CHAPTER 20

Kona stuck around for a while and helped me clean up the worst of the mess from Red’s pyrotechnics display. I found some old cardboard boxes in the garage and cut out pieces to fit in the window frames in place of broken panes. One of my neighbors called the fire department, but when the engines rolled up, Kona convinced the fire fighters that we had the situation under control. I wondered though if I’d set some kind of city record for initiating 911 calls in a two-day period-Shari Bettancourt’s house, the bar, Antoine’s house, Q’s place, and now this. Not to mention Robby Sommer. Death and mayhem seemed to follow me around.

When we’d done all we could to clean things up, Kona took a seat in the kitchen. I gave her a beer, filled a glass of water for myself, and sat across the table from her. I’d picked up a small scrap of wood from the door, and I was toying with it.

“What’s that?” Kona asked.

“Part of my door. Red’s magic is still on it.”

“Red?”

“That’s what I’ve been calling him. His magic’s red, so. .” I shrugged.

She laughed. “Dude’s blowing up your house, killing people right and left, and you’ve named him like he was some damn pet.” She shook her head. “You’re a piece of work.”

I grinned. “Yeah, I guess I am.”

“He knows where you live now,” she said, growing serious again. “That can’t be good. Maybe you should stay with Margarite and me tonight.”

“I can’t tonight. You know that.”

“Why not?”

“Tomorrow’s the full moon, Kona.”

She stared at me for a second, looking lost. Then it hit her. “Oh,” she said, sounding like someone had punched her in the gut. “I knew that. That’s why I’m here, right?” She shook her head. “Crap.” It took her only a few moments to recover. “Well, that’s all the more reason you shouldn’t be alone. I can stay here with you.”

“Thanks, partner, but I’ll be all right. And it wouldn’t be safe for you, remember.”

“Right,” she said. “Twice the magic; half the control.”

We’d been through this conversation before. I had always appreciated her offers to stay with me during the phasings, but I’d never let her do it. I didn’t want anyone around me when I was sinking into the delusions and psychosis, in part because I was afraid I’d hurt someone, and in part because I dreaded being seen like that.

“But,” she said, “if this sorcerer-”

“It’s full moon for him, too,” I reminded her. “He might be strong, but he can’t change what it means to be a weremyste.” I shook my head. “Red won’t bother me tonight.”

“Would you stop calling him that, please. It makes him sound like an Irish setter.”

“We can call him whatever you want. The fact is, he’ll be dealing with his own phasing tonight.”

“What about tomorrow morning? And the day after that, and the night after that?” She glanced out at my living room. There was dry wall dust all over the floor and furniture and there were cracks in the walls and ceiling. Kona couldn’t see the residue of Red’s magic and mine as I could, but that hardly mattered. “I’ve never tried to tell you how to use your mojo, Justis. I don’t know anything about it. But it seems to me you need some help here. You’re in over your head.”

As if I needed her telling me that. “Yeah, I know. I’ve been working with Namid, improving my spell work.”

“How’s that going?” she asked, sounding skeptical.

“I’m alive,” I said. “A week ago, I wouldn’t have survived what he did to my house.”

I didn’t tell her that I was still a novice compared to this guy, or that I had no confidence that I could survive his next attack. But I’m not sure she needed to be told.

“All right,” she said. “I’m going to assume that you know what you’re doing.”

I chuckled. “When has that ever been a good idea?” My gaze strayed toward the window. The sky was almost dark. The moon might well have been rising at that moment. “You should go,” I said, knowing it sounded abrupt, rude even. Just then I didn’t care. “Another five minutes and I won’t be much fun to be around.”

“There’s an assumption there,” she said, smiling at me. “But we’ll discuss it another time. I should get home to Margarite anyway. I told her I’d met Billie and she’s eager for details.” She finished her beer and put the bottle in the sink. “Call me in the morning,” she said, resting a hand on my shoulder. “I want to know you’re all right.”

I nodded. “Okay.” I didn’t really want her to leave, but I didn’t want her to stay, either.

She put out her hand. We’d done this a hundred times before, but tonight it felt more final, more frightening. I pulled my Glock from my shoulder holster, removed the magazine, and handed the weapon to her. I was about to be delusional, and who knew what else. Having a weapon in the house would have been dangerous, to say the least. As an afterthought, I pulled off the holster and hung it on my chair.

“Thanks,” I said.

“You’re welcome.”

I sat at the table, staring at the wood grain, and I listened as she let herself out of what was left of my house.

Still I sat, and I began to hear noises. Shouts from out on the street, or maybe from my living room. I shrank back from what I saw at the door, at the broken windows. Red and aqua light played around the edges of the walls and framing. Wardings. I’d used wardings there. Against Red.

