Читать книгу Black Magic Sanction - Kim Harrison, Ким Харрисон - Страница 12

Seven

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The metal floor and walls were cold, but I had quit shivering hours ago, numb to it now. The backs of my knees were swollen, and I couldn’t bend them. They ached, throbbing with a pain that refused to abate and that I just learned to live with. The solid outer door had remained closed, and it was close to pitch-dark. I couldn’t see the walls, but I had traced their outlines to find the toilet—hard to use with my hands still cuffed—and the sink. Now I sat with my back in a corner beside the door, my legs outstretched on the cold metal floor to try to get the swelling down. Getting my cuffed hands in front of me had been torture.

I had missed lunch, by the faint scent of lasagna that had come and gone. My dinner had been salad. I hadn’t eaten it, and it sat beside the interior door where the woman had left it. The vinegary dressing was probably full of magic-demoting goodness.

A scrape of nail on metal brought my heart into my throat, and I strained to see. Rat? I thought. I wasn’t scared of them, much, but I couldn’t see a damned thing. Wincing, I tried to bring my knees closer. The new scent of iron and stone tickled a memory, and hope brought me stiff. “Bis?” I whispered.

A soft thump shocked through me, and adrenaline pulsed when a pair of softly glowing eyes turned to me, hovering about a foot above the floor. “Ms. Rachel,” the adolescent gargoyle whispered, his nails scraping as he came closer. “I knew I could find you!”

“What are you doing here?” I asked, relief spilling through me. I reached out to touch him, and the instant my cold fingertips made contact, the unfamiliar pattern of the shattered West Coast ley lines burst into my thoughts. I jerked back, shocked. Damn it, I really needed to touch someone, but Bis would send me into overload.

“Sorry,” he said, his big supple ears drooping like a puppy’s in the faint light from his eyes. His usually pricked ears were edged in white fur, as was the lionlike tuft on his thin, hairless tail. His leathery wings rustled as he settled them, and his craggy features looked young despite the crevices and pebbly gray appearance.

“How did you get here?” I whispered. “Is Ivy with you? Did she fly out?”

“It’s just me and Pierce,” he said proudly. “We jumped. All the way from your kitchen.”

“Pierce!” I exclaimed, then winced. Any louder, and a guard might hear. “Did he escape from Al?” Oh God, I’d get blamed for that—even if I was in prison.

Bis’s flat, black teeth glinted faintly. “No. After you almost died from that soul charm, the demons made him send someone to watch you. Pierce was willing, able, and cheap.”

“You’re kidding!” I almost hissed, but I wondered if part of the reason Al had gone along with it was because he was worried Pierce might find him sleeping one night and kill him. I’d thought those silver bands were impossible to thwart. If it had shocked me, it had shaken Al.

“Ivy is mad,” Bis said, his words spilling out, sounding like falling scree. “She thinks you lied to her about how bad you were hurt. Pierce taught me how to jump here. I swam from the mainland, but it’s too cold for Pierce. No one saw me. I didn’t know I could ride the lines. It was cool, Ms. Rachel! First I’m in your kitchen, and then bam! San Francisco! Just that fast. The lines taste funny, here, though.” He finally ran out of words, his red eyes glowing faintly.

“Pierce didn’t know I was in trouble until you told him?” I insisted, not believing that Al had just let him go. And I really didn’t like the demons sending me a babysitter. I could take care of myself. Most days. Today I could use some help though.

The small gargoyle shifted, his wings brushing my ankles to send a burst of awareness through me. “Not a clue. He’s really upset. He didn’t even know which line to jump to until I told him which line you came in on. That’s why he showed me how to jump. Ivy said it was okay. All I had to do was listen to the ley lines. You left your aura all over the place. Following you was freakier than a boy soprano’s voice changing in the middle of ‘Ave Maria,’ especially when the line we came out of was all broken and stuff, but it was easy! No one told me gargoyles could jump the lines. Even my dad doesn’t know, and he’s old!”

Gargoyles can jump the lines? Well, they could slide right through a protection circle, and it made Al’s comment last winter about my “having my gargoyle” all the more intriguing. But why didn’t gargoyles know they could? Demon censorship? Sounded about right.

“Pierce knew exactly where they had taken you when we popped out of that line,” Bis said, inching closer, his glowing eyes pinched in worry. “Are you okay?”

