Authors: Harry Connolly
"No," Jon said, still watching the ghost knife as if it might jump out of my hand and run at him. "Your spell did that. You put that thing in Payton and it tore him apart."
Echo backed through the doorway. "We will be coming for you, meat."
I had lost and she had won. Jon was hers. "You forgot," I said to her, "that you're pretending to be Echo."
She sneered. Jon stepped through the doorway and slammed it shut. They were gone.
I slumped against the wall. I'd screwed up in a big, big way. I held up my ghost knife. It cut through
magic, ghosts and dead things.
It had never cut a person's flesh before. Did that mean Payton was already dead? Had Jon's so-called cure killed him?
That didn't make sense. I'd hit Jon with the ghost knife, and all it had done was cut his "ghost", not his flesh. I'd used it on Echo, too, while holding her with Irena's glove. There had been no black blood or sliced flesh then, either. Just another cut at her ghost.
Not that I had any idea what that meant. In truth, I had no idea what I was doing. Everything that had happened to me since I'd arrived in Seattle had been like a waking nightmare. All I could do was rush from one moment to the next, hoping I could stay ahead of all the people who wanted to kill me long enough to save my friend.
I crouched next to Payton's body. "I'm sorry, big guy."
But not too sorry. Payton had tried to clean me like a fish, which meant this mess in front of me was self-defense. I tried to imagine explaining that to the cops, what with me being an ex-con who'd already broken out of jail after less than a week of freedom.
No, no. Think about cops and prison later. For now, I had to cure Jon, stop Echo from summoning more cousins and head off the peer from the Twenty Palace Society who was coming to "clean up" the mess we were all making. After all that, I'd... What? Change my name and head to Costa Rica, maybe. I sure wasn't going to be a free man in my own country.
And I would have to be more careful with Callin's damn spell. Truthfully, I had no idea what it was doing to the people I used it on. Maybe I'd seal it in concrete and drop it into Elliott Bay on my way to South America.
Ghosts, magic and dead things.
Which were the cousins?
I looked down at Payton again, but he didn't look like a human being any more, not with his head deformed that way. And maybe that's what I was missing. The ghost knife had hit Jon in the chest and Echo on the arm, but Payton had been cut on the head. Maybe the cousins--and I might as well start calling them that--lived inside their victim's skulls.
It was an ugly thought. If one did live inside Jon's skull, wouldn't it have destroyed his brain? Jon's personality and memories were still intact, so it didn't seem likely. Then again, when I'd grabbed Payton and Echo with Irena's glove, the weird branches had appeared around their faces and heads.
So maybe they
were
inside Jon, Payton and Macy's skulls. If, as Annalise had said, the cousins were only partly real, it was possible that they could live inside someone's skull while leaving the person intact.
For once I did not have to operate by empty guesswork. If I wanted to know if the cousins could share a space inside a human skull with that person's brain, I could just kneel down on Wally's disgusting living room floor and look for myself.
I knelt beside the body, careful not to get any sticky black blood on my clothes. I did my best not to look directly at his deformed face, only the side and top of his head. I pretended that the hair wasn't really hair, the bone wasn't really bone. I was looking at an open shell, not a person at all.
It was too dark. I took a tissue from a box on the end table and turned on a lamp. It seemed silly to worry about fingerprints now, but the fewer things I touched in this apartment the happier the rest of my life would be.
I leaned over Payton's body again and peered into the split skull. I saw bone, hair and a shadow. It took me a moment to register what I was seeing, but I soon realized I was looking into Payton's empty skull.
I felt woozy and backed away from him. I had the urge to laugh, but I was afraid that if I started I would never be able to stop. There was nothing inside Payton's skull. No brain, no meat, no blood. Not even a whole bunch of rocks. Nothing.
I remembered him standing beside the french fries, saying: "You're wondering why she's with me."
My stomach twisted and I retched against the wall, but I'd spent the whole day lying on the floor and nothing but a thin stream of bitter acid came out. I stumbled away from the body and lurched against the window.