I needed to do that again. I’d told Kona-Kona, who had been here only a minute or two before; or had it been longer?

I’d told her that I was safe. That tonight, of all nights, Red couldn’t hurt me. Why the hell would I have thought that? What an idiot I’d been!

Standing, I realized that I held something in my hand: a scrap of wood slick with magic, red like blood. I flung it away before it could hurt me and rubbed my fingers on my shirt, expecting them to start burning any second. The red was everywhere. I needed to protect myself from it. I didn’t know why, but I did. Wardings. That’s what I’d been thinking. Wardings. That was why I’d stood.

But that red magic was already inside. What was the use of warding if it was already here?

I watched the red as I sidled toward the back of the house, my back to the wall. When I couldn’t see the red anymore I threw myself down the hallway and into another room. My room. There was no red in here. I closed the door. Locked it.

My room, a shield, and that red magic.

No, those weren’t the right elements. Three was the right number. But the elements had to be right, too. My room, the shield, and. . what? Red himself. I spoke the spell, felt magic surge through me.

The walls shimmered with magic the color of the sea. I sunk to the floor and leaned back against the side of my bed, my eyes closed.

I heard a coyote howl in the distance. Opening my eyes again, I saw sprigs of cinquefoil and clover sprouting from the rug. The ground. I squinted up at the sun overhead, felt its heat on my face and neck and shoulders. A hot breeze touched my skin and I wiped sweat from my brow.

Honeybees grappled with the tiny blooms beside me and a butterfly floated past. Following it with my eyes, I saw it swoop over a patch of grass and then loop back toward a low, shaded path. I inhaled sharply, held my breath, the butterfly forgotten.

The path. It was red, and it wound away from me, cutting through the shimmering aqua light like a knife. Red. He was down that path. I could feel him, close, powerful. Evil, someone had called him. Who had said that?

I followed. I stayed where I was, too tired to move, too comfortable in the clover and grass. But I followed, my mind flying down that path. It led a long way from the grass, over rock and sand and more rock. The grass and flowers were gone, but still the red went on, and I followed, determined now, tired no longer, though still I was sitting, resting.

Like embers the red glowed, hot and angry and my feet ached, my face and neck and chest burned. Heat rose from the path like steam from a boiling pot, damp, rank with the smell of blood. But I followed. After a time a second color bled into the crimson. Green, pale as a forest mist. The colors twined, and I followed, until the green broke free and curled away. I knew that green. I’d seen it before. But I stayed with the red, knowing that was the important color. Time was running short, and I was growing desperate, conscious of the sun dropping like a stone toward the horizon. I tried to run, gasping for breath, my feet leaden.

The path began to climb, steeper and steeper, until I was scrabbling on all fours. An animal, chasing the scent of blood. Other colors joined the red and faded, sweeping in from left and right like swallows angling along a cliff face. Blues and yellows, oranges and golds, something akin to pure light itself, and this one I did know, but it was gone so fast I had no time to guess from where. More greens, more purples. Always they swung away again, these other colors. But the red remained, a gash running through all the rest-raw, livid, fevered. That was the constant, and that was the path I followed.

A bird squawked, shrill and insistent from beside the path. I ignored it, but it called again. Twice, three times. Until I had to stop and search for it.

The phone. The phone was ringing. I picked it up. No sound. At least not at first.

Had I said hello?

“Fearsson?”

I knew the voice, though it seemed to be coming from far away. I could see the red path still, but the sun was setting. I had no time.

“Fearsson? You there?”

“Billie,” I said, because that was the name.

“We must have a bad connection or something. Can you hear me okay?”

“Yes.”

“I just wanted to tell you again what a great a day I had. I’m so glad I got to meet your father.”

I didn’t take my eyes off the path. I was afraid even to blink, in case it vanished in the failing light.

“Fearsson?”

“I have to go.”

“Oh. I’m sorry. Did Kona come by? Are the two of you still working?”

“No. Kona’s. . she left. The light’s almost gone, and I’m losing the path. I can’t. . I have to go.”

“I don’t. . You sound funny, Fearsson. Are you all right?”

I had to make her understand; it was important that I explain to her better. But the ribbon of crimson light had faded almost to nothing. And I couldn’t find the words.

“Fearsson? You still there?” She sounded frightened now. I could hear the fear in her voice. I was scared, too. The path.

“I can’t now,” I said, and hung up.

I started up the path again, loose rocks falling away behind me, my hands scraping on the stone and dirt. But I could still see the red and I thought I could see the top.

