CHAPTER 9
Jilly wanted to pump Archer for more
information, but he’d already said he didn’t know any more, that
Ecco had made the cryptic call from a pay phone before racing back
to the entrenched cluster. A howl echoed in her head, louder than
the junker car as Archer floored the crap engine. Liam had refused
to abandon the malice-molested vehicle, protecting the league’s
mission even as her life swung toward disaster.
She stared her outrage at the back of his head,
but he was flying through his speed dial, rallying the troops to
this unknown threat.
Despite his calm voice as he relayed commands,
tension glowed off him. The reven at his
temple flushed violet, and the skin around it had gone almost
translucent with a darkness she couldn’t bear to look into, as if
shadows ate him from the inside.
Which, she supposed, they did.
All this save-the-world shit had seemed very
theoretical—and not so unnerving—until she was caroming through the
midnight streets at sixty- five miles per hour in a car tagged with
demon graffiti.
With her sister at the other end.
Liam finished his calls and sat in deep silence a
moment. Then he glanced back at her. “The dossier we put together
on you was rushed, but it included the basics on your family. Your
sister’s been an addict for a long time. The chances that she
hasn’t already started on solvo aren’t good.”
She gritted her teeth. “Let’s just wait until we
find her before we decide she’s dead.”
“Undead,” Archer chimed in. “Mostly.”
She resisted smacking him in the back of the head
only because he had the car almost up on two wheels around the
corner.
Liam ignored the other man and the stunt driving.
“Dory didn’t even come around after you took that knife for
her.”
A toxic mix of guilt and rage churned in Jilly’s
gut. “I got her to leave her pimp.”
“Not because she chose to leave him, but because
your bloody DNA sprayed everywhere helped put him in prison. I
don’t want you to get your hopes up.”
He’d taken away everything else. The car’s tires
squealed around another corner, shrill as a malice crying foul. She
knew the unvoiced accusation was unreasonable. But considering how
much she’d lost—not just because of the demon—she wasn’t willing to
lose another chance.
From his down-turned mouth, she knew he’d read
her refusal without her saying another word.
They paralleled the L for a few blocks before
Archer pulled over. “This is the address Ecco gave us.” From just
beyond one of the support columns for the elevated tracks, a man
stepped out of the gloom. “Ah, there he is. And Jonah and Perrin
are across the street.”
“I called everyone in,” Liam said.
Even if Archer hadn’t pointed them out, the men
would have caught Jilly’s wary attention under any circumstances.
Though varied in their police-blotter descriptions, they each
exuded a dangerous stillness she associated with TV wildlife
programs of big cats right before they pounced on something, all
taut muscle and focused eyes.
Sheathed claws had been replaced, though, with
unsheathed blades, cudgels, and other weapons of up-close
and-personal destruction. The headlights gleamed off the razored
gauntlets that embraced both Ecco’s forearms. The second man,
Jonah, stepped up beside him, blond hair shining almost as
brightly.
Jilly tightened her bare fists and wished she
hadn’t been so cocky down in the weapons depot at the league
warehouse.
They parked and got out. As she glanced up at the
windows of the apartment building above them, the smells of cold
metal and trash reminded her too much of that night outside Dory’s
apartment. Except for the L train tracks, this vibe was almost
exactly the same. Life just a few steps off the street. Her chest
ached, not where Rico’s knife had slipped between her ribs, but
spreading out along the dark threads of her reven, and she knew her teshuva was coming online.
She welcomed it, if it drove away the fear.
She couldn’t be afraid, not if she wanted to save
Dory again. Maybe for the last time.
The big man—Ecco—stalked up to them. He nodded at
her once, eyes assessing, but addressed his comment to Liam. “You
know how I love me some malice. I found these while hunting
tonight. They’re crawling all over. Seemed like too many for one
place, so I poked around. That’s how I found the haints. And the
others.”
“This is not good.” Archer shook his head. “I
told Sera to swing by the warehouse and grab some of the ESF
equipment before she came. Maybe we can pick up some changes in the
emanations to explain what’s going on.”
Ecco snorted. “You trying to keep her out of the
fight? Good luck. She’s onto you, man.”
Archer pursed his lips. “Yeah, I know. But it
sounded legit.”
