Authors: Laurell K. Hamilton
I
DREAMED
. I
N
the dream, someone held me in their lap. Smooth dark arms wrapped around me. I looked up into my mother's laughing face. She was the most beautiful woman in the world. I snuggled against her body, and the clean smell of her skin was there. She'd always smelled of Hypnotique bath powder. She bent and kissed me on the lips. I had forgotten the taste of her lipstick, the way she brushed my mouth with her thumb, and laughed because she'd gotten bright red lipstick on my small mouth.
Her thumb came away with something brighter than lipstick. Blood dripped down her thumb. She'd pricked her skin with a safety pin. It was bleeding. She held her thumb out to me and said, “Kiss it, Anita, make it all better.”
But there was too much blood. It ran down her hand. I stared up at her laughing face, and blood ran down it like rain. I woke sitting bolt upright on the velvet couch, gasping for breath. I could still taste her lipstick on my mouth, and the smell of Hypnotique bath powder clung to me.
Larry sat up on the love seat, rubbing at his eyes. “What's wrong? Did we get our wake-up call?”
“No, I had a bad dream.”
He nodded, stretching, then frowned. “Do you smell perfume?”
I stared at him. “What do you mean?”
“Perfume or powder or something; do you smell it?”
I swallowed and nearly choked on my own pulse. “Yeah. I smell it.”
I flung back the extra blanket and threw the lumpy pillow across the room.
Larry swung his legs off the love seat. “What is wrong with you?”
I went to the window and flung the drapes open. The bedroom door was closed, and Jean-Claude was safely inside. Jason was sleeping in there. I stood in the sunlight and let the heat sink into me. I leaned against the warm glass, and
only then realized that I was wearing nothing but an oversized t-shirt and my undies. Oh, well. I stayed in the sunlight for a few minutes, waiting for my pulse to calm down.
“Serephina sent me a dream. The smell is my mother's perfume.”
Larry came to stand beside me. He was wearing a pair of gym shorts and a green t-shirt. His curly red hair stuck up in all directions. His blue eyes squinted when he stepped into the light. “I thought only a vampire that had a connection with you, a hold on you, could invade your dreams.”
“That's what I thought,” I said.
“How could I smell perfume from your dream?”
I shook my head, forehead against the glass. “I don't know.”
“Has she marked you?”
“I don't know.”
He touched my shoulder, squeezing. “It'll be alright.”
I stepped away from him to pace the room. “It won't be alright, Larry. Serephina invaded my dreams. No one but Jean-Claude has ever done that.” I stopped, because that wasn't true. Nikolaos had done it. But that was after she'd bitten me. I shook my head. Either way, it was a very bad sign.
“What are you going to do?”
“Kill her.”
“Murder her, you mean.”
If Larry's earnest eyes hadn't been staring at me, I'd have said, “You bet.” But it's hard to contemplate murder with someone staring at you like you've kicked their favorite puppy.
“I'll try to get a warrant,” I said.
“If you can't?”
“If it's her or me, Larry, then it's her. Okay?”
Larry looked at me sadly. “What I did last night was murder. I know that, but I didn't go in planning to kill someone.”
“You stay in this business long enough and you will.”
He shook his head. “I don't believe that.”
“Believe what you want, but it's still the truth. These things are too dangerous to play fair.”
“If you really believe that, then how can you date Jean-Claude? How can you let him touch you?”
I shook my head. “I never said I was consistent.”
“You can't defend yourself, can you?”
“Defend which one? Killing Serephina or dating Jean-Claude?”
“Either, both. Hell, Anita, if you're one of the bad guys you can't be one of the good guys.”
I opened my mouth and closed it. What could I say? “I am one of the good guys, Larry. But I'm not going to be a martyr. If that means breaking the law, so be it.”
“Are you going to get a warrant?” His face was very neutral as he asked. He looked older suddenly. Even with his orangey curls sticking up, he looked solemn.
I was watching Larry grow older before my eyes. Not in age, but in experience. The expression in his eyes was older than it had been a few months ago. Seen too much, done too much. He was still trying to be Sir Galahad, but Galahad had had God on his side. All Larry had was me. It wasn't enough.
“The only way I could get a death warrant is to lie,” I said.
“I know,” he said.
I stared at him. “Serephina hasn't broken any laws, yet. I won't lie about that.”
He smiled. “Good. When do we meet Dorcas Bouvier?”
“Three.”