The phone rang again. The bird. Keening, its voice echoing off the cliffs. But I ignored it. After a time, it stopped.

On and on I climbed. There were no other colors now; only the red. The path was barren, rocky, unforgiving. The drop on either side would have been enough to kill me. In the distance I could see some trees, clustered like cattle in a rainstorm. Mountains rose beyond them, gray and austere. Closer, the terrain rolled like swells on some grassy sea, silvered where the wind blew, bending the grasses so that they gleamed in the pale light.

I slowed as I neared the top, fearful, eager. Far to the west, the sun seemed to teeter on the edge of the world, huge, ovate, its color a match for the path I’d followed to the top of this rise. But I saw nothing. I’d reached the top, and there was nothing. Rock, the lurid glow of that sun, and laughter riding the wind. That was all. The path was gone; it wasn’t even behind me anymore.

“What the hell?” I muttered.

I’d been so sure that I was following him. Red. I’d known that he’d be here at the end. So where was he?

“Right here.”

I opened my eyes, not realizing they’d been closed. He stood over me. Tall, broad, bald. Eyes as pale as bone. His nose was hooked and crooked. Broken once, maybe. There was something regal about it. His lips were thin and pale, and his chin was dimpled. For so long I’d wanted to see his face, to memorize his features. I stared at him. Stared and stared. I couldn’t help myself.

Tu aies me cherche, oui?” he said, his smile cold and cruel. “You have been looking for me?”

For a moment I couldn’t bring myself to say anything. At last I nodded. “Yes. But you couldn’t come tonight. It’s. . the moon. You couldn’t come. And I put wardings on my. .”

I stopped, because he was laughing. A sound that chilled me, that seemed to make the room colder. The sun was a light again. No heat. I was shivering.

And in that moment I knew. The rest had been delusion, hallucination; whatever you wanted to call it. It hadn’t been real. But he was. Red was standing over me in my bedroom. And I was a dead man.

I tried to crawl away from him, my eyes never leaving his face. But he stood between me and my door. I groped for a spell-any spell-that would send him away or shield me from whatever he was about to do. But I could feel the moon pressing down on my mind, crushing memory, knowledge, craft-everything I needed.

“You are resourceful,” he said. I remembered the accent from before. Did it even matter anymore that he was French? “I thought you would die from that spell I placed on your house.” He glanced from side to side, clearly surprised that the walls around us still stood. “Tu as fait bien. You have done well.”

I closed my eyes.

My weapon, my shoulder holster, my hand.

Nothing happened.

He laughed again, and I shuddered.

“I do not think it will help you to have that. . that gun.” It sounded strange when he said it. “But I do not think I want you to have it anyway.” He canted his head to the side. “I do not believe it is where you thought it was. I sense nothing there.”

Of course not. I’d given it to Kona. Like I always did.

“The phasing,” I said. “It. . you’re not affected?”

“No.”

I should have known this. I remembered someone saying that the moons didn’t touch him. Who’d told me that? And then it hit me.

“That’s what you were doing!” I whispered, amazed at the clarity of my thought. “That’s why you killed those kids! You were. . doing something to make yourself immune to the phasings.”

Laughter filled the room, as if blown in on a cold wind.

“You are limited. Almost as much as those with nothing. It is a waste that you should have any power at all.” He cocked his head to the side once more. “And yet, you have tracked me and managed to come closer than others. Tu as un peu de talent, eh?

Apparently he thought I had talent. A little, anyway.

“Why did you kill them then? If it wasn’t for the phasings, why did you do it? You always kill them on the quarter moon, and you use magic. There’s got to be something that you get from them, something that makes you more powerful than you were when you began.”

He stared down at me, nodding, his lips pursed now. For an odd moment, his expression reminded me of Kona. “Yes, you are not without some cleverness. A shame then that you have to die.”

“Cahors.”

Red raised his eyes. I turned, knowing that voice.

Namid stood near my window, his waters as roiled as I’d ever seen them. He was the color of lead, his surface rough as from an unseen wind, like he was covered with scales. His eyes shone as white and hard as the full moon.

“Namid’skemu,” Red said, his voice as soft as a kiss, the name rolling off his tongue as liquid and graceful as Namid himself. I wished that I could speak the runemyste’s name like that one time. “You should not be here, mon ami.”

Namid rumbled, the sound like breakers rolling over a rocky shoreline. “I should not?” he said. “What of you?”

“I am beyond your control now. I am free to do as I please.”

“Not here,” Namid said. “Not tonight.”

Red’s smile turned brittle. “You have already interfered once. They will not let you do so again.” He shook his head, and even this he did with grace. “No, you cannot stop me. And to prove it, I will kill your little friend while you watch.”