I wasn’t, but I forced a smile. “I’m much better now,” I whispered. “You did good. I’m really happy to see you. Can you get back on your own?”

He shook his head, his thick canines making him look terribly fierce as he frowned. “I promised Pierce I wouldn’t jump without him. He says I’m not good enough.”

I smiled, thoroughly understanding how it rankled to be told you weren’t good enough. In this case, though, I was all for a little adult supervision. How Pierce knew the coven would put me here sort of bothered me. True, he’d been a member of the coven of moral and ethical standards himself—before they bricked him into the ground, alive—but Alcatraz hadn’t been a prison when he’d been living.

“Bis,” I said, wincing when my knees bent. “Can you show me what Pierce showed you? Maybe we can get home together.”

The pair of glowing eyes slowly shifted. “Not really. I don’t have the words, Ms. Rachel. Pierce said people have to learn from an experienced gargoyle, not a, uh, novice. He can’t jump you either. But it’s okay,” he rushed on when my brow furrowed. “Ivy has someone to bring you home right before the lines close to summoning in Cincinnati.”

My knees throbbed, and his eyes shifted from orange to their usual dull red. Even the hard metal floor didn’t feel so cold. I was going home. Before they lobotomized me.

Mistaking my relief for despair, Bis edged closer, almost putting a claw on my leg. “Pierce would come rescue you himself, Ms. Rachel, but the water is too cold. No one saw me swim over. It used to be an old fort, and I only needed a little crack to get in.”

He was trying to cheer me up, and I nodded, not knowing what to do with my hands and aware of the cuffs for the first time in hours. Bis could slip through the smallest opening, like an octopus. It had driven Jenks crazy until one night the fun-loving teen showed him how he did it.

“I didn’t know you could swim,” I said softly, running a finger between me and the steel around my wrist. “The ward around the island didn’t stop you?”

“It’s just a modified ley line,” the young gargoyle said loftily. “It can’t keep me out.”

“Is Ivy okay? And Jenks?” I hung on his words, starved for the memory of comfort and companionship, and I watched his eyes shift when he nodded.

“Jenks’s wing is bent, but he’s okay. He can still fly and stuff. They want to wait to summon you home until the sun almost rises in Cincy so the council can’t summon you back again. That’s what I came to tell you. Pierce is worried. He says not to eat the food.”

He knew about the food? I mused, disturbed. “Nick summoned me here,” I said bitterly.

“Nick?” The young gargoyle rocked back. “You’re sure?”

“Yes,” I answered sourly. “He walked right after, but if they throw enough money at him, he’ll probably do it again.” Bis had heard of Nick by way of Jenks bad-mouthing him, but obviously had never met him. “I have to talk to Al when I get home,” I said, probing my knees to see how bad they were, and the dull throb turned into a stabbing pain. “I don’t need Pierce babysitting me. That’s what Jenks and Ivy are for.”

“That’s what Ivy thinks, too,” Bis said softly, his eyes darting, making me think she’d said so in no uncertain words. Loud ones, probably.

I’d tried to make Al take his summoning name back before, but part of the deal was that he’d remove one of my demon marks, something he didn’t want to do. I hadn’t pressed the issue since Al couldn’t abduct anyone if he couldn’t be summoned. That the situation could be used against me had never crossed my mind. I shivered, the backs of my swollen knees pressed against the icy floor. I’d been pulled around like a toy. No wonder demons showed up pissed.

“You’re cold,” Bis said, as if only now realizing it. The kid could, and did, sleep in the snow.

“Mmmm-hmm.” My misery was temporary. I could endure it.

“I can help,” he said, and a dull red warmth blossomed in the dark, lighting my cell with a weird shadow glow as his skin turned pink. He was glowing like an overheated rock, his gray, pebbly skin taking on a luminescent sheen. Bis’s big tufted ears were back like a scolded puppy’s, and his pushed-in, ugly face was pinched in worry. His tail, too, was wrapped around his oversize feet to make himself as small as he could. “Bis, you are a wonder!” I said, holding my hands out until I pulled them back from the sudden heat. My shins, too, were getting warm.

The teenage gargoyle blushed, sending out a wash of heat, but then his big ears pricked and swiveled, his eyes following a second later. The sound of a buzzing alarm came faintly, followed by a key in my outer door’s lock. Shit. Was it time for my interrogation already?

