Grave Dance
Page 51Sites, plural. Which meant there were more than the police knew about.
“—we believe they are attempting to use the relic as a focus to open permanent paths between our planes. You have looked across the planes. I’m sure you understand the possible implication of the space between realities becoming too thin.”
I swallowed, or tried to, but my mouth had suddenly gone dry. If the Aetheric was always in reality and anyone could grab magic, burn themselves out like the skimmers . . . I shivered. And the land of the dead? The world as we knew it would be changed forever.
“That’s why they want me?” I whispered.
Death nodded. “With your ability to merge planes and the relic as a focus . . . But, Alex, they may want you, but they don’t need you. The last ritual was close. The next may succeed.”
Which would destroy the world. I thought back to what Fred had said about the world decaying. Let that be a warning and not an unchangeable outcome. “We’d better hope the accomplice shows at the bridge.”
And speaking of a bridge, the car crossed the river and then turned onto an old gravel road. I frowned. The only thing in this direction was a cemetery.
“We will be at the bridge,” the gray man said. “But in case the accomplice does not show . . .”
“Trust me, I’m already looking for the bastard. Knowing they are attempting to royally screw up reality definitely doesn’t give me less reason to search.” But first I had to get away from the skimmers.
The gray man nodded as if pleased with my answer. The crunch of tires over gravel fell away and the car slowed to a stop. Why the hell are they taking me to a cemetery?
“If you manage to find the accomplice, call us,” the raver said.
“Call—?”
“With this.” Death leaned forward, his lips brushing mine, but there was more than just smooth lips to the kiss. Power rolled into me, cold, foreign magic, and I felt the spell sink into my very flesh. It tingled, burning like ice against my skin. Then Death’s warm lips soothed away the sting.
Death smiled, his eyes glittering in the light from the streetlamps. “Yes, it was necessary,” he whispered, answering her but staring at me.
I looked away, ignoring the twisty, fluttery feeling filling my stomach. “So how does this work?”
“You can feel the spell, yes?” the gray man asked, and at my nod he said, “Good. When you find the accomplice, and they are outside of Faerie, use the spell. We will feel it. We will all feel it.”
As in all the soul collectors? I imagined every soul collector in the world appearing around me and then I shivered, making a mental note not to poke at the spell. I nodded as the goons jerked the back car door open. Time’s up.
“Be safe. We hope to see you at the bridge,” the gray man said before vanishing.
The raver swiped her hand through the air, orange nails flashing like claws. “What he said.” Then she also disappeared.
I glanced at Death, expecting him to vanish as well, but he didn’t. As the goon dragged me out of the backseat, Death followed. He locked one hand on my arm and used the other to steady my purse against me so PC didn’t tumble unceremoniously to the ground. The goons pulled me away from the car, Death right beside me. Then the raver appeared next to him.
“What is the holdup?” She cocked a hip as she stared at him. “It’s not like you can enter.” She nodded at the cemetery gate. “Come on.”
He didn’t fight her when she wrapped her hand around his arm, but he didn’t look away from me either. “I’ll be at the bridge,” he said.
Then he vanished and I was left with the goons as half a dozen skimmers poured out of vehicles. All of us headed for a graveyard.
Chapter 27
The goons hauled me around tombstones and monuments, heedless of my dragging steps. I really could have used a moment to focus on my shields, but they didn’t give me one. The media had a tendency to portray grave witches as creepy goths hanging out in cemeteries. While it was true that I tended to do most of my work in cemeteries, I certainly didn’t enjoy hanging out in them. There were too many bodies, too much grave essence clawing at my shields and searching for weak spots. It was always a relief to leave a graveyard.
“You guys picked a cheery spot, didn’t you?” I said, rambling because I tended to do that when I got nervous.
Neither goon answered, but a rotund skimmer with rings on all of his pudgy fingers frowned as he kept pace with us. “It’s temporary.” He hugged his arms over his chest as if guarding against a chill. Even at one in the morning, the temperature had to be in the high eighties and there wasn’t a breeze. I guessed he wasn’t cold. The man looked around, a little too much of the white of his eyes showing. “You don’t think ghosts really exist, do you?”
He’s asking a grave witch that? Not only did ghosts exist, but this graveyard boasted several, and currently they were doing what most ghosts stuck for eternity in a graveyard tend to do—they were following the strangers. Us.
There were no truly old bodies in Nekros, but this was one of the oldest and largest graveyards in the city. Or really, below the city. We couldn’t have been more than a dozen miles from the old bridge. Not like they’re going to take me there.
The goons stopped in front of a large mausoleum. The engraving over the arched doorway read BELL.
No surprise there.
They pushed me into the cool, stagnant air inside the mausoleum. The pudgy skimmer pulled out a cell phone and used the LCD screen as a flashlight. Goon One had a Zippo. Way to come prepared. Still, what they could see with their makeshift lights was probably more reliable than the washed-out ruins I saw, so I let the goons guide me. That way I wouldn’t slam PC into anything that didn’t exist in my vision.
They stopped in front of a sarcophagus and Goon One fumbled with something under the carved rim. The click was loud in the dark stillness, and the skimmer with the phone jumped. Then the large stone lid swung aside to reveal a staircase.
Okay, this is a little too spy movie for me. Tell me Bell doesn’t have a secret hideout under his family mausoleum.
But he did.
I descended the stairs into a well-lit room. A generator roared somewhere out of sight, and a hiss whispered around the room as fresh air was pumped into the underground space. Judging by the number of cots pushed against the far wall, Bell wasn’t the only person staying here. No wonder Roy hadn’t been able to warn me until Bell made his move—they’d been hiding in a cemetery this whole time.
“Welcome,” Bell said, not rising from a large wooden chair that had been placed in the center of the room like it was a throne. Would that make him the king of sewer rats?
Magic clung in clumps around him. They weren’t spells exactly, but high concentrations of magic forced with no skill into crude charms—like square pegs pounded into round holes. With a jackhammer.
“Forgive the unorthodox manner of your employment,” he said, but he slurred the words. I didn’t think alcohol had anything to do with his condition. “You see, we ran out of magic. You will be well compensated.”
Bullshit. He was a fugitive, and from the hungry look of the gathered skimmers, the lot of them were addicted from their brush with the Aetheric. They wanted a fix. Even if I did open a rift for them—which wasn’t an option—most would burn like a moth in a flame.
“Like I told you before, you can’t hire me to open a hole into the Aetheric.” I’d have liked to say I couldn’t do it, but that would have been a lie, and the words stuck in my throat.
Bell blinked at me. Then he nodded at the goons behind me. The rasp and clack of a gun cocking filled the room. A cold shiver shot down my spine and I froze, rooted to the concrete under my feet. The hard muzzle of the gun pressed into the flesh under my ear. My heart crashed in my chest, knocking the air out of my lungs, but I didn’t dare breathe too hard.
I could die right here, in this hole in the ground, and no one would ever know. The skimmers were crazy enough to do it. No one even looked surprised as they watched the goon press the gun hard enough against my skin to make my pulse burst like explosions in my ear. And I’ll be just another cemetery haunt. Death wouldn’t be able to reach me, and I’d be stuck until I was forgotten and faded away.
I glanced at the ghosts who had followed us into the mausoleum. They flitted about, chattering to themselves. One woman, so indistinct that she was barely a shadow, smiled at me. I don’t know if she realized I could see her, or if she just thought I’d join her soon.
Not tonight I won’t.
Okay, points for bravado, but even if I could open the rift in reality—which I wasn’t sure I could do on command—there were no guarantees that Bell would release me. And who knew how much damage the skimmers could do in their blissed-out madness if they had unlimited access to the Aetheric? It just wasn’t an option. I had to find some way out of this that didn’t endanger an unknown number of people while the skimmers fed their addiction.
“You’re awfully silent, Miss Craft,” Bell said, and the gun barrel ground harder into my skin.
I swallowed, tasting acidic fear. My dagger hummed in my boot, but even if my hands hadn’t been bound, the only thing I would be able to accomplish by drawing it would be to get myself shot. Of course, I did have one other thing. I had the whole damn graveyard. The idiots had dragged me off to a grave witch’s seat of power. Not that grave magic was the least bit effective against the living, but what I really needed was a big enough distraction for me to get the hell out of here.