Draw One In The Dark—ARC
Draw One In The Dark—ARC
Sarah A. Hoyt
Advance Reader Copy
Unproofed
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events
portrayed in this book are
fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely
coincidental.
Copyright © 2006 by Sarah A. Hoyt
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN 10: 1-4165-2092-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-4165-2092-4
Cover art by Veronica Casas
First printing, November 2006
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
t/k
Printed in the United States of America
* * *
The July night
sprawled, warm and deep blue over Goldport, Colorado. In the distance the
mountains were little more than suspicions of deeper darkness, a jagged outline
where no stars appeared.
Most of
Goldport was equally dark, from its slumbering suburbs to the blind silence of
its downtown shops. Only the streetlights shone, at intervals, piercing the
velvet blackness like so many stars.
At the edge of
the western suburbs that climbed -- square block after square block -- into the
lower slopes of the Rockies, the neon sign outside a Chinese Restaurant
flickered. Three Luck Dragon flared, faded, then flared again and
finally turned off completely.
A hand with
nails that were, perhaps, just a little too long turned over a sign that hung
on the window, so that the word closed faced the parking lot.
After a while,
a sound broke the silence. A flapping, noise, as though of sheets unfurling in
the silent night. Or perhaps of large wings beating. Descending.
Had anyone
been awake, he'd have seen a large, dark creature—serpentine and thin—with vast
unfolding wings descend from the night sky till his huge taloned feet met the
asphalt. It closed its wings about itself and waited.
It did not
wait long. From alleys and darkened streets, people emerged: teenagers, in tight
jeans and t-shirts, looking nervous, sidling out of the shadows, glancing over
their shoulders as if afraid of being followed. From yet other alleys . . . creatures
emerged: long, sinuous, in moist glistening colors between green and blue. They
slid, monstrous heads low to the ground, curved fangs like daggers unsheathed
in the moonlight. And sometimes dragons seemed to shift to naked teenagers and
back again. In and out of the shadows, knit with walls and garbage bins,
slithering along the hot cement of the pavements came young men who were
dragons and dragons who were nervous young men.
They gathered
in front of the Great Sky Dragon. And waited.
At length the
dragon spoke, in a voice like pearls rolling upon old gold "Where is
it?" he asked. "Did you get it back?"
The amorphous
crowd of humans and dragons moved. There was the impression of someone pushed
forward. A rustle of cloth and wings. A murmur of speech.
The young man
pushed forward was slender, though there was a suggestion of muscles beneath his
leg-molding jeans and of a substantial chest straining the fabric of the white
t-shirt. His bare arm displayed a tattoo of a large, green, glistening dragon
and his eyes had an oriental fold, though it was clear from his light brown
hair, his pale skin that he was not wholly oriental.
He was,
however, completely scared. He stood trembling in front of the monster, who
brought a vast golden eye to fix on him. "Yesssssss?" The dragon
said. "You have something to report? You've found the Pearl of
Heaven?"
The young man
shook his head, his straight, lank hair swinging from side to side.
"No?"
the dragon asked. Light glimmered on his fangs as he spoke, and his golden eye
came very close to the boy, as if to examine him better.
"It
wasn't there," the youth said, rapidly, his English not so much accented,
as retaining the lilt of someone who'd grown up in a community full of Chinese
speakers. "We looked all over his apartment. It wasn't there."
The golden eye
blinked, vein-laced green skin obstructing it for a just a moment. Then the
huge head pulled back a little and tilted. "We do not," it said,
fangs glimmering. "Tolerate failure."
It darted
forward, so quickly the movement seemed to leave a green trail in the air like
an after-image. The fangs glistened. A delicate tongue came forth.
The boy's
scream echoed a second too late, like bad special effects. It still hung in air
as the youth, feet and hands flailing, was lifted high into the night by the
great dragon head.
A crunching
sound. A brief glimmer. Two halves of the boy tumbling, in a shower of blood,
towards the parking lot.
A scurry of
cloth and wings followed, as men and dragons scrambled away.
The great
golden eyes turned to them. The green muzzle was stained red. "We do not
tolerate failure," it said. "Find the Pearl of Heaven. Kill the
thief."
It opened its
wings and, still looking intently at the crowd, flapped their great green
length, till it rose into the dark, dark sky.
In the parking
lot below no one moved till the last vestiges of the sinuous green and gold
body had disappeared from view.
* * *
Kyrie was
worried about Tom. Which was strange, because Tom was not one of her friends.
Nor would she have thought she could care less if he stopped showing up
at work altogether.
But now he was
late and she was worried. . .
She tapped her
foot impatiently, as she stared out at the window of the Athens, the Greek
diner on Fairfax Avenue where she'd worked for the last year. Her wavy hair,
dyed in multicolored layers, gave the effect of a tapestry. It went well with
her honey-dark skin, her exotic features and the bright red feather earring
dangling from her ear, but it looked oddly out of place with the much-washed
full-length red apron with Athens blazoned in green across the chest.
Outside
everything appeared normal—the winding serpentine road between tall brick
buildings, the darkened facade of the used cd store across the street, the
occasional lone passing car.
She looked
away, disgusted, from the windows splashed with bright, hand-scrawled
advertisements for specials—souvlaki and fries - $3.99, clam chowder
- 99 ў, Fresh Rice Pudding—and at the large plastic clock high on
the wall.
Midnight. And
Tom should have come in at nine. Tom had never been late before. Oh, she'd had
her doubts when Frank hired the young street tough with the unkempt dark curls,
the leather jacket and boots and the track marks up both of his arms, clear as
day. But he had always come in on time, and he was polite to the customers, and
he never seemed to be out of it. Not during work time.
"Kyrie,"
Frank said, from behind her. Kyrie turned to see him, behind the counter—a
short, dark middle aged man, who looked Greek but seemed to be a mix of Italian
and French and Greek and whatever else had fallen in the melting pot. He was
testy today. The woman he'd been dating—or at least sweet on, as she often
walked with him to work, or after work—hadn't come in.
He gave Kyrie
a dark look from beneath his bushy eyebrows. "Table seven," he said.
She looked at
table seven, the broad table by the front window. And that was a problem,
because the moon was full on the table, bathing it. It didn't seem to bother
the gaggle of students seating at it, talking and laughing and eating a
never-ending jumble of slices of pie, dolmades, rice pudding dishes and olives,
all of it washed down with coffee.
Of course,
there was no reason it should bother them, Kyrie reminded herself. Probably
not. Moonlight only bothered her. Only her. . .
No. She
wouldn't let moonlight do anything. She wouldn't give in to it. She had it
under control. It had been months. She was not going to lose control now.
The students
needed warm ups for their coffee. And heaven knew they might very well have
decided they needed more olives. Or pie.
She lifted the
walk-through portion of the counter and ducked behind for the carafe, then back
again, walking briskly, towards the table.
Her hand
stretched, with the pot's plastic handle firmly grasped in manicured fingers,
adorned with violet-blue fingernail polish. One cup refilled, two, and a young
man probably two or three years younger than Kyrie stretched his cup for a
warm-up. The cup glistened, glazed porcelain under the full moonlight of August.
Kyrie's hand
entered the pool of moonlight, brighter than the fluorescent lights in the
distant ceiling. She felt it like a sting upon the skin, like bathwater, just a
little too hot for touch. For a disturbing second, she felt as if her
fingernails lengthened.
She bit the
inside of her cheek, and told herself no, but it didn't help, because part of
her mind, some part way at the back and mostly submerged, gave her memories of
a hot and wet jungle, of walking amid the lush foliage. Memories of soft mulch
beneath her paws. Memories of creatures scurrying in the dark undergrowth.
Creatures who were scared of her.
Moonlight felt
like wine on her lips, like a touch of fever. She felt as if an unheard rhythm
pounded through her veins and presently—
"Could we
have another piece of pie, too?" a redheaded girl with a southern drawl
asked, snapping Kyrie out of her trance.
Fingernails—Kyrie
checked—were the right length. Was it her imagination that the polish seemed a
little cracked and crazed? Probably.
She could
still feel the need for a jungle, for greenery—she who'd grown up in foster
homes in several cement-and-metal jungles. The biggest woods she'd ever seen
were city parks. Or the miles of greenery from the windows of the greyhound
that had brought her to Colorado.
These
memories, these thoughts, were just illusions, nothing more. She remembered
those times she had surrendered to the madness.
"One
piece of pie," she said, taking the small notebook from her apron pocket
and concentrating gratefully on its solidity. Paper that rustled, a pencil that
was growing far too blunt and required lots of pressure on the page.
"And some
olives," one of the young men said.
"Oh, and
more rice pudding," one of the others said, setting off a lengthy order,
paper being scratched by pencil and nails that, Kyrie told herself, were not
growing any longer. Not at all.
Still she felt
tension leave her as she turned her back on the table and walked out of the
moonlit area. Passing into the shadow felt as if some inner pressure receded,
as though something she'd been fighting with all her will and mind had now been
withdrawn.
While she was
drawing a breath of relief, she heard the sound—like wings unfolding, or like a
very large blanket flapping. It came, she thought, from the back of the diner,
from the parking lot that abutted warehouses and the blind wall at the back of
a bed and breakfast.
Kyrie wanted
to go look, but people were waiting for their food, so she set about getting
the pie and the olives and the rice pudding -- all of it pre-prepared -- from
the refrigerator behind the counter. Next to it, Frank was peeling and cutting
potatoes for the Athens' famous fresh made fries, never frozen, which
were also advertised on the facade, somewhere.
While she
worked, some of the regulars came in. A tall blond man who carried a journal in
which he wrote obsessively every night between midnight and four in the
morning. And a heavy-set, dark haired woman who came in for a pastry on her way
to her job at one of the warehouses.
Kyrie looked
again at the clock. Half an hour, and still no Tom. She took the newcomers'
orders.
On one of her
trips behind the counter, for the carafe of coffee, she told Frank, "Tom
is late."
But Frank only
shrugged and grunted, which was pretty odd behavior for the guy who had brought
Tom in out of nowhere, hired him with no work history while Tom was,
admittedly, living in the homeless shelter down the street.
As Kyrie
returned the carafe to its rest, after the round of warmups, she heard the
scream. It was a lone scream, at first, startled and cut short. It too came
from the parking lot at the back.
She told
herself it was nothing to do with her. There were all sorts of people out there
at night. Goldport didn't exactly have a large population of homeless, but it
had some, and some of them were crazy enough to scream for no reason.
Swallowing
hard, she told herself it meant nothing, absolutely nothing. It was just a
sound, one of the random sounds of night in the city. It wasn't anything to
worry about. It—
The scream
echoed again, intense, frightened, a wail of distress in the night. Looking
around her, Kyrie could tell no one else had heard it. Or at least, if Frank's
shoulders were a little tenser than normal, as he dropped fries into a huge vat
of oil, it was the tenseness of expectation, as if he were listening for Tom.
It wasn't the
look of someone who'd heard a death scream. In fact, the only person who might
have heard it was the blond guy who had stopped writing on his journal and was
staring up, mid-air. But Kyrie was not about to ask a man who wrote half the
night what exactly he had heard or hadn't. Besides the guy -- nicknamed the
poet by the diner staff -- always gave the impression of being on edge and
ready to lose all self control, from the tips of his long, nervous fingers, to
the ends of his tennis shoes.
And yet. . .
And yet she
couldn't pretend nothing had happened. She knew she had heard the scream. With
that type of scream, someone or something was in trouble bad. Back there. In
the parking lot. At this time of night most of the clientele of the Athens came
in on foot, from the nearby apartment complexes or from the college dorms just
a couple of blocks away. It could be hours before anyone went out to the
parking lot.
Kyrie didn't
want to go out there, either. But she could not ignore it. She had the crazy
feeling that whatever was happening out there involved Tom, and, what the heck,
she might not like the man, but neither did she want him dead.
She gave a
last round of warmups, looked towards the counter where Frank was still
seemingly absorbed in his frying, and edged out towards the hallway that led to
the back.
It curved past
the bathrooms, so if Frank saw her, he would think she was going to the
bathroom. She was not sure why she didn't want him to know she was going to the
parking lot. Except that—as she got to the glass door at the back—when she saw
the parking lot bathed in the moonlight, she thought that something might
happen out there, something. . . Something she didn't want her employer to know
about her.
Not that it
could happen. There was nothing that could happen, she thought, as she turned
the key. Nothing had happened in months. She wasn't sure what she thought had
happened back then hadn't all been a dream.
The key hadn't
been turned in some time and it stuck, but finally the resistence gave way, and
she opened the door, and plunged into the burning moonlight.
Feeling of
jungle, need for undergrowth and vegetation, her heart beating madly in her
eardrums, and she was holding it together, barely holding it together, hoping.
. .
She jumped out
onto the parking lot and called out, "Tom—"
Something not
quite a roar answered her. She stopped.
And then the
smell hit her. Fresh blood. Spilled blood. She trembled and tried to stop.
Tried to think.
But her nose
scented blood and her mouth filled with saliva, and her hands curved and her
nails grew. Somehow, with clumsy claws, she unbuttoned her uniform. She never
knew how. As the last piece of clothing fell to the ground, she felt a spasm
contort her whole body.
And a large,
black jungle cat ran swiftly across the parking lot. Towards the smell of
blood.
* * *
Soft pads on
asphalt. Asphalt. The word appeared alien to Kyrie's mind, locked in the great
loping body, feeling the movement, the agility, and not quite believing it.
Strange
feeling on pads. Hard, scratchy.
Muscles
coiling and uncoiling like darkness flowing in moonlit patches. Bright moonlight
like a river of fire and joy. Running. Smelling with sense that no human ever
possessed.
And the feline
stopped, alert, head thrown back, sniffing. A soft growl made its way up a
throat that Kyrie could only just believe was her own.
Smell—a rich,
spicy, flowing smell, like cinnamon on a cold winter night in Kyrie's human
memory, like rich molten chocolate, like freshly picked apples to that
dwindling part of herself who thought with human memories.
She took a
deep breath and felt her mouth fill and overflow with drool, while her paws
moved, step on step, towards the smell, soft pads on asphalt, growl rising from
throat.
What was it?
What could it be? Her human mind could not identify the smell which came at her
with depth and meaning that humans did not seem capable of perceiving.
She felt drool
drop through her half-open mouth, onto the concrete, as she looked around for
the possible source of the wondrous scent.
There were. .
. cars—she had to force herself to remember the word, to realize these were man
made and not some natural plant or animal in a jungle she'd never seen but
which was all this body knew and wanted to remember.
Cars. She
shook her great head. Her own small, battered Ford, and two big vans that
belonged to Frank and which he used for the daily shopping.
Around the
edge of the vehicles she followed the scent. It was coming from right there,
behind the vans, from dark liquid flowing along the asphalt, between the wheels
of the van. She padded around the vans. Liquid looked black and glistened under
moonlight, and she was about to take an experimental lap when the shadow
startled her.
At first it
was just that. A shadow, formless, moving on the concrete. Something with
wings. Something.
Her hackles
rising, she jumped back, cowering, head lifted, growling. And saw it.
A. . . lizard.
No. No lizard had ever been this size. A . . . creature, green and scaly and
immense, with wings that stretched between the Earth and the sky.
The feline
Kyrie dropped to her belly, paws stretched our in front of her, a low growl
rising, while her hair stood on end, trying to make the already large jungle
cat look bigger.
The human
Kyrie, torpid and half-dormant, a passenger in her own brain that had been
taken over by this dream of moonlight and forest, looked at the beast and
thought Dragon.
Not the
slender, convoluted form of the Chinese dragons with their huge, bewhiskered
faces. No. Nordic. A sturdy nordic dragon, stout of body, with the sort of
wings that truly seemed like they could devour the icy blue sky of the Norsemen
and not notice.
Huge, feral,
it stood before Kyrie, fangs bared, both wings extended, tip to tip each
probably a good twelve feet. Its muzzle was stained a dark red, and—as Kyrie
knit her belly to the concrete—it hissed, a threatening hiss.
It will
flame me next, Kyrie thought. But she couldn't get the big cat to move.
Bewildered by something that the now dominant part of her couldn't comprehend,
she lay on her belly and growled.
And the Kyrie
part of her mind, the human part, looked bewildered at the dragon wings which
were a fantastic construction of bones and translucent glittering skin that
faded from green to gold. And she thought that dragons weren't supposed to look
that beautiful. Particularly not a dragon whose muzzle was stained with blood.
And on that,
on the one word, she identified the enticing smell. Blood. Fresh blood. She
remembered smelling it before the shape-shift. But it smelled nothing like
blood through the big cat's senses.
With the
feline's sharp eyes, she could see, beneath the paws of the dragon, a dark
bundle that looked like a human body.
Human blood.
And she'd almost lapped it.
Shock and
revulsion did what her fear couldn't. They broke the human Kyrie out of the
prison at the back of her own mind. Free, she pushed the animal back.
Push and push
and push, she told herself she must be Kyrie. She must be human. Kyrie was
smart enough to run away before the dragon let out with fire.
And never mind
that the dragon might run her down, kill her. At least she would be able to
think with a human mind.
All of a
sudden, the animal gave, and she felt the spasms that contorted her body back
to two human legs, two human arms, the solidity of a human body, lying on the
concrete, hands on the ground, toes supporting her lower body.
She started to
rise to run, but the dragon made a sudden, startled movement.
It was not a
spring to attack nor a cowering in fear. Either of those she could have
accepted as normal for the beast. It was a vague, startled jump. A familiar,
startled jump.
Like coming on
Tom around the corner of the hallway leading to the bathroom and meeting him
coming out of it. Tom jumped that way, startled, not quite scared, and she
always thought he'd been shooting up in there—must have been shooting up in
there.
Now the same
guilty jump from the dragon, and the massive head swung down to her prone body,
to look at her with huge, startled blue eyes. Tom's eyes.
* * *
Kyrie. His
human mind identified her a second before his reptilian self, startled, scared,
surprised, would have opened his mouth and let out with a jet of flame.
His mouth
opened, he just managed to control the flame. He tried to shape her name, but
the reptilian throat didn't lend itself to it.
Tom felt his
nictating eyelids blink, sideways, before his normal eyelids, the eyelids he
was used to, blinked up and down.
She stood up,
slowly, shivering. She was honey-colored all over. Both sets of his eyelids
blinked again. He'd always thought that she had a tan. No lines. And her
breasts were much fuller than they looked beneath the uniform and apron—heavy,
rounded forms miraculously, perfectly horizontal in defiance of gravity.
He realized he
was staring and looked up to see her looking into his eyes, horrified. He tried
to shape an apology but what came out was a semi-growling hiss.
"Tom,"
she said, her voice raspy and hoarse, her eyes frightened and. . . pitying?
"Tom, you killed someone."
Killed? He was
sure he hadn't. He stopped on a breath, then tasted in his mouth the metallic
and—to his dragon senses—bright and delicious symphony of flavors that was
blood.
Blood? Human
blood?
The shock of
it seemed to wake him. He looked down to see a corpse between his paws. His
paws were smeared with blood. The corpse was a bundle, indistinct, neither male
nor female, neither young nor old. It smelled dead. Freshly dead.
Had he run
someone down? Killed him? Had he?
He tried to
remember and he couldn't. The dragon. . .
He took his
hand to his forehead, felt the clamminess of blood on his skin, and realized he
was human again. Human, smeared with blood, standing by a corpse.
And Kyrie had
seen him kill someone.
"No,"
he said, not sure to whom he spoke. "Oh, please, no."
* * *
Tom's voice
was low at the best of times. Now it came out growly and raspy, like gravel
dragging around on a river bottom. His transformation, much faster than hers,
had been so fast that she'd hardly seen it.
He stood by
the corpse. Broad shoulders, small waist, muscular legs, powerful arms. A body
that, except for his being all of five six, and for the track marks on his
arms, could have graced the cover of body-building magazines. Only his muscles
weren't developed to the grotesque level the field demanded.
And above it
all, was a face that managed to make him look like a frightened little boy.
His hair had
come loose from the rubber band he used to confine it in a ponytail. Loose, it
just touched his arms, in a rumple of irregular curls. His skin was pale, very
pale all over. Not exactly vampire white. More like aged ivory, even and
smooth. And his eyes were a deep, dark and yet somehow brilliant, blue.
They now
opened in total horror, as he stared at her and rasped, "I didn't.
Kill."
Her first
reaction was to snap out that of course he had. She'd seen him by the corpse,
his muzzle stained by blood. Then she remembered she'd almost lapped the blood,
herself. Lapped. And she'd known what it was before shifting too.
She shuddered,
and remembered what the blood smelled like to the jungle cat. The beast as
she'd learned to call it years ago, when she'd first turned into it. Or
hallucinated turning into it, as she'd convinced herself had happened over
time. That theory might have to be discarded now, unless she was hallucinating
Tom's shifting, too.
"I don't
remember chasing," he said. "Killing."
A look down at
the corpse told her nothing, save that it had been mauled. But wouldn't Tom. .
. The dragon have mauled it anyway? Whether he'd killed it or not?
Tom was
looking down, horrified, trembling. Shock. He was in shock. If she left him
here, he would stay like that. Till they were caught.
She reached
for his arm. His skin felt skin cold, clammy to the touch. Was it being the
dragon? Or being naked in the night? Or the shock? She had to do something
about the shock. No. She had to do something, period.
"Come,"
she said. "Come."
He obeyed.
Like a child, he allowed her to pull him all the way to the back door of the
diner.
She stooped to
pick up her clothes, trying not to get blood on them.
* * *
Tom stumbled
after Kyrie, confused. The parking lot was cold. He felt it on his wet skin.
Wet. He looked down and saw patches of blood on his body. Human blood.
"You're
shaking like a leaf," Kyrie whispered. She opened the back door of the
Athens and looked in, along the corridor that curved gently towards the bathroom.
She said, "Go in. Quickly. Get into the women's bathroom. Don't lock. I'll
come."
He rushed
forward, obeying. In his current state, he couldn't think of doing anything but
obeying. But a part of his brain, moving fast beneath the sluggish surface of
his shocked mind, wondered why the women's bathroom. Then he realized the
women's bathroom was just one large room and locked, while in the men's
restroom they'd managed to cram the stall and a row of urinals. And the outer
door didn't lock.
Yeah, there
would be more room in the women's bathroom to clean up, he thought, even as he
skidded into the door to the bathroom, on damp, bare feet.
"Why
didn't you turn the light on?" Kyrie said, coming in after him, turning
the light on.
She went to
the sink and started washing herself, making use of the paper towels and the
water. Considering where she'd been, she had very little blood on her. Not like
Tom. He tasted blood on his tongue.
And now he was
shaking again.
"Stop
that," Kyrie said. She was clean now, and putting her clothes back on. How
had she managed to get out of her clothes before shifting?
He tried to
remember his own clothes, and where he'd left them, but his memory was fogged
and confused, intercut by the bright golden blur of the dragon's thoughts.
"Are you
going to clean yourself or am I going to have to?" Kyrie asked. She'd
somehow got fully dressed before he could notice. She stood there, looking
proper, in her apron. She'd even put the earring back on her ear. She'd
remembered to take that off. What was she? Some kind of machine?
Tom pulled his
hair back from his face. "I'm naked," he said.
"I've
noticed," she said, but she wasn't looking. And now she had the expression
back on her face—the expression she'd shown Tom since the first day he'd
arrived at the Athens and Frank had offered him a job. The expression that
meant he was no good, he was possibly dangerous, and that Frank was crazy to
trust him.
He knew she
would glare at his track marks next and, damn it all, he hadn't shot up since
he'd got—Well, since he'd got the job. He stopped the thoughts of whatever else
he'd got forcefully. You really never knew what the other dragons could hear.
He didn't think they were telepathic. He thought they were just watching him
really closely. But he wasn't about to bet on it. No way. He wasn't about to
let his guard down. He'd seen what they could do, way back when—
He shook his
head and took deep breaths to drive away his memory—which could force him to
become a dragon as fast as the shine of the moon or the smell of blood. He
concentrated on the thought that it was nearby—it. The treasure he'd stolen.
The magic that helped him stay himself.
A wet and cold
paper towel touched his chest and he jumped. Kyrie's glance at him held a
challenge. "I'll do it if I have to," she said.
He shook his
head and pulled the towel from her hand, rubbing it briskly on his shoulders,
his arms, his chest. He discarded it in the trash can, thinking about DNA
evidence and trying not to. Telling himself he couldn't have done it, he couldn't
have killed anyone. He couldn't. He just couldn't. That was something he
couldn't live with—knowing for sure he'd killed anyone.
But the police
would think—The police—
He started
shaking again and took deep breaths to control it. He folded another mass of
paper towels and wet it and ran it on his face, his hands. The face looking
back at him from the mirror looked more red than white, smeared with blood.
Whose blood?
Who had that person been, out in the parking lot? Tom didn't remember anything.
Nothing, before opening his eyes, staring at the dead body, and seeing Kyrie.
And that wasn't right. It had been like that at first, but it had given him
more control and he was supposed to know what he'd done while in dragon form.
He was supposed to remember.
Kyrie was
looking at him, attentively, cautiously, like a bomb expert trying to decide
which wire to cut in a peculiar homemade contraption.
Tom bit his
tongue and managed a good imitation of his normal, gruff tone. "It's all
right," he said. "I'm fine."
She cocked her
head to one side, managing to convey wordlessly that there were about a million
interpretations of fine and none of them applied to him. But aloud she
said, "I'm going out for just a second. Lock up after me. When I come back
I will knock once. Only once. Let me in when I do."
Tom locked the
door behind her, obediently. He wondered where she was going, but it wasn't
like he had any room left to argue about what she might want to do. He should
count himself lucky she hadn't screamed bloody murder when she'd found him in
the parking lot. Perhaps she should have screamed bloody murder. Wasn't that
the name for what he'd done? No—He hadn't—He couldn't—
A muffled
knock. He realized that not only had Kyrie been gone for a while, but also that
he'd somehow managed to remove most of the red stains from his hands and face.
His hair was a drying, sticky mass that he didn't want to investigate, much
less clean.
"That
will do," she said. "You can wear these." She extended to him,
at the end of a stiff arm—like a person feeding a wild animal—what looked like
a red jogging suit.
"It's
mine," she said, as though mistaking his hesitation for a belief that
she'd mugged a vagrant for the clothes. Or taken them from the corpse. "I
usually jog in the morning before going home. Safer here. It's a main
street."
He swallowed
hard, trying not to think of what street would be less safe than Fairfax. But
then if she lived nearby—as he did—in the interlacing warren of downtown
streets, there would be many less safe. Well, not less safe in reality—the
crime rate in Goldport was never that high and most deaths were crimes
committed by and between gang members. But in the side streets, dotted with
tiny houses, or with huge Victorian mansions long since turned into tiny apartments,
a woman jogging alone in the wee hours of the morning would not be seen. And
that, perhaps, meant she wouldn't be safe—because she could disappear and not
be noticed for hours.
A thought that
whoever tried to attack this woman would be far from safe himself crossed Tom's
mind and he beat it down. Perhaps that was what she was afraid of. Of being
mugged in the dark street and killing—
He grabbed the
jogging suit. It felt too cold to his hands, and too distant—as if it weren't
real fabric but some fabric-like illusion that his senses refused to
acknowledge fully. As if he weren't really here. As if this were all a dream
and he would, shortly, wake up back in the safety of his teenage room, in his
father's house, with his stereo, his tv, his game system, all those things he'd
needed when life itself wasn't exciting enough.
The clothes
fit. Of course they would fit. Kyrie was his height, just about, and while his
shoulders were much broader, and his chest far more muscular, she had other. .
. endowments. A memory of her in the parking lot swept like a wave over him,
and he felt a warm blush climb his cheeks and adjusted his—her—jogging pants
and prayed that she wasn't focusing there just now.
But he might
have been too late, because she frowned as if she were about to ask if blood
turned him on. She didn't, though. Just said, "Wait for me. By the back
door."
"The
back?" he said. His voice came out too low and raspy. "But—"
"You
can't walk through the diner like that. It's clear your hair is caked with blood.
Someone might notice and say something. Later. When. . . someone asks."
The police.
But neither of them mentioned it.
"I'm
going to tell Frank I'm going out for a moment," she said.
He nodded. She
was efficient. She was determined. And she was helping him. It was more than he
could have hoped for. And certainly no fault at all of hers if it made him feel
helpless and out of control.
As he hadn't
been in six months.
* * *
Kyrie wasn't
sure what she was going to tell Frank. She had some idea he'd already be on
simmer from what he would see as her sudden disappearance. In the ten steps
between the bathroom and the diner proper, she ran her options through her
mind—she could tell him she felt ill. She felt ill enough after the mess in the
parking lot and the more specific mess in the bathroom. And the last thing any
greasy spoon owner wanted was to have a sick employee—visibly sick—tending to
tables. On the other hand, if she did that, she was going to be some hours
short this month. Because there was no way she could come back again tonight.
And there was rent to pay.
She didn't
know what she going to say at all until she emerged from the corridor into the
yellowish light of the diner and said, "Frank, I need a few minutes, to go
to Tom's." Which made perfect sense as she said it. A few minutes should
suffice to go to Tom's house, because Tom walked here, and if Tom walked here,
he couldn't live very far away. That meant a couple of minutes would also see
him back to his home with no problem at all. And her back here, pretending
she'd just dropped by his place.
Frank was
attending to the students' table and had the sort of look on his face that
meant he was trying very hard not to explode. Kyrie had worked for him for a
year and she'd been a reliable employee, never late, rarely sick and
trustworthy enough to be left alone with the register on occasion. None of
which were easy to come by in a college town in Colorado for the late night
shift and considering what Frank was willing to pay.
He looked over
his shoulder at Kyrie, and his brows beetled together, nonetheless, and he
managed, "What? More minutes?"
"Tom is
sick," she said. "He called me." Let Frank wonder why and how
she'd given Tom her cell phone number. "He wants me to buy him some stuff
at the pharmacy and drop it by. Over the counter stuff," she added,
thinking that most of what Tom probably took was not over the counter.
Frank looked
like he was going to say something like that, for just a moment, but he gave it
up. Probably he couldn't imagine Kyrie buying illegal drugs. And in that he
would be right. She got enough lawlessness in her everyday life, enough to hide
and disguise, that she did not need any more adrenalin.
So Frank
shrugged, which might be taken for agreement, and Kyrie rushed back down the
hallway, hoping to find Tom, hoping Tom hadn't shifted, hoping that for once
things would go well. For just this once.
Tom was where
she expected him—at the back of the diner, facing the door to the parking lot.
He was pale and had started trembling again, and there wasn't much she could
say or do for that. She wondered if he'd killed the man. She didn't want to
think about it. It didn't matter. If he had, could she blame him? She knew the
confusion of mind, the prevalence of the beast-self over every civilized
learning, every instinct, even. How could she accuse someone else who'd given
in perhaps further?
Of course she
could, a deeper voice said, because she didn't give in. She'd fought her—as
she'd thought—hallucinations tooth and nail and she'd held onto a normal life
of sorts. No friends, no family, no one who might discover what she'd thought
was her hideous madness, but she made her own money, she lived her own life.
She managed a
weak smile at Tom by way of reassurance, as she turned the key and opened the
door.
She took a
deep breath to steel herself against the smell of blood, the light of the moon.
She must stay in control. She must.
But she wasn't
ready for the other smell—the hot, musky and definitely male smell that invaded
her nostrils as she stepped onto the parking lot.
Dizziness and
her mouth went dry and her whole body started fluttering on the verge of shifting
shape, and she told herself no. No. Regained control just in time to see it, at
the edge of the parking lot, under one of the lights.
Not it. Him.
The smell was clear as a hallelujah chorus in her head. He was at the edge of
the parking lot, and he was tawny and huge and muscular.
A lion. He was
a lion. Was he a lion like she was a panther and Tom was a dragon, or. . .
Or what? An
invader from the vast Colorado savannah outside Goldport? Where lions and
zebras chased each other under the hot tropical sun?
She shook her
head at her own silliness.
Behind her,
Tom drew breath, noisily. "Is it?" he asked.
"Yes,"
she said.
"But—"
He drew breath again and something—something about the movement of his feet
against the asphalt, something about his breathing, perhaps something about his
smell (since when could she smell people this way?) made her think he was about
to run.
She put out a
hand to his arm. "Do not run," she said. "Walk steadily."
His arm felt
cold and smooth under her hand. Light sprinkling of hair. Very little of it for
a male. Perhaps being a dragon. . . She didn't want to think of that. She
didn't want to think of Tom, muzzle deep in blood.
Which of
course, meant the lion could smell them. Smell the blood on them. "You
mustn't run," she said. "We. . . Cats are triggered by motion. If you
run he will give chase. Walk slowly and steadily towards my car. The small
white one. Come."
They made
their way slowly, steadily, across the parking lot, in the reek of blood.
Perhaps the lion wouldn't be able to smell Tom in the overwhelming smell.
Perhaps they
could make it to the car. Perhaps. . . Perhaps the moon was made of green
cheese and it would rain pea soup tomorrow.
He smelled
powerful, musky. She could hear him draw breath, was aware of the touch of paw
pads on the asphalt. She felt those movements as if they were her own, her
heart accelerating and seeming to beat at her throat, suffocating her.
Paw touching
asphalt, and paw touching asphalt, and paw touching asphalt. Measured steps.
Not a run. Please don't let it be a run.
And her
movements matched his -- slow, measured, trying to appear unconcerned,
escorting Tom to the car, guiding him.
Tom walked
like a wooden puppet. Was he that terrified of the lion? Didn't he know in his
dragon form he was as big? Bigger? Stronger? Why was he afraid?
But her
rational self understood. He was afraid because he was in human form. And every
human at the back of his mind feared the large felines who lurked in the
shadows and who could eat him in two bites.
Kyrie herself
was sweating and cold by degrees, and felt as if her legs were made of water,
as she concentrated on following the beast's movements by sound.
They hit the
moonlight, out of the shadow of the diner and into the fully illuminated
parking lot. The heat of it felt like fire playing over Kyrie's skin and she
kept her head lowered. She took deep breaths. Her heartbeat echoed some old
jungle rhythm but she told herself she would not, she would not, she could not
shift.
And the smell
of him—of the lion—enveloped her, stronger than ever. Her senses, sharpened
from wanting to transform, gave her data about him that a mere nose should not
be able to gather. That he was young. That he was healthy. That he was virile.
She pulled Tom
forward, and the lion followed them at a distance -- step, step, step,
unhurried, unafraid. She prayed he wouldn't start running. She prayed he
wouldn't leap. And inside, deep inside, she felt as if he was toying with her.
Playing. Like a cat with a mouse.
She was not a
mouse.
Sweat formed
on her scalp, dripped towards her eyes, made her blink. The car loomed in front
of her, white and looking much bigger than it usually did. Looking like safety.
Kyrie pushed
her key fob button to unlock it, and felt as if her fingers slipped on the
smooth plastic, as though she had claws and unwieldy paws.
No. She must
not. She must remain human. She must.
Breathing
deeply and only managing to inhale more unabashed male musk, she shoved Tom,
slightly, and said, "Go around to the passenger side. Get in."
Go, give
him a divided target. Go, but for the love of all that's holy, don't stop.
Don't stop. Don't let him catch you. She didn't know which she feared most.
The idea of being attacked of the idea of seeing Tom attacked, of seeing Tom
torn to pieces. Of shifting. Of joining in.
She shuddered
as her too clumsy fingers struggled with the car handle. She saw Tom open the
door on the other side. Get in. She struggled with the handle.
And the lion
was twenty steps away, crouching in the full light of the moon, augmented by
the light of a parking lot lamp above her. He was crouching, front down low and
hindquarters high.
Hindquarters
trembling. Legs bunching.
Jump. He was
going to—
He jumped,
clearing the space between them, and she leaned hard against her car, her heart
hammering in her chest, her body divided and dividing her mind. Her human body,
her human mind, wanted to scream, to hide. Her human body knew that the huge
body would hit her, claws would rend her. That she was about to die.
But her other
mind. . . Her other mind practically died in the ecstatic smell of healthy
young male. Her other mind thought the lion knew her, guessed her, smelled her
for an equal. That the lion wanted—Not to eat her.
She realized
she'd closed her eyes, when she felt him landing near her—landing with all four
paws on the asphalt. Not on her, but so close to her she felt the breeze of his
falling, and smelled him, smelled him hot and strong and oh, so impossibly
male.
She felt her body
spasm, wish to shift. She fought it. She struggled to stay herself.
Through
half-open eyes, she saw a lion's face turned towards her, its golden eyes
glowing, its whole expression betraying. . . smugness?
Then it opened
its mouth, the fangs glowing in the light and a soft growl started at the back
of its throat. She didn't know if it was threatening her or. . .
Something to
the growl—something to the sound crept along her nerves like a tingle on the
verge of aching. If she stayed—If she stayed. . .
The car door
opened, shoving her. She leapt aside, to avoid being pushed into the lion. A
hand reached out of the car, dragged her. She fell onto her seat. Blinked. Tom.
Tom had pulled her into the car.
"Drive,"
Tom said. "Drive."
He reached
across her, as he spoke and slammed the door. From outside, the lion made a
rumbling sound that might have been amusement.
She didn't
remember turning the ignition. She didn't remember stepping on the gas. But she
realized she was driving down Fairfax. Tall, silent apartment houses succeeded
each other on either side of the road, lighted by sporadic white pools of light
from the street lamps.
"Where do
you live?" she managed, glancing at Tom. Part of her wanted to tell him
she hadn't been afraid, she hadn't been. . .
But she wasn't
even sure she could explain what she'd been. She had been afraid. That was a
huge beast. But also, at some level, she was afraid she would end up shifting,
cavorting with him. Over a half-devoured human carcass.
"Two
blocks down," Tom said, and swallowed, as if he'd had the same thought at
the same time. "Audubon apartments. On the left."
She remembered
the place. Not one of the graceful Victorian remnants, but half a dozen
rectangular red-brick boxes sharing a parking lot. During the day there were
any number of kids playing in the parking lot, and usually one or two men
working on cars or drinking beer.
Now, in the
dark of night, it was silent and ill lit. As she pulled into the parking lot,
Tom asked. "It was one of us, wasn't it?"
"Pardon?"
she said. She knew what he meant. She knew all too well. He was asking if the
lion was like them. If the lion too had a human form and one not so human. But
Kyrie had managed, until very recently to convince herself she only had one
form and that everything else was hallucination. Mental illness.
Now this whole
thing felt like mental illness. She parked the car, turned the engine off.
"You
know. . ." Tom said. His blue eyes were earnest, and he plucked at her
sleeve like a little kid seeking reassurance. "You know, a shape-shifter.
Like us."
She shrugged.
"Seems unlikely it escaped from a zoo," she said. "Someone would
have given the alarm, wouldn't they?"
Tom nodded, as
if considering this. "What.. . . what did it want?"
Kyrie
shrugged. She wanted to say he wanted everything but all she had to go
on was the smell. And she didn't wish to discuss her response to the smell with
Tom.
"Do you
think it killed the. . . person?"
Did you?
Kyrie thought, but only shrugged. How did you ask someone who looked as
bewildered and shocked as Tom if he'd committed murder? And was she really
feeling sorry for Tom? Must be going soft in the head.
Tom got out of
the car, patted down where the pockets would be in normal pants and Kyrie
realized he wouldn't have keys.
But he turned
around and said, "Thank you for driving me," and pushed the door as
if to close it.
"Wait, do
you have keys?"
He shrugged.
"The neighbor usually keeps them," he said. "For me. I keep
his."
His? For some
reason it had never occurred to Kyrie that someone like Tom could entrust his
key—or anything else—to a male. If she'd thought of his social life outside
work at all, she imagined a never-ending succession of sweet things across his
mattress. But now she realized she was probably wrong. It was unlikely there
was anyone on his mattress. He had come from a homeless shelter. And he was a
dragon.
"Keith
keeps my key and I keep his. . . So if we lose it while we're out," Tom
said, an edge of impatience in his voice. "He's a college student. They
lose their keys." He hesitated a minute. "Gets stinking drunk
too." He said it as if he, himself, never took any mind-altering
substances.
And out of
nowhere, an altruistic impulse, or perhaps the thought that he'd saved her—from
what?—with the lion in the parking lot, made her get out. "I'll come with
you," she said. "To make sure you get in okay."
She had a
feeling, a strange feeling something was wrong. Wrong with this parking lot,
with this entire area. There was a feeling of being watched and not in a
friendly manner, but she wasn't sure by whom, or how. Any other day, any other
time, she would have shrugged it off. But now. . . Well. . . perhaps she was
picking up smell or something. Something was definitely wrong.
She got out of
the car, unsteady on her legs, glad that the moonlight was hidden by the
shadows of the buildings. The pressure of the full moonlight was all she needed
now. At the same time, she felt as if the buildings themselves were looming
shapes waiting to jump her.
It wasn't
possible, was it? For the buildings to be shifters? With a human form? What was
this? How many people did it afflict? And why was she afraid?
She wasn't
sure of anything anymore. Sweat trickled down her back and her legs felt like
water while she followed Tom to the steps outside the door of the nearest
building.
* * *
"Keith
might not be home," Tom said, pressing the button. Actually, it was damn
bloody sure that Keith Vorpal would not be home. Keith was a film student at
Goldport College and somewhat of a ladies' man. One or the other tended to keep
him out of the house on warm summer nights. He always assumed Tom had the same
sort of life and only seemed somewhat amused Tom managed to come home naked so
often. He took Tom's mutters of some good beer or a glass too many and asked no
questions. Which in itself would be worrisome, except that Keith's own life was
such a mess of perils and odd adventures that he probably took it for granted
everyone else's life was that crazy. And no worse.
Their
arrangement with the keys rested on a vague hope that one of them might be home
when the other needed a key. So far it had worked out, more or less. But there
was always the chance. . .
Tom rang
again. A buzz he recognized as Keith's voice came through the loudspeaker. He
couldn't actually understand what Keith said, but he could guess. "It's
Tom, man," Tom said. "Lost my key, somehow. . ."
Another buzz
that Tom—with long practice—understood to mean that he should ring Keith's door
and Keith would give him the key. Then the front door clicked open.
"Sorry
there's no elevator, but—" Tom started, and shut up. Most apartment
buildings in Goldport, much less most apartment buildings in Downtown Goldport
didn't have elevators. He must be having flash backs to his childhood in an
upscale NY condo.
As it was, the
Audubon was more upscale than the places he'd lived in the last five years even
when he'd been out of the shelter. There were no rats. The cement stairs
covered in worn carpet were clean enough and didn't smell of piss. And if, now
and then, like on the third floor, you could hear a baby cry through the thin
door of an apartment, you could be sure the little tyke had just awakened and
needed to nurse, and not that he was being beaten within an inch of his life.
These were
solid working class apartments, where people scrimped and saved to get by and
might wear clothes from thrift shop racks, but where most families had two parents
and both parents worked, and where kids went to school and played, instead of
doing drugs. Or selling them.
Yeah, it could
be much, much worse. Tom rubbed his hand across his face as he climbed, as fast
as his feet would carry him up to the third floor. He hated with shifting
shape—particularly shifting shape when he didn't mean to and staying shifted
for. . . hours, he guessed as his last memory was from when the moon first
appeared in the sky, around maybe nine. He wondered what he'd been doing. It had
been months since shifting had come with such total memory loss.
If he could
find his clothes, he would know what had happened, but right now he only had a
memory of fear—of fleeing. And then nothing at all until he'd come to himself
in that parking lot, with Kyrie staring at him and the bloodied corpse at his
feet.
They'd reached
the landing on the third floor and he lurched to Keith's door on the left, and
pushed the doorbell. Despite his having called, he didn't expect a fast
response and didn't get it. From inside came Keith's voice and a higher,
clearly female voice, and then the sound of footsteps, something falling, more
footsteps.
Tom smiled
despite himself, guessing that Keith had still been explaining to his visitor
why the doorbell had rung from downstairs, when it rang again up here.
When the door
opened, Keith looked disheveled and sleepy. He was a young kid—although to be
honest he might be older than Tom. Tom just perceived him as much younger than
himself -- perhaps because Keith didn't shift. Keith was blond and generally
good looking. Right then, he was blinking, his blue eyes displaying the
curiously naked look of the eyes of people who normally wore glasses and
suddenly found themselves without.
His hair was a
mess and he looked confused, but he was grinning as he handed Tom a set of
keys. Though the student held the door almost closed, Tom glimpsed a redheaded
girl behind Keith. He felt a little envious. It had been years since he'd even
dreamed of sharing his bed with anyone. He could never guarantee he wouldn't
shift and scare a date halfway to death. Or worse.
Then he
realized Keith was looking enviously at him. Tom followed the direction of
Keith's gaze, and saw Kyrie standing just behind him, hands on hips, as though
daring Keith to make a comment. And Tom felt at the same time ridiculously
pleased that Keith thought he could be involved with someone like Kyrie and a
little jealous of Keith's admiration for her. Keith didn't even know her. He
didn't even know who she was. He didn't know that she shifted, as well.
"Thanks,"
Tom said, a little more dryly than he should. He snatched the key from Keith's
hand and started up the stairs at a faster clip than he should, considering how
he felt.
Keith grinned.
"No problem. But I have to go back. This girl is something else. She
swears she saw a dragon flying over the building. A dragon." He shook his
head.
A dragon. Tom
managed a noncommittal sound of empathy. Probably Tom. But Tom didn't dare ask
questions about what he'd been doing or what direction he'd been flying.
Instead, he turned and started up the stairs. Up and up and up, to his fifth
floor landing, Kyrie's steady gait keeping pace with his.
His door was.
. . locked. He let out a breath he hadn't been aware of holding in. After all,
he did not know how or when he'd shifted and all he had was the memory of fear,
of running away. It was possible they had found him in his apartment. It
was possible. . . If they'd figured out his name, and they must have by now, it
would have been easy.
But the door
was locked, his doormat looked untouched. Everything was as it should be. No
light came under his door. Everything was normal at least to human senses and
he didn't want to use his dragon senses. He didn't want to reach for that other
self, for fear it would bring them. And for fear of what he might do. He swallowed
hard, thinking of the corpse.
There could be
nothing odd in his apartment. The only reason his hand trembled was because of
his being so tired. And the corpse and everything.
He slid the
key in and turned it.
* * *
In the moment
before Tom opened the door Kyrie had a wild surge of panic. She wanted to tell
him to wait, but she couldn't speak. And she didn't know why he should wait.
She just had a feeling—added up from rustling, from sounds she could not
possibly have heard, from an odd smell, from a weird tingle up her spine—that
something was wrong, very wrong.
Perhaps Tom
was going to drag her into his apartment and—And what? Imagination failed her.
She had seen him in that bathroom, so slow and confused he didn't even seem to
know how to wipe away blood from himself. She had seen him standing there,
helpless. She could hardly believe he would now turn around and rape her.
On the other
hand, didn't they sacrifice virgins to dragons in the Middle Ages? She almost
smiled at the thought of Tom as virgin-despoiler. The way he looked, he'd have
trouble beating away the ones who threw themselves at him. Kyrie managed to
calm herself completely, when Tom reached in and turned on the light.
The light
revealed an unprepossessing living room, with the type of dark brown carpet
that landlords slapped down when they didn't expect to rent to the upper
echelons of society. But the rest. . .
The furniture,
what there was of it —splinters of bookcase, remnants of couches with ugly
brown polyester covering— seemed to have been piled up in the middle of the
room as if someone had been getting ready to light a bonfire. And the
window—the huge picture window opposite—was broken. A thousand splinters
littered the carpet. Books and pieces of books fluttered all over.
Tom made a
sound of distress and stepped into the room, and Kyrie stepped in behind him.
He knelt by a pile of something on the carpet, and Kyrie focused on it,
noticing shreds of denim, and what might or might once have been a white
t-shirt. And over it all, a torn purple rag, with the Athens logo. The Athens
sent the aprons home with the employees to get laundered at employee expense.
That meant
that Tom had been ready to go to work when. . . The tingle in her spine grew
stronger and the feeling that something was wrong, very wrong overwhelmed her.
It was like a scream both soundless and so loud that it took over her whole
thought, overcame her whole mind, reverberated from her whole being.
"Tom,"
she said, putting a hand on his shoulder. "Tom, we'd best--"
She never had
time to finish. Someone or something, moving soundlessly behind them, had
closed the door.
Kyrie heard
the bolt slide home and turned, skin prickling, hair standing on end, to stare
openmouthed at three men who stood between them and the door.
Men was
dignifying them with a name they didn't quite deserve. They were boys, maybe
nineteen or twenty, just at the edge of manhood. Oriental, dressed all in
black, they clearly had watched one too many ninja movies. The middle one wore
exquisitely groomed slightly too long hair, the bangs arranged so they fell to
perfection and didn't move. He must spend a fortune on product.
The ones on
either side were not so stylishly groomed, but one sported a tattoo of a
Chinese letter in the middle of his forehead, while the other had a tattoo of a
red dragon on the back of each hand—those clearly visible and he was clenching
his fists and holding them up in a gesture more reminiscent of boxing than
karate.
The far one
shouted something, and Kyrie grabbed hold of Tom's arm, and shoved him behind
her. He'd gone wooden puppet again.
The pretty boy
in the middle laughed and said something—Kyrie presumed in Chinese—to his
friend. Then added in English, "He only speaks English." But when he
turned to Tom all traces of laughter had vanished from his expression, as he
said, "You know what we want. You foiled the first fool who came looking,
but, you see, we returned for you. Now give it to us, and we might not kill you
or your pretty girlfriend."
Pretty
girlfriend? Kyrie registered as if from a long way away that they were talking
about her. Truth was very few people ever had called her pretty. She was too. .
. striking, and proud to be called that. Also at some level people must always
have sensed what she was, because since she'd turned fifteen and the panther
had made its first appearance, few men had made taunting comments in her
presence. Hell, few men even addressed her in any way.
But if there
was an instinct for self-protection, this trio was lacking it. The little one
with the two dragons on the backs of his hands started laughing.
At least, he
threw his head back and Kyrie thought he was laughing, a high pitched,
hysterical laughter. And then she realized what the laughter really was as his
outlines blurred and he started to shift. Wings, and curving neck. All of it in
lovely tones of red and gold, like all those Chinese paintings. But the
features—that in paintings had always made Kyrie think of a naughty cat—looked
malevolent. He hissed, between lips wholly unprepared for speech, "Give us
the pearl."
Pearl? A pearl
seemed like a very odd thing for Tom to steal. Was it some form of drug? Kyrie
glanced behind her, to see Tom shaking his head violently. The fact that he was
the approximate color of curdled milk, his normally pale skin looking downright
unhealthy and grey, did not reassure her that by his shaking his head he meant
he'd never heard of such a thing as a pearl.
"Tom?"
she said.
He only shook
his head again.
"Right,"
the middle one said. "You want to play rough, rough it is."
And suddenly a
golden dragon took up most of the small brown room. And there were claws
reaching for Kyrie. No. Talons. And someone's fangs were close to her face, a
smell like a thousand long-forgotten sushi dinners invading her nostrils. A
forked tongue licked her ear and through the lips not fashioned for speech,
through the accent that he showed even in English, she nonetheless understood
the young man's words as he said, "We're going to have so much fun."
She'd never
shifted when she was scared. The few times she'd shifted it had been just the
moon and usually summer calling to her, the feeling of jungle in her mind, at
the back of her brain.
But as her
fear closed upon her throat, making breathing almost impossible, as her heart
pounded seemingly in her ears, as her blood seemed to race away from her
leaving her cold as ice, she felt something. . .
She wasn't
sure what was happening until she heard the growl erupt from her throat. A full
growl, fashioned from melodies of the jungle.
Lizards.
Uppity lizards, at that. They dared challenge her? Try to grab her?
Turning
around, she swiped a giant paw across the tender under flesh of a clawed foot
holding her. And then she leapt for the throat of the giant beast who was
trying to claw her down.
It was—the
part of her that remained human, deep in the mists of consciousness
thought—like the armada and the English ships. The Spanish armada's huge, slow
ships might be stronger and better armored. But they had no hope against the
small English ships that could sail around them, landing shots where they
wished till the giant ship was crippled.
Kyrie grabbed
the beast by the throat, hanging on, till she tasted blood—and what blood. It
was like drinking the finest champagne straight from the bottle.
The beast
yelled and reached for her with its claws. It managed to scrape her flank, in a
bright slash of pain. But she jumped out of the way before the creature could
grab her, and she was on top of his head, as both his friends converged, trying
to grab her. And she leapt at the soft underbelly of the red one—Two Dragons,
the human Kyrie thought—in a mad dance of claws sinking into soft, unarmored
flesh.
And then up
again, and leaping at the eye of the next dragon.
That there were
three of them was not an advantage. After all, three large, slower moving
beings only helped each other get hopelessly entangled while Kyrie danced upon
them like a deadly firefly, in a frenzy of wounding, a joy of blood.
She was
vaguely aware that she too was bleeding, that there were punctures on her hide
and that, somehow, one of them had managed to sink his fangs into her front
paw—her right arm. But she didn't care. Right then, allowed the madness she'd
long denied, she jumped at the dragon's eyes, swiping her claws across them and
relishing the dragon's shriek of pain, the bright blood jumping from the right
eye. She jumped and leaped, possessed of fierce anger, of maddened, repressed
rage.
But while the
beast exulted in the carnage, while the feline gyrated in mayhem, a small
trickling feeling formed at the back of Kyrie's mind. It was like the first
melting tip of an icicle, dropping cold reason on her hot madness. The feeling,
at first, was no more than that—just a trickling cold, protesting, demanding—she
wasn't sure what. The beast, in its frenzy, ignored it.
Until slowly,
slowly, the feeling became words and the words became panic in Kyrie's mind.
She was fighting all three dragons. She was keeping all three dragons at
bay—just. But there were three of them, there was one of her and the beast's
muscles were starting to hurt and. . . How could she get out of here?
There was no
way of reaching the door. All the dragons were between her and the door and
none of her sorties had brought her close to escaping.
Blood in her
nostrils, mad fury in the beast's brain, what remained of the human Kyrie tried
to think and came up with nothing but an insistent, white surge of panic. And
she couldn't let it slow her down. She couldn't. If she did, all would be lost.
But she couldn't fight forever.
In a twirl,
claws sinking into the nearest dragon's hide, she thought of Tom. But the
corner into which he'd shrunk when she'd shifted was vacant.
The coward had
run out the door behind her back, hadn't he?
She felt a horrible
sense of betrayal, a let down at this, and her extended paw faltered, and the
dragon above her reared.
It was the
center dragon—who in human form had artificially smooth and immovable hair. In
dragon form he had a tall crest, red and gold. Well, it had been red and gold,
it was now much darker red in spots, thanks to Kyrie's claws. And blood ran
down its cheek from one of its eyes. But the other eye was unblinking fixed
hatred, as it opened its jaws wide, wide, fangs glistening.
Kyrie needed
to jump. She needed to. But her muscles felt powerless, spent. Stretched
elastic that would not spring again.
So this is
how it ends. . .
The big head
descended to devour her, teeth ready to break her neck. And a taloned paw
grabbed her roughly around the middle, swept her back.
She turned.
She turned with her remnant of strength, her very last drop of fury, to snarl
at the dragon behind her.
* * *
She snarled at
him, Tom thought—amazed he could think clearly in dragon form. He'd willed
himself into being a dragon. Willed himself into it.
He desired it
and pushed. He knew she was going to have problems leaving. He knew she
couldn't fly.
And he knew
she was an idiot for even fighting. They had no chance. But then, neither could
he leave her to die alone. She had taken care of him, when she'd found him in
suspicious circumstances. She'd shown him more kindness than his own father
had. And she was a shifter like him. They were family: bonded deeper than any
shared genes, any joint upbringing.
He shifted
suddenly, unexpectedly, leaping in the air, and out of his corner so quickly
the other dragons didn't seem to register it. He had only the time to see that
she was cowering, that the dragon above her would finish her. And then he was
reaching for her, grabbing her, jumping out the open window, even as she turned
to snarl at him.
But the
snarl—lip pulled back from vicious fangs—faltered as she recognized him.
He held her as
gently and firmly as he could. He mustn't drop her. But neither must he hurt
her. He could smell blood from her. He could smell fear.
He unfurled
his wings—huge parachutes. Above him, the other dragons hadn't appeared yet.
Perhaps she'd done more damage than he'd thought. Perhaps they had a few
minutes. A very few minutes.
Down in the
parking lot, her car was a small abandoned toy. Her keys would be in his
apartment, he thought, and shook his huge head, amazed at the clarity of the
human thought in beast form. Normally he didn't even remember what he'd done as
a dragon. Perhaps because he was responsible for another? He'd never been
responsible for anyone but himself.
But they must
run. They must get out of here very fast. And as beasts, he could not explain
to her what danger they were in. He couldn't even think, clearly think, of
where to run.
The dragon
wished to crawl under a rock, preferably by a river, and hide.
But Goldport
was not so big on rivers. There was Panner's creek, which in the summer became
a mere trickle winding amid sun-parched boulders.
He flew her
down to the parking lot, slowly, landed by the car and wished to shift. He
didn't dare reach for the strength of the talisman to allow himself to shift.
No. The dragons would sense, that.
Instead,
setting Kyrie down carefully, he WILLED himself to shift. He thought himself
human, and shivered, as his body spasmed in painful shift.
He was naked.
Naked, sitting on the warm asphalt of the parking lot, next to Kyrie's car and
a panther. No. Next to Kyrie. In the next minute, she also shifted, and appeared
as a naked, bloodied young woman, lying on the pavement next to him.
"The
car," he rasped at her, his voice hesitant, difficult, like a
long-neglected instrument. "We must leave. Soon. They will pursue."
She looked at
him with confused, tired eyes. Her chin was scratched, and there was too much
blood on her everywhere. He wondered how much of it was hers. Did they need to
go to the hospital? They healed very quickly. At least Tom did. But what if
these wounds were too serious? How could they go to the hospital? How could
they explain anything?
"I don't
have keys," she said, and patted her hips as though looking for keys in
pockets that were no longer there.
Tom nodded. He
got up, feeling about a hundred years old after two shifts in such a short
time. His legs hurt, as did his arms, and his whole body felt as though someone
had belabored him with sticks.
But he was
human now and he could think. He remembered.
One eye on the
window of his apartment, wondering how long he had, he said, "I'm sorry.
I'll pay." Then he grabbed one of the stones on the flowerbed nearby—a
stone bed, to tell the truth since he'd never seen flowers there. He smashed
the window with the stone, reached in, unlocked the door.
Sweeping the
crumbs of glass from the seat, he smashed the key holder, reached down to the
floor and grabbed a screwdriver he'd noticed there while Kyrie was driving him.
"Remembered you had this here," he said, turning to see her
bewildered expression as her car started. And then "Get in. I'll pay for
the damage. Just get in."
Was it his
imagination, or had he seen the shadow of a wing in the window above?
He reached
across to unlock the passenger door, as she jumped in.
She fumbled
with the seat belt as he tore out of the parking lot in a screech of rubber.
Sweat was dripping from his forehead into his eyes. He was sure he was sitting
on a chunk of glass. It had been years since he'd driven and he found the turns
odd and difficult. The car his father had given him as a sixteenth birthday
gift handled much better than this. Good thing there was almost no traffic on
the roads at this time.
He tore around
the corner of Fairfax, turning into a narrower street and hoping he was only
imagining the noise of wings above. He tried to choose the tree-lined streets,
knowing well enough that it was harder to see into them from above. The vision
of dragons seemed to focus naturally on moving things. In a street of trees,
shaken by the wind, in which shadows shifted and shook, it would be harder to
see them.
Some of these
streets were narrow enough—and the trees above them well over a hundred years
old -- that it made it impossible to see the streets at all, except as a green
canopy. He took one street, then another, then yet another, tearing down quiet
residential streets like a madman and probably causing the families snug in
their brick ranches to wonder what was happening out there.
They passed
two people walking, male and female, he tall and she much shorter, leaning into
him. Shorts, t-shirts, a swirling white skirt, a vision of normalcy and a
relationship that he couldn't aspire too, and Tom bit his lip and thumped the
side of the wheel with his hand, bringing a startled glance from Kyrie.
He'd gone a
good ten minutes and was starting to think they'd lost their pursuers, when he
thought of Kyrie. He turned to her, wanting to explain he really would pay and
that she should not—
Her dark eyes
gazed into his, unwavering. "How many cars have you stolen?" she
asked.
* * *
The way he'd
hot-wired the car, quickly—she swore it had taken him less than a few
seconds—had chilled Kyrie to the bone.
She supposed
she should have known someone with a drug problem, working minimum wage jobs
had to supplement with crime, but all of a sudden she realized he was more
dangerous—more out of control than she'd thought.
More out of
control than the other dragons?
And yet, after
he'd driven like a madman for a while, he looked at her with a devastatingly
scared expression in his pale face. Despite chiseled features and the now
all-too-obvious dark shadow of unshaven beard, he managed to look about five
and worried he'd be put in time out.
"How many
cars have you stolen?" she asked, before she knew she was going to say it.
His expression
closed. She would not be able to describe it any other way. The eager, almost
childish panic vanished, leaving in its place a dark, unreadable glare, his
eyebrows low over his dark blue eyes. He turned away, looking forward, and shrugged,
a calculated shrug from his broad shoulders. One quarter inch up, one quarter
inch down.
"I used
to go joy riding," he said. "When I was a kid. I got bored." And
when she didn't answer that, he added. "Look, I've told you. I'll pay you
for the damage." And again, at her continued silence. "I couldn't let
us be caught. If they'd caught us, they'd have killed us."
At this, he
stopped. He stopped long enough for her to gather her thoughts. She felt so
tired that if she weren't in pain, she would have fallen asleep. But she hurt.
Her shoulder felt as if it had been dislocated in the fight. There was a slash
across her torso that she prayed wouldn't need stitches, and a broad swath of
her buttock felt scraped, as though it had rubbed hard against a scaly hide.
Which it probably had though she didn't remember.
"Who are
they?" she finally asked. "Why are they after you?"
"They're
a Chinese triad," he said. "They're members. A. . . crime sindicate.
Asian."
"Admirably
described," she said, and heard the hint of sarcasm in her own voice, and
was surprised she still had the strength for it. "But what do they want
with you?"
He hesitated.
For just a moment he glanced at her, and the scared little boy was back, with
wide open eyes, and slightly parted lips.
He looked back
at the road in time to take them, tightly, around a corner, tires squealing,
car tilting. "They think I stole something from them," he said, with
the defensive tone of a child explaining it really, really, really wasn't him
who put the clamp on the cat's tail.
Something.
Kyrie was not so naive that she didn't know Chinese crime syndicates—like most
crime syndicates—dealt mostly in various drugs. "A drug deal gone
bad?" she asked.
He had the
nerve to tighten his lips, and shake his head. "I don't deal drugs,"
he said.
Whee. There
was one form of criminality he didn't stoop to. Who would have thunk it?
"So. . ."
"I didn't
steal it, okay?" he said. "I didn't steal anything. They think I did,
and they're trying to get it back."
"Sounds
ugly," she said. Somehow she felt he was lying but also not lying. There
was an edge to his tone as if he weren't quite so sure how he'd got himself
into this type of situation.
"It
is," he said. "They've been after me for months." He shrugged.
"Only they've just figured out my name, I think. Now they can follow me,
wherever I live. They're shifters. Dragons."
"I
gathered."
"They
worship the Great Sky Dragon. . ."
"Uh?"
she had never heard of any shifter divinity. But then again, she'd never heard
of any other shifters. All of a sudden, vertiginously, as though standing at
the edge of a precipice and seeing a whole world open before her, she wondered
if there was a whole culture, a whole society she didn't know about. Some place
she belonged, whole families of shifters. Perhaps the only reason she'd never
known about it was because she was adopted and she didn't know her own birth
family. "Shifters have their own gods?"
Tom shrugged.
"I think he was a Chinese divinity. Or one of their sacred animals, or
something."
"Did you
get involved with them because you. . . shift? Into a dragon? Is your family .
. . does your family shift?"
Tom shook his
head. "My father doesn't. . . No."
"Then how
did you get involved with the triad?"
He looked
confused, then shrugged—not a precise shrug. "I don't know," he said.
He seemed on the verge of saying something, but shook his head, as if to his
own thoughts. "My father—" He stopped dead, as though something in
him had halted not just the words but the train of thought as well.
They were
driving down a narrow, tree-bordered street. Ahead of them, loomed the dark
expanse of the Castle—officially known as Chateau D'Aubigerne, a castle
imported from the Loire, stone by stone by a man enriched in the gold rush. It
now stood smack dab in the center of Goldport, abandoned and empty, surrounded
by gardens gone to seed and an eight foot high iron fence like massed spears.
Now and then there was talk of someone buying it, restoring it, and making it
into a hotel, a mall, a resort, or just a monument for tourists to gawk at. But
all those projects seemed non starters, perhaps because the Castle was well
away from all the hotels and convention centers, in a street of tiny, workmen
brick ranches, with cars on blocks and broken plastic toys in the front yards.
Tom slowed
down till he was going a normal speed and said, "Where can I take
you?"
"Beg your
pardon?"
He grinned at
her, a fugitive grin that transformed his features and gave her a startling
glimpse of what might lurk underneath the troubled young man's
aggression—humor? Joy? "Where can I drop you off? Where do you live?"
He smiled at her, a less naughty smile this time, more that of a patient adult
facing a stupid child. "You can't go to work like that, can you?"
She shook her
head, panicked. Gee. Frank was going to be mad. She might already have lost her
job. A surge of anger at Tom came up, but then vanished again. Someone had once
told Kyrie that if you lost a job making less than ten dollars and hour you
could find another one within the day. In her experience this was true. And
besides, it wasn't like Tom had asked her for help.
She'd just
jumped in and helped him. Hell, she thought she'd learned not to do that years
ago.
"My
place," she said. "It's down the next street . Turn right. Third house
on the left."
"House?"
"Rental.
It's smaller than an apartment, really. I just. . . I don't like people
around."
He nodded and
maneuvered through the turn and up to her house, at a speed that could only be
considered sedate after his early high jinxes.
The house was
tiny—eight hundred square feet and one bedroom, but it had a driveway—a narrow
strip of concrete that led right up to the back door and from which a narrow
walking path led to the front door. This late at night—or early in the
morning—all of Kyrie's neighbors would be asleep and she was grateful for that.
As Tom pulled
up to the back door, she had only two steps to go, stark naked. And she always
left the key under a rock in the nearby flowerbed. She hated to be locked out
of her house and didn't know anyone in town she could trust with a key. It was
one of the side-effects of moving around so much.
As she started
to open the door, she looked at Tom. He was sitting behind the wheel, the
engine still going, looking forward. The car was hers, but she could hardly
tell him to leave it and run off naked into the night. On the other hand—where
was he going to go even with the car?
She had to
invite him in. She didn't really want to, but she saw nothing else she could
do. Nothing else a decent human being could do. She tapped him on the arm.
"Turn that off. Come inside. Have a shower. I'll grab another jogging suit
for you."
He looked
surprised. Dumbfounded as if she'd offered him a fortune. "Are you
sure?"
"Where
would you go otherwise?"
He shrugged.
"I'll figure. . . I'll figure something. I always do." For just a
second a dangerous liquid quality crept into his voice, but he only shook his
head and swallowed. "Look, it's not safe to be around me."
"I've
noticed. But you have nowhere else to go. Come inside. I'll make coffee."
He took a few
seconds, then grabbed the screwdriver and turned it. And nodded at her.
"Can I come out through your side?" he said. "Less—"
"Exposure,
yes," she said. "And don't break anything. I have a key."
She dove out
the door and retrieved her key from its hiding place.
* * *
Later Tom
would think he might never have agreed to go to Kyrie's house, except for the
chunk of glass slowly working its way into his buttock.
It was clear
she didn't really want him around, and he wasn't sure he could blame her. After
all, he wasn't sure he wanted himself around most of the time. And she'd seen
him at one of his most dangerous moments.
It would
probably be a kindness for him to leave. But then he came up on the fact that
he was naked, he was shaking with exhaustion, and there was a big glass chunk
becoming a permanent part of his behind.
He turned off
the car and waited till she was out and had opened the door, before he dove out
of the car, after her. And stepped into a cozy kitchen—cozy and homey and like
no place he'd ever been before.
His father's
condo had been huge. This entire house would probably fit in the kitchen. And
the kitchen of that house had been white and chrome, imported Italian marble
and mosaic floors. But it was the domain of Mrs. Lopez, their cook. Never the
family kitchen. Never a place where the family gathered for meals.
Of course no
family could really gather in this kitchen either. Not unless they were all
unusually close. It was barely big enough to contain both of them, a card
table, two folding chairs, a refrigerator, stove and a tiny counter with sink.
Above the table, on the wall, hung a painting of an old fashioned-bicycle done
in shades of red and pink on black, the front wheel dwarfing the rest.
Kyrie closed
the door behind him. "This way," she said, as she led him out of the
kitchen via the interior door, and into a hallway. She opened another door and
turned the light on. "The bathroom. I'll go get you something to
wear."
He stepped
into the bathroom, where there was just enough space for himself, between tub,
sink and toilet.
Kyrie returned
almost immediately and knocked, and he hid himself behind the door as he opened
it. It seemed silly when they'd been together, naked for most of the evening.
But then Kyrie had put on a robe—a fluffy, pink robe that made her look young
and feminine.
She handed him
a bundle of clothes and said, "There's plenty of water. Outsized water
heater, so don't worry too much. But I'd like to shower after you, so don't use
more than you have to."
He nodded,
took the clothes, set them on the toilet tank, and started the shower. Plunging
under the water he felt it like a warm caress. He tried not to notice that it
ran red-stained down the drain. The corpse. . .
The corpse
seemed wholly unreal in this white-tiled shower that smelled of lavender and a
subtle hint of Kyrie's perfume. Tom had never noticed her perfume before, but
it was definitely her smell. Something spicy and soft that he'd caught before
as an undertone at work.
He removed the
glass chunk from his backside, by touch, then soaped himself vigorously. He had
no right to intrude on her life, nor to bring his own messes into her house. He
had no right to endanger her. He should leave as soon as possible.
Guiltily, he
used her shampoo, which was some designer brand and smelled of vanilla. His
hair, too, yielded quantities of red blood-stained water.
What would the
police think? Would the police track him? And Kyrie? He'd tell them she was
innocent. He was the murderer.
Was he the
murderer?
He couldn't
think about it. Stepping out of the tub, he heard Kyrie knock at the door. She
then opened it a sliver, and held out a towel. "Sorry. Forgot to give them
earlier," she said.
And she was
being kind to him. Far kinder than anyone had been in a long time. He thanked
her, dried himself, combed his hair with his fingers, the thick black curls
falling into their natural unruliness, and dressed in her jogging suit.
Coming out the
door, he had his words ready. About how he would be going now, no time to chat,
really, best thing would be to get out of her hair as soon as possible, and
then—
And then she
was waiting at the door and smiled at him. "I made coffee. It's in the
kitchen. Do you drink coffee? I won't be a minute."
And she went
past him into the steam-filled bathroom.
He couldn't
exactly leave when she was being so friendly, so he went into the kitchen,
where she'd run the coffee maker, and set cups, sugar and cream out. He didn't
know whether to laugh or cry that one of the cups was embossed with a dragon,
but he took it, anyway.
* * *
Kyrie showered
quickly, wondering what was wrong with her. Didn't she want him out of the
house. Now? Yesterday?
But she'd
never talked with another of her kind. And perhaps he knew what had happened.
Perhaps he'd remember if he'd killed the person in the parking lot. And perhaps
she'd be able to figure out how he'd got involved with the triad and if she'd
now be in danger.
And perhaps
tomorrow it would rain soup. And cream.
But there were
more material considerations, too. Her arm, where Two Dragons had got in a
glancing bite at the panther's paw. It looked like the tooth had pierced her
arm. It wasn't exactly bleeding—just a trickle of blood that increased under
the warm shower. She examined the puncture dispassionately. Her memory of the
adrenaline-fueled fight had fuzzy edges and she could not remember if the bite
had released, or if it had been fully completed before something she did caused
the dragon—who in human form wore the tattoo of two dragons on his hands—to let
go.
If the first,
it was probably a narrow, not too deep cut. If the second. . . Well, she could
easily be looking at a puncture all the way to the bone, at an infection. She
couldn't afford that, but neither could she afford to go to the hospital.
Oh, not
monetarily. She probably could scrape up the money for a quick visit to the
emergency room or one of the twenty four hours med centers. What she couldn't
afford was for doctors to ask how she got her wound. For them to notice
anything at all strange about the shape of the wound. For them to remember her
wounds when someone brought the corpse in, certainly with similar wounds. No.
Better to trust in Tom and ask him to help her clean her arm and perhaps
bandage the wound. Better the devil you know.
There were
other wounds too. One on her hip, which she could bandage herself, and then one
across her shoulder, at the back, which she didn't think she could take care of
without help.
She got out of
the shower and dried a little more vigorously than she need, to punish herself
for her stupidity in getting involved in Tom's affairs. She bandaged her hip
and her torso, before putting on her robe again.
Frank was
going to make her pay for the apron. But at least she still had a job. She'd
called while Tom was showering. While Frank had been none too pleased to hear
she wouldn't be back the rest of the night, neither had he fired her.
In the
kitchen, Tom stood, holding the cup of coffee. The one with the dragon. Kyrie
smiled. She hadn't even thought about his reaction. It had come, like most of
her dishes, from the Salvation Army thrift store. She picked up the cup left on
the counter and poured herself a cup of black coffee. He hadn't thrown a snit
at the dragon. He hadn't imagined it was a dig directed at him.
Perhaps he was
not quite so touchy and anti-social as she would have thought he was. Or
perhaps. . .
Kyrie looked
him over. He smelled of soap and her shampoo, and he looked far less dangerous
than he had. His black curls were damp from the shower, dripping down his back.
His expression was just bewildered enough to make him look younger he normally
did. Even the fact that he was frowning into his coffee cup didn't make him
look threatening, just puzzled.
He looked at
her, and the frown became less intense, but the eyebrows remained low over the
blue eyes, which looked like they were trying to figure out something really
difficult. Like the meaning of the universe. "Why?" he said.
"I'm dangerous." He shrugged, as if he hadn't said exactly what he
meant to say. "I mean, it's dangerous to hang out with me. You saw. . . my
apartment." He took a sip of coffee, fast, desperately, as if trying to
make up for words that didn't come out quite right. Then choked, coughed, and
set the cup down to cover his mouth. "Why did you let me in here?" he
asked.
Kyrie could
have said many things. That his apartment was one of the reasons. Who would
send him out there naked, in a car that looked, clearly, like it had been
broken into? Who would send him out into the night with nowhere to stay, no
safe place to crash?
But before she
spoke, she realized that there would be many people—perhaps most people—who
would do that. She'd met them often enough growing up. The families who took
foster children but didn't want them associating with their real
children; the children at school who shunned you because you lived in a less
than savory part of town; the teachers who assumed you were dumb and hopeless
because you didn't live with your blood family.
Had she done
the same with Tom, in shunning him because of his appearance? His drug habit?
But no. She'd been justified in that. Those were things he could and should
control. However, this trouble. . . Well, perhaps he'd brought it on himself.
Perhaps at the root of it all was a drug deal gone bad, or the theft of
something valuable.
She couldn't
imagine anyone stealing anything valuable from a triad composed of dragon
shape-shifters. She would have to assume Tom was brasher, and perhaps braver,
than she. But she didn't know him well enough to rule it out, either.
And again, she
had had plenty of experience with his type: the alcoholic foster parents, the
doping foster brothers. You gave them chance and chance and chance, and they
never improved, never got any better. They just told you more and more lies and
got bolder and bolder.
She didn't
know what to say and she couldn't guess in which category Tom would fall. So,
instead, she stuck to the need at hand. That had always seen her through. When
in trouble, stick to the need at hand.
"I need
you to help me bandage my arm and disinfect my back," she said. And not
sure why his eyes grew so wide at this request, added, "Please?"
He nodded and
shrugged. "Of course," he said. His eyes remained wide, as if he were
either very surprised or very skeptical. "Where do you keep the first aid
supplies?"
* * *
"They're
in the bathroom," Kyrie told him. "Behind the mirror."
Tom headed
that way. It was a relief to have something to do—to have something to think
of. He'd been sitting there, feeling miserable, drinking his coffee, wondering
what was the best way to leave.
The bathroom
was still full of steam—but the smell was indefinably different there. Not just
the soap and shampoo he'd used also, but something else. . . Something he could
neither define nor explain. It smelled like Kyrie. That was all he could say.
It was a familiar smell and he realized he'd smelled it around her even under
the layers of odors at the Athens. A hint of cinnamon, an edge of burnt sugar.
Only not really, but that was what the smells made him think of. Like. . . What
the kitchen smelled like when Mrs. Lopez had been making pastries.
He opened the
medicine cabinet and collected bandages, antibiotic cream, small scissors,
bandages, hydrogen peroxide and cotton wool. It was the best stocked home
cabinet he'd ever seen. Other than his own. Shape-shifters. You came home cut,
scraped, you weren't even sure how.
And Kyrie was
one of them. Just like him.
That he was
attracted to her didn't make it any easier. He'd been attracted to her from the
first moment he'd seen her—giving him the jaundiced once-over when Frank
introduced them. But his attraction to women had come to nothing these last
five years, ever since he'd found out he was a shape-shifter.
There were too
many things to be afraid of—shifting in front of her, for instance. Hurting her
while he was shape-shifted. And then the whole thing with the drugs, with which
he'd tried—unsuccessfully—to control his shifts. It made him associate with too
many shady characters for him to want any girl he even liked involved with. And
then, of course, the. . . He shifted his mind forcefully away from even
thinking of the object. That. And the triad. This without even thinking of
nightmare scenarios: pregnancy. A baby who was born shifted.
And now in one
night he'd managed to visit all but the last of these scenarios. He'd shifted
in front of Kyrie. He'd probably hurt someone else in front of her. And he'd
landed her in the thick of his trouble with the triad. Damn. And all this when
he'd just found out she was a shape-shifter too. She was one like him.
Oh, she was
not the only one he'd met, in his five years of wandering around, homeless and
rootless. But she was the first one he'd talked to, the first one he'd had
anything to do with. The only female. . . Up to tonight, he would have sworn
that only males shifted shape.
And what good
did it do him that she too was a shape-shifter—that she would understand him?
Absolutely
none. First, he had blown it so far with her that if his hopes were a substance
they would be scraping them off the floor and ceiling for months. And
second—and second there was the triad.
Tom had been
attracted to Kyrie before tonight. Now he liked her. He liked her a lot. He
might very well be on his way to falling in love with her. If he had the
slightest idea what love was and how one fell in it, he would be able to say
for sure. But here the thing was—he cared about her. He cared a lot. An awful
lot. He didn't want her dead. As he was bound to be, soon enough, now that the
triad had got really serious about finding him.
"It's
right there on the shelf," Kyrie's voice said from the doorway. He turned
to see her framed in the door, those big, dark eyes, looking puzzled.
"Oh, yes,
right," he said. "It's actually in my hands." He turned around
and lifted the hands filled with first aid stuff. "I'm sorry. I spaced. I
guess I'm tired."
She nodded
solemnly. He didn't remember ever seeing her laugh. Smile, sure, a bunch of
times, mostly the polite smile you gave customers late at night when they came
in looking tired and out of it. But never laugh. Was laughter too far out of
control for her? And why did he want to know? It wasn't as if he'd ever find
out.
"Right,"
she said. "Shifting that many times in a row. Staying shifted that long.
I've shifted, but not for long tonight, so I'm not—" she yawned and
covered her mouth with her hand. "That tired."
He smiled,
despite himself, grateful that she couldn't see it because she had turned her
back and was heading back towards the kitchen. Where she sat at the table,
pulled the cord on the lamp overhead to turn it on, and rolled up the sleeve of
her robe to show a narrow wound with bluish borders, like a bruise.
He sat on the
other chair, laid the first aid materials down on the table. "That looks
awful," he said.
She nodded and
turned her arm over. On the bottom there was another bruise, another puncture.
"It went
all the way—" he started.
She shook her
head. "No. The dra—He just bit me. I don't know how deeply. It feels
different. . . In the other body." She'd lowered her head to look at her
own arm, and her hair had fallen across her face. The temptation to reach over
and pull that multicolored curtain back was almost more than he could endure.
"Have you
had a tetanus shot?" he asked, going on routine. "Because if you
hadn't, you should. I don't know how clean. . ." He realized he was about
to say he didn't know how clean dragons' teeth were and caught himself in time.
He smiled. There was no avoiding it. He was a dragon. She knew he was a dragon.
And on that, at least, there was no reason for awkwardness. Hell, she shifted
too. He had to keep telling himself that. He had to remember. "I,
personally, brush and floss. Use mouthwash, even. But I can't answer to the
cleanliness of another dragon's teeth."
That got him a
smile. Little more than the polite smile that she gave customers, but a smile
nonetheless, and even a teasing sort of reply. "No unified dental hygiene
guidelines for dragons?"
"Afraid
not," he said. He soaked one of the balls of cotton wool in hydrogen
peroxide and gently started to cleanse the area. "Seriously, you really
should go to a doctor. I know we shifters heal quickly, but these deep puncture
wounds can be dangerous. Only a tiny area exposed to air, see. The space in
there can develop an infection very easily. And you could get blood poisoning,
something horrible." He looked up and saw her open her mouth. "I know
what you're going to say, and I'm not going to tell you that you're wrong. The
last thing we need. The very last thing is to call attention to
ourselves—particularly with strange animal bites. And I understand how you feel
about being in the hospital. I slept under a bridge many a night, rather than
going to a shelter when the moon was full and the impulse to shift greater.
But, Kyrie, I'm not joking." He pushed as much hydrogen peroxide as he
could into the puncture, on both sides, by squeezing the cotton right atop of
it. "If you get a fever, the first sign of swelling on your arm, and you
must—must—see a doctor. It could kill you."
"You know
a lot about this stuff."
He nodded
pulling back the cotton wool, tossing it in the kitchen trash in the corner and
waiting while her arm dried. Then he got antibiotic cream and started
slathering it on. There was no reason to tell her anything. Or maybe there was.
He'd been so desperately alone all these years. "My mom is a doctor,"
he said.
"Is she.
. ." Kyrie swallowed. "Is she. . ."
"She left
dad about ten years ago," he said. "When I was a kid. Went down to
Florida with her new husband. I haven't seen her since. But up till I was ten I
gave her many reasons to perform first aid on me, and I heard this speech a
lot."
Kyrie frowned
at him. Then shook her head. "I was going to ask if she was a
dragon."
Tom shook his
head, then shrugged. "I don't think so. I know dad isn't. And I don't
think mom is. I've never. . ." He was about to say that he didn't know any
older shifters, but then realized he did. He had seen a couple of derelicts
shifting while he flew above in the middle of a summer night. It had been
further out west, towards New Mexico, and they'd shifted into coyotes and
headed for the hills. He remembered because back then, seeing the tattered men
shift into ragtag coyotes he'd wondered if he'd end up like that. Old, still a
transient, still homeless. It had been part of what led him to steal. . .
"I don't think it's hereditary, or at least not that way. Why? Are your
parents shifters?"
She shook her
head and shrugged, and her eyes got soft and distant. "I wouldn't know.
They left me at the entrance of a church in Charlotte, North Carolina when I
was just a few hours old. I was found by parishioners coming in for the
midnight services on Christmas night. There were headlines all over the papers,
about it. But I never knew. . ." She shrugged again. "I was raised by
foster families."
And perhaps
that explained why she held herself under such tight control? Tom wouldn't
know. He knew about as much about foster care as he knew about happy family
life. A couple of his acquaintances of convenience, while he had been on the
streets, had been foster children. They'd told him hair raising stories about
the system. But did it mean that every one was like that? Or only the ones
who'd gone seriously to the bad?
He taped the
bandages in place over the puncture. "Blood poisoning will make a visible
circle, it will start just above the wound, and it will be a red circle that
will slowly move upwards if it's not treated. If you see a circle on your arm,
you must go to the doctor, immediately."
"Am I to
assume personal experience speaks here?" Kyrie asked.
He managed a
smile. "My best friend and I." He hadn't thought of Joe in years.
Wondered where he was now. What he was doing. "We had these plastic
swords, but you know, they were disappointing because they really couldn't
cause enough damage. We could bang on each other all day long with them, they
were too light and definitely not sharp. So we improved them by sticking nails
in the tip. Rusty nails." He saw her wince. "Yeah. Lucky for us my
mom caught the infection in time. Even then I was on antibiotics forever. Now
that I think about it, lucky we were both lousy swordsmen, too. We never
managed to kill each other, though we tried for a whole day."
He pulled her
sleeve down, and started to gather the stuff.
"No,"
she said. "I want you to look at my back. "It feels abraded." As
she spoke, she loosened her robe, and edged it down at the back—to reveal a
shoulder that had been stripped bare of skin.
"It's
more than abraded," Tom said. And because the sight of the robe sliding
over the raw flesh of her shoulder made him cringe, he added, "Let
me," and pulled the robe down slowly, at the back. In the process, the
front fell too, revealing one of her breasts almost to the nipple. Golden skin
the color of honey, and it looked velvet soft. His fingers wanted to stray that
way, wanted to feel. . .
He
concentrated on her back, kneeling so that her back was all he saw. He found
the end of the skinned portion where her shoulder blade ended. "This looks
awful. How?"
"I think
it was a paw swipe," she said. "The claws missed me, but the scales
got me."
"Ah,"
Tom said. He had never thought he was that lethal in his dragon form, and to be
honest, he wasn't sure he was. He didn't know how much he looked like the
Chinese dragons. He was aware the tail was different, the paws more massive,
but he'd never looked at himself in a mirror while shifted. Or if he had, he
hadn't managed to remember it.
He got the
antibiotic cream and started applying it in a thin layer to Kyrie's back, trying
to touch so lightly that he wouldn't hurt her. She didn't seem to flinch from
the touch, so he must be succeeding. There had been a time he wanted to be a
doctor. Before. . . All of this.
"When did
you shift for the first time?" Kyrie asked.
Tom's hand
trembled immediately, as the memories flooded him. Flying over the city. Not
the first time, but one of the first. Seeing everything. Then coming home.
Breaking the bedroom window. It was devilishly hard to work the paws when you
weren't even sure what was happening to you. And then his father. His father,
with the gun, ordering him out.
Hell, he
didn't even know his father had a gun until then. Until that moment, had anyone
asked, he'd have said his father wouldn't have a gun in the house. Tom had
heard his father go on and on about gun control quite often. And he was too
young to understand hypocrisy.
He took a deep
breath and managed to push the memory away. To this day he wasn't sure why his
father had ordered him out of the house. He'd shifted back by then. He'd
shifted back and grabbed hold of his robe. Which is why he'd ended on the
street in his robe and barefoot.
But he
controlled the memories, squeezed a dollop of cream from the tube. Kyrie hadn't
asked again, so he probably hadn't taken that long to get himself under
control. "I was sixteen," he said. "I never had any warning
before. I just. . . Shifted. In the moonlight."
In the
moonlight, in his room, with its comfortable bed, and all the posters, and the
tv, the stereo, the game system. All the things he'd once thought needed to
survive. "I was all excited too," he said. "That first time. I
thought it was a cool, super hero thing."
She was
silent, and he thought she was thinking about what a fool he'd been. He
concentrated on what he was doing. Fingers on the wound on her shoulder,
lightly, lightly, spreading a thin, shining layer of antibiotic cream.
"I was
fourteen," she said, speaking as from a great distance. "I thought I
was dreaming the first few times. And then I thought I was hallucinating. I
thought I had . . . I don't know. Seizures or something. I used to imagine that
my parents were two mental patients who'd had me and had smuggled me out of the
madhouse so I could be raised on the outside."
He laughed
despite himself and she turned to look at him, her expression grave. Not
offended, just grave.
"I don't
think there were any mental hospitals like that in the nineteen eighties,"
he said. "Where they kept the children of the patients locked up along
with the parents. Were there?"
Kyrie shook
her head and smiled again, a smile fractionally warmer than the ones she gave
the customers. "Not in this country, no, I don't think," she said.
"But I was very young. Just a kid. I thought. . ." She shrugged.
"Actually at first I thought someone was putting datura in my food or
something."
"Datura?"
he asked.
"An
hallucinogenic. At least, Agatha Christie has a mystery in which someone is
putting it in a man's shaving cream to make him dream that he's a werewolf, and
I thought—"
"I read
Christie too," he said. Often her books were the only thing available in
safe homes for at risk youth or what not, where he sought temporary refuge.
That and the ever-yellowing pile of National Geographics. It was Tom's
considered opinion that National Geographics were alien artifacts routinely
bombarded down onto the Earth. "But isn't datura something Indian,
something. . ."
"I didn't
tell you I was rational, did I?" Kyrie asked.
He shook his
head and reached for the gauze, cutting it to fit the area on her shoulder, and
laying it gently atop the wound.
"I
thought someone was trying to make me think I was crazy. Perhaps my foster
parents. They get more for special needs kids, you know? And then I read up on
it, and I decided I was schizophrenic. I couldn't tell what I did while I was
under this condition, so I started hiding. At first I was lucky that no one saw
me, and then when I realized what caused it—the full moon, a feeling of anger.
Anything. I was damn careful over the next four years. Always slept alone, even
if arrangements called for other kids in the room. I'd take a blanket and go
sleep on a tree, if needed. It. . . Made for interesting times and made me
change families even more often. And then I was on my own, and I've been
careful. Very careful. But I still thought it was all in my mind. Till
tonight."
Tom shook his
head, as he started taping the gauze in place. He couldn't imagine not knowing
the shift was true. But perhaps it was different for dragons. He saw the city
from above. He saw things happen. And, of course, within a month of his first
shifting, his father had seen him shift and had shouted at him and . . .
ordered him out. For shifting. Hard to tell yourself it was all in your mind
after that.
"How many
of us are there?" Kyrie asked. "I mean—there's you and the triad,
but. . . You've known about this more and have been more places. How many
shifters have you met?"
* * *
She had to
talk to keep her mind off what he was doing. He wasn't hurting her. On the
contrary. His fingers, touching her skin ever-so-lightly were a caress. Or the
closest to a caress she could remember.
It had been
too long since she'd even let anyone touch her. Certainly not since she'd
started shifting. Before that there had been foster siblings who'd got close,
some she'd hugged and who'd hugged her. But not since then.
Tom's touch
was very delicate, as if he were afraid of breaking her. It felt odd. She
didn't want to think of him, back there, being careful not to hurt her.
And she really
wanted to know how many shifters he'd seen in the five years since he'd left
his house. She hadn't been out much. Well, not out on the street and not out
while aware of being in a shape-shifted body. She hadn't been looking for other
shifters. But he might have been. Hell, considering his thing with the triad,
he probably had been.
He paused at
her question. He'd been taping the gauze down over her wound, and he stopped.
For a moment she thought she'd offended him.
But he sighed.
"I don't know for sure," he said. "I wasn't counting. Including
the occasional enforcer for the triad or not?"
"The
enforcers for the triad have been trailing you all this time?"
She was sure
he'd smiled at that, but she wasn't sure how. His fingers resumed their gentle
touch, taping the gauze in place.
"No,"
he said. "Only a. . . part of a year." He paused again. "Without
counting them and . . . and the other triad dragons, of whom there are many,
I'd say I've seen about twelve, maybe thirteen shifters. Not. . . Not close
enough to talk to. I've only talked to a couple. I never went out of my way to
talk to them. And sometimes, it was ambiguous, you know. Like, you're walking
downtown and you see someone walk in a certain direction and moments later a
wolfhound . . . or a wolf. . . comes from the same direction. The only ones I
knew for sure were the triad and the orangutan and the coyotes. There seems to
be any number of them within the triad. Hundreds. And that might be hereditary.
They seem to think they're descended of the Great Sky Dragon. They marry among
themselves and they have rites and. . . and stuff."
"So—excluding
the triad—a dozen in five years? That doesn't seem like many."
"No. And
most of the time it was larger cities than Goldport. Large cities back East.
New York and Boston and Atlanta."
"Odd,"
Kyrie said. "Because just last night. . ."
"Yes, you
and me and that lion," Tom said, his voice grave, as he finished taping
the gauze in place. At least she assumed he'd finished, because he lay the tape
back on the table, with the scissors on top of it. And then, ever so gently, he
tugged her robe back in place. "I've been thinking the same. Why that many
in one night. With the triad here, too, we must be tipping the scales at . . .
a lot of shifters. And I wondered why."
Kyrie wondered
why too. She'd been living in Goldport for over a year. She remembered the
greyhound bus had stopped here and she'd thought to stay for a night before
going on to Denver. But she'd never gone on. Something about Goldport just felt.
. . right. Like it was the home she'd been looking for so long. Which was
ridiculous, since it was what remained of a gold boom town that had become a
University town. And she never had anything to do with either mining or
college.
But Goldport
had felt. . . Not exactly familiar, but more safe. Secure. Home. Like the home
she'd never known. She had walked from the Greyhound station to the Athens and
seen a sign on the window asking for a server. She'd applied and been hired
that night.
But what
attraction could the small, odd town have for other shifters. Well. . . Tom had
come via the Greyhound too, she supposed. And Frank had offered him a job.
As for the
lion. . . She wouldn't think about the lion. "It's probably just a
coincidence," she told Tom. And it probably was. Three were not, after
all, a great sample. Perhaps they were the only three shifters in town—other
than the triad—and had just chanced to bump into each other. The blood had
surely helped. She swallowed, remembering what the blood smelled like in the
other shape.
Tom came
around and started gathering the first aid supplies.
"What
kinds of shifters are there? What kinds did you see? Just big cats? And
werewolves? And dragons? Or. . ."
Tom stopped
what he was doing. He didn't drop the supplies, just held them where they were.
He didn't look at her. "You're going to think I'm an idiot," he said.
"Um. . .
No," Kyrie said. She couldn't understand why she would think he was an
idiot now. She had a thousand reasons to think him careless, low on self-preservation
instincts and probably a little insane. But. . . an idiot? "Why?"
He sighed.
"I swear one of those shifters was a centaur. I know what you're going to
tell me, that centaurs don't exist, that I was just seeing a horseman,
that—"
"No I'm
not," Kyrie said.
"You're
not?"
"Tom,
dragons are thought not to exist too."
"Oh,"
He looked shocked. As if he'd never thought of it that way. Then he grinned.
"Well, then I can tell you. Another one of them was an orangutan. Little
stooped man, sold roast chestnuts on the street near . . . Near my father's
house. And he shifted into an orangutan at night. He was a very nice man, once
I got to talking to him. He told me that his wife and his daughters sometimes
didn't notice when he shifted." He grinned at that, as he gathered all the
first aid supplies, and headed back to the bathroom.
Kyrie followed
him, wondering what to do next. He'd helped her. And, whether his association
with the triad was dangerous or not, he, personally, didn't feel dangerous. And
they'd lost the triad for the night, hadn't they?
She was
reluctant to send him out alone and barefoot into the night. What if he got
killed? How would she feel when she heard about it? How would she live with
herself?
And besides,
having grown up without family, all alone, this was the first time she'd found
someone who was genuinely like her. Not family—at least she didn't think so,
though he could be a half brother or a cousin. One of the curses of the
abandoned child was not to know—but someone who had more in common with her
than anyone else she had found. And if he'd gone bad. . . She shook her head.
She didn't
know why he'd gone bad. She remembered the smell of blood in that parking lot
and the madness in the apartment. Clearly, she too had it in her to commit
violence. She would have to control it. Perhaps he was just weaker than her?
Perhaps he could not control himself as well.
He put the
stuff back in the medicine cabinet, carefully organized, and turned around.
"I'll get out of your hair now, okay. Just report your car stolen. You
have insurance, right?"
"Yes,
but. . ."
"Oh, I'll
still pay you for the window," Tom said. "But it might take me a
while to be able to get to an ATM. I have some money. Not much. I don't think
I'll get my deposit back for the apartment. I thought I'd head out of town,
lead the . . . the dragons away from you."
"And
leave me stuck in the middle of a murder investigation?"
He opened his
hands. "What else can I do? I can't undo what happened." He looked
earnest and distraught. "Someone died. And, Kyrie, I wish to all that's
holy that I could tell you it wasn't me who killed him. But I can't. He's dead,
and I'm. . ."
He opened his
hands denoting his helplessness. "I wish I could tell you I never touched
him and that I would never have done that, but my mind is all a blank. I don't
even remember being attacked in my apartment, honest. If it weren't for the
state it's in. . ."
His hair had
fallen in front of his eyes, and he tossed his head back to throw it back.
"Look. . . I might very well have done it, and they might find evidence
linking me to it. I'm not sure how your DNA works when you're shifted. But if
it was. . . If they think I killed him, all you have to say is that I asked you
for a ride home, that you had no idea anyone was dead. You could have come out
in the parking lot and never seen it, you know? It was behind the vans. I took
advantage of your charity and stole your car. No one will hold that against
you."
Kyrie bit her
lip. There were other things he wasn't even thinking about, she thought. For
instance, the paper towels. Properly looked over they'd probably find traces of
her hair, dead skin cells, whatever.
But fine, the
major evidence would point to him, and she could probably come up with a story
that would let her off and get him out of her life forever. So, why didn't she
want to? Was it because once he was gone she could go back to imagining that
she was just hallucinating the shifts? And she wouldn't have a witness to her
shape-shifting.
She put her
hands inside the wide sleeves of her robe. "I think that's tiredness
talking," she said. "I think if I can come up with an excuse, so can
you. You're exhausted from who knows how many hours shifted. And you don't look
well." This last was the absolute truth. Tom had started out looking
shocked and ill, and he'd progressed to milk-pale, with dark, dark circles
under his eyes, bruised enough to look like someone had punched him hard.
"You could crash the car out there," she said, and seized upon that.
"And I don't want it made inoperable. The insurance never pays you enough
to junk it."
He frowned at
her, the frown that she had learned to identify as his look of indecision.
"I have a
love seat," she said. And to his surprised look, "In the sunroom at
the back. Sleeping porch, really, from when they treated tubercular patients in
this region. They thought fresh air was essential, so they had these sun
porches. Someone glassed this one in, and there's a love seat in it. Nothing
fancy, mind you, but you can have it and a blanket."
She could see
him being tempted. He was so tired that, standing in the middle of her little
bathroom, he was swaying slightly on his feet. She could see him looking in
what he probably thought was the direction of the sun porch, and she could
practically hear the thoughts of the love seat and blanket run through his
head. She could also see him opening his mouth to tell her thanks but no
thanks.
Which was when
the doorbell rang.
* * *
The noise of
the doorbell echoed, seeming to fill the small house.
Kyrie jumped
and Tom turned his wrist towards himself, as though checking time on a watch he
didn't wear.
She swept her
gaze towards the narrow little window in the shower, instead, checking the
scant light coming through, blue tinged, announcing the end of blind night, the
beginning of barely lit morning.
"It can't
be anyone about the. . . It's too early," she said.
And saw Tom
pale, saw him start shaking. "Go to the kitchen," she told him, sure
that in his mind as in hers was the memory of the bathroom at the Athens, full
of bloodied towels, probably tainted with his hair and skin. And hers.
Why, oh, why
hadn't she put the used towels in her car? Dumped them somewhere? But where?
Outside Tom's apartment? They hadn't exactly had time to stop anywhere and get
rid of things.
It was too
late for all that, now. All her life, she had faced crises and looked after
herself. What else could she do? There hadn't been anyone else to look after
her. Now she had to look after Tom too. Not the first time she had this sort of
responsibility. Younger kids at foster homes often clung to her, sure that her
strength would carry them. And it did, even when she thought she had no strength
left.
He was
shaking, and she put a hand out to him, and touched his arm. It still felt too
cold, even through the sweat suit. "Go to the kitchen. Sit down," she
said. "Stay. I'll go see who it is. I'll deal with it."
She walked out
through the kitchen and the hallway, to the front room with its curved
seventies vintage sofa that she'd covered in the pretty red sheet, and the
table made of plastic cubes where she kept her books and her few prized
possessions. It should give her a sense of security, but it didn't. Instead,
she wondered what would happen to her books if she were arrested and what would
happen to the house if she lost her job. Though it was just a rental, it was
the first place she could call hers, the first place where she was not living on
someone else's territory and on someone else's terms.
She shook her
head. It wouldn't come to that. She wouldn't let it come to that.
The front door
was one of the cheap hollow metal ones, but it did have a bull's eye. The
neighborhood was quiet enough and the whole city was safe, so she supposed it
had been put there to allow occupants to avoid Jehovah witnesses.
Now she leaned
into the door and put her eye to the tiny opening. Out there was. . . A
stranger.
He stood on
her doorstep, and he was tall, blond. Broad shouldered, she supposed, but with
the sort of relaxed posture and laid back demeanor that made him look more like
a surfer than a body builder. Increasing the impression was hair just on this
side of long, the bangs overhanging his left eye. He wore a loose white linen
suit that seemed to accentuate his relaxed expression. The sunglasses that
covered his eyes despite the scant light made him look like one of those
artists afraid of being recognized, or else like a man who'd just flown in from
a vacation in Bermuda and had not yet fully realized that he was back home.
The sunglasses
made his expression unreadable, but he seemed to be looking intently at the
door. As Kyrie watched, he raised his hand and rang the doorbell again.
It was what?
Four, five in the morning? Surely this was not a casual visit. Casual visitors
didn't insist on being answered at this time of night. But then what? A rapist
or a robber? What? Ringing the doorbell? Wasn't that sort of unusual? Besides,
she could handle herself. Surely she could handle herself.
Kyrie unlocked
the door and opened it the length of the chain. The chain was another puzzler.
Either the neighborhood had been a lot worse when the security device was
installed, or the Jehovah Witnesses were unusually persistent.
"Ah,"
he said, when she opened the door, and smiled flashing teeth straight out of a
toothpaste commercial. "Ms Kyrie Smith?"
Before she
could answer, there was a faint rustling sound behind her. She Turned and saw
Tom mouthing soundlessly "Police?" He raised his eyebrows.
She shrugged.
But it if was police, then she really needed to answer. Before he took too
close a look at the car. The upholstery was doubtlessly smeared with blood.
And, doubtlessly, some of it would be the murder victim's.
Tom nodded at
her, as if to tell her to go ahead and open the door. And Kyrie did, about a
palm's width further.
The man on the
other side got closer. He wore some strong aftershave. No. Not strong, but
insinuating. He looked down at her, his eyes unreadable behind the sunglasses.
"Ms. Kyrie Grace Smith?"
She nodded.
Smith was the name of a foster family she no longer remembered, but it had
stuck to her throughout her growing up years.
He reached for
a pocket of his linen suit, and brought out a leather wallet, which he opened
with a flourish that must have taken years to learn. "Officer Rafiel
Trall, Goldport Police Department. May I speak to you for a moment?"
* * *
Tom swallowed
hard and was sure he'd turned pale at the announcement that the man on the
other side of the door was an officer of the law. He'd had run- ins with the
police before. He had a record. Oh, he'd never been arrested for more than a
night or a couple of nights. And he'd been a minor. And every time his father
had bailed him out.
But still, he
didn't know what kind of record they kept or if it would have been erased when
he turned eighteen. He was sure a couple of times they'd tried to charge him as
an adult. Wasn't sure if it had stuck. He hadn't been paying much attention
back then. He'd been cocky and full of himself and his family's power and
position.
Since he'd
left home, he'd done his best not to be caught. He tried to visualize being in
jail, and needing to shift. Or shifting without meaning to. He imagined turning
into a dragon in confines where privacy didn't exist. He couldn't be arrested.
He wouldn't be. He would kill himself first.
Kyrie looked
at the ID, then at the man.
"May I
come in?" the man asked. "I have a few questions to ask you. Just a
few minutes of your time."
Silently,
Kyrie opened the door, and the man came in. He didn't look surprised at all at
seeing Tom, whom he greeted with a nod. But then why should he look surprised?
He couldn't know that Kyrie didn't have a boyfriend, could he?
Tom willed
himself to relax, to show no fear. Fear would make the man suspicious and would
make him look harder for something that had triggered that reaction.
"Look,
this is just a quick visit," the policeman said. "A quick question.
You work at the Athens on Fairfax, right?"
Kyrie nodded.
"Mr.
Frank Skathari, your boss, said you had left about midnight?"
Had it been
midnight? Tom wondered. It seemed like an eternity to his tired body, his dizzy
mind. He saw Kyrie nod and wondered if she had any more idea of the time than
he did.
"You
didn't see any large animal in the parking lot?"
"An. . .
animal?" she asked.
"There
was a corpse. . . I'm sorry. You might not have noticed," he said.
"It was behind some vans. But there was a corpse, and it looked like it
died by accident. An attack by some creature with large teeth. We're thinking
like a Komodo dragon or something."
Dragon. Tom
felt as if the word were directed at him. The policeman looked at him as he
spoke. Or at least, his face turned in Tom's direction. It was hard to see what
the man was looking at, exactly, with those sunglasses on. "People bring
these pets from abroad," he was saying, as Tom focused on him again.
"And let them lose. It could be dangerous. I just wanted to know if you'd
seen something."
"No,"
Kyrie said, and sounded amazingly convincing. "I saw nothing strange. I
just concerned with Tom. . ." She made a head gesture towards him.
"With getting Tom his medicine."
"Medicine?"
the policeman asked, as if this were the clue that would unravel the whole
case.
"Migraine,"
Tom said. It was the first thing to cross his mind. His father, he remembered,
had migraines. "Migraine medicine."
"Oh."
The policeman said. "I see." He sounded alarmingly as if he did. He
looked at one of them and then the other. "So, you won't be able to help
me."
"I'm
afraid not," Kyrie said.
"That,"
he said. "Is too bad. I was hoping you'd have coffee with me
tomorrow." He looked at his watch and nodded. "Well, later today—and
discuss if you might have heard something suspicious or. . . found something.
Perhaps in the bathroom of the diner. We haven't looked there, yet, you
know?"
Tom heard the
sound of a train, inside his ears, complete with whistles and growing thuds. He
felt as if he would pass out. The bathroom. The damn man had looked in the
bathroom and. . . seen the towels. And he going to use it to blackmail Kyrie?
Blackmail Kyrie into what? What had Tom got Kyrie into?
He felt a
spasm come over his whole body, and knew he was going to shift. And he didn't
have the strength nor the will power to stop it.
Kyrie gasped.
He managed to see her through a fog of pre-shift trembling, and realized she
wasn't looking at him, but at the door she had just closed.
Then she
turned around and something—something about him, about the way he looked, made
her eyes grow huge and panicky. "No," she said. "No, you idiot.
Don't shift."
Her hand
grabbed firmly at his arm, and it felt warm and human and real.
* * *
Kyrie turned
from closing the door on the policeman's smiling face, and saw Tom. . . She
couldn't describe it. He was Tom, undeniably Tom, human and bipedal, but there
was something very wrong about his shape. His arms were too long, the wrist and
quite a bit of green-shaded flesh protruding from the end of the sleeve. His
hands were stretched out, too, his fingers elongated and the space between them
strangely membranous. And his face, beneath the huge, puzzled blue eyes looked
like it was doing its best to grow a snout.
"No, no,
you idiot," she said. "Don't shift. No. Calm down."
He stood on
one foot, then the other, his features blank and stupid. His face already
half-dragon and unable to show human emotions. His mouth opened, but what came
out was half hiss, half growl.
She slapped him.
She slapped him hard. "No," she said. "No."
And he
shivered. He trembled on the edge of shifting. She realized she had smacked
what could be a very large, very angry dragon in a minute. And then she smacked
him again on the nose, as if he were a naughty puppy.
She judged how
her shifts had left her, tired, witless. He'd shifted twice now. Oh, so had
she, but the first time very briefly. How long had he been shifted? What had he
done?
"You
cannot shift now," she said. And slapped him again.
He blinked. His
features blurred and changed. All of a sudden he was Tom, just Tom, standing
there, looking like someone had hit him hard with a half brick and stopped just
short of braining him. He seemed to be beyond tiredness, to some zombie-like
state where he could be ordered about.
"Oh,
damn," he said, so softly that it was almost a sigh. He looked at her, and
his eyes showed a kind of mad despair behind the tiredness. "Oh, damn. I
can't be arrested, Kyrie, I can't. I was. . . when I was young and stupid. My
father. . . got me out, but sometimes I spent a night in lockup. Kyrie, I
couldn't survive it as a dragon. When my dad threw me out, I spent the night in
a runaway shelter and. . . It was torture. The dragon. . . The beast wanted to
come out. All those people. And being confined. If they take me in on suspicion
of murder, if I have to stay. . . Kyrie, I couldn't. I'll kill myself before
that."
Suddenly she
understood why he'd started to shift, what the words of Officer Trall would
sound like to him. She sighed, heavily. "No one is arresting you. At least
not yet."
"But he
is blackmailing us. He's blackmailing you. About the towels in the bathroom. He
knows about the blood. And it's all my fault."
"Yes,"
Kyrie said, wondering if it was blackmail, or what it was, exactly. She
remembered the expression in his eyes. Those eyes. . . If it was blackmail,
what did he want, exactly? "He knows about the towels because he smelled
them."
"Smelled?"
"He found
them by the smell of blood, I'd bet. Before any other policemen got to them. He
got to them and bagged them and. . . I presume hid them. You were starting to
shift, so you probably missed it, but he lowered his glasses and I could see
his eyes."
"And?"
Tom asked.
"He had
the same golden eyes as the lion in the parking lot," she said.
* * *
"He is. .
. like us?" Tom asked, as his mind tried to adjust to the thought.
"He is the lion? How can. . ."
"You know
the lion was like us," Kyrie said.
He heard the
annoyed note in her voice. She had slapped him. Hard. He'd almost gone to
pieces in front of her. He felt like an idiot. "But, he's a policeman. He
looks. . . He looks well adjusted. And he traced us. . . And. . . he's in the
police?" He swallowed, aware of sounding far less than rational and
grown-up.
She nodded.
"Yes. I'm very much afraid he's in the police."
"And he's
like us. . ." Tom couldn't imagine it. How would he hide his shifts? How
would he shift? How would he. . . Did his family know? Or didn't they care? He
tried to imagine having parents—a family—who accepted your shifts, who loved
you even when you, yourself, weren't sure you were human.
Kyrie shook
her head. For just a moment there was empathy in her look. "I can't
imagine it either," she said. "I suspect he normally works the night
hours, though, as we do. Cops do, too, you know. It's a nocturnal occupation.
So we will probably find some of our kind. It's easier to control the shifting
if you're awake."
Tom nodded.
The whole thing was that even if you didn't shift, if you were a shape-shifter
you felt more awake—more aware—at night. It was inescapable. So if you wanted
to sleep and actually be able to rest, you did it during the day. And
therefore, of necessity, you worked nights.
"Speaking
of which," Kyrie said. "Sun is coming up soon, and you're practically
falling down on your feet."
"You've
been yawning," he said accusingly.
She looked at
him, puzzled and he realized he'd said it as if he needed to salvage his
manhood. While she'd just been. . . telling the truth.
"I'm sure
I have," she said. "It's late. Come on. You can sleep in the
backroom."
Tom pulled his
hair back and very much wished he had something to tie it back with. "I
really should go," he said. "The triad dragons are after me and. .
."
"Oh, not
that again," Kyrie said. "We've been over it." And she said it
in such a tone of great tiredness that Tom couldn't answer.
Meekly he
followed her back through the hallway, where she opened a linen closet and got
out a thin blanket. And then she led him all the way back to the kitchen and
opened a door he hadn't even been able to see, next to the fridge. It was a
narrow door, as if designed for very thin people. At the very back of the
house, a small room, enclosed all in glass, opened. There were blinds on the
windows, which made it not quite like sleeping in a fish bowl. Besides, the
backyard was the size of a normal flowerbed. Maybe ten feet by ten feet, if
that much, and surrounded by tall wooden fences. Not a fence belonging to it,
but the fences of other houses that met there.
"Sorry
there's not much of a view," Kyrie said. "I planted roses out there,
to hide the fence, but most of them died in the drought. Only a couple survive
and they're tiny."
He realized
she thought he was looking at the fence in horror, and he managed a smile.
"No, no. It's fine. I just need to sleep. . ."
"Well,
this is the love seat. It doesn't open up, but it's fairly comfy. I've napped
on it on occasion."
Tom felt the
sofa reflexively, even as a voice at the back of his mind asked him what
exactly he intended to do if he found it lumpy. Go and sleep in a better place?
Like, for instance, all the hotels that accepted barefoot men without a dime on
them?
He sat down on
the sofa and clutched the thin blanket to himself. "Thank you, Kyrie.
Thank you."
She looked
surprised. Had he really come across as that much of a prick, that she'd be
surprised because he thanked her?
Apparently,
because Kyrie stood there, looking at him, eyebrows raised, as though evaluating
a new and strange artifact, before she said,"Good night," and left.
Tom lay down
and pulled the blanket over himself. It couldn't have taken more than ten
seconds before he fell asleep and into dreams populated by darkness, pierced by
sharp claws and glimmering fangs—and a huge pearl, the size of a grapefruit and
glowing like the moonlight at the full.
* * *
Kyrie frowned
all the way to her room. She told herself that she must get her head examined,
she really, really must.
In jerky
movements, angrier at herself than she would like to admit, she undressed,
throwing her robe over the foot of the bed.
Normally she
slept naked. It was a habit she'd picked up since she'd started renting this
house. All her life, up till then, she had been staying with someone else,
under someone else's rules—when she was a foster child—or in a communal
building, an apartment building where she didn't want someone to come in
attracted by noise, while she was having what she thought of as one of her
episodes, and find her naked. In retrospect, it was very foolish of her to
think she didn't actually shift, since the episodes usually meant she
woke up naked. At least, she told herself, she had learned to remove her
clothes fast in the first throes of the shift.
Looking back,
she thought it had all been an elaborate game with herself, to keep herself
fooled about the nature of the shifting. After all, if she'd wakened with
clothes nearby shredded to bits by large claws, she'd have had to think. She'd
have had to admit something else was going on, right?
But in her own
home she went to sleep naked, so that when she woke up naked she could pretend
nothing at all untoward had happened in the night. Dreams, just dreams. She
could tell herself that and believe it.
Only now, she
stood naked in the middle of her bedroom and felt. . . well, nude. There was a
man in the house. A young, attractive and not particularly wholesome young man.
Okay, so he
was in the back room and frankly, from the way he'd been swaying slightly on
his feet, he probably wasn't in any state to be walking around. Not even
stumbling around. And there was a locked—she paused and turned the key in the
lock—door between them.
But still, she
looked at herself in the mirror and she looked distressingly naked. Which
meant. . . She blew out a breath, in annoyance at herself, as she scrambled to
her dresser, got her loosest t-shirt and a pair of panties and slipped them on.
What was she
thinking? Up till this night she'd never found any reason to like Tom. And what
had changed about this night? Well, he might have killed someone. And he was
being chased by triads trying to recover something he'd been stupid enough to
steal from. . . gangsters.
Yeah. There
was a good reason to allow him to sleep in her house. There was a good reason
to expose herself to the potential danger of a practically strange—no
practically about it, in fact, she knew Tom was strange—man in the house.
She pulled
back the covers on the narrow bed pushed up against her wall. The bedroom was
barely large enough for the bed and the dresser—both purchased from thrift
stores. It would be too small if she had a double bed.
She lay down
on the mattress—or more accurately, threw herself down on it with the sort of
angry fling of the body that a thin thrift store mattress couldn't quite take.
She shifted
position and flung the covers over herself, refusing to admit she'd bruised
something.
There was a
reason for Tom to be here. Sure there was. She didn't want to throw him out
into the night, barefoot, tired and confused.
Only, if she'd
caught the drift of Tom's story right, he'd been surviving on his own, out
there for a long time. He was a big man. Well, perhaps on the short side, but
definitely well developed and muscular and. . .
No, this was worse
than the lion. She turned face down on the mattress and buried her face on her
pillow.
The bedroom
was in deep darkness, partly because it was the only room in the entire house
that had only one tiny window—very small and high up on the upper corner of the
back wall. Now she wondered if the full light of day was near.
What kind of
an idiot was she?
Tom was
clearly dangerous. Beyond the fact that she'd found him leaning over a fresh
corpse, beyond the fact that he seemed to know how to steal cars, with barely a
moment to think about it, he'd just admitted to a career of juvenile
delinquency. And he'd almost shifted. In the middle of her living room, he'd
almost shifted, for heaven's sake. And he'd almost for sure stolen something
that had the triad gunning for him.
What? Was she
now suddenly attracted to hard luck cases? She'd always laughed at women who
came to the diner and, over breakfast with their equally clueless friends,
complained about being disappointed by men that, surely, they knew were no good
from the beginning. If you picked up with ex-cons, drug addicts, thieves—how
could you expect anything good to come of it? Why would they respect you when
they'd never respected another human being?
She knew this.
So, why would she take this one in? Why? He wasn't even any good at being bad.
He was a mess of trembling jelly between bouts of dangerous behavior.
She remembered
him in the parking lot, under the moonlight. Pale skin and muscle-sculpted
body, and those eyes. . .
Okay, so he
was pretty. Since when was pretty worth all this trouble? The world was full of
handsome men who weren't her problem. Men who would run the first time she
turned into a panther.
And there was
the problem, and there she came to and stopped. Because for all else that might
be said for Tom, he wouldn't run.
Neither—probably—would
officer Trall. She remembered the disturbing moment when he'd lowered his
glasses and fixed her with those recognizable golden eyes, that even in human
form, with normal sclera, iris and pupil were unmistakable. And he looked just
as good in human form.
She threw back
the covers.
Again, pretty
he might be, but that man was trouble. Pure trouble. He was a shifter, yes, but
he was also a police officer. And what did the officer want with her? Why did
he want to meet her? She was not so innocent that she didn't notice—of course
she did—that he'd mentioned the bathroom which meant the paper towels. Was it a
threat? Was he blackmailing her? Blackmailing her into what?
She remembered
the lion in the parking lot of the Athens—virile and energetic and very, very
male.
She bit her
lip. She wished she could convince herself that it would take a lot of
blackmail to get her to what the Victorians called a fate worse than death. But
she doubted it. If Tom hadn't been there, if he hadn't pulled her into the car,
she very much suspected she would have shifted and. . .
And then there
was Tom. His image flickered through her mind, as she tossed her thin blanket
and turned first this way, then that. He'd been so gentle, so. . . respectful,
when he helped dress her shoulder. Which, by the way, should hurt, shouldn't
it?
She sat up in
bed and prodded at her bandaged areas, but nothing hurt. Perhaps the antibiotic
cream was also an analgesic. She had a bad habit of buying whatever was on sale
without reading it too carefully. Well, just as well it didn't hurt. She lay
down again, and closed her eyes.
But her
thoughts went on behind her closed eyelids.
What was she
going to do with Tom? Did she have to do anything with Tom? How far was she
responsible for him?
She saw his
features close at her comment, she saw his lost expression, all pale face and
huge, shocked eyes. She saw him the parking lot, dragon-form, muzzle
blood-stained, and in the bathroom of the Athens, all over blood, his long,
dark hair caked with it. She saw him in her living room, half dragon and mostly
man, clearly out of control.
What had he
meant to do? Attack the officer? Why? For speaking out of turn?
All right. So,
Rafiel Trall might have sounded like he was blackmailing her—blackmailing them.
But she wasn't sure he was. There was something to his expression—a softness, a
hopefulness. . . that made her doubt that he meant to threaten her. And even if
he were. What did Tom mean to do? Eat him? Was he so devoid of any sense of
right and wrong? Had no one ever told him you didn't eat people? Ever?
The bed felt
too hard, the blanket too hot, the sheet too wrinkled beneath her tossing body.
She was never
aware of the moment at which she fell into a dreamless sleep.
* * *
Kyrie woke up
with the phone ringing.
The phone was
on the dresser, across the room from the bed. The ring itself, seeming to run
up and down her nerves like fire, carried her halfway there, still asleep, and
she woke up fully with the receiver pressed to her ear, while she heard herself
say "Hello," in a sleepy voice.
"Ms.
Smith?" the voice on the other side was a masculine purr, dripping with
sensuousness that caressed the syllables, making the Ms. sound dangerously like
Miss and Smith sound like a compliment, an indent proposition.
She knew it
was Rafiel Trall without his announcing himself. She could see him at the other
side of the phone, relaxed and seductive masculinity, poise and confidence and
that something in his eyes, that something in his expression that said he was
very bad for her. In the way that chocolate was bad for you. And all the more
irresistible for being bad.
"How may
I help you, officer?" she asked, making her voice crispy and official. All
business. She had to keep this all business.
"In a lot
of ways," he said. "But right now I just want to ask you a
favor."She could hear him smile, and she couldn't quite tell how. One of
her first jobs, out of high school, had been with a cold-calling telemarketing
company. The job hadn't lasted long, though she'd been surprisingly good at it.
Perhaps, she thought now, they could hear the harmonics of the panther in the
human voice. And bought. And bought. And were very polite with it.
At that job
they'd told her to always smile while she was talking because people on the
other side could tell. She'd never believed it till now.
The silence
lengthened between them, stretched like taffy, feeling sticky and endless,
thinner and thinner, but never breaking. "All right," she said, at
last. "Ask."
This time
there was a very masculine chuckle at the other end.
"I can
always say no," she said, tempted beyond endurance by the chuckle.
"You
can," he said, gravely. "But I hope you don't. There's a restaurant
about. . . Oh, two miles from your house. It's the in-house restaurant at Spurs
And Lace."
Spurs and
Lace, was the one good hotel in a western town plagued with cheap motels and
improbable cabin resorts, which catered to those families too poor, too
numerous or too shy to stay at the one Holiday Inn. The nineteenth century
hotel was in a completely different class. Once used by moneyed Easterners
coming for the benefit of the mineral waters and the dry western air, it had
been renovated within an inch of its life, furnished with antiques and updated.
It was now the haven of moneyed business travelers and honeymooning couples. An
executive resort, Kyrie believed they called it.
"The
Restaurant is called Sheriff's Star , but despite the name it's
good," Trall went on. "They serve brunch, which we're just about in
time for."
Again, she
said nothing. Oh, she could see where this was going, but she would let him
come out and say it.
"I'd like
to swing by your house to pick you up in about . . . oh. . . five
minutes?"
"Why
would you like to pick me up?" Kyrie asked, though her mind, and the
recollections of his smell from the day before, gave her pretty good
indications.
The chuckle
again. "I'd like to feed you, Ms. Smith. Nothing worse than that. And if,
during brunch, you should feel like talking to me about the diner, and what you
think might have gone on in that parking lot in the dark, I will discuss the
other cases we've had with you and—"
"Did you
say other cases?" Kyrie asked.
"Indeed."
"Other
cases of. . ." She remembered his story the day before. "Attacks by
Komodo dragons?"
"Possibly.
Mysterious attacks, shall we say."
"I
see."
"Well, I
think if we discuss it, we'll both see better," he said. "So. . .
I'll pick you up in a few minutes, if that is acceptable."
"No,"
Kyrie said, before she even knew she was going to say it. But as soon as the
word was out of her lips, she knew why. She knew she had to say it. Stranded at
a restaurant with only this relative stranger and no way home on her own? No.
She didn't think so. She might have gone stupid last night, but now it was the
next day and she wouldn't be stupid anymore. "No. I'll bring my car. I'll
meet you there. In twenty minutes."
She could see
him hesitate on the other end of the phone. She wasn't sure how, or not
exactly. Perhaps the letting out of breath, or perhaps some other sound, too
light for ears to consciously discern. But it was there. And it was followed by
an hesitant, "Your car. . ."
And now it was
her turn to smile into the phone, "Why, officer. Would you be embarrassed
to be seen with me, because of the condition of my car?"
"What? Of
course not. It's just that I thought with the broken window, you have a
security liability and—"
"Oh, I
wouldn't worry, Officer Trall. After all, it's a good part of town, isn't
it?"
After she put
the phone down, she thought that it was a good part of town. And that her car
might look ever so slightly embarrassing. But probably more so for Officer
Trall whom she doubted ever left the house without wearing a pressed suit.
She refused to
be intimidated by him. Or scared by his obvious, open, clear sexuality. To
begin with, whether he turned into a lion or not, he was—as she had reason to
know, being a female counterpart—only human. Or possibly something less. How
much the animal controlled them was something that Kyrie didn't wish to think
about. And second, there was very little reason he would be romantically
interested in her. She'd guess his suit had cost more than she made in a month.
Chances were
he turned on that feline, devil-may-care charm with every female in sight. And
meant nothing by it.
Still, she
wouldn't look like a charity date. Not at the Sheriff's Star, she wouldn't. Too
many times in childhood, she'd found herself dressed in foster sisters'—or
brothers'—discards, cowering at the back of a family group, afraid someone
would ask why a beggar was let in.
Now she might
dress from thrift shops—her salary rarely extended to new clothes, except for
underwear and socks—but at a size six that meant she got last year's designer
clothes, donated by women so fashion conscious they spent half their time
studying trends. That and a bit of flair, and her naturally exotic features
made most people think her beautiful. Or at least handsome.
Before getting
in the shower, she checked her wounds under the bandages, and was shocked at
finding them completely healed and only a little red. There would be scars, but
no wound. Interesting. Very interesting. She must make sure to figure out what
that antibiotic cream was. She needed to buy more of it. She always kept a well
stocked first aid cabinet—part of her trying to be prepared to survive any
emergency on her own—but this had been the first time she'd needed it.
She rushed
through a shower, dried her hair properly into position and slipped on a white
t-shirt—or at least a knit shirt—with a mass of soft folds in the front, that
gave the appearance of a really deeply cut decolletage—but a decolletage so
hidden by the swaying material in the front that it was a matter of guessing whether
it was really there or not.
Then she put
on the wrap-around green suede mini-skirt. No fishnets, which she occasionally
wore to work. There was no reason to look like Officer Trall was having brunch
with a hooker either and —with this outfit—fishnets would give that impression.
Instead, she put on flesh-tone stockings and slipped her feet into relatively
flat shoes.
Fully dressed,
she thought of Tom. If she was going to leave him here alone, in the house,
without a car, she should leave him a note.
Backtracking
to her dresser, she grabbed the notepad and pen she kept in her underwear
drawer, and wrote quickly, I had to go out. There's eggs and bacon in the
fridge. Shape-shifting seemed to come with hunger and, from the way her own
stomach was rumbling, Tom would be ravenous. Don't go anywhere till I come
back. We'll discuss what to do.
She went to
the kitchen and was about to put the note on the table, when she heard a rustle
of fabric from the doorway to the back porch.
Tom stood
there, looking only half awake. But his blue eyes were wide open as they stared
at her. "Whoa," he said, very softly.
It was, in
many ways, the greatest compliment anyone had paid Kyrie in a long time. If
nothing else, because it seemed to have been forced from his lips before his
mouth could stop it.
* * *
Tom awakened
with the sound of steps. For a moment, confused, he thought it was his upstairs
neighbor walking around in high heels again. But then he realized the steps
were nearby by. Very nearby.
He woke
already sitting up, teeth clenched, hands grabbing. . . the side and seat of a
rough, brownish sofa.
He blinked as
the world caught up with him—the night before and the events all ran through
his mind like a train, overpowering all other thought and leaving him stunned.
And then he
realized he could still hear steps nearby. Kyrie. He was in Kyrie's house. She
had put him up for the night, though he still couldn't quite understand why.
He'd have thought he was the last person in the world whom she'd want around.
But she had given him the sofa to sleep on, and the sweat suit, and. . .
Still
half-asleep, and with some vague idea of thanking her and getting out of her
house and stopping endangering her as soon as possible, he lurched to his feet
and stumbled towards the kitchen.
Kyrie stood by
the table, her hair impeccably combed, as it usually was when she came to work.
The first time Tom had seen her, he'd thought she was wearing a
tapestry-pattern scarf. When he'd realized it was her real hair, he'd been so
fascinated that he couldn't help staring at her. Until he'd realized she was
looking at him with frowning disapproval bordering on hatred. And then he'd
learned to look elsewhere.
But this
morning, in her own kitchen, she looked far more stunning than she usually did
when she came to work. There was this folded down front to her blouse that
seemed—at any minute—to threaten to reveal her breasts. He remembered her
breasts and his mouth went dry. Beyond that, she wore this tiny suede thing
that looked like a scarf doing the turn of a skirt. Below it her legs
stretched, long and straight to her feet which were encased in relatively low
heeled but elegant shoes, seemingly made of strips of multicolored leather
woven together.
The whole was.
. . He heard himself exclaim under his breath and she turned around. He had a
moment to think that she was going to disapprove of him again. But instead, she
looked surprised, her eyebrows raised.
"I'm
sorry," he said. "I'm not used to seeing you dressed up. You look. .
. amazing." He just wished her little feather earring hadn't got lost. It
would have looked lovely with that outfit.
"Thank
you." She smiled, and her cheeks reddened, but for only a second, before
the smile was replaced by a worried expression. As if she thought he wouldn't
compliment her unless he had ulterior motives. "I was about to leave you a
note," she said. "There's eggs and bacon in the fridge."
He realized he
was starving. But still, it felt wrong to impose that far. She was being too
generous. There was something wrong. "I should go," he said.
"Eat
first. And then we'll talk," she said. She spoke as if she had some plan,
or at least some intention of having a plan. She threw the note she had written
to him into the trash, opened the cupboard above the coffee maker.
"There's cups and coffee beans here," she said. "The coffee
grinder is behind the coffee beans. I'm going to go for brunch with. . ."
She took a deep breath and faced him. "I'd rather you don't leave because I'm
going to go for brunch with the policeman."
Tom felt a
surge of panic. "You mean, he might want to arrest me?"
She looked
puzzled. "No. I mean I might get some information out of him about what
happened and what we can do, or even if there's any danger at all." She
waved him into silence. "I know there's still danger from the triad, but
I'm hoping there is no danger from the police. If there is, I'll call and let
you know, okay?"
He nodded
dumbly. Something in him was deeply aggrieved that she had dressed up to go to
lunch with the policeman. But of course, there was nothing he could do about
that. She wasn't his. He had no chance of her ever even looking at him like
less than a dangerous nuisance.
And then for a
moment, for just a moment, she looked at him and smiled a little. "Wish me
luck," she said.
And she was
out the door. And he silently wished her whatever luck meant to her. But he
felt bereft as he hadn't in a long time. As he hadn't since that night he'd
been thrown out of the only home he'd ever known.
* * *
Okay, and
on top of everything else, the man is paranoid, Kyrie thought as she got
out. Why would he think I wanted to turn him in to the police? In the
cool light of day, her car looked truly awful, with its smashed driver's side
window. She would have to get a square of plastic and tape it over the opening.
Fortunately it rarely rained in Colorado, so it wasn't urgent. As for getting
money to fix it. . . Well. . .
She put the
key in the broken ignition socket, thinking that would probably be more
expensive to repair than the window. And she would make sure Tom paid. Yes,
he'd done it to save their lives, but much too thoughtlessly. Clearly he'd
either never owned a car, or never owned a car for whose repair he was
responsible.
From the look of
the sun up in the sky, it was noon and it was a beautiful day, the sidewalks
filled with people in shorts and t-shirts, ambling among the small shops that
grew increasingly smaller and pricier in the two miles between Kyrie's
neighborhood and the hotel.
There were
couples with kids and couples with dogs dressed like children, in bandanas and
baseball caps. Lone joggers. A couple of business women in suits, out shopping
on their lunch hour.
Again Kyrie
experienced the twin feelings of envy and confusion at these people. What would
they do if they knew? What would they think if they were aware that humans who
could take the shape of animals stalked the night? And what wouldn't Kyrie give
to change places with one of them? Any one of them. Even the business woman
with the pinched lips and the eyes narrowed by some emotional pain. At least
she knew what she was. Homo sapiens.
She pulled
into the parking lot of the hotel, and, unwilling to brave the disdain of the
valets, parked her own car. Wasn't difficult to find a parking space during the
week.
Entering the
hotel was like going into a different world from her modest house, her tiny
car, or even the diner.
The door
whooshed, as it slid aside in front of her, and the cold air reached out to
engulf her, drawing her into the, tall and broad, atrium of the hotel, whose
ceiling was lost in the dim space overhead, supported by columns that looked
like green marble. The air conditioning cooled her suddenly, making her feel
composed and sophisticated and quite a different person from the sweaty,
rumpled woman outside, in the Colorado summer.
The smoked
glass doors closed behind her. Velvet sofas and potted palms dotted the immense
space. Uniformed young men, on who knew what errands, circulated between. This
hotel was designed to look like an old west hotel, one of the more upscale
ones.
She could all
too easily imagine gun slingers swinging from the chandeliers, a bar fight
breaking out and the uniformed receptionists ducking behind their marble
counter.
Kyrie hesitated
but only for a moment, because she saw the signs to the restaurant and followed
it, down into the bowels of the atrium and up in the elevator to the top floor
that overlooked most of Goldport. Light flooded the restaurant through windows
that lined the every wall. Kyrie could not tell how big it was, just that the
ceiling seemed as far up as the atrium's, but fully visible—a cool whiteness
twenty feet up. Soft carpet deadened the sound of steps and the arrangement of
the tables, on different levels and separated by partitions and judiciously
placed potted palms, made each table a private space.
A girl about
Kyrie's age, blond and cool and wearing what looked like a business suit in
pretty salmon pink, gave her the once over. "May I help you?"
"Yes,"
Kyrie said. "I'm meeting a Mr. Trall. Rafiel Trall."
The girl's
eyes widened slightly. And there was a gratifying look of envy.
What,
thinking I can't possibly be in his league, sweetie? Kyrie thought, and
reproached herself for her sudden anger and calmed herself forcefully, giving
the woman a little smile.
"Mr.
Trall is this way," the hostess said, and, picking up a menu, led her down
a winding corridor amid wood and glass partitions and palms. From the recesses
around the walkway came the sounds of talk —but not the words, the acoustics of
the restaurant being seemingly designed to give tables their privacy—and the
smells of food—bacon and ham and sausage, eggs, roast beef. It made her mouth
water so much that she was afraid of drooling.
then the
hostess led her around a wooden partition, and stepped back. And there, getting
hastily up from his chair was Rafiel Trall. He was perhaps better dressed than
the night before, when his pale suit had betrayed a look of almost retro cool.
Now he was
wearing tawny chinos and a khaki colored shirt. His blond hair still shone, and
still fell, unruly, over his golden eye. The mobile mouth turned upwards in
what seemed to be a smile of genuine pleasure at seeing her. "Miss
Smith," he said, extending a hand. He tossed his head back to free his
eyes of hair. There were circles of tiredness around his golden eyes, and
creases on his face, as though he too had slept too little and not well.
He shook her
hand hard, firmly. The hostess disappeared, silently, walking on the plush
carpet as though gliding.
"Sit,
sit," Rafiel Trall said. "Relax. I was horribly hungry, so I ordered
an appetizer." He waved towards a platter on the table. "Seafood
croquettes," he said. "High on protein, though perhaps not the kind.
. ." He grinned. The golden eyes seemed to sparkle with mischief of their
own.
Kyrie sat
down, bonelessly. What am I doing here? She asked herself. What does
he want from me?
And there, she
knew the answer to the first one. She was here because he had blackmailed her
into coming. Regardless of whether a threat had been uttered, regardless of
what the threat he might actually mean, Rafiel Trall had mentioned those bloody
towels in the bathroom.
Kyrie didn't
own a television, but she had watched enough episodes of CSI on the diner's
television, during slow times of the day, that she knew that on the show, at
least, they could tell if someone had wiped someone else's blood off their skin
with a paper towel. There would be skin and hair and sweat. . .
But she
remembered Tom and the way Tom had looked. What else could she have done then?
Short of ignoring the whole thing and pretending it had nothing to do with her?
And then what would have happened to Tom? She wasn't sure what she thought was
worse—Tom eating the corpse, or Tom getting killed by ambush in his bedroom.
So she'd used
the towels, and now Rafiel Trall held the towels over her head. And Tom's head.
Which had brought her here.
But why did
Officer Trall want her here? And what was the point of it all? Did he want to
blackmail her for favors? No. If he wanted to do that, he would demand she meet
him elsewhere, wouldn't he? However secluded the table might be. . . It wasn't that
private.
Besides—she
looked up at Rafiel Trall and refused to believe that he had that much trouble
getting dates that he needed to force a girl into bed. Even if she admitted she
didn't look like chopped liver.
She became
aware that he'd said something and was now sitting, his napkin halfway to being
unfolded on his lap, while he looked at her, expectantly.
There was no
point lying. "I'm sorry," she said. "I have no idea what you
said."
He smiled.
"No. You were miles away. I said your outfit is very becoming."
Before she
could stop it, she felt heat rise up her cheeks. "Thank you," she
said. "But I would like to know why you asked me to come here?"
He grinned at
her. "I would like to have breakfast with you and to discuss. . . some
cases the Goldport police force has encountered recently."
Her expression
must have became frozen with worry, because he shook his head. "I do not
in any way suspect you, do you understand? I just think you could literally
help me with my enquiries. And I thought it was best done over a nice
meal."
Kyrie nodded
and picked up her menu, then put it down again, as the prices dismayed her.
"Ms.
Smith—I'm hoping for your help with this. I'll pay for your meal." He
smiled, showing very even teeth. "This is a business brunch."
She hesitated.
She was aware that whatever he said, breaking bread with someone was an
expression of friendship, an expression of familiarity. After all, throughout
human history, enemies had refused to dine together.
"Look,"
he stared at her, across the table, and, for the first time since last night,
didn't smile. "I'm sorry I mentioned the bathroom, which I meant to make
you think of the paper towels. It was unworthy of me. And stupid. In fact, I .
. . got rid of them, okay? I risked my position. But I'm sure. . . Just, I'm
sorry I mentioned them. I didn't know any other way to make you help me, and we
must talk. About. . . dragons and what's going on."
His voice was
low, though Kyrie very much doubted anyone overhearing them—and the restaurant
really seemed to have very good privacy-designed acoustics—would have no idea
at all what they were talking about. But his expression was intense and
serious.
She nodded,
once. Not only was she starving, but she had left Tom in charge of the kitchen,
with bacon and eggs at his disposal. Considering how many times he'd shifted
the night before and how tired he'd looked, she was sure that he would have
eaten all of it and possibly her lunch meat besides, before he could think
straight.
Besides, what
did Trall mean dragons? He'd mentioned crimes. More than one? What had
Tom done? Before she threw her luck in with his, she had to know, didn't she?
"Very
well, Officer Trall," she said. "I'll have brunch with you."
He smiled
effusively. At that moment, the server reappeared and he informed her they
would be having the buffet. He also ordered black coffee, which Kyrie seconded.
The buffet
spread was the most sumptuous that Kyrie had ever seen. It stretched over
several counters and ranged from steamed crab legs, through prime rib, to
desserts of various unlikely colors and shapes.
Kyrie was
interested only in the meat. Preferably red and rare. She piled a plate with
prime rib, conscious of the shocked glares of a couple of other guests. She
didn't care. And at any rate, back at the table, she was glad to notice that
Rafiel Trall's plate was even more full—though he'd gone for variety by adding
ham and bacon.
They ate for a
while in silence, and Rafiel got refills—how long had he been shifted the night
before? Could a lion have killed the man? —before he leaned back and looked
appraisingly at her. "How long have you known your friend? The. . .
dragon?"
Kyrie, busy
with a mouthful, swallowed hastily. "About six months," she said.
"Frank hired him from the homeless shelter downtown for the night hours.
He told me he was hiring him from the homeless shelter and that he thought Tom
had a drug problem, so I'm guessing that Frank thought he was doing the world a
favor, or was trying to garner a treasure in heaven, or whatever."
Rafiel was
frowning. "Six months ago?"
Kyrie's turn
to nod. "No, wait. A little more, because it was before Christmas when we
were really crunched with all the late shoppers and people going to shows. And
the other girl on the night hours had just left town with her boyfriend, so we
were in the lurch. Frank got a couple of the day people to fill in, but they
don't like it. Most of them are girls, who think this part of town is unsavory
and don't like being out in it at night. So he said he was doing something for
community service, and he went and hired Tom."
Rafiel was
still frowning. "And is he? On drugs?"
Kyrie
shrugged. She thought of Tom, so defenseless last night, she thought of Tom,
looking . . . admiring and confused this morning. And she felt like a weasel,
betraying him to this stranger.
But she didn't
seem quite able to help herself. Something was making her talk. His smell,
masculine, feline, pervasive, seemed to make her want to please him. So she
shrugged again. "Not on work time, that I've noticed," she said. She
didn't find it needed to mention the track marks. To be honest, they might be
scars. She hadn't looked up close. It seemed more indecent than staring at his
privates. Which she hadn't done, either. Well, maybe she'd seen them by
accident yesterday, but no more than to note he had nothing to be ashamed of.
"His name
is Thomas Ormson?" Rafiel asked. "Thomas Edward Ormson?"
Kyrie shrugged
again. "I've never known his middle name. I know he's Ormson because he
introduced himself as Tom Ormson."
Rafiel made a
sound at the back of his throat, as though this proved something. "If you
excuse me," he said.
She ate the
rest of her roast beef in silence, wondering if, by confirming Tom's name, she
had given something essential away and if Tom would now be arrested. But Rafiel
simply came back with yet another plate of meat. "How long have you known
he was. . . a shifter?" Rafiel asked, cutting a bite of his ham.
"Not. . .
not until last night. He was late. I heard a scream and I went to look. And he
was. . . shifted." Why couldn't she stop herself talk? Why would she trust
this stranger?
"And
there was a dead person?" Rafiel asked.
Kyrie nodded.
Rafiel frowned
and ate home as fast as she could. "Has he been late other nights?"
"No,"
Kyrie said.
"Are you
sure? Not last Thursday? Does he work on Thursdays?"
Kyrie frowned.
"He works on Thursdays, and he wasn't late."
"And he's
been in town for more than six months?"
She nodded.
Rafiel Trall
ate for a while in silence. Kyrie was dying to know what this was all about.
"Why do
you ask?" she said. "You said there had been crimes, not one
crime."
Rafiel nodded.
"What I'm going to tell you is not known much outside the police
department. There have been a couple of reported cases, but no one has put two
and two together."
* * *
Alone in the
house, Tom showered. He felt guilty about it, because it was Kyrie's shower.
Her water. Her soap. Her shampoo. But at this point he owed her a bunch of
money, and he just added to it mentally.
Most of his
time on his own, he'd found shelters for runaway kids and, then, when he was
older, homeless shelters. He hadn't been homeless as such. He'd just moved from
shelter to shelter in between bouts of getting in trouble and running away.
He'd only slept outside when the moon was full. Shortly after leaving his
father's house—even now his mind flitted away from the circumstances of that
leaving—he'd thought it best to abandon New York City altogether. There were
too many opportunities, there, for a rampaging dragon to do serious damage. And
far too many people who might see him do it.
He'd drifted
vaguely south and westward, moving when he thought someone had caught a glimpse
of him in shifted form and, once, when a picture of him, as a dragon, in full
flight, was published on the front page of the local rag. It had been
syndicated to the National Enquirer, too. If his father caught a glimpse of it,
on a supermarket line, would he have—But Tom shook his head. If he'd not
actually given up on his father, he should have. Long ago.
But running or
settled for a while in a town, he'd never had an apartment until these last
five months. And all showers at these institutions had been rationed and far
from private. All the soap had smelled of disinfectant, too.
The last five
months, the showers had been heaven. And he'd bought the best soap he could
find. His one luxury. But now he was homeless again, adrift. And, with the
triad pressing down, he might have to leave.
He only hadn't
left already because Kyrie had insisted he stay. And Kyrie was. . . the only
one of his kind he'd ever got close to. Oh, he might also have quite a huge
crush on her. But that didn't count. He'd had crushes before. He'd moved on.
But Kyrie. . . He bit his lower lip, standing in her tiny bathroom and turning
on the water.
Kyrie was
something he didn't know what to do about. He didn't want to leave. He didn't
want to loose the only kindred feeling and fellowship he'd ever known. But with
the triad chasing him, what else could he do?
He showered,
enjoying the water, then dried his hair and put the jogging suit Kyrie had lent
him back on. He didn't own anything else. He didn't even own this. Nothing but
his own skin.
A look
outside, through the kitchen window, showed him a paper in the driveway. He
wondered if Kyrie would mind if the neighbors saw him. But considering she
hadn't told him anything about it, he'd assume she didn't.
He walked out
to get the paper. It was noon, or close to it. The earliest he'd wakened in a
long time. The air, though already suffocatingly hot, felt clear and clean, and
he smelled Kyrie's roses, and the neighbor's profusion of flowers that spilled
over the lawn and around the mailbox, in an array of pastel colors.
The neighbor,
an elderly lady, sat on the porch with a tall glass of something, her white
hair in curlers. She smiled pointedly at Tom and waved at him. Tom waved back
and found himself grinning ridiculously. Bending to pick up the paper, he felt
as if he were living something out of a movie. A domestic morning. And he
wished madly that he could live that life and have that kind of morning. That
kind of life. Just be a normal person with a normal life.
But, who was
he kidding? Judging from all the trouble he'd got into before he'd started
transforming into a dragon, his life wouldn't have been any different had he
been perfectly normal. He'd probably still be running from town, a drifter. He
probably still would have used. He probably. . .