“Hide,” I said, and he immediately dampened the heat and the light with it. “Don’t do anything unless they try to take me to the hospital wing. They might give me a lobotomy.”

“I won’t let them” came his voice from the dark ceiling, and the faintest scratch of nail on metal sounded. The memory of him was a glow on the back of my eyelids, fading when the first door creaked open and harsh electric light made a long rectangle, shining on my untouched salad and my swollen knees.

I blinked, trying to move as a guard opened the inner door and stepped back. I couldn’t get up the normal way because of my knees. Above me, Bis clung to the ceiling like a cat-size bat, my protector in case things went from bad to worse. My pulse hammered, and using my hands and the corner, I managed to wedge myself to my feet with my shaking arms. I would not go to the prison hospital. I’d die fighting first.

A shadow eclipsed the electric lights. The scent of roast pork slipped in, and my stomach growled. “I’m not going in there,” came Brooke’s voice, sour and slightly supercilious, and the light returned to the floor. Brooke? Brooke wanted to talk to me?

My chest hurt. It wasn’t the medical people, at least. Maybe the dissension I’d seen in the coven chamber was deeper than I thought. A three A.M. meeting couldn’t be sanctioned. She was here on her own.

“I’m not going in there,” Brooke said, louder this time when a guard protested. “Bring her out. I’ll talk to her in that excuse of a library you have.”

There was a moment of muted conversation, then a masculine, “She is your boss’s boss, you cretin! Get her out!” echoed dully.

A flashlight panned over me. “Out,” someone ordered, and I shuffled into the light, feeling very … orange. The dried coffee on my jumpsuit looked like old blood, and I lifted my chin when Brooke looked me up and down, lingering on my swollen, cuffed wrists. The sprig of heather in her Möbius-strip pin had wilted, and I felt a pinch of worry when I noticed the same shape embroidered on all the guards’ collars. Jeez, they had their own prison?

“Can you walk, Rachel?” she asked.

“It’s Ms. Morgan, if you don’t mind,” I said, leaning against the wall. My stomach hurt and I was almost dizzy from the pain in my knees.

“The inmates aren’t allowed in the library, Madam Coven Leader,” one of the guards protested weakly, and she spun, giving him a nasty look.

“I’m not going to sit on your ugly little chairs and talk to her through plastic. The woman is cuffed. She is wearing charmed silver. She isn’t going to hit me or take me hostage. She can hardly stand up, thanks to you. Rachel, this way.”

“I told you, it’s Ms. Morgan.” Head down and my lank hair falling into my eyes, I shuffled after her. Crap, I could hardly move, and a sudden nausea made me glad I hadn’t eaten. It would have been nice if someone had offered me a pain amulet, but we were surrounded by salt water. Besides, it would ruin the beating they’d given me.

The guards were not happy, but one jumped to open doors and clear the way. I looked back at my cell to see if Bis was still in there. Someone had tacked SUNSHINE over the door. Ha, ha. “What time is it?” I asked Brooke as she waited for me to catch up. I felt as if I was a hundred and sixty years old, but the hope that I’d shortly be in Ivy’s black tub full of hot water kept me moving.

The woman’s low heels clicked as I followed her into the main building. “A little after three,” she said, sniffing. “God, it stinks like bad sushi in here.”

Most of the inmates we passed were either in bed or sitting on top of their covers waiting for lights out. A whisper went out like a wave among them as they saw us. If it was after three here, then it was after six at home. Take into account the difference in latitude, and the sun was indeed about to rise in Cincy. A quiver of anticipation shot through me, and I walked a little straighter. The lines in Cincy were about to close to summoning, though if you knew how, you could still jump them no matter what time of day it was.

A quick look up assured me Bis was still with me. He was crawling on the ceiling, and I could see him only when he went over a metal bar, his skin not adapting quite fast enough. When he was older, even that wouldn’t show. He was a good kid.

The whispers grew to soft voices as word traveled from block to block. Alcatraz was kind of like a one-room schoolhouse. If something happened, everyone knew it in three minutes. I walked slowly to hide my pain, forcing my shoulders back and my head high as we entered the library,enclosed with a ceiling-to-floor fence. There was an oblong coffee table with several cast-off chairs around it in a cruel mimicry of a bookstore lounge. As luck would have it, I could see my empty cell, Mary, Charles, and Ralph. Mary looked shocked, her soulful eyes wide as she sat on her bed with her blanket pulled to her chin.