I wanted Namid to tell him he was wrong, to laugh at his surety, as Cahors had laughed at me. But instead the runemyste looked down at me, sadness in his glowing eyes.

Cahors stared at me as well, and I felt like a rabbit under the gaze of an eagle. Only more helpless.

I knew better than to think that I could attack him directly. If the moon couldn’t touch him, how could I? But I also knew that with the phasing underway, I was stronger than usual. And now that Red had pulled me out of my hallucination, my thoughts were clear enough to conjure. I hoped.

Defend yourself! I heard once more in my head. And the remembered sound of Namid’s warning triggered another memory.

Three elements: my magic, a book on the shelf by my bed, Red’s head.

The book flew across the room, smacking the myste hard in the back of his head. He spun, as if expecting to see someone behind him.

Before I could cast again, I heard Namid’s voice in my mind-for real this time, not a memory.

Ohanko! I can ward your house.

It was all I needed to hear.

Again three elements: Cahors, my bedroom, my lawn. It was the most powerful spell I had ever attempted, but the phasing made it possible, as long as I didn’t foul it up.

I didn’t. One moment Red loomed over me, eyes blazing in anger, and the next he was gone.

Namid raised his hands, and a clear shimmering shield appeared on the walls of my bedroom.

I clamored to my feet and hurried to the window. Cahors stood outside the house, rage contorting his features.

“You cannot interfere!” he howled. “You challenge me at your own peril, Namid’skemu!”

“My peril?” the runemyste said, keeping his voice low, the way he would have if Cahors had still been in the room. “You are strong, and more than you used to be. But you are no threat to me.”

Somehow Red heard him. “You are forbidden to interfere! I know you are!”

“I have done nothing to you,” Namid said. “I have merely warded this house.”

“That is still interference!”

“Not anymore. The rules have changed. Thanks to you, we had no choice. Surely you did not think that we would stand aside and let you do this.”

Red’s eyes appeared to burn white hot. “After all you did to me,” he said, his voice so low I could barely hear him.

“We did nothing that you did not force us to do.”

The man raged in silence, and my face seemed to be scalded by the heat of his glare. I knew that if not for Namid’s wardings, his mere glance would have turned me to ash and razed my home to the ground.

I had struggled to keep up with their exchange, but even without the moon’s pull, I would have had trouble. How did Namid and Red-Cahors-know each other? Had Red trained with the runemyste, too? Had he once been like me?

“You cannot guard this one forever,” Cahors said at last, still staring at me from the lawn. “Your vigilance will slacken, and when it does, I will be ready.”

Namid said nothing. Cahors’ lips curled upward in a smile that made my stomach turn.

“You know I am right,” Red told him. “And you know that he cannot stand against me.”

“That has yet to be scryed,” Namid said. “As I said, you have changed the rules. Where you are concerned nothing is certain anymore.”

“This is, Namid’skemu. This is.” He spared me once last glance. “Farewell for now, little weremyste. We will meet again soon, you and I. And we shall see how you do sans ton ami, oui?” He laughed again. Then he turned and walked out into the street. An instant later, he vanished.

For several moments, I continued to stare out at where he’d been standing, fearing that he’d reappear, wondering if I’d imagined it after all. Already the moon was dulling my mind again. I felt as though I’d downed a bottle of wine.

“Ohanko.”

I turned to face Namid. His waters had softened, though the glow of his eyes remained as intense as it had been when he spoke to Red.

“You’re really here?” I asked, sinking to the floor. “This was real? It wasn’t just the phasing?”

“I am here. Cahors was as well, but he has gone. You did well. Very well. Are you hurt?”

“No, I’m. .” I took a breath. “I’m fine. Who is he, Namid?”

The runemyste shook his head. “Tomorrow. In the morning, when you can understand what I tell you. Now you should sleep.”

As soon as he said this, I realized that I was exhausted. I nodded. “Yes, all right.” I started to close my eyes, then jerked myself awake. “No!” I said. “I never sleep during the phasings. You know that. The dreams. .” I shuddered.

“You will be all right tonight. I will remain here until you wake.”

“You will?” Even on this night, my mind drifting again, I knew how unusual an offer this was.

Namid lowered himself to the floor. To the ground. Sun reflected off his waters. He appeared calmer now, more at peace. “I can guard your sleep, keep the moon from intruding too much, as I am doing now. You will sleep.”

“Why would you do this?”

Again he shook his head. “Tomorrow. Sleep now.”

The sun shone overhead, and bees buzzed in the clover and cinquefoil. I lay down where I was, my head cushioned in fresh grass, and I slept.

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