing for Pemkowet and everyone involved.” He shrugged. “The autopsy results prove the Vanderhei boy’s friends were lying. We’ll charge them as accessories if we have to.”

“Ross Barnard can shift the focus all he likes, but it’s not going to change the truth,” Chief Bryant said. “Is he calling for my resignation?”

The detective hesitated. “Not yet.”

I looked around in vain for a calendar, and counted days on my fingers instead. “But today’s . . . Friday, right?”

Cody stirred. “Right. So we’re not finished yet. We have three days before the case gets yanked.”

“Correct.” Tim Wilkes nodded. “And until then, I’m still authorized to share my findings.”

The chief leaned forward, an alert glint kindling behind his deceptively sleepy gaze. “Which are?”

Wilkes slid a piece of paper across the conference table. “Ichthyologist’s report on the scales found under the vic’s fingernails. Says he’s never seen anything like it. Says the closest living relative would be the coelacanth. You know what that is?”

“Yeah,” Cody said. “I watch the Discovery Channel. It’s a prehistoric fish, right?”

“Right.”

I shivered.

The chief drummed his fingers on the tabletop. “We’re not talking about a hobbyist’s aquarium here, are we?”

Lost in reverie, I didn’t hear the reply. My thoughts chased one another. I examined all the pieces of the puzzle.

Jerry Dunham, the dead-eyed former carny from Seattle, his connection to Dr. Midnight’s Traveling Sideshow, and his collection of expensive vintage motorcycles. Matthew Mollenkamp, Van Buren slacker alumnus extraordinaire and self-proclaimed Master of the Universe and true son of Triton. A pair of ghouls in love, locked in an unsustainable loop of closed feedback, requiring a hostage to survive. A dead boy, a callow young man drowned in salt water, with a bellyful of booze, scratches on his back, and impossible fish scales lodged under his nails.

My own words, echoing Lurine in the car.
But you’re right. It all comes down to sex
.

It so often does, cupcake
.

One by one, the pieces of the puzzle fell into place like cards. Mom had told me it was likely the reading was unusually literal. I should have seen it before. According to rumor, Dr. Midnight’s circus had one true thing—one true thing that fulfilled the requirements of Triton House.

La Sirena
, upside down. An alluring woman in distress, that was my mom’s interpretation. But the card didn’t just depict an ordinary woman. It depicted a woman with a scaled fishtail bobbing in the saltwater sea.

In other words, it depicted a freaking mermaid. It had been right in front of me the whole time.

I inhaled sharply. “It’s a mermaid. We’re looking for a mermaid.”

All three men stared at me.

“It
fits
,” I said impatiently. “It fits with what Lurine and I learned at Triton House last night. That whole Masters of the Universe thing, it’s about having sex with an immortal, preferably of the aquatic variety. That’s how you get to become a Master of the Universe and a true son of Triton. Mollenkamp admitted as much. He tried to play it off like Thad drowned trying to seduce a naiad, but he was lying.”

“Miss Johanssen . . .” Detective Wilkes seemed at a loss for words.

I threw up my hands. “Is it any more unlikely than a coelacanth?”

“No,” he admitted. “But I’m telling you, we’ve been looking into this, and there’s no one in the area with an aquarium that size. It’s not something you can hide easily. They require maintenance and upkeep.”

Cody leaned back in his chair and ran a hand over his chin, rasping against his stubble. “What if Jerry Dunham brought it with him from Seattle?”

I eyed him. “You think?”

He shrugged. “He had to hire some sort of moving truck or trailer to transport those bikes. Why not an aquarium? If that’s what he was in charge of in the circus, he might be doing the maintenance himself.” He gave Wilkes an inquiring look. “Think we can get a search warrant for his house, Detective?”

“Based on this? No.”

“Based on suspicion of trafficking in stolen motorcycles and parts,” Cody said. “Hell, I saw the evidence with my own eyes. It’s in the report.”

The detective stood. “I’ll see what I can do. But as far as we can tell, Dunham holds legal title to those bikes. If I were you, I’d go with reasonable suspicion and worry about the paperwork later.” He glanced around at all of us. “Good luck to you. You’ll need it.”

With that, he made his exit.

Chief Bryant sighed. “A mermaid, eh?”

“It’s a guess,” I murmured. “But I think it’s a pretty good one, sir. And if it’s true . . .” I swallowed. “I’m guessing she’s in a pretty bad way. And that’s not a priority the county sheriff’s office is interested in pursuing.”

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