Read Dead Witch Walking Online
Authors: Kim Harrison
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #General
“Kill Al?” I breathed, not believing he still thought he could.
“I’ll be free of him and have a body both.” He took my hands, and I realized how cold I was. “Trust me, Rachel. I know what I’m doing.”
Oh my God. He is as bad as I am. Was. “You’re crazy!” I exclaimed, pulling out of his grip. “You think you’re more powerful than you are, with your black magic and whatever! Al is a demon, and I don’t think you grasp what he can do. He’s playing with you!”
Pierce leaned against the table, arms crossed and the light catching the colorful pattern of his vest. “Do tell? You opine I don’t know what I’m doing?”
“I opine you don’t!” I mocked, using his own words. His attitude was infuriating, and I looked at the bowl behind him—the remnant of others who had thought they were smarter than a demon, now just names on a bowl, bottles on a shelf.
“Fair enough.” Pierce scratched his chin and stood. “I expect a body needs proof.”
I stiffened. Shit. Proof? “Hey, wait a minute,” I said, dropping the rag to the table. “What are you doing? Al brought you back, but he can take you out again, too.”
Pierce impishly put a finger to his nose. “Mayhap. But he has to catch me, first.”
My eyes darted to the band of charmed silver around his wrist. Pierce could jump ley lines where I couldn’t, but charmed silver cut off his access to them. He couldn’t leave.
“What, this?” he said confidently, and my lips parted when he ran his finger around the inside of the silver band, and the metal seemed to stretch, allowing him to slip it off.
“H-How,” I stammered as he twirled it. Crap on toast. I’d be blamed for this. I knew it!
“It’s been tampered with so I can move from room to room here. I tampered with it a little more is all,” Pierce said, sticking the band of silver in his pack pocket, his eyes gleaming. “I’ve not had a bite of food free of burnt amber in a coon’s age. I’ll fetch you something to warm your cold heart.”
I stepped forward, panicking. “Put that back on! If Al knows you can escape, he’ll—”
“Kill me. Yeah, yeah, yeah,” he said, hitting the modern phrase perfectly. His hand dipped into another pocket, and he studied a handful of coins. “Al will tarry with Newt for at least fifteen minutes. I’ll be right back.”
His accent was thinning. Clearly he could turn it off and on at will—which worried me even more. What else was he hiding? “You’re going to get me in trouble!” I said, but with a sly grin, he vanished. The lights he had been minding went out, and the ring of charmed silver he had stuck in his pocket made a ting as it hit the floor. My heart thumped in the sudden darkness lit only by the hearth fire and the dull glow of the banked fire pit. He was gone, and we were both going to be in deep shit if Al found out.
Heart pounding, I watched the creepy tapestry across the room. My mouth was dry, and the shadows shifted as the figures on it seemed to move in the firelight.
Son of a bitch!
I thought as I went to pick up the ring of charmed silver and tuck the incriminating thing in a pocket. Al was going to blame me. He’d think I took the charmed silver off him.
Edging back to the small hearth fire, I fumbled for the candle on the mantel, pinching the wick and tapping a ley line to work the charm.
“Consimilis calefacio,”
I said, voice quavering as a tiny slip of ley-line energy flowed through me, exciting the molecules until the wick burst into flame, but just as I did, the ley-line powered lights flashed high, and I jumped, knocking the lit candle off the sconce.
“I can explain!” I exclaimed as I fumbled for the candle now rolling down the mantle and into Mr. Fish. But it was Pierce, tossing his hair from his eyes and two tall grandes in his hands. “You idiot!” I hissed as the candle hit the scraps of paper, and in a flash, they went up.
“Across lots like lightning, mistress witch,” Pierce said, laughing as he extended a coffee.
God, I wish he’d speak normal English. Frantic, I brushed the bits of paper off the mantel, stepping on them once they hit the black marble floor. The stink of burning plastic joined the mess, and I grabbed the bowl of water, dumping it. Black smoke wisped up, stinging my eyes. It helped mask the reek of burning shoe, so maybe it wasn’t all bad.
“You ass!” I shouted. “Do you realize what would happen if Al came back and found you gone? Are you that inconsiderate, or just that stupid! Put this back on!”
Angry I threw the ring of charmed metal at him. His hands were full, and he sidestepped it. With a thunk, it hit the tapestry, and then the floor. Pierce’s hand extending the coffee drooped, his enthusiasm fading. “I’d do naught to hurt you, mistress witch.”
“I am
not
your mistress witch!” Ignoring the coffee, I looked at the bits of burned paper in a soggy mess on the floor. Kneeling, I snatched the rag from the table to sop it up. I could smell raspberry flavored Italian blend, and my stomach growled.
“Rachel,” Pierce coaxed.
Pissed, I wouldn’t look up at him as I wiped the floor. Standing, I tossed the rag to the table in disgust, then froze. The aura bottle wasn’t green anymore.