Payton had been acting like himself right up to the moment of his death, but he didn't have any gray matter at all. The cousin had replaced it, had mimicked it, and with it all of Payton's memories and quirks.
Had this already happened to Jon? Was Jon a corpse with one of these
things
inside him, driving his body like a stolen car?
Or had Payton's brain been destroyed when the cousin was destroyed?
That was a thought. Maybe the cousins became truly solid when they died or were forced out of the host's body. After all, when I grabbed them with Irena's glove, the parts I could see were ghostly, hardly real. Something like that could co-exist with an actual, physical thing, couldn't it?
Maybe, up until the point the cousin was killed, their victims could be saved. Maybe if I could find some way to cut them out of their hosts while they were both still alive, I could still save Jon.
I held up my ghost knife. I even had the tool for the job.
There should have been a surge of satisfaction at the idea, but what I got was a sour hollow feeling. It seemed too tenuous, as if I was scamming myself because I just didn't want to face up to facts.
What if Jon was gone, for real? What if the cousin inside him had killed him even before I'd gotten off the bus from L.A.?
The truth was, I wasn't sure what I would do with him. I had too many memories of him and his family to think about cutting him open the way I'd cut open Payton. I wasn't sure I could do that.
But I was getting ahead of myself. Maybe, despite what he said, Wally had a counterspell in his book. If not, I would try the ghost knife. I couldn't imagine how it would actually work, but I had to try.
I was living on hope, and my supply had nearly run out.
I glanced out the window. In the street below, Jon and Echo stood beside a telephone pole. Jon was struggling with his cell phone, as though the numbers were in a different language. Then he held it up to his ear and started talking. Echo stared up at the windows of Wally's apartment. At me.
I bolted from the window. I had no doubt they were calling the cops on me. Jon might have been a cannibal with a monster living inside his brain, but at heart he was still a seat-belt person, and seat-belt people called the cops when they needed help. I yanked the stereo and speakers away from the wall. The stack of blue pages was gone. Wally had taken them.
The copy I'd been reading was still on the coffee table. It was missing the spell Echo had grabbed, of course, but I didn't need that one. I picked up the stack and checked it for splatters of black blood. It was clean. I tucked it under my jacket.
I felt dizzy again. I rushed into Wally's tiny kitchen and scanned the contents. The only thing I felt was safe to take was a plastic bag with four oranges inside. On my way to the door, I did my best not to look at Payton.
There was a little dish on a telephone table by the door, and there was a single engine key inside it. There was also a wad of folded five-dollar bills and a sheet of torn blue paper. I unfolded the paper and saw it was a photocopy of a check written by someone named "Nettle Philips"--if that was a real person's name--with her address printed on it as clear as day. Handwritten beside it was the note: "No hard feelings. Wally."
Wally had given me a motorcycle and the address of the woman he'd stolen the book from. What a pal. I stuffed the copied check, the key and the money into my pocket, then bolted out the front door and down a stairwell. I would have given Wally's apartment the same treatment Annalise had given Macy and Echo's house, if only to destroy any spells he might have left lying around, but I knew I didn't have time.
What's more, I didn't know who else was in the building and if they'd be able to get away. I wasn't going to kill innocent bystanders just because I'd screwed up. I'd just have to believe that Wally was the type to have taken everything magical with him.
There were few vehicles in the basement garage and no people. I passed a battered Toyota and an Isuzu minivan to reach an old Honda motorcycle that was so small it was nearly a dirt bike. I yanked the helmet out of the mesh net on the seat and pulled it on, then lowered the tinted visor.
I revved it and raced out of the garage. As I reached the corner of Wally's block, three police cars raced by. One of the cops looked straight into my blank visor, then straight at my license plate.
Shit. Now I'd have to ditch the motorcycle, and soon. If only I'd gone the other way. I rode away, staying just below the speed limit. Echo had the spell again, which meant I didn't have much time.