Ecco snorted again. “You guys ready, then?” He
slanted another glance at Jilly.
“I called in reinforcements,” Liam said. “Let’s
give them a minute. No sense getting dead for nothing.”
Jilly shifted restlessly. “If Dory’s in there now
. . .”
Ecco crossed his gauntleted arms over his massive
chest and stuck his jaw out. “She is. Now aren’t you thankful
you’ve been possessed by a demon and that we crawled all into your
past so I’d recognize your sis? She looks just like you.”
“She’s my half sister—not that it matters—and she
doesn’t look like me at all. She’s tall and blond.”
“Same lost-little-girl look, though.”
Jilly mirrored his crossed arms. She couldn’t
match his bulk, but she beat him on the glower. “Hardly.”
Ecco lowered his arms with a zhing of stropping blades. “How long are we going to
stand around without smashing something? I’m not going to live
forever.” He smiled, a flash of teeth as sharp as his gauntlets.
“Oh, wait. . . .”
“Yeah, you can wait.” Liam stared up at the
building. “I don’t like this. Another massing of malice so soon.”
He glanced at Jilly.
She huffed. “What? I didn’t do it.”
“Not you, no. But the conjunction of your
emergent demon and the change in malice behavior is suspect.” He
lowered his voice. “Not to mention whatever we did that trapped
them together.” When she opened her mouth, he said, “And by ‘not to
mention,’ I mean let’s not mention that yet. Nothing gets this
crowd more fired up than the possibility of unleashing an untried
new weapon with unknown consequences.”
“I’m with them,” she muttered.
The edge of his jaw hardened. “No. You’re with
me.”
In the next few moments, a half dozen men
filtered out from the shadows. Jilly found herself pressed a little
closer to Liam. Not out of nerves and the fact that she was topped
by at least head and shoulders by each man, merely by the fact she
didn’t want to get sliced or bruised on their bristling
armament.
She cleared her throat loudly. “You can’t go in
there flailing.”
She realized she’d interrupted their plans when
they all stared at her. Liam was the only one not returning her
scowl.
“Why not?” Ecco propped his fists on his hips.
“To flail is divine. Or damned. Whichever.”
“There are innocents in there.”
“There are no innocents,” said one of the other
men—Jonah, she remembered.
“Jilly’s right,” Liam broke in over the others’
muttering.
Everyone—including Jilly—gaped at him.
He unsheathed the hammer. When he swung it down
to his side, it hummed through the air as if in agreement. “Not
about their innocence,” he clarified. “That’s irrelevant. But about
flailing and failing. We need to know what this new cluster is,
what these haints are up to. Flailing doesn’t get us
answers.”
“It gets us closer to salvation,” Jonah growled.
“Which is why we’re here.”
Jilly bristled and moved to stand between the
talyan and the door. “I’m here to save my sister. Where are
they?”
“Most of the third floor,” Ecco said. “And part
of the fourth. They’ve busted out walls to make a hive. The place
is spackled with etheric secretions.”
“Creepy,” Archer said.
“And maybe deadly.” Liam put his hand on Jilly’s
shoulder. “Demonic secretions like birnenston—as in fire and
brimstone—can interfere with your teshuva, especially if you aren’t
well integrated. Or just newly possessed.”
She brushed off his hand. “If you’re about to
suggest I wait out here, forget it.”
Ecco snickered. “She’s no fool.”
“Exactly,” she snapped. “I won’t be stupid, but I
won’t be left behind either.”
Three more men had materialized from the night
and stood with the lights of the L gleaming on their drawn weapons,
but even the combined weight of their impatience wouldn’t shift
Liam, she knew.
But she could crowbar his ass. “Just let me go
with you, and I won’t give you any more shit about being part of
the league.”
He studied her as if the morass of evil
congregating in the building behind him meant nothing. “You still
thought you could be anything but?”
“It’s the not-giving-you-shit part I thought
would appeal.”
“You’ll do as I say?”
That wasn’t necessarily the same thing as being
part of the league, was it? “Whatever. Let’s go.”
At her words, she sensed the sudden tension of
the talyan yearning toward action, the preternatural crackle of
energy as the teshuva inside them surged to the fore.