He put the
paper on the table, while he nuked himself a profusion of bacon and fried some
eggs in a frying pan on the gas stove. He left half the eggs and bacon in the
fridge. He could have eaten them all, easily enough, but he didn't want to do
that to Kyrie. Yeah, she'd probably get lunch bought for her today, but what if
she shifted again tonight and needed breakfast tomorrow?
Tom knew how
much food cost. Over the last five months one of his delights had been learning
to cook. He'd bought cookbooks at the same thrift stores at which he shopped
for clothes and furniture. Since—on a diner's waiter salary it was a challenge
to cover everything and put money aside—as he felt he had to—he'd reveled in
trying to create quasi-gourmet dishes from meats on special and discounted
produce. And he'd eaten a lot of tofu.
Now he cooked
quickly, peppering his eggs from a shaker by the stove. His stomach growled at
the smell of the utilitarian fare. He knew, from other shifts, that the craving
for protein was almost impossible to deny, the morning after a shift. Kyrie,
clearly knew it too, having given him access to all her food.
Kyrie again.
Sitting down to eat, he opened the paper. And choked.
Right there,
on the front page, the headline above the fold screamed Murder at local
diner! The picture of the Athens in black and white made the huge parking
lot with the tiny diner beside it look like something out of a film noir.
The story was
all too familiar to Tom. They'd found a body in the parking lot—of course
anyone reading only the headline would think that they'd found it in the diner
proper. Which meant that Frank was probably sizzling. If he was awake. Since he
preferred to work nights, perhaps his day manager hadn't found it necessary to
wake him and tell him about the paper. Then again, sometimes Tom thought Frank
worked around the clock. He always seemed to be at the diner.
Frank's mood
might matter or not. Tom hadn't decided yet what he was going to do about work.
He needed the job. Wanted it. He'd enjoyed working at the diner more than he
cared to think about. It had been his first long-term employment. A real,
normal job.
Before this
he'd just signed up with the day laborer places. But he'd enjoyed the routine,
the regulars, and getting them served quickly, and getting their tips. Smiling
just enough at the college girls to get a good tip without their thinking he
was coming on to them. The minor feuds with the day staff, the camaraderie with
Kyrie and. . . well, he wouldn't call it camaraderie with Frank, but Frank's
gruff ways.
He had felt
almost. . . human. And now it would all vanish. It all would go as if it meant
nothing. Like, having a family. Like school. Like a normal adolescence.
He finished
eating and cleaned his plate with bread from the red breadbox over the fridge,
before carefully washing the dishes and putting them away.
Normally he
compensated after nights of shifting by grabbing some fried chicken on the way
to work the next evening. Or by eating a couple of boiled eggs. Most of what he
cooked at home was near-vegetarian. So this might be the most protein he'd
eaten at one sitting in years.
Oh, he could
afford bacon and eggs, but he'd been saving money. He had some idea that he
would go to a community college and get a degree. He'd dreamed of settling
down.
Now, of
course, as soon as he could swing by an ATM, he would have to empty the five
hundred in his account to pay Kyrie for the car repairs and the groceries. And
at that he'd probably still owe her money. But he would send her money from. .
. somewhere.
And on this he
stopped, because he hadn't told himself he was going to run. Not yet. But,
after all, with the apartment in ruins, and the police investigating a crime
around his place of employment, what else could he do? He had to run. Just as
soon as he could retrieve. . . it from the Athens.
The doorbell
rang. Tom thought it would be the police, come to arrest him. But how could
they know he was here? Of course, Kyrie might have spoken, but. . .
He tiptoed to
the door, trying to keep quiet, and looked through the peephole. Keith Vorpal
stood on the doorstep, baseball cap rakishly turned backwards and an expression
of intense concern on his good-natured face. Since Vorpal didn't usually feel
much concern for something not involving shapely females, Tom was surprised and
curious. Also curious about how Vorpal had found him.
He opened the
door on the chain and looked out.
"Man,"
Keith said as soon as he saw Tom. "Good to see you're alive. They think
someone broke into your place and destroyed it, then tried to set fire to the
pieces of furniture. It's all everyone talks about. Did you see anything weird
when you were there?" He looked up at the space over the door, probably
where the house number was. "I guess you spent the night here?"
Tom opened the
door. "Come in," he said.
Keith came in,
looking around the room with the curiosity of someone visiting a strange place.
"How did
you find me?"
Keith
shrugged. "Your boss, at that dive you work in. He said you were staying
with the girl, Kyrie? And he gave me the address."
How did Frank
know? Perhaps Kyrie had told him. She must have called in sometime after they
got back to her place.
"Come
on," Tom said. "I'll get you some coffee."
Moments later,
they were in the kitchen and Tom had managed to get cups and coffee, and locate
the sugar and milk.
"I guess
you've been here a lot?" Keith asked.
Tom shrugged,
neither willing to lie full-out, nor to destroy this impression of himself as a
man in a relationship that Keith seemed to envy.
He wondered
why Keith had come over. He seemed to be worried about Tom. But Tom wasn't used
to anyone being worried about him. Did this mean the human race wanted him
back?
* * *
"There
have been," Rafiel Trall said, leaning over the table and keeping his
voice low. "A series of deaths in town. Well, at least they're classified
as deaths, not murders. Bodies have been found. . . bitten in two."
"Bitten?"
Kyrie asked, while her thoughts raced. Only one kind of thing could bite a
person in two. Well, maybe many kinds of things, but in the middle of a city
like Goldport, almost for sure all of those things would be shape-shifters.
People like her. Tom had said that there weren't that many out there. But there
were three of them and the triad. Were there more? And if so, what was calling
them to Goldport?
"Bitten,"
Rafiel said, and his teeth clashed as he closed his mouth, as though the words
had been distasteful for him to say. And he held his teeth clenched too,
visible through his slightly parted lips. "Our forensics have found
proteins in the bites that they say are reptilian but not. . . Not of any known
reptile."
He sat up
straight and was silent a moment. "The theories range wildly," he
said. From pet Komodo dragons that escaped and grew to huge proportions, to an
alligator, somewhere, to. . ." He shrugged. "An extinct reptile that
survived somewhere in the wilderness of Colorado and has just now found its way
into town. Though that theory is on the fringes. It's not like we've called a
palaeontologist in to look at the bite marks yet. But. . ." He took a deep
breath, and it trembled a little as he let it out. "But the teeth size and
the marks are definitely. . . They're very large teeth, of a reptile type. I. .
." He shook his head. "You must realize in what position this puts
me. Everyone at the police is talking escaped animals and Jurassic revivals.
They've stopped just short of positing UFO aliens, but I'm very much afraid
that's coming up next."
"And
meanwhile none of them guesses the truth," Kyrie said, leaning back.
He nodded.
"Or at least what might be the truth," he said. "You see in what
kind of a position this puts me. . ."
She looked at
him across the table, and could well imagine that sort of divided loyalty, that
confusion of identities. There were many things she wanted to ask. How many other
shifters he'd met. Why he suspected Tom specifically. Instead, she heard
herself say, "How did you become a police officer?"
He grinned.
"Oh, that was easy. Grandad was one. Dad is one." Suddenly the grin
expanded, becoming the easy smile of the night before. His hand toyed with his
silverware on the side of his plate. "If I hadn't become a police officer,
they would think there was something wrong with me. The shifting, they can
forgive even if they can't understand. Not being a policeman? Never."
It was a large
hand, with square fingers. No rings, except for a large, square class ring, and
she scolded herself for looking for rings. Yeah. They could get together and
raise a litter of kittens. What was she thinking?
Rafiel
shrugged. "So, you see. . ."
"And your
. . . shifting. . . when did you start?"
He took a deep
breath. "It started when I was about twelve. My parents were aware of it
first, as I did it in my sleep. They were a little scared, but I was normal
otherwise, and how do you go and tell someone your kid. . . well. . ."
Kyrie nodded.
"So. . . they aren't?"
"No. And
dad is retired now, but the first he heard about these corpses he asked if I
knew. . ."
"And you
think it's Tom?" Kyrie asked, her hands, unaccountably clenched on the
side of the table, as if this mattered to her personally.
He shrugged.
"Just. . . the shape matches, and I've never met another one large enough
to actually sever a body in two. But if he was in town that far back, and there
were no murders something must have happened three months ago that triggered
them. And then you say that he was at work on Wednesday. And on Wednesday we
found a body right behind the Three Luck Dragon. Well, actually it was found on
Thursday morning, but we think he died around midnight on Wednesday."
Kyrie thought
back. As far as she could tell Tom had been at work and had been much as
normal.
"Of
course," Rafiel said. "The time is never exact. There could be a two
hour difference one way or another. And you see, I don't know any other
shifters, any other shape that could just bite a man in half. And how common
can a dragon be?"
Kyrie thought
of the triad. "There are others. . . like Tom in town."
"Really?"
Rafiel asked. He raised his eyebrows. "I've only met another, truly met
another one besides you. He was a wolf and was passing through town. Transient.
He was brought in for petty theft, and shifted while I was booking him. Fortunately
Goldport has a tiny police force. Most officers are part timers. And I was
alone in the room with him at the time. I could.. . . cover things up and talk
sense to him. But that was only one I ever talked to. And he was a mess. Drugs,
possible mental illness. I've . . . smelled others, but I don't know their
shapes."
"Smelled?"
Kyrie asked, aware of his smell so close, just across the table, that reek of
masculinity and health and vigor—like the distilled scent of self-confidence.
He looked at
her, with the look of a man who tries to evaluate whether someone is playing a
joke on him. "Smelled—there is a definite scent to those. . . like us. A
slightly metallic smell? An edge?"
Kyrie shook
her head. She hadn't been aware of ever smelling people before. Perhaps because
she hadn't been aware of really shifting shapes before. She thought of people
as people, not smells. And yet, as Rafiel mentioned it, she was aware that
there was a slight edge in common in his smell and Tom's and perhaps her won.
If their smell had been music, the metallic scent would have been a note,
subdued but persistent, in the background. She blinked.
"These
other. . . dragons," he said, lowering his voice on the last word.
"Are they part of. . . The Asian community in town?"
"Why do
you ask?" Kyrie said.
"Because
all the victims were Asian or part Asian," he said. "That's why I was
so surprised when I saw your. . . When I saw Thomas Ormson in his other form.
Though thinking about it, he didn't look oriental even as. . . a dragon."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Nordic," she said. "Like what they used to carve on
the prow of Viking ships." She wondered if the Viking figureheads had been
drawn from life. And if they'd really existed, all that time, in the past.
"But yes, the other dragons are Asian. Tom said they are members of a
triad." She hesitated.
"An
organized Chinese crime syndicate?" Rafiel asked. Then added, "I see.
Look, I know you feel like you're betraying him or something. But. . . put
yourself in my place. The police will never be able to solve this series of
deaths. And I know—or at least I think I know—something that could lead them to
the truth. But if I speak, I won't be believed. And if I demonstrate it, I
don't know. . . I suspect the first few of us who come out to society at large
face the charming prospect of a life in the laboratory. I don't want that. I
don't know anyone who wants that. I'm sure you don't. But at the same time I
want to stop the murders. The people being killed. . ."
He shrugged.
"They don't deserve to die, and we should put a stop to it. If the killers
are like us—and there's a great chance they are—then it's our responsibility to
stop it." He looked desperately up at her, his expression very intense and
not at all like the relaxed image of the day before. "Do you understand
what I'm saying at all?"
Kyrie
understood. At least intellectually she understood. And suddenly, in a rush,
she felt as if she, the orphan, had been adopted into a family, a family that
came with obligations, with requirements. She looked at Rafiel's intense golden
eyes, and hoped his smell was not influencing her as she said. "Yes, I
see. But you must promise to do nothing against Tom on. . . anything else.
Anything beyond the murders. It is not his fault if he is a shifter, and if he
weren't a shifter, none of this would come out about him."
Rafiel nodded
once and leaned forward. His plate was now empty and he pushed it forward and
joined his hands on the place where it had been, his whole attitude one of
intense attention to her.
She told him
what had happened the night before. Her considerations and thoughts and final
decision to take Tom home to his apartment. The condition of the apartment. The
attack by the triad members.
She could no
more stop herself talking than she could stop herself breathing. Her mind was
powerless against his masculine scent.
Rafiel nodded.
"That would make sense for the deaths we've been seeing." He pulled a
notepad out of his pocket and noted down the description of the triad members.
"Not that we can do anything about it officially," he said.
"Because if they catch them then they'll. . . They might very well figure
out about us as well, you know."
Kyrie nodded.
The rules of this group to which she belonged despite herself were revealing
themselves as complex. If they must be hidden—and they must, because revealing
one of them would mean revealing all of them—then, surely, surely, they would
have to police their own. Like other secretive communities of what had at the
time been considered not quite humans all through history, they would have to
take care of their own. Slaves, immigrants, serfs—all had policed themselves,
to avoid notice from the outside, as far back as there had been humans in the
world.
One way or
another. She wondered what that meant. She could understand it to mean nicely
or by force. And she wondered if Rafiel Trall understood it.
And looked up
to find his intelligent golden eyes trained on her. "You know that means
we might have to. . . take care of it on our own," he said. "I. . .
never met any of us till a couple of years ago, and I never thought
about it. The possibilities of someone going bad, doing something terrible and
how the normals would never be able to take care of it and we'd have to step
in. I never thought about it. I thought there might be a half a dozen of us in
the world. . ."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Tom has seen a dozen or so over five years. Not counting the
dragon triad, where he thinks there could be hundreds. I think there's more
than half a dozen. I wonder. . ."
"Yes?"
"I wonder
how long this has been going on and why no one seems to know about it."
"I don't
know," Rafiel said. "When my parents found out, they tried to
research. They found legends and stories, poems and songs. And mom, who reads a
lot of scientific stuff, thinks there might be such a thing as. . . migratory
genes. People attaching the genes from other species. Going partway there, as
it were. But I'll be damned if that explains mythological species, too. Like
dragons. Wonder if there are sphinxes and sea serpents, as well." He shook
his head. "There seem to be a lot of legends about. . . people like us,
until magic stopped being believed and science stepped in. I think we'll have
to admit that we are not . . . things of the rational universe. I'm sure Thomas
Ormson's shift violates the rules of conservation of matter and energy."
He frowned, then suddenly grinned, a boyish grin. "Good thing that's not
the sort of law I have to enforce."
Kyrie nodded.
Men and their puns. "I've thought the same. But if we exist, if we exist anyway,
how come no one has found out? How come one of us hasn't slipped, spectacularly
in a public place yet, and been found out?"
"Who says
we haven't?" Rafiel said. "Have you ever heard of crypto
zoology?"
"Bigfoot
and the Lochness monster?" she asked, unearthing the word from a long ago
spree on the internet looking up strange stuff.
Rafiel started
to shake his head then shrugged and nodded. "For all I know, they're of
ours too, yes," he said. "But more than that. Giant panthers in
England, the lizard man of Denver, the thylacine in Australia, that keeps being
seen, years after it's supposedly extinct. And giant tigers and giant black
dogs. All of those. And perhaps," he sighed. "Bigfoot and Nessie
too." He looked at her. "They're all seen. They're all found. It's
just that they're impossible, see. And the human mind is very good at erasing
everything that is not possible. I. . . My mother says that the human mind is
an engine designed to order reality." He paused and frowned. "You
have to meet mom to understand. But if she's right, then our minds are also
designed to reject anything that introduces disorder, anything that goes
against the grain."
"Our,"
she said, before she knew where her mind was headed. "You said the human
mind and referred to it as our. You think our minds are human."
"Do you
think they aren't?" Rafiel asked. "Why?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "Up until last night I thought I was perfectly human," she
said. "I had no idea that I shifted shapes. I thought all that was an
hallucination. Today I don't know what I think."
Something to
the way that Rafiel's expression changed, and to his gaze shifting to a point
behind her, made her turn. The server approached to drop off the bill. Rafiel
glanced at it and handed it, with a card, back to the server.
"Look,
when I went to bed yesterday—well, today at sunrise—we didn't have an ID on the
victim yet. I'm scheduled to go and attend the autopsy today."
"Why?"
"Why the
autopsy? Because we don't know exactly what killed the man. Our pathologist
says the wounds look odd."
"No, why
would they have you attend it? I've seen this in cop shows on TV, but I don't
understand whey they need a policeman, who's not an expert in anatomy or
anything of the sort to be there."
"Oh,
that. . ." He shrugged. "Look, I'm the investigating officer. We
don't have a murder department. Until these bodies started appearing three
months ago, our murder rate was one or two year and those usually domestic. And
the investigating officer has to attend the autopsy. It's. . . That way we're
there. They film the autopsy, you know, but a lot of it never makes it onto the
film or even the official report. And we need to know everything. Even some casual
comment, that the examiner might forget to put in the official report, or that
the cameras might not catch. Sometimes, crimes are solved on little suff."
He grinned suddenly, disarmingly. "Of course, I'm going on my criminal
science class. As I said, most of the murders here don't involve much solving.
The murderer is usually sobbing by the kitchen door, holding the knife. But the
classes I took said I should be there. Also, if they find any evidence—dust or
hair on the victim's clothing, I'll be there to take it into custody. Chain of
custody is very important, should the case ever come to trial."
The victim's
clothing. Kyrie remembered the sodden rag of a body the night before, soaked in
blood. She hadn't been able to tell if he was wearing clothing, much less what
it might be.
She emerged
from the reverie, in time to hear Rafiel say "To the morgue?"
"Beg your
pardon?"
"I was
asking if you'd come with me to the morgue. To watch the autopsy."
"Why?"
she asked.
He shrugged.
"I don't know. Because though I'm not deputizing you, in a way I am?
Because there might be something you see or notice. There might be a hair on
the victim's body that is that of a diner regular—"
"I doubt
they can find a hair, with all that blood," she said.
"You'd be
amazed what is found in autopsy. And I think you can help us. Perhaps help me
solve the whole thing." He paused a moment, significantly, playing with
his napkin by folding it and unfolding it. "And then we can deal with
it." From his expression, he looked about as eager to deal with it as she
felt.
"Won't
people mind?" Kyrie asked. "Isn't it irregular to have me with you at
something like an official autopsy?" She imagined facing the dead body
again. All that blood. It was safer during the day, but it would still trigger
her desire to shift.
"I'll
tell them you work at the diner," he said. "And that you're there
because I think you might see or remember something. And if needed I'll tell
them you're my girlfriend and you're thinking of studying law enforcement. But
it should just be me, and Officer Bob—Bob McDonald. Good man, he usually helps
me. He'll be there. But he was my dad's partner when dad was in the force. Bob
won't ask much of anything. He'll trust me. He thinks I'm. . . as he puts it: strange
but sound. And no, he doesn't know. At least we never told him. Of course,
he's around the house a lot." He shrugged and set the napkin down, neatly
folded, by his still half-full water glass. "So, will you come? With
me?"
Kyrie sighed.
She nodded. It seemed to be her duty to do this. Would it be her duty, also, to
kill someone? To . . . execute someone? Until this evening she'd never even
examined her own ideas on the death penalty—she hadn't had any ideas on the
death penalty, trusting brighter minds than hers to figure that out. But now
she must figure it out. If Tom had killed the man yesterday, did they need to
kill him? Was there another way to control him? How much consciousness did he
have while killing? And would any considerations of justice or injustice to him
have anything to do with it? Or would it all be overruled by the need to keep
society safe?
The server
dropped off the credit card slip, and Rafiel signed it.
"Your
name," Kyrie said. "It's an odd spelling."
"Rafiel?
I was named after an Agatha Christie character. Mom is a great fan."
"Jason
Rafiel," Kyrie said. "Nemesis and Caribbean murder."
He smiled.
"Mom will love you." Then he seemed to realize how that might sound,
and he cleared his throat. "So, will you come with me?"
Kyrie sighed.
"I really don't want to," she said. "But—"
"But?"
"But I
think I might have to." She felt as if her shoulders were being crushed by
the weight of this responsibility she didn't really want to take.
* * *
Tom had given
Keith coffee and shuffled him to the back room where Tom had spent the night.
He felt more at ease there, as if he were intruding less on Kyrie's privacy.
She'd let him sleep here. It was a de-facto guest room.
"I was
just worried about you," Keith said, sitting down on the love seat as Tom
motioned towards it. "The paper said a corpse was found behind that diner
place where you work. And then with the apartment the way it looked, I thought—"
He had never
clearly said what he thought, just frowned and looked worried. And Tom wasn't
absolutely sure how to respond. It had been five years since he had actually
needed to talk to someone or had a personal connection with anyone. And
apparently socialization was reversible, because as far as making small talk—or
any talk at all—he might as well have been raised by wolves.
He hadn't been
a solitary child. He'd always had his buds, back when he was growing up, all
the way from his playgroup in kindergarten to what—he now suspected—had been a
rather unsavory group of young thugs in his adolescent years. In fact, it could
be said that Tom, growing up, had spent far too little time alone with his own
mind and his own thoughts.
But the last
five years. . . Well, there had been interactions with other humans, of course,
some of which still made him cringe. The man who'd tried to rob him outside his
father's house. At least Tom hoped he'd been trying to rob him. Though why a
barefoot kid in a robe would have anything worth taking, Tom couldn't
understand. All he remembered was feeling suddenly very angry. He remembered
shifting, and the dragon. And coming to with a spot of blood in front of him,
and no one near him.
And there had
been other. . . simpler interactions. But there had been practically no social
interaction. Every time he'd talked to another human, or another human had
talked to him, one of them had pretty clearly and immediately wanted something
of the other.
Now, he
couldn't see any signs that Keith wanted something of him. At any rate, there
was nothing Tom had—what few possessions he'd owned had been destroyed at the
apartment—his changes of clothes, his second hand furniture, his. . . he
realized, with a start that his thrift store black-leather jacket would be lost
as well, and felt more grief over that than he'd felt over anything else. That
jacket had been with him from almost the time he got kicked out of the house.
He'd bought it almost new, from a thrift shop, with the proceeds of his first
day as a laborer.
In many ways,
that jacket defined him. It had a high enough collar for him to raise and hide
his often-too-vulnerable face at moments when he wanted just his tough exterior
to show. He'd learned early that looking tough and perhaps just a little crazy
saved him from having to do real violence. Which, when anger could literally
turn you into a beast, was half the battle.
Tom had lost
his home and left without even the clothes on his body. For the second time in
his life. And the thought that Keith might want Tom's body made Tom start to
laugh—rapidly changed into a cough when Keith looked at him, puzzled. He knew
Keith. That was not in the realm of possible.
Keith, for his
part, just seemed to want to reassure himself Tom was okay. Having done that,
he now sipped the coffee very slowly. "I guess your girlfriend is
out?" he asked.
"Kyrie
had an appointment," Tom said.
"She's
cute," Keith said. "How long have you guys been together?"
Ah.
"Well, we work together," Tom said, edging. "And one thing led
to the other."
Keith nodded.
"You? Did
the girl see any other dragons last night?"
Keith frowned.
"Now that you mention it, yeah. She said she saw four dragons later on.
One jumped down to the parking lot, and then three others flew away a while
later." He shook his head. "I don't know. Maybe she has a dragon
obsession. She's fun and all, but it might be more weirdness than I want to
handle." He scratched his head and adjusted his hat. "I have
weirdness enough at college."
Tom nodded,
not sure what to say. And Keith launched in a detailed description of his
college trouble, which involved pig-headed administrators and some complex
requirements for graduation which Tom—who'd never been to college, only vaguely
understood.
And then in
the middle of it—he'd never quite understand it or be able to explain it—there
were wings.
Only it wasn't
quite like that. There was a powder. A green powder, like a shimmer in the air.
Tom had sneezed and was about to say something about it, but it didn't seem to
matter. It was as if he were floating a long way above his own body.
And Keith
jumped up, dropping the cup that he'd been holding. Tom jumped for it, in the
process dropping his own cup. Both cups shattered with a noise that seemed out
of proportion to the event, and seemed to go on forever in Tom's mind.
And then he
turned, but he seemed to turn in slow motion. For one, his body didn't
understand that his legs actually belonged to him. And his legs felt like they
were made of loose string, unable to support his weight. He tripped over his
feet, and as he plunged towards the floor there were. . . wings over him. Green
wings. Dragons. Green. Wings. Had to be dragons.
Suddenly the
windows weren't there. Ripped? The screens were ripped, from the frames. Glass
lay at his feet. And the tip of a green paw came into the room, only it didn't
look like a paw, more like a single toe with a claw at the end.
Tom grabbed
for the low coffee table in front of the love seat. It was wicker and very
unstable, but he struck out with it, hard, at the thing. There was a . . .
tooth? Fang? Coming towards him, and he batted at it with the table. It made a
hissing sound, not at all like a dragon sound. And it was dripping. At least
Tom didn't think it was a dragon sound. He had no idea what he sounded like
when he was shape-shifted.
Keith was
kicking something large and green and shimmering.
"Stop,"
Tom yelled. "You can't kick a dragon. It will blaze you."
Keith looked
at him, and Keith's eyes were huge, the pupils so dilated there was almost no
iris left. It reminded Tom of something but he couldn't say what.
"Mother
ship," Keith said. "The Mother ship has landed. They're coming for
us. I saw a movie."
"Really,"
Tom said, reaching out. "You shouldn't kick dragons."
Tom had
managed to wrench the wooden leg away from the wicker table, and he had some
idea he could stab the dragon with it. But one of the dragons was attacking
Keith, while the other was. . . crouching against the glass door. If Tom could
attack that one. . .
He started to
go for the handle to the patio door, but all of a sudden it wavered and
changed, in front of him, and it was the door to the Athens, with all the
specials painted on. He pulled at it, but it wouldn't open. So he backed up,
and kicked high at it.
The glass
shattered with a sound like hail.
The big green
body leaning against it shuddered and turned. Towards Tom.
Two
toes-with-claws reached for him. A fang probed.
He had time to
think, "Oh, shit." And then he remembered what Keith's eyes looked like.
They looked like his own, in the mirror, back when he was using.
* * *
The morgue of
Goldport was in a low slung, utilitarian-looking brick building. Someone with
misconceived ideas of making it look like Southwestern architecture, had put
two obviously non functional towers in asymmetrical positions atop the tile
roof.
Rafiel Trall
parked in front of the building, and Kyrie parked beside him. There were a
couple of other cars and a couple of white panel vans parked in front. The
street was the sort of little-traveled downtown street connecting quiet
residential streets to the industrial areas with their warehouses and
factories.
Rafiel put
sunglasses on as he came out of the car, and Kyrie wondered for a moment if his
golden eyes were unusually sensitive to light. It didn't seem like the most
practical eye color to have.
He saw her
staring and smiled at her, as if he thought she was admiring him. Kyrie looked
away quickly. The man clearly had an ego as large as his shifted shape.
But he was
quiet as they walked inside the building. Though it was air conditioned, it
didn't have the same feeling of clean cool as the inside of the hotel. Instead,
the cold here felt clammy and clinging and there was a barely discernible
smell. If Kyrie had been pressed to define it, she would have said that it
smelled like her car a day after she'd lost a package of ground turkey in it,
last May. It was the stink of spoiled meat, mixed with a faint tinge of urine
and feces—what she'd once heard someone call the odor of mortality—but so faint
that she couldn't quite be sure it was there.
"Have you
ever been to this type of place?" Rafiel asked.
She shook her
head.
"Sensitive
stomach?" he asked.
She shrugged.
She truly didn't know. She remembered the corpse last night and felt a
recoiling -- not because she'd been on the edge of losing her lunch over it,
but because she remembered all too clearly how appetizing the blood had
smelled. Appetizing was far worse than sickening. "I don't think so,"
she said.
And at that he
gave her his bright smile, that seemed to beam rays of warmth through the
chilly atmosphere. "Well, any one of our kind has seen dead bodies,
right?"
Kyrie blinked,
bereft of an ability to answer. Had she seen dead bodies? Only the one
yesterday. What was he telling her? She looked at the bright smile, the calm
golden eyes and wondered what hid behind it. Oh, she'd guessed—it wasn't that
hard given his history—that Tom might have done things he was sorry for. There
was that edging and shying away behind his silences. And a man like him who
didn't seem totally devoid of interior life and yet ended up on drugs was
clearly running away from something.
But until this
moment, Kyrie had allowed herself to believe the something had been a few petty
thefts, car joyriding, other things that could well fall under juvenile
delinquency. Never. . . Never murder. She'd never thought of murder, until
Rafiel thought that. And now she wondered if the other shifters really had that
much trouble controlling themselves in animal form that killing humans was
common and accepted. And if it was, what was she doing here? What was the point
of murderers investigating murders? If it was normal for shifters to kill
humans, how much should the life of a human be worth it to them? How could
Rafiel be a policeman? And how could Rafiel talk of it so calmly?
But she
couldn't ask him. He'd continued ahead of her, down the cool tiled hallway, and
she had followed him, without thinking, by instinct, like a child or a dog. And
now he stood near a man who sat at a desk, and said, "Hi Joe. I'm here to
see last night's pickup." He removed his sunglasses and pocketed them.
Joe, a middle
aged man, with a greying comb-over and a desk-job paunch, looked pointedly at
Kyrie.
Rafiel smiled,
that dazzling smile that seemed to hide no shadows and no fears.
"Girlfriend," he said. "Kyrie is thinking of joining the force
and I told her she should see an autopsy first. Kyrie Smith, this is Joe
Martin. You know I've talked to you about him. He practically keeps this place
running."
Kyrie, head
spinning at being called someone's girlfriend, put her hand forward, to have it
squeezed in a massive, square-tipped paw. Joe gave her what he probably thought
was a friendly smile, but which was at least three quarters leer, and told her
in a tone he surely believed was avuncular, "You take good care of our
boy, Ms. Smith. He's been lonely too long. Not that some ladies haven't
tried."
And on that
auspicious blessing, they walked past Joe and down the hallway, past a row of
grey doors with little glass windows.
They all
looked similar to Kyrie, and she had no idea what prompted Rafiel to stop in
front one of them. But he stopped, and plunged a hand into his pants pocket,
handing her a small notebook. She took it without comment, thought considering
the tightness of Rafiel's pants, she had to wonder what quantum principle
allowed him to keep notebooks in there. When he handed her a pen too, from the
same provenance, she was even more impressed, because sharp objects there had
to hurt.
"Just
take notes," Rafiel told her. "And no one in there will ask who you
are. They'll assume you're a new officer I'm training. Goldport has one of the
smallest full time forces in the state. To compensate, we have a never-end of
part timers, usually either people blowing through town for a few months, or
people who took a couple of months of law enforcement courses and decided it
wasn't for them. If they ask, then I'll tell them you work at the diner and I
want your opinion, okay?"
Kyrie nodded,
feeling marginally better about being an apprentice policeman than about
pretending to be Rafiel's girlfriend. A sense of unease about Rafiel built in
her mind, even as she nodded and held the notebook and pencil as if she were
official. Might as well make some notes, too. Hell. Who knew? She might need
them. She was, after all, investigating this herself, wasn't she?
Rafiel opened
the door and the smell of spoiled meat leaked out, overwhelmed—fortunately
overwhelmed—by the smell of chemicals. She thought she detected rubbing alcohol
and formaldehyde among them.
Inside was a
small room, with tiled walls and floor, all leading down to a drain in the
center of the floor, above which a metallic table was placed and into which
something was gurgling. Kyrie knew very well what the something would be, but
she refused to look, refused to investigate.
In the full
light of day, without the pressure of the moon on her body and mind, it was
unlikely that the smell of blood would be appetizing. But she refused to give
it a chance, all the same.
The tiled room
should have looked cold and sterile and it probably would have, had it been
tiled in standard white. However, the walls looked like someone had either gone
crazy with artistry or—more likely considering what Kyrie had seen of how the
public departments of Goldport, from town hall to schools, operated—they'd
received remnant tiles from various public projects.
Be it as it
may, bright blue, fierce red, sunny yellow and the curious terracota-orange of
Southwest buildings covered walls and floor.
It all went to
make the man who stood in the middle of the room look greyer and more
colorless. He would be, Kyrie judged, somewhat past middle age. Colorlessness
came not only from his white hair, but from a skin that looked like he was
never allowed out in the sunlight. He had an aquiline nose that looked broken
but probably had just grown like that, and—on either side of it—brightly
sparkling blue eyes, rife with amusement.
"Hello
there, Rafiel," he said, and grinned. He wore a lab coat, and the
sleeves—and his hands, in latex gloves—were stained as colorfully as the tiles
that surrounded him. "We were just about to start, but Bob—" He
nodded towards the other man in the room, who was somewhat past middle age,
with a bald head surrounded in a fringe of grey hair. He wore a bright Hawaiian-style
shirt, incongruously patterned with what seemed to be palm trees and camels on
a virulently green background. "Bob said it was proper if you were here,
as there should be more than one of you watching."
"I'm
sorry," Rafiel said. There was some change that Kyrie couldn't quite
define to his tone. "We were having breakfast."
The man in the
lab-coat—a doctor?—grinned. "Breakfast, before this? Oh, no. You know so
much better than that."
"To be
honest, Mike," Bob said. "He hasn't tossed his cookies in about a
year. Not since that vagrant found at the warehouse, that had been there for
over three months, last summer, remember?"
Rafiel said
nothing, only shook his head and a light red tinge appeared on his cheeks. And
Kyrie realized all of a sudden what his tone had been. The sound in his voice
had been the sound of a little boy responding to his betters, of a young man
convincing the elders of his worthiness.
"This is
Kyrie Smith," Rafiel said, gruffly. "She'll be taking notes."
The two older
men looked at her as if noticing her presence for the first time. The medical
examiner smiled and Bob raised his eyebrows, his eyes twinkling with amusement.
She rather suspected that, notebook or not, she'd just been relegated to the
girlfriend realm again.
She ducked her
head, while the examiner turned to a point in the wall, where a little light
flashing, and a glint of something seemed to indicate the presence of a camera,
and said, "We have washed and set the body, ready for examination."
He gestured towards the body on the table.
It looked much
better than the night before. Or perhaps much worse. It was all a matter of
perspective. The night before, it had looked like a piece of meat wrapped in
blood-soaked rags. Now, laid out on the table, it looked definitely human.
"The
victim," the medical examiner continued, in that officious voice that
people get when talking into recording instruments. "Is a Caucasian male,
blue eyed, five foot nine, two hundred and thirty pounds, probably between
thirty and forty years old. As far as we can determine, he died of multiple
stab wounds, by an instrument to be determined." He gestured towards a
large ziploc bag at the corner of the room, against the multicolored wall. It
was filled with something that looked black and ragged. "I removed the
victim's clothes—t-shirt and slacks—in the presence of officer McDonald, and
bagged them. They will be handed to the custody of officer McDonald and officer
Trall for further analysis. As reported to me by Officer McDonald, the corpse
was not found to have any identification and the police department is waiting
for a missing-persons report that might give some clue as to his
identity."
"Instrument
to be determined, Mike?" Rafiel asked, leaning forward to take a closer
look at the very pale corpse crisscrossed by dark gashes.
The medical
examiner looked up. "They don't look like knife stab wounds."
"What
about. . . I mean, yesterday we thought it might be another of those animal
attacks?"
"What
animal. . . Oh, the victims cut in half?" Mike said. "Not that I can
tell. I mean, yeah, the other ones have some marks consistent with perhaps
animal teeth, though I would hate to see the animal with teeth that size. But
this one. . ." He frowned. "More like he was stabbed multiple times
by a weird implement. A nubby sword with a serrated edge, perhaps?"
Rafiel
blinked. He looked towards Kyrie and frowned.
Kyrie felt
relieved. Well, at least a little relieved. She took a deep breath. A nubby
sword with a serrated edge didn't seem like anything that Tom could have been
carrying on him. She had seen his teeth—glimmering in the moonlight—and they
looked as polished and smooth as the best gourmet knives. So they couldn't be
confused with these stabbing implements. And Tom hadn't had anything on him.
She remembered him in the bathroom.
Her sense of
relief surprised her. Did she care that much if Tom was guilty or not? But then
she thought that considering she might be called on to administer justice, and
considering she had already hidden him from the law, in a way, yes, she did
care.
She made a
quick note on the nature of the implements, and looked up to see that the
doctor and Rafiel were removing something, with tweezers—from the man's grey
hair.
"Looks
like the same green powder found on the clothes and the body when we first
examined it," Mike said. "We're sending it for analysis."
Rafiel was
frowning at a little baggie into which he'd collected what looked like a
sprinkle of bright green powder. "Looks like pollen," he said.
"Anything flowering about now, that's this bright green?" he looked
at Bob.
"Not that
I know," Bob said. "Label it. We'll hand it over to the lab. Who
knows? They might actually figure it out."
He shrugged
and Kyrie didn't know if he was being ironic. She also didn't have time to
think about it, because Mike had sliced a Y shape on the man's chest and opened
the body cavity.
The smell of
death and corruption became all encompassing, and the sight of the organs. . .
Kyrie swallowed. Even as she swallowed and struggled with nausea, she felt
relieved that it wasn't hunger and that she wasn't finding this in any way
appetizing. Perhaps panthers only ate fresh meat.
"Are you
okay?" Rafiel asked.
She wasn't
okay. The smell seemed to be short circuiting her brain and making her blood
rush loudly in her ears. But she nodded and got hold of the considerable will
power she resorted to when she had to prevent herself from shifting. She nodded
again. "I'm fine," she said, though her voice echoed tiny and
distant.
"Look at
that," the doctor said. "That's the stab that killed him. Right
through the heart." He pointed at an organ that looked exactly like the
others, to Kyrie, all of them an amalgam of red and green, yellow and the sort
of greys that really shouldn't exist in nature. "There are several others
that reached vital organs, but I'd say that's the one that stopped it. Pretty
much ripped the heart to shreds, in fact."
Rafiel and Bob
had moved closer, and were looking into the opened body.
"What are
those white things?" Rafiel asked.
"Damned
if I know," Mike said. "They look like some sort of adipose
deposits."
"They
look like huge ant eggs to me," Bob said. "You know, the kind you
find when you break an anthill open in your garden? Just much bigger."
"They
seem to be at all the stab wound sites," Rafiel said.
Kyrie wrote
"white things" and "ant eggs" and "wound sites."
"So, some
contamination on the blade," Rafiel said. "Can you put some—"
Then as the doctor
handed him a bag and said, "You'd best keep it in a cooler, though, since
it's not been exposed to the air."
Bob produced a
normal picnic cooler from somewhere. It was full of ice. He got the baggy and a
couple other baggies of what the doctor might think were contaminants in the
wound, and put them in the cooler.
The autopsy
progressed along lines that Kyrie had read about, but never been forced to
watch before, and she had to call on all her self-control to continue watching,
particularly when they sawed the cranium open to remove the brain. But there
didn't seem to be any other surprises.
"I
think," the doctor said. "There might be some drug in the blood, so
I'd like to get that looked at also."
"Drug?"
"Some
hallucinogenic. His pupils were like pie plates when they got him in. I'd say
he was high as a kite."
She tried to
imagine this man high. He didn't seem the type. Well fed, middling dressed,
middle aged. Oh, Kyrie and everyone in her generation had heard all the
platitudes about drug use affecting every class and every type of person. And,
as such, they might even be true. But there were two classes it primarily
affected—depending on the drug—the very rich and the very poor. And within
those, whatever drug was the current drug of choice tended to make people
sickly or at least skinny.
This man
looked robust and neither too rich or too poor. And yet, looking at him,
something gnawed at the back of Kyrie's mind. She couldn't quite say what.
She took her
leave, with Rafiel, and hurried out of the place. Outside, standing in the sun,
holding a cooler with whatever samples they got off the body, Rafiel blinked.
His enormous confidence seemed to have vanished and he looked confused and
perhaps a little scared.
He looked over
his shoulder, but Bob had stayed behind, talking to the examiner. "We have
to find who did this, Kyrie. The sooner the better."
"Why?"
Kyrie said. There were many things she wanted to ask Rafiel, like why he
assumed that one of their kind was bound to have seen corpses before, and why,
if that was the case, they should discipline this killer. And why he'd assumed
that this too was a death by dragon—other than having seen Tom standing over
the body. But she couldn't ask any of those, and anyway, the most important was
this—why they, particularly and not the police in general should find out what
happened to this victim.
Rafiel blinked
again. The gesture made him look slow of thought, though it was probably just a
reaction to the strong sunshine. "What do you mean why?" he asked.
"Why should
we care who did this, if it wasn't a shifter?" Kyrie asked.
Rafiel
frowned. "No, but the victim was a shifter. Didn't you smell it?"
* * *
Rafiel
insisted on following her home. There was nothing for it. "Can't you
see?" he said. "I have to. If something is killing shifters. .
."
"How
would they even know I'm a shifter?" she asked. "Wouldn't it take
knowing the smell? And knowing what we are?"
Rafiel
shrugged. "I can't answer that. Perhaps something like your triad friends.
Didn't Ormson say that the triad had been shifters for centuries? That it ran
in families? That they know what it means and even have a shifter god?"
She looked at
him. A monstrous idea was forming. If someone was killing shifters, and if it
was another shifter, wouldn't it make sense for it to be someone who. . . oh,
worked for the police? Who could keep an eye on people without anyone getting
suspicious? He could smell someone—once—and then realize. . .
She shook her
head. "Why were you at the diner?" she asked. "Last night?"
Golden eyes
widened. "I was coming for a cup of coffee," he said. "I was off
work."
"You were
coming for a cup of coffee in lion shape?"
He chuckled at
that. Audibly chuckled. "No. Of course not. I only shifted when I smelled.
. . I was in human form when I first saw you. When I saw you pull Ormson
inside. Of course, I knew you were shifters."
"How?"
He looked at
her as if she'd taken leave of her senses. "He was a dragon," he
said.
"But then
why did you shift?" Kyrie asked. "Why wouldn't you just call the
crime in?"
"And
catch you still shape-shifted?" he said. "I had to make sure you were
out of there before I called it in."
"But why
shift, then?"
He sighed.
Something like a shadow crossed the serene golden eyes and he mumbled
something.
"Beg your
pardon?" Kyrie said.
"The
smell of blood, all right? Combined with the moonlight it caused me to shift
and it took effort to get back to my form. Because then. . ." He turned
very red. "Then I smelled you."
Kyrie thought
of the smell of him, rising in the night with all the blatant come on of a
feline-seeking-female ad.
She nodded
once. She could believe that. But she still had a question, "Why come to
the Athens for coffee? Pardon me, but I know even late at night there are
better places open, and dressing as you do, surely you can afford better."
He shrugged.
"I don't know, okay? Started going there about a year ago. I like. . .
It's homey, okay? Feels homey. And there's you. You're. . . I could smell you
were a shifter. And I like looking at you."
Kyrie frowned.
"Fine," she said. But she wasn't convinced. For one, she couldn't
remember having seen Rafiel at the diner, ever. Of course, considering how busy
it got there at times, like the five a.m. rush just before she went off shift,
he could have been dancing naked on a table and she would not have noticed.
She looked at
him, and, involuntarily, pictured that. No. If he were dancing naked on the
table, she would have noticed.
"Fine,"
she said again. "You can follow me home."
At the back of
her mind, she thought that if all else failed, Tom would be there. And Tom
could always help defend her against Rafiel. Okay, Tom might not be exactly a super
hero. But it would be two against one.
* * *
Tom had just
kicked the door, and felt something—something giant and pincer like reach for
him when. . .
"What in
hell?" came from the direction of the living room in a very male voice. A
vaguely familiar male voice. And then there were strides—sounding echoey and
strange through his distorting senses, advancing along, towards him.
Past the
kitchen. He felt more than saw as two pairs of green wings took flight, from
the backyard, into the dark night sky above.
And he turned
in the direction of the steps to see Kyrie look at him, her mouth open in
shock, her eyes wide, her face suddenly drained of color.
Keith was
still doing fake kung-foo moves in the direction of the utterly broken windows.
But Kyrie stood in the middle of the room, gulping air.
Behind her,
stood the policeman lion, golden eyes and immaculate linen clothes, all in a
vague tawny color. And he looked. . . disgusted.
Tom summoned
all his thought, all his ability to speak, and came out with the best excuse he
could craft. "It wasn't me," he said. "It was the dragons."
* * *
Kyrie stood in
the middle of her demolished sunroom. The windows were all broken. As was the
sliding door. And there was Tom—and he looked very odd. Tottery and. . . just
strange. And there was another guy—his neighbor, she thought, from the
apartment.
"I'm
sorry," Tom said, again. "It was the dragons." He pointed at the
backyard. "They were attacking."
His voice
sounded odd. Normally it was raspy, but now it sounded like it was coming out
through one of those distorters that kids used to do alien voices. And there
had to be something wrong with him. He was walking barefoot on shards of glass.
It had to hurt. In fact, she could see little pinpricks of blood on the
indifferent beige carpet. But he didn't seem to be in pain.
"Tom are
you all right?" she asked. But by then she was close enough to look in his
eyes. His pupils were huge, crowding the blue iris almost completely out of his
eyes.
Kyrie took a
deep breath. Damn, damn, damn, damn. She knew better, didn't she? Once a junkie
always a junkie. And Tom was. . . Hell, she knew what he was. Shifter or not,
someone with his upbringing wouldn't have fallen as low as he had without some
major work on his part. He had to be totally out of control. He had to be.
But she'd
almost believed. She'd almost trusted. She remembered how she'd felt bad about
telling Rafiel on him. She remembered how she felt so relieved it wasn't a
dragon's teeth on that man's body.
Hell, she
still felt happy the man hadn't died by dragon. That meant she didn't have to
keep Tom close until she figured out what to do about it. She just didn't have
to. She was through with him.
"You're high,"
she said, and it sounded odd, because she hadn't meant to say it, hadn't meant
to call attention to the fact, just in case Rafiel hadn't noticed it. But it
didn't matter, did it? If Tom was this out of control, he was going to be
arrested, sooner or later.
Tom shook his
head, his dark eyebrows knit over his eyes in complete surprise.
"Me?" he said. "No. Keith is high. He was talking about the
Mother ship. I mean, clear as day it was just Two dragons."
Kyrie didn't
know whether to laugh and cry. All these years she had kept away from dangerous
men. She'd laughed at the sort of woman who let herself get head over heels
with some bundle of muscles and no brain. And now she'd got involved with . . .
this. Okay, so not involved, although if she told herself the truth, she had
been interested in Tom. Or at least appreciative of his buff and sculpted body.
She hadn't done anything even remotely sexual or physical to him, though.
Not that it
mattered. She'd let him into her house. She'd let him stay here alone. . . And
he'd got his buddy over, hadn't he? And they'd. . . what? Shot up? There didn't
seem to be any smell of pot in the air, and besides she doubted that pot would
cause this kind of trip. Of course, she knew drugs could also be swallowed or.
. . And that wasn't the point. He'd gotten high and destroyed her property.
She looked
around at the devastation in her sunroom, and wondered how she was going to pay
for this mess. The landlord would demand payment. But she had no more than a
couple of hundred in the bank, and that had to last for food and all till the
end of the month. And she needed rent.
She took
another deep breath. She was going to have to ask Frank for more hours. And
even then, she might not make it.
Tom was
looking at her, as though trying to interpret her expression, as if it were
very hard to read—something he couldn't understand. "Uh," he said.
"I'll leave now?"
Part of Kyrie
wanted to tell him no. After all, well, he was still barefoot. And bleeding.
And he was high. She should tell him to say. She should. . .
But no, she
definitely should not. She'd kept him overnight, so he would be better off
leaving in the morning. And now, what? He'd just caused more damage.
"Yes,"
she said. She heard her voice so cold it could have formed icicles on contact.
"Yeah. I think it would be best if you left and took your friend."
Tom nodded,
and tugged on the shoulder of the other guy's sweater, even as he started
inching past Kyrie, in an oddly skittish movement. It reminded her of a cat, in
a house where she'd stayed for a few months. A very skittish cat, who ran away
if you so much as looked at her.
As far as
Kyrie could tell, no one had ever hurt the cat. But she skidded past people, as
though afraid of being kicked.
Now Tom edged
past her the same way, while dragging his friend, who looked at Kyrie, blank
and confused, and said, "It was aliens, you know. Just like. . . you know.
Aliens."
She heard them
cross the house, towards the front door. She didn't remember the guy's car on
the driveway, but it wasn't her problem if they were on foot. In fact, it might
be safer in the state they were. And she didn't care, she told herself, as she
listened for the front door to close.
"Kyrie,"
Rafiel said. He stood by the windows, frowning, puzzled. "Something was here."
* * *
They'd been
walking for a while, aimlessly, down the street, when Tom because aware of
three things—first, that he was walking around in a neighborhood he didn't
know; second, that he was barefoot; third that his feet hurt like living hell.
He sat down on
the nearest law, and looked at his feet, which were cut, all over, by a bunch
of glass.
This
realization seemed to have hit Keith at the same time, which was weird. As Tom
was looking in dismay at the blood covering the soles of his feet, Keith said,
"Shit. You're bleeding."
Tom looked up.
He remembered seeing Keith's eyes, the pupil dilated and odd. But Keith looked
perfectly normal now, even if a little puzzled. "What happened?" he
said. And frowned, as if remembering some thing that didn't make any sense
whatsoever. "What happened to us back there. What. . ."
Tom shook his
head. He knew what Keith's eyes looked like. And Tom had some idea what mind
altering substances could do to your mind and your senses. Hell, for a while
there he was shooting everything that came his way. Heroin by choice, but he'd
have done drain opener if he had any reason to suspect that it would prevent
him from shifting into a dragon. He suspected, in fact, that he had shot up
baking soda in solution more than a few times. And who knew what else? It was
miraculous enough he'd survived all those years. But nothing, nothing, equaled
the trip he'd just gone through, back there.
He put his
face in his hands, and heard himself groan. He'd messed it up for good an all.
Not that there had ever been any hope that Kyrie would see him as anything
other than a mess. Not considering what he'd done the night before. The. . .
corpse. And then his being so totally helpless. There was no way he had a
chance with Kyrie. Not any way. But. . .
But now she
thought him a drug addict. And the policeman had been with her.
"I'm
going to get my car," Keith said. "Do you have any idea which way we
came?"
"You have
a car?"
"Yeah,"
Keith said. "I parked just a couple of blocks from. . . your girl's. .
." It seemed to hit him, belatedly, that perhaps Kyrie was no longer Tom's
girl. Not after what they'd done to her sunroom. "Do you have any idea
which way we came?"
There was
something to the dragon. Perhaps seeing the city from above so many times, Tom
had memorized it like one memorizes a map, or a favorite picture. Or perhaps
being a dragon came with a sense of direction. Who knew?
But by
concentrating, he could just figure out which way Kyrie's house was. He
wondered if the policeman would arrest them for even coming near.
Standing up,
unsteadily, he said, "Come on." He winced at the pain in his feet.
"Come on. It's this way, up the road here two blocks, then up ten blocks,
and then to the left another five, and you should see her house."
Keith took a
step back. "Whoa, dude," he said. "You've gone all pale, just
standing up. Sit down. I'll go get the car. You're sure of the way?"
Tom nodded. He
wanted to say he would go with Keith, but he could tell he would only slow
Keith down. He sat down on the grass, again, with some relief. "Sure,"
he said. "Sure. You should see it. If not. . . come back."
He put his
face in his hands, again, sitting there. He didn't know how long he and Keith
had been fighting the. . . dragons? He was sure they were dragons, but there
was a feeling of strangeness, his memory kept giving him images of a big,
horned toe. No. A tooth. No. . .
He sighed. He
was never going to remember. And he had no idea what had got him so high. And
Keith too. For all his attitude with the girls, the one thing Tom had never
suspected Keith of doing was getting involved in drugs. In fact, he would bet
his neighbor had never got high before.
So. . . How
had they got high?
The sugar. It
had to be the sugar. He'd drunk nothing but the coffee. None, absolutely no one
would put drugs in eggs or bacon. So, it had to be the sugar. He'd put three
spoons in the coffee. Kyrie. Kyrie kept drugs in the house.
He blinked in
amazement. Okay, so he'd stolen the—He'd stolen it—he forced his mind
away from what it was—so he could give up drugs. There had been one too
many times of waking up choking on his own vomit, struggling for every breath
and not sure he was going to make it to the morning. There had also been the
ever present fear of being arrested, of shifting in a jail cell. Of eating a
bunch of people.
So, he'd
stolen it and tried to use it to control his shifts, so that he would
stop waking up in the middle of the day dreaming he had eaten someone the night
before and not being sure if it was true or not. The drugs weren't working so
well for that, anyway. Or to make him stop hurting.
But, even with
the. . . object in his possession he hadn't been able to give up on drugs, not
entirely, until he'd started working at the diner, and he'd been. . . He'd seen
Kyrie, and he'd seen the way she looked at him. And . . . he chuckled to
himself. He'd tried to change. He'd really tried to change his ways to impress
her. And all the time, all this time, she was doing drugs, too. Perhaps all
shifters did them, to control the shift? Or perhaps she disapproved of him for
other reasons. But, clearly, a straight arrow she was not.
"Are you
okay?" Keith asked. He'd stopped the car—a beat up golden Toyota of late
eighties vintage—in front of Tom and rolled down the window.
Tom realized
he was laughing so hard that there were tears pouring down his face. He
controlled with an effort. "Oh, I'm fine. I am perfectly fine."
He had, in
fact, been an idiot. But not anymore.
* * *
When the
office was empty like this, late at night, and Edward Ormson was the only one
still at his desk, sometimes he wondered what it would be like to have someone
to go home to.
He hadn't
remarried because. . . Well, because his marriage had blown up so explosively,
and Sylvia had taken herself such a long way away that he thought there was no point
trying again.
No. He was
wrong. He was lying to himself again. What had made him give up on family and
home wasn't Sylvia. It was Tom.
He looked up
from the laptop open on his broad mahogany desk, and past the glass-door of his
private office at the rest of the office—where normally his secretaries and his
clerks worked. This late, it was all gloom, with here and there a faint light
where someone's computer had turned on to run the automated processes, or where
someone had forgotten a desk lamp on.
He probably
should make a complaint about the waste of energy, but the truth was he liked
those small lapses. It made the office feel more homey—and the office was
practically the only home Ormson had.
The wind
whistled behind him, around the corner of the office, where giant panel of
window glass met giant panel of window glass. The wind always whistled out
here. When you're on the thirtieth floor of an office building there's always a
certain amount of wind.
Only it seemed
to Ormson that there was an echo of wings unfolding in the wind. He shivered
and glowered at the screen, at the message one of his clerks had sent him, with
research details for one of his upcoming trials. Even with the screen turned on,
he could still see a reflection of himself in it—salt-and-pepper hair that had
once been dark, and blue eyes, shaped exactly like Tom's.
He wondered if
Tom was still alive and where he was. Damn it. It shouldn't be this difficult.
None of this should be so difficult. He'd made partner, he'd gotten married,
he'd had a son. By now, Tom was supposed to be in Yale, or if he absolutely had
to rebel, in Harvard, working on his law degree. Tom was supposed to be his
son. Not the constant annoyance of a thorn on the side, a burr under the
saddle.
But Tom had
been trouble from the first step he'd taken—when he'd held onto the side table
and toppled Sylvia's favorite Ming vase. And it hadn't got any better when it
had progressed to petty car theft, to pot smoking, to the school complaining he
was sexually harassing girls. It just kept getting harder and harder and
harder.
He thought he
heard a tinkle of glass far off and stopped breathing, listening. But no sound
followed and, through the glass door, he saw no movement in the darkened
office. There was nothing. He was imagining things, because he had thought of
Tom.
Hell, even
Sylvia hadn't wanted Tom. She'd started having an affair with another doctor at
the hospital and taken off with her boyfriend to Florida and married him, and
set about having a family, and she'd never, never again even bothered to send
Tom a birthday card. Not after that first year. And then Tom. . .
This time the
noise was more definite, closer by.
Edward rose
from his desk, his fingertips touching the desktop, as if for support. He told
himself there were no such thing as dragons. He told himself people didn't
shift into dragons and back again.
Every time he
told himself that. Every time. And it didn't make any difference. There were
still. . . Tom had still. . .
No sound from
the office, and he drew in a deep breath and started to sit down. He'd turn off
the computer, pack up and go. . . well, not home. His condo wasn't a home. But
he'd go back to the condo, and have a drink and call one of the suitably long
list of arm candy who'd been vying to be Mrs. Ormson for the last few months,
and see if she wanted to go to dinner somewhere nice. If he was lucky, he
wouldn't have to sleep alone.
"Ormsssssson."
His office
door had opened, noiselessly, and through it whistled the sort of breeze that
hit the thirtieth floor when one of the windows had been broken. It was more of
a wind. He could hear paper rustling, tumbling about, a roaring of wind, and a
tinkle as someone's lamp or monitor fell over.
And the head
pushing through the door was huge, reptilian, armed with many teeth that
glimmered even in the scant light. Edward had seen it only once. He'd seen. . .
other dragons. Tom not the least of them. But he hadn't seen this dragon. Not
more than once. That had been when Edward had hired to defend a triad member
accused—and guilty—of a particularly gruesome and pointless murder.
This creature
had appeared, shortly after Edward had gotten his client paroled, and while
Edward was trying to convince him to go away for a while and not to pursue a
bloody course of revenge that would have torn the triad apart—and,
incidentally, got him dead or back in jail.
This
dragon—they called it the great something dragon?—had flapped down from the sky
and—Edward remembered his client's body falling from a great height, the two
pieces of it tumbling down to the asphalt. And the blood. The blood.
He swallowed
bile, hastily, and stood fully again. Stood. Ready to run. Which was foolish,
because the thing blocked his office door, and its huge, many-fanged head
rested on its massive paws. There was nowhere Edward could run.
The dragon
blinked huge, green eyes at him, and, as with a cat's secretly satisfied
expression, it gave the impression of smiling. A long forked tongue licked at
the lipless mouth. "Ormson," it said, still somehow managing to give
the impression that the word was composed mostly of sibilants.
"Yes?"
Edward asked, and found his voice wavering and uncertain. "How may I help
you?"
"Your
whelp has stolen something of mine," the dragon said. Its voice was only
part noise. The other part was a feeling, like a scratch at the back of the
brain. It made you want to flip up your cranium and scratch.
"My. .
.?"
"Your
son. Thomas. He's stolen the Pearl of Heaven."
Edward's mouth
was dry. He opened it to say this was entirely Tom's business, but he found
himself caught in an odd crux. If Tom had stolen something, then Tom was still
alive. Still alive five years after being kicked out of the house. Had he
learned something? Had he shaped up? He almost had to, hadn't he, or he would
be dead by now? No one could continue going the way Tom had been going and
still be alive after five years on their own, could they?
He swallowed
hard. But Tom had stolen something. This seemed to imply he'd learned nothing.
He'd not changed.
He clenched
his hands so tightly that his nails bit into his palm. How could Tom still be a
problem? How could he? Didn't he know how hard he made it on his father? Didn't
he care?
"I don't
know what my son has done," he said, and his voice came out creditably
firm. "I haven't seen me in more than five years. You cannot hold me
responsible for what he has done."
"He has
stolen the Pearl of Heaven," the dragon rumbled, his eyes half closed and
still giving that look of a secret smile.
"So, he's
stolen some jewelry," Edward said. "Get it from him. I don't
care."
Did he care?
What if they killed Tom? Edward didn't know. He didn't even know if it would
grieve him anymore. It wasn't supposed to be this hard. He'd been saying that
since Tom was one. And it hadn't got any easier.
"It's not
that easy," the dragon said. "The Pearl is. . . dragon magic.
Ancient. It was given to us by the Emperor of Heaven. It will not do him any
good, but it is the center of our strength. We need it, or we shall fall
apart."
Great. Tom
would manage to steal some cultic object. Hell, if he found an idol with an eye
made of ruby, he'd dig the ruby out just to see what would happen. And Edward
remembered all too well the incident in the Met Museum with Tom and the mummy
when Tom was five. Other kids just never thought of this kind of trouble to get
into.
"So get
it. From him. I know nothing of it."
"Ah,"
the dragon said. And the sound, somehow, managed to convey an impression of
disapproval, an impression of denial. "But the child is always the
responsibility of the parents, isn't he? Your son has hidden the Pearl of
Heaven. It is up to you to find it and give it back to us."
The or else
remained unspoken, hanging mid air, more solid, more certain than anything the
dragon had said.
"I don't
even know where he is," Edward said.
"Goldport,
Colorado."
"Fine,"
Edward said, nodding and trying to look business like. He scooped up his
laptop, picked up his case from the floor, started pushing the laptop into it.
"Fine, fine. I'll call tomorrow. I'll make enquiries. I'll try to figure
out where he—"
A many-clawed
paw lifted. With unreal, careful precision, it rested atop the briefcase and
the laptop and just touched the edge of Edward Ormson's hand. The claw
shimmered, like real gold, and ended in an impossibly sharp talon.
"Not
tomorrow," the dragon said. "Now."
"Now?"
Edward blinked, in confusion, looking down at the talon on is hand, the tip of
it pressing just enough to leave a mark, but leaving no doubt that it could
press hard enough to skewer the hand through sinew and bone. "But it's
what? Nine at night? You can't really book flights at this time of night. Well,
not anymore. You can't just show up at the airport and book a flight on a whim.
With the security measures that simply doesn't happen anymore."
"No
airport," the dragon said, his paw immobile, the pressure of his talon
palpable.
"Driving?"
Edward asked, and would have sat down, if he weren't so afraid that some
stirring, some careless gesture would make the creature stab his hand with that
talon. He didn't know what would happen if he did that. He didn't know how Tom
had become a dragon, but if the legends were right, then it was through a bite.
Or a clawing. "Driving would take much longer. Why don't I book a flight
tomorrow. I'll fly out before twenty four hours. I promise."
"No
driving. I'll take you. Now."
"You'll
take me?"
The claw
withdrew. "Pack your things. Whatever you need to take. I'll take you.
Now."
There really
wasn't much choice. Less than ten minutes later, Edward was straddling the huge
beast's back, holding on tight, while they stood facing the place where the
dragon had broken several panels of glass to get in.
There was a
moment of fear, as the dragon dove through the window, wings closed, and they
plunged down towards the busy street.
A scream
caught in Edward's throat. Not for the first time, he wondered why no one else
saw these creatures. Was he having really vivid hallucinations while locked up
in some madhouse?
No. No. He was
sure other people saw them. But he was also sure they forgot it as soon as they
could. He, himself, tried to forget them every time he saw them. Every time.
And then they appeared again.
They plunged
dizzily past blind dark offices and fully lit ones, towards the cars on the
street below.
At maybe tenth
floor level, the dragon opened his wings, and turned gracefully, gaining
height.
Edward was
never sure how they flew. He'd always thought thermals. . . But these wings
were flapping, vigorously, to gain altitude, and he could feel the back muscles
ripple beneath his legs.
He'd put his
briefcase's shoulder handle across his chest, bandolier style. And that was
good because the dragon's scales were slicker and smoother than they seemed to
be, and he had to hold on with both hands to the ridge that ran down the back
of the dragon, as the dragon turned almost completely sideways, and gained
altitude, flying above the high-rises, above Hudson Bay, circling. Heading out
to Colorado. Where Edward was supposed to convince Tom to do something he
didn't want to do.
Oh, hell.
* * *
"What?"
Kyrie asked, looking at Rafiel who stood by the windows, frowning at them.
"This
window was broken from the outside," he said. "Something ripped the
screen aside, and hammered that window down. From the outside."
"How do
you know?" she asked. She was looking at her patio door and wondering how
she was going to be able to pay for all that glass. Safety glass, at that, she
was sure. "How could you tell?"
"The
glass fragments are all on the inside," he said. "And scattered
pretty far in."
"The
glass fragments for this patio door are pretty much inside, too, but there's a
bunch of them outside," she said. "I think you're reading too much
into it."
"No,"
Rafiel said. "I'm no expert, of course. I could bring the lab here, and
they could tell you for sure. But—see, on the patio door, the glass is kicked
all the way out there, almost halfway through your backyard."
"Which
isn't very far," Kyrie said.
"Admittedly,"
Rafiel said. "But see, the door, I'm sure was kicked from the inside. But
the windows weren't. There's some glass that crumbled and just fell on that
side, but most of it got pushed in here, all the way to the middle of the
carpet."
Kyrie looked.
There were glass pieces all the way through the room, to the foot of the sofa
where Tom had slept. There were spots of blood, too, where Tom had walked on
the glass, apparently without noticing.
Suddenly, it
was too much for Kyrie, and she sat on the end of the sofa where there was no
glass. "How could he?" she asked. "What was he high on, anyway?
There was glass everywhere. Why couldn't he feel it? What's wrong with
him?"
Rafiel looked
puzzled and started to say "Who—" Then he shook his head. "If
you mean Ormson, I think there's a lot more wrong with him than even I could tell
you. Though I think I'll do a background check on him tomorrow. His getting
that other young punk here worries me. Perhaps he's a dealer? And that guy came
by for a hit?"
Kyrie was
about to say that she'd never seen any signs that Tom dealt—but what did she
have to go on? She had suspected him of it. He'd said he didn't. And, of
course, she would trust him because he was a model of virtue and probity.
"What is wrong with me?" she asked.
And now Rafiel
looked even more puzzled and she almost laughed. Which showed how shocked she
was, because there really wasn't anything to laugh about.
The golden
eyes gave her the once over, head to toe. "I don't see anything wrong with
you."
For a moment,
for just a moment, she could almost smell him, musky and virile like the night
before. She got up from the sofa. That was probably what was messing her up. It
was all down to pheromones and unconscious reactions and stuff. It was all . .
. insane.
She grabbed
her right hand with her left, as if afraid what they might do. "Well,
that's neither here nor there," she said. "Is it? These windows are
going to cost me a fortune, and I will have to work a bunch of overtime to pay
for it."
"I could
talk to my dad. He knows—I could get someone to do the job and you could pay
for them on credit."
Kyrie twisted
her lips. One thing she had seen, through her growing up years, and that was
that families usually went wrong when they started buying things on credit, no
matter how necessary it seemed at the time. And since many of the foster
families fostered for the money allowance a new kid brought, she had seen a lot
of families who had gone financially to the wrong. "No, thank you,"
she said. "I can take care of myself."
"But this
is wide open," he said. "And there's something killing shifters. What
if they come for you? How are you going to defend yourself? I have to protect
you. We're partners in solving this crime, remember?"
Kyrie
remembered. But she also remembered that she wasn't sure what all this meant to
Rafiel. And didn't want to known. She'd been a fool for trusting Tom. She'd be
damned if she was going to repeat the mistake with Rafiel. What if he had the
door fixed, in a way that he could somehow, come in and kill her in the night?
She couldn't
figure out any reason why he would want to kill her. But then, she couldn't
figure out any reason why anyone would want to go around killing other
shape-shifters. It had to be a shifter. Only a shifter would smell them. So,
what would he get out of killing his own kind? And who better to do it than a
policeman?
"No,
thank you," she said, again. "You don't have to take care of me. I
can take care of myself. I've been doing it all my life. Pretty successfully,
as you see."
"But—"
"No buts,
Officer Trall." Without seeming to, she edged around him, and guided him
through the doorway from the sunporch into the kitchen. She locked the door to
the outside, then grabbed the extra chair and wedged it under the doorknob, the
way she'd secured her bedroom in countless foster homes, when she'd been lucky
enough to have a room for herself. "You'd best leave now. I need to have
something to eat, and then I'll go to the Athens early. The day shift is often
a person late, and if I can pitch in at dinner time, I can work some overtime,
and that will help pay for this. . . mess."
As if taken
off balance by her sudden forcefulness, he allowed himself to be shepherded all
the way out the kitchen door.
"Thank
you again," Kyrie said. And almost told him it had been lovely. Which
could apply to the luncheon, but certainly was a gross overstatement when it
came to the autopsy, and just plain silly when applied to what they found back
here. Which, admittedly, wasn't his fault.
He was still
staring at her, the golden eyes somehow managing to look sheepish, when she closed
the door in his face. And locked it.
Alone in the
house for the first time in almost twenty four hours, she rushed to the
bedroom. She needed to get out of her skirt and into jeans and a t-shirt. Then
she'd eat something—at a guess bread, because she imagined that Tom would have
eaten every ounce of protein in the house—and get out of here. The diner had to
be safer. More people, more witnesses.
Although it
hadn't helped the guy last night, had it?
She shuddered
at the thought of that bloodied body on the slab. She would park up-front, she
decided. On Fairfax avenue. Within plain sight of everyone.
* * *
"Damn,"
Keith said, after a while of driving in silence.
"What
now?" Tom asked. He'd been sitting there, his head in his hands, trying to
figure out what he was going to do next. He felt as if his life, over the last
six months, was a carefully constructed castle of cards that someone had poked
right in the middle and sent tumbling.
If Kyrie was
no better than him, then maybe it was something wrong with the nature of
shifters. Maybe that was why everyone he'd met was a drifter, or. . .
"I forgot
to tell you why I came looking for you," Keith said.
"I
thought it was to make sure I was all right," Tom said.
"Well."
Keith nodded. "That was part of it, only. . . I went to pay the rent today
and I got to talking to the building manager about what happened at your
apartment and she said. . . The manager got a bunch of your things from the
floor. Before she called the police to look at it."
"The
police? To look at my things?" Tom asked. He was trying to imagine why the
woman would do that. She was a little old lady who looked Italian or Greek and
who had always seemed pretty nice to him.
"No, you
fool. She got the things before the police came over, because she figured they
were your things and you might need them, and the police would just tie them
up."
"Oh, what
did she get?"
"I don't
know. It looked like was some of your clothes, and your boots, and a credit
card."
Tom blinked.
"I don't have a credit card." Had one of the triad dropped his credit
card behind? Tom hadn't been impressed by the collective intelligence of the
dragon enforcer trio, but that seemed too stupid even for them.
"Your ATM
card, then."
"Oh."
"The
manager said it was none of the police's business. She asked me to bring you by
for your stuff." Keith looked at Tom. "But perhaps I should take you
to emergency first. For your feet?"
"No,"
Tom said. First, because he had enough experience in his own body to know that
any wound would heal up seemingly overnight. And second because if he could get
some clothes on, and his hand on his ATM card, he was going to find some stuff
to buy. Heroin, by choice, but just about anything else would do, short of
baking soda. This time he was going to get high and stay high. He would be
feeling no pain.
* * *
In jeans and a
comfortable t-shirt, Kyrie went into the kitchen. She felt naked without the
earring she normally wore. She'd found it in a street fair when she was about
fourteen and it had been her favorite piece of jewelry since. But there was no
point crying over spilt milk or spoiled jewelry. She had lost it somewhere at
Tom's house, while becoming a panther. She would have to look out for another
one.
Meanwhile she
need to eat something, even if just bread and butter.
She put the
kettle on for tea, and opened the fridge to see if perhaps a couple rounds of
her lunch meat had survived. And was shocked to find eggs and bacon still
sitting on the shelf, where she had left them. Looking at the containers, she
determined he'd eaten about a third of her provisions. Which meant she would
still have enough for the rest of the week, even if she shifted once or twice.
She'd long ago
decided to make breakfast her main protein meal of the day. Even if she ate
breakfast at the time other people ate dinner. Eggs and bacon, particularly
bought at a sale, were far cheaper than meat for other meals. Also, she often
woke up after what she thought was one of her episodes in desperate need of
protein.
She got the
microwave bacon tray, and noticed he'd washed it very carefully. She put the
pan on for eggs, and again noticed it had been scrubbed with a soft, plastic
scrubber, per manufacturer instructions for non-stick pans. Sitting at her
little table, washing down the food with a cup of sweet tea—which she preferred
to coffee unless she felt a need to wake up suddenly—she felt vaguely guilty
about throwing Tom out.
Then she
realized the source of her guilt was that he'd actually made an effort to wash
the dishes and that, as ravenous as he must have been—she remembered what she'd
felt like at the restaurant—he hadn't eaten all of her food. She smiled to
herself. So, it was fine if the man were a one-person demolition engine, as
long as he had good household habits?
She shook her
head. Okay, she clearly was going soft in the head. Perhaps it was the
shifter-bond. But if so, couldn't she feel more tenderly towards Rafiel? Was
the way to her heart to give as much trouble and cause as much damage as
humanly possible?
After washing
her dishes, she grabbed her purse and hurried towards the Athens. She'd park up
front. With the driver's window in the state it was, she didn't want to leave
the car unwatched, anyway. She'd park up front, and keep an eye on it through
her work shift.
Hopefully the
diner would be short-staffed for the dinner shift, the last few hours of the
day staff. Hopefully. They usually were, but then things never went the way one
wanted them to, did they? And she'd have to buy another apron from Frank's
stock, kept for when a staff member walked out of the job with the apron still
on.
Another
expense.
She checked
the chair under the lock between the kitchen and the back porch before leaving
the house.
* * *
"We were
all very worried something dreadful had happened to you," Mrs. Rizzo
looked at him, her sparkling black eyes narrowed in what might indeed be worry.
Or suspicion. Though that wasn't fair, because she'd never been suspicious of
him.
A small woman,
so short that she made Tom feel tall, she stood in front of her desk in the
little, musty manager's office at the back of the apartment complex. Every
possible inch of space on her wall was covered up in pictures—pictures of
smiling brides, pictures of babies, and pictures of children looking sticky and
sweet in equal measures and displaying mouths with a varying number of teeth in
unguarded smiles. A set of pink-booties, half knit, lay on her desk, with a
gigantic ball of pink yarn and two green plastic knitting needles.
Tom had often
wanted to ask her if the pictures were all her children, but he was a little
afraid of the answer, and not quite sure if yes or no would be the scarier
reply. Instead, he threw back his head to move the hair out from in front of
his face—he really needed to find something to tie it soon. A rubber band would
do—and smiled at Mrs. Rizzo. "Fortunately I was staying with a
friend."
She cocked an
eyebrow at him. "A girl?"
"Yes. She
works with me."
Mrs. Rizzo
grinned, suddenly. "Well, and isn't it about time you found someone to
settle down. Is she a good girl?"
"Yes, a
very good girl," Tom said. Or at least he'd thought that until today, and
finding out about the sugar. But he wasn't about to discuss that with his
apartment manager.
The lady
nodded. "Good, maybe you can stay with her until we get your place fixed.
It should only be a couple of weeks. Or we could move you to number thirty
five, if you want. I talked to the owner, and he said it would be okay to give
it to you. It's a little bigger, but he said you could have it for the same
price."
A few hours
ago, this would have been an offer for Tom to snatch with both hands. He could
have got into the new apartment without paying a deposit, and with no real
inconvenience. Oh, his furniture and utensils were gone, but he hadn't had all
that much, and he could always replace them in a month or less from thrift shops
and garage sales. A sofa first, until he could afford a bed, and a pan and a
frying pan would do for cooking in, till he could get more complete utensils.
And. . .
But he stopped
his own thought, forcefully. He would have been very happy to do that a few
hours ago. It would have made him non-homeless again. But a few hours ago, he
now realized, he'd still been under the mistaken impression that Kyrie was some
sort of ideal woman, something to aspire to. Someone whom, even if he could
never have her, he could imitate and hope to be more like. Now. . . "I
don't know what I'm doing, yet, Mrs. Rizzo. I'll let you know in a couple of
days, if that's all right." Of course he knew perfectly well what he was
doing. He was getting heck out of dodge before nightfall. He might come back
later—if he could—for the . . . object in the water tank of the Athens'
bathroom. But he wouldn't come back to live. He wouldn't go back to working
there—with Kyrie. No way, no when, no how. And no one could make him.
Mrs. Rizzo
sighed. "You're staying with her, right? Well, I hope it works. But if it
doesn't, remember we have number thirty five. I'll hold it for you for another
week." She smiled. "It's the one with the bay window." And
sounded exactly like someone holding out a sweet to a kid.
Tom nodded.
"I'll be in touch. But Keith said you had some of my stuff. . ."
She reached
behind the desk and brought out a box that was larger than Tom expected.
Protruding out of the top were his boots, and he gave a deep sigh of relief
upon seeing them. Then, as he dug through, he found a couple of pairs of jeans,
one black and one blue, three black t-shirts, and—carefully folded—his black
leather jacket. He felt suddenly weak at the knees. It was like losing half of
your identity and then retrieving it again.
At the very
bottom of the box was his ATM card, and he found himself taking a deep,
relieved breath. He wouldn't need to wait till the banks opened to get out his
money before he got out of town. Next to the ATM card was a library book—The
Book of Sand by Jorge Luis Borges. He could drop that off at the library
depot on the way out of town. Good. The library was unlikely to make much of a
search for him on the strength of a single hardcover book, but it was best to
get out of town with as few things hanging over his head as possible.
Between the
book and the ATM card was a red object, which at first he couldn't identify.
And then he realized it was Kyrie's red plumed earring.
He should take
it back. He should. . . His hand closed around it. Or not. Or not. He couldn't
see facing her. He couldn't imagine her reproaching him for getting high and
destroying her sunroom. He would have to tell her, then, that the least she
could have done was tell him that the sugar wasn't exactly sugar. She must keep
the real stuff somewhere. After all, they'd had coffee the night before to no
ill effects. So, why didn't she tell him where it was? Tom would much rather
have had it.
His hand
closed on the plumed earring and he shoved it into the pocket of his jacket.
"You can
change in the bathroom," Mrs. Rizzo said, pointing to a little door at the
back. "If you want to."
The bathroom
was a continuation of the office. Oh, there were no pictures on the walls,
which was a very good thing. Tom would have hated to undress completely in
front of a mass of staring babies and prim brides. But the hand-soap was pink
and shaped like a rose, and, on the toilet tank, a much too tall crochet angel
with a plastic face, squatted contentedly over three spare toilet paper rolls,
as though hoping they would soon hatch into chickens.
Tom had to
watch that, and the mirror, and the vanity, because the bathroom was so small
he could barely move in it. He removed Kyrie's jogging suit, folded it
carefully and put it beside the toilet paper angel. Then he put on his jeans
and t-shirt with a sense of relief. He wished some of his underwear had been
preserved, but if absolutely needed he could do without it a little longer.
Socks were
something else—as was the need to put his boots back on. He hadn't felt any
pain from his feet recently, but then he'd been. . . busy. He sat down on the
closed toilet lid, to look at his feet. And was surprised to find he'd shed
most of the glass shards. Only a couple large ones remained, embedded in his
skin, but his skin seemed to be. . . He stared at it. Yep. His skin was pushing
them out, forcing them out and growing behind them. The other cuts were already
closed, though angry-red and likely to leave a scar.
This was one
of those changes that arrived when he started shifting into a dragon. All of a
sudden, he could cut himself or scrape himself and it would heal in a day, or a
few hours, depending on the depth of the injury. It was just about the only
change that wasn't completely unwelcome.
He washed the
bottom of his feet with damp toilet paper, and looked again. Nothing really.
Just rapidly healing cuts. He slipped his boots on, wishing he had socks, but
it couldn't be helped. With all his belongings still in a box, he went back to
Mrs. Rizzo. "I'm sorry to bother you, but could I borrow a plastic bag?
It's easier to carry than a box." Meaning, it would actually be possible
to carry while he was in dragon form. Which was how he'd kept most of his
belongings, while moving all over the country.
She nodded,
and bent to get something from behind her desk. Tom wondered what exactly she
kept back there, just as she emerged with a backpack, not a plastic bag. The
backpack was pale blue and made in the sort of plastic that glistens. "The
Michelsons left it behind, when they vacated number 22," Mrs. Rizzio said.
"It used to have wheels, but they're broken. They left a bunch of the
kids' old clothes, too. Ripped and dirty." She made a face. "When
people do that, I wash them and fix them and give them to charities in town.
Such a waste. People throw everything away these days. But the backpack I kept,
if someone moved in with a school-age kid and needed it."
"It's all
right," Tom said. "I only need a plastic bag."
"No, no.
It's okay. You can have it. There will be two or three others by September,
when school opens. People throw them away."
Well, the
backpack was more practical because it closed. Though, in dragon form, he would
still have to carry it the same way—by wrapping the straps around his huge
ankle—the backpack zipped shut. And there was less chance of losing stuff.
"Well, thank you then," he said, reaching for it.
Up close, as
he stuffed his remaining belongings—and Kyrie's jogging suit—into it, he
realized the full extent of his problem. The backpack had a little orange
dragon with stubby wings on the back, and it said underneath, in fiery
orange-red letters Scorchio. He scowled at it.
"Kids
these days like the weirdest things, don't they?" Mrs. Rizzio said.
"Yes,"
Tom said. And then, with everything in the backpack, he had to say goodbye
somehow. Only he'd never said goodbye to anyone or anything, and certainly not
to anyone who liked him and whom he liked. "I'll be back," he lied.
"In a few days."
"You do
that, dear," she said. "I'll hold number thirty five for you,
okay?"
As he headed
out, he caught a glimpse of his reflection in the window of the next door
apartment. Against the dark drapes, he looked like something out of a horror
movie—unruly hair, tight black jeans, black leather jacket. Even with the
stupid pale blue backpack on, he didn't look like anyone that someone would
want to bother.
He stalked
off, down Fairfax Avenue, away from the Athens and towards the nearest ATM that
way. He had a vague idea that he should go back and pay Kyrie for the mess. He
would have done it the day before. But now he told himself there was simply no
way. Not any way in hell. She should have told him about the sugar. It was all
her fault. Yeah, he probably still owed her for the car—but because of the
sugar he was now headed out of town, with nothing but a handful of possessions.
He was going to need all his money.
He realized he
was holding her responsible for the fact that she wasn't perfect. And that was
fine, as far as he was concerned. Wasn't there someone—one person—in the world
he could look up to?
* * *
"When is
your break?" Rafiel asked. He'd been sitting at one of the small tables in
the extension room that used to be the sun porch of the Athens and had been
enclosed, sometime decades away, to make more space for tables.
Like a sun
porch, it was informally furnished. Just plastic tables and chairs, of the type
people used outside. On a Friday like this, and when the dinner hour was in
full swing, it filled up fast.
A family group
or a gaggle of laughing and screaming students surrounded every other table.
Only Rafiel sat alone.
She'd smiled
at him when first serving him, and the rest of the time she'd avoided looking
too closely at him, as she served the noisy groups around him. But now she was
pouring a warm up of coffee into his cup, and he said, "Come on, please? I
need to talk to you."
She would
believe him a lot more and talk to him with a far clearer conscience if she
couldn't detect, as an undertone to his soap and aftershave smell, the lion's
spicy-hot scent. She didn't trust herself around that smell. She behaved very
stupidly around it. Instead, she made a big show of looking around, as if
mentally counting people. "No way for the next hour or so," she said.
"I have to keep refills and desserts and all coming. They allowed me to
work because they were two people short. There's no way I can take a
break."
To her
surprise, he smiled. "Okay, then. I'll have the bowl of rice pudding. Ala
mode." He lowered his voice, "And then I want to talk to you. There's
some very odd autopsy results."
* * *
Stealing the
car wasn't hard. Tom walked along the darkened working class neighborhoods
first, looking at all the old models of cars parked on the street.
It had to be
an old model, because his way of starting a car without a key wouldn't work on
the newer models. And in those streets, around Fairfax, with their tiny,
decrepit brick houses, the cars spotted with primer on the front, there was a
prospect on every corner. He could steal a dozen cars, if he wanted to.
Half a dozen
times, he walked up to a sickly-looking two door sedan, a rusted and
disreputable pickup and put his hand on the door handle, while he felt in his
pocket for the stone he'd picked up from a flowerbed near his apartment. The
only other piece of equipment necessary to this operation was a screw driver,
which he'd bought from a corner convenience store.
He had
everything. So, why didn't he just smash the window, break the ignition
housing, start the car and drive away? Most of these houses looked empty and
people were probably still at work or already asleep.
But he'd put
his hand on the handle, and reach for the rock, and remember how hard it was to
make ends meet from his job at the Athens. How he had never been able to buy a
car, but used to read the Sunday paper Vehicles for Sale ads with the relish of
a kid looking through a candy store window.
From those
ads, he knew many of these cars would be a few hundred dollars, no more. But a
few hundred dollars was all he had in his pocket, and it had emptied his
account. And accumulating it had required endless small sacrifices, in what
food he ate, in what clothes he wore. Hell, he didn't even shop the thrift
stores at full price. It was always at half price or dollar day sales.
Oh, he wasn't
complaining. He was lucky to have a job, given his past work history and his
lack of training. Correction. He'd been lucky to have a job. Now it was over
and he'd be lucky to ever have another. What were the owners of these cars
employed at? What did they do?
Fuming, he
turned away. Damn. This going straight thing was like some sort of disease. You
caught it, and then you had the hardest trouble getting rid of it. They
probably didn't sell honesty-be-gone tablets at the local drugstore.
He walked down
one of the cracked sidewalks that ran along the front of the pocket-sized
lawns, kicking a stray piece of concrete here and there, to vent his anger.
Damn. He couldn't walk out of the city on foot. And he wasn't at all sure he
could start flying from inside the city. What if someone saw him? What if. . . they
saw him?
He walked
along, as a thin rain started trickling down on him from the sky above. The
rain felt. . . odd. He'd been living in Colorado for six months and this was
the first time he'd seen rain. There was a feeling of strangeness, at first,
and then, despite the warmth of the night, discomfort at water seeping
everywhere and dripping from his hair onto the back of his neck, running down
the back of his jacket.
He walked a
long time, on his still-tender feet and passed a roped in car dealership. But
it was the sort of car dealership you got in this kind of area—selling fifth or
sixth hand cars. Of course, he thought, as he walked past, his hand idly
touching the rope that marked off the lot, he could probably break into those
cars far more easily than into any others. But. . . he stared at the wrecks and
semi-wrecks under the moonlight. What were the chances that the owner of this
lot was living so close to the bone that the theft of a car would really hurt him?
Tom looked at
the facade of the dealership proper, and it was a well-known car dealer.
Chances were they'd never feel it. His hand weighed the stone in his pocket.
On the other
hand. . . On the other hand, the theft of a car—or one more car, as Tom doubted
this would be the first—might be what caused the dealership to close doors at
this location, to give up on this neighborhood, perhaps to give up on this
level of car, at all. And then people in this neighborhood would find it harder
to get a car. Perhaps harder to find jobs.
Tom dropped
the stone out of his jacket pocket and kicked it violently aside. Then he
dropped the screwdriver after it. He walked down the road. His hands shoved
deep in his pockets.
He would have
to walk, as far as he could out of Goldport. He'd go south, towards New Mexico.
Lots of empty space that way, less chance of someone seeing or noticing a
dragon flying against the sky. But damn, he could get much, much farther if he
could ride. As it was, he'd almost surely get caught by the three dragons. And
this time he would have to face them alone.
He realized he
was chewing on his lower lip, as he walked down the street where the
dilapidated houses gave way to houses in even worse state but divided into apartments,
and then to warehouses tagged with the occasional gang graffiti.
He pulled the
collar up on his leather jacket. Even with the ridiculous backpack on his back,
he didn't think anyone would challenge him. Not for a moment.
Knowing this
trip was likely to end in his death, he wished he could buy something to make
it easier. Not a lot. Probably nothing to inject. Just some pot to smoke, to
ease his nerves. He was going to die, he might as well go easy. Besides, he'd
seen there was no point trying to escape the grip of drugs, if even Kyrie did
them.
In his six
months in the city, he'd seen plenty of drug dealers standing around in shady
corners, waiting. This was the type of neighborhood to attract them. But
perhaps the rain, unaccustomed in Colorado, had driven them indoors. Tom
couldn't see anyone, and certainly not anyone with that pose of alert
shiftiness that identified a dealer. He had money. He was willing. But no one
was selling.
"Damn
dealers," he muttered to himself under his breath. "Just like cops.
Never around when you need one."
Wide awake and
hopeless, he headed south and west while the sun set and the breeze grew
cooler, ruffling at his damp hair, his soaking jeans.
* * *
"Frank,
do we have rice pudding?" Kyrie asked, coming near the counter.
Frank looked
up with a frown, from a talk he'd been having with three customers seated at
the part of the counter where you could get food served. His girlfriend wasn't
around again, tonight, so he was in a mood. "I just came in and I haven't
made any. If there's any, it's leftover from yesterday."
Well, it was
all gone, then. But before Kyrie could turn to go give Rafiel the bad news,
Frank added, "Is Tom coming in later?"
"Tom?"
Kyrie didn't know what to say. She honestly had no idea. And for just a moment
was startled that Frank would ask her about Tom. Except that of course, last
night she'd taken time off to take medicine to Tom. Or at least that was what
she had told Frank. And then she'd told Frank that Tom was in really bad shape
and she had to take him home with her and watch him.
"I don't
know," she said. "He left my place a few hours ago."
"Do you
know where he was going?"
She shook her
head. "He was with his friend. The guy who lives downstairs from
him," Kyrie said, as she pulled a stray strand of hair behind her ear. And
as she did, the customers at the counter looked up. And she froze.
They were the
three from the night before. The three dragons. None of them permanently
injured, as far as she could tell, though she was sure she'd got the eye of at
least one of them in the battle.
But they sat
there, at the counter, uninjured, and the middle one even had his hair
arranged, as artificially perfect and smooth as before. They all wore tight
jeans and satin-like shimmering jackets, with dragons in the back. They looked
like something out of a bad karate movie, and Kyrie was so shocked at seeing
them here, in . . . well, the glare of the fluorescent lights, that she didn't
know what to do.
Two Dragons
was the one sitting next to where Kyrie stood. He backed away from her, his
eyes wide, and said something in Chinese, that sounded like a panic attack.
The middle one
said something in return, something she couldn't understand, and put his hand
into his pocket, pulling out a sheaf of notes, which he laid on the counter.
And then, the three geniuses, in massed disarray, started towards the door. A
process only slightly hampered by the fact that not one of them was willing to
turn his back on Kyrie. So they moved backwards as a group, bumping into tables
and booths, snagging on girls' purses and mens' coats, and muttering stuff in
Chinese that might be apologies or threats.
Clearly, they
were rattled enough to forget their English. Clearly, they thought that Kyrie's
panther form was too dangerous to anger. Although why they thought she would
shift into a panther right then and take them to pieces in front of the diner
patrons, was beyond her.
Pulling and
shoving at each other, they got to the door, then in a tinkling of the bells
suspended from it, out of it, tumbling onto the sidewalk where the lights were
starting to show, faintly, against the persistent glow of the sunset.
"What was
that all about?" Frank asked. "Did those guys know you?"
"I have
no clue," Kyrie said, choosing to answer the first question. And this was
the absolute truth. She couldn't figure out why they would be scared of her.
After all, even if she had been so stupid as to shift here, in the middle of
the diner, they could have shifted too, and then they would have had the upper
hand. There were three of them, after all.
Unless. . .
She smiled faintly at the thought. Unless the total idiots thought this
was a shifter diner and that everyone here would be shifters. If Tom was
right the shifting was ancient, well established in their culture, and perhaps
passed on in families. They had a lore and a culture. For people like that it
must be utterly bewildering when strangers shifted. Perhaps they think we
too band together.
Frank was
glowering at her, and she realized she was still smiling. He reached for the
plates and cups the guys had left on the counter and pulled them down, near the
cleaning area, by the dishwasher, glowering all the while and banging the
utensils around so much that, if they weren't break-resistant, they would
probably have shattered.
"What's
wrong?" Kyrie asked.
But he just
glowered at her some more, grabbed a dishtowel from the counter, and wiped at
the serving surface with it. "Oh, nothing. Everything is fine and dandy.
You and Tom and. . ." He lifted his hands, upwards, as though signifying
his inability to understand any of them.
Kyrie skidded
back to the sun porch, to give Rafiel the distressing news about the rice
pudding.
"There's
no rice pudding," she said. "And the three dragons who were at Tom's
apartment were just here."
"The
dragons?" he said and started to rise. "Here?"
"In human
form," she said. "They left." She frowned. "They seemed
afraid of me."
He looked at
her a long moment, then shook his head. "I don't know what to do. I wonder
why they were here."
"Looking
for Tom," she said.
"Oh."
He looked out the window. "We could follow them, but there's only two of
us—"
"And
neither of us can fly," Kyrie said. "Besides, there's only one of us.
I'm working. But since there's no rice pudding, you're free to follow
them."
He just
grinned up at her. "Oh, bring me pie a la mode, then. I don't care. I'm in
it for the vanilla ice cream." And he winked at her.
"What
kind of pie?"
"I told
you I don't care," he said. "Just bring me a wedge."
"Green
bean pie it is, then," she said, and walked away. To bump into Anthony,
the last of the day shift to leave. He was in his street clothes, which, in his
case were usually elaborate and today consisted of a ruffled button-down white
shirt, red vest and immaculate black pants. "Hey," he said.
"What's up with Frank? He's acting like a bear with two heads."
Kyrie shrugged
and Anthony sighed. "What that man needs," he said, as if this summed
up the wisdom of the ages. "Is to get laid. He seriously needs to get
laid. His girlfriend hasn't been in for too long." And with that, he twirled
on his heels and made for the door. Kyrie had often wondered if in his free
time he was a member of some dance troupe. At least that would explain the
bizarre clothes.
Kyrie went
back to scout out the pie, though the only choices were apple and lemon. She
chose lemon, figuring he would like it less, and put two scoops of ice cream on
the plate with it. It wasn't so much that she wanted to thwart Rafiel—but a man
who ordered with that kind of complacency did deserve green bean pie. Or at
least spinach. Too bad they didn't have any on the menu.
She took the
plate of pie in one hand, the carafe in the other, set the pie in front of
Rafiel and went off, from table to table, warming up people's coffees.
Despite her
best efforts to banish it, the image of Frank getting laid was stuck in her
mind. She looked across the diner at Frank, behind the counter, his
cro-magnon-like features still knit in a glower. She shuddered. There were
things the human mind was not supposed to contemplate.
* * *
Edward
Ormson's first thought was that they couldn't be in Colorado. Not so fast. Even
by airplane it took over three hours. And they couldn't be flying at airplane
speeds. Well, they could, but it would have left him frozen as a popsicle
sitting astride that dragon.
And he hadn't
been frozen, nor gasping for air. The temperature around him had remained even,
and he'd felt perfectly comfortable. Only twice, for just a moment, light
seemed to vanish from around them. But it was such a brief moment that Edward
hadn't had time to think about it. Now he wondered if some magic transfer had
taken place at that moment.
Oh, Edward
didn't believe in magic. But then he also didn't believe in dragons, he thought
and smiled with more irony than joy while the dragon circled down to a parking
lot in a street of low-to-the-ground buildings.
They landed
softly on the asphalt and the huge wings that had been spread on either side of
him, cuscurating and sparkling in the light like living fire, closed slowly.
"Down,"
the dragon said. Or perhaps not said it, because Edward didn't remember sounds.
Just the feeling that he should get down. He should get down immediately.
He scrambled
off, sliding along scales that felt softer on the skin than they should have.
But once he
stood, in the parking lot, holding his briefcase, he realized that the front of
his suit had tiny cuts, as though someone had worked it over with very small
blades.
He frowned at
it, then looked up at the dragon who glowed with some sort of inner fire, in
front of him. The beast opened its huge mouth, and all thought of complaining
about damages to his clothes fled Ormson's mind.
"Find
your son," the dragon said, in that voice that wasn't exactly a voice.
"Make him give back what belongs to me."
And, just as
suddenly as he'd appeared at Edward Ormson's office, the dragon now stretched
its wings, flexed its legs, and was airborne, gaining height.
Alone in the
parking lot, Edward became aware that it was raining, a boring, slow rain.
Behind him, a little Chinese restaurant called Three Luck Dragon had its open
sign out, but there were no cars parked. So either it catered to a local
clientele, or it had none.
Did the Great
Sky Dragon mean anything by dropping Edward off here? Or was it simply the
first convenient place they'd come to?
Edward saw the
curtain twitch on the little window, and a face peer out. The lighting and the
distance didn't allow him to see features, but he thought it would be the
proprietors looking to see if he intended to come in.
Well, today
was their lucky day. He'd go in and order something, and get out his cell
phone. He would bet now he knew where Tom had last been seen, he would be able
to find the boy with half a dozen phone calls.
One way or
another, he always ended up cleaning up after his son.
* * *
Western towns
don't taper off. Or at least that was what Tom had seen, ever since his
drifting had brought him west and south to Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.
You walked down a street, surrounded by five-floor brick warehouses, resounding
with the noises of loading and unloading, of packing and making of things
resounding within.
And then, a
couple of blocks away, you were in the middle of a high prairie, with
tumbleweed blowing around. Looking back, you could still see the warehouses,
but they were so incongruous that they seemed to be part of another world.
Tom turned to
look at the dark edge of the warehouses. He stood on what had abruptly become a
country road, its asphalt cracked underfoot. Looking just beyond where he was
standing, he saw nothing but an underpass, just ahead. Why there was an
underpass was a question he couldn't answer, as it was just two country roads meeting.
Perhaps this was what people complained about, with public projects that made
no sense.
But right then
Tom was grateful of the underpass. In this landscape of brown grass and blowing
tumbleweeds, there wasn't much cover, else. He made for the underpass and
stripped quickly, shoving all his clothes and boots into the little backpack
with the happy dragon on the back. The boots were a tight fit into the small
space, but he got them in, and zipped the thing. Then he loosened the
backstraps to their outmost, and put them around his wrist.
Willing
yourself to shift was like willing yourself to die. Because the process of
shifting, no matter how easy, always hurt. It took desire to do it, but it
needed something else. He got out from under the overpass, and stood—naked in
the moonlight, willing his body to shift, willing.
A cough shook
him, another, heralding the preliminary spasms that often preceded the
shape-shifting. Pain twisted in his limbs, wracked his back, as his body tried
to extrude wings from itself. He opened his mouth and let the scream
come—something he never did within a city—the scream of pain of his human self,
the scream of triumph from the ancient beast once more let forth.
A car drove
by, towards the outside of town. One of the tiny SUVs in white. A Kia or a
Wassaby or one of those. Tom's confused senses were aware of its turning around
and then zooming past again. But no one came out. Worse comes to worst,
his still rational mind thought, as his body shifted. They'll just call 911.
And good luck with convincing a dispatcher they just saw a dragon.
In the next
moment it no longer mattered. The dragon was him. He was the dragon. His body
fully shifted, Tom spread his wings fully, feeling the caress of wind and rain
on them. He opened his mouth and roared, this time in triumph. His vision
sharpened. He was in a vast non-cave. And the dragon knew they should go to
ground, they should find a cave.
No, the
human part of Tom said. No. Not to a cave. We're flying west. Deep west,
until we come to a town. We'll follow the highway that will take us to Las
Vegas New Mexico by early morning. Then. . . cave.
The dragon
blinked, confused, because the image in its mind, for a cave, had mattresses
and pillows and other things that made sense only to the human. But it had
learned, over the years, to trust the ape cowering away at the back of its
mind.
It trusted it
now, even when it found something wrapped tightly around its front paw. The
human mind said they were clothes, and that they shouldn't be discarded.
The dragon
harumphed, loudly. Then spread its wings again, sensing the air currents. Half
of flying was coasting. If you needed to beat your wings the whole time, you
were going to die of tiredness soon.
He felt the
currents. He flapped a little. He gained altitude. He headed out of town.
* * *
"Break?"
Rafiel asked.
Kyrie was
about to shake her head, but stopped. The dinner time crowd had thinned.
Students had left for concerts or movies or whatever it was that college
students did with their evenings. And the families, too, had vanished, probably
home to their comfy chairs and their TVs.
The only two
people in the diner were a man at the back, who seemed to be signing the credit
card slip that Kyrie had dropped on his table. And Rafiel.
Kyrie looked at
the wall clock. Ten thirty p.m. That meant there would be a lull till eleven or
there abouts, when the late night people would start coming in. And she only
needed ten minutes.
She
backtracked to the counter and put away the carafe she'd just used to give
Rafiel a warm up. "Frank, is it okay if I take ten minutes?" she
asked.
Frank turned
around. He was still glowering. "Fine. It's fine," he said, as if he
were saying that it was all completely wrong.
"Is there
a problem?" Kyrie asked taken aback.
"No. I just
wish your boyfriend had given us some warning before he decided to
disappear."
"He's not
due for an hour or so. I came in early," Kyrie said. "And he's not my
boyfriend."
But it was
hardly worth arguing. And Frank looked to be in a worse mood than she'd ever
seen him. "I'll take a break now," she said. "If Tom doesn't
come in, it's going to be a hellish shift, and that way I'll be able to stay
with till five a.m., okay?"
Frank
shrugged, which looked like consent. He was grilling a bunch of burgers, though
Kyrie had no idea why, given the deserted look of the diner. Perhaps he was
pre-cooking them a bit to allow him to cook them faster later on. It wasn't any
of her business, in any case.
She
backtracked to the enclosed-porch-addition. Rafiel must have heard, or watched
her conversation. He was standing as she approached. "Ready?"
She nodded.
And gestured with her head towards the door at the back of the extension, that
led to the parking lot. She didn't want to go to the parking lot again. Truly,
she didn't. On the other hand, neither did she want to talk to Rafiel in front
of Frank. Frank was likely to decide that Rafiel was also her boyfriend and
hold her responsible for whatever the policeman did in the future.
She had no
idea what had gotten into her boss. He was usually grumpy, but not like this.
And then there was Anthony's idea, which made her make a face, as she led
Rafiel out the back door and onto the parking lot.
This time the
parking lot was deserted there was no smell of blood, and she took care to stay
in the shadow of the building, out of the light of the moon.
Rafiel made a
sound that seemed suspiciously close to a purr as he got outside, and he
stretched his arms. "Do you feel it?" he asked, giving Kyrie a
sidelong glance. "Do you feel the call?"
"No,"
Kyrie said, as curtly as she could. It was a lie, but only in a way. Yeah, she
could feel the call, but she could feel the call every night. And it seemed to
her Rafiel was speaking of another call. And there, as if on cue, she noticed
his smell again. No, not his smell. His smell was soap and a little aftershave,
nothing out of the ordinary. But the smell exuding from him right now was a
thick, feline musk that made her think of running through the jungles, of
hunting, of. . . "You said you had news that pertained to the
corpse?" she said, turning her head away.
"Yeah,"
he said, and looked away from her, as though her turning her head to get fresh
air, slightly less tainted by his musk, were an insult. "Yeah. We got a
chemical analysis for the green stuff we found."
She looked at
him. He nodded as if she'd asked a question. "The. . . Well, the lab
thinks it's of insect origin, although not quite like anything they know from
any insects they know."
"And?"
Kyrie asked.
"And
those things. . . the white stuff on the lungs?"
"Yeah."
"They
think it's eggs."
Kyrie frowned
at him and he shook his head, looking impatient and annoyed, as if resenting
that she couldn't read his mind. "Not chicken eggs," he said.
"They're insect eggs. They don't know what type yet, but they're getting
in an entomologist from the Natural History Museum in Denver tomorrow. He's
someone's brother in law or brother of a brother in law, and he's driving down
day after tomorrow. He's supposedly one of those guys who can tell on sight
what kind of insect laid eggs where. He's used for investigating crimes by all
the local police departments."
"Okay,"
Kyrie said. "And why did I need to know this right now? Why was this so
urgent that I had to take a break to hear it?" His smell was growing
stronger. It seemed to fill her nose and her mouth and to populate her mind
with odd images and thoughts. She found herself wondering what his hair would
feel like to the touch.
"Because
I think there was the same powder on your porch last night," he said.
"Where those windows were broken."
"My
porch? Insects?" she asked. "But Tom said something about dragons and
his friend was going on about aliens."
"Well,
yeah," Rafiel said, and shrugged. "But I don't think those two were
exactly in the state necessary to testify in a court of law. Or for that matter
anywhere else."
Kyrie
conceded. And yet, she wondered what had happened in the porch while they were
gone. Had bugs broken the window? In her mind was an image of masses of bugs
crawling out of the loam, pushing on the window, till the sheer weight of their
mass broke it. Yuck. Like something out of a bad horror movie. "Any dead
bugs, or other pieces of bug in that powder?"
"No,"
he said. He looked directly at her, as if her face were a puzzle he was hoping
to decipher. His eyes were huge and golden, and his lips looked soft. The musky
smell of him was everywhere, penetrating her nostrils, her mind.
He leaned in,
very close to her, and asked in a voice that should be reserved for indecent
proposals, "So, can I come by? After your shift?"
The tone and
the closeness startled her enough to wake her from the trance induced by his
scent. She stepped back. "No. Why would you? No."
He took a deep
breath as though he, too, had been affected by something, and stepped back.
"So I can see if you have that powder in your porch or not. And to have it
analyzed if you do." He shook his head. "What did you think I
meant?"
"All
right," she said, reluctantly. "If you want to come. But not when I
get off work. Come later, around one or so." She wanted to get some sleep
tomorrow. And besides, she was not absolutely sure about Rafiel Trall yet.
She'd rather face him in the full light of noon, without the effects of
whatever this smell was. "I'd better go back in. Frank is in a mood and I
have repairs on a porch to pay off."
* * *
Edward Ormson
got out of the taxi in front of the diner where he'd been told Tom worked.
Finding this information had been a fast job.
He, himself,
had found Tom's address on the web, and his secretary had then called—from New
York, that much more impressive—the boy's landlady and asked questions.
Closing the
taxi door and waiting till the driver pulled away, Ormson frowned. In fact, in
the whole story there was only one thing he didn't understand. And that was
that his secretary had told him the landlady seemed fond of Tom.
Oh, it wasn't
at all strange that a woman should have some interest in Tom. Even at sixteen,
when the boy had left home, there had been to him that roguish charm that
attracts a certain class of females. What was odd, though, was that he had
reportedly been living within the apartment complex this woman managed for
about six months, and she said he'd never been late with the rent, didn't have
loud parties, hadn't given the neighbors any cause to complain. He didn't, in
fact, seem to have any life beyond going to work and—according to the
woman—reading out on the steps of the building when the weather was warm.
Reading? Tom? Perhaps it was the wrong Thomas E. Ormson?
But no. It
wasn't that common a name. And besides, there had been the dragon. Edward
swallowed, as he headed towards the gaudy facade painted all over with the
prices of specials in what appeared to be a full pack of primary color markers.
It wasn't just that Fresh Rice Pudding was scrawled in vivid red that
offended Ormson's sense of aesthetics. It was that above it Fries Always
Fresh, Never Frozen was done in at least five different and mutually
clashing colors.
And above the
door, something that looked very much like a pink pig wearing a cook's hat and
apron was tossing a succession of pancakes up in the air. The whole was so
horrendous that it might very well be considered kitchy chic if it were in the
right place. But around the diner, head shops, used record stores and closed
warehouses clustered. This was the type of area that would never be
fashionable.
Wondering about
the hygiene of the place, and if it was quite safe to go in, he opened the
door. A clash of bells greeted him, and a rough-looking dark haired, bearded
man glared at him from behind the counter.
Ormson had
intended on approaching the first person he saw and ask for Tom. But this man
didn't look like the greatest of prospects. His eyebrows were beetled low over
his dark, sunken eyes, and he looked positively murderous, an impression not
improved by the fact that he held a very large knife in his right hand.
Hoping that
his hesitation hadn't been noticeable, Edward made for the most distant of the
many booths upholstered in dark green vinyl. He was about to slide into it,
when the man behind the counter barked, "Hey, you." Edward looked up,
not even daring to ask what he'd done wrong.
"That
booth is for groups, Mister," the dark man said. "Take one of the
smaller ones."
Edward obeyed,
though wondering why the booth was being held for groups when, clearly, there
was no one else in the place. But he really didn't want to argue with the man.
Instead, he
slid into the smaller booth and made a big show of picking up the menu and
studying it. Normal diner fare, all of it, as far as he could see, with a few
Greek dishes thrown in. And though he wasn't sure he wanted to eat here, or
even that the food here would be safe to eat, the place didn't smell bad.
Greasy, sure. There was an underlying smell of hot oil, as if the place were
used, day and night, to fry stuff. Which it probably was. But there were
appetizing smells of freshly grilled burgers and fries riding on the sheer
greasiness that put a sticky film on every vinyl booth and table. And those
were making his stomach clench, and his mouth start to water.
It had been
too long since he'd eaten anything. Since lunch the day before. The clock on
the wall here showed eleven o'clock, which meant it was one in the morning back
home. No wonder he was starving. And he'd eaten in diners when he was in
college. To no ill effects. Of course, he'd been younger.
He looked around
the still empty diner, hoping that the very angry man behind the counter was
not the only person here, hoping that a waitress—or, for a choice, his
son—would materialize somewhere, out of the blue.
Not that he
had any wish to see Tom. Not really. He had no idea what he would tell the boy,
or what the boy's reaction to him would be. Their last parting had been far
less than amicable. But if he saw Tom and convinced the stupid boy to give back
whatever it was to the dragons—and what kind of an idiot did you need to be to
steal from organized criminals?—then he could go back home in the early morning
flight. And wash his hands of the boy. And resume his lonely life. Lonely, yes,
but at least untroubled by the stream of acts of self-destruction that was Tom's
way of living.
He looked
around enough, and no one came, and rather than order from the guy behind the
counter, Edward thought he would leave. Leave now. The man would probably curse
him, as he left, but it was obvious Tom wasn't here. And if Tom was the reason
the man behind the counter was so furious, then what would happen if Edward
mentioned Tom?
He'd started
rising when a couple came in through a side door that seemed to lead to another
part of the diner—the covered porch he'd seen from the outside. He first
thought of them as a couple—tall, blond man and slightly smaller girl, with
multicolored hair. But then he realized the girl was wearing an apron with the
logo of the diner, and that the blond man was just following her. In fact, he
headed for the door as the girl rushed towards Edward.
"Hi,"
she said, and smiled. "My name is Kyrie. What can I get for you?"
He thought of
asking her for Tom right away, but . . . no. He was hungry, anyway. "I'll
have coffee," he said. "And your souvlaki platter, and one of the
large Greek salads."
"What
dressing on your salad?" she asked.
"Ranch is
fine," he said.
She nodded,
and went over to the counter. He watched her, from behind as she went. She was
quite an attractive girl, probably in her early twenties, with a trim body,
hair dyed in an elaborate pattern, and the sort of face that reminded him that
America was supposed to be a melting pot. Seen in a certain light, he supposed
she could be Greek, or perhaps Italian, or maybe even Native American. . . Or,
he admitted, some other, far more exotic combination. He wondered what the
truth was. He also wondered if anything was going on with her and Tom and if
that was what had the cook's nose out of joint.
The girl came
back in a moment, set a cup in front of him, and put down a container of sugar
and another with creamers. She filled the cup and he—ignoring the sugar and the
creamers—took a sip.
His surprise
at the quality of the coffee must have shown, in raised eyebrows or some change
in expression, because the girl smiled at him. And, oh, she had dimples. He
grinned back. She wasn't that much younger than him, really, and besides, he
went out with girls her age every other week. But was she involved with Tom? Or
how did she feel about Tom? He had to ask about Tom, but was it going to ruin
everything?
"Excuse
me?" he said, before she could turn away. "I don't suppose I could
ask you a question?"
She tensed. He
saw her tense, as she turned around, even if her face didn't show anything as
she said, "Yes?"
"I'm
sorry to bother you," he said. "But does Thomas Ormson work
here?"
For a moment
her face stayed absolutely frozen, and he thought she was going to tell him to
go to hell or something. Instead, she put a hand on the table, and it trembled.
Oh, no. What was going on here? Was she Tom's girlfriend.
"I
thought you looked like him," she said. "But I thought. . ." She
swallowed and didn't say what she thought.
"I'm his
father," Edward said, low enough that the gorilla behind at the grill
wouldn't hear him. "My name is Edward Ormson. Do you know where he
is?"
She opened her
mouth.
"Kyrie,"
the gorilla said. And she looked around, as if wakening. People had come in
while they were talking, and there were five tables occupied. And she was
alone. Also, his dinner was now sitting on the counter, ready. She went to get
it.
"I get
out at five," she told him. "It might be easier to talk then."
* * *
It was night
from hell. Or at least night from next door to hell. Nothing bad happened.
Kyrie even managed—despite her mounting exhaustion—to not drop any trays full
of plates, and not to mix up any orders.
But Tom hadn't
shown up. She was of two minds about this. Part of her wanted him to show up.
She wanted to . . . Well, for one his father had been at the Athens, and his
father was asking about him. That certainly didn't seem like the kind of father
who had thrown his son out of the house at sixteen. Then again, she thought—who
knew what Tom had done, and how much he could goad people beyond their natural
limits?
His father had
left after half an hour, and she hadn't given it much thought, until, as she
was getting ready to leave, she saw him waiting by the door, looking very
proper in his expensive-looking, if somewhat rumpled business suit.
She nodded to
him, and went towards the counter, to tell Frank she was leaving. He glared at
her, which was not really a surprise, since he'd been glaring at her—and to be
honest at everyone else—all night. Then he motioned with his head towards Tom's
father. "Another one?"
She sighed.
"I have no idea what you're talking about. He's just. . ." She
stopped short of telling Frank this was Tom's father. She wasn't even sure why.
Just she didn't want the jokes following on Tom being her boyfriend and his
father supposedly visiting her. "He just wants to ask me something,"
she said.
And anyway,
she thought, as she walked towards Mr. Ormson, if Frank couldn't see the
resemblance between Tom and his father—same pale skin, same dark hair, same
blue eyes—then he didn't want to see it.
They stepped
outside the diner, and the morning was lovely, just warm enough to promise heat
later at mid-day, but not warm enough to actually be uncomfortable. Kyrie took
a deep breath of the air that seemed much cleaner than it would be later on in
the day when Fairfax became clogged with bumper-to-bumper traffic. "I
don't know where Tom is," she told his father, quickly. "I saw him
last about twelve hours ago. He left with a friend. I don't know where he is. I
can give you his address if you want."
"I have
his address," his father said. "His landlady said that he worked at
the Athens and that she thought his girlfriend worked there too. You
wouldn't—"
Kyrie felt
herself blush. "No. He doesn't have a girlfriend, that I know." There
was no point explaining, and yet she could tell he was looking attentively at
her, as though trying to read her expression. Or most probably wondering why
she was blushing. Damn her blush, really. For a woman who could and did tan
easily enough, she had the most inconvenient blushes. And it really didn't mean
anything, except annoyance at Frank thinking she was Tom's girlfriend.
"Can we
go somewhere and talk?" Mr. Ormson asked, leaning slightly forward, as if
eager to have her answer.
Kyrie shook
her head. Her feet hurt, and she felt sticky all over, as she usually did when
she'd been working long hours at the Athens. And this time she'd worked ten
hours. "I really don't think I have anything else to tell you," she
said. "I only know Tom from work." And why was her mind, unbidden,
giving her images of his coming out of the shower, his hair still dripping.
He'd been perfectly dressed too. Well, almost perfectly. One thing her house
didn't have any of was male underwear. "And I really don't know where he
could have gone. If you go where he lives, and talk to his downstairs neighbor.
I think his name is Keith. He might know where Tom went from there."
"Oh, but
I think you might know more without realizing it," he said, and in
response to what she was sure was very annoyed frown, he said, "I'm not
underestimating your intelligence, it is just that I know people absorb things
about other people, without meaning to. And you might know something about Tom,
something that will give me a clue." He hesitated a long time, as if he
were not sure a clue to exactly what. "A clue to where to find him."
Kyrie was
sure, too, that this was not what he had meant to say. She looked up—Tom's
father was considerably taller than him—at Mr. Ormson's chiseled profile, and
she wondered what he was trying to find a clue to exactly, and why he'd come
looking for his son these many years later. Or had he looked for Tom before?
Had Tom refused to see him? Perhaps that was what he wanted a clue for? A clue
as to why his son would reject him? Kyrie shouldn't be getting involved with
this. She really shouldn't.
"Just a
cup of coffee," he said, and looked wildly around, lighting at last at a
coffee shop sign a couple of blocks away, the edge of the advance of
gentrification of downtown Goldport. "I won't keep you long, I promise. I
imagine you must be very tired."
"Yes,
but—"
"Please,"
the man said. "Tom is my only son. If there's any chance I can. . . find
him."
Again she had
a feeling that what he had been about to say was not "find" but
something else—persuade? Reach?
"All
right," she said, setting off towards the Coffee shop. "But just one
cup of coffee." She had to admit to herself at least half the reason for
allowing him that one cup of coffee was that she wanted to know what was
happening—exactly what was wrong—between those two. Had Tom told her the truth
about being thrown out of the house? Or had he run away? What had his father
thought of the whole thing? Did his father even know that Tom was a shifter?
And did he love him despite that?
Kyrie didn't
have any personal interest in the matter, of course. Well, Tom's father seemed
nice enough. Possibly too nice to be saddled with Tom as a child. But, really,
ultimately, what drove her to walk those blocks to the coffee shop, what
convinced her to sit across from him at the little, tottering table, amid the
decor that tried to hard to be urban and sophisticated, was curiosity.
She had grown
up with many families, but none of them hers. And none of her families had ever
shown her much of the tangled feelings between close blood relatives. All she
had of it was the understanding drawn from books and movies. She saw family and
familial love through a mirror darkly.
So she went
with Edward Ormson, and sat at the little table across from him, holding a
Cappuccino that she knew would have way too much milk, and watching the man sip
his espresso grande, or very tall or whatever they were calling the huge cups
these days.
"How long
has Tom been working at the Athens?" Mr. Ormson asked.
"Six
months," Kyrie said. Was everyone going to ask her this question. If Mr.
Ormson's next question was about the murders three months ago, she was going to
scream.
But he nodded.
"And he's. . . he's a good worker?"
"He's
responsible," Kyrie said, surprising herself with saying it. "And
competent. He always shows up or calls if he's ill. This is the first night he
missed work completely." And having said the words, she wondered where he
was, what he was doing. She frowned at her cup of foam with very little coffee.
She had as good as thrown him out. Of course, he deserved it. Or did he?
Rafiel's talk
of an insect-origin powder, his talk of eggs in the wounds of the victim. . .
Something was not right, and it seemed certain that high or not, Tom had been
fighting something—some creature, possibly the same that had committed murder
in the parking lot, just a day ago. But he had been high. And he should not
have been high. He should have been more careful in her house.
Somehow this
high moral ground was not as satisfying as it should be. She realized that Mr.
Ormson was looking attentively at her, and she managed a smile at him, her
professional smile that meant very little but seemed to make people feel at
ease. "He was better than most servers we get at the Athens."
"Was?"
Mr. Ormson said. His blue eyes, so much like Tom's, were filled with a cooly
evaluating look that was nothing like Tom's at all.
She shook her
head. "He didn't show up today. I'm assuming he gave up the job. I don't
know. . ."
But Mr. Ormson
continued looking at her, cooly appraising. "Do you. . . I don't quite
know how to ask this question, but I need to—do you have any idea if my son
might be involved in illegal activities?"
Oh, Lord, the
drugs. Yes, she was fairly sure that Tom was involved in illegal activities.
But talking about it to this stranger felt like a violation of trust. Stupid to
feel that way, she told herself. Stupid. And ridiculous.
He'd broken
confidence with her. He'd been a guest in her house and behaved with utter
disregard, with utter—
But she
thought of the food left on her shelf. She had expected him to eat it all. She
wouldn't have held it against him if he had eaten it all. It must have taken a
lot of will power to control himself and not eat all the protein he could. She,
herself, and Rafiel too, had binged shamelessly. But Tom hadn't. And if he'd
given in to the drugs later, perhaps he hadn't realized what he was doing? Or
perhaps he had but had no other choice?
She looked at
Mr. Ormson staring at her. No. Tom was, if nothing else, another shifter, a
member of this makeshift family in which she'd ended up plunged suddenly. She
owed him that much loyalty, if nothing else. Even if he were really guilty of
murder; even if she ended up having to fight him or take him out—he was one of
hers. And Mr. Ormson, even if his looks were testimony of a genetic
relationship to Tom, was not one of them.
She raised her
eyebrows at Mr. Ormson, and he laughed, as if she'd said something very funny.
Only the laughter echoed bitter and hollow at the edge of it. "Ah. I
see," he said, though she clearly did not. "Let me tell you what I
know of my son. Let me explain."
"You
don't need—"
"No,
please let me, then perhaps you'll understand better what I mean, and that I'm
not merely fishing for something that will allow me to put my son away or
something equally . . . drastic.
"Tom was
never an easy child. No, perhaps I lie there. He was a happy baby, chubby and
contented. At least, we had a nanny, but when I was home and the nanny brought
him to me, he was usually asleep and sometimes he. . . woke up and looked at
me, and smiled." He made a face, worried, as if trying to figure out, now,
what those smiles might have meant, and suspecting them of some deeper and
possibly bad meaning. "But then he started walking. And he started
speaking. The first word he learned was no. And he said no very often over the
next fourteen or fifteen years. His teachers told us there was nothing wrong
with his mind, but his grades were dismal."
He frowned
again and took a quick sip of his espresso, as if it could control the flow of
words. "I was going to say the first call from the police station, saying
he'd been arrested was a shock, but that isn't true. From nursery school
onward, we got calls, from Tom's teachers and supervisors. He'd stolen
something. Or he'd broken something. His language violated all the rules of
every school that ever took children. He had. . . I think they call it
appositional defiational disorder. He couldn't obey and he wouldn't submit to
any authority."
Ormson's lips
compressed into a bitter line. "By the time he became officially a
teenager, I'd run out of options. Counselors and boot camps, and whatever I
thought might straighten him out, just made him more violent, more unruly. His
mother had left by then. She—I think she couldn't understand him. I couldn't
understand him, either, but I had my work. She. . . She found someone else and
moved to Florida, as far as she could from us and still remain on the East
Coast. And Tom and I settled into a routine. As long as he kept his . . .
infractions beneath a certain threshold, I could get him out of jail the same
day, and no harm done. I thought. . . I thought he would grow out of it."
Kyrie finished
her coffee. For some reason, the story was making her feel sorry for Tom. Oh,
it was foolish. It was borderline suicidal to feel sorry for someone like Tom.
But in his father's descriptions—it seemed to her, from kids she had known in
foster care—she read a desperate desire of Tom's to be seen, to be noticed, to
be acknowledged. Oh, she didn't think it could all have been solved with a nice
talk by the fire. Life tended not to behave like a Disney special, so much more
the pity. She suspected that by the time that Tom had learned to walk, learned
to say that all-vital no, the problem was already intractable. But
nonetheless it was possible to feel sorry for the man he might have been.
"There
was joyriding," Ormson said. "And drugs. And one or two cases of lewd
acts in semi-public places."
Was he
watching her face to see if she was shocked? The only thing Tom hadn't told her
about was the lewd acts, and she wondered how much of those was showing up
naked in public places—something neither he, nor she, could control.
"So,"
he leaned back. "You can't possibly fear to let me know something he's
done. You see, I know."
She inclined
her head, in a gesture that might have been a yes, or just curiosity.
He smiled, a
tight-lipped smile. "I see," he said. "Well, then I'll ask it
outright. Do you have any reason to think my son did something. . . Stole
something from a. . . an organized crime group?"
She must have
trembled, without meaning to. The triad, the three exceedingly dumb dragons at
the diner today, all came to her mind, and she must have trembled as she
thought about it. She immediately calmed herself down, and forced herself to
relax, but there was that look of understanding on Ormson's face.
"You
don't have to answer that, but you do have to answer me this. It's very
important. Do you know where he's hidden it? The Pearl?"
The Pearl.
Ormson wanted the same Pearl the Chinese dragons had spoken of. How could he
know about it? Clearly Tom hadn't told him about it. He hadn't even seen Tom
and wasn't sure where Tom might be. So. . .
She looked at
him, and in his intense expression read the same eagerness of the three dragons
looking at Tom the night before. The Pearl, they had said. And they'd asked
where he hid it.
On her feet,
she pushed the chair forward. She remembered to take the cup with her, which
was a little strange, in retrospect, and put it on the tray near the other
dirty cups.
She headed
towards the door at a good clip and got there before Mr. Ormson seemed to
realize it, before he got up, before he came after her, with a haste that made
everyone in the coffee shop turn to stare at them.
Kyrie was
aware of their scrutiny as she ran out, into the still-deserted early morning
street. She heard him come after her, almost immediately, heard him call,
"Ms. Smith. Kyrie. Please, I must explain."
But all she
could think was that he—was he really Tom's father—was working for the dragons.
He had no more concern or care for Tom than he did for her. They were shifters,
they were alone. They must look after each other.
She ran full
tilt back to the Athens, and heard him run behind her, also at full clip. But
she was much younger than him, and she ran faster, and was well ahead of him by
the time she reached the Athens and headed for the parking lot.
It was only in
the parking lot that she realized she hadn't parked there that day. And that
was the least of her worries.
* * *
Tom was tired.
At just that moment, he wasn't absolutely sure how the dragon felt. Though he
was still the dragon.
He could feel
the dragon's wings, suspended between the Earth and the sky, the dragon's front
legs tucked upward in flight position, the dragon's tail, serving as a rudder
to direct the pattern of flight. But a part of him, a core, looking out through
the dragon's eyes, and trying—desperately trying to find a populated place to
land—was wholly human, wholly Tom. And tired.
He had to stop
soon, he thought as the dragon flew above the spectacular painted desert, the
brightly layered mesas of New Mexico. But New Mexico was empty. That was what
had made it so attractive. It was a place he could hide, far from human
contact. But he needed some humans. He was going to need food and sleep, soon.
And he did not want to hunt for wild rabbits, eat them raw and fall asleep on
the hard-packed desert dirt.
The dragon's
eyes, more far-seeing than any humans, followed a highway and following the
highway, a conglomerate of buildings. It wasn't very big. Nothing to compare to
the Colorado cities Tom had left behind. It wasn't even as big as Goldport.
Memories from
drifting west, through parts of New Mexico, months ago, brought up the name Las
Vegas, New Mexico. One of those towns forever being confused with a better
known town of the same name. It was the only city large enough to have a
hotel in the area within reach of his flying.
He aimed for
it and flew in its direction, determinedly, feeling the weight of the backpack
reassuring on the dragon's ankle. He had money in there. And clothes. He'd land
somewhere outside town, make himself decent for human contact, then slip into
town and stop at some truck stop—he seemed to remember an awful lot of them in
Las Vegas—for breakfast. And then find a cheap motel room to crash in.
Anything, really, so long as it didn't rent by the hour. He wanted to sleep in
peace and quiet.
And then he
could start looking for something more permanent, and thinking of a way to
survive. Some place to hide out for a few months, till the triad either found
the Pearl on their own or forgot about him.
And then. . .
He had a fleeting thought he could go back to Kyrie then, and maybe. . . But
no. That avenue was closed and he knew it.
The human
brain in control of the dragon body, guided himself down and down and down, to
land between two mesas, on rocky ground, where no one would see him.
He shifted, an
effort even greater than shifting into dragon had been the evening before. When
it was done, he was weak and pale and trembling, standing naked in between the
two rock spires, holding onto the handle of the backpack.
How he managed
to get dressed, he didn't know. It involved a lot of starts and stops. Even the
times he'd run away from other cities, from other states, he'd never made
himself fly eight hours straight, through the night.
Las Vegas
could not be more than a mile away. He'd gaged it well when he'd landed. He
didn't want to land so close to the populated area that someone would see him
shifting. And he was right by the only road into town coming from the direction
of Goldport.
He put his
backpack on and summoned strength from determination. He must make it to town.
It was the only way he was going to get eggs and bacon and a cup of coffee. He
could almost taste the cup of coffee. Not to mention the orange juice. Hell,
anything wet would do.
With the dry
desert air stinging his nostrils and his parched throat, he headed towards Las
Vegas.
* * *
That she'd
gone to the parking lot instead of up front where she'd parked her car was the
least of Kyrie's worries because in the parking lot there was. . . She
swallowed hard, trying to comprehend it and unable to. They were. . .
They were
green and huge and glittering like jewels in the full light of day. And they
were some sort of Amazonian beetle. At least, Kyrie remembered, vaguely, having
seen much smaller versions of these creatures at the Natural History Museum in
Denver, pinned solidly through their middle, against a background of black
velvet. In a glass case.
But those were
small. And dead. The legend had said something about their being used for
jewelry, and she could kind of see that, from the way the green carapaces
glowed with blue highlights, in the light of the morning.
It would be
five fifteen, she though, or possibly five thirty, and soon there would be
people coming to breakfast at the Athens, and yet in the parking lot of the
building, there were two giant. . . insects dragging something.
She couldn't
even look at the something. She didn't need to look at the something. She could
smell the symphony of blood sharp and clear as day from where she was standing.
Somewhere in
the back of her mind, a steady and very worried voice was intoning, oh crap,
oh crap, oh crap almost in the tone of someone praying.
The little
voice was prescient. Or more in tune than Kyrie's body and the rest of Kyrie's
mind which stood, amazed and immobilized, staring at the insects.
She didn't
know when they first saw her—where were the eyes in those things?—but she
noticed a little start and their leaning into each other, communicating—with
what? Antennae?—somehow, and then they turned. They advanced on her.
At this moment
the little voice that had been intoning oh crap, grabbed the rest of
Kyrie. It turned her around. It sent her running, in broad strides, around the
Athens and to her car. She had a vague impression of people inside the diner
turning to look at her as she ran by at full speed. Would the beetles follow?
Out here, up front? In front of everyone?
They wouldn't
if they were shifters, but what if they weren't?
What,
she thought, as she put her hand in through the open window to release the
latch, pulled the door open and, without pause, dove head long into her car. They're
the result of some nuclear accident? Or some exterminator's bad dream?
She stuck the
key in the ignition, started the car and headed down the street. It wasn't
until she was headed towards home, speeding as much as she dared in this zone,
that she realized her moment of frozen panic couldn't have taken much more than
a few seconds. It seemed much longer, subjectively, but as she pulled away from
the curb, in her car, she saw Edward Ormson on the sidewalk, hands on sides,
slightly bent over, in the position of someone who's run too fast, too far.
He had just—almost
caught up with her. As for the beetles, they were nowhere in sight. Had she
imagined them? She wasn't about to drive around the back of the Athens to find
out.
* * *
Edward Ormson
stared at the girl, his mouth hanging open in wonder.
She'd run away
from him. She'd looked at him as if he were something profoundly disgusting,
and then she'd left without warning. This was not something that happened to
him normally, when he was trying to ask someone questions.
Why had she
run? What had he said that was so terrible?
Confused, he
walked back up in the direction of the coffee shop, where the area was much
better. His head ached and he felt very tired. Dragon-lagged, he thought.
Whatever magic the dragon had used to get here had left Edward feeling as if
he'd been beaten.
So. . . this
avenue to find Tom hadn't worked. And he needed to get back to New York as soon
as possible. He'd best find a place where he could call his secretary again and
get her to call around and ask more questions, find someone who might know
where Tom was.
It was eight
a.m. in New York and the woman would probably be in the office.
He considered
going into the coffee shop, but they'd seen the girl run away from him. At the
very least he'd get pitying stares. At worst, they would think he was some sort
of pervert and had said something to her that was over the line.
Shaking his
head—he still couldn't understand why she had run—he walked past the coffee
shop. And came to a sort of little park in the middle of the sidewalk. He sat
down on the park bench set in the four feet of lawn amid three dispirited
trees.
Perhaps he
shouldn't have eaten? Perhaps having eaten was making him sleepy?
He started
reaching for his cell phone, then closed his eyes.
And woke up
with a cold wind blowing, a spectacular sunset lighting the sky in the
west—right in front of him—and someone pawing at his briefcase.
The impression
that someone was pawing was so great, that he was shocked on turning to find an
old man with long whiskers and a tattered suit, trying to unlatch the
briefcase. Though to be honest, the man was being so clumsy about it, that it
might very well have been paws he was using.
When Edward
turned to face him, the man looked scared, got up, and ran away. Edward had the
impression he was running away on four paws, and blinked. No. He was just
shambling along, irregularly.
Edward had
shape-shifters in the brain. And still no idea how to find his son.
* * *
Tom walked in
the shadow as much as he could. Partly because he was thirsty and partly because
he realized a guy like him, in black leather, carrying a kid's backpack had to
look incongruous. He was holding it by the strap, dangling it from his hand,
instead of carrying it on his back.
He hoped
anyone seeing him would think he was carrying it for a son or little brother
and give it no thought. But you never knew. And he didn't want people to
remember his coming through here. He didn't want the triad to be able to find
him.
Just before he
got to town—he couldn't see it, but he could smell it, a tinge of food and car
exhaust in his nostrils—he saw a couple of cars abandoned. Something about the
cars tickled his memory, but he couldn't quite say what. Well, at least one of
them looked awfully familiar. But it was just a kia something or other, one of
those economy cars that tried to look like suvs and rarely managed more than
looking like a toy patterned on an suv.
It wasn't
Kyrie's car. That was white too, but much smaller. Besides, this one had a
driver's side window, Tom thought, and felt very guilty he hadn't sent her the
money to have that repaired.
He'd been so
furious last night, so furious because she'd failed to live up to his high
standards. His high standards at that. It took some nerve. Now, he felt
mostly tired and vaguely upset at himself, as if he had let himself down.
Fine. He'd eat
something, he thought, as he saw, in the distance, the outskirts of town—represented
by what looked like an abandoned gas station. He'd eat something, he'd sleep
and then he'd think this whole thing over. If by then he still thought he had
done Kyrie an injustice or somehow failed to live up to what should—yes,
indeed, by damn—be his high standards, he would take as much of the money
as he dared and mail it back to Kyrie before he vanished from her life.
He couldn't
even tell why he wanted to deal straight with her. It wasn't because she was a
shifter. He wasn't feeling particularly charitable towards Mr. Golden Eye Lion
police officer. And it wasn't because they'd worked together all this
time—because though he'd enjoyed work at the Athens, Kyrie had always looked at
him as if he were slightly below sub-human. And it wasn't his attraction for
her, because he'd already decided that he had not a snowball's chance in hell.
And then he
realized it was how she'd treated him, when she had found him standing over
that body. He'd been deranged. He'd been in dragon form. But she hadn't even
hesitated. And she didn't even like him. He knew that. But she'd grabbed him,
and helped him hide the evidence of his involvement in anything back there.
She'd been
there when he needed her the most. Whether she'd disappointed him by keeping
funny sugar around or not, she didn't deserve for him to leave her with a huge
bill in car repairs. Okay—so that was that. He'd send her some money this
evening, send her more when he settled some place and found a job.
The decision
put a spring in his step, and he almost walking normally when he reached the
gas station. Which was too bad. Had he been dragging along the road and looking
all around in despondency and depression, he might have noticed something about
the shadows, something about movement.
As it was, he
walked by the squat brick building without a second glance. And didn't know
anything was wrong until he felt the impact of something hard on the back of
his head. And then he had no time to think about it, as darkness closed around
him.
* * *
Kyrie was rattled.
She didn't know if she had dreamed the beetles, out of being so tired, out of
Rafiel's report on there being insect matter in and around the corpse last
night.
Normally,
Kyrie was very sure of her perceptions. She'd had to trust in them and them alone,
as often those who were supposed to look after her or be in charge of her
hadn't been very trustworthy at all.
But now? Now
she wasn't sure of anything. The last two days had been a carnival of
weirdness, a whirling of the very strange. Driving her car along familiar
streets and around the castle just before her neighborhood, she thought she
wouldn't be at all surprised to wake up in her bed, suddenly, and find that all
this, from the moment she'd seen Tom as a dragon, had been a crazy dream.
Although if that were true, then her subconscious harbored some very weird
thoughts about Tom.
She pulled up
at her house, and opened the front door, half expecting to find her house as
ransacked as Tom's apartment. But everything inside looked normal and was in
its usual place. She locked the door, picked up the mail that the carrier had
pushed through the mail slot on the door. Junk, junk and bills. Which seemed to
be the modern corollary of death and taxes.
She went all
the way to the kitchen, and saw her chair still under the door to the back
porch. Had it really all happened? Had the little porch, which had been her
main reason for renting this house, truly been destroyed?
She pulled the
chair away, unlocked the door and looked at the broken windows, the glass on
the carpet, the . . . mess. Then she turned on the light and walked into the
room.
Rafiel had
said that there was green powder on this carpet, like there was green powder on
yesterday's corpse. She hadn't noticed. But now, by the light of dawn and the
overhead light, she could see it—glistening on the carpet. It was even more
visible because it must have rained sometime during the night when she wasn't
paying attention to the outside—and the rain had puddled it into little rings
and patterns on the beige carpet.
She wondered
what it all meant, but couldn't even think straight. And she wasn't about to
call Rafiel and ask him. Not right now, she wasn't.
Instead, she
retreated to the kitchen, locked the door and slipped the chair underneath. She
wished the door were somewhat stronger than the hollow-chore, seventies vintage
door it appeared to be. But it couldn't be helped. She was certainly not going
to fashion a new door before going to bed. And she needed to go to bed.
She took a
hurried shower, with torrents of hot water, and felt as if the heat and the
massage on her sore muscles were reviving her. Coming out and drying her hair,
she noted that Tom had hung up his towel very neatly on the hook at the back of
the door. For some reason she'd expected it tossed on the floor.
As soon as she
went into the bedroom, the phone rang. It was a cheap, corded affair and it was
plugged in there because it was the only phone plug in the entire house.
Possibly because the entire house was not hard to cross in twenty hurried
steps.
Normally the
only calls she got—at least since she'd got on the telemarketers do not call
list—were from Frank, asking if she wanted to come in and work extra hours. And
if this were Frank right now, he could go to hell. There was no way Kyrie was
about to turn around and go work another shift. Not with those beetles in the
parking lot, and she didn't even care whether they were real or a product of
her imagination.
But the voice
on the other end of the phone wasn't Frank's. It was a voice that purred with
masculine self-assurance.
"Kyrie?"
it said, though she didn't remember giving Rafiel permission to call her by her
given name.
"Yes."
"I have
information on the victim."
So, he was
going to call her every time he had information? But she bit her tongue and
said, "Yes?" because she knew that anything else could start a debate
or an argument and that would mean talking on the phone longer and staying
awake longer.
"He was
Bill Johnson. A roofer by trade. And apparently a coyote in his shifter form."
"A. .
.?" How had Rafiel found that out? It wasn't exactly the sort of thing you
could ask people about? Or. . .
"His wife
had pictures."
"Pardon
me?" Kyrie asked finding this, in some way, stranger than giant beetles in
the parking lot of the Athens.
"His wife
had pictures of him as a coyote. Lovely lady, I would judge about ten years
older than him but looking and acting much older. A grandma type. She pulled
out pictures, to show us, of what her husband looked like in his coyote form.
She said he got the shape-shifting ability from his Native American ancestors
and that he was, like their coyote of legend, a bit of a trickster. And then
she said—"
"Showed us
pictures?" Kyrie asked, as her mouth caught up with her brain in horrified
wonder.
"Oh yes. She
called him in to missing persons and officer Bob and I and our one female
officer, Cindy all went along to take her statement and see if she had any
pictures of the deceased. Because if it wasn't him, we didn't want to put her
through identifying the body. Cindy came along on the principle that the lady
might need a female shoulder to cry on."
"And?"
"And she
took out the pictures and showed them to us. And the other two looked at each
other and then at me as though they thought the poor lady was totally out of
her mind with shock and all that. Which she probably was, of course. But still.
. ."
"But
still, he was a coyote. And she knew. And didn't mind."
"Mind?
She was positively gleeful. Very sorry none of their six children inherited the
characteristic."
"Children."
Kyrie was beyond astonishment. That a shifter could secure all these things
that she thought were out of her reach because she was a shifter felt
absolutely baffling.
"They
live in Arizona," Rafiel said. "Where Bill and his wife lived till about
a year ago, when they drove through town and stopped at the Athens for
breakfast and all of a sudden realized they'd never felt so at home anywhere.
So they decided to sell the place in Arizona and buy a house here. Ever since
then, Bill went into the Athens for his morning breakfast after roaming the
neighborhood as a coyote."
"Well, at
least no one would notice a coyote. Not in Colorado."
"Right.
Lions and panthers are something else."
"And
dragons."
"Yes."
She could hear
him take a deep breath.
"So, we
know that the victim was definitely a shifter."
Shifter.
Victim. The back of the Athens. The beetles. Kyrie desperately wanted to go to
bed, but she felt she should tell Rafiel. After all, he was a police officer.
He would know what to do about it, right?
"There is
more," she said.
"More
about the victim?"
"More. .
. another victim."
"What?"
"I was. .
. I forgot I parked my car up-front," she said. "Because of the
broken window. So I went into the parking lot and there were. . . They were
beetles. That type of shiny rain forest type beetle that they make jewelry out
of?"
"Someone
made jewelry out of beetles?"
"No. It
would take a very big person to wear those as jewelry. They were six or seven
feet long and at least five feet across, and shiny. . ."
"Are you
sure you didn't dream this?"
"No, I
absolutely am not sure. But I think they were there. They were huge and green
blue and they were dragging something. A corpse. I think it was a corpse
because I could smell the blood."
"A
corpse? In the parking lot of the Athens? Another corpse?"
"I didn't
see it. It was just something—a bundle—they were carrying. And it smelled like
blood."
"Are you
sure this is not a dream you were having when I woke you up with my phone
call?"
"Quite."
Kyrie looked towards her still made bed. "Very much so. I haven't gone to
bed yet."
"Fine,"
he sounded, for some reason exasperated. "Fine. This is just fine. I will
go to the Athens and check."
"Take. .
. something. They might be dangerous."
"Oh, I wouldn't
worry," he said, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "I have my
regulation bug spray can."
She had a
feeling he didn't believe her, and she couldn't really blame him because she
wasn't a hundred percent sure she believed herself. "Right," she
said. "And, oh, remember you wanted to know about the dust on the floor of
my porch. There is dust. It's bright green."
"Lovely,"
he said. "I'll be there. Right after I check the parking lot of the
Athens."
* * *
Tom hurt. That
was his first realization, his first awareness that he was alive. The back of
his head hurt like someone had tried to saw it open, and the pain radiated
around the side of his head and it seemed to him as though it made his teeth
vibrate. An effect not improved by a twisted rag, which was inserted between
his teeth and tied viciously tight behind his head. His legs and arms were tied
too, he realized, as he squirmed around, trying to get into a better position.
It felt like there was a band of something around his knees, and one around his
ankles. Very tightly tied.
With his eyes
closed, trying to remember where he was and why, he smelled old car oil and
dust and the mildew of long-unoccupied places. His face rested on concrete, but
part of it felt slick.
The gas
station. He must be in the gas station he was passing when. . . When someone
had hit him on the back of the head. So. Fine. Shaking, he opened his eyes a
sliver. And confirmed that he was lying in a vast space, on a concrete floor
irregularly stained with oil or other car-fluids. This must have been a service
station at some point. Light was dim, coming through glass squares atop huge,
closed doors that took up the front of the building.
He looked
around, but his eyes felt as if they couldn't quite focus. And he wondered if
he'd been attacked by some random local hooligans, who had felt an irresistible
craving for his leather jacket and the kid's dragon backpack, which no longer
appeared to be anywhere near. Or if it was the triad again.
Through the
fogs of his mind, he remembered that the white car parked by the road side had
been the same make and model as the one that had turned around while he was
shifting before. Had they seen him? Had they followed him? Along the highway?
If they'd seen him follow the highway, it wouldn't be hard to calculate that he
would stop in Las Vegas, New Mexico. It wouldn't have been hard to figure out,
either, that he'd land and shift some distance from town.
It couldn't
have been hard to find a place to lay in ambush for him.
In the next
minute, there was a sound of high censure, in some form of Chinese. Oh, bloody
hell. And then, out of a darker corner of the warehouse they came, all three of
them. Tom had run into them a couple of times, before the time they'd ambushed
him in his apartment.
He'd privately
nicknamed them Crest Dragon, Two Dragons and The Other One. And his opinion
that their intelligence and their viciousness were inversely proportional did
nothing to make him feel better right now. The only good thing, he thought, as
they advanced, speaking fast Chinese at him as though he should understand it,
was that they were in human form and not dragons.
As usual Crest
Dragon—in his human form a young man with hair so well groomed Tom had wondered
if it was a wig—took the lead, walking in front of the other two, who flanked
him, left and right. Crest Dragon was waving the backpack around, and shouting
something in Chinese.
Truth was,
even without having any idea what the high complaints in Chinese were, Tom
understood the gist of the matter completely. And the gist of the matter was
that the Pearl of Heaven hadn't been in the backpack.
Exactly what
kind of an idiot did they think he was? He glared at them. And how stupid were
they, really? Did they think they would not feel. . . it, if it were in that
backpack. Tom remembered holding it, remembered the feeling of power and
strength and calm and sanity flowing from it. He could feel across miles, and
he was sure so would they be able to, if he hadn't taken extraordinary
precautions in hiding it. And they'd thought he'd carry it in a back pack?
He glared at
them, which was harder to do than it should be, because his eyes seemed to want
to focus in different directions. How hard had they hit him on the head? And
did they realize how hungry he was?
Crest Dragon
came closer, waving his arms in theatrical exasperation. Then he flung the
backpack—with force, across the building, grabbed Tom by the front of the
t-shirt and, lifting him off the ground, punched him hard on the face.
Tom screamed.
The pain radiated from his nose to match the pain on the back of his head, but
sharper and sudden, edged around with blood and a feeling that his nose had
broken. His vision blurred. If not for the rag in his mouth, he'd have bit his
tongue.