“This looks … comfortable,” Brooke said dryly as she took off her coat, hesitating briefly before gingerly draping it over the grimy chair and sitting on it.

I looked at my equally dirty chair, knowing I wouldn’t be able to get out of it once I was down. The promise of a soft cushion was irresistible, though, and I almost fell trying to sit without bending my knees. The jolt was enough to bring my eyes shut for an instant, and I gasped, taking in the scent of musty fabric and discarded books left to the elements.

“How pleasant,” I said so she wouldn’t see Bis crawl past the windows. “What do you want, Brooke?” I said, tired. If it was three here, it was six at home, and way past my bedtime.

She shifted, steepling her fingers and eying me from behind them. “They told me you didn’t eat. Good. Don’t eat anything unless it comes from me.”

I uncrossed my arms from around my middle. “You know about the food?”

The woman smiled, showing me perfect teeth. “Isolating that amino acid is expensive, but we’ve been using it for centuries. It has an excellent success rate.”

I thought of Mary starving herself for another thirty years, and I unclenched my jaw.

“Not everyone thinks you should be castrated,” she said as she adjusted her skirt over her ugly knees. “Magically or otherwise. I’m your friend, Rachel. You should trust me.”

Oh. Yeah. That’s a good idea. I looked at the ceiling, not seeing Bis, then back to her. Damn Trent back to the Turn. This was his fault. Didn’t tell them, my ass.

“I alone believe that you don’t need such harsh treatment,” she continued. “If you can invoke demon magic, you are—”

“A tool?” I interrupted. “A weapon? Have you ever fought a demon, Brooke? You were stupid to have risked it trying to catch me. The only reason I keep surviving demons is because they want me for other things.”

I shut up, not wanting to hurt my case any more than I probably just had, but Brooke was smiling her West Coast smile. “I’m trying to help you, Rachel.”

“Ms. Morgan, please.” I flicked a bit of dried egg off myself, almost hitting her.

“Mor-r-r-rgan,” Brooke drawled, bringing my attention back. “I don’t want you to become the property of a fucking elf in your efforts to survive.”

Ohhh, potty mouth! I thought, smirking. “No, you’d rather see me become your property. The coven’s secret weapon. No thanks.”

The woman’s tan darkened as she flushed in anger. “He can’t protect you from us. Never. You think you’re something special for surviving an I.S. death threat? Where do you think they get their charms from? The ones we don’t keep for ourselves? We get what we want, Rachel. Always.”

I stifled a shiver as I recalled Vivian’s charms, technically white but with devastating results, all invoked without fear of repercussion, and then Pierce, one of their own buried alive because he’d stood up to them and said that even white charms weren’t enough. A fear born out of self-preservation slipped through my anger.

“Sign this,” Brooke said, confident as she brought an envelope from her purse and set it on the table between us. “It gives us permission to remove your ability to reproduce and chemically take away your ability to do ley-line magic.”

Somehow I managed a snort of amusement I didn’t feel. “As opposed to you doing so behind prison doors and with saturated fats?”

She hesitated, and then as if having made a decision, she leaned close enough for me to smell the linen her suit was cut from, clean and light. Her eyes were bright, almost feverish, and a chill spilled through me. This didn’t look good.

“I don’t mind your being able to invoke demon magic,” she whispered,scaring me. “I don’t care that you are the beginning of demons on earth. I do have a problem with most of the coven unable to see past their shortsighted noses, so entrenched in old fear that they can’t see what you are. They would vote against me, and the majority rules, even if the majority is blind.”

My mouth went dry. “And what am I?”

“You are what we all should be!” she exclaimed, then lowered her voice as she leaned back. “The power you have? We’re stunted. Half of what we could be. We can be whole, and you’re the way. You are the future. I can protect you. Sign that paper, and I promise you’ll come out of the anesthesia completely yourself, with your magic intact. This is a sham to get you off the coven’s radar and away from Trent Kalamack.”

Whoa. Schism? Try the freaking Grand Canyon. “So I’d be your personal monster, not the coven’s?” I said, more than a little afraid. “I don’t deal with demons.”

“You do,” Brooke insisted, and the soft murmur from the cells ceased. “It’s on the record. You survive every time. The power you can give back to us—”

“I meant,” I said, disgusted, “I won’t deal with you, and I’m not signing that paper.”