Nettle Philips lived on the northern side of the University, in one of those secluded little streets that Seattle tucks away on the sides of hills. It was a wooded dead-end lane surrounded by greenbelt too steep for safe development--it didn't even have a sidewalk. Philips's house was set back from the road and hemmed in by bushes and blackberry vines so high you couldn't actually see it from the street.
I parked the motorcycle down the block and hung the helmet on the handlebars. There was no one around. I double-checked the address and then pushed through the high wooden gate.
Then immediately stopped short. Whatever had happened here, it had been bad.
Philips's house was a cozy little California Bungalow, but something had punched huge holes into the walls, making the roof sag in several places. The building leaned toward the greenbelt slope behind it and groaned like it might collapse at any moment.
I took an orange from the mesh net behind me, peeled it and popped a section into my mouth. I immediately felt better. Whoever this Nettle Philips was, she might have parts of the spell book that Wally didn't, including a way to undo Jon's curse.
There was no other way. I was going into that house.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
I finished the orange, letting the sweetness settle my stomach and give me strength. A strong wind ruffled my hair and made the little bungalow groan. I could picture myself crushed under the timbers in that house when it finally went down, but I shrugged the thought off. If I was willing to face Callin, I wasn't going to back down from this.
The front door bowed out inside the tilted jamb; there was no way I could pull it open. The two front windows were miraculously unbroken, although they also looked as if they were squeezed shut by the crooked frame. The two holes that had been punched through the walls were on the second floor, well out of reach.
I jogged around to the back of the house. The back door was splintering and squeezed shut, but the little kitchen window was sitting open.
I approached it carefully, ready to bolt if it started to fall toward me. There was something strange on the wall above the window--five parallel gouges in the wood. I spread my fingers next to them; the scratches had been made by a claw three times the size of my hand.
And there was something that looked like huge teeth marks on the window sill.
A predator. Someone had summoned a predator. I drew my ghost knife and carefully climbed through the window.
The kitchen was dark and chilly. I eased myself into the sink. Something crashed to the floor nearby. I stepped down from the counter into two inches of water.
All of my thought and energy was turned outward, taking in everything around me. If there was a predator here, I couldn't see it.
The house groaned. The floor shifted and plates slid out of the cabinets, smashing against the counter and bouncing across the wet floor. I jumped away from the rain of flatware and stumbled into the doorway.
By the light of a single desk lamp, I saw that the entire living room was coated with ice. Icicles hung from the ceiling and light fixtures. Books, furniture, TV... everything was covered with a dripping coat of ice.
"What the hell happened here?" I said aloud.
As if in answer to my question, I saw it: Wedged into the wooden banister was a compact disc with a sigil drawn onto the blank side with a Sharpie.
Wally must have been the one who summoned a predator to wreck the place. Had he been trying to destroy the other copies of the spell book, as Annalise had, or was he trying to cover his tracks?
The ice on the stairs was different from the rest. It looked like a single, smooth tube of bluish-white, thicker at the bottom and tapering as it went up. It was shaped like a roll of uncooked dough, but I couldn't tell if it was made of ice or was something else covered with ice.
I did know that it made the hairs on the back of my neck stand at attention. I laid my hand on the frost covered desk beside me and leaned over, craning my neck to look around the end of the sofa at the bottom of the stairs.
There was more ice there, and it would have taken me a long time to work out the shape if some parts hadn't been stained in blood red. There, on the floor, was a huge hand. The long, curled fingers were like overturned icicles--and the sharp tips were streaked with red.
The hand was palm up and attached to a slender, knobby arm with an extra elbow. The arm connected to the round body, which extended beyond the foot of the stairs to the front door. The body was a continuation of the long tube, without a feather, hair, scale, or other feature on the smooth ice. The end of it--the thickest part yet--looked like a rolled out tube of blue-white clay, and it took me a moment to realize the jagged crack with the red stains over it was not an injury, it was a mouth.