Another punch
came, immediately after. And he screamed again. He tasted blood and didn't know
if it was running from the back of his nose, or from his mouth. And it didn't
matter. Pain after pain came. He was vaguely aware of being kicked, punched and
hit with something—he wasn't sure what.
On the floor,
curling into a tight ball, he endured each sharp pain as it came, and screamed
as loud as he could. In the back of his mind, words ran, words so completely
calm and composed that he couldn't think they were his. But the thoughts
couldn't have belonged to anyone else. And they made sense.
One was: Scream.
Stoicism is for fools. Another, just as sudden, as complete, was: Only
idiots inflict pain for pain's sake. And the third, very clear, very sharp,
was: I could shift. I could eat them.
It was the
third thought that caused him to scream louder than the pain. And the word he
would scream, if his mouth hadn't been so firmly gagged, would have been,
"No."
Oh, he could
shift. He could undoubtedly shift. And the binds on his limbs would break away
with the force of the shifting, the greater strength and size of the dragon. Of
that he had no doubt.
It was even
possible that he could defeat all three of them, even if they too shifted. They
were not swift of mind and they always had trouble coordinating attacks.
But—and this was a huge but—he wasn't absolutely sure he could prevail. Not as
tired and weak as he felt.
And then,
worse of all, the dragon was very hungry. Starving. Ravenous. The dragon wanted
food. Protein. And Tom didn't think he could live with himself if he succeeded
in eating another human being. Or even one of these three fools.
A foot—he
thought—crashed against his face. It felt like his forehead exploded. Blood
flowed down, making him close his eyes.
He screamed
"No," as much at the dragon within as at the pain.
* * *
Kyrie had just
fallen asleep when she heard something. At first it was a little sound. Like. .
. something scraping.
The sound, in
itself almost imperceptible, intruded into her dreams, where she dreamed of
mice, nibbling on cardboard. In her dream, she was in the back hallway of the
Athens, and she opened the back door to the parking lot to find thousands of
mice nibbling on large piles of cardboard boxes.
As she stood
there, paralyzed, the nibbling grew louder, and louder, and then the mice
swarmed all over her, thousands of little paws all over her, insinuating
themselves under her nightshirt, crawling up her belly, tangling in her hair.
She woke up
and sat up in bed. No mice. But she'd been sleeping uncovered, on top of the
bed, and there was a breeze coming in around the door to the bedroom, blowing
with enough force to ruffle her nightshirt and give her silly dreams.
Kyrie looked
at the clock on her dresser. Seven a.m. She should be asleep. She still had
time to sleep. Turning her pillow over, she lay back down. And realized she
could still hear the sound of mice nibbling on cardboard. She blinked. She was
awake. She was sure of that. So why were mice. . .?
And why did it
feel like her head swam? She felt dizzy, as if she were. . . anaesthetized?
Drugged? Slow?
She looked at
the shaft of light coming from the little window above her bed. Was that green
powder dancing in the light? Was she dreaming it? And she still felt dizzy, as
if her head wasn't quite attached to her body.
Getting out of
bed, as silently as she could manage, she opened her bedroom door. The living
room was empty and everything looked undisturbed. Definitely no mice. But she
could still hear the crunching, shredding sounds from . . . The kitchen.
Even more
cautiously, feeling pretty stupid for moving around her own house as if it were
some sort of secret dungeon, she crept down the hallway towards the kitchen.
But before she got there, the green glimmer in the air became obvious. It was
no more than a glimmer, she thought, a soft shine, like. . . A cloud of green
dust. Green dust in the air. Green dust on the corpses. Green dust covering her
back porch the day that Tom claimed he had been attacked by dragons.
And she was
lightheaded and growing dizzy. As if she were being doped.
Had they been
dragons? Rafiel had said the powder was of insect origin, but was it? They
didn't even know what dragons were—exactly. Other than mythical beasts, of
course. And she remembered the beetles in the parking lot of the Athens. It
could be those.
She stood
there, for a moment, in the hallway of her own house, feeling her head swim.
She stared at the green dust, listening to what sounded like an attempt to
break through the door—if the thing trying to break through were armed with
claws and pincers.
Only, the
attempt couldn't be very serious, could it? It was a hollow core door. How hard
could it be to break it down? No, the purpose was to put the green powder into
the house first, wasn't it. And why would you do that?
She thought of
the victim in the parking lot of the Athens, covered in the green powder. And
then she thought of Tom and Keith, clearly high as kites.
Yes, Tom had
seemed to do most of the damage she'd found in the sunroom. Yes, their response
to the attack hadn't been the most effective. But they had been high as kites.
What if they had been high as kites because of the green dust?
What if it
that was what was causing her head to swim?
In a moment,
she was sure of it. She remembered Tom's casual greeting of Keith when he'd
stopped for the key. Friends? Perhaps, of a sort, the friendly acquaintance
sort where you trust each other with a key in case you're locked out. Or where
you might exchange greetings in the hall. Perhaps the kind where you go in
search of your acquaintance when you hear a murder has taken place at their job
site. Not the type of friendship, though, where you go to someone's house in
order to share a drug with your friend.
Kyrie retraced
her steps down the hallway, quickly. Why, oh, why hadn't she allowed herself to
be so afraid of bird-flu that she bought a couple of surgical masks? In the
event, right now, all she could do was improvise.
She opened the
door to the linen cupboard and got a washcloth, which she tied over her mouth
and nose, careful to cover them as much as possible. Then she retreated
further, into the living room where she grabbed the umbrella she had bought for
what she thought was a fabulous price when she first moved to Colorado. As her
year's worth of letting the umbrella sit by the front door had proven, the
price hadn't been quite so fabulous as she then thought. Never mind. It would
be of use now.
She grabbed
the umbrella by the solid wooden handle that had so impressed her when she
bought the thing and wielded it like a samurai sword.
Just in time.
From the kitchen came the sound of the door breaking down and then a dry
shuffle, shuffle, shuffle, as of chitinous legs moving over the linoleum of the
kitchen. She heard her chair being dragged, the table overturned. And she heard
the thing shuffle closer, towards the hallway. At the entrance to the hallway
it stopped, and, in a series of dry scrapings, it sent forth another cloud of
glowing green powder. From the other side of the house came the sound of the
door falling down. The front door. Wouldn't the neighbors see it? And who would
believe it? They could see it all day long. They'd think they were going crazy
and not tell anyone about it.
Kyrie put her
back against the hallway wall, as a cloud of green powder came from the living
room side, too.
She prepared
to sell her life dearly.
* * *
Tom woke up
choking. A taste of blood in his mouth, and his nose felt wholly obstructed. He
coughed, and it seemed to help, clearing both mouth and nose. But he was thirsty
and he was still lying, twisted, on the floor of the old service station. And
his mouth was still gagged.
"Are you
going to talk or not?" Crest Dragon asked. He stood directly in front of
Tom, hands on hips. "Are you going to tell us where you hid it, or will we
have to hurt you again?"
Tom blinked.
He opened his mouth, and screamed, because that was all he could do. With a gag
in his mouth, it was very hard to tell the idiots he had a gag in his mouth.
Two Dragons
screamed something oriental and menacing in response to his scream, and struck
a pseudo-karate position he had probably learned from movies. He came running
towards Tom and Tom closed his eyes, fairly sure they were going to hit his
nose again.
But before Two
Dragons got to him, someone yelled. Other Dragon? Tom opened one eye. It was
indeed Other Dragon. The one with the Chinese character tattooed on his
forehead. He spoke rapidly, pointing at Tom. And he had one arm in front of Two
Dragons, who looked confused. Crest Dragon looked vexed. He turned towards Two
Dragons. "You didn't remove the gag? I told you to remove the gag,"
he said, in rapid English, and threw a punch at Two Dragons who avoided it by
ducking under it.
He didn't tell
Crest Dragon, obviously the head of this outfit, that he too could easily have
seen that Tom was gagged. Instead, he untied the gag at the back of Tom's head,
his fingers scraping at Tom's scalp and tangling in Tom's hair as he did it.
As the gag
fell away, Tom opened and closed his mouth, hoping his jaw wasn't dislocated.
It hurt as if it were, but that was probably only the result of having his
mouth tied like that for hours, and not being able to properly close his mouth.
"Now,"
Crest Dragon said, and smiled, graciously, looking much like some sort of
society hostess. "Now, will you tell us where you hid it?"
Tom judged his
chances. What he needed most—what he wanted more than anything—beyond the inner
dragon's wish to tear these goons apart and use them as a protein source, was
water. Liquid.
He looked at
Crest Dragon and, in a voice he didn't need to make any raspier, he managed,
"Thirsty. Very. Thirsty."
Crest Dragon
looked disgusted, and for just a moment Tom thought they were going to resume
beating him. He turned around to the other two.
"You know
they said we shouldn't hurt him to where he couldn't talk," Other Dragon
said. "You know he has to be thirsty."
How long had
it been since he'd been thrown here? It seemed like forever. And he hadn't
drunk anything before. Tom closed his eyes, as his captors' argument progressed
into whatever form of Chinese they talked, Mandarin or Cantonese or whatever.
Other Dragon
had said they shouldn't hurt him to the point where he couldn't talk. Tom had
realized, sometime in the last few days, that stealing the Pearl of Heaven had
been a grievous mistake. Oh, he remembered it from when he was a kid, in his
father's house. He remembered some old Chinese guy showing it to Edward Ormson
at his home office.
Hidden around
the corner, the then very young Tom had seen the Pearl and felt it. He'd felt
the radiance of it penetrating to the core of his being. Since he'd later come
to realize that it was a. . . cultic object of dragon shifters, he supposed
that the fact that it resonated with him, even then, must mean he'd already been
a dragon. It wasn't a late-caught affliction, but something he'd had all his
life and only became active in adolescence.
Years later,
he'd felt the call of the Pearl and he'd slithered, among those other dragons,
so different from himself, to a meeting, where he'd seen the Great Sky Dragon.
And the Pearl. He hadn't understood almost anything of the meeting. But he'd
seen the guy who had the Pearl shift back into his normal form. And he'd
followed him to an unassuming little restaurant. Where he'd stolen the Pearl.
Oh, the
reasons he'd stolen it seemed valid at the time. He'd thought since this was
used by shifters, since it gave forth a feeling of safety and calm, it must be
something that helped control shifts. And perhaps it was. At least, since he'd
had it, Tom had been able to stop his drug taking. Gradually, but he'd stopped
it. And the withdrawal effects he'd expected from heroin—all the horrible
vomiting and cramps he'd heard about, had never materialized. Or not to any
degree worth talking about. It hadn't been much more than a stomach flu. So
perhaps the Pearl had helped.
Only then the
triad had picked up the scent, and Tom had found that unless the Pearl were
kept submerged in water, every dragon within miles of it could follow it.
He didn't even
know how many dragons there were around. But he knew that there were enough
that they'd tracked him. They'd tracked him all the way to Colorado, tracked
him to Goldport. . . And he had to leave the Pearl immersed in water, which
meant he, himself, couldn't use it.
So, if he
couldn't use it, he might as well give it back. Only he couldn't give it back,
because he'd seen enough of the dragon triad, enough of the ruthless way in
which they disposed of those who crossed them.
They were so
mad at him that these—admittedly low level—thugs had pretended to forget to
remove his gag and had proceed to beat hell out of him. And no, he wasn't so
stupid he would believe that they'd actually forgotten to remove it. No. They
hated him. They had it in for him. So. . . The minute he told them where the
Pearl was, the moment one of them verified it, got his hands on it and phoned
the others back to tell them where it was, he was a dead man.
And Tom didn't
want to die. Not yet. So many times over the last few years, he'd thought he
would be better off dead.
He didn't know
what was different now, to be honest. He still didn't have a chance with Kyrie.
Kyrie was probably, even now, snuggling with her lion-policeman.
But, damn it
all, Tom felt a sting to his pride, a sting to what he retained as his sense of
self, to think that if he died now, Kyrie would only think of him as a fuck up,
as a junkie so far out of control that he couldn't keep from getting high in
her house—even if he used her drugs for it.
He took a deep
breath. He wanted to live. He wanted to know why she kept drugs. He wanted.. .
. He wanted Kyrie, and a house, roses and everyday paper delivery.
He wanted the
normalcy that had never been his.
A hand lifted
him roughly, and he opened his eyes, bracing for a hit. But instead, he found
Two dragons pressing the neck of a water bottle against his lips.
Tom drunk
gratefully, as if the water had been the breath of life.
As his mouth
and nose became hydrated, the smell of the other three became more obvious.
There was some sort of cologne, cheap and probably bought in gallon bottles,
and the smell of the masses of product that Crest Dragon had slathered on his
hair.
But above it,
stronger than all of that, was the smell of living flesh. "No," Tom
said. It was all he could tell the inner dragon, who was slavering at the
thought of eating these fools.
* * *
Edward Ormson
walked along the street, too stunned to even hail a cab from the two or three
that drove by. This was all very bewildering. He'd fallen asleep, lost a whole
day. And he felt cramped and achy from sleeping sitting up.
And he still
couldn't understand what had made the girl run. In fact, he had no idea at all.
He frowned. It
didn't make any sense. What did she know? And who was she, really? She said she
barely knew Tom. She said that they'd just worked side by side for about six
months.
But there was
something else, there. Something to the way she talked about him, to the
silences, to what she didn't say.
Oh, Edward had
always known that Tom could be very charming to women. In fact, it seemed to
him that women tended to like rogues and fools and Tom had a strong component
of both, so it shouldn't surprise Edward that women liked his errant son. Even
when Tom was little, just toddling around the place, the cook, Mrs. Lopez had
been quite smitten with him. It was all they could do to keep her from feeding
him on cookies and cake constantly. And Tom took advantage of it, of course.
He'd been all smiles to the woman, even when he threw tantrums at his parents.
And yet, Kyrie
Smith didn't seem to Ormson as the sort of woman who would be attracted to men
who were trouble. No. Despite her exotic features and odd hairdo, she'd come
across as capable, self-contained, controlled.
So, why did
she seem so protective of Tom? Was it possible that for once in his life, just
once, Tom had managed to attract someone in more than a superficial way? Was it
possible that for once in his life Tom had a real relationship going? Or did
she know something about the Pearl of Heaven itself?
For Tom to
steal from the triad seemed like the stupidest form of madness, the last loss
of grip on reality that the boy could have come to. But what if this were a
cunning plan, hatched by someone with better organizational skills than Tom's?
What if Kyrie was behind it? What if she had something in mind for the Pearl?
Edward needed
to know more. That's all there was to it. He needed to know more about this
whole thing before they could expect him to find Tom and force the boy to give
the Pearl back.
He hailed a
cab. He'd go back to the restaurant in whose parking lot he'd been let out, and
he'd go find out exactly what this was all about. He'd worked for triad members
now and then. He was, after all, a criminal defense lawyer.
It had started
with pro bono cases, when he'd been asked to represent indigent clients. One of
them was associated with the triads somehow, and that had brought him the triad
business.
He remembered
how shocked he'd been when he'd first realized that some members of the triad
of the Dragon—the ones he dealt with—were shape-shifters, capable of shifting
into dragons. But he had never expected that this would somehow make Tom into a
dragon. And he was still not sure how that could have happened. Nor was he sure
how Tom could have got involved with the group again after he left his father's
house.
But he knew he
had to stop it. Somehow. And soon. He had to get back home to New York.
* * *
Beetles.
Definitely beetles. There was no other name for it. Shiny green carapaces and
pincers. Advancing towards Kyrie, one from either end of the hallway. And they
hissed. Or at least, it wasn't a proper hiss. Not like a cat's hiss, or
anything. More like. . .
More like a
kettle left too long on the fire. Or more like the release of hydraulic
pressure from a train as it stops. That type of hiss.
One hissed,
then the other hissed. They were communicating. They were communicating as they
hunted her, as one approached from each side and they contrived to capture her
in the middle, Kyrie thought.
This wouldn't
do. This couldn't do. If she let them continue to advance, she'd find herself
impaled by those two pincer-ended arms that kept advancing towards her,
advancing inexorably in front of the shiny blue carapace, even while the
creatures behind the pincers hissed at each other.
She imagined
the hiss saying "There she is, we've got her cornered."
Fear and an
odd sort of anger mixed in her. This was her house. This was the only house
that had ever been truly hers. All those years, growing up, she'd gone from
house to house, from foster home to foster home, never having a place of her
own, never having a say in even something as little as the color of her
bedspread or the positioning of an armchair.
This house,
tiny as it was, was the first place that had belonged to her alone. Well, that
she'd been sole renter of, at any rate. Where, if she so wished, she could put
the armchair on the roof, and it would stay there, because this was her space.
And these
things, these. . . creatures. . . had violated it. Worse. They'd come into her
house before, and they'd made Tom . . . high. They'd made Tom destroy part of
her house. They'd given her an entirely wrong impression about Tom.
Not that they
could be the ones who gave her the impression that Tom was an addict—or an ex
drug addict. But they, as they were, had given her the impression that Tom
didn't care about being a guest in her house, that he'd violated her
hospitality. And because of them, she'd let Tom go—no—encouraged Tom to go, out
there, somewhere, with no protection.
For all she
knew, he was already dead. His own father was looking for him for the dragon
triad. And she had kicked him out. Because of these things.
Anger boiled
through her, together with a not unreasonable fear that there was no way out of
this predicament and that she was going to end up as dead as that corpse they
had rolled about in the parking lot of the Athens a few hours ago.
She heard a
scream tear through her throat, and it seemed to her that the more advanced
beetle—the one coming from the kitchen—stopped.
It seemed to
Kyrie too that—though there was nothing on the beetle, anywhere, that could
properly be called an expression—the beetle looked like it had just realized it
was in deep trouble. Perhaps it was the thing's vague, confused attempt at
skittering backwards.
And then Kyrie
jumped forward. There was no use at all attacking the pincers, so she vaulted
over them. She used to be quite good at gymnastics in middle school. In fact,
for a brief period of time, she'd thought that she was going to be a gymnast.
But the foster family she was with didn't have the time to drive her to the
extra practices.
Yet, just
enough skill remained to allow her to vault over the pincers, and towards the
monstrous head.
Blindly, more
by instinct than anything else, Kyrie stabbed at the thing where the head
carapace met the body carapace. She stabbed the umbrella down hard and was
rewarded with a satisfyingly squishy sound, a spray of liquid upwards, and a
shriek that was part steam release and part the sound of a car's valves going
seriously wrong.
From the other
beetle came a sound of high distress, and it advanced. But its companion's
body—dead?—blocked its way, and Kyrie jumped down from the carapace, on the
other side, ran through her kitchen and out through her ruined back porch.
In her tiny
backyard garden, she realized in her human form, she could never get enough of
a running standard to jump over the six foot fence.
But, as a
panther. . .
She had never
cavalierly shifted. Certainly never during the day. And yet, she was so full of
fear and anger, of adrenalin and the need to fight or fly, that it seemed the
easiest thing in the world. She willed herself into cat form and, suddenly, a black
panther was rearing and taking a jumping leap at the fence. She cleared it with
some space, just before she heard a sound behind her. It was an odd hissing,
and a sound like. . . wings?
She had an odd
feeling that these beetles could fly.
* * *
"Will you
talk?" Crest Dragon asked.
Tom shook his
head. There had been more. . . beatings. At least he supposed they would call
it beatings. More accurate would be brutalizing to within an inch of his life.
Tom knew he
would heal. The problem was that he suspected so did his captors. And that they
were being more unrestrained with him than they would be with practically
anyone else.
His defense
right now was to look more confused than he felt, to look more tired than he
felt. He shook his head and mumbled something that he hoped passed for a
creditable wish to speak.
Two Dragons
said something in their language that, for all it was unintelligible, was still
clearly scathing. Crest Dragon answered curtly and sharply. They both turned to
glare at Other Dragon who shook his head, said something, then shrugged. He
disappeared into a corner, where they seemed to have piled up some bags and
other effects.
He returned,
moments later, with. . . Tom blinked, unable to believe his eyes. But Other
Dragon was definitely holding a syringe. A huge syringe. Tom frowned at it. It
looked just a little smaller than those sold as basters at stores. He'd once
been tempted to buy one for about two minutes until he realized the amount of
meat he could actually afford didn't ever require external basting, much less
internal.
Now he blinked
at the syringe, and looked up at Other Dragon in some puzzlement. What the hell
was that? What did they think they were doing? What did they want to put into
him? Truth serum? Or marinade? Did they think he would be all the better for a
touch of garlic and a bit of vinegar?
Other Dragon
seemed rather puzzled as to what he should be doing, too. Twice he turned
around to ask something in Chinese. Twice he was told off sharply—or so it
seemed—also in Chinese.
At last he
sighed, and walked up to Tom, and held the hypodermic in front of Tom's face
and shouted something that sounded like a Samurai challenge. While Tom blinked,
puzzled, Crest Dragon said something from the back. Other Dragon turned. Then
looked again at Tom and smiled. A very odd smile, Tom thought. A smile of
enticement, of offer that would have made much more sense—as starving as Tom
felt—if he'd been holding a rare steak. He leaned in close to Tom and said,
"You want this, right?"
The syringe
was filled with a colorless liquid. It could be. . . anything. And Tom
realized, suddenly, with something like a shock, that he very much did not want
it, whatever it was. Perhaps it was the Pearl of Heaven that had eased his way
up from the pit he'd dug himself into, but he could remember the days he was
using. It had seemed so simple then. It had seemed to him that he was sparing
himself pain and thought, both.
A life that
was too bizarre, too complex—his feelings for the home he'd lost, his wandering
existence, and the dragon he could become suddenly, unexpectedly— had been
suddenly simplified. He'd sometimes, before the drugs, forgotten what he'd done
as a dragon, but when he'd started using, it had made it that much easier. He
could either forget or pretend it was all part of a bad trip.
He didn't have
to believe—in the unblinking light of day, he didn't have to believe that he
had no control over the beast. And he didn't have to see that the beast
existed. He didn't even have to be believe himself alone—expelled from the only
home he had ever known.
No—the drugs
had blurred his mind just enough to make him be able to pretend it was all a
dream—just a dream. That he was still sixteen and still at home. That he was
not a shape-shifter, a dangerous, uncertain creature.
He'd thought
he was fine. He'd . . . He frowned at the syringe, thinking. He'd thought he
was doing great. He'd anaesthetized himself into being able to bear his life.
Until he'd
woken up choking on his own vomit once too many times. Until he'd woken up, in
the morning, naked, under some underpass or beside some shelter, wondering what
the dragon had done in the night and why.
And then there
were the dreams. Lying asleep in daytime and dreaming of. . . eating someone.
Of chasing people down. Of. . . Oh, he was almost sure none of it had ever
happened. There would have been talk. News reports. Someone would have noticed.
But the dreams were there, and the dreams made him fear one day all control
would slip from the dragon and the dreams would become true.
And then there
had been the Pearl of Heaven. And the job. And. . . and Kyrie. Who was he to
judge her if she too chose to anesthesize herself, sometimes? She had helped
him when he needed it most. He wanted to remember that. And he wanted to
control the dragon. He wanted to know what he did, to know it was true. He
didn't want the slippery dream, again.
"I want
to own my own mind," he said, his raspy, low voice startling him. It
seemed to come from so far away. And the words were odd, too, formal, stilted,
not like himself at all. "I don't want drugs," he said in still-lower
voice.
Crest Dragon
said something that had the sound of profanity to it. And Other Dragon looked
back confused. It was left to Two Dragons, the brash, perhaps younger of them,
to step forward and say, "Well, then, if you don't talk, we'll have to
give you some."
Which, of
course, made perfect sense. But Tom couldn't talk. Because if he talked they
would kill him. But if he didn't talk, they would give him this stuff. Which,
of course, would make him talk.
He—who just
the night before had been looking desperately for a drug dealer—realized if he
were going to die, he would rather die sober. He'd rather know whatever there
was to know, experience what there was to experience, with a clean perception.
But then. . .
But then, and
there it was. If he told them they would kill him for sure. Possibly in a
painful way. If they gave him the drug. . . Perhaps they would leave him alone
while they went to verify he'd told them the truth. Okay, it was unlikely they
would leave him alone. But with these three geniuses it was possible. At any
rate, it would take them longer. . . They would have to get the words from
him—and Tom had no idea what this drug was, or if it would make him talk
quickly. Or at all. And then they would have to verify.
That would
take longer than if he told them the truth up front and they rushed off right
away to verify it. Or called someone in Goldport And that meant there would be
more time for something to happen. Something. . .
Two Dragons
was waiting. He had his hands on either side of his skinny waist, a dragon
tattoo shone on the back of each hand. "Well," he said, with a kind
of petulant sneer. "Are you going to tell us where the Pearl of Heaven
is?"
Tom grinned.
It made his lips hurt, as cracked as they were and with dried blood caked on
them, but he grinned anyway. He wished he could gather enough saliva to spit at
them, but of course, he couldn't. "Your grandfather's won-ton," he
said.
And, as they
held him down; as the needle went into his arm, he relished the look of
surprise—and confusion—on Two Dragon's face.
* * *
Paws on
concrete. The sidewalk—an alien word from her human mind, forced, unwilling, on
the panther, intruded. Sidewalk. People. People walking.
There were
screams. Mothers and terrified babies, hurling to the side of the street. A man
standing in front of her, gun cocked.
Kyrie's human
mind pulled the panther sideways. The bullet whistled by. The panther crouched
to leap. Kyrie tugged at the panther.
Trapped. The
panther's brain rushed to every nook and cranny, to every possible hiding
place, but she was trapped. There was nowhere she could go. No safety. No
jungle.
Smell of
trees, of green. Smell of moss and undergrowth.
Like a
passenger in a lurching car, Kyrie blinked, becoming aware that she was veering
off the street and towards the triangular block of land where the castle sat,
with its own little forest around it, surrounded by high black metal fence,
full of Victorian scrolls and rusting in spots.
Leaf mold on
paws. Trees rustling overhead. The pleasing sound of things scurrying along the
ground, in the soft vegetation. Screams behind her. People pointing through the
fence, screaming, yelling.
The panther
ran and Kyrie guided it as she could. Through the undergrowth, to the thick
clumps of vegetation. She told the panther they were being hunted. That
something bigger and meaner was after them. The panther crouched on its belly
and crept, belly to the grass, close to the ground, forward, forward, forward,
till it found itself all but hidden under the trees.
Kyrie had lost
sense of time. She didn't know how long she had been in the panther's mind—a
small foci of humanity, of sanity, within the beast. But she knew it had been
long, because she could feel pain along the panther's muscles, from holding the
position too long.
The panther
wanted to climb a tree, to watch from above. It did not like this cowering,
this submissive posture. And Kyrie couldn't hear any noise nearby. What
remained rational and sane of herself withing the panther thought that the
people had stayed at the fence, talking, whispering.
They would
call the police. Or the zoo. Or animal control. They wouldn't risk their lives
on this. No. The panther wanted to climb the nearest tree and Kyrie let it,
jumping so quickly up the trunk that Kyrie didn't detect any raised voices, any
excitement at seeing her.
The tree was
thick, and heavily covered in leaves. And it was around a corner from the front
of the house. This way she would see the animal control officers approaching
with their darts. Perhaps she could escape.
She wasn't so
stupid that she couldn't see the possibility for discovery, for being caught.
But she wouldn't think of it. She wouldn't think past trying to escape. She
thought, as fast as she could, as hard as she could. And she saw no way out of
this. Unless animal control officers missed her. She didn't imagine this
happening. She could picture them beating the garden, tree by tree, bush by
bush, looking for her.
The other
option, of course, was for her to shift. She blinked. It hadn't occurred to her
before. Of course, it would be humiliating. But being found naked in a public
garden had to be better than to be tranquilized as a panther, and become a
woman under sedation. She didn't know if that would happen—but it could.
But. . . But
if she were found naked in a public garden, and if her house were examined,
wouldn't she be committed? Or in some other way confined? Who would believe she
was okay when she'd left her house torn to bits behind and was now here in this
garden? At the very least they'd think she was on drugs. It wouldn't do at all.
* * *
Edward Ormson
waited for only one moment, in the shabby entrance of the Chinese restaurant.
He'd expected the oriental decor, and it was there, in a round, white paper
lantern concealing the light fixture on the ceiling, on the huge fan pinned to
the wall behind the cash register, in the dragon statue carved of some
improbable green stone or molded from glow-in-the-dark plastic, that stood
glowering on the counter by the register.
But the man
behind the register, though unmistakably Chinese, wore a grubby flannel shirt
and jeans and managed to look as much like the western red necks around him as
he could. And the TV hanging from the wall was on and blaring, showing the
scene of a tractor pull.
He was
drinking a beer, straight from the can. To the other side of the elaborate
oriental fan hung a calendar with a pinup standing in front of a huge truck.
Something about this—the irreverence, the western intrusions, stopped Edward
from his course, which was to ask about the Great Sky Dragon.
Perhaps the
creature had only left him in the parking lot because it was convenient. But
the name. . . Three Luck Dragon, while not unusual, seemed to speak of dragons,
and dragons. . .
He realized
he'd been standing there for a while in silence, and probably looking very
worried, as the man behind the counter swivelled around to look at him.
"How may
I help you?" he asked.
Edward took a
deep breath. Come on, worse came to worst, what would happen? He could always
tell the man that Great Sky Dragon was just the name of another restaurant,
couldn't he? That he'd got confused?
And besides,
if he didn't ask, what would happen? It wasn't as if Edward was going to figure
out where Tom was, much less manage to convince Tom on his own. And he had a
sneaky suspicion that if he tried to just forget the whole thing and go back to
New York, the creature would just come and pluck him out of his office again.
Or his house. There was only so much plate glass he was willing to replace.
All this was
thought quickly, while the man's dark eyes stared at him betraying just a
slight edge of discomfort, as if he were waiting, madly, to go back to his
tractor pull on TV.
"I was
looking for the Great Sky Dragon," Edward said.
"What?"
the man asked, eyes widening.
"I was
looking. . . I wondered if you could tell me where to find the Great Sky
Dragon," Edward said.
There was a
silence, as the man looked at him from head to toe, as if something about
Edward's appearance could have reassured him that this was something to do.
Slowly, the cashier's hand reached for a remote near the cash register, turned
the TV off.
Then he came
out from behind the counter and said, "You come with me."
Edward took a
deep breath. What had he got into? And what would it mean? Had he just managed
to startle a member of the dragon triad who had no idea who he was or what he
was doing? And if he had, would he presently be killed by people who didn't
even ask him why he wanted the Great Sky Dragon, or what he wanted of him.
He was led all
the way, past a bustling kitchen and, past a set of swinging doors, into a
grubby corridor stacked high with boxes.
At the very
back of the corridor, a door opened, and the cashier reached in, turned on the
light by tugging on a pull chain on the ceiling.
Light flooded
a room scarcely larger than a cubicle. There was a foldable table, open. An
immaculate white cloth covered it. And on the cloth was a mound of peas—some
shelled, some still in their pods. On the floor was a bucket, filled with empty
pods. Behind the table was a plastic orange chair.
"Wait
here," the cashier said. "Just wait."
Hesitantly,
afraid of what this might mean, Edward went in. The cashier closed the door
after him. Edward could hear the lock clicking home.
* * *
"I'll go
in and look for it," a voice Kyrie knew said.
"But I
wouldn't be too alarmed. It was probably just a large cat. I very much doubt it
was a panther. I haven't heard of any panthers having been lost by the zoo. And
panthers are not common here, you know," Rafiel Trall's voice went on, as
usual radiating self-confidence.
A babble of
voices answered him and, from the panther's perch atop the branch, Kyrie
gathered that the crowd out there were insulted that Rafiel thought they could
confuse a large house cat with a panther.
And yet, the
way Rafiel talked, that certainty that exuded from his words, was so convincing
that she could also hear the resistence running away. She could almost hear
people starting to doubt themselves.
"I'll go
in," Rafiel said. "With officer Bob. Just to be on the safe side,
please no one follow us. We'll do a thorough search. If we find it warranted,
we will then call animal control. Right now all this commotion is
premature."
The panther
heard them come into the garden. Wondered how long it would take them to find
it. Them. Officer Bob. Kyrie wondered what officer Bob would think if he found
her.
But Officer
Bob was looking one way, and Rafiel was looking the other. She could hear them
separate. She could hear officer Bob walking away. She could hear . . . She
could hear Rafiel following her trail here.
He followed it
so exactly that she started wondering if he was following the trail of broken
branches and footprints she'd doubtless left, or following her scent. She
remembered he seemed to be able to smell other shifters. To smell them out
better than she did, at any rate.
He came all
the way to the bottom of the tree, looked up at her, blinked, then smiled.
"Kyrie," he said.
His voice was
perfectly normal and human, and yet there seemed to be something to it, some
kind of harmonics that made the hair stand up at the back of her neck. Not
fright. She wasn't scared of him. It was something else.
For just a
moment, there was the feeling that the panther might jump down from the tree
and roll on him and. . . No.
Kyrie tried to
control the panther and had a feeling that the world flickered. And realized
she was a naked human, sitting on a branch of a tree in a most unusual
position. A position that gave a very interesting view to the man below.
She scrambled
to sit on the branch in the human way, and fought a desire to cover herself.
She could either hold on to the branch or she could cover herself. Between
modesty and a fall, modesty could not win.
"Yes,"
she said. Heat climbed up to her cheeks and she had a feeling she was blushing
from her belly button to her hair roots.
Yes, she was
sure she was blushing from the way Rafiel smiled—a broad smile that exuded
confidence and amusement.
But when he
spoke, it was still in a whisper. "There is this," he said, taking it
from his pants pocket and handing it up. "I stopped for just a moment when
I heard the report on the radio. I told Bob I needed to use the restroom and
let him radio we were taking care of it, while I went to a shop and bought
this. I'm sorry if it looks horrible, my concern was that it fit in my
pocket."
He handed up
what looked like a little wrinkled square of fabric. When Kyrie caught it, she
realized it was very light silk, the type that is designed to look wrinkled,
and that there was a lot more material than seemed to be.
Shaken out,
the fabric revealed a sheath dress. Kyrie decided it was safer to climb down
from the tree, first, and then put it on. With the dress draped over her
shoulders, she climbed down carefully, until, on the ground, she slipped the
dress on. Of course, she was still barefoot, but on a warm day, in Colorado, in
one of the old residential neighborhoods of Goldport, that was not exactly
unheard of.
"Go out
at the back," Rafiel said. "From what I could see when we approached,
the part where the garden borders on the alley doesn't have any bystanders. If
anyone sees you, tell them some thing about having come in to look for the
panther, but the police ordering you out. And now, go." As she started t
for the path, he pushed her towards another path, the other way. "No,
no," he said. "That way. If you go this way you will run into Bob and
Bob is likely to have his gun out and be on edge. I don't want you shot. Go.
I'll meet you at your house as soon as I can."
Her house.
With the bugs. Kyrie shivered. But there was nothing for it. She had to go
somewhere. At the very least, she had to go somewhere to get shoes.
* * *
Edward didn't
wait long. He didn't sit down. He didn't dare sit down. There was only one
chair, and it seemed to be in front of the table, with the peas on it.
Instead, he
stood, uncertainly, till the door opened, and a man came in. He looked. . .
Well, he looked like an average middle aged man, of Oriental origin, in Colorado.
He wore t-shirt and jeans, had a sprinkling of silver in his black hair, and,
in fact, looked so mundane, that Edward was sure there must be a mistake.
He opened his
mouth to say so. And stopped. There was something in the man's eyes—the man's
serious, dark eyes. They looked like he was doing something very difficult.
Something that might be life or death.
"Mr.
Ormson?" he said.
Edward Ormson
nodded, and his eyes widened. Was this the human form of the dragon he had seen
yesterday? He seemed so small, so. . . normal.
But in
Edward's mind was the image of that last night before he'd. . . asked Tom to
leave. He remembered looking out of the window of his bedroom, next to Tom's
room and seeing a green and gold dragon against the sky—majestic against the
sky. He remembered seeing the dragon go into Tom's bedroom. And he remembered.
. . He remembered running to see it, and finding only Tom, putting on his
bathrobe. He remembered the shock.
These
creatures could look like normal people. Perhaps. . .
"My name
is Lung," the man said, and then, as though catching something in Edward's
expression, he smiled. "And no, I am not him. But you could say I. . . ah.
. . know him." Lung stepped fully in the room, and seemed to about to sit
down in the plastic chair, when he realized that Edward didn't have anywhere to
sit.
"They
left you standing?" he asked. "I'm so sorry." He opened the door
and spoke sharply to someone back there, then stepped fully in. Moments later,
a young man, with long lanky hair almost covering his eyes came in and set down
a chair. Another one, swiftly, ducked in the wake of the first, to remove the
cloth and all the peas in it. As soon as he'd withdrawn the first one showed up
again, to spread another, clean, tablecloth on the table. And after that, yet
another one set a tray with a teapot and two tea cups on the table.
Lung gestured
towards the—blue, plastic—chair they'd brought in. "Please sit," he
said. "Might as well be comfortable, as we speak."
Edward sat on
the chair, and faced Lung across the table. "Tea?" Lung said, and
without waiting for an answer, filled Edward's cup, then his own. "Now. .
. may I ask why you were looking for. . . Him? His name is not normally spoken
so. . . casually."
Edward took a
deep breath. "How do you know my name?" he asked.
Lung smiled,
again. He picked up his cup, holding it with two hands, as if his palms were
cold and had to be warmed on the hot porcelain. "He told us. He told us he
brought you to town. That you were to. . . convince your son to speak."
"Ah,"
Edward said. "I don't know where to find my son," he said, picking up
his cup and taking a hurried sip that scalded his tongue. "I haven't seen
Tom in. . ."
Lung shook his
head. "I don't question his judgements. I wouldn't do to do such," he
said. He looked at Edward and raised his eyebrows just a little. "He says
you have been. . . useful to us in the past, so you know a little of. . . his
ways. And of us. Do you not?"
Edward
inclined his head. More than simple acknowledgment, but less than a nod.
"I have defended. . . People connected to him, before. I know about. .
." He thought about a way to put it that wouldn't seem too open or too
odd. "About the shape-shifting," he said at last.
Lung inclined
his head in turn. "But do you know about the other. . . about his other
powers?"
Edward raised
his eyebrows, said nothing.
Lung smiled.
"Ah, I won't bore you with ancient Oriental legends."
"Given
what I've seen, what I've felt; given that I was brought here by. . .
the—"
"Him."
"Him, I
don't think I would dismiss it all as just a legend."
"Perhaps
not," Lung said. "And yet the legend is just a legend, and, I
suspect, as filled with imagination and wild embellishments. What we know is
somewhat different. But. . . He is not like us. That we know. Or rather, he is
like us, but old, impossibly old."
"How
old?"
Lung shrugged.
"Thousands of years. Before. . . civilization. From the time of legends.
Who knows?" He drank his tea and poured a new cup. "What we do know
is this—he has powers. Perhaps because he is old, or perhaps, simply, because
he was born with more powers than us. I wouldn't tell you which. But whatever
powers he has, it is said that he can feel things—sense them. Perhaps it's less
premonition than simply having been around a lot and seeing how things tend to
work out." He inclined his head and looked into his tea cup as though
reading the future in its surface. "If he thought you should be here, then
he has his reasons."
"But I
can't find my son. I haven't seen my son in years. I didn't even know if he was
alive. The—He said that I was responsible for my son, but surely you must see.
. . I haven't seen him in years."
Lung looked
up, gave Edward an analyzing glance, then nodded. "As is, I think we have
it all in hand. We know where your son is. We have. . . Some of our employees
have got him. In a nearby city. And they're confident he will eventually tell
them what he did with the object he stole. We don't know why he thought
it necessary to get you, nor why he thought you should be here. But he
is not someone whose judgements I'd dream of disputing."
A silence,
long and fraught, descended, while Edward tried to figure out what he had just
been told, in that convoluted way. "Are you telling me I have to stay here,
but you're not sure why?" he asked.
* * *
The back alley
wasn't empty, but it was nearly empty. At least compared to the crowd that
surrounded the castle garden in the front. Here at the back, there were only
half a dozen people looking in, staring at the lush, green garden, spying,
presumably, for movement and fur.
There were two
boys, a young girl, of maybe fifteen, wearing jeans, a t-shirt and a ponytail
and holding a skateboard under her arm. The other three people looked like
transients. Street people. Men, and probably past fifty, though there was no
way to tell for sure.
Kyrie, still
under cover of thick greenery, wondered at the strange minds of these people
who would come and surround a place where they'd seen what they thought was a
jungle animal disappear. What kind of idiots, she asked herself, wanted to face
a panther, while unarmed and empty handed? She might be a shape-shifter but at
least, she wasn't so strange as this.
They were all
roughly disposed on either side of a broad gate which seemed to have rusted
partly open.
Kyrie could,
of course, just walk out and tell them what Rafiel had suggested—that she had
felt a sudden and overwhelming desire to look for the panther herself. But she
would prefer to find some way past them without having to speak. Remembering a
scene from a Western, long ago, she looked at the ground and found a large
rock. Picking it up, she weighed it carefully in her hand. Then she pulled
back, and flung the rock across greenery, till it fell with a thud at the corner
of the property.
Noise like
that was bound to make them look. They wouldn't be human if they didn't. In
fact, they all turned and stared, and Kyrie took the opportunity to rush
forward and out of the enclosure.
They turned
back to look at her, when she was in the alley, but she thought none of them
would be sure he had seen her in the garden, and started walking away towards
the main road and home.
"Hey,
Miss," a voice said behind her.
Kyrie turned
around.
"Are you
the one who owns the castle?" One of the homeless men asked.
She shook her
head and his friend who stood by him elbowed him on the side. "The woman
who owns the castle is much older, Mike."
She didn't
stay to hear their argument and instead hurried, home as fast as she could.
Once out of the immediate vicinity of the castle, everything was normal and no
one seemed unduly alarmed by the idea of a panther on the loose. So Kyrie
assumed that Rafiel wouldn't have too much of a problem convincing them that it
had been a collective hallucination.
Her house
looked. . . well, wrecked, the front door open, crooked on its hinges, the door
handle and lock missing. Inside, the green powder was everywhere underfoot and,
in the hallway, where she had confronted the creature, there was something that
looked like sparkling greenish nut shells. Looking closer, she realized they
were probably fragments or the beetle—struck off when she'd stabbed it with the
umbrella?
The umbrella
was still there, leaning against the wall. But the beetles had vanished.
* * *
Lung nodded,
then shrugged at Edward Ormson's question. "I don't pretend to know why he
wants you here, though I'm sure he has his reasons. However, you don't need
to stress too much in search of your son. As I said, he is. . . We have him.
And he will talk."
A cold shiver
ran up Edward's back at those words. They had Tom? "What do you mean by
having him? Do you. . . are you keeping him prisoner?"
Lung seemed puzzled
by Edward's question—or perhaps by the disapproval that Edward had tried to
keep from his voice, but which was still obvious. "He stole from us,"
he said. "Some of our men have captured him. They will find out where he
put the Pearl of Heaven one way or another."
One way or
another. Edward found his hand trembling. And that was stupid. All these years,
he'd gone through without knowing if Tom was dead or alive, or how he was
doing. He hadn't worried at all about him. Why should the thought that he was
being held prisoner by a dragon triad disturb him so much? Why should he care?
Oh, he could
hear in the way Lung said that Tom would tell them the truth eventually that
they probably weren't being pleasant with him. He doubted they were treating
him very well. But in his mind, with no control from him, was the image of Tom
on that last night. Barefoot, in a robe.
Edward had
thought. . . well, truth be told he couldn't even be very sure what he'd
thought. He'd seen the triad dragons in action often enough. He knew what they
could do. He'd seen them kill humans. . . devour humans. He'd seen the
ruthlessness of the beasts. Seeing his son become a dragon, himself, he'd
thought. . .
He'd thought
it was an infection and that Tom had caught it. He'd thought his worthless,
juvenile delinquent of a son had now become a mindless beast, who would devour.
. .
His throat
closed, remembering what he'd thought then. He didn't know if it was true or
not. He assumed not, since Tom wasn't a member of the triad and lacked their
protection. If he'd been making his way across the country devouring people,
he'd have been discovered by now. He would have been killed by now. So Edward
was forced to admit that his son must have some form of self control. Well.
Clearly he had to have some form of self control if he'd not given in to
whatever persuasion they were using to make him talk.
He looked up
at Lung, who was staring at him, obviously baffled by his reactions. "What
are you doing to him?" he asked. In his mind, he saw Tom, that last night
he'd seen him. He saw Tom who looked far more tired and confused than he
normally was. He hadn't even attempted to fight it. He'd opened his hands palm
up to show he wasn't armed—as if he could be, having just shifted from a
dragon. He'd tried to talk, but he didn't make any sense. Something about comic
books.
These many
years later, Edward frowned, trying to figure out what comic books had to do
with the whole thing. Back then he'd found the whole nonsense talk even
scarier, as though Tom had lost what little rationality he had with his
transformation. And he'd got his gun from his home office desk and ordered Tom
out of the house.
Tom had gone,
too. And, somewhat to Edward's surprise, he hadn't made any effort to get back
in.
"I
thought you hadn't seen him for years?" Lung asked. "That you didn't
care what happened to him?"
"I don't.
Or at least. . ." But Edward had to admit that this last recollection he
had of Tom as a sixteen year old youth in a white robe, and looking quite lost
was an illusion. A sentimental illusion. It was no more real, no more a
representation of their relationship than the picture of Tom in the hospital,
two days old, with a funny hat on and his legs curled towards each.
It was a
pretty picture and one that, as a father, he should have cherished forever. But
Tom had been very far from living up to the picture of the ideal son. And in
the same way, at least five years had passed since Tom had been that boy of
sixteen, and even if Edward had done him an injustice then—had Edward done him
an injustice then?—the man he was now would have only the vaguest resemblance
to that boy.
Back then, Tom
hadn't known anything but his relatively sheltered existence. And though he'd
been popular and had the kind of friends who had got him in all kinds of
trouble, his friends were like him, privileged. Well taken care of.
Suddenly
Edward realized where his uneasiness was coming from about Tom and who Tom was,
and what he had assumed about Tom for so many years. "It's his girlfriend,
Kyrie," he said.
"Girlfriend?"
Lung asked.
"Yes. . .
or at least, I think she is. She said they were just co-workers, but there is
something more there. She seems to care for him. She was furious at me for. . .
I think she realized I was working for you, and she was furious at me."
"The
panther girl?" Lung asked.
"I'm
sorry?" Edward asked confused.
Lung smiled.
"The girl who was with him two nights ago. The one who shifts into a
panther."
"She. .
." Edward's mind was filled with the image of the attractive girl shifting,
shifting into something dark and feline. He could imagine it all too well.
There had been that kind of easy, gliding grace in her steps.
"Oh, you
didn't know. Yes, she is a shifter. But I never knew she was his
girlfriend."
"I just
thought. . ." Perhaps what had bound them was their ability to shift
shapes? But what would a dragon want with a panther? The images in Edward's
mind were very disturbing and he found himself embarrassed and blushing.
"There are other shifter shapes? Other than dragons?"
Lung smiled.
"Come, Mr. Ormson, you're not stupid. Your own legends talk about other
shifters. . . werewolves, isn't it? And were tigers too? And the legends of
other lands speak of many and different animals?"
Edward felt
his mouth dry. "This has been going on all along? People shift, like
that." He made a vague gesture supposed to show the ease of the shifting.
"And they. . ." he waved his hand.
"We don't
know for sure," Lung said, seriously. "He who brought you here says
there have always been shifters, and as you know he's not the sort of. . .
person, whose word one should doubt. He is also, not, unfortunately, someone
one can question or badger for details. He says that there have always been
shifters. But that shifters are increasing."
"Increasing?"
"There
are more of them."
"How? Is
it. . . a bite?" He'd thought that back then. He remembered being afraid
that Tom would bite him. He remembered having gone through the entire house,
trying to think whether he'd touched anything Tom had touched. Tom's clothes,
his tooth brush had all been consigned to the trash at his order.
The man
laughed. "No, Mister Ormson. It is. . . genetic," he pronounced the
word as if to display his knowledge of such modern concepts.
Edward felt
shocked, not because the man knew the word—he spoke without an accent—but at
the idea that such a thing could be genetic. "But there is no one in our
family. . ."
Lung shrugged.
"In our families, which intermarry with each other quite often, even then
only one child in four, if that many, will have the characteristic. In other
families, in the world at large, who knows? It could be not one in twenty
generations." He frowned. "I have often wondered if it is perhaps
that people travel more now, and meet people from other lands, carrying the
same rare gene. And if that's the only reason there's been an increase.
Although. . ." He frowned. "I don't know that this is entirely
natural—or explainable by simple laws of science. We seem to heal quicker than
normal people and unless we are killed in certain, particular ways—traditional
ways like beheading, or burning, or destroying the heart, or with silver—we're
nearly impossible to kill. And we seem to live. . . longer than other people. I
don't know how long. Himself is the oldest among our kind. I've never enquired
as to those of other kinds and other lands."
Edward
swallowed. That gun, that night, wouldn't have killed Tom anyway. Good thing he
hadn't fired it. It would be horrible to have to live with Tom after firing on
him.
But beyond
that, something else was troubling him. The thought that Tom had received that
curse from him—and presumably from his mother—and yet, he'd thrown him out. And
now. . . "What will you do to Tom, if he tells you where the Pearl
is?" he asked.
"He will
no longer be. . . a problem," Lung said.
Edward nodded
feeling relief. So, they'd let Tom go. "Pardon me if I'm asking too much.
You don't need to tell me. I know something of the working of the triads in
this country and I know the Dragon Triad is not that very much different, but I
must ask. . . Why the Pearl? You're the only ones who have it, right? It was
shown to me, years ago, in my apartment, and I remember thinking it was very
pretty. But I thought it was a symbol."
Lung smiled, a
smile that seemed to have too many teeth and to slide, unpleasantly, over his
lips. "It is not a symbol," he said. "Our legend has it that the
Pearl was sent down with the Great—With him. The Emperor of Heaven, himself, is
supposed to have given it to him."
"Why?"
Edward said, asking why the man believed his legend when he had dismissed all
others.
But Lung
clearly misunderstood him. He shrugged. "Because dragons are by nature
bestial, competitive and brutal. The beast in us overrides the man. We could
never band together, much less work together without the Pearl of Heaven. We
must find it soon," he said. "Or we will destroy ourselves and each
other."
It wasn't
until Edward had left and stood outside the restaurant, that it occurred to him
that saying Tom would no longer be a problem was not a reassurance. On the
contrary. Unless it were a reassurance that Tom would soon be dead.
Stopped, in
the parking lot, he felt as if ice water were running through his veins. He
took a deep, sudden breath and almost went back inside. Almost.
But then he
thought it would only get him killed. How could he go up against almost
immortal shape-shifters? How could he? He would only get killed. And for Tom?
He needed
help. He needed help now.
* * *
Kyrie locked
her front door as best she could, which in this case involved sliding the sofa
in front of it, because the beetle had pulled the handle and the lock out of
it.
If Kyrie
survived all this mess, she would be so far in debt for house repairs that she
would be arrested. Or die of trying to pay for it. Or something.
The back door
was impossible to close, having splintered in a million pieces. She should have
got a solid wood door, after all. And on that thought she got out the phone
book, called her bank for her balance which ran to the middle hundreds. Then
she went back to the phone and started calling handymen, finding it somewhat
difficult to reconcile her urgency in getting the doors fixed with the price
any craftsman would accept for this.
She had just
discovered an elderly handyman, who only worked two days a week, who could do
both glazing and carpentry, and who thought her situation desperate enough to
warrant immediate response when Rafiel came in through the ruined back door.
"Dragons?"
he asked her, as she was hanging up the phone.
"No,"
she said. "As it turned out beetles. Huge, green and blue and iridescent.
If you go to the Natural History Museum in Denver, you'll find that the much
tinier versions of the creatures are used as jewelry by some rain forest tribe
or other."
He grabbed
blindly for one of the overturned chairs, pulled it upright and collapsed on
it, looking at her. She'd put the kitchen table and the other chair up, and
that was where she'd been making her calls. "I've just got hold of a
handyman, who will be coming by to fix my porch and my two doors. I gave him
the dimensions and he says he has some surplus, older doors he removed from a
house and I can have them for nothing. Which only means I'll be broke, not in
the red. At this rate I do not dare miss work for six months, but I will
probably survive the experience."
But Rafiel
only looked at her, the golden eyes dull and uncomprehending.
"Beetles?" he said.
She nodded.
"Very much so."
"So it
wasn't a hallucination in the back of the Athens?" he said.
"Did you
find a corpse?" Kyrie asked.
He shook his
head slowly. "No. But I found. . . I could smell blood. I didn't want to
shift to verify it, but I could smell blood. And death. Fresher than. . . two
nights ago. So I'm sure you were telling the truth. Only till this moment I had
hoped that you had seen it wrong and that it was actually dragons. Do you mean
to tell me we have dragons and beetles?"
"It's
worse than that. The green powder? I think it has hallucinogenic properties,
that it's supposed to make the victim unable to fight. I think that is why I
managed to fight them back. I tied a towel over my mouth."
"Ingenious,"
he said. "I could go back to the Athens tonight in. . . lion form and try
to follow the trail of the blood. It's probably fresh enough and because there
was no body, I wasn't forced to call out the rest of the force, so the scent
won't be diluted." He paused for a moment. "I would have done it
then, but I was afraid it would bring too much attention."
He nodded, as
if satisfying himself of something. "Then as we were heading for the
station, there was the report of a panther. Fortunately it turned out to be a
sort of mass hallucination." He cleared his throat. "As you know,
these are quite common. Seeing black panthers, I mean. There's whole counties
in England afflicted by it."
He looked at
her, and reached for her hand, where it rested on the table. "How did you
escape them?"
For a moment,
for just a moment, Kyrie had a feeling of misgiving. Was it that Rafiel wanted
to know how she'd escaped so that he could warn the beetles? But no. The
beetles already knew how she had escaped. He wanted to know. It made sense.
"I
stabbed one with my umbrella," she nodded towards the umbrella resting a
few feet away against the wall in the hallway. "Between the head and back
carapaces. And it was immobilized. Which allowed me to jump over it and
escape."
"So, the
shift to panther was. . ."
"I
thought its mate would chase me."
"It
probably would have, except for its being daylight and a busy area." He
sighed. "I don't like to think creatures like that have such control. They
are shifters, they must be. But what kind of insane nature or magic or
evolution could have caused such a thing as shifter beetles?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "Whatever it was, it created dragons. Which brings me to
Tom."
"Ormson?
Must you?" Rafiel looked pained and vaguely put out, as if she were
insisting on speaking about a distasteful subject.
"Tom
Ormson," she said. "I have reason to believe I did him an injustice.
If that powder from the beetles causes hallucinations, I think that might have
been all he was high on. On top of that, there is his father."
"Ormson
has a father?" Rafiel asked.
"Till
this moment you assumed he reproduced by fission?"
"No, I
mean he has a father around here, a father who is in some way involved in his
life?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "I don't think he is. Involved in Tom's life, I mean. I think he
came from New York on purpose to find Tom. I think at the request of the
Triad."
Rafiel's
eyebrows rose.
"I think
he's a lawyer of some sort," she said. "I. . . vaguely remember Tom
telling me that. And I think he is involved with the triads in some way. Well,
with the shifter dragon triad, most of all."
"This
family just keeps getting better and better," Rafiel said. "I suppose
I'll look up the elder Mr. Ormson's background. And his name is?"
"His
given name? Edward."
Rafiel nodded.
"I'll check him out."
"Wait,"
Kyrie said. She didn't know she was going to say it, till it came flying out of
her mouth. "Wait. I need to ask you a favor. Please. Would you. . . Would
you check on Tom?"
"Check
on. . .?"
"I think
he's staying with his friend, Keith, who lives in the same building, third
floor. Because he left with Keith. Keith would at least know where he was
going."
"But why
do you want me to check on him? Isn't he a grownup and able to look after
himself?"
Kyrie frowned.
She had a sense of deep uneasiness and was quite well aware that a lot of it
might be due to her guilt in having misjudged him over the drug stuff. "I.
. ." She waved at her house and the destruction. "Until today I would
have said I was able to look after myself, too, but it is not that easy, as you
see. And then he had the triad looking for him too. And apparently his father,
working for them." She took a deep breath. "Last night he missed work
completely. I'd like to know he's okay."
She stood up.
She had some vague idea that the gesture would encourage Rafiel to go. She
didn't want to be so rude as to ask him to leave, not when she was asking him
for a favor. But the handyman should be here any minute. And as soon as she had
locking doors—with a few extra locks—she was going to have to shower and go
work. On virtually no sleep.
Rafiel got up
too and she was optimistic that he would leave now. But he was still holding
the hand he covered with his own when they sat at the table. And now he leaned
forward and said, "You don't need to go it alone."
And before she
knew what he was doing, he'd covered her lips with his and was pulling her to
him.
She'd never
been kissed, not even in highschool. Any boy smart enough to be interested in
her was, presumably, smart enough to realize this was not exactly a safe course
of action. Having her lips covered by his, his hands moving to her shoulders
was novel enough to stop her from reacting immediately.
His hands were
warm on her shoulders, and his body felt warm and firm next to hers. And his
tongue was trying to push between her lips.
She put her
hands on his shoulders and pushed him back. "I'm sorry," she said.
"I'm not. . . I'm not prepared. I don't think. . . Let us get through this
first, and figure out what it's all about?"
He started to
open his mouth, as if to answer, but at that moment a white-haired man, in
impeccable work pants and t-shirt showed at the kitchen door. "Miss Smith?
I'm Harold Keener. Ready to start work."
"Well,"
Rafiel said, looking perfectly composed as if just seconds before he hadn't
been attempting to shove his tongue into her mouth. "I'll be going then,
and check on Ormson."
Was it Kyrie's
imagination, or had he pronounced Tom's family name with particular venom?
And what had
Rafiel thought he was doing, she wondered, as she walked the handyman back to
the porch to discuss the double glazed versus single glazed options and costs.
Was he so used to any girl he came onto melting with pleasure that he didn't
even bother to check for some signs of interest before jumping the gun? Or had she
been giving signs of interest? She doubted that very much, as she wasn't even
sure what the signs were.
On the other
hand perhaps he just thought with both of them shifting to feline forms, they
were perfect for each other? Was this all about creating a litter of kittens?
Or was he trying to distract her from something in the conversation? Had he
said anything he didn't want her to remember.
* * *
Edward Ormson
had left the Three Luck Dragon feeling less assured of himself than he was used
to feeling. Something in the conversation—perhaps the way these strangers spoke
casually of holding Tom prisoner, of interrogating Tom, made Edward feel
inadequate and ashamed of himself.
These were not
feelings he normally entertained about himself, and he didn't feel right about
entertaining them now.
He told
himself that Tom had been a difficult child, a delinquent adolescent. But the
words of Lung echoed in his mind, telling him that people who shifted into
dragons had problems of that sort. That the beast often overruled the human.
And if Tom had been born that way, if it was blind genetic accident, then it
wouldn't be his fault, would it? He'd been difficult, but then he couldn't have
been otherwise. Would parents who were more interested in him and less interested
in -- what? His career, himself, Tom's mother's devotion to medicine? All of
those?—have done better for him? Could anything have prevented getting to this
point where a criminal organization composed of shape-shifters was intending to
eliminate Edward's son? And Edward could do nothing about it? Except perhaps
help them?
The wrongness
of it, the wrongness of his having worked for the group that was intending to
kill his son, made bitter bile rise to his throat. But why should he care?
Where did all this anguish come from? Hadn't he washed his hands of the boy
five years ago?
Five years
ago. Damn, the boy had only been sixteen. And Edward had ordered him out of the
house. At gun point.
Edward had
been walking along the road leading towards town. Not a pretty road—a place of
warehouses and dilapidated motels— and it seemed to be making him things he'd
never thought before. This was all wrong, these unexpected feelings, the sudden
guilt over Tom. It was all very wrong. He'd been fine with this for five years.
Why should it torment him now?
He was tired.
That was all. He was very tired. He hadn't slept at all the night before, and
now it was afternoon. He'd hail the first cab that came by. He would ask to be
taken to the best hotel in town. He would go to sleep. When he woke up, he
would feel much better about this. He would realize that Tom had made his own
bed and now should damn well lie in it.
His briefcase
was heavy, pulling down on his arm. And no cab came by. Heck, no car came by.
He walked on, into the Colorado night.
He should have
rented a car, only he didn't think it would take him this long to. . . To what?
Make Tom give back whatever he had stolen, like a naughty boy caught with
another kid's lunch box?
What did he
know of Tom now, really? He would be twenty one. How he had lived the last five
years was beyond his father's knowledge and probably beyond his father's
understanding. Who was he, this creature he'd seen growing up till the age of
sixteen, and then let go and not seen again?
Tom worked
nights in a diner, he could shift shapes into a dragon. And he had the
affection—or at least the interest—of that exotic beauty who did not look like
the type to be easily rolled by some patter. And Ormson should know that, he
thought, with a rueful grin. I tried.
He'd walked a
few blocks and was near an intersection when, out of the corner of his eye, he
caught the yellow glimmer of a taxi.
Waving
frantically, he got the cabby's attention, and moments later was sitting on the
back seat of an air-conditioned taxi heading downtown.
"Downtown?"
he said. "Really."
"Oh,
yes," the cabby said. "Lace and Spurs is the best hotel in
town."
Edward leaned
back against the cool upholstery and hoped they had room. He just needed to
sleep. Just. . . sleep. And then all would be well.
* * *
"Kyrie,"
Tom called, and the sound of her name woke him from a nightmare of half-defined
shapes and half formed thoughts in which he'd been, seemingly stumbling without
direction.
He didn't know
what they had given him. He suspected it was supposed to be some form of truth
serum. At least they had expected him to answer questions while under.
He suspected
he hadn't. Part of it was because he had the feeling that he'd been touring
random recesses of his mind which, for some reason, featured not only an up
close and personal view of Kyrie's bared breast, but also repeated reruns of
Keith's conversation about his problems at college.
And part of it
was because, as he became aware of who he was, where he was and what was
happening around him, he heard the three. . . Oh, he must not call them the
three stooges, not even mentally. The way he was feeling, it might come flying
out of his mouth next thing, and, who knew, they might actually understand the
reference. No. He heard the three geniuses arguing loudly in what he presumed
was their native tongue. It didn't sound like an argument about which one would
go for the Pearl and which one would wait until the order came to cut Tom's
throat. . . or however they intended to dispatch him.
With a final
scream, Two Dragons ran out the door. The other two shrugged, went to the
corner, and came back with sandwiches and drinks.
The smell of food
made Tom hungrier than ever. If it weren't for the fact that he was using all
his concentration to keep himself from turning into a dragon, he might very
well have broken down and told them where to find the Pearl.
* * *
The room was
acceptable, though it was close to downtown and, from his fifth floor window,
Edward had a view of the area where Tom worked.
Standing
there, looking out the window, he wondered if Tom had lived in one of those
rectilineal streets that radiated from Fairfax avenue and which were lined with
tiny houses and apartment buildings. Probably, since Edward very much doubted
that waiting at tables at night in a diner was a job that paid enough for a
car. And then he realized he'd thought of Tom in the past tense.
Angry with
himself, he took a shower, put his underwear back on and got in bed. He was
asleep before his head touched the pillow.
And he was
fully awake, staring at the ceiling a few minutes later, while thoughts that
shouldn't be in his head insisted on running through it. Thoughts such
as—shouldn't Tom's father do something to save him? No matter how unworthy the
boy was—and really, what had he ever done while living in his father's house
that wasn't done by kids of his age and set? He'd gone joyriding. He'd been
caught with pot, once. And he'd committed minor acts of vandalism. He'd been
naked in public twice, both in his last week at home—after he'd started
shifting. Nothing that other kids he ran with didn't do. Kids who were now, for
the most part at Yale and Harvard.
But Edward had
kicked Tom out of the house. And never even stirred himself to find out what
exactly the boy was doing. Or even if he was alive.
"He was a
shape-shifter," he said to the cool air of the room. "He was a
dragon."
But the empty
room seemed to sneer disdainfully at this excuse, and he sat up in bed, furious
at himself. The truth was that since his marriage had broken apart, Tom had
been more of a burden than anything else. An hindrance to just living the life
of an unattached adult, with a job and a few casual dates and no significant
attachments. Because, if Edward hadn't been around for a while, then Tom took
it upon himself to get parental attention by getting himself arrested or by—and
suddenly Edward smiled remembering exactly what that had looked like—shaving
half of his head and dying the rest of his hair bright orange. Why was it that
at a distance of eight years that memory seemed funny and endearing.
Fully awake,
he dug into his briefcase and brought out his cell phone. He called information
in Palmetto, Florida. And then he called Sylvia.
A kid answered
the phone, speaking in the endearing lisp of a child whose front teeth are
missing and when Edward asked for Sylvia, screamed at the top of his lungs
"Mom."
This was
followed by the click of pumps on the floor, and finally Sylvia's voice on the
phone. "Hello."
"Hi,
Sylvia, this is Edward."
"Who?"
"Edward
Ormson?"
There was a
short silence, followed by "Oh." And, after a longish pause.
"How may I help you?"
Exactly like
the waitress at an impersonal restaurant, Edward thought, but then they hadn't
seen each other in over ten years. She had another family. It was foolish of
him to resent it. Well, it was foolish of him to call too, but he felt he had
to. She had never even sent Tom a birthday card. Not that Edward had seen.
"I just
wanted to know if you've heard from Tom?"
"Who?"
"Thomas.
Your son?"
"Oh.
Tom?"
Was she not
sure who her oldest son was? Edward should have felt revolted, but instead he
felt more guilty than ever. What a pair they had made. Poor boy. Poor screwed
up boy who'd ended up with them.
She seemed to
collect herself, from a long ways away. "Isn't he living with you?"
she said.
Edward took a
deep breath. "No." And he hung up.
He didn't know
what he had expected. That Sylvia was secretly a great mom? After all, she'd
turned Tom over to a nanny as soon as she could, and returned to her job before
he was one month old.
He walked over
to the window and looked out again. No. He knew what he had hoped for. He had
hoped that Sylvia would behave like a responsible, caring parent and thereby
redeem all his memories of Tom's childhood. Prove to him that the boy had had
at least one attentive parent till the divorce. And that if he'd gone wrong it
was entirely his fault and his parents couldn't be blamed.
If that could
be proved to be true—well, then Edward would feel if not justified at least
slightly less guilty in washing his hands of Tom.
But his
ex-wife's behavior, his own memories of his behavior only proved to him that
Tom had never had a chance. Not even the beginning of one. And yet, he was
still alive, five years after being kicked out. And Kyrie Smith liked him. That
had to count for something. He couldn't be completely lost to humanity if he'd
engaged the interest of an attractive and clearly smart young woman.
Kyrie Smith.
She was a panther in her other form, Lung had said. Perhaps she knew other
shifters. With their help, perhaps Edward could go up against the triad.
Perhaps he could rescue his son.
He wasn't sure
he could have Tom move back in. He wasn't sure he could endure Tom for much
longer than a few hours. He wasn't even sure that he should ever have had a
son, since he seemed to have approached the enterprise with the idea that
children were sort of animated dolls.
But he was
sure the least he could do was save his son's life. Or not cooperate with his
murderers.
* * *
Kyrie was not
in a good mood. Oh, she was sure most of the reason for her feeling as down as
she did was the fact that she really hadn't slept much.
By her
calculations, she had slept exactly two hours in the last forty eight. And even
with the best of payment plans—the handyman had allowed her to pay in installments
for her new windows and doors—she would not have any spare cash for the next
few months.
So she'd been
going from table to table, forcing her professional smile and longing—just
longing—for the end of the shift. It didn't help that the night was exceptionally
hot and the single air conditioning unit labored, helplessly, against the dry
heat that plunged through the windows patrons opened and clung around Kyrie in
a vapor of French-fry grease and hamburger smell.
"It
doesn't help that Frank is acting like someone did him wrong," Anthony
said, as he passed her on the narrow isle between the plastic tables in the
addition and gave her a sympathetic scowl. "Couldn't you get your friend
Tom to show up?" he said. "I mean, Frank said if I wanted to continue
working here, I'd do this shift too."
"I don't
know where Tom is," Kyrie said, her voice sounding even more depressed
than she felt.
Anthony—tonight
resplendent in a ruffled red shirt and his customary tight black pants and
colorful vest—looked very aggrieved. "Only, I'm missing my bolero dance
group practice." And, at the widening of her eyes that she couldn't
control, "Oh, Lord. Why did you think I dressed this way?"
Kyrie just
smiled and looked away. There was an answer she had no intention of giving. Instead,
she took her tray laden with dirty dishes to behind the counter, scraped them
and loaded them into the dishwasher.
Needless to
say the diner was crowded tonight. Probably because people couldn't sleep with
the heat—since most houses in Colorado didn't have air conditioning—and had
decided to come here and eat the night away instead. Normally, Kyrie and Tom,
after six months of working together, had things down to a routine. Whichever
of them went to bus one of his tables did the other's tables too, if they
needed doing. They'd worked it out, and it all evened out in the end. When the
night was busy, it kept the tables clear so people could sit down as soon as
other people left. And that was good. But Anthony, though he was a very nice
man, wasn't used to Kyrie's routines.
Kyrie
hesitated, alternating between being mad at Tom for not being here, and a sort
of formless groping, not quite a prayer, towards some unnamed power to grant
his safety. She had as good as kicked him out. . .
No. She
wouldn't go there. Of all the useless emotions in the world, the most useless
was guilt. She slammed the last dish in the dishwasher, and checked the cell
phone she'd slipped into her apron pocket.
Rafiel had
said he'd call as soon as he had checked on Tom. He'd call even if he couldn't
find Tom. He hadn't called yet. Why hadn't he called?
Kyrie turned
from the dishwasher, expecting to see Frank glaring at her for slamming the
dish in. But Frank was leaning over the counter, seemingly elated by intimate
conference with his girlfriend—or at least the woman he'd been seeing. Kyrie
was afraid the staff had decided she was his girlfriend partly as a joke. Which
was kind of funny, because the woman was not much to look at.
She had to be
fifty if she was a day, with the kind of lined, weathered skin that people got
when they'd lived too long outdoors. And she had the sort of features that were
normally associated with British women of a horsey kind. Her hair was flyaway,
mostly white, and if it could be said to have been styled, she'd been aiming to
look like popular pictures of Einstein.
But Frank was
leaning forward towards her, to the point where there foreheads almost touched.
It revealed his neck, above the t-shirt, and showed a bandage there. Ew. Had
his girlfriend given him a hickey?
They'd been
seeing each other for a while, but today they seemed cozier than Kyrie had ever
seen them.
On the way
back to her tables, coffeepot in hand for warmups, Kyrie noticed that, despite
the woman's weathered features, she wore a very expensive skirt suit. Maybe
Frank was interested in her for her money?
"Or maybe
he has no taste," she told Anthony, as they met one coming and one going
into the addition. "But see, you wished him to get laid and there. .
."
"Don't
say it," Anthony said. "Don't even say it. I don't have the money to
buy as much mental floss as I'd need to get that image out of my mind." He
made a face, as he moved the tray the other way, to clear the doorway.
"But it's been going on for a while, now, hasn't it? I hear she's the
heiress to the castle. And there's talk she's going to renovate it and use it
as a bed and breakfast. So, perhaps it is just for money." He looked
hopeful.
Kyrie gave her
warmups and then started taking orders. Went back and gave the orders to Frank,
who, she was sure, was ignoring them. Or didn't even notice the new handful of
orders spiked through the order wire.
Then she went
back again, having caught movement by the corner of her eye, and the impression
someone had sat in the enclosure. It wasn't until she was at the corner table,
near the outer door, facing the guy who had just sat down, that she recognized
Tom's father.
He looked like
he'd been dragged through hell. Backwards. By his heels. He looked like he
hadn't slept in more hours than she'd been awake. His suit was rumpled, his
hair looked like he'd washed it and not given it the benefit of a comb—or
clergy, since it tossed in all directions, as if possessed of a discordant
spirit.
His dark blue
eyes stared at her from amid bruised circles. "Don't say it," he
said. "I know what you think of me, but don't say anything. I think. .
." he swallowed. "I think that there's reason. Oh, hell. I think
they're going to kill Tom. I need help."
That he needed
help was a given. That he was so worried about their killing Tom was not. She
glared at him. "You didn't seem to be worried about him at all," she
said.
"I. .
." He swallowed again. "I've been thinking and. . . I don't want them
to kill him."
Well, and
wasn't that big of him? After all, Tom was only his son. She narrowed eyes at
him. The shock, when she'd realized he was working for the people who'd already
tried to kill his son once, had turned her stomach. She still didn't feel any
better about Mr. Edward Ormson. She'd be less disgusted by a giant beetle.
"What will you be eating, sir?"
He looked as
surprised as if she'd slapped him. "What. . . what. . . I need to talk.
Seriously. They're—"
She took her
notebook out of her apron pocket, and tapped the pencil on the page. "I'm
at work, Mr. Ormson, and my job is to get people food. What can I get
you?"
"I. . .
whatever you want. . ."
"We're
all out of rat poison," Kyrie said, the words shocking her as they came
out of her mouth.
His eyes
widened. "Coffee. Coffee and a. . ." he looked at the menu.
"Piece of pie."
She wrote it
down and walked away. She really, really, really needed to convince Frank to
start making spinach pies. Or cod liver oil ones.
* * *
Tom woke up
from a sort of formless dream. He didn't remember falling asleep. His last
memory had been of Crest Dragon and Other Dragon having a picnic of sorts in
front of him.
Now he opened
his eyes to an empty building. He didn't know how long he'd slept, but his nose
no longer hurt, and it seemed to him like the pain in his tied arms had eased a
little too. Perhaps he'd gotten used to being tied up. Or perhaps his arms had
been without circulation so long that he could no longer feel them.
The last
should have been alarming, except it wasn't. Everything seemed very distant, as
if a great sheet of glass made of indifference separated him from the world and
his own predicament.
He lay there,
and listened to his own breathing. He would assume he still hadn't talked,
though it was—of course—possible he had said something while he was in a half
wake state. And if he had. . .
Well, it was
possible that the three dragons had gone off to get the Pearl and would
presently come back and kill him. Tom could shift now, of course, but what if
they were still here? Perhaps just outside? First, as tired as he was, he
couldn't fight all three of them at once. Second, what if he ate them?
His mouth felt
so dry—his tongue glued to his palate by thirst, that he was sure he would bite
them just for the moisture. And yet, there was an off chance. Would he lay here
and wait for death? No. He would shift. As difficult as it was, as tiring as it
was, he would shift.
Before he
could collect his mind enough to concentrate on the shift, though, he heard
sounds outside. A couple of cars, a lot of voices. Speaking Chinese. He closed
his eyes, and pretended to be asleep.
A group of
people came in, babbling in Chinese. Several men, by the sound of it. Tom half
opened his eyes, just enough to look through his eyelashes, without anyone realizing
that he was actually awake. He forced himself to keep his breathing regular.
And then from
the middle of the babble a voice emerged. "Hey. Hey, what's the
idea?"
Keith. The
voice was Keith's. What was Keith doing here, though?
"You're
okay, you're okay," one of the other voices answered, in accented English.
"As soon as your friend answers questions, we'll let you go."
And then two
men came in, breathing hard, carrying a sack with something very heavy in it.
"Where do we put her?" they asked.
"Here,"
another voice answered. The forest of legs in front of Tom parted enough for
him to see, on the ground, a trussed up human, and the big sack being laid down
behind it.
"She's
starting to wake up," one of the men said.
"That's
fine," another one answered. "With the tranq she'll be weak as a
kitten for a while."
A kitten. Tom
blinked, trying to focus his gaze. A kitten. The sack—some kind of rough
burlap—was large enough to contain a heavy feline. She. Kitten. Kyrie. Not
Kyrie.
"Oh, look,
he's awake," one of the men who'd come in—and who looked far smarter than
the three reverse geniuses—said and grinned. "Yes, that is your
girlfriend, but don't worry. So long as you tell us where you hid the Pearl of
Heaven, she'll be just fine."
Kyrie. Tom
didn't want to shift. If he shifted, he was going to eat someone. But he
couldn't tell them where the Pearl of Heaven was, either. Because then they'd
just kill him. And Keith. And Kyrie.
He felt his
heart speed up and his body spasm. And there was no turning back.
* * *
There was
blood. There was blood and screams and panic. Tom's vision—the dragon's vision,
was filled with people. He flamed. There was the smell of fire, and of cloth
burning. People with clothes on fire ran to either side of him.
The dragon
wanted to feed. To the dragon's nostrils, all flesh was food. The smell of
humans, the smell of fodder so close was more than he could endure. The dragon
tried to nip left, right. . .
But Tom knew
once the dragon started feeding, it wouldn't stop till all humans around it
were eaten. He knew from some deep instinctive feeling that having reached the
depths of hunger, the dragon would now eat past satiety. And he couldn't let it
happen. He couldn't.
If he ate a
human, he'd never be able to live with himself. And if he ate Kyrie. . . No.
Tom—what there
was of Tom in the huge scaley body with the flapping wings and the tearing
claws and the flaming mouth, controlled the body and the wings and the mouth.
Forcefully, he walked forward slashing with his claws at all opposition. Taken
by surprise, the others ran out of the way. Tom could hear, to his side, the
cough-cough-cough like laughter of a dragon shifting. He would deal with that
later.
Before the
dragon shifted, before he had to battle others of his kind, he would free
Keith. And Kyrie.
Disciplining
the dragon, he bent over Keith, and, with a sharp claw, burst the ropes that
bound his friend's legs and hands. Keith was looking at Tom with huge eyes and,
for a moment, Tom thought he would run away. He remembered that Keith had no
idea who the dragon was. But Keith was looking intently at him and said,
"Tom?"
Tom nodded,
rapidly, and managed to get out, through a mouth not well adapted to speech,
"Run."
Then he bent
and ripped the burlap bag open. He couldn't see the feline—definitely a feline
shape—inside move, though. He felt more than saw movement from it, and then he
heard a stumping step from the side, and knew that a dragon had shifted shape
near him.
He turned,
just in time to find Crest Dragon launching himself at Tom.
Tom jumped
aside, enough to avoid Crest Dragon's slashing and then turned around. Then he
bent low and slashed across Crest Dragon's belly with a claw.
Bright blood
spurted, and there was something like a scream that sounded all too human. The
blood made the dragon's thirst worse, but Tom wouldn't let it drink, and,
instead, hopped back, to slash at Two Dragons who had shifted shape also, and
was trying to sneak up on Tom with all the stealth of an elephant in a very
small china shop.
Tom's dragon
kicked out at Crest Dragon, who was coming at him again, his back claws leaving
red stripes of blood on Crest Dragon's muzzle, even as his muzzle clamped tight
on Two Dragon's arm and pulled, ripping it out of its socket.
"Look
out, look out, look out," Keith screamed from beside Tom. And he'd grabbed
something—Tom couldn't quite see what, but it looked like an ancient and rusted
tire iron. Keith was looming with it behind Other Dragon, who had, in turn been
sneaking out behind Tom.
Tom clashed
jaws at Other Dragon, but Keith hit Other dragon a sideways blow with whatever
the thing was. It must have been a hell of an implement, and heavy enough,
because Other Dragon gave a high pitch scream and fell forward.
But there were
other dragons. Too many dragons. A lot of the people who had come in had been
severely burned by Tom's original flaming, and lay fallen, some in various
stages of shifting shape, but seemingly out of action. But then there were
others. Many others.
As a dragon,
Tom wasn't particularly good at counting. There was something in the reptilian
brain that tended to simplify things down to the level of one, two many. But
the human inside that brain could tell there were at least eight dragons. Maybe
more. And Tom was tired. And weak.
He was
surrounded by dragons, on all sides, snipping and biting at him. He could feel
wounds, even if he couldn't stop. If he stopped, he would die. And though that
seemed—eventually—inevitable, he wasn't ready to give up. Not yet.
He circled and
nipped. Until his back was to a wall and he was surrounded by dragons. Truth
was, he thought, they could already have killed him. They were holding back.
They probably just wanted to hurt him enough that he wouldn't be able to
resist—he wouldn't be able to stop them from making him answer. . .
But if they
didn't want to kill him, that gave him the advantage. He kicked and bit with
renewed vigor, and realized that he had allies. On the outer ring, at the edge,
Keith was dancing, like a mad monkey—which was exactly how Tom's dragon brain
thought of him—repeatedly bashing the dragons at the periphery with whatever
heavy implement he'd grabbed.
Oh, they
turned, and tried to flame him, but Keith was too quick for them, jumping and
running into the darkness, only to appear again somewhere unexpected, and bash
another dragon over the head.
And from the
other side, another . . . person? Had joined the fray. Only it wasn't in person
shape, but as a large feline.
In the
semi-darkness of the station—was it dark out now?—Tom couldn't see very
clearly, but he could see that it was a feline shape. And it was roaring and
clawing and biting.
Suddenly, Tom
realized he had an open way out of there, to the front door. Awkwardly, his
legs streaming blood, Tom ran for it flaming everything that got in his way.
The door had been left open. From carrying the hostages in? Outside in the
parking lot there were a lot of cars, and two men who ran at the sight of Tom.
Tom flamed the cars. They caught and some exploded. And then, as Tom slowed
down, he felt a hand on his front leg. A human hand. Touching him.
He turned
ready to flame, and saw Keith, who was physically pulling him forward, towards
one of the cars. An undamaged one. "Dude," he said. "You have to
change, or you'll have to go on the roof rack."
Tom was
already shifting. It was the only way to stop from flaming Keith. He became
human, and tired and in pain, in mid stride, and it was only Keith's
determination that pulled him forward, that shoved him into a car—huge car.
Like a limo—from the driver's side, and pushed him over to the passenger side.
He threw
something on the floor at Tom's feet. Tom was too tired to notice, what and
just leaned back, breathing hard. Keith waited, his hand on the ignition.
Waited. Waited. And then something—Tom couldn't see very well, he was that
tired and in that much pain—heavy hit the back seat.
Kyrie. Tom
turned around, even as Keith reached back, grabbed the back door, pulled it
shut, then started the car and took off, in a squeal of tires, weaving between
the other parked cars on the way to the road, and then down it, at speeds that
were probably forbidden in this neighborhood.
The feline
looking at Tom from the back seat was not Kyrie. It was a lion. Tawny and
definitely male.
As Tom
watched, it morphed into police officer Rafiel Trall.
* * *
Edward Ormson
didn't know what to say to this woman. Kyrie brought him back a cup of coffee
and a slice of pie, and he actually reached forward and grabbed her wrist,
before she could walk away.
"They
have him prisoner," he said. "They have him prisoner and you must
help him."
"I must
help him?" Kyrie asked. She shook her hand, pulling it away from his
grasp. "I must help him? How? Aren't you the one who has been trying to
catch him, to get him to tell you everything for the benefit of the
triad?"
Edward felt
exasperated. The woman was beautiful. Her skin was just the tone, her features
just exotic enough to make her look some ancient statue of a forgotten
civilization—remote and admirable and inhuman. The tapestry-dyed hair only
contributed to the impression. But she clearly didn't understand. "You are
young," he said. "You haven't got any children. You wouldn't know
what—"
"No,"
she said. And it sounded like an admission, but then she leaned forward on his
table, her hands resting on it. "No, I don't have children. But if I did I
am sure I wouldn't assume a . . . criminal group was in the right and he in the
wrong."
"You
don't understand," Edward said. "You don't understand at all. Why
would he. . . Why would Tom mess with them? Doesn't he know better? Doesn't he
understand? They're dangerous."
"Oh, I'm
sure he knows that," she said. "And I'm sure I understand better than
you do. I'm sure he had his reasons. They might have been wrong, but I'm sure
he had his reasons. I've known Tom too long not to know that he had to have
reasons for what he did. He's neither stupid nor crazy, though he is, perhaps,
a little too reckless."
Edward snorted
at this. "Look, I don't know how good my son is in bed, but—"
The moment the
words were out of his mouth, he knew he'd said entirely the wrong thing. She
drew herself up. Her face became too impassive, too distant. "Mr.
Ormson," she said. "I think you've said enough."
"No,
listen, I know he appeals to women, he always has, but he—"
She pushed her
lips together and looked at him with an expression that made him feel as though
he were something smelly she had just found under her shoe. She opened her
mouth. "Mr. Ormson," she said. "I have no idea what you think my
relationship with your son is, but—"
At that
moment, a phone rang. Kyrie plunged her hand into the pocket of her apron.
"Rafiel," she said.
* * *
"Can I
borrow your cell phone," Rafiel asked, all polite from the back seat.
"My. .
.?" Tom asked. Couldn't the man see Tom was naked? Where did he think Tom
kept a cell phone, exactly?
"The cell
phone," Rafiel said.
"From
your backpack, dude. All your stuff is in there," Keith said, looking
aside from his driving, even as he took perilous turns at high speed on the
country road. Behind them, on the rear view mirror, Tom could see a blaze going
up.
"The
other . . . aren't they chasing us?" he asked.
"Nah. You
set fire to their cars and the station."
"I
did?" Tom asked.
"Yep. As
you came out. You were flaming all directions. I grabbed you to prevent you
from flaming this car. Don't your remember?"
Tom shook his
head. He didn't. But he'd been running on adrenalin.
"And
Rafiel stayed behind to keep them in there, until the fire caught. Some must
have escaped, but I don't think they're in a state to follow us." He
looked at Tom, even as he took a sharp turn onto the highway towards Colorado.
"That was awesome," he said, and grinned.
"Your
cell phone?" Rafiel asked from the back seat. "If I may."
Tom forced
himself to open his back pack. And almost wept at the sight of his black
leather jacket, his boots, his meager possessions. He rifled through them, till
his hand closed on the cell phone. He passed it to Rafiel, without even asking
why or what was so urgent about a phone call.
"You
could dress," Keith said. "You know. . ."
And Tom,
obediently, without thinking, pulled out his spare t-shirt and pair of jeans
and put them on. Then he slipped on his jacket and boots.
Rafiel was
talking to someone on the cell phone. "No, damn it, he's fine. Well, he's
bleeding, but you know we heal quickly. Don't worry. We'll be there in six
hours or so."
"I have
to drink something," Tom said. "I have to."
"Um. . .
we might stop at a convenience store," he said. He leaned forward, towards
Keith, and spoke urgently, "In this area, some of the convenience stores
at the rest stops have everything. I could use a pair of shorts and a
t-shirt."
Keith looked
back, still driving, and grinned. "Yeah, you sure could."
"So,"
Rafiel said, into the phone. "Don't worry. We'll be there. Yes, I
understand. We'll. . . discuss it later."
He turned the
phone off and handed it to Tom, then leaned back in his seat.
Tom could only
see him from the waist up, of course, but he seemed relatively unscathed by the
ordeal. And he was. . . well, everything Tom was not. Much taller, much more
self assured. And a lion. Kyrie was a panther. Tom didn't have a chance.
"So,"
Keith said, oblivious to his friend's thoughts. "How long have you guys been
able to change into animals, and how do I get in on this?"
* * *
Kyrie stood,
holding the phone, not quite sure what to do or say. Edward Ormson was looking
at her, attentively.
"Look,"
he said. "I know I have said the wrong thing." His expression changed
as if he read a response she wasn't aware of expressing in her features.
"Okay, many wrong things. But look, however misguided, however wrong
headed, your. . . your reaction to what I was trying to do, to my trying to
obtain the Pearl from Tom woke me, made me realize how bizarre all of this was.
I haven't seen Tom in five years, and I'll confess I was a horrible father. But
I don't want him to die. Can you help me?"
Kyrie looked
at him a long time. She'd taken his measure the first time they'd met. Or at
least she'd thought so. He was cold and self-centered. A smart man and probably
well-educated and definitely good-looking, he was used to having his own way
and very little used to or interested in caring for anyone else.
He would have,
Kyrie thought, viewed Tom as an accessory to his lifestyle. He'd have the
beautiful wife, the lovely home and, oh, yes, the son. Tom—if Tom's personality
had always been somewhat as it was now—must have been a hell of a
disappointment. They must have clashed constantly—supposing Edward paid enough
attention to his son to clash with him.
Weirdly, it
was that resentment he felt towards Tom, the fact he talked about Tom as having
been insufferable that gave her a feeling that, however hidden, however denied
even to himself, the man must care for his son. Because if he didn't truly give
a damn about Tom, Tom wouldn't get under his skin so much.
Then she
realized she could very well be speaking about herself. She had spent an awful
lot of the last six months reassuring herself of how impossibly annoying Tom
was.
Of course, he
was annoying. Tom was quite capable of sulking through an entire work shift,
for reasons she never understood. And he had this way of looking at her, then
flinching away as if he'd seen something that displeased him. Particularly on
those silent, sulking days. He was also quite capable of doing exactly the
opposite of what you asked him to do, if he thought you hadn't asked him nicely
enough. But. . .
But Tom was
also unexpectedly generous. He would cover for her if she needed it, not
complaining about the extra work. He would cover her tables, too, if she was
moving slow because he was tired or not feeling well. He would buss a
disproportionate number of tables and not call her to it. He had a way of
smiling and shrugging and walking away when she offered to give him part of her
tips after he'd helped her with the tables. And once when she'd pressed him,
he'd said, "Oh, it all evens out, Kyrie." She remembered that.
And he had a
way of appreciating the funniest of their diners. Sometimes, while enjoying a
particularly funny interaction between a college-age couple, Kyrie would look
over and find Tom smiling at them, in silent amusement. And, of course, he
was—she remembered him naked, in the parking lot—distractingly handsome. As
disturbing as the circumstances had been. . . It couldn't be denied that he was
attractive. Despite his height, she'd often seen college girls batting eyes and
displaying chests and legs at him.
So, her
constant annoyance at him, might very well have been a defense.
She realized
she was grinning, as well as blushing because Edward Ormson was looking at her
as if she had just taken leave of her senses.
"I'm
sorry," she said. "I just realized why your son annoys me so
much," and was gratified to see him look puzzled at this. "But you do
not need to worry about him right now. He is . . . fine now."
"He
is?" Edward Ormson started to get up, then set down. He looked as though
someone had cut all his strings, or whatever had been holding him up. He
visibly sagged in his chair.
He looked so
relieved that she had to smile. She picked up his coffee cup. "Let me get
you another coffee. Warmer."
But he got up
and handed her a twenty dollar bill. "No," he said. "No. I don't
think I need the coffee. Or the. . . pie. I just need to go to bed. I'm. .
." He rubbed his hand across his forehead. "I find I'm very
tired." He pulled something else from his wallet and wrote rapidly in the
back of it. "This is my card. There's my cell phone on the front and I put
my room number at Spurs and Lace." He handed it to Kyrie. "If Tom
should. . ." He swallowed. "If you tell Tom. . ." He shrugged.
"I don't want. . . Let him decide."
"I owe
you about ten twelve dollars change," Kyrie said. "Even with
tip."
But he waved
it away. "I don't want to waste time. I don't care. I'm very tired. I
haven't slept in. . . much too long."
Kyrie almost
argued, but then she saw him stumble to the door. She put the bill in her apron
pocket. She would ring it up later.
She wondered
where Tom was and how he really was. And what was happening.
* * *
When they
stopped at the convenience store, first Keith went in.
"I forgot
to ask if he had any money," Rafiel said from the back.
Tom had been
dozing. He opened his eyes and looked back at Rafiel, then at the front of the
brightly lit store and grinned. "I'd tell you that he probably does, but
since we're talking about a man who thinks driving while looking backwards to
talk to you is a perfectly safe practice, I can't really be sure."
Rafiel nodded.
He looked. . . less than composed and was hiding behind the back seat.
Fortunately though even at this time of night the convenience store/rest stop
was full of people, Keith had parked in a place with two empty spaces on either
side. Of course, the store was brightly lit in front and even with the tinted
windows, Rafiel had to feel awfully exposed.
"I don't
think anyone can see in," Tom said, in what he hoped was a friendly voice.
He was still starving and his mouth felt dry as sandpaper, but the brief doze
had made him feel much more human, much more in command of his own faculties.
He felt. . . almost like himself. Enough to feel sorry for the guy. Even if the
guy had a lot more chances with Kyrie than Tom himself.
Rafiel raised
his eyebrows at Tom's comment, and nodded. "I hope not, I would never live
down being arrested for indecent exposure. Even if I explained it—somehow—and
went free. It's not something police officers are supposed to do, walking
around naked."
"Must be
a bitch," Tom said, leaning back against the seat and closing his eyes. He
wanted to go in and get water and food. All his money was still in the backpack.
He'd checked. But he would prefer to go in with one—or preferably—to people who
could grab him if he passed out. Or started shifting and tried to eat one of
the tourists.
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said, quietly. "I have clothes hidden all over town." He was
silent a minute. "I just never thought I needed them in the neighboring
towns too."
Tom smiled in
acknowledgment of the joke, and felt a hand on his shoulder.
"I don't
think we've been formally introduced," Rafiel said. "My name is
Rafiel Trall. I'm a police officer of Goldport."
Tom opened one
eye to see a hand extended in his general direction. He shook it, hard.
"Thomas Ormson," he said. "Troublemaker. Broadly speaking of
Goldport, also."
Rafiel nodded.
"I haven't thanked you for saving my life," he said.
"You
don't need to," Tom said. "I thought you were someone else."
Rafiel smiled.
"At least you had the excuse of darkness. Apparently other. . . dragons
have trouble telling a female panther from a male lion. In full light."
"Ah. . .
how did. . .?"
"Kyrie
had sent me to check on Keith," Rafiel said, then frowned. "No. To
tell you the truth, Kyrie sent me to look for you. She thought Keith might know
where you were. So I was at his place when dragons came in. Through the window.
So I. . . shifted before I knew what I was doing. And they tranquilized me.
With a dart gun."
Tom nodded.
"They really weren't very polite," he said, thinking how much
preferable a dart gun would be than what they'd done to him. "I think they
injected me with marinade."
Rafiel's face
went very puzzled, but at that moment, Keith opened the door and threw a bundle
at Rafiel. "Shorts, t-shirt, flip-flops. All in the best of taste and the
cheapest stuff we could get and still make you decent. Enjoy."
Tom turned
back to look at the clothes while Rafiel unfolded them. The t-shirt was white,
with a mountain lion on the front and it said "Get Wild In New
Mexico." The shorts were plad and managed to look like a cross between bad
golf clothes and a grandpa's underwear. And the flip flops managed to combine
green yellow and a headachy-violet in the minimal possible amount of rubber.
Looking at
Rafiel staring aghast at the getup, Tom realized he really liked Keith an awful
lot.
But Rafiel
recovered quickly. "I'll pay you back, of course," he said.
Keith nodded.
Tom, not sure Rafiel meant that as a threat or a promise, raised his eyebrows.
Then he said, "Look, I'm dying of thirst. And hunger. I have some money
and I want to go inside, but I want one of you to come with me. Or both,
preferably."
"Why?"
Keith asked.
"Well. .
." Tom shrugged. "I haven't eaten in very long. I also haven't slept
much. When I eat I might pass out or. . . as soon as I'm a little stronger, I
might try to shift and. . . eat tourists."
Keith's eyes
went very wide.
Rafiel, moving
frantically and, from the bits visible on the rear view mirror, dressing, in
the back seat, said, "Even in Colorado that seems a bit drastic. And I
don't even know if New Mexico's tourists are as annoying as ours." There
was a sound of flip-flops thrown about, and then Rafiel opened the door.
"Come on then. We'll escort you to the food and water."
* * *
Anthony had
moved behind the counter and was turning burgers on the grill. That Frank
didn't even seem to have realized, was worrisome.
Anthony turned
around, putting plates on the counter for Kyrie to pick up. "Those are
your orders," he said. "And would you cover table fifteen for me? And
table five?"
Kyrie nodded.
She assumed that Frank hadn't responded to Anthony's requests that he cook.
Considering that he normally wouldn't let them behind the counter for more than
dishwasher-filling, coffee-pot-grabbing stints. But Frank was still bent over
the counter, staring into the eyes of his dowdy girlfriend and whispering who
knew what sweet nothings to her.
When had this
become so serious. Kyrie had seen the woman around before, but never actually
interfering with Frank's work.
They touched a
lot, Kyrie noticed. More than they talked. Her hand was on his, her fingers
beating a slow tattoo on the back of his hand. And his were on the side of her
other arm, also beating some weird rhythm.
Ah, well.
Dating for the speech impaired. And sight, Kyrie thought, looking back at
Frank's neanderthal profile, and his girlfriend's faded lack of beauty.
But Anthony
was moving the burgers and fries, mixing the salads and generally cooking like
a demon, and she didn't have much time to look at her employer as, over the
next few minutes she carried trays back and forth, fulfilling long overdue
orders for both her tables and Anthony's.
When she was
caught up, she came back to get the carafe and the pitcher of ice-tea for
refills. Frank's girlfriend had got up and was heading out of the diner via the
back hallway. Either that or going to the bathroom, of course.
And Frank had seemed
to wake up. "No," he yelled at Anthony. "What are you
doing?"
Uh-oh. Now the
explosion came, Kyrie thought. But as she approached, she realized Frank wasn't
storming over the fact that Anthony had been manning the grill and the deep
frier. Instead, he was throwing a fit because there was a little insect on the
counter, and Anthony had been about to squish it with a paper towel.
"What?"
Anthony said, his hand poised above the little creature—who looked like a
beetle of some sort, only too small to be any of the normal ones found in
diners. "It's an IPS beetle, man. It lives in pines. It must have come in
because the windows are open."
"There's
no need to kill it," Frank said, pushing Anthony's hand away and taking
the paper towel from it at the same time. With infinite patience, he coaxed the
beetle onto the paper towel.
Anthony
shrugged and turned the burgers. "It's not like it's endangered or
anything, you know? They spray for them up in the mountains. They kill
spruce."
But Frank
didn't seem to care. He got the beetle all the way into the towel, then walked
out back, along the hallway.
Half
fascinated, wondering what could have turned Frank, purveyor of burgers to the
masses, into a lover of the small and defenseless, Kyrie followed him part of
the way. Enough to see him open the back door and put the beetle out, on the
ground, close to the dumpster.
Then he waved
at his girlfriend, who was walking across the parking lot.
"Is she
an animal lover?" Kyrie asked as Frank came back in.
"Debra?
No. Why?"
Kyrie wasn't
about to explain. Instead, she said, "Is it quite safe for her to walk
home alone at night like that?"
He looked at
her surprised. And behind the surprise something else. As if he were wondering
why she was asking him the question. "Sure. She lives just at the castle.
She'll be fine."
It didn't seem
to admit further discussion.
* * *
"No more
hotdogs," Keith told Tom. He handed him a thin pack of something cold.
"Sliced ham."
Tom grabbed at
it, trying to focus. He was vaguely aware that he'd eaten something like twenty
five or six hotdogs. And drunk something like four huge cups of something
sickly sweet with a flavor vaguely reminiscent of cherries.
Somewhere at
the back of his mind was the awareness that he was going to need to use the
restroom soon. Even a shifter's bladder couldn't possibly hold that much.
But much
closer at hand was a need for protein. Lots of it. He grabbed the pack Keith
gave him and was about to bite it as Keith pulled it away.
"Whoa,
you need to unwrap it."
Tom was aware
of growling. Or rather he was aware of several faces of tourists roaming around
turning to him in shock. He was aware of Keith jumping, then shoving the
pack—now peeled halfway, back at him.
He shoved the
ham into his mouth and ate it, becoming aware, halfway through, that his
manners left much to be desired. And that the burning pit of hunger at the
center of his being was. . . calmer, if not completely filled.
Rafiel, to
whom Tom had handed a hundred dollars to deal with the damage, because he
couldn't think and eat at the same time, approached them, carrying a bag of
food. Tom could see a block of cheese and a couple of containers of what might
be yogurt through the bag.
"Ready?"
Rafiel asked. "You seem to have slowed down some?"
Tom finished
the last crumbs of meat, resisted an urge to lick package. "I'll use the
restroom," he said. "And I'll be right out."
"Good
point," Rafiel said. "We grabbed you snacks but no drink. Keith, get
us a six pack of water." He passed Keith some money. "Tom, can I use
your cell phone? In the car?"
Tom nodded.
When he got
back to the car, Rafiel was behind the wheel and Keith next to him. "You
get in the back," Keith said. "We figure you'd want to sleep
some."
"There's
cheese and cold cuts and stuff in the bag," Rafiel said. "If you're
still hungry. And there's water. You can lie down. I drive better than
him."
"And
there's a bag of baby wipes," Keith said. "Your face is caked with
blood. I didn't even think how weird it looked till we went in there."
Tom climbed
into the back. He was about to tell them he wasn't that tired, when he
stretched out on the broad and comfy back seat. And then his eyes closed. And
he didn't know anything more.
* * *
He woke up
with a running conversation up front.
"So, why
was he so hungry again?" Keith said.
"The
transformation takes. . . I don't know. Strength. Power. It costs us what seem
to be parts of ourselves. The muscle needs to recover."
"Would he
really have. . . Would he have eaten someone or was he. . ."
"I don't
know," Rafiel said. "I don't know Mr. Ormson that well. I don't know
how many shape-shifts he'd had without replenishing himself. I guess it's. . .
I mean. . . I guess it depends. I've never eaten anyone." There was a
short silence, and Tom saw Keith look at Rafiel.
"Well, at
least not that I remember," Rafiel said. "When you're very hungry or
very tired, or scared, or in any other way pressed the memory of when you're. .
. the beast. . . changes. And we smell dead bodies a long distance away. So. .
. I found a lot of corpses. Still do. I don't think I've ever eaten anyone,
though. And since in my job I deal with unknown deaths and disappearances, I
probably would have heard of it. Or, when I was too young to be in the force,
my father would have. So. . ." He shrugged.
Tom sat up and
rested his face on the front seat, between the driver and passenger sides.
"I might have eaten some of that corpse in the parking lot. . ." he
said, and looked at Rafiel, in the rearview mirror. "I don't know if I
killed him."
Rafiel
shrugged. "As to that, I can reassure you, at least. You didn't. The
corpse had no tooth marks, certainly no marks of being killed by a
dragon."
"The guy
who died?" Keith asked. "In the parking lot?"
Rafiel nodded,
at the same time Tom asked, "But you said he was killed by a Komodo."
"Oh,
that's right," Rafiel said. "We never told you. . . Kyrie and I when
we came back you two were high because of the beetle powder. Well, insect
powder, but Kyrie says it was beetles."
"Beetles?"
Tom and Keith said, at the same time.
"There
was green powder all over Kyrie's back porch," Rafiel said. "And it
seemed to be of insect origin and. . . well, I have the lab checking for some
form of hallucinogenic properties. But the lab seemed to think that corpse at
least had some traces of hallucinogenic in his blood. So, we think that the
green powder caused both of you to get high and hallucinate."
"Oh,"
Tom said, and could say no more. Of course. It wasn't Kyrie's sugar. It was the
things attacking them. He frowned as he tried to remember. He'd thought they
were dragons, but looking back he wondered why. He could remember what seemed
to be long, long limbs, with fangs at the end, and he remembered green wings,
but they didn't in any way look like dragon wings.
"But you
said something about Komodo dragons?"
"Well,
yes. There have been a few deaths that seemed to be by being bitten by Komodo
dragons. Really large Komodo dragons. Because they were all oriental, I
suspected it had to do with triad business, and now I'm almost sure of it. I
suspect it's the dragon triad. Some way they punish their members. That seems
to be totally unrelated to the thing going on with the beetles. You seem to be
the only link, Mr. Ormson."
Tom groaned.
"My father is Mr. Ormson. I am Tom. Particularly. . ." He managed a
tired smile but couldn't see if Rafiel responded because all he saw of Rafiel
in the rearview mirror was his very intent eyes. "Particularly to people
who've seen me wolf down two dozen overcooked convenience store hotdogs."
He made a face. "They weren't even all that good."
"Oh,"
said Keith. "There were also two containers of cottage cheese while the
man was cooking more hotdogs, and a couple of pepperoni."
"Pepperoni?"
Tom asked, and felt a moan break through his lips. "I don't even like
pepperoni."
"Well, if
you're going to throw up," Rafiel said. "You'd best do it out the
window. We're still in Raton and we have about two more hours before we get
home."
"I'm not
going to throw up," Tom said. "Now, if I had taken Keith's finger
when he tried to pull the cold cuts away, then I might have."
"You
growled," Keith said.
"Dangerous
that," Rafiel said, and though Tom couldn't see his face, he was now quite
sure there would be a smile twisting the policeman's lips. "Taking food
from a starving dragon. Just so you know, it's not all that safe with a lion,
either."
Keith made a
sound that might have been a really fake whimper, then perked up and grinned at
Rafiel. "Oh, well. Worth the price of admission just to have heard you
explain to the cashier that Tom had an eating disorder. I don't know how they
thought that related to the fact that his face was covered in blood. Why was
your face covered in blood?" he asked, looking back.
"Well. .
. I think I took Red Dragon's arm. Front paw. Whatever. But I think there was
blood before." Tom touched a snaking pink scar that crossed his forehead.
"They broke my skin there. And I think they might have broken my nose,
though it looks the normal shape, so maybe they just hit it hard enough to make
it bleed and tear the cartilage."
"But. . .
How long ago?" Keith said.
"We heal
freakishly fast," Rafiel said. "But you might want to use the wipes
back there, anyway, Tom. I'd suspect you rubbed some of it off on the seat back
there, but you still look like you were in an accident. And if you don't clean
up and we stop for any reason. . ."
Tom noted that
his first name had been used, as he grabbed the baby wipes and wiped at the
mess, using the rearview mirror, for guidance.
"And are
you undead?" Keith said. "I mean. . . can you be killed, unless it's
a silver bullet, or whatever?"
Rafiel
shrugged. "I don't know. Tom, have you ever been killed?"
"I
thought I was going to be," he said. "Out there, alone with the triad
guys. I thought if they didn't kick me to death, they were going to kill me
some other way. And if not, I thought I would be killed if I gave them what
they wanted."
"And what
did they want?" Rafiel said, very softly.
"Well,"
Tom said. "I brought the conversation around because I thought you
deserved to know, but I'm not sure how to explain. Let me start by saying my
dad was a lawyer."
"Ah,
well, all is clear," Keith said. "No wonder you turn into a
dragon."
Tom grinned.
"He's a lawyer with a big firm, in New York. Or at least he was, five
years ago. His firm represented some oriental families that had. . . contracts
with the triads. It wasn't so much, I think, that the firm set out to represent
a criminal organization. More like they started representing people at the
margins of it, and then eventually, they were defending members of the triad in
criminal trials. And my dad is a criminal lawyer. So. . ."
Rafiel nodded.
"Yeah. I suspect a lot of lawyers end up having contact with less than
savory creatures."
"Well, at
one point, some people came over to my father's house. There was something that
had landed from China, and they wanted him to keep it safe for them till the
next day. He was the only person they trusted in New York, one of the very few
people they'd had contact with. They came to our condo, which I remember my
father was very upset about because he hadn't given them permission.
"I was .
. . oh, probably five? My mom was working. My nanny was watching soaps. I was
very bored. So I snuck around to hear what my dad was saying. These people were
not like the people who normally came to visit, you know—they wore actual
Chinese outfits in silk. I was fascinated."
He was quiet a
while. He remembered the Pearl unveiling. He remembered. . .
"And
then?" Rafiel said.
"And then
they explained to my father that this was the Pearl of Heaven. It had been
given to the Great Sky Dragon by the Heavenly Emperor. They said that many of
their members, though not all, had the ability to shift shapes to become
dragons. I didn't believe them, of course. And I could tell my dad didn't. And
then they put this felt bag on his desk, and they pulled it down. And the Pearl
appeared. It was. . . Imagine something that radiates light, that makes you
swim with happiness.
"They
said that it was needed to keep peace amid shape-shifters who were dragons part
of the time, because the characteristics of the dragons remained in the humans,
and there was too much strife otherwise. As a kid—and you realize I never had
what could be called a good family life, back then—all I could sense and feel
was the warmth and approval of the Pearl. And that's all I remembered."
"And?"
Keith asked.
Tom realized
he'd been quiet for a long while. "And then at sixteen I started turning
into a dragon. I had a little trouble believing it at first, and then I thought
that it was very cool. Like a superpower."
"That's
what I think," Keith said.
"And
then. . . My father caught me coming in as a dragon and transforming. I
actually had this down to a science. I could kind of perch on the balcony
outside my bedroom, and shift back to human, and then drop into the room
through the sliding doors. Anyway, my dad caught me. He must have seen the dragon
fly in. And he came to look. I only had time to grab my bath robe. He thought.
. . I don't know what he thought, but he looked terrified. He ordered me out of
the house. I thought he was joking. He got a gun."
Tom laughed
without humor. "My father who was a member of I don't know how many
anti-gun organizations. He had a gun somewhere in his desk. He ran to grab it.
I thought he was joking. I thought he would calm down. He ordered me out of the
house at gunpoint and I went."
"Barefoot
and in a robe?" Rafiel said. "In New York City. Amazing you
survived."
Tom shrugged.
"There are organizations for runaways. I wasn't, but I was the right age,
the right profile, and all I had to do was say no when they offered to mediate
my return home with my father." He shrugged again. "In a year I was
lying about my age and getting jobs. But I hated the shift. I hated that it
came when I didn't expect it. And because I fought it till the last possible
minute, I often couldn't remember what I'd done when I'd shifted. I. . ."
He looked at Rafiel. "I tried street drugs."
"Anything
in the last six months?" Rafiel asked. "Since you've been in
Goldport."
"Only
whatever the triad boys injected into me," Tom said.
"Ah. We
don't regulate marinade. The rest is really none of my business. It's all
hearsay, anyway. I have no proof. You might just be nuts and think you used and
sold drugs."
"I never
sold it," Tom said.
"Good.
That's harder to give up, sometimes," Rafiel said. "What with
connections. . . So, you tried some funny stuff, to control it. Did it?"
His interest sounded clinical.
"Not so
you could notice. I was using mostly heroin because of its being a depressant.
I thought it would stop the shift. Since the shift came with big emotions and
such."
Rafiel nodded.
"So I
wanted to give it up, but I was scared," Tom said. "The one thing the
drugs did was make me forget. And make me calmer when I wasn't a dragon. They.
. . simplified my life. I couldn't obsess about being a dragon shape-shifter or
about the fact that my own father had kicked me out of the house, or any of
that, because I was too worried about getting enough money for the next
fix."
Rafiel nodded.
"Weirdly, I've heard other addicts say that this was more important for
them than the physical effects. The simplification of life and of
choices."
"It was
for me," Tom said. "And then one day, I was in a small city—I don't
even remember where—and I felt. . . I felt the Pearl. And I got the bright idea
that if I had the Pearl I wouldn't need the drugs. So I followed the feeling.
And I came to this incredible meeting of dragon shape-shifters. It was dark and
the little town was asleep. The parking lot was filled with men. . . And many
dragons. And there was. . . The Great Sky Dragon. I don't know how to explain
this.
"He's
like a dragon god. Not like God, the God above, the one God, but like a god.
Like. . . Like the Roman gods would be to humans. That's how the Great Sky
Dragon was to the rest of us. I could imagine people offering sacrifices and. .
. virgins to him. Like in the legends. And he had the Pearl."
Tom heard
himself sigh. "I wanted the Pearl. I'm not stupid. Not when I don't want
to be. They were all basking in the glow of the Pearl and stuff. And they were
all scared of The Great Sky Dragon. I'm not very good at being scared," he
said, and watched Rafiel nod.
"I was
impressed by the Great Sky Dragon," Tom said. "But not scared as such.
So I paid attention to who took the Pearl, and it was another dragon in
attendance. He put it in a wicker basket. And I loitered till the dragon
shifted shape. He was the owner of a small Chinese restaurant in town. I
followed him there. And then. . . I . . . well. . . I waited. And I watched.
And I planned. And then I ran in, got the Pearl and got out of there
fast."
Tom frowned.
"I must have taken them completely by surprise, because they didn't even
think to follow me for a while. And meanwhile I found out they couldn't sense
or follow the Pearl by sense if it was submerged in water. I couldn't follow it
if it was submerged in water. I brought it out west inside an aquarium packed
in foam peanuts in a cardboard box, in the luggage hold of various greyhounds."
"Did it
help with the addiction?" Rafiel asked.
"It
helped with controlling myself, not necessarily the addition—though perhaps the
two are related. When I got it out and looked at it, I felt. . . calm,
peaceful, accepted. And then even if I shifted, I didn't feel like it was a
terrible thing or that I should be shunned or killed for it. Does it make
sense?"
Rafiel nodded.
He was frowning. Keith was looking back, and his eyes were wide—and was that
pity in them? Tom didn't want Keith's pity.
"Anyway,"
He said, looking out the window at the mostly deserted landscape they were
crossing. "Anyway, I kicked the habit. It wasn't as difficult as I
thought. Rough moments, but I think that the fact we heal so easily. . ."
He shrugged.
Rafiel nodded.
"It would help, wouldn't it? The tendency to reassert balance. And Keith,
when you asked if we were, I guess immortal? That I know not more than anyone
else. It's hard to say. Until you die you don't know, and then it's academic. I
try to stay away from people trying to shoot me with silver bullets."
"Or any
bullets," Tom said, wryly. "And before you ask, I brought the Pearl
with me to Goldport. And it's stashed in water. They want it back. To be
honest, I wouldn't mind giving it back, but I can't. Because I think once I
give it back to them, they kill me."
Rafiel made a
face. "There has to be a way of giving it back." He was quiet a
while. Then he said, "But I guess it doesn't have anything to do with the
beetles, then?"
Tom shrugged.
"I didn't know about the beetles till tonight."
"What
would you estimate the percentage of shifters in the population is?"
Rafiel said. "From your travels?"
"I don't
know," Tom said. "Not very high. Considerably less than one percent.
Even if we go on legends."
"Even if
we go on legends. . ."Rafiel said, as an echo. "But you know, we know
three at least, in our immediate sphere, and then there's the beetles, at least
two. From their size, there's no way they can be non shifters. And there's one
of their victims who smelled like a shifter—though I only caught a bit of
blood. And another that was definitely a shifter. The corpse in the parking
lot." He nodded at Tom. "His wife said he was a coyote shifter."
"Lucky
bastard," Tom said feelingly. "A coyote would be much easier."
Rafiel laughed
and for a moment there was a bond. "Tell me about it," he said.
"Here's the thing, though, Tom, why so many of us? And why is all this
activity around the Athens?"
Tom shook his
head. "I have no idea."
"Except,"
Keith said. "Except maybe there's something like the Pearl of Heaven?
Something that calls shifters there? That works on shifters?"
"Perhaps
the Pearl?" Rafiel asked.
Tom didn't
think Rafiel was working for the triad, but you never knew. "Not the
Pearl," he said. "At any rate, where I have the Pearl, it's
submerged. So it's not exerting influence on anyone. If the dragons who know
what it feels like can't feel it, then neither can anyone else."
"Um. .
."
"Speaking
of the triad," Tom said. "How come we're driving their car, and
they're not hot on our trail?"
"Well. .
. you flamed them pretty thoroughly," Keith said.
"Yeah,
but. . . come on? No one has checked? And don't forget they have aerial
transportation."
"Well,"
Rafiel said. "Two things. While you were in the bathroom at the station, I
called some friends in New Mexico and told them the old station was a triad
hangout and I'd heard from a friend that it had just gone up in flames. At a
guess, any of them that got out, is in too much trouble to talk, much less
count the car wrecks in the parking lot. It's genuinely possible they think you
burned."
Tom nodded.
"And the other thing?"
Keith
chuckled. "We bought three cans of spray paint. While you were in the
restroom, we spray painted the top of the car. Just the top. So that aerial
surveillance. . ."
"Painted?
What color?"
"Mostly
bright orange," Rafiel said. "It was what they had. The front is
still black. We ran out of paint." He grinned at Keith who was still
chuckling. "People did look at us like we were nuts."
"I
bet."
"So what
do we do now?" Keith asked.
"Well,
first we get to Goldport," Rafiel said. "I'd like to change clothes. .
." He frowned down at himself. "And I probably should call in and
figure out the news on the case. Also tell them I didn't drop from the face of
the world, since I was supposed to be at work a few hours ago."
"And
then?" Keith said.
"And then
I think Tom and I, and Kyrie should get together and figure out what we're
going to do. Both about the Pearl of Heaven and the triad and about the
beetles." He looked back at Tom. "They attacked Kyrie's house, you
know, after you left."
"Damn. Is
she okay?"
"She's fine."
"My
fault," Tom said. I shouldn't have stayed there. They were probably after
me."
"Don't be
a fool. I think they were after her. She had seen them in the parking lot,
dragging a corpse, and it was clear they knew she saw them."
"Hey,"
Keith said. "Why you and Tom and Kyrie? Why am I being left out of this?
What have I done wrong?"
Rafiel
frowned. "Well, you're not . . . one of us, are you? I mean. . . we have
to police our own and help our own, because if one of us is discovered, the
others will be too. But you don't have to help us. You're not. . ."
"Yeah,
but I want to help," Keith said. "Can I like be an honorary
shape-shifter or something?"
"Why?"
Tom asked, puzzled.
"Oh,
hell. You guys are cool. It's like sf or a comic book."
"Except
you could get hurt. Quickly," Tom said.
"I could
get hurt very quickly anyway. Look, they knew you were my friend, they came to
my house to get me. Surely that means I'm already not safe. I might as well
help."
"Tom, he
has a point," Rafiel said. "Kyrie's house is clearly not safe. Your
apartment is destroyed. I doubt that Keith's apartment is safe. And I. .
."
"You?"
"I live
with my parents," Rafiel said. "They know I'm a shifter. They help me
if needed. It's convenient."
"I didn't
say anything," Tom said.
Rafiel shrugged.
"But I can't bring you guys there. If we're tracked. . . I can't risk
them. Dad is not doing so well these days."
"So
you're saying you don't know where we can get together?"
Rafiel nodded.
"Drop me off at home first. Then call Kyrie and tell her to meet you
somewhere. Then pick me up in her car. We should leave this one in a public
park or something. I don't think they'll report it stolen, but you never
know." He drummed his fingers on the side of the wheel. "And then
we'll figure out where to go. Perhaps a hotel room? A hotel would be good,
wouldn't it? It's so public that I don't think even the triad would risk
it."
Tom nodded.
"And I'm
in? I'm in, right?" Keith asked.
"You're
in," Rafiel said.
"There's
a distinct possibility you're too addled to be left on your own," Tom
said.
"Hey,"
Keith said, but he was smiling.
Tom felt odd.
There was a weird camaraderie. He hadn't had friends in a long time. He hadn't
ever had friends, truly. Not real friends.
He only hoped
he could keep them all alive by the end of this.
* * *
Kyrie was
standing at the counter, adding up her hours, when her cell phone rang. She
dipped into the apron pocket, and brought it out. "Yes?"
"Kyrie?"
It was Tom.
Until she felt relief flooding through her, she didn't realize that she
couldn't be absolutely sure he was still alive till she heard from him.
She almost
called his name, but then realized that Anthony was behind the counter doing
something and that she didn't know if Frank was hanging out somewhere. So,
instead, she said, "Yes?"
"Thank
God it's you," he said. There was a sound like coughing. "You didn't
say anything and I wondered if I'd done something wrong and called the police
department in New Mexico."
"What?"
"Later,"
Rafiel said he'd told you that you might need to pick us up."
"Yes."
"Well,
can you come? We're in the parking garage for the zoo. We've parked on the
third level, and we'll come down to meet you up front. In front of the
zoo."
"We?"
"Keith
and I. We'll swing by Rafiel's place on the way, okay?"
"Sure."
She hung up
and found Anthony staring at her. "Was that Frank?"
"No."
"Damn,"
Anthony said. "I don't know where he's gone. I'm going to have to stay
here and wait for the day shift people. Will you wait with me?"
"I
can't," Kyrie said. "I've got to meet a friend."
"The guy
you were talking to?" Anthony asked, gesturing towards the enclosure.
"He looks an awful lot like Tom."
"It's his
father," Kyrie said, as she headed for the door. She'd parked up front again.
She didn't think she could ever park in the parking lot again. Not for all the
money in the world.
"Oh,"
Anthony said, just as she opened the door and went out.
Kyrie realized
a little too late that Anthony might think that she was having an affair with
Tom's dad. But she didn't think so. Anthony was a rather conventional person
and was more likely to have her engaged to Tom in his mind—and to assume that
his father's visit had something to do with finalizing the arrangements.
The drive to
the zoo wasn't long. Just a few blocks down Fairfax and then a turn into a
tangle of streets named after presidents.
It didn't
really matter which you took, since they were all parallel. Either Madison or
Jackson took you to a sharp turn at Taylor and then up Wilson where the street
namers had run out of presidents and offered, instead, Chrisalys St, which in
turn, exhausted by all these flights of fancy ended in Main Parkway, where the
zoo, the library and the pioneer museum were all located.
Finding Tom
and Keith at the entrance wasn't hard either. She simply took a long turn
around the parking lot, and—circling by the door—saw the two only people
standing there—since the zoo was still closed.
She very much
doubted it would have been hard to find them even if there had been crowds
streaming by the door, though. Tom looked like he'd been put through a
shredder. There was blood on his face, his hair was a mess, and he looked like
he was about to fall over of tiredness.
But he smiled
when he saw her, and she couldn't help smiling back as she opened the door. For
some reason, she expected him to be mad at her, for throwing him out—for
thinking he'd gotten high. But he didn't look resentful at all. He sat in the
passenger seat, while Keith took the back seat. And Tom strapped himself down
with the seat belt, too, she noted.
"We have
to call Rafiel and go get him," Tom said.
"We
do?"
"Yes. He
went home to change. His clothes were shredded sometime. . . around the time
they captured him." He gave her a quick rundown of everything that had
happened and Kyrie listened, eyebrows raised, trying not to show just how
harrowing the account was. Particularly the torture.
When he was
done she thought how strange he was that he should have endured all that
torture and yet have roused himself to action when he thought Keith—and
herself—were in trouble. She took a sidelong glance at Tom, who was dialing his
cell phone. There was someone there, she thought. Someone salvageable despite
whatever his upbringing and his unexpected shifter nature had done to him.
"Rafiel,"
Tom said into the phone. Followed by raised eyebrows and, "I see."
Which was, in turn, followed by, "Sure."
"He wants
to know where we're going to be. He says he'll meet us. He's looking up some
data on missing people. He says there's a spike over the last two months. He
wants to know what the chances are those people are shifters. Something in the
family interviews might give it away, he said. And he definitely wants to
figure out how many people were headed for the Athens or vicinity when they
disappeared. So he says he'll meet us wherever we're going. And he asks which
hotel."
Hotel. Kyrie
had been thinking about this. There was an off chance the triad—or the beetles,
whoever they were—would decide to call around to hotels for their names. But
the hotels they would call around to—if they got around to that—would be in
their price range. Not the Lace and Spurs.
"We
thought it would be better to meet at a hotel," he said into the phone.
"Particularly a large hotel. Lots of guests. No shape-shifter even one not
quite in his right mind would want to have that kind of public revelation."
"Where
are we going?" he said. "Rafiel says he'll meet us wherever."
"Tom. . .
What do you think of your father?"
Tom's eyes
widened. His face lost color—which she would have thought impossible before.
"Why?" he asked.
"Because
he's in town and he—"
"Hang on
a second," Tom said into the phone. "I'll call you back in a couple
of minutes." He hung up the phone and set it in his lap, then looked at
Kyrie. "My father?" he said, not so much as though he were verifying
her words, but as though he were in doubt that such a thing as a father
existed.
"Your
father came to town two days ago and he—"
"Oh,
shit," Tom said. "You realize he's probably working for the
triad?"
"He
was," Kyrie said.
"And?
What did he do? Where did he go?"
"He came
to me."
Tom's hand
clenched so hard on the phone that his knuckles shone white through the pale
skin. His face remained impassive. "What did he ask you?"
"Many
things. But most of all he seemed to be concerned with where you were, and I
couldn't have helped him even if I wanted to."
Tom nodded.
"And?"
"And I
realized he was working for the triad and I was so shocked that I. . . I
left."
"Good,"
Tom said, and picked up the phone again. "Now, where should we go to that
Rafiel can meet us."
"Tom,"
Kyrie said, speaking in a low voice because she felt as though Tom were
something very unstable on the verge of an explosion. Should not be shaken,
stirred, or even looked at cross-eyed, as far as she could tell. "Your
father has a hotel room. At the Spurs and Lace."
She expected
the silence, and it came, but then she expected a flip remark, and that didn't
come. Instead, Tom's face seemed set in stone, his eyebrows slightly pulled
together as if he were puzzled, his face expressionless, his eyes giving the
impression of being so unreadable that they might as well have a blind pulled
down in front of them.
"He said
to call him if we needed anything."
"Kyrie,"
Tom said. It was a slow, even voice. "Are you out of your mind?"
"No."
She was prepared to be firm. It was the best solution, and yes, she realized it
would disturb Tom, but she was determined to keep them safe. By force if
needed. "No. I'm not. He said to call him, and we can meet him at the
Spurs and Lace. Our names won't be on the register and I don't think anyone
will think that he and you will be under the same roof."
"And
there are reasons for that," Tom said, his voice still even. "Kyrie,
he's working for the triad."
"No, he's
not. He realized that they wanted to. . . kill you. And he came to me. He
wanted me to save you."
"No. That
might have been what he said. But he was just trying to find me, to. . ."
"Tom, I
am not an idiot," Kyrie said, and saw something flicker in his eyes and
for just a moment thought that Tom was going to tell her she was. But he didn't
say anything, and she went on. "I saw what he was doing first, but he has
changed. He said that he didn't want you dead. He came to the Athens in the
middle of the night, looking like the walking dead. And he begged me to help
him."
"Kyrie.
He's a lawyer. Lawyers lie. It's right in the contract."
She shook her
head. "He wasn't lying."
"No? How
not? What sign did he give you of his amazing turnaround, Kyrie? Tell me. Maybe
it will convince me. I know the bastard far better than you do." He left
the phone resting on his knees and crossed his arms on his chest, in a clear
body-language sign that like hell he'd listen.
"If he
shifts into a dragon in the car, I'm jumping out," Keith said, quietly,
from the back.
Kyrie ignored
Keith. "I know he's changed in his view of it, because he tried to
convince me how bad you are."
Tom's eyes
widened. "All right, Kyrie. I was the one who was hit on the head, but you
seem to be the one affected by it. He's always said how bad I was."
"No,"
Kyrie said, and shook her head. "Not like this. He stopped just short of
saying you botched your spelling bee in third grade. Your father, Tom, realized
suddenly that he messed up big with you. And he's trying to justify it to
himself by telling someone in increasingly more ridiculous terms how nasty a
person you are."
Tom didn't
answer. He was biting the corner of his lower lip.
"Look—I—"
she stopped short of telling him she had done the same. Just. "I tend to
do what he was doing, so I understand the process. Besides, when I told him you
were safe, when Rafiel called, he went all slack. I've never seen someone so
relieved."
"Okay, so
maybe he didn't want me to die. Maybe he was relieved at that. Doesn't mean he
won't change his mind again when he actually sees me."
"I don't
think so," Kyrie said. "I don't think he will. And Tom, we could use
his room. I'm indentured for the next six months, you can't have that much
money. We'd have to get Rafiel to pay for it. I'd. . . I'd rather not."
The last thing she wanted to tell Tom was that Rafiel had kissed her. Oh, Tom
had no reason at all for jealousy, nor did she know if she had any interest in
Tom's kissing her—Okay. So, she had to stop lying to herself, she thought
again, looking at his face—Yeah, she wanted to kiss him. She just wasn't sure where
it would go and that she wasn't sure if she wanted. But Tom had no
reason for jealousy and she doubted he would have any, but she would still
prefer not to tell him about it.
"Kyrie, I
don't believe in big turnarounds. I don't believe people change that
much."
Oh, she was
going to hate to have to say this. "I don't believe it either, Tom, but .
. . You're no longer a hard core drug user who would steal cars for joyrides
without a second thought, are you? So there must be change."
Tom's mouth
dropped open. For a moment she thought he was going to ask her to stop the car
so he could get out. His hand actually moved towards the door handle. And then
he seemed to realize she wasn't insulting him. The meaning of her words seemed
to actually penetrate through his thick head.
He took a deep
breath and held the phone out to her. "You call Daddy Dearest."
It would have
been easiest to tell him she was driving and couldn't, but Kyrie was aware of
the victory this represented. So, instead, she pulled over into a vacant
parking space on the side of Polk Street and grabbed the phone. Pulling
Edward's number from her purse, she dialed.
The phone
rang, and she asked for the room number from the bored-sounding receptionist.
Then his bedroom phone rang. Once, twice, three, four times. She expected the
message to come on, when the phone was picked up, and clearly dropped, and
picked up again.
"Hello,"
a sleepy male voice said from the other side.
"Mister
Ormson?" Kyrie said.
"Kyrie,"
the name came out with force, as though it would be more effort to keep it in.
"Tom. Is Tom all right? Anything wrong with. . ."
"No. Tom
is right here. He's fine. We were wondering if we could camp in your hotel room
for a few hours."
"Beg your
pardon?"
"Tom and
I, and a couple of friends. We're. . . in danger from. . . your friends and. .
. other people. We wondered if we could hide there till we find a plan of
action."
There was a
silence from the other side. And then a voice that sounded as if he didn't
quite know what he was saying. "Sure, of course. Sure." A small
pause. "And Tom is with you?"
"Yes."
"Oh."
A deep breath, the sound of it audible even through the phone. "Sure. Of
course. Anything you need."
"Thank
you," Kyrie said and hung up the phone. She handed the phone to Tom and
said, "Call Rafiel."
"Daddy
Dearest is even now calling the triad bosses," Tom said. His mouth set in
an expression of petulant disdain. "They'll be there when we get
there."
"I doubt
it," Kyrie said.
"And if
they are, we fight them," Keith said, leaning forward.
* * *
Okay, so being
scared didn't even begin to describe the state of Tom's emotions as they pulled
into the parking lot of the Spurs and Lace.
The problem
wasn't being scared. He was used to being scared at this point. In the last
three days, he'd been scared so often that he thought he wouldn't actually know
what to do if he weren't in fear of someone or something. But this time he
didn't even know what he was scared of.
Okay—so, if
the triad members were there, Keith was right. They fought. And if Tom had to
sacrifice himself so Kyrie and Keith got out of this unscathed, he would do so.
He'd been prepared to do it before, in the abandoned gas station. So, why not
now.
So. . . that
wasn't the big source of his fear. The big source of his fear was that his
father would be there, without the triad, and that all would be seemingly nice
between them. He couldn't imagine talking to his father as if nothing had
happened, as if. . . Worse, he couldn't imagine his father talking to him like
that. But he'd been worried about Tom. Tom couldn't understand that either.
He settled for
thinking that his father had been exchanged by aliens. It didn't make much
sense and it wasn't very likely, but heck, what around here was likely? He'd
just think that this was pod-father, and with pod-father, he had no history.
He got out of
the car, and followed Kyrie and Keith up to the elevator and up in the elevator
to the room, only slightly gratified by the puzzled looks the staff gave him.
Up at the fifth floor, they walked along the cool, carpeted hallway towards
room 550.
Tom took in
the trays with used dishes at the door to the rooms, and the general atmosphere
of quiet. There were no detectable odors in the air. Down the hallway, an ice
machine hummed and clunked.
The classiest
place he'd been in before this was motel six. Oh, he supposed he'd been in
hotels as a child. In fact, he had vague memories of a trip to Rome with mother
and father and, of course, his nanny, when he was ten or eleven. But most of
the stuff before he'd left home now seemed to him like scenes from someone
else's life.
And perhaps
that was the best way to think about it. The Tom who'd been ordered at gun
point from his childhood home was dead and gone. This new Tom was a stranger to
the man in the room.
But when Kyrie
knocked, the door was open by a man who looked far too much like the father Tom
remembered for Tom not to take a step back, shocked—even as his father's gaze
scanned him indifferently once, before returning, and then his eyes opened
wider, and he opened his mouth as if to say something, but closed it again in
silence and, instead, stepped aside to let them in.
He was wearing
the pants and a shirt for the type of suit that Tom remembered his father
wearing—fabric good enough to look expensive without looking ostentatious. But
this one looked like hell—or like he'd been sleeping in it. His hair too, was
piled up in a way that suggested a total disregard for combs.
But the
strangest thing was that, as he stepped aside, so they could enter the room,
Tom's father stared intently at Tom.
Tom let his
gaze wonder around the room, instead. It was. . . dark red. And opulent. There
was a dark red bed spread on the bed and from its sheen it might have been real
silk. Someone had pulled it up hastily and a bit crookedly, so Tom's father had
probably been in bed when they called, and had tried to make the bed in a
hurry. Tom felt a strange satisfaction about this. To his knowledge, it was the
first time his father had engaged in housekeeping for Tom's benefit.
Besides the
bed, there were a loveseat and three arm chairs and two chairs, a huge desk,
where his father had a laptop, resting. And a lot more empty space than there
should be in a room with all that furniture.
Over the bed
was an abstract collage that brought the art form completely out of the realm
of nutty seventies fads—a thing in deep textures and gold and bronze colors.
The bathroom,
glimpsed as Tom was going past, was all marble and actually two rooms, the first
of which contained just a sink with a hair drier and various other essentials
of toiletry. Tom ached for a shower with an almost physical pain, but he went
in, quietly.
"Mr.
Ormson," Kyrie said. "Thanks for letting us come in at such short
notice."
He shook his
head. "No problem. Make use of. . . whatever you want. Tom? Are you. . .
There's blood on you."
Tom shook his
head. "I'm fine." And then, as though betraying that he wasn't, he
walked over to the most distant armchair and sat down, as far away from his
father as he could get.
His father
frowned at him a moment, but didn't say anything.
"I wonder
if Rafiel is going to be much longer," Tom said, pretending not to feel
the weight of that gaze on him.
Keith sat down
on one of the straight-backed chairs, and Kyrie, after some hesitation, took
the armchair next to Tom's.
She looked at
him, too, but her gaze was not full of disapproving enquiry. Unlike his
father's expression, Kyrie's was warm and full of sympathy.
He wanted to
smile at her, to pat her hand. But just because the woman didn't want him dead;
just because the woman didn't think he was dangerous or a criminal, it didn't
mean that she had any interest whatsoever in him.
So instead, he
fidgeted in the chair and looked out of the window into the parking lot. But he
kept looking at her out of the corner of his eye. She looked good enough to
eat—and not in the sense he'd threatened to eat tourists. That cinnamon skin,
those heavy-lidded eyes. He looked away. If he allowed himself to contemplate the
perfection of her lips, or the way her breasts—one of which he remembered with
particular fondness—pushed out her t-shirt, he wouldn't be able to respond for
his actions.
Instead, he
looked again, at her tapestry-dyed hair, falling in lustrous layers. And he
remembered he had something of hers.
Digging
frantically in his jacket pocket, he brought it out. He saw her eyes widen, and
her smile appear, as he offered her the earring on his palm.
"You
found it," she said.
"My
landlady did," he said. "And I took it. I was hoping. . . I was
hoping I would see you again, to be able to give it to you."
He felt
himself blush and felt like a total idiot. But Kyrie put the earring on and was
smiling at him. He'd have been willing to go a long way for that. Coming to his
father's hotel room seemed like a minor sacrifice.
Even if Daddy
Dearest ended up selling them up the river.
* * *
The boy looked
tense, Edward thought. Only the thing was, he wasn't a boy, anymore, was he?
The face looking back at Edward's with such studied lack of expression was
covered in dark stubble. And the shoulders had filled out, the arms become
knotted with muscle.
Tom was
wearing a black leather jacket, ratty jeans and heavy boots. His father could
have passed him a hundred times in the street and never recognized him. Only
the eyes were the same he remembered from childhood, the same that looked out
of his own mirror at him, every morning. But Tom's eyes showed no expression.
They allowed him to look at them, and then they slid away from contact, without
revealing anything.
There was
blood on him too, and a snaking scar on his forehead. Had the triad done that,
or had Tom gone through worse scrapes in the last five years. There were many
things Edward wanted to know. Unfortunately, they were the ones he would never
dare ask.
He watched Tom
for a while, watched him pull out the girl's earring and give it back to her.
He wondered if the two young fools had any idea that they were giving each
other sick-puppy-dog looks.
But not only
wasn't it his place to interfere, he was sure if he tried to tell them, either
of them would put him soundly in his place.
"Do you
guys want some coffee?" he asked, "I'm making some for myself."
There were
sounds that might be agreement from the bedroom, as he set up the coffee maker.
Fortunately the Spurs and Lace went for normal sized coffee makers, not the
one-cup deals that were normally the rule. And they provided enough coffee and
enough cups. He set it to run and thought.
The boy needed
a shower. And probably clean clothes. But Edward had a feeling that if he
offered either Tom might very well fling out of the room in a fury. He got a
feeling that Tom was holding something in, battling something. And that if he
let it all blow, none of them would like it.
Of course, if
Tom should shift to a dragon. . . Edward peered around the door at the young
man and Kyrie, who were now talking to each other, while Tom had closed his
eyes and appeared to be dozing.
Neither the
young man nor Kyrie looked scared that Tom would shift into a dragon, so it
couldn't be that frequent an occurrence.
The coffee was
made, and Edward had a sudden flash of inspiration. Everything that he might
offer Tom would be refused. But if he handed it to Tom as a matter of fact,
there was at least the off chance that Tom wouldn't know how to refuse. He'd
looked many things, none of them at ease.
So, testing
his theory, Edward poured himself a cup of coffee, and then one for Tom,
surprising himself with retrieving, from the mists of memory, how Tom liked his
coffee. The boy had only started drinking it when he'd. . . left. But Edward
remembered ribbing him about liking three spoons of sugar in it.
He now poured
in three packets of sugar and then crossed the room, trying to look completely
at ease. For all his appearances in uncertain cases, in court rooms presided
over by hostile judges, this was probably his greatest performance.
"Coffee is ready," He told Kyrie and the other young man. "If
you wish to help yourselves." Then he walked up to Tom.
The armchair
the boy was sitting in was right next to a side table, and on the other side of
that was the straight backed chair normally used at the desk.
Edward put his
own coffee cup down on the side table, and leaned over, touching Tom's
shoulder, lightly. "Tom, coffee," he said.
Tom woke up
immediately, and sat up, fully alert. Edward remembered that he used to sleep
late and sometimes miss first period at school. When had he learned to wake up
like this, quickly, without complaint. How had he been living that a moment's
hesitation between being asleep and full alertness might make a difference?
He couldn't
ask. "I put three packets of sugar in. The way you like it."
Tom looked
surprised. He reached for the cup, took it to his lips without complaint. And
Edward sat at the desk chair, and took a deep draught of his coffee, feeling
ridiculously proud of himself. It had worked. If handed things straight off, Tom
was too confused to refuse. It was the first time in years. . . No. It was the
first time Tom's lifetime that Edward had set himself to learn how to get
around his stubborn son without a confrontation. And it had paid off.
It was all he
could do to keep himself from smiling in victory. Fortunately, at that moment,
someone knocked at the door and Kyrie opened it.
"Mr.
Edward Ormson, this is Rafiel Trall, a police officer of Goldport."
Officer Rafiel
Trall was tall and golden haired, with the sort of demeanor one would expect
from a duke or visiting royalty. He shook Edward's hand, but there was a slight
hesitation, and Edward wondered what Tom had told him about his father.
But then, as
the young people pulled chairs together to talk, Edward slipped out the door,
quietly.
He didn't know
if they were all shape changers, and he didn't know how they'd react to what he
was about to do.
But he knew he
had to do it.
* * *
Tom smiled at
seeing Keith immediately assume the role of secretary of the organization. Sometimes
people defied all categorization. He'd never expected his wild neighbor, of the
late nights and the revolving girlfriends to be this. . . neat.
But Keith
grabbed the pad and turned to them. "As far as I can see it, he said.
We're facing two problems. One is the beetles. Kyrie is the only one who's seen
the beetles—right?"
"No,"
Tom said, amused. "We've seen them also. We just didn't remember. I think
you thought they were aliens."
Keith looked
wounded. "Whatever that powder was. . ."
"Yes,"
Tom agreed not particularly wanting to go there, not wanting to explain that
he'd thought Kyrie's sugar was drugged. He looked at her out the corner of his
eye, and realized that Rafiel was also looking at her with an intent
expression. Well, if she had to go to someone else. . . But Tom very much hoped
she wouldn't.
"They are
blue and green and refractive," Kyrie said. "And they look somewhat
like the beetles I've seen in the museum of natural history in Denver. I
vaguely remember they said they were made into jewelry, and I could believe it
because they were so pretty. The little ones in the museum. Not the small
ones."
"You
don't know what their genus is, do you?" Keith asked, looking up.
"Because we could look them up and figure out their habits."
Kyrie shook her
head. "I never really thought knowing the name of a beetle would be
essential to me," she said.
"Ah, but
see, that's where you go wrong," Keith said. Scribbling furiously.
"Beetles are always essential. You let them run around unnamed they start
music groups and what not." He looked up. "Well, I'll call the museum
later, or look it up on line. So. . . we have these huge beetles. Are we sure
they're shifters."
"They're
the size of that bed," Kyrie said, pointing to the king size bed behind
them. Or maybe the size of a double bed. But taller. Where do you suppose their
natural habitat would be? And why wouldn't it have been discovered long
ago?"
Keith waved
one hand. "Okay, point, point," he said. "But so, we have two
shifters. How often is it that shifters get together? Same species shifters?
Can you guys like. . . mate in your other form?"
Tom felt a
burning heat climb to his cheeks. Without looking he could tell that Rafiel was
now staring at Kyrie with a gaze set to smolder. And Kyrie was staring ahead, looking
shocked, refusing to look at either of them.
It was funny.
Because of course Keith had always assumed that Tom was a player like himself,
that he was out there, every night, picking up girls. And of course, Tom's
sexual experience could be written on the head of a pin, was all in very human
form, and had all happened before the age of sixteen.
He threw his
head back and laughed. "Keith, you've got the wrong guy, at least where
I'm concerned," he said. "Only dragons I've known were in the triad.
So, I have no idea. Also, the legends are a little quiet on the mating habits
of dragons."
"And I
had never met another shifter till two days ago," Kyrie said, her voice
small and embarrassed. "I suppose it's possible to mate in animal
form."
Did she throw
a quick look at Rafiel? Tom's heart sank.
"But I
wouldn't like to do it," Kyrie said. She sat up straighter in her chair.
"For the same reason I wouldn't really like to eat in the shifted form.
Even if it's proper food, you know, not. . . people. I like being human. If I'm
ever going to have sex, I'd like to be aware of who I'm doing it with and
how."
"You've
never—" Keith started, then shook his head.
Tom realized
he was grinning, and forced his face to become impassive. He hoped Kyrie hadn't
noticed.
Rafiel,
meanwhile, was shaking his head. "Not in shifted form," he said.
"Never. So, I too know nothing about sex between shifters. Though I
suppose," he gave Tom a sly look. "That the sex lives of lions are
far better documented than the sex lives of dragons."
But he
couldn't touch Tom's self assurance at that point. Kyrie had just as good as
confessed that her experience was not superior to his own. He wondered if she'd
done it on purpose.
"You guys
are a waste of shifting ability," Keith said, sounding vaguely disgusted.
"So, you don't know if two shifters of the same kind, different gender
met, if it would lead to. . ."
"Kittens
in the basket?" Rafiel said.
"Eggs in
the lair," Tom immediately interposed not to be outdone.
"Actually,"
Keith said. "I was thinking more than some species have truly bizarre
mating habits. And if we're dealing with a mating pair, which . . . could we
be?"
Kyrie leaned
forward, holding her coffee cup in both hands, over her knees. "I think we
could be, yes," she said. "I think. . . I got a feeling that was the
case."
"So, if
we're dealing with a mating couple, you know that insects can get really kinky,
right? Like all the biting off of heads of males after mating, or while mating,
and all that stuff. Is it possible that the killings are part of a mating
ritual? Like where the male has to give the female a gift or something."
"Yes,
that's quite possible," Tom said, feeling slightly dumb that this hadn't
occurred to him. Possibly because in all he'd read of the mating rituals of
beautiful jungle cats, there had never been anything about their requiring the
gift of a corpse.
"It might
be pertinent," Rafiel said. "That I suspect there have been about two
dozen people killed, and that they were all or almost all shifters."
"How
could you know that?" Kyrie asked.
"I don't
know. I suspect. If you remember, I told you I wanted to wait a little before I
came here, because I wanted to find out if there could have been more people
who disappeared in that area and whose bodies haven't been found yet?" He
took a sip of coffee. "Well, I figured it out. At least partway. There are
at least fifteen other people who have been missing, all over the last month or
so. And they all disappeared from around the Athens. They were all young and therefore
we didn't pay too much attention. Otherwise the pattern would have become
obvious. But most of them the families didn't seem sure they hadn't run away,
so we thought we'd give it a little longer. . ." He took another sip of
coffee. "We're a small police department. Oh, and most people were either
passing through or had just decided to move here. Some interesting things—they
all seemed to really like the Athens and had been there more than once. And
they all had, the sort of relationship with their families and people around
them that. . ." He looked at Tom.