Brooke’s expression soured. “You’re being foolish. If you can’t see the future, then at least look at your present. You want to go back to that hole? Fine. Or you can be moved into the warden’s apartments. Low security, real food. A view.” Her gaze went to the inmates watching. “Privacy. Sign the paper. You have my word you will remain as you are now.”

I looked at the paper on the table between us. Remain as I was? Cold, miserable, and a continent away from home? “Let’s just say I took a stupid pill this morning, and I sign your paper. What will I be? Soldier? Broodmare?”

The woman smiled. “Motherhood is a noble profession.”

My chin went up, and I nodded. “I never said it wasn’t, but anything that comes from me will be baby-snatched by demons, Brooke sweetie.”

“Way ahead of you,” she said, the pen she took from her purse clicking onto the table. “You will become an egg donor,” the woman said, unable to hide her eager look. “The demons would never know. You could even adopt one of your own kids. I’m going to.”

She wanted one of my unborn children? Parcel my progeny out to the highest bidder? “You are disgusting,” I said, but all I got from her was a bemused expression. She took a breath, and I raised my cuffed hands to stop her next words. “What time is it?” I asked, and her expression became annoyed.

“Three fifteen,” she said, wiry arm shifting so she could glance at her watch.

Sighing, I sank back into the rank cushions. Almost time. “Brooke, I’m already gone. The only reason I tried to get away from you boneheads earlier was because I wanted a couple of hours to see the sights before I headed home. Crooked Street maybe. Or Treasure Island. That sweet little bridge you’re all so fond of. I can’t say I like the Alcatraz tour, though. It’s a little too realistic.”

Brooke snorted to show her disbelief. “We are surrounded by salt water. There are no ley lines on the island. A very expensive ward keeps witches from jumping in for a rescue. Even if you could tap a line through a familiar, which I know you don’t have, you wear charmed silver.”

“This?” I held up my hands to show the link on my pulped wrist. It had my name on it, and a freaking serial number. “This is really pretty,” I said, dropping my arm. “But, Brooke, sweetheart, you can’t hold me.” Any time, Ivy.

“I think we can.” Confidence showed as she leaned back in the tatty chair.

I shook my head, smiling. “No, you can’t. It’s almost sunrise in Cincinnati. You know what happens when the sun rises? The lines close to summoning traffic. Oh, you can still get around with them, but a summons won’t work. And you know what’s going to happen just before then?” Brooke’s expression was empty, but then she got it.

“You can’t jump by line,” she said, voice loud. “You’re cut off.”

I leaned forward, the beating, the humiliation, and the indignity of being locked in a metal closet all day falling from me to leave only a bitter satisfaction. “I’m not a demon,” I said softly. “But I’m in their system.”

A sneeze shook me, and a quiver grew in my middle. I was going home. “You should have come to talk to me,” I said, wishing I could cross my knees and look smug. “I really am a nice person most times, but you just pissed me off.”

I sneezed again, and a gut-cramping feeling rose, threatening worse. “I’m going home to take a hot bath and get some sleep. Tell you what,” I said, gripping the arms of the chair—as if it could keep me here a moment longer—“I understand how easy it is to underestimate me. Let’s start fresh. You can either instigate a war with me or come and talk. Your choice.”

Eyes wide, Brooke stood, reaching across the table to grab me.

A gray blur dropped between us, hissing.

My heart beat once, hard, and I forced myself to remain seated when Bis spread his wings, tufts of fur puffed and tail switching like a cat’s. One clawed foot gripped her unsigned contract, and his head was lowered, red eyes promising violence.

“Shit, it’s a gargoyle!” Mary shouted, her words taken up and passed along. “Rachel has a gargoyle!”

“Security!” Brooke shouted as she stood. She was going to lose me, and she knew it.

My head spun when Bis spread his wings and hopped to my shoulder. The unfamiliar pattern of West Coast ley lines exploded in my thoughts, harsh and jagged, tasting of broken rock. Bis could feel them all the time, and when we touched, I felt them too. The young gargoyle wrapped his tail around my neck, and tears threatened. I was going home.

I wanted to stand, but I couldn’t. The pull of the summons had become painful, so I made the vampire kiss-kiss gesture to Brooke as I relaxed my grip on reality and felt the lines pull me in. The smut for this, I would willingly take.

Damn, I had good friends.

Black Magic Sanction

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