And yet Liam held them unmoving with the force of
his stillness. His eyes, focused on her while he waited for an
answer, stayed blue as Lake Michigan under cloudless skies, not a
flicker of stormy violet. Reluctantly, she admitted he was not a
man to be dismissed simply as a bully or a braggart.
He was much more dangerous than that.
“Yes,” she said softly.
He took a step forward and the dozen talyan broke
for the building.
In the controlled sweep forward, he tugged her
into his wake. “Stay close to me. Get out of the way of anyone else
with solid amethyst eyes. Don’t go running off to find your sister.
If she’s here, we’ll get her out.”
A handful of the talyan peeled off, heading for
the back of the building and the fire escapes, she guessed. She
followed Liam through the front door. The tiny lobby was barren
except for a few brown leaves crinkled into the corner beneath the
mailboxes. The remaining talyan started up the stairs.
She smelled the lair before they arrived at the
third floor. A biting sourness burned in her nose. She flashed back
to one of her erstwhile uncles passed out against the bathroom door
in a miasma of sweat and stale vomit.
She breathed shallowly against the smell, against
the unexpected pain of the memory. Could her mother have possibly
made any worse choices in her life? Could her sister?
Could she? And did the fact that this was her
only choice make it any less terrible?
They hit the third-floor landing. An unlit
hallway bent around the corner. The first talya drifted forward out
of sight, footsteps inaudible even to her suddenly sharpened
hearing. Her vision flickered, and veins of a strange calcified
gray stretched down the hallway walls. She shrank closer to Liam to
avoid touching them.
“Birnenston,” he murmured. “It’s a slow-acting
poison to demonic energies. Don’t get it on you. Not surprisingly,
it burns.”
The overhead lights were smashed, but the
birnenston streaks gave off a sickly glow to her demon-spiked
vision. Bits of glass twinkled in the debris of drywall and
age-softened lathe strewn across the floor where walls had been
torn apart, as if a giant rat had gone through the place in search
of its cheese. The gray veins thickened around the damage. Whether
the birnenston caused or had just taken advantage of the
destruction, Jilly couldn’t tell. The talyan moved down the hall,
boots seeming to float above the trash; so smoothly did they
move.
Jilly winced when her own feet stumbled, the
crunch of her rubber soles across broken glass like a gunshot in
her ears. But nothing hurtled out of the dark holes.
She held her breath against the thickening stink
and noticed a faint rhythmic huffing sound all around them,
punctuated by intermittent gasps. The hair at her nape rippled in
atavistic unease.
Jonah, in the lead, halted in front of one of the
anti-home-improvement renovations. He hoisted a giant
Maglite—obviously he wasn’t willing to rely solely on his demon
sight—and flooded the hole with the high beam.
Thick ropes of birnenston bracketed the opening
and laced the interior of the chamber. Gray stalactites hung from
the ceiling. Yellow droplets oozed from the serrated tips and
dropped to the mirrored stalagmites that grew up from the floor.
Jilly figured she didn’t need a childhood of comic book horror—or
the teshuva recoiling within her—to know she should avoid the
mess.
Several haints stood half embedded in the viscous
gnarl, as if they’d lacked the initiative to take a single step
out. The rest were arrayed between the tapering columns, equally
gray. Where they happened to be aligned to face the hallway, their
vacant eyes reflected the flashlight, but otherwise none moved.
Jilly’s flesh crawled, urging her to escape.
The huffing she’d heard was the haints’ breath.
She hadn’t noticed it when she and Liam had visited the cluster in
the park. Within the confines of the chamber that had once been the
living room of one apartment and the kitchen and bathroom of
another, the synchronized wheeze carried a tone of menace. She had
the terrifying impression that despite their stillness and apparent
unity, somewhere in their fugues they were trapped alone in sorrow
and pain, their silence broken only by those soft hiccuping gasps,
like a child in a closet crying itself to sleep.
“Who brought the flamethrower?” Ecco’s voice rang
in the quiet. “And the marshmallows?”
All the other talyan winced, whether at the
coarseness of his tone or his joke, she wasn’t sure.
A movement in one corner caught her eye and she
swung around. And realized what Ecco had meant by the
“others.”