"Say no
more," Tom said, and for the first time realized his father was nowhere
around. Was he hiding in the bathroom to be out of their hair? Tom didn't think
it likely, but then neither had he thought it likely that his father would
still remember how Tom took his coffee.
"Well,
here's the thing," Keith said. "If these are gifts perhaps they have
to be shifters. Do you guys know when someone else is a shifter?"
"Sometimes,"
Kyrie said. "If you get close enough. There is a definite tang, but I'm
not very good at smelling it."
"I can't
smell it at all," Tom said.
"I smell
it very well, but I have to be near the person and sort of away from everything
else."
"And all
shifters smell alike?" Keith asked. "Regardless of species?"
Rafiel nodded.
"So,
perhaps the gift of the dead corpse has to smell like a shifter?"
"It's
possible," Rafiel said. "We don't have enough to go on, but there are
definite possibilities. Just the fact that it's a shifter couple is
interesting. I'd imagine the odds against it are enormous, and I wonder how
long they've been a couple.
"Probably
about a month," Tom said. "Since that's when you started noticing the
pattern."
"Good
job, Mr. Ormson. You might have a future in law enforcement," Rafiel said.
The Mr.
Ormson was clearly intended to be a teasing remark, and Tom was about to
answer in kind, but he thought of his father. If he was in the bathroom, trying
to stay out of their way, Tom didn't call the others' attention to his absence.
Because if he did, and it was nothing, he was just going to sound totally
paranoid. On the other hand. . . On the other hand. . . If he didn't call their
attention, and his father had gone to the triad. . .
Tom got up,
carrying his cup of coffee, as if he were going to get a refill.
"So I
think on the matter of the beetles, the best thing really would be to look them
up in the Museum of Natural History," Keith said. "See if they have
stuff about those beetles habits, then see what helps. And then we have the
matter of the Pearl of Heaven."
But Tom had
reached the little alcove before the bathroom, the area with the sink and the
coffee maker and cups. Tom frowned at it, because it had no articles of
personal hygiene, only one of those kits of horrible toothbrush with toothpaste
already on that hotels give guests who forgot their toiletries. And Tom
couldn't believe that his father—of all people—would have forgotten his
toiletries.
The door to
the bathroom was closed, but not enough for the latch to catch. Tom reached
over, and slid it open with his foot, slowly. No one.
There could be
a perfectly natural explanation. There should be a perfectly natural
explanation. Tom was sure of it. But his heart was beating up near his throat,
his mouth felt dry and his hands shook. He put the coffee cup on the counter,
very carefully, and then walked out, feeling lightheaded.
Had he really
believed his father cared? Had the thing with remembering how Tom liked his
coffee been enough to make Tom believe his father gave a dam? He must really be
starved for affection, if he'd believe his father could be more than a cold and
calculating bastard.
He walked
outside to the bedroom, feeling as if his legs would give out under him. His father
had gone to the triad. Was probably, even now, making some plan to deliver Tom
to the triad. And Tom didn't want to be tortured again. Plus, they would
probably be even more upset now, considering he'd just been the cause of death
of a number of their affiliates.
"We
should just leave it on some public place," Keith said. "Like we left
the car. And get the hell out of dodge. Let the triad feel it and go get
it."
Tom tried to
shape his mouth to explain that his father had left, that he'd gone to denounce
them—to denounce Tom—to the triad. But the betrayal was so monstrous that he
couldn't find the words.
And then he
heard the key slide into the lock, and he turned, barely staying human, poised
at the verge of shifting. . .
And his father
came in, alone, carrying two very large bags with the name and the logo of one
of the stores in the lobby. And another smaller bag, with the name of another
of the lobby stores. One that specialized in candy and snacks.
They faced
each other, silently, and his father looked so startled, so shocked, that Tom
wondered if he'd started to shift already.
"I'm
sorry," his father said. "Was I needed? You guys seemed to be talking
about things I didn't understand and I thought I'd get some clothes and a comb,
since I left without any of that." He put the larger bags on the bed, then
opened the small bag and fished out a red box tied with a gold ribbon. "I
thought you might like these Tom."
Nuts with
chocolate and his favorite brand. Okay, this was becoming ridiculous. His
father might have kicked him out of the house at sixteen, and he might know
next to nothing about Tom's life since then, but, apparently, it was a point of
pride that he remembered what Tom liked to eat and drink.
There was
really no response for it, though, and Tom, no longer hungry, still felt
peckish of sorts. Besides, this was a hideously expensive brand of chocolates
and he hadn't been able to afford it in years.
While he was
tearing the ribbon, he saw his father open a bigger assortment of different
types and set it on the side table. "For you guys, since none of you look
like you've slept enough."
Tom noticed
that Kyrie's eyes widened and that her hand went out for a dark chocolate
truffle. He would have to remember that. Forget dead bodies. Any female with
even a bit of homo sapiens in her was going to go for the chocolates.
To change
subject, and disguise his attention to her every action—and also how scared
he'd been at his father's absence—Tom looked at his father and managed to say
in a voice almost devoid of hostility, "I wonder if you could talk to us
about the triad," he said. "How you came to be here, I mean. And how
they got you to come here."
"The
Great Sky Dragon kidnaped me from my office," Tom's father said. He dipped
into the common box, too, and got a nut chocolate also. It was one of the
tastes they shared. "He picked me up and told me that my son was my
responsibility and he was going to bring me here, and I could find you and the
Pearl, after which he'd take me back to New York. He made it clear I wasn't to
return until I'd found them their Pearl. Tom, why did you take it?"
Tom shrugged.
He'd try to explain this before, and was getting tired of explaining.
Particularly because the idea seemed really stupid now, and also because he was
starting to realize what he'd searched for in the Pearl was what he'd found
with Kyrie and even with the guys—acceptance, caring for him, giving a damn if
he lived or died.
Instead, in
said, 'Because hard drugs weren't working for me." And seeing his father
look shocked, Tom smiled. "Because the Pearl made me feel loved and
accepted and I hadn't felt that since. . . In a long time."
His father had
gone slightly red, and was looking at Tom as though evaluating something.
"So," he said. "Do you still need it?"
Tom shook his
head. "No. I told the. . . them," he gestured towards Keith and
Rafiel. "I told them that I would give it back, if I could just figure out
how to do it. I haven't really been able to do that. Not recently."
"What do
you mean?" Edward asked.
"I mean
that if I gave it back to them, they'd kill me. They made it very clear they
didn't take kindly that I'd stolen it. It's their. . . cultic object or
something. They don't like the idea that a stranger grabbed it. I think they
will feel the stranger must be killed. Considering what they did to me when
they captured me. . ."
"Okay,"
Edward said, very calmly. "So, how about I take the Pearl back."
Rafiel chocked
on his chocolate. "Not a good thing," he said. "Because if you
do that, then I suspect they'll kill you. The whole thing they said about you
being responsible for Tom?"
"Okay,"
Keith said. "I've already said it, but you guys were out of the room. I
think the easiest thing is for us to take it somewhere public and leave it.
Yeah, they might still come after Tom in search of revenge, but there is at
least a chance that after the massive ass whopping of last night, they would
leave him alone as being way too much trouble to discipline."
"Well. .
." Tom said. "Yes, it's possible." It wasn't probable. And it
wasn't the plan he would have picked, if he had any other semi-sane choice. But
he didn't think he did, and leaving the Pearl somewhere public and running beat
his plan to keep hiding it and running from the triad.
"You
could leave it in front of the triad center here in town," Edward Ormson
said. "You could put it at the door, in a bucket of water. Wait till the
bucket dries. By the time the water dries and they feel it—if we hide it a little—we'll
all be out of town."
Tom looked up.
"Out of town?"
"You
could come back home," his father said, suddenly animated. "Maybe go
to college." He looked around at the rest of them. "And I'd arrange
for the other two here to go wherever they want to go. College? Move and a
business? Just say it. I assume Officer Trall would be safe, by virtue of his
position?"
Tom could feel
his jaw set. "The only home I've ever known," he said. There was the
thought that Kyrie might want to go to college, but he didn't think she wanted
to go at his father's charity. He didn't want his father's charity.
"Burned a few days ago. I'll have to find some other place to live."
His father
looked away and there was a silence from everyone else for a moment.
"Anyway," Tom said. "Leaving the Pearl somewhere and letting
them know later is the best plan I've heard, Keith. Perhaps leave it in a
bucket of water and call them though, instead of leaving it in the open and
letting them sense it. We don't know if there are other dragons like me around
and getting it stolen again would be a pain. They'd only come after me
again."
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said. "So. . . where did you hide the Pearl and how much trouble do
we need to go through to retrieve it?"
Tom did a fast
calculation in his head. He wasn't sure of Rafiel or his father yet. Though,
sadly, he was more sure of Rafiel than his father. Rafiel had at least fought
against the triad dragons.
But he'd
misjudged his father once. He looked sidelong at his father, and read
discomfort and understanding in his eyes, as if he were completely sure Tom
wouldn't trust him, and understood it too. As well he should. And yet. . . Tom
was going to have to take the risk at some point. Might as well start.
"It's in
the toilet tank at the Athens," Tom said. "The ladies' room. It has a
huge toilet tank, old fashioned kind, so I just put it in there."
Kyrie's eyes
grew huge. "What if the tank had stopped?" She asked. "What if.
. ."
He shrugged.
"It seemed fairly sturdy. Besides, I wrapped the Pearl in dark cloth,
before I put it in. You know the light is not very good there. If someone
looked in there, as ancient as the tank is, they'd just think there was some
type of old-fashioned flushing mechanism that they didn't understand."
"And it's
been there?" Rafiel asked. "These six months?"
Tom nodded.
"Have you
considered," Rafiel said. "That maybe it is the Pearl that's
attracting people to the Athens and making them feel at home there?"
"I don't
think so," Tom said. "If I can't feel it when it's submerged; if the
triad dragons can't feel it while it's submerged, then how should
strangers?"
"Besides,"
Kyrie said. "That feeling was there before. It was there a good six months
before that. I felt. . . I know this is going to sound very strange, but I felt
almost called to Goldport. Like I had to come here. And once I got here, I had
to go to the Athens. Then I saw the wanted sign and I applied."
Rafiel
fidgeted. "I developed the habit of going to the Athens for breakfast
about a year ago too. And it's not near my house. I just felt. . . called to go
there. And I felt okay once I was there."
Tom sighed.
"I came to the Athens a few times for meals, before Frank noticed me. He
asked if I wanted a job. I didn't want to take job under false pretenses, so I
told him the truth. That I was homeless, that I hadn't had a fixed address for
a long time, that I'd never had a full time job and that I had a drug habit I
was working on kicking. He told me as long as I kept clean once he'd hired me,
he didn't mind any of those. . . What's weird is that I'd already stopped in
Goldport, and I had no idea why. It was like something in my subconscious had
called me here, and to the Athens."
"Aha,"
Keith said. "Beetles. Mr. Ormson, is your computer connected to the
internet, and can I use it?"
Tom's father
nodded. "Sure. Why?"
"I want
to search the Natural History Museum. They have a lot of their collections
online now. And they have a bunch of links to other scientific
institutions."
"What do
you mean by aha beetles?" Tom asked.
"Well. .
." Keith blushed. "You see, I like reading weird things."
"You told
us," Kyrie said. "Comics and sf."
"Eh.
Those are actually the sanest things I read. I also read science books. For
fun. As I said, biology is fascinating, particularly insects. I seem to remember
that certain beetles can put down pheromones which attract other beetles and
their particular type of prey to their environment." He shrugged, blushing
to the eyes. "So I think we should find out if the beetle Kyrie says looks
like the shifter beetles is one of those."
"Makes
sense," Rafiel said.
"Let me
help you navigate the computer," Tom's father said. "In just a
moment. Meanwhile. . . Tom, I don't mean. . . Well, you have blood on your face
and your hair, and I thought. . ." He'd walked to the bed and pulled up
one of bags. "I don't think you've changed pants size, and I just got you
xl shirts and that. I grabbed you some socks and underwear too. The store here
only has designer clothing, but I didn't want to go outside and look for
another store."
Clothes? His
father had got him clothes? Tom's first impulse was to say no and scowl. But if
he was trying to keep his purity from his father's gifts, he was a little late.
While the others talked, he'd been happily munching away on his chocolate with
nuts. And the box was empty. Besides, he hated wearing jeans without underwear;
the leather boots, without socks, were rubbing his feet raw; and if he was to
have to go out soon, then he would have to shower.
So instead of
his planned heated denial, he said, "Fine. I'll only be a minute. If
anyone needs my opinion on anything, call me."
He grabbed the
bag from the bed and took it with him to the little alcove before the bedroom.
It weighed far more than it should for a pair of jeans and a couple of
t-shirts. Opening it, he found it had at least as many clothes as he had owned
back in his apartment. Better quality though. And more variety. There were a
few pairs of jeans, and chinos, t-shirts and a couple of polos. And, yes,
underwear and socks.
He wasn't sure
if he was ready to forgive his father, yet, but he was sure that his feet would
thank him.
He went into
the bathroom and turned on the shower. Water poured out in torrents. Oh. He
might have to take more than a few minutes.
* * *
Much to
Kyrie's surprise, the museum did have information on its insect collection on
line. It wasn't complete. All they had was pictures of the insects and their
names.
"Is it
this one, Kyrie," Keith asked. And because the three men remaining—while
judging from the sounds from the bathroom Tom was doing his best to deplete
Colorado's natural water reserves today rather than in the next fifty years—had
all crowded together around the computer, behind Keith who was sitting at the
desk, they had to part now, to allow her near enough to see.
The picture
was very small, and clicking on it didn't make it bigger. But Kyrie was fairly
sure it was the same creature. "Yes. I'm almost positive," she said.
"Cryptosarcodermestus
Halucigens," Keith read. "Now a quick google search."
The sounds
from the bathroom had become positively strange. Kyrie had known Tom for six
months. She would have sworn he was the last person to ever sing in the shower.
And if he had ever sang in the shower, she was sure—absolutely sure—it wouldn't
be the lion sleeps tonight. Although—and she grinned—there was always
the possibility that he was trying to tweak Rafiel. And tweaking was definitely
in Tom's personality.
She wasn't so
stupid that she didn't realize that though the men seemed to get along with
each other—fighting triad dragons must have done it—they seemed to have a
rivalry going over her. Right now it was composed of mostly stupid things—like
how she reacted to something each of them said.
Kyrie wasn't
sure she could deal with any of it. She was sure she didn't wish Rafiel to kiss
her again. Well, maybe a little. But not if it was going to hurt Tom.
"Aha,"
Keith said, from the computer. He'd brought up a colorful screen, surmounted by
a picture of the beetle.
"Yes,
it's that one," Kyrie said. "It definitely is."
"Well,
it's our old friend sarcodermestus," Keith said. "And listen to this
guys. . ." He stopped, as they heard the door to the bathroom open and
close. "Might as well wait for Tom," he said, under his breath.
Tom, Kyrie
thought, as he came towards them, barefoot, walking silently across the
carpeted floor, was definitely worth waiting for. Or at least the man cleaned
up well. He'd shaved and tied his hair back. The new clothes, jeans and a white
t-shirt, seemed to have been spray painted on his body. They underlined his
broad shoulders, defined his musculature and made quite a fetching display of
his just-rounded-enough-but-clearly-muscular behind. He looked far more
indecently naked than he'd been when she'd found him with the corpse in the
parking lot. And, as he pressed in close, he smelled of vanilla. Vanilla soap
and vanilla shampoo, probably some designer brand used by the Spurs and Lace.
Kyrie
swallowed. She wasn't drooling either. And besides, if she were, it would be
because it was vanilla. She was almost positive.
He pushed in
close, between her and Rafiel—he would—and said, "Listen to what? What
have you found, Keith?"
"On the
beetles," Keith said. "They rub their wings together to produce
clouds of hallucinogenic powder to disable their victims. And the male puts
down some sort of hormonal scent. It attracts the victim as well as the prey
they need to reproduce."
"Prey?"
Kyrie said. It was very hard to think next to a vanilla factory. Up till today,
she'd always have said she was a chocolate type of girl. But apparently vanilla
was just as good. Provided it was good vanilla.
"They lay
eggs in the bodies of freshly killed victims, which have to be of a certain
species of beetle. By the time the victims have reached a certain point in the
decomposition, the eggs are ready to emerge as larvae." Keith said.
"They bury the corpses in shallow graves, so that the larvae can crawl out
on their own."
"So, if I
were a beetle, which I am not," Tom said. "Where would I hide the
corpses with the eggs in them."
"Somewhere
safe," Kyrie said.
"The
parking lot of the Athens?" Tom said.
"Impossible,"
Kyrie said, aware of the fact that she might sound more antagonistic than she
meant to. "Impossible. After all, it's asphalt. And besides. . ."
"It's
public," Rafiel said from Tom's side.
"So, the
male lays down a scent to attract the female, does he?" Tom said.
Definitely,
Kyrie thought. And it's vanilla. Then stopped her thought forcefully.
"Why lay
a scent at the Athens?" Tom asked.
"Easy,"
Rafiel said. "It's a diner. This means they get not only tourists passing
through and the workers and students from around there, but also a large
transient population. If it's true that shifters aren't all that usual, then it
increases their odds of getting shifters—supposing, of course, shifters are the
intended population."
"Well,
since all the shifters here seem to have some form of the warm fuzzies towards
the Athens, I must ask the non-shifters. Keith? Mr. Ormson?"
"It's a
dive," Keith said.
"It . . .
I only went there because Tom worked there," Edward said. "I
wouldn't. . . I don't see any reason to go again."
"So,"
Rafiel said. "There is a good chance whatever the substance—if there is
one—that the male slathered around the Athens attracts shifters only. Which
would mean the eggs would need to be laid in shifters. Where around the Athens
can one bury freshly-killed bodies in shallow graves and not be immediately
discovered? It's all parking lots and warehouses around there."
Kyrie had
something—some thought making its way up from the back of her subconscious. At
least she hoped it was thought, because otherwise it would mean that stories of
corpses and weird shifters who lay eggs in corpses turned her on.
"This
means that the male has to be a regular at the Athens," Rafiel said.
"Or an employee."
"Don't
look at me," Tom said. "I already turn into a dragon. Turning into a
weird beetle too, would require overtime. When would I sleep?"
"No,"
Rafiel said. "I don't think that we can turn into more than one thing. At
least I can't and none of the legends mention it. "No. But you know, it
might be someone on day shift. In fact," he said, warming up to his
theory. "Someone on day shift or who only works nights very occasionally,
would fit the bill. Because then when he's not serving, he could be tripping
the light fantastic with his lady. . . er. . . beetle."
Whatever
thought had been forming in Kyrie's mind disappeared, replaced with the image
of Anthony turning into a beetle but retaining his frilly shirt, his vest.
"Anthony," she said. "Perhaps he dresses that way to attract the
beetle in human form."
Tom grinned at
what he thought was a joke. "He's a member of a bolero group. They meet
every night," he said. "He only works nights when Frank twists his arm,
poor Anthony."
Okay, so maybe
it was a joke, but still. . . "Are we sure he really does dance with this
bolero group?" she asked.
Tom grinned
wider. "Quite. He gave me tickets once. You wouldn't believe our Anthony
was the star of the show, would you? But he was."
"So. . .
what can we do?" Rafiel asked. "I can go in and make a note of all
the regulars. Or you can point out to me the ones you thought started coming
around about a year ago."
"Hard to
say," Kyrie said. "I mean, I can easily eliminate those who haven't
been there that long. But I can't really tell you if they've been coming for
longer than a year, since I've only been there a year."
"It's a
start," Rafiel said. "I'll come in tonight. You can point them out to
me, and then I can run quick background checks on the computer. Mind you, we
don't get the stuff the CSI shows get. I keep thinking that they're going to
claim to know when the person was conceived. But we get where they live and
such."
"There's
the poet," Kyrie said.
Tom nodded,
then explained to the other's blank looks. "Guy who comes and scribbles on
a journal most of the night, every night. Maybe he's writing down plump and
tasty. Looks soft enough for grubs."
"Or
perfectly salvageable with some marinade," Rafiel said, looking over Kyrie's
head at Tom.
Without
looking, Kyrie was sure that the guys had exchanged grins that were part
friendly and part simian warning of another male off his territory.
"So, I go
into work as normal," Kyrie said.
"And
I," Tom put in. "Well, yeah, I know Frank should have fired me, but I
don't think he will. I know how hard it is for him to find help at night."
"Yeah,"
Kyrie said. "Particularly since he's been weirdly absent minded." She
didn't want to explain about Frank's romance heating up in front of everyone.
It was funny, yes, but it was a joke employees could share. Bringing it out in
front of strangers just seemed like gratuitous meanness. "Poor Anthony
ended up having to cook for most of the night yesterday."
"Which
means you were alone at the tables?" Tom said. "I'm sorry."
And this was
the type of moment that made Kyrie want to think of things she hated about Tom.
Because when he looked at her like this, all soft and nice, it was very hard to
resist, unless she could think of something bad he had done. Which, right now,
was failing her, because the only bad thing she could think of was stealing the
Pearl of Heaven. And he was ready to give it back, wasn't he? "Yeah,
well," she said, lamely. "For some reason I'm sure you'd rather be attending
to tables than being held prisoner by a triad of dragon shifters. So you're
forgiven."
"Thank
you," Tom said, and smiled. "So I'll come in tonight, with you, at
the normal hour, and I'll . . . we'll watch and see if anyone looks
suspicious." The smile became impish and the dimple appeared.
"Besides, really, Anthony will thank me. His fiancй is in the bolero group
too and by now she probably thinks he's found another one."
"So,
that's what we do about the beetles," Keith said. "But what do we do
about the triad dragons and the Pearl of Heaven?"
"I'm very
glad we made Keith an honorary shifter," Rafiel said. "This guy has a
talent for keeping us on target."
"Honorary
shifter?" Kyrie asked.
"He
wanted to help us. He's jealous of our abilities. So he said we could make him
an honorary shifter," Tom said. "I don't think he told us what
specifically he would shift into though. I say a bunny."
"A
blood-sucking bunny with big sharp teeth," Keith said. "Seriously,
how are you going to get the Pearl, Tom, and shouldn't we at least have a
tentative plan in place for how to return it?"
"I need
to find a container large enough for it," Tom said, showing the
approximate size with his hands. It looked to Kyrie like about six inches
circumference. "A plastic bucket, perhaps. With a lid. Then I can put it
in there, in water and carry it without its giving me away. A backpack to carry
it in would be good. Not this backpack." He nodded to the thing he'd
carried and which he'd let drop in a corner of the room. "Because if I go
in with a kid's backpack, Frank will notice and ask questions. I'll transfer my
money to my pockets."
"Right,"
Rafiel said. "I have a couple of backpacks from army surplus, that I use
when I'm hiking. I'll go grab one of them before you go in to work."
"Well,
this just brings up one question," Keith said, turning his chair around to
face them. "And that's how are we going to sleep. Because we all need to
be fresh for tonight. Unlikely as it is, we might be able to pinpoint someone
and follow them and find the bodies, but we don't want to be stumbling into
walls."
"You can
stay here," Tom's father said. "There's a few extra pillows and
blankets in the closet and I'm sure the bed fits five."
But Tom's
father should have known better, Kyrie thought a few minutes later. With Tom
and Rafiel in full blown competition for her attention, chivalry was thick
enough in the air that one needed a knife to spread it.
So, despite
her heated protests, it ended up with her on the bed, Tom—universally believed
to have had the roughest few hours—stretched out on the love seat by the
window, Keith curled up on the floor in a corner and Rafiel and Mr. Ormson
staking out the floor on either side of the bed. Rafiel lay down between her
and the love seat, of course—probably trying to prevent Tom from attempting a
stealth move.
Kyrie would
have liked to fall asleep immediately, and she thought she was tired enough for
it. But she wasn't used to sharing a house—much less a room—with anyone.
She lay there,
with her eyes closed, in the semi-dark caused by closing the curtains almost
all the way—leaving only enough light so that they could each maneuver to the
bathroom without tripping on other sleepers.
Tom's dad
showered. She heard that and the rustle of the paper bag as he fished for
clothes. She grinned at the way the older man had neatly outflanked Tom's
stubbornness.
Tom was still
suspicious of his father, and perhaps he had reason, but Kyrie heard the man
lie down on the floor, next to the bed and seconds later, she heard his breath
become regular and deep.
She was the
only one still awake. She turned and opened her eyes a little. Tom was in the
loveseat, directly facing the bed. In the half-light, with his eyes closed and
something very much resembling a smile on his lips, the sleeping Tom looked ten
years younger and very innocent.
A tumble of
dark hair had come loose from whatever he'd tied it with, and fell across his
forehead. His leg was slightly bent at the knee, and he'd flung his arm above
his head, looking like he was about to invoke some super power and take off
flying.
It was all
Kyrie could do not to get up and pull the hair off from in front of his face.
Forget special hormones laid down by male beetles to attract the females. The
way some human males looked while sleeping was the most effective trap nature
had ever devised.
* * *
Kyrie woke up
with a hand on her shoulder. This was rare enough that just that light touch,
over her t-shirt, brought her fully bolt upright. She blinked, to see Tom
smiling at her and holding a finger to his lips.
He appeared
indecently well-rested and, unless it was an effect of the dim light, the scar
on his forehead had almost disappeared. He pointed her towards the desk and
asked in her ear, breath tickling her, "Do you like steak?"
She looked her
confusion and he smiled. "I ordered dinner," he said. "From room
service. My father said to do it, since we have to go in before the
others."
"Your
father?" Kyrie said.
"Don't go
there," Tom said, giving her a hand to help her up. "Really,
don't."
"No. He
was awake?"
"I woke
him to tell him I was going to wake you and we'd leave for work. They don't
need to be there when we go to work."
Kyrie got up
and stepped over the sleeping bodies in the room, to the bathroom. She washed
herself, half-heartedly because she didn't have clean clothes to put on. By the
sink there were now five little "if you forgot your toiletries"
kits—she would love to hear how Edward had explained that to the hotel
staff—and half a dozen black combs. Also, a brush.
"I
thought you could use the brush," Tom said, putting his head around the
doorway. "I got it from downstairs."
She thanked
him, pulled the earring from her pocket, where she'd put it for the night, and
slipped it back on.
The meal was a
hurried and odd affair, eating in the dark. But more disturbing than any of it,
was looking up from taking a bite and finding Tom watching her.
What did he
want her to do? Swoon with the attention? Fall madly in love with him? What
would they do together? Both worked entry-level jobs, which was no way to start
a family. And if they did start a family, what would it be? Snaky cats?
She glared at
him and to excuse the glare said, "Eat. Stop staring. We don't have that
much time." And he shouldn't, he really shouldn't smile like that. There
was nothing funny.
But she didn't
say anything. They finished the trays, left them by the door and hurried out.
"Are you worried about what Frank will say?" Kyrie asked Tom as they
got in the car.
Tom still had
the goofy smile affixed on his lips, but he nodded. "A little," he
said. "Just a little. Frank can be profoundly unpleasant."
"Yeah,
and he's been in a mood," Kyrie said.
* * *
Tom didn't know
whether to be relieved or worried that all Frank said was "I thought you'd
disappeared."
"No,"
Tom said. "Wasn't feeling well for a while and my dad came to town to look
after stuff, so I was with him. I'm sorry I forgot to call."
For some
reason, this seemed to alarm Frank. "Your dad? You have—You're in touch
with him?"
Tom shrugged.
"He heard I wasn't okay and he came to check on me. It's not that rare,
parents caring about their kids," he said. Of course, he had no previous
experience of this, and he wasn't absolutely sure he trusted his father's newly
conciliatory mood. But he'd enjoy it while it was there and not expect it to
stay, so he wouldn't be wounded when it disappeared.
Frank looked
upset with that. "Well, get on with it. You have tables to attend
to."
To Tom it was
like returning home. He realized, as he was tying on the apron—"and we'll
dock the extra $10 from your paycheck. I can't figure out what you people do
with your aprons. Eat them?"—that he'd missed all of this.
The air
conditioner was pumping away ineffectively, too far away from the tables to
make any practical difference, which meant that the patrons had opened the
windows again, allowing the hot dry air of Fairfax avenue, perfumed with car
exhaust and the slight scent of hot asphalt, to pour in and mingle with the hot
muggy air inside the Athens, perfumed with clam chowder, burgers and a touch of
homemade fries.
It was almost
shocking to realize, but he really loved the place. His mind went over the
panorama of seasons and imagined the Athens in Winter, when it was snowy out
and cozy inside and customers would linger for hours at the corner tables—near
the heat vents—drinking coffee after coffee. He'd enjoyed coming in from the
freezing cold outside and encountering the Athens as though it were an haven of
dryness and warmth. He felt happy here. He wondered if it was whatever
pheromones the beetles had laid down around this place talking.
And speaking
of pheromones, he got to work, greeting now this customer, now the other,
taking orders, refilling coffees. To his surprise people remembered and had
missed him.
"Hello
Tom," one of the women who came by before going to work at the warehouses
said. "Were you sick?"
"Yeah,"
Tom said, and smiled at her. She was spectacularly homely—with a square face
and grey hair clipped short. But she seemed to treat him with almost maternal
warmth, and she always tipped him indecently well. "Touch of going
around."
"You guys
should be more careful," she said. "Just because it's warm, doesn't
mean that you can't get sick. Working nights, and you probably don't sleep as
much as you should. I abused my body like that when I was young too. Trust me,
it does send you a bill, though it might come twenty years down the road."
"Well,
I'm all right now. What will you have?" he leaned towards her, smiling.
And felt a hand pat his bottom lightly.
He believed in
being friendly to customers but this was ridiculous. He turned around ready to
blast whoever it might be, and saw Kyrie, leaning against him to talk to the customer.
"Is this big ape bothering you, ma'am? Should I remove him?"
The customer
grinned. "My, you're in a good mood. I guess your boss' hot romance makes
things easier, right? He's not on your case so much?"
"Hot
romance?" Tom asked.
"Oh, you
don't know?" the customer said. "He's been sitting there all the time
holding hands with that woman who inherited the castle. The one he's been
seeing off and on. Now she's here all the time."
"I meant
to tell you," Kyrie said. "But I didn't want to talk in front of
people. They spent yesterday necking over the counter. It was. . . weird. Poor
Anthony had cook all the meals. Slowed us down to a crawl."
"Well,
Anthony is a nice boy," the woman said. "But not like Tom."
"Ah, so
you wouldn't want our big ape removal services," Kyrie said, and smiled at
the woman, then at Tom and flitted away to go take the order of the next table.
She left Tom
quite stunned. Had Kyrie smiled at him? And had Kyrie really patted his bottom?
Forget pheromones. What were they pumping out of those air conditioners?
"Well,
have you asked her out?" the woman said.
"I'm
sorry?"
"Oh,
don't play stupid. Have you asked Kyrie out?" the woman asked, smiling at
him with a definite maternal expression.
He felt his
damn all-too-easy blush come on and heat his cheeks. "Oh, I wouldn't have
a chance."
The woman
pressed her lips together. "Don't be stupid. She might have talked to me,
but that entire little display was for your benefit. You do have a
chance."
Tom hesitated.
He could feel his mouth opening and closing, as he failed to find something
appropriate to say, and he was sure, absolutely sure, he looked like a landed
guppy. "I don't know," he said. "I'm not anyone's prize
catch."
"So?"
the woman shrugged. "No one is. You don't make babies start screaming when
they see you. You'll do."
He had to get
hold of this conversation. And his own unruly emotions. He and Kyrie had things
to do. Far more important things. The Pearl had to be returned. They had to stop
whatever scary beetles were trying to kill them both. This was no time to go
all googly-eyed at the girl. "Yeah, well. . . anyway, what will you be
having?"
"The
usual. See if you have apple pie. I don't know if Frank baked yesterday, he
seemed so distracted with his girlfriend. Apple for preference, but cherry
would do. And a coffee, with creamer and sugar on the side."
"Sure,"
Tom said and beat a hasty retreat around the edge of the booths and back to the
counter. There was apple pie in the fridge. He knew the customer enough to put
the pie in the microwave for a few seconds' zap to chase the chill away. He got
the coffee and the little bowls with cream and sugar and put it all on a tray.
And turned
around to see Frank and his girlfriend—and he almost dropped the tray.
There was
something odd about Frank and his girlfriend, both, and Tom couldn't quite say
what it was.
He'd seen them
before together, but usually when she picked Frank up or dropped him off. Now,
they were holding hands over the counter, quite lost in each other's eyes. They
weren't talking. Only their hands, moving infinitesimally against each other
seemed to be communicating interest or affection or something.
With such an
intense gaze, you expected. . . talk. And you really didn't expect people their
age to be that smitten.
He realized he
was staring fixedly at them, but they didn't even seem to have noticed. They
continued looking at each other's eyes.
There was
other crazy stuff happening there, Tom thought. Because while the woman didn't
look like a prize—she looked like she'd been run through the ringer a couple
dozen times, and perhaps hit with a mallet for good measure—she dressed well,
and she looked like she could do better.
And if she was
really the heiress to the castle, she couldn't be all that poor. The property,
dilapidated and in need of work as it was, was yet worth at least half a mil,
just on location. Where would someone like her meet someone like Frank? And
what would attract her to him?
He set the pie
and the coffee in front of the customer, who said, "I see you have noticed
the lovebirds."
"Yes,"
Tom said, distracted. "I wonder how they met."
"I don't
know," the woman said. "It was at least a month ago. In fact, when I
saw them first, a month ago, they were already holding hands like that, so it
might have been longer."
A month ago.
The cluster of missing people had started a month ago. How would those two
facts correlate? Tom wondered. He smiled at the customer and said something, he
wasn't sure what, then backtracked to get the carafe to give warm ups to his
tables.
Was he being
churlish? After all, he also didn't compare to Kyrie. If he should—by a
miracle, and possibly through sudden loss of her mind—manage to convince Kyrie
to go out with him, wouldn't people look at them funny like that too, and say
that they couldn't believe she would date someone like him?
But he looked
at Frank, still holding the woman's hands. And Kyrie had said that the day
before he'd been so out of it that he'd let Anthony work the grill. Frank,
normally, would not let any of them touch the grill. He said that quality
control was his responsibility.
Tom looked at
Frank and the woman. He could swear they hadn't moved in half an hour. That
just wasn't normal.
He tracked
Kyrie through the diner, till he could arrange to meet her—as he went out, his
tray laden with salad and soda, to attend to a table, and she was coming back,
her tray loaded with dishes—in the middle of the isle, in the extension where a
whole wall of windows separated them from Frank and made it less likely Frank
would overhear them.
"Kyrie,
those two, that isn't normal."
To his
surprise, Kyrie smiled. "Oh, it's cute in a gag me sort of way."
"No, no.
I mean it isn't normal, Kyrie. Normal people don't sit like that perfectly
quiet, fluttering fingers at each other."
Kyrie flung
around to watch him, eye to eye. "What are you saying?"
"That
we're looking for a weird insect-like romance. And I think that's it. The pie
and coffee lady says that they first met a month ago, at least. I confess I
didn't pay any attention when it started, just sort of realized it was going
on. I guess the idea of Frank getting some and maybe leaving descendants was so
scary I kind of shied away from it. But the pie lady thinks it was already
going on a month ago. Though even she says it's getting more intense."
"I
haven't given it much attention, either," Kyrie said. "A month at
least, or a month?"
"At least
a month, I don't know any more."
Kyrie looked
suitably worried. "Okay," she said. "Okay. I'll make
enquiries."
* * *
Kyrie turned
on her rounds, to stop by the poet, and give him a warm up on his coffee.
"We always wonder what you write," she said and smiled. All these
months, she'd never actually attempted to talk to the poet, but she figured
someone had to. And he was there every night the same hours.
He was the
most regular of the regulars. If he had looked at all—and Kyrie had never been
absolutely sure of the poet's being fully engaged with the world—he would know,
better than anyone, how long Frank's romance had been going on.
The man
reached nervous fingers for the ceramic cup with the fresh coffee in it, and
fumbled with getting it to his mouth to drink. His pale-blue eyes rested on
Kyrie's face for a moment, then away. "I. . . It's just a journal. My
therapist said I would be better off for writing a journal."
"A
journal," she said. She had a feeling the man wasn't used to much female
attention, but if what he wrote was indeed a journal, then he would have all
the data there, at his fingertips. "I would never be disciplined enough
for a journal."
He grinned,
showing her very crooked teeth. Then looked rapidly away and continued,
speaking intently to the salt shaker. "Well, it's all a matter of doing it
at the same time every day, isn't it? Just being regular and doing it at the
same time. After a while it becomes an habit and you could no more go without
it than you could go without eating or sleeping."
He looked back
at her, just a little, out of the corner of the eye, reminding Kyrie of a
squirrel, tempted by nuts on the sidewalk but hesitant about coming out in the
open.
She smiled at
him. "You must write all sorts of fascinating details about everything
that happens in there. I mean, so much better than just memory. My co-worker
and I were just talking about how long our boss has been in love with that lady
there," she gestured with her head. "And we couldn't remember when
they started going out."
"Oh."
The poet fumbled with his journal, flipping through the pages in a way that
seemed to indicate he wasn't absolutely sure how to use fingers. The gesture of
a terminally nervous neurotic. "I can tell you the exact day. I have it
here, all written down, because it was so amazing. She came in, they looked at
each other, and it was like. . . you know, the song, across a crowded room and
all that. They looked at each other, their eyes met, and she hurried over there
and they held hands." He found the right page and, for once, dared to look
up at Kyrie, as he showed it to her. "There, there, you see. Almost
exactly a month ago. And they've been like that ever since. Oh, not every
night, not that . . . absorbed. . . but at least a few nights a week she walks
him in or waits for him when he goes out."
The way he
looked at Kyrie, shyly and sort of sideways, seemed to indicate he had his own
personal dreams of getting to hold hands with her someday. Kyrie didn't feel
that charitable, but smiled at him anyway, and glanced at the page—of which she
could understand nothing, since it appeared to have been written by dipping a
spider's legs in ink and letting it wander all over the page. "Very nice.
Well, now I'll know what you're doing and I can tell the other people when they
ask."
She wandered
away to check on orders. So far, no one had asked for anything cooked, but it
was bound to happen. "Tom, you might need to take over the grill,"
she said, as she passed him. "As people start coming in who want their
early morning dinners."
He looked
surprised. "Sure," he said. "I can probably load dishes while
I'm up there too, if you want me to."
She didn't
tell him anything about Frank and his girlfriend, but she was thinking. What
she was thinking, mostly, was that this whole eyes meeting across a crowded
room didn't happen to people. Not in real life. But it might very well happen
to bugs who were acting on instinct and pheromones.
* * *
It turned out
not to be as bad as Kyrie expected. The clinch of hands over the bar stopped
before the crunch, and Frank took over flipping the burgers and cooking the
eggs and what not.
From about ten
to midnight they were so busy that Kyrie didn't even notice the other guys had
come in—Keith and Rafiel and Tom's dad—until she saw that Tom was serving that
table. And then she forgot about them again, as she was kept running off her
feet, taking pie to one and a hamburger to another, and a plate of dolmades to
a particularly raucous group in a corner.
As the crowd
started thinning, past midnight, Kyrie went up to the counter to put the carafe
back. And when she turned, Rafiel was standing by the counter. "Can you
take a fifteen minute break?" he said. "Tom says he can handle it
till you come back."
"Frank,"
she said, and realized that Frank had heard them. He waved them away. "Go.
If Tom can handle it, I don't care."
On the way to
the front door, Kyrie told Tom, "Thank you."
He looked
slightly puzzled and then frowned at Rafiel, which did not seem at all like a
natural reaction. "Are you sure you asked him?" she asked Rafiel.
"Yes,
yes, I asked him." He led her outside, towards his car, parked on the
street. "I'm not saying he's incredibly excited about it, but I asked
him."
"Rafiel,
if he doesn't think he can handle it alone I shouldn't leave him." She
started to walk back, but Rafiel came after her and grabbed her arm.
"Seriously,"
he said. "I don't think he minds the work. He minds you going out with me.
Oh, don't look like that," he said, before she was aware of looking like
anything at all. "He knows we have to talk. He says there's some stuff you
found out."
"Yes,"
Kyrie said, and sat down on the passenger side of the car. Rafiel had held the
door open for her, and closed it as soon as she sat down. He then walked around
the car to his side.
"I
thought I'd take you for a cup of coffee, so we can talk? There's an all night
coffee house down the street."
Kyrie nodded.
She had no need for coffee, but she wanted to tell Rafiel about the beetles,
and what she thought of the beetles.
* * *
Edward watched
Tom, after Kyrie left. He watched Keith too. Mostly because Keith puzzled him.
He sat at the table, taking everything in, seemingly unaffected by the fact
that there were not one but two types of shape-shifters that might want him
dead.
Dragons and
beetles and who knows what oh, my. "You're not scared at all?" he
asked Keith, in an undertone.
Keith looked
back at him, as though trying to decide exactly how many heads Edward might have.
"Well," he said. "It's not so much that I'm not scared.
Although. . . I don't think I am, you know?"
"Why
not?" Edward asked. He thought of the Great Sky Dragon, flying through the
sky and using what seemed to be magic to get from one place to the other
without having to cross the space between. He thought of even Tom in his dragon
form, of Tom's flying across the New York sky, seeming completely non-human.
"I don't
know," Keith said. "I told them it was because I read so much science
fiction and comic books—and that's probably true." He shrugged. "I
mean, you see something very often, even if you know it's fiction, it makes an
impression on you after a while and part of you hopes or believes it to be
true, right? I mean, even if your mind knows it isn't."
"It's
possible," Edward said. To be honest he didn't remember what it was like
to be that young anymore. It had been at least twenty five years since he'd
read any fiction. No. More. In college, his fiction reading had just tapered
away to nothing. "I suppose it's possible."
"Well, in
a way it was like that," Keith said. "I mean, the idea would have
probably struck me as much odder, much more impossible if I'd never seen it in
stories. But the important thing is, I saw it happen in the worst possible circumstances."
He lowered his voice. "They grabbed us and they took us in, and Rafiel
was. . . um. . . shifted. And Tom was all tied up, and—"
"He was.
Tied?" Edward knew what Lung had told him, and at some level, consciously,
he knew that being captured by the triad could be no picnic. But somehow,
seeing Tom walk into his hotel room had given him hope that it was all just a
big fight. He knew Tom could handle himself in a fight. He wasn't so sure about
Tom being helpless.
"Yeah. He
was completely tied. And he. . . They'd. . . His clothes were caked with blood.
They'd taken his jacket and boots off. I think they might have thought to keep
them after they. . . you know, got rid of him. Or perhaps they thought that the
leather would protect him. And then he . . . shifted. I knew it was still him
because of his eyes. And he freed me. And I freed Rafiel, who recovered much
faster than they expected. And then we were. . . Fighting. And that's the thing
you know." He looked at Edward and seemed to realize that Edward was
trying very hard to imagine but didn't really know. "I realized they can
be taken out with a good tire iron. You don't need to be one of them."
Edward was
following his son with his gaze. Tom looked so. . . competent. He'd removed his
leather jacket and was wearing a red apron with Athens on the chest, and
doing a job his father had never, possibly, imagined a son of his doing. But he
was doing the job competently.
There had been
no complaints. On the contrary. People smiled at him and it was clear that
several of the regulars were very fond of him. And he answered back and smiled,
and seemed to be a part of this diner. A trusted employee. Which was more
than—just five years ago—Edward could have imagined.
To be honest,
he couldn't have imagined it two days ago. If he'd thought of Tom at all, he'd
thought of Tom as being in jail, or perhaps dead. He would never have believed
his son was sane and responsible enough to hold down any job.
"Really,"
Keith said. "I'd love to be able to shift, because it's cool, but I'm not
afraid of them. I mean, the nice ones are nice. The other ones would probably
be just as dangerous as normal people."
Edward
frowned. That thought too would have been unbelievable five years ago. But he
was looking at Tom, and thought Tom was not much different than he would have
been if he'd never turned into a dragon. He was just Tom. And, on balance, a
much better person than Edward had any right to expect.
Just then, Tom
noticed him looking and arched his eyebrows. Edward looked away. He might have
thrown Tom out from fear and confusion. Getting him back, however, was going to
require a full and rational siege.
If only they
managed not to get killed by any other shifters. Edward wished he had Keith's
certainty that they could fight against shape changers on equal terms.
* * *
"We need
to talk," Rafiel said. He pulled the chair out for Kyrie, and waited until
Kyrie had sat down before going around to his side. He picked up both their
orders too, her iced mocha latte and his tall cup of something profoundly
foamy.
"Yes, I.
. . Tom thinks—"
"Wait,"
Rafiel said. "We don't need to talk about the . . . creatures." He
looked around again, as though afraid someone around them might understand the
cryptic comments. "We need to talk about Tom."
"We—uh?
What about Tom?"
"Well,
he's not as bad as I expected," Rafiel said. "Not nearly. But he is.
. . ah. . . Tom has issues."
Kyrie nodded.
"Yes, but—" She didn't want to discuss Tom's nor Tom's issues, nor
could she imagine what Tom had to do with any of this. Tom's personality had
nothing to do with the predicament they were in.
Sure, it would
have been helpful if he could have managed to avoid tangling with the triad
dragons. But that was, surely, just a fraction of his problems. The beetles
loomed much larger in Kyrie's mind, perhaps because she had experienced them up
close and personal. And Tom was not a were beetle. Of that she was sure.
"No. I just
. . ." Rafiel looked flustered, which was a new one for him. "I just
am going to say this once and be done, okay? I can't help notice that he's
attracted to you, and I think I've seen you. . . I mean, you give the
impression of being attracted to him too, sometimes."
"I don't
think I am," she said. "It's just that we've been working together
for a while and I think I've misjudged him horribly, and I feel guilty about
that. So I've been nice to him, but I don't think—"
"Good,"
Rafiel said. "I mean, really. Tom is not a bad person, but I think he's
been through a lot in his life, and I think it makes him. . . well. . . I think
he's sometimes not as well adjusted as he would like to be. And I wouldn't want
to wish that on you."
He put his
hand across the table, on top of hers. Kyrie withdrew her hand, slowly, not
wanting it to seem like a rejection. If she was reading this right, Rafiel had
just tried to clear the field of his rival in a most underhanded way, something
she thought only women did. Perhaps because she'd seen it between women and
girls in her middle and highschool years.
Fortunately,
she wasn't sure she was interested in either of these men—or in any men. She'd
seen too much of marriage and relationships through her time in foster care to
think that she would ever take any relationship for granted or view it as a
given. On top of that the kinks the shifters' natures would put into any
relationship just about had her deciding to remain celibate the rest of her
life. The knife-in-the-back approach to friendship and love certainly didn't
incline her towards Rafiel.
"Tom
thinks that Frank and his girlfriend might be the beetles," Kyrie said,
rapidly, before Rafiel could resume his wholly inappropriate talk.
"Frank
and his girlfriend?" Rafiel asked. "Why?"
Kyrie told
him. She told him about the woman who ordered pie every night and who said that
Frank and his girlfriend had held hands a month back, and about the poet and
the whole eyes meeting across a crowded room thing.
Rafiel
frowned. "Don't you think it's all a bit in the air?" he asked.
"I mean, they're just a middle aged couple, and perhaps they're not so
good on the relationship and getting along with each other front. Perhaps they
aren't very good at connecting with each other?"
"But. .
." Kyrie said, and seized on the one thing she was sure of. "But his
girlfriend first met him around a month ago." And then, with desperate
recollection. "And, you know, he had a band-aid on his neck the day after
I speared the beetle."
Rafiel sighed.
"He and how many guys in Goldport. Think. Perhaps he cut himself
shaving."
"At the
back of his neck?"
"Well,
okay, so he scratched himself. Or had a pimple that blew up. It happens. Don't
you think if he'd been stuck with an umbrella, even in another shape, it would
require more than a band-aid?"
"Not
necessarily," Kyrie said. "We heal fast."
"I still
say this is all in the air," Rafiel said. He sipped at his coffee as if he
were angry at it. "You have no proof. There are probably dozen of
couples—hundreds—with weird relationships, who started a month ago, and where
one of them had some sort of injury on the neck that day."
"I doubt
hundreds," Kyrie said. "And besides, you know, there is the fact that
she has a very convenient burial ground."
"What?"
"The
castle. She inherited the castle. You've seen the grounds. She could bury a
hundred people there in shallow graves and be fairly assured they wouldn't be
found. That's pretty hard in urban Goldport."
"Not
really," Rafiel said. "You know, people have backyard lawns."
Kyrie snorted
with laughter before she could stop herself. "I suppose you could fit one
corpse in my backyard lawn. Two if you put them very close together."
Rafiel was
jiggling his leg rapidly up and down. "Yeah, but some people have bigger
lawns." He frowned, bringing his brows together. "What do you want me
to do about it, anyway? Do you want me to burst into the Athens and arrest them
because they hold hands and don't talk?"
Kyrie wasn't
used to getting upset at people. Normally, to get along, both as a foster child
and as an adult, she'd learned to hide her anger from people. But she couldn't
even hide from herself that she though Rafiel was being unreasonable. That she
suspected he was being unreasonable because he felt thwarted in his pursuit of
her affections didn't actually make her feel any better.
"I want
you to go in there and look around," she said.
His mouth
turned down in a dissatisfied little-boy scowl. It was the type of expression
she would expect from a five or six year old who had just seen someone else get
the bigger piece of candy. "I can't do that," he said.
"For
heaven's sake, why not?"
"Because
I don't have a warrant." Instead of getting louder, his voice had to lower
and lower, until it was low and almost vicious, growling out its protest.
"I'm a policeman. I can't go poking around people's property without a
warrant. Citizens get all sorts of upset when policemen do that. They would. .
."
Kyrie didn't
think this behavior was more endearing because of its sheer irrationality. She
finished her frozen latte, and picked up the cup, which she'd got as a take out
cup, as she'd been afraid of having to finish it on the way back to work.
"Officer Trall, if you can hide evidence, lie to other police forces, and
suggest that we, as shifters, need to take our law into what passes for our
hands, then yeah, you could and should be able to have a look-see in someone's
garden without a warrant. I mean, no one is asking you to go in with a police
force. Just go there, shift, and have a good sniff. Death will out, you
know?"
He narrowed
his eyes at her. "I'm trying to stay on the right side of the law. I'm
trying to enforce the law. I'm trying to be a good person, Kyrie, and somehow
balance this with being a. . . shifter. I don't think you realize—"
"Oh, I
think I realize it perfectly well. I just think you'd be far more energetic in
pursuing this if I'd told you that the culprit in this case was Tom
Ormson."
"That's
underhanded. Tom is a friend. He risked himself to rescue me."
"Oh, and
how well you thank him."
"I didn't
mean it that way. If you took it that way it's because you chose to. Tom would
be very bad for you, and just because—"
"As
opposed to yourself? You would be great? What would your mother think of your
dragging me home?"
He blinked,
genuinely confused. "Mom would love you. I don't understand—"
"I mean,
Officer Trall, that your parents might not be so happy that the son they've
protected, the son they always thought would need their protection the rest of
their lives has a life outside the family."
"That's
ridiculous. Did you just call me a mama's boy? I don't think there's anything
else I can say to you."
"Well,"
Kyrie said. She was leaning over the table, and he was leaning from the other
side, and they'd been arguing in low vicious tones. Now she straightened.
"That is very fortunate, because I don't think I want to discuss anything
with you, either."
And with that,
she flounced out the door, which -- she thought, smiling to herself -- the
owners of this coffee shop must think was a normal thing for her.
She had gone a
good half block before she heard him shout "Kyrie" behind her, but
she didn't slow down, just went on as fast as she could.
This time she
didn't go into the parking lot. Didn't even think about it. Instead, she
approached at a half run, towards the front door. While she was waiting to
cross Pride, the cross-street before the Athens, she was vaguely aware of a car
squealing tires nearby, and then parking in front of the diner.
She didn't
turn to look. Which was too bad, because if she had turned to look, Rafiel's
hands on her shoulders spinning her around wouldn't have taken her so much by
surprise. And his mouth descending on hers might have been entirely avoided.
Or, if not, she might at least have avoided the few seconds of confusion in
which her brain told her to get away from the man while parts far more
southerly responded to his strength, his virility and the rather obvious, feline
musk assaulting her nostrils with a proclamation of both those qualities.
As it was, she
lost self-control just enough to allow him to pull her towards him, to allow
herself to relax against him. She lost track of who she was and what she meant
to do through the feeling of firm male flesh, and the large hands on her
shoulders, both compelling and sheltering her.
He slid his
tongue between her lips, hot and searching and forceful.
And in her
mind, an image of Tom appeared. Tom smiling at her, with that odd diffident
expression when Keith had asked about sex as a shifter.
She pushed
Rafiel away. And then she slapped him. Hard
* * *
Tom would
probably have missed the kiss, if he hadn't already been watching the door for
Kyrie. But he was.
Okay, first of
all, and stupid as it was, and as much as he was absolutely sure he didn't
actually stand a snow ball's—or a snow flake's chance in hell—of getting near
her, he'd been indulging himself in quite nasty thoughts about Rafiel.
So, okay,
Rafiel needed to discuss the case with her. But couldn't he just have taken her
on a quick walk down the block, then back again? Couldn't he have talked to her
out there, against that lamppost in front of the Athens? Where Tom could have
kept track of them through the big plate-glass window?
And then. . .
and then there was everything else. If Frank and his girlfriend were the beetle
couple, where did that leave Tom? Truth be told, Tom felt a little guilty for
even suspecting Frank of that. Frank had given him a full time job when no one
else would.
Yes, but why
had he? Tom wouldn't have hired himself, with his credentials at the time. An
then there was his father. He'd told Kyrie not to go there, but it wasn't
entirely avoidable. For one his father was sitting at a corner table, in the
extension, getting intermittent warm-ups of coffee and ordering the occasional
pastry. He seemed to be discussing comic books with Keith, a scene that, before
tonight, Tom thought could only come from his hallucinations.
And his father
had already managed to ask Tom if Tom was warm enough—warm enough!—in the
Colorado summer, where the temperatures reached the low hundreds in daytime and
the buildings gave it back all night. Warm. Enough. It wasn't so much like this
man's behavior bore absolutely no resemblance to the father Tom had known
growing up. That was somewhat of a problem but, on the other hand, it could be
said that any father at all would be an improvement over that man.
On the other
hand, this particular father seemed to do parenting by instruments. Like a
pilot, flying in a thick fog, might read his instruments to decide his
location, how to turn and where to stop—and if the instruments are faulty might
end up somewhere completely different—Tom's father seemed to be trying to mend
a relationship that had never existed in ways that didn't apply even to that
hypothetical relationship.
Maybe it was
that the only relationships Tom's father had ever taken seriously were courting
relationships. At least that would explain his trying to win his way back to
Tom's heart with chocolates. It didn't explain his thinking that Tom wore the
same size pants he'd worn at sixteen though.
On the other
hand, these pants were a great advantage, now he thought of it. He would no
longer need to worry about siring an inconvenient shifter child—not if he wore
them much longer. This, of course, brought his thoughts around to Kyrie again,
and to the fact that she was five minutes over her break already.
Oh, he had no
intention of telling Frank about it. Even if Frank were perfectly above board
and exactly what he claimed to be, there was absolutely no reason to let Frank
know this stuff. He'd just get upset.
And so far
Tom, moving rapidly from table to table, taking orders, distributing them,
warming up coffee, was keeping on top of everything. In a little while, the
crowds would drift back in again, and as long as Kyrie was in by then. . .
No. What he
hated was the fact that he might be covering up for her necking time with
Rafiel. Okay, he was willing to admit that Rafiel might not be exactly the scum
of the Earth. He could do worse. And she could do worse, too. In fact, any way
he looked at it, Kyrie and Rafiel were just about a perfect match.
Despite her
upbringing, Kyrie was fairly balanced. And Rafiel, after all, came from such a
well-adjusted background that his parents knew about and abetted his
shape-shifting. Surely, neither of them had anything in common with Tom, who
had been thrown out of his house—at gun point no less—by the man who now
thought he could heal it all with expensive chocolates and too-tight clothes.
They deserved
each other. And neither of them deserved him in any sense. Which didn't mean he
had to like it. It didn't even mean he had to accept it, did it?
He seethed,
having to control himself to prevent slamming plates and breaking cups. He
seethed partly at them, because he was sure they were taking advantage of his
covering up for her to go and neck in some shady corner. And he seethed partly
at himself, because, who was he to get angry at whatever they wanted to do?
And then, as
he turned around, carafe in hand, he saw Kyrie come hurrying towards the door.
Alone. She was
alone. He felt his heart give a little leap at this. Not hopeful. Oh, he
couldn't have told himself he was hopeful. But. . .
And then he
saw Rafiel come up behind her. He grabbed her by the shoulders. He spun her
around. His mouth came down to meet hers. She relaxed against him.
The teapot
escaped from Tom's grasp and fell, with a resounding crash and a spray of hot
coffee onto the nearest bar stools and Tom's feet.
It took him a
moment to realize the shattering sound had indeed come from outside his head.
* * *
Edward had
never seen Tom tremble. He'd held a gun to the boy's head, when Tom was only
sixteen and he had never seen him shake. But now, he was shaking. Or rather,
vibrating, lightly, as if he were a bell that someone had struck.
"I'm
sorry I'm late with the warm up," he said, and his face was pale, and his
voice oh, so absolutely polite. "I dropped the carafe and had to brew
another one."
"It's
okay," Edward said. He'd been enjoying his conversation with Keith, partly
because it distracted him from the fact that they might very well all be dead
come nighttime. And partly because in the middle of a lot of information about
Keith—who apparently had parents and no less than four siblings somewhere in
Pennsylvania—there was some comment and anecdote about Tom. Apparently Tom kept
Keith's key and usually could be counted on to give it back when Keith came
home drunk and confused, having left keys and jacket—and often other clothes—at
the last wild party he'd attended.
Keith had
engaged in some self-mocking on the subject of the number of times Tom had
shown up without a stitch of clothing on, and how Keith had thought that Tom
went to even wilder parties than he did. Now, of course, he understood.
"He must go through an awful lot of clothes," Keith said. "They
all must."
And Edward had
nodded. He'd been relaxed. And Tom had looked happy and in his element. Why was
he shaking now? Was it just the coffee pot? Was Tom so insecure he'd get that
upset over a broken coffee pot?
"It's
okay. I really don't need a warm up," Edward said. "It's excellent
coffee, but I've probably already drank too much. Don't worry."
Tom nodded,
and looked aside, as if getting ready to walk away. Then came back and sat
down. He put the carafe down, with some care, on one of the coasters and leaned
forward. "Father," he said.
It was the
first time in five years he'd actually called Edward that. Edward took a deep
breath. "Yes?"
"I need
you do it for me, the delivery."
"What
delivery?" Edward asked, puzzled. They were going to find the beetles,
weren't they? What was there to deliver?
"The
delivery of the Pearl," Tom said, lowering his voice. "In a few
minutes, when I get a chance, I'm going to go into the bathroom and get it,
I'll put it in the container before I take it out of the water, then put the
container in the backpack. I assume you know where the center for the. . .
Where their center is in Goldport, right?"
Edward nodded.
"But. . . aren't we going to do that later? I thought we were going
to—"
Tom pushed
back the strands of his hair that had gotten loose in the course of the
evening. "No. I. . . It's me. Look, it's just me. I know there's something
wrong with me, but I just can't take it. I can't. I can't be around to watch
it. So, you take the. . . delivery to the people looking for it, and I'll go,
okay?"
Oh, no. This
sounded far more serious than Edward had thought. And he didn't quite know how
to handle it. The thing had always been, since Tom was two or so, that if he
got something in his mind, no matter how misguided or strange, it was almost
impossible to get it out. And if you pushed the wrong way, he only got mad at
you and more determined to do whatever he'd set his mind on.
He didn't even
want to ask about it in a way that would get Tom's back up. So he spoke as
gently as he knew how. "Tom, I don't understand. What can't you take, and
why are you going? And where?"
Tom shook his
head, as if answering some unspoken question. "Kyrie. And. . . Rafiel. I
can't take it. I know this is stupid, okay? I know it's puppy love okay? But
I've never been close to another woman. Well, not since I was sixteen. And I've
never even thought about another woman as I think about Kyrie. I know it's
stupid. You don't need to tell me—"
"I wasn't
going to tell you that—" Edward started.
"But I
know it is stupid. I know I never had a chance. Being as I am. Who I am. And I
don't just mean the. . . shifting. I mean, just who I am. I know Kyrie deserves
much better. I know that Rafiel is better. I've known that since I met him. But
I'm too . . . I can't watch. I should be able to because they're both my
friends, in a way, so I'm probably immature too, but there it is. I'm immature.
I just can't. . . I'd end up getting in a big argument with her or him, or both
of them. And I can't do that, because then. . . it would be worse than just
leaving. So I'm leaving."
The words had
poured in a torrent, drowning out any other attempts at speech, any other
attempts at questioning. Now they stopped, and Tom reached for the coffeepot
handle, as if to get up and resume his rounds.
"Tom,"
Edward said. "Where are you going?"
"It
doesn't matter. Just. . . somewhere. Somewhere till things cool with the triad
and until. . . No, I don't suppose I'll ever forget. I'm not. . . good."
"Perhaps
you could consider coming home?" Edward said, and before Tom could correct
it, "To my home. You can, you know. I don't mind."
He expected
anger, or perhaps a huffing of pain. But instead Tom inclined his head once.
"Maybe. After. . . when the triad isn't looking anymore. Perhaps they'll
even give up on the idea of revenge, and calm down, and then, maybe."
Edward knew
Tom was wrong. He knew Tom was wrong about Kyrie and Rafiel. He'd seen the
three of them together and while Rafiel might look a lot at Kyrie, Kyrie looked
at Tom. Now, most of the time she looked at Tom with annoyance or borderline
irritation.
But that was
part of it too, wasn't it? The ones who could annoy you most, the ones who
could get under your skin most. . . He remembered what she had told him about
how she knew that Edward still liked Tom, still had paternal feelings for him.
How it was all about how he fought so hard to counter those feelings.
From what he'd
seen, Edward guessed Kyrie had known from experience. She was, at the very
least, seriously in lust with Tom. For a moment or two the day before, he'd
thought she'd need a drool catcher to avoid staining the carpets of his hotel
room. But she would bet there was more there, too. Because Kyrie was not the
type to confuse lust with love.
He could Tom
go on believing this, being miserable. Tom would then probably end up in New
York again and, knowing his intelligence and his new-found focus, be at Harvard
or Yale within the year. And eventually he would find another woman.
But Edward
looked at his son's pale face, his set mouth, which looked rigid enough not to
tremble. Rigid enough not to betray the desolation within.
"Tom,
I've watched at her, and I think you're wrong. From her reactions, since I've
met her, and from seeing her with him, I've . . . I don't think she's
interested in him. And I think she likes you a lot."
Tom shook his
head. "No, trust me. I had some hope. Not a lot. I mean, I know our
different standings. But she was nice to me, and I thought maybe. . . But then
I saw them kissing." He gestured with his head. "Up front. I know. I
saw." He shook his head. "And I never expected it to affect me so much."
He frowned, thunderous eyebrows low over his blue eyes. "I wanted to shift
and flame something. Preferably his pants."
Edward almost
laughed at this, because it was so much like Tom, to want to flame his rival's
manhood right off. But he didn't want to laugh, not while Tom was in pain.
"I just
thought you should know. I think you're wrong. But if you still think you must
leave, then. . . I hope eventually you'll come back to my home. And before
that, call me, okay. Tell me where you are. I'll wire you money. There's no
reason for you to be deprived."
It was
probably a measure of Tom's state of mind that he didn't protest the offer of
money. Instead, he nodded and walked away.
"Man, he
has it bad," Keith said. "I didn't realize it was that serious."
"I suspected
it," Edward said. "I just didn't know he would take it in his head to
run away from it all."
Was that what
he'd taught Tom, when he'd thrown him out? To leave difficult situations
behind?
* * *
Kyrie was
shaking. Mostly with repressed rage. That Rafiel would dare grab her like that.
That he would dare kiss her. And in front of half the diner too.
She put her
apron on, and resumed serving her tables, but felt as if people were staring at
her, and found herself blushing. How could he?
She suspected
Rafiel was the center of attention to his parents, the center of their lives.
His "handicap", the fact that he shifted, would make him far more
precious to them, and they far more attentive to him. And he'd grown up to be
the center of the universe.
Kyrie would
bet too that with his body, his easy, self assured personality, he would have
girls falling from his hair and tumbling into his lap. She would just bet. So
he probably was not too well aware of the meaning of the word "no."
Well, she would buy him a thesaurus at the first opportunity.
No, as in
never. As in negation. As in I'm not interested. And even if the girl
hasn't said it flat out, if she'd given him reason to think she was less than
pleased with his interest, then Mr. Rafiel Trall would learn to keep his hands
to himself. And his lips too.
She was so
mad, that she banged a load of dishes into the dishwasher, after bussing the
empty tables. This was the hour when people started leaving before the rush,
and she'd bussed her tables, and Tom's too. She banged the plates and cups in,
and she gave Frank a dirty look when he glared at her.
The dirty look
must have worked, because Frank didn't say anything. Just turned away.
And Frank was,
of course, a problem, as was Frank's girlfriend. Kyrie couldn't believe how
obtuse and close minded Rafiel had been. How could he not see that this series
of coincidences, here, at the center of the Athens, was far more relevant than
no matter how many couples who'd started dating a month ago, no matter how many
men with bandaged necks elsewhere?
Damn the man.
She couldn't believe someone like that, who was clearly smarter than dryer lint
would attempt to solve crimes using parts of his anatomy that lay below the
equator.
She closed the
dishwasher and started it, and turned to face Tom. He stood just behind her,
his arms full with a tray of dishes.
"Oh, Tom,
I'm sorry. That dishwasher is full. Let me open the other one. I'll put the
dishes in for you if you want me to."
He shook his
head. He was keeping his lips together, as if he were biting them to keep
himself from saying something. How weird. It was an expression she'd never seen
on his face. "Are you okay?"
"Fine,"
he said. "Just fine. I'll put the dishes in. You may go." His voice
sounded lower and raspier than normal.
She went. She
picked up tips, she tallied totals, she filled coffee cups.
On the way
back from the addition to the main part of the diner, she saw Tom bussing a
table, and thought that was as good a time as any to talk to him.
"I
couldn't get Rafiel to listen," she said, in a whisper. "About Frank.
He says it's all coincidences, and he refuses to help. What are we going to
do?"
For a while,
she thought that Tom hadn't heard her. He remained bent over the table, his
hand holding a stack of plates to put on the tray, while the other hand held a
moist cloth, with which he was poised to wipe where the plates had been. But he
didn't move. He just stood there.
"Tom?"
she said.
He put the
plates on the tray, very slowly. Carefully, he wiped the table. Then he stood
up and faced her. His face was stark white. Not the sickly pale it had been in
the parking lot the night she'd found him over the corpse, but white—the white
of paper, the white of the unblinking heart of a thunderbolt. "I don't
know what you want me to do," he said, his voice calm, emotionless.
"If you can't get Rafiel to listen to you, I fail to see where I can be of
any use. I'm sorry."
"Oh, Tom,
don't be an idiot," she said, in an urgent whisper, sure he had to have
misunderstood it all. "I want to know what you and I are going to do about
it."
Tom shook his
head. "No. You don't understand. We're not going to do anything. After
tonight, I won't even be here."
"Where
are you going?"
He twisted his
lips and shrugged. "Somewhere."
She watched
him pick up his tray and his cloth and disappear towards the main diner, tray
held at waist level.
What on Earth
was going on? First Rafiel had behaved like a lunatic, and now Tom. What had
they been smoking? And why were they not sharing?
"What do
you know about this?" she asked Keith and Edward, where they sat in their
corner table. "Where is Tom going? What is wrong with him?"
Keith sat back
on his chair, looking vaguely scared. "Whoa," he said. "That's
one of the few rules of safety I've learned. I don't get in between this kind
of stuff."
"What
kind of stuff," Kyrie asked, her temper rising. "What kind of stuff?
What is wrong with every male tonight?"
"I
think," Edward said, his voice regretful, his tone slow. "That if I
told you what Tom told me I would forfeit whatever trust I've been able to earn
back from him. And you must see I can't do that. He might need me. I have to. .
. stand by to help him if he needs it. I've got to tell you I hope he comes to
his senses, but I don't think my explaining things to you would further this in
any way."
"Oh,"
Kyrie said. "I see. He—" and she pointed at Keith. "Makes
cryptic remarks, and you make longer cryptic remarks, with far better
vocabulary. Whatever. Sure. What is this? Be stupid day for males?"
She glared at
them a while, daring them to answer. When neither did, she huffed out of there.
They didn't
answer because they had no answer. They knew damn well—had to know—that they
were acting like idiots. All of them.
Well, she
would show them. Rafiel might be more practiced at smelling shifters, but Kyrie
would bet that even she, herself, in panther form, could smell a rotting body
in a shallow grave. If she knew what she was looking for. Even at the morgue,
with all the preserving fluids and embalming whatnots, she had smelled it. She
was sure she could smell it undisguised and in the heat of day under a thin
layer of earth. The only reason she hadn't smelled before—if it was there—would
have been that she was escaping beetles and cops with guns.
So, when her
shift was over, she'd go up to the castle, and she'd shift. She'd sniff around.
When she found the corpses, she would shift again, and she would call the
police. Take that, Officer Trall. If someone called the corpses in, then Mr.
Rafiel Trall would have to do something about it, would he not?
And as for Mr.
Tom Ormsen, she didn't know exactly what was biting him, but she was in no mood
to find out, either. It occurred to her that he might have seen Rafiel kiss
her. But if that was what had put his nose so severely out of joint, then Tom
needed to take a chill pill, was what he needed to do.
After all what
fault was hers if an idiot male decided to kiss her. She had slapped him for
it, too. Half rocked his head off of his shoulders. And if Tom hadn't stuck
around to see that, he was more of a fool than she'd ever thought, and she
wouldn't mind if he left and never came back.
She avoided
him the rest of the shift.
* * *
Edward
received the backpack from Tom's hands, and pulled out his wallet to set the
bill for the food he and Keith and Rafiel had eaten. He guessed Rafiel wasn't
coming back, but he wasn't about to ask Tom. There was absolutely no reason to
get the boy even more upset than he already was.
Instead,
Edward put the backpack on his back, sure it looked ridiculous with his nice
clothes. He got up, and Tom was turning away, putting the bill with the money
in his apron pocket. Edward grabbed at his son's shoulder. "Tom." It
was as close as he dared come to a hug.
Tom looked
back, eyebrows raised.
"I just
want you to know," Edward said. "That if you need anything at
all." He gave Tom one of his cards. "You probably remember the home
address," he said. "But this is the new office address and my cell
phone and work phone. Call. Anytime. Day or night, okay?"
Tom nodded,
but there was just that look of dubiousness in his eyes that made Edward wonder
if he would really call. Or just get into trouble and not tell anyone.
He walked out
of the diner, and out into the cooler, exhaust-filled night of Fairfax avenue.
Under the light pole, he noticed that Keith was behind him.
"Can I
come with you?" Keith asked. "To deliver that?"
Edward took a
deep breath. "I don't think so," he said. "I'm going to deliver
it in person, you see, not put it down somewhere and wait for them to find it.
I'm afraid they'll go after Tom again if I do that."
"So. .
."
"So the
triads are dangerous. And the Great Sky Dragon is not someone—or something—one
tangles with for sport. I think I'm fairly safe, because they depend on me for
legal representation. But I don't think you'd be safe and I can't allow you to
risk yourself."
"But. .
." Keith said. "I can take out dragons. With a tire iron."
Edward
couldn't avoid smiling at that. "I know," he said. "And I'm
proud to have met you. But I really think this is something I have to do alone."
Keith took a
deep breath, and shrugged. Then frowned. "You're not going to allow me to,
are you? No matter what I say?"
"I'm
afraid not," Edward said. "I'm afraid it wouldn't be safe."
"Okay.
Then. . . I'll stay and keep an eye on Kyrie and see in what direction Tom
leaves, okay? I'll tell you. When I see you."
Edward nodded,
and put out his hand, solemnly. Keith shook it just as solemnly.
Add to the
things Tom had accomplished the fact that he seemed to make worthy friends. And
that was something that Edward had never expected of Tom. But he was glad. He
started walking up the street, to where Fairfax became a little better area. It
would make it easier to hail a cab. Once he caught a cab, he would call Lung.
If he didn't
give them much time to react, perhaps they wouldn't have time to summon the
Great Sky Dragon. Edward wasn't sure he could face that presence.
In fact, he
wasn't sure at all he would survive this experience. Despite everything he'd
told Keith, he was sure that the triad could buy a replacement lawyer, once
they got rid of him.
The funny
thing was that he didn't much care if anything happened to him, provided
nothing happened to Tom. He'd never got around to changing his will, and if he
died, at least Tom would be taken care of. It wasn't like he'd ever been much
of a father.
* * *
Kyrie hung up
her apron and picked up her purse. It hit her, suddenly, and with a certainty
she'd never felt before that whatever happened tonight was decisive.
Because, if
she went to the castle and found nothing, she'd have to live in hiding home as
fast as she could. Perhaps move. Because she couldn't know what the beetles
knew or where they were.
On the other
hand, if she went up there tonight and found corpses. . . well, it might be the
last time she hung her apron on this peg and headed out, at the end of the
shift, into the Colorado morning with the sky just turning pink, Fairfax avenue
as deserted as a country lane, and everything clean and still.
She got in her
car and drove home, but only opened her front door to throw her purse inside
the living room. Then she put her key in her pocket and headed back out.
The way to the
castle was quick enough and at this time of morning there wasn't really anyone
out. Kyrie could walk unnoticed down the streets. Which was good, because
whether he and his girlfriend were shifter-beetles or not, Kyrie didn't want
him to know that she suspected him or his girlfriend. She wanted him to think
that she had gone home, normally and stayed there.
In a way she
wished she could. Or that she—at least—had Tom or Rafiel with her. She couldn't
believe that both of them had turned on them at the same time, and she wondered
if it was some argument they'd had, of which she was only catching the
backlash. Who knew?
The castle
looked forbidding and dark, looming in the morning light. Most of the windows
were boarded up, except for some right at the front, next to the front door.
She supposed that Frank's girlfriend, not needing all the rooms—at least until
such a time as she opened a bed and breakfast if those plans were true—had
opened only those in which she was living.
Kyrie wondered
what Frank's and whatever her name's plans were, if they really were the
beetles and if they truly were in the middle of a reproductive frenzy.
Were they
intending on having all their sons and daughters help in the bed and breakfast?
Or simply to take over the castle with their family. Kyrie seemed to remember
that beetles were capable of laying a thousand eggs in one reproductive season,
so even the castle might prove very tight quarters. And how would they explain
it? And would the babies be human most of the time? Or humans all the time till
adolescence?
There was no
way to tell and Kyrie wondered if other shifters worried about it. She did. But
others were, seemingly, in a headlong rush to reproduce, regardless of what it
might mean. She thought of Rafiel and scowled.
As she
approached the front entrance to the garden, Kyrie saw a woman in a well-cut skirt
suit and fly away grey hair walking away from the alley where the back entrance
opened. She was walking away from the castle, towards Fairfax avenue. Maybe she
was going to pick Frank up from work.
Which would
mean, Kyrie supposed, that they weren't guilty and were just an older couple in
dire need of social skills.
But it would
also mean it was safe to go into the castle gardens. Kyrie ran in.
The gardens
were thick and green, in the early morning light. There was dew on the plants,
and some of it dripped from the overhead trees. Above, somewhere, two birds
engaged in a singing competition. She started towards the thicker part of the
vegetation, where she could undress and shift. She didn't think that the woman
living here now had any domestic help, but if she did, Kyrie didn't want some
maid or housekeeper to scream that there was a girl undressing in the garden.
Embarrassing, that.
Avoiding a
couple of spiders building elaborate webs in the early morning sunlight, Kyrie
made it all the way to the center of the garden, somewhere between the path
that circled the house, and the outside fence.
There were
ferns almost as tall as she was and she felt as if she'd stepped back into
another geologic age when the area was covered in rain forest. She removed her
clothes quickly and with practiced gestures. Shirt, jeans, shoes, all of it
neatly folded and set aside. And then she stood, in the greenery, and willed
herself to change.
It came more
easily than she expected. The panther liked green jungles and dark places. It
craved running through the heavy vegetation and climbing trees.
Kyrie forced
it, instead, to stand very still and smell. It didn't take long. The smell was
quite unmistakable.
* * *
"Hello,"
Edward said into his cell phone in the back of the car. "May I speak with
Mr. Lung?"
There was no
answer, but a clunking sound as though the phone had been dropped onto a hard
surface. From the background, Edward could hear the enthusiastic voice of a
monster-truck rally narrator. Then, as if from very far off, the shutting of a
door echoed.
Edward hoped
this meant that someone was calling Mr. Lung. It was, of course, possible that
once it had been determined that Edward hadn't called to order an order of
moo-goo-gaipan with fried rice on the side, the cashier had simply left. Or
gone to the kitchen to pinch an egg roll or his girlfriend's bottom.
It took a long
time, but at long last, Edward thought he heard, very faintly, approaching
footsteps. And then—finally—the sounds of a phone being moved around on a counter.
"Mr.
Ormson?" Lung's voice asked.
"Yes. I
have what you. . . I have the object you require. I'm heading to the restaurant
to return it."
"You are?
And your son?"
"We'll
leave my son out of this," Edward said.
"I see.
Will we?"
"Yes."
"Your son
caused much damage and death to our. . . organization."
Edward said
nothing. What was he supposed to say?
After a long
while, Lung sighed. "I see. But you are returning the object in
dispute."
"Yes."
"Well,
then I shall wait anxiously. I will see you in how long?"
"About
ten minutes," Edward said, and hung up the phone. He looked at the light
growing brighter and brighter in east, every minute. If he was very lucky, then
they wouldn't summon the Great Sky Dragon this close to dawn. Or if they did,
he wouldn't make it here.
If he was very
lucky.
He felt he
could stand just about everything short of facing that huge, enigmatic presence
once again.
* * *
The panther
scented the corpses right away. Fortunately they were a little past ripe, even
for its tastes. Kyrie was grateful for this.
Locked at the
back of the huge feline mind, she could feel the huge paws tread carefully
through the undergrowth, and she could feel the big feline head swaying, while
it tasted the air. Death. Death nearby.
The death
smelled enough like what the animal recognized as its own mortality to slow
down its steps, and it only continued forward because Kyrie forced it to.
But it
continued. Around the lushest part of the vegetation and towards a little
clearing of sorts, in the midst of it all.
The vegetation
that had once grown here had been torn out, unceremoniously, by the roots, rose
bush and fern, weed and bulb, all of it had been pulled up and tossed,
unceremoniously, in a huge pile beside the clearing.
What there was
of the Earth there had then been turned. Graves. Kyrie could smell them, or
rather the panther could.
Kyrie was sure
the smell would be imperceptible to her human nose, but her feline nose could
smell it, welting up through the imperfectly compacted earth—the smell of
decay, of death, of that thing that inevitably all living things became.
Only this
death had the peculiar metallic scent that Kyrie had learned to recognize as
the smell of shifters. The people laid to rest here had been shifters. Her
kind. She looked at the ground with the feline eyes, and forced the feline paw
to make a scratching motion on the loose Earth.
It didn't take
long. The hand wasn't much more than fifteen inches down.
The panther
wanted to run away and to forget this, to pretend it had never existed.
But Kyrie
forced it to walk, slowly, ponderously, to where Kyrie had left her clothes.
Kyrie would shift. And then she would call the police.
But before she
got to where her clothes lay, she found herself enveloped by a cloud of green
dust. It shimmered in the morning air, raining down on her.
Pollen. I had
to be pollen. Just pollen. She wished it to be pollen. But she could feel the
panther's head go light, and indistinct forms take shape before her shifted
eyes. Game, predators, small fluffy creatures and large ones, all teeth and
claws, formed in front of the panther's eyes, coming directly from her brain.
Kyrie could
feel the huge feline body leap and recoil, as if the things it were seeing were
normal.
And then. . .
And then she saw the beetle. It was coming through the vegetation, blue-green
carapace shining under the morning light.
Not quite sure
what she was doing, Kyrie forced the panther throat to make a sound it had
never been designed for. She screamed.
* * *
The Chinese
restaurant looked dismal grey in the morning light, as Edward got out of the
cab in front of it.
As he was
paying the fare, the cabby gave him an odd look. "They're closed, you
know," he said. "They only open for lunch and that's not for seven
hours."
"I
know," Edward said, giving the man a generous tip and handing the credit
card slip back. When you're not sure you're going to live, you can be very
generous. "I'm meeting someone."
The cabby
frowned. And older man, with anglo-saxon features, he was one of those men
whose expressions are slow and seemingly painful as though their faces had been
designed for absolute immobility. "Only," he said. "They've
found corpses in this parking lot, all the time. I've read about it in the
paper. Are you sure you want. . ."
Edward nodded.
He wanted to explain he was doing it for his son, but that made it sound way
too much like expected a medal for doing what any decent father would do. Brave
death to keep his son safe. Only.. . . he supposed he hadn't been a decent
father. Or not long enough for it to be unremarkable.
"I'm
sure," he said. "I'll call you for the trip back," he said.
"Your name is on the receipt, right?"
"Right,"
the cabby said, but dubiously, as though he couldn't really believe there would
be a trip back.
The truth was
neither did Edward. As he walked away from the cab—already peeling rubber out
of the parking lot—and towards the silent door of the Three Luck Dragon, with
the closed sign on the window, he would have given anything to run away.
But instead he
fumbled off the backpack as the door opened a crack and Lung's face appeared in
the opening. "Ah, Mr. Ormson," he said. Then he stepped aside and
opened the door further. "Come in."
"There is
no need," Edward said. "I have what you want, here. Take it and
I—"
But the door
opened fully. And inside the room were a group of young men, all glaring at
him. They all looked. . . dangerous. In the sort of danger that comes from
having absolutely no pre-conceived notions about the sanctity of the human
life.
"I said,
come in," Lung said.
It wasn't the
sort of invitation that Edward could refuse. For one, he was sure if he did
those dark haired young men glaring at him out of the shadows would chase him
down and drag him back. The only question was whether they would shift into
dragon form first.
Edward
suspected they would.
* * *
Walking away
from Goldport by the shortest route did not require going near Kyrie's house.
However, walking away from Goldport and not heading out of town via the route
to New Mexico did lead Tom down Fairfax avenue, in the general direction of the
castle and Kyrie's neighborhood. Though those were a few blocks north from his
path.
Kyrie. The
name kept turning up in Tom's mind with the same regularity that a sufferer's
tongue will seek out a hole in a decaying tooth. It hurt, but it was the sort
of hurt that reassured him he was still alive.
Kyrie. The
problem was that he'd actually had hope. He'd seen her look at him. She'd
patted his behind. She'd smiled at him. He'd had hope, however foolish that
hope might have been. If he'd never hoped for anything, he wouldn't have been
so shocked and wounded at seeing her with Rafiel.
And, yes, he
was aware that the fact he couldn't bear to see them together was a character
failing of his, not of theirs. He was also aware she hadn't betrayed him. Looks
and even pats on the bottom are not promises. They certainly are not a
relationship. They are just. . . Lust.
Perhaps,
he thought, as he walked in front of closed up store doors and dismal-looking
store fronts in the grey morning daylight. Perhaps she lusts after me—though
who knows why—but when it comes to love, when it comes to a relationship, she's
a smart girl. If she were interested in me, it would only be proof of either
stupidity or insanity.
But. . . But
if it wasn't her fault, why was he punishing her?
He scowled at
his own thought. He wasn't punishing her. If anything, he was keeping himself
from being punished daily by the sight of her with Rafiel.
It hurt. No,
it wasn't rational, but it hurt. Badly. And Tom didn't do well with hurt. He
wasn't punishing Kyrie. He'd go out of town, through Colorado Springs. Probably
buy a greyhound ticket there. Maybe go to Kansas for a while. It had been a
long time since he'd been in Kansas.
But, the
relentless accusing voice went on in his mind, if he wasn't trying to punish
her, why was he leaving Kyrie to face the beetles alone? Why was he leaving her
when she couldn't even sleep in her house?
Because it
wasn't his problem. Because she wasn't his to worry about. She could always
bunk up with Rafiel, couldn't she? And she was sure he'd keep her safe. She
wasn't Tom's to keep safe.
If she had
been, he would have given up his life for her, happily enough.
But what kind
of love was that? He minded seeing her with Rafiel? He minded her being happy?
But he didn't mind leaving town while she was in danger?
No wonder
she'd picked Rafiel. Tom's love was starting to sound a lot like hate.
As the last
few thoughts ran through his mind, Tom's steps had slowed down, and now he
stopped completely in front of the closed door of a little quilting shop, just
one crossroad past where he would have turned up to go to Kyrie's place.
Maybe he
should go and check on her. See if she was home. See if she was well. . . Then,
if she told him she was fine and that Rafiel would take care of her, he could
leave town with a clear conscience and never worry.
He turned
around, in front of the shop—the window screaming at him in pretty red cursive
that summer was the ideal time to quilt—and headed back towards the crossroad.
He'd just turned upward on it, when he saw, ahead of him, just scurrying out of
sight on a bend of the road, a giant beetle, its blue carapace shining in the
sun.
Kyrie,
Tom thought. He knew there were other places they could be headed. But right
then he thought of Kyrie. He thought only of Kyrie.
And then the
scream came. It was all Kyrie and yet not human—a warbling mix of terror coming
from a feline throat designed only for roaring and hissing.
Without even
noticing what he was doing, he broke into a run. He made the turn ahead in the
street in time to see the beetle creep into the greenery-choked garden of the
castle.
And the scream
came again.
* * *
Kyrie was
hallucinating. Or rather, the panther was. In front of the feline eyes arose a
hundred little animals that needed hunting, or rearing predators.
And yet, at
the back of the panther's mind, Kyrie managed to remain lucid, or almost lucid.
There was a beetle. She must not loose track of that. A beetle with shimmering
blue-green carapace. And it was trying to kill Kyrie. And lay eggs in her
corpse.
This certainty
firmly in mind, Kyrie aimed at anything green-blue that she caught amid the
snatches of illusion clogging the panther's vision. The panther's claws danced
over the extended limbs with what looked like a poison injector at the end but
might merely have been a lethal claw of some sort. She careened over the bug's
back, and scrambled halfway away before the beetle caught up.
They were
right over the graves, and the funky smell of them disturbed the panther, even
through the hallucinations.
And at the
back of the panther's mind, Kyrie knew soon she would be dead and buried in
this shallow grave.
* * *
Tom had run
full tilt into the garden of the castle, before he realized what he was doing.
He was only lucky the beetles were too busy to realize he was running after
them.
Of course,
what they were too busy with was Kyrie. And once they noticed Tom they would
start pumping the green stuff, and make Tom high as a kite and his fighting
totally ineffective.
Twenty yards
from them, seeing the huge black feline leap and dance ahead, in mad attack,
Tom stopped. He pulled his jacket off, and tossed it in the direction of a
tree, making a note where it was. He would come back for it. Then he peeled off
the white t-shirt and, wrapping it around his head, tied it in a knot at the
back. Its double-thickness of fabric made it hard to breathe, and he could wish
for better clothes to fight in than the pants that were slowly castrating him.
But he didn't
get his choice. And it didn't matter. He must fight Kyrie.
He grabbed a
tree branch and plunged forward into the battle swinging it at any beetle limbs
within his reach.
Clouds of
green stuff emanated, turning the air green and shimmering.
Tom realized
the smaller beetle—the one he'd followed?—was immobile and rubbing its wings to
emit cloud after cloud of green powder. Meanwhile the one fighting Kyrie—and so
far not losing, though also not managing to get any hits in—was not emitting
green powder.
Interesting.
So, they could only make people hallucinate when they weren't actively
fighting, was that it?
Well,
he thought, jumping back and landing atop the beetle, with a huge tree branch
in hand. Well. He was about to take the fight to the enemy.
* * *
And now Kyrie
was sure that she, personally, was hallucinating. On top of the
panther-conjured images of scared little furry things, there was . . . Tom. Oh,
not just Tom, but Tom in gloriously tight jeans, with his shirt removed, and
his muscular chest bare in the morning sunlight.
Of course, the
shirt he'd taken off was tied around his face, which seemed a really odd
hallucination for her to have. And she would think she would dream of his
grabbing her and kissing her, rather than of his hitting some very hard blows
on the beetle with a huge tree trunk—far too big to be a branch— he'd got from
nowhere.
And yet,
she thought as she tried to concentrate on hitting any green-blue bits of bug
that she could see through the panther's addled eyes. And yet the sight of him
fighting the bug was far more distracting than the sight of the small furry
things could be for the panther.
She bit and
snarled and clawed at bits of bug, but in her mind she was admiring the way tom
leapt, the way he could turn on a dime, the force he put into the swing of that
tree branch in his hand. From his movements, he too must have taken gymnastics
or dance, or something.
Absorbed between
her fight and disturbing glimpses of half-naked Tom, she could barely think.
She heard the squeal of brakes towards the back entrance of the garden, but she
paid it no attention.
Which is why
she was so shocked to see Rafiel running towards them, gun drawn, blond hair
flying in the wind and his expression quite the most distraught Kyrie had ever
seen. He was screaming something as he ran, and it seemed to Kyrie—through the
panther's distorted senses—that one of the words was "die." The other
words, though, were gravy and pick. She wasn't sure what gravy had to do with
it.
Rafiel let out
shots as he ran, aimed at the beetles, and from the high-pitched whining of the
one that Tom was beating, Kyrie would guess at least one of the bullets had
found beetle flesh. Whether that meant it had also found any lethal points was
something else again.
Behind Rafiel,
Keith came, running up, with what looked like a hoe in his hand. Where had he
found the hoe?
* * *
Tom heard a
bullet whistle by and looked up to see Rafiel running into the garden firing
wildly. Still beating on the beetle—smacking it repeatedly on the head seemed
to make it too confused to either fight, flee or put out green powder—Tom
wondered if he was the intended victim of the beetle.
But the next
bullet lodged itself solidly in the beetle's—Frank's?—flesh, and the creature
emitted a high-pitch whine. And then it went berserk, limbs failing up towards
Tom, trying to dislodge him, trying to stab at him.
Tom hit at the
limbs, wildly. Keith was running up, behind Rafiel, and as Rafiel leapt towards
Kyrie's beetle and shifted shapes mid-leap, his clothes falling in shreds away
from the dragon body, Keith grabbed the falling gun and aimed it at Tom's
beetle.
* * *
Kyrie was
grateful when Rafiel, now in lion form, joined the fight, but—though the
panther was having trouble seeing clearly—she could see enough to see Keith
grab the gun and point it in the general direction of Tom.
She didn't
think that Keith would hurt Tom. Or not on purpose. But from the way Keith was
holding the gun, she could tell there was no way in hell he could hit the
broadside of a barn.
Unfortunately,
he wasn't aiming at the broadside of a barn. He was aiming at a general area
where Tom was a prominent feature. Without thinking she leapt, hitting the
still-human Tom with her weight and bringing him rolling off the bug and onto
the ground, with Kyrie just by his side.
Just in time,
as the bullet whistled through the space where he'd been.
* * *
Kyrie was
attacking him, Tom thought, as he hit hard on the ground, just barely managing
to tuck in his head enough that he wouldn't end up unconscious. Why was she?
And then he
realized that Keith had a gun and clearly had no idea what to do with it, as
several erratically-fired bullets flew over the beetle's carapace. Just where
Tom would have been.
Still stunned
by his fall on the ground, Tom put out an hesitant hand towards the huge mound
of fur beside him. "Kyrie?" he said.
A tongue came
out and touched his hand. Just touched, which was good, because it felt just
like a cat tongue, all sharp bits and hooks.
A non feline
hissing sound, a scraping, and Tom saw the beetle was turning around and was
aiming sharp claw-like things at Kyrie.
Before he
could think, he knew he was going to shift. He had just the time to kick off
his leather boots, as his body twisted and bent. And he was standing, as a
dragon, facing the bug. He did what a dragon does. He flamed.
* * *
First, Kyrie
thought, flames weren't particularly effective in these circumstances. Tom's
flame seemed to glance over the beetle's carapace, without harming it. And
second, if Tom continued flaming, he would hit a tree and roast them all alive.
But before
Kyrie could change shape and yell this at Tom, who was clearly addled by
adrenaline and change, Keith came flying out from behind them, hoe in hand. He
had dropped his gun. Which was good. But Kyrie wasn't sure that a hoe was the
most effective of weapons.
Only she
couldn't do anything, except shift, in a hurry and scream, "Don't flame,
Tom," as Keith landed on top of the beetle and started digging into the
joint between the neck and the back carapace. Digging, as if he were digging
into soil, making big chunks of beetle fly all over.
The beetle
went berserk.
* * *
Sometimes the
only way to stop a flame that is doing its best to erupt from a dragon's throat
is for the dragon to force himself to become human. This Tom did, forcing his
mind to twist his body into human shape. Just in time to avoid burning Keith to
a crisp atop the beetle. Which was good, because Keith seemed to have hit on
something that worked. He was digging up large chunks of beetle flesh, throwing
them all around in a shower of beetle and ichor.
And the beetle
was stabbing at him, fortunately pretty erratically. The beetle's arms weren't
meant to bend that way. Not upward and towards something on its back. Only,
even an erratic blow was bound to hit, eventually. Unless. . .
Tom grabbed
the tree branch he'd let drop, and started beating at beetle limbs. From the
other side, Kyrie was doing the same.
Kyrie was back
to her human form, and Tom couldn't look at her with more than the corner of
his eye. Not if he wanted to continue fighting in any rational manner at all.
But, damn,
that woman could swing the tree branch with the best of them.
* * *
As the beetle
stopped moving, and its high-pitched scream grew, Tom became aware of another
sound behind him. A feline protest of pain. He turned, in time to see the
beetle get a claw into Rafiel between shoulder and front leg.
For a moment,
for just a moment, Tom thought, Good. He deserves it.
But an immense
feeling of shame swept over him. Why did Rafiel deserve to die? Because he'd
bested Tom in winning the affections of a woman?
Hell, by that
criteria there would hardly be any males left alive in the world.
Shame made Tom
jump forward, towards Rafiel, tree branch in hand, beating at the beetle. Just
in time, as Rafiel was crawling away, bleeding.
And now Keith
scrambled up on the back of this beetle. He looked like nothing on Earth and
certainly no longer like the hard-partying college student. His clothes were a
mess, he seemed to have bathed in greenish-brown ichor, and he'd lost his cap
somewhere.
But he had an
insane grin on his face, as he started digging up chunks of this beetle. And
Tom concentrated on keeping the beetle from stabbing his friend, by beating the
beetle's limbs away. Kyrie joined in on the other side.
Soon the
beetle had stopped moving.
But from
behind them there was still a high pitched sound, like the beetle's scream.
Tom turned around,
expecting to face yet another beetle. Instead, he saw Rafiel desperately
clutching his shoulder and struggling to get up while pale, white, giant worms
swarmed over him.
Tom didn't
understand where the worms came from, but they had big, sharp teeth and were
biting at Rafiel.
Tom ran
towards Rafiel and started grabbing at the worms trying to eat Rafiel, while
Kyrie ran up to smash the ones that were merely around Rafiel.
A second
later, Keith and his hoe joined in.
* * *
Grubs,
Kyrie thought. The more advanced grubs on the corpses beneath the thin layer of
soil had come alive at the smell of Rafiel's blood, and were swarming him.
She saw Tom
jump ahead and start to pull the grubs off Rafiel. As mad as she was at Rafiel,
she didn't want him eaten alive by would-be insects. And besides, Rafiel had
got in this trouble by trying to help her in the first place.
She jumped
into the fray, gleefully smashing at the grubs with her heavy branch.
And Tom had
got the last grub off Rafiel—who seemed more stunned than hurt, and was
swinging the huge piece of tree he carried, likewise beating down the bugs.
Keith joined in with his hoe.
There were a
lot of grubs, more and more—pale and white and writhing—pushing up out of the
soil, as soon as they smashed a dozen or a hundred.
So absorbed in
what she was doing, her arms hurting, while she kicked away to keep the grubs
from climbing her legs, Kyrie didn't keep track of Rafiel.
Until she
smelled gasoline and realized that Rafiel had got a huge container of gasoline
from somewhere and was liberally dousing the clearing and the surrounding
vegetation.
* * *
Tom had just
realized what the worms were. They were grubs. Babies. It seemed odd to be
killing babies who were acting only on instinct.
But. . . were
the babies human? He couldn't tell. They looked like white grubs, featureless,
except for large mouths with sharp teeth. With which they'd probably been
feeding on decaying human flesh.
Would they
ever be human? How could Tom know? Except that, of course, their parents had
been human. At least part of the time.
He swung the
tree branch and smashed little beetle grubs while wondering if with time they
would learn to be human babies and human toddlers. But. . . would they? And
even if they did, when adolescence came, when most people started shifting,
would they be able to control their urges to shift? And their urges to kill
people so they could lay eggs in the corpses?
He just
decided that he'd hit all of them who attacked him, but he would not, could
not, kill any that might still be asleep beneath the soil. They should take
those, and see if they became human babies as they developed. If they did,
chances were they wouldn't shift again till their teen years. And meanwhile,
they could see that they got a good education, and didn't believe they could
kill people for their sexual gratification.
If shifters
would look after punishing their own criminals, then they had to look after
educating their own young, didn't they?
He'd just
thought this when he smelled gasoline, and, looking up, saw Rafiel spreading
gasoline over the entire area and the surrounding vegetation.
Tom had to
stop him. He had to. He was going to kill all the babies. And themselves with
them, probably.
As tired as he
was, he didn't realize he'd shifted and flamed until he saw fire spark on the
gasoline-doused tree on the other side of the clearing.
Oh, shit.
* * *
"Run,"
Kyrie screamed, managing to grab at Keith's arm, and making an ineffective grab
at Tom's wing, as she scrambled ahead of them towards the back entrance of the
garden—the nearest one.
If she thought
for a minute she could go over the fence, she would have done it. She couldn't
pull Tom, though, and he seemed dazed, staying behind, staring at the flames.
"Tom,
run," she yelled, but there were sheets of flames where they'd been, and
she couldn't stop, but ran. Ran all the way out the gate. Where she collapsed
in a heap on the beaten-dirt of the alley, a few steps from Rafiel's car.
Rafiel was
face down in the alley, but he was clearly alive, taking deep breaths that
shook his whole body.
Kyrie heard
Keith ask "Are you all right, man?"
And realized
Rafiel was on all fours, throwing up.
Tom, ran out
of the gate, fell, then scrambled up, holding on to the eight foot tall metal
fence of the castle to pull himself upright.
And Kyrie
couldn't help smiling when she realized he was wearing a jacket and a pair of
leather boots. And nothing else. So, that was why he had delayed? Tom and his
jacket and boots.
He dropped
something at her feet. "I tripped on these."
Her clothes.
As she shook them out, even her earring dropped out.
But he had his
back to her, and was still clutching the fence posts, while he stared at the
roaring inferno growing inside the garden.
"We have
to go," Kyrie said. "We have to get out of here. The fire department
will be here in no time."
"But. .
." Tom said. "The babies."
"You mean
the grubs? Tom, those weren't human. They tried to eat Rafiel."
Tom made a
sound half growl. "We don't know if they were babies. Do we know what we
were during gestation? Perhaps they would have shifted when they were fully
grown, and only a few of them would ever shift again and not for years."
"Tom,"
Rafiel said. His voice sounded shaky. "I understand the feelings, but we
had to kill them. We couldn't afford for the corpses to be found with those
larvae. They would be taken to labs. Do you want them to figure out
shape-shifting? They might very well come after us and kill us all, if faced
with a dangerous example like that."
"So, you
killed them to save your life? Is that right? Do you have the right to kill
things just because there's a remote chance it would eventually lead to your
death?"
"Hell,
yes," Rafiel said.
"It's not
moral," Tom protested.
"If I'm
dead, morality doesn't matter to me anymore. Tom. Look, they bit me," he
showed round bite marks, as if from a hundred little mouths equipped with sharp
teeth. "They were dangerous. They would have bit other people. Killed
other people. Besides," Rafiel shrugged. "Technically we killed them.
You flamed them."
"Only
because I was trying to prevent you from killing them," Tom said, and
realized how stupid that sounded.
"Tom,"
Kyrie said. "It was self-defense. The heat of battle. And they were
probably dangerous. Please calm down. We need to get out of here before those
fire trucks get here. Hear them?"
Tom heard
them, the wailing in the distance, getting near.
"We can
go to my house," Kyrie said. "Take showers. I'll make something for
us."
Just then,
Tom's phone rang in his jacket pocket. "What now?" he said, grabbing
the phone and taking it to his ear.
"Mr.
Ormson," a cool voice on the other side said.
"Yes."
"We have
your father," the voice said.
Oh, shit. The
dragons. "But you have the Pearl of Heaven too," Tom said.
"Yes.
But. . . There is someone who wishes for more than the return of the
Pearl." The voice on the other side was slick and uncaring an inhuman.
"He says there must be punishment."
"What
punishment?" Tom said, feeling like he'd been punished enough this last
hour.
"Severe
punishment," the voice said. "One of you will be punished. Either you
or your father. We're at Three Luck Dragon, on Ore Road on the other side of
town. If you're not here in half an hour, we'll punish your father. The Great
Sky Dragon is tired of waiting."
The phone line
went dead and Tom thought, So, let them punish my father. He deserves it.
He's the one who got involved with the triad.
But Tom was
the one who had stolen the Pearl of Heaven. Worse, Tom was the one who had
asked his father to return it. And his father had gone, without complaint. Even
though, knowing even more about the triad than Tom did, he must have realized
this was the kiss of death.
Tom didn't
realize he had made a decision until he was running down the alley.
* * *
"Where is
he going?" Rafiel asked Kyrie, as Tom started running.
Kyrie
shrugged, but Keith said, "Something must have gone wrong with his father
taking the Pearl out to the triad."
"What?"
Rafiel said.
"Whatever
happened to we'll leave the Pearl somewhere?" Kyrie said. "And let
them find it?"
"I guess
that wasn't practical," Keith said. "Since Tom was heading out of
town."
"He was?
Why?"
"I don't
know," Keith said. "But he'd seen the two of you kissing and he said
he couldn't stand to stay around."
"Oh
no," Kyrie said.
"He's not
going to get very far dressed like that, before someone arrests him for
indecent exposure," Rafiel said, as Tom hit the end of the garden, and
turned onto Fairfax avenue. And then he jumped, and opened the door of his car.
Getting into the driver's seat, he yelled, "Get in now."
Kyrie had
barely the time to scramble in, beside Keith on the back seat, before Rafiel
tore out of the parking lot in a squeal of tires and a smell of burning rubber.
He pulled onto
the curb just ahead of the running Tom, leaned sideways and opened the
passenger door. Then before Tom could swerve to avoid it, he yelled out the
door, "Get in now, Tom. Get in."
* * *
"I don't
want to get in," Tom said, stopping.
"That you
might not, but you're naked. Someone will arrest you long before you get where
you're supposed to go," Rafiel said way too reasonably.
Tom looked
down. Yeah. He supposed a leather jacket and a pair of leather boots didn't
constitute decent clothing. And he had to get to the restaurant without being
arrested.
He flung into
the passenger seat of the car. "I need to go to Three Luck Dragon on Ore
road on the south side."
"I know
where it is," Rafiel said, starting the car up. "Wonderful Peking
duck." Then, as though realizing that Tom's driving motive wasn't a wish
for food. "Your father?"
"Yes,"
Tom said, and covered his face with his hands. "I should never have sent
him to them. Hell, I can't do anything right. Damn."
He felt a hand
on his shoulder, from the back, and heard Kyrie's voice. "If you were
planning to go out of town, you did the only thing you could do," she
said. "And your father, did he protest?"
"No,"
Keith said. "He knew there was a danger. He wouldn't let me go with him.
But he, himself, went willingly. Tom. Your father is an adult. He made his own
decision."
"Doesn't
mean we'll leave him to die," Tom said.
"Right,"
Rafiel said. "Which is why I'll get us there as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, there are clothes under the front seat, Kyrie, if you could get
them. There should be at least two changes of clothes. And there should be a
pair of pants and a t-shirt Tom could use. They'll be large as hell, but they
should make him decent."
Before Tom
could protest, he found Kyrie handing him a t-shirt and a pair of sweat pants.
Removing his jacket and boots and putting clothes on was difficult in the tight
confines of the car. And Tom wasn't absolutely sure if the dragons cared if he
had any clothes on.
But he
understood there would be a psychological advantage to being fully dressed when
he got there and tried to negotiate his father's release with the dragons. If
he were naked, he'd be embarrassed, and that would put him at a strong
disadvantage. No. He had to be dressed. And he had to get his dad out of this.
He should
never have involved his dad in this.
* * *
Before they
got to the restaurant Kyrie could smell the shifter scent in the air. She
wondered how many of them were there.
Speeding down
the—at this time—deserted Ore road, lined by warehouses and dilapidated motels,
then made one last turn. . . And then she saw it. At least she imagined that
was it. She couldn't imagine any other reason why the parking lot in front of a
low-slung building ornamented with an unlikely fluorescent green dragon on the
roof would be crammed—literally crammed with men.
No, she
thought, as she got closer. Men and dragons.
And at the
head of it all, golden and brilliant in the morning light, was a huge dragon.
Ten times bigger than Tom in his dragon form. And even bigger than that in
presence. He felt a hundred times larger than his already immense size.
In his front
paw, raised high above the assembly, he held Edward Orson.
Kyrie wasn't
close enough to see Edward's expression. But she could see his arms moving. He
was alive.
Rafiel stopped
the car in front of the parking lot. Impossible to turn into it. And besides,
Tom was already struggling with the latch, trying to jump out.
Kyrie opened
the door, too, as soon as the car stopped. And was hit by the silence of the
hundreds of beings in the parking lot.
It was the
silence of suspended breath.
* * *
Tom had never
been so scared. Not even when he'd been sixteen and his father had thrown him
out of the house at gun point. Not even in the wild days and terrifying nights
afterwards, while he tried to learn to live on the street while not dying of
sheer stupidity.
It wasn't only
his terror, he realized. It was the terror and awe of all those around him. He
could hear it in their silence, see it in their absolute immobility. And he
could feel it rolling in waves over him whenever he looked at the great golden
dragon who stood in front of the multitude. Holding Tom's father.
Right.
There were
moments, Tom had learned, when fear was the best thing. Fear of the street tug
kept you from saying something that would have made him kill you. Fear of the
poisonous snake, kept you too far away from it to be bit. And fear of some
animals would make you stand absolutely still, so that their eyes, adapted to
movement, couldn't see you.
And there were
moments when fear had to be ignored. His fear was perfectly rational. He could
sense the menace of the Great Sky Dragon and the fear that infected those
around him, crowding the parking lot. He could fear it, and it made him
struggle to draw breath. It made him have to fight his every instinct to be
able to step forward into the crowd, which parted to allow him through.
His fear was
the most natural thing in the world and it came from the fact that he did not
wish to die. And it didn't take a genius to know that was the most likely
outcome of this situation.
And yet. . .
And yet, of course Tom didn't want to die. There had been enough ambiguity in
the exchanges in the car that he thought he just might still have a chance with
Kyrie. And who, thinking of Kyrie—particularly when she'd smiled at him—could
want to die and not even try for something more with her?
But all of
that was irrelevant, for the same reason that it was irrelevant whether or not
Tom could or wanted to eat some human beings on occasion. It was irrelevant
because if Tom did it and succeeded he wouldn't be able to live with himself
afterwards.
As he wouldn't
be able to live with himself if he walked away now and let them kill his
father. His father had walked into this at Tom's request. It was Tom's doing,
and it was high time Tom dealt with his own mistakes.
He walked
forward through the crowd, which parted for him, leaving him a wide aisle to
walk through.
He could hear
his friends walk behind him, but he didn't turn to look. That would only make
what he needed to do harder to accomplish.
* * *
Edward wasn't
really scared until Tom showed up. Before the Great Sky Dragon arrived, even,
while Lung and his minions had kept him prisoner in the entrance area of the
restaurant—where the TV blared endlessly about round-the-clock monster truck
rallies—he'd realized what was going to happen and he was prepared to take it.
Funny how,
just days ago, when the Great Sky Dragon had told him that he held him
responsible for Tom's actions, Edward had bridled at the idea and tried to deny
it. Now it seemed absolutely self-evident.
Tom was
something that Edward had made. Not only by inadvertently passing on some
long-forgotten gene that had caused the boy to turn into a dragon—no. Of that
guilt he could have easily absolved himself, because. . . who can be sure of
what he's passing on to his sons? And who can control what his children
inherit?
But these days
with the other shifters—getting acquainted with Kyrie and even the
policeman—Edward had realized that he'd done something else, something
drastically wrong with Tom. Because the other shifters weren't as troubled and
hadn't gone through so much to get to a place of balance. And hadn't made
mistakes nearly as bad as the ones Tom had achieved.
Which must
mean that shifters weren't inherently unstable. Of course, Edward had tried to
tell himself that Tom was inherently unstable; that there had been something
wrong with the boy from the beginning. But he'd seen Tom at the diner—Tom
holding down a job and establishing contact with other human beings all around
him.
There was
nothing wrong with Tom. If he'd gone around the bend, it had to be his father's
doing.
And so, Edward
was ready to pay for his crimes and for the fact that he had been a truly
horrible father. So he'd been perfectly calm, in the Great Sky Dragon's grasp,
while the dragon lifted him above the crowd. Even though he'd been held there,
immobile, for half an hour, he didn't feel scared or upset.
He devoted his
time to a vague dream that Tom would come back; would figure things out with
Kyrie; that sometime in their future they would have children. Even if Edward
would never get to see his grandchildren, he could imagine them vividly. And it
was worth it to him to sacrifice himself for them.
And then the
car stopped. And Tom showed up. The four of them—the four children, as Edward
couldn't help thinking—walked through the massed triad crowd towards the Great
Sky Dragon.
Tom was at the
front, looking pale and drawn and absolutely determined.
"Tom,
no," Edward shouted. "It's not worth it. Leave."
But Tom shook
his head, black curls tossing in the light of the morning. He frowned. He
walked all the way to the front of the Great Sky Dragon and stood, feet planted
apart, arms crossed on his chest. "I've come," he said.
Edward had the
impression the giant creature holding him laughed, though there was no sound.
"It is good that you come," he said. "And now, what do you want
to do?"
"I want
you to let my father go," Tom said, casting his voice so that, normally
low as it was, it could be heard all over the vast parking lot.
"Or?"
The Great Sky Dragon asked.
"I don't
think there's any or," Tom said. "You're much bigger than I, and
we're surrounded by all your minions. I'll fight you, if you want me to, but I
don't think there would be any contest."
"No,"
The Great Sky Dragon said. "There wouldn't."
"So, I'm
here. You do whatever you have to do, but you let my father go first."
"Tom,
no," Edward said. "Don't do this. I don't want you to sacrifice
yourself for me. I was a horrible father."
At that
something like amusement flickered over Tom's face which, from where Edward was
looking at it, looked like a horrible, pale mask incapable of human movement.
For just a moment, Tom blinked, and looked up at his father, and his eyelids
fluttered, and his lips pinched upward in an almost smile, "No shit,
Sherlock. Did you have to consult many experts to come to this
conclusion?" He shook his head. "But it doesn't matter, because I've
always been an even worse son, and—" as Edward opened his mouth, Tom held
up a hand to silence him. "What's more, I brought this final situation on
by my own actions. I'm not stupid. I wasn't a baby when I stole the Pearl of
Heaven. Nor were my impulses uncontrollable. I knew what I was doing. I knew
whom I was messing with. And I did it anyway. So, you see, it's my doing, and
who but I should suffer for it?"
Tom looked
away from his father. "Let my father go," he told the dragon.
"And promise me that all my friends will be able to leave safely. And then
do whatever you think you have to do to even the score."
Edward felt
himself being lowered, slowly, until his feet touched the pavement. He put out
a hand and grabbed at Tom's shoulder. "Tom, no. Please. I can't live
knowing. . ."
But the dragon
flicked a toe at Edward's back. Just, flicked it. And Edward went flying,
backwards, head over heels, to land bruised and stunned at Kyrie's and Keith's
feet.
* * *
Tom watched
the dragon flick his father out of the way and send him flying. A look back
over his shoulder showed him that his father was alive and well. He turned back
to the dragon.
Having no
illusions about how long—or how little—remained for him to live seemed to make
everything around him very bright and sharp. The dragon glittering in the light
of the morning was a thing of beauty, golden and scintillating. And the sun
coming up over the Three Luck Dragon painted the sky a delicate pink like the
inside of certain roses when they're just opening to the light of morning.
As for the
morning air, it smelled of flowers and it felt cool to the skin, with only a
hint of warmth to indicate the scorcher the day would later become.
I'll never
see another sunrise, Tom thought. Yesterday was my last sunset. That
meal eaten with Kyrie, hastily, in my father's hotel room, was my last meal.
Worse, I'll never kiss a girl, beyond the half hearted kisses and gropes I got
back before I knew I was a dragon. I'll never kiss Kyrie.
Weirdly, none
of this seemed startling. It was as though all his life he'd been hastening
towards this. Or rather, as if all his life he'd been worried about how he was
going to die and what would put an end to his life. Now he need worry no more.
He knew exactly where he would end and how.
A brief
thought of whether there was anything after flickered through his mind. His
parents were Catholic—or at least Catholic of the sort that didn't believe in
God but believed that Mary was His mother. They went to mass sometimes.
Certainly for big occasions and momentous parties, like weddings and baptisms
and funerals. And Tom had attended catechism lessons in the far away days of
his childhood. Well, at least he'd been present while dreaming up ways to trip
up the catechist, or look up her skirt.
He had no
objections to the idea of an after life. But he also couldn't believe in it.
Not really believe. If there was anything on the other side of this, he sensed
it would be so different that who he was and what he thought on this side would
make no difference at all. For all intents and purposes, Tom Ormson would stop
existing.
He
wanted—desperately wanted—to look over his shoulder at Kyrie. He heard her back
there, her voice muffled, as though someone held a hand over her mouth. She was
yelling "Tom, no."
But he didn't
dare look. If he saw her. If he actually saw her, he knew his courage would
fail him. Instead, he stood, legs slightly apart for balance, letting his arms
uncross from his chest and fall alongside his body. In a position that didn't
look quite so threatening.
He looked up
at the huge, inhuman eye of the Great Sky Dragon.
"Ready?"
the creature said.
"Ready,"
Tom said.
The creature
lowered its head to be level with Tom's and said—in a voice that was little
more than a modulated hiss, "You have great courage, little one."
And for a
moment, for a brief, intense moment, Tom had hope.
Then he saw
the glimmering claw slice through the air. It caught him just above the pubic
bone. Tom saw it penetrate, before the pain hit. It ripped upwards, swiftly,
disemboweling him from pubic bone to throat.
Looking down,
Tom saw his own innards spill, saw blood fountain out.
I'm dead,
he thought, and blinked with the sort of blank stupidity that comes from not
believing your own eyes.
And then the
pain hit, burning, unbearable. He screamed, or attempted to scream but nothing
came out except a burble of blood that stopped up his throat, filled his mouth,
poured out of his nose.
He dropped to
the ground and for a second, for an agonizing second, struggled to breathe. His
rapidly-fading brain told him it was impossible. He was dead. But he tried to
breathe, against pain and horrible cold and fear.
He inhaled
blood and heard Kyrie call his name. He thought he felt her grab his hand, but
his hand was as distant and cold as the other side of the moon.
And then there
was nothing.
* * *
"Tom."
Kyrie had
struggled against Rafiel and Keith, as they held her back, struggled and kicked
and tried to yell at Tom not to do this. It wasn't worth his sacrifice. It just
wasn't.
They could
fight the dragons. They could.
"No, we
can't," Rafiel told her. "He's giving himself up so that the rest of
us can get away in peace. If he doesn't do that, all of us will die."
"There's
hundreds of them and five of us, Kyrie," Keith said. "We'll all
die."
"Then
we'll all die," she yelled. "Can you live with the idea you calmly
allowed him to sacrifice himself for us?"
"I
can't," Edward said. But he was gathering himself up from the ground, and
he looked bruised and tired and hurt. He didn't look like he would lead any
charges against any dragons.
So Kyrie
yelled, "Tom, don't do it," and tried to struggle free, to go grab
him. If they ran. If they ran very fast. . .
But Keith and
Rafiel both grabbed her and held onto her arms, and covered her mouth.
She was
twisting against them, writhing. . .
And it all
happened too fast. That claw rising and falling, in the morning sunlight,
catching Tom and ripping. . .
Kyrie saw
blood fountain at the same time that the men, startled, let go of her. She
careened forward, under the power of her own repressed attempts at movement,
and the burst got her to Tom just as he was falling, his face contorted in
pain.
She didn't
even—couldn't even—look down to where his body had been ripped open. His
insides were hanging out, and he was twisting, and his face looked like he was
suffering pain she couldn't imagine.
His wide open
eyes fixed on her, but she didn't know if he could see her. She fell to her
knees, and grabbed his hand, which felt too cold and was flexing in what seemed
to be a spasmodic movement.
"They can
still save you," she said. "They can still save you. The wonders of
modern medicine."
But blood was
pouring out of his mouth, blood was bubbling out of his nose, and, as she
watched, his eyes went totally blank, in the morning light. Blank and upward turned,
and wide open.
She couldn't
tell if his heart was still beating and, since it was probably in the mass of
organs exposed in the front of his body, she couldn't check. And she didn't
need to. She knew he was dead.
She stood up,
shaking slightly. And then she lost it.
She never knew
the exact moment when she lost it. When she realized she was doing something
stupid, she had already flung herself forward, at the Great Sky Dragon, arms
and legs flying, mouth poised to bite.
"You
bastard," she said. "You bastard." Only it wasn't so much a word
as a formless growl, and she kicked at the golden foot and tore with her nails
at the golden scales.
She felt more
than saw as several of the human spectators, the triad members, plunged forward
to grab at her, and she didn't care because she could take them all. All of
them.
Only the Great
Sky Dragon grabbed her in his talons, one of them still stained red by Tom's
blood, and brought her up to his face, to look at her intently with his
impassive eyes. "Pure fire," the voice that wasn't a voice said.
"I wonder if he knows what he holds."
And then she
was tumbling down, and hitting the ground hard.
As she
struggled to sit up again, she could see the Great Sky Dragon already high in
the sky, flapping his wings—vanishing.
Around them,
the other men—or mostly dragons—were disappearing. Some flying and some just. .
. scurrying away.
Aching, Kyrie
looked over at Tom's corpse. He was still staring blankly at the sky. What did
she expect? That he would get up and say it was all a joke? Corpses rarely
moved.
She swallowed
hard. Grief felt like a huge, insoluble lump in her throat.
But the
madness was gone. She knew she couldn't avenge herself on the dragons. Or on
any of them. She knew as she knew she was alive and that Tom was dead that
there was no remedy for this.
She scooted
forward and took hold of Tom's hand. "I'm sorry," she said. She knew
he couldn't hear her, and she'd never devoted any thought to the possibility of
life after this one. But if there was anything, and if he could hear her. . .
"I'm sorry. This is not how I meant for this to go. I didn't even realize.
. . I didn't know myself until just now." She squeezed the cold hand,
knowing it was beyond comfort.
"Kyrie,
you have to get up," Rafiel said. "I'm going to call the police. You
have to get up from there."
She shook her
head. "No. I'll stay with him. I'll go with him. We can't leave him alone
here." She saw a fly try to alight on Tom's wide open eyes, and she waved it
away with her free hand. Oh, she knew he was dead and he couldn't feel it, but
it seemed. . . indecent.
"Kyrie,
he's going to the morgue. You can't go with him. You don't want to. Let me help
you up," Rafiel said.
She felt him
tear her fingers away from Tom's hand. As if from somewhere, far away, she
heard her own thoughts tell her that she was in shock. And she believed them.
It just didn't change anything, did it?
There were
sounds of someone throwing up behind her. She thought it was Keith, but she didn't
turn to look. It had to be Keith, anyway, since there were only the five of
them. . . the four of them here. And it couldn't be Edward because he was
crying, somewhere to her right side. He was crying, loudly and immoderately.
And she thought that was weird because she didn't know lawyers could cry.
Rafiel threw
something warm. A jacket? Over her shoulders. "You're trembling, Kyrie.
You need something warm," he said.
"Tom's
jacket," she said.
"What
about it?"
"It will
be ruined," she said. "All the blood. He's going to be very
upset." And then she realized what she'd said was nonsense, but she
couldn't seem to think her way out of that puzzle.
She felt
Rafiel lead her very gently. And then there were lights, and noise, and a
siren, and someone was asking her something, and she heard Rafiel's voice say,
"She really can't talk now. She's in shock. I'm sorry. Perhaps later. We
were walking across the parking lot to see when the restaurant opened, and this
giant Komodo dragon came running out of nowhere, and it attacked Tom. I really
am not sure of the details. It all happened so fast."
Kyrie felt
Keith shove her into a car. She didn't care whose car, nor where she was going.
* * *
And then life
went on, somehow. It all seemed very odd to Kyrie that life could go on after
something like that. She'd seen someone die—no. She'd seen Tom die. She'd seen
Tom die so that the rest of them would be allowed to go free.
It all seemed
very strange, and she thought about it very deeply. She thought about it so
deeply that the rest of life seemed inconsequential.
It all seemed
a great mystery. One minute Tom had been alive and well and afraid, and making
wisecracks and being himself. And the next minute—no, the next second, he was
so much flesh, on the ground. No life, no spirit, no breath.
It was very
odd that such a great change could be effected so quickly and that it could
never be reversed.
There
should be, she thought, and realized she was in her kitchen, sitting at the
table and staring down at the pattern of the table—whirls of fake marble
engraved on the Formica—there should be a rewind button on life. So that you
could press the button and life would be again as it was before. And the
horrible things wouldn't have happened.
Someone was
knocking at the door. At the kitchen door. Tom. But no. Tom would come no more.
But someone
was knocking on her kitchen door. And she was sitting at her table in her robe
and—she looked—yup, a long t-shirt. She was decent. And someone was knocking,
so she guessed she'd better let whoever it was in.
She stood up,
opened the door. Keith was there, on the doorstep, wearing his ridiculous
backward-hat. Only it had to be a new one, because the other one had burned
with the castle, had it not? She seemed to remember. . .
He had her
newspapers under one arm, and was staring at her, in utter dismay.
"Kyrie," he said. "Have you slept? Eaten anything?"
"I don't.
. ." She frowned. "I don't remember."
"You
don't remember?" Keith asked. He looked scared. "Kyrie, it's been two
days."
Two days?
Since Tom had died?
"I just
realized I'm. . . in my robe. In my home. . ."
"We
brought you back. Mr. Ormson. . . Edward, put you to bed."
He had? For
some reason the idea of a strange male—of a strange older male—undressing her
didn't embarrass her. Not even a little. It didn't matter.
She became
aware that Keith had dumped the papers on the table, and was bustling around,
setting a teapot on, opening the fridge, letting out with exclamations of
dismay, if at her housekeeping or the lack of food in her fridge, she didn't
know.
It seemed like
all of a sudden, he was putting a cup of tea, a plate of toast with jam, and a
peeled boiled egg in front of her.
"I'm not
the best of cooks, Kyrie, I'm sorry," he said. "This is about all I
can cook. But will you eat? A little. For me?"
He was looking
pleadingly at her, and he looked far younger than she thought he was, and she
thought if she didn't eat he might very well cry.
The toast and
the egg tasted like straw to her, but she forced herself to eat them. The tea,
at least, was sweet and warm, and she swallowed cup after cup, while Keith
poured.
"Have you
talked to Rafiel?" Keith asked.
Kyrie had to
concentrate to remember Rafiel. It all seemed such a long way away and vague.
After a while she shook her head.
"Well,
they found journals. Apparently Frank kept journals. He'd managed to keep the
beetle under control until just a few Natural History Museum, and then. . .
biological clock or what not and he went insane and started. . . laying down
pheromones bait, to attract females and victims. He wrote all about it in his
diary. He started laying the pheromones over a year ago. As if he were trying
to reassure himself he wasn't crazy. Though most of the killings were the
female's doing. He just helped drag the corpses to the castle,
afterwards."
She nodded,
though what Keith was saying only made sense in a very distant and impersonal
sort of way, as if he were talking about people who had been dead for centuries
and whom nothing could affect.
"He was
intending to make Tom the fall guy for it all, you know. That's why he hired
someone from the homeless shelter and with a history of drug abuse. The idea
was to make all corpses disappear, except a couple, which would be found near
Tom's apartment, and it would be thought that Tom had killed them all, that he
had gone over the edge. The beetle's hallucinogenic powder would have helped.
That's why they attacked us here. They wanted you to throw him out. They didn't
want anyone to be around him, or to know him that well."
Well, and that
had worked. And had led by degrees to everything else. But Kyrie felt to numb
to even feel guilt. None of it mattered. She put her empty cup forward, and
Keith filled it again.
"Kyrie,
can you take a sleeping tablet? I bought some over the counter ones. I
couldn't. . . I couldn't sleep without having nightmares. I have one. Can you
take them? Or will they cause you any problems?"
"I can
take them," she said, her voice sounding pasty and altogether like a
stranger's.
He put the
small yellow tablet in her hand. She swallowed it with a gulp of tea. Presently
she felt as if the world around her were becoming blurry.
She was only
vaguely aware of Keith's leading her to her bed, and tucking her in. For such a
young kid—though he might be her age in chronological years—he had an oddly
maternal touch as he tucked the blanket around her.
"Sleep,"
he said. "I'll take a key. I'll come check on you."
* * *
"This too
shall pass," Kyrie said, and startled herself with saying it. Keith had
come and checked on her and forced her to eat and sleep for the last two days.
This morning
she'd woken up realizing that she couldn't go on like this.
Life would go
on, even when there didn't seem to be any point to it. And it wasn't as though
she could say, "please just stop my subscription, I don't want to play
anymore." Nor did it seem to matter. Not that way.
A wedge of
sanity was forcing itself into her shock and grief. She'd liked Tom. She'd
liked Tom a lot. Although at least part of the feeling was probably lust. She
remembered his sprayed-on clothes, and she could smile, in distant
appreciation.
She got up out
of bed. It was eight a.m. Keith had been dropping by every morning at ten,
after early classes. She didn't want him to catch her naked. And she really
should stop being a burden to the poor young man. It was time she got herself
together.
A glimpse in
the mirror showed her how fully horrible she looked, with her unwashed hair
matted and falling in tangles in front of her face. Witch of the rainbow
hairdo, she thought and smiled, an odd smile, from pale, cracked lips.
She opened her
dresser and got out jeans and a dark t-shirt, and underwear. She trudged the
whole thing to the bathroom, where she realized she still had her red feather
earring on. She couldn't remember preserving it through the fight at the
castle, but she must have, because she was wearing it.
She took it
off and laid it, reverently, on the vanity. Tom had saved that for her.
Under the hot,
full shower, she washed rapidly. Shampoo. Twice to get rid of all the grease
she'd allowed her hair to accumulate in the last . . . three? Four days? And
then conditioner. And then soap her body, slowly, bit by bit, making sure every
bit got properly scrubbed.
She doubted
she had washed. . . since. There was green-red ichor on her legs. And her arms
and hands were stained the dark -- almost black -- red of dried blood. Tom's
blood. She watched it wash down the drain, in the water.
Damn. It
wasn't only that she'd liked him. It wasn't only that she lusted after him and she'd
never had a chance to do anything about it. It was that she'd only realized
what he was made of as he was dying.
Oh, not just
because he stepped up and offered himself in exchange for his father—and safety
for all of them—but because he'd done it without complaint. And as a matter of
course. Even the creature. . . the dragon, had told him he had courage.
Why you'd say
that to someone who was about to die, was beyond Kyrie. Maybe the dragon
believed in an afterlife. Maybe he'd thought it would make things easier. . .
She finished
showering and dried. Tom's towel was still there, hanging from the hook at the
back of the door. She resisted a wild impulse to smell it, to bury her face in
it and see if any of his scent remained on the fibers.
But no. That
way lay madness. That way lay people who kept the rooms of dead people just the
way they'd been when the person died. That way lay widows who slept with their
husband's used clothes under their pillows. And it wasn't as if she had the
right, even. He wasn't her husband. He wasn't even her boyfriend. Until a few
days ago, she would have told people she didn't like him.
She dressed
herself, combed her hair, carefully, put her earring in.
The face that
looked at her from the mirror was still too pale, and she looked like she'd
lost weight too. Her cheek bones poked out too far. But there was really
nothing for it, was there? Life went on.
She'd got to
the kitchen and put on the kettle, when someone knocked at the kitchen door.
She thought it was Keith. He'd taken a key—what did he think she was going to
do? Try to kill herself? Did he think he'd need the key to get in and save
her?—but he still knocked before getting in.
"Come
in," she said.
"I
can't," a muffled voice said. "It's locked."
She reached
over and unlocked the door. And. . . Edward Ormson came in.
He stood just
inside the door, as if uncertain what he was going to do or say, or why he'd
come here at all.
Kyrie turned
from the small pan in which she'd just put an egg to boil. Keith must have
brought eggs one of these days, because there were two cartons in the fridge.
"Do you want an egg?" she asked.
"No, thank
you," he said. His skin looked ashen. His eyes, so much like Tom's, were
sunken in dark rings. "I've. . . eaten."
She got a
feeling that what he was really saying was that he never wanted to eat again.
Ever.
"I. .
." he hesitated. He was wearing cargo pants and a t-shirt and looked
ruffled and uncertain and a long way from the smooth lawyer who'd landed in
town however many days ago. "I would like to talk to you."
"Sit,"
Kyrie said. "As long as you don't mind if I eat while you talk."
As a matter of
fact, though, she got two cups down from the cupboard, and grabbed the sugar
bowl, which she put between them. She poured a cup for Edward and said,
"Put sugar in it. Even if you normally don't. It seems to help. Keith has
been making me drink it."
"Keith. .
." Edward said.
And Kyrie
thought that he was going to accuse her of having an affair with Keith right
after Tom had died, as if she'd made Tom any promises. And besides, she wasn't.
Having an affair with Keith. She'd barely been aware of him here, to be honest,
except for his making her eat and drink. And she thought he'd done the dishes
once, because everything was out of place in the cupboard.
But Edward
grimaced, and ran his hand back through his hair, just like Tom used to do.
"Yeah, Keith has been coming to my hotel room every morning, too. And
making me eat. He wrangled a key from the front desk somehow. I have no idea
what the front desk people think is going on, and I'm afraid to ask." His
grimace became an almost smile. "But he's kept me alive, I think. It
didn't seem. . . to matter for a while."
"I'd have
thought you'd be back in New York," Kyrie said. "With your
family."
He shrugged.
"There is no family. There was Tom. And I couldn't leave . . . yet.
They're going to give me back the body tomorrow. I'll be flying it back with me
for burial. Our family has a plot in Connecticut." He hesitated.
"There will be a funeral. Probably closed casket funeral. I wouldn't want.
. ." He shook his head. "I thought you might want to come. I . . .
you don't have to but if you want to I'll pay your fare. I've asked Keith, too.
Other than that it will just be me and my business associates. I think. . .
some of Tom's friends should be there."
Kyrie
contemplated this. She wasn't sure. On the one hand it might offer. . .
closure. On the other hand, she just wasn't sure. After all—she knew he was
dead. Did she need to see him buried too?
And yet, it
did seem right that he should have friends there with him, didn't it? He
shouldn't go into the ground watched only by people who thought he'd gone bad.
Poor Edward's son who'd gone to the wrong.
"I'll
try," she said. "Yes. I think I would like to go."
"Good,"
he said. "And that brings me to what I wanted to talk to you about. You
know the Athens is closed. From what I understand it is about to be foreclosed
on. Not only had. . . the owner no living relatives that anyone can find, but
he hadn't paid the mortgage in about three months. Apparently whatever frenzy.
. . well. . . He wasn't taking care of business."
She nodded,
not sure what he meant.
"I wanted
to offer you. . . I wanted to. . . I know you're unemployed now."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Waiting at tables jobs aren't hard to come by," she said.
"Particularly late night ones. People offer them to you for being alive
and breathing."
"I
know," Edward said. "But I would like. . ." He took a deep
breath, as if steeling himself to brave a dragon in full rampage. "Tom
liked you an awful lot."
She nodded,
then shrugged. It didn't seem to matter.
"I'd like
to offer you college money," Edward said. "And however much money you
need to live while you're in college. You can study whatever you want to."
He swallowed, as if something in her expression intimidated him further. "I
can't help you much in most professions, but if you take law, I can see to it
that our firm hires you, and if you are half as smart as you seem to be, I can
probably nudge you up to partner before you're thirty."
She heard
herself laugh and then, in horror, she heard abuse pouring from her lips. She
called him every dirty word she could think of. And some she wasn't sure
existed.
His eyes
widened. "Why. . . why?"
"You're
trying to make reparations," she said, and the sane person at the back of
the mind of the raving lunatic she seemed to have become noted that she sounded
quite wild. "As if Tom were responsible for my being without a job. Tom
isn't, you know. It was not his fault that the beetles ran wild. It was not his
fault—"
And then the
tears came, for the first time since all this had started. Tears chased each
other down her cheeks, and there was a great sense of release. As though
whatever she'd kept bottled up all this time had finally been allowed to flow.
She became
aware of Edward's hand, gently, patting her hair. "You have it all
wrong," he said. "I'm not trying to make up for anything Tom did.
It's just that without Tom, I really have no family. And besides, I owe him a
debt. Whoever started it—and it can be argued I did—right there in the end, he
gave his life to end it, so that I could go free. That's a debt. I'm trying to
look after the people he cared for. Don't deny me that. I've offered the same
thing to Keith. Anything I can do to help, in his studies or his career. . .
I'm a fairly useless person. Most of what I can offer is money. But that's
yours, if you need it."
As suddenly as
they'd started, the tears stopped. Kyrie wiped at her face, and swallowed and
nodded. "I don't know, yet" she said. "I just don't know. I'll.
I'll come to the funeral. And then we'll see."
* * *
"There
are jobs with the police force, if you should want them," Rafiel said.
He stood by
her kitchen door, looking, for the first time since she'd known him, stiff and
ill at ease.
Kyrie sat at
her kitchen table. She'd been going through all the newspapers, one by one. The
one from after Tom's death talked about the two horrible tragedies in town—the
group of people who seemed to have died in the garden at the castle. And Tom's
death. The headline screamed A Tragic Night In Goldport.
She looked up at
Rafiel. "Surely the CSIs could tell that the bodies had been dead a while
and buried," she said.
Rafiel seemed
to take this as encouragement to come further into the house. "Yes and
no," he said. "They could see. . . sort of, that things weren't
exactly text book. But the thing is that the fire got really hot there, at the
center of the garden, and they couldn't say much for sure about each of the
corpses, except identify them through dental records."
"The. . .
beetles. . ."
"They
must have reverted, in death or in burning, because they found skeletons."
He sat down at the table, across from her. "They identified Frank and the
woman who owned the castle. The castle itself survived, by the way. There's
talk of someone buying it to make a school for deaf and blind kids."
Kyrie nodded,
and flipped through the other papers. There were pictures of all the other
dead. Even Frank, with his neanderthal brow, graced the front pages of all
newspapers. All of them smiled from posed photos or looked out from poses obviously
clipped from candid snap shots. All except Tom.
"There
are no pictures of Tom," she said.
Rafiel shook
his head. "No," he said. "His father's picture of Tom, in his
wallet, is from when Tom was six. We didn't think it was appropriate. And while
his father thinks there are mug shots from his juvenile arrests, he didn't
think those were appropriate either. And no one has tracked them down, possibly
because I the record is sealed."
Kyrie felt
bereft. She couldn't explain it to herself, but she felt like she needed to see
Tom's face, just once more. She was afraid of forgetting him. She was afraid
his features would slip from her mind, irrecoverable.
While she'd
come to accept that she'd live on past this, that she might very well live on
to find someone and marry, maybe, sometime—her shifter handicap being accounted
for—she couldn't bear the thought of forgetting Tom. "It's just. . . I
would very much like to remember his face," she said.
Rafiel looked
at her, intently. He was wiggling his leg again, this time side to side, very
fast. "About what I said about Tom, the day. . . I was an ass, Kyrie. I
could tell you were interested in him, and I was afraid. You. . . are very
special to me, Kyrie."
She didn't
know what to say to that, and just looked at him, with what she was sure was a
vacant look.
He laughed, a
short laugh, more like a bark. "And I'm being an ass again, aren't I? I
can't give you a picture of him. Unless you want the one from when he was six
and I don't suppose. . ." He sighed. "Would you like to come to the
morgue? To see him? He's being given back to his father tonight, so if you want
to see him, it has to be now."
Kyrie thought
of Tom's face contorted in pain, as she'd last seen it. She wasn't sure that
was the memory she wanted.
"He doesn't
look like he did, you know. In death. . . His face has relaxed. They. . . the
coroner closed him up. He doesn't look gross at all. More like he's
sleeping."
"You were
there?" Kyrie asked. "For the autopsy?" She thought of what
she'd seen done to the corpse in the parking lot—the body opened, the brain
sawed out of its cavity.
"There
was no autopsy. It didn't seem needed. We supposedly saw death, you know, by
attack by wild animal. They found a couple of scales on his body. They're not
exactly Komodo dragon scales." He frowned. "To be honest, they were
in his boots and were probably. . . his. . . but they analyzed as reptile
scales and the paper is printing something about the danger of exotic pets.
They love to preach. And his father didn't want him autopsied, so he wasn't. He
really looks. . . very natural."
Kyrie wasn't
sure. The morgue had scared her. But perhaps seeing Tom without that expression
of agony on his face was all she needed.
She nodded. In
the bathroom, she caught herself putting on lip gloss and combing her hair. As
if Tom could see her.
Feeling very
silly, she headed out the door with Rafiel.
* * *
The morgue was
. . . as it had been before. The guy at the desk didn't even make much fuss
over Kyrie coming back. Just tipped his hat at her, as if she were a known
person here.
Rafiel led her
down the cool, faintly smelly corridors, to a door at the end. He opened the
door and turned on a very bright fluorescent light, which glared off tiled
walls. In this room, the tiles were white, and it made the whole thing look
like an antiseptic cell. Or the inside of an ice cube.
It wasn't an
autopsy room. Just a small room, with a collapsible metal table set up against
one wall. On the table was something—no, someone—covered with a sheet. The room
was just this side of freezing.
"We don't
have drawers," Rafiel said. "Just ten of these rooms. If needed we
can cram three people per room, but I don't think we've ever needed to. The
closest we came were the bones, from the castle, and those we just put all
together in one room, while we sorted out who was who and identified victims by
dental records and DNA."
She nodded.
She didn't remember walking up to the table, but she was standing right next to
it, now. She couldn't quite bring herself to reach out her hand and pull the
sheet back.
Rafiel reached
past her, and pulled the sheet back. Just enough to reveal Tom's face and neck.
He was right,
Tom didn't look as he had at the time of his death. He also didn't look as
other dead people that Kyrie had seen. She expected wax-dummy pallor. She
expected the feeling she'd had when she'd seen other dead people—even when
she'd seen Tom dead, in the parking lot. That feeling that all that mattered
had fled the body and the only thing left there was. . . meat.
But there
wasn't that sense. Instead, there was as much color as she'd seen on Tom when
he was pale. Not the paper-white pallor of his anger, and not the sickly pale
of the parking lot, when they'd discovered the corpse. Just, even, ivory white.
His lips even had a faint color—pale pink. And his eyelids were closed, his
quite indecently long eyelashes—how come she never had noticed?—resting against
the white of his skin and giving the impression that at any minute his eyes
would flutter open and he'd wake up.
She looked up
to ask Rafiel if embalmers had worked on Tom, but Rafiel had left. Very decent
of him. Giving her time alone with Tom.
She ran a hand
down Tom's cheek. It felt. . . warm to the touch. She didn't know embalmers
could do that. She caught at a bit of his hair. It felt silky soft in her hand.
Clearly, they'd cleaned the body of blood.
Bending over
him, she caught herself and thought this was insane. She couldn't, seriously,
be meaning to kiss a dead man? But he didn't look dead. He didn't feel
dead, and it wasn't as though she meant to French him. Just a quick peck on the
lips. A goodbye.
She bent down
all the way, and set her lips on him for a quick peck.
His lips were
warm—warmer than she would expect, even from someone alive who was lying down
in a refrigerated room—and she would swear they moved under hers.
And then she
heard him draw a breath. She felt breath against her own lips. His eyes flew
open. He looked very shocked. Then he smiled, under her lips. He wrapped his
arms around her shoulders. He pulled her down onto him.
And he kissed
her very thoroughly.
It should have
been scary, but it was not. It was just. . . Tom. And his mouth tasted, a
little, of blood, but it wasn't unpleasant. As soon as he allowed her to pull
up, she said, "You're alive."
He frowned.
"It would seem so. Shouldn't I be?"
She shook her
head. "We're at the morgue."
He raised his
eyebrows, but the mild curiosity didn't stop him from pulling her face down
towards him, and kissing her again.
"Oh,
Hell," a voice said, startling them both; sending Kyrie flying back from
Tom; and making Tom sit up and the sheet that covered him fall.
He pulled it
back up, to make himself decent, but left his chest exposed, and Kyrie blinked,
because where she was sure there had been a torso-long rip that exposed his
insides, there was now only a very faint scar, as though the had only had a
superficial cut.
They turned to
the person who'd said "Oh, hell."
It was Rafiel,
and he was leaning against the wall, by the door, looking at them with wide
open eyes. "Shit," he said very softly. "It's nice to see you
well, Tom, but how the hell do I explain to the coroner that his corpse with
massive trauma is going to walk out of here?"
"Tell him
reports of my death were greatly exaggerated?" Tom asked, raising an
eyebrow and smiling.
"But we
need to get him out of here soon," Kyrie said. "And get him some
clothes. He's going to catch his death of cold."
"I doubt
it," Rafiel said. "I very much doubt it. Unless cold is a silver
bullet."
* * *
And life went
on even when the best that could possibly happen had happened. The day that Tom
was let out of the morgue—though the coroner had insisted he go to the hospital
for x-rays and a full checkup before admitting that Tom might, just possibly,
be alive—they'd bought a day bed and a dresser for the back room.
They'd been
quite prepared to use the rest of Tom's money and get it from the Salvation
Army, but Edward had insisted, and so Tom had a matching day bed and dresser in
southwestern style, as well as a bookcase and a bunch of books his father had
bought him to replace the ones that had been destroyed in his apartment.
The back room
was now his, and for the use of it, the kitchen and the other common areas, he
would pay half of Kyrie's rent, and half the utilities. Kyrie's bathroom had
acquired a bottle of something called Mane and Tail, which she'd told
Tom seemed more appropriate for Rafiel, and shouldn't Tom's shampoo be Wing
and Scale?
But they
weren't living together. Not exactly. They were roommates, not lovers. They
hadn't slept together, didn't know if it would ever happen.
For now there
were kisses, now and then, and the occasional holding of hands. Tom had
explained what he wanted with disarming frankness. "I'd like to
date," he'd told her the night he'd got out of the morgue—was it only two
weeks ago?—over dinner. "I've never dated, you know? Not even high school
dating. I groped a few girls in school." He'd grinned. "They all
complained. And I think I suck at relationships. Of any sort. I need practice.
I'd like to date. Well. . . go together, as if we were kids. And then work up
to the rest, if it works out."
The decision
to share a house seemed odd in light of that, but it wasn't. Between two
shifters, one of them should be able to watch out for the other. And also,
they'd both realized that they'd been awfully lonely. And whether they were
ever anything else again, they were friends.
They were also
partners. Not in a romantic sense, but in a business sense.
Kyrie
remembered a whole afternoon of shouting between Tom and his father. Both men
assured her they'd never raised their voices, but she remembered sitting on the
sofa in her living room while they glowered at each other and shouted, both of
their expressions very much alike, and both far more intense than the argument
warranted.
The gist of it
was that Edward wanted to give Tom the moon, the stars and happiness on a
plate—or at least the only form of it Edward could give him. He wanted Tom to
go back to school. He wanted to pay Tom's expenses while he did. He still
wanted to pay Kyrie's too. Both studies and expenses.
Tom. . .
wanted something completely different. He wanted the Athens. He would accept
enough money to go to cooking school. Not chef's school. Far too fancy. Tom
wanted to learn enough to be the cook of the Athens. And he wanted Kyrie to
have part ownership of it.
Which brought
them to this evening, two weeks later, standing outside what used to be the
Athens. There was a new sign, up front, and Keith, perched up on a ladder, was
finishing painting it. It said, in fancy old-English script The George and,
in case someone missed the reference, there was a cartoonish drawing of St.
George, spearing a flaming dragon.
It was all
very baffling to Kyrie, but Tom had insisted. And when Keith came down from his
ladder, to much applause from the four of them—Kyrie, Tom, Rafiel and
Edward—and took a bow at his artistry, and Tom led them inside, the bafflement
continued.