“Rachel?”
It was questioning this time, and I held up a hand, tasting the air as my eyes stung. Shit, I’d burned the name and gotten the charged water all over me. “I think I’m in trouble,” I whispered, then jerked, feeling as if my skin was on fire. Yelping, I slapped at my clothes. Panic rose as an alien aura slipped through mine, soaking in to find my soul—and squeezing.
Oh, shit. Oh shit. Oh shit. I’d invoked the curse. I was in so-o-o-o much trouble. But this didn’t feel right; the curse burned! Demons were wimps. They always made their magic painless unless you did it wrong. Oh God. I’d done it wrong!
“Rachel?” Pierce touched my shoulder. I met his eyes, and then I doubled over, gasping.
“Rachel!” he cried, but I was trying to breathe. It was the dead person, the one whose name I’d scribed in my own blood. It hadn’t been his aura in the bottle, but his soul. And now his soul wanted a new body. Mine. Son of a bitch, Al had
lied
to me. I knew I should have trusted my gut and questioned him. He said it was an aura, but it was a soul, and the soul in the bottle was pissed!
Mine, echoed in our joined thoughts. Gritting my teeth, I bent double and tapped a ley line. Newt had once tried to possess me, and I burnt her out with a rush of energy. I gasped when a scintillating stream of it poured in with the taste of burning tinfoil, but the presence in me chortled, welcoming the flood. Mine! the soul insisted in delight, and I felt my link to the line sever. I stumbled, falling to kneel on the cold marble. It had taken control, cutting me out!
No! I thought, scrambling for the line in my mind only to find nothing to grasp. My chest hurt when my heart started to beat to a new, faster rhythm. What in hell was this thing! What sort of mind could make a soul this determined? I couldn’t . . . stop it!
“Rachel!”
Eyes tearing, I blinked at Pierce, struggling to focus. “Get. It. Out of me!”
He spun, motions fast as he found the unburnt signature still on the table. There was a swallow of water left in the bowl. It had to be enough.
I am Rachel Morgan, I thought, teeth gritted as the soul rifled through my memories like some people shake old books for money. I live in a church with a vampire and a family of pixies. I fight the bad guys. And I will not let you have my body!
You can’t stop me.
The thought was oily—hysteria set to discordant music. It hadn’t been my thought, and I panicked. It was right, though. I was powerless to stop it, and as soon as it looked at everything and claimed what it wanted, I was going to be discarded.
“Get out!” I screamed, but its fingers reached into my heart and brain for more, and I groaned, feeling control over my body start to slip away. “Pierce, get it out of me!” I begged, clenched on the cold black floor, the silver etchings decorating it like threads under my cheek. Everything I didn’t concentrate on was gone. The moment I lapsed, I would be too.
I smelled the scent of burnt paper, and the soft murmur of Latin.
“Sunt qui discessum animi a corpore putent esse mortem,”
Pierce said, his hand shaking as he brushed the hair from my face. Beside him was the empty bowl.
“Sunt Erras.”
“This is mine!” I cried gleefully, but it wasn’t me, screaming. It was the soul, who had found, and held aloft like a jewel, the knowledge that my blood could invoke demon magic. I got in one clean gasp of air as it was distracted, and I opened my eyes. “Pierce . . . .” I whispered desperately for his attention, then choked when the soul realized I still had some control.
“Mine!” the soul snarled with my lips, and I backhanded Pierce across the cheek.
Oh, God, I’d lost, and I felt myself pull my legs under me to crouch before the fire like an animal. I’d lost my body to a thousand year old soul! My lips curled back, and I grinned at Pierce’s horror, even as I tried to claw my way back into control. But even my connection to the ley line belonged to it.
“Get away from her!” I heard Al exclaim, and with the sound of smacking flesh, Pierce slid backward against the tapestry.
Al.
Hissing, I spun to him, crouched and hands turned to claws.
It is a demon
, echoed in my thoughts, and hatred bubbled up, a thousand years of hatred demanding revenge.
Kim Harrison is back with Rachel Morgan’s most complex and emotionally charged adventure yet!
On Sale February 23, 2010
Rachel has had some close calls before, but no battle has been this serious or deadly as she faces off against her own kind for the first time. It takes a witch to catch a witch, but surviving will cost Rachel more than she knows.
“I wouldn’t miss a Kim Harrison book for anything.” —Charlaine Harris
www.KimHarrison.net
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The only girl in a large family of boys, former tomboy
Kim Harrison
invented the first Brigadier General Barbie in self-defense. She’s been called a witch, among other things, but has never seen a vampire (that she knows of). Born in the Midwest, she loves graveyards and midnight jazz, and wears too much black.
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
DEAD WITCH WALKING
. Copyright © 2004 by Kim Harrison. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
ePub edition January 2010 eISBN 9780062000644
First HarperTorch paperback printing: May 2004
First HarperTorch special printing: December 2003
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