“Have you figured out what you can sacrifice to raise the zombies Stirling wants done?” he asked.
“Nope.”
He stared at me. “What are you going to tell Stirling?”
I shook my head. “I don't know yet. I wish I knew why he's so hot and heavy to kill Bouvier.”
“He wants the land,” Larry said.
“Stirling and Company have been saying the Bouvier family, not Magnus Bouvier. That means he's not the only one suing them. So killing Magnus won't solve their problems.”
“So why do it?” Larry asked.
“Exactly,” I said.
Larry nodded. “We need to talk to Magnus again.”
“Preferably without Serephina around,” I said.
“Amen to that,” Larry said.
“I'd love to talk to Magnus, but before we tackle Mr. Bouvier again, I'd like to find some fairie ointment.”
“Some what?”
“Didn't you take any classes on fairies?”
“It was an elective,” he said.
“Fairie ointment makes you proof against glamor. Just in case whatever else Magnus is hiding is nastier than Serephina.”
“Nothing nastier than that,” he said.
“True, but just in case, he won't be able to work magic on us. In fact, it's not a bad precaution before we meet Dorrie. She may not be as scary as Magnus, but she shines, and I'd just as soon she didn't shine all over us.”
“You think Serephina will find Jeff Quinlan?”
“If anyone can, she can. She seemed pretty confident she could take Xavier, but then Jean-Claude had been pretty confident he could take her last night. He was wrong.”
He frowned. “So we're rooting for Serephina?”
It sounded wrong, put that way, but I nodded. “If it's a choice between a vampire that obeys most of the laws, and one that slaughters kids, yeah, we're on her side.”
“You were talking about killing her just a little bit ago.”
“I can stay out of her way until she saves Jeff, and kills Xavier.”
“Why would she kill him?” Larry asked.
“He's killing people in her territory. She can say anything she wants, but that's a direct challenge to her authority. Besides, I don't think Xavier will give up Jeff without a fight.”
“What do you think happened to him last night?” Larry asked.
I shook my head. “It doesn't do any good to dwell on it, Larry. We're doing all we can.”
“We could tell the FBI about Serephina.”
“One thing I've learned is that master vamps don't talk to the cops. Too many years of the cops killing them on sight, or trying to.”
“Okay,” he said, “but we've still got to come up with something big enough to kill for raising the cemetery tonight,” he said.
“I'll think on it.”
“You really have no idea what to do?” He sounded surprised.
“Short of a human sacrifice, Larry, I don't think I can raise several three-hundred-year-old corpses. Even I've got my limits.”
He grinned. “Nice to hear you admit it.”
I had to smile. “It'll be our little secret.”
He put his hand out, and I slapped it. He slapped mine back, and I felt better. Larry had a way of making me smile. Friends will do that to you.
D
ORCAS
B
OUVIER WAS
leaning on a car in the parking lot. Her hair gleamed in the sunlight, swirling as she moved, like heavy water. In jeans and a green tank top, she was flawless.
Larry tried not to stare at her, but it was hard work. Larry was wearing a blue t-shirt, jeans, white Nikes, and an oversized checked flannel shirt to hide his shoulder holster.
I was in jeans and a navy blue polo shirt, black Nikes, and an oversized blue dress shirt. I'd had to borrow it from Larry after my black jacket had gotten covered in vampire goop. Had to have something to hide the Browning. Makes people nervous if you go around with a naked gun. Larry and I looked like we'd dressed from the same closet.
Dorrie pushed away from the car. “Shall we go?”
“We'd like to talk to Magnus.”
“So you can turn him into the cops?”
I shook my head. “So we can find out why Stirling is so hot to kill him.”
“I don't know where he is,” Dorcas said.
Maybe it showed on my face, because she said, “I don't know where he is, but if I did, I wouldn't tell you. Using magic on the police is a death penalty case. I won't turn him in.”
“I'm not the police.”
She looked at me, eyes narrowing. “Did you come to look at Bloody Bones, or to question me about my brother?”
“How did you know to be waiting here for us?” I asked.
“I knew you'd be on time.” Her pupils swirled downward to pinpoints, like the eyes of an excited parrot.
“Let's go,” I said.
She led us to the back of the restaurant where it nearly touched the woods. A path began at the edge of the clearing. It was barely wide enough for a man. Even though we walked single file, the branches whipped at my shoulders. The new green leaves rubbed like velvet along my cheek. The path was deep and rutted down to naked tree roots in places, but weeds were beginning to encroach on the path, as if it wasn't used as much as it once had been.
Dorrie moved down the uneven path with an easy, swinging stride. She was obviously familiar with the path, but it was more than that. The tree limbs that caught on my shirt didn't get caught in her hair. The roots that threatened to trip me didn't slow her down.
We'd found ointment at a health food store. So the bushes moving for her and not for us was real, not illusion. Maybe glamor wasn't the only thing to worry about. Which was why the Browning was loaded with nonsilver bullets. I'd had to go out and buy some special for the occasion. Larry was loaded up too, and for the first time I wished he had two guns. I still had the Firestar with silver ammo, but Larry was out of luck if a vamp jumped us. Of course, it was broad daylight. I was more worried about fairies than vamps right this minute. There was salt in our shirt pockets, not a lot, but you didn't need much, just enough to throw on the fey or the thing being magicked. Salt disrupted fey magic. Temporarily.
A breeze came up the path. It grew into a wind in one
fitful gust. The air smelled clean and fresh. You hoped the beginning of time smelled like that; like fresh bread, clean laundry, childhood memories of spring. It probably smelled like ozone and swamp water. Reality almost always smells worse than daydream.
Dorrie stopped and turned back to us. “The trees across the path are just illusion. They're not solid.”
“What trees?” Larry asked. I cursed silently. It would have been nice to keep the ointment a secret.
Dorrie took two steps back towards us. She stared at my face from inches away, then made a face like she'd seen something unclean. “You're wearing ointment.” She made it sound like a very bad thing.
“Magnus did try to bedazzle us twice. Nothing wrong with being cautious,” I said.
“Well, our illusions won't matter to you, then.” She took off at a faster pace, leaving us to stumble after her.
The path led into a clearing that was nearly a perfect circle. There was a small mound in the center with a white stone Celtic cross in the middle of a mass of vibrant blue flowers. Every inch of ground was covered with bluebells. English bluebells, thick and fleshy, bluer than the sky. The flowers never grew in this country without help. They never grew in Missouri without more water than was practical. But standing in the solid mass of blue surrounded by trees, it seemed worth it.
Dorrie stood frozen nearly knee-deep in the flowers. She was staring open-mouthed, a look of horror on her lovely face.
Magnus Bouvier knelt in the flowers on top of the mound, near the cross. His mouth was bright with fresh blood. Something moved around him, in front of him. Something more felt than seen. If it was illusion, the ointment should have taken care of it. I tried looking at it out of the corner of my eye. Sometimes peripheral vision works better on magic than straight-on sight.
From the corner of my eye I could see the air swimming in something that was almost a shape. It was bigger than a man.
Magnus turned and saw us. He stood up abruptly, and the swimming air blinked out like it had never been. He wiped a sleeve across his mouth.
“Dorrie . . .” His voice was soft and strangled.
Dorrie clawed her way up the hill. She screamed, “Blasphemy!” and smacked him. I could hear the slap all the way across the clearing.
“Ouch,” Larry said. “Why is she mad?”
She hit him again, hard enough to sit him down on his butt in the flowers. “How could you? How could you do such a vile thing?”
“What did he do?” Larry asked.
“He's been feeding off Rawhead and Bloody Bones just like his ancestor,” I said.
Dorrie turned to me. She looked haggard, horrified, as if she had caught her brother molesting children. “It was forbidden to feed.” She turned back to Magnus. “You knew that!”
“I wanted the power, Dorrie. What harm did it do?”
“What harm? What harm?” She grabbed a handful of his long hair and pulled him to his knees. She exposed the bite marks on his neck. “This is why that creature can call you. This is why one of the
Daoine Sidhe,
even a half-breed like you, is called by death.” She let go so abruptly he fell forward on his hands and knees.
Dorrie sat down in the flowers and cried.
I waded into the flowers. They parted like water, but they didn't move. They were just never exactly where you were stepping.
“Jesus, are they moving out of the way?” Larry asked.
“Not exactly,” Magnus said. He walked down the mound to stand at its base. He was wearing the white tuxedo from last night, or what was left of it. The smear of blood on his shirtsleeve was very bright against the whiteness.
We waded through the flowers that were moving and not moving, to join him in front of the mound.
He'd shoved his hair back behind his ears so his face was visible. And no, his ears weren't pointed. Where do these rumors get started?
He met my eyes without flinching. If he was ashamed of what he'd done, it didn't show. Dorrie was still weeping in the bluebells like her heart would break.
“So now you know,” he said.
“You can't bleed a fairie, in the flesh or not in the flesh, without ritual magic. I've read the spell, Magnus. It's a doozy,” I said.
He smiled at that, and the smile was still lovely, but the blood at the corner of his mouth ruined the effect. “I had to tie myself to the beastie. I had to give him some of my mortality in order to get his blood.”
“The spell isn't meant to help you gather blood,” I said. “It's to help the fairies kill each other.”
“If it got some of your mortality, did you get some of its immortality?” Larry asked. It was a good question.
“Yes,” Magnus said, “but that wasn't why I did it.”
“You did it for power, you son of a bitch,” Dorrie said. She came down the mound, sliding in the strange flowers. “You just had to do real glamor, real magic. My God, Magnus, you must have been drinking its blood for years, ever since you were a teenager. That's when your powers suddenly got so strong. We all thought it was puberty.”
“Afraid not, sister dear.”
She spit at him. “Our family was cursed, tied to this land forever in repentance for doing what you have done. Bloody Bones broke free last time someone tried to drink from his veins.”
“It's been safely imprisoned for ten years, Dorrie.”
“How do you know? How do you know that nebulous thing you called up hasn't been out scaring children?”
“As long as it doesn't hurt any of them, what's the harm?”
“Wait a minute,” said Larry. “Why would it scare children?”
“I told you, it's a nursery boggle. It was supposed to eat bad children,” I said. I had an idea, an awful idea. I'd seen a vampire use a sword, but was I absolutely sure of what I'd seen? No. “When the thing got out and started slaughtering the Indian tribe, did it use a weapon, or its hands?”
Dorrie looked at me. “I don't know. Does it matter?”
Larry said, “Oh, my God.”
“It might matter a great deal,” I said.
“You can't mean those killings,” Magnus said. “Bloody Bones cannot manifest itself physically. I've seen to that.”
“Are you sure, brother dear? Are you absolutely sure?” Dorrie's voice cut and sliced; she wielded scorn like a weapon.
“Yes, I'm sure.”
“We'll have to have a witch look at this. I don't know enough about it,” I said.
Dorrie nodded. “I understand. The sooner the better.”
“Rawhead and Bloody Bones did not do those killings,” Magnus said.
“For your sake, Magnus, I hope not,” I said.
“What do you mean?”
“Because five people have died. Five people who didn't do a damn thing to deserve it.”
“It's imprisoned by a combination of Indian, Christian, and fairie power,” he said. “It's not breaking free of that.”
I walked around the mound slowly. The fleshy flowers still moved out of the way. I'd tried watching my feet, but it was dizzying, because the flowers moved yet didn't, like trying to watch one of them bloom. You knew it did, but you could never watch the actual event.
I ignored the flowers and concentrated on the mound. I wasn't trying to sense the dead, so daylight was fine. There was magic here, lots of it. I'd never felt fairie magic before. There was something here that had a familiar taste to it, and it wasn't the Christianity. “Some kind of death magic went into this,” I said. I walked around the mound until I could see Magnus's face. “A little human sacrifice, perhaps?”
“Not exactly,” Magnus said.
“We would never condone human sacrifice,” Dorrie said.
Maybe she wouldn't, but I wasn't so sure about Magnus. I didn't say it out loud. Dorrie was upset enough already.
“If it's not sacrifice, then what is it?”
“Three hills are buried with our dead. Each death is like a stake to hold old Bloody Bones down,” Magnus said.
“How did you lose track of which hills belonged to you?” I asked.
“It's been over three hundred years,” Magnus said. “There were no deeds back then. I wasn't a hundred percent sure the hill was the right hill myself. But when they raked up the dead, I felt it.” He huddled in on himself as if the air had suddenly grown colder. “You can't raise the dead from that hillside. If you do it, then Bloody Bones will be loosed. The magic to stop it is complicated. Truthfully, I'm not sure I'm up to it myself. And I don't know any Indian shamans anymore.”
“You have made a mockery of everything we stand for,” Dorrie said.
“What did Serephina offer you?” I asked.
He looked at me, surprised. “What are you talking about?”
“She offers everyone their heart's desire. What was yours, Magnus?”
“Freedom and power. She said she'd find another guardian for Rawhead and Bloody Bones. She said she'd find a way for me to keep the power I'd borrowed from it without having to tend it.”