She was quite familiar with the classic junkie
sprawl, arms slack, legs akimbo, head tipped, drool optional. She’d
seen it often enough in her mother’s boyfriends and in her own
work. Pipes and needles littered the low table near this second
group, an ugly mess compared with the pristine white tablets of
solvo, which were nowhere in evidence. She knew no one went back to
the smack once they tried solvo. After its pure high, allegedly
nothing else would work. So this group of addicts hadn’t yet made
the switch.
Which meant they still had their souls.
It seemed impossible these garden-variety
addicts, surrounded by the haints, hadn’t been converted, but she
was almost ecstatic to see the agitated twitch of their muscles,
the darting of their eyes behind half-closed lids. These people
could still be saved.
Then she saw her sister.
“Dory,” she gasped. Against all Liam’s warnings,
she found herself jumping forward. Stupid, she knew, but didn’t
stop herself. Some things mattered more than smart.
She was brought up short by a grip on the hood of
her jacket.
“What did I tell you about running off?” Liam’s
voice was a growl. She half expected him to shake her like a dog
with a bone.
“It’s her.”
“I got that. And we’ll get her, along with the
others. In a minute.”
Jilly glanced around at him. Sera had come up
behind them carrying what looked like an old portable-video-camera
bag slung from one shoulder. She held a fat wand like a Geiger
counter and raised it to the room. Archer loomed close. If the
violet sparks in his eyes got loose, he wouldn’t need Ecco’s
flamethrower; so fierce was his protective stance.
Jilly glared at Liam. “We could be getting them
out of here and you’re recording this for America’s Funniest Home Videos?”
“It’s something new. We don’t understand it. We
don’t have a Bookkeeper to analyze it. Maybe we can find a
Bookkeeper in another league in another city who may have
encountered the same thing.” He lowered his voice, but his grip on
her jacket was unrelenting. “If I’m going to keep my men alive, I
need to know what these things are doing.”
“They’re not things—not all of them, not my
sister.”
“She’s not bound. She came here willingly. These
haints have got to be the biggest buzz- kill around, and still she
sat down with the others over there and shot up.”
Jilly gritted her teeth. “I’m not going to argue
morality and addiction-recovery theory with you. She’s my
sister.”
“And you’re my talya, my fighter. I won’t lose
you any more than I’d sacrifice my men.”
“You sacrifice them every night,” she hissed.
“It’s just that they’re immortal, so they survive.”
If her words penetrated his imperturbable armor,
she couldn’t see it. “Be that as it may, you’ll wait.”
She relaxed in his hold until he loosened his
grip; then she tore free. The better to turn her glare on him. But
she didn’t bolt off again.
Sera walked past them, tracing the wand through
the air in a slow-motion wave like some demented fairy godmother.
“Emanation spike here.” She studied them reprovingly, a glint of
violet in her hazel eyes. “Get a grip, you two.”
Jilly tamped down her wayward emotions. Liam’s
already perfectly composed face didn’t change at all. Probably that
spike was all her fault. Never mind the blue hair dye, she’d always
been the hotheaded one. And look where it had gotten her.
She resisted the urge to look over at her
sister.
Sera completed a circuit of the room, Archer
never leaving her side. She frowned as she approached Liam.
“Something odd just—Oh hell.”
“What?”
“Hell,” she said more urgently.
As one, the haints took a gasping breath. An
etheric shock wave passed through the room at that moment. What was
left of the walls seemed to bow inward, on the edge of
collapse.
Jilly clamped her hand under her breast where the
flare of her teshuva’s mark stole her breath worse than a kick to
the ribs. Though he must have suffered a similar blow to his
reven like an instant migraine, Liam never
flinched. He spun and pulled her under the edge of his coat just as
yellow poison suddenly gushed from the birnenston stalactites,
splashing across the floor in all directions. As if the stones
themselves wept in the presence of what had arrived.
Through the bilious fog, a deeper shadow moved.
Nothing corporeal, just a suggestion of a looming monstrosity given
shape by the smoking birnenston. Something misshapen and ghastly,
with a half-crescent extrusion cutting up through the fog like an
off-center horn or enormous tooth or scythe. No, not one
monstrosity, but a dozen.
The demons had returned to their lair.