Tom had found
somewhere, in the bowels of the Salvation Army—while he was trying to find
replacements for some of his personal effects behind his father's back—an old,
possibly antique and definitely disgusting painting. It showed saint George on
a horse putting a lance through the chest of a dragon, who fountained
quantities of blood. He now proceeded to hang it over the big booth at the
back, the only one that could sit ten people.
"I hope
you realize it's in extremely poor taste," Kyrie said.
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said. "That would kill you. That was the difference between you and
the other corpses. The Great Sky Dragon didn't get your heart."
"I wonder
if it was on purpose," Keith said.
"I'm sure
it was," Tom said, finishing nailing his picture and jumping down from the
vinyl seat, and backing up to admire the effect. "I suspect he considered
it the equivalent of turning me over his knee."
"Has the
coroner recovered yet?" Kyrie asked. "From having one of his corpses
walk out?"
"Well. .
. Rafiel said. "He's now talking about how Tom was in comatose shock from
the injury. In another five days he'll have convinced himself that he never
pronounced Tom dead. I mean, if he told the truth, people would wonder if he'd
been drinking his own formaldehyde. He's probably wondering if he's been
drinking his own formaldehyde. People hate doubting their own sanity. He'll
make. . . adjustments."
"But
could the Great Sky Dragon know that?" Keith asked. "Wouldn't he have
feared Tom's coming back would hit the papers and blow the whole shifter thing
sky-high?"
"I doubt
it," Tom said. He turned around, a frown making a vertical wrinkle between
his eyebrows. "I very much doubt it. He's been around a lot. He knows
people."
"What I
want to know," Rafiel said softly. "Is if the great triad presence in
town was because of the Pearl Of Heaven and if they'll now thin out, or if
we're stuck with them for good. We don't have the police force to deal with an
international criminal organization. . ."
"I wonder
if they'll leave us alone," Kyrie said. "They strike me as people
with notoriously little sense of humor—whatever the Great Sky Dragon has. And
they're bound to be a little. . . miffed at us." She looked out the corner
of her eye at Edward, who had already declared his intention to leave the firm
that worked so much for the triads. He'd start again on his own. He'd made some
noises about maybe moving to Denver. She wondered if any of these intentions
would survive once he got back to New York.
But Edward
didn't notice her look. He was still staring at the picture of St. George, wide
eyed. "Good Lord, Tom," he said. "It will put customers off
their food."
"I very
much doubt it," Kyrie said. "Tom has been hiding talents. He can
actually cook."
"And
college students will eat anything," Keith said.
"There is
that," Kyrie admitted. Then she looked at Tom, who was looking at her with
a little smile. When he looked like that, it was very hard not to kiss him, and
she'd been trying very hard not to kiss him in public. It only gave people
ideas. Besides, they were at the George. They were supposed to behave as
business partners. "So, what's the symbolism, Tom?"
"Can't
you tell?" he asked softly. "I thought you'd get it." Smiling,
he looked around at the still-empty tables. The door was closed, the closed
sign firmly in place. In a minute, Keith—who wanted to work for them part-time,
at night, even while going to college—was going to go out and hang the
"Grand opening" and "Under New Management" signs out there.
But for now everything was quiet.
"The
pheromones that Frank laid down will take years to wear out," Tom said.
"Rafiel," he looked at the policeman, "Has had them analyzed,
and they are very potent. It's not unusual for little beetles to lay down chemical
signs that attract mates and prey from miles away. These ones might very well
act on the whole country. And they're specific for shifters. We'll have
shifters coming out of our ears for years to come. Chances are," he said,
looking at Rafiel. "That we'll have to keep order in our own little
strange community. So many occasions for people to go over the edge. And we
can't afford for the more out-of-control of us to expose us all to danger. So.
. ." He waved expansively towards the picture on the wall. "We get to
be both the beast, and the dragon slayer. It's perfect."
"If you
say so," Kyrie said.
"There's
people milling around out there," Keith said.
"Those
aren't people darling," Kyrie said, turning around, and surely surprising
poor Keith with the playful appellation. "That's the poet and pie lady.
They just want to come and loiter all night, eating too little food." She
grinned at him. "Go open the door."
"And I
suppose I'd better eat something," Edward said. "I'm taking the last
flight to New York." He looked at the menu. New menus, freshly laminated.
"Good Lord," he said. "What are these?"
"It's old
diner lingo. Tom insisted. There's a translation in front of each item."
"You
really have to learn to start saying no to that boy," Edward said,
smiling. "He has entirely too many crazy ideas for his own good."
"Oh,
trust me," Kyrie said. "I say no enough." And had Tom's father
blushed?
He looked away
from her and backed, to sit at a table facing the counter. Keith was opening
the door. Behind the counter, Tom had put his—blue, emblazoned in gold— apron
on. Yesterday he'd spent the whole day scrubbing the counter and kitchen area
till it glimmered. And they'd interviewed and hired the staff. Anthony. And a
couple of the day girls. And Keith, and half a dozen other new faces.
They,
themselves, would have to work twelve hours or more a day, everyday. It didn't
matter. That it was their place made all the difference.
Keith was
writing stuff on the glass window. Most of it incomprehensible to the normal—or
even abnormal—mind because it was taken from Tom's research of old diner lingo.
There was for instance Moo with Haystacks, which she thought was supposed to be
burger and fries, for $5. She was going to have a talk with Keith and get him
to write stuff everyone understood.
But for now,
it was the first night, and she didn't mind if only the regulars came in.
Edward looked
up from his menu. "I think I'll try the hash," he said.
"Really?"
Kyrie asked.
"Really.
I haven't had it in years, and since my own son is cooking, the chances are low
he'll poison me. They're there, but low."
"All
right," Kyrie said, and glanced in the menu to see the fancy name that Tom
wanted hash called. Getting back to the counter, she looked over it at Tom.
He'd tied his
hair back and tied a scarf over it, pirate style, to keep hair from the grill.
Which just meant that he wasn't in the spirit of cooking in a diner yet. And he
smiled at her, which made all thoughts flee her mind for a while.
It took her a
few seconds to remember Edward's order, and to relay it in the new-menu-speak.
"Gentleman will take a chance," she told Tom.
His features
crinkled up in a smile. "Oh, yes. I am quite sure he will."
Draw One In The Dark—ARC
Draw One In The Dark—ARC
Sarah A. Hoyt
Advance Reader Copy
Unproofed
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events
portrayed in this book are
fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely
coincidental.
Copyright © 2006 by Sarah A. Hoyt
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN 10: 1-4165-2092-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-4165-2092-4
Cover art by Veronica Casas
First printing, November 2006
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
t/k
Printed in the United States of America
* * *
The July night
sprawled, warm and deep blue over Goldport, Colorado. In the distance the
mountains were little more than suspicions of deeper darkness, a jagged outline
where no stars appeared.
Most of
Goldport was equally dark, from its slumbering suburbs to the blind silence of
its downtown shops. Only the streetlights shone, at intervals, piercing the
velvet blackness like so many stars.
At the edge of
the western suburbs that climbed -- square block after square block -- into the
lower slopes of the Rockies, the neon sign outside a Chinese Restaurant
flickered. Three Luck Dragon flared, faded, then flared again and
finally turned off completely.
A hand with
nails that were, perhaps, just a little too long turned over a sign that hung
on the window, so that the word closed faced the parking lot.
After a while,
a sound broke the silence. A flapping, noise, as though of sheets unfurling in
the silent night. Or perhaps of large wings beating. Descending.
Had anyone
been awake, he'd have seen a large, dark creature—serpentine and thin—with vast
unfolding wings descend from the night sky till his huge taloned feet met the
asphalt. It closed its wings about itself and waited.
It did not
wait long. From alleys and darkened streets, people emerged: teenagers, in tight
jeans and t-shirts, looking nervous, sidling out of the shadows, glancing over
their shoulders as if afraid of being followed. From yet other alleys . . . creatures
emerged: long, sinuous, in moist glistening colors between green and blue. They
slid, monstrous heads low to the ground, curved fangs like daggers unsheathed
in the moonlight. And sometimes dragons seemed to shift to naked teenagers and
back again. In and out of the shadows, knit with walls and garbage bins,
slithering along the hot cement of the pavements came young men who were
dragons and dragons who were nervous young men.
They gathered
in front of the Great Sky Dragon. And waited.
At length the
dragon spoke, in a voice like pearls rolling upon old gold "Where is
it?" he asked. "Did you get it back?"
The amorphous
crowd of humans and dragons moved. There was the impression of someone pushed
forward. A rustle of cloth and wings. A murmur of speech.
The young man
pushed forward was slender, though there was a suggestion of muscles beneath his
leg-molding jeans and of a substantial chest straining the fabric of the white
t-shirt. His bare arm displayed a tattoo of a large, green, glistening dragon
and his eyes had an oriental fold, though it was clear from his light brown
hair, his pale skin that he was not wholly oriental.
He was,
however, completely scared. He stood trembling in front of the monster, who
brought a vast golden eye to fix on him. "Yesssssss?" The dragon
said. "You have something to report? You've found the Pearl of
Heaven?"
The young man
shook his head, his straight, lank hair swinging from side to side.
"No?"
the dragon asked. Light glimmered on his fangs as he spoke, and his golden eye
came very close to the boy, as if to examine him better.
"It
wasn't there," the youth said, rapidly, his English not so much accented,
as retaining the lilt of someone who'd grown up in a community full of Chinese
speakers. "We looked all over his apartment. It wasn't there."
The golden eye
blinked, vein-laced green skin obstructing it for a just a moment. Then the
huge head pulled back a little and tilted. "We do not," it said,
fangs glimmering. "Tolerate failure."
It darted
forward, so quickly the movement seemed to leave a green trail in the air like
an after-image. The fangs glistened. A delicate tongue came forth.
The boy's
scream echoed a second too late, like bad special effects. It still hung in air
as the youth, feet and hands flailing, was lifted high into the night by the
great dragon head.
A crunching
sound. A brief glimmer. Two halves of the boy tumbling, in a shower of blood,
towards the parking lot.
A scurry of
cloth and wings followed, as men and dragons scrambled away.
The great
golden eyes turned to them. The green muzzle was stained red. "We do not
tolerate failure," it said. "Find the Pearl of Heaven. Kill the
thief."
It opened its
wings and, still looking intently at the crowd, flapped their great green
length, till it rose into the dark, dark sky.
In the parking
lot below no one moved till the last vestiges of the sinuous green and gold
body had disappeared from view.
* * *
Kyrie was
worried about Tom. Which was strange, because Tom was not one of her friends.
Nor would she have thought she could care less if he stopped showing up
at work altogether.
But now he was
late and she was worried. . .
She tapped her
foot impatiently, as she stared out at the window of the Athens, the Greek
diner on Fairfax Avenue where she'd worked for the last year. Her wavy hair,
dyed in multicolored layers, gave the effect of a tapestry. It went well with
her honey-dark skin, her exotic features and the bright red feather earring
dangling from her ear, but it looked oddly out of place with the much-washed
full-length red apron with Athens blazoned in green across the chest.
Outside
everything appeared normal—the winding serpentine road between tall brick
buildings, the darkened facade of the used cd store across the street, the
occasional lone passing car.
She looked
away, disgusted, from the windows splashed with bright, hand-scrawled
advertisements for specials—souvlaki and fries - $3.99, clam chowder
- 99 ў, Fresh Rice Pudding—and at the large plastic clock high on
the wall.
Midnight. And
Tom should have come in at nine. Tom had never been late before. Oh, she'd had
her doubts when Frank hired the young street tough with the unkempt dark curls,
the leather jacket and boots and the track marks up both of his arms, clear as
day. But he had always come in on time, and he was polite to the customers, and
he never seemed to be out of it. Not during work time.
"Kyrie,"
Frank said, from behind her. Kyrie turned to see him, behind the counter—a
short, dark middle aged man, who looked Greek but seemed to be a mix of Italian
and French and Greek and whatever else had fallen in the melting pot. He was
testy today. The woman he'd been dating—or at least sweet on, as she often
walked with him to work, or after work—hadn't come in.
He gave Kyrie
a dark look from beneath his bushy eyebrows. "Table seven," he said.
She looked at
table seven, the broad table by the front window. And that was a problem,
because the moon was full on the table, bathing it. It didn't seem to bother
the gaggle of students seating at it, talking and laughing and eating a
never-ending jumble of slices of pie, dolmades, rice pudding dishes and olives,
all of it washed down with coffee.
Of course,
there was no reason it should bother them, Kyrie reminded herself. Probably
not. Moonlight only bothered her. Only her. . .
No. She
wouldn't let moonlight do anything. She wouldn't give in to it. She had it
under control. It had been months. She was not going to lose control now.
The students
needed warm ups for their coffee. And heaven knew they might very well have
decided they needed more olives. Or pie.
She lifted the
walk-through portion of the counter and ducked behind for the carafe, then back
again, walking briskly, towards the table.
Her hand
stretched, with the pot's plastic handle firmly grasped in manicured fingers,
adorned with violet-blue fingernail polish. One cup refilled, two, and a young
man probably two or three years younger than Kyrie stretched his cup for a
warm-up. The cup glistened, glazed porcelain under the full moonlight of August.
Kyrie's hand
entered the pool of moonlight, brighter than the fluorescent lights in the
distant ceiling. She felt it like a sting upon the skin, like bathwater, just a
little too hot for touch. For a disturbing second, she felt as if her
fingernails lengthened.
She bit the
inside of her cheek, and told herself no, but it didn't help, because part of
her mind, some part way at the back and mostly submerged, gave her memories of
a hot and wet jungle, of walking amid the lush foliage. Memories of soft mulch
beneath her paws. Memories of creatures scurrying in the dark undergrowth.
Creatures who were scared of her.
Moonlight felt
like wine on her lips, like a touch of fever. She felt as if an unheard rhythm
pounded through her veins and presently—
"Could we
have another piece of pie, too?" a redheaded girl with a southern drawl
asked, snapping Kyrie out of her trance.
Fingernails—Kyrie
checked—were the right length. Was it her imagination that the polish seemed a
little cracked and crazed? Probably.
She could
still feel the need for a jungle, for greenery—she who'd grown up in foster
homes in several cement-and-metal jungles. The biggest woods she'd ever seen
were city parks. Or the miles of greenery from the windows of the greyhound
that had brought her to Colorado.
These
memories, these thoughts, were just illusions, nothing more. She remembered
those times she had surrendered to the madness.
"One
piece of pie," she said, taking the small notebook from her apron pocket
and concentrating gratefully on its solidity. Paper that rustled, a pencil that
was growing far too blunt and required lots of pressure on the page.
"And some
olives," one of the young men said.
"Oh, and
more rice pudding," one of the others said, setting off a lengthy order,
paper being scratched by pencil and nails that, Kyrie told herself, were not
growing any longer. Not at all.
Still she felt
tension leave her as she turned her back on the table and walked out of the
moonlit area. Passing into the shadow felt as if some inner pressure receded,
as though something she'd been fighting with all her will and mind had now been
withdrawn.
While she was
drawing a breath of relief, she heard the sound—like wings unfolding, or like a
very large blanket flapping. It came, she thought, from the back of the diner,
from the parking lot that abutted warehouses and the blind wall at the back of
a bed and breakfast.
Kyrie wanted
to go look, but people were waiting for their food, so she set about getting
the pie and the olives and the rice pudding -- all of it pre-prepared -- from
the refrigerator behind the counter. Next to it, Frank was peeling and cutting
potatoes for the Athens' famous fresh made fries, never frozen, which
were also advertised on the facade, somewhere.
While she
worked, some of the regulars came in. A tall blond man who carried a journal in
which he wrote obsessively every night between midnight and four in the
morning. And a heavy-set, dark haired woman who came in for a pastry on her way
to her job at one of the warehouses.
Kyrie looked
again at the clock. Half an hour, and still no Tom. She took the newcomers'
orders.
On one of her
trips behind the counter, for the carafe of coffee, she told Frank, "Tom
is late."
But Frank only
shrugged and grunted, which was pretty odd behavior for the guy who had brought
Tom in out of nowhere, hired him with no work history while Tom was,
admittedly, living in the homeless shelter down the street.
As Kyrie
returned the carafe to its rest, after the round of warmups, she heard the
scream. It was a lone scream, at first, startled and cut short. It too came
from the parking lot at the back.
She told
herself it was nothing to do with her. There were all sorts of people out there
at night. Goldport didn't exactly have a large population of homeless, but it
had some, and some of them were crazy enough to scream for no reason.
Swallowing
hard, she told herself it meant nothing, absolutely nothing. It was just a
sound, one of the random sounds of night in the city. It wasn't anything to
worry about. It—
The scream
echoed again, intense, frightened, a wail of distress in the night. Looking
around her, Kyrie could tell no one else had heard it. Or at least, if Frank's
shoulders were a little tenser than normal, as he dropped fries into a huge vat
of oil, it was the tenseness of expectation, as if he were listening for Tom.
It wasn't the
look of someone who'd heard a death scream. In fact, the only person who might
have heard it was the blond guy who had stopped writing on his journal and was
staring up, mid-air. But Kyrie was not about to ask a man who wrote half the
night what exactly he had heard or hadn't. Besides the guy -- nicknamed the
poet by the diner staff -- always gave the impression of being on edge and
ready to lose all self control, from the tips of his long, nervous fingers, to
the ends of his tennis shoes.
And yet. . .
And yet she
couldn't pretend nothing had happened. She knew she had heard the scream. With
that type of scream, someone or something was in trouble bad. Back there. In
the parking lot. At this time of night most of the clientele of the Athens came
in on foot, from the nearby apartment complexes or from the college dorms just
a couple of blocks away. It could be hours before anyone went out to the
parking lot.
Kyrie didn't
want to go out there, either. But she could not ignore it. She had the crazy
feeling that whatever was happening out there involved Tom, and, what the heck,
she might not like the man, but neither did she want him dead.
She gave a
last round of warmups, looked towards the counter where Frank was still
seemingly absorbed in his frying, and edged out towards the hallway that led to
the back.
It curved past
the bathrooms, so if Frank saw her, he would think she was going to the
bathroom. She was not sure why she didn't want him to know she was going to the
parking lot. Except that—as she got to the glass door at the back—when she saw
the parking lot bathed in the moonlight, she thought that something might
happen out there, something. . . Something she didn't want her employer to know
about her.
Not that it
could happen. There was nothing that could happen, she thought, as she turned
the key. Nothing had happened in months. She wasn't sure what she thought had
happened back then hadn't all been a dream.
The key hadn't
been turned in some time and it stuck, but finally the resistence gave way, and
she opened the door, and plunged into the burning moonlight.
Feeling of
jungle, need for undergrowth and vegetation, her heart beating madly in her
eardrums, and she was holding it together, barely holding it together, hoping.
. .
She jumped out
onto the parking lot and called out, "Tom—"
Something not
quite a roar answered her. She stopped.
And then the
smell hit her. Fresh blood. Spilled blood. She trembled and tried to stop.
Tried to think.
But her nose
scented blood and her mouth filled with saliva, and her hands curved and her
nails grew. Somehow, with clumsy claws, she unbuttoned her uniform. She never
knew how. As the last piece of clothing fell to the ground, she felt a spasm
contort her whole body.
And a large,
black jungle cat ran swiftly across the parking lot. Towards the smell of
blood.
* * *
Soft pads on
asphalt. Asphalt. The word appeared alien to Kyrie's mind, locked in the great
loping body, feeling the movement, the agility, and not quite believing it.
Strange
feeling on pads. Hard, scratchy.
Muscles
coiling and uncoiling like darkness flowing in moonlit patches. Bright moonlight
like a river of fire and joy. Running. Smelling with sense that no human ever
possessed.
And the feline
stopped, alert, head thrown back, sniffing. A soft growl made its way up a
throat that Kyrie could only just believe was her own.
Smell—a rich,
spicy, flowing smell, like cinnamon on a cold winter night in Kyrie's human
memory, like rich molten chocolate, like freshly picked apples to that
dwindling part of herself who thought with human memories.
She took a
deep breath and felt her mouth fill and overflow with drool, while her paws
moved, step on step, towards the smell, soft pads on asphalt, growl rising from
throat.
What was it?
What could it be? Her human mind could not identify the smell which came at her
with depth and meaning that humans did not seem capable of perceiving.
She felt drool
drop through her half-open mouth, onto the concrete, as she looked around for
the possible source of the wondrous scent.
There were. .
. cars—she had to force herself to remember the word, to realize these were man
made and not some natural plant or animal in a jungle she'd never seen but
which was all this body knew and wanted to remember.
Cars. She
shook her great head. Her own small, battered Ford, and two big vans that
belonged to Frank and which he used for the daily shopping.
Around the
edge of the vehicles she followed the scent. It was coming from right there,
behind the vans, from dark liquid flowing along the asphalt, between the wheels
of the van. She padded around the vans. Liquid looked black and glistened under
moonlight, and she was about to take an experimental lap when the shadow
startled her.
At first it
was just that. A shadow, formless, moving on the concrete. Something with
wings. Something.
Her hackles
rising, she jumped back, cowering, head lifted, growling. And saw it.
A. . . lizard.
No. No lizard had ever been this size. A . . . creature, green and scaly and
immense, with wings that stretched between the Earth and the sky.
The feline
Kyrie dropped to her belly, paws stretched our in front of her, a low growl
rising, while her hair stood on end, trying to make the already large jungle
cat look bigger.
The human
Kyrie, torpid and half-dormant, a passenger in her own brain that had been
taken over by this dream of moonlight and forest, looked at the beast and
thought Dragon.
Not the
slender, convoluted form of the Chinese dragons with their huge, bewhiskered
faces. No. Nordic. A sturdy nordic dragon, stout of body, with the sort of
wings that truly seemed like they could devour the icy blue sky of the Norsemen
and not notice.
Huge, feral,
it stood before Kyrie, fangs bared, both wings extended, tip to tip each
probably a good twelve feet. Its muzzle was stained a dark red, and—as Kyrie
knit her belly to the concrete—it hissed, a threatening hiss.
It will
flame me next, Kyrie thought. But she couldn't get the big cat to move.
Bewildered by something that the now dominant part of her couldn't comprehend,
she lay on her belly and growled.
And the Kyrie
part of her mind, the human part, looked bewildered at the dragon wings which
were a fantastic construction of bones and translucent glittering skin that
faded from green to gold. And she thought that dragons weren't supposed to look
that beautiful. Particularly not a dragon whose muzzle was stained with blood.
And on that,
on the one word, she identified the enticing smell. Blood. Fresh blood. She
remembered smelling it before the shape-shift. But it smelled nothing like
blood through the big cat's senses.
With the
feline's sharp eyes, she could see, beneath the paws of the dragon, a dark
bundle that looked like a human body.
Human blood.
And she'd almost lapped it.
Shock and
revulsion did what her fear couldn't. They broke the human Kyrie out of the
prison at the back of her own mind. Free, she pushed the animal back.
Push and push
and push, she told herself she must be Kyrie. She must be human. Kyrie was
smart enough to run away before the dragon let out with fire.
And never mind
that the dragon might run her down, kill her. At least she would be able to
think with a human mind.
All of a
sudden, the animal gave, and she felt the spasms that contorted her body back
to two human legs, two human arms, the solidity of a human body, lying on the
concrete, hands on the ground, toes supporting her lower body.
She started to
rise to run, but the dragon made a sudden, startled movement.
It was not a
spring to attack nor a cowering in fear. Either of those she could have
accepted as normal for the beast. It was a vague, startled jump. A familiar,
startled jump.
Like coming on
Tom around the corner of the hallway leading to the bathroom and meeting him
coming out of it. Tom jumped that way, startled, not quite scared, and she
always thought he'd been shooting up in there—must have been shooting up in
there.
Now the same
guilty jump from the dragon, and the massive head swung down to her prone body,
to look at her with huge, startled blue eyes. Tom's eyes.
* * *
Kyrie. His
human mind identified her a second before his reptilian self, startled, scared,
surprised, would have opened his mouth and let out with a jet of flame.
His mouth
opened, he just managed to control the flame. He tried to shape her name, but
the reptilian throat didn't lend itself to it.
Tom felt his
nictating eyelids blink, sideways, before his normal eyelids, the eyelids he
was used to, blinked up and down.
She stood up,
slowly, shivering. She was honey-colored all over. Both sets of his eyelids
blinked again. He'd always thought that she had a tan. No lines. And her
breasts were much fuller than they looked beneath the uniform and apron—heavy,
rounded forms miraculously, perfectly horizontal in defiance of gravity.
He realized he
was staring and looked up to see her looking into his eyes, horrified. He tried
to shape an apology but what came out was a semi-growling hiss.
"Tom,"
she said, her voice raspy and hoarse, her eyes frightened and. . . pitying?
"Tom, you killed someone."
Killed? He was
sure he hadn't. He stopped on a breath, then tasted in his mouth the metallic
and—to his dragon senses—bright and delicious symphony of flavors that was
blood.
Blood? Human
blood?
The shock of
it seemed to wake him. He looked down to see a corpse between his paws. His
paws were smeared with blood. The corpse was a bundle, indistinct, neither male
nor female, neither young nor old. It smelled dead. Freshly dead.
Had he run
someone down? Killed him? Had he?
He tried to
remember and he couldn't. The dragon. . .
He took his
hand to his forehead, felt the clamminess of blood on his skin, and realized he
was human again. Human, smeared with blood, standing by a corpse.
And Kyrie had
seen him kill someone.
"No,"
he said, not sure to whom he spoke. "Oh, please, no."
* * *
Tom's voice
was low at the best of times. Now it came out growly and raspy, like gravel
dragging around on a river bottom. His transformation, much faster than hers,
had been so fast that she'd hardly seen it.
He stood by
the corpse. Broad shoulders, small waist, muscular legs, powerful arms. A body
that, except for his being all of five six, and for the track marks on his
arms, could have graced the cover of body-building magazines. Only his muscles
weren't developed to the grotesque level the field demanded.
And above it
all, was a face that managed to make him look like a frightened little boy.
His hair had
come loose from the rubber band he used to confine it in a ponytail. Loose, it
just touched his arms, in a rumple of irregular curls. His skin was pale, very
pale all over. Not exactly vampire white. More like aged ivory, even and
smooth. And his eyes were a deep, dark and yet somehow brilliant, blue.
They now
opened in total horror, as he stared at her and rasped, "I didn't.
Kill."
Her first
reaction was to snap out that of course he had. She'd seen him by the corpse,
his muzzle stained by blood. Then she remembered she'd almost lapped the blood,
herself. Lapped. And she'd known what it was before shifting too.
She shuddered,
and remembered what the blood smelled like to the jungle cat. The beast as
she'd learned to call it years ago, when she'd first turned into it. Or
hallucinated turning into it, as she'd convinced herself had happened over
time. That theory might have to be discarded now, unless she was hallucinating
Tom's shifting, too.
"I don't
remember chasing," he said. "Killing."
A look down at
the corpse told her nothing, save that it had been mauled. But wouldn't Tom. .
. The dragon have mauled it anyway? Whether he'd killed it or not?
Tom was
looking down, horrified, trembling. Shock. He was in shock. If she left him
here, he would stay like that. Till they were caught.
She reached
for his arm. His skin felt skin cold, clammy to the touch. Was it being the
dragon? Or being naked in the night? Or the shock? She had to do something
about the shock. No. She had to do something, period.
"Come,"
she said. "Come."
He obeyed.
Like a child, he allowed her to pull him all the way to the back door of the
diner.
She stooped to
pick up her clothes, trying not to get blood on them.
* * *
Tom stumbled
after Kyrie, confused. The parking lot was cold. He felt it on his wet skin.
Wet. He looked down and saw patches of blood on his body. Human blood.
"You're
shaking like a leaf," Kyrie whispered. She opened the back door of the
Athens and looked in, along the corridor that curved gently towards the bathroom.
She said, "Go in. Quickly. Get into the women's bathroom. Don't lock. I'll
come."
He rushed
forward, obeying. In his current state, he couldn't think of doing anything but
obeying. But a part of his brain, moving fast beneath the sluggish surface of
his shocked mind, wondered why the women's bathroom. Then he realized the
women's bathroom was just one large room and locked, while in the men's
restroom they'd managed to cram the stall and a row of urinals. And the outer
door didn't lock.
Yeah, there
would be more room in the women's bathroom to clean up, he thought, even as he
skidded into the door to the bathroom, on damp, bare feet.
"Why
didn't you turn the light on?" Kyrie said, coming in after him, turning
the light on.
She went to
the sink and started washing herself, making use of the paper towels and the
water. Considering where she'd been, she had very little blood on her. Not like
Tom. He tasted blood on his tongue.
And now he was
shaking again.
"Stop
that," Kyrie said. She was clean now, and putting her clothes back on. How
had she managed to get out of her clothes before shifting?
He tried to
remember his own clothes, and where he'd left them, but his memory was fogged
and confused, intercut by the bright golden blur of the dragon's thoughts.
"Are you
going to clean yourself or am I going to have to?" Kyrie asked. She'd
somehow got fully dressed before he could notice. She stood there, looking
proper, in her apron. She'd even put the earring back on her ear. She'd
remembered to take that off. What was she? Some kind of machine?
Tom pulled his
hair back from his face. "I'm naked," he said.
"I've
noticed," she said, but she wasn't looking. And now she had the expression
back on her face—the expression she'd shown Tom since the first day he'd
arrived at the Athens and Frank had offered him a job. The expression that
meant he was no good, he was possibly dangerous, and that Frank was crazy to
trust him.
He knew she
would glare at his track marks next and, damn it all, he hadn't shot up since
he'd got—Well, since he'd got the job. He stopped the thoughts of whatever else
he'd got forcefully. You really never knew what the other dragons could hear.
He didn't think they were telepathic. He thought they were just watching him
really closely. But he wasn't about to bet on it. No way. He wasn't about to
let his guard down. He'd seen what they could do, way back when—
He shook his
head and took deep breaths to drive away his memory—which could force him to
become a dragon as fast as the shine of the moon or the smell of blood. He
concentrated on the thought that it was nearby—it. The treasure he'd stolen.
The magic that helped him stay himself.
A wet and cold
paper towel touched his chest and he jumped. Kyrie's glance at him held a
challenge. "I'll do it if I have to," she said.
He shook his
head and pulled the towel from her hand, rubbing it briskly on his shoulders,
his arms, his chest. He discarded it in the trash can, thinking about DNA
evidence and trying not to. Telling himself he couldn't have done it, he couldn't
have killed anyone. He couldn't. He just couldn't. That was something he
couldn't live with—knowing for sure he'd killed anyone.
But the police
would think—The police—
He started
shaking again and took deep breaths to control it. He folded another mass of
paper towels and wet it and ran it on his face, his hands. The face looking
back at him from the mirror looked more red than white, smeared with blood.
Whose blood?
Who had that person been, out in the parking lot? Tom didn't remember anything.
Nothing, before opening his eyes, staring at the dead body, and seeing Kyrie.
And that wasn't right. It had been like that at first, but it had given him
more control and he was supposed to know what he'd done while in dragon form.
He was supposed to remember.
Kyrie was
looking at him, attentively, cautiously, like a bomb expert trying to decide
which wire to cut in a peculiar homemade contraption.
Tom bit his
tongue and managed a good imitation of his normal, gruff tone. "It's all
right," he said. "I'm fine."
She cocked her
head to one side, managing to convey wordlessly that there were about a million
interpretations of fine and none of them applied to him. But aloud she
said, "I'm going out for just a second. Lock up after me. When I come back
I will knock once. Only once. Let me in when I do."
Tom locked the
door behind her, obediently. He wondered where she was going, but it wasn't
like he had any room left to argue about what she might want to do. He should
count himself lucky she hadn't screamed bloody murder when she'd found him in
the parking lot. Perhaps she should have screamed bloody murder. Wasn't that
the name for what he'd done? No—He hadn't—He couldn't—
A muffled
knock. He realized that not only had Kyrie been gone for a while, but also that
he'd somehow managed to remove most of the red stains from his hands and face.
His hair was a drying, sticky mass that he didn't want to investigate, much
less clean.
"That
will do," she said. "You can wear these." She extended to him,
at the end of a stiff arm—like a person feeding a wild animal—what looked like
a red jogging suit.
"It's
mine," she said, as though mistaking his hesitation for a belief that
she'd mugged a vagrant for the clothes. Or taken them from the corpse. "I
usually jog in the morning before going home. Safer here. It's a main
street."
He swallowed
hard, trying not to think of what street would be less safe than Fairfax. But
then if she lived nearby—as he did—in the interlacing warren of downtown
streets, there would be many less safe. Well, not less safe in reality—the
crime rate in Goldport was never that high and most deaths were crimes
committed by and between gang members. But in the side streets, dotted with
tiny houses, or with huge Victorian mansions long since turned into tiny apartments,
a woman jogging alone in the wee hours of the morning would not be seen. And
that, perhaps, meant she wouldn't be safe—because she could disappear and not
be noticed for hours.
A thought that
whoever tried to attack this woman would be far from safe himself crossed Tom's
mind and he beat it down. Perhaps that was what she was afraid of. Of being
mugged in the dark street and killing—
He grabbed the
jogging suit. It felt too cold to his hands, and too distant—as if it weren't
real fabric but some fabric-like illusion that his senses refused to
acknowledge fully. As if he weren't really here. As if this were all a dream
and he would, shortly, wake up back in the safety of his teenage room, in his
father's house, with his stereo, his tv, his game system, all those things he'd
needed when life itself wasn't exciting enough.
The clothes
fit. Of course they would fit. Kyrie was his height, just about, and while his
shoulders were much broader, and his chest far more muscular, she had other. .
. endowments. A memory of her in the parking lot swept like a wave over him,
and he felt a warm blush climb his cheeks and adjusted his—her—jogging pants
and prayed that she wasn't focusing there just now.
But he might
have been too late, because she frowned as if she were about to ask if blood
turned him on. She didn't, though. Just said, "Wait for me. By the back
door."
"The
back?" he said. His voice came out too low and raspy. "But—"
"You
can't walk through the diner like that. It's clear your hair is caked with blood.
Someone might notice and say something. Later. When. . . someone asks."
The police.
But neither of them mentioned it.
"I'm
going to tell Frank I'm going out for a moment," she said.
He nodded. She
was efficient. She was determined. And she was helping him. It was more than he
could have hoped for. And certainly no fault at all of hers if it made him feel
helpless and out of control.
As he hadn't
been in six months.
* * *
Kyrie wasn't
sure what she was going to tell Frank. She had some idea he'd already be on
simmer from what he would see as her sudden disappearance. In the ten steps
between the bathroom and the diner proper, she ran her options through her
mind—she could tell him she felt ill. She felt ill enough after the mess in the
parking lot and the more specific mess in the bathroom. And the last thing any
greasy spoon owner wanted was to have a sick employee—visibly sick—tending to
tables. On the other hand, if she did that, she was going to be some hours
short this month. Because there was no way she could come back again tonight.
And there was rent to pay.
She didn't
know what she going to say at all until she emerged from the corridor into the
yellowish light of the diner and said, "Frank, I need a few minutes, to go
to Tom's." Which made perfect sense as she said it. A few minutes should
suffice to go to Tom's house, because Tom walked here, and if Tom walked here,
he couldn't live very far away. That meant a couple of minutes would also see
him back to his home with no problem at all. And her back here, pretending
she'd just dropped by his place.
Frank was
attending to the students' table and had the sort of look on his face that
meant he was trying very hard not to explode. Kyrie had worked for him for a
year and she'd been a reliable employee, never late, rarely sick and
trustworthy enough to be left alone with the register on occasion. None of
which were easy to come by in a college town in Colorado for the late night
shift and considering what Frank was willing to pay.
He looked over
his shoulder at Kyrie, and his brows beetled together, nonetheless, and he
managed, "What? More minutes?"
"Tom is
sick," she said. "He called me." Let Frank wonder why and how
she'd given Tom her cell phone number. "He wants me to buy him some stuff
at the pharmacy and drop it by. Over the counter stuff," she added,
thinking that most of what Tom probably took was not over the counter.
Frank looked
like he was going to say something like that, for just a moment, but he gave it
up. Probably he couldn't imagine Kyrie buying illegal drugs. And in that he
would be right. She got enough lawlessness in her everyday life, enough to hide
and disguise, that she did not need any more adrenalin.
So Frank
shrugged, which might be taken for agreement, and Kyrie rushed back down the
hallway, hoping to find Tom, hoping Tom hadn't shifted, hoping that for once
things would go well. For just this once.
Tom was where
she expected him—at the back of the diner, facing the door to the parking lot.
He was pale and had started trembling again, and there wasn't much she could
say or do for that. She wondered if he'd killed the man. She didn't want to
think about it. It didn't matter. If he had, could she blame him? She knew the
confusion of mind, the prevalence of the beast-self over every civilized
learning, every instinct, even. How could she accuse someone else who'd given
in perhaps further?
Of course she
could, a deeper voice said, because she didn't give in. She'd fought her—as
she'd thought—hallucinations tooth and nail and she'd held onto a normal life
of sorts. No friends, no family, no one who might discover what she'd thought
was her hideous madness, but she made her own money, she lived her own life.
She managed a
weak smile at Tom by way of reassurance, as she turned the key and opened the
door.
She took a
deep breath to steel herself against the smell of blood, the light of the moon.
She must stay in control. She must.
But she wasn't
ready for the other smell—the hot, musky and definitely male smell that invaded
her nostrils as she stepped onto the parking lot.
Dizziness and
her mouth went dry and her whole body started fluttering on the verge of shifting
shape, and she told herself no. No. Regained control just in time to see it, at
the edge of the parking lot, under one of the lights.
Not it. Him.
The smell was clear as a hallelujah chorus in her head. He was at the edge of
the parking lot, and he was tawny and huge and muscular.
A lion. He was
a lion. Was he a lion like she was a panther and Tom was a dragon, or. . .
Or what? An
invader from the vast Colorado savannah outside Goldport? Where lions and
zebras chased each other under the hot tropical sun?
She shook her
head at her own silliness.
Behind her,
Tom drew breath, noisily. "Is it?" he asked.
"Yes,"
she said.
"But—"
He drew breath again and something—something about the movement of his feet
against the asphalt, something about his breathing, perhaps something about his
smell (since when could she smell people this way?) made her think he was about
to run.
She put out a
hand to his arm. "Do not run," she said. "Walk steadily."
His arm felt
cold and smooth under her hand. Light sprinkling of hair. Very little of it for
a male. Perhaps being a dragon. . . She didn't want to think of that. She
didn't want to think of Tom, muzzle deep in blood.
Which of
course, meant the lion could smell them. Smell the blood on them. "You
mustn't run," she said. "We. . . Cats are triggered by motion. If you
run he will give chase. Walk slowly and steadily towards my car. The small
white one. Come."
They made
their way slowly, steadily, across the parking lot, in the reek of blood.
Perhaps the lion wouldn't be able to smell Tom in the overwhelming smell.
Perhaps they
could make it to the car. Perhaps. . . Perhaps the moon was made of green
cheese and it would rain pea soup tomorrow.
He smelled
powerful, musky. She could hear him draw breath, was aware of the touch of paw
pads on the asphalt. She felt those movements as if they were her own, her
heart accelerating and seeming to beat at her throat, suffocating her.
Paw touching
asphalt, and paw touching asphalt, and paw touching asphalt. Measured steps.
Not a run. Please don't let it be a run.
And her
movements matched his -- slow, measured, trying to appear unconcerned,
escorting Tom to the car, guiding him.
Tom walked
like a wooden puppet. Was he that terrified of the lion? Didn't he know in his
dragon form he was as big? Bigger? Stronger? Why was he afraid?
But her
rational self understood. He was afraid because he was in human form. And every
human at the back of his mind feared the large felines who lurked in the
shadows and who could eat him in two bites.
Kyrie herself
was sweating and cold by degrees, and felt as if her legs were made of water,
as she concentrated on following the beast's movements by sound.
They hit the
moonlight, out of the shadow of the diner and into the fully illuminated
parking lot. The heat of it felt like fire playing over Kyrie's skin and she
kept her head lowered. She took deep breaths. Her heartbeat echoed some old
jungle rhythm but she told herself she would not, she would not, she could not
shift.
And the smell
of him—of the lion—enveloped her, stronger than ever. Her senses, sharpened
from wanting to transform, gave her data about him that a mere nose should not
be able to gather. That he was young. That he was healthy. That he was virile.
She pulled Tom
forward, and the lion followed them at a distance -- step, step, step,
unhurried, unafraid. She prayed he wouldn't start running. She prayed he
wouldn't leap. And inside, deep inside, she felt as if he was toying with her.
Playing. Like a cat with a mouse.
She was not a
mouse.
Sweat formed
on her scalp, dripped towards her eyes, made her blink. The car loomed in front
of her, white and looking much bigger than it usually did. Looking like safety.
Kyrie pushed
her key fob button to unlock it, and felt as if her fingers slipped on the
smooth plastic, as though she had claws and unwieldy paws.
No. She must
not. She must remain human. She must.
Breathing
deeply and only managing to inhale more unabashed male musk, she shoved Tom,
slightly, and said, "Go around to the passenger side. Get in."
Go, give
him a divided target. Go, but for the love of all that's holy, don't stop.
Don't stop. Don't let him catch you. She didn't know which she feared most.
The idea of being attacked of the idea of seeing Tom attacked, of seeing Tom
torn to pieces. Of shifting. Of joining in.
She shuddered
as her too clumsy fingers struggled with the car handle. She saw Tom open the
door on the other side. Get in. She struggled with the handle.
And the lion
was twenty steps away, crouching in the full light of the moon, augmented by
the light of a parking lot lamp above her. He was crouching, front down low and
hindquarters high.
Hindquarters
trembling. Legs bunching.
Jump. He was
going to—
He jumped,
clearing the space between them, and she leaned hard against her car, her heart
hammering in her chest, her body divided and dividing her mind. Her human body,
her human mind, wanted to scream, to hide. Her human body knew that the huge
body would hit her, claws would rend her. That she was about to die.
But her other
mind. . . Her other mind practically died in the ecstatic smell of healthy
young male. Her other mind thought the lion knew her, guessed her, smelled her
for an equal. That the lion wanted—Not to eat her.
She realized
she'd closed her eyes, when she felt him landing near her—landing with all four
paws on the asphalt. Not on her, but so close to her she felt the breeze of his
falling, and smelled him, smelled him hot and strong and oh, so impossibly
male.
She felt her body
spasm, wish to shift. She fought it. She struggled to stay herself.
Through
half-open eyes, she saw a lion's face turned towards her, its golden eyes
glowing, its whole expression betraying. . . smugness?
Then it opened
its mouth, the fangs glowing in the light and a soft growl started at the back
of its throat. She didn't know if it was threatening her or. . .
Something to
the growl—something to the sound crept along her nerves like a tingle on the
verge of aching. If she stayed—If she stayed. . .
The car door
opened, shoving her. She leapt aside, to avoid being pushed into the lion. A
hand reached out of the car, dragged her. She fell onto her seat. Blinked. Tom.
Tom had pulled her into the car.
"Drive,"
Tom said. "Drive."
He reached
across her, as he spoke and slammed the door. From outside, the lion made a
rumbling sound that might have been amusement.
She didn't
remember turning the ignition. She didn't remember stepping on the gas. But she
realized she was driving down Fairfax. Tall, silent apartment houses succeeded
each other on either side of the road, lighted by sporadic white pools of light
from the street lamps.
"Where do
you live?" she managed, glancing at Tom. Part of her wanted to tell him
she hadn't been afraid, she hadn't been. . .
But she wasn't
even sure she could explain what she'd been. She had been afraid. That was a
huge beast. But also, at some level, she was afraid she would end up shifting,
cavorting with him. Over a half-devoured human carcass.
"Two
blocks down," Tom said, and swallowed, as if he'd had the same thought at
the same time. "Audubon apartments. On the left."
She remembered
the place. Not one of the graceful Victorian remnants, but half a dozen
rectangular red-brick boxes sharing a parking lot. During the day there were
any number of kids playing in the parking lot, and usually one or two men
working on cars or drinking beer.
Now, in the
dark of night, it was silent and ill lit. As she pulled into the parking lot,
Tom asked. "It was one of us, wasn't it?"
"Pardon?"
she said. She knew what he meant. She knew all too well. He was asking if the
lion was like them. If the lion too had a human form and one not so human. But
Kyrie had managed, until very recently to convince herself she only had one
form and that everything else was hallucination. Mental illness.
Now this whole
thing felt like mental illness. She parked the car, turned the engine off.
"You
know. . ." Tom said. His blue eyes were earnest, and he plucked at her
sleeve like a little kid seeking reassurance. "You know, a shape-shifter.
Like us."
She shrugged.
"Seems unlikely it escaped from a zoo," she said. "Someone would
have given the alarm, wouldn't they?"
Tom nodded, as
if considering this. "What.. . . what did it want?"
Kyrie
shrugged. She wanted to say he wanted everything but all she had to go
on was the smell. And she didn't wish to discuss her response to the smell with
Tom.
"Do you
think it killed the. . . person?"
Did you?
Kyrie thought, but only shrugged. How did you ask someone who looked as
bewildered and shocked as Tom if he'd committed murder? And was she really
feeling sorry for Tom? Must be going soft in the head.
Tom got out of
the car, patted down where the pockets would be in normal pants and Kyrie
realized he wouldn't have keys.
But he turned
around and said, "Thank you for driving me," and pushed the door as
if to close it.
"Wait, do
you have keys?"
He shrugged.
"The neighbor usually keeps them," he said. "For me. I keep
his."
His? For some
reason it had never occurred to Kyrie that someone like Tom could entrust his
key—or anything else—to a male. If she'd thought of his social life outside
work at all, she imagined a never-ending succession of sweet things across his
mattress. But now she realized she was probably wrong. It was unlikely there
was anyone on his mattress. He had come from a homeless shelter. And he was a
dragon.
"Keith
keeps my key and I keep his. . . So if we lose it while we're out," Tom
said, an edge of impatience in his voice. "He's a college student. They
lose their keys." He hesitated a minute. "Gets stinking drunk
too." He said it as if he, himself, never took any mind-altering
substances.
And out of
nowhere, an altruistic impulse, or perhaps the thought that he'd saved her—from
what?—with the lion in the parking lot, made her get out. "I'll come with
you," she said. "To make sure you get in okay."
She had a
feeling, a strange feeling something was wrong. Wrong with this parking lot,
with this entire area. There was a feeling of being watched and not in a
friendly manner, but she wasn't sure by whom, or how. Any other day, any other
time, she would have shrugged it off. But now. . . Well. . . perhaps she was
picking up smell or something. Something was definitely wrong.
She got out of
the car, unsteady on her legs, glad that the moonlight was hidden by the
shadows of the buildings. The pressure of the full moonlight was all she needed
now. At the same time, she felt as if the buildings themselves were looming
shapes waiting to jump her.
It wasn't
possible, was it? For the buildings to be shifters? With a human form? What was
this? How many people did it afflict? And why was she afraid?
She wasn't
sure of anything anymore. Sweat trickled down her back and her legs felt like
water while she followed Tom to the steps outside the door of the nearest
building.
* * *
"Keith
might not be home," Tom said, pressing the button. Actually, it was damn
bloody sure that Keith Vorpal would not be home. Keith was a film student at
Goldport College and somewhat of a ladies' man. One or the other tended to keep
him out of the house on warm summer nights. He always assumed Tom had the same
sort of life and only seemed somewhat amused Tom managed to come home naked so
often. He took Tom's mutters of some good beer or a glass too many and asked no
questions. Which in itself would be worrisome, except that Keith's own life was
such a mess of perils and odd adventures that he probably took it for granted
everyone else's life was that crazy. And no worse.
Their
arrangement with the keys rested on a vague hope that one of them might be home
when the other needed a key. So far it had worked out, more or less. But there
was always the chance. . .
Tom rang
again. A buzz he recognized as Keith's voice came through the loudspeaker. He
couldn't actually understand what Keith said, but he could guess. "It's
Tom, man," Tom said. "Lost my key, somehow. . ."
Another buzz
that Tom—with long practice—understood to mean that he should ring Keith's door
and Keith would give him the key. Then the front door clicked open.
"Sorry
there's no elevator, but—" Tom started, and shut up. Most apartment
buildings in Goldport, much less most apartment buildings in Downtown Goldport
didn't have elevators. He must be having flash backs to his childhood in an
upscale NY condo.
As it was, the
Audubon was more upscale than the places he'd lived in the last five years even
when he'd been out of the shelter. There were no rats. The cement stairs
covered in worn carpet were clean enough and didn't smell of piss. And if, now
and then, like on the third floor, you could hear a baby cry through the thin
door of an apartment, you could be sure the little tyke had just awakened and
needed to nurse, and not that he was being beaten within an inch of his life.
These were
solid working class apartments, where people scrimped and saved to get by and
might wear clothes from thrift shop racks, but where most families had two parents
and both parents worked, and where kids went to school and played, instead of
doing drugs. Or selling them.
Yeah, it could
be much, much worse. Tom rubbed his hand across his face as he climbed, as fast
as his feet would carry him up to the third floor. He hated with shifting
shape—particularly shifting shape when he didn't mean to and staying shifted
for. . . hours, he guessed as his last memory was from when the moon first
appeared in the sky, around maybe nine. He wondered what he'd been doing. It had
been months since shifting had come with such total memory loss.
If he could
find his clothes, he would know what had happened, but right now he only had a
memory of fear—of fleeing. And then nothing at all until he'd come to himself
in that parking lot, with Kyrie staring at him and the bloodied corpse at his
feet.
They'd reached
the landing on the third floor and he lurched to Keith's door on the left, and
pushed the doorbell. Despite his having called, he didn't expect a fast
response and didn't get it. From inside came Keith's voice and a higher,
clearly female voice, and then the sound of footsteps, something falling, more
footsteps.
Tom smiled
despite himself, guessing that Keith had still been explaining to his visitor
why the doorbell had rung from downstairs, when it rang again up here.
When the door
opened, Keith looked disheveled and sleepy. He was a young kid—although to be
honest he might be older than Tom. Tom just perceived him as much younger than
himself -- perhaps because Keith didn't shift. Keith was blond and generally
good looking. Right then, he was blinking, his blue eyes displaying the
curiously naked look of the eyes of people who normally wore glasses and
suddenly found themselves without.
His hair was a
mess and he looked confused, but he was grinning as he handed Tom a set of
keys. Though the student held the door almost closed, Tom glimpsed a redheaded
girl behind Keith. He felt a little envious. It had been years since he'd even
dreamed of sharing his bed with anyone. He could never guarantee he wouldn't
shift and scare a date halfway to death. Or worse.
Then he
realized Keith was looking enviously at him. Tom followed the direction of
Keith's gaze, and saw Kyrie standing just behind him, hands on hips, as though
daring Keith to make a comment. And Tom felt at the same time ridiculously
pleased that Keith thought he could be involved with someone like Kyrie and a
little jealous of Keith's admiration for her. Keith didn't even know her. He
didn't even know who she was. He didn't know that she shifted, as well.
"Thanks,"
Tom said, a little more dryly than he should. He snatched the key from Keith's
hand and started up the stairs at a faster clip than he should, considering how
he felt.
Keith grinned.
"No problem. But I have to go back. This girl is something else. She
swears she saw a dragon flying over the building. A dragon." He shook his
head.
A dragon. Tom
managed a noncommittal sound of empathy. Probably Tom. But Tom didn't dare ask
questions about what he'd been doing or what direction he'd been flying.
Instead, he turned and started up the stairs. Up and up and up, to his fifth
floor landing, Kyrie's steady gait keeping pace with his.
His door was.
. . locked. He let out a breath he hadn't been aware of holding in. After all,
he did not know how or when he'd shifted and all he had was the memory of fear,
of running away. It was possible they had found him in his apartment. It
was possible. . . If they'd figured out his name, and they must have by now, it
would have been easy.
But the door
was locked, his doormat looked untouched. Everything was as it should be. No
light came under his door. Everything was normal at least to human senses and
he didn't want to use his dragon senses. He didn't want to reach for that other
self, for fear it would bring them. And for fear of what he might do. He swallowed
hard, thinking of the corpse.
There could be
nothing odd in his apartment. The only reason his hand trembled was because of
his being so tired. And the corpse and everything.
He slid the
key in and turned it.
* * *
In the moment
before Tom opened the door Kyrie had a wild surge of panic. She wanted to tell
him to wait, but she couldn't speak. And she didn't know why he should wait.
She just had a feeling—added up from rustling, from sounds she could not
possibly have heard, from an odd smell, from a weird tingle up her spine—that
something was wrong, very wrong.
Perhaps Tom
was going to drag her into his apartment and—And what? Imagination failed her.
She had seen him in that bathroom, so slow and confused he didn't even seem to
know how to wipe away blood from himself. She had seen him standing there,
helpless. She could hardly believe he would now turn around and rape her.
On the other
hand, didn't they sacrifice virgins to dragons in the Middle Ages? She almost
smiled at the thought of Tom as virgin-despoiler. The way he looked, he'd have
trouble beating away the ones who threw themselves at him. Kyrie managed to
calm herself completely, when Tom reached in and turned on the light.
The light
revealed an unprepossessing living room, with the type of dark brown carpet
that landlords slapped down when they didn't expect to rent to the upper
echelons of society. But the rest. . .
The furniture,
what there was of it —splinters of bookcase, remnants of couches with ugly
brown polyester covering— seemed to have been piled up in the middle of the
room as if someone had been getting ready to light a bonfire. And the
window—the huge picture window opposite—was broken. A thousand splinters
littered the carpet. Books and pieces of books fluttered all over.
Tom made a
sound of distress and stepped into the room, and Kyrie stepped in behind him.
He knelt by a pile of something on the carpet, and Kyrie focused on it,
noticing shreds of denim, and what might or might once have been a white
t-shirt. And over it all, a torn purple rag, with the Athens logo. The Athens
sent the aprons home with the employees to get laundered at employee expense.
That meant
that Tom had been ready to go to work when. . . The tingle in her spine grew
stronger and the feeling that something was wrong, very wrong overwhelmed her.
It was like a scream both soundless and so loud that it took over her whole
thought, overcame her whole mind, reverberated from her whole being.
"Tom,"
she said, putting a hand on his shoulder. "Tom, we'd best--"
She never had
time to finish. Someone or something, moving soundlessly behind them, had
closed the door.
Kyrie heard
the bolt slide home and turned, skin prickling, hair standing on end, to stare
openmouthed at three men who stood between them and the door.
Men was
dignifying them with a name they didn't quite deserve. They were boys, maybe
nineteen or twenty, just at the edge of manhood. Oriental, dressed all in
black, they clearly had watched one too many ninja movies. The middle one wore
exquisitely groomed slightly too long hair, the bangs arranged so they fell to
perfection and didn't move. He must spend a fortune on product.
The ones on
either side were not so stylishly groomed, but one sported a tattoo of a
Chinese letter in the middle of his forehead, while the other had a tattoo of a
red dragon on the back of each hand—those clearly visible and he was clenching
his fists and holding them up in a gesture more reminiscent of boxing than
karate.
The far one
shouted something, and Kyrie grabbed hold of Tom's arm, and shoved him behind
her. He'd gone wooden puppet again.
The pretty boy
in the middle laughed and said something—Kyrie presumed in Chinese—to his
friend. Then added in English, "He only speaks English." But when he
turned to Tom all traces of laughter had vanished from his expression, as he
said, "You know what we want. You foiled the first fool who came looking,
but, you see, we returned for you. Now give it to us, and we might not kill you
or your pretty girlfriend."
Pretty
girlfriend? Kyrie registered as if from a long way away that they were talking
about her. Truth was very few people ever had called her pretty. She was too. .
. striking, and proud to be called that. Also at some level people must always
have sensed what she was, because since she'd turned fifteen and the panther
had made its first appearance, few men had made taunting comments in her
presence. Hell, few men even addressed her in any way.
But if there
was an instinct for self-protection, this trio was lacking it. The little one
with the two dragons on the backs of his hands started laughing.
At least, he
threw his head back and Kyrie thought he was laughing, a high pitched,
hysterical laughter. And then she realized what the laughter really was as his
outlines blurred and he started to shift. Wings, and curving neck. All of it in
lovely tones of red and gold, like all those Chinese paintings. But the
features—that in paintings had always made Kyrie think of a naughty cat—looked
malevolent. He hissed, between lips wholly unprepared for speech, "Give us
the pearl."
Pearl? A pearl
seemed like a very odd thing for Tom to steal. Was it some form of drug? Kyrie
glanced behind her, to see Tom shaking his head violently. The fact that he was
the approximate color of curdled milk, his normally pale skin looking downright
unhealthy and grey, did not reassure her that by his shaking his head he meant
he'd never heard of such a thing as a pearl.
"Tom?"
she said.
He only shook
his head again.
"Right,"
the middle one said. "You want to play rough, rough it is."
And suddenly a
golden dragon took up most of the small brown room. And there were claws
reaching for Kyrie. No. Talons. And someone's fangs were close to her face, a
smell like a thousand long-forgotten sushi dinners invading her nostrils. A
forked tongue licked her ear and through the lips not fashioned for speech,
through the accent that he showed even in English, she nonetheless understood
the young man's words as he said, "We're going to have so much fun."
She'd never
shifted when she was scared. The few times she'd shifted it had been just the
moon and usually summer calling to her, the feeling of jungle in her mind, at
the back of her brain.
But as her
fear closed upon her throat, making breathing almost impossible, as her heart
pounded seemingly in her ears, as her blood seemed to race away from her
leaving her cold as ice, she felt something. . .
She wasn't
sure what was happening until she heard the growl erupt from her throat. A full
growl, fashioned from melodies of the jungle.
Lizards.
Uppity lizards, at that. They dared challenge her? Try to grab her?
Turning
around, she swiped a giant paw across the tender under flesh of a clawed foot
holding her. And then she leapt for the throat of the giant beast who was
trying to claw her down.
It was—the
part of her that remained human, deep in the mists of consciousness
thought—like the armada and the English ships. The Spanish armada's huge, slow
ships might be stronger and better armored. But they had no hope against the
small English ships that could sail around them, landing shots where they
wished till the giant ship was crippled.
Kyrie grabbed
the beast by the throat, hanging on, till she tasted blood—and what blood. It
was like drinking the finest champagne straight from the bottle.
The beast
yelled and reached for her with its claws. It managed to scrape her flank, in a
bright slash of pain. But she jumped out of the way before the creature could
grab her, and she was on top of his head, as both his friends converged, trying
to grab her. And she leapt at the soft underbelly of the red one—Two Dragons,
the human Kyrie thought—in a mad dance of claws sinking into soft, unarmored
flesh.
And then up
again, and leaping at the eye of the next dragon.
That there were
three of them was not an advantage. After all, three large, slower moving
beings only helped each other get hopelessly entangled while Kyrie danced upon
them like a deadly firefly, in a frenzy of wounding, a joy of blood.
She was
vaguely aware that she too was bleeding, that there were punctures on her hide
and that, somehow, one of them had managed to sink his fangs into her front
paw—her right arm. But she didn't care. Right then, allowed the madness she'd
long denied, she jumped at the dragon's eyes, swiping her claws across them and
relishing the dragon's shriek of pain, the bright blood jumping from the right
eye. She jumped and leaped, possessed of fierce anger, of maddened, repressed
rage.
But while the
beast exulted in the carnage, while the feline gyrated in mayhem, a small
trickling feeling formed at the back of Kyrie's mind. It was like the first
melting tip of an icicle, dropping cold reason on her hot madness. The feeling,
at first, was no more than that—just a trickling cold, protesting, demanding—she
wasn't sure what. The beast, in its frenzy, ignored it.
Until slowly,
slowly, the feeling became words and the words became panic in Kyrie's mind.
She was fighting all three dragons. She was keeping all three dragons at
bay—just. But there were three of them, there was one of her and the beast's
muscles were starting to hurt and. . . How could she get out of here?
There was no
way of reaching the door. All the dragons were between her and the door and
none of her sorties had brought her close to escaping.
Blood in her
nostrils, mad fury in the beast's brain, what remained of the human Kyrie tried
to think and came up with nothing but an insistent, white surge of panic. And
she couldn't let it slow her down. She couldn't. If she did, all would be lost.
But she couldn't fight forever.
In a twirl,
claws sinking into the nearest dragon's hide, she thought of Tom. But the
corner into which he'd shrunk when she'd shifted was vacant.
The coward had
run out the door behind her back, hadn't he?
She felt a horrible
sense of betrayal, a let down at this, and her extended paw faltered, and the
dragon above her reared.
It was the
center dragon—who in human form had artificially smooth and immovable hair. In
dragon form he had a tall crest, red and gold. Well, it had been red and gold,
it was now much darker red in spots, thanks to Kyrie's claws. And blood ran
down its cheek from one of its eyes. But the other eye was unblinking fixed
hatred, as it opened its jaws wide, wide, fangs glistening.
Kyrie needed
to jump. She needed to. But her muscles felt powerless, spent. Stretched
elastic that would not spring again.
So this is
how it ends. . .
The big head
descended to devour her, teeth ready to break her neck. And a taloned paw
grabbed her roughly around the middle, swept her back.
She turned.
She turned with her remnant of strength, her very last drop of fury, to snarl
at the dragon behind her.
* * *
She snarled at
him, Tom thought—amazed he could think clearly in dragon form. He'd willed
himself into being a dragon. Willed himself into it.
He desired it
and pushed. He knew she was going to have problems leaving. He knew she
couldn't fly.
And he knew
she was an idiot for even fighting. They had no chance. But then, neither could
he leave her to die alone. She had taken care of him, when she'd found him in
suspicious circumstances. She'd shown him more kindness than his own father
had. And she was a shifter like him. They were family: bonded deeper than any
shared genes, any joint upbringing.
He shifted
suddenly, unexpectedly, leaping in the air, and out of his corner so quickly
the other dragons didn't seem to register it. He had only the time to see that
she was cowering, that the dragon above her would finish her. And then he was
reaching for her, grabbing her, jumping out the open window, even as she turned
to snarl at him.
But the
snarl—lip pulled back from vicious fangs—faltered as she recognized him.
He held her as
gently and firmly as he could. He mustn't drop her. But neither must he hurt
her. He could smell blood from her. He could smell fear.
He unfurled
his wings—huge parachutes. Above him, the other dragons hadn't appeared yet.
Perhaps she'd done more damage than he'd thought. Perhaps they had a few
minutes. A very few minutes.
Down in the
parking lot, her car was a small abandoned toy. Her keys would be in his
apartment, he thought, and shook his huge head, amazed at the clarity of the
human thought in beast form. Normally he didn't even remember what he'd done as
a dragon. Perhaps because he was responsible for another? He'd never been
responsible for anyone but himself.
But they must
run. They must get out of here very fast. And as beasts, he could not explain
to her what danger they were in. He couldn't even think, clearly think, of
where to run.
The dragon
wished to crawl under a rock, preferably by a river, and hide.
But Goldport
was not so big on rivers. There was Panner's creek, which in the summer became
a mere trickle winding amid sun-parched boulders.
He flew her
down to the parking lot, slowly, landed by the car and wished to shift. He
didn't dare reach for the strength of the talisman to allow himself to shift.
No. The dragons would sense, that.
Instead,
setting Kyrie down carefully, he WILLED himself to shift. He thought himself
human, and shivered, as his body spasmed in painful shift.
He was naked.
Naked, sitting on the warm asphalt of the parking lot, next to Kyrie's car and
a panther. No. Next to Kyrie. In the next minute, she also shifted, and appeared
as a naked, bloodied young woman, lying on the pavement next to him.
"The
car," he rasped at her, his voice hesitant, difficult, like a
long-neglected instrument. "We must leave. Soon. They will pursue."
She looked at
him with confused, tired eyes. Her chin was scratched, and there was too much
blood on her everywhere. He wondered how much of it was hers. Did they need to
go to the hospital? They healed very quickly. At least Tom did. But what if
these wounds were too serious? How could they go to the hospital? How could
they explain anything?
"I don't
have keys," she said, and patted her hips as though looking for keys in
pockets that were no longer there.
Tom nodded. He
got up, feeling about a hundred years old after two shifts in such a short
time. His legs hurt, as did his arms, and his whole body felt as though someone
had belabored him with sticks.
But he was
human now and he could think. He remembered.
One eye on the
window of his apartment, wondering how long he had, he said, "I'm sorry.
I'll pay." Then he grabbed one of the stones on the flowerbed nearby—a
stone bed, to tell the truth since he'd never seen flowers there. He smashed
the window with the stone, reached in, unlocked the door.
Sweeping the
crumbs of glass from the seat, he smashed the key holder, reached down to the
floor and grabbed a screwdriver he'd noticed there while Kyrie was driving him.
"Remembered you had this here," he said, turning to see her
bewildered expression as her car started. And then "Get in. I'll pay for
the damage. Just get in."
Was it his
imagination, or had he seen the shadow of a wing in the window above?
He reached
across to unlock the passenger door, as she jumped in.
She fumbled
with the seat belt as he tore out of the parking lot in a screech of rubber.
Sweat was dripping from his forehead into his eyes. He was sure he was sitting
on a chunk of glass. It had been years since he'd driven and he found the turns
odd and difficult. The car his father had given him as a sixteenth birthday
gift handled much better than this. Good thing there was almost no traffic on
the roads at this time.
He tore around
the corner of Fairfax, turning into a narrower street and hoping he was only
imagining the noise of wings above. He tried to choose the tree-lined streets,
knowing well enough that it was harder to see into them from above. The vision
of dragons seemed to focus naturally on moving things. In a street of trees,
shaken by the wind, in which shadows shifted and shook, it would be harder to
see them.
Some of these
streets were narrow enough—and the trees above them well over a hundred years
old -- that it made it impossible to see the streets at all, except as a green
canopy. He took one street, then another, then yet another, tearing down quiet
residential streets like a madman and probably causing the families snug in
their brick ranches to wonder what was happening out there.
They passed
two people walking, male and female, he tall and she much shorter, leaning into
him. Shorts, t-shirts, a swirling white skirt, a vision of normalcy and a
relationship that he couldn't aspire too, and Tom bit his lip and thumped the
side of the wheel with his hand, bringing a startled glance from Kyrie.
He'd gone a
good ten minutes and was starting to think they'd lost their pursuers, when he
thought of Kyrie. He turned to her, wanting to explain he really would pay and
that she should not—
Her dark eyes
gazed into his, unwavering. "How many cars have you stolen?" she
asked.
* * *
The way he'd
hot-wired the car, quickly—she swore it had taken him less than a few
seconds—had chilled Kyrie to the bone.
She supposed
she should have known someone with a drug problem, working minimum wage jobs
had to supplement with crime, but all of a sudden she realized he was more
dangerous—more out of control than she'd thought.
More out of
control than the other dragons?
And yet, after
he'd driven like a madman for a while, he looked at her with a devastatingly
scared expression in his pale face. Despite chiseled features and the now
all-too-obvious dark shadow of unshaven beard, he managed to look about five
and worried he'd be put in time out.
"How many
cars have you stolen?" she asked, before she knew she was going to say it.
His expression
closed. She would not be able to describe it any other way. The eager, almost
childish panic vanished, leaving in its place a dark, unreadable glare, his
eyebrows low over his dark blue eyes. He turned away, looking forward, and shrugged,
a calculated shrug from his broad shoulders. One quarter inch up, one quarter
inch down.
"I used
to go joy riding," he said. "When I was a kid. I got bored." And
when she didn't answer that, he added. "Look, I've told you. I'll pay you
for the damage." And again, at her continued silence. "I couldn't let
us be caught. If they'd caught us, they'd have killed us."
At this, he
stopped. He stopped long enough for her to gather her thoughts. She felt so
tired that if she weren't in pain, she would have fallen asleep. But she hurt.
Her shoulder felt as if it had been dislocated in the fight. There was a slash
across her torso that she prayed wouldn't need stitches, and a broad swath of
her buttock felt scraped, as though it had rubbed hard against a scaly hide.
Which it probably had though she didn't remember.
"Who are
they?" she finally asked. "Why are they after you?"
"They're
a Chinese triad," he said. "They're members. A. . . crime sindicate.
Asian."
"Admirably
described," she said, and heard the hint of sarcasm in her own voice, and
was surprised she still had the strength for it. "But what do they want
with you?"
He hesitated.
For just a moment he glanced at her, and the scared little boy was back, with
wide open eyes, and slightly parted lips.
He looked back
at the road in time to take them, tightly, around a corner, tires squealing,
car tilting. "They think I stole something from them," he said, with
the defensive tone of a child explaining it really, really, really wasn't him
who put the clamp on the cat's tail.
Something.
Kyrie was not so naive that she didn't know Chinese crime syndicates—like most
crime syndicates—dealt mostly in various drugs. "A drug deal gone
bad?" she asked.
He had the
nerve to tighten his lips, and shake his head. "I don't deal drugs,"
he said.
Whee. There
was one form of criminality he didn't stoop to. Who would have thunk it?
"So. . ."
"I didn't
steal it, okay?" he said. "I didn't steal anything. They think I did,
and they're trying to get it back."
"Sounds
ugly," she said. Somehow she felt he was lying but also not lying. There
was an edge to his tone as if he weren't quite so sure how he'd got himself
into this type of situation.
"It
is," he said. "They've been after me for months." He shrugged.
"Only they've just figured out my name, I think. Now they can follow me,
wherever I live. They're shifters. Dragons."
"I
gathered."
"They
worship the Great Sky Dragon. . ."
"Uh?"
she had never heard of any shifter divinity. But then again, she'd never heard
of any other shifters. All of a sudden, vertiginously, as though standing at
the edge of a precipice and seeing a whole world open before her, she wondered
if there was a whole culture, a whole society she didn't know about. Some place
she belonged, whole families of shifters. Perhaps the only reason she'd never
known about it was because she was adopted and she didn't know her own birth
family. "Shifters have their own gods?"
Tom shrugged.
"I think he was a Chinese divinity. Or one of their sacred animals, or
something."
"Did you
get involved with them because you. . . shift? Into a dragon? Is your family .
. . does your family shift?"
Tom shook his
head. "My father doesn't. . . No."
"Then how
did you get involved with the triad?"
He looked
confused, then shrugged—not a precise shrug. "I don't know," he said.
He seemed on the verge of saying something, but shook his head, as if to his
own thoughts. "My father—" He stopped dead, as though something in
him had halted not just the words but the train of thought as well.
They were
driving down a narrow, tree-bordered street. Ahead of them, loomed the dark
expanse of the Castle—officially known as Chateau D'Aubigerne, a castle
imported from the Loire, stone by stone by a man enriched in the gold rush. It
now stood smack dab in the center of Goldport, abandoned and empty, surrounded
by gardens gone to seed and an eight foot high iron fence like massed spears.
Now and then there was talk of someone buying it, restoring it, and making it
into a hotel, a mall, a resort, or just a monument for tourists to gawk at. But
all those projects seemed non starters, perhaps because the Castle was well
away from all the hotels and convention centers, in a street of tiny, workmen
brick ranches, with cars on blocks and broken plastic toys in the front yards.
Tom slowed
down till he was going a normal speed and said, "Where can I take
you?"
"Beg your
pardon?"
He grinned at
her, a fugitive grin that transformed his features and gave her a startling
glimpse of what might lurk underneath the troubled young man's
aggression—humor? Joy? "Where can I drop you off? Where do you live?"
He smiled at her, a less naughty smile this time, more that of a patient adult
facing a stupid child. "You can't go to work like that, can you?"
She shook her
head, panicked. Gee. Frank was going to be mad. She might already have lost her
job. A surge of anger at Tom came up, but then vanished again. Someone had once
told Kyrie that if you lost a job making less than ten dollars and hour you
could find another one within the day. In her experience this was true. And
besides, it wasn't like Tom had asked her for help.
She'd just
jumped in and helped him. Hell, she thought she'd learned not to do that years
ago.
"My
place," she said. "It's down the next street . Turn right. Third house
on the left."
"House?"
"Rental.
It's smaller than an apartment, really. I just. . . I don't like people
around."
He nodded and
maneuvered through the turn and up to her house, at a speed that could only be
considered sedate after his early high jinxes.
The house was
tiny—eight hundred square feet and one bedroom, but it had a driveway—a narrow
strip of concrete that led right up to the back door and from which a narrow
walking path led to the front door. This late at night—or early in the
morning—all of Kyrie's neighbors would be asleep and she was grateful for that.
As Tom pulled
up to the back door, she had only two steps to go, stark naked. And she always
left the key under a rock in the nearby flowerbed. She hated to be locked out
of her house and didn't know anyone in town she could trust with a key. It was
one of the side-effects of moving around so much.
As she started
to open the door, she looked at Tom. He was sitting behind the wheel, the
engine still going, looking forward. The car was hers, but she could hardly
tell him to leave it and run off naked into the night. On the other hand—where
was he going to go even with the car?
She had to
invite him in. She didn't really want to, but she saw nothing else she could
do. Nothing else a decent human being could do. She tapped him on the arm.
"Turn that off. Come inside. Have a shower. I'll grab another jogging suit
for you."
He looked
surprised. Dumbfounded as if she'd offered him a fortune. "Are you
sure?"
"Where
would you go otherwise?"
He shrugged.
"I'll figure. . . I'll figure something. I always do." For just a
second a dangerous liquid quality crept into his voice, but he only shook his
head and swallowed. "Look, it's not safe to be around me."
"I've
noticed. But you have nowhere else to go. Come inside. I'll make coffee."
He took a few
seconds, then grabbed the screwdriver and turned it. And nodded at her.
"Can I come out through your side?" he said. "Less—"
"Exposure,
yes," she said. "And don't break anything. I have a key."
She dove out
the door and retrieved her key from its hiding place.
* * *
Later Tom
would think he might never have agreed to go to Kyrie's house, except for the
chunk of glass slowly working its way into his buttock.
It was clear
she didn't really want him around, and he wasn't sure he could blame her. After
all, he wasn't sure he wanted himself around most of the time. And she'd seen
him at one of his most dangerous moments.
It would
probably be a kindness for him to leave. But then he came up on the fact that
he was naked, he was shaking with exhaustion, and there was a big glass chunk
becoming a permanent part of his behind.
He turned off
the car and waited till she was out and had opened the door, before he dove out
of the car, after her. And stepped into a cozy kitchen—cozy and homey and like
no place he'd ever been before.
His father's
condo had been huge. This entire house would probably fit in the kitchen. And
the kitchen of that house had been white and chrome, imported Italian marble
and mosaic floors. But it was the domain of Mrs. Lopez, their cook. Never the
family kitchen. Never a place where the family gathered for meals.
Of course no
family could really gather in this kitchen either. Not unless they were all
unusually close. It was barely big enough to contain both of them, a card
table, two folding chairs, a refrigerator, stove and a tiny counter with sink.
Above the table, on the wall, hung a painting of an old fashioned-bicycle done
in shades of red and pink on black, the front wheel dwarfing the rest.
Kyrie closed
the door behind him. "This way," she said, as she led him out of the
kitchen via the interior door, and into a hallway. She opened another door and
turned the light on. "The bathroom. I'll go get you something to
wear."
He stepped
into the bathroom, where there was just enough space for himself, between tub,
sink and toilet.
Kyrie returned
almost immediately and knocked, and he hid himself behind the door as he opened
it. It seemed silly when they'd been together, naked for most of the evening.
But then Kyrie had put on a robe—a fluffy, pink robe that made her look young
and feminine.
She handed him
a bundle of clothes and said, "There's plenty of water. Outsized water
heater, so don't worry too much. But I'd like to shower after you, so don't use
more than you have to."
He nodded,
took the clothes, set them on the toilet tank, and started the shower. Plunging
under the water he felt it like a warm caress. He tried not to notice that it
ran red-stained down the drain. The corpse. . .
The corpse
seemed wholly unreal in this white-tiled shower that smelled of lavender and a
subtle hint of Kyrie's perfume. Tom had never noticed her perfume before, but
it was definitely her smell. Something spicy and soft that he'd caught before
as an undertone at work.
He removed the
glass chunk from his backside, by touch, then soaped himself vigorously. He had
no right to intrude on her life, nor to bring his own messes into her house. He
had no right to endanger her. He should leave as soon as possible.
Guiltily, he
used her shampoo, which was some designer brand and smelled of vanilla. His
hair, too, yielded quantities of red blood-stained water.
What would the
police think? Would the police track him? And Kyrie? He'd tell them she was
innocent. He was the murderer.
Was he the
murderer?
He couldn't
think about it. Stepping out of the tub, he heard Kyrie knock at the door. She
then opened it a sliver, and held out a towel. "Sorry. Forgot to give them
earlier," she said.
And she was
being kind to him. Far kinder than anyone had been in a long time. He thanked
her, dried himself, combed his hair with his fingers, the thick black curls
falling into their natural unruliness, and dressed in her jogging suit.
Coming out the
door, he had his words ready. About how he would be going now, no time to chat,
really, best thing would be to get out of her hair as soon as possible, and
then—
And then she
was waiting at the door and smiled at him. "I made coffee. It's in the
kitchen. Do you drink coffee? I won't be a minute."
And she went
past him into the steam-filled bathroom.
He couldn't
exactly leave when she was being so friendly, so he went into the kitchen,
where she'd run the coffee maker, and set cups, sugar and cream out. He didn't
know whether to laugh or cry that one of the cups was embossed with a dragon,
but he took it, anyway.
* * *
Kyrie showered
quickly, wondering what was wrong with her. Didn't she want him out of the
house. Now? Yesterday?
But she'd
never talked with another of her kind. And perhaps he knew what had happened.
Perhaps he'd remember if he'd killed the person in the parking lot. And perhaps
she'd be able to figure out how he'd got involved with the triad and if she'd
now be in danger.
And perhaps
tomorrow it would rain soup. And cream.
But there were
more material considerations, too. Her arm, where Two Dragons had got in a
glancing bite at the panther's paw. It looked like the tooth had pierced her
arm. It wasn't exactly bleeding—just a trickle of blood that increased under
the warm shower. She examined the puncture dispassionately. Her memory of the
adrenaline-fueled fight had fuzzy edges and she could not remember if the bite
had released, or if it had been fully completed before something she did caused
the dragon—who in human form wore the tattoo of two dragons on his hands—to let
go.
If the first,
it was probably a narrow, not too deep cut. If the second. . . Well, she could
easily be looking at a puncture all the way to the bone, at an infection. She
couldn't afford that, but neither could she afford to go to the hospital.
Oh, not
monetarily. She probably could scrape up the money for a quick visit to the
emergency room or one of the twenty four hours med centers. What she couldn't
afford was for doctors to ask how she got her wound. For them to notice
anything at all strange about the shape of the wound. For them to remember her
wounds when someone brought the corpse in, certainly with similar wounds. No.
Better to trust in Tom and ask him to help her clean her arm and perhaps
bandage the wound. Better the devil you know.
There were
other wounds too. One on her hip, which she could bandage herself, and then one
across her shoulder, at the back, which she didn't think she could take care of
without help.
She got out of
the shower and dried a little more vigorously than she need, to punish herself
for her stupidity in getting involved in Tom's affairs. She bandaged her hip
and her torso, before putting on her robe again.
Frank was
going to make her pay for the apron. But at least she still had a job. She'd
called while Tom was showering. While Frank had been none too pleased to hear
she wouldn't be back the rest of the night, neither had he fired her.
In the
kitchen, Tom stood, holding the cup of coffee. The one with the dragon. Kyrie
smiled. She hadn't even thought about his reaction. It had come, like most of
her dishes, from the Salvation Army thrift store. She picked up the cup left on
the counter and poured herself a cup of black coffee. He hadn't thrown a snit
at the dragon. He hadn't imagined it was a dig directed at him.
Perhaps he was
not quite so touchy and anti-social as she would have thought he was. Or
perhaps. . .
Kyrie looked
him over. He smelled of soap and her shampoo, and he looked far less dangerous
than he had. His black curls were damp from the shower, dripping down his back.
His expression was just bewildered enough to make him look younger he normally
did. Even the fact that he was frowning into his coffee cup didn't make him
look threatening, just puzzled.
He looked at
her, and the frown became less intense, but the eyebrows remained low over the
blue eyes, which looked like they were trying to figure out something really
difficult. Like the meaning of the universe. "Why?" he said.
"I'm dangerous." He shrugged, as if he hadn't said exactly what he
meant to say. "I mean, it's dangerous to hang out with me. You saw. . . my
apartment." He took a sip of coffee, fast, desperately, as if trying to
make up for words that didn't come out quite right. Then choked, coughed, and
set the cup down to cover his mouth. "Why did you let me in here?" he
asked.
Kyrie could
have said many things. That his apartment was one of the reasons. Who would
send him out there naked, in a car that looked, clearly, like it had been
broken into? Who would send him out into the night with nowhere to stay, no
safe place to crash?
But before she
spoke, she realized that there would be many people—perhaps most people—who
would do that. She'd met them often enough growing up. The families who took
foster children but didn't want them associating with their real
children; the children at school who shunned you because you lived in a less
than savory part of town; the teachers who assumed you were dumb and hopeless
because you didn't live with your blood family.
Had she done
the same with Tom, in shunning him because of his appearance? His drug habit?
But no. She'd been justified in that. Those were things he could and should
control. However, this trouble. . . Well, perhaps he'd brought it on himself.
Perhaps at the root of it all was a drug deal gone bad, or the theft of
something valuable.
She couldn't
imagine anyone stealing anything valuable from a triad composed of dragon
shape-shifters. She would have to assume Tom was brasher, and perhaps braver,
than she. But she didn't know him well enough to rule it out, either.
And again, she
had had plenty of experience with his type: the alcoholic foster parents, the
doping foster brothers. You gave them chance and chance and chance, and they
never improved, never got any better. They just told you more and more lies and
got bolder and bolder.
She didn't
know what to say and she couldn't guess in which category Tom would fall. So,
instead, she stuck to the need at hand. That had always seen her through. When
in trouble, stick to the need at hand.
"I need
you to help me bandage my arm and disinfect my back," she said. And not
sure why his eyes grew so wide at this request, added, "Please?"
He nodded and
shrugged. "Of course," he said. His eyes remained wide, as if he were
either very surprised or very skeptical. "Where do you keep the first aid
supplies?"
* * *
"They're
in the bathroom," Kyrie told him. "Behind the mirror."
Tom headed
that way. It was a relief to have something to do—to have something to think
of. He'd been sitting there, feeling miserable, drinking his coffee, wondering
what was the best way to leave.
The bathroom
was still full of steam—but the smell was indefinably different there. Not just
the soap and shampoo he'd used also, but something else. . . Something he could
neither define nor explain. It smelled like Kyrie. That was all he could say.
It was a familiar smell and he realized he'd smelled it around her even under
the layers of odors at the Athens. A hint of cinnamon, an edge of burnt sugar.
Only not really, but that was what the smells made him think of. Like. . . What
the kitchen smelled like when Mrs. Lopez had been making pastries.
He opened the
medicine cabinet and collected bandages, antibiotic cream, small scissors,
bandages, hydrogen peroxide and cotton wool. It was the best stocked home
cabinet he'd ever seen. Other than his own. Shape-shifters. You came home cut,
scraped, you weren't even sure how.
And Kyrie was
one of them. Just like him.
That he was
attracted to her didn't make it any easier. He'd been attracted to her from the
first moment he'd seen her—giving him the jaundiced once-over when Frank
introduced them. But his attraction to women had come to nothing these last
five years, ever since he'd found out he was a shape-shifter.
There were too
many things to be afraid of—shifting in front of her, for instance. Hurting her
while he was shape-shifted. And then the whole thing with the drugs, with which
he'd tried—unsuccessfully—to control his shifts. It made him associate with too
many shady characters for him to want any girl he even liked involved with. And
then, of course, the. . . He shifted his mind forcefully away from even
thinking of the object. That. And the triad. This without even thinking of
nightmare scenarios: pregnancy. A baby who was born shifted.
And now in one
night he'd managed to visit all but the last of these scenarios. He'd shifted
in front of Kyrie. He'd probably hurt someone else in front of her. And he'd
landed her in the thick of his trouble with the triad. Damn. And all this when
he'd just found out she was a shape-shifter too. She was one like him.
Oh, she was
not the only one he'd met, in his five years of wandering around, homeless and
rootless. But she was the first one he'd talked to, the first one he'd had
anything to do with. The only female. . . Up to tonight, he would have sworn
that only males shifted shape.
And what good
did it do him that she too was a shape-shifter—that she would understand him?
Absolutely
none. First, he had blown it so far with her that if his hopes were a substance
they would be scraping them off the floor and ceiling for months. And
second—and second there was the triad.
Tom had been
attracted to Kyrie before tonight. Now he liked her. He liked her a lot. He
might very well be on his way to falling in love with her. If he had the
slightest idea what love was and how one fell in it, he would be able to say
for sure. But here the thing was—he cared about her. He cared a lot. An awful
lot. He didn't want her dead. As he was bound to be, soon enough, now that the
triad had got really serious about finding him.
"It's
right there on the shelf," Kyrie's voice said from the doorway. He turned
to see her framed in the door, those big, dark eyes, looking puzzled.
"Oh, yes,
right," he said. "It's actually in my hands." He turned around
and lifted the hands filled with first aid stuff. "I'm sorry. I spaced. I
guess I'm tired."
She nodded
solemnly. He didn't remember ever seeing her laugh. Smile, sure, a bunch of
times, mostly the polite smile you gave customers late at night when they came
in looking tired and out of it. But never laugh. Was laughter too far out of
control for her? And why did he want to know? It wasn't as if he'd ever find
out.
"Right,"
she said. "Shifting that many times in a row. Staying shifted that long.
I've shifted, but not for long tonight, so I'm not—" she yawned and
covered her mouth with her hand. "That tired."
He smiled,
despite himself, grateful that she couldn't see it because she had turned her
back and was heading back towards the kitchen. Where she sat at the table,
pulled the cord on the lamp overhead to turn it on, and rolled up the sleeve of
her robe to show a narrow wound with bluish borders, like a bruise.
He sat on the
other chair, laid the first aid materials down on the table. "That looks
awful," he said.
She nodded and
turned her arm over. On the bottom there was another bruise, another puncture.
"It went
all the way—" he started.
She shook her
head. "No. The dra—He just bit me. I don't know how deeply. It feels
different. . . In the other body." She'd lowered her head to look at her
own arm, and her hair had fallen across her face. The temptation to reach over
and pull that multicolored curtain back was almost more than he could endure.
"Have you
had a tetanus shot?" he asked, going on routine. "Because if you
hadn't, you should. I don't know how clean. . ." He realized he was about
to say he didn't know how clean dragons' teeth were and caught himself in time.
He smiled. There was no avoiding it. He was a dragon. She knew he was a dragon.
And on that, at least, there was no reason for awkwardness. Hell, she shifted
too. He had to keep telling himself that. He had to remember. "I,
personally, brush and floss. Use mouthwash, even. But I can't answer to the
cleanliness of another dragon's teeth."
That got him a
smile. Little more than the polite smile that she gave customers, but a smile
nonetheless, and even a teasing sort of reply. "No unified dental hygiene
guidelines for dragons?"
"Afraid
not," he said. He soaked one of the balls of cotton wool in hydrogen
peroxide and gently started to cleanse the area. "Seriously, you really
should go to a doctor. I know we shifters heal quickly, but these deep puncture
wounds can be dangerous. Only a tiny area exposed to air, see. The space in
there can develop an infection very easily. And you could get blood poisoning,
something horrible." He looked up and saw her open her mouth. "I know
what you're going to say, and I'm not going to tell you that you're wrong. The
last thing we need. The very last thing is to call attention to
ourselves—particularly with strange animal bites. And I understand how you feel
about being in the hospital. I slept under a bridge many a night, rather than
going to a shelter when the moon was full and the impulse to shift greater.
But, Kyrie, I'm not joking." He pushed as much hydrogen peroxide as he
could into the puncture, on both sides, by squeezing the cotton right atop of
it. "If you get a fever, the first sign of swelling on your arm, and you
must—must—see a doctor. It could kill you."
"You know
a lot about this stuff."
He nodded
pulling back the cotton wool, tossing it in the kitchen trash in the corner and
waiting while her arm dried. Then he got antibiotic cream and started
slathering it on. There was no reason to tell her anything. Or maybe there was.
He'd been so desperately alone all these years. "My mom is a doctor,"
he said.
"Is she.
. ." Kyrie swallowed. "Is she. . ."
"She left
dad about ten years ago," he said. "When I was a kid. Went down to
Florida with her new husband. I haven't seen her since. But up till I was ten I
gave her many reasons to perform first aid on me, and I heard this speech a
lot."
Kyrie frowned
at him. Then shook her head. "I was going to ask if she was a
dragon."
Tom shook his
head, then shrugged. "I don't think so. I know dad isn't. And I don't
think mom is. I've never. . ." He was about to say that he didn't know any
older shifters, but then realized he did. He had seen a couple of derelicts
shifting while he flew above in the middle of a summer night. It had been
further out west, towards New Mexico, and they'd shifted into coyotes and
headed for the hills. He remembered because back then, seeing the tattered men
shift into ragtag coyotes he'd wondered if he'd end up like that. Old, still a
transient, still homeless. It had been part of what led him to steal. . .
"I don't think it's hereditary, or at least not that way. Why? Are your
parents shifters?"
She shook her
head and shrugged, and her eyes got soft and distant. "I wouldn't know.
They left me at the entrance of a church in Charlotte, North Carolina when I
was just a few hours old. I was found by parishioners coming in for the
midnight services on Christmas night. There were headlines all over the papers,
about it. But I never knew. . ." She shrugged again. "I was raised by
foster families."
And perhaps
that explained why she held herself under such tight control? Tom wouldn't
know. He knew about as much about foster care as he knew about happy family
life. A couple of his acquaintances of convenience, while he had been on the
streets, had been foster children. They'd told him hair raising stories about
the system. But did it mean that every one was like that? Or only the ones
who'd gone seriously to the bad?
He taped the
bandages in place over the puncture. "Blood poisoning will make a visible
circle, it will start just above the wound, and it will be a red circle that
will slowly move upwards if it's not treated. If you see a circle on your arm,
you must go to the doctor, immediately."
"Am I to
assume personal experience speaks here?" Kyrie asked.
He managed a
smile. "My best friend and I." He hadn't thought of Joe in years.
Wondered where he was now. What he was doing. "We had these plastic
swords, but you know, they were disappointing because they really couldn't
cause enough damage. We could bang on each other all day long with them, they
were too light and definitely not sharp. So we improved them by sticking nails
in the tip. Rusty nails." He saw her wince. "Yeah. Lucky for us my
mom caught the infection in time. Even then I was on antibiotics forever. Now
that I think about it, lucky we were both lousy swordsmen, too. We never
managed to kill each other, though we tried for a whole day."
He pulled her
sleeve down, and started to gather the stuff.
"No,"
she said. "I want you to look at my back. "It feels abraded." As
she spoke, she loosened her robe, and edged it down at the back—to reveal a
shoulder that had been stripped bare of skin.
"It's
more than abraded," Tom said. And because the sight of the robe sliding
over the raw flesh of her shoulder made him cringe, he added, "Let
me," and pulled the robe down slowly, at the back. In the process, the
front fell too, revealing one of her breasts almost to the nipple. Golden skin
the color of honey, and it looked velvet soft. His fingers wanted to stray that
way, wanted to feel. . .
He
concentrated on her back, kneeling so that her back was all he saw. He found
the end of the skinned portion where her shoulder blade ended. "This looks
awful. How?"
"I think
it was a paw swipe," she said. "The claws missed me, but the scales
got me."
"Ah,"
Tom said. He had never thought he was that lethal in his dragon form, and to be
honest, he wasn't sure he was. He didn't know how much he looked like the
Chinese dragons. He was aware the tail was different, the paws more massive,
but he'd never looked at himself in a mirror while shifted. Or if he had, he
hadn't managed to remember it.
He got the
antibiotic cream and started applying it in a thin layer to Kyrie's back, trying
to touch so lightly that he wouldn't hurt her. She didn't seem to flinch from
the touch, so he must be succeeding. There had been a time he wanted to be a
doctor. Before. . . All of this.
"When did
you shift for the first time?" Kyrie asked.
Tom's hand
trembled immediately, as the memories flooded him. Flying over the city. Not
the first time, but one of the first. Seeing everything. Then coming home.
Breaking the bedroom window. It was devilishly hard to work the paws when you
weren't even sure what was happening to you. And then his father. His father,
with the gun, ordering him out.
Hell, he
didn't even know his father had a gun until then. Until that moment, had anyone
asked, he'd have said his father wouldn't have a gun in the house. Tom had
heard his father go on and on about gun control quite often. And he was too
young to understand hypocrisy.
He took a deep
breath and managed to push the memory away. To this day he wasn't sure why his
father had ordered him out of the house. He'd shifted back by then. He'd
shifted back and grabbed hold of his robe. Which is why he'd ended on the
street in his robe and barefoot.
But he
controlled the memories, squeezed a dollop of cream from the tube. Kyrie hadn't
asked again, so he probably hadn't taken that long to get himself under
control. "I was sixteen," he said. "I never had any warning
before. I just. . . Shifted. In the moonlight."
In the
moonlight, in his room, with its comfortable bed, and all the posters, and the
tv, the stereo, the game system. All the things he'd once thought needed to
survive. "I was all excited too," he said. "That first time. I
thought it was a cool, super hero thing."
She was
silent, and he thought she was thinking about what a fool he'd been. He
concentrated on what he was doing. Fingers on the wound on her shoulder,
lightly, lightly, spreading a thin, shining layer of antibiotic cream.
"I was
fourteen," she said, speaking as from a great distance. "I thought I
was dreaming the first few times. And then I thought I was hallucinating. I
thought I had . . . I don't know. Seizures or something. I used to imagine that
my parents were two mental patients who'd had me and had smuggled me out of the
madhouse so I could be raised on the outside."
He laughed
despite himself and she turned to look at him, her expression grave. Not
offended, just grave.
"I don't
think there were any mental hospitals like that in the nineteen eighties,"
he said. "Where they kept the children of the patients locked up along
with the parents. Were there?"
Kyrie shook
her head and smiled again, a smile fractionally warmer than the ones she gave
the customers. "Not in this country, no, I don't think," she said.
"But I was very young. Just a kid. I thought. . ." She shrugged.
"Actually at first I thought someone was putting datura in my food or
something."
"Datura?"
he asked.
"An
hallucinogenic. At least, Agatha Christie has a mystery in which someone is
putting it in a man's shaving cream to make him dream that he's a werewolf, and
I thought—"
"I read
Christie too," he said. Often her books were the only thing available in
safe homes for at risk youth or what not, where he sought temporary refuge.
That and the ever-yellowing pile of National Geographics. It was Tom's
considered opinion that National Geographics were alien artifacts routinely
bombarded down onto the Earth. "But isn't datura something Indian,
something. . ."
"I didn't
tell you I was rational, did I?" Kyrie asked.
He shook his
head and reached for the gauze, cutting it to fit the area on her shoulder, and
laying it gently atop the wound.
"I
thought someone was trying to make me think I was crazy. Perhaps my foster
parents. They get more for special needs kids, you know? And then I read up on
it, and I decided I was schizophrenic. I couldn't tell what I did while I was
under this condition, so I started hiding. At first I was lucky that no one saw
me, and then when I realized what caused it—the full moon, a feeling of anger.
Anything. I was damn careful over the next four years. Always slept alone, even
if arrangements called for other kids in the room. I'd take a blanket and go
sleep on a tree, if needed. It. . . Made for interesting times and made me
change families even more often. And then I was on my own, and I've been
careful. Very careful. But I still thought it was all in my mind. Till
tonight."
Tom shook his
head, as he started taping the gauze in place. He couldn't imagine not knowing
the shift was true. But perhaps it was different for dragons. He saw the city
from above. He saw things happen. And, of course, within a month of his first
shifting, his father had seen him shift and had shouted at him and . . .
ordered him out. For shifting. Hard to tell yourself it was all in your mind
after that.
"How many
of us are there?" Kyrie asked. "I mean—there's you and the triad,
but. . . You've known about this more and have been more places. How many
shifters have you met?"
* * *
She had to
talk to keep her mind off what he was doing. He wasn't hurting her. On the
contrary. His fingers, touching her skin ever-so-lightly were a caress. Or the
closest to a caress she could remember.
It had been
too long since she'd even let anyone touch her. Certainly not since she'd
started shifting. Before that there had been foster siblings who'd got close,
some she'd hugged and who'd hugged her. But not since then.
Tom's touch
was very delicate, as if he were afraid of breaking her. It felt odd. She
didn't want to think of him, back there, being careful not to hurt her.
And she really
wanted to know how many shifters he'd seen in the five years since he'd left
his house. She hadn't been out much. Well, not out on the street and not out
while aware of being in a shape-shifted body. She hadn't been looking for other
shifters. But he might have been. Hell, considering his thing with the triad,
he probably had been.
He paused at
her question. He'd been taping the gauze down over her wound, and he stopped.
For a moment she thought she'd offended him.
But he sighed.
"I don't know for sure," he said. "I wasn't counting. Including
the occasional enforcer for the triad or not?"
"The
enforcers for the triad have been trailing you all this time?"
She was sure
he'd smiled at that, but she wasn't sure how. His fingers resumed their gentle
touch, taping the gauze in place.
"No,"
he said. "Only a. . . part of a year." He paused again. "Without
counting them and . . . and the other triad dragons, of whom there are many,
I'd say I've seen about twelve, maybe thirteen shifters. Not. . . Not close
enough to talk to. I've only talked to a couple. I never went out of my way to
talk to them. And sometimes, it was ambiguous, you know. Like, you're walking
downtown and you see someone walk in a certain direction and moments later a
wolfhound . . . or a wolf. . . comes from the same direction. The only ones I
knew for sure were the triad and the orangutan and the coyotes. There seems to
be any number of them within the triad. Hundreds. And that might be hereditary.
They seem to think they're descended of the Great Sky Dragon. They marry among
themselves and they have rites and. . . and stuff."
"So—excluding
the triad—a dozen in five years? That doesn't seem like many."
"No. And
most of the time it was larger cities than Goldport. Large cities back East.
New York and Boston and Atlanta."
"Odd,"
Kyrie said. "Because just last night. . ."
"Yes, you
and me and that lion," Tom said, his voice grave, as he finished taping
the gauze in place. At least she assumed he'd finished, because he lay the tape
back on the table, with the scissors on top of it. And then, ever so gently, he
tugged her robe back in place. "I've been thinking the same. Why that many
in one night. With the triad here, too, we must be tipping the scales at . . .
a lot of shifters. And I wondered why."
Kyrie wondered
why too. She'd been living in Goldport for over a year. She remembered the
greyhound bus had stopped here and she'd thought to stay for a night before
going on to Denver. But she'd never gone on. Something about Goldport just felt.
. . right. Like it was the home she'd been looking for so long. Which was
ridiculous, since it was what remained of a gold boom town that had become a
University town. And she never had anything to do with either mining or
college.
But Goldport
had felt. . . Not exactly familiar, but more safe. Secure. Home. Like the home
she'd never known. She had walked from the Greyhound station to the Athens and
seen a sign on the window asking for a server. She'd applied and been hired
that night.
But what
attraction could the small, odd town have for other shifters. Well. . . Tom had
come via the Greyhound too, she supposed. And Frank had offered him a job.
As for the
lion. . . She wouldn't think about the lion. "It's probably just a
coincidence," she told Tom. And it probably was. Three were not, after
all, a great sample. Perhaps they were the only three shifters in town—other
than the triad—and had just chanced to bump into each other. The blood had
surely helped. She swallowed, remembering what the blood smelled like in the
other shape.
Tom came
around and started gathering the first aid supplies.
"What
kinds of shifters are there? What kinds did you see? Just big cats? And
werewolves? And dragons? Or. . ."
Tom stopped
what he was doing. He didn't drop the supplies, just held them where they were.
He didn't look at her. "You're going to think I'm an idiot," he said.
"Um. . .
No," Kyrie said. She couldn't understand why she would think he was an
idiot now. She had a thousand reasons to think him careless, low on self-preservation
instincts and probably a little insane. But. . . an idiot? "Why?"
He sighed.
"I swear one of those shifters was a centaur. I know what you're going to
tell me, that centaurs don't exist, that I was just seeing a horseman,
that—"
"No I'm
not," Kyrie said.
"You're
not?"
"Tom,
dragons are thought not to exist too."
"Oh,"
He looked shocked. As if he'd never thought of it that way. Then he grinned.
"Well, then I can tell you. Another one of them was an orangutan. Little
stooped man, sold roast chestnuts on the street near . . . Near my father's
house. And he shifted into an orangutan at night. He was a very nice man, once
I got to talking to him. He told me that his wife and his daughters sometimes
didn't notice when he shifted." He grinned at that, as he gathered all the
first aid supplies, and headed back to the bathroom.
Kyrie followed
him, wondering what to do next. He'd helped her. And, whether his association
with the triad was dangerous or not, he, personally, didn't feel dangerous. And
they'd lost the triad for the night, hadn't they?
She was
reluctant to send him out alone and barefoot into the night. What if he got
killed? How would she feel when she heard about it? How would she live with
herself?
And besides,
having grown up without family, all alone, this was the first time she'd found
someone who was genuinely like her. Not family—at least she didn't think so,
though he could be a half brother or a cousin. One of the curses of the
abandoned child was not to know—but someone who had more in common with her
than anyone else she had found. And if he'd gone bad. . . She shook her head.
She didn't
know why he'd gone bad. She remembered the smell of blood in that parking lot
and the madness in the apartment. Clearly, she too had it in her to commit
violence. She would have to control it. Perhaps he was just weaker than her?
Perhaps he could not control himself as well.
He put the
stuff back in the medicine cabinet, carefully organized, and turned around.
"I'll get out of your hair now, okay. Just report your car stolen. You
have insurance, right?"
"Yes,
but. . ."
"Oh, I'll
still pay you for the window," Tom said. "But it might take me a
while to be able to get to an ATM. I have some money. Not much. I don't think
I'll get my deposit back for the apartment. I thought I'd head out of town,
lead the . . . the dragons away from you."
"And
leave me stuck in the middle of a murder investigation?"
He opened his
hands. "What else can I do? I can't undo what happened." He looked
earnest and distraught. "Someone died. And, Kyrie, I wish to all that's
holy that I could tell you it wasn't me who killed him. But I can't. He's dead,
and I'm. . ."
He opened his
hands denoting his helplessness. "I wish I could tell you I never touched
him and that I would never have done that, but my mind is all a blank. I don't
even remember being attacked in my apartment, honest. If it weren't for the
state it's in. . ."
His hair had
fallen in front of his eyes, and he tossed his head back to throw it back.
"Look. . . I might very well have done it, and they might find evidence
linking me to it. I'm not sure how your DNA works when you're shifted. But if
it was. . . If they think I killed him, all you have to say is that I asked you
for a ride home, that you had no idea anyone was dead. You could have come out
in the parking lot and never seen it, you know? It was behind the vans. I took
advantage of your charity and stole your car. No one will hold that against
you."
Kyrie bit her
lip. There were other things he wasn't even thinking about, she thought. For
instance, the paper towels. Properly looked over they'd probably find traces of
her hair, dead skin cells, whatever.
But fine, the
major evidence would point to him, and she could probably come up with a story
that would let her off and get him out of her life forever. So, why didn't she
want to? Was it because once he was gone she could go back to imagining that
she was just hallucinating the shifts? And she wouldn't have a witness to her
shape-shifting.
She put her
hands inside the wide sleeves of her robe. "I think that's tiredness
talking," she said. "I think if I can come up with an excuse, so can
you. You're exhausted from who knows how many hours shifted. And you don't look
well." This last was the absolute truth. Tom had started out looking
shocked and ill, and he'd progressed to milk-pale, with dark, dark circles
under his eyes, bruised enough to look like someone had punched him hard.
"You could crash the car out there," she said, and seized upon that.
"And I don't want it made inoperable. The insurance never pays you enough
to junk it."
He frowned at
her, the frown that she had learned to identify as his look of indecision.
"I have a
love seat," she said. And to his surprised look, "In the sunroom at
the back. Sleeping porch, really, from when they treated tubercular patients in
this region. They thought fresh air was essential, so they had these sun
porches. Someone glassed this one in, and there's a love seat in it. Nothing
fancy, mind you, but you can have it and a blanket."
She could see
him being tempted. He was so tired that, standing in the middle of her little
bathroom, he was swaying slightly on his feet. She could see him looking in
what he probably thought was the direction of the sun porch, and she could
practically hear the thoughts of the love seat and blanket run through his
head. She could also see him opening his mouth to tell her thanks but no
thanks.
Which was when
the doorbell rang.
* * *
The noise of
the doorbell echoed, seeming to fill the small house.
Kyrie jumped
and Tom turned his wrist towards himself, as though checking time on a watch he
didn't wear.
She swept her
gaze towards the narrow little window in the shower, instead, checking the
scant light coming through, blue tinged, announcing the end of blind night, the
beginning of barely lit morning.
"It can't
be anyone about the. . . It's too early," she said.
And saw Tom
pale, saw him start shaking. "Go to the kitchen," she told him, sure
that in his mind as in hers was the memory of the bathroom at the Athens, full
of bloodied towels, probably tainted with his hair and skin. And hers.
Why, oh, why
hadn't she put the used towels in her car? Dumped them somewhere? But where?
Outside Tom's apartment? They hadn't exactly had time to stop anywhere and get
rid of things.
It was too
late for all that, now. All her life, she had faced crises and looked after
herself. What else could she do? There hadn't been anyone else to look after
her. Now she had to look after Tom too. Not the first time she had this sort of
responsibility. Younger kids at foster homes often clung to her, sure that her
strength would carry them. And it did, even when she thought she had no strength
left.
He was
shaking, and she put a hand out to him, and touched his arm. It still felt too
cold, even through the sweat suit. "Go to the kitchen. Sit down," she
said. "Stay. I'll go see who it is. I'll deal with it."
She walked out
through the kitchen and the hallway, to the front room with its curved
seventies vintage sofa that she'd covered in the pretty red sheet, and the
table made of plastic cubes where she kept her books and her few prized
possessions. It should give her a sense of security, but it didn't. Instead,
she wondered what would happen to her books if she were arrested and what would
happen to the house if she lost her job. Though it was just a rental, it was
the first place she could call hers, the first place where she was not living on
someone else's territory and on someone else's terms.
She shook her
head. It wouldn't come to that. She wouldn't let it come to that.
The front door
was one of the cheap hollow metal ones, but it did have a bull's eye. The
neighborhood was quiet enough and the whole city was safe, so she supposed it
had been put there to allow occupants to avoid Jehovah witnesses.
Now she leaned
into the door and put her eye to the tiny opening. Out there was. . . A
stranger.
He stood on
her doorstep, and he was tall, blond. Broad shouldered, she supposed, but with
the sort of relaxed posture and laid back demeanor that made him look more like
a surfer than a body builder. Increasing the impression was hair just on this
side of long, the bangs overhanging his left eye. He wore a loose white linen
suit that seemed to accentuate his relaxed expression. The sunglasses that
covered his eyes despite the scant light made him look like one of those
artists afraid of being recognized, or else like a man who'd just flown in from
a vacation in Bermuda and had not yet fully realized that he was back home.
The sunglasses
made his expression unreadable, but he seemed to be looking intently at the
door. As Kyrie watched, he raised his hand and rang the doorbell again.
It was what?
Four, five in the morning? Surely this was not a casual visit. Casual visitors
didn't insist on being answered at this time of night. But then what? A rapist
or a robber? What? Ringing the doorbell? Wasn't that sort of unusual? Besides,
she could handle herself. Surely she could handle herself.
Kyrie unlocked
the door and opened it the length of the chain. The chain was another puzzler.
Either the neighborhood had been a lot worse when the security device was
installed, or the Jehovah Witnesses were unusually persistent.
"Ah,"
he said, when she opened the door, and smiled flashing teeth straight out of a
toothpaste commercial. "Ms Kyrie Smith?"
Before she
could answer, there was a faint rustling sound behind her. She Turned and saw
Tom mouthing soundlessly "Police?" He raised his eyebrows.
She shrugged.
But it if was police, then she really needed to answer. Before he took too
close a look at the car. The upholstery was doubtlessly smeared with blood.
And, doubtlessly, some of it would be the murder victim's.
Tom nodded at
her, as if to tell her to go ahead and open the door. And Kyrie did, about a
palm's width further.
The man on the
other side got closer. He wore some strong aftershave. No. Not strong, but
insinuating. He looked down at her, his eyes unreadable behind the sunglasses.
"Ms. Kyrie Grace Smith?"
She nodded.
Smith was the name of a foster family she no longer remembered, but it had
stuck to her throughout her growing up years.
He reached for
a pocket of his linen suit, and brought out a leather wallet, which he opened
with a flourish that must have taken years to learn. "Officer Rafiel
Trall, Goldport Police Department. May I speak to you for a moment?"
* * *
Tom swallowed
hard and was sure he'd turned pale at the announcement that the man on the
other side of the door was an officer of the law. He'd had run- ins with the
police before. He had a record. Oh, he'd never been arrested for more than a
night or a couple of nights. And he'd been a minor. And every time his father
had bailed him out.
But still, he
didn't know what kind of record they kept or if it would have been erased when
he turned eighteen. He was sure a couple of times they'd tried to charge him as
an adult. Wasn't sure if it had stuck. He hadn't been paying much attention
back then. He'd been cocky and full of himself and his family's power and
position.
Since he'd
left home, he'd done his best not to be caught. He tried to visualize being in
jail, and needing to shift. Or shifting without meaning to. He imagined turning
into a dragon in confines where privacy didn't exist. He couldn't be arrested.
He wouldn't be. He would kill himself first.
Kyrie looked
at the ID, then at the man.
"May I
come in?" the man asked. "I have a few questions to ask you. Just a
few minutes of your time."
Silently,
Kyrie opened the door, and the man came in. He didn't look surprised at all at
seeing Tom, whom he greeted with a nod. But then why should he look surprised?
He couldn't know that Kyrie didn't have a boyfriend, could he?
Tom willed
himself to relax, to show no fear. Fear would make the man suspicious and would
make him look harder for something that had triggered that reaction.
"Look,
this is just a quick visit," the policeman said. "A quick question.
You work at the Athens on Fairfax, right?"
Kyrie nodded.
"Mr.
Frank Skathari, your boss, said you had left about midnight?"
Had it been
midnight? Tom wondered. It seemed like an eternity to his tired body, his dizzy
mind. He saw Kyrie nod and wondered if she had any more idea of the time than
he did.
"You
didn't see any large animal in the parking lot?"
"An. . .
animal?" she asked.
"There
was a corpse. . . I'm sorry. You might not have noticed," he said.
"It was behind some vans. But there was a corpse, and it looked like it
died by accident. An attack by some creature with large teeth. We're thinking
like a Komodo dragon or something."
Dragon. Tom
felt as if the word were directed at him. The policeman looked at him as he
spoke. Or at least, his face turned in Tom's direction. It was hard to see what
the man was looking at, exactly, with those sunglasses on. "People bring
these pets from abroad," he was saying, as Tom focused on him again.
"And let them lose. It could be dangerous. I just wanted to know if you'd
seen something."
"No,"
Kyrie said, and sounded amazingly convincing. "I saw nothing strange. I
just concerned with Tom. . ." She made a head gesture towards him.
"With getting Tom his medicine."
"Medicine?"
the policeman asked, as if this were the clue that would unravel the whole
case.
"Migraine,"
Tom said. It was the first thing to cross his mind. His father, he remembered,
had migraines. "Migraine medicine."
"Oh."
The policeman said. "I see." He sounded alarmingly as if he did. He
looked at one of them and then the other. "So, you won't be able to help
me."
"I'm
afraid not," Kyrie said.
"That,"
he said. "Is too bad. I was hoping you'd have coffee with me
tomorrow." He looked at his watch and nodded. "Well, later today—and
discuss if you might have heard something suspicious or. . . found something.
Perhaps in the bathroom of the diner. We haven't looked there, yet, you
know?"
Tom heard the
sound of a train, inside his ears, complete with whistles and growing thuds. He
felt as if he would pass out. The bathroom. The damn man had looked in the
bathroom and. . . seen the towels. And he going to use it to blackmail Kyrie?
Blackmail Kyrie into what? What had Tom got Kyrie into?
He felt a
spasm come over his whole body, and knew he was going to shift. And he didn't
have the strength nor the will power to stop it.
Kyrie gasped.
He managed to see her through a fog of pre-shift trembling, and realized she
wasn't looking at him, but at the door she had just closed.
Then she
turned around and something—something about him, about the way he looked, made
her eyes grow huge and panicky. "No," she said. "No, you idiot.
Don't shift."
Her hand
grabbed firmly at his arm, and it felt warm and human and real.
* * *
Kyrie turned
from closing the door on the policeman's smiling face, and saw Tom. . . She
couldn't describe it. He was Tom, undeniably Tom, human and bipedal, but there
was something very wrong about his shape. His arms were too long, the wrist and
quite a bit of green-shaded flesh protruding from the end of the sleeve. His
hands were stretched out, too, his fingers elongated and the space between them
strangely membranous. And his face, beneath the huge, puzzled blue eyes looked
like it was doing its best to grow a snout.
"No, no,
you idiot," she said. "Don't shift. No. Calm down."
He stood on
one foot, then the other, his features blank and stupid. His face already
half-dragon and unable to show human emotions. His mouth opened, but what came
out was half hiss, half growl.
She slapped him.
She slapped him hard. "No," she said. "No."
And he
shivered. He trembled on the edge of shifting. She realized she had smacked
what could be a very large, very angry dragon in a minute. And then she smacked
him again on the nose, as if he were a naughty puppy.
She judged how
her shifts had left her, tired, witless. He'd shifted twice now. Oh, so had
she, but the first time very briefly. How long had he been shifted? What had he
done?
"You
cannot shift now," she said. And slapped him again.
He blinked. His
features blurred and changed. All of a sudden he was Tom, just Tom, standing
there, looking like someone had hit him hard with a half brick and stopped just
short of braining him. He seemed to be beyond tiredness, to some zombie-like
state where he could be ordered about.
"Oh,
damn," he said, so softly that it was almost a sigh. He looked at her, and
his eyes showed a kind of mad despair behind the tiredness. "Oh, damn. I
can't be arrested, Kyrie, I can't. I was. . . when I was young and stupid. My
father. . . got me out, but sometimes I spent a night in lockup. Kyrie, I
couldn't survive it as a dragon. When my dad threw me out, I spent the night in
a runaway shelter and. . . It was torture. The dragon. . . The beast wanted to
come out. All those people. And being confined. If they take me in on suspicion
of murder, if I have to stay. . . Kyrie, I couldn't. I'll kill myself before
that."
Suddenly she
understood why he'd started to shift, what the words of Officer Trall would
sound like to him. She sighed, heavily. "No one is arresting you. At least
not yet."
"But he
is blackmailing us. He's blackmailing you. About the towels in the bathroom. He
knows about the blood. And it's all my fault."
"Yes,"
Kyrie said, wondering if it was blackmail, or what it was, exactly. She
remembered the expression in his eyes. Those eyes. . . If it was blackmail,
what did he want, exactly? "He knows about the towels because he smelled
them."
"Smelled?"
"He found
them by the smell of blood, I'd bet. Before any other policemen got to them. He
got to them and bagged them and. . . I presume hid them. You were starting to
shift, so you probably missed it, but he lowered his glasses and I could see
his eyes."
"And?"
Tom asked.
"He had
the same golden eyes as the lion in the parking lot," she said.
* * *
"He is. .
. like us?" Tom asked, as his mind tried to adjust to the thought.
"He is the lion? How can. . ."
"You know
the lion was like us," Kyrie said.
He heard the
annoyed note in her voice. She had slapped him. Hard. He'd almost gone to
pieces in front of her. He felt like an idiot. "But, he's a policeman. He
looks. . . He looks well adjusted. And he traced us. . . And. . . he's in the
police?" He swallowed, aware of sounding far less than rational and
grown-up.
She nodded.
"Yes. I'm very much afraid he's in the police."
"And he's
like us. . ." Tom couldn't imagine it. How would he hide his shifts? How
would he shift? How would he. . . Did his family know? Or didn't they care? He
tried to imagine having parents—a family—who accepted your shifts, who loved
you even when you, yourself, weren't sure you were human.
Kyrie shook
her head. For just a moment there was empathy in her look. "I can't
imagine it either," she said. "I suspect he normally works the night
hours, though, as we do. Cops do, too, you know. It's a nocturnal occupation.
So we will probably find some of our kind. It's easier to control the shifting
if you're awake."
Tom nodded.
The whole thing was that even if you didn't shift, if you were a shape-shifter
you felt more awake—more aware—at night. It was inescapable. So if you wanted
to sleep and actually be able to rest, you did it during the day. And
therefore, of necessity, you worked nights.
"Speaking
of which," Kyrie said. "Sun is coming up soon, and you're practically
falling down on your feet."
"You've
been yawning," he said accusingly.
She looked at
him, puzzled and he realized he'd said it as if he needed to salvage his
manhood. While she'd just been. . . telling the truth.
"I'm sure
I have," she said. "It's late. Come on. You can sleep in the
backroom."
Tom pulled his
hair back and very much wished he had something to tie it back with. "I
really should go," he said. "The triad dragons are after me and. .
."
"Oh, not
that again," Kyrie said. "We've been over it." And she said it
in such a tone of great tiredness that Tom couldn't answer.
Meekly he
followed her back through the hallway, where she opened a linen closet and got
out a thin blanket. And then she led him all the way back to the kitchen and
opened a door he hadn't even been able to see, next to the fridge. It was a
narrow door, as if designed for very thin people. At the very back of the
house, a small room, enclosed all in glass, opened. There were blinds on the
windows, which made it not quite like sleeping in a fish bowl. Besides, the
backyard was the size of a normal flowerbed. Maybe ten feet by ten feet, if
that much, and surrounded by tall wooden fences. Not a fence belonging to it,
but the fences of other houses that met there.
"Sorry
there's not much of a view," Kyrie said. "I planted roses out there,
to hide the fence, but most of them died in the drought. Only a couple survive
and they're tiny."
He realized
she thought he was looking at the fence in horror, and he managed a smile.
"No, no. It's fine. I just need to sleep. . ."
"Well,
this is the love seat. It doesn't open up, but it's fairly comfy. I've napped
on it on occasion."
Tom felt the
sofa reflexively, even as a voice at the back of his mind asked him what
exactly he intended to do if he found it lumpy. Go and sleep in a better place?
Like, for instance, all the hotels that accepted barefoot men without a dime on
them?
He sat down on
the sofa and clutched the thin blanket to himself. "Thank you, Kyrie.
Thank you."
She looked
surprised. Had he really come across as that much of a prick, that she'd be
surprised because he thanked her?
Apparently,
because Kyrie stood there, looking at him, eyebrows raised, as though evaluating
a new and strange artifact, before she said,"Good night," and left.
Tom lay down
and pulled the blanket over himself. It couldn't have taken more than ten
seconds before he fell asleep and into dreams populated by darkness, pierced by
sharp claws and glimmering fangs—and a huge pearl, the size of a grapefruit and
glowing like the moonlight at the full.
* * *
Kyrie frowned
all the way to her room. She told herself that she must get her head examined,
she really, really must.
In jerky
movements, angrier at herself than she would like to admit, she undressed,
throwing her robe over the foot of the bed.
Normally she
slept naked. It was a habit she'd picked up since she'd started renting this
house. All her life, up till then, she had been staying with someone else,
under someone else's rules—when she was a foster child—or in a communal
building, an apartment building where she didn't want someone to come in
attracted by noise, while she was having what she thought of as one of her
episodes, and find her naked. In retrospect, it was very foolish of her to
think she didn't actually shift, since the episodes usually meant she
woke up naked. At least, she told herself, she had learned to remove her
clothes fast in the first throes of the shift.
Looking back,
she thought it had all been an elaborate game with herself, to keep herself
fooled about the nature of the shifting. After all, if she'd wakened with
clothes nearby shredded to bits by large claws, she'd have had to think. She'd
have had to admit something else was going on, right?
But in her own
home she went to sleep naked, so that when she woke up naked she could pretend
nothing at all untoward had happened in the night. Dreams, just dreams. She
could tell herself that and believe it.
Only now, she
stood naked in the middle of her bedroom and felt. . . well, nude. There was a
man in the house. A young, attractive and not particularly wholesome young man.
Okay, so he
was in the back room and frankly, from the way he'd been swaying slightly on
his feet, he probably wasn't in any state to be walking around. Not even
stumbling around. And there was a locked—she paused and turned the key in the
lock—door between them.
But still, she
looked at herself in the mirror and she looked distressingly naked. Which
meant. . . She blew out a breath, in annoyance at herself, as she scrambled to
her dresser, got her loosest t-shirt and a pair of panties and slipped them on.
What was she
thinking? Up till this night she'd never found any reason to like Tom. And what
had changed about this night? Well, he might have killed someone. And he was
being chased by triads trying to recover something he'd been stupid enough to
steal from. . . gangsters.
Yeah. There
was a good reason to allow him to sleep in her house. There was a good reason
to expose herself to the potential danger of a practically strange—no
practically about it, in fact, she knew Tom was strange—man in the house.
She pulled
back the covers on the narrow bed pushed up against her wall. The bedroom was
barely large enough for the bed and the dresser—both purchased from thrift
stores. It would be too small if she had a double bed.
She lay down
on the mattress—or more accurately, threw herself down on it with the sort of
angry fling of the body that a thin thrift store mattress couldn't quite take.
She shifted
position and flung the covers over herself, refusing to admit she'd bruised
something.
There was a
reason for Tom to be here. Sure there was. She didn't want to throw him out
into the night, barefoot, tired and confused.
Only, if she'd
caught the drift of Tom's story right, he'd been surviving on his own, out
there for a long time. He was a big man. Well, perhaps on the short side, but
definitely well developed and muscular and. . .
No, this was worse
than the lion. She turned face down on the mattress and buried her face on her
pillow.
The bedroom
was in deep darkness, partly because it was the only room in the entire house
that had only one tiny window—very small and high up on the upper corner of the
back wall. Now she wondered if the full light of day was near.
What kind of
an idiot was she?
Tom was
clearly dangerous. Beyond the fact that she'd found him leaning over a fresh
corpse, beyond the fact that he seemed to know how to steal cars, with barely a
moment to think about it, he'd just admitted to a career of juvenile
delinquency. And he'd almost shifted. In the middle of her living room, he'd
almost shifted, for heaven's sake. And he'd almost for sure stolen something
that had the triad gunning for him.
What? Was she
now suddenly attracted to hard luck cases? She'd always laughed at women who
came to the diner and, over breakfast with their equally clueless friends,
complained about being disappointed by men that, surely, they knew were no good
from the beginning. If you picked up with ex-cons, drug addicts, thieves—how
could you expect anything good to come of it? Why would they respect you when
they'd never respected another human being?
She knew this.
So, why would she take this one in? Why? He wasn't even any good at being bad.
He was a mess of trembling jelly between bouts of dangerous behavior.
She remembered
him in the parking lot, under the moonlight. Pale skin and muscle-sculpted
body, and those eyes. . .
Okay, so he
was pretty. Since when was pretty worth all this trouble? The world was full of
handsome men who weren't her problem. Men who would run the first time she
turned into a panther.
And there was
the problem, and there she came to and stopped. Because for all else that might
be said for Tom, he wouldn't run.
Neither—probably—would
officer Trall. She remembered the disturbing moment when he'd lowered his
glasses and fixed her with those recognizable golden eyes, that even in human
form, with normal sclera, iris and pupil were unmistakable. And he looked just
as good in human form.
She threw back
the covers.
Again, pretty
he might be, but that man was trouble. Pure trouble. He was a shifter, yes, but
he was also a police officer. And what did the officer want with her? Why did
he want to meet her? She was not so innocent that she didn't notice—of course
she did—that he'd mentioned the bathroom which meant the paper towels. Was it a
threat? Was he blackmailing her? Blackmailing her into what?
She remembered
the lion in the parking lot of the Athens—virile and energetic and very, very
male.
She bit her
lip. She wished she could convince herself that it would take a lot of
blackmail to get her to what the Victorians called a fate worse than death. But
she doubted it. If Tom hadn't been there, if he hadn't pulled her into the car,
she very much suspected she would have shifted and. . .
And then there
was Tom. His image flickered through her mind, as she tossed her thin blanket
and turned first this way, then that. He'd been so gentle, so. . . respectful,
when he helped dress her shoulder. Which, by the way, should hurt, shouldn't
it?
She sat up in
bed and prodded at her bandaged areas, but nothing hurt. Perhaps the antibiotic
cream was also an analgesic. She had a bad habit of buying whatever was on sale
without reading it too carefully. Well, just as well it didn't hurt. She lay
down again, and closed her eyes.
But her
thoughts went on behind her closed eyelids.
What was she
going to do with Tom? Did she have to do anything with Tom? How far was she
responsible for him?
She saw his
features close at her comment, she saw his lost expression, all pale face and
huge, shocked eyes. She saw him the parking lot, dragon-form, muzzle
blood-stained, and in the bathroom of the Athens, all over blood, his long,
dark hair caked with it. She saw him in her living room, half dragon and mostly
man, clearly out of control.
What had he
meant to do? Attack the officer? Why? For speaking out of turn?
All right. So,
Rafiel Trall might have sounded like he was blackmailing her—blackmailing them.
But she wasn't sure he was. There was something to his expression—a softness, a
hopefulness. . . that made her doubt that he meant to threaten her. And even if
he were. What did Tom mean to do? Eat him? Was he so devoid of any sense of
right and wrong? Had no one ever told him you didn't eat people? Ever?
The bed felt
too hard, the blanket too hot, the sheet too wrinkled beneath her tossing body.
She was never
aware of the moment at which she fell into a dreamless sleep.
* * *
Kyrie woke up
with the phone ringing.
The phone was
on the dresser, across the room from the bed. The ring itself, seeming to run
up and down her nerves like fire, carried her halfway there, still asleep, and
she woke up fully with the receiver pressed to her ear, while she heard herself
say "Hello," in a sleepy voice.
"Ms.
Smith?" the voice on the other side was a masculine purr, dripping with
sensuousness that caressed the syllables, making the Ms. sound dangerously like
Miss and Smith sound like a compliment, an indent proposition.
She knew it
was Rafiel Trall without his announcing himself. She could see him at the other
side of the phone, relaxed and seductive masculinity, poise and confidence and
that something in his eyes, that something in his expression that said he was
very bad for her. In the way that chocolate was bad for you. And all the more
irresistible for being bad.
"How may
I help you, officer?" she asked, making her voice crispy and official. All
business. She had to keep this all business.
"In a lot
of ways," he said. "But right now I just want to ask you a
favor."She could hear him smile, and she couldn't quite tell how. One of
her first jobs, out of high school, had been with a cold-calling telemarketing
company. The job hadn't lasted long, though she'd been surprisingly good at it.
Perhaps, she thought now, they could hear the harmonics of the panther in the
human voice. And bought. And bought. And were very polite with it.
At that job
they'd told her to always smile while she was talking because people on the
other side could tell. She'd never believed it till now.
The silence
lengthened between them, stretched like taffy, feeling sticky and endless,
thinner and thinner, but never breaking. "All right," she said, at
last. "Ask."
This time
there was a very masculine chuckle at the other end.
"I can
always say no," she said, tempted beyond endurance by the chuckle.
"You
can," he said, gravely. "But I hope you don't. There's a restaurant
about. . . Oh, two miles from your house. It's the in-house restaurant at Spurs
And Lace."
Spurs and
Lace, was the one good hotel in a western town plagued with cheap motels and
improbable cabin resorts, which catered to those families too poor, too
numerous or too shy to stay at the one Holiday Inn. The nineteenth century
hotel was in a completely different class. Once used by moneyed Easterners
coming for the benefit of the mineral waters and the dry western air, it had
been renovated within an inch of its life, furnished with antiques and updated.
It was now the haven of moneyed business travelers and honeymooning couples. An
executive resort, Kyrie believed they called it.
"The
Restaurant is called Sheriff's Star , but despite the name it's
good," Trall went on. "They serve brunch, which we're just about in
time for."
Again, she
said nothing. Oh, she could see where this was going, but she would let him
come out and say it.
"I'd like
to swing by your house to pick you up in about . . . oh. . . five
minutes?"
"Why
would you like to pick me up?" Kyrie asked, though her mind, and the
recollections of his smell from the day before, gave her pretty good
indications.
The chuckle
again. "I'd like to feed you, Ms. Smith. Nothing worse than that. And if,
during brunch, you should feel like talking to me about the diner, and what you
think might have gone on in that parking lot in the dark, I will discuss the
other cases we've had with you and—"
"Did you
say other cases?" Kyrie asked.
"Indeed."
"Other
cases of. . ." She remembered his story the day before. "Attacks by
Komodo dragons?"
"Possibly.
Mysterious attacks, shall we say."
"I
see."
"Well, I
think if we discuss it, we'll both see better," he said. "So. . .
I'll pick you up in a few minutes, if that is acceptable."
"No,"
Kyrie said, before she even knew she was going to say it. But as soon as the
word was out of her lips, she knew why. She knew she had to say it. Stranded at
a restaurant with only this relative stranger and no way home on her own? No.
She didn't think so. She might have gone stupid last night, but now it was the
next day and she wouldn't be stupid anymore. "No. I'll bring my car. I'll
meet you there. In twenty minutes."
She could see
him hesitate on the other end of the phone. She wasn't sure how, or not
exactly. Perhaps the letting out of breath, or perhaps some other sound, too
light for ears to consciously discern. But it was there. And it was followed by
an hesitant, "Your car. . ."
And now it was
her turn to smile into the phone, "Why, officer. Would you be embarrassed
to be seen with me, because of the condition of my car?"
"What? Of
course not. It's just that I thought with the broken window, you have a
security liability and—"
"Oh, I
wouldn't worry, Officer Trall. After all, it's a good part of town, isn't
it?"
After she put
the phone down, she thought that it was a good part of town. And that her car
might look ever so slightly embarrassing. But probably more so for Officer
Trall whom she doubted ever left the house without wearing a pressed suit.
She refused to
be intimidated by him. Or scared by his obvious, open, clear sexuality. To
begin with, whether he turned into a lion or not, he was—as she had reason to
know, being a female counterpart—only human. Or possibly something less. How
much the animal controlled them was something that Kyrie didn't wish to think
about. And second, there was very little reason he would be romantically
interested in her. She'd guess his suit had cost more than she made in a month.
Chances were
he turned on that feline, devil-may-care charm with every female in sight. And
meant nothing by it.
Still, she
wouldn't look like a charity date. Not at the Sheriff's Star, she wouldn't. Too
many times in childhood, she'd found herself dressed in foster sisters'—or
brothers'—discards, cowering at the back of a family group, afraid someone
would ask why a beggar was let in.
Now she might
dress from thrift shops—her salary rarely extended to new clothes, except for
underwear and socks—but at a size six that meant she got last year's designer
clothes, donated by women so fashion conscious they spent half their time
studying trends. That and a bit of flair, and her naturally exotic features
made most people think her beautiful. Or at least handsome.
Before getting
in the shower, she checked her wounds under the bandages, and was shocked at
finding them completely healed and only a little red. There would be scars, but
no wound. Interesting. Very interesting. She must make sure to figure out what
that antibiotic cream was. She needed to buy more of it. She always kept a well
stocked first aid cabinet—part of her trying to be prepared to survive any
emergency on her own—but this had been the first time she'd needed it.
She rushed
through a shower, dried her hair properly into position and slipped on a white
t-shirt—or at least a knit shirt—with a mass of soft folds in the front, that
gave the appearance of a really deeply cut decolletage—but a decolletage so
hidden by the swaying material in the front that it was a matter of guessing whether
it was really there or not.
Then she put
on the wrap-around green suede mini-skirt. No fishnets, which she occasionally
wore to work. There was no reason to look like Officer Trall was having brunch
with a hooker either and —with this outfit—fishnets would give that impression.
Instead, she put on flesh-tone stockings and slipped her feet into relatively
flat shoes.
Fully dressed,
she thought of Tom. If she was going to leave him here alone, in the house,
without a car, she should leave him a note.
Backtracking
to her dresser, she grabbed the notepad and pen she kept in her underwear
drawer, and wrote quickly, I had to go out. There's eggs and bacon in the
fridge. Shape-shifting seemed to come with hunger and, from the way her own
stomach was rumbling, Tom would be ravenous. Don't go anywhere till I come
back. We'll discuss what to do.
She went to
the kitchen and was about to put the note on the table, when she heard a rustle
of fabric from the doorway to the back porch.
Tom stood
there, looking only half awake. But his blue eyes were wide open as they stared
at her. "Whoa," he said, very softly.
It was, in
many ways, the greatest compliment anyone had paid Kyrie in a long time. If
nothing else, because it seemed to have been forced from his lips before his
mouth could stop it.
* * *
Tom awakened
with the sound of steps. For a moment, confused, he thought it was his upstairs
neighbor walking around in high heels again. But then he realized the steps
were nearby by. Very nearby.
He woke
already sitting up, teeth clenched, hands grabbing. . . the side and seat of a
rough, brownish sofa.
He blinked as
the world caught up with him—the night before and the events all ran through
his mind like a train, overpowering all other thought and leaving him stunned.
And then he
realized he could still hear steps nearby. Kyrie. He was in Kyrie's house. She
had put him up for the night, though he still couldn't quite understand why.
He'd have thought he was the last person in the world whom she'd want around.
But she had given him the sofa to sleep on, and the sweat suit, and. . .
Still
half-asleep, and with some vague idea of thanking her and getting out of her
house and stopping endangering her as soon as possible, he lurched to his feet
and stumbled towards the kitchen.
Kyrie stood by
the table, her hair impeccably combed, as it usually was when she came to work.
The first time Tom had seen her, he'd thought she was wearing a
tapestry-pattern scarf. When he'd realized it was her real hair, he'd been so
fascinated that he couldn't help staring at her. Until he'd realized she was
looking at him with frowning disapproval bordering on hatred. And then he'd
learned to look elsewhere.
But this
morning, in her own kitchen, she looked far more stunning than she usually did
when she came to work. There was this folded down front to her blouse that
seemed—at any minute—to threaten to reveal her breasts. He remembered her
breasts and his mouth went dry. Beyond that, she wore this tiny suede thing
that looked like a scarf doing the turn of a skirt. Below it her legs
stretched, long and straight to her feet which were encased in relatively low
heeled but elegant shoes, seemingly made of strips of multicolored leather
woven together.
The whole was.
. . He heard himself exclaim under his breath and she turned around. He had a
moment to think that she was going to disapprove of him again. But instead, she
looked surprised, her eyebrows raised.
"I'm
sorry," he said. "I'm not used to seeing you dressed up. You look. .
. amazing." He just wished her little feather earring hadn't got lost. It
would have looked lovely with that outfit.
"Thank
you." She smiled, and her cheeks reddened, but for only a second, before
the smile was replaced by a worried expression. As if she thought he wouldn't
compliment her unless he had ulterior motives. "I was about to leave you a
note," she said. "There's eggs and bacon in the fridge."
He realized he
was starving. But still, it felt wrong to impose that far. She was being too
generous. There was something wrong. "I should go," he said.
"Eat
first. And then we'll talk," she said. She spoke as if she had some plan,
or at least some intention of having a plan. She threw the note she had written
to him into the trash, opened the cupboard above the coffee maker.
"There's cups and coffee beans here," she said. "The coffee
grinder is behind the coffee beans. I'm going to go for brunch with. . ."
She took a deep breath and faced him. "I'd rather you don't leave because I'm
going to go for brunch with the policeman."
Tom felt a
surge of panic. "You mean, he might want to arrest me?"
She looked
puzzled. "No. I mean I might get some information out of him about what
happened and what we can do, or even if there's any danger at all." She
waved him into silence. "I know there's still danger from the triad, but
I'm hoping there is no danger from the police. If there is, I'll call and let
you know, okay?"
He nodded
dumbly. Something in him was deeply aggrieved that she had dressed up to go to
lunch with the policeman. But of course, there was nothing he could do about
that. She wasn't his. He had no chance of her ever even looking at him like
less than a dangerous nuisance.
And then for a
moment, for just a moment, she looked at him and smiled a little. "Wish me
luck," she said.
And she was
out the door. And he silently wished her whatever luck meant to her. But he
felt bereft as he hadn't in a long time. As he hadn't since that night he'd
been thrown out of the only home he'd ever known.
* * *
Okay, and
on top of everything else, the man is paranoid, Kyrie thought as she got
out. Why would he think I wanted to turn him in to the police? In the
cool light of day, her car looked truly awful, with its smashed driver's side
window. She would have to get a square of plastic and tape it over the opening.
Fortunately it rarely rained in Colorado, so it wasn't urgent. As for getting
money to fix it. . . Well. . .
She put the
key in the broken ignition socket, thinking that would probably be more
expensive to repair than the window. And she would make sure Tom paid. Yes,
he'd done it to save their lives, but much too thoughtlessly. Clearly he'd
either never owned a car, or never owned a car for whose repair he was
responsible.
From the look of
the sun up in the sky, it was noon and it was a beautiful day, the sidewalks
filled with people in shorts and t-shirts, ambling among the small shops that
grew increasingly smaller and pricier in the two miles between Kyrie's
neighborhood and the hotel.
There were
couples with kids and couples with dogs dressed like children, in bandanas and
baseball caps. Lone joggers. A couple of business women in suits, out shopping
on their lunch hour.
Again Kyrie
experienced the twin feelings of envy and confusion at these people. What would
they do if they knew? What would they think if they were aware that humans who
could take the shape of animals stalked the night? And what wouldn't Kyrie give
to change places with one of them? Any one of them. Even the business woman
with the pinched lips and the eyes narrowed by some emotional pain. At least
she knew what she was. Homo sapiens.
She pulled
into the parking lot of the hotel, and, unwilling to brave the disdain of the
valets, parked her own car. Wasn't difficult to find a parking space during the
week.
Entering the
hotel was like going into a different world from her modest house, her tiny
car, or even the diner.
The door
whooshed, as it slid aside in front of her, and the cold air reached out to
engulf her, drawing her into the, tall and broad, atrium of the hotel, whose
ceiling was lost in the dim space overhead, supported by columns that looked
like green marble. The air conditioning cooled her suddenly, making her feel
composed and sophisticated and quite a different person from the sweaty,
rumpled woman outside, in the Colorado summer.
The smoked
glass doors closed behind her. Velvet sofas and potted palms dotted the immense
space. Uniformed young men, on who knew what errands, circulated between. This
hotel was designed to look like an old west hotel, one of the more upscale
ones.
She could all
too easily imagine gun slingers swinging from the chandeliers, a bar fight
breaking out and the uniformed receptionists ducking behind their marble
counter.
Kyrie hesitated
but only for a moment, because she saw the signs to the restaurant and followed
it, down into the bowels of the atrium and up in the elevator to the top floor
that overlooked most of Goldport. Light flooded the restaurant through windows
that lined the every wall. Kyrie could not tell how big it was, just that the
ceiling seemed as far up as the atrium's, but fully visible—a cool whiteness
twenty feet up. Soft carpet deadened the sound of steps and the arrangement of
the tables, on different levels and separated by partitions and judiciously
placed potted palms, made each table a private space.
A girl about
Kyrie's age, blond and cool and wearing what looked like a business suit in
pretty salmon pink, gave her the once over. "May I help you?"
"Yes,"
Kyrie said. "I'm meeting a Mr. Trall. Rafiel Trall."
The girl's
eyes widened slightly. And there was a gratifying look of envy.
What,
thinking I can't possibly be in his league, sweetie? Kyrie thought, and
reproached herself for her sudden anger and calmed herself forcefully, giving
the woman a little smile.
"Mr.
Trall is this way," the hostess said, and, picking up a menu, led her down
a winding corridor amid wood and glass partitions and palms. From the recesses
around the walkway came the sounds of talk —but not the words, the acoustics of
the restaurant being seemingly designed to give tables their privacy—and the
smells of food—bacon and ham and sausage, eggs, roast beef. It made her mouth
water so much that she was afraid of drooling.
then the
hostess led her around a wooden partition, and stepped back. And there, getting
hastily up from his chair was Rafiel Trall. He was perhaps better dressed than
the night before, when his pale suit had betrayed a look of almost retro cool.
Now he was
wearing tawny chinos and a khaki colored shirt. His blond hair still shone, and
still fell, unruly, over his golden eye. The mobile mouth turned upwards in
what seemed to be a smile of genuine pleasure at seeing her. "Miss
Smith," he said, extending a hand. He tossed his head back to free his
eyes of hair. There were circles of tiredness around his golden eyes, and
creases on his face, as though he too had slept too little and not well.
He shook her
hand hard, firmly. The hostess disappeared, silently, walking on the plush
carpet as though gliding.
"Sit,
sit," Rafiel Trall said. "Relax. I was horribly hungry, so I ordered
an appetizer." He waved towards a platter on the table. "Seafood
croquettes," he said. "High on protein, though perhaps not the kind.
. ." He grinned. The golden eyes seemed to sparkle with mischief of their
own.
Kyrie sat
down, bonelessly. What am I doing here? She asked herself. What does
he want from me?
And there, she
knew the answer to the first one. She was here because he had blackmailed her
into coming. Regardless of whether a threat had been uttered, regardless of
what the threat he might actually mean, Rafiel Trall had mentioned those bloody
towels in the bathroom.
Kyrie didn't
own a television, but she had watched enough episodes of CSI on the diner's
television, during slow times of the day, that she knew that on the show, at
least, they could tell if someone had wiped someone else's blood off their skin
with a paper towel. There would be skin and hair and sweat. . .
But she
remembered Tom and the way Tom had looked. What else could she have done then?
Short of ignoring the whole thing and pretending it had nothing to do with her?
And then what would have happened to Tom? She wasn't sure what she thought was
worse—Tom eating the corpse, or Tom getting killed by ambush in his bedroom.
So she'd used
the towels, and now Rafiel Trall held the towels over her head. And Tom's head.
Which had brought her here.
But why did
Officer Trall want her here? And what was the point of it all? Did he want to
blackmail her for favors? No. If he wanted to do that, he would demand she meet
him elsewhere, wouldn't he? However secluded the table might be. . . It wasn't that
private.
Besides—she
looked up at Rafiel Trall and refused to believe that he had that much trouble
getting dates that he needed to force a girl into bed. Even if she admitted she
didn't look like chopped liver.
She became
aware that he'd said something and was now sitting, his napkin halfway to being
unfolded on his lap, while he looked at her, expectantly.
There was no
point lying. "I'm sorry," she said. "I have no idea what you
said."
He smiled.
"No. You were miles away. I said your outfit is very becoming."
Before she
could stop it, she felt heat rise up her cheeks. "Thank you," she
said. "But I would like to know why you asked me to come here?"
He grinned at
her. "I would like to have breakfast with you and to discuss. . . some
cases the Goldport police force has encountered recently."
Her expression
must have became frozen with worry, because he shook his head. "I do not
in any way suspect you, do you understand? I just think you could literally
help me with my enquiries. And I thought it was best done over a nice
meal."
Kyrie nodded
and picked up her menu, then put it down again, as the prices dismayed her.
"Ms.
Smith—I'm hoping for your help with this. I'll pay for your meal." He
smiled, showing very even teeth. "This is a business brunch."
She hesitated.
She was aware that whatever he said, breaking bread with someone was an
expression of friendship, an expression of familiarity. After all, throughout
human history, enemies had refused to dine together.
"Look,"
he stared at her, across the table, and, for the first time since last night,
didn't smile. "I'm sorry I mentioned the bathroom, which I meant to make
you think of the paper towels. It was unworthy of me. And stupid. In fact, I .
. . got rid of them, okay? I risked my position. But I'm sure. . . Just, I'm
sorry I mentioned them. I didn't know any other way to make you help me, and we
must talk. About. . . dragons and what's going on."
His voice was
low, though Kyrie very much doubted anyone overhearing them—and the restaurant
really seemed to have very good privacy-designed acoustics—would have no idea
at all what they were talking about. But his expression was intense and
serious.
She nodded,
once. Not only was she starving, but she had left Tom in charge of the kitchen,
with bacon and eggs at his disposal. Considering how many times he'd shifted
the night before and how tired he'd looked, she was sure that he would have
eaten all of it and possibly her lunch meat besides, before he could think
straight.
Besides, what
did Trall mean dragons? He'd mentioned crimes. More than one? What had
Tom done? Before she threw her luck in with his, she had to know, didn't she?
"Very
well, Officer Trall," she said. "I'll have brunch with you."
He smiled
effusively. At that moment, the server reappeared and he informed her they
would be having the buffet. He also ordered black coffee, which Kyrie seconded.
The buffet
spread was the most sumptuous that Kyrie had ever seen. It stretched over
several counters and ranged from steamed crab legs, through prime rib, to
desserts of various unlikely colors and shapes.
Kyrie was
interested only in the meat. Preferably red and rare. She piled a plate with
prime rib, conscious of the shocked glares of a couple of other guests. She
didn't care. And at any rate, back at the table, she was glad to notice that
Rafiel Trall's plate was even more full—though he'd gone for variety by adding
ham and bacon.
They ate for a
while in silence, and Rafiel got refills—how long had he been shifted the night
before? Could a lion have killed the man? —before he leaned back and looked
appraisingly at her. "How long have you known your friend? The. . .
dragon?"
Kyrie, busy
with a mouthful, swallowed hastily. "About six months," she said.
"Frank hired him from the homeless shelter downtown for the night hours.
He told me he was hiring him from the homeless shelter and that he thought Tom
had a drug problem, so I'm guessing that Frank thought he was doing the world a
favor, or was trying to garner a treasure in heaven, or whatever."
Rafiel was
frowning. "Six months ago?"
Kyrie's turn
to nod. "No, wait. A little more, because it was before Christmas when we
were really crunched with all the late shoppers and people going to shows. And
the other girl on the night hours had just left town with her boyfriend, so we
were in the lurch. Frank got a couple of the day people to fill in, but they
don't like it. Most of them are girls, who think this part of town is unsavory
and don't like being out in it at night. So he said he was doing something for
community service, and he went and hired Tom."
Rafiel was
still frowning. "And is he? On drugs?"
Kyrie
shrugged. She thought of Tom, so defenseless last night, she thought of Tom,
looking . . . admiring and confused this morning. And she felt like a weasel,
betraying him to this stranger.
But she didn't
seem quite able to help herself. Something was making her talk. His smell,
masculine, feline, pervasive, seemed to make her want to please him. So she
shrugged again. "Not on work time, that I've noticed," she said. She
didn't find it needed to mention the track marks. To be honest, they might be
scars. She hadn't looked up close. It seemed more indecent than staring at his
privates. Which she hadn't done, either. Well, maybe she'd seen them by
accident yesterday, but no more than to note he had nothing to be ashamed of.
"His name
is Thomas Ormson?" Rafiel asked. "Thomas Edward Ormson?"
Kyrie shrugged
again. "I've never known his middle name. I know he's Ormson because he
introduced himself as Tom Ormson."
Rafiel made a
sound at the back of his throat, as though this proved something. "If you
excuse me," he said.
She ate the
rest of her roast beef in silence, wondering if, by confirming Tom's name, she
had given something essential away and if Tom would now be arrested. But Rafiel
simply came back with yet another plate of meat. "How long have you known
he was. . . a shifter?" Rafiel asked, cutting a bite of his ham.
"Not. . .
not until last night. He was late. I heard a scream and I went to look. And he
was. . . shifted." Why couldn't she stop herself talk? Why would she trust
this stranger?
"And
there was a dead person?" Rafiel asked.
Kyrie nodded.
Rafiel frowned
and ate home as fast as she could. "Has he been late other nights?"
"No,"
Kyrie said.
"Are you
sure? Not last Thursday? Does he work on Thursdays?"
Kyrie frowned.
"He works on Thursdays, and he wasn't late."
"And he's
been in town for more than six months?"
She nodded.
Rafiel Trall
ate for a while in silence. Kyrie was dying to know what this was all about.
"Why do
you ask?" she said. "You said there had been crimes, not one
crime."
Rafiel nodded.
"What I'm going to tell you is not known much outside the police
department. There have been a couple of reported cases, but no one has put two
and two together."
* * *
Alone in the
house, Tom showered. He felt guilty about it, because it was Kyrie's shower.
Her water. Her soap. Her shampoo. But at this point he owed her a bunch of
money, and he just added to it mentally.
Most of his
time on his own, he'd found shelters for runaway kids and, then, when he was
older, homeless shelters. He hadn't been homeless as such. He'd just moved from
shelter to shelter in between bouts of getting in trouble and running away.
He'd only slept outside when the moon was full. Shortly after leaving his
father's house—even now his mind flitted away from the circumstances of that
leaving—he'd thought it best to abandon New York City altogether. There were
too many opportunities, there, for a rampaging dragon to do serious damage. And
far too many people who might see him do it.
He'd drifted
vaguely south and westward, moving when he thought someone had caught a glimpse
of him in shifted form and, once, when a picture of him, as a dragon, in full
flight, was published on the front page of the local rag. It had been
syndicated to the National Enquirer, too. If his father caught a glimpse of it,
on a supermarket line, would he have—But Tom shook his head. If he'd not
actually given up on his father, he should have. Long ago.
But running or
settled for a while in a town, he'd never had an apartment until these last
five months. And all showers at these institutions had been rationed and far
from private. All the soap had smelled of disinfectant, too.
The last five
months, the showers had been heaven. And he'd bought the best soap he could
find. His one luxury. But now he was homeless again, adrift. And, with the
triad pressing down, he might have to leave.
He only hadn't
left already because Kyrie had insisted he stay. And Kyrie was. . . the only
one of his kind he'd ever got close to. Oh, he might also have quite a huge
crush on her. But that didn't count. He'd had crushes before. He'd moved on.
But Kyrie. . . He bit his lower lip, standing in her tiny bathroom and turning
on the water.
Kyrie was
something he didn't know what to do about. He didn't want to leave. He didn't
want to loose the only kindred feeling and fellowship he'd ever known. But with
the triad chasing him, what else could he do?
He showered,
enjoying the water, then dried his hair and put the jogging suit Kyrie had lent
him back on. He didn't own anything else. He didn't even own this. Nothing but
his own skin.
A look
outside, through the kitchen window, showed him a paper in the driveway. He
wondered if Kyrie would mind if the neighbors saw him. But considering she
hadn't told him anything about it, he'd assume she didn't.
He walked out
to get the paper. It was noon, or close to it. The earliest he'd wakened in a
long time. The air, though already suffocatingly hot, felt clear and clean, and
he smelled Kyrie's roses, and the neighbor's profusion of flowers that spilled
over the lawn and around the mailbox, in an array of pastel colors.
The neighbor,
an elderly lady, sat on the porch with a tall glass of something, her white
hair in curlers. She smiled pointedly at Tom and waved at him. Tom waved back
and found himself grinning ridiculously. Bending to pick up the paper, he felt
as if he were living something out of a movie. A domestic morning. And he
wished madly that he could live that life and have that kind of morning. That
kind of life. Just be a normal person with a normal life.
But, who was
he kidding? Judging from all the trouble he'd got into before he'd started
transforming into a dragon, his life wouldn't have been any different had he
been perfectly normal. He'd probably still be running from town, a drifter. He
probably still would have used. He probably. . .
He put the
paper on the table, while he nuked himself a profusion of bacon and fried some
eggs in a frying pan on the gas stove. He left half the eggs and bacon in the
fridge. He could have eaten them all, easily enough, but he didn't want to do
that to Kyrie. Yeah, she'd probably get lunch bought for her today, but what if
she shifted again tonight and needed breakfast tomorrow?
Tom knew how
much food cost. Over the last five months one of his delights had been learning
to cook. He'd bought cookbooks at the same thrift stores at which he shopped
for clothes and furniture. Since—on a diner's waiter salary it was a challenge
to cover everything and put money aside—as he felt he had to—he'd reveled in
trying to create quasi-gourmet dishes from meats on special and discounted
produce. And he'd eaten a lot of tofu.
Now he cooked
quickly, peppering his eggs from a shaker by the stove. His stomach growled at
the smell of the utilitarian fare. He knew, from other shifts, that the craving
for protein was almost impossible to deny, the morning after a shift. Kyrie,
clearly knew it too, having given him access to all her food.
Kyrie again.
Sitting down to eat, he opened the paper. And choked.
Right there,
on the front page, the headline above the fold screamed Murder at local
diner! The picture of the Athens in black and white made the huge parking
lot with the tiny diner beside it look like something out of a film noir.
The story was
all too familiar to Tom. They'd found a body in the parking lot—of course
anyone reading only the headline would think that they'd found it in the diner
proper. Which meant that Frank was probably sizzling. If he was awake. Since he
preferred to work nights, perhaps his day manager hadn't found it necessary to
wake him and tell him about the paper. Then again, sometimes Tom thought Frank
worked around the clock. He always seemed to be at the diner.
Frank's mood
might matter or not. Tom hadn't decided yet what he was going to do about work.
He needed the job. Wanted it. He'd enjoyed working at the diner more than he
cared to think about. It had been his first long-term employment. A real,
normal job.
Before this
he'd just signed up with the day laborer places. But he'd enjoyed the routine,
the regulars, and getting them served quickly, and getting their tips. Smiling
just enough at the college girls to get a good tip without their thinking he
was coming on to them. The minor feuds with the day staff, the camaraderie with
Kyrie and. . . well, he wouldn't call it camaraderie with Frank, but Frank's
gruff ways.
He had felt
almost. . . human. And now it would all vanish. It all would go as if it meant
nothing. Like, having a family. Like school. Like a normal adolescence.
He finished
eating and cleaned his plate with bread from the red breadbox over the fridge,
before carefully washing the dishes and putting them away.
Normally he
compensated after nights of shifting by grabbing some fried chicken on the way
to work the next evening. Or by eating a couple of boiled eggs. Most of what he
cooked at home was near-vegetarian. So this might be the most protein he'd
eaten at one sitting in years.
Oh, he could
afford bacon and eggs, but he'd been saving money. He had some idea that he
would go to a community college and get a degree. He'd dreamed of settling
down.
Now, of
course, as soon as he could swing by an ATM, he would have to empty the five
hundred in his account to pay Kyrie for the car repairs and the groceries. And
at that he'd probably still owe her money. But he would send her money from. .
. somewhere.
And on this he
stopped, because he hadn't told himself he was going to run. Not yet. But,
after all, with the apartment in ruins, and the police investigating a crime
around his place of employment, what else could he do? He had to run. Just as
soon as he could retrieve. . . it from the Athens.
The doorbell
rang. Tom thought it would be the police, come to arrest him. But how could
they know he was here? Of course, Kyrie might have spoken, but. . .
He tiptoed to
the door, trying to keep quiet, and looked through the peephole. Keith Vorpal
stood on the doorstep, baseball cap rakishly turned backwards and an expression
of intense concern on his good-natured face. Since Vorpal didn't usually feel
much concern for something not involving shapely females, Tom was surprised and
curious. Also curious about how Vorpal had found him.
He opened the
door on the chain and looked out.
"Man,"
Keith said as soon as he saw Tom. "Good to see you're alive. They think
someone broke into your place and destroyed it, then tried to set fire to the
pieces of furniture. It's all everyone talks about. Did you see anything weird
when you were there?" He looked up at the space over the door, probably
where the house number was. "I guess you spent the night here?"
Tom opened the
door. "Come in," he said.
Keith came in,
looking around the room with the curiosity of someone visiting a strange place.
"How did
you find me?"
Keith
shrugged. "Your boss, at that dive you work in. He said you were staying
with the girl, Kyrie? And he gave me the address."
How did Frank
know? Perhaps Kyrie had told him. She must have called in sometime after they
got back to her place.
"Come
on," Tom said. "I'll get you some coffee."
Moments later,
they were in the kitchen and Tom had managed to get cups and coffee, and locate
the sugar and milk.
"I guess
you've been here a lot?" Keith asked.
Tom shrugged,
neither willing to lie full-out, nor to destroy this impression of himself as a
man in a relationship that Keith seemed to envy.
He wondered
why Keith had come over. He seemed to be worried about Tom. But Tom wasn't used
to anyone being worried about him. Did this mean the human race wanted him
back?
* * *
"There
have been," Rafiel Trall said, leaning over the table and keeping his
voice low. "A series of deaths in town. Well, at least they're classified
as deaths, not murders. Bodies have been found. . . bitten in two."
"Bitten?"
Kyrie asked, while her thoughts raced. Only one kind of thing could bite a
person in two. Well, maybe many kinds of things, but in the middle of a city
like Goldport, almost for sure all of those things would be shape-shifters.
People like her. Tom had said that there weren't that many out there. But there
were three of them and the triad. Were there more? And if so, what was calling
them to Goldport?
"Bitten,"
Rafiel said, and his teeth clashed as he closed his mouth, as though the words
had been distasteful for him to say. And he held his teeth clenched too,
visible through his slightly parted lips. "Our forensics have found
proteins in the bites that they say are reptilian but not. . . Not of any known
reptile."
He sat up
straight and was silent a moment. "The theories range wildly," he
said. From pet Komodo dragons that escaped and grew to huge proportions, to an
alligator, somewhere, to. . ." He shrugged. "An extinct reptile that
survived somewhere in the wilderness of Colorado and has just now found its way
into town. Though that theory is on the fringes. It's not like we've called a
palaeontologist in to look at the bite marks yet. But. . ." He took a deep
breath, and it trembled a little as he let it out. "But the teeth size and
the marks are definitely. . . They're very large teeth, of a reptile type. I. .
." He shook his head. "You must realize in what position this puts
me. Everyone at the police is talking escaped animals and Jurassic revivals.
They've stopped just short of positing UFO aliens, but I'm very much afraid
that's coming up next."
"And
meanwhile none of them guesses the truth," Kyrie said, leaning back.
He nodded.
"Or at least what might be the truth," he said. "You see in what
kind of a position this puts me. . ."
She looked at
him across the table, and could well imagine that sort of divided loyalty, that
confusion of identities. There were many things she wanted to ask. How many other
shifters he'd met. Why he suspected Tom specifically. Instead, she heard
herself say, "How did you become a police officer?"
He grinned.
"Oh, that was easy. Grandad was one. Dad is one." Suddenly the grin
expanded, becoming the easy smile of the night before. His hand toyed with his
silverware on the side of his plate. "If I hadn't become a police officer,
they would think there was something wrong with me. The shifting, they can
forgive even if they can't understand. Not being a policeman? Never."
It was a large
hand, with square fingers. No rings, except for a large, square class ring, and
she scolded herself for looking for rings. Yeah. They could get together and
raise a litter of kittens. What was she thinking?
Rafiel
shrugged. "So, you see. . ."
"And your
. . . shifting. . . when did you start?"
He took a deep
breath. "It started when I was about twelve. My parents were aware of it
first, as I did it in my sleep. They were a little scared, but I was normal
otherwise, and how do you go and tell someone your kid. . . well. . ."
Kyrie nodded.
"So. . . they aren't?"
"No. And
dad is retired now, but the first he heard about these corpses he asked if I
knew. . ."
"And you
think it's Tom?" Kyrie asked, her hands, unaccountably clenched on the
side of the table, as if this mattered to her personally.
He shrugged.
"Just. . . the shape matches, and I've never met another one large enough
to actually sever a body in two. But if he was in town that far back, and there
were no murders something must have happened three months ago that triggered
them. And then you say that he was at work on Wednesday. And on Wednesday we
found a body right behind the Three Luck Dragon. Well, actually it was found on
Thursday morning, but we think he died around midnight on Wednesday."
Kyrie thought
back. As far as she could tell Tom had been at work and had been much as
normal.
"Of
course," Rafiel said. "The time is never exact. There could be a two
hour difference one way or another. And you see, I don't know any other
shifters, any other shape that could just bite a man in half. And how common
can a dragon be?"
Kyrie thought
of the triad. "There are others. . . like Tom in town."
"Really?"
Rafiel asked. He raised his eyebrows. "I've only met another, truly met
another one besides you. He was a wolf and was passing through town. Transient.
He was brought in for petty theft, and shifted while I was booking him. Fortunately
Goldport has a tiny police force. Most officers are part timers. And I was
alone in the room with him at the time. I could.. . . cover things up and talk
sense to him. But that was only one I ever talked to. And he was a mess. Drugs,
possible mental illness. I've . . . smelled others, but I don't know their
shapes."
"Smelled?"
Kyrie asked, aware of his smell so close, just across the table, that reek of
masculinity and health and vigor—like the distilled scent of self-confidence.
He looked at
her, with the look of a man who tries to evaluate whether someone is playing a
joke on him. "Smelled—there is a definite scent to those. . . like us. A
slightly metallic smell? An edge?"
Kyrie shook
her head. She hadn't been aware of ever smelling people before. Perhaps because
she hadn't been aware of really shifting shapes before. She thought of people
as people, not smells. And yet, as Rafiel mentioned it, she was aware that
there was a slight edge in common in his smell and Tom's and perhaps her won.
If their smell had been music, the metallic scent would have been a note,
subdued but persistent, in the background. She blinked.
"These
other. . . dragons," he said, lowering his voice on the last word.
"Are they part of. . . The Asian community in town?"
"Why do
you ask?" Kyrie said.
"Because
all the victims were Asian or part Asian," he said. "That's why I was
so surprised when I saw your. . . When I saw Thomas Ormson in his other form.
Though thinking about it, he didn't look oriental even as. . . a dragon."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Nordic," she said. "Like what they used to carve on
the prow of Viking ships." She wondered if the Viking figureheads had been
drawn from life. And if they'd really existed, all that time, in the past.
"But yes, the other dragons are Asian. Tom said they are members of a
triad." She hesitated.
"An
organized Chinese crime syndicate?" Rafiel asked. Then added, "I see.
Look, I know you feel like you're betraying him or something. But. . . put
yourself in my place. The police will never be able to solve this series of
deaths. And I know—or at least I think I know—something that could lead them to
the truth. But if I speak, I won't be believed. And if I demonstrate it, I
don't know. . . I suspect the first few of us who come out to society at large
face the charming prospect of a life in the laboratory. I don't want that. I
don't know anyone who wants that. I'm sure you don't. But at the same time I
want to stop the murders. The people being killed. . ."
He shrugged.
"They don't deserve to die, and we should put a stop to it. If the killers
are like us—and there's a great chance they are—then it's our responsibility to
stop it." He looked desperately up at her, his expression very intense and
not at all like the relaxed image of the day before. "Do you understand
what I'm saying at all?"
Kyrie
understood. At least intellectually she understood. And suddenly, in a rush,
she felt as if she, the orphan, had been adopted into a family, a family that
came with obligations, with requirements. She looked at Rafiel's intense golden
eyes, and hoped his smell was not influencing her as she said. "Yes, I
see. But you must promise to do nothing against Tom on. . . anything else.
Anything beyond the murders. It is not his fault if he is a shifter, and if he
weren't a shifter, none of this would come out about him."
Rafiel nodded
once and leaned forward. His plate was now empty and he pushed it forward and
joined his hands on the place where it had been, his whole attitude one of
intense attention to her.
She told him
what had happened the night before. Her considerations and thoughts and final
decision to take Tom home to his apartment. The condition of the apartment. The
attack by the triad members.
She could no
more stop herself talking than she could stop herself breathing. Her mind was
powerless against his masculine scent.
Rafiel nodded.
"That would make sense for the deaths we've been seeing." He pulled a
notepad out of his pocket and noted down the description of the triad members.
"Not that we can do anything about it officially," he said.
"Because if they catch them then they'll. . . They might very well figure
out about us as well, you know."
Kyrie nodded.
The rules of this group to which she belonged despite herself were revealing
themselves as complex. If they must be hidden—and they must, because revealing
one of them would mean revealing all of them—then, surely, surely, they would
have to police their own. Like other secretive communities of what had at the
time been considered not quite humans all through history, they would have to
take care of their own. Slaves, immigrants, serfs—all had policed themselves,
to avoid notice from the outside, as far back as there had been humans in the
world.
One way or
another. She wondered what that meant. She could understand it to mean nicely
or by force. And she wondered if Rafiel Trall understood it.
And looked up
to find his intelligent golden eyes trained on her. "You know that means
we might have to. . . take care of it on our own," he said. "I. . .
never met any of us till a couple of years ago, and I never thought
about it. The possibilities of someone going bad, doing something terrible and
how the normals would never be able to take care of it and we'd have to step
in. I never thought about it. I thought there might be a half a dozen of us in
the world. . ."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Tom has seen a dozen or so over five years. Not counting the
dragon triad, where he thinks there could be hundreds. I think there's more
than half a dozen. I wonder. . ."
"Yes?"
"I wonder
how long this has been going on and why no one seems to know about it."
"I don't
know," Rafiel said. "When my parents found out, they tried to
research. They found legends and stories, poems and songs. And mom, who reads a
lot of scientific stuff, thinks there might be such a thing as. . . migratory
genes. People attaching the genes from other species. Going partway there, as
it were. But I'll be damned if that explains mythological species, too. Like
dragons. Wonder if there are sphinxes and sea serpents, as well." He shook
his head. "There seem to be a lot of legends about. . . people like us,
until magic stopped being believed and science stepped in. I think we'll have
to admit that we are not . . . things of the rational universe. I'm sure Thomas
Ormson's shift violates the rules of conservation of matter and energy."
He frowned, then suddenly grinned, a boyish grin. "Good thing that's not
the sort of law I have to enforce."
Kyrie nodded.
Men and their puns. "I've thought the same. But if we exist, if we exist anyway,
how come no one has found out? How come one of us hasn't slipped, spectacularly
in a public place yet, and been found out?"
"Who says
we haven't?" Rafiel said. "Have you ever heard of crypto
zoology?"
"Bigfoot
and the Lochness monster?" she asked, unearthing the word from a long ago
spree on the internet looking up strange stuff.
Rafiel started
to shake his head then shrugged and nodded. "For all I know, they're of
ours too, yes," he said. "But more than that. Giant panthers in
England, the lizard man of Denver, the thylacine in Australia, that keeps being
seen, years after it's supposedly extinct. And giant tigers and giant black
dogs. All of those. And perhaps," he sighed. "Bigfoot and Nessie
too." He looked at her. "They're all seen. They're all found. It's
just that they're impossible, see. And the human mind is very good at erasing
everything that is not possible. I. . . My mother says that the human mind is
an engine designed to order reality." He paused and frowned. "You
have to meet mom to understand. But if she's right, then our minds are also
designed to reject anything that introduces disorder, anything that goes
against the grain."
"Our,"
she said, before she knew where her mind was headed. "You said the human
mind and referred to it as our. You think our minds are human."
"Do you
think they aren't?" Rafiel asked. "Why?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "Up until last night I thought I was perfectly human," she
said. "I had no idea that I shifted shapes. I thought all that was an
hallucination. Today I don't know what I think."
Something to
the way that Rafiel's expression changed, and to his gaze shifting to a point
behind her, made her turn. The server approached to drop off the bill. Rafiel
glanced at it and handed it, with a card, back to the server.
"Look,
when I went to bed yesterday—well, today at sunrise—we didn't have an ID on the
victim yet. I'm scheduled to go and attend the autopsy today."
"Why?"
"Why the
autopsy? Because we don't know exactly what killed the man. Our pathologist
says the wounds look odd."
"No, why
would they have you attend it? I've seen this in cop shows on TV, but I don't
understand whey they need a policeman, who's not an expert in anatomy or
anything of the sort to be there."
"Oh,
that. . ." He shrugged. "Look, I'm the investigating officer. We
don't have a murder department. Until these bodies started appearing three
months ago, our murder rate was one or two year and those usually domestic. And
the investigating officer has to attend the autopsy. It's. . . That way we're
there. They film the autopsy, you know, but a lot of it never makes it onto the
film or even the official report. And we need to know everything. Even some casual
comment, that the examiner might forget to put in the official report, or that
the cameras might not catch. Sometimes, crimes are solved on little suff."
He grinned suddenly, disarmingly. "Of course, I'm going on my criminal
science class. As I said, most of the murders here don't involve much solving.
The murderer is usually sobbing by the kitchen door, holding the knife. But the
classes I took said I should be there. Also, if they find any evidence—dust or
hair on the victim's clothing, I'll be there to take it into custody. Chain of
custody is very important, should the case ever come to trial."
The victim's
clothing. Kyrie remembered the sodden rag of a body the night before, soaked in
blood. She hadn't been able to tell if he was wearing clothing, much less what
it might be.
She emerged
from the reverie, in time to hear Rafiel say "To the morgue?"
"Beg your
pardon?"
"I was
asking if you'd come with me to the morgue. To watch the autopsy."
"Why?"
she asked.
He shrugged.
"I don't know. Because though I'm not deputizing you, in a way I am?
Because there might be something you see or notice. There might be a hair on
the victim's body that is that of a diner regular—"
"I doubt
they can find a hair, with all that blood," she said.
"You'd be
amazed what is found in autopsy. And I think you can help us. Perhaps help me
solve the whole thing." He paused a moment, significantly, playing with
his napkin by folding it and unfolding it. "And then we can deal with
it." From his expression, he looked about as eager to deal with it as she
felt.
"Won't
people mind?" Kyrie asked. "Isn't it irregular to have me with you at
something like an official autopsy?" She imagined facing the dead body
again. All that blood. It was safer during the day, but it would still trigger
her desire to shift.
"I'll
tell them you work at the diner," he said. "And that you're there
because I think you might see or remember something. And if needed I'll tell
them you're my girlfriend and you're thinking of studying law enforcement. But
it should just be me, and Officer Bob—Bob McDonald. Good man, he usually helps
me. He'll be there. But he was my dad's partner when dad was in the force. Bob
won't ask much of anything. He'll trust me. He thinks I'm. . . as he puts it: strange
but sound. And no, he doesn't know. At least we never told him. Of course,
he's around the house a lot." He shrugged and set the napkin down, neatly
folded, by his still half-full water glass. "So, will you come? With
me?"
Kyrie sighed.
She nodded. It seemed to be her duty to do this. Would it be her duty, also, to
kill someone? To . . . execute someone? Until this evening she'd never even
examined her own ideas on the death penalty—she hadn't had any ideas on the
death penalty, trusting brighter minds than hers to figure that out. But now
she must figure it out. If Tom had killed the man yesterday, did they need to
kill him? Was there another way to control him? How much consciousness did he
have while killing? And would any considerations of justice or injustice to him
have anything to do with it? Or would it all be overruled by the need to keep
society safe?
The server
dropped off the credit card slip, and Rafiel signed it.
"Your
name," Kyrie said. "It's an odd spelling."
"Rafiel?
I was named after an Agatha Christie character. Mom is a great fan."
"Jason
Rafiel," Kyrie said. "Nemesis and Caribbean murder."
He smiled.
"Mom will love you." Then he seemed to realize how that might sound,
and he cleared his throat. "So, will you come with me?"
Kyrie sighed.
"I really don't want to," she said. "But—"
"But?"
"But I
think I might have to." She felt as if her shoulders were being crushed by
the weight of this responsibility she didn't really want to take.
* * *
Tom had given
Keith coffee and shuffled him to the back room where Tom had spent the night.
He felt more at ease there, as if he were intruding less on Kyrie's privacy.
She'd let him sleep here. It was a de-facto guest room.
"I was
just worried about you," Keith said, sitting down on the love seat as Tom
motioned towards it. "The paper said a corpse was found behind that diner
place where you work. And then with the apartment the way it looked, I thought—"
He had never
clearly said what he thought, just frowned and looked worried. And Tom wasn't
absolutely sure how to respond. It had been five years since he had actually
needed to talk to someone or had a personal connection with anyone. And
apparently socialization was reversible, because as far as making small talk—or
any talk at all—he might as well have been raised by wolves.
He hadn't been
a solitary child. He'd always had his buds, back when he was growing up, all
the way from his playgroup in kindergarten to what—he now suspected—had been a
rather unsavory group of young thugs in his adolescent years. In fact, it could
be said that Tom, growing up, had spent far too little time alone with his own
mind and his own thoughts.
But the last
five years. . . Well, there had been interactions with other humans, of course,
some of which still made him cringe. The man who'd tried to rob him outside his
father's house. At least Tom hoped he'd been trying to rob him. Though why a
barefoot kid in a robe would have anything worth taking, Tom couldn't
understand. All he remembered was feeling suddenly very angry. He remembered
shifting, and the dragon. And coming to with a spot of blood in front of him,
and no one near him.
And there had
been other. . . simpler interactions. But there had been practically no social
interaction. Every time he'd talked to another human, or another human had
talked to him, one of them had pretty clearly and immediately wanted something
of the other.
Now, he
couldn't see any signs that Keith wanted something of him. At any rate, there
was nothing Tom had—what few possessions he'd owned had been destroyed at the
apartment—his changes of clothes, his second hand furniture, his. . . he
realized, with a start that his thrift store black-leather jacket would be lost
as well, and felt more grief over that than he'd felt over anything else. That
jacket had been with him from almost the time he got kicked out of the house.
He'd bought it almost new, from a thrift shop, with the proceeds of his first
day as a laborer.
In many ways,
that jacket defined him. It had a high enough collar for him to raise and hide
his often-too-vulnerable face at moments when he wanted just his tough exterior
to show. He'd learned early that looking tough and perhaps just a little crazy
saved him from having to do real violence. Which, when anger could literally
turn you into a beast, was half the battle.
Tom had lost
his home and left without even the clothes on his body. For the second time in
his life. And the thought that Keith might want Tom's body made Tom start to
laugh—rapidly changed into a cough when Keith looked at him, puzzled. He knew
Keith. That was not in the realm of possible.
Keith, for his
part, just seemed to want to reassure himself Tom was okay. Having done that,
he now sipped the coffee very slowly. "I guess your girlfriend is
out?" he asked.
"Kyrie
had an appointment," Tom said.
"She's
cute," Keith said. "How long have you guys been together?"
Ah.
"Well, we work together," Tom said, edging. "And one thing led
to the other."
Keith nodded.
"You? Did
the girl see any other dragons last night?"
Keith frowned.
"Now that you mention it, yeah. She said she saw four dragons later on.
One jumped down to the parking lot, and then three others flew away a while
later." He shook his head. "I don't know. Maybe she has a dragon
obsession. She's fun and all, but it might be more weirdness than I want to
handle." He scratched his head and adjusted his hat. "I have
weirdness enough at college."
Tom nodded,
not sure what to say. And Keith launched in a detailed description of his
college trouble, which involved pig-headed administrators and some complex
requirements for graduation which Tom—who'd never been to college, only vaguely
understood.
And then in
the middle of it—he'd never quite understand it or be able to explain it—there
were wings.
Only it wasn't
quite like that. There was a powder. A green powder, like a shimmer in the air.
Tom had sneezed and was about to say something about it, but it didn't seem to
matter. It was as if he were floating a long way above his own body.
And Keith
jumped up, dropping the cup that he'd been holding. Tom jumped for it, in the
process dropping his own cup. Both cups shattered with a noise that seemed out
of proportion to the event, and seemed to go on forever in Tom's mind.
And then he
turned, but he seemed to turn in slow motion. For one, his body didn't
understand that his legs actually belonged to him. And his legs felt like they
were made of loose string, unable to support his weight. He tripped over his
feet, and as he plunged towards the floor there were. . . wings over him. Green
wings. Dragons. Green. Wings. Had to be dragons.
Suddenly the
windows weren't there. Ripped? The screens were ripped, from the frames. Glass
lay at his feet. And the tip of a green paw came into the room, only it didn't
look like a paw, more like a single toe with a claw at the end.
Tom grabbed
for the low coffee table in front of the love seat. It was wicker and very
unstable, but he struck out with it, hard, at the thing. There was a . . .
tooth? Fang? Coming towards him, and he batted at it with the table. It made a
hissing sound, not at all like a dragon sound. And it was dripping. At least
Tom didn't think it was a dragon sound. He had no idea what he sounded like
when he was shape-shifted.
Keith was
kicking something large and green and shimmering.
"Stop,"
Tom yelled. "You can't kick a dragon. It will blaze you."
Keith looked
at him, and Keith's eyes were huge, the pupils so dilated there was almost no
iris left. It reminded Tom of something but he couldn't say what.
"Mother
ship," Keith said. "The Mother ship has landed. They're coming for
us. I saw a movie."
"Really,"
Tom said, reaching out. "You shouldn't kick dragons."
Tom had
managed to wrench the wooden leg away from the wicker table, and he had some
idea he could stab the dragon with it. But one of the dragons was attacking
Keith, while the other was. . . crouching against the glass door. If Tom could
attack that one. . .
He started to
go for the handle to the patio door, but all of a sudden it wavered and
changed, in front of him, and it was the door to the Athens, with all the
specials painted on. He pulled at it, but it wouldn't open. So he backed up,
and kicked high at it.
The glass
shattered with a sound like hail.
The big green
body leaning against it shuddered and turned. Towards Tom.
Two
toes-with-claws reached for him. A fang probed.
He had time to
think, "Oh, shit." And then he remembered what Keith's eyes looked like.
They looked like his own, in the mirror, back when he was using.
* * *
The morgue of
Goldport was in a low slung, utilitarian-looking brick building. Someone with
misconceived ideas of making it look like Southwestern architecture, had put
two obviously non functional towers in asymmetrical positions atop the tile
roof.
Rafiel Trall
parked in front of the building, and Kyrie parked beside him. There were a
couple of other cars and a couple of white panel vans parked in front. The
street was the sort of little-traveled downtown street connecting quiet
residential streets to the industrial areas with their warehouses and
factories.
Rafiel put
sunglasses on as he came out of the car, and Kyrie wondered for a moment if his
golden eyes were unusually sensitive to light. It didn't seem like the most
practical eye color to have.
He saw her
staring and smiled at her, as if he thought she was admiring him. Kyrie looked
away quickly. The man clearly had an ego as large as his shifted shape.
But he was
quiet as they walked inside the building. Though it was air conditioned, it
didn't have the same feeling of clean cool as the inside of the hotel. Instead,
the cold here felt clammy and clinging and there was a barely discernible
smell. If Kyrie had been pressed to define it, she would have said that it
smelled like her car a day after she'd lost a package of ground turkey in it,
last May. It was the stink of spoiled meat, mixed with a faint tinge of urine
and feces—what she'd once heard someone call the odor of mortality—but so faint
that she couldn't quite be sure it was there.
"Have you
ever been to this type of place?" Rafiel asked.
She shook her
head.
"Sensitive
stomach?" he asked.
She shrugged.
She truly didn't know. She remembered the corpse last night and felt a
recoiling -- not because she'd been on the edge of losing her lunch over it,
but because she remembered all too clearly how appetizing the blood had
smelled. Appetizing was far worse than sickening. "I don't think so,"
she said.
And at that he
gave her his bright smile, that seemed to beam rays of warmth through the
chilly atmosphere. "Well, any one of our kind has seen dead bodies,
right?"
Kyrie blinked,
bereft of an ability to answer. Had she seen dead bodies? Only the one
yesterday. What was he telling her? She looked at the bright smile, the calm
golden eyes and wondered what hid behind it. Oh, she'd guessed—it wasn't that
hard given his history—that Tom might have done things he was sorry for. There
was that edging and shying away behind his silences. And a man like him who
didn't seem totally devoid of interior life and yet ended up on drugs was
clearly running away from something.
But until this
moment, Kyrie had allowed herself to believe the something had been a few petty
thefts, car joyriding, other things that could well fall under juvenile
delinquency. Never. . . Never murder. She'd never thought of murder, until
Rafiel thought that. And now she wondered if the other shifters really had that
much trouble controlling themselves in animal form that killing humans was
common and accepted. And if it was, what was she doing here? What was the point
of murderers investigating murders? If it was normal for shifters to kill
humans, how much should the life of a human be worth it to them? How could
Rafiel be a policeman? And how could Rafiel talk of it so calmly?
But she
couldn't ask him. He'd continued ahead of her, down the cool tiled hallway, and
she had followed him, without thinking, by instinct, like a child or a dog. And
now he stood near a man who sat at a desk, and said, "Hi Joe. I'm here to
see last night's pickup." He removed his sunglasses and pocketed them.
Joe, a middle
aged man, with a greying comb-over and a desk-job paunch, looked pointedly at
Kyrie.
Rafiel smiled,
that dazzling smile that seemed to hide no shadows and no fears.
"Girlfriend," he said. "Kyrie is thinking of joining the force
and I told her she should see an autopsy first. Kyrie Smith, this is Joe
Martin. You know I've talked to you about him. He practically keeps this place
running."
Kyrie, head
spinning at being called someone's girlfriend, put her hand forward, to have it
squeezed in a massive, square-tipped paw. Joe gave her what he probably thought
was a friendly smile, but which was at least three quarters leer, and told her
in a tone he surely believed was avuncular, "You take good care of our
boy, Ms. Smith. He's been lonely too long. Not that some ladies haven't
tried."
And on that
auspicious blessing, they walked past Joe and down the hallway, past a row of
grey doors with little glass windows.
They all
looked similar to Kyrie, and she had no idea what prompted Rafiel to stop in
front one of them. But he stopped, and plunged a hand into his pants pocket,
handing her a small notebook. She took it without comment, thought considering
the tightness of Rafiel's pants, she had to wonder what quantum principle
allowed him to keep notebooks in there. When he handed her a pen too, from the
same provenance, she was even more impressed, because sharp objects there had
to hurt.
"Just
take notes," Rafiel told her. "And no one in there will ask who you
are. They'll assume you're a new officer I'm training. Goldport has one of the
smallest full time forces in the state. To compensate, we have a never-end of
part timers, usually either people blowing through town for a few months, or
people who took a couple of months of law enforcement courses and decided it
wasn't for them. If they ask, then I'll tell them you work at the diner and I
want your opinion, okay?"
Kyrie nodded,
feeling marginally better about being an apprentice policeman than about
pretending to be Rafiel's girlfriend. A sense of unease about Rafiel built in
her mind, even as she nodded and held the notebook and pencil as if she were
official. Might as well make some notes, too. Hell. Who knew? She might need
them. She was, after all, investigating this herself, wasn't she?
Rafiel opened
the door and the smell of spoiled meat leaked out, overwhelmed—fortunately
overwhelmed—by the smell of chemicals. She thought she detected rubbing alcohol
and formaldehyde among them.
Inside was a
small room, with tiled walls and floor, all leading down to a drain in the
center of the floor, above which a metallic table was placed and into which
something was gurgling. Kyrie knew very well what the something would be, but
she refused to look, refused to investigate.
In the full
light of day, without the pressure of the moon on her body and mind, it was
unlikely that the smell of blood would be appetizing. But she refused to give
it a chance, all the same.
The tiled room
should have looked cold and sterile and it probably would have, had it been
tiled in standard white. However, the walls looked like someone had either gone
crazy with artistry or—more likely considering what Kyrie had seen of how the
public departments of Goldport, from town hall to schools, operated—they'd
received remnant tiles from various public projects.
Be it as it
may, bright blue, fierce red, sunny yellow and the curious terracota-orange of
Southwest buildings covered walls and floor.
It all went to
make the man who stood in the middle of the room look greyer and more
colorless. He would be, Kyrie judged, somewhat past middle age. Colorlessness
came not only from his white hair, but from a skin that looked like he was
never allowed out in the sunlight. He had an aquiline nose that looked broken
but probably had just grown like that, and—on either side of it—brightly
sparkling blue eyes, rife with amusement.
"Hello
there, Rafiel," he said, and grinned. He wore a lab coat, and the
sleeves—and his hands, in latex gloves—were stained as colorfully as the tiles
that surrounded him. "We were just about to start, but Bob—" He
nodded towards the other man in the room, who was somewhat past middle age,
with a bald head surrounded in a fringe of grey hair. He wore a bright Hawaiian-style
shirt, incongruously patterned with what seemed to be palm trees and camels on
a virulently green background. "Bob said it was proper if you were here,
as there should be more than one of you watching."
"I'm
sorry," Rafiel said. There was some change that Kyrie couldn't quite
define to his tone. "We were having breakfast."
The man in the
lab-coat—a doctor?—grinned. "Breakfast, before this? Oh, no. You know so
much better than that."
"To be
honest, Mike," Bob said. "He hasn't tossed his cookies in about a
year. Not since that vagrant found at the warehouse, that had been there for
over three months, last summer, remember?"
Rafiel said
nothing, only shook his head and a light red tinge appeared on his cheeks. And
Kyrie realized all of a sudden what his tone had been. The sound in his voice
had been the sound of a little boy responding to his betters, of a young man
convincing the elders of his worthiness.
"This is
Kyrie Smith," Rafiel said, gruffly. "She'll be taking notes."
The two older
men looked at her as if noticing her presence for the first time. The medical
examiner smiled and Bob raised his eyebrows, his eyes twinkling with amusement.
She rather suspected that, notebook or not, she'd just been relegated to the
girlfriend realm again.
She ducked her
head, while the examiner turned to a point in the wall, where a little light
flashing, and a glint of something seemed to indicate the presence of a camera,
and said, "We have washed and set the body, ready for examination."
He gestured towards the body on the table.
It looked much
better than the night before. Or perhaps much worse. It was all a matter of
perspective. The night before, it had looked like a piece of meat wrapped in
blood-soaked rags. Now, laid out on the table, it looked definitely human.
"The
victim," the medical examiner continued, in that officious voice that
people get when talking into recording instruments. "Is a Caucasian male,
blue eyed, five foot nine, two hundred and thirty pounds, probably between
thirty and forty years old. As far as we can determine, he died of multiple
stab wounds, by an instrument to be determined." He gestured towards a
large ziploc bag at the corner of the room, against the multicolored wall. It
was filled with something that looked black and ragged. "I removed the
victim's clothes—t-shirt and slacks—in the presence of officer McDonald, and
bagged them. They will be handed to the custody of officer McDonald and officer
Trall for further analysis. As reported to me by Officer McDonald, the corpse
was not found to have any identification and the police department is waiting
for a missing-persons report that might give some clue as to his
identity."
"Instrument
to be determined, Mike?" Rafiel asked, leaning forward to take a closer
look at the very pale corpse crisscrossed by dark gashes.
The medical
examiner looked up. "They don't look like knife stab wounds."
"What
about. . . I mean, yesterday we thought it might be another of those animal
attacks?"
"What
animal. . . Oh, the victims cut in half?" Mike said. "Not that I can
tell. I mean, yeah, the other ones have some marks consistent with perhaps
animal teeth, though I would hate to see the animal with teeth that size. But
this one. . ." He frowned. "More like he was stabbed multiple times
by a weird implement. A nubby sword with a serrated edge, perhaps?"
Rafiel
blinked. He looked towards Kyrie and frowned.
Kyrie felt
relieved. Well, at least a little relieved. She took a deep breath. A nubby
sword with a serrated edge didn't seem like anything that Tom could have been
carrying on him. She had seen his teeth—glimmering in the moonlight—and they
looked as polished and smooth as the best gourmet knives. So they couldn't be
confused with these stabbing implements. And Tom hadn't had anything on him.
She remembered him in the bathroom.
Her sense of
relief surprised her. Did she care that much if Tom was guilty or not? But then
she thought that considering she might be called on to administer justice, and
considering she had already hidden him from the law, in a way, yes, she did
care.
She made a
quick note on the nature of the implements, and looked up to see that the
doctor and Rafiel were removing something, with tweezers—from the man's grey
hair.
"Looks
like the same green powder found on the clothes and the body when we first
examined it," Mike said. "We're sending it for analysis."
Rafiel was
frowning at a little baggie into which he'd collected what looked like a
sprinkle of bright green powder. "Looks like pollen," he said.
"Anything flowering about now, that's this bright green?" he looked
at Bob.
"Not that
I know," Bob said. "Label it. We'll hand it over to the lab. Who
knows? They might actually figure it out."
He shrugged
and Kyrie didn't know if he was being ironic. She also didn't have time to
think about it, because Mike had sliced a Y shape on the man's chest and opened
the body cavity.
The smell of
death and corruption became all encompassing, and the sight of the organs. . .
Kyrie swallowed. Even as she swallowed and struggled with nausea, she felt
relieved that it wasn't hunger and that she wasn't finding this in any way
appetizing. Perhaps panthers only ate fresh meat.
"Are you
okay?" Rafiel asked.
She wasn't
okay. The smell seemed to be short circuiting her brain and making her blood
rush loudly in her ears. But she nodded and got hold of the considerable will
power she resorted to when she had to prevent herself from shifting. She nodded
again. "I'm fine," she said, though her voice echoed tiny and
distant.
"Look at
that," the doctor said. "That's the stab that killed him. Right
through the heart." He pointed at an organ that looked exactly like the
others, to Kyrie, all of them an amalgam of red and green, yellow and the sort
of greys that really shouldn't exist in nature. "There are several others
that reached vital organs, but I'd say that's the one that stopped it. Pretty
much ripped the heart to shreds, in fact."
Rafiel and Bob
had moved closer, and were looking into the opened body.
"What are
those white things?" Rafiel asked.
"Damned
if I know," Mike said. "They look like some sort of adipose
deposits."
"They
look like huge ant eggs to me," Bob said. "You know, the kind you
find when you break an anthill open in your garden? Just much bigger."
"They
seem to be at all the stab wound sites," Rafiel said.
Kyrie wrote
"white things" and "ant eggs" and "wound sites."
"So, some
contamination on the blade," Rafiel said. "Can you put some—"
Then as the doctor
handed him a bag and said, "You'd best keep it in a cooler, though, since
it's not been exposed to the air."
Bob produced a
normal picnic cooler from somewhere. It was full of ice. He got the baggy and a
couple other baggies of what the doctor might think were contaminants in the
wound, and put them in the cooler.
The autopsy
progressed along lines that Kyrie had read about, but never been forced to
watch before, and she had to call on all her self-control to continue watching,
particularly when they sawed the cranium open to remove the brain. But there
didn't seem to be any other surprises.
"I
think," the doctor said. "There might be some drug in the blood, so
I'd like to get that looked at also."
"Drug?"
"Some
hallucinogenic. His pupils were like pie plates when they got him in. I'd say
he was high as a kite."
She tried to
imagine this man high. He didn't seem the type. Well fed, middling dressed,
middle aged. Oh, Kyrie and everyone in her generation had heard all the
platitudes about drug use affecting every class and every type of person. And,
as such, they might even be true. But there were two classes it primarily
affected—depending on the drug—the very rich and the very poor. And within
those, whatever drug was the current drug of choice tended to make people
sickly or at least skinny.
This man
looked robust and neither too rich or too poor. And yet, looking at him,
something gnawed at the back of Kyrie's mind. She couldn't quite say what.
She took her
leave, with Rafiel, and hurried out of the place. Outside, standing in the sun,
holding a cooler with whatever samples they got off the body, Rafiel blinked.
His enormous confidence seemed to have vanished and he looked confused and
perhaps a little scared.
He looked over
his shoulder, but Bob had stayed behind, talking to the examiner. "We have
to find who did this, Kyrie. The sooner the better."
"Why?"
Kyrie said. There were many things she wanted to ask Rafiel, like why he
assumed that one of their kind was bound to have seen corpses before, and why,
if that was the case, they should discipline this killer. And why he'd assumed
that this too was a death by dragon—other than having seen Tom standing over
the body. But she couldn't ask any of those, and anyway, the most important was
this—why they, particularly and not the police in general should find out what
happened to this victim.
Rafiel blinked
again. The gesture made him look slow of thought, though it was probably just a
reaction to the strong sunshine. "What do you mean why?" he asked.
"Why should
we care who did this, if it wasn't a shifter?" Kyrie asked.
Rafiel
frowned. "No, but the victim was a shifter. Didn't you smell it?"
* * *
Rafiel
insisted on following her home. There was nothing for it. "Can't you
see?" he said. "I have to. If something is killing shifters. .
."
"How
would they even know I'm a shifter?" she asked. "Wouldn't it take
knowing the smell? And knowing what we are?"
Rafiel
shrugged. "I can't answer that. Perhaps something like your triad friends.
Didn't Ormson say that the triad had been shifters for centuries? That it ran
in families? That they know what it means and even have a shifter god?"
She looked at
him. A monstrous idea was forming. If someone was killing shifters, and if it
was another shifter, wouldn't it make sense for it to be someone who. . . oh,
worked for the police? Who could keep an eye on people without anyone getting
suspicious? He could smell someone—once—and then realize. . .
She shook her
head. "Why were you at the diner?" she asked. "Last night?"
Golden eyes
widened. "I was coming for a cup of coffee," he said. "I was off
work."
"You were
coming for a cup of coffee in lion shape?"
He chuckled at
that. Audibly chuckled. "No. Of course not. I only shifted when I smelled.
. . I was in human form when I first saw you. When I saw you pull Ormson
inside. Of course, I knew you were shifters."
"How?"
He looked at
her as if she'd taken leave of her senses. "He was a dragon," he
said.
"But then
why did you shift?" Kyrie asked. "Why wouldn't you just call the
crime in?"
"And
catch you still shape-shifted?" he said. "I had to make sure you were
out of there before I called it in."
"But why
shift, then?"
He sighed.
Something like a shadow crossed the serene golden eyes and he mumbled
something.
"Beg your
pardon?" Kyrie said.
"The
smell of blood, all right? Combined with the moonlight it caused me to shift
and it took effort to get back to my form. Because then. . ." He turned
very red. "Then I smelled you."
Kyrie thought
of the smell of him, rising in the night with all the blatant come on of a
feline-seeking-female ad.
She nodded
once. She could believe that. But she still had a question, "Why come to
the Athens for coffee? Pardon me, but I know even late at night there are
better places open, and dressing as you do, surely you can afford better."
He shrugged.
"I don't know, okay? Started going there about a year ago. I like. . .
It's homey, okay? Feels homey. And there's you. You're. . . I could smell you
were a shifter. And I like looking at you."
Kyrie frowned.
"Fine," she said. But she wasn't convinced. For one, she couldn't
remember having seen Rafiel at the diner, ever. Of course, considering how busy
it got there at times, like the five a.m. rush just before she went off shift,
he could have been dancing naked on a table and she would not have noticed.
She looked at
him, and, involuntarily, pictured that. No. If he were dancing naked on the
table, she would have noticed.
"Fine,"
she said again. "You can follow me home."
At the back of
her mind, she thought that if all else failed, Tom would be there. And Tom
could always help defend her against Rafiel. Okay, Tom might not be exactly a super
hero. But it would be two against one.
* * *
Tom had just
kicked the door, and felt something—something giant and pincer like reach for
him when. . .
"What in
hell?" came from the direction of the living room in a very male voice. A
vaguely familiar male voice. And then there were strides—sounding echoey and
strange through his distorting senses, advancing along, towards him.
Past the
kitchen. He felt more than saw as two pairs of green wings took flight, from
the backyard, into the dark night sky above.
And he turned
in the direction of the steps to see Kyrie look at him, her mouth open in
shock, her eyes wide, her face suddenly drained of color.
Keith was
still doing fake kung-foo moves in the direction of the utterly broken windows.
But Kyrie stood in the middle of the room, gulping air.
Behind her,
stood the policeman lion, golden eyes and immaculate linen clothes, all in a
vague tawny color. And he looked. . . disgusted.
Tom summoned
all his thought, all his ability to speak, and came out with the best excuse he
could craft. "It wasn't me," he said. "It was the dragons."
* * *
Kyrie stood in
the middle of her demolished sunroom. The windows were all broken. As was the
sliding door. And there was Tom—and he looked very odd. Tottery and. . . just
strange. And there was another guy—his neighbor, she thought, from the
apartment.
"I'm
sorry," Tom said, again. "It was the dragons." He pointed at the
backyard. "They were attacking."
His voice
sounded odd. Normally it was raspy, but now it sounded like it was coming out
through one of those distorters that kids used to do alien voices. And there
had to be something wrong with him. He was walking barefoot on shards of glass.
It had to hurt. In fact, she could see little pinpricks of blood on the
indifferent beige carpet. But he didn't seem to be in pain.
"Tom are
you all right?" she asked. But by then she was close enough to look in his
eyes. His pupils were huge, crowding the blue iris almost completely out of his
eyes.
Kyrie took a
deep breath. Damn, damn, damn, damn. She knew better, didn't she? Once a junkie
always a junkie. And Tom was. . . Hell, she knew what he was. Shifter or not,
someone with his upbringing wouldn't have fallen as low as he had without some
major work on his part. He had to be totally out of control. He had to be.
But she'd
almost believed. She'd almost trusted. She remembered how she'd felt bad about
telling Rafiel on him. She remembered how she felt so relieved it wasn't a
dragon's teeth on that man's body.
Hell, she
still felt happy the man hadn't died by dragon. That meant she didn't have to
keep Tom close until she figured out what to do about it. She just didn't have
to. She was through with him.
"You're high,"
she said, and it sounded odd, because she hadn't meant to say it, hadn't meant
to call attention to the fact, just in case Rafiel hadn't noticed it. But it
didn't matter, did it? If Tom was this out of control, he was going to be
arrested, sooner or later.
Tom shook his
head, his dark eyebrows knit over his eyes in complete surprise.
"Me?" he said. "No. Keith is high. He was talking about the
Mother ship. I mean, clear as day it was just Two dragons."
Kyrie didn't
know whether to laugh and cry. All these years she had kept away from dangerous
men. She'd laughed at the sort of woman who let herself get head over heels
with some bundle of muscles and no brain. And now she'd got involved with . . .
this. Okay, so not involved, although if she told herself the truth, she had
been interested in Tom. Or at least appreciative of his buff and sculpted body.
She hadn't done anything even remotely sexual or physical to him, though.
Not that it
mattered. She'd let him into her house. She'd let him stay here alone. . . And
he'd got his buddy over, hadn't he? And they'd. . . what? Shot up? There didn't
seem to be any smell of pot in the air, and besides she doubted that pot would
cause this kind of trip. Of course, she knew drugs could also be swallowed or.
. . And that wasn't the point. He'd gotten high and destroyed her property.
She looked
around at the devastation in her sunroom, and wondered how she was going to pay
for this mess. The landlord would demand payment. But she had no more than a
couple of hundred in the bank, and that had to last for food and all till the
end of the month. And she needed rent.
She took
another deep breath. She was going to have to ask Frank for more hours. And
even then, she might not make it.
Tom was
looking at her, as though trying to interpret her expression, as if it were
very hard to read—something he couldn't understand. "Uh," he said.
"I'll leave now?"
Part of Kyrie
wanted to tell him no. After all, well, he was still barefoot. And bleeding.
And he was high. She should tell him to say. She should. . .
But no, she
definitely should not. She'd kept him overnight, so he would be better off
leaving in the morning. And now, what? He'd just caused more damage.
"Yes,"
she said. She heard her voice so cold it could have formed icicles on contact.
"Yeah. I think it would be best if you left and took your friend."
Tom nodded,
and tugged on the shoulder of the other guy's sweater, even as he started
inching past Kyrie, in an oddly skittish movement. It reminded her of a cat, in
a house where she'd stayed for a few months. A very skittish cat, who ran away
if you so much as looked at her.
As far as
Kyrie could tell, no one had ever hurt the cat. But she skidded past people, as
though afraid of being kicked.
Now Tom edged
past her the same way, while dragging his friend, who looked at Kyrie, blank
and confused, and said, "It was aliens, you know. Just like. . . you know.
Aliens."
She heard them
cross the house, towards the front door. She didn't remember the guy's car on
the driveway, but it wasn't her problem if they were on foot. In fact, it might
be safer in the state they were. And she didn't care, she told herself, as she
listened for the front door to close.
"Kyrie,"
Rafiel said. He stood by the windows, frowning, puzzled. "Something was here."
* * *
They'd been
walking for a while, aimlessly, down the street, when Tom because aware of
three things—first, that he was walking around in a neighborhood he didn't
know; second, that he was barefoot; third that his feet hurt like living hell.
He sat down on
the nearest law, and looked at his feet, which were cut, all over, by a bunch
of glass.
This
realization seemed to have hit Keith at the same time, which was weird. As Tom
was looking in dismay at the blood covering the soles of his feet, Keith said,
"Shit. You're bleeding."
Tom looked up.
He remembered seeing Keith's eyes, the pupil dilated and odd. But Keith looked
perfectly normal now, even if a little puzzled. "What happened?" he
said. And frowned, as if remembering some thing that didn't make any sense
whatsoever. "What happened to us back there. What. . ."
Tom shook his
head. He knew what Keith's eyes looked like. And Tom had some idea what mind
altering substances could do to your mind and your senses. Hell, for a while
there he was shooting everything that came his way. Heroin by choice, but he'd
have done drain opener if he had any reason to suspect that it would prevent
him from shifting into a dragon. He suspected, in fact, that he had shot up
baking soda in solution more than a few times. And who knew what else? It was
miraculous enough he'd survived all those years. But nothing, nothing, equaled
the trip he'd just gone through, back there.
He put his
face in his hands, and heard himself groan. He'd messed it up for good an all.
Not that there had ever been any hope that Kyrie would see him as anything
other than a mess. Not considering what he'd done the night before. The. . .
corpse. And then his being so totally helpless. There was no way he had a
chance with Kyrie. Not any way. But. . .
But now she
thought him a drug addict. And the policeman had been with her.
"I'm
going to get my car," Keith said. "Do you have any idea which way we
came?"
"You have
a car?"
"Yeah,"
Keith said. "I parked just a couple of blocks from. . . your girl's. .
." It seemed to hit him, belatedly, that perhaps Kyrie was no longer Tom's
girl. Not after what they'd done to her sunroom. "Do you have any idea
which way we came?"
There was
something to the dragon. Perhaps seeing the city from above so many times, Tom
had memorized it like one memorizes a map, or a favorite picture. Or perhaps
being a dragon came with a sense of direction. Who knew?
But by
concentrating, he could just figure out which way Kyrie's house was. He
wondered if the policeman would arrest them for even coming near.
Standing up,
unsteadily, he said, "Come on." He winced at the pain in his feet.
"Come on. It's this way, up the road here two blocks, then up ten blocks,
and then to the left another five, and you should see her house."
Keith took a
step back. "Whoa, dude," he said. "You've gone all pale, just
standing up. Sit down. I'll go get the car. You're sure of the way?"
Tom nodded. He
wanted to say he would go with Keith, but he could tell he would only slow
Keith down. He sat down on the grass, again, with some relief. "Sure,"
he said. "Sure. You should see it. If not. . . come back."
He put his
face in his hands, again, sitting there. He didn't know how long he and Keith
had been fighting the. . . dragons? He was sure they were dragons, but there
was a feeling of strangeness, his memory kept giving him images of a big,
horned toe. No. A tooth. No. . .
He sighed. He
was never going to remember. And he had no idea what had got him so high. And
Keith too. For all his attitude with the girls, the one thing Tom had never
suspected Keith of doing was getting involved in drugs. In fact, he would bet
his neighbor had never got high before.
So. . . How
had they got high?
The sugar. It
had to be the sugar. He'd drunk nothing but the coffee. None, absolutely no one
would put drugs in eggs or bacon. So, it had to be the sugar. He'd put three
spoons in the coffee. Kyrie. Kyrie kept drugs in the house.
He blinked in
amazement. Okay, so he'd stolen the—He'd stolen it—he forced his mind
away from what it was—so he could give up drugs. There had been one too
many times of waking up choking on his own vomit, struggling for every breath
and not sure he was going to make it to the morning. There had also been the
ever present fear of being arrested, of shifting in a jail cell. Of eating a
bunch of people.
So, he'd
stolen it and tried to use it to control his shifts, so that he would
stop waking up in the middle of the day dreaming he had eaten someone the night
before and not being sure if it was true or not. The drugs weren't working so
well for that, anyway. Or to make him stop hurting.
But, even with
the. . . object in his possession he hadn't been able to give up on drugs, not
entirely, until he'd started working at the diner, and he'd been. . . He'd seen
Kyrie, and he'd seen the way she looked at him. And . . . he chuckled to
himself. He'd tried to change. He'd really tried to change his ways to impress
her. And all the time, all this time, she was doing drugs, too. Perhaps all
shifters did them, to control the shift? Or perhaps she disapproved of him for
other reasons. But, clearly, a straight arrow she was not.
"Are you
okay?" Keith asked. He'd stopped the car—a beat up golden Toyota of late
eighties vintage—in front of Tom and rolled down the window.
Tom realized
he was laughing so hard that there were tears pouring down his face. He
controlled with an effort. "Oh, I'm fine. I am perfectly fine."
He had, in
fact, been an idiot. But not anymore.
* * *
When the
office was empty like this, late at night, and Edward Ormson was the only one
still at his desk, sometimes he wondered what it would be like to have someone
to go home to.
He hadn't
remarried because. . . Well, because his marriage had blown up so explosively,
and Sylvia had taken herself such a long way away that he thought there was no point
trying again.
No. He was
wrong. He was lying to himself again. What had made him give up on family and
home wasn't Sylvia. It was Tom.
He looked up
from the laptop open on his broad mahogany desk, and past the glass-door of his
private office at the rest of the office—where normally his secretaries and his
clerks worked. This late, it was all gloom, with here and there a faint light
where someone's computer had turned on to run the automated processes, or where
someone had forgotten a desk lamp on.
He probably
should make a complaint about the waste of energy, but the truth was he liked
those small lapses. It made the office feel more homey—and the office was
practically the only home Ormson had.
The wind
whistled behind him, around the corner of the office, where giant panel of
window glass met giant panel of window glass. The wind always whistled out
here. When you're on the thirtieth floor of an office building there's always a
certain amount of wind.
Only it seemed
to Ormson that there was an echo of wings unfolding in the wind. He shivered
and glowered at the screen, at the message one of his clerks had sent him, with
research details for one of his upcoming trials. Even with the screen turned on,
he could still see a reflection of himself in it—salt-and-pepper hair that had
once been dark, and blue eyes, shaped exactly like Tom's.
He wondered if
Tom was still alive and where he was. Damn it. It shouldn't be this difficult.
None of this should be so difficult. He'd made partner, he'd gotten married,
he'd had a son. By now, Tom was supposed to be in Yale, or if he absolutely had
to rebel, in Harvard, working on his law degree. Tom was supposed to be his
son. Not the constant annoyance of a thorn on the side, a burr under the
saddle.
But Tom had
been trouble from the first step he'd taken—when he'd held onto the side table
and toppled Sylvia's favorite Ming vase. And it hadn't got any better when it
had progressed to petty car theft, to pot smoking, to the school complaining he
was sexually harassing girls. It just kept getting harder and harder and
harder.
He thought he
heard a tinkle of glass far off and stopped breathing, listening. But no sound
followed and, through the glass door, he saw no movement in the darkened
office. There was nothing. He was imagining things, because he had thought of
Tom.
Hell, even
Sylvia hadn't wanted Tom. She'd started having an affair with another doctor at
the hospital and taken off with her boyfriend to Florida and married him, and
set about having a family, and she'd never, never again even bothered to send
Tom a birthday card. Not after that first year. And then Tom. . .
This time the
noise was more definite, closer by.
Edward rose
from his desk, his fingertips touching the desktop, as if for support. He told
himself there were no such thing as dragons. He told himself people didn't
shift into dragons and back again.
Every time he
told himself that. Every time. And it didn't make any difference. There were
still. . . Tom had still. . .
No sound from
the office, and he drew in a deep breath and started to sit down. He'd turn off
the computer, pack up and go. . . well, not home. His condo wasn't a home. But
he'd go back to the condo, and have a drink and call one of the suitably long
list of arm candy who'd been vying to be Mrs. Ormson for the last few months,
and see if she wanted to go to dinner somewhere nice. If he was lucky, he
wouldn't have to sleep alone.
"Ormsssssson."
His office
door had opened, noiselessly, and through it whistled the sort of breeze that
hit the thirtieth floor when one of the windows had been broken. It was more of
a wind. He could hear paper rustling, tumbling about, a roaring of wind, and a
tinkle as someone's lamp or monitor fell over.
And the head
pushing through the door was huge, reptilian, armed with many teeth that
glimmered even in the scant light. Edward had seen it only once. He'd seen. . .
other dragons. Tom not the least of them. But he hadn't seen this dragon. Not
more than once. That had been when Edward had hired to defend a triad member
accused—and guilty—of a particularly gruesome and pointless murder.
This creature
had appeared, shortly after Edward had gotten his client paroled, and while
Edward was trying to convince him to go away for a while and not to pursue a
bloody course of revenge that would have torn the triad apart—and,
incidentally, got him dead or back in jail.
This
dragon—they called it the great something dragon?—had flapped down from the sky
and—Edward remembered his client's body falling from a great height, the two
pieces of it tumbling down to the asphalt. And the blood. The blood.
He swallowed
bile, hastily, and stood fully again. Stood. Ready to run. Which was foolish,
because the thing blocked his office door, and its huge, many-fanged head
rested on its massive paws. There was nowhere Edward could run.
The dragon
blinked huge, green eyes at him, and, as with a cat's secretly satisfied
expression, it gave the impression of smiling. A long forked tongue licked at
the lipless mouth. "Ormson," it said, still somehow managing to give
the impression that the word was composed mostly of sibilants.
"Yes?"
Edward asked, and found his voice wavering and uncertain. "How may I help
you?"
"Your
whelp has stolen something of mine," the dragon said. Its voice was only
part noise. The other part was a feeling, like a scratch at the back of the
brain. It made you want to flip up your cranium and scratch.
"My. .
.?"
"Your
son. Thomas. He's stolen the Pearl of Heaven."
Edward's mouth
was dry. He opened it to say this was entirely Tom's business, but he found
himself caught in an odd crux. If Tom had stolen something, then Tom was still
alive. Still alive five years after being kicked out of the house. Had he
learned something? Had he shaped up? He almost had to, hadn't he, or he would
be dead by now? No one could continue going the way Tom had been going and
still be alive after five years on their own, could they?
He swallowed
hard. But Tom had stolen something. This seemed to imply he'd learned nothing.
He'd not changed.
He clenched
his hands so tightly that his nails bit into his palm. How could Tom still be a
problem? How could he? Didn't he know how hard he made it on his father? Didn't
he care?
"I don't
know what my son has done," he said, and his voice came out creditably
firm. "I haven't seen me in more than five years. You cannot hold me
responsible for what he has done."
"He has
stolen the Pearl of Heaven," the dragon rumbled, his eyes half closed and
still giving that look of a secret smile.
"So, he's
stolen some jewelry," Edward said. "Get it from him. I don't
care."
Did he care?
What if they killed Tom? Edward didn't know. He didn't even know if it would
grieve him anymore. It wasn't supposed to be this hard. He'd been saying that
since Tom was one. And it hadn't got any easier.
"It's not
that easy," the dragon said. "The Pearl is. . . dragon magic.
Ancient. It was given to us by the Emperor of Heaven. It will not do him any
good, but it is the center of our strength. We need it, or we shall fall
apart."
Great. Tom
would manage to steal some cultic object. Hell, if he found an idol with an eye
made of ruby, he'd dig the ruby out just to see what would happen. And Edward
remembered all too well the incident in the Met Museum with Tom and the mummy
when Tom was five. Other kids just never thought of this kind of trouble to get
into.
"So get
it. From him. I know nothing of it."
"Ah,"
the dragon said. And the sound, somehow, managed to convey an impression of
disapproval, an impression of denial. "But the child is always the
responsibility of the parents, isn't he? Your son has hidden the Pearl of
Heaven. It is up to you to find it and give it back to us."
The or else
remained unspoken, hanging mid air, more solid, more certain than anything the
dragon had said.
"I don't
even know where he is," Edward said.
"Goldport,
Colorado."
"Fine,"
Edward said, nodding and trying to look business like. He scooped up his
laptop, picked up his case from the floor, started pushing the laptop into it.
"Fine, fine. I'll call tomorrow. I'll make enquiries. I'll try to figure
out where he—"
A many-clawed
paw lifted. With unreal, careful precision, it rested atop the briefcase and
the laptop and just touched the edge of Edward Ormson's hand. The claw
shimmered, like real gold, and ended in an impossibly sharp talon.
"Not
tomorrow," the dragon said. "Now."
"Now?"
Edward blinked, in confusion, looking down at the talon on is hand, the tip of
it pressing just enough to leave a mark, but leaving no doubt that it could
press hard enough to skewer the hand through sinew and bone. "But it's
what? Nine at night? You can't really book flights at this time of night. Well,
not anymore. You can't just show up at the airport and book a flight on a whim.
With the security measures that simply doesn't happen anymore."
"No
airport," the dragon said, his paw immobile, the pressure of his talon
palpable.
"Driving?"
Edward asked, and would have sat down, if he weren't so afraid that some
stirring, some careless gesture would make the creature stab his hand with that
talon. He didn't know what would happen if he did that. He didn't know how Tom
had become a dragon, but if the legends were right, then it was through a bite.
Or a clawing. "Driving would take much longer. Why don't I book a flight
tomorrow. I'll fly out before twenty four hours. I promise."
"No
driving. I'll take you. Now."
"You'll
take me?"
The claw
withdrew. "Pack your things. Whatever you need to take. I'll take you.
Now."
There really
wasn't much choice. Less than ten minutes later, Edward was straddling the huge
beast's back, holding on tight, while they stood facing the place where the
dragon had broken several panels of glass to get in.
There was a
moment of fear, as the dragon dove through the window, wings closed, and they
plunged down towards the busy street.
A scream
caught in Edward's throat. Not for the first time, he wondered why no one else
saw these creatures. Was he having really vivid hallucinations while locked up
in some madhouse?
No. No. He was
sure other people saw them. But he was also sure they forgot it as soon as they
could. He, himself, tried to forget them every time he saw them. Every time.
And then they appeared again.
They plunged
dizzily past blind dark offices and fully lit ones, towards the cars on the
street below.
At maybe tenth
floor level, the dragon opened his wings, and turned gracefully, gaining
height.
Edward was
never sure how they flew. He'd always thought thermals. . . But these wings
were flapping, vigorously, to gain altitude, and he could feel the back muscles
ripple beneath his legs.
He'd put his
briefcase's shoulder handle across his chest, bandolier style. And that was
good because the dragon's scales were slicker and smoother than they seemed to
be, and he had to hold on with both hands to the ridge that ran down the back
of the dragon, as the dragon turned almost completely sideways, and gained
altitude, flying above the high-rises, above Hudson Bay, circling. Heading out
to Colorado. Where Edward was supposed to convince Tom to do something he
didn't want to do.
Oh, hell.
* * *
"What?"
Kyrie asked, looking at Rafiel who stood by the windows, frowning at them.
"This
window was broken from the outside," he said. "Something ripped the
screen aside, and hammered that window down. From the outside."
"How do
you know?" she asked. She was looking at her patio door and wondering how
she was going to be able to pay for all that glass. Safety glass, at that, she
was sure. "How could you tell?"
"The
glass fragments are all on the inside," he said. "And scattered
pretty far in."
"The
glass fragments for this patio door are pretty much inside, too, but there's a
bunch of them outside," she said. "I think you're reading too much
into it."
"No,"
Rafiel said. "I'm no expert, of course. I could bring the lab here, and
they could tell you for sure. But—see, on the patio door, the glass is kicked
all the way out there, almost halfway through your backyard."
"Which
isn't very far," Kyrie said.
"Admittedly,"
Rafiel said. "But see, the door, I'm sure was kicked from the inside. But
the windows weren't. There's some glass that crumbled and just fell on that
side, but most of it got pushed in here, all the way to the middle of the
carpet."
Kyrie looked.
There were glass pieces all the way through the room, to the foot of the sofa
where Tom had slept. There were spots of blood, too, where Tom had walked on
the glass, apparently without noticing.
Suddenly, it
was too much for Kyrie, and she sat on the end of the sofa where there was no
glass. "How could he?" she asked. "What was he high on, anyway?
There was glass everywhere. Why couldn't he feel it? What's wrong with
him?"
Rafiel looked
puzzled and started to say "Who—" Then he shook his head. "If
you mean Ormson, I think there's a lot more wrong with him than even I could tell
you. Though I think I'll do a background check on him tomorrow. His getting
that other young punk here worries me. Perhaps he's a dealer? And that guy came
by for a hit?"
Kyrie was
about to say that she'd never seen any signs that Tom dealt—but what did she
have to go on? She had suspected him of it. He'd said he didn't. And, of
course, she would trust him because he was a model of virtue and probity.
"What is wrong with me?" she asked.
And now Rafiel
looked even more puzzled and she almost laughed. Which showed how shocked she
was, because there really wasn't anything to laugh about.
The golden
eyes gave her the once over, head to toe. "I don't see anything wrong with
you."
For a moment,
for just a moment, she could almost smell him, musky and virile like the night
before. She got up from the sofa. That was probably what was messing her up. It
was all down to pheromones and unconscious reactions and stuff. It was all . .
. insane.
She grabbed
her right hand with her left, as if afraid what they might do. "Well,
that's neither here nor there," she said. "Is it? These windows are
going to cost me a fortune, and I will have to work a bunch of overtime to pay
for it."
"I could
talk to my dad. He knows—I could get someone to do the job and you could pay
for them on credit."
Kyrie twisted
her lips. One thing she had seen, through her growing up years, and that was
that families usually went wrong when they started buying things on credit, no
matter how necessary it seemed at the time. And since many of the foster
families fostered for the money allowance a new kid brought, she had seen a lot
of families who had gone financially to the wrong. "No, thank you,"
she said. "I can take care of myself."
"But this
is wide open," he said. "And there's something killing shifters. What
if they come for you? How are you going to defend yourself? I have to protect
you. We're partners in solving this crime, remember?"
Kyrie
remembered. But she also remembered that she wasn't sure what all this meant to
Rafiel. And didn't want to known. She'd been a fool for trusting Tom. She'd be
damned if she was going to repeat the mistake with Rafiel. What if he had the
door fixed, in a way that he could somehow, come in and kill her in the night?
She couldn't
figure out any reason why he would want to kill her. But then, she couldn't
figure out any reason why anyone would want to go around killing other
shape-shifters. It had to be a shifter. Only a shifter would smell them. So,
what would he get out of killing his own kind? And who better to do it than a
policeman?
"No,
thank you," she said, again. "You don't have to take care of me. I
can take care of myself. I've been doing it all my life. Pretty successfully,
as you see."
"But—"
"No buts,
Officer Trall." Without seeming to, she edged around him, and guided him
through the doorway from the sunporch into the kitchen. She locked the door to
the outside, then grabbed the extra chair and wedged it under the doorknob, the
way she'd secured her bedroom in countless foster homes, when she'd been lucky
enough to have a room for herself. "You'd best leave now. I need to have
something to eat, and then I'll go to the Athens early. The day shift is often
a person late, and if I can pitch in at dinner time, I can work some overtime,
and that will help pay for this. . . mess."
As if taken
off balance by her sudden forcefulness, he allowed himself to be shepherded all
the way out the kitchen door.
"Thank
you again," Kyrie said. And almost told him it had been lovely. Which
could apply to the luncheon, but certainly was a gross overstatement when it
came to the autopsy, and just plain silly when applied to what they found back
here. Which, admittedly, wasn't his fault.
He was still
staring at her, the golden eyes somehow managing to look sheepish, when she closed
the door in his face. And locked it.
Alone in the
house for the first time in almost twenty four hours, she rushed to the
bedroom. She needed to get out of her skirt and into jeans and a t-shirt. Then
she'd eat something—at a guess bread, because she imagined that Tom would have
eaten every ounce of protein in the house—and get out of here. The diner had to
be safer. More people, more witnesses.
Although it
hadn't helped the guy last night, had it?
She shuddered
at the thought of that bloodied body on the slab. She would park up-front, she
decided. On Fairfax avenue. Within plain sight of everyone.
* * *
"Damn,"
Keith said, after a while of driving in silence.
"What
now?" Tom asked. He'd been sitting there, his head in his hands, trying to
figure out what he was going to do next. He felt as if his life, over the last
six months, was a carefully constructed castle of cards that someone had poked
right in the middle and sent tumbling.
If Kyrie was
no better than him, then maybe it was something wrong with the nature of
shifters. Maybe that was why everyone he'd met was a drifter, or. . .
"I forgot
to tell you why I came looking for you," Keith said.
"I
thought it was to make sure I was all right," Tom said.
"Well."
Keith nodded. "That was part of it, only. . . I went to pay the rent today
and I got to talking to the building manager about what happened at your
apartment and she said. . . The manager got a bunch of your things from the
floor. Before she called the police to look at it."
"The
police? To look at my things?" Tom asked. He was trying to imagine why the
woman would do that. She was a little old lady who looked Italian or Greek and
who had always seemed pretty nice to him.
"No, you
fool. She got the things before the police came over, because she figured they
were your things and you might need them, and the police would just tie them
up."
"Oh, what
did she get?"
"I don't
know. It looked like was some of your clothes, and your boots, and a credit
card."
Tom blinked.
"I don't have a credit card." Had one of the triad dropped his credit
card behind? Tom hadn't been impressed by the collective intelligence of the
dragon enforcer trio, but that seemed too stupid even for them.
"Your ATM
card, then."
"Oh."
"The
manager said it was none of the police's business. She asked me to bring you by
for your stuff." Keith looked at Tom. "But perhaps I should take you
to emergency first. For your feet?"
"No,"
Tom said. First, because he had enough experience in his own body to know that
any wound would heal up seemingly overnight. And second because if he could get
some clothes on, and his hand on his ATM card, he was going to find some stuff
to buy. Heroin, by choice, but just about anything else would do, short of
baking soda. This time he was going to get high and stay high. He would be
feeling no pain.
* * *
In jeans and a
comfortable t-shirt, Kyrie went into the kitchen. She felt naked without the
earring she normally wore. She'd found it in a street fair when she was about
fourteen and it had been her favorite piece of jewelry since. But there was no
point crying over spilt milk or spoiled jewelry. She had lost it somewhere at
Tom's house, while becoming a panther. She would have to look out for another
one.
Meanwhile she
need to eat something, even if just bread and butter.
She put the
kettle on for tea, and opened the fridge to see if perhaps a couple rounds of
her lunch meat had survived. And was shocked to find eggs and bacon still
sitting on the shelf, where she had left them. Looking at the containers, she
determined he'd eaten about a third of her provisions. Which meant she would
still have enough for the rest of the week, even if she shifted once or twice.
She'd long ago
decided to make breakfast her main protein meal of the day. Even if she ate
breakfast at the time other people ate dinner. Eggs and bacon, particularly
bought at a sale, were far cheaper than meat for other meals. Also, she often
woke up after what she thought was one of her episodes in desperate need of
protein.
She got the
microwave bacon tray, and noticed he'd washed it very carefully. She put the
pan on for eggs, and again noticed it had been scrubbed with a soft, plastic
scrubber, per manufacturer instructions for non-stick pans. Sitting at her
little table, washing down the food with a cup of sweet tea—which she preferred
to coffee unless she felt a need to wake up suddenly—she felt vaguely guilty
about throwing Tom out.
Then she
realized the source of her guilt was that he'd actually made an effort to wash
the dishes and that, as ravenous as he must have been—she remembered what she'd
felt like at the restaurant—he hadn't eaten all of her food. She smiled to
herself. So, it was fine if the man were a one-person demolition engine, as
long as he had good household habits?
She shook her
head. Okay, she clearly was going soft in the head. Perhaps it was the
shifter-bond. But if so, couldn't she feel more tenderly towards Rafiel? Was
the way to her heart to give as much trouble and cause as much damage as
humanly possible?
After washing
her dishes, she grabbed her purse and hurried towards the Athens. She'd park up
front. With the driver's window in the state it was, she didn't want to leave
the car unwatched, anyway. She'd park up front, and keep an eye on it through
her work shift.
Hopefully the
diner would be short-staffed for the dinner shift, the last few hours of the
day staff. Hopefully. They usually were, but then things never went the way one
wanted them to, did they? And she'd have to buy another apron from Frank's
stock, kept for when a staff member walked out of the job with the apron still
on.
Another
expense.
She checked
the chair under the lock between the kitchen and the back porch before leaving
the house.
* * *
"We were
all very worried something dreadful had happened to you," Mrs. Rizzo
looked at him, her sparkling black eyes narrowed in what might indeed be worry.
Or suspicion. Though that wasn't fair, because she'd never been suspicious of
him.
A small woman,
so short that she made Tom feel tall, she stood in front of her desk in the
little, musty manager's office at the back of the apartment complex. Every
possible inch of space on her wall was covered up in pictures—pictures of
smiling brides, pictures of babies, and pictures of children looking sticky and
sweet in equal measures and displaying mouths with a varying number of teeth in
unguarded smiles. A set of pink-booties, half knit, lay on her desk, with a
gigantic ball of pink yarn and two green plastic knitting needles.
Tom had often
wanted to ask her if the pictures were all her children, but he was a little
afraid of the answer, and not quite sure if yes or no would be the scarier
reply. Instead, he threw back his head to move the hair out from in front of
his face—he really needed to find something to tie it soon. A rubber band would
do—and smiled at Mrs. Rizzo. "Fortunately I was staying with a
friend."
She cocked an
eyebrow at him. "A girl?"
"Yes. She
works with me."
Mrs. Rizzo
grinned, suddenly. "Well, and isn't it about time you found someone to
settle down. Is she a good girl?"
"Yes, a
very good girl," Tom said. Or at least he'd thought that until today, and
finding out about the sugar. But he wasn't about to discuss that with his
apartment manager.
The lady
nodded. "Good, maybe you can stay with her until we get your place fixed.
It should only be a couple of weeks. Or we could move you to number thirty
five, if you want. I talked to the owner, and he said it would be okay to give
it to you. It's a little bigger, but he said you could have it for the same
price."
A few hours
ago, this would have been an offer for Tom to snatch with both hands. He could
have got into the new apartment without paying a deposit, and with no real
inconvenience. Oh, his furniture and utensils were gone, but he hadn't had all
that much, and he could always replace them in a month or less from thrift shops
and garage sales. A sofa first, until he could afford a bed, and a pan and a
frying pan would do for cooking in, till he could get more complete utensils.
And. . .
But he stopped
his own thought, forcefully. He would have been very happy to do that a few
hours ago. It would have made him non-homeless again. But a few hours ago, he
now realized, he'd still been under the mistaken impression that Kyrie was some
sort of ideal woman, something to aspire to. Someone whom, even if he could
never have her, he could imitate and hope to be more like. Now. . . "I
don't know what I'm doing, yet, Mrs. Rizzo. I'll let you know in a couple of
days, if that's all right." Of course he knew perfectly well what he was
doing. He was getting heck out of dodge before nightfall. He might come back
later—if he could—for the . . . object in the water tank of the Athens'
bathroom. But he wouldn't come back to live. He wouldn't go back to working
there—with Kyrie. No way, no when, no how. And no one could make him.
Mrs. Rizzo
sighed. "You're staying with her, right? Well, I hope it works. But if it
doesn't, remember we have number thirty five. I'll hold it for you for another
week." She smiled. "It's the one with the bay window." And
sounded exactly like someone holding out a sweet to a kid.
Tom nodded.
"I'll be in touch. But Keith said you had some of my stuff. . ."
She reached
behind the desk and brought out a box that was larger than Tom expected.
Protruding out of the top were his boots, and he gave a deep sigh of relief
upon seeing them. Then, as he dug through, he found a couple of pairs of jeans,
one black and one blue, three black t-shirts, and—carefully folded—his black
leather jacket. He felt suddenly weak at the knees. It was like losing half of
your identity and then retrieving it again.
At the very
bottom of the box was his ATM card, and he found himself taking a deep,
relieved breath. He wouldn't need to wait till the banks opened to get out his
money before he got out of town. Next to the ATM card was a library book—The
Book of Sand by Jorge Luis Borges. He could drop that off at the library
depot on the way out of town. Good. The library was unlikely to make much of a
search for him on the strength of a single hardcover book, but it was best to
get out of town with as few things hanging over his head as possible.
Between the
book and the ATM card was a red object, which at first he couldn't identify.
And then he realized it was Kyrie's red plumed earring.
He should take
it back. He should. . . His hand closed around it. Or not. Or not. He couldn't
see facing her. He couldn't imagine her reproaching him for getting high and
destroying her sunroom. He would have to tell her, then, that the least she
could have done was tell him that the sugar wasn't exactly sugar. She must keep
the real stuff somewhere. After all, they'd had coffee the night before to no
ill effects. So, why didn't she tell him where it was? Tom would much rather
have had it.
His hand
closed on the plumed earring and he shoved it into the pocket of his jacket.
"You can
change in the bathroom," Mrs. Rizzo said, pointing to a little door at the
back. "If you want to."
The bathroom
was a continuation of the office. Oh, there were no pictures on the walls,
which was a very good thing. Tom would have hated to undress completely in
front of a mass of staring babies and prim brides. But the hand-soap was pink
and shaped like a rose, and, on the toilet tank, a much too tall crochet angel
with a plastic face, squatted contentedly over three spare toilet paper rolls,
as though hoping they would soon hatch into chickens.
Tom had to
watch that, and the mirror, and the vanity, because the bathroom was so small
he could barely move in it. He removed Kyrie's jogging suit, folded it
carefully and put it beside the toilet paper angel. Then he put on his jeans
and t-shirt with a sense of relief. He wished some of his underwear had been
preserved, but if absolutely needed he could do without it a little longer.
Socks were
something else—as was the need to put his boots back on. He hadn't felt any
pain from his feet recently, but then he'd been. . . busy. He sat down on the
closed toilet lid, to look at his feet. And was surprised to find he'd shed
most of the glass shards. Only a couple large ones remained, embedded in his
skin, but his skin seemed to be. . . He stared at it. Yep. His skin was pushing
them out, forcing them out and growing behind them. The other cuts were already
closed, though angry-red and likely to leave a scar.
This was one
of those changes that arrived when he started shifting into a dragon. All of a
sudden, he could cut himself or scrape himself and it would heal in a day, or a
few hours, depending on the depth of the injury. It was just about the only
change that wasn't completely unwelcome.
He washed the
bottom of his feet with damp toilet paper, and looked again. Nothing really.
Just rapidly healing cuts. He slipped his boots on, wishing he had socks, but
it couldn't be helped. With all his belongings still in a box, he went back to
Mrs. Rizzo. "I'm sorry to bother you, but could I borrow a plastic bag?
It's easier to carry than a box." Meaning, it would actually be possible
to carry while he was in dragon form. Which was how he'd kept most of his
belongings, while moving all over the country.
She nodded,
and bent to get something from behind her desk. Tom wondered what exactly she
kept back there, just as she emerged with a backpack, not a plastic bag. The
backpack was pale blue and made in the sort of plastic that glistens. "The
Michelsons left it behind, when they vacated number 22," Mrs. Rizzio said.
"It used to have wheels, but they're broken. They left a bunch of the
kids' old clothes, too. Ripped and dirty." She made a face. "When
people do that, I wash them and fix them and give them to charities in town.
Such a waste. People throw everything away these days. But the backpack I kept,
if someone moved in with a school-age kid and needed it."
"It's all
right," Tom said. "I only need a plastic bag."
"No, no.
It's okay. You can have it. There will be two or three others by September,
when school opens. People throw them away."
Well, the
backpack was more practical because it closed. Though, in dragon form, he would
still have to carry it the same way—by wrapping the straps around his huge
ankle—the backpack zipped shut. And there was less chance of losing stuff.
"Well, thank you then," he said, reaching for it.
Up close, as
he stuffed his remaining belongings—and Kyrie's jogging suit—into it, he
realized the full extent of his problem. The backpack had a little orange
dragon with stubby wings on the back, and it said underneath, in fiery
orange-red letters Scorchio. He scowled at it.
"Kids
these days like the weirdest things, don't they?" Mrs. Rizzio said.
"Yes,"
Tom said. And then, with everything in the backpack, he had to say goodbye
somehow. Only he'd never said goodbye to anyone or anything, and certainly not
to anyone who liked him and whom he liked. "I'll be back," he lied.
"In a few days."
"You do
that, dear," she said. "I'll hold number thirty five for you,
okay?"
As he headed
out, he caught a glimpse of his reflection in the window of the next door
apartment. Against the dark drapes, he looked like something out of a horror
movie—unruly hair, tight black jeans, black leather jacket. Even with the
stupid pale blue backpack on, he didn't look like anyone that someone would
want to bother.
He stalked
off, down Fairfax Avenue, away from the Athens and towards the nearest ATM that
way. He had a vague idea that he should go back and pay Kyrie for the mess. He
would have done it the day before. But now he told himself there was simply no
way. Not any way in hell. She should have told him about the sugar. It was all
her fault. Yeah, he probably still owed her for the car—but because of the
sugar he was now headed out of town, with nothing but a handful of possessions.
He was going to need all his money.
He realized he
was holding her responsible for the fact that she wasn't perfect. And that was
fine, as far as he was concerned. Wasn't there someone—one person—in the world
he could look up to?
* * *
"When is
your break?" Rafiel asked. He'd been sitting at one of the small tables in
the extension room that used to be the sun porch of the Athens and had been
enclosed, sometime decades away, to make more space for tables.
Like a sun
porch, it was informally furnished. Just plastic tables and chairs, of the type
people used outside. On a Friday like this, and when the dinner hour was in
full swing, it filled up fast.
A family group
or a gaggle of laughing and screaming students surrounded every other table.
Only Rafiel sat alone.
She'd smiled
at him when first serving him, and the rest of the time she'd avoided looking
too closely at him, as she served the noisy groups around him. But now she was
pouring a warm up of coffee into his cup, and he said, "Come on, please? I
need to talk to you."
She would
believe him a lot more and talk to him with a far clearer conscience if she
couldn't detect, as an undertone to his soap and aftershave smell, the lion's
spicy-hot scent. She didn't trust herself around that smell. She behaved very
stupidly around it. Instead, she made a big show of looking around, as if
mentally counting people. "No way for the next hour or so," she said.
"I have to keep refills and desserts and all coming. They allowed me to
work because they were two people short. There's no way I can take a
break."
To her
surprise, he smiled. "Okay, then. I'll have the bowl of rice pudding. Ala
mode." He lowered his voice, "And then I want to talk to you. There's
some very odd autopsy results."
* * *
Stealing the
car wasn't hard. Tom walked along the darkened working class neighborhoods
first, looking at all the old models of cars parked on the street.
It had to be
an old model, because his way of starting a car without a key wouldn't work on
the newer models. And in those streets, around Fairfax, with their tiny,
decrepit brick houses, the cars spotted with primer on the front, there was a
prospect on every corner. He could steal a dozen cars, if he wanted to.
Half a dozen
times, he walked up to a sickly-looking two door sedan, a rusted and
disreputable pickup and put his hand on the door handle, while he felt in his
pocket for the stone he'd picked up from a flowerbed near his apartment. The
only other piece of equipment necessary to this operation was a screw driver,
which he'd bought from a corner convenience store.
He had
everything. So, why didn't he just smash the window, break the ignition
housing, start the car and drive away? Most of these houses looked empty and
people were probably still at work or already asleep.
But he'd put
his hand on the handle, and reach for the rock, and remember how hard it was to
make ends meet from his job at the Athens. How he had never been able to buy a
car, but used to read the Sunday paper Vehicles for Sale ads with the relish of
a kid looking through a candy store window.
From those
ads, he knew many of these cars would be a few hundred dollars, no more. But a
few hundred dollars was all he had in his pocket, and it had emptied his
account. And accumulating it had required endless small sacrifices, in what
food he ate, in what clothes he wore. Hell, he didn't even shop the thrift
stores at full price. It was always at half price or dollar day sales.
Oh, he wasn't
complaining. He was lucky to have a job, given his past work history and his
lack of training. Correction. He'd been lucky to have a job. Now it was over
and he'd be lucky to ever have another. What were the owners of these cars
employed at? What did they do?
Fuming, he
turned away. Damn. This going straight thing was like some sort of disease. You
caught it, and then you had the hardest trouble getting rid of it. They
probably didn't sell honesty-be-gone tablets at the local drugstore.
He walked down
one of the cracked sidewalks that ran along the front of the pocket-sized
lawns, kicking a stray piece of concrete here and there, to vent his anger.
Damn. He couldn't walk out of the city on foot. And he wasn't at all sure he
could start flying from inside the city. What if someone saw him? What if. . . they
saw him?
He walked
along, as a thin rain started trickling down on him from the sky above. The
rain felt. . . odd. He'd been living in Colorado for six months and this was
the first time he'd seen rain. There was a feeling of strangeness, at first,
and then, despite the warmth of the night, discomfort at water seeping
everywhere and dripping from his hair onto the back of his neck, running down
the back of his jacket.
He walked a
long time, on his still-tender feet and passed a roped in car dealership. But
it was the sort of car dealership you got in this kind of area—selling fifth or
sixth hand cars. Of course, he thought, as he walked past, his hand idly
touching the rope that marked off the lot, he could probably break into those
cars far more easily than into any others. But. . . he stared at the wrecks and
semi-wrecks under the moonlight. What were the chances that the owner of this
lot was living so close to the bone that the theft of a car would really hurt him?
Tom looked at
the facade of the dealership proper, and it was a well-known car dealer.
Chances were they'd never feel it. His hand weighed the stone in his pocket.
On the other
hand. . . On the other hand, the theft of a car—or one more car, as Tom doubted
this would be the first—might be what caused the dealership to close doors at
this location, to give up on this neighborhood, perhaps to give up on this
level of car, at all. And then people in this neighborhood would find it harder
to get a car. Perhaps harder to find jobs.
Tom dropped
the stone out of his jacket pocket and kicked it violently aside. Then he
dropped the screwdriver after it. He walked down the road. His hands shoved
deep in his pockets.
He would have
to walk, as far as he could out of Goldport. He'd go south, towards New Mexico.
Lots of empty space that way, less chance of someone seeing or noticing a
dragon flying against the sky. But damn, he could get much, much farther if he
could ride. As it was, he'd almost surely get caught by the three dragons. And
this time he would have to face them alone.
He realized he
was chewing on his lower lip, as he walked down the street where the
dilapidated houses gave way to houses in even worse state but divided into apartments,
and then to warehouses tagged with the occasional gang graffiti.
He pulled the
collar up on his leather jacket. Even with the ridiculous backpack on his back,
he didn't think anyone would challenge him. Not for a moment.
Knowing this
trip was likely to end in his death, he wished he could buy something to make
it easier. Not a lot. Probably nothing to inject. Just some pot to smoke, to
ease his nerves. He was going to die, he might as well go easy. Besides, he'd
seen there was no point trying to escape the grip of drugs, if even Kyrie did
them.
In his six
months in the city, he'd seen plenty of drug dealers standing around in shady
corners, waiting. This was the type of neighborhood to attract them. But
perhaps the rain, unaccustomed in Colorado, had driven them indoors. Tom
couldn't see anyone, and certainly not anyone with that pose of alert
shiftiness that identified a dealer. He had money. He was willing. But no one
was selling.
"Damn
dealers," he muttered to himself under his breath. "Just like cops.
Never around when you need one."
Wide awake and
hopeless, he headed south and west while the sun set and the breeze grew
cooler, ruffling at his damp hair, his soaking jeans.
* * *
"Frank,
do we have rice pudding?" Kyrie asked, coming near the counter.
Frank looked
up with a frown, from a talk he'd been having with three customers seated at
the part of the counter where you could get food served. His girlfriend wasn't
around again, tonight, so he was in a mood. "I just came in and I haven't
made any. If there's any, it's leftover from yesterday."
Well, it was
all gone, then. But before Kyrie could turn to go give Rafiel the bad news,
Frank added, "Is Tom coming in later?"
"Tom?"
Kyrie didn't know what to say. She honestly had no idea. And for just a moment
was startled that Frank would ask her about Tom. Except that of course, last
night she'd taken time off to take medicine to Tom. Or at least that was what
she had told Frank. And then she'd told Frank that Tom was in really bad shape
and she had to take him home with her and watch him.
"I don't
know," she said. "He left my place a few hours ago."
"Do you
know where he was going?"
She shook her
head. "He was with his friend. The guy who lives downstairs from
him," Kyrie said, as she pulled a stray strand of hair behind her ear. And
as she did, the customers at the counter looked up. And she froze.
They were the
three from the night before. The three dragons. None of them permanently
injured, as far as she could tell, though she was sure she'd got the eye of at
least one of them in the battle.
But they sat
there, at the counter, uninjured, and the middle one even had his hair
arranged, as artificially perfect and smooth as before. They all wore tight
jeans and satin-like shimmering jackets, with dragons in the back. They looked
like something out of a bad karate movie, and Kyrie was so shocked at seeing
them here, in . . . well, the glare of the fluorescent lights, that she didn't
know what to do.
Two Dragons
was the one sitting next to where Kyrie stood. He backed away from her, his
eyes wide, and said something in Chinese, that sounded like a panic attack.
The middle one
said something in return, something she couldn't understand, and put his hand
into his pocket, pulling out a sheaf of notes, which he laid on the counter.
And then, the three geniuses, in massed disarray, started towards the door. A
process only slightly hampered by the fact that not one of them was willing to
turn his back on Kyrie. So they moved backwards as a group, bumping into tables
and booths, snagging on girls' purses and mens' coats, and muttering stuff in
Chinese that might be apologies or threats.
Clearly, they
were rattled enough to forget their English. Clearly, they thought that Kyrie's
panther form was too dangerous to anger. Although why they thought she would
shift into a panther right then and take them to pieces in front of the diner
patrons, was beyond her.
Pulling and
shoving at each other, they got to the door, then in a tinkling of the bells
suspended from it, out of it, tumbling onto the sidewalk where the lights were
starting to show, faintly, against the persistent glow of the sunset.
"What was
that all about?" Frank asked. "Did those guys know you?"
"I have
no clue," Kyrie said, choosing to answer the first question. And this was
the absolute truth. She couldn't figure out why they would be scared of her.
After all, even if she had been so stupid as to shift here, in the middle of
the diner, they could have shifted too, and then they would have had the upper
hand. There were three of them, after all.
Unless. . .
She smiled faintly at the thought. Unless the total idiots thought this
was a shifter diner and that everyone here would be shifters. If Tom was
right the shifting was ancient, well established in their culture, and perhaps
passed on in families. They had a lore and a culture. For people like that it
must be utterly bewildering when strangers shifted. Perhaps they think we
too band together.
Frank was
glowering at her, and she realized she was still smiling. He reached for the
plates and cups the guys had left on the counter and pulled them down, near the
cleaning area, by the dishwasher, glowering all the while and banging the
utensils around so much that, if they weren't break-resistant, they would
probably have shattered.
"What's
wrong?" Kyrie asked.
But he just
glowered at her some more, grabbed a dishtowel from the counter, and wiped at
the serving surface with it. "Oh, nothing. Everything is fine and dandy.
You and Tom and. . ." He lifted his hands, upwards, as though signifying
his inability to understand any of them.
Kyrie skidded
back to the sun porch, to give Rafiel the distressing news about the rice
pudding.
"There's
no rice pudding," she said. "And the three dragons who were at Tom's
apartment were just here."
"The
dragons?" he said and started to rise. "Here?"
"In human
form," she said. "They left." She frowned. "They seemed
afraid of me."
He looked at
her a long moment, then shook his head. "I don't know what to do. I wonder
why they were here."
"Looking
for Tom," she said.
"Oh."
He looked out the window. "We could follow them, but there's only two of
us—"
"And
neither of us can fly," Kyrie said. "Besides, there's only one of us.
I'm working. But since there's no rice pudding, you're free to follow
them."
He just
grinned up at her. "Oh, bring me pie a la mode, then. I don't care. I'm in
it for the vanilla ice cream." And he winked at her.
"What
kind of pie?"
"I told
you I don't care," he said. "Just bring me a wedge."
"Green
bean pie it is, then," she said, and walked away. To bump into Anthony,
the last of the day shift to leave. He was in his street clothes, which, in his
case were usually elaborate and today consisted of a ruffled button-down white
shirt, red vest and immaculate black pants. "Hey," he said.
"What's up with Frank? He's acting like a bear with two heads."
Kyrie shrugged
and Anthony sighed. "What that man needs," he said, as if this summed
up the wisdom of the ages. "Is to get laid. He seriously needs to get
laid. His girlfriend hasn't been in for too long." And with that, he twirled
on his heels and made for the door. Kyrie had often wondered if in his free
time he was a member of some dance troupe. At least that would explain the
bizarre clothes.
Kyrie went
back to scout out the pie, though the only choices were apple and lemon. She
chose lemon, figuring he would like it less, and put two scoops of ice cream on
the plate with it. It wasn't so much that she wanted to thwart Rafiel—but a man
who ordered with that kind of complacency did deserve green bean pie. Or at
least spinach. Too bad they didn't have any on the menu.
She took the
plate of pie in one hand, the carafe in the other, set the pie in front of
Rafiel and went off, from table to table, warming up people's coffees.
Despite her
best efforts to banish it, the image of Frank getting laid was stuck in her
mind. She looked across the diner at Frank, behind the counter, his
cro-magnon-like features still knit in a glower. She shuddered. There were
things the human mind was not supposed to contemplate.
* * *
Edward
Ormson's first thought was that they couldn't be in Colorado. Not so fast. Even
by airplane it took over three hours. And they couldn't be flying at airplane
speeds. Well, they could, but it would have left him frozen as a popsicle
sitting astride that dragon.
And he hadn't
been frozen, nor gasping for air. The temperature around him had remained even,
and he'd felt perfectly comfortable. Only twice, for just a moment, light
seemed to vanish from around them. But it was such a brief moment that Edward
hadn't had time to think about it. Now he wondered if some magic transfer had
taken place at that moment.
Oh, Edward
didn't believe in magic. But then he also didn't believe in dragons, he thought
and smiled with more irony than joy while the dragon circled down to a parking
lot in a street of low-to-the-ground buildings.
They landed
softly on the asphalt and the huge wings that had been spread on either side of
him, cuscurating and sparkling in the light like living fire, closed slowly.
"Down,"
the dragon said. Or perhaps not said it, because Edward didn't remember sounds.
Just the feeling that he should get down. He should get down immediately.
He scrambled
off, sliding along scales that felt softer on the skin than they should have.
But once he
stood, in the parking lot, holding his briefcase, he realized that the front of
his suit had tiny cuts, as though someone had worked it over with very small
blades.
He frowned at
it, then looked up at the dragon who glowed with some sort of inner fire, in
front of him. The beast opened its huge mouth, and all thought of complaining
about damages to his clothes fled Ormson's mind.
"Find
your son," the dragon said, in that voice that wasn't exactly a voice.
"Make him give back what belongs to me."
And, just as
suddenly as he'd appeared at Edward Ormson's office, the dragon now stretched
its wings, flexed its legs, and was airborne, gaining height.
Alone in the
parking lot, Edward became aware that it was raining, a boring, slow rain.
Behind him, a little Chinese restaurant called Three Luck Dragon had its open
sign out, but there were no cars parked. So either it catered to a local
clientele, or it had none.
Did the Great
Sky Dragon mean anything by dropping Edward off here? Or was it simply the
first convenient place they'd come to?
Edward saw the
curtain twitch on the little window, and a face peer out. The lighting and the
distance didn't allow him to see features, but he thought it would be the
proprietors looking to see if he intended to come in.
Well, today
was their lucky day. He'd go in and order something, and get out his cell
phone. He would bet now he knew where Tom had last been seen, he would be able
to find the boy with half a dozen phone calls.
One way or
another, he always ended up cleaning up after his son.
* * *
Western towns
don't taper off. Or at least that was what Tom had seen, ever since his
drifting had brought him west and south to Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.
You walked down a street, surrounded by five-floor brick warehouses, resounding
with the noises of loading and unloading, of packing and making of things
resounding within.
And then, a
couple of blocks away, you were in the middle of a high prairie, with
tumbleweed blowing around. Looking back, you could still see the warehouses,
but they were so incongruous that they seemed to be part of another world.
Tom turned to
look at the dark edge of the warehouses. He stood on what had abruptly become a
country road, its asphalt cracked underfoot. Looking just beyond where he was
standing, he saw nothing but an underpass, just ahead. Why there was an
underpass was a question he couldn't answer, as it was just two country roads meeting.
Perhaps this was what people complained about, with public projects that made
no sense.
But right then
Tom was grateful of the underpass. In this landscape of brown grass and blowing
tumbleweeds, there wasn't much cover, else. He made for the underpass and
stripped quickly, shoving all his clothes and boots into the little backpack
with the happy dragon on the back. The boots were a tight fit into the small
space, but he got them in, and zipped the thing. Then he loosened the
backstraps to their outmost, and put them around his wrist.
Willing
yourself to shift was like willing yourself to die. Because the process of
shifting, no matter how easy, always hurt. It took desire to do it, but it
needed something else. He got out from under the overpass, and stood—naked in
the moonlight, willing his body to shift, willing.
A cough shook
him, another, heralding the preliminary spasms that often preceded the
shape-shifting. Pain twisted in his limbs, wracked his back, as his body tried
to extrude wings from itself. He opened his mouth and let the scream
come—something he never did within a city—the scream of pain of his human self,
the scream of triumph from the ancient beast once more let forth.
A car drove
by, towards the outside of town. One of the tiny SUVs in white. A Kia or a
Wassaby or one of those. Tom's confused senses were aware of its turning around
and then zooming past again. But no one came out. Worse comes to worst,
his still rational mind thought, as his body shifted. They'll just call 911.
And good luck with convincing a dispatcher they just saw a dragon.
In the next
moment it no longer mattered. The dragon was him. He was the dragon. His body
fully shifted, Tom spread his wings fully, feeling the caress of wind and rain
on them. He opened his mouth and roared, this time in triumph. His vision
sharpened. He was in a vast non-cave. And the dragon knew they should go to
ground, they should find a cave.
No, the
human part of Tom said. No. Not to a cave. We're flying west. Deep west,
until we come to a town. We'll follow the highway that will take us to Las
Vegas New Mexico by early morning. Then. . . cave.
The dragon
blinked, confused, because the image in its mind, for a cave, had mattresses
and pillows and other things that made sense only to the human. But it had
learned, over the years, to trust the ape cowering away at the back of its
mind.
It trusted it
now, even when it found something wrapped tightly around its front paw. The
human mind said they were clothes, and that they shouldn't be discarded.
The dragon
harumphed, loudly. Then spread its wings again, sensing the air currents. Half
of flying was coasting. If you needed to beat your wings the whole time, you
were going to die of tiredness soon.
He felt the
currents. He flapped a little. He gained altitude. He headed out of town.
* * *
"Break?"
Rafiel asked.
Kyrie was
about to shake her head, but stopped. The dinner time crowd had thinned.
Students had left for concerts or movies or whatever it was that college
students did with their evenings. And the families, too, had vanished, probably
home to their comfy chairs and their TVs.
The only two
people in the diner were a man at the back, who seemed to be signing the credit
card slip that Kyrie had dropped on his table. And Rafiel.
Kyrie looked at
the wall clock. Ten thirty p.m. That meant there would be a lull till eleven or
there abouts, when the late night people would start coming in. And she only
needed ten minutes.
She
backtracked to the counter and put away the carafe she'd just used to give
Rafiel a warm up. "Frank, is it okay if I take ten minutes?" she
asked.
Frank turned
around. He was still glowering. "Fine. It's fine," he said, as if he
were saying that it was all completely wrong.
"Is there
a problem?" Kyrie asked taken aback.
"No. I just
wish your boyfriend had given us some warning before he decided to
disappear."
"He's not
due for an hour or so. I came in early," Kyrie said. "And he's not my
boyfriend."
But it was
hardly worth arguing. And Frank looked to be in a worse mood than she'd ever
seen him. "I'll take a break now," she said. "If Tom doesn't
come in, it's going to be a hellish shift, and that way I'll be able to stay
with till five a.m., okay?"
Frank
shrugged, which looked like consent. He was grilling a bunch of burgers, though
Kyrie had no idea why, given the deserted look of the diner. Perhaps he was
pre-cooking them a bit to allow him to cook them faster later on. It wasn't any
of her business, in any case.
She
backtracked to the enclosed-porch-addition. Rafiel must have heard, or watched
her conversation. He was standing as she approached. "Ready?"
She nodded.
And gestured with her head towards the door at the back of the extension, that
led to the parking lot. She didn't want to go to the parking lot again. Truly,
she didn't. On the other hand, neither did she want to talk to Rafiel in front
of Frank. Frank was likely to decide that Rafiel was also her boyfriend and
hold her responsible for whatever the policeman did in the future.
She had no
idea what had gotten into her boss. He was usually grumpy, but not like this.
And then there was Anthony's idea, which made her make a face, as she led
Rafiel out the back door and onto the parking lot.
This time the
parking lot was deserted there was no smell of blood, and she took care to stay
in the shadow of the building, out of the light of the moon.
Rafiel made a
sound that seemed suspiciously close to a purr as he got outside, and he
stretched his arms. "Do you feel it?" he asked, giving Kyrie a
sidelong glance. "Do you feel the call?"
"No,"
Kyrie said, as curtly as she could. It was a lie, but only in a way. Yeah, she
could feel the call, but she could feel the call every night. And it seemed to
her Rafiel was speaking of another call. And there, as if on cue, she noticed
his smell again. No, not his smell. His smell was soap and a little aftershave,
nothing out of the ordinary. But the smell exuding from him right now was a
thick, feline musk that made her think of running through the jungles, of
hunting, of. . . "You said you had news that pertained to the
corpse?" she said, turning her head away.
"Yeah,"
he said, and looked away from her, as though her turning her head to get fresh
air, slightly less tainted by his musk, were an insult. "Yeah. We got a
chemical analysis for the green stuff we found."
She looked at
him. He nodded as if she'd asked a question. "The. . . Well, the lab
thinks it's of insect origin, although not quite like anything they know from
any insects they know."
"And?"
Kyrie asked.
"And
those things. . . the white stuff on the lungs?"
"Yeah."
"They
think it's eggs."
Kyrie frowned
at him and he shook his head, looking impatient and annoyed, as if resenting
that she couldn't read his mind. "Not chicken eggs," he said.
"They're insect eggs. They don't know what type yet, but they're getting
in an entomologist from the Natural History Museum in Denver tomorrow. He's
someone's brother in law or brother of a brother in law, and he's driving down
day after tomorrow. He's supposedly one of those guys who can tell on sight
what kind of insect laid eggs where. He's used for investigating crimes by all
the local police departments."
"Okay,"
Kyrie said. "And why did I need to know this right now? Why was this so
urgent that I had to take a break to hear it?" His smell was growing
stronger. It seemed to fill her nose and her mouth and to populate her mind
with odd images and thoughts. She found herself wondering what his hair would
feel like to the touch.
"Because
I think there was the same powder on your porch last night," he said.
"Where those windows were broken."
"My
porch? Insects?" she asked. "But Tom said something about dragons and
his friend was going on about aliens."
"Well,
yeah," Rafiel said, and shrugged. "But I don't think those two were
exactly in the state necessary to testify in a court of law. Or for that matter
anywhere else."
Kyrie
conceded. And yet, she wondered what had happened in the porch while they were
gone. Had bugs broken the window? In her mind was an image of masses of bugs
crawling out of the loam, pushing on the window, till the sheer weight of their
mass broke it. Yuck. Like something out of a bad horror movie. "Any dead
bugs, or other pieces of bug in that powder?"
"No,"
he said. He looked directly at her, as if her face were a puzzle he was hoping
to decipher. His eyes were huge and golden, and his lips looked soft. The musky
smell of him was everywhere, penetrating her nostrils, her mind.
He leaned in,
very close to her, and asked in a voice that should be reserved for indecent
proposals, "So, can I come by? After your shift?"
The tone and
the closeness startled her enough to wake her from the trance induced by his
scent. She stepped back. "No. Why would you? No."
He took a deep
breath as though he, too, had been affected by something, and stepped back.
"So I can see if you have that powder in your porch or not. And to have it
analyzed if you do." He shook his head. "What did you think I
meant?"
"All
right," she said, reluctantly. "If you want to come. But not when I
get off work. Come later, around one or so." She wanted to get some sleep
tomorrow. And besides, she was not absolutely sure about Rafiel Trall yet.
She'd rather face him in the full light of noon, without the effects of
whatever this smell was. "I'd better go back in. Frank is in a mood and I
have repairs on a porch to pay off."
* * *
Edward Ormson
got out of the taxi in front of the diner where he'd been told Tom worked.
Finding this information had been a fast job.
He, himself,
had found Tom's address on the web, and his secretary had then called—from New
York, that much more impressive—the boy's landlady and asked questions.
Closing the
taxi door and waiting till the driver pulled away, Ormson frowned. In fact, in
the whole story there was only one thing he didn't understand. And that was
that his secretary had told him the landlady seemed fond of Tom.
Oh, it wasn't
at all strange that a woman should have some interest in Tom. Even at sixteen,
when the boy had left home, there had been to him that roguish charm that
attracts a certain class of females. What was odd, though, was that he had
reportedly been living within the apartment complex this woman managed for
about six months, and she said he'd never been late with the rent, didn't have
loud parties, hadn't given the neighbors any cause to complain. He didn't, in
fact, seem to have any life beyond going to work and—according to the
woman—reading out on the steps of the building when the weather was warm.
Reading? Tom? Perhaps it was the wrong Thomas E. Ormson?
But no. It
wasn't that common a name. And besides, there had been the dragon. Edward
swallowed, as he headed towards the gaudy facade painted all over with the
prices of specials in what appeared to be a full pack of primary color markers.
It wasn't just that Fresh Rice Pudding was scrawled in vivid red that
offended Ormson's sense of aesthetics. It was that above it Fries Always
Fresh, Never Frozen was done in at least five different and mutually
clashing colors.
And above the
door, something that looked very much like a pink pig wearing a cook's hat and
apron was tossing a succession of pancakes up in the air. The whole was so
horrendous that it might very well be considered kitchy chic if it were in the
right place. But around the diner, head shops, used record stores and closed
warehouses clustered. This was the type of area that would never be
fashionable.
Wondering about
the hygiene of the place, and if it was quite safe to go in, he opened the
door. A clash of bells greeted him, and a rough-looking dark haired, bearded
man glared at him from behind the counter.
Ormson had
intended on approaching the first person he saw and ask for Tom. But this man
didn't look like the greatest of prospects. His eyebrows were beetled low over
his dark, sunken eyes, and he looked positively murderous, an impression not
improved by the fact that he held a very large knife in his right hand.
Hoping that
his hesitation hadn't been noticeable, Edward made for the most distant of the
many booths upholstered in dark green vinyl. He was about to slide into it,
when the man behind the counter barked, "Hey, you." Edward looked up,
not even daring to ask what he'd done wrong.
"That
booth is for groups, Mister," the dark man said. "Take one of the
smaller ones."
Edward obeyed,
though wondering why the booth was being held for groups when, clearly, there
was no one else in the place. But he really didn't want to argue with the man.
Instead, he
slid into the smaller booth and made a big show of picking up the menu and
studying it. Normal diner fare, all of it, as far as he could see, with a few
Greek dishes thrown in. And though he wasn't sure he wanted to eat here, or
even that the food here would be safe to eat, the place didn't smell bad.
Greasy, sure. There was an underlying smell of hot oil, as if the place were
used, day and night, to fry stuff. Which it probably was. But there were
appetizing smells of freshly grilled burgers and fries riding on the sheer
greasiness that put a sticky film on every vinyl booth and table. And those
were making his stomach clench, and his mouth start to water.
It had been
too long since he'd eaten anything. Since lunch the day before. The clock on
the wall here showed eleven o'clock, which meant it was one in the morning back
home. No wonder he was starving. And he'd eaten in diners when he was in
college. To no ill effects. Of course, he'd been younger.
He looked around
the still empty diner, hoping that the very angry man behind the counter was
not the only person here, hoping that a waitress—or, for a choice, his
son—would materialize somewhere, out of the blue.
Not that he
had any wish to see Tom. Not really. He had no idea what he would tell the boy,
or what the boy's reaction to him would be. Their last parting had been far
less than amicable. But if he saw Tom and convinced the stupid boy to give back
whatever it was to the dragons—and what kind of an idiot did you need to be to
steal from organized criminals?—then he could go back home in the early morning
flight. And wash his hands of the boy. And resume his lonely life. Lonely, yes,
but at least untroubled by the stream of acts of self-destruction that was Tom's
way of living.
He looked
around enough, and no one came, and rather than order from the guy behind the
counter, Edward thought he would leave. Leave now. The man would probably curse
him, as he left, but it was obvious Tom wasn't here. And if Tom was the reason
the man behind the counter was so furious, then what would happen if Edward
mentioned Tom?
He'd started
rising when a couple came in through a side door that seemed to lead to another
part of the diner—the covered porch he'd seen from the outside. He first
thought of them as a couple—tall, blond man and slightly smaller girl, with
multicolored hair. But then he realized the girl was wearing an apron with the
logo of the diner, and that the blond man was just following her. In fact, he
headed for the door as the girl rushed towards Edward.
"Hi,"
she said, and smiled. "My name is Kyrie. What can I get for you?"
He thought of
asking her for Tom right away, but . . . no. He was hungry, anyway. "I'll
have coffee," he said. "And your souvlaki platter, and one of the
large Greek salads."
"What
dressing on your salad?" she asked.
"Ranch is
fine," he said.
She nodded,
and went over to the counter. He watched her, from behind as she went. She was
quite an attractive girl, probably in her early twenties, with a trim body,
hair dyed in an elaborate pattern, and the sort of face that reminded him that
America was supposed to be a melting pot. Seen in a certain light, he supposed
she could be Greek, or perhaps Italian, or maybe even Native American. . . Or,
he admitted, some other, far more exotic combination. He wondered what the
truth was. He also wondered if anything was going on with her and Tom and if
that was what had the cook's nose out of joint.
The girl came
back in a moment, set a cup in front of him, and put down a container of sugar
and another with creamers. She filled the cup and he—ignoring the sugar and the
creamers—took a sip.
His surprise
at the quality of the coffee must have shown, in raised eyebrows or some change
in expression, because the girl smiled at him. And, oh, she had dimples. He
grinned back. She wasn't that much younger than him, really, and besides, he
went out with girls her age every other week. But was she involved with Tom? Or
how did she feel about Tom? He had to ask about Tom, but was it going to ruin
everything?
"Excuse
me?" he said, before she could turn away. "I don't suppose I could
ask you a question?"
She tensed. He
saw her tense, as she turned around, even if her face didn't show anything as
she said, "Yes?"
"I'm
sorry to bother you," he said. "But does Thomas Ormson work
here?"
For a moment
her face stayed absolutely frozen, and he thought she was going to tell him to
go to hell or something. Instead, she put a hand on the table, and it trembled.
Oh, no. What was going on here? Was she Tom's girlfriend.
"I
thought you looked like him," she said. "But I thought. . ." She
swallowed and didn't say what she thought.
"I'm his
father," Edward said, low enough that the gorilla behind at the grill
wouldn't hear him. "My name is Edward Ormson. Do you know where he
is?"
She opened her
mouth.
"Kyrie,"
the gorilla said. And she looked around, as if wakening. People had come in
while they were talking, and there were five tables occupied. And she was
alone. Also, his dinner was now sitting on the counter, ready. She went to get
it.
"I get
out at five," she told him. "It might be easier to talk then."
* * *
It was night
from hell. Or at least night from next door to hell. Nothing bad happened.
Kyrie even managed—despite her mounting exhaustion—to not drop any trays full
of plates, and not to mix up any orders.
But Tom hadn't
shown up. She was of two minds about this. Part of her wanted him to show up.
She wanted to . . . Well, for one his father had been at the Athens, and his
father was asking about him. That certainly didn't seem like the kind of father
who had thrown his son out of the house at sixteen. Then again, she thought—who
knew what Tom had done, and how much he could goad people beyond their natural
limits?
His father had
left after half an hour, and she hadn't given it much thought, until, as she
was getting ready to leave, she saw him waiting by the door, looking very
proper in his expensive-looking, if somewhat rumpled business suit.
She nodded to
him, and went towards the counter, to tell Frank she was leaving. He glared at
her, which was not really a surprise, since he'd been glaring at her—and to be
honest at everyone else—all night. Then he motioned with his head towards Tom's
father. "Another one?"
She sighed.
"I have no idea what you're talking about. He's just. . ." She
stopped short of telling Frank this was Tom's father. She wasn't even sure why.
Just she didn't want the jokes following on Tom being her boyfriend and his
father supposedly visiting her. "He just wants to ask me something,"
she said.
And anyway,
she thought, as she walked towards Mr. Ormson, if Frank couldn't see the
resemblance between Tom and his father—same pale skin, same dark hair, same
blue eyes—then he didn't want to see it.
They stepped
outside the diner, and the morning was lovely, just warm enough to promise heat
later at mid-day, but not warm enough to actually be uncomfortable. Kyrie took
a deep breath of the air that seemed much cleaner than it would be later on in
the day when Fairfax became clogged with bumper-to-bumper traffic. "I
don't know where Tom is," she told his father, quickly. "I saw him
last about twelve hours ago. He left with a friend. I don't know where he is. I
can give you his address if you want."
"I have
his address," his father said. "His landlady said that he worked at
the Athens and that she thought his girlfriend worked there too. You
wouldn't—"
Kyrie felt
herself blush. "No. He doesn't have a girlfriend, that I know." There
was no point explaining, and yet she could tell he was looking attentively at
her, as though trying to read her expression. Or most probably wondering why
she was blushing. Damn her blush, really. For a woman who could and did tan
easily enough, she had the most inconvenient blushes. And it really didn't mean
anything, except annoyance at Frank thinking she was Tom's girlfriend.
"Can we
go somewhere and talk?" Mr. Ormson asked, leaning slightly forward, as if
eager to have her answer.
Kyrie shook
her head. Her feet hurt, and she felt sticky all over, as she usually did when
she'd been working long hours at the Athens. And this time she'd worked ten
hours. "I really don't think I have anything else to tell you," she
said. "I only know Tom from work." And why was her mind, unbidden,
giving her images of his coming out of the shower, his hair still dripping.
He'd been perfectly dressed too. Well, almost perfectly. One thing her house
didn't have any of was male underwear. "And I really don't know where he
could have gone. If you go where he lives, and talk to his downstairs neighbor.
I think his name is Keith. He might know where Tom went from there."
"Oh, but
I think you might know more without realizing it," he said, and in
response to what she was sure was very annoyed frown, he said, "I'm not
underestimating your intelligence, it is just that I know people absorb things
about other people, without meaning to. And you might know something about Tom,
something that will give me a clue." He hesitated a long time, as if he
were not sure a clue to exactly what. "A clue to where to find him."
Kyrie was
sure, too, that this was not what he had meant to say. She looked up—Tom's
father was considerably taller than him—at Mr. Ormson's chiseled profile, and
she wondered what he was trying to find a clue to exactly, and why he'd come
looking for his son these many years later. Or had he looked for Tom before?
Had Tom refused to see him? Perhaps that was what he wanted a clue for? A clue
as to why his son would reject him? Kyrie shouldn't be getting involved with
this. She really shouldn't.
"Just a
cup of coffee," he said, and looked wildly around, lighting at last at a
coffee shop sign a couple of blocks away, the edge of the advance of
gentrification of downtown Goldport. "I won't keep you long, I promise. I
imagine you must be very tired."
"Yes,
but—"
"Please,"
the man said. "Tom is my only son. If there's any chance I can. . . find
him."
Again she had
a feeling that what he had been about to say was not "find" but
something else—persuade? Reach?
"All
right," she said, setting off towards the Coffee shop. "But just one
cup of coffee." She had to admit to herself at least half the reason for
allowing him that one cup of coffee was that she wanted to know what was
happening—exactly what was wrong—between those two. Had Tom told her the truth
about being thrown out of the house? Or had he run away? What had his father
thought of the whole thing? Did his father even know that Tom was a shifter?
And did he love him despite that?
Kyrie didn't
have any personal interest in the matter, of course. Well, Tom's father seemed
nice enough. Possibly too nice to be saddled with Tom as a child. But, really,
ultimately, what drove her to walk those blocks to the coffee shop, what
convinced her to sit across from him at the little, tottering table, amid the
decor that tried to hard to be urban and sophisticated, was curiosity.
She had grown
up with many families, but none of them hers. And none of her families had ever
shown her much of the tangled feelings between close blood relatives. All she
had of it was the understanding drawn from books and movies. She saw family and
familial love through a mirror darkly.
So she went
with Edward Ormson, and sat at the little table across from him, holding a
Cappuccino that she knew would have way too much milk, and watching the man sip
his espresso grande, or very tall or whatever they were calling the huge cups
these days.
"How long
has Tom been working at the Athens?" Mr. Ormson asked.
"Six
months," Kyrie said. Was everyone going to ask her this question. If Mr.
Ormson's next question was about the murders three months ago, she was going to
scream.
But he nodded.
"And he's. . . he's a good worker?"
"He's
responsible," Kyrie said, surprising herself with saying it. "And
competent. He always shows up or calls if he's ill. This is the first night he
missed work completely." And having said the words, she wondered where he
was, what he was doing. She frowned at her cup of foam with very little coffee.
She had as good as thrown him out. Of course, he deserved it. Or did he?
Rafiel's talk
of an insect-origin powder, his talk of eggs in the wounds of the victim. . .
Something was not right, and it seemed certain that high or not, Tom had been
fighting something—some creature, possibly the same that had committed murder
in the parking lot, just a day ago. But he had been high. And he should not
have been high. He should have been more careful in her house.
Somehow this
high moral ground was not as satisfying as it should be. She realized that Mr.
Ormson was looking attentively at her, and she managed a smile at him, her
professional smile that meant very little but seemed to make people feel at
ease. "He was better than most servers we get at the Athens."
"Was?"
Mr. Ormson said. His blue eyes, so much like Tom's, were filled with a cooly
evaluating look that was nothing like Tom's at all.
She shook her
head. "He didn't show up today. I'm assuming he gave up the job. I don't
know. . ."
But Mr. Ormson
continued looking at her, cooly appraising. "Do you. . . I don't quite
know how to ask this question, but I need to—do you have any idea if my son
might be involved in illegal activities?"
Oh, Lord, the
drugs. Yes, she was fairly sure that Tom was involved in illegal activities.
But talking about it to this stranger felt like a violation of trust. Stupid to
feel that way, she told herself. Stupid. And ridiculous.
He'd broken
confidence with her. He'd been a guest in her house and behaved with utter
disregard, with utter—
But she
thought of the food left on her shelf. She had expected him to eat it all. She
wouldn't have held it against him if he had eaten it all. It must have taken a
lot of will power to control himself and not eat all the protein he could. She,
herself, and Rafiel too, had binged shamelessly. But Tom hadn't. And if he'd
given in to the drugs later, perhaps he hadn't realized what he was doing? Or
perhaps he had but had no other choice?
She looked at
Mr. Ormson staring at her. No. Tom was, if nothing else, another shifter, a
member of this makeshift family in which she'd ended up plunged suddenly. She
owed him that much loyalty, if nothing else. Even if he were really guilty of
murder; even if she ended up having to fight him or take him out—he was one of
hers. And Mr. Ormson, even if his looks were testimony of a genetic
relationship to Tom, was not one of them.
She raised her
eyebrows at Mr. Ormson, and he laughed, as if she'd said something very funny.
Only the laughter echoed bitter and hollow at the edge of it. "Ah. I
see," he said, though she clearly did not. "Let me tell you what I
know of my son. Let me explain."
"You
don't need—"
"No,
please let me, then perhaps you'll understand better what I mean, and that I'm
not merely fishing for something that will allow me to put my son away or
something equally . . . drastic.
"Tom was
never an easy child. No, perhaps I lie there. He was a happy baby, chubby and
contented. At least, we had a nanny, but when I was home and the nanny brought
him to me, he was usually asleep and sometimes he. . . woke up and looked at
me, and smiled." He made a face, worried, as if trying to figure out, now,
what those smiles might have meant, and suspecting them of some deeper and
possibly bad meaning. "But then he started walking. And he started
speaking. The first word he learned was no. And he said no very often over the
next fourteen or fifteen years. His teachers told us there was nothing wrong
with his mind, but his grades were dismal."
He frowned
again and took a quick sip of his espresso, as if it could control the flow of
words. "I was going to say the first call from the police station, saying
he'd been arrested was a shock, but that isn't true. From nursery school
onward, we got calls, from Tom's teachers and supervisors. He'd stolen
something. Or he'd broken something. His language violated all the rules of
every school that ever took children. He had. . . I think they call it
appositional defiational disorder. He couldn't obey and he wouldn't submit to
any authority."
Ormson's lips
compressed into a bitter line. "By the time he became officially a
teenager, I'd run out of options. Counselors and boot camps, and whatever I
thought might straighten him out, just made him more violent, more unruly. His
mother had left by then. She—I think she couldn't understand him. I couldn't
understand him, either, but I had my work. She. . . She found someone else and
moved to Florida, as far as she could from us and still remain on the East
Coast. And Tom and I settled into a routine. As long as he kept his . . .
infractions beneath a certain threshold, I could get him out of jail the same
day, and no harm done. I thought. . . I thought he would grow out of it."
Kyrie finished
her coffee. For some reason, the story was making her feel sorry for Tom. Oh,
it was foolish. It was borderline suicidal to feel sorry for someone like Tom.
But in his father's descriptions—it seemed to her, from kids she had known in
foster care—she read a desperate desire of Tom's to be seen, to be noticed, to
be acknowledged. Oh, she didn't think it could all have been solved with a nice
talk by the fire. Life tended not to behave like a Disney special, so much more
the pity. She suspected that by the time that Tom had learned to walk, learned
to say that all-vital no, the problem was already intractable. But
nonetheless it was possible to feel sorry for the man he might have been.
"There
was joyriding," Ormson said. "And drugs. And one or two cases of lewd
acts in semi-public places."
Was he
watching her face to see if she was shocked? The only thing Tom hadn't told her
about was the lewd acts, and she wondered how much of those was showing up
naked in public places—something neither he, nor she, could control.
"So,"
he leaned back. "You can't possibly fear to let me know something he's
done. You see, I know."
She inclined
her head, in a gesture that might have been a yes, or just curiosity.
He smiled, a
tight-lipped smile. "I see," he said. "Well, then I'll ask it
outright. Do you have any reason to think my son did something. . . Stole
something from a. . . an organized crime group?"
She must have
trembled, without meaning to. The triad, the three exceedingly dumb dragons at
the diner today, all came to her mind, and she must have trembled as she
thought about it. She immediately calmed herself down, and forced herself to
relax, but there was that look of understanding on Ormson's face.
"You
don't have to answer that, but you do have to answer me this. It's very
important. Do you know where he's hidden it? The Pearl?"
The Pearl.
Ormson wanted the same Pearl the Chinese dragons had spoken of. How could he
know about it? Clearly Tom hadn't told him about it. He hadn't even seen Tom
and wasn't sure where Tom might be. So. . .
She looked at
him, and in his intense expression read the same eagerness of the three dragons
looking at Tom the night before. The Pearl, they had said. And they'd asked
where he hid it.
On her feet,
she pushed the chair forward. She remembered to take the cup with her, which
was a little strange, in retrospect, and put it on the tray near the other
dirty cups.
She headed
towards the door at a good clip and got there before Mr. Ormson seemed to
realize it, before he got up, before he came after her, with a haste that made
everyone in the coffee shop turn to stare at them.
Kyrie was
aware of their scrutiny as she ran out, into the still-deserted early morning
street. She heard him come after her, almost immediately, heard him call,
"Ms. Smith. Kyrie. Please, I must explain."
But all she
could think was that he—was he really Tom's father—was working for the dragons.
He had no more concern or care for Tom than he did for her. They were shifters,
they were alone. They must look after each other.
She ran full
tilt back to the Athens, and heard him run behind her, also at full clip. But
she was much younger than him, and she ran faster, and was well ahead of him by
the time she reached the Athens and headed for the parking lot.
It was only in
the parking lot that she realized she hadn't parked there that day. And that
was the least of her worries.
* * *
Tom was tired.
At just that moment, he wasn't absolutely sure how the dragon felt. Though he
was still the dragon.
He could feel
the dragon's wings, suspended between the Earth and the sky, the dragon's front
legs tucked upward in flight position, the dragon's tail, serving as a rudder
to direct the pattern of flight. But a part of him, a core, looking out through
the dragon's eyes, and trying—desperately trying to find a populated place to
land—was wholly human, wholly Tom. And tired.
He had to stop
soon, he thought as the dragon flew above the spectacular painted desert, the
brightly layered mesas of New Mexico. But New Mexico was empty. That was what
had made it so attractive. It was a place he could hide, far from human
contact. But he needed some humans. He was going to need food and sleep, soon.
And he did not want to hunt for wild rabbits, eat them raw and fall asleep on
the hard-packed desert dirt.
The dragon's
eyes, more far-seeing than any humans, followed a highway and following the
highway, a conglomerate of buildings. It wasn't very big. Nothing to compare to
the Colorado cities Tom had left behind. It wasn't even as big as Goldport.
Memories from
drifting west, through parts of New Mexico, months ago, brought up the name Las
Vegas, New Mexico. One of those towns forever being confused with a better
known town of the same name. It was the only city large enough to have a
hotel in the area within reach of his flying.
He aimed for
it and flew in its direction, determinedly, feeling the weight of the backpack
reassuring on the dragon's ankle. He had money in there. And clothes. He'd land
somewhere outside town, make himself decent for human contact, then slip into
town and stop at some truck stop—he seemed to remember an awful lot of them in
Las Vegas—for breakfast. And then find a cheap motel room to crash in.
Anything, really, so long as it didn't rent by the hour. He wanted to sleep in
peace and quiet.
And then he
could start looking for something more permanent, and thinking of a way to
survive. Some place to hide out for a few months, till the triad either found
the Pearl on their own or forgot about him.
And then. . .
He had a fleeting thought he could go back to Kyrie then, and maybe. . . But
no. That avenue was closed and he knew it.
The human
brain in control of the dragon body, guided himself down and down and down, to
land between two mesas, on rocky ground, where no one would see him.
He shifted, an
effort even greater than shifting into dragon had been the evening before. When
it was done, he was weak and pale and trembling, standing naked in between the
two rock spires, holding onto the handle of the backpack.
How he managed
to get dressed, he didn't know. It involved a lot of starts and stops. Even the
times he'd run away from other cities, from other states, he'd never made
himself fly eight hours straight, through the night.
Las Vegas
could not be more than a mile away. He'd gaged it well when he'd landed. He
didn't want to land so close to the populated area that someone would see him
shifting. And he was right by the only road into town coming from the direction
of Goldport.
He put his
backpack on and summoned strength from determination. He must make it to town.
It was the only way he was going to get eggs and bacon and a cup of coffee. He
could almost taste the cup of coffee. Not to mention the orange juice. Hell,
anything wet would do.
With the dry
desert air stinging his nostrils and his parched throat, he headed towards Las
Vegas.
* * *
That she'd
gone to the parking lot instead of up front where she'd parked her car was the
least of Kyrie's worries because in the parking lot there was. . . She
swallowed hard, trying to comprehend it and unable to. They were. . .
They were
green and huge and glittering like jewels in the full light of day. And they
were some sort of Amazonian beetle. At least, Kyrie remembered, vaguely, having
seen much smaller versions of these creatures at the Natural History Museum in
Denver, pinned solidly through their middle, against a background of black
velvet. In a glass case.
But those were
small. And dead. The legend had said something about their being used for
jewelry, and she could kind of see that, from the way the green carapaces
glowed with blue highlights, in the light of the morning.
It would be
five fifteen, she though, or possibly five thirty, and soon there would be
people coming to breakfast at the Athens, and yet in the parking lot of the
building, there were two giant. . . insects dragging something.
She couldn't
even look at the something. She didn't need to look at the something. She could
smell the symphony of blood sharp and clear as day from where she was standing.
Somewhere in
the back of her mind, a steady and very worried voice was intoning, oh crap,
oh crap, oh crap almost in the tone of someone praying.
The little
voice was prescient. Or more in tune than Kyrie's body and the rest of Kyrie's
mind which stood, amazed and immobilized, staring at the insects.
She didn't
know when they first saw her—where were the eyes in those things?—but she
noticed a little start and their leaning into each other, communicating—with
what? Antennae?—somehow, and then they turned. They advanced on her.
At this moment
the little voice that had been intoning oh crap, grabbed the rest of
Kyrie. It turned her around. It sent her running, in broad strides, around the
Athens and to her car. She had a vague impression of people inside the diner
turning to look at her as she ran by at full speed. Would the beetles follow?
Out here, up front? In front of everyone?
They wouldn't
if they were shifters, but what if they weren't?
What,
she thought, as she put her hand in through the open window to release the
latch, pulled the door open and, without pause, dove head long into her car. They're
the result of some nuclear accident? Or some exterminator's bad dream?
She stuck the
key in the ignition, started the car and headed down the street. It wasn't
until she was headed towards home, speeding as much as she dared in this zone,
that she realized her moment of frozen panic couldn't have taken much more than
a few seconds. It seemed much longer, subjectively, but as she pulled away from
the curb, in her car, she saw Edward Ormson on the sidewalk, hands on sides,
slightly bent over, in the position of someone who's run too fast, too far.
He had just—almost
caught up with her. As for the beetles, they were nowhere in sight. Had she
imagined them? She wasn't about to drive around the back of the Athens to find
out.
* * *
Edward Ormson
stared at the girl, his mouth hanging open in wonder.
She'd run away
from him. She'd looked at him as if he were something profoundly disgusting,
and then she'd left without warning. This was not something that happened to
him normally, when he was trying to ask someone questions.
Why had she
run? What had he said that was so terrible?
Confused, he
walked back up in the direction of the coffee shop, where the area was much
better. His head ached and he felt very tired. Dragon-lagged, he thought.
Whatever magic the dragon had used to get here had left Edward feeling as if
he'd been beaten.
So. . . this
avenue to find Tom hadn't worked. And he needed to get back to New York as soon
as possible. He'd best find a place where he could call his secretary again and
get her to call around and ask more questions, find someone who might know
where Tom was.
It was eight
a.m. in New York and the woman would probably be in the office.
He considered
going into the coffee shop, but they'd seen the girl run away from him. At the
very least he'd get pitying stares. At worst, they would think he was some sort
of pervert and had said something to her that was over the line.
Shaking his
head—he still couldn't understand why she had run—he walked past the coffee
shop. And came to a sort of little park in the middle of the sidewalk. He sat
down on the park bench set in the four feet of lawn amid three dispirited
trees.
Perhaps he
shouldn't have eaten? Perhaps having eaten was making him sleepy?
He started
reaching for his cell phone, then closed his eyes.
And woke up
with a cold wind blowing, a spectacular sunset lighting the sky in the
west—right in front of him—and someone pawing at his briefcase.
The impression
that someone was pawing was so great, that he was shocked on turning to find an
old man with long whiskers and a tattered suit, trying to unlatch the
briefcase. Though to be honest, the man was being so clumsy about it, that it
might very well have been paws he was using.
When Edward
turned to face him, the man looked scared, got up, and ran away. Edward had the
impression he was running away on four paws, and blinked. No. He was just
shambling along, irregularly.
Edward had
shape-shifters in the brain. And still no idea how to find his son.
* * *
Tom walked in
the shadow as much as he could. Partly because he was thirsty and partly because
he realized a guy like him, in black leather, carrying a kid's backpack had to
look incongruous. He was holding it by the strap, dangling it from his hand,
instead of carrying it on his back.
He hoped
anyone seeing him would think he was carrying it for a son or little brother
and give it no thought. But you never knew. And he didn't want people to
remember his coming through here. He didn't want the triad to be able to find
him.
Just before he
got to town—he couldn't see it, but he could smell it, a tinge of food and car
exhaust in his nostrils—he saw a couple of cars abandoned. Something about the
cars tickled his memory, but he couldn't quite say what. Well, at least one of
them looked awfully familiar. But it was just a kia something or other, one of
those economy cars that tried to look like suvs and rarely managed more than
looking like a toy patterned on an suv.
It wasn't
Kyrie's car. That was white too, but much smaller. Besides, this one had a
driver's side window, Tom thought, and felt very guilty he hadn't sent her the
money to have that repaired.
He'd been so
furious last night, so furious because she'd failed to live up to his high
standards. His high standards at that. It took some nerve. Now, he felt
mostly tired and vaguely upset at himself, as if he had let himself down.
Fine. He'd eat
something, he thought, as he saw, in the distance, the outskirts of town—represented
by what looked like an abandoned gas station. He'd eat something, he'd sleep
and then he'd think this whole thing over. If by then he still thought he had
done Kyrie an injustice or somehow failed to live up to what should—yes,
indeed, by damn—be his high standards, he would take as much of the money
as he dared and mail it back to Kyrie before he vanished from her life.
He couldn't
even tell why he wanted to deal straight with her. It wasn't because she was a
shifter. He wasn't feeling particularly charitable towards Mr. Golden Eye Lion
police officer. And it wasn't because they'd worked together all this
time—because though he'd enjoyed work at the Athens, Kyrie had always looked at
him as if he were slightly below sub-human. And it wasn't his attraction for
her, because he'd already decided that he had not a snowball's chance in hell.
And then he
realized it was how she'd treated him, when she had found him standing over
that body. He'd been deranged. He'd been in dragon form. But she hadn't even
hesitated. And she didn't even like him. He knew that. But she'd grabbed him,
and helped him hide the evidence of his involvement in anything back there.
She'd been
there when he needed her the most. Whether she'd disappointed him by keeping
funny sugar around or not, she didn't deserve for him to leave her with a huge
bill in car repairs. Okay—so that was that. He'd send her some money this
evening, send her more when he settled some place and found a job.
The decision
put a spring in his step, and he almost walking normally when he reached the
gas station. Which was too bad. Had he been dragging along the road and looking
all around in despondency and depression, he might have noticed something about
the shadows, something about movement.
As it was, he
walked by the squat brick building without a second glance. And didn't know
anything was wrong until he felt the impact of something hard on the back of
his head. And then he had no time to think about it, as darkness closed around
him.
* * *
Kyrie was rattled.
She didn't know if she had dreamed the beetles, out of being so tired, out of
Rafiel's report on there being insect matter in and around the corpse last
night.
Normally,
Kyrie was very sure of her perceptions. She'd had to trust in them and them alone,
as often those who were supposed to look after her or be in charge of her
hadn't been very trustworthy at all.
But now? Now
she wasn't sure of anything. The last two days had been a carnival of
weirdness, a whirling of the very strange. Driving her car along familiar
streets and around the castle just before her neighborhood, she thought she
wouldn't be at all surprised to wake up in her bed, suddenly, and find that all
this, from the moment she'd seen Tom as a dragon, had been a crazy dream.
Although if that were true, then her subconscious harbored some very weird
thoughts about Tom.
She pulled up
at her house, and opened the front door, half expecting to find her house as
ransacked as Tom's apartment. But everything inside looked normal and was in
its usual place. She locked the door, picked up the mail that the carrier had
pushed through the mail slot on the door. Junk, junk and bills. Which seemed to
be the modern corollary of death and taxes.
She went all
the way to the kitchen, and saw her chair still under the door to the back
porch. Had it really all happened? Had the little porch, which had been her
main reason for renting this house, truly been destroyed?
She pulled the
chair away, unlocked the door and looked at the broken windows, the glass on
the carpet, the . . . mess. Then she turned on the light and walked into the
room.
Rafiel had
said that there was green powder on this carpet, like there was green powder on
yesterday's corpse. She hadn't noticed. But now, by the light of dawn and the
overhead light, she could see it—glistening on the carpet. It was even more
visible because it must have rained sometime during the night when she wasn't
paying attention to the outside—and the rain had puddled it into little rings
and patterns on the beige carpet.
She wondered
what it all meant, but couldn't even think straight. And she wasn't about to
call Rafiel and ask him. Not right now, she wasn't.
Instead, she
retreated to the kitchen, locked the door and slipped the chair underneath. She
wished the door were somewhat stronger than the hollow-chore, seventies vintage
door it appeared to be. But it couldn't be helped. She was certainly not going
to fashion a new door before going to bed. And she needed to go to bed.
She took a
hurried shower, with torrents of hot water, and felt as if the heat and the
massage on her sore muscles were reviving her. Coming out and drying her hair,
she noted that Tom had hung up his towel very neatly on the hook at the back of
the door. For some reason she'd expected it tossed on the floor.
As soon as she
went into the bedroom, the phone rang. It was a cheap, corded affair and it was
plugged in there because it was the only phone plug in the entire house.
Possibly because the entire house was not hard to cross in twenty hurried
steps.
Normally the
only calls she got—at least since she'd got on the telemarketers do not call
list—were from Frank, asking if she wanted to come in and work extra hours. And
if this were Frank right now, he could go to hell. There was no way Kyrie was
about to turn around and go work another shift. Not with those beetles in the
parking lot, and she didn't even care whether they were real or a product of
her imagination.
But the voice
on the other end of the phone wasn't Frank's. It was a voice that purred with
masculine self-assurance.
"Kyrie?"
it said, though she didn't remember giving Rafiel permission to call her by her
given name.
"Yes."
"I have
information on the victim."
So, he was
going to call her every time he had information? But she bit her tongue and
said, "Yes?" because she knew that anything else could start a debate
or an argument and that would mean talking on the phone longer and staying
awake longer.
"He was
Bill Johnson. A roofer by trade. And apparently a coyote in his shifter form."
"A. .
.?" How had Rafiel found that out? It wasn't exactly the sort of thing you
could ask people about? Or. . .
"His wife
had pictures."
"Pardon
me?" Kyrie asked finding this, in some way, stranger than giant beetles in
the parking lot of the Athens.
"His wife
had pictures of him as a coyote. Lovely lady, I would judge about ten years
older than him but looking and acting much older. A grandma type. She pulled
out pictures, to show us, of what her husband looked like in his coyote form.
She said he got the shape-shifting ability from his Native American ancestors
and that he was, like their coyote of legend, a bit of a trickster. And then
she said—"
"Showed us
pictures?" Kyrie asked, as her mouth caught up with her brain in horrified
wonder.
"Oh yes. She
called him in to missing persons and officer Bob and I and our one female
officer, Cindy all went along to take her statement and see if she had any
pictures of the deceased. Because if it wasn't him, we didn't want to put her
through identifying the body. Cindy came along on the principle that the lady
might need a female shoulder to cry on."
"And?"
"And she
took out the pictures and showed them to us. And the other two looked at each
other and then at me as though they thought the poor lady was totally out of
her mind with shock and all that. Which she probably was, of course. But still.
. ."
"But
still, he was a coyote. And she knew. And didn't mind."
"Mind?
She was positively gleeful. Very sorry none of their six children inherited the
characteristic."
"Children."
Kyrie was beyond astonishment. That a shifter could secure all these things
that she thought were out of her reach because she was a shifter felt
absolutely baffling.
"They
live in Arizona," Rafiel said. "Where Bill and his wife lived till about
a year ago, when they drove through town and stopped at the Athens for
breakfast and all of a sudden realized they'd never felt so at home anywhere.
So they decided to sell the place in Arizona and buy a house here. Ever since
then, Bill went into the Athens for his morning breakfast after roaming the
neighborhood as a coyote."
"Well, at
least no one would notice a coyote. Not in Colorado."
"Right.
Lions and panthers are something else."
"And
dragons."
"Yes."
She could hear
him take a deep breath.
"So, we
know that the victim was definitely a shifter."
Shifter.
Victim. The back of the Athens. The beetles. Kyrie desperately wanted to go to
bed, but she felt she should tell Rafiel. After all, he was a police officer.
He would know what to do about it, right?
"There is
more," she said.
"More
about the victim?"
"More. .
. another victim."
"What?"
"I was. .
. I forgot I parked my car up-front," she said. "Because of the
broken window. So I went into the parking lot and there were. . . They were
beetles. That type of shiny rain forest type beetle that they make jewelry out
of?"
"Someone
made jewelry out of beetles?"
"No. It
would take a very big person to wear those as jewelry. They were six or seven
feet long and at least five feet across, and shiny. . ."
"Are you
sure you didn't dream this?"
"No, I
absolutely am not sure. But I think they were there. They were huge and green
blue and they were dragging something. A corpse. I think it was a corpse
because I could smell the blood."
"A
corpse? In the parking lot of the Athens? Another corpse?"
"I didn't
see it. It was just something—a bundle—they were carrying. And it smelled like
blood."
"Are you
sure this is not a dream you were having when I woke you up with my phone
call?"
"Quite."
Kyrie looked towards her still made bed. "Very much so. I haven't gone to
bed yet."
"Fine,"
he sounded, for some reason exasperated. "Fine. This is just fine. I will
go to the Athens and check."
"Take. .
. something. They might be dangerous."
"Oh, I wouldn't
worry," he said, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "I have my
regulation bug spray can."
She had a
feeling he didn't believe her, and she couldn't really blame him because she
wasn't a hundred percent sure she believed herself. "Right," she
said. "And, oh, remember you wanted to know about the dust on the floor of
my porch. There is dust. It's bright green."
"Lovely,"
he said. "I'll be there. Right after I check the parking lot of the
Athens."
* * *
Tom hurt. That
was his first realization, his first awareness that he was alive. The back of
his head hurt like someone had tried to saw it open, and the pain radiated
around the side of his head and it seemed to him as though it made his teeth
vibrate. An effect not improved by a twisted rag, which was inserted between
his teeth and tied viciously tight behind his head. His legs and arms were tied
too, he realized, as he squirmed around, trying to get into a better position.
It felt like there was a band of something around his knees, and one around his
ankles. Very tightly tied.
With his eyes
closed, trying to remember where he was and why, he smelled old car oil and
dust and the mildew of long-unoccupied places. His face rested on concrete, but
part of it felt slick.
The gas
station. He must be in the gas station he was passing when. . . When someone
had hit him on the back of the head. So. Fine. Shaking, he opened his eyes a
sliver. And confirmed that he was lying in a vast space, on a concrete floor
irregularly stained with oil or other car-fluids. This must have been a service
station at some point. Light was dim, coming through glass squares atop huge,
closed doors that took up the front of the building.
He looked
around, but his eyes felt as if they couldn't quite focus. And he wondered if
he'd been attacked by some random local hooligans, who had felt an irresistible
craving for his leather jacket and the kid's dragon backpack, which no longer
appeared to be anywhere near. Or if it was the triad again.
Through the
fogs of his mind, he remembered that the white car parked by the road side had
been the same make and model as the one that had turned around while he was
shifting before. Had they seen him? Had they followed him? Along the highway?
If they'd seen him follow the highway, it wouldn't be hard to calculate that he
would stop in Las Vegas, New Mexico. It wouldn't have been hard to figure out,
either, that he'd land and shift some distance from town.
It couldn't
have been hard to find a place to lay in ambush for him.
In the next
minute, there was a sound of high censure, in some form of Chinese. Oh, bloody
hell. And then, out of a darker corner of the warehouse they came, all three of
them. Tom had run into them a couple of times, before the time they'd ambushed
him in his apartment.
He'd privately
nicknamed them Crest Dragon, Two Dragons and The Other One. And his opinion
that their intelligence and their viciousness were inversely proportional did
nothing to make him feel better right now. The only good thing, he thought, as
they advanced, speaking fast Chinese at him as though he should understand it,
was that they were in human form and not dragons.
As usual Crest
Dragon—in his human form a young man with hair so well groomed Tom had wondered
if it was a wig—took the lead, walking in front of the other two, who flanked
him, left and right. Crest Dragon was waving the backpack around, and shouting
something in Chinese.
Truth was,
even without having any idea what the high complaints in Chinese were, Tom
understood the gist of the matter completely. And the gist of the matter was
that the Pearl of Heaven hadn't been in the backpack.
Exactly what
kind of an idiot did they think he was? He glared at them. And how stupid were
they, really? Did they think they would not feel. . . it, if it were in that
backpack. Tom remembered holding it, remembered the feeling of power and
strength and calm and sanity flowing from it. He could feel across miles, and
he was sure so would they be able to, if he hadn't taken extraordinary
precautions in hiding it. And they'd thought he'd carry it in a back pack?
He glared at
them, which was harder to do than it should be, because his eyes seemed to want
to focus in different directions. How hard had they hit him on the head? And
did they realize how hungry he was?
Crest Dragon
came closer, waving his arms in theatrical exasperation. Then he flung the
backpack—with force, across the building, grabbed Tom by the front of the
t-shirt and, lifting him off the ground, punched him hard on the face.
Tom screamed.
The pain radiated from his nose to match the pain on the back of his head, but
sharper and sudden, edged around with blood and a feeling that his nose had
broken. His vision blurred. If not for the rag in his mouth, he'd have bit his
tongue.
Another punch
came, immediately after. And he screamed again. He tasted blood and didn't know
if it was running from the back of his nose, or from his mouth. And it didn't
matter. Pain after pain came. He was vaguely aware of being kicked, punched and
hit with something—he wasn't sure what.
On the floor,
curling into a tight ball, he endured each sharp pain as it came, and screamed
as loud as he could. In the back of his mind, words ran, words so completely
calm and composed that he couldn't think they were his. But the thoughts
couldn't have belonged to anyone else. And they made sense.
One was: Scream.
Stoicism is for fools. Another, just as sudden, as complete, was: Only
idiots inflict pain for pain's sake. And the third, very clear, very sharp,
was: I could shift. I could eat them.
It was the
third thought that caused him to scream louder than the pain. And the word he
would scream, if his mouth hadn't been so firmly gagged, would have been,
"No."
Oh, he could
shift. He could undoubtedly shift. And the binds on his limbs would break away
with the force of the shifting, the greater strength and size of the dragon. Of
that he had no doubt.
It was even
possible that he could defeat all three of them, even if they too shifted. They
were not swift of mind and they always had trouble coordinating attacks.
But—and this was a huge but—he wasn't absolutely sure he could prevail. Not as
tired and weak as he felt.
And then,
worse of all, the dragon was very hungry. Starving. Ravenous. The dragon wanted
food. Protein. And Tom didn't think he could live with himself if he succeeded
in eating another human being. Or even one of these three fools.
A foot—he
thought—crashed against his face. It felt like his forehead exploded. Blood
flowed down, making him close his eyes.
He screamed
"No," as much at the dragon within as at the pain.
* * *
Kyrie had just
fallen asleep when she heard something. At first it was a little sound. Like. .
. something scraping.
The sound, in
itself almost imperceptible, intruded into her dreams, where she dreamed of
mice, nibbling on cardboard. In her dream, she was in the back hallway of the
Athens, and she opened the back door to the parking lot to find thousands of
mice nibbling on large piles of cardboard boxes.
As she stood
there, paralyzed, the nibbling grew louder, and louder, and then the mice
swarmed all over her, thousands of little paws all over her, insinuating
themselves under her nightshirt, crawling up her belly, tangling in her hair.
She woke up
and sat up in bed. No mice. But she'd been sleeping uncovered, on top of the
bed, and there was a breeze coming in around the door to the bedroom, blowing
with enough force to ruffle her nightshirt and give her silly dreams.
Kyrie looked
at the clock on her dresser. Seven a.m. She should be asleep. She still had
time to sleep. Turning her pillow over, she lay back down. And realized she
could still hear the sound of mice nibbling on cardboard. She blinked. She was
awake. She was sure of that. So why were mice. . .?
And why did it
feel like her head swam? She felt dizzy, as if she were. . . anaesthetized?
Drugged? Slow?
She looked at
the shaft of light coming from the little window above her bed. Was that green
powder dancing in the light? Was she dreaming it? And she still felt dizzy, as
if her head wasn't quite attached to her body.
Getting out of
bed, as silently as she could manage, she opened her bedroom door. The living
room was empty and everything looked undisturbed. Definitely no mice. But she
could still hear the crunching, shredding sounds from . . . The kitchen.
Even more
cautiously, feeling pretty stupid for moving around her own house as if it were
some sort of secret dungeon, she crept down the hallway towards the kitchen.
But before she got there, the green glimmer in the air became obvious. It was
no more than a glimmer, she thought, a soft shine, like. . . A cloud of green
dust. Green dust in the air. Green dust on the corpses. Green dust covering her
back porch the day that Tom claimed he had been attacked by dragons.
And she was
lightheaded and growing dizzy. As if she were being doped.
Had they been
dragons? Rafiel had said the powder was of insect origin, but was it? They
didn't even know what dragons were—exactly. Other than mythical beasts, of
course. And she remembered the beetles in the parking lot of the Athens. It
could be those.
She stood
there, for a moment, in the hallway of her own house, feeling her head swim.
She stared at the green dust, listening to what sounded like an attempt to
break through the door—if the thing trying to break through were armed with
claws and pincers.
Only, the
attempt couldn't be very serious, could it? It was a hollow core door. How hard
could it be to break it down? No, the purpose was to put the green powder into
the house first, wasn't it. And why would you do that?
She thought of
the victim in the parking lot of the Athens, covered in the green powder. And
then she thought of Tom and Keith, clearly high as kites.
Yes, Tom had
seemed to do most of the damage she'd found in the sunroom. Yes, their response
to the attack hadn't been the most effective. But they had been high as kites.
What if they had been high as kites because of the green dust?
What if it
that was what was causing her head to swim?
In a moment,
she was sure of it. She remembered Tom's casual greeting of Keith when he'd
stopped for the key. Friends? Perhaps, of a sort, the friendly acquaintance
sort where you trust each other with a key in case you're locked out. Or where
you might exchange greetings in the hall. Perhaps the kind where you go in
search of your acquaintance when you hear a murder has taken place at their job
site. Not the type of friendship, though, where you go to someone's house in
order to share a drug with your friend.
Kyrie retraced
her steps down the hallway, quickly. Why, oh, why hadn't she allowed herself to
be so afraid of bird-flu that she bought a couple of surgical masks? In the
event, right now, all she could do was improvise.
She opened the
door to the linen cupboard and got a washcloth, which she tied over her mouth
and nose, careful to cover them as much as possible. Then she retreated
further, into the living room where she grabbed the umbrella she had bought for
what she thought was a fabulous price when she first moved to Colorado. As her
year's worth of letting the umbrella sit by the front door had proven, the
price hadn't been quite so fabulous as she then thought. Never mind. It would
be of use now.
She grabbed
the umbrella by the solid wooden handle that had so impressed her when she
bought the thing and wielded it like a samurai sword.
Just in time.
From the kitchen came the sound of the door breaking down and then a dry
shuffle, shuffle, shuffle, as of chitinous legs moving over the linoleum of the
kitchen. She heard her chair being dragged, the table overturned. And she heard
the thing shuffle closer, towards the hallway. At the entrance to the hallway
it stopped, and, in a series of dry scrapings, it sent forth another cloud of
glowing green powder. From the other side of the house came the sound of the
door falling down. The front door. Wouldn't the neighbors see it? And who would
believe it? They could see it all day long. They'd think they were going crazy
and not tell anyone about it.
Kyrie put her
back against the hallway wall, as a cloud of green powder came from the living
room side, too.
She prepared
to sell her life dearly.
* * *
Tom woke up
choking. A taste of blood in his mouth, and his nose felt wholly obstructed. He
coughed, and it seemed to help, clearing both mouth and nose. But he was thirsty
and he was still lying, twisted, on the floor of the old service station. And
his mouth was still gagged.
"Are you
going to talk or not?" Crest Dragon asked. He stood directly in front of
Tom, hands on hips. "Are you going to tell us where you hid it, or will we
have to hurt you again?"
Tom blinked.
He opened his mouth, and screamed, because that was all he could do. With a gag
in his mouth, it was very hard to tell the idiots he had a gag in his mouth.
Two Dragons
screamed something oriental and menacing in response to his scream, and struck
a pseudo-karate position he had probably learned from movies. He came running
towards Tom and Tom closed his eyes, fairly sure they were going to hit his
nose again.
But before Two
Dragons got to him, someone yelled. Other Dragon? Tom opened one eye. It was
indeed Other Dragon. The one with the Chinese character tattooed on his
forehead. He spoke rapidly, pointing at Tom. And he had one arm in front of Two
Dragons, who looked confused. Crest Dragon looked vexed. He turned towards Two
Dragons. "You didn't remove the gag? I told you to remove the gag,"
he said, in rapid English, and threw a punch at Two Dragons who avoided it by
ducking under it.
He didn't tell
Crest Dragon, obviously the head of this outfit, that he too could easily have
seen that Tom was gagged. Instead, he untied the gag at the back of Tom's head,
his fingers scraping at Tom's scalp and tangling in Tom's hair as he did it.
As the gag
fell away, Tom opened and closed his mouth, hoping his jaw wasn't dislocated.
It hurt as if it were, but that was probably only the result of having his
mouth tied like that for hours, and not being able to properly close his mouth.
"Now,"
Crest Dragon said, and smiled, graciously, looking much like some sort of
society hostess. "Now, will you tell us where you hid it?"
Tom judged his
chances. What he needed most—what he wanted more than anything—beyond the inner
dragon's wish to tear these goons apart and use them as a protein source, was
water. Liquid.
He looked at
Crest Dragon and, in a voice he didn't need to make any raspier, he managed,
"Thirsty. Very. Thirsty."
Crest Dragon
looked disgusted, and for just a moment Tom thought they were going to resume
beating him. He turned around to the other two.
"You know
they said we shouldn't hurt him to where he couldn't talk," Other Dragon
said. "You know he has to be thirsty."
How long had
it been since he'd been thrown here? It seemed like forever. And he hadn't
drunk anything before. Tom closed his eyes, as his captors' argument progressed
into whatever form of Chinese they talked, Mandarin or Cantonese or whatever.
Other Dragon
had said they shouldn't hurt him to the point where he couldn't talk. Tom had
realized, sometime in the last few days, that stealing the Pearl of Heaven had
been a grievous mistake. Oh, he remembered it from when he was a kid, in his
father's house. He remembered some old Chinese guy showing it to Edward Ormson
at his home office.
Hidden around
the corner, the then very young Tom had seen the Pearl and felt it. He'd felt
the radiance of it penetrating to the core of his being. Since he'd later come
to realize that it was a. . . cultic object of dragon shifters, he supposed
that the fact that it resonated with him, even then, must mean he'd already been
a dragon. It wasn't a late-caught affliction, but something he'd had all his
life and only became active in adolescence.
Years later,
he'd felt the call of the Pearl and he'd slithered, among those other dragons,
so different from himself, to a meeting, where he'd seen the Great Sky Dragon.
And the Pearl. He hadn't understood almost anything of the meeting. But he'd
seen the guy who had the Pearl shift back into his normal form. And he'd
followed him to an unassuming little restaurant. Where he'd stolen the Pearl.
Oh, the
reasons he'd stolen it seemed valid at the time. He'd thought since this was
used by shifters, since it gave forth a feeling of safety and calm, it must be
something that helped control shifts. And perhaps it was. At least, since he'd
had it, Tom had been able to stop his drug taking. Gradually, but he'd stopped
it. And the withdrawal effects he'd expected from heroin—all the horrible
vomiting and cramps he'd heard about, had never materialized. Or not to any
degree worth talking about. It hadn't been much more than a stomach flu. So
perhaps the Pearl had helped.
Only then the
triad had picked up the scent, and Tom had found that unless the Pearl were
kept submerged in water, every dragon within miles of it could follow it.
He didn't even
know how many dragons there were around. But he knew that there were enough
that they'd tracked him. They'd tracked him all the way to Colorado, tracked
him to Goldport. . . And he had to leave the Pearl immersed in water, which
meant he, himself, couldn't use it.
So, if he
couldn't use it, he might as well give it back. Only he couldn't give it back,
because he'd seen enough of the dragon triad, enough of the ruthless way in
which they disposed of those who crossed them.
They were so
mad at him that these—admittedly low level—thugs had pretended to forget to
remove his gag and had proceed to beat hell out of him. And no, he wasn't so
stupid he would believe that they'd actually forgotten to remove it. No. They
hated him. They had it in for him. So. . . The minute he told them where the
Pearl was, the moment one of them verified it, got his hands on it and phoned
the others back to tell them where it was, he was a dead man.
And Tom didn't
want to die. Not yet. So many times over the last few years, he'd thought he
would be better off dead.
He didn't know
what was different now, to be honest. He still didn't have a chance with Kyrie.
Kyrie was probably, even now, snuggling with her lion-policeman.
But, damn it
all, Tom felt a sting to his pride, a sting to what he retained as his sense of
self, to think that if he died now, Kyrie would only think of him as a fuck up,
as a junkie so far out of control that he couldn't keep from getting high in
her house—even if he used her drugs for it.
He took a deep
breath. He wanted to live. He wanted to know why she kept drugs. He wanted.. .
. He wanted Kyrie, and a house, roses and everyday paper delivery.
He wanted the
normalcy that had never been his.
A hand lifted
him roughly, and he opened his eyes, bracing for a hit. But instead, he found
Two dragons pressing the neck of a water bottle against his lips.
Tom drunk
gratefully, as if the water had been the breath of life.
As his mouth
and nose became hydrated, the smell of the other three became more obvious.
There was some sort of cologne, cheap and probably bought in gallon bottles,
and the smell of the masses of product that Crest Dragon had slathered on his
hair.
But above it,
stronger than all of that, was the smell of living flesh. "No," Tom
said. It was all he could tell the inner dragon, who was slavering at the
thought of eating these fools.
* * *
Edward Ormson
walked along the street, too stunned to even hail a cab from the two or three
that drove by. This was all very bewildering. He'd fallen asleep, lost a whole
day. And he felt cramped and achy from sleeping sitting up.
And he still
couldn't understand what had made the girl run. In fact, he had no idea at all.
He frowned. It
didn't make any sense. What did she know? And who was she, really? She said she
barely knew Tom. She said that they'd just worked side by side for about six
months.
But there was
something else, there. Something to the way she talked about him, to the
silences, to what she didn't say.
Oh, Edward had
always known that Tom could be very charming to women. In fact, it seemed to
him that women tended to like rogues and fools and Tom had a strong component
of both, so it shouldn't surprise Edward that women liked his errant son. Even
when Tom was little, just toddling around the place, the cook, Mrs. Lopez had
been quite smitten with him. It was all they could do to keep her from feeding
him on cookies and cake constantly. And Tom took advantage of it, of course.
He'd been all smiles to the woman, even when he threw tantrums at his parents.
And yet, Kyrie
Smith didn't seem to Ormson as the sort of woman who would be attracted to men
who were trouble. No. Despite her exotic features and odd hairdo, she'd come
across as capable, self-contained, controlled.
So, why did
she seem so protective of Tom? Was it possible that for once in his life, just
once, Tom had managed to attract someone in more than a superficial way? Was it
possible that for once in his life Tom had a real relationship going? Or did
she know something about the Pearl of Heaven itself?
For Tom to
steal from the triad seemed like the stupidest form of madness, the last loss
of grip on reality that the boy could have come to. But what if this were a
cunning plan, hatched by someone with better organizational skills than Tom's?
What if Kyrie was behind it? What if she had something in mind for the Pearl?
Edward needed
to know more. That's all there was to it. He needed to know more about this
whole thing before they could expect him to find Tom and force the boy to give
the Pearl back.
He hailed a
cab. He'd go back to the restaurant in whose parking lot he'd been let out, and
he'd go find out exactly what this was all about. He'd worked for triad members
now and then. He was, after all, a criminal defense lawyer.
It had started
with pro bono cases, when he'd been asked to represent indigent clients. One of
them was associated with the triads somehow, and that had brought him the triad
business.
He remembered
how shocked he'd been when he'd first realized that some members of the triad
of the Dragon—the ones he dealt with—were shape-shifters, capable of shifting
into dragons. But he had never expected that this would somehow make Tom into a
dragon. And he was still not sure how that could have happened. Nor was he sure
how Tom could have got involved with the group again after he left his father's
house.
But he knew he
had to stop it. Somehow. And soon. He had to get back home to New York.
* * *
Beetles.
Definitely beetles. There was no other name for it. Shiny green carapaces and
pincers. Advancing towards Kyrie, one from either end of the hallway. And they
hissed. Or at least, it wasn't a proper hiss. Not like a cat's hiss, or
anything. More like. . .
More like a
kettle left too long on the fire. Or more like the release of hydraulic
pressure from a train as it stops. That type of hiss.
One hissed,
then the other hissed. They were communicating. They were communicating as they
hunted her, as one approached from each side and they contrived to capture her
in the middle, Kyrie thought.
This wouldn't
do. This couldn't do. If she let them continue to advance, she'd find herself
impaled by those two pincer-ended arms that kept advancing towards her,
advancing inexorably in front of the shiny blue carapace, even while the
creatures behind the pincers hissed at each other.
She imagined
the hiss saying "There she is, we've got her cornered."
Fear and an
odd sort of anger mixed in her. This was her house. This was the only house
that had ever been truly hers. All those years, growing up, she'd gone from
house to house, from foster home to foster home, never having a place of her
own, never having a say in even something as little as the color of her
bedspread or the positioning of an armchair.
This house,
tiny as it was, was the first place that had belonged to her alone. Well, that
she'd been sole renter of, at any rate. Where, if she so wished, she could put
the armchair on the roof, and it would stay there, because this was her space.
And these
things, these. . . creatures. . . had violated it. Worse. They'd come into her
house before, and they'd made Tom . . . high. They'd made Tom destroy part of
her house. They'd given her an entirely wrong impression about Tom.
Not that they
could be the ones who gave her the impression that Tom was an addict—or an ex
drug addict. But they, as they were, had given her the impression that Tom
didn't care about being a guest in her house, that he'd violated her
hospitality. And because of them, she'd let Tom go—no—encouraged Tom to go, out
there, somewhere, with no protection.
For all she
knew, he was already dead. His own father was looking for him for the dragon
triad. And she had kicked him out. Because of these things.
Anger boiled
through her, together with a not unreasonable fear that there was no way out of
this predicament and that she was going to end up as dead as that corpse they
had rolled about in the parking lot of the Athens a few hours ago.
She heard a
scream tear through her throat, and it seemed to her that the more advanced
beetle—the one coming from the kitchen—stopped.
It seemed to
Kyrie too that—though there was nothing on the beetle, anywhere, that could
properly be called an expression—the beetle looked like it had just realized it
was in deep trouble. Perhaps it was the thing's vague, confused attempt at
skittering backwards.
And then Kyrie
jumped forward. There was no use at all attacking the pincers, so she vaulted
over them. She used to be quite good at gymnastics in middle school. In fact,
for a brief period of time, she'd thought that she was going to be a gymnast.
But the foster family she was with didn't have the time to drive her to the
extra practices.
Yet, just
enough skill remained to allow her to vault over the pincers, and towards the
monstrous head.
Blindly, more
by instinct than anything else, Kyrie stabbed at the thing where the head
carapace met the body carapace. She stabbed the umbrella down hard and was
rewarded with a satisfyingly squishy sound, a spray of liquid upwards, and a
shriek that was part steam release and part the sound of a car's valves going
seriously wrong.
From the other
beetle came a sound of high distress, and it advanced. But its companion's
body—dead?—blocked its way, and Kyrie jumped down from the carapace, on the
other side, ran through her kitchen and out through her ruined back porch.
In her tiny
backyard garden, she realized in her human form, she could never get enough of
a running standard to jump over the six foot fence.
But, as a
panther. . .
She had never
cavalierly shifted. Certainly never during the day. And yet, she was so full of
fear and anger, of adrenalin and the need to fight or fly, that it seemed the
easiest thing in the world. She willed herself into cat form and, suddenly, a black
panther was rearing and taking a jumping leap at the fence. She cleared it with
some space, just before she heard a sound behind her. It was an odd hissing,
and a sound like. . . wings?
She had an odd
feeling that these beetles could fly.
* * *
"Will you
talk?" Crest Dragon asked.
Tom shook his
head. There had been more. . . beatings. At least he supposed they would call
it beatings. More accurate would be brutalizing to within an inch of his life.
Tom knew he
would heal. The problem was that he suspected so did his captors. And that they
were being more unrestrained with him than they would be with practically
anyone else.
His defense
right now was to look more confused than he felt, to look more tired than he
felt. He shook his head and mumbled something that he hoped passed for a
creditable wish to speak.
Two Dragons
said something in their language that, for all it was unintelligible, was still
clearly scathing. Crest Dragon answered curtly and sharply. They both turned to
glare at Other Dragon who shook his head, said something, then shrugged. He
disappeared into a corner, where they seemed to have piled up some bags and
other effects.
He returned,
moments later, with. . . Tom blinked, unable to believe his eyes. But Other
Dragon was definitely holding a syringe. A huge syringe. Tom frowned at it. It
looked just a little smaller than those sold as basters at stores. He'd once
been tempted to buy one for about two minutes until he realized the amount of
meat he could actually afford didn't ever require external basting, much less
internal.
Now he blinked
at the syringe, and looked up at Other Dragon in some puzzlement. What the hell
was that? What did they think they were doing? What did they want to put into
him? Truth serum? Or marinade? Did they think he would be all the better for a
touch of garlic and a bit of vinegar?
Other Dragon
seemed rather puzzled as to what he should be doing, too. Twice he turned
around to ask something in Chinese. Twice he was told off sharply—or so it
seemed—also in Chinese.
At last he
sighed, and walked up to Tom, and held the hypodermic in front of Tom's face
and shouted something that sounded like a Samurai challenge. While Tom blinked,
puzzled, Crest Dragon said something from the back. Other Dragon turned. Then
looked again at Tom and smiled. A very odd smile, Tom thought. A smile of
enticement, of offer that would have made much more sense—as starving as Tom
felt—if he'd been holding a rare steak. He leaned in close to Tom and said,
"You want this, right?"
The syringe
was filled with a colorless liquid. It could be. . . anything. And Tom
realized, suddenly, with something like a shock, that he very much did not want
it, whatever it was. Perhaps it was the Pearl of Heaven that had eased his way
up from the pit he'd dug himself into, but he could remember the days he was
using. It had seemed so simple then. It had seemed to him that he was sparing
himself pain and thought, both.
A life that
was too bizarre, too complex—his feelings for the home he'd lost, his wandering
existence, and the dragon he could become suddenly, unexpectedly— had been
suddenly simplified. He'd sometimes, before the drugs, forgotten what he'd done
as a dragon, but when he'd started using, it had made it that much easier. He
could either forget or pretend it was all part of a bad trip.
He didn't have
to believe—in the unblinking light of day, he didn't have to believe that he
had no control over the beast. And he didn't have to see that the beast
existed. He didn't even have to be believe himself alone—expelled from the only
home he had ever known.
No—the drugs
had blurred his mind just enough to make him be able to pretend it was all a
dream—just a dream. That he was still sixteen and still at home. That he was
not a shape-shifter, a dangerous, uncertain creature.
He'd thought
he was fine. He'd . . . He frowned at the syringe, thinking. He'd thought he
was doing great. He'd anaesthetized himself into being able to bear his life.
Until he'd
woken up choking on his own vomit once too many times. Until he'd woken up, in
the morning, naked, under some underpass or beside some shelter, wondering what
the dragon had done in the night and why.
And then there
were the dreams. Lying asleep in daytime and dreaming of. . . eating someone.
Of chasing people down. Of. . . Oh, he was almost sure none of it had ever
happened. There would have been talk. News reports. Someone would have noticed.
But the dreams were there, and the dreams made him fear one day all control
would slip from the dragon and the dreams would become true.
And then there
had been the Pearl of Heaven. And the job. And. . . and Kyrie. Who was he to
judge her if she too chose to anesthesize herself, sometimes? She had helped
him when he needed it most. He wanted to remember that. And he wanted to
control the dragon. He wanted to know what he did, to know it was true. He
didn't want the slippery dream, again.
"I want
to own my own mind," he said, his raspy, low voice startling him. It
seemed to come from so far away. And the words were odd, too, formal, stilted,
not like himself at all. "I don't want drugs," he said in still-lower
voice.
Crest Dragon
said something that had the sound of profanity to it. And Other Dragon looked
back confused. It was left to Two Dragons, the brash, perhaps younger of them,
to step forward and say, "Well, then, if you don't talk, we'll have to
give you some."
Which, of
course, made perfect sense. But Tom couldn't talk. Because if he talked they
would kill him. But if he didn't talk, they would give him this stuff. Which,
of course, would make him talk.
He—who just
the night before had been looking desperately for a drug dealer—realized if he
were going to die, he would rather die sober. He'd rather know whatever there
was to know, experience what there was to experience, with a clean perception.
But then. . .
But then, and
there it was. If he told them they would kill him for sure. Possibly in a
painful way. If they gave him the drug. . . Perhaps they would leave him alone
while they went to verify he'd told them the truth. Okay, it was unlikely they
would leave him alone. But with these three geniuses it was possible. At any
rate, it would take them longer. . . They would have to get the words from
him—and Tom had no idea what this drug was, or if it would make him talk
quickly. Or at all. And then they would have to verify.
That would
take longer than if he told them the truth up front and they rushed off right
away to verify it. Or called someone in Goldport And that meant there would be
more time for something to happen. Something. . .
Two Dragons
was waiting. He had his hands on either side of his skinny waist, a dragon
tattoo shone on the back of each hand. "Well," he said, with a kind
of petulant sneer. "Are you going to tell us where the Pearl of Heaven
is?"
Tom grinned.
It made his lips hurt, as cracked as they were and with dried blood caked on
them, but he grinned anyway. He wished he could gather enough saliva to spit at
them, but of course, he couldn't. "Your grandfather's won-ton," he
said.
And, as they
held him down; as the needle went into his arm, he relished the look of
surprise—and confusion—on Two Dragon's face.
* * *
Paws on
concrete. The sidewalk—an alien word from her human mind, forced, unwilling, on
the panther, intruded. Sidewalk. People. People walking.
There were
screams. Mothers and terrified babies, hurling to the side of the street. A man
standing in front of her, gun cocked.
Kyrie's human
mind pulled the panther sideways. The bullet whistled by. The panther crouched
to leap. Kyrie tugged at the panther.
Trapped. The
panther's brain rushed to every nook and cranny, to every possible hiding
place, but she was trapped. There was nowhere she could go. No safety. No
jungle.
Smell of
trees, of green. Smell of moss and undergrowth.
Like a
passenger in a lurching car, Kyrie blinked, becoming aware that she was veering
off the street and towards the triangular block of land where the castle sat,
with its own little forest around it, surrounded by high black metal fence,
full of Victorian scrolls and rusting in spots.
Leaf mold on
paws. Trees rustling overhead. The pleasing sound of things scurrying along the
ground, in the soft vegetation. Screams behind her. People pointing through the
fence, screaming, yelling.
The panther
ran and Kyrie guided it as she could. Through the undergrowth, to the thick
clumps of vegetation. She told the panther they were being hunted. That
something bigger and meaner was after them. The panther crouched on its belly
and crept, belly to the grass, close to the ground, forward, forward, forward,
till it found itself all but hidden under the trees.
Kyrie had lost
sense of time. She didn't know how long she had been in the panther's mind—a
small foci of humanity, of sanity, within the beast. But she knew it had been
long, because she could feel pain along the panther's muscles, from holding the
position too long.
The panther
wanted to climb a tree, to watch from above. It did not like this cowering,
this submissive posture. And Kyrie couldn't hear any noise nearby. What
remained rational and sane of herself withing the panther thought that the
people had stayed at the fence, talking, whispering.
They would
call the police. Or the zoo. Or animal control. They wouldn't risk their lives
on this. No. The panther wanted to climb the nearest tree and Kyrie let it,
jumping so quickly up the trunk that Kyrie didn't detect any raised voices, any
excitement at seeing her.
The tree was
thick, and heavily covered in leaves. And it was around a corner from the front
of the house. This way she would see the animal control officers approaching
with their darts. Perhaps she could escape.
She wasn't so
stupid that she couldn't see the possibility for discovery, for being caught.
But she wouldn't think of it. She wouldn't think past trying to escape. She
thought, as fast as she could, as hard as she could. And she saw no way out of
this. Unless animal control officers missed her. She didn't imagine this
happening. She could picture them beating the garden, tree by tree, bush by
bush, looking for her.
The other
option, of course, was for her to shift. She blinked. It hadn't occurred to her
before. Of course, it would be humiliating. But being found naked in a public
garden had to be better than to be tranquilized as a panther, and become a
woman under sedation. She didn't know if that would happen—but it could.
But. . . But
if she were found naked in a public garden, and if her house were examined,
wouldn't she be committed? Or in some other way confined? Who would believe she
was okay when she'd left her house torn to bits behind and was now here in this
garden? At the very least they'd think she was on drugs. It wouldn't do at all.
* * *
Edward Ormson
waited for only one moment, in the shabby entrance of the Chinese restaurant.
He'd expected the oriental decor, and it was there, in a round, white paper
lantern concealing the light fixture on the ceiling, on the huge fan pinned to
the wall behind the cash register, in the dragon statue carved of some
improbable green stone or molded from glow-in-the-dark plastic, that stood
glowering on the counter by the register.
But the man
behind the register, though unmistakably Chinese, wore a grubby flannel shirt
and jeans and managed to look as much like the western red necks around him as
he could. And the TV hanging from the wall was on and blaring, showing the
scene of a tractor pull.
He was
drinking a beer, straight from the can. To the other side of the elaborate
oriental fan hung a calendar with a pinup standing in front of a huge truck.
Something about this—the irreverence, the western intrusions, stopped Edward
from his course, which was to ask about the Great Sky Dragon.
Perhaps the
creature had only left him in the parking lot because it was convenient. But
the name. . . Three Luck Dragon, while not unusual, seemed to speak of dragons,
and dragons. . .
He realized
he'd been standing there for a while in silence, and probably looking very
worried, as the man behind the counter swivelled around to look at him.
"How may
I help you?" he asked.
Edward took a
deep breath. Come on, worse came to worst, what would happen? He could always
tell the man that Great Sky Dragon was just the name of another restaurant,
couldn't he? That he'd got confused?
And besides,
if he didn't ask, what would happen? It wasn't as if Edward was going to figure
out where Tom was, much less manage to convince Tom on his own. And he had a
sneaky suspicion that if he tried to just forget the whole thing and go back to
New York, the creature would just come and pluck him out of his office again.
Or his house. There was only so much plate glass he was willing to replace.
All this was
thought quickly, while the man's dark eyes stared at him betraying just a
slight edge of discomfort, as if he were waiting, madly, to go back to his
tractor pull on TV.
"I was
looking for the Great Sky Dragon," Edward said.
"What?"
the man asked, eyes widening.
"I was
looking. . . I wondered if you could tell me where to find the Great Sky
Dragon," Edward said.
There was a
silence, as the man looked at him from head to toe, as if something about
Edward's appearance could have reassured him that this was something to do.
Slowly, the cashier's hand reached for a remote near the cash register, turned
the TV off.
Then he came
out from behind the counter and said, "You come with me."
Edward took a
deep breath. What had he got into? And what would it mean? Had he just managed
to startle a member of the dragon triad who had no idea who he was or what he
was doing? And if he had, would he presently be killed by people who didn't
even ask him why he wanted the Great Sky Dragon, or what he wanted of him.
He was led all
the way, past a bustling kitchen and, past a set of swinging doors, into a
grubby corridor stacked high with boxes.
At the very
back of the corridor, a door opened, and the cashier reached in, turned on the
light by tugging on a pull chain on the ceiling.
Light flooded
a room scarcely larger than a cubicle. There was a foldable table, open. An
immaculate white cloth covered it. And on the cloth was a mound of peas—some
shelled, some still in their pods. On the floor was a bucket, filled with empty
pods. Behind the table was a plastic orange chair.
"Wait
here," the cashier said. "Just wait."
Hesitantly,
afraid of what this might mean, Edward went in. The cashier closed the door
after him. Edward could hear the lock clicking home.
* * *
"I'll go
in and look for it," a voice Kyrie knew said.
"But I
wouldn't be too alarmed. It was probably just a large cat. I very much doubt it
was a panther. I haven't heard of any panthers having been lost by the zoo. And
panthers are not common here, you know," Rafiel Trall's voice went on, as
usual radiating self-confidence.
A babble of
voices answered him and, from the panther's perch atop the branch, Kyrie
gathered that the crowd out there were insulted that Rafiel thought they could
confuse a large house cat with a panther.
And yet, the
way Rafiel talked, that certainty that exuded from his words, was so convincing
that she could also hear the resistence running away. She could almost hear
people starting to doubt themselves.
"I'll go
in," Rafiel said. "With officer Bob. Just to be on the safe side,
please no one follow us. We'll do a thorough search. If we find it warranted,
we will then call animal control. Right now all this commotion is
premature."
The panther
heard them come into the garden. Wondered how long it would take them to find
it. Them. Officer Bob. Kyrie wondered what officer Bob would think if he found
her.
But Officer
Bob was looking one way, and Rafiel was looking the other. She could hear them
separate. She could hear officer Bob walking away. She could hear . . . She
could hear Rafiel following her trail here.
He followed it
so exactly that she started wondering if he was following the trail of broken
branches and footprints she'd doubtless left, or following her scent. She
remembered he seemed to be able to smell other shifters. To smell them out
better than she did, at any rate.
He came all
the way to the bottom of the tree, looked up at her, blinked, then smiled.
"Kyrie," he said.
His voice was
perfectly normal and human, and yet there seemed to be something to it, some
kind of harmonics that made the hair stand up at the back of her neck. Not
fright. She wasn't scared of him. It was something else.
For just a
moment, there was the feeling that the panther might jump down from the tree
and roll on him and. . . No.
Kyrie tried to
control the panther and had a feeling that the world flickered. And realized
she was a naked human, sitting on a branch of a tree in a most unusual
position. A position that gave a very interesting view to the man below.
She scrambled
to sit on the branch in the human way, and fought a desire to cover herself.
She could either hold on to the branch or she could cover herself. Between
modesty and a fall, modesty could not win.
"Yes,"
she said. Heat climbed up to her cheeks and she had a feeling she was blushing
from her belly button to her hair roots.
Yes, she was
sure she was blushing from the way Rafiel smiled—a broad smile that exuded
confidence and amusement.
But when he
spoke, it was still in a whisper. "There is this," he said, taking it
from his pants pocket and handing it up. "I stopped for just a moment when
I heard the report on the radio. I told Bob I needed to use the restroom and
let him radio we were taking care of it, while I went to a shop and bought
this. I'm sorry if it looks horrible, my concern was that it fit in my
pocket."
He handed up
what looked like a little wrinkled square of fabric. When Kyrie caught it, she
realized it was very light silk, the type that is designed to look wrinkled,
and that there was a lot more material than seemed to be.
Shaken out,
the fabric revealed a sheath dress. Kyrie decided it was safer to climb down
from the tree, first, and then put it on. With the dress draped over her
shoulders, she climbed down carefully, until, on the ground, she slipped the
dress on. Of course, she was still barefoot, but on a warm day, in Colorado, in
one of the old residential neighborhoods of Goldport, that was not exactly
unheard of.
"Go out
at the back," Rafiel said. "From what I could see when we approached,
the part where the garden borders on the alley doesn't have any bystanders. If
anyone sees you, tell them some thing about having come in to look for the
panther, but the police ordering you out. And now, go." As she started t
for the path, he pushed her towards another path, the other way. "No,
no," he said. "That way. If you go this way you will run into Bob and
Bob is likely to have his gun out and be on edge. I don't want you shot. Go.
I'll meet you at your house as soon as I can."
Her house.
With the bugs. Kyrie shivered. But there was nothing for it. She had to go
somewhere. At the very least, she had to go somewhere to get shoes.
* * *
Edward didn't
wait long. He didn't sit down. He didn't dare sit down. There was only one
chair, and it seemed to be in front of the table, with the peas on it.
Instead, he
stood, uncertainly, till the door opened, and a man came in. He looked. . .
Well, he looked like an average middle aged man, of Oriental origin, in Colorado.
He wore t-shirt and jeans, had a sprinkling of silver in his black hair, and,
in fact, looked so mundane, that Edward was sure there must be a mistake.
He opened his
mouth to say so. And stopped. There was something in the man's eyes—the man's
serious, dark eyes. They looked like he was doing something very difficult.
Something that might be life or death.
"Mr.
Ormson?" he said.
Edward Ormson
nodded, and his eyes widened. Was this the human form of the dragon he had seen
yesterday? He seemed so small, so. . . normal.
But in
Edward's mind was the image of that last night before he'd. . . asked Tom to
leave. He remembered looking out of the window of his bedroom, next to Tom's
room and seeing a green and gold dragon against the sky—majestic against the
sky. He remembered seeing the dragon go into Tom's bedroom. And he remembered.
. . He remembered running to see it, and finding only Tom, putting on his
bathrobe. He remembered the shock.
These
creatures could look like normal people. Perhaps. . .
"My name
is Lung," the man said, and then, as though catching something in Edward's
expression, he smiled. "And no, I am not him. But you could say I. . . ah.
. . know him." Lung stepped fully in the room, and seemed to about to sit
down in the plastic chair, when he realized that Edward didn't have anywhere to
sit.
"They
left you standing?" he asked. "I'm so sorry." He opened the door
and spoke sharply to someone back there, then stepped fully in. Moments later,
a young man, with long lanky hair almost covering his eyes came in and set down
a chair. Another one, swiftly, ducked in the wake of the first, to remove the
cloth and all the peas in it. As soon as he'd withdrawn the first one showed up
again, to spread another, clean, tablecloth on the table. And after that, yet
another one set a tray with a teapot and two tea cups on the table.
Lung gestured
towards the—blue, plastic—chair they'd brought in. "Please sit," he
said. "Might as well be comfortable, as we speak."
Edward sat on
the chair, and faced Lung across the table. "Tea?" Lung said, and
without waiting for an answer, filled Edward's cup, then his own. "Now. .
. may I ask why you were looking for. . . Him? His name is not normally spoken
so. . . casually."
Edward took a
deep breath. "How do you know my name?" he asked.
Lung smiled,
again. He picked up his cup, holding it with two hands, as if his palms were
cold and had to be warmed on the hot porcelain. "He told us. He told us he
brought you to town. That you were to. . . convince your son to speak."
"Ah,"
Edward said. "I don't know where to find my son," he said, picking up
his cup and taking a hurried sip that scalded his tongue. "I haven't seen
Tom in. . ."
Lung shook his
head. "I don't question his judgements. I wouldn't do to do such," he
said. He looked at Edward and raised his eyebrows just a little. "He says
you have been. . . useful to us in the past, so you know a little of. . . his
ways. And of us. Do you not?"
Edward
inclined his head. More than simple acknowledgment, but less than a nod.
"I have defended. . . People connected to him, before. I know about. .
." He thought about a way to put it that wouldn't seem too open or too
odd. "About the shape-shifting," he said at last.
Lung inclined
his head in turn. "But do you know about the other. . . about his other
powers?"
Edward raised
his eyebrows, said nothing.
Lung smiled.
"Ah, I won't bore you with ancient Oriental legends."
"Given
what I've seen, what I've felt; given that I was brought here by. . .
the—"
"Him."
"Him, I
don't think I would dismiss it all as just a legend."
"Perhaps
not," Lung said. "And yet the legend is just a legend, and, I
suspect, as filled with imagination and wild embellishments. What we know is
somewhat different. But. . . He is not like us. That we know. Or rather, he is
like us, but old, impossibly old."
"How
old?"
Lung shrugged.
"Thousands of years. Before. . . civilization. From the time of legends.
Who knows?" He drank his tea and poured a new cup. "What we do know
is this—he has powers. Perhaps because he is old, or perhaps, simply, because
he was born with more powers than us. I wouldn't tell you which. But whatever
powers he has, it is said that he can feel things—sense them. Perhaps it's less
premonition than simply having been around a lot and seeing how things tend to
work out." He inclined his head and looked into his tea cup as though
reading the future in its surface. "If he thought you should be here, then
he has his reasons."
"But I
can't find my son. I haven't seen my son in years. I didn't even know if he was
alive. The—He said that I was responsible for my son, but surely you must see.
. . I haven't seen him in years."
Lung looked
up, gave Edward an analyzing glance, then nodded. "As is, I think we have
it all in hand. We know where your son is. We have. . . Some of our employees
have got him. In a nearby city. And they're confident he will eventually tell
them what he did with the object he stole. We don't know why he thought
it necessary to get you, nor why he thought you should be here. But he
is not someone whose judgements I'd dream of disputing."
A silence,
long and fraught, descended, while Edward tried to figure out what he had just
been told, in that convoluted way. "Are you telling me I have to stay here,
but you're not sure why?" he asked.
* * *
The back alley
wasn't empty, but it was nearly empty. At least compared to the crowd that
surrounded the castle garden in the front. Here at the back, there were only
half a dozen people looking in, staring at the lush, green garden, spying,
presumably, for movement and fur.
There were two
boys, a young girl, of maybe fifteen, wearing jeans, a t-shirt and a ponytail
and holding a skateboard under her arm. The other three people looked like
transients. Street people. Men, and probably past fifty, though there was no
way to tell for sure.
Kyrie, still
under cover of thick greenery, wondered at the strange minds of these people
who would come and surround a place where they'd seen what they thought was a
jungle animal disappear. What kind of idiots, she asked herself, wanted to face
a panther, while unarmed and empty handed? She might be a shape-shifter but at
least, she wasn't so strange as this.
They were all
roughly disposed on either side of a broad gate which seemed to have rusted
partly open.
Kyrie could,
of course, just walk out and tell them what Rafiel had suggested—that she had
felt a sudden and overwhelming desire to look for the panther herself. But she
would prefer to find some way past them without having to speak. Remembering a
scene from a Western, long ago, she looked at the ground and found a large
rock. Picking it up, she weighed it carefully in her hand. Then she pulled
back, and flung the rock across greenery, till it fell with a thud at the corner
of the property.
Noise like
that was bound to make them look. They wouldn't be human if they didn't. In
fact, they all turned and stared, and Kyrie took the opportunity to rush
forward and out of the enclosure.
They turned
back to look at her, when she was in the alley, but she thought none of them
would be sure he had seen her in the garden, and started walking away towards
the main road and home.
"Hey,
Miss," a voice said behind her.
Kyrie turned
around.
"Are you
the one who owns the castle?" One of the homeless men asked.
She shook her
head and his friend who stood by him elbowed him on the side. "The woman
who owns the castle is much older, Mike."
She didn't
stay to hear their argument and instead hurried, home as fast as she could.
Once out of the immediate vicinity of the castle, everything was normal and no
one seemed unduly alarmed by the idea of a panther on the loose. So Kyrie
assumed that Rafiel wouldn't have too much of a problem convincing them that it
had been a collective hallucination.
Her house
looked. . . well, wrecked, the front door open, crooked on its hinges, the door
handle and lock missing. Inside, the green powder was everywhere underfoot and,
in the hallway, where she had confronted the creature, there was something that
looked like sparkling greenish nut shells. Looking closer, she realized they
were probably fragments or the beetle—struck off when she'd stabbed it with the
umbrella?
The umbrella
was still there, leaning against the wall. But the beetles had vanished.
* * *
Lung nodded,
then shrugged at Edward Ormson's question. "I don't pretend to know why he
wants you here, though I'm sure he has his reasons. However, you don't need
to stress too much in search of your son. As I said, he is. . . We have him.
And he will talk."
A cold shiver
ran up Edward's back at those words. They had Tom? "What do you mean by
having him? Do you. . . are you keeping him prisoner?"
Lung seemed puzzled
by Edward's question—or perhaps by the disapproval that Edward had tried to
keep from his voice, but which was still obvious. "He stole from us,"
he said. "Some of our men have captured him. They will find out where he
put the Pearl of Heaven one way or another."
One way or
another. Edward found his hand trembling. And that was stupid. All these years,
he'd gone through without knowing if Tom was dead or alive, or how he was
doing. He hadn't worried at all about him. Why should the thought that he was
being held prisoner by a dragon triad disturb him so much? Why should he care?
Oh, he could
hear in the way Lung said that Tom would tell them the truth eventually that
they probably weren't being pleasant with him. He doubted they were treating
him very well. But in his mind, with no control from him, was the image of Tom
on that last night. Barefoot, in a robe.
Edward had
thought. . . well, truth be told he couldn't even be very sure what he'd
thought. He'd seen the triad dragons in action often enough. He knew what they
could do. He'd seen them kill humans. . . devour humans. He'd seen the
ruthlessness of the beasts. Seeing his son become a dragon, himself, he'd
thought. . .
He'd thought
it was an infection and that Tom had caught it. He'd thought his worthless,
juvenile delinquent of a son had now become a mindless beast, who would devour.
. .
His throat
closed, remembering what he'd thought then. He didn't know if it was true or
not. He assumed not, since Tom wasn't a member of the triad and lacked their
protection. If he'd been making his way across the country devouring people,
he'd have been discovered by now. He would have been killed by now. So Edward
was forced to admit that his son must have some form of self control. Well.
Clearly he had to have some form of self control if he'd not given in to
whatever persuasion they were using to make him talk.
He looked up
at Lung, who was staring at him, obviously baffled by his reactions. "What
are you doing to him?" he asked. In his mind, he saw Tom, that last night
he'd seen him. He saw Tom who looked far more tired and confused than he
normally was. He hadn't even attempted to fight it. He'd opened his hands palm
up to show he wasn't armed—as if he could be, having just shifted from a
dragon. He'd tried to talk, but he didn't make any sense. Something about comic
books.
These many
years later, Edward frowned, trying to figure out what comic books had to do
with the whole thing. Back then he'd found the whole nonsense talk even
scarier, as though Tom had lost what little rationality he had with his
transformation. And he'd got his gun from his home office desk and ordered Tom
out of the house.
Tom had gone,
too. And, somewhat to Edward's surprise, he hadn't made any effort to get back
in.
"I
thought you hadn't seen him for years?" Lung asked. "That you didn't
care what happened to him?"
"I don't.
Or at least. . ." But Edward had to admit that this last recollection he
had of Tom as a sixteen year old youth in a white robe, and looking quite lost
was an illusion. A sentimental illusion. It was no more real, no more a
representation of their relationship than the picture of Tom in the hospital,
two days old, with a funny hat on and his legs curled towards each.
It was a
pretty picture and one that, as a father, he should have cherished forever. But
Tom had been very far from living up to the picture of the ideal son. And in
the same way, at least five years had passed since Tom had been that boy of
sixteen, and even if Edward had done him an injustice then—had Edward done him
an injustice then?—the man he was now would have only the vaguest resemblance
to that boy.
Back then, Tom
hadn't known anything but his relatively sheltered existence. And though he'd
been popular and had the kind of friends who had got him in all kinds of
trouble, his friends were like him, privileged. Well taken care of.
Suddenly
Edward realized where his uneasiness was coming from about Tom and who Tom was,
and what he had assumed about Tom for so many years. "It's his girlfriend,
Kyrie," he said.
"Girlfriend?"
Lung asked.
"Yes. . .
or at least, I think she is. She said they were just co-workers, but there is
something more there. She seems to care for him. She was furious at me for. . .
I think she realized I was working for you, and she was furious at me."
"The
panther girl?" Lung asked.
"I'm
sorry?" Edward asked confused.
Lung smiled.
"The girl who was with him two nights ago. The one who shifts into a
panther."
"She. .
." Edward's mind was filled with the image of the attractive girl shifting,
shifting into something dark and feline. He could imagine it all too well.
There had been that kind of easy, gliding grace in her steps.
"Oh, you
didn't know. Yes, she is a shifter. But I never knew she was his
girlfriend."
"I just
thought. . ." Perhaps what had bound them was their ability to shift
shapes? But what would a dragon want with a panther? The images in Edward's
mind were very disturbing and he found himself embarrassed and blushing.
"There are other shifter shapes? Other than dragons?"
Lung smiled.
"Come, Mr. Ormson, you're not stupid. Your own legends talk about other
shifters. . . werewolves, isn't it? And were tigers too? And the legends of
other lands speak of many and different animals?"
Edward felt
his mouth dry. "This has been going on all along? People shift, like
that." He made a vague gesture supposed to show the ease of the shifting.
"And they. . ." he waved his hand.
"We don't
know for sure," Lung said, seriously. "He who brought you here says
there have always been shifters, and as you know he's not the sort of. . .
person, whose word one should doubt. He is also, not, unfortunately, someone
one can question or badger for details. He says that there have always been
shifters. But that shifters are increasing."
"Increasing?"
"There
are more of them."
"How? Is
it. . . a bite?" He'd thought that back then. He remembered being afraid
that Tom would bite him. He remembered having gone through the entire house,
trying to think whether he'd touched anything Tom had touched. Tom's clothes,
his tooth brush had all been consigned to the trash at his order.
The man
laughed. "No, Mister Ormson. It is. . . genetic," he pronounced the
word as if to display his knowledge of such modern concepts.
Edward felt
shocked, not because the man knew the word—he spoke without an accent—but at
the idea that such a thing could be genetic. "But there is no one in our
family. . ."
Lung shrugged.
"In our families, which intermarry with each other quite often, even then
only one child in four, if that many, will have the characteristic. In other
families, in the world at large, who knows? It could be not one in twenty
generations." He frowned. "I have often wondered if it is perhaps
that people travel more now, and meet people from other lands, carrying the
same rare gene. And if that's the only reason there's been an increase.
Although. . ." He frowned. "I don't know that this is entirely
natural—or explainable by simple laws of science. We seem to heal quicker than
normal people and unless we are killed in certain, particular ways—traditional
ways like beheading, or burning, or destroying the heart, or with silver—we're
nearly impossible to kill. And we seem to live. . . longer than other people. I
don't know how long. Himself is the oldest among our kind. I've never enquired
as to those of other kinds and other lands."
Edward
swallowed. That gun, that night, wouldn't have killed Tom anyway. Good thing he
hadn't fired it. It would be horrible to have to live with Tom after firing on
him.
But beyond
that, something else was troubling him. The thought that Tom had received that
curse from him—and presumably from his mother—and yet, he'd thrown him out. And
now. . . "What will you do to Tom, if he tells you where the Pearl
is?" he asked.
"He will
no longer be. . . a problem," Lung said.
Edward nodded
feeling relief. So, they'd let Tom go. "Pardon me if I'm asking too much.
You don't need to tell me. I know something of the working of the triads in
this country and I know the Dragon Triad is not that very much different, but I
must ask. . . Why the Pearl? You're the only ones who have it, right? It was
shown to me, years ago, in my apartment, and I remember thinking it was very
pretty. But I thought it was a symbol."
Lung smiled, a
smile that seemed to have too many teeth and to slide, unpleasantly, over his
lips. "It is not a symbol," he said. "Our legend has it that the
Pearl was sent down with the Great—With him. The Emperor of Heaven, himself, is
supposed to have given it to him."
"Why?"
Edward said, asking why the man believed his legend when he had dismissed all
others.
But Lung
clearly misunderstood him. He shrugged. "Because dragons are by nature
bestial, competitive and brutal. The beast in us overrides the man. We could
never band together, much less work together without the Pearl of Heaven. We
must find it soon," he said. "Or we will destroy ourselves and each
other."
It wasn't
until Edward had left and stood outside the restaurant, that it occurred to him
that saying Tom would no longer be a problem was not a reassurance. On the
contrary. Unless it were a reassurance that Tom would soon be dead.
Stopped, in
the parking lot, he felt as if ice water were running through his veins. He
took a deep, sudden breath and almost went back inside. Almost.
But then he
thought it would only get him killed. How could he go up against almost
immortal shape-shifters? How could he? He would only get killed. And for Tom?
He needed
help. He needed help now.
* * *
Kyrie locked
her front door as best she could, which in this case involved sliding the sofa
in front of it, because the beetle had pulled the handle and the lock out of
it.
If Kyrie
survived all this mess, she would be so far in debt for house repairs that she
would be arrested. Or die of trying to pay for it. Or something.
The back door
was impossible to close, having splintered in a million pieces. She should have
got a solid wood door, after all. And on that thought she got out the phone
book, called her bank for her balance which ran to the middle hundreds. Then
she went back to the phone and started calling handymen, finding it somewhat
difficult to reconcile her urgency in getting the doors fixed with the price
any craftsman would accept for this.
She had just
discovered an elderly handyman, who only worked two days a week, who could do
both glazing and carpentry, and who thought her situation desperate enough to
warrant immediate response when Rafiel came in through the ruined back door.
"Dragons?"
he asked her, as she was hanging up the phone.
"No,"
she said. "As it turned out beetles. Huge, green and blue and iridescent.
If you go to the Natural History Museum in Denver, you'll find that the much
tinier versions of the creatures are used as jewelry by some rain forest tribe
or other."
He grabbed
blindly for one of the overturned chairs, pulled it upright and collapsed on
it, looking at her. She'd put the kitchen table and the other chair up, and
that was where she'd been making her calls. "I've just got hold of a
handyman, who will be coming by to fix my porch and my two doors. I gave him
the dimensions and he says he has some surplus, older doors he removed from a
house and I can have them for nothing. Which only means I'll be broke, not in
the red. At this rate I do not dare miss work for six months, but I will
probably survive the experience."
But Rafiel
only looked at her, the golden eyes dull and uncomprehending.
"Beetles?" he said.
She nodded.
"Very much so."
"So it
wasn't a hallucination in the back of the Athens?" he said.
"Did you
find a corpse?" Kyrie asked.
He shook his
head slowly. "No. But I found. . . I could smell blood. I didn't want to
shift to verify it, but I could smell blood. And death. Fresher than. . . two
nights ago. So I'm sure you were telling the truth. Only till this moment I had
hoped that you had seen it wrong and that it was actually dragons. Do you mean
to tell me we have dragons and beetles?"
"It's
worse than that. The green powder? I think it has hallucinogenic properties,
that it's supposed to make the victim unable to fight. I think that is why I
managed to fight them back. I tied a towel over my mouth."
"Ingenious,"
he said. "I could go back to the Athens tonight in. . . lion form and try
to follow the trail of the blood. It's probably fresh enough and because there
was no body, I wasn't forced to call out the rest of the force, so the scent
won't be diluted." He paused for a moment. "I would have done it
then, but I was afraid it would bring too much attention."
He nodded, as
if satisfying himself of something. "Then as we were heading for the
station, there was the report of a panther. Fortunately it turned out to be a
sort of mass hallucination." He cleared his throat. "As you know,
these are quite common. Seeing black panthers, I mean. There's whole counties
in England afflicted by it."
He looked at
her, and reached for her hand, where it rested on the table. "How did you
escape them?"
For a moment,
for just a moment, Kyrie had a feeling of misgiving. Was it that Rafiel wanted
to know how she'd escaped so that he could warn the beetles? But no. The
beetles already knew how she had escaped. He wanted to know. It made sense.
"I
stabbed one with my umbrella," she nodded towards the umbrella resting a
few feet away against the wall in the hallway. "Between the head and back
carapaces. And it was immobilized. Which allowed me to jump over it and
escape."
"So, the
shift to panther was. . ."
"I
thought its mate would chase me."
"It
probably would have, except for its being daylight and a busy area." He
sighed. "I don't like to think creatures like that have such control. They
are shifters, they must be. But what kind of insane nature or magic or
evolution could have caused such a thing as shifter beetles?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "Whatever it was, it created dragons. Which brings me to
Tom."
"Ormson?
Must you?" Rafiel looked pained and vaguely put out, as if she were
insisting on speaking about a distasteful subject.
"Tom
Ormson," she said. "I have reason to believe I did him an injustice.
If that powder from the beetles causes hallucinations, I think that might have
been all he was high on. On top of that, there is his father."
"Ormson
has a father?" Rafiel asked.
"Till
this moment you assumed he reproduced by fission?"
"No, I
mean he has a father around here, a father who is in some way involved in his
life?"
Kyrie
shrugged. "I don't think he is. Involved in Tom's life, I mean. I think he
came from New York on purpose to find Tom. I think at the request of the
Triad."
Rafiel's
eyebrows rose.
"I think
he's a lawyer of some sort," she said. "I. . . vaguely remember Tom
telling me that. And I think he is involved with the triads in some way. Well,
with the shifter dragon triad, most of all."
"This
family just keeps getting better and better," Rafiel said. "I suppose
I'll look up the elder Mr. Ormson's background. And his name is?"
"His
given name? Edward."
Rafiel nodded.
"I'll check him out."
"Wait,"
Kyrie said. She didn't know she was going to say it, till it came flying out of
her mouth. "Wait. I need to ask you a favor. Please. Would you. . . Would
you check on Tom?"
"Check
on. . .?"
"I think
he's staying with his friend, Keith, who lives in the same building, third
floor. Because he left with Keith. Keith would at least know where he was
going."
"But why
do you want me to check on him? Isn't he a grownup and able to look after
himself?"
Kyrie frowned.
She had a sense of deep uneasiness and was quite well aware that a lot of it
might be due to her guilt in having misjudged him over the drug stuff. "I.
. ." She waved at her house and the destruction. "Until today I would
have said I was able to look after myself, too, but it is not that easy, as you
see. And then he had the triad looking for him too. And apparently his father,
working for them." She took a deep breath. "Last night he missed work
completely. I'd like to know he's okay."
She stood up.
She had some vague idea that the gesture would encourage Rafiel to go. She
didn't want to be so rude as to ask him to leave, not when she was asking him
for a favor. But the handyman should be here any minute. And as soon as she had
locking doors—with a few extra locks—she was going to have to shower and go
work. On virtually no sleep.
Rafiel got up
too and she was optimistic that he would leave now. But he was still holding
the hand he covered with his own when they sat at the table. And now he leaned
forward and said, "You don't need to go it alone."
And before she
knew what he was doing, he'd covered her lips with his and was pulling her to
him.
She'd never
been kissed, not even in highschool. Any boy smart enough to be interested in
her was, presumably, smart enough to realize this was not exactly a safe course
of action. Having her lips covered by his, his hands moving to her shoulders
was novel enough to stop her from reacting immediately.
His hands were
warm on her shoulders, and his body felt warm and firm next to hers. And his
tongue was trying to push between her lips.
She put her
hands on his shoulders and pushed him back. "I'm sorry," she said.
"I'm not. . . I'm not prepared. I don't think. . . Let us get through this
first, and figure out what it's all about?"
He started to
open his mouth, as if to answer, but at that moment a white-haired man, in
impeccable work pants and t-shirt showed at the kitchen door. "Miss Smith?
I'm Harold Keener. Ready to start work."
"Well,"
Rafiel said, looking perfectly composed as if just seconds before he hadn't
been attempting to shove his tongue into her mouth. "I'll be going then,
and check on Ormson."
Was it Kyrie's
imagination, or had he pronounced Tom's family name with particular venom?
And what had
Rafiel thought he was doing, she wondered, as she walked the handyman back to
the porch to discuss the double glazed versus single glazed options and costs.
Was he so used to any girl he came onto melting with pleasure that he didn't
even bother to check for some signs of interest before jumping the gun? Or had she
been giving signs of interest? She doubted that very much, as she wasn't even
sure what the signs were.
On the other
hand perhaps he just thought with both of them shifting to feline forms, they
were perfect for each other? Was this all about creating a litter of kittens?
Or was he trying to distract her from something in the conversation? Had he
said anything he didn't want her to remember.
* * *
Edward Ormson
had left the Three Luck Dragon feeling less assured of himself than he was used
to feeling. Something in the conversation—perhaps the way these strangers spoke
casually of holding Tom prisoner, of interrogating Tom, made Edward feel
inadequate and ashamed of himself.
These were not
feelings he normally entertained about himself, and he didn't feel right about
entertaining them now.
He told
himself that Tom had been a difficult child, a delinquent adolescent. But the
words of Lung echoed in his mind, telling him that people who shifted into
dragons had problems of that sort. That the beast often overruled the human.
And if Tom had been born that way, if it was blind genetic accident, then it
wouldn't be his fault, would it? He'd been difficult, but then he couldn't have
been otherwise. Would parents who were more interested in him and less interested
in -- what? His career, himself, Tom's mother's devotion to medicine? All of
those?—have done better for him? Could anything have prevented getting to this
point where a criminal organization composed of shape-shifters was intending to
eliminate Edward's son? And Edward could do nothing about it? Except perhaps
help them?
The wrongness
of it, the wrongness of his having worked for the group that was intending to
kill his son, made bitter bile rise to his throat. But why should he care?
Where did all this anguish come from? Hadn't he washed his hands of the boy
five years ago?
Five years
ago. Damn, the boy had only been sixteen. And Edward had ordered him out of the
house. At gun point.
Edward had
been walking along the road leading towards town. Not a pretty road—a place of
warehouses and dilapidated motels— and it seemed to be making him things he'd
never thought before. This was all wrong, these unexpected feelings, the sudden
guilt over Tom. It was all very wrong. He'd been fine with this for five years.
Why should it torment him now?
He was tired.
That was all. He was very tired. He hadn't slept at all the night before, and
now it was afternoon. He'd hail the first cab that came by. He would ask to be
taken to the best hotel in town. He would go to sleep. When he woke up, he
would feel much better about this. He would realize that Tom had made his own
bed and now should damn well lie in it.
His briefcase
was heavy, pulling down on his arm. And no cab came by. Heck, no car came by.
He walked on, into the Colorado night.
He should have
rented a car, only he didn't think it would take him this long to. . . To what?
Make Tom give back whatever he had stolen, like a naughty boy caught with
another kid's lunch box?
What did he
know of Tom now, really? He would be twenty one. How he had lived the last five
years was beyond his father's knowledge and probably beyond his father's
understanding. Who was he, this creature he'd seen growing up till the age of
sixteen, and then let go and not seen again?
Tom worked
nights in a diner, he could shift shapes into a dragon. And he had the
affection—or at least the interest—of that exotic beauty who did not look like
the type to be easily rolled by some patter. And Ormson should know that, he
thought, with a rueful grin. I tried.
He'd walked a
few blocks and was near an intersection when, out of the corner of his eye, he
caught the yellow glimmer of a taxi.
Waving
frantically, he got the cabby's attention, and moments later was sitting on the
back seat of an air-conditioned taxi heading downtown.
"Downtown?"
he said. "Really."
"Oh,
yes," the cabby said. "Lace and Spurs is the best hotel in
town."
Edward leaned
back against the cool upholstery and hoped they had room. He just needed to
sleep. Just. . . sleep. And then all would be well.
* * *
"Kyrie,"
Tom called, and the sound of her name woke him from a nightmare of half-defined
shapes and half formed thoughts in which he'd been, seemingly stumbling without
direction.
He didn't know
what they had given him. He suspected it was supposed to be some form of truth
serum. At least they had expected him to answer questions while under.
He suspected
he hadn't. Part of it was because he had the feeling that he'd been touring
random recesses of his mind which, for some reason, featured not only an up
close and personal view of Kyrie's bared breast, but also repeated reruns of
Keith's conversation about his problems at college.
And part of it
was because, as he became aware of who he was, where he was and what was
happening around him, he heard the three. . . Oh, he must not call them the
three stooges, not even mentally. The way he was feeling, it might come flying
out of his mouth next thing, and, who knew, they might actually understand the
reference. No. He heard the three geniuses arguing loudly in what he presumed
was their native tongue. It didn't sound like an argument about which one would
go for the Pearl and which one would wait until the order came to cut Tom's
throat. . . or however they intended to dispatch him.
With a final
scream, Two Dragons ran out the door. The other two shrugged, went to the
corner, and came back with sandwiches and drinks.
The smell of food
made Tom hungrier than ever. If it weren't for the fact that he was using all
his concentration to keep himself from turning into a dragon, he might very
well have broken down and told them where to find the Pearl.
* * *
The room was
acceptable, though it was close to downtown and, from his fifth floor window,
Edward had a view of the area where Tom worked.
Standing
there, looking out the window, he wondered if Tom had lived in one of those
rectilineal streets that radiated from Fairfax avenue and which were lined with
tiny houses and apartment buildings. Probably, since Edward very much doubted
that waiting at tables at night in a diner was a job that paid enough for a
car. And then he realized he'd thought of Tom in the past tense.
Angry with
himself, he took a shower, put his underwear back on and got in bed. He was
asleep before his head touched the pillow.
And he was
fully awake, staring at the ceiling a few minutes later, while thoughts that
shouldn't be in his head insisted on running through it. Thoughts such
as—shouldn't Tom's father do something to save him? No matter how unworthy the
boy was—and really, what had he ever done while living in his father's house
that wasn't done by kids of his age and set? He'd gone joyriding. He'd been
caught with pot, once. And he'd committed minor acts of vandalism. He'd been
naked in public twice, both in his last week at home—after he'd started
shifting. Nothing that other kids he ran with didn't do. Kids who were now, for
the most part at Yale and Harvard.
But Edward had
kicked Tom out of the house. And never even stirred himself to find out what
exactly the boy was doing. Or even if he was alive.
"He was a
shape-shifter," he said to the cool air of the room. "He was a
dragon."
But the empty
room seemed to sneer disdainfully at this excuse, and he sat up in bed, furious
at himself. The truth was that since his marriage had broken apart, Tom had
been more of a burden than anything else. An hindrance to just living the life
of an unattached adult, with a job and a few casual dates and no significant
attachments. Because, if Edward hadn't been around for a while, then Tom took
it upon himself to get parental attention by getting himself arrested or by—and
suddenly Edward smiled remembering exactly what that had looked like—shaving
half of his head and dying the rest of his hair bright orange. Why was it that
at a distance of eight years that memory seemed funny and endearing.
Fully awake,
he dug into his briefcase and brought out his cell phone. He called information
in Palmetto, Florida. And then he called Sylvia.
A kid answered
the phone, speaking in the endearing lisp of a child whose front teeth are
missing and when Edward asked for Sylvia, screamed at the top of his lungs
"Mom."
This was
followed by the click of pumps on the floor, and finally Sylvia's voice on the
phone. "Hello."
"Hi,
Sylvia, this is Edward."
"Who?"
"Edward
Ormson?"
There was a
short silence, followed by "Oh." And, after a longish pause.
"How may I help you?"
Exactly like
the waitress at an impersonal restaurant, Edward thought, but then they hadn't
seen each other in over ten years. She had another family. It was foolish of
him to resent it. Well, it was foolish of him to call too, but he felt he had
to. She had never even sent Tom a birthday card. Not that Edward had seen.
"I just
wanted to know if you've heard from Tom?"
"Who?"
"Thomas.
Your son?"
"Oh.
Tom?"
Was she not
sure who her oldest son was? Edward should have felt revolted, but instead he
felt more guilty than ever. What a pair they had made. Poor boy. Poor screwed
up boy who'd ended up with them.
She seemed to
collect herself, from a long ways away. "Isn't he living with you?"
she said.
Edward took a
deep breath. "No." And he hung up.
He didn't know
what he had expected. That Sylvia was secretly a great mom? After all, she'd
turned Tom over to a nanny as soon as she could, and returned to her job before
he was one month old.
He walked over
to the window and looked out again. No. He knew what he had hoped for. He had
hoped that Sylvia would behave like a responsible, caring parent and thereby
redeem all his memories of Tom's childhood. Prove to him that the boy had had
at least one attentive parent till the divorce. And that if he'd gone wrong it
was entirely his fault and his parents couldn't be blamed.
If that could
be proved to be true—well, then Edward would feel if not justified at least
slightly less guilty in washing his hands of Tom.
But his
ex-wife's behavior, his own memories of his behavior only proved to him that
Tom had never had a chance. Not even the beginning of one. And yet, he was
still alive, five years after being kicked out. And Kyrie Smith liked him. That
had to count for something. He couldn't be completely lost to humanity if he'd
engaged the interest of an attractive and clearly smart young woman.
Kyrie Smith.
She was a panther in her other form, Lung had said. Perhaps she knew other
shifters. With their help, perhaps Edward could go up against the triad.
Perhaps he could rescue his son.
He wasn't sure
he could have Tom move back in. He wasn't sure he could endure Tom for much
longer than a few hours. He wasn't even sure that he should ever have had a
son, since he seemed to have approached the enterprise with the idea that
children were sort of animated dolls.
But he was
sure the least he could do was save his son's life. Or not cooperate with his
murderers.
* * *
Kyrie was not
in a good mood. Oh, she was sure most of the reason for her feeling as down as
she did was the fact that she really hadn't slept much.
By her
calculations, she had slept exactly two hours in the last forty eight. And even
with the best of payment plans—the handyman had allowed her to pay in installments
for her new windows and doors—she would not have any spare cash for the next
few months.
So she'd been
going from table to table, forcing her professional smile and longing—just
longing—for the end of the shift. It didn't help that the night was exceptionally
hot and the single air conditioning unit labored, helplessly, against the dry
heat that plunged through the windows patrons opened and clung around Kyrie in
a vapor of French-fry grease and hamburger smell.
"It
doesn't help that Frank is acting like someone did him wrong," Anthony
said, as he passed her on the narrow isle between the plastic tables in the
addition and gave her a sympathetic scowl. "Couldn't you get your friend
Tom to show up?" he said. "I mean, Frank said if I wanted to continue
working here, I'd do this shift too."
"I don't
know where Tom is," Kyrie said, her voice sounding even more depressed
than she felt.
Anthony—tonight
resplendent in a ruffled red shirt and his customary tight black pants and
colorful vest—looked very aggrieved. "Only, I'm missing my bolero dance
group practice." And, at the widening of her eyes that she couldn't
control, "Oh, Lord. Why did you think I dressed this way?"
Kyrie just
smiled and looked away. There was an answer she had no intention of giving. Instead,
she took her tray laden with dirty dishes to behind the counter, scraped them
and loaded them into the dishwasher.
Needless to
say the diner was crowded tonight. Probably because people couldn't sleep with
the heat—since most houses in Colorado didn't have air conditioning—and had
decided to come here and eat the night away instead. Normally, Kyrie and Tom,
after six months of working together, had things down to a routine. Whichever
of them went to bus one of his tables did the other's tables too, if they
needed doing. They'd worked it out, and it all evened out in the end. When the
night was busy, it kept the tables clear so people could sit down as soon as
other people left. And that was good. But Anthony, though he was a very nice
man, wasn't used to Kyrie's routines.
Kyrie
hesitated, alternating between being mad at Tom for not being here, and a sort
of formless groping, not quite a prayer, towards some unnamed power to grant
his safety. She had as good as kicked him out. . .
No. She
wouldn't go there. Of all the useless emotions in the world, the most useless
was guilt. She slammed the last dish in the dishwasher, and checked the cell
phone she'd slipped into her apron pocket.
Rafiel had
said he'd call as soon as he had checked on Tom. He'd call even if he couldn't
find Tom. He hadn't called yet. Why hadn't he called?
Kyrie turned
from the dishwasher, expecting to see Frank glaring at her for slamming the
dish in. But Frank was leaning over the counter, seemingly elated by intimate
conference with his girlfriend—or at least the woman he'd been seeing. Kyrie
was afraid the staff had decided she was his girlfriend partly as a joke. Which
was kind of funny, because the woman was not much to look at.
She had to be
fifty if she was a day, with the kind of lined, weathered skin that people got
when they'd lived too long outdoors. And she had the sort of features that were
normally associated with British women of a horsey kind. Her hair was flyaway,
mostly white, and if it could be said to have been styled, she'd been aiming to
look like popular pictures of Einstein.
But Frank was
leaning forward towards her, to the point where there foreheads almost touched.
It revealed his neck, above the t-shirt, and showed a bandage there. Ew. Had
his girlfriend given him a hickey?
They'd been
seeing each other for a while, but today they seemed cozier than Kyrie had ever
seen them.
On the way
back to her tables, coffeepot in hand for warmups, Kyrie noticed that, despite
the woman's weathered features, she wore a very expensive skirt suit. Maybe
Frank was interested in her for her money?
"Or maybe
he has no taste," she told Anthony, as they met one coming and one going
into the addition. "But see, you wished him to get laid and there. .
."
"Don't
say it," Anthony said. "Don't even say it. I don't have the money to
buy as much mental floss as I'd need to get that image out of my mind." He
made a face, as he moved the tray the other way, to clear the doorway.
"But it's been going on for a while, now, hasn't it? I hear she's the
heiress to the castle. And there's talk she's going to renovate it and use it
as a bed and breakfast. So, perhaps it is just for money." He looked
hopeful.
Kyrie gave her
warmups and then started taking orders. Went back and gave the orders to Frank,
who, she was sure, was ignoring them. Or didn't even notice the new handful of
orders spiked through the order wire.
Then she went
back again, having caught movement by the corner of her eye, and the impression
someone had sat in the enclosure. It wasn't until she was at the corner table,
near the outer door, facing the guy who had just sat down, that she recognized
Tom's father.
He looked like
he'd been dragged through hell. Backwards. By his heels. He looked like he
hadn't slept in more hours than she'd been awake. His suit was rumpled, his
hair looked like he'd washed it and not given it the benefit of a comb—or
clergy, since it tossed in all directions, as if possessed of a discordant
spirit.
His dark blue
eyes stared at her from amid bruised circles. "Don't say it," he
said. "I know what you think of me, but don't say anything. I think. .
." he swallowed. "I think that there's reason. Oh, hell. I think
they're going to kill Tom. I need help."
That he needed
help was a given. That he was so worried about their killing Tom was not. She
glared at him. "You didn't seem to be worried about him at all," she
said.
"I. .
." He swallowed again. "I've been thinking and. . . I don't want them
to kill him."
Well, and
wasn't that big of him? After all, Tom was only his son. She narrowed eyes at
him. The shock, when she'd realized he was working for the people who'd already
tried to kill his son once, had turned her stomach. She still didn't feel any
better about Mr. Edward Ormson. She'd be less disgusted by a giant beetle.
"What will you be eating, sir?"
He looked as
surprised as if she'd slapped him. "What. . . what. . . I need to talk.
Seriously. They're—"
She took her
notebook out of her apron pocket, and tapped the pencil on the page. "I'm
at work, Mr. Ormson, and my job is to get people food. What can I get
you?"
"I. . .
whatever you want. . ."
"We're
all out of rat poison," Kyrie said, the words shocking her as they came
out of her mouth.
His eyes
widened. "Coffee. Coffee and a. . ." he looked at the menu.
"Piece of pie."
She wrote it
down and walked away. She really, really, really needed to convince Frank to
start making spinach pies. Or cod liver oil ones.
* * *
Tom woke up
from a sort of formless dream. He didn't remember falling asleep. His last
memory had been of Crest Dragon and Other Dragon having a picnic of sorts in
front of him.
Now he opened
his eyes to an empty building. He didn't know how long he'd slept, but his nose
no longer hurt, and it seemed to him like the pain in his tied arms had eased a
little too. Perhaps he'd gotten used to being tied up. Or perhaps his arms had
been without circulation so long that he could no longer feel them.
The last
should have been alarming, except it wasn't. Everything seemed very distant, as
if a great sheet of glass made of indifference separated him from the world and
his own predicament.
He lay there,
and listened to his own breathing. He would assume he still hadn't talked,
though it was—of course—possible he had said something while he was in a half
wake state. And if he had. . .
Well, it was
possible that the three dragons had gone off to get the Pearl and would
presently come back and kill him. Tom could shift now, of course, but what if
they were still here? Perhaps just outside? First, as tired as he was, he
couldn't fight all three of them at once. Second, what if he ate them?
His mouth felt
so dry—his tongue glued to his palate by thirst, that he was sure he would bite
them just for the moisture. And yet, there was an off chance. Would he lay here
and wait for death? No. He would shift. As difficult as it was, as tiring as it
was, he would shift.
Before he
could collect his mind enough to concentrate on the shift, though, he heard
sounds outside. A couple of cars, a lot of voices. Speaking Chinese. He closed
his eyes, and pretended to be asleep.
A group of
people came in, babbling in Chinese. Several men, by the sound of it. Tom half
opened his eyes, just enough to look through his eyelashes, without anyone realizing
that he was actually awake. He forced himself to keep his breathing regular.
And then from
the middle of the babble a voice emerged. "Hey. Hey, what's the
idea?"
Keith. The
voice was Keith's. What was Keith doing here, though?
"You're
okay, you're okay," one of the other voices answered, in accented English.
"As soon as your friend answers questions, we'll let you go."
And then two
men came in, breathing hard, carrying a sack with something very heavy in it.
"Where do we put her?" they asked.
"Here,"
another voice answered. The forest of legs in front of Tom parted enough for
him to see, on the ground, a trussed up human, and the big sack being laid down
behind it.
"She's
starting to wake up," one of the men said.
"That's
fine," another one answered. "With the tranq she'll be weak as a
kitten for a while."
A kitten. Tom
blinked, trying to focus his gaze. A kitten. The sack—some kind of rough
burlap—was large enough to contain a heavy feline. She. Kitten. Kyrie. Not
Kyrie.
"Oh, look,
he's awake," one of the men who'd come in—and who looked far smarter than
the three reverse geniuses—said and grinned. "Yes, that is your
girlfriend, but don't worry. So long as you tell us where you hid the Pearl of
Heaven, she'll be just fine."
Kyrie. Tom
didn't want to shift. If he shifted, he was going to eat someone. But he
couldn't tell them where the Pearl of Heaven was, either. Because then they'd
just kill him. And Keith. And Kyrie.
He felt his
heart speed up and his body spasm. And there was no turning back.
* * *
There was
blood. There was blood and screams and panic. Tom's vision—the dragon's vision,
was filled with people. He flamed. There was the smell of fire, and of cloth
burning. People with clothes on fire ran to either side of him.
The dragon
wanted to feed. To the dragon's nostrils, all flesh was food. The smell of
humans, the smell of fodder so close was more than he could endure. The dragon
tried to nip left, right. . .
But Tom knew
once the dragon started feeding, it wouldn't stop till all humans around it
were eaten. He knew from some deep instinctive feeling that having reached the
depths of hunger, the dragon would now eat past satiety. And he couldn't let it
happen. He couldn't.
If he ate a
human, he'd never be able to live with himself. And if he ate Kyrie. . . No.
Tom—what there
was of Tom in the huge scaley body with the flapping wings and the tearing
claws and the flaming mouth, controlled the body and the wings and the mouth.
Forcefully, he walked forward slashing with his claws at all opposition. Taken
by surprise, the others ran out of the way. Tom could hear, to his side, the
cough-cough-cough like laughter of a dragon shifting. He would deal with that
later.
Before the
dragon shifted, before he had to battle others of his kind, he would free
Keith. And Kyrie.
Disciplining
the dragon, he bent over Keith, and, with a sharp claw, burst the ropes that
bound his friend's legs and hands. Keith was looking at Tom with huge eyes and,
for a moment, Tom thought he would run away. He remembered that Keith had no
idea who the dragon was. But Keith was looking intently at him and said,
"Tom?"
Tom nodded,
rapidly, and managed to get out, through a mouth not well adapted to speech,
"Run."
Then he bent
and ripped the burlap bag open. He couldn't see the feline—definitely a feline
shape—inside move, though. He felt more than saw movement from it, and then he
heard a stumping step from the side, and knew that a dragon had shifted shape
near him.
He turned,
just in time to find Crest Dragon launching himself at Tom.
Tom jumped
aside, enough to avoid Crest Dragon's slashing and then turned around. Then he
bent low and slashed across Crest Dragon's belly with a claw.
Bright blood
spurted, and there was something like a scream that sounded all too human. The
blood made the dragon's thirst worse, but Tom wouldn't let it drink, and,
instead, hopped back, to slash at Two Dragons who had shifted shape also, and
was trying to sneak up on Tom with all the stealth of an elephant in a very
small china shop.
Tom's dragon
kicked out at Crest Dragon, who was coming at him again, his back claws leaving
red stripes of blood on Crest Dragon's muzzle, even as his muzzle clamped tight
on Two Dragon's arm and pulled, ripping it out of its socket.
"Look
out, look out, look out," Keith screamed from beside Tom. And he'd grabbed
something—Tom couldn't quite see what, but it looked like an ancient and rusted
tire iron. Keith was looming with it behind Other Dragon, who had, in turn been
sneaking out behind Tom.
Tom clashed
jaws at Other Dragon, but Keith hit Other dragon a sideways blow with whatever
the thing was. It must have been a hell of an implement, and heavy enough,
because Other Dragon gave a high pitch scream and fell forward.
But there were
other dragons. Too many dragons. A lot of the people who had come in had been
severely burned by Tom's original flaming, and lay fallen, some in various
stages of shifting shape, but seemingly out of action. But then there were
others. Many others.
As a dragon,
Tom wasn't particularly good at counting. There was something in the reptilian
brain that tended to simplify things down to the level of one, two many. But
the human inside that brain could tell there were at least eight dragons. Maybe
more. And Tom was tired. And weak.
He was
surrounded by dragons, on all sides, snipping and biting at him. He could feel
wounds, even if he couldn't stop. If he stopped, he would die. And though that
seemed—eventually—inevitable, he wasn't ready to give up. Not yet.
He circled and
nipped. Until his back was to a wall and he was surrounded by dragons. Truth
was, he thought, they could already have killed him. They were holding back.
They probably just wanted to hurt him enough that he wouldn't be able to
resist—he wouldn't be able to stop them from making him answer. . .
But if they
didn't want to kill him, that gave him the advantage. He kicked and bit with
renewed vigor, and realized that he had allies. On the outer ring, at the edge,
Keith was dancing, like a mad monkey—which was exactly how Tom's dragon brain
thought of him—repeatedly bashing the dragons at the periphery with whatever
heavy implement he'd grabbed.
Oh, they
turned, and tried to flame him, but Keith was too quick for them, jumping and
running into the darkness, only to appear again somewhere unexpected, and bash
another dragon over the head.
And from the
other side, another . . . person? Had joined the fray. Only it wasn't in person
shape, but as a large feline.
In the
semi-darkness of the station—was it dark out now?—Tom couldn't see very
clearly, but he could see that it was a feline shape. And it was roaring and
clawing and biting.
Suddenly, Tom
realized he had an open way out of there, to the front door. Awkwardly, his
legs streaming blood, Tom ran for it flaming everything that got in his way.
The door had been left open. From carrying the hostages in? Outside in the
parking lot there were a lot of cars, and two men who ran at the sight of Tom.
Tom flamed the cars. They caught and some exploded. And then, as Tom slowed
down, he felt a hand on his front leg. A human hand. Touching him.
He turned
ready to flame, and saw Keith, who was physically pulling him forward, towards
one of the cars. An undamaged one. "Dude," he said. "You have to
change, or you'll have to go on the roof rack."
Tom was
already shifting. It was the only way to stop from flaming Keith. He became
human, and tired and in pain, in mid stride, and it was only Keith's
determination that pulled him forward, that shoved him into a car—huge car.
Like a limo—from the driver's side, and pushed him over to the passenger side.
He threw
something on the floor at Tom's feet. Tom was too tired to notice, what and
just leaned back, breathing hard. Keith waited, his hand on the ignition.
Waited. Waited. And then something—Tom couldn't see very well, he was that
tired and in that much pain—heavy hit the back seat.
Kyrie. Tom
turned around, even as Keith reached back, grabbed the back door, pulled it
shut, then started the car and took off, in a squeal of tires, weaving between
the other parked cars on the way to the road, and then down it, at speeds that
were probably forbidden in this neighborhood.
The feline
looking at Tom from the back seat was not Kyrie. It was a lion. Tawny and
definitely male.
As Tom
watched, it morphed into police officer Rafiel Trall.
* * *
Edward Ormson
didn't know what to say to this woman. Kyrie brought him back a cup of coffee
and a slice of pie, and he actually reached forward and grabbed her wrist,
before she could walk away.
"They
have him prisoner," he said. "They have him prisoner and you must
help him."
"I must
help him?" Kyrie asked. She shook her hand, pulling it away from his
grasp. "I must help him? How? Aren't you the one who has been trying to
catch him, to get him to tell you everything for the benefit of the
triad?"
Edward felt
exasperated. The woman was beautiful. Her skin was just the tone, her features
just exotic enough to make her look some ancient statue of a forgotten
civilization—remote and admirable and inhuman. The tapestry-dyed hair only
contributed to the impression. But she clearly didn't understand. "You are
young," he said. "You haven't got any children. You wouldn't know
what—"
"No,"
she said. And it sounded like an admission, but then she leaned forward on his
table, her hands resting on it. "No, I don't have children. But if I did I
am sure I wouldn't assume a . . . criminal group was in the right and he in the
wrong."
"You
don't understand," Edward said. "You don't understand at all. Why
would he. . . Why would Tom mess with them? Doesn't he know better? Doesn't he
understand? They're dangerous."
"Oh, I'm
sure he knows that," she said. "And I'm sure I understand better than
you do. I'm sure he had his reasons. They might have been wrong, but I'm sure
he had his reasons. I've known Tom too long not to know that he had to have
reasons for what he did. He's neither stupid nor crazy, though he is, perhaps,
a little too reckless."
Edward snorted
at this. "Look, I don't know how good my son is in bed, but—"
The moment the
words were out of his mouth, he knew he'd said entirely the wrong thing. She
drew herself up. Her face became too impassive, too distant. "Mr.
Ormson," she said. "I think you've said enough."
"No,
listen, I know he appeals to women, he always has, but he—"
She pushed her
lips together and looked at him with an expression that made him feel as though
he were something smelly she had just found under her shoe. She opened her
mouth. "Mr. Ormson," she said. "I have no idea what you think my
relationship with your son is, but—"
At that
moment, a phone rang. Kyrie plunged her hand into the pocket of her apron.
"Rafiel," she said.
* * *
"Can I
borrow your cell phone," Rafiel asked, all polite from the back seat.
"My. .
.?" Tom asked. Couldn't the man see Tom was naked? Where did he think Tom
kept a cell phone, exactly?
"The cell
phone," Rafiel said.
"From
your backpack, dude. All your stuff is in there," Keith said, looking
aside from his driving, even as he took perilous turns at high speed on the
country road. Behind them, on the rear view mirror, Tom could see a blaze going
up.
"The
other . . . aren't they chasing us?" he asked.
"Nah. You
set fire to their cars and the station."
"I
did?" Tom asked.
"Yep. As
you came out. You were flaming all directions. I grabbed you to prevent you
from flaming this car. Don't your remember?"
Tom shook his
head. He didn't. But he'd been running on adrenalin.
"And
Rafiel stayed behind to keep them in there, until the fire caught. Some must
have escaped, but I don't think they're in a state to follow us." He
looked at Tom, even as he took a sharp turn onto the highway towards Colorado.
"That was awesome," he said, and grinned.
"Your
cell phone?" Rafiel asked from the back seat. "If I may."
Tom forced
himself to open his back pack. And almost wept at the sight of his black
leather jacket, his boots, his meager possessions. He rifled through them, till
his hand closed on the cell phone. He passed it to Rafiel, without even asking
why or what was so urgent about a phone call.
"You
could dress," Keith said. "You know. . ."
And Tom,
obediently, without thinking, pulled out his spare t-shirt and pair of jeans
and put them on. Then he slipped on his jacket and boots.
Rafiel was
talking to someone on the cell phone. "No, damn it, he's fine. Well, he's
bleeding, but you know we heal quickly. Don't worry. We'll be there in six
hours or so."
"I have
to drink something," Tom said. "I have to."
"Um. . .
we might stop at a convenience store," he said. He leaned forward, towards
Keith, and spoke urgently, "In this area, some of the convenience stores
at the rest stops have everything. I could use a pair of shorts and a
t-shirt."
Keith looked
back, still driving, and grinned. "Yeah, you sure could."
"So,"
Rafiel said, into the phone. "Don't worry. We'll be there. Yes, I
understand. We'll. . . discuss it later."
He turned the
phone off and handed it to Tom, then leaned back in his seat.
Tom could only
see him from the waist up, of course, but he seemed relatively unscathed by the
ordeal. And he was. . . well, everything Tom was not. Much taller, much more
self assured. And a lion. Kyrie was a panther. Tom didn't have a chance.
"So,"
Keith said, oblivious to his friend's thoughts. "How long have you guys been
able to change into animals, and how do I get in on this?"
* * *
Kyrie stood,
holding the phone, not quite sure what to do or say. Edward Ormson was looking
at her, attentively.
"Look,"
he said. "I know I have said the wrong thing." His expression changed
as if he read a response she wasn't aware of expressing in her features.
"Okay, many wrong things. But look, however misguided, however wrong
headed, your. . . your reaction to what I was trying to do, to my trying to
obtain the Pearl from Tom woke me, made me realize how bizarre all of this was.
I haven't seen Tom in five years, and I'll confess I was a horrible father. But
I don't want him to die. Can you help me?"
Kyrie looked
at him a long time. She'd taken his measure the first time they'd met. Or at
least she'd thought so. He was cold and self-centered. A smart man and probably
well-educated and definitely good-looking, he was used to having his own way
and very little used to or interested in caring for anyone else.
He would have,
Kyrie thought, viewed Tom as an accessory to his lifestyle. He'd have the
beautiful wife, the lovely home and, oh, yes, the son. Tom—if Tom's personality
had always been somewhat as it was now—must have been a hell of a
disappointment. They must have clashed constantly—supposing Edward paid enough
attention to his son to clash with him.
Weirdly, it
was that resentment he felt towards Tom, the fact he talked about Tom as having
been insufferable that gave her a feeling that, however hidden, however denied
even to himself, the man must care for his son. Because if he didn't truly give
a damn about Tom, Tom wouldn't get under his skin so much.
Then she
realized she could very well be speaking about herself. She had spent an awful
lot of the last six months reassuring herself of how impossibly annoying Tom
was.
Of course, he
was annoying. Tom was quite capable of sulking through an entire work shift,
for reasons she never understood. And he had this way of looking at her, then
flinching away as if he'd seen something that displeased him. Particularly on
those silent, sulking days. He was also quite capable of doing exactly the
opposite of what you asked him to do, if he thought you hadn't asked him nicely
enough. But. . .
But Tom was
also unexpectedly generous. He would cover for her if she needed it, not
complaining about the extra work. He would cover her tables, too, if she was
moving slow because he was tired or not feeling well. He would buss a
disproportionate number of tables and not call her to it. He had a way of
smiling and shrugging and walking away when she offered to give him part of her
tips after he'd helped her with the tables. And once when she'd pressed him,
he'd said, "Oh, it all evens out, Kyrie." She remembered that.
And he had a
way of appreciating the funniest of their diners. Sometimes, while enjoying a
particularly funny interaction between a college-age couple, Kyrie would look
over and find Tom smiling at them, in silent amusement. And, of course, he
was—she remembered him naked, in the parking lot—distractingly handsome. As
disturbing as the circumstances had been. . . It couldn't be denied that he was
attractive. Despite his height, she'd often seen college girls batting eyes and
displaying chests and legs at him.
So, her
constant annoyance at him, might very well have been a defense.
She realized
she was grinning, as well as blushing because Edward Ormson was looking at her
as if she had just taken leave of her senses.
"I'm
sorry," she said. "I just realized why your son annoys me so
much," and was gratified to see him look puzzled at this. "But you do
not need to worry about him right now. He is . . . fine now."
"He
is?" Edward Ormson started to get up, then set down. He looked as though
someone had cut all his strings, or whatever had been holding him up. He
visibly sagged in his chair.
He looked so
relieved that she had to smile. She picked up his coffee cup. "Let me get
you another coffee. Warmer."
But he got up
and handed her a twenty dollar bill. "No," he said. "No. I don't
think I need the coffee. Or the. . . pie. I just need to go to bed. I'm. .
." He rubbed his hand across his forehead. "I find I'm very
tired." He pulled something else from his wallet and wrote rapidly in the
back of it. "This is my card. There's my cell phone on the front and I put
my room number at Spurs and Lace." He handed it to Kyrie. "If Tom
should. . ." He swallowed. "If you tell Tom. . ." He shrugged.
"I don't want. . . Let him decide."
"I owe
you about ten twelve dollars change," Kyrie said. "Even with
tip."
But he waved
it away. "I don't want to waste time. I don't care. I'm very tired. I
haven't slept in. . . much too long."
Kyrie almost
argued, but then she saw him stumble to the door. She put the bill in her apron
pocket. She would ring it up later.
She wondered
where Tom was and how he really was. And what was happening.
* * *
When they
stopped at the convenience store, first Keith went in.
"I forgot
to ask if he had any money," Rafiel said from the back.
Tom had been
dozing. He opened his eyes and looked back at Rafiel, then at the front of the
brightly lit store and grinned. "I'd tell you that he probably does, but
since we're talking about a man who thinks driving while looking backwards to
talk to you is a perfectly safe practice, I can't really be sure."
Rafiel nodded.
He looked. . . less than composed and was hiding behind the back seat.
Fortunately though even at this time of night the convenience store/rest stop
was full of people, Keith had parked in a place with two empty spaces on either
side. Of course, the store was brightly lit in front and even with the tinted
windows, Rafiel had to feel awfully exposed.
"I don't
think anyone can see in," Tom said, in what he hoped was a friendly voice.
He was still starving and his mouth felt dry as sandpaper, but the brief doze
had made him feel much more human, much more in command of his own faculties.
He felt. . . almost like himself. Enough to feel sorry for the guy. Even if the
guy had a lot more chances with Kyrie than Tom himself.
Rafiel raised
his eyebrows at Tom's comment, and nodded. "I hope not, I would never live
down being arrested for indecent exposure. Even if I explained it—somehow—and
went free. It's not something police officers are supposed to do, walking
around naked."
"Must be
a bitch," Tom said, leaning back against the seat and closing his eyes. He
wanted to go in and get water and food. All his money was still in the backpack.
He'd checked. But he would prefer to go in with one—or preferably—to people who
could grab him if he passed out. Or started shifting and tried to eat one of
the tourists.
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said, quietly. "I have clothes hidden all over town." He was
silent a minute. "I just never thought I needed them in the neighboring
towns too."
Tom smiled in
acknowledgment of the joke, and felt a hand on his shoulder.
"I don't
think we've been formally introduced," Rafiel said. "My name is
Rafiel Trall. I'm a police officer of Goldport."
Tom opened one
eye to see a hand extended in his general direction. He shook it, hard.
"Thomas Ormson," he said. "Troublemaker. Broadly speaking of
Goldport, also."
Rafiel nodded.
"I haven't thanked you for saving my life," he said.
"You
don't need to," Tom said. "I thought you were someone else."
Rafiel smiled.
"At least you had the excuse of darkness. Apparently other. . . dragons
have trouble telling a female panther from a male lion. In full light."
"Ah. . .
how did. . .?"
"Kyrie
had sent me to check on Keith," Rafiel said, then frowned. "No. To
tell you the truth, Kyrie sent me to look for you. She thought Keith might know
where you were. So I was at his place when dragons came in. Through the window.
So I. . . shifted before I knew what I was doing. And they tranquilized me.
With a dart gun."
Tom nodded.
"They really weren't very polite," he said, thinking how much
preferable a dart gun would be than what they'd done to him. "I think they
injected me with marinade."
Rafiel's face
went very puzzled, but at that moment, Keith opened the door and threw a bundle
at Rafiel. "Shorts, t-shirt, flip-flops. All in the best of taste and the
cheapest stuff we could get and still make you decent. Enjoy."
Tom turned
back to look at the clothes while Rafiel unfolded them. The t-shirt was white,
with a mountain lion on the front and it said "Get Wild In New
Mexico." The shorts were plad and managed to look like a cross between bad
golf clothes and a grandpa's underwear. And the flip flops managed to combine
green yellow and a headachy-violet in the minimal possible amount of rubber.
Looking at
Rafiel staring aghast at the getup, Tom realized he really liked Keith an awful
lot.
But Rafiel
recovered quickly. "I'll pay you back, of course," he said.
Keith nodded.
Tom, not sure Rafiel meant that as a threat or a promise, raised his eyebrows.
Then he said, "Look, I'm dying of thirst. And hunger. I have some money
and I want to go inside, but I want one of you to come with me. Or both,
preferably."
"Why?"
Keith asked.
"Well. .
." Tom shrugged. "I haven't eaten in very long. I also haven't slept
much. When I eat I might pass out or. . . as soon as I'm a little stronger, I
might try to shift and. . . eat tourists."
Keith's eyes
went very wide.
Rafiel, moving
frantically and, from the bits visible on the rear view mirror, dressing, in
the back seat, said, "Even in Colorado that seems a bit drastic. And I
don't even know if New Mexico's tourists are as annoying as ours." There
was a sound of flip-flops thrown about, and then Rafiel opened the door.
"Come on then. We'll escort you to the food and water."
* * *
Anthony had
moved behind the counter and was turning burgers on the grill. That Frank
didn't even seem to have realized, was worrisome.
Anthony turned
around, putting plates on the counter for Kyrie to pick up. "Those are
your orders," he said. "And would you cover table fifteen for me? And
table five?"
Kyrie nodded.
She assumed that Frank hadn't responded to Anthony's requests that he cook.
Considering that he normally wouldn't let them behind the counter for more than
dishwasher-filling, coffee-pot-grabbing stints. But Frank was still bent over
the counter, staring into the eyes of his dowdy girlfriend and whispering who
knew what sweet nothings to her.
When had this
become so serious. Kyrie had seen the woman around before, but never actually
interfering with Frank's work.
They touched a
lot, Kyrie noticed. More than they talked. Her hand was on his, her fingers
beating a slow tattoo on the back of his hand. And his were on the side of her
other arm, also beating some weird rhythm.
Ah, well.
Dating for the speech impaired. And sight, Kyrie thought, looking back at
Frank's neanderthal profile, and his girlfriend's faded lack of beauty.
But Anthony
was moving the burgers and fries, mixing the salads and generally cooking like
a demon, and she didn't have much time to look at her employer as, over the
next few minutes she carried trays back and forth, fulfilling long overdue
orders for both her tables and Anthony's.
When she was
caught up, she came back to get the carafe and the pitcher of ice-tea for
refills. Frank's girlfriend had got up and was heading out of the diner via the
back hallway. Either that or going to the bathroom, of course.
And Frank had seemed
to wake up. "No," he yelled at Anthony. "What are you
doing?"
Uh-oh. Now the
explosion came, Kyrie thought. But as she approached, she realized Frank wasn't
storming over the fact that Anthony had been manning the grill and the deep
frier. Instead, he was throwing a fit because there was a little insect on the
counter, and Anthony had been about to squish it with a paper towel.
"What?"
Anthony said, his hand poised above the little creature—who looked like a
beetle of some sort, only too small to be any of the normal ones found in
diners. "It's an IPS beetle, man. It lives in pines. It must have come in
because the windows are open."
"There's
no need to kill it," Frank said, pushing Anthony's hand away and taking
the paper towel from it at the same time. With infinite patience, he coaxed the
beetle onto the paper towel.
Anthony
shrugged and turned the burgers. "It's not like it's endangered or
anything, you know? They spray for them up in the mountains. They kill
spruce."
But Frank
didn't seem to care. He got the beetle all the way into the towel, then walked
out back, along the hallway.
Half
fascinated, wondering what could have turned Frank, purveyor of burgers to the
masses, into a lover of the small and defenseless, Kyrie followed him part of
the way. Enough to see him open the back door and put the beetle out, on the
ground, close to the dumpster.
Then he waved
at his girlfriend, who was walking across the parking lot.
"Is she
an animal lover?" Kyrie asked as Frank came back in.
"Debra?
No. Why?"
Kyrie wasn't
about to explain. Instead, she said, "Is it quite safe for her to walk
home alone at night like that?"
He looked at
her surprised. And behind the surprise something else. As if he were wondering
why she was asking him the question. "Sure. She lives just at the castle.
She'll be fine."
It didn't seem
to admit further discussion.
* * *
"No more
hotdogs," Keith told Tom. He handed him a thin pack of something cold.
"Sliced ham."
Tom grabbed at
it, trying to focus. He was vaguely aware that he'd eaten something like twenty
five or six hotdogs. And drunk something like four huge cups of something
sickly sweet with a flavor vaguely reminiscent of cherries.
Somewhere at
the back of his mind was the awareness that he was going to need to use the
restroom soon. Even a shifter's bladder couldn't possibly hold that much.
But much
closer at hand was a need for protein. Lots of it. He grabbed the pack Keith
gave him and was about to bite it as Keith pulled it away.
"Whoa,
you need to unwrap it."
Tom was aware
of growling. Or rather he was aware of several faces of tourists roaming around
turning to him in shock. He was aware of Keith jumping, then shoving the
pack—now peeled halfway, back at him.
He shoved the
ham into his mouth and ate it, becoming aware, halfway through, that his
manners left much to be desired. And that the burning pit of hunger at the
center of his being was. . . calmer, if not completely filled.
Rafiel, to
whom Tom had handed a hundred dollars to deal with the damage, because he
couldn't think and eat at the same time, approached them, carrying a bag of
food. Tom could see a block of cheese and a couple of containers of what might
be yogurt through the bag.
"Ready?"
Rafiel asked. "You seem to have slowed down some?"
Tom finished
the last crumbs of meat, resisted an urge to lick package. "I'll use the
restroom," he said. "And I'll be right out."
"Good
point," Rafiel said. "We grabbed you snacks but no drink. Keith, get
us a six pack of water." He passed Keith some money. "Tom, can I use
your cell phone? In the car?"
Tom nodded.
When he got
back to the car, Rafiel was behind the wheel and Keith next to him. "You
get in the back," Keith said. "We figure you'd want to sleep
some."
"There's
cheese and cold cuts and stuff in the bag," Rafiel said. "If you're
still hungry. And there's water. You can lie down. I drive better than
him."
"And
there's a bag of baby wipes," Keith said. "Your face is caked with
blood. I didn't even think how weird it looked till we went in there."
Tom climbed
into the back. He was about to tell them he wasn't that tired, when he
stretched out on the broad and comfy back seat. And then his eyes closed. And
he didn't know anything more.
* * *
He woke up
with a running conversation up front.
"So, why
was he so hungry again?" Keith said.
"The
transformation takes. . . I don't know. Strength. Power. It costs us what seem
to be parts of ourselves. The muscle needs to recover."
"Would he
really have. . . Would he have eaten someone or was he. . ."
"I don't
know," Rafiel said. "I don't know Mr. Ormson that well. I don't know
how many shape-shifts he'd had without replenishing himself. I guess it's. . .
I mean. . . I guess it depends. I've never eaten anyone." There was a
short silence, and Tom saw Keith look at Rafiel.
"Well, at
least not that I remember," Rafiel said. "When you're very hungry or
very tired, or scared, or in any other way pressed the memory of when you're. .
. the beast. . . changes. And we smell dead bodies a long distance away. So. .
. I found a lot of corpses. Still do. I don't think I've ever eaten anyone,
though. And since in my job I deal with unknown deaths and disappearances, I
probably would have heard of it. Or, when I was too young to be in the force,
my father would have. So. . ." He shrugged.
Tom sat up and
rested his face on the front seat, between the driver and passenger sides.
"I might have eaten some of that corpse in the parking lot. . ." he
said, and looked at Rafiel, in the rearview mirror. "I don't know if I
killed him."
Rafiel
shrugged. "As to that, I can reassure you, at least. You didn't. The
corpse had no tooth marks, certainly no marks of being killed by a
dragon."
"The guy
who died?" Keith asked. "In the parking lot?"
Rafiel nodded,
at the same time Tom asked, "But you said he was killed by a Komodo."
"Oh,
that's right," Rafiel said. "We never told you. . . Kyrie and I when
we came back you two were high because of the beetle powder. Well, insect
powder, but Kyrie says it was beetles."
"Beetles?"
Tom and Keith said, at the same time.
"There
was green powder all over Kyrie's back porch," Rafiel said. "And it
seemed to be of insect origin and. . . well, I have the lab checking for some
form of hallucinogenic properties. But the lab seemed to think that corpse at
least had some traces of hallucinogenic in his blood. So, we think that the
green powder caused both of you to get high and hallucinate."
"Oh,"
Tom said, and could say no more. Of course. It wasn't Kyrie's sugar. It was the
things attacking them. He frowned as he tried to remember. He'd thought they
were dragons, but looking back he wondered why. He could remember what seemed
to be long, long limbs, with fangs at the end, and he remembered green wings,
but they didn't in any way look like dragon wings.
"But you
said something about Komodo dragons?"
"Well,
yes. There have been a few deaths that seemed to be by being bitten by Komodo
dragons. Really large Komodo dragons. Because they were all oriental, I
suspected it had to do with triad business, and now I'm almost sure of it. I
suspect it's the dragon triad. Some way they punish their members. That seems
to be totally unrelated to the thing going on with the beetles. You seem to be
the only link, Mr. Ormson."
Tom groaned.
"My father is Mr. Ormson. I am Tom. Particularly. . ." He managed a
tired smile but couldn't see if Rafiel responded because all he saw of Rafiel
in the rearview mirror was his very intent eyes. "Particularly to people
who've seen me wolf down two dozen overcooked convenience store hotdogs."
He made a face. "They weren't even all that good."
"Oh,"
said Keith. "There were also two containers of cottage cheese while the
man was cooking more hotdogs, and a couple of pepperoni."
"Pepperoni?"
Tom asked, and felt a moan break through his lips. "I don't even like
pepperoni."
"Well, if
you're going to throw up," Rafiel said. "You'd best do it out the
window. We're still in Raton and we have about two more hours before we get
home."
"I'm not
going to throw up," Tom said. "Now, if I had taken Keith's finger
when he tried to pull the cold cuts away, then I might have."
"You
growled," Keith said.
"Dangerous
that," Rafiel said, and though Tom couldn't see his face, he was now quite
sure there would be a smile twisting the policeman's lips. "Taking food
from a starving dragon. Just so you know, it's not all that safe with a lion,
either."
Keith made a
sound that might have been a really fake whimper, then perked up and grinned at
Rafiel. "Oh, well. Worth the price of admission just to have heard you
explain to the cashier that Tom had an eating disorder. I don't know how they
thought that related to the fact that his face was covered in blood. Why was
your face covered in blood?" he asked, looking back.
"Well. .
. I think I took Red Dragon's arm. Front paw. Whatever. But I think there was
blood before." Tom touched a snaking pink scar that crossed his forehead.
"They broke my skin there. And I think they might have broken my nose,
though it looks the normal shape, so maybe they just hit it hard enough to make
it bleed and tear the cartilage."
"But. . .
How long ago?" Keith said.
"We heal
freakishly fast," Rafiel said. "But you might want to use the wipes
back there, anyway, Tom. I'd suspect you rubbed some of it off on the seat back
there, but you still look like you were in an accident. And if you don't clean
up and we stop for any reason. . ."
Tom noted that
his first name had been used, as he grabbed the baby wipes and wiped at the
mess, using the rearview mirror, for guidance.
"And are
you undead?" Keith said. "I mean. . . can you be killed, unless it's
a silver bullet, or whatever?"
Rafiel
shrugged. "I don't know. Tom, have you ever been killed?"
"I
thought I was going to be," he said. "Out there, alone with the triad
guys. I thought if they didn't kick me to death, they were going to kill me
some other way. And if not, I thought I would be killed if I gave them what
they wanted."
"And what
did they want?" Rafiel said, very softly.
"Well,"
Tom said. "I brought the conversation around because I thought you
deserved to know, but I'm not sure how to explain. Let me start by saying my
dad was a lawyer."
"Ah,
well, all is clear," Keith said. "No wonder you turn into a
dragon."
Tom grinned.
"He's a lawyer with a big firm, in New York. Or at least he was, five
years ago. His firm represented some oriental families that had. . . contracts
with the triads. It wasn't so much, I think, that the firm set out to represent
a criminal organization. More like they started representing people at the
margins of it, and then eventually, they were defending members of the triad in
criminal trials. And my dad is a criminal lawyer. So. . ."
Rafiel nodded.
"Yeah. I suspect a lot of lawyers end up having contact with less than
savory creatures."
"Well, at
one point, some people came over to my father's house. There was something that
had landed from China, and they wanted him to keep it safe for them till the
next day. He was the only person they trusted in New York, one of the very few
people they'd had contact with. They came to our condo, which I remember my
father was very upset about because he hadn't given them permission.
"I was .
. . oh, probably five? My mom was working. My nanny was watching soaps. I was
very bored. So I snuck around to hear what my dad was saying. These people were
not like the people who normally came to visit, you know—they wore actual
Chinese outfits in silk. I was fascinated."
He was quiet a
while. He remembered the Pearl unveiling. He remembered. . .
"And
then?" Rafiel said.
"And then
they explained to my father that this was the Pearl of Heaven. It had been
given to the Great Sky Dragon by the Heavenly Emperor. They said that many of
their members, though not all, had the ability to shift shapes to become
dragons. I didn't believe them, of course. And I could tell my dad didn't. And
then they put this felt bag on his desk, and they pulled it down. And the Pearl
appeared. It was. . . Imagine something that radiates light, that makes you
swim with happiness.
"They
said that it was needed to keep peace amid shape-shifters who were dragons part
of the time, because the characteristics of the dragons remained in the humans,
and there was too much strife otherwise. As a kid—and you realize I never had
what could be called a good family life, back then—all I could sense and feel
was the warmth and approval of the Pearl. And that's all I remembered."
"And?"
Keith asked.
Tom realized
he'd been quiet for a long while. "And then at sixteen I started turning
into a dragon. I had a little trouble believing it at first, and then I thought
that it was very cool. Like a superpower."
"That's
what I think," Keith said.
"And
then. . . My father caught me coming in as a dragon and transforming. I
actually had this down to a science. I could kind of perch on the balcony
outside my bedroom, and shift back to human, and then drop into the room
through the sliding doors. Anyway, my dad caught me. He must have seen the dragon
fly in. And he came to look. I only had time to grab my bath robe. He thought.
. . I don't know what he thought, but he looked terrified. He ordered me out of
the house. I thought he was joking. He got a gun."
Tom laughed
without humor. "My father who was a member of I don't know how many
anti-gun organizations. He had a gun somewhere in his desk. He ran to grab it.
I thought he was joking. I thought he would calm down. He ordered me out of the
house at gunpoint and I went."
"Barefoot
and in a robe?" Rafiel said. "In New York City. Amazing you
survived."
Tom shrugged.
"There are organizations for runaways. I wasn't, but I was the right age,
the right profile, and all I had to do was say no when they offered to mediate
my return home with my father." He shrugged again. "In a year I was
lying about my age and getting jobs. But I hated the shift. I hated that it
came when I didn't expect it. And because I fought it till the last possible
minute, I often couldn't remember what I'd done when I'd shifted. I. . ."
He looked at Rafiel. "I tried street drugs."
"Anything
in the last six months?" Rafiel asked. "Since you've been in
Goldport."
"Only
whatever the triad boys injected into me," Tom said.
"Ah. We
don't regulate marinade. The rest is really none of my business. It's all
hearsay, anyway. I have no proof. You might just be nuts and think you used and
sold drugs."
"I never
sold it," Tom said.
"Good.
That's harder to give up, sometimes," Rafiel said. "What with
connections. . . So, you tried some funny stuff, to control it. Did it?"
His interest sounded clinical.
"Not so
you could notice. I was using mostly heroin because of its being a depressant.
I thought it would stop the shift. Since the shift came with big emotions and
such."
Rafiel nodded.
"So I
wanted to give it up, but I was scared," Tom said. "The one thing the
drugs did was make me forget. And make me calmer when I wasn't a dragon. They.
. . simplified my life. I couldn't obsess about being a dragon shape-shifter or
about the fact that my own father had kicked me out of the house, or any of
that, because I was too worried about getting enough money for the next
fix."
Rafiel nodded.
"Weirdly, I've heard other addicts say that this was more important for
them than the physical effects. The simplification of life and of
choices."
"It was
for me," Tom said. "And then one day, I was in a small city—I don't
even remember where—and I felt. . . I felt the Pearl. And I got the bright idea
that if I had the Pearl I wouldn't need the drugs. So I followed the feeling.
And I came to this incredible meeting of dragon shape-shifters. It was dark and
the little town was asleep. The parking lot was filled with men. . . And many
dragons. And there was. . . The Great Sky Dragon. I don't know how to explain
this.
"He's
like a dragon god. Not like God, the God above, the one God, but like a god.
Like. . . Like the Roman gods would be to humans. That's how the Great Sky
Dragon was to the rest of us. I could imagine people offering sacrifices and. .
. virgins to him. Like in the legends. And he had the Pearl."
Tom heard
himself sigh. "I wanted the Pearl. I'm not stupid. Not when I don't want
to be. They were all basking in the glow of the Pearl and stuff. And they were
all scared of The Great Sky Dragon. I'm not very good at being scared," he
said, and watched Rafiel nod.
"I was
impressed by the Great Sky Dragon," Tom said. "But not scared as such.
So I paid attention to who took the Pearl, and it was another dragon in
attendance. He put it in a wicker basket. And I loitered till the dragon
shifted shape. He was the owner of a small Chinese restaurant in town. I
followed him there. And then. . . I . . . well. . . I waited. And I watched.
And I planned. And then I ran in, got the Pearl and got out of there
fast."
Tom frowned.
"I must have taken them completely by surprise, because they didn't even
think to follow me for a while. And meanwhile I found out they couldn't sense
or follow the Pearl by sense if it was submerged in water. I couldn't follow it
if it was submerged in water. I brought it out west inside an aquarium packed
in foam peanuts in a cardboard box, in the luggage hold of various greyhounds."
"Did it
help with the addiction?" Rafiel asked.
"It
helped with controlling myself, not necessarily the addition—though perhaps the
two are related. When I got it out and looked at it, I felt. . . calm,
peaceful, accepted. And then even if I shifted, I didn't feel like it was a
terrible thing or that I should be shunned or killed for it. Does it make
sense?"
Rafiel nodded.
He was frowning. Keith was looking back, and his eyes were wide—and was that
pity in them? Tom didn't want Keith's pity.
"Anyway,"
He said, looking out the window at the mostly deserted landscape they were
crossing. "Anyway, I kicked the habit. It wasn't as difficult as I
thought. Rough moments, but I think that the fact we heal so easily. . ."
He shrugged.
Rafiel nodded.
"It would help, wouldn't it? The tendency to reassert balance. And Keith,
when you asked if we were, I guess immortal? That I know not more than anyone
else. It's hard to say. Until you die you don't know, and then it's academic. I
try to stay away from people trying to shoot me with silver bullets."
"Or any
bullets," Tom said, wryly. "And before you ask, I brought the Pearl
with me to Goldport. And it's stashed in water. They want it back. To be
honest, I wouldn't mind giving it back, but I can't. Because I think once I
give it back to them, they kill me."
Rafiel made a
face. "There has to be a way of giving it back." He was quiet a
while. Then he said, "But I guess it doesn't have anything to do with the
beetles, then?"
Tom shrugged.
"I didn't know about the beetles till tonight."
"What
would you estimate the percentage of shifters in the population is?"
Rafiel said. "From your travels?"
"I don't
know," Tom said. "Not very high. Considerably less than one percent.
Even if we go on legends."
"Even if
we go on legends. . ."Rafiel said, as an echo. "But you know, we know
three at least, in our immediate sphere, and then there's the beetles, at least
two. From their size, there's no way they can be non shifters. And there's one
of their victims who smelled like a shifter—though I only caught a bit of
blood. And another that was definitely a shifter. The corpse in the parking
lot." He nodded at Tom. "His wife said he was a coyote shifter."
"Lucky
bastard," Tom said feelingly. "A coyote would be much easier."
Rafiel laughed
and for a moment there was a bond. "Tell me about it," he said.
"Here's the thing, though, Tom, why so many of us? And why is all this
activity around the Athens?"
Tom shook his
head. "I have no idea."
"Except,"
Keith said. "Except maybe there's something like the Pearl of Heaven?
Something that calls shifters there? That works on shifters?"
"Perhaps
the Pearl?" Rafiel asked.
Tom didn't
think Rafiel was working for the triad, but you never knew. "Not the
Pearl," he said. "At any rate, where I have the Pearl, it's
submerged. So it's not exerting influence on anyone. If the dragons who know
what it feels like can't feel it, then neither can anyone else."
"Um. .
."
"Speaking
of the triad," Tom said. "How come we're driving their car, and
they're not hot on our trail?"
"Well. .
. you flamed them pretty thoroughly," Keith said.
"Yeah,
but. . . come on? No one has checked? And don't forget they have aerial
transportation."
"Well,"
Rafiel said. "Two things. While you were in the bathroom at the station, I
called some friends in New Mexico and told them the old station was a triad
hangout and I'd heard from a friend that it had just gone up in flames. At a
guess, any of them that got out, is in too much trouble to talk, much less
count the car wrecks in the parking lot. It's genuinely possible they think you
burned."
Tom nodded.
"And the other thing?"
Keith
chuckled. "We bought three cans of spray paint. While you were in the
restroom, we spray painted the top of the car. Just the top. So that aerial
surveillance. . ."
"Painted?
What color?"
"Mostly
bright orange," Rafiel said. "It was what they had. The front is
still black. We ran out of paint." He grinned at Keith who was still
chuckling. "People did look at us like we were nuts."
"I
bet."
"So what
do we do now?" Keith asked.
"Well,
first we get to Goldport," Rafiel said. "I'd like to change clothes. .
." He frowned down at himself. "And I probably should call in and
figure out the news on the case. Also tell them I didn't drop from the face of
the world, since I was supposed to be at work a few hours ago."
"And
then?" Keith said.
"And then
I think Tom and I, and Kyrie should get together and figure out what we're
going to do. Both about the Pearl of Heaven and the triad and about the
beetles." He looked back at Tom. "They attacked Kyrie's house, you
know, after you left."
"Damn. Is
she okay?"
"She's fine."
"My
fault," Tom said. I shouldn't have stayed there. They were probably after
me."
"Don't be
a fool. I think they were after her. She had seen them in the parking lot,
dragging a corpse, and it was clear they knew she saw them."
"Hey,"
Keith said. "Why you and Tom and Kyrie? Why am I being left out of this?
What have I done wrong?"
Rafiel
frowned. "Well, you're not . . . one of us, are you? I mean. . . we have
to police our own and help our own, because if one of us is discovered, the
others will be too. But you don't have to help us. You're not. . ."
"Yeah,
but I want to help," Keith said. "Can I like be an honorary
shape-shifter or something?"
"Why?"
Tom asked, puzzled.
"Oh,
hell. You guys are cool. It's like sf or a comic book."
"Except
you could get hurt. Quickly," Tom said.
"I could
get hurt very quickly anyway. Look, they knew you were my friend, they came to
my house to get me. Surely that means I'm already not safe. I might as well
help."
"Tom, he
has a point," Rafiel said. "Kyrie's house is clearly not safe. Your
apartment is destroyed. I doubt that Keith's apartment is safe. And I. .
."
"You?"
"I live
with my parents," Rafiel said. "They know I'm a shifter. They help me
if needed. It's convenient."
"I didn't
say anything," Tom said.
Rafiel shrugged.
"But I can't bring you guys there. If we're tracked. . . I can't risk
them. Dad is not doing so well these days."
"So
you're saying you don't know where we can get together?"
Rafiel nodded.
"Drop me off at home first. Then call Kyrie and tell her to meet you
somewhere. Then pick me up in her car. We should leave this one in a public
park or something. I don't think they'll report it stolen, but you never
know." He drummed his fingers on the side of the wheel. "And then
we'll figure out where to go. Perhaps a hotel room? A hotel would be good,
wouldn't it? It's so public that I don't think even the triad would risk
it."
Tom nodded.
"And I'm
in? I'm in, right?" Keith asked.
"You're
in," Rafiel said.
"There's
a distinct possibility you're too addled to be left on your own," Tom
said.
"Hey,"
Keith said, but he was smiling.
Tom felt odd.
There was a weird camaraderie. He hadn't had friends in a long time. He hadn't
ever had friends, truly. Not real friends.
He only hoped
he could keep them all alive by the end of this.
* * *
Kyrie was
standing at the counter, adding up her hours, when her cell phone rang. She
dipped into the apron pocket, and brought it out. "Yes?"
"Kyrie?"
It was Tom.
Until she felt relief flooding through her, she didn't realize that she
couldn't be absolutely sure he was still alive till she heard from him.
She almost
called his name, but then realized that Anthony was behind the counter doing
something and that she didn't know if Frank was hanging out somewhere. So,
instead, she said, "Yes?"
"Thank
God it's you," he said. There was a sound like coughing. "You didn't
say anything and I wondered if I'd done something wrong and called the police
department in New Mexico."
"What?"
"Later,"
Rafiel said he'd told you that you might need to pick us up."
"Yes."
"Well,
can you come? We're in the parking garage for the zoo. We've parked on the
third level, and we'll come down to meet you up front. In front of the
zoo."
"We?"
"Keith
and I. We'll swing by Rafiel's place on the way, okay?"
"Sure."
She hung up
and found Anthony staring at her. "Was that Frank?"
"No."
"Damn,"
Anthony said. "I don't know where he's gone. I'm going to have to stay
here and wait for the day shift people. Will you wait with me?"
"I
can't," Kyrie said. "I've got to meet a friend."
"The guy
you were talking to?" Anthony asked, gesturing towards the enclosure.
"He looks an awful lot like Tom."
"It's his
father," Kyrie said, as she headed for the door. She'd parked up front again.
She didn't think she could ever park in the parking lot again. Not for all the
money in the world.
"Oh,"
Anthony said, just as she opened the door and went out.
Kyrie realized
a little too late that Anthony might think that she was having an affair with
Tom's dad. But she didn't think so. Anthony was a rather conventional person
and was more likely to have her engaged to Tom in his mind—and to assume that
his father's visit had something to do with finalizing the arrangements.
The drive to
the zoo wasn't long. Just a few blocks down Fairfax and then a turn into a
tangle of streets named after presidents.
It didn't
really matter which you took, since they were all parallel. Either Madison or
Jackson took you to a sharp turn at Taylor and then up Wilson where the street
namers had run out of presidents and offered, instead, Chrisalys St, which in
turn, exhausted by all these flights of fancy ended in Main Parkway, where the
zoo, the library and the pioneer museum were all located.
Finding Tom
and Keith at the entrance wasn't hard either. She simply took a long turn
around the parking lot, and—circling by the door—saw the two only people
standing there—since the zoo was still closed.
She very much
doubted it would have been hard to find them even if there had been crowds
streaming by the door, though. Tom looked like he'd been put through a
shredder. There was blood on his face, his hair was a mess, and he looked like
he was about to fall over of tiredness.
But he smiled
when he saw her, and she couldn't help smiling back as she opened the door. For
some reason, she expected him to be mad at her, for throwing him out—for
thinking he'd gotten high. But he didn't look resentful at all. He sat in the
passenger seat, while Keith took the back seat. And Tom strapped himself down
with the seat belt, too, she noted.
"We have
to call Rafiel and go get him," Tom said.
"We
do?"
"Yes. He
went home to change. His clothes were shredded sometime. . . around the time
they captured him." He gave her a quick rundown of everything that had
happened and Kyrie listened, eyebrows raised, trying not to show just how
harrowing the account was. Particularly the torture.
When he was
done she thought how strange he was that he should have endured all that
torture and yet have roused himself to action when he thought Keith—and
herself—were in trouble. She took a sidelong glance at Tom, who was dialing his
cell phone. There was someone there, she thought. Someone salvageable despite
whatever his upbringing and his unexpected shifter nature had done to him.
"Rafiel,"
Tom said into the phone. Followed by raised eyebrows and, "I see."
Which was, in turn, followed by, "Sure."
"He wants
to know where we're going to be. He says he'll meet us. He's looking up some
data on missing people. He says there's a spike over the last two months. He
wants to know what the chances are those people are shifters. Something in the
family interviews might give it away, he said. And he definitely wants to
figure out how many people were headed for the Athens or vicinity when they
disappeared. So he says he'll meet us wherever we're going. And he asks which
hotel."
Hotel. Kyrie
had been thinking about this. There was an off chance the triad—or the beetles,
whoever they were—would decide to call around to hotels for their names. But
the hotels they would call around to—if they got around to that—would be in
their price range. Not the Lace and Spurs.
"We
thought it would be better to meet at a hotel," he said into the phone.
"Particularly a large hotel. Lots of guests. No shape-shifter even one not
quite in his right mind would want to have that kind of public revelation."
"Where
are we going?" he said. "Rafiel says he'll meet us wherever."
"Tom. . .
What do you think of your father?"
Tom's eyes
widened. His face lost color—which she would have thought impossible before.
"Why?" he asked.
"Because
he's in town and he—"
"Hang on
a second," Tom said into the phone. "I'll call you back in a couple
of minutes." He hung up the phone and set it in his lap, then looked at
Kyrie. "My father?" he said, not so much as though he were verifying
her words, but as though he were in doubt that such a thing as a father
existed.
"Your
father came to town two days ago and he—"
"Oh,
shit," Tom said. "You realize he's probably working for the
triad?"
"He
was," Kyrie said.
"And?
What did he do? Where did he go?"
"He came
to me."
Tom's hand
clenched so hard on the phone that his knuckles shone white through the pale
skin. His face remained impassive. "What did he ask you?"
"Many
things. But most of all he seemed to be concerned with where you were, and I
couldn't have helped him even if I wanted to."
Tom nodded.
"And?"
"And I
realized he was working for the triad and I was so shocked that I. . . I
left."
"Good,"
Tom said, and picked up the phone again. "Now, where should we go to that
Rafiel can meet us."
"Tom,"
Kyrie said, speaking in a low voice because she felt as though Tom were
something very unstable on the verge of an explosion. Should not be shaken,
stirred, or even looked at cross-eyed, as far as she could tell. "Your
father has a hotel room. At the Spurs and Lace."
She expected
the silence, and it came, but then she expected a flip remark, and that didn't
come. Instead, Tom's face seemed set in stone, his eyebrows slightly pulled
together as if he were puzzled, his face expressionless, his eyes giving the
impression of being so unreadable that they might as well have a blind pulled
down in front of them.
"He said
to call him if we needed anything."
"Kyrie,"
Tom said. It was a slow, even voice. "Are you out of your mind?"
"No."
She was prepared to be firm. It was the best solution, and yes, she realized it
would disturb Tom, but she was determined to keep them safe. By force if
needed. "No. I'm not. He said to call him, and we can meet him at the
Spurs and Lace. Our names won't be on the register and I don't think anyone
will think that he and you will be under the same roof."
"And
there are reasons for that," Tom said, his voice still even. "Kyrie,
he's working for the triad."
"No, he's
not. He realized that they wanted to. . . kill you. And he came to me. He
wanted me to save you."
"No. That
might have been what he said. But he was just trying to find me, to. . ."
"Tom, I
am not an idiot," Kyrie said, and saw something flicker in his eyes and
for just a moment thought that Tom was going to tell her she was. But he didn't
say anything, and she went on. "I saw what he was doing first, but he has
changed. He said that he didn't want you dead. He came to the Athens in the
middle of the night, looking like the walking dead. And he begged me to help
him."
"Kyrie.
He's a lawyer. Lawyers lie. It's right in the contract."
She shook her
head. "He wasn't lying."
"No? How
not? What sign did he give you of his amazing turnaround, Kyrie? Tell me. Maybe
it will convince me. I know the bastard far better than you do." He left
the phone resting on his knees and crossed his arms on his chest, in a clear
body-language sign that like hell he'd listen.
"If he
shifts into a dragon in the car, I'm jumping out," Keith said, quietly,
from the back.
Kyrie ignored
Keith. "I know he's changed in his view of it, because he tried to
convince me how bad you are."
Tom's eyes
widened. "All right, Kyrie. I was the one who was hit on the head, but you
seem to be the one affected by it. He's always said how bad I was."
"No,"
Kyrie said, and shook her head. "Not like this. He stopped just short of
saying you botched your spelling bee in third grade. Your father, Tom, realized
suddenly that he messed up big with you. And he's trying to justify it to
himself by telling someone in increasingly more ridiculous terms how nasty a
person you are."
Tom didn't
answer. He was biting the corner of his lower lip.
"Look—I—"
she stopped short of telling him she had done the same. Just. "I tend to
do what he was doing, so I understand the process. Besides, when I told him you
were safe, when Rafiel called, he went all slack. I've never seen someone so
relieved."
"Okay, so
maybe he didn't want me to die. Maybe he was relieved at that. Doesn't mean he
won't change his mind again when he actually sees me."
"I don't
think so," Kyrie said. "I don't think he will. And Tom, we could use
his room. I'm indentured for the next six months, you can't have that much
money. We'd have to get Rafiel to pay for it. I'd. . . I'd rather not."
The last thing she wanted to tell Tom was that Rafiel had kissed her. Oh, Tom
had no reason at all for jealousy, nor did she know if she had any interest in
Tom's kissing her—Okay. So, she had to stop lying to herself, she thought
again, looking at his face—Yeah, she wanted to kiss him. She just wasn't sure where
it would go and that she wasn't sure if she wanted. But Tom had no
reason for jealousy and she doubted he would have any, but she would still
prefer not to tell him about it.
"Kyrie, I
don't believe in big turnarounds. I don't believe people change that
much."
Oh, she was
going to hate to have to say this. "I don't believe it either, Tom, but .
. . You're no longer a hard core drug user who would steal cars for joyrides
without a second thought, are you? So there must be change."
Tom's mouth
dropped open. For a moment she thought he was going to ask her to stop the car
so he could get out. His hand actually moved towards the door handle. And then
he seemed to realize she wasn't insulting him. The meaning of her words seemed
to actually penetrate through his thick head.
He took a deep
breath and held the phone out to her. "You call Daddy Dearest."
It would have
been easiest to tell him she was driving and couldn't, but Kyrie was aware of
the victory this represented. So, instead, she pulled over into a vacant
parking space on the side of Polk Street and grabbed the phone. Pulling
Edward's number from her purse, she dialed.
The phone
rang, and she asked for the room number from the bored-sounding receptionist.
Then his bedroom phone rang. Once, twice, three, four times. She expected the
message to come on, when the phone was picked up, and clearly dropped, and
picked up again.
"Hello,"
a sleepy male voice said from the other side.
"Mister
Ormson?" Kyrie said.
"Kyrie,"
the name came out with force, as though it would be more effort to keep it in.
"Tom. Is Tom all right? Anything wrong with. . ."
"No. Tom
is right here. He's fine. We were wondering if we could camp in your hotel room
for a few hours."
"Beg your
pardon?"
"Tom and
I, and a couple of friends. We're. . . in danger from. . . your friends and. .
. other people. We wondered if we could hide there till we find a plan of
action."
There was a
silence from the other side. And then a voice that sounded as if he didn't
quite know what he was saying. "Sure, of course. Sure." A small
pause. "And Tom is with you?"
"Yes."
"Oh."
A deep breath, the sound of it audible even through the phone. "Sure. Of
course. Anything you need."
"Thank
you," Kyrie said and hung up the phone. She handed the phone to Tom and
said, "Call Rafiel."
"Daddy
Dearest is even now calling the triad bosses," Tom said. His mouth set in
an expression of petulant disdain. "They'll be there when we get
there."
"I doubt
it," Kyrie said.
"And if
they are, we fight them," Keith said, leaning forward.
* * *
Okay, so being
scared didn't even begin to describe the state of Tom's emotions as they pulled
into the parking lot of the Spurs and Lace.
The problem
wasn't being scared. He was used to being scared at this point. In the last
three days, he'd been scared so often that he thought he wouldn't actually know
what to do if he weren't in fear of someone or something. But this time he
didn't even know what he was scared of.
Okay—so, if
the triad members were there, Keith was right. They fought. And if Tom had to
sacrifice himself so Kyrie and Keith got out of this unscathed, he would do so.
He'd been prepared to do it before, in the abandoned gas station. So, why not
now.
So. . . that
wasn't the big source of his fear. The big source of his fear was that his
father would be there, without the triad, and that all would be seemingly nice
between them. He couldn't imagine talking to his father as if nothing had
happened, as if. . . Worse, he couldn't imagine his father talking to him like
that. But he'd been worried about Tom. Tom couldn't understand that either.
He settled for
thinking that his father had been exchanged by aliens. It didn't make much
sense and it wasn't very likely, but heck, what around here was likely? He'd
just think that this was pod-father, and with pod-father, he had no history.
He got out of
the car, and followed Kyrie and Keith up to the elevator and up in the elevator
to the room, only slightly gratified by the puzzled looks the staff gave him.
Up at the fifth floor, they walked along the cool, carpeted hallway towards
room 550.
Tom took in
the trays with used dishes at the door to the rooms, and the general atmosphere
of quiet. There were no detectable odors in the air. Down the hallway, an ice
machine hummed and clunked.
The classiest
place he'd been in before this was motel six. Oh, he supposed he'd been in
hotels as a child. In fact, he had vague memories of a trip to Rome with mother
and father and, of course, his nanny, when he was ten or eleven. But most of
the stuff before he'd left home now seemed to him like scenes from someone
else's life.
And perhaps
that was the best way to think about it. The Tom who'd been ordered at gun
point from his childhood home was dead and gone. This new Tom was a stranger to
the man in the room.
But when Kyrie
knocked, the door was open by a man who looked far too much like the father Tom
remembered for Tom not to take a step back, shocked—even as his father's gaze
scanned him indifferently once, before returning, and then his eyes opened
wider, and he opened his mouth as if to say something, but closed it again in
silence and, instead, stepped aside to let them in.
He was wearing
the pants and a shirt for the type of suit that Tom remembered his father
wearing—fabric good enough to look expensive without looking ostentatious. But
this one looked like hell—or like he'd been sleeping in it. His hair too, was
piled up in a way that suggested a total disregard for combs.
But the
strangest thing was that, as he stepped aside, so they could enter the room,
Tom's father stared intently at Tom.
Tom let his
gaze wonder around the room, instead. It was. . . dark red. And opulent. There
was a dark red bed spread on the bed and from its sheen it might have been real
silk. Someone had pulled it up hastily and a bit crookedly, so Tom's father had
probably been in bed when they called, and had tried to make the bed in a
hurry. Tom felt a strange satisfaction about this. To his knowledge, it was the
first time his father had engaged in housekeeping for Tom's benefit.
Besides the
bed, there were a loveseat and three arm chairs and two chairs, a huge desk,
where his father had a laptop, resting. And a lot more empty space than there
should be in a room with all that furniture.
Over the bed
was an abstract collage that brought the art form completely out of the realm
of nutty seventies fads—a thing in deep textures and gold and bronze colors.
The bathroom,
glimpsed as Tom was going past, was all marble and actually two rooms, the first
of which contained just a sink with a hair drier and various other essentials
of toiletry. Tom ached for a shower with an almost physical pain, but he went
in, quietly.
"Mr.
Ormson," Kyrie said. "Thanks for letting us come in at such short
notice."
He shook his
head. "No problem. Make use of. . . whatever you want. Tom? Are you. . .
There's blood on you."
Tom shook his
head. "I'm fine." And then, as though betraying that he wasn't, he
walked over to the most distant armchair and sat down, as far away from his
father as he could get.
His father
frowned at him a moment, but didn't say anything.
"I wonder
if Rafiel is going to be much longer," Tom said, pretending not to feel
the weight of that gaze on him.
Keith sat down
on one of the straight-backed chairs, and Kyrie, after some hesitation, took
the armchair next to Tom's.
She looked at
him, too, but her gaze was not full of disapproving enquiry. Unlike his
father's expression, Kyrie's was warm and full of sympathy.
He wanted to
smile at her, to pat her hand. But just because the woman didn't want him dead;
just because the woman didn't think he was dangerous or a criminal, it didn't
mean that she had any interest whatsoever in him.
So instead, he
fidgeted in the chair and looked out of the window into the parking lot. But he
kept looking at her out of the corner of his eye. She looked good enough to
eat—and not in the sense he'd threatened to eat tourists. That cinnamon skin,
those heavy-lidded eyes. He looked away. If he allowed himself to contemplate the
perfection of her lips, or the way her breasts—one of which he remembered with
particular fondness—pushed out her t-shirt, he wouldn't be able to respond for
his actions.
Instead, he
looked again, at her tapestry-dyed hair, falling in lustrous layers. And he
remembered he had something of hers.
Digging
frantically in his jacket pocket, he brought it out. He saw her eyes widen, and
her smile appear, as he offered her the earring on his palm.
"You
found it," she said.
"My
landlady did," he said. "And I took it. I was hoping. . . I was
hoping I would see you again, to be able to give it to you."
He felt
himself blush and felt like a total idiot. But Kyrie put the earring on and was
smiling at him. He'd have been willing to go a long way for that. Coming to his
father's hotel room seemed like a minor sacrifice.
Even if Daddy
Dearest ended up selling them up the river.
* * *
The boy looked
tense, Edward thought. Only the thing was, he wasn't a boy, anymore, was he?
The face looking back at Edward's with such studied lack of expression was
covered in dark stubble. And the shoulders had filled out, the arms become
knotted with muscle.
Tom was
wearing a black leather jacket, ratty jeans and heavy boots. His father could
have passed him a hundred times in the street and never recognized him. Only
the eyes were the same he remembered from childhood, the same that looked out
of his own mirror at him, every morning. But Tom's eyes showed no expression.
They allowed him to look at them, and then they slid away from contact, without
revealing anything.
There was
blood on him too, and a snaking scar on his forehead. Had the triad done that,
or had Tom gone through worse scrapes in the last five years. There were many
things Edward wanted to know. Unfortunately, they were the ones he would never
dare ask.
He watched Tom
for a while, watched him pull out the girl's earring and give it back to her.
He wondered if the two young fools had any idea that they were giving each
other sick-puppy-dog looks.
But not only
wasn't it his place to interfere, he was sure if he tried to tell them, either
of them would put him soundly in his place.
"Do you
guys want some coffee?" he asked, "I'm making some for myself."
There were
sounds that might be agreement from the bedroom, as he set up the coffee maker.
Fortunately the Spurs and Lace went for normal sized coffee makers, not the
one-cup deals that were normally the rule. And they provided enough coffee and
enough cups. He set it to run and thought.
The boy needed
a shower. And probably clean clothes. But Edward had a feeling that if he
offered either Tom might very well fling out of the room in a fury. He got a
feeling that Tom was holding something in, battling something. And that if he
let it all blow, none of them would like it.
Of course, if
Tom should shift to a dragon. . . Edward peered around the door at the young
man and Kyrie, who were now talking to each other, while Tom had closed his
eyes and appeared to be dozing.
Neither the
young man nor Kyrie looked scared that Tom would shift into a dragon, so it
couldn't be that frequent an occurrence.
The coffee was
made, and Edward had a sudden flash of inspiration. Everything that he might
offer Tom would be refused. But if he handed it to Tom as a matter of fact,
there was at least the off chance that Tom wouldn't know how to refuse. He'd
looked many things, none of them at ease.
So, testing
his theory, Edward poured himself a cup of coffee, and then one for Tom,
surprising himself with retrieving, from the mists of memory, how Tom liked his
coffee. The boy had only started drinking it when he'd. . . left. But Edward
remembered ribbing him about liking three spoons of sugar in it.
He now poured
in three packets of sugar and then crossed the room, trying to look completely
at ease. For all his appearances in uncertain cases, in court rooms presided
over by hostile judges, this was probably his greatest performance.
"Coffee is ready," He told Kyrie and the other young man. "If
you wish to help yourselves." Then he walked up to Tom.
The armchair
the boy was sitting in was right next to a side table, and on the other side of
that was the straight backed chair normally used at the desk.
Edward put his
own coffee cup down on the side table, and leaned over, touching Tom's
shoulder, lightly. "Tom, coffee," he said.
Tom woke up
immediately, and sat up, fully alert. Edward remembered that he used to sleep
late and sometimes miss first period at school. When had he learned to wake up
like this, quickly, without complaint. How had he been living that a moment's
hesitation between being asleep and full alertness might make a difference?
He couldn't
ask. "I put three packets of sugar in. The way you like it."
Tom looked
surprised. He reached for the cup, took it to his lips without complaint. And
Edward sat at the desk chair, and took a deep draught of his coffee, feeling
ridiculously proud of himself. It had worked. If handed things straight off, Tom
was too confused to refuse. It was the first time in years. . . No. It was the
first time Tom's lifetime that Edward had set himself to learn how to get
around his stubborn son without a confrontation. And it had paid off.
It was all he
could do to keep himself from smiling in victory. Fortunately, at that moment,
someone knocked at the door and Kyrie opened it.
"Mr.
Edward Ormson, this is Rafiel Trall, a police officer of Goldport."
Officer Rafiel
Trall was tall and golden haired, with the sort of demeanor one would expect
from a duke or visiting royalty. He shook Edward's hand, but there was a slight
hesitation, and Edward wondered what Tom had told him about his father.
But then, as
the young people pulled chairs together to talk, Edward slipped out the door,
quietly.
He didn't know
if they were all shape changers, and he didn't know how they'd react to what he
was about to do.
But he knew he
had to do it.
* * *
Tom smiled at
seeing Keith immediately assume the role of secretary of the organization. Sometimes
people defied all categorization. He'd never expected his wild neighbor, of the
late nights and the revolving girlfriends to be this. . . neat.
But Keith
grabbed the pad and turned to them. "As far as I can see it, he said.
We're facing two problems. One is the beetles. Kyrie is the only one who's seen
the beetles—right?"
"No,"
Tom said, amused. "We've seen them also. We just didn't remember. I think
you thought they were aliens."
Keith looked
wounded. "Whatever that powder was. . ."
"Yes,"
Tom agreed not particularly wanting to go there, not wanting to explain that
he'd thought Kyrie's sugar was drugged. He looked at her out the corner of his
eye, and realized that Rafiel was also looking at her with an intent
expression. Well, if she had to go to someone else. . . But Tom very much hoped
she wouldn't.
"They are
blue and green and refractive," Kyrie said. "And they look somewhat
like the beetles I've seen in the museum of natural history in Denver. I
vaguely remember they said they were made into jewelry, and I could believe it
because they were so pretty. The little ones in the museum. Not the small
ones."
"You
don't know what their genus is, do you?" Keith asked, looking up.
"Because we could look them up and figure out their habits."
Kyrie shook her
head. "I never really thought knowing the name of a beetle would be
essential to me," she said.
"Ah, but
see, that's where you go wrong," Keith said. Scribbling furiously.
"Beetles are always essential. You let them run around unnamed they start
music groups and what not." He looked up. "Well, I'll call the museum
later, or look it up on line. So. . . we have these huge beetles. Are we sure
they're shifters."
"They're
the size of that bed," Kyrie said, pointing to the king size bed behind
them. Or maybe the size of a double bed. But taller. Where do you suppose their
natural habitat would be? And why wouldn't it have been discovered long
ago?"
Keith waved
one hand. "Okay, point, point," he said. "But so, we have two
shifters. How often is it that shifters get together? Same species shifters?
Can you guys like. . . mate in your other form?"
Tom felt a
burning heat climb to his cheeks. Without looking he could tell that Rafiel was
now staring at Kyrie with a gaze set to smolder. And Kyrie was staring ahead, looking
shocked, refusing to look at either of them.
It was funny.
Because of course Keith had always assumed that Tom was a player like himself,
that he was out there, every night, picking up girls. And of course, Tom's
sexual experience could be written on the head of a pin, was all in very human
form, and had all happened before the age of sixteen.
He threw his
head back and laughed. "Keith, you've got the wrong guy, at least where
I'm concerned," he said. "Only dragons I've known were in the triad.
So, I have no idea. Also, the legends are a little quiet on the mating habits
of dragons."
"And I
had never met another shifter till two days ago," Kyrie said, her voice
small and embarrassed. "I suppose it's possible to mate in animal
form."
Did she throw
a quick look at Rafiel? Tom's heart sank.
"But I
wouldn't like to do it," Kyrie said. She sat up straighter in her chair.
"For the same reason I wouldn't really like to eat in the shifted form.
Even if it's proper food, you know, not. . . people. I like being human. If I'm
ever going to have sex, I'd like to be aware of who I'm doing it with and
how."
"You've
never—" Keith started, then shook his head.
Tom realized
he was grinning, and forced his face to become impassive. He hoped Kyrie hadn't
noticed.
Rafiel,
meanwhile, was shaking his head. "Not in shifted form," he said.
"Never. So, I too know nothing about sex between shifters. Though I
suppose," he gave Tom a sly look. "That the sex lives of lions are
far better documented than the sex lives of dragons."
But he
couldn't touch Tom's self assurance at that point. Kyrie had just as good as
confessed that her experience was not superior to his own. He wondered if she'd
done it on purpose.
"You guys
are a waste of shifting ability," Keith said, sounding vaguely disgusted.
"So, you don't know if two shifters of the same kind, different gender
met, if it would lead to. . ."
"Kittens
in the basket?" Rafiel said.
"Eggs in
the lair," Tom immediately interposed not to be outdone.
"Actually,"
Keith said. "I was thinking more than some species have truly bizarre
mating habits. And if we're dealing with a mating pair, which . . . could we
be?"
Kyrie leaned
forward, holding her coffee cup in both hands, over her knees. "I think we
could be, yes," she said. "I think. . . I got a feeling that was the
case."
"So, if
we're dealing with a mating couple, you know that insects can get really kinky,
right? Like all the biting off of heads of males after mating, or while mating,
and all that stuff. Is it possible that the killings are part of a mating
ritual? Like where the male has to give the female a gift or something."
"Yes,
that's quite possible," Tom said, feeling slightly dumb that this hadn't
occurred to him. Possibly because in all he'd read of the mating rituals of
beautiful jungle cats, there had never been anything about their requiring the
gift of a corpse.
"It might
be pertinent," Rafiel said. "That I suspect there have been about two
dozen people killed, and that they were all or almost all shifters."
"How
could you know that?" Kyrie asked.
"I don't
know. I suspect. If you remember, I told you I wanted to wait a little before I
came here, because I wanted to find out if there could have been more people
who disappeared in that area and whose bodies haven't been found yet?" He
took a sip of coffee. "Well, I figured it out. At least partway. There are
at least fifteen other people who have been missing, all over the last month or
so. And they all disappeared from around the Athens. They were all young and therefore
we didn't pay too much attention. Otherwise the pattern would have become
obvious. But most of them the families didn't seem sure they hadn't run away,
so we thought we'd give it a little longer. . ." He took another sip of
coffee. "We're a small police department. Oh, and most people were either
passing through or had just decided to move here. Some interesting things—they
all seemed to really like the Athens and had been there more than once. And
they all had, the sort of relationship with their families and people around
them that. . ." He looked at Tom.
"Say no
more," Tom said, and for the first time realized his father was nowhere
around. Was he hiding in the bathroom to be out of their hair? Tom didn't think
it likely, but then neither had he thought it likely that his father would
still remember how Tom took his coffee.
"Well,
here's the thing," Keith said. "If these are gifts perhaps they have
to be shifters. Do you guys know when someone else is a shifter?"
"Sometimes,"
Kyrie said. "If you get close enough. There is a definite tang, but I'm
not very good at smelling it."
"I can't
smell it at all," Tom said.
"I smell
it very well, but I have to be near the person and sort of away from everything
else."
"And all
shifters smell alike?" Keith asked. "Regardless of species?"
Rafiel nodded.
"So,
perhaps the gift of the dead corpse has to smell like a shifter?"
"It's
possible," Rafiel said. "We don't have enough to go on, but there are
definite possibilities. Just the fact that it's a shifter couple is
interesting. I'd imagine the odds against it are enormous, and I wonder how
long they've been a couple.
"Probably
about a month," Tom said. "Since that's when you started noticing the
pattern."
"Good
job, Mr. Ormson. You might have a future in law enforcement," Rafiel said.
The Mr.
Ormson was clearly intended to be a teasing remark, and Tom was about to
answer in kind, but he thought of his father. If he was in the bathroom, trying
to stay out of their way, Tom didn't call the others' attention to his absence.
Because if he did, and it was nothing, he was just going to sound totally
paranoid. On the other hand. . . On the other hand. . . If he didn't call their
attention, and his father had gone to the triad. . .
Tom got up,
carrying his cup of coffee, as if he were going to get a refill.
"So I
think on the matter of the beetles, the best thing really would be to look them
up in the Museum of Natural History," Keith said. "See if they have
stuff about those beetles habits, then see what helps. And then we have the
matter of the Pearl of Heaven."
But Tom had
reached the little alcove before the bathroom, the area with the sink and the
coffee maker and cups. Tom frowned at it, because it had no articles of
personal hygiene, only one of those kits of horrible toothbrush with toothpaste
already on that hotels give guests who forgot their toiletries. And Tom
couldn't believe that his father—of all people—would have forgotten his
toiletries.
The door to
the bathroom was closed, but not enough for the latch to catch. Tom reached
over, and slid it open with his foot, slowly. No one.
There could be
a perfectly natural explanation. There should be a perfectly natural
explanation. Tom was sure of it. But his heart was beating up near his throat,
his mouth felt dry and his hands shook. He put the coffee cup on the counter,
very carefully, and then walked out, feeling lightheaded.
Had he really
believed his father cared? Had the thing with remembering how Tom liked his
coffee been enough to make Tom believe his father gave a dam? He must really be
starved for affection, if he'd believe his father could be more than a cold and
calculating bastard.
He walked
outside to the bedroom, feeling as if his legs would give out under him. His father
had gone to the triad. Was probably, even now, making some plan to deliver Tom
to the triad. And Tom didn't want to be tortured again. Plus, they would
probably be even more upset now, considering he'd just been the cause of death
of a number of their affiliates.
"We
should just leave it on some public place," Keith said. "Like we left
the car. And get the hell out of dodge. Let the triad feel it and go get
it."
Tom tried to
shape his mouth to explain that his father had left, that he'd gone to denounce
them—to denounce Tom—to the triad. But the betrayal was so monstrous that he
couldn't find the words.
And then he
heard the key slide into the lock, and he turned, barely staying human, poised
at the verge of shifting. . .
And his father
came in, alone, carrying two very large bags with the name and the logo of one
of the stores in the lobby. And another smaller bag, with the name of another
of the lobby stores. One that specialized in candy and snacks.
They faced
each other, silently, and his father looked so startled, so shocked, that Tom
wondered if he'd started to shift already.
"I'm
sorry," his father said. "Was I needed? You guys seemed to be talking
about things I didn't understand and I thought I'd get some clothes and a comb,
since I left without any of that." He put the larger bags on the bed, then
opened the small bag and fished out a red box tied with a gold ribbon. "I
thought you might like these Tom."
Nuts with
chocolate and his favorite brand. Okay, this was becoming ridiculous. His
father might have kicked him out of the house at sixteen, and he might know
next to nothing about Tom's life since then, but, apparently, it was a point of
pride that he remembered what Tom liked to eat and drink.
There was
really no response for it, though, and Tom, no longer hungry, still felt
peckish of sorts. Besides, this was a hideously expensive brand of chocolates
and he hadn't been able to afford it in years.
While he was
tearing the ribbon, he saw his father open a bigger assortment of different
types and set it on the side table. "For you guys, since none of you look
like you've slept enough."
Tom noticed
that Kyrie's eyes widened and that her hand went out for a dark chocolate
truffle. He would have to remember that. Forget dead bodies. Any female with
even a bit of homo sapiens in her was going to go for the chocolates.
To change
subject, and disguise his attention to her every action—and also how scared
he'd been at his father's absence—Tom looked at his father and managed to say
in a voice almost devoid of hostility, "I wonder if you could talk to us
about the triad," he said. "How you came to be here, I mean. And how
they got you to come here."
"The
Great Sky Dragon kidnaped me from my office," Tom's father said. He dipped
into the common box, too, and got a nut chocolate also. It was one of the
tastes they shared. "He picked me up and told me that my son was my
responsibility and he was going to bring me here, and I could find you and the
Pearl, after which he'd take me back to New York. He made it clear I wasn't to
return until I'd found them their Pearl. Tom, why did you take it?"
Tom shrugged.
He'd try to explain this before, and was getting tired of explaining.
Particularly because the idea seemed really stupid now, and also because he was
starting to realize what he'd searched for in the Pearl was what he'd found
with Kyrie and even with the guys—acceptance, caring for him, giving a damn if
he lived or died.
Instead, in
said, 'Because hard drugs weren't working for me." And seeing his father
look shocked, Tom smiled. "Because the Pearl made me feel loved and
accepted and I hadn't felt that since. . . In a long time."
His father had
gone slightly red, and was looking at Tom as though evaluating something.
"So," he said. "Do you still need it?"
Tom shook his
head. "No. I told the. . . them," he gestured towards Keith and
Rafiel. "I told them that I would give it back, if I could just figure out
how to do it. I haven't really been able to do that. Not recently."
"What do
you mean?" Edward asked.
"I mean
that if I gave it back to them, they'd kill me. They made it very clear they
didn't take kindly that I'd stolen it. It's their. . . cultic object or
something. They don't like the idea that a stranger grabbed it. I think they
will feel the stranger must be killed. Considering what they did to me when
they captured me. . ."
"Okay,"
Edward said, very calmly. "So, how about I take the Pearl back."
Rafiel chocked
on his chocolate. "Not a good thing," he said. "Because if you
do that, then I suspect they'll kill you. The whole thing they said about you
being responsible for Tom?"
"Okay,"
Keith said. "I've already said it, but you guys were out of the room. I
think the easiest thing is for us to take it somewhere public and leave it.
Yeah, they might still come after Tom in search of revenge, but there is at
least a chance that after the massive ass whopping of last night, they would
leave him alone as being way too much trouble to discipline."
"Well. .
." Tom said. "Yes, it's possible." It wasn't probable. And it
wasn't the plan he would have picked, if he had any other semi-sane choice. But
he didn't think he did, and leaving the Pearl somewhere public and running beat
his plan to keep hiding it and running from the triad.
"You
could leave it in front of the triad center here in town," Edward Ormson
said. "You could put it at the door, in a bucket of water. Wait till the
bucket dries. By the time the water dries and they feel it—if we hide it a little—we'll
all be out of town."
Tom looked up.
"Out of town?"
"You
could come back home," his father said, suddenly animated. "Maybe go
to college." He looked around at the rest of them. "And I'd arrange
for the other two here to go wherever they want to go. College? Move and a
business? Just say it. I assume Officer Trall would be safe, by virtue of his
position?"
Tom could feel
his jaw set. "The only home I've ever known," he said. There was the
thought that Kyrie might want to go to college, but he didn't think she wanted
to go at his father's charity. He didn't want his father's charity.
"Burned a few days ago. I'll have to find some other place to live."
His father
looked away and there was a silence from everyone else for a moment.
"Anyway," Tom said. "Leaving the Pearl somewhere and letting
them know later is the best plan I've heard, Keith. Perhaps leave it in a
bucket of water and call them though, instead of leaving it in the open and
letting them sense it. We don't know if there are other dragons like me around
and getting it stolen again would be a pain. They'd only come after me
again."
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said. "So. . . where did you hide the Pearl and how much trouble do
we need to go through to retrieve it?"
Tom did a fast
calculation in his head. He wasn't sure of Rafiel or his father yet. Though,
sadly, he was more sure of Rafiel than his father. Rafiel had at least fought
against the triad dragons.
But he'd
misjudged his father once. He looked sidelong at his father, and read
discomfort and understanding in his eyes, as if he were completely sure Tom
wouldn't trust him, and understood it too. As well he should. And yet. . . Tom
was going to have to take the risk at some point. Might as well start.
"It's in
the toilet tank at the Athens," Tom said. "The ladies' room. It has a
huge toilet tank, old fashioned kind, so I just put it in there."
Kyrie's eyes
grew huge. "What if the tank had stopped?" She asked. "What if.
. ."
He shrugged.
"It seemed fairly sturdy. Besides, I wrapped the Pearl in dark cloth,
before I put it in. You know the light is not very good there. If someone
looked in there, as ancient as the tank is, they'd just think there was some
type of old-fashioned flushing mechanism that they didn't understand."
"And it's
been there?" Rafiel asked. "These six months?"
Tom nodded.
"Have you
considered," Rafiel said. "That maybe it is the Pearl that's
attracting people to the Athens and making them feel at home there?"
"I don't
think so," Tom said. "If I can't feel it when it's submerged; if the
triad dragons can't feel it while it's submerged, then how should
strangers?"
"Besides,"
Kyrie said. "That feeling was there before. It was there a good six months
before that. I felt. . . I know this is going to sound very strange, but I felt
almost called to Goldport. Like I had to come here. And once I got here, I had
to go to the Athens. Then I saw the wanted sign and I applied."
Rafiel
fidgeted. "I developed the habit of going to the Athens for breakfast
about a year ago too. And it's not near my house. I just felt. . . called to go
there. And I felt okay once I was there."
Tom sighed.
"I came to the Athens a few times for meals, before Frank noticed me. He
asked if I wanted a job. I didn't want to take job under false pretenses, so I
told him the truth. That I was homeless, that I hadn't had a fixed address for
a long time, that I'd never had a full time job and that I had a drug habit I
was working on kicking. He told me as long as I kept clean once he'd hired me,
he didn't mind any of those. . . What's weird is that I'd already stopped in
Goldport, and I had no idea why. It was like something in my subconscious had
called me here, and to the Athens."
"Aha,"
Keith said. "Beetles. Mr. Ormson, is your computer connected to the
internet, and can I use it?"
Tom's father
nodded. "Sure. Why?"
"I want
to search the Natural History Museum. They have a lot of their collections
online now. And they have a bunch of links to other scientific
institutions."
"What do
you mean by aha beetles?" Tom asked.
"Well. .
." Keith blushed. "You see, I like reading weird things."
"You told
us," Kyrie said. "Comics and sf."
"Eh.
Those are actually the sanest things I read. I also read science books. For
fun. As I said, biology is fascinating, particularly insects. I seem to remember
that certain beetles can put down pheromones which attract other beetles and
their particular type of prey to their environment." He shrugged, blushing
to the eyes. "So I think we should find out if the beetle Kyrie says looks
like the shifter beetles is one of those."
"Makes
sense," Rafiel said.
"Let me
help you navigate the computer," Tom's father said. "In just a
moment. Meanwhile. . . Tom, I don't mean. . . Well, you have blood on your face
and your hair, and I thought. . ." He'd walked to the bed and pulled up
one of bags. "I don't think you've changed pants size, and I just got you
xl shirts and that. I grabbed you some socks and underwear too. The store here
only has designer clothing, but I didn't want to go outside and look for
another store."
Clothes? His
father had got him clothes? Tom's first impulse was to say no and scowl. But if
he was trying to keep his purity from his father's gifts, he was a little late.
While the others talked, he'd been happily munching away on his chocolate with
nuts. And the box was empty. Besides, he hated wearing jeans without underwear;
the leather boots, without socks, were rubbing his feet raw; and if he was to
have to go out soon, then he would have to shower.
So instead of
his planned heated denial, he said, "Fine. I'll only be a minute. If
anyone needs my opinion on anything, call me."
He grabbed the
bag from the bed and took it with him to the little alcove before the bedroom.
It weighed far more than it should for a pair of jeans and a couple of
t-shirts. Opening it, he found it had at least as many clothes as he had owned
back in his apartment. Better quality though. And more variety. There were a
few pairs of jeans, and chinos, t-shirts and a couple of polos. And, yes,
underwear and socks.
He wasn't sure
if he was ready to forgive his father, yet, but he was sure that his feet would
thank him.
He went into
the bathroom and turned on the shower. Water poured out in torrents. Oh. He
might have to take more than a few minutes.
* * *
Much to
Kyrie's surprise, the museum did have information on its insect collection on
line. It wasn't complete. All they had was pictures of the insects and their
names.
"Is it
this one, Kyrie," Keith asked. And because the three men remaining—while
judging from the sounds from the bathroom Tom was doing his best to deplete
Colorado's natural water reserves today rather than in the next fifty years—had
all crowded together around the computer, behind Keith who was sitting at the
desk, they had to part now, to allow her near enough to see.
The picture
was very small, and clicking on it didn't make it bigger. But Kyrie was fairly
sure it was the same creature. "Yes. I'm almost positive," she said.
"Cryptosarcodermestus
Halucigens," Keith read. "Now a quick google search."
The sounds
from the bathroom had become positively strange. Kyrie had known Tom for six
months. She would have sworn he was the last person to ever sing in the shower.
And if he had ever sang in the shower, she was sure—absolutely sure—it wouldn't
be the lion sleeps tonight. Although—and she grinned—there was always
the possibility that he was trying to tweak Rafiel. And tweaking was definitely
in Tom's personality.
She wasn't so
stupid that she didn't realize that though the men seemed to get along with
each other—fighting triad dragons must have done it—they seemed to have a
rivalry going over her. Right now it was composed of mostly stupid things—like
how she reacted to something each of them said.
Kyrie wasn't
sure she could deal with any of it. She was sure she didn't wish Rafiel to kiss
her again. Well, maybe a little. But not if it was going to hurt Tom.
"Aha,"
Keith said, from the computer. He'd brought up a colorful screen, surmounted by
a picture of the beetle.
"Yes,
it's that one," Kyrie said. "It definitely is."
"Well,
it's our old friend sarcodermestus," Keith said. "And listen to this
guys. . ." He stopped, as they heard the door to the bathroom open and
close. "Might as well wait for Tom," he said, under his breath.
Tom, Kyrie
thought, as he came towards them, barefoot, walking silently across the
carpeted floor, was definitely worth waiting for. Or at least the man cleaned
up well. He'd shaved and tied his hair back. The new clothes, jeans and a white
t-shirt, seemed to have been spray painted on his body. They underlined his
broad shoulders, defined his musculature and made quite a fetching display of
his just-rounded-enough-but-clearly-muscular behind. He looked far more
indecently naked than he'd been when she'd found him with the corpse in the
parking lot. And, as he pressed in close, he smelled of vanilla. Vanilla soap
and vanilla shampoo, probably some designer brand used by the Spurs and Lace.
Kyrie
swallowed. She wasn't drooling either. And besides, if she were, it would be
because it was vanilla. She was almost positive.
He pushed in
close, between her and Rafiel—he would—and said, "Listen to what? What
have you found, Keith?"
"On the
beetles," Keith said. "They rub their wings together to produce
clouds of hallucinogenic powder to disable their victims. And the male puts
down some sort of hormonal scent. It attracts the victim as well as the prey
they need to reproduce."
"Prey?"
Kyrie said. It was very hard to think next to a vanilla factory. Up till today,
she'd always have said she was a chocolate type of girl. But apparently vanilla
was just as good. Provided it was good vanilla.
"They lay
eggs in the bodies of freshly killed victims, which have to be of a certain
species of beetle. By the time the victims have reached a certain point in the
decomposition, the eggs are ready to emerge as larvae." Keith said.
"They bury the corpses in shallow graves, so that the larvae can crawl out
on their own."
"So, if I
were a beetle, which I am not," Tom said. "Where would I hide the
corpses with the eggs in them."
"Somewhere
safe," Kyrie said.
"The
parking lot of the Athens?" Tom said.
"Impossible,"
Kyrie said, aware of the fact that she might sound more antagonistic than she
meant to. "Impossible. After all, it's asphalt. And besides. . ."
"It's
public," Rafiel said from Tom's side.
"So, the
male lays down a scent to attract the female, does he?" Tom said.
Definitely,
Kyrie thought. And it's vanilla. Then stopped her thought forcefully.
"Why lay
a scent at the Athens?" Tom asked.
"Easy,"
Rafiel said. "It's a diner. This means they get not only tourists passing
through and the workers and students from around there, but also a large
transient population. If it's true that shifters aren't all that usual, then it
increases their odds of getting shifters—supposing, of course, shifters are the
intended population."
"Well,
since all the shifters here seem to have some form of the warm fuzzies towards
the Athens, I must ask the non-shifters. Keith? Mr. Ormson?"
"It's a
dive," Keith said.
"It . . .
I only went there because Tom worked there," Edward said. "I
wouldn't. . . I don't see any reason to go again."
"So,"
Rafiel said. "There is a good chance whatever the substance—if there is
one—that the male slathered around the Athens attracts shifters only. Which
would mean the eggs would need to be laid in shifters. Where around the Athens
can one bury freshly-killed bodies in shallow graves and not be immediately
discovered? It's all parking lots and warehouses around there."
Kyrie had
something—some thought making its way up from the back of her subconscious. At
least she hoped it was thought, because otherwise it would mean that stories of
corpses and weird shifters who lay eggs in corpses turned her on.
"This
means that the male has to be a regular at the Athens," Rafiel said.
"Or an employee."
"Don't
look at me," Tom said. "I already turn into a dragon. Turning into a
weird beetle too, would require overtime. When would I sleep?"
"No,"
Rafiel said. "I don't think that we can turn into more than one thing. At
least I can't and none of the legends mention it. "No. But you know, it
might be someone on day shift. In fact," he said, warming up to his
theory. "Someone on day shift or who only works nights very occasionally,
would fit the bill. Because then when he's not serving, he could be tripping
the light fantastic with his lady. . . er. . . beetle."
Whatever
thought had been forming in Kyrie's mind disappeared, replaced with the image
of Anthony turning into a beetle but retaining his frilly shirt, his vest.
"Anthony," she said. "Perhaps he dresses that way to attract the
beetle in human form."
Tom grinned at
what he thought was a joke. "He's a member of a bolero group. They meet
every night," he said. "He only works nights when Frank twists his arm,
poor Anthony."
Okay, so maybe
it was a joke, but still. . . "Are we sure he really does dance with this
bolero group?" she asked.
Tom grinned
wider. "Quite. He gave me tickets once. You wouldn't believe our Anthony
was the star of the show, would you? But he was."
"So. . .
what can we do?" Rafiel asked. "I can go in and make a note of all
the regulars. Or you can point out to me the ones you thought started coming
around about a year ago."
"Hard to
say," Kyrie said. "I mean, I can easily eliminate those who haven't
been there that long. But I can't really tell you if they've been coming for
longer than a year, since I've only been there a year."
"It's a
start," Rafiel said. "I'll come in tonight. You can point them out to
me, and then I can run quick background checks on the computer. Mind you, we
don't get the stuff the CSI shows get. I keep thinking that they're going to
claim to know when the person was conceived. But we get where they live and
such."
"There's
the poet," Kyrie said.
Tom nodded,
then explained to the other's blank looks. "Guy who comes and scribbles on
a journal most of the night, every night. Maybe he's writing down plump and
tasty. Looks soft enough for grubs."
"Or
perfectly salvageable with some marinade," Rafiel said, looking over Kyrie's
head at Tom.
Without
looking, Kyrie was sure that the guys had exchanged grins that were part
friendly and part simian warning of another male off his territory.
"So, I go
into work as normal," Kyrie said.
"And
I," Tom put in. "Well, yeah, I know Frank should have fired me, but I
don't think he will. I know how hard it is for him to find help at night."
"Yeah,"
Kyrie said. "Particularly since he's been weirdly absent minded." She
didn't want to explain about Frank's romance heating up in front of everyone.
It was funny, yes, but it was a joke employees could share. Bringing it out in
front of strangers just seemed like gratuitous meanness. "Poor Anthony
ended up having to cook for most of the night yesterday."
"Which
means you were alone at the tables?" Tom said. "I'm sorry."
And this was
the type of moment that made Kyrie want to think of things she hated about Tom.
Because when he looked at her like this, all soft and nice, it was very hard to
resist, unless she could think of something bad he had done. Which, right now,
was failing her, because the only bad thing she could think of was stealing the
Pearl of Heaven. And he was ready to give it back, wasn't he? "Yeah,
well," she said, lamely. "For some reason I'm sure you'd rather be attending
to tables than being held prisoner by a triad of dragon shifters. So you're
forgiven."
"Thank
you," Tom said, and smiled. "So I'll come in tonight, with you, at
the normal hour, and I'll . . . we'll watch and see if anyone looks
suspicious." The smile became impish and the dimple appeared.
"Besides, really, Anthony will thank me. His fiancй is in the bolero group
too and by now she probably thinks he's found another one."
"So,
that's what we do about the beetles," Keith said. "But what do we do
about the triad dragons and the Pearl of Heaven?"
"I'm very
glad we made Keith an honorary shifter," Rafiel said. "This guy has a
talent for keeping us on target."
"Honorary
shifter?" Kyrie asked.
"He
wanted to help us. He's jealous of our abilities. So he said we could make him
an honorary shifter," Tom said. "I don't think he told us what
specifically he would shift into though. I say a bunny."
"A
blood-sucking bunny with big sharp teeth," Keith said. "Seriously,
how are you going to get the Pearl, Tom, and shouldn't we at least have a
tentative plan in place for how to return it?"
"I need
to find a container large enough for it," Tom said, showing the
approximate size with his hands. It looked to Kyrie like about six inches
circumference. "A plastic bucket, perhaps. With a lid. Then I can put it
in there, in water and carry it without its giving me away. A backpack to carry
it in would be good. Not this backpack." He nodded to the thing he'd
carried and which he'd let drop in a corner of the room. "Because if I go
in with a kid's backpack, Frank will notice and ask questions. I'll transfer my
money to my pockets."
"Right,"
Rafiel said. "I have a couple of backpacks from army surplus, that I use
when I'm hiking. I'll go grab one of them before you go in to work."
"Well,
this just brings up one question," Keith said, turning his chair around to
face them. "And that's how are we going to sleep. Because we all need to
be fresh for tonight. Unlikely as it is, we might be able to pinpoint someone
and follow them and find the bodies, but we don't want to be stumbling into
walls."
"You can
stay here," Tom's father said. "There's a few extra pillows and
blankets in the closet and I'm sure the bed fits five."
But Tom's
father should have known better, Kyrie thought a few minutes later. With Tom
and Rafiel in full blown competition for her attention, chivalry was thick
enough in the air that one needed a knife to spread it.
So, despite
her heated protests, it ended up with her on the bed, Tom—universally believed
to have had the roughest few hours—stretched out on the love seat by the
window, Keith curled up on the floor in a corner and Rafiel and Mr. Ormson
staking out the floor on either side of the bed. Rafiel lay down between her
and the love seat, of course—probably trying to prevent Tom from attempting a
stealth move.
Kyrie would
have liked to fall asleep immediately, and she thought she was tired enough for
it. But she wasn't used to sharing a house—much less a room—with anyone.
She lay there,
with her eyes closed, in the semi-dark caused by closing the curtains almost
all the way—leaving only enough light so that they could each maneuver to the
bathroom without tripping on other sleepers.
Tom's dad
showered. She heard that and the rustle of the paper bag as he fished for
clothes. She grinned at the way the older man had neatly outflanked Tom's
stubbornness.
Tom was still
suspicious of his father, and perhaps he had reason, but Kyrie heard the man
lie down on the floor, next to the bed and seconds later, she heard his breath
become regular and deep.
She was the
only one still awake. She turned and opened her eyes a little. Tom was in the
loveseat, directly facing the bed. In the half-light, with his eyes closed and
something very much resembling a smile on his lips, the sleeping Tom looked ten
years younger and very innocent.
A tumble of
dark hair had come loose from whatever he'd tied it with, and fell across his
forehead. His leg was slightly bent at the knee, and he'd flung his arm above
his head, looking like he was about to invoke some super power and take off
flying.
It was all
Kyrie could do not to get up and pull the hair off from in front of his face.
Forget special hormones laid down by male beetles to attract the females. The
way some human males looked while sleeping was the most effective trap nature
had ever devised.
* * *
Kyrie woke up
with a hand on her shoulder. This was rare enough that just that light touch,
over her t-shirt, brought her fully bolt upright. She blinked, to see Tom
smiling at her and holding a finger to his lips.
He appeared
indecently well-rested and, unless it was an effect of the dim light, the scar
on his forehead had almost disappeared. He pointed her towards the desk and
asked in her ear, breath tickling her, "Do you like steak?"
She looked her
confusion and he smiled. "I ordered dinner," he said. "From room
service. My father said to do it, since we have to go in before the
others."
"Your
father?" Kyrie said.
"Don't go
there," Tom said, giving her a hand to help her up. "Really,
don't."
"No. He
was awake?"
"I woke
him to tell him I was going to wake you and we'd leave for work. They don't
need to be there when we go to work."
Kyrie got up
and stepped over the sleeping bodies in the room, to the bathroom. She washed
herself, half-heartedly because she didn't have clean clothes to put on. By the
sink there were now five little "if you forgot your toiletries"
kits—she would love to hear how Edward had explained that to the hotel
staff—and half a dozen black combs. Also, a brush.
"I
thought you could use the brush," Tom said, putting his head around the
doorway. "I got it from downstairs."
She thanked
him, pulled the earring from her pocket, where she'd put it for the night, and
slipped it back on.
The meal was a
hurried and odd affair, eating in the dark. But more disturbing than any of it,
was looking up from taking a bite and finding Tom watching her.
What did he
want her to do? Swoon with the attention? Fall madly in love with him? What
would they do together? Both worked entry-level jobs, which was no way to start
a family. And if they did start a family, what would it be? Snaky cats?
She glared at
him and to excuse the glare said, "Eat. Stop staring. We don't have that
much time." And he shouldn't, he really shouldn't smile like that. There
was nothing funny.
But she didn't
say anything. They finished the trays, left them by the door and hurried out.
"Are you worried about what Frank will say?" Kyrie asked Tom as they
got in the car.
Tom still had
the goofy smile affixed on his lips, but he nodded. "A little," he
said. "Just a little. Frank can be profoundly unpleasant."
"Yeah,
and he's been in a mood," Kyrie said.
* * *
Tom didn't know
whether to be relieved or worried that all Frank said was "I thought you'd
disappeared."
"No,"
Tom said. "Wasn't feeling well for a while and my dad came to town to look
after stuff, so I was with him. I'm sorry I forgot to call."
For some
reason, this seemed to alarm Frank. "Your dad? You have—You're in touch
with him?"
Tom shrugged.
"He heard I wasn't okay and he came to check on me. It's not that rare,
parents caring about their kids," he said. Of course, he had no previous
experience of this, and he wasn't absolutely sure he trusted his father's newly
conciliatory mood. But he'd enjoy it while it was there and not expect it to
stay, so he wouldn't be wounded when it disappeared.
Frank looked
upset with that. "Well, get on with it. You have tables to attend
to."
To Tom it was
like returning home. He realized, as he was tying on the apron—"and we'll
dock the extra $10 from your paycheck. I can't figure out what you people do
with your aprons. Eat them?"—that he'd missed all of this.
The air
conditioner was pumping away ineffectively, too far away from the tables to
make any practical difference, which meant that the patrons had opened the
windows again, allowing the hot dry air of Fairfax avenue, perfumed with car
exhaust and the slight scent of hot asphalt, to pour in and mingle with the hot
muggy air inside the Athens, perfumed with clam chowder, burgers and a touch of
homemade fries.
It was almost
shocking to realize, but he really loved the place. His mind went over the
panorama of seasons and imagined the Athens in Winter, when it was snowy out
and cozy inside and customers would linger for hours at the corner tables—near
the heat vents—drinking coffee after coffee. He'd enjoyed coming in from the
freezing cold outside and encountering the Athens as though it were an haven of
dryness and warmth. He felt happy here. He wondered if it was whatever
pheromones the beetles had laid down around this place talking.
And speaking
of pheromones, he got to work, greeting now this customer, now the other,
taking orders, refilling coffees. To his surprise people remembered and had
missed him.
"Hello
Tom," one of the women who came by before going to work at the warehouses
said. "Were you sick?"
"Yeah,"
Tom said, and smiled at her. She was spectacularly homely—with a square face
and grey hair clipped short. But she seemed to treat him with almost maternal
warmth, and she always tipped him indecently well. "Touch of going
around."
"You guys
should be more careful," she said. "Just because it's warm, doesn't
mean that you can't get sick. Working nights, and you probably don't sleep as
much as you should. I abused my body like that when I was young too. Trust me,
it does send you a bill, though it might come twenty years down the road."
"Well,
I'm all right now. What will you have?" he leaned towards her, smiling.
And felt a hand pat his bottom lightly.
He believed in
being friendly to customers but this was ridiculous. He turned around ready to
blast whoever it might be, and saw Kyrie, leaning against him to talk to the customer.
"Is this big ape bothering you, ma'am? Should I remove him?"
The customer
grinned. "My, you're in a good mood. I guess your boss' hot romance makes
things easier, right? He's not on your case so much?"
"Hot
romance?" Tom asked.
"Oh, you
don't know?" the customer said. "He's been sitting there all the time
holding hands with that woman who inherited the castle. The one he's been
seeing off and on. Now she's here all the time."
"I meant
to tell you," Kyrie said. "But I didn't want to talk in front of
people. They spent yesterday necking over the counter. It was. . . weird. Poor
Anthony had cook all the meals. Slowed us down to a crawl."
"Well,
Anthony is a nice boy," the woman said. "But not like Tom."
"Ah, so
you wouldn't want our big ape removal services," Kyrie said, and smiled at
the woman, then at Tom and flitted away to go take the order of the next table.
She left Tom
quite stunned. Had Kyrie smiled at him? And had Kyrie really patted his bottom?
Forget pheromones. What were they pumping out of those air conditioners?
"Well,
have you asked her out?" the woman said.
"I'm
sorry?"
"Oh,
don't play stupid. Have you asked Kyrie out?" the woman asked, smiling at
him with a definite maternal expression.
He felt his
damn all-too-easy blush come on and heat his cheeks. "Oh, I wouldn't have
a chance."
The woman
pressed her lips together. "Don't be stupid. She might have talked to me,
but that entire little display was for your benefit. You do have a
chance."
Tom hesitated.
He could feel his mouth opening and closing, as he failed to find something
appropriate to say, and he was sure, absolutely sure, he looked like a landed
guppy. "I don't know," he said. "I'm not anyone's prize
catch."
"So?"
the woman shrugged. "No one is. You don't make babies start screaming when
they see you. You'll do."
He had to get
hold of this conversation. And his own unruly emotions. He and Kyrie had things
to do. Far more important things. The Pearl had to be returned. They had to stop
whatever scary beetles were trying to kill them both. This was no time to go
all googly-eyed at the girl. "Yeah, well. . . anyway, what will you be
having?"
"The
usual. See if you have apple pie. I don't know if Frank baked yesterday, he
seemed so distracted with his girlfriend. Apple for preference, but cherry
would do. And a coffee, with creamer and sugar on the side."
"Sure,"
Tom said and beat a hasty retreat around the edge of the booths and back to the
counter. There was apple pie in the fridge. He knew the customer enough to put
the pie in the microwave for a few seconds' zap to chase the chill away. He got
the coffee and the little bowls with cream and sugar and put it all on a tray.
And turned
around to see Frank and his girlfriend—and he almost dropped the tray.
There was
something odd about Frank and his girlfriend, both, and Tom couldn't quite say
what it was.
He'd seen them
before together, but usually when she picked Frank up or dropped him off. Now,
they were holding hands over the counter, quite lost in each other's eyes. They
weren't talking. Only their hands, moving infinitesimally against each other
seemed to be communicating interest or affection or something.
With such an
intense gaze, you expected. . . talk. And you really didn't expect people their
age to be that smitten.
He realized he
was staring fixedly at them, but they didn't even seem to have noticed. They
continued looking at each other's eyes.
There was
other crazy stuff happening there, Tom thought. Because while the woman didn't
look like a prize—she looked like she'd been run through the ringer a couple
dozen times, and perhaps hit with a mallet for good measure—she dressed well,
and she looked like she could do better.
And if she was
really the heiress to the castle, she couldn't be all that poor. The property,
dilapidated and in need of work as it was, was yet worth at least half a mil,
just on location. Where would someone like her meet someone like Frank? And
what would attract her to him?
He set the pie
and the coffee in front of the customer, who said, "I see you have noticed
the lovebirds."
"Yes,"
Tom said, distracted. "I wonder how they met."
"I don't
know," the woman said. "It was at least a month ago. In fact, when I
saw them first, a month ago, they were already holding hands like that, so it
might have been longer."
A month ago.
The cluster of missing people had started a month ago. How would those two
facts correlate? Tom wondered. He smiled at the customer and said something, he
wasn't sure what, then backtracked to get the carafe to give warm ups to his
tables.
Was he being
churlish? After all, he also didn't compare to Kyrie. If he should—by a
miracle, and possibly through sudden loss of her mind—manage to convince Kyrie
to go out with him, wouldn't people look at them funny like that too, and say
that they couldn't believe she would date someone like him?
But he looked
at Frank, still holding the woman's hands. And Kyrie had said that the day
before he'd been so out of it that he'd let Anthony work the grill. Frank,
normally, would not let any of them touch the grill. He said that quality
control was his responsibility.
Tom looked at
Frank and the woman. He could swear they hadn't moved in half an hour. That
just wasn't normal.
He tracked
Kyrie through the diner, till he could arrange to meet her—as he went out, his
tray laden with salad and soda, to attend to a table, and she was coming back,
her tray loaded with dishes—in the middle of the isle, in the extension where a
whole wall of windows separated them from Frank and made it less likely Frank
would overhear them.
"Kyrie,
those two, that isn't normal."
To his
surprise, Kyrie smiled. "Oh, it's cute in a gag me sort of way."
"No, no.
I mean it isn't normal, Kyrie. Normal people don't sit like that perfectly
quiet, fluttering fingers at each other."
Kyrie flung
around to watch him, eye to eye. "What are you saying?"
"That
we're looking for a weird insect-like romance. And I think that's it. The pie
and coffee lady says that they first met a month ago, at least. I confess I
didn't pay any attention when it started, just sort of realized it was going
on. I guess the idea of Frank getting some and maybe leaving descendants was so
scary I kind of shied away from it. But the pie lady thinks it was already
going on a month ago. Though even she says it's getting more intense."
"I
haven't given it much attention, either," Kyrie said. "A month at
least, or a month?"
"At least
a month, I don't know any more."
Kyrie looked
suitably worried. "Okay," she said. "Okay. I'll make
enquiries."
* * *
Kyrie turned
on her rounds, to stop by the poet, and give him a warm up on his coffee.
"We always wonder what you write," she said and smiled. All these
months, she'd never actually attempted to talk to the poet, but she figured
someone had to. And he was there every night the same hours.
He was the
most regular of the regulars. If he had looked at all—and Kyrie had never been
absolutely sure of the poet's being fully engaged with the world—he would know,
better than anyone, how long Frank's romance had been going on.
The man
reached nervous fingers for the ceramic cup with the fresh coffee in it, and
fumbled with getting it to his mouth to drink. His pale-blue eyes rested on
Kyrie's face for a moment, then away. "I. . . It's just a journal. My
therapist said I would be better off for writing a journal."
"A
journal," she said. She had a feeling the man wasn't used to much female
attention, but if what he wrote was indeed a journal, then he would have all
the data there, at his fingertips. "I would never be disciplined enough
for a journal."
He grinned,
showing her very crooked teeth. Then looked rapidly away and continued,
speaking intently to the salt shaker. "Well, it's all a matter of doing it
at the same time every day, isn't it? Just being regular and doing it at the
same time. After a while it becomes an habit and you could no more go without
it than you could go without eating or sleeping."
He looked back
at her, just a little, out of the corner of the eye, reminding Kyrie of a
squirrel, tempted by nuts on the sidewalk but hesitant about coming out in the
open.
She smiled at
him. "You must write all sorts of fascinating details about everything
that happens in there. I mean, so much better than just memory. My co-worker
and I were just talking about how long our boss has been in love with that lady
there," she gestured with her head. "And we couldn't remember when
they started going out."
"Oh."
The poet fumbled with his journal, flipping through the pages in a way that
seemed to indicate he wasn't absolutely sure how to use fingers. The gesture of
a terminally nervous neurotic. "I can tell you the exact day. I have it
here, all written down, because it was so amazing. She came in, they looked at
each other, and it was like. . . you know, the song, across a crowded room and
all that. They looked at each other, their eyes met, and she hurried over there
and they held hands." He found the right page and, for once, dared to look
up at Kyrie, as he showed it to her. "There, there, you see. Almost
exactly a month ago. And they've been like that ever since. Oh, not every
night, not that . . . absorbed. . . but at least a few nights a week she walks
him in or waits for him when he goes out."
The way he
looked at Kyrie, shyly and sort of sideways, seemed to indicate he had his own
personal dreams of getting to hold hands with her someday. Kyrie didn't feel
that charitable, but smiled at him anyway, and glanced at the page—of which she
could understand nothing, since it appeared to have been written by dipping a
spider's legs in ink and letting it wander all over the page. "Very nice.
Well, now I'll know what you're doing and I can tell the other people when they
ask."
She wandered
away to check on orders. So far, no one had asked for anything cooked, but it
was bound to happen. "Tom, you might need to take over the grill,"
she said, as she passed him. "As people start coming in who want their
early morning dinners."
He looked
surprised. "Sure," he said. "I can probably load dishes while
I'm up there too, if you want me to."
She didn't
tell him anything about Frank and his girlfriend, but she was thinking. What
she was thinking, mostly, was that this whole eyes meeting across a crowded
room didn't happen to people. Not in real life. But it might very well happen
to bugs who were acting on instinct and pheromones.
* * *
It turned out
not to be as bad as Kyrie expected. The clinch of hands over the bar stopped
before the crunch, and Frank took over flipping the burgers and cooking the
eggs and what not.
From about ten
to midnight they were so busy that Kyrie didn't even notice the other guys had
come in—Keith and Rafiel and Tom's dad—until she saw that Tom was serving that
table. And then she forgot about them again, as she was kept running off her
feet, taking pie to one and a hamburger to another, and a plate of dolmades to
a particularly raucous group in a corner.
As the crowd
started thinning, past midnight, Kyrie went up to the counter to put the carafe
back. And when she turned, Rafiel was standing by the counter. "Can you
take a fifteen minute break?" he said. "Tom says he can handle it
till you come back."
"Frank,"
she said, and realized that Frank had heard them. He waved them away. "Go.
If Tom can handle it, I don't care."
On the way to
the front door, Kyrie told Tom, "Thank you."
He looked
slightly puzzled and then frowned at Rafiel, which did not seem at all like a
natural reaction. "Are you sure you asked him?" she asked Rafiel.
"Yes,
yes, I asked him." He led her outside, towards his car, parked on the
street. "I'm not saying he's incredibly excited about it, but I asked
him."
"Rafiel,
if he doesn't think he can handle it alone I shouldn't leave him." She
started to walk back, but Rafiel came after her and grabbed her arm.
"Seriously,"
he said. "I don't think he minds the work. He minds you going out with me.
Oh, don't look like that," he said, before she was aware of looking like
anything at all. "He knows we have to talk. He says there's some stuff you
found out."
"Yes,"
Kyrie said, and sat down on the passenger side of the car. Rafiel had held the
door open for her, and closed it as soon as she sat down. He then walked around
the car to his side.
"I
thought I'd take you for a cup of coffee, so we can talk? There's an all night
coffee house down the street."
Kyrie nodded.
She had no need for coffee, but she wanted to tell Rafiel about the beetles,
and what she thought of the beetles.
* * *
Edward watched
Tom, after Kyrie left. He watched Keith too. Mostly because Keith puzzled him.
He sat at the table, taking everything in, seemingly unaffected by the fact
that there were not one but two types of shape-shifters that might want him
dead.
Dragons and
beetles and who knows what oh, my. "You're not scared at all?" he
asked Keith, in an undertone.
Keith looked
back at him, as though trying to decide exactly how many heads Edward might have.
"Well," he said. "It's not so much that I'm not scared.
Although. . . I don't think I am, you know?"
"Why
not?" Edward asked. He thought of the Great Sky Dragon, flying through the
sky and using what seemed to be magic to get from one place to the other
without having to cross the space between. He thought of even Tom in his dragon
form, of Tom's flying across the New York sky, seeming completely non-human.
"I don't
know," Keith said. "I told them it was because I read so much science
fiction and comic books—and that's probably true." He shrugged. "I
mean, you see something very often, even if you know it's fiction, it makes an
impression on you after a while and part of you hopes or believes it to be
true, right? I mean, even if your mind knows it isn't."
"It's
possible," Edward said. To be honest he didn't remember what it was like
to be that young anymore. It had been at least twenty five years since he'd
read any fiction. No. More. In college, his fiction reading had just tapered
away to nothing. "I suppose it's possible."
"Well, in
a way it was like that," Keith said. "I mean, the idea would have
probably struck me as much odder, much more impossible if I'd never seen it in
stories. But the important thing is, I saw it happen in the worst possible circumstances."
He lowered his voice. "They grabbed us and they took us in, and Rafiel
was. . . um. . . shifted. And Tom was all tied up, and—"
"He was.
Tied?" Edward knew what Lung had told him, and at some level, consciously,
he knew that being captured by the triad could be no picnic. But somehow,
seeing Tom walk into his hotel room had given him hope that it was all just a
big fight. He knew Tom could handle himself in a fight. He wasn't so sure about
Tom being helpless.
"Yeah. He
was completely tied. And he. . . They'd. . . His clothes were caked with blood.
They'd taken his jacket and boots off. I think they might have thought to keep
them after they. . . you know, got rid of him. Or perhaps they thought that the
leather would protect him. And then he . . . shifted. I knew it was still him
because of his eyes. And he freed me. And I freed Rafiel, who recovered much
faster than they expected. And then we were. . . Fighting. And that's the thing
you know." He looked at Edward and seemed to realize that Edward was
trying very hard to imagine but didn't really know. "I realized they can
be taken out with a good tire iron. You don't need to be one of them."
Edward was
following his son with his gaze. Tom looked so. . . competent. He'd removed his
leather jacket and was wearing a red apron with Athens on the chest, and
doing a job his father had never, possibly, imagined a son of his doing. But he
was doing the job competently.
There had been
no complaints. On the contrary. People smiled at him and it was clear that
several of the regulars were very fond of him. And he answered back and smiled,
and seemed to be a part of this diner. A trusted employee. Which was more
than—just five years ago—Edward could have imagined.
To be honest,
he couldn't have imagined it two days ago. If he'd thought of Tom at all, he'd
thought of Tom as being in jail, or perhaps dead. He would never have believed
his son was sane and responsible enough to hold down any job.
"Really,"
Keith said. "I'd love to be able to shift, because it's cool, but I'm not
afraid of them. I mean, the nice ones are nice. The other ones would probably
be just as dangerous as normal people."
Edward
frowned. That thought too would have been unbelievable five years ago. But he
was looking at Tom, and thought Tom was not much different than he would have
been if he'd never turned into a dragon. He was just Tom. And, on balance, a
much better person than Edward had any right to expect.
Just then, Tom
noticed him looking and arched his eyebrows. Edward looked away. He might have
thrown Tom out from fear and confusion. Getting him back, however, was going to
require a full and rational siege.
If only they
managed not to get killed by any other shifters. Edward wished he had Keith's
certainty that they could fight against shape changers on equal terms.
* * *
"We need
to talk," Rafiel said. He pulled the chair out for Kyrie, and waited until
Kyrie had sat down before going around to his side. He picked up both their
orders too, her iced mocha latte and his tall cup of something profoundly
foamy.
"Yes, I.
. . Tom thinks—"
"Wait,"
Rafiel said. "We don't need to talk about the . . . creatures." He
looked around again, as though afraid someone around them might understand the
cryptic comments. "We need to talk about Tom."
"We—uh?
What about Tom?"
"Well,
he's not as bad as I expected," Rafiel said. "Not nearly. But he is.
. . ah. . . Tom has issues."
Kyrie nodded.
"Yes, but—" She didn't want to discuss Tom's nor Tom's issues, nor
could she imagine what Tom had to do with any of this. Tom's personality had
nothing to do with the predicament they were in.
Sure, it would
have been helpful if he could have managed to avoid tangling with the triad
dragons. But that was, surely, just a fraction of his problems. The beetles
loomed much larger in Kyrie's mind, perhaps because she had experienced them up
close and personal. And Tom was not a were beetle. Of that she was sure.
"No. I just
. . ." Rafiel looked flustered, which was a new one for him. "I just
am going to say this once and be done, okay? I can't help notice that he's
attracted to you, and I think I've seen you. . . I mean, you give the
impression of being attracted to him too, sometimes."
"I don't
think I am," she said. "It's just that we've been working together
for a while and I think I've misjudged him horribly, and I feel guilty about
that. So I've been nice to him, but I don't think—"
"Good,"
Rafiel said. "I mean, really. Tom is not a bad person, but I think he's
been through a lot in his life, and I think it makes him. . . well. . . I think
he's sometimes not as well adjusted as he would like to be. And I wouldn't want
to wish that on you."
He put his
hand across the table, on top of hers. Kyrie withdrew her hand, slowly, not
wanting it to seem like a rejection. If she was reading this right, Rafiel had
just tried to clear the field of his rival in a most underhanded way, something
she thought only women did. Perhaps because she'd seen it between women and
girls in her middle and highschool years.
Fortunately,
she wasn't sure she was interested in either of these men—or in any men. She'd
seen too much of marriage and relationships through her time in foster care to
think that she would ever take any relationship for granted or view it as a
given. On top of that the kinks the shifters' natures would put into any
relationship just about had her deciding to remain celibate the rest of her
life. The knife-in-the-back approach to friendship and love certainly didn't
incline her towards Rafiel.
"Tom
thinks that Frank and his girlfriend might be the beetles," Kyrie said,
rapidly, before Rafiel could resume his wholly inappropriate talk.
"Frank
and his girlfriend?" Rafiel asked. "Why?"
Kyrie told
him. She told him about the woman who ordered pie every night and who said that
Frank and his girlfriend had held hands a month back, and about the poet and
the whole eyes meeting across a crowded room thing.
Rafiel
frowned. "Don't you think it's all a bit in the air?" he asked.
"I mean, they're just a middle aged couple, and perhaps they're not so
good on the relationship and getting along with each other front. Perhaps they
aren't very good at connecting with each other?"
"But. .
." Kyrie said, and seized on the one thing she was sure of. "But his
girlfriend first met him around a month ago." And then, with desperate
recollection. "And, you know, he had a band-aid on his neck the day after
I speared the beetle."
Rafiel sighed.
"He and how many guys in Goldport. Think. Perhaps he cut himself
shaving."
"At the
back of his neck?"
"Well,
okay, so he scratched himself. Or had a pimple that blew up. It happens. Don't
you think if he'd been stuck with an umbrella, even in another shape, it would
require more than a band-aid?"
"Not
necessarily," Kyrie said. "We heal fast."
"I still
say this is all in the air," Rafiel said. He sipped at his coffee as if he
were angry at it. "You have no proof. There are probably dozen of
couples—hundreds—with weird relationships, who started a month ago, and where
one of them had some sort of injury on the neck that day."
"I doubt
hundreds," Kyrie said. "And besides, you know, there is the fact that
she has a very convenient burial ground."
"What?"
"The
castle. She inherited the castle. You've seen the grounds. She could bury a
hundred people there in shallow graves and be fairly assured they wouldn't be
found. That's pretty hard in urban Goldport."
"Not
really," Rafiel said. "You know, people have backyard lawns."
Kyrie snorted
with laughter before she could stop herself. "I suppose you could fit one
corpse in my backyard lawn. Two if you put them very close together."
Rafiel was
jiggling his leg rapidly up and down. "Yeah, but some people have bigger
lawns." He frowned, bringing his brows together. "What do you want me
to do about it, anyway? Do you want me to burst into the Athens and arrest them
because they hold hands and don't talk?"
Kyrie wasn't
used to getting upset at people. Normally, to get along, both as a foster child
and as an adult, she'd learned to hide her anger from people. But she couldn't
even hide from herself that she though Rafiel was being unreasonable. That she
suspected he was being unreasonable because he felt thwarted in his pursuit of
her affections didn't actually make her feel any better.
"I want
you to go in there and look around," she said.
His mouth
turned down in a dissatisfied little-boy scowl. It was the type of expression
she would expect from a five or six year old who had just seen someone else get
the bigger piece of candy. "I can't do that," he said.
"For
heaven's sake, why not?"
"Because
I don't have a warrant." Instead of getting louder, his voice had to lower
and lower, until it was low and almost vicious, growling out its protest.
"I'm a policeman. I can't go poking around people's property without a
warrant. Citizens get all sorts of upset when policemen do that. They would. .
."
Kyrie didn't
think this behavior was more endearing because of its sheer irrationality. She
finished her frozen latte, and picked up the cup, which she'd got as a take out
cup, as she'd been afraid of having to finish it on the way back to work.
"Officer Trall, if you can hide evidence, lie to other police forces, and
suggest that we, as shifters, need to take our law into what passes for our
hands, then yeah, you could and should be able to have a look-see in someone's
garden without a warrant. I mean, no one is asking you to go in with a police
force. Just go there, shift, and have a good sniff. Death will out, you
know?"
He narrowed
his eyes at her. "I'm trying to stay on the right side of the law. I'm
trying to enforce the law. I'm trying to be a good person, Kyrie, and somehow
balance this with being a. . . shifter. I don't think you realize—"
"Oh, I
think I realize it perfectly well. I just think you'd be far more energetic in
pursuing this if I'd told you that the culprit in this case was Tom
Ormson."
"That's
underhanded. Tom is a friend. He risked himself to rescue me."
"Oh, and
how well you thank him."
"I didn't
mean it that way. If you took it that way it's because you chose to. Tom would
be very bad for you, and just because—"
"As
opposed to yourself? You would be great? What would your mother think of your
dragging me home?"
He blinked,
genuinely confused. "Mom would love you. I don't understand—"
"I mean,
Officer Trall, that your parents might not be so happy that the son they've
protected, the son they always thought would need their protection the rest of
their lives has a life outside the family."
"That's
ridiculous. Did you just call me a mama's boy? I don't think there's anything
else I can say to you."
"Well,"
Kyrie said. She was leaning over the table, and he was leaning from the other
side, and they'd been arguing in low vicious tones. Now she straightened.
"That is very fortunate, because I don't think I want to discuss anything
with you, either."
And with that,
she flounced out the door, which -- she thought, smiling to herself -- the
owners of this coffee shop must think was a normal thing for her.
She had gone a
good half block before she heard him shout "Kyrie" behind her, but
she didn't slow down, just went on as fast as she could.
This time she
didn't go into the parking lot. Didn't even think about it. Instead, she
approached at a half run, towards the front door. While she was waiting to
cross Pride, the cross-street before the Athens, she was vaguely aware of a car
squealing tires nearby, and then parking in front of the diner.
She didn't
turn to look. Which was too bad, because if she had turned to look, Rafiel's
hands on her shoulders spinning her around wouldn't have taken her so much by
surprise. And his mouth descending on hers might have been entirely avoided.
Or, if not, she might at least have avoided the few seconds of confusion in
which her brain told her to get away from the man while parts far more
southerly responded to his strength, his virility and the rather obvious, feline
musk assaulting her nostrils with a proclamation of both those qualities.
As it was, she
lost self-control just enough to allow him to pull her towards him, to allow
herself to relax against him. She lost track of who she was and what she meant
to do through the feeling of firm male flesh, and the large hands on her
shoulders, both compelling and sheltering her.
He slid his
tongue between her lips, hot and searching and forceful.
And in her
mind, an image of Tom appeared. Tom smiling at her, with that odd diffident
expression when Keith had asked about sex as a shifter.
She pushed
Rafiel away. And then she slapped him. Hard
* * *
Tom would
probably have missed the kiss, if he hadn't already been watching the door for
Kyrie. But he was.
Okay, first of
all, and stupid as it was, and as much as he was absolutely sure he didn't
actually stand a snow ball's—or a snow flake's chance in hell—of getting near
her, he'd been indulging himself in quite nasty thoughts about Rafiel.
So, okay,
Rafiel needed to discuss the case with her. But couldn't he just have taken her
on a quick walk down the block, then back again? Couldn't he have talked to her
out there, against that lamppost in front of the Athens? Where Tom could have
kept track of them through the big plate-glass window?
And then. . .
and then there was everything else. If Frank and his girlfriend were the beetle
couple, where did that leave Tom? Truth be told, Tom felt a little guilty for
even suspecting Frank of that. Frank had given him a full time job when no one
else would.
Yes, but why
had he? Tom wouldn't have hired himself, with his credentials at the time. An
then there was his father. He'd told Kyrie not to go there, but it wasn't
entirely avoidable. For one his father was sitting at a corner table, in the
extension, getting intermittent warm-ups of coffee and ordering the occasional
pastry. He seemed to be discussing comic books with Keith, a scene that, before
tonight, Tom thought could only come from his hallucinations.
And his father
had already managed to ask Tom if Tom was warm enough—warm enough!—in the
Colorado summer, where the temperatures reached the low hundreds in daytime and
the buildings gave it back all night. Warm. Enough. It wasn't so much like this
man's behavior bore absolutely no resemblance to the father Tom had known
growing up. That was somewhat of a problem but, on the other hand, it could be
said that any father at all would be an improvement over that man.
On the other
hand, this particular father seemed to do parenting by instruments. Like a
pilot, flying in a thick fog, might read his instruments to decide his
location, how to turn and where to stop—and if the instruments are faulty might
end up somewhere completely different—Tom's father seemed to be trying to mend
a relationship that had never existed in ways that didn't apply even to that
hypothetical relationship.
Maybe it was
that the only relationships Tom's father had ever taken seriously were courting
relationships. At least that would explain his trying to win his way back to
Tom's heart with chocolates. It didn't explain his thinking that Tom wore the
same size pants he'd worn at sixteen though.
On the other
hand, these pants were a great advantage, now he thought of it. He would no
longer need to worry about siring an inconvenient shifter child—not if he wore
them much longer. This, of course, brought his thoughts around to Kyrie again,
and to the fact that she was five minutes over her break already.
Oh, he had no
intention of telling Frank about it. Even if Frank were perfectly above board
and exactly what he claimed to be, there was absolutely no reason to let Frank
know this stuff. He'd just get upset.
And so far
Tom, moving rapidly from table to table, taking orders, distributing them,
warming up coffee, was keeping on top of everything. In a little while, the
crowds would drift back in again, and as long as Kyrie was in by then. . .
No. What he
hated was the fact that he might be covering up for her necking time with
Rafiel. Okay, he was willing to admit that Rafiel might not be exactly the scum
of the Earth. He could do worse. And she could do worse, too. In fact, any way
he looked at it, Kyrie and Rafiel were just about a perfect match.
Despite her
upbringing, Kyrie was fairly balanced. And Rafiel, after all, came from such a
well-adjusted background that his parents knew about and abetted his
shape-shifting. Surely, neither of them had anything in common with Tom, who
had been thrown out of his house—at gun point no less—by the man who now
thought he could heal it all with expensive chocolates and too-tight clothes.
They deserved
each other. And neither of them deserved him in any sense. Which didn't mean he
had to like it. It didn't even mean he had to accept it, did it?
He seethed,
having to control himself to prevent slamming plates and breaking cups. He
seethed partly at them, because he was sure they were taking advantage of his
covering up for her to go and neck in some shady corner. And he seethed partly
at himself, because, who was he to get angry at whatever they wanted to do?
And then, as
he turned around, carafe in hand, he saw Kyrie come hurrying towards the door.
Alone. She was
alone. He felt his heart give a little leap at this. Not hopeful. Oh, he
couldn't have told himself he was hopeful. But. . .
And then he
saw Rafiel come up behind her. He grabbed her by the shoulders. He spun her
around. His mouth came down to meet hers. She relaxed against him.
The teapot
escaped from Tom's grasp and fell, with a resounding crash and a spray of hot
coffee onto the nearest bar stools and Tom's feet.
It took him a
moment to realize the shattering sound had indeed come from outside his head.
* * *
Edward had
never seen Tom tremble. He'd held a gun to the boy's head, when Tom was only
sixteen and he had never seen him shake. But now, he was shaking. Or rather,
vibrating, lightly, as if he were a bell that someone had struck.
"I'm
sorry I'm late with the warm up," he said, and his face was pale, and his
voice oh, so absolutely polite. "I dropped the carafe and had to brew
another one."
"It's
okay," Edward said. He'd been enjoying his conversation with Keith, partly
because it distracted him from the fact that they might very well all be dead
come nighttime. And partly because in the middle of a lot of information about
Keith—who apparently had parents and no less than four siblings somewhere in
Pennsylvania—there was some comment and anecdote about Tom. Apparently Tom kept
Keith's key and usually could be counted on to give it back when Keith came
home drunk and confused, having left keys and jacket—and often other clothes—at
the last wild party he'd attended.
Keith had
engaged in some self-mocking on the subject of the number of times Tom had
shown up without a stitch of clothing on, and how Keith had thought that Tom
went to even wilder parties than he did. Now, of course, he understood.
"He must go through an awful lot of clothes," Keith said. "They
all must."
And Edward had
nodded. He'd been relaxed. And Tom had looked happy and in his element. Why was
he shaking now? Was it just the coffee pot? Was Tom so insecure he'd get that
upset over a broken coffee pot?
"It's
okay. I really don't need a warm up," Edward said. "It's excellent
coffee, but I've probably already drank too much. Don't worry."
Tom nodded,
and looked aside, as if getting ready to walk away. Then came back and sat
down. He put the carafe down, with some care, on one of the coasters and leaned
forward. "Father," he said.
It was the
first time in five years he'd actually called Edward that. Edward took a deep
breath. "Yes?"
"I need
you do it for me, the delivery."
"What
delivery?" Edward asked, puzzled. They were going to find the beetles,
weren't they? What was there to deliver?
"The
delivery of the Pearl," Tom said, lowering his voice. "In a few
minutes, when I get a chance, I'm going to go into the bathroom and get it,
I'll put it in the container before I take it out of the water, then put the
container in the backpack. I assume you know where the center for the. . .
Where their center is in Goldport, right?"
Edward nodded.
"But. . . aren't we going to do that later? I thought we were going
to—"
Tom pushed
back the strands of his hair that had gotten loose in the course of the
evening. "No. I. . . It's me. Look, it's just me. I know there's something
wrong with me, but I just can't take it. I can't. I can't be around to watch
it. So, you take the. . . delivery to the people looking for it, and I'll go,
okay?"
Oh, no. This
sounded far more serious than Edward had thought. And he didn't quite know how
to handle it. The thing had always been, since Tom was two or so, that if he
got something in his mind, no matter how misguided or strange, it was almost
impossible to get it out. And if you pushed the wrong way, he only got mad at
you and more determined to do whatever he'd set his mind on.
He didn't even
want to ask about it in a way that would get Tom's back up. So he spoke as
gently as he knew how. "Tom, I don't understand. What can't you take, and
why are you going? And where?"
Tom shook his
head, as if answering some unspoken question. "Kyrie. And. . . Rafiel. I
can't take it. I know this is stupid, okay? I know it's puppy love okay? But
I've never been close to another woman. Well, not since I was sixteen. And I've
never even thought about another woman as I think about Kyrie. I know it's
stupid. You don't need to tell me—"
"I wasn't
going to tell you that—" Edward started.
"But I
know it is stupid. I know I never had a chance. Being as I am. Who I am. And I
don't just mean the. . . shifting. I mean, just who I am. I know Kyrie deserves
much better. I know that Rafiel is better. I've known that since I met him. But
I'm too . . . I can't watch. I should be able to because they're both my
friends, in a way, so I'm probably immature too, but there it is. I'm immature.
I just can't. . . I'd end up getting in a big argument with her or him, or both
of them. And I can't do that, because then. . . it would be worse than just
leaving. So I'm leaving."
The words had
poured in a torrent, drowning out any other attempts at speech, any other
attempts at questioning. Now they stopped, and Tom reached for the coffeepot
handle, as if to get up and resume his rounds.
"Tom,"
Edward said. "Where are you going?"
"It
doesn't matter. Just. . . somewhere. Somewhere till things cool with the triad
and until. . . No, I don't suppose I'll ever forget. I'm not. . . good."
"Perhaps
you could consider coming home?" Edward said, and before Tom could correct
it, "To my home. You can, you know. I don't mind."
He expected
anger, or perhaps a huffing of pain. But instead Tom inclined his head once.
"Maybe. After. . . when the triad isn't looking anymore. Perhaps they'll
even give up on the idea of revenge, and calm down, and then, maybe."
Edward knew
Tom was wrong. He knew Tom was wrong about Kyrie and Rafiel. He'd seen the
three of them together and while Rafiel might look a lot at Kyrie, Kyrie looked
at Tom. Now, most of the time she looked at Tom with annoyance or borderline
irritation.
But that was
part of it too, wasn't it? The ones who could annoy you most, the ones who
could get under your skin most. . . He remembered what she had told him about
how she knew that Edward still liked Tom, still had paternal feelings for him.
How it was all about how he fought so hard to counter those feelings.
From what he'd
seen, Edward guessed Kyrie had known from experience. She was, at the very
least, seriously in lust with Tom. For a moment or two the day before, he'd
thought she'd need a drool catcher to avoid staining the carpets of his hotel
room. But she would bet there was more there, too. Because Kyrie was not the
type to confuse lust with love.
He could Tom
go on believing this, being miserable. Tom would then probably end up in New
York again and, knowing his intelligence and his new-found focus, be at Harvard
or Yale within the year. And eventually he would find another woman.
But Edward
looked at his son's pale face, his set mouth, which looked rigid enough not to
tremble. Rigid enough not to betray the desolation within.
"Tom,
I've watched at her, and I think you're wrong. From her reactions, since I've
met her, and from seeing her with him, I've . . . I don't think she's
interested in him. And I think she likes you a lot."
Tom shook his
head. "No, trust me. I had some hope. Not a lot. I mean, I know our
different standings. But she was nice to me, and I thought maybe. . . But then
I saw them kissing." He gestured with his head. "Up front. I know. I
saw." He shook his head. "And I never expected it to affect me so much."
He frowned, thunderous eyebrows low over his blue eyes. "I wanted to shift
and flame something. Preferably his pants."
Edward almost
laughed at this, because it was so much like Tom, to want to flame his rival's
manhood right off. But he didn't want to laugh, not while Tom was in pain.
"I just
thought you should know. I think you're wrong. But if you still think you must
leave, then. . . I hope eventually you'll come back to my home. And before
that, call me, okay. Tell me where you are. I'll wire you money. There's no
reason for you to be deprived."
It was
probably a measure of Tom's state of mind that he didn't protest the offer of
money. Instead, he nodded and walked away.
"Man, he
has it bad," Keith said. "I didn't realize it was that serious."
"I suspected
it," Edward said. "I just didn't know he would take it in his head to
run away from it all."
Was that what
he'd taught Tom, when he'd thrown him out? To leave difficult situations
behind?
* * *
Kyrie was
shaking. Mostly with repressed rage. That Rafiel would dare grab her like that.
That he would dare kiss her. And in front of half the diner too.
She put her
apron on, and resumed serving her tables, but felt as if people were staring at
her, and found herself blushing. How could he?
She suspected
Rafiel was the center of attention to his parents, the center of their lives.
His "handicap", the fact that he shifted, would make him far more
precious to them, and they far more attentive to him. And he'd grown up to be
the center of the universe.
Kyrie would
bet too that with his body, his easy, self assured personality, he would have
girls falling from his hair and tumbling into his lap. She would just bet. So
he probably was not too well aware of the meaning of the word "no."
Well, she would buy him a thesaurus at the first opportunity.
No, as in
never. As in negation. As in I'm not interested. And even if the girl
hasn't said it flat out, if she'd given him reason to think she was less than
pleased with his interest, then Mr. Rafiel Trall would learn to keep his hands
to himself. And his lips too.
She was so
mad, that she banged a load of dishes into the dishwasher, after bussing the
empty tables. This was the hour when people started leaving before the rush,
and she'd bussed her tables, and Tom's too. She banged the plates and cups in,
and she gave Frank a dirty look when he glared at her.
The dirty look
must have worked, because Frank didn't say anything. Just turned away.
And Frank was,
of course, a problem, as was Frank's girlfriend. Kyrie couldn't believe how
obtuse and close minded Rafiel had been. How could he not see that this series
of coincidences, here, at the center of the Athens, was far more relevant than
no matter how many couples who'd started dating a month ago, no matter how many
men with bandaged necks elsewhere?
Damn the man.
She couldn't believe someone like that, who was clearly smarter than dryer lint
would attempt to solve crimes using parts of his anatomy that lay below the
equator.
She closed the
dishwasher and started it, and turned to face Tom. He stood just behind her,
his arms full with a tray of dishes.
"Oh, Tom,
I'm sorry. That dishwasher is full. Let me open the other one. I'll put the
dishes in for you if you want me to."
He shook his
head. He was keeping his lips together, as if he were biting them to keep
himself from saying something. How weird. It was an expression she'd never seen
on his face. "Are you okay?"
"Fine,"
he said. "Just fine. I'll put the dishes in. You may go." His voice
sounded lower and raspier than normal.
She went. She
picked up tips, she tallied totals, she filled coffee cups.
On the way
back from the addition to the main part of the diner, she saw Tom bussing a
table, and thought that was as good a time as any to talk to him.
"I
couldn't get Rafiel to listen," she said, in a whisper. "About Frank.
He says it's all coincidences, and he refuses to help. What are we going to
do?"
For a while,
she thought that Tom hadn't heard her. He remained bent over the table, his
hand holding a stack of plates to put on the tray, while the other hand held a
moist cloth, with which he was poised to wipe where the plates had been. But he
didn't move. He just stood there.
"Tom?"
she said.
He put the
plates on the tray, very slowly. Carefully, he wiped the table. Then he stood
up and faced her. His face was stark white. Not the sickly pale it had been in
the parking lot the night she'd found him over the corpse, but white—the white
of paper, the white of the unblinking heart of a thunderbolt. "I don't
know what you want me to do," he said, his voice calm, emotionless.
"If you can't get Rafiel to listen to you, I fail to see where I can be of
any use. I'm sorry."
"Oh, Tom,
don't be an idiot," she said, in an urgent whisper, sure he had to have
misunderstood it all. "I want to know what you and I are going to do about
it."
Tom shook his
head. "No. You don't understand. We're not going to do anything. After
tonight, I won't even be here."
"Where
are you going?"
He twisted his
lips and shrugged. "Somewhere."
She watched
him pick up his tray and his cloth and disappear towards the main diner, tray
held at waist level.
What on Earth
was going on? First Rafiel had behaved like a lunatic, and now Tom. What had
they been smoking? And why were they not sharing?
"What do
you know about this?" she asked Keith and Edward, where they sat in their
corner table. "Where is Tom going? What is wrong with him?"
Keith sat back
on his chair, looking vaguely scared. "Whoa," he said. "That's
one of the few rules of safety I've learned. I don't get in between this kind
of stuff."
"What
kind of stuff," Kyrie asked, her temper rising. "What kind of stuff?
What is wrong with every male tonight?"
"I
think," Edward said, his voice regretful, his tone slow. "That if I
told you what Tom told me I would forfeit whatever trust I've been able to earn
back from him. And you must see I can't do that. He might need me. I have to. .
. stand by to help him if he needs it. I've got to tell you I hope he comes to
his senses, but I don't think my explaining things to you would further this in
any way."
"Oh,"
Kyrie said. "I see. He—" and she pointed at Keith. "Makes
cryptic remarks, and you make longer cryptic remarks, with far better
vocabulary. Whatever. Sure. What is this? Be stupid day for males?"
She glared at
them a while, daring them to answer. When neither did, she huffed out of there.
They didn't
answer because they had no answer. They knew damn well—had to know—that they
were acting like idiots. All of them.
Well, she
would show them. Rafiel might be more practiced at smelling shifters, but Kyrie
would bet that even she, herself, in panther form, could smell a rotting body
in a shallow grave. If she knew what she was looking for. Even at the morgue,
with all the preserving fluids and embalming whatnots, she had smelled it. She
was sure she could smell it undisguised and in the heat of day under a thin
layer of earth. The only reason she hadn't smelled before—if it was there—would
have been that she was escaping beetles and cops with guns.
So, when her
shift was over, she'd go up to the castle, and she'd shift. She'd sniff around.
When she found the corpses, she would shift again, and she would call the
police. Take that, Officer Trall. If someone called the corpses in, then Mr.
Rafiel Trall would have to do something about it, would he not?
And as for Mr.
Tom Ormsen, she didn't know exactly what was biting him, but she was in no mood
to find out, either. It occurred to her that he might have seen Rafiel kiss
her. But if that was what had put his nose so severely out of joint, then Tom
needed to take a chill pill, was what he needed to do.
After all what
fault was hers if an idiot male decided to kiss her. She had slapped him for
it, too. Half rocked his head off of his shoulders. And if Tom hadn't stuck
around to see that, he was more of a fool than she'd ever thought, and she
wouldn't mind if he left and never came back.
She avoided
him the rest of the shift.
* * *
Edward
received the backpack from Tom's hands, and pulled out his wallet to set the
bill for the food he and Keith and Rafiel had eaten. He guessed Rafiel wasn't
coming back, but he wasn't about to ask Tom. There was absolutely no reason to
get the boy even more upset than he already was.
Instead,
Edward put the backpack on his back, sure it looked ridiculous with his nice
clothes. He got up, and Tom was turning away, putting the bill with the money
in his apron pocket. Edward grabbed at his son's shoulder. "Tom." It
was as close as he dared come to a hug.
Tom looked
back, eyebrows raised.
"I just
want you to know," Edward said. "That if you need anything at
all." He gave Tom one of his cards. "You probably remember the home
address," he said. "But this is the new office address and my cell
phone and work phone. Call. Anytime. Day or night, okay?"
Tom nodded,
but there was just that look of dubiousness in his eyes that made Edward wonder
if he would really call. Or just get into trouble and not tell anyone.
He walked out
of the diner, and out into the cooler, exhaust-filled night of Fairfax avenue.
Under the light pole, he noticed that Keith was behind him.
"Can I
come with you?" Keith asked. "To deliver that?"
Edward took a
deep breath. "I don't think so," he said. "I'm going to deliver
it in person, you see, not put it down somewhere and wait for them to find it.
I'm afraid they'll go after Tom again if I do that."
"So. .
."
"So the
triads are dangerous. And the Great Sky Dragon is not someone—or something—one
tangles with for sport. I think I'm fairly safe, because they depend on me for
legal representation. But I don't think you'd be safe and I can't allow you to
risk yourself."
"But. .
." Keith said. "I can take out dragons. With a tire iron."
Edward
couldn't avoid smiling at that. "I know," he said. "And I'm
proud to have met you. But I really think this is something I have to do alone."
Keith took a
deep breath, and shrugged. Then frowned. "You're not going to allow me to,
are you? No matter what I say?"
"I'm
afraid not," Edward said. "I'm afraid it wouldn't be safe."
"Okay.
Then. . . I'll stay and keep an eye on Kyrie and see in what direction Tom
leaves, okay? I'll tell you. When I see you."
Edward nodded,
and put out his hand, solemnly. Keith shook it just as solemnly.
Add to the
things Tom had accomplished the fact that he seemed to make worthy friends. And
that was something that Edward had never expected of Tom. But he was glad. He
started walking up the street, to where Fairfax became a little better area. It
would make it easier to hail a cab. Once he caught a cab, he would call Lung.
If he didn't
give them much time to react, perhaps they wouldn't have time to summon the
Great Sky Dragon. Edward wasn't sure he could face that presence.
In fact, he
wasn't sure at all he would survive this experience. Despite everything he'd
told Keith, he was sure that the triad could buy a replacement lawyer, once
they got rid of him.
The funny
thing was that he didn't much care if anything happened to him, provided
nothing happened to Tom. He'd never got around to changing his will, and if he
died, at least Tom would be taken care of. It wasn't like he'd ever been much
of a father.
* * *
Kyrie hung up
her apron and picked up her purse. It hit her, suddenly, and with a certainty
she'd never felt before that whatever happened tonight was decisive.
Because, if
she went to the castle and found nothing, she'd have to live in hiding home as
fast as she could. Perhaps move. Because she couldn't know what the beetles
knew or where they were.
On the other
hand, if she went up there tonight and found corpses. . . well, it might be the
last time she hung her apron on this peg and headed out, at the end of the
shift, into the Colorado morning with the sky just turning pink, Fairfax avenue
as deserted as a country lane, and everything clean and still.
She got in her
car and drove home, but only opened her front door to throw her purse inside
the living room. Then she put her key in her pocket and headed back out.
The way to the
castle was quick enough and at this time of morning there wasn't really anyone
out. Kyrie could walk unnoticed down the streets. Which was good, because
whether he and his girlfriend were shifter-beetles or not, Kyrie didn't want
him to know that she suspected him or his girlfriend. She wanted him to think
that she had gone home, normally and stayed there.
In a way she
wished she could. Or that she—at least—had Tom or Rafiel with her. She couldn't
believe that both of them had turned on them at the same time, and she wondered
if it was some argument they'd had, of which she was only catching the
backlash. Who knew?
The castle
looked forbidding and dark, looming in the morning light. Most of the windows
were boarded up, except for some right at the front, next to the front door.
She supposed that Frank's girlfriend, not needing all the rooms—at least until
such a time as she opened a bed and breakfast if those plans were true—had
opened only those in which she was living.
Kyrie wondered
what Frank's and whatever her name's plans were, if they really were the
beetles and if they truly were in the middle of a reproductive frenzy.
Were they
intending on having all their sons and daughters help in the bed and breakfast?
Or simply to take over the castle with their family. Kyrie seemed to remember
that beetles were capable of laying a thousand eggs in one reproductive season,
so even the castle might prove very tight quarters. And how would they explain
it? And would the babies be human most of the time? Or humans all the time till
adolescence?
There was no
way to tell and Kyrie wondered if other shifters worried about it. She did. But
others were, seemingly, in a headlong rush to reproduce, regardless of what it
might mean. She thought of Rafiel and scowled.
As she
approached the front entrance to the garden, Kyrie saw a woman in a well-cut skirt
suit and fly away grey hair walking away from the alley where the back entrance
opened. She was walking away from the castle, towards Fairfax avenue. Maybe she
was going to pick Frank up from work.
Which would
mean, Kyrie supposed, that they weren't guilty and were just an older couple in
dire need of social skills.
But it would
also mean it was safe to go into the castle gardens. Kyrie ran in.
The gardens
were thick and green, in the early morning light. There was dew on the plants,
and some of it dripped from the overhead trees. Above, somewhere, two birds
engaged in a singing competition. She started towards the thicker part of the
vegetation, where she could undress and shift. She didn't think that the woman
living here now had any domestic help, but if she did, Kyrie didn't want some
maid or housekeeper to scream that there was a girl undressing in the garden.
Embarrassing, that.
Avoiding a
couple of spiders building elaborate webs in the early morning sunlight, Kyrie
made it all the way to the center of the garden, somewhere between the path
that circled the house, and the outside fence.
There were
ferns almost as tall as she was and she felt as if she'd stepped back into
another geologic age when the area was covered in rain forest. She removed her
clothes quickly and with practiced gestures. Shirt, jeans, shoes, all of it
neatly folded and set aside. And then she stood, in the greenery, and willed
herself to change.
It came more
easily than she expected. The panther liked green jungles and dark places. It
craved running through the heavy vegetation and climbing trees.
Kyrie forced
it, instead, to stand very still and smell. It didn't take long. The smell was
quite unmistakable.
* * *
"Hello,"
Edward said into his cell phone in the back of the car. "May I speak with
Mr. Lung?"
There was no
answer, but a clunking sound as though the phone had been dropped onto a hard
surface. From the background, Edward could hear the enthusiastic voice of a
monster-truck rally narrator. Then, as if from very far off, the shutting of a
door echoed.
Edward hoped
this meant that someone was calling Mr. Lung. It was, of course, possible that
once it had been determined that Edward hadn't called to order an order of
moo-goo-gaipan with fried rice on the side, the cashier had simply left. Or
gone to the kitchen to pinch an egg roll or his girlfriend's bottom.
It took a long
time, but at long last, Edward thought he heard, very faintly, approaching
footsteps. And then—finally—the sounds of a phone being moved around on a counter.
"Mr.
Ormson?" Lung's voice asked.
"Yes. I
have what you. . . I have the object you require. I'm heading to the restaurant
to return it."
"You are?
And your son?"
"We'll
leave my son out of this," Edward said.
"I see.
Will we?"
"Yes."
"Your son
caused much damage and death to our. . . organization."
Edward said
nothing. What was he supposed to say?
After a long
while, Lung sighed. "I see. But you are returning the object in
dispute."
"Yes."
"Well,
then I shall wait anxiously. I will see you in how long?"
"About
ten minutes," Edward said, and hung up the phone. He looked at the light
growing brighter and brighter in east, every minute. If he was very lucky, then
they wouldn't summon the Great Sky Dragon this close to dawn. Or if they did,
he wouldn't make it here.
If he was very
lucky.
He felt he
could stand just about everything short of facing that huge, enigmatic presence
once again.
* * *
The panther
scented the corpses right away. Fortunately they were a little past ripe, even
for its tastes. Kyrie was grateful for this.
Locked at the
back of the huge feline mind, she could feel the huge paws tread carefully
through the undergrowth, and she could feel the big feline head swaying, while
it tasted the air. Death. Death nearby.
The death
smelled enough like what the animal recognized as its own mortality to slow
down its steps, and it only continued forward because Kyrie forced it to.
But it
continued. Around the lushest part of the vegetation and towards a little
clearing of sorts, in the midst of it all.
The vegetation
that had once grown here had been torn out, unceremoniously, by the roots, rose
bush and fern, weed and bulb, all of it had been pulled up and tossed,
unceremoniously, in a huge pile beside the clearing.
What there was
of the Earth there had then been turned. Graves. Kyrie could smell them, or
rather the panther could.
Kyrie was sure
the smell would be imperceptible to her human nose, but her feline nose could
smell it, welting up through the imperfectly compacted earth—the smell of
decay, of death, of that thing that inevitably all living things became.
Only this
death had the peculiar metallic scent that Kyrie had learned to recognize as
the smell of shifters. The people laid to rest here had been shifters. Her
kind. She looked at the ground with the feline eyes, and forced the feline paw
to make a scratching motion on the loose Earth.
It didn't take
long. The hand wasn't much more than fifteen inches down.
The panther
wanted to run away and to forget this, to pretend it had never existed.
But Kyrie
forced it to walk, slowly, ponderously, to where Kyrie had left her clothes.
Kyrie would shift. And then she would call the police.
But before she
got to where her clothes lay, she found herself enveloped by a cloud of green
dust. It shimmered in the morning air, raining down on her.
Pollen. I had
to be pollen. Just pollen. She wished it to be pollen. But she could feel the
panther's head go light, and indistinct forms take shape before her shifted
eyes. Game, predators, small fluffy creatures and large ones, all teeth and
claws, formed in front of the panther's eyes, coming directly from her brain.
Kyrie could
feel the huge feline body leap and recoil, as if the things it were seeing were
normal.
And then. . .
And then she saw the beetle. It was coming through the vegetation, blue-green
carapace shining under the morning light.
Not quite sure
what she was doing, Kyrie forced the panther throat to make a sound it had
never been designed for. She screamed.
* * *
The Chinese
restaurant looked dismal grey in the morning light, as Edward got out of the
cab in front of it.
As he was
paying the fare, the cabby gave him an odd look. "They're closed, you
know," he said. "They only open for lunch and that's not for seven
hours."
"I
know," Edward said, giving the man a generous tip and handing the credit
card slip back. When you're not sure you're going to live, you can be very
generous. "I'm meeting someone."
The cabby
frowned. And older man, with anglo-saxon features, he was one of those men
whose expressions are slow and seemingly painful as though their faces had been
designed for absolute immobility. "Only," he said. "They've
found corpses in this parking lot, all the time. I've read about it in the
paper. Are you sure you want. . ."
Edward nodded.
He wanted to explain he was doing it for his son, but that made it sound way
too much like expected a medal for doing what any decent father would do. Brave
death to keep his son safe. Only.. . . he supposed he hadn't been a decent
father. Or not long enough for it to be unremarkable.
"I'm
sure," he said. "I'll call you for the trip back," he said.
"Your name is on the receipt, right?"
"Right,"
the cabby said, but dubiously, as though he couldn't really believe there would
be a trip back.
The truth was
neither did Edward. As he walked away from the cab—already peeling rubber out
of the parking lot—and towards the silent door of the Three Luck Dragon, with
the closed sign on the window, he would have given anything to run away.
But instead he
fumbled off the backpack as the door opened a crack and Lung's face appeared in
the opening. "Ah, Mr. Ormson," he said. Then he stepped aside and
opened the door further. "Come in."
"There is
no need," Edward said. "I have what you want, here. Take it and
I—"
But the door
opened fully. And inside the room were a group of young men, all glaring at
him. They all looked. . . dangerous. In the sort of danger that comes from
having absolutely no pre-conceived notions about the sanctity of the human
life.
"I said,
come in," Lung said.
It wasn't the
sort of invitation that Edward could refuse. For one, he was sure if he did
those dark haired young men glaring at him out of the shadows would chase him
down and drag him back. The only question was whether they would shift into
dragon form first.
Edward
suspected they would.
* * *
Walking away
from Goldport by the shortest route did not require going near Kyrie's house.
However, walking away from Goldport and not heading out of town via the route
to New Mexico did lead Tom down Fairfax avenue, in the general direction of the
castle and Kyrie's neighborhood. Though those were a few blocks north from his
path.
Kyrie. The
name kept turning up in Tom's mind with the same regularity that a sufferer's
tongue will seek out a hole in a decaying tooth. It hurt, but it was the sort
of hurt that reassured him he was still alive.
Kyrie. The
problem was that he'd actually had hope. He'd seen her look at him. She'd
patted his behind. She'd smiled at him. He'd had hope, however foolish that
hope might have been. If he'd never hoped for anything, he wouldn't have been
so shocked and wounded at seeing her with Rafiel.
And, yes, he
was aware that the fact he couldn't bear to see them together was a character
failing of his, not of theirs. He was also aware she hadn't betrayed him. Looks
and even pats on the bottom are not promises. They certainly are not a
relationship. They are just. . . Lust.
Perhaps,
he thought, as he walked in front of closed up store doors and dismal-looking
store fronts in the grey morning daylight. Perhaps she lusts after me—though
who knows why—but when it comes to love, when it comes to a relationship, she's
a smart girl. If she were interested in me, it would only be proof of either
stupidity or insanity.
But. . . But
if it wasn't her fault, why was he punishing her?
He scowled at
his own thought. He wasn't punishing her. If anything, he was keeping himself
from being punished daily by the sight of her with Rafiel.
It hurt. No,
it wasn't rational, but it hurt. Badly. And Tom didn't do well with hurt. He
wasn't punishing Kyrie. He'd go out of town, through Colorado Springs. Probably
buy a greyhound ticket there. Maybe go to Kansas for a while. It had been a
long time since he'd been in Kansas.
But, the
relentless accusing voice went on in his mind, if he wasn't trying to punish
her, why was he leaving Kyrie to face the beetles alone? Why was he leaving her
when she couldn't even sleep in her house?
Because it
wasn't his problem. Because she wasn't his to worry about. She could always
bunk up with Rafiel, couldn't she? And she was sure he'd keep her safe. She
wasn't Tom's to keep safe.
If she had
been, he would have given up his life for her, happily enough.
But what kind
of love was that? He minded seeing her with Rafiel? He minded her being happy?
But he didn't mind leaving town while she was in danger?
No wonder
she'd picked Rafiel. Tom's love was starting to sound a lot like hate.
As the last
few thoughts ran through his mind, Tom's steps had slowed down, and now he
stopped completely in front of the closed door of a little quilting shop, just
one crossroad past where he would have turned up to go to Kyrie's place.
Maybe he
should go and check on her. See if she was home. See if she was well. . . Then,
if she told him she was fine and that Rafiel would take care of her, he could
leave town with a clear conscience and never worry.
He turned
around, in front of the shop—the window screaming at him in pretty red cursive
that summer was the ideal time to quilt—and headed back towards the crossroad.
He'd just turned upward on it, when he saw, ahead of him, just scurrying out of
sight on a bend of the road, a giant beetle, its blue carapace shining in the
sun.
Kyrie,
Tom thought. He knew there were other places they could be headed. But right
then he thought of Kyrie. He thought only of Kyrie.
And then the
scream came. It was all Kyrie and yet not human—a warbling mix of terror coming
from a feline throat designed only for roaring and hissing.
Without even
noticing what he was doing, he broke into a run. He made the turn ahead in the
street in time to see the beetle creep into the greenery-choked garden of the
castle.
And the scream
came again.
* * *
Kyrie was
hallucinating. Or rather, the panther was. In front of the feline eyes arose a
hundred little animals that needed hunting, or rearing predators.
And yet, at
the back of the panther's mind, Kyrie managed to remain lucid, or almost lucid.
There was a beetle. She must not loose track of that. A beetle with shimmering
blue-green carapace. And it was trying to kill Kyrie. And lay eggs in her
corpse.
This certainty
firmly in mind, Kyrie aimed at anything green-blue that she caught amid the
snatches of illusion clogging the panther's vision. The panther's claws danced
over the extended limbs with what looked like a poison injector at the end but
might merely have been a lethal claw of some sort. She careened over the bug's
back, and scrambled halfway away before the beetle caught up.
They were
right over the graves, and the funky smell of them disturbed the panther, even
through the hallucinations.
And at the
back of the panther's mind, Kyrie knew soon she would be dead and buried in
this shallow grave.
* * *
Tom had run
full tilt into the garden of the castle, before he realized what he was doing.
He was only lucky the beetles were too busy to realize he was running after
them.
Of course,
what they were too busy with was Kyrie. And once they noticed Tom they would
start pumping the green stuff, and make Tom high as a kite and his fighting
totally ineffective.
Twenty yards
from them, seeing the huge black feline leap and dance ahead, in mad attack,
Tom stopped. He pulled his jacket off, and tossed it in the direction of a
tree, making a note where it was. He would come back for it. Then he peeled off
the white t-shirt and, wrapping it around his head, tied it in a knot at the
back. Its double-thickness of fabric made it hard to breathe, and he could wish
for better clothes to fight in than the pants that were slowly castrating him.
But he didn't
get his choice. And it didn't matter. He must fight Kyrie.
He grabbed a
tree branch and plunged forward into the battle swinging it at any beetle limbs
within his reach.
Clouds of
green stuff emanated, turning the air green and shimmering.
Tom realized
the smaller beetle—the one he'd followed?—was immobile and rubbing its wings to
emit cloud after cloud of green powder. Meanwhile the one fighting Kyrie—and so
far not losing, though also not managing to get any hits in—was not emitting
green powder.
Interesting.
So, they could only make people hallucinate when they weren't actively
fighting, was that it?
Well,
he thought, jumping back and landing atop the beetle, with a huge tree branch
in hand. Well. He was about to take the fight to the enemy.
* * *
And now Kyrie
was sure that she, personally, was hallucinating. On top of the
panther-conjured images of scared little furry things, there was . . . Tom. Oh,
not just Tom, but Tom in gloriously tight jeans, with his shirt removed, and
his muscular chest bare in the morning sunlight.
Of course, the
shirt he'd taken off was tied around his face, which seemed a really odd
hallucination for her to have. And she would think she would dream of his
grabbing her and kissing her, rather than of his hitting some very hard blows
on the beetle with a huge tree trunk—far too big to be a branch— he'd got from
nowhere.
And yet,
she thought as she tried to concentrate on hitting any green-blue bits of bug
that she could see through the panther's addled eyes. And yet the sight of him
fighting the bug was far more distracting than the sight of the small furry
things could be for the panther.
She bit and
snarled and clawed at bits of bug, but in her mind she was admiring the way tom
leapt, the way he could turn on a dime, the force he put into the swing of that
tree branch in his hand. From his movements, he too must have taken gymnastics
or dance, or something.
Absorbed between
her fight and disturbing glimpses of half-naked Tom, she could barely think.
She heard the squeal of brakes towards the back entrance of the garden, but she
paid it no attention.
Which is why
she was so shocked to see Rafiel running towards them, gun drawn, blond hair
flying in the wind and his expression quite the most distraught Kyrie had ever
seen. He was screaming something as he ran, and it seemed to Kyrie—through the
panther's distorted senses—that one of the words was "die." The other
words, though, were gravy and pick. She wasn't sure what gravy had to do with
it.
Rafiel let out
shots as he ran, aimed at the beetles, and from the high-pitched whining of the
one that Tom was beating, Kyrie would guess at least one of the bullets had
found beetle flesh. Whether that meant it had also found any lethal points was
something else again.
Behind Rafiel,
Keith came, running up, with what looked like a hoe in his hand. Where had he
found the hoe?
* * *
Tom heard a
bullet whistle by and looked up to see Rafiel running into the garden firing
wildly. Still beating on the beetle—smacking it repeatedly on the head seemed
to make it too confused to either fight, flee or put out green powder—Tom
wondered if he was the intended victim of the beetle.
But the next
bullet lodged itself solidly in the beetle's—Frank's?—flesh, and the creature
emitted a high-pitch whine. And then it went berserk, limbs failing up towards
Tom, trying to dislodge him, trying to stab at him.
Tom hit at the
limbs, wildly. Keith was running up, behind Rafiel, and as Rafiel leapt towards
Kyrie's beetle and shifted shapes mid-leap, his clothes falling in shreds away
from the dragon body, Keith grabbed the falling gun and aimed it at Tom's
beetle.
* * *
Kyrie was
grateful when Rafiel, now in lion form, joined the fight, but—though the
panther was having trouble seeing clearly—she could see enough to see Keith
grab the gun and point it in the general direction of Tom.
She didn't
think that Keith would hurt Tom. Or not on purpose. But from the way Keith was
holding the gun, she could tell there was no way in hell he could hit the
broadside of a barn.
Unfortunately,
he wasn't aiming at the broadside of a barn. He was aiming at a general area
where Tom was a prominent feature. Without thinking she leapt, hitting the
still-human Tom with her weight and bringing him rolling off the bug and onto
the ground, with Kyrie just by his side.
Just in time,
as the bullet whistled through the space where he'd been.
* * *
Kyrie was
attacking him, Tom thought, as he hit hard on the ground, just barely managing
to tuck in his head enough that he wouldn't end up unconscious. Why was she?
And then he
realized that Keith had a gun and clearly had no idea what to do with it, as
several erratically-fired bullets flew over the beetle's carapace. Just where
Tom would have been.
Still stunned
by his fall on the ground, Tom put out an hesitant hand towards the huge mound
of fur beside him. "Kyrie?" he said.
A tongue came
out and touched his hand. Just touched, which was good, because it felt just
like a cat tongue, all sharp bits and hooks.
A non feline
hissing sound, a scraping, and Tom saw the beetle was turning around and was
aiming sharp claw-like things at Kyrie.
Before he
could think, he knew he was going to shift. He had just the time to kick off
his leather boots, as his body twisted and bent. And he was standing, as a
dragon, facing the bug. He did what a dragon does. He flamed.
* * *
First, Kyrie
thought, flames weren't particularly effective in these circumstances. Tom's
flame seemed to glance over the beetle's carapace, without harming it. And
second, if Tom continued flaming, he would hit a tree and roast them all alive.
But before
Kyrie could change shape and yell this at Tom, who was clearly addled by
adrenaline and change, Keith came flying out from behind them, hoe in hand. He
had dropped his gun. Which was good. But Kyrie wasn't sure that a hoe was the
most effective of weapons.
Only she
couldn't do anything, except shift, in a hurry and scream, "Don't flame,
Tom," as Keith landed on top of the beetle and started digging into the
joint between the neck and the back carapace. Digging, as if he were digging
into soil, making big chunks of beetle fly all over.
The beetle
went berserk.
* * *
Sometimes the
only way to stop a flame that is doing its best to erupt from a dragon's throat
is for the dragon to force himself to become human. This Tom did, forcing his
mind to twist his body into human shape. Just in time to avoid burning Keith to
a crisp atop the beetle. Which was good, because Keith seemed to have hit on
something that worked. He was digging up large chunks of beetle flesh, throwing
them all around in a shower of beetle and ichor.
And the beetle
was stabbing at him, fortunately pretty erratically. The beetle's arms weren't
meant to bend that way. Not upward and towards something on its back. Only,
even an erratic blow was bound to hit, eventually. Unless. . .
Tom grabbed
the tree branch he'd let drop, and started beating at beetle limbs. From the
other side, Kyrie was doing the same.
Kyrie was back
to her human form, and Tom couldn't look at her with more than the corner of
his eye. Not if he wanted to continue fighting in any rational manner at all.
But, damn,
that woman could swing the tree branch with the best of them.
* * *
As the beetle
stopped moving, and its high-pitched scream grew, Tom became aware of another
sound behind him. A feline protest of pain. He turned, in time to see the
beetle get a claw into Rafiel between shoulder and front leg.
For a moment,
for just a moment, Tom thought, Good. He deserves it.
But an immense
feeling of shame swept over him. Why did Rafiel deserve to die? Because he'd
bested Tom in winning the affections of a woman?
Hell, by that
criteria there would hardly be any males left alive in the world.
Shame made Tom
jump forward, towards Rafiel, tree branch in hand, beating at the beetle. Just
in time, as Rafiel was crawling away, bleeding.
And now Keith
scrambled up on the back of this beetle. He looked like nothing on Earth and
certainly no longer like the hard-partying college student. His clothes were a
mess, he seemed to have bathed in greenish-brown ichor, and he'd lost his cap
somewhere.
But he had an
insane grin on his face, as he started digging up chunks of this beetle. And
Tom concentrated on keeping the beetle from stabbing his friend, by beating the
beetle's limbs away. Kyrie joined in on the other side.
Soon the
beetle had stopped moving.
But from
behind them there was still a high pitched sound, like the beetle's scream.
Tom turned around,
expecting to face yet another beetle. Instead, he saw Rafiel desperately
clutching his shoulder and struggling to get up while pale, white, giant worms
swarmed over him.
Tom didn't
understand where the worms came from, but they had big, sharp teeth and were
biting at Rafiel.
Tom ran
towards Rafiel and started grabbing at the worms trying to eat Rafiel, while
Kyrie ran up to smash the ones that were merely around Rafiel.
A second
later, Keith and his hoe joined in.
* * *
Grubs,
Kyrie thought. The more advanced grubs on the corpses beneath the thin layer of
soil had come alive at the smell of Rafiel's blood, and were swarming him.
She saw Tom
jump ahead and start to pull the grubs off Rafiel. As mad as she was at Rafiel,
she didn't want him eaten alive by would-be insects. And besides, Rafiel had
got in this trouble by trying to help her in the first place.
She jumped
into the fray, gleefully smashing at the grubs with her heavy branch.
And Tom had
got the last grub off Rafiel—who seemed more stunned than hurt, and was
swinging the huge piece of tree he carried, likewise beating down the bugs.
Keith joined in with his hoe.
There were a
lot of grubs, more and more—pale and white and writhing—pushing up out of the
soil, as soon as they smashed a dozen or a hundred.
So absorbed in
what she was doing, her arms hurting, while she kicked away to keep the grubs
from climbing her legs, Kyrie didn't keep track of Rafiel.
Until she
smelled gasoline and realized that Rafiel had got a huge container of gasoline
from somewhere and was liberally dousing the clearing and the surrounding
vegetation.
* * *
Tom had just
realized what the worms were. They were grubs. Babies. It seemed odd to be
killing babies who were acting only on instinct.
But. . . were
the babies human? He couldn't tell. They looked like white grubs, featureless,
except for large mouths with sharp teeth. With which they'd probably been
feeding on decaying human flesh.
Would they
ever be human? How could Tom know? Except that, of course, their parents had
been human. At least part of the time.
He swung the
tree branch and smashed little beetle grubs while wondering if with time they
would learn to be human babies and human toddlers. But. . . would they? And
even if they did, when adolescence came, when most people started shifting,
would they be able to control their urges to shift? And their urges to kill
people so they could lay eggs in the corpses?
He just
decided that he'd hit all of them who attacked him, but he would not, could
not, kill any that might still be asleep beneath the soil. They should take
those, and see if they became human babies as they developed. If they did,
chances were they wouldn't shift again till their teen years. And meanwhile,
they could see that they got a good education, and didn't believe they could
kill people for their sexual gratification.
If shifters
would look after punishing their own criminals, then they had to look after
educating their own young, didn't they?
He'd just
thought this when he smelled gasoline, and, looking up, saw Rafiel spreading
gasoline over the entire area and the surrounding vegetation.
Tom had to
stop him. He had to. He was going to kill all the babies. And themselves with
them, probably.
As tired as he
was, he didn't realize he'd shifted and flamed until he saw fire spark on the
gasoline-doused tree on the other side of the clearing.
Oh, shit.
* * *
"Run,"
Kyrie screamed, managing to grab at Keith's arm, and making an ineffective grab
at Tom's wing, as she scrambled ahead of them towards the back entrance of the
garden—the nearest one.
If she thought
for a minute she could go over the fence, she would have done it. She couldn't
pull Tom, though, and he seemed dazed, staying behind, staring at the flames.
"Tom,
run," she yelled, but there were sheets of flames where they'd been, and
she couldn't stop, but ran. Ran all the way out the gate. Where she collapsed
in a heap on the beaten-dirt of the alley, a few steps from Rafiel's car.
Rafiel was
face down in the alley, but he was clearly alive, taking deep breaths that
shook his whole body.
Kyrie heard
Keith ask "Are you all right, man?"
And realized
Rafiel was on all fours, throwing up.
Tom, ran out
of the gate, fell, then scrambled up, holding on to the eight foot tall metal
fence of the castle to pull himself upright.
And Kyrie
couldn't help smiling when she realized he was wearing a jacket and a pair of
leather boots. And nothing else. So, that was why he had delayed? Tom and his
jacket and boots.
He dropped
something at her feet. "I tripped on these."
Her clothes.
As she shook them out, even her earring dropped out.
But he had his
back to her, and was still clutching the fence posts, while he stared at the
roaring inferno growing inside the garden.
"We have
to go," Kyrie said. "We have to get out of here. The fire department
will be here in no time."
"But. .
." Tom said. "The babies."
"You mean
the grubs? Tom, those weren't human. They tried to eat Rafiel."
Tom made a
sound half growl. "We don't know if they were babies. Do we know what we
were during gestation? Perhaps they would have shifted when they were fully
grown, and only a few of them would ever shift again and not for years."
"Tom,"
Rafiel said. His voice sounded shaky. "I understand the feelings, but we
had to kill them. We couldn't afford for the corpses to be found with those
larvae. They would be taken to labs. Do you want them to figure out
shape-shifting? They might very well come after us and kill us all, if faced
with a dangerous example like that."
"So, you
killed them to save your life? Is that right? Do you have the right to kill
things just because there's a remote chance it would eventually lead to your
death?"
"Hell,
yes," Rafiel said.
"It's not
moral," Tom protested.
"If I'm
dead, morality doesn't matter to me anymore. Tom. Look, they bit me," he
showed round bite marks, as if from a hundred little mouths equipped with sharp
teeth. "They were dangerous. They would have bit other people. Killed
other people. Besides," Rafiel shrugged. "Technically we killed them.
You flamed them."
"Only
because I was trying to prevent you from killing them," Tom said, and
realized how stupid that sounded.
"Tom,"
Kyrie said. "It was self-defense. The heat of battle. And they were
probably dangerous. Please calm down. We need to get out of here before those
fire trucks get here. Hear them?"
Tom heard
them, the wailing in the distance, getting near.
"We can
go to my house," Kyrie said. "Take showers. I'll make something for
us."
Just then,
Tom's phone rang in his jacket pocket. "What now?" he said, grabbing
the phone and taking it to his ear.
"Mr.
Ormson," a cool voice on the other side said.
"Yes."
"We have
your father," the voice said.
Oh, shit. The
dragons. "But you have the Pearl of Heaven too," Tom said.
"Yes.
But. . . There is someone who wishes for more than the return of the
Pearl." The voice on the other side was slick and uncaring an inhuman.
"He says there must be punishment."
"What
punishment?" Tom said, feeling like he'd been punished enough this last
hour.
"Severe
punishment," the voice said. "One of you will be punished. Either you
or your father. We're at Three Luck Dragon, on Ore Road on the other side of
town. If you're not here in half an hour, we'll punish your father. The Great
Sky Dragon is tired of waiting."
The phone line
went dead and Tom thought, So, let them punish my father. He deserves it.
He's the one who got involved with the triad.
But Tom was
the one who had stolen the Pearl of Heaven. Worse, Tom was the one who had
asked his father to return it. And his father had gone, without complaint. Even
though, knowing even more about the triad than Tom did, he must have realized
this was the kiss of death.
Tom didn't
realize he had made a decision until he was running down the alley.
* * *
"Where is
he going?" Rafiel asked Kyrie, as Tom started running.
Kyrie
shrugged, but Keith said, "Something must have gone wrong with his father
taking the Pearl out to the triad."
"What?"
Rafiel said.
"Whatever
happened to we'll leave the Pearl somewhere?" Kyrie said. "And let
them find it?"
"I guess
that wasn't practical," Keith said. "Since Tom was heading out of
town."
"He was?
Why?"
"I don't
know," Keith said. "But he'd seen the two of you kissing and he said
he couldn't stand to stay around."
"Oh
no," Kyrie said.
"He's not
going to get very far dressed like that, before someone arrests him for
indecent exposure," Rafiel said, as Tom hit the end of the garden, and
turned onto Fairfax avenue. And then he jumped, and opened the door of his car.
Getting into the driver's seat, he yelled, "Get in now."
Kyrie had
barely the time to scramble in, beside Keith on the back seat, before Rafiel
tore out of the parking lot in a squeal of tires and a smell of burning rubber.
He pulled onto
the curb just ahead of the running Tom, leaned sideways and opened the
passenger door. Then before Tom could swerve to avoid it, he yelled out the
door, "Get in now, Tom. Get in."
* * *
"I don't
want to get in," Tom said, stopping.
"That you
might not, but you're naked. Someone will arrest you long before you get where
you're supposed to go," Rafiel said way too reasonably.
Tom looked
down. Yeah. He supposed a leather jacket and a pair of leather boots didn't
constitute decent clothing. And he had to get to the restaurant without being
arrested.
He flung into
the passenger seat of the car. "I need to go to Three Luck Dragon on Ore
road on the south side."
"I know
where it is," Rafiel said, starting the car up. "Wonderful Peking
duck." Then, as though realizing that Tom's driving motive wasn't a wish
for food. "Your father?"
"Yes,"
Tom said, and covered his face with his hands. "I should never have sent
him to them. Hell, I can't do anything right. Damn."
He felt a hand
on his shoulder, from the back, and heard Kyrie's voice. "If you were
planning to go out of town, you did the only thing you could do," she
said. "And your father, did he protest?"
"No,"
Keith said. "He knew there was a danger. He wouldn't let me go with him.
But he, himself, went willingly. Tom. Your father is an adult. He made his own
decision."
"Doesn't
mean we'll leave him to die," Tom said.
"Right,"
Rafiel said. "Which is why I'll get us there as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, there are clothes under the front seat, Kyrie, if you could get
them. There should be at least two changes of clothes. And there should be a
pair of pants and a t-shirt Tom could use. They'll be large as hell, but they
should make him decent."
Before Tom
could protest, he found Kyrie handing him a t-shirt and a pair of sweat pants.
Removing his jacket and boots and putting clothes on was difficult in the tight
confines of the car. And Tom wasn't absolutely sure if the dragons cared if he
had any clothes on.
But he
understood there would be a psychological advantage to being fully dressed when
he got there and tried to negotiate his father's release with the dragons. If
he were naked, he'd be embarrassed, and that would put him at a strong
disadvantage. No. He had to be dressed. And he had to get his dad out of this.
He should
never have involved his dad in this.
* * *
Before they
got to the restaurant Kyrie could smell the shifter scent in the air. She
wondered how many of them were there.
Speeding down
the—at this time—deserted Ore road, lined by warehouses and dilapidated motels,
then made one last turn. . . And then she saw it. At least she imagined that
was it. She couldn't imagine any other reason why the parking lot in front of a
low-slung building ornamented with an unlikely fluorescent green dragon on the
roof would be crammed—literally crammed with men.
No, she
thought, as she got closer. Men and dragons.
And at the
head of it all, golden and brilliant in the morning light, was a huge dragon.
Ten times bigger than Tom in his dragon form. And even bigger than that in
presence. He felt a hundred times larger than his already immense size.
In his front
paw, raised high above the assembly, he held Edward Orson.
Kyrie wasn't
close enough to see Edward's expression. But she could see his arms moving. He
was alive.
Rafiel stopped
the car in front of the parking lot. Impossible to turn into it. And besides,
Tom was already struggling with the latch, trying to jump out.
Kyrie opened
the door, too, as soon as the car stopped. And was hit by the silence of the
hundreds of beings in the parking lot.
It was the
silence of suspended breath.
* * *
Tom had never
been so scared. Not even when he'd been sixteen and his father had thrown him
out of the house at gun point. Not even in the wild days and terrifying nights
afterwards, while he tried to learn to live on the street while not dying of
sheer stupidity.
It wasn't only
his terror, he realized. It was the terror and awe of all those around him. He
could hear it in their silence, see it in their absolute immobility. And he
could feel it rolling in waves over him whenever he looked at the great golden
dragon who stood in front of the multitude. Holding Tom's father.
Right.
There were
moments, Tom had learned, when fear was the best thing. Fear of the street tug
kept you from saying something that would have made him kill you. Fear of the
poisonous snake, kept you too far away from it to be bit. And fear of some
animals would make you stand absolutely still, so that their eyes, adapted to
movement, couldn't see you.
And there were
moments when fear had to be ignored. His fear was perfectly rational. He could
sense the menace of the Great Sky Dragon and the fear that infected those
around him, crowding the parking lot. He could fear it, and it made him
struggle to draw breath. It made him have to fight his every instinct to be
able to step forward into the crowd, which parted to allow him through.
His fear was
the most natural thing in the world and it came from the fact that he did not
wish to die. And it didn't take a genius to know that was the most likely
outcome of this situation.
And yet. . .
And yet, of course Tom didn't want to die. There had been enough ambiguity in
the exchanges in the car that he thought he just might still have a chance with
Kyrie. And who, thinking of Kyrie—particularly when she'd smiled at him—could
want to die and not even try for something more with her?
But all of
that was irrelevant, for the same reason that it was irrelevant whether or not
Tom could or wanted to eat some human beings on occasion. It was irrelevant
because if Tom did it and succeeded he wouldn't be able to live with himself
afterwards.
As he wouldn't
be able to live with himself if he walked away now and let them kill his
father. His father had walked into this at Tom's request. It was Tom's doing,
and it was high time Tom dealt with his own mistakes.
He walked
forward through the crowd, which parted for him, leaving him a wide aisle to
walk through.
He could hear
his friends walk behind him, but he didn't turn to look. That would only make
what he needed to do harder to accomplish.
* * *
Edward wasn't
really scared until Tom showed up. Before the Great Sky Dragon arrived, even,
while Lung and his minions had kept him prisoner in the entrance area of the
restaurant—where the TV blared endlessly about round-the-clock monster truck
rallies—he'd realized what was going to happen and he was prepared to take it.
Funny how,
just days ago, when the Great Sky Dragon had told him that he held him
responsible for Tom's actions, Edward had bridled at the idea and tried to deny
it. Now it seemed absolutely self-evident.
Tom was
something that Edward had made. Not only by inadvertently passing on some
long-forgotten gene that had caused the boy to turn into a dragon—no. Of that
guilt he could have easily absolved himself, because. . . who can be sure of
what he's passing on to his sons? And who can control what his children
inherit?
But these days
with the other shifters—getting acquainted with Kyrie and even the
policeman—Edward had realized that he'd done something else, something
drastically wrong with Tom. Because the other shifters weren't as troubled and
hadn't gone through so much to get to a place of balance. And hadn't made
mistakes nearly as bad as the ones Tom had achieved.
Which must
mean that shifters weren't inherently unstable. Of course, Edward had tried to
tell himself that Tom was inherently unstable; that there had been something
wrong with the boy from the beginning. But he'd seen Tom at the diner—Tom
holding down a job and establishing contact with other human beings all around
him.
There was
nothing wrong with Tom. If he'd gone around the bend, it had to be his father's
doing.
And so, Edward
was ready to pay for his crimes and for the fact that he had been a truly
horrible father. So he'd been perfectly calm, in the Great Sky Dragon's grasp,
while the dragon lifted him above the crowd. Even though he'd been held there,
immobile, for half an hour, he didn't feel scared or upset.
He devoted his
time to a vague dream that Tom would come back; would figure things out with
Kyrie; that sometime in their future they would have children. Even if Edward
would never get to see his grandchildren, he could imagine them vividly. And it
was worth it to him to sacrifice himself for them.
And then the
car stopped. And Tom showed up. The four of them—the four children, as Edward
couldn't help thinking—walked through the massed triad crowd towards the Great
Sky Dragon.
Tom was at the
front, looking pale and drawn and absolutely determined.
"Tom,
no," Edward shouted. "It's not worth it. Leave."
But Tom shook
his head, black curls tossing in the light of the morning. He frowned. He
walked all the way to the front of the Great Sky Dragon and stood, feet planted
apart, arms crossed on his chest. "I've come," he said.
Edward had the
impression the giant creature holding him laughed, though there was no sound.
"It is good that you come," he said. "And now, what do you want
to do?"
"I want
you to let my father go," Tom said, casting his voice so that, normally
low as it was, it could be heard all over the vast parking lot.
"Or?"
The Great Sky Dragon asked.
"I don't
think there's any or," Tom said. "You're much bigger than I, and
we're surrounded by all your minions. I'll fight you, if you want me to, but I
don't think there would be any contest."
"No,"
The Great Sky Dragon said. "There wouldn't."
"So, I'm
here. You do whatever you have to do, but you let my father go first."
"Tom,
no," Edward said. "Don't do this. I don't want you to sacrifice
yourself for me. I was a horrible father."
At that
something like amusement flickered over Tom's face which, from where Edward was
looking at it, looked like a horrible, pale mask incapable of human movement.
For just a moment, Tom blinked, and looked up at his father, and his eyelids
fluttered, and his lips pinched upward in an almost smile, "No shit,
Sherlock. Did you have to consult many experts to come to this
conclusion?" He shook his head. "But it doesn't matter, because I've
always been an even worse son, and—" as Edward opened his mouth, Tom held
up a hand to silence him. "What's more, I brought this final situation on
by my own actions. I'm not stupid. I wasn't a baby when I stole the Pearl of
Heaven. Nor were my impulses uncontrollable. I knew what I was doing. I knew
whom I was messing with. And I did it anyway. So, you see, it's my doing, and
who but I should suffer for it?"
Tom looked
away from his father. "Let my father go," he told the dragon.
"And promise me that all my friends will be able to leave safely. And then
do whatever you think you have to do to even the score."
Edward felt
himself being lowered, slowly, until his feet touched the pavement. He put out
a hand and grabbed at Tom's shoulder. "Tom, no. Please. I can't live
knowing. . ."
But the dragon
flicked a toe at Edward's back. Just, flicked it. And Edward went flying,
backwards, head over heels, to land bruised and stunned at Kyrie's and Keith's
feet.
* * *
Tom watched
the dragon flick his father out of the way and send him flying. A look back
over his shoulder showed him that his father was alive and well. He turned back
to the dragon.
Having no
illusions about how long—or how little—remained for him to live seemed to make
everything around him very bright and sharp. The dragon glittering in the light
of the morning was a thing of beauty, golden and scintillating. And the sun
coming up over the Three Luck Dragon painted the sky a delicate pink like the
inside of certain roses when they're just opening to the light of morning.
As for the
morning air, it smelled of flowers and it felt cool to the skin, with only a
hint of warmth to indicate the scorcher the day would later become.
I'll never
see another sunrise, Tom thought. Yesterday was my last sunset. That
meal eaten with Kyrie, hastily, in my father's hotel room, was my last meal.
Worse, I'll never kiss a girl, beyond the half hearted kisses and gropes I got
back before I knew I was a dragon. I'll never kiss Kyrie.
Weirdly, none
of this seemed startling. It was as though all his life he'd been hastening
towards this. Or rather, as if all his life he'd been worried about how he was
going to die and what would put an end to his life. Now he need worry no more.
He knew exactly where he would end and how.
A brief
thought of whether there was anything after flickered through his mind. His
parents were Catholic—or at least Catholic of the sort that didn't believe in
God but believed that Mary was His mother. They went to mass sometimes.
Certainly for big occasions and momentous parties, like weddings and baptisms
and funerals. And Tom had attended catechism lessons in the far away days of
his childhood. Well, at least he'd been present while dreaming up ways to trip
up the catechist, or look up her skirt.
He had no
objections to the idea of an after life. But he also couldn't believe in it.
Not really believe. If there was anything on the other side of this, he sensed
it would be so different that who he was and what he thought on this side would
make no difference at all. For all intents and purposes, Tom Ormson would stop
existing.
He
wanted—desperately wanted—to look over his shoulder at Kyrie. He heard her back
there, her voice muffled, as though someone held a hand over her mouth. She was
yelling "Tom, no."
But he didn't
dare look. If he saw her. If he actually saw her, he knew his courage would
fail him. Instead, he stood, legs slightly apart for balance, letting his arms
uncross from his chest and fall alongside his body. In a position that didn't
look quite so threatening.
He looked up
at the huge, inhuman eye of the Great Sky Dragon.
"Ready?"
the creature said.
"Ready,"
Tom said.
The creature
lowered its head to be level with Tom's and said—in a voice that was little
more than a modulated hiss, "You have great courage, little one."
And for a
moment, for a brief, intense moment, Tom had hope.
Then he saw
the glimmering claw slice through the air. It caught him just above the pubic
bone. Tom saw it penetrate, before the pain hit. It ripped upwards, swiftly,
disemboweling him from pubic bone to throat.
Looking down,
Tom saw his own innards spill, saw blood fountain out.
I'm dead,
he thought, and blinked with the sort of blank stupidity that comes from not
believing your own eyes.
And then the
pain hit, burning, unbearable. He screamed, or attempted to scream but nothing
came out except a burble of blood that stopped up his throat, filled his mouth,
poured out of his nose.
He dropped to
the ground and for a second, for an agonizing second, struggled to breathe. His
rapidly-fading brain told him it was impossible. He was dead. But he tried to
breathe, against pain and horrible cold and fear.
He inhaled
blood and heard Kyrie call his name. He thought he felt her grab his hand, but
his hand was as distant and cold as the other side of the moon.
And then there
was nothing.
* * *
"Tom."
Kyrie had
struggled against Rafiel and Keith, as they held her back, struggled and kicked
and tried to yell at Tom not to do this. It wasn't worth his sacrifice. It just
wasn't.
They could
fight the dragons. They could.
"No, we
can't," Rafiel told her. "He's giving himself up so that the rest of
us can get away in peace. If he doesn't do that, all of us will die."
"There's
hundreds of them and five of us, Kyrie," Keith said. "We'll all
die."
"Then
we'll all die," she yelled. "Can you live with the idea you calmly
allowed him to sacrifice himself for us?"
"I
can't," Edward said. But he was gathering himself up from the ground, and
he looked bruised and tired and hurt. He didn't look like he would lead any
charges against any dragons.
So Kyrie
yelled, "Tom, don't do it," and tried to struggle free, to go grab
him. If they ran. If they ran very fast. . .
But Keith and
Rafiel both grabbed her and held onto her arms, and covered her mouth.
She was
twisting against them, writhing. . .
And it all
happened too fast. That claw rising and falling, in the morning sunlight,
catching Tom and ripping. . .
Kyrie saw
blood fountain at the same time that the men, startled, let go of her. She
careened forward, under the power of her own repressed attempts at movement,
and the burst got her to Tom just as he was falling, his face contorted in
pain.
She didn't
even—couldn't even—look down to where his body had been ripped open. His
insides were hanging out, and he was twisting, and his face looked like he was
suffering pain she couldn't imagine.
His wide open
eyes fixed on her, but she didn't know if he could see her. She fell to her
knees, and grabbed his hand, which felt too cold and was flexing in what seemed
to be a spasmodic movement.
"They can
still save you," she said. "They can still save you. The wonders of
modern medicine."
But blood was
pouring out of his mouth, blood was bubbling out of his nose, and, as she
watched, his eyes went totally blank, in the morning light. Blank and upward turned,
and wide open.
She couldn't
tell if his heart was still beating and, since it was probably in the mass of
organs exposed in the front of his body, she couldn't check. And she didn't
need to. She knew he was dead.
She stood up,
shaking slightly. And then she lost it.
She never knew
the exact moment when she lost it. When she realized she was doing something
stupid, she had already flung herself forward, at the Great Sky Dragon, arms
and legs flying, mouth poised to bite.
"You
bastard," she said. "You bastard." Only it wasn't so much a word
as a formless growl, and she kicked at the golden foot and tore with her nails
at the golden scales.
She felt more
than saw as several of the human spectators, the triad members, plunged forward
to grab at her, and she didn't care because she could take them all. All of
them.
Only the Great
Sky Dragon grabbed her in his talons, one of them still stained red by Tom's
blood, and brought her up to his face, to look at her intently with his
impassive eyes. "Pure fire," the voice that wasn't a voice said.
"I wonder if he knows what he holds."
And then she
was tumbling down, and hitting the ground hard.
As she
struggled to sit up again, she could see the Great Sky Dragon already high in
the sky, flapping his wings—vanishing.
Around them,
the other men—or mostly dragons—were disappearing. Some flying and some just. .
. scurrying away.
Aching, Kyrie
looked over at Tom's corpse. He was still staring blankly at the sky. What did
she expect? That he would get up and say it was all a joke? Corpses rarely
moved.
She swallowed
hard. Grief felt like a huge, insoluble lump in her throat.
But the
madness was gone. She knew she couldn't avenge herself on the dragons. Or on
any of them. She knew as she knew she was alive and that Tom was dead that
there was no remedy for this.
She scooted
forward and took hold of Tom's hand. "I'm sorry," she said. She knew
he couldn't hear her, and she'd never devoted any thought to the possibility of
life after this one. But if there was anything, and if he could hear her. . .
"I'm sorry. This is not how I meant for this to go. I didn't even realize.
. . I didn't know myself until just now." She squeezed the cold hand,
knowing it was beyond comfort.
"Kyrie,
you have to get up," Rafiel said. "I'm going to call the police. You
have to get up from there."
She shook her
head. "No. I'll stay with him. I'll go with him. We can't leave him alone
here." She saw a fly try to alight on Tom's wide open eyes, and she waved it
away with her free hand. Oh, she knew he was dead and he couldn't feel it, but
it seemed. . . indecent.
"Kyrie,
he's going to the morgue. You can't go with him. You don't want to. Let me help
you up," Rafiel said.
She felt him
tear her fingers away from Tom's hand. As if from somewhere, far away, she
heard her own thoughts tell her that she was in shock. And she believed them.
It just didn't change anything, did it?
There were
sounds of someone throwing up behind her. She thought it was Keith, but she didn't
turn to look. It had to be Keith, anyway, since there were only the five of
them. . . the four of them here. And it couldn't be Edward because he was
crying, somewhere to her right side. He was crying, loudly and immoderately.
And she thought that was weird because she didn't know lawyers could cry.
Rafiel threw
something warm. A jacket? Over her shoulders. "You're trembling, Kyrie.
You need something warm," he said.
"Tom's
jacket," she said.
"What
about it?"
"It will
be ruined," she said. "All the blood. He's going to be very
upset." And then she realized what she'd said was nonsense, but she
couldn't seem to think her way out of that puzzle.
She felt
Rafiel lead her very gently. And then there were lights, and noise, and a
siren, and someone was asking her something, and she heard Rafiel's voice say,
"She really can't talk now. She's in shock. I'm sorry. Perhaps later. We
were walking across the parking lot to see when the restaurant opened, and this
giant Komodo dragon came running out of nowhere, and it attacked Tom. I really
am not sure of the details. It all happened so fast."
Kyrie felt
Keith shove her into a car. She didn't care whose car, nor where she was going.
* * *
And then life
went on, somehow. It all seemed very odd to Kyrie that life could go on after
something like that. She'd seen someone die—no. She'd seen Tom die. She'd seen
Tom die so that the rest of them would be allowed to go free.
It all seemed
very strange, and she thought about it very deeply. She thought about it so
deeply that the rest of life seemed inconsequential.
It all seemed
a great mystery. One minute Tom had been alive and well and afraid, and making
wisecracks and being himself. And the next minute—no, the next second, he was
so much flesh, on the ground. No life, no spirit, no breath.
It was very
odd that such a great change could be effected so quickly and that it could
never be reversed.
There
should be, she thought, and realized she was in her kitchen, sitting at the
table and staring down at the pattern of the table—whirls of fake marble
engraved on the Formica—there should be a rewind button on life. So that you
could press the button and life would be again as it was before. And the
horrible things wouldn't have happened.
Someone was
knocking at the door. At the kitchen door. Tom. But no. Tom would come no more.
But someone
was knocking on her kitchen door. And she was sitting at her table in her robe
and—she looked—yup, a long t-shirt. She was decent. And someone was knocking,
so she guessed she'd better let whoever it was in.
She stood up,
opened the door. Keith was there, on the doorstep, wearing his ridiculous
backward-hat. Only it had to be a new one, because the other one had burned
with the castle, had it not? She seemed to remember. . .
He had her
newspapers under one arm, and was staring at her, in utter dismay.
"Kyrie," he said. "Have you slept? Eaten anything?"
"I don't.
. ." She frowned. "I don't remember."
"You
don't remember?" Keith asked. He looked scared. "Kyrie, it's been two
days."
Two days?
Since Tom had died?
"I just
realized I'm. . . in my robe. In my home. . ."
"We
brought you back. Mr. Ormson. . . Edward, put you to bed."
He had? For
some reason the idea of a strange male—of a strange older male—undressing her
didn't embarrass her. Not even a little. It didn't matter.
She became
aware that Keith had dumped the papers on the table, and was bustling around,
setting a teapot on, opening the fridge, letting out with exclamations of
dismay, if at her housekeeping or the lack of food in her fridge, she didn't
know.
It seemed like
all of a sudden, he was putting a cup of tea, a plate of toast with jam, and a
peeled boiled egg in front of her.
"I'm not
the best of cooks, Kyrie, I'm sorry," he said. "This is about all I
can cook. But will you eat? A little. For me?"
He was looking
pleadingly at her, and he looked far younger than she thought he was, and she
thought if she didn't eat he might very well cry.
The toast and
the egg tasted like straw to her, but she forced herself to eat them. The tea,
at least, was sweet and warm, and she swallowed cup after cup, while Keith
poured.
"Have you
talked to Rafiel?" Keith asked.
Kyrie had to
concentrate to remember Rafiel. It all seemed such a long way away and vague.
After a while she shook her head.
"Well,
they found journals. Apparently Frank kept journals. He'd managed to keep the
beetle under control until just a few Natural History Museum, and then. . .
biological clock or what not and he went insane and started. . . laying down
pheromones bait, to attract females and victims. He wrote all about it in his
diary. He started laying the pheromones over a year ago. As if he were trying
to reassure himself he wasn't crazy. Though most of the killings were the
female's doing. He just helped drag the corpses to the castle,
afterwards."
She nodded,
though what Keith was saying only made sense in a very distant and impersonal
sort of way, as if he were talking about people who had been dead for centuries
and whom nothing could affect.
"He was
intending to make Tom the fall guy for it all, you know. That's why he hired
someone from the homeless shelter and with a history of drug abuse. The idea
was to make all corpses disappear, except a couple, which would be found near
Tom's apartment, and it would be thought that Tom had killed them all, that he
had gone over the edge. The beetle's hallucinogenic powder would have helped.
That's why they attacked us here. They wanted you to throw him out. They didn't
want anyone to be around him, or to know him that well."
Well, and that
had worked. And had led by degrees to everything else. But Kyrie felt to numb
to even feel guilt. None of it mattered. She put her empty cup forward, and
Keith filled it again.
"Kyrie,
can you take a sleeping tablet? I bought some over the counter ones. I
couldn't. . . I couldn't sleep without having nightmares. I have one. Can you
take them? Or will they cause you any problems?"
"I can
take them," she said, her voice sounding pasty and altogether like a
stranger's.
He put the
small yellow tablet in her hand. She swallowed it with a gulp of tea. Presently
she felt as if the world around her were becoming blurry.
She was only
vaguely aware of Keith's leading her to her bed, and tucking her in. For such a
young kid—though he might be her age in chronological years—he had an oddly
maternal touch as he tucked the blanket around her.
"Sleep,"
he said. "I'll take a key. I'll come check on you."
* * *
"This too
shall pass," Kyrie said, and startled herself with saying it. Keith had
come and checked on her and forced her to eat and sleep for the last two days.
This morning
she'd woken up realizing that she couldn't go on like this.
Life would go
on, even when there didn't seem to be any point to it. And it wasn't as though
she could say, "please just stop my subscription, I don't want to play
anymore." Nor did it seem to matter. Not that way.
A wedge of
sanity was forcing itself into her shock and grief. She'd liked Tom. She'd
liked Tom a lot. Although at least part of the feeling was probably lust. She
remembered his sprayed-on clothes, and she could smile, in distant
appreciation.
She got up out
of bed. It was eight a.m. Keith had been dropping by every morning at ten,
after early classes. She didn't want him to catch her naked. And she really
should stop being a burden to the poor young man. It was time she got herself
together.
A glimpse in
the mirror showed her how fully horrible she looked, with her unwashed hair
matted and falling in tangles in front of her face. Witch of the rainbow
hairdo, she thought and smiled, an odd smile, from pale, cracked lips.
She opened her
dresser and got out jeans and a dark t-shirt, and underwear. She trudged the
whole thing to the bathroom, where she realized she still had her red feather
earring on. She couldn't remember preserving it through the fight at the
castle, but she must have, because she was wearing it.
She took it
off and laid it, reverently, on the vanity. Tom had saved that for her.
Under the hot,
full shower, she washed rapidly. Shampoo. Twice to get rid of all the grease
she'd allowed her hair to accumulate in the last . . . three? Four days? And
then conditioner. And then soap her body, slowly, bit by bit, making sure every
bit got properly scrubbed.
She doubted
she had washed. . . since. There was green-red ichor on her legs. And her arms
and hands were stained the dark -- almost black -- red of dried blood. Tom's
blood. She watched it wash down the drain, in the water.
Damn. It
wasn't only that she'd liked him. It wasn't only that she lusted after him and she'd
never had a chance to do anything about it. It was that she'd only realized
what he was made of as he was dying.
Oh, not just
because he stepped up and offered himself in exchange for his father—and safety
for all of them—but because he'd done it without complaint. And as a matter of
course. Even the creature. . . the dragon, had told him he had courage.
Why you'd say
that to someone who was about to die, was beyond Kyrie. Maybe the dragon
believed in an afterlife. Maybe he'd thought it would make things easier. . .
She finished
showering and dried. Tom's towel was still there, hanging from the hook at the
back of the door. She resisted a wild impulse to smell it, to bury her face in
it and see if any of his scent remained on the fibers.
But no. That
way lay madness. That way lay people who kept the rooms of dead people just the
way they'd been when the person died. That way lay widows who slept with their
husband's used clothes under their pillows. And it wasn't as if she had the
right, even. He wasn't her husband. He wasn't even her boyfriend. Until a few
days ago, she would have told people she didn't like him.
She dressed
herself, combed her hair, carefully, put her earring in.
The face that
looked at her from the mirror was still too pale, and she looked like she'd
lost weight too. Her cheek bones poked out too far. But there was really
nothing for it, was there? Life went on.
She'd got to
the kitchen and put on the kettle, when someone knocked at the kitchen door.
She thought it was Keith. He'd taken a key—what did he think she was going to
do? Try to kill herself? Did he think he'd need the key to get in and save
her?—but he still knocked before getting in.
"Come
in," she said.
"I
can't," a muffled voice said. "It's locked."
She reached
over and unlocked the door. And. . . Edward Ormson came in.
He stood just
inside the door, as if uncertain what he was going to do or say, or why he'd
come here at all.
Kyrie turned
from the small pan in which she'd just put an egg to boil. Keith must have
brought eggs one of these days, because there were two cartons in the fridge.
"Do you want an egg?" she asked.
"No, thank
you," he said. His skin looked ashen. His eyes, so much like Tom's, were
sunken in dark rings. "I've. . . eaten."
She got a
feeling that what he was really saying was that he never wanted to eat again.
Ever.
"I. .
." he hesitated. He was wearing cargo pants and a t-shirt and looked
ruffled and uncertain and a long way from the smooth lawyer who'd landed in
town however many days ago. "I would like to talk to you."
"Sit,"
Kyrie said. "As long as you don't mind if I eat while you talk."
As a matter of
fact, though, she got two cups down from the cupboard, and grabbed the sugar
bowl, which she put between them. She poured a cup for Edward and said,
"Put sugar in it. Even if you normally don't. It seems to help. Keith has
been making me drink it."
"Keith. .
." Edward said.
And Kyrie
thought that he was going to accuse her of having an affair with Keith right
after Tom had died, as if she'd made Tom any promises. And besides, she wasn't.
Having an affair with Keith. She'd barely been aware of him here, to be honest,
except for his making her eat and drink. And she thought he'd done the dishes
once, because everything was out of place in the cupboard.
But Edward
grimaced, and ran his hand back through his hair, just like Tom used to do.
"Yeah, Keith has been coming to my hotel room every morning, too. And
making me eat. He wrangled a key from the front desk somehow. I have no idea
what the front desk people think is going on, and I'm afraid to ask." His
grimace became an almost smile. "But he's kept me alive, I think. It
didn't seem. . . to matter for a while."
"I'd have
thought you'd be back in New York," Kyrie said. "With your
family."
He shrugged.
"There is no family. There was Tom. And I couldn't leave . . . yet.
They're going to give me back the body tomorrow. I'll be flying it back with me
for burial. Our family has a plot in Connecticut." He hesitated.
"There will be a funeral. Probably closed casket funeral. I wouldn't want.
. ." He shook his head. "I thought you might want to come. I . . .
you don't have to but if you want to I'll pay your fare. I've asked Keith, too.
Other than that it will just be me and my business associates. I think. . .
some of Tom's friends should be there."
Kyrie
contemplated this. She wasn't sure. On the one hand it might offer. . .
closure. On the other hand, she just wasn't sure. After all—she knew he was
dead. Did she need to see him buried too?
And yet, it
did seem right that he should have friends there with him, didn't it? He
shouldn't go into the ground watched only by people who thought he'd gone bad.
Poor Edward's son who'd gone to the wrong.
"I'll
try," she said. "Yes. I think I would like to go."
"Good,"
he said. "And that brings me to what I wanted to talk to you about. You
know the Athens is closed. From what I understand it is about to be foreclosed
on. Not only had. . . the owner no living relatives that anyone can find, but
he hadn't paid the mortgage in about three months. Apparently whatever frenzy.
. . well. . . He wasn't taking care of business."
She nodded,
not sure what he meant.
"I wanted
to offer you. . . I wanted to. . . I know you're unemployed now."
Kyrie shook
her head. "Waiting at tables jobs aren't hard to come by," she said.
"Particularly late night ones. People offer them to you for being alive
and breathing."
"I
know," Edward said. "But I would like. . ." He took a deep
breath, as if steeling himself to brave a dragon in full rampage. "Tom
liked you an awful lot."
She nodded,
then shrugged. It didn't seem to matter.
"I'd like
to offer you college money," Edward said. "And however much money you
need to live while you're in college. You can study whatever you want to."
He swallowed, as if something in her expression intimidated him further. "I
can't help you much in most professions, but if you take law, I can see to it
that our firm hires you, and if you are half as smart as you seem to be, I can
probably nudge you up to partner before you're thirty."
She heard
herself laugh and then, in horror, she heard abuse pouring from her lips. She
called him every dirty word she could think of. And some she wasn't sure
existed.
His eyes
widened. "Why. . . why?"
"You're
trying to make reparations," she said, and the sane person at the back of
the mind of the raving lunatic she seemed to have become noted that she sounded
quite wild. "As if Tom were responsible for my being without a job. Tom
isn't, you know. It was not his fault that the beetles ran wild. It was not his
fault—"
And then the
tears came, for the first time since all this had started. Tears chased each
other down her cheeks, and there was a great sense of release. As though
whatever she'd kept bottled up all this time had finally been allowed to flow.
She became
aware of Edward's hand, gently, patting her hair. "You have it all
wrong," he said. "I'm not trying to make up for anything Tom did.
It's just that without Tom, I really have no family. And besides, I owe him a
debt. Whoever started it—and it can be argued I did—right there in the end, he
gave his life to end it, so that I could go free. That's a debt. I'm trying to
look after the people he cared for. Don't deny me that. I've offered the same
thing to Keith. Anything I can do to help, in his studies or his career. . .
I'm a fairly useless person. Most of what I can offer is money. But that's
yours, if you need it."
As suddenly as
they'd started, the tears stopped. Kyrie wiped at her face, and swallowed and
nodded. "I don't know, yet" she said. "I just don't know. I'll.
I'll come to the funeral. And then we'll see."
* * *
"There
are jobs with the police force, if you should want them," Rafiel said.
He stood by
her kitchen door, looking, for the first time since she'd known him, stiff and
ill at ease.
Kyrie sat at
her kitchen table. She'd been going through all the newspapers, one by one. The
one from after Tom's death talked about the two horrible tragedies in town—the
group of people who seemed to have died in the garden at the castle. And Tom's
death. The headline screamed A Tragic Night In Goldport.
She looked up at
Rafiel. "Surely the CSIs could tell that the bodies had been dead a while
and buried," she said.
Rafiel seemed
to take this as encouragement to come further into the house. "Yes and
no," he said. "They could see. . . sort of, that things weren't
exactly text book. But the thing is that the fire got really hot there, at the
center of the garden, and they couldn't say much for sure about each of the
corpses, except identify them through dental records."
"The. . .
beetles. . ."
"They
must have reverted, in death or in burning, because they found skeletons."
He sat down at the table, across from her. "They identified Frank and the
woman who owned the castle. The castle itself survived, by the way. There's
talk of someone buying it to make a school for deaf and blind kids."
Kyrie nodded,
and flipped through the other papers. There were pictures of all the other
dead. Even Frank, with his neanderthal brow, graced the front pages of all
newspapers. All of them smiled from posed photos or looked out from poses obviously
clipped from candid snap shots. All except Tom.
"There
are no pictures of Tom," she said.
Rafiel shook
his head. "No," he said. "His father's picture of Tom, in his
wallet, is from when Tom was six. We didn't think it was appropriate. And while
his father thinks there are mug shots from his juvenile arrests, he didn't
think those were appropriate either. And no one has tracked them down, possibly
because I the record is sealed."
Kyrie felt
bereft. She couldn't explain it to herself, but she felt like she needed to see
Tom's face, just once more. She was afraid of forgetting him. She was afraid
his features would slip from her mind, irrecoverable.
While she'd
come to accept that she'd live on past this, that she might very well live on
to find someone and marry, maybe, sometime—her shifter handicap being accounted
for—she couldn't bear the thought of forgetting Tom. "It's just. . . I
would very much like to remember his face," she said.
Rafiel looked
at her, intently. He was wiggling his leg again, this time side to side, very
fast. "About what I said about Tom, the day. . . I was an ass, Kyrie. I
could tell you were interested in him, and I was afraid. You. . . are very
special to me, Kyrie."
She didn't
know what to say to that, and just looked at him, with what she was sure was a
vacant look.
He laughed, a
short laugh, more like a bark. "And I'm being an ass again, aren't I? I
can't give you a picture of him. Unless you want the one from when he was six
and I don't suppose. . ." He sighed. "Would you like to come to the
morgue? To see him? He's being given back to his father tonight, so if you want
to see him, it has to be now."
Kyrie thought
of Tom's face contorted in pain, as she'd last seen it. She wasn't sure that
was the memory she wanted.
"He doesn't
look like he did, you know. In death. . . His face has relaxed. They. . . the
coroner closed him up. He doesn't look gross at all. More like he's
sleeping."
"You were
there?" Kyrie asked. "For the autopsy?" She thought of what
she'd seen done to the corpse in the parking lot—the body opened, the brain
sawed out of its cavity.
"There
was no autopsy. It didn't seem needed. We supposedly saw death, you know, by
attack by wild animal. They found a couple of scales on his body. They're not
exactly Komodo dragon scales." He frowned. "To be honest, they were
in his boots and were probably. . . his. . . but they analyzed as reptile
scales and the paper is printing something about the danger of exotic pets.
They love to preach. And his father didn't want him autopsied, so he wasn't. He
really looks. . . very natural."
Kyrie wasn't
sure. The morgue had scared her. But perhaps seeing Tom without that expression
of agony on his face was all she needed.
She nodded. In
the bathroom, she caught herself putting on lip gloss and combing her hair. As
if Tom could see her.
Feeling very
silly, she headed out the door with Rafiel.
* * *
The morgue was
. . . as it had been before. The guy at the desk didn't even make much fuss
over Kyrie coming back. Just tipped his hat at her, as if she were a known
person here.
Rafiel led her
down the cool, faintly smelly corridors, to a door at the end. He opened the
door and turned on a very bright fluorescent light, which glared off tiled
walls. In this room, the tiles were white, and it made the whole thing look
like an antiseptic cell. Or the inside of an ice cube.
It wasn't an
autopsy room. Just a small room, with a collapsible metal table set up against
one wall. On the table was something—no, someone—covered with a sheet. The room
was just this side of freezing.
"We don't
have drawers," Rafiel said. "Just ten of these rooms. If needed we
can cram three people per room, but I don't think we've ever needed to. The
closest we came were the bones, from the castle, and those we just put all
together in one room, while we sorted out who was who and identified victims by
dental records and DNA."
She nodded.
She didn't remember walking up to the table, but she was standing right next to
it, now. She couldn't quite bring herself to reach out her hand and pull the
sheet back.
Rafiel reached
past her, and pulled the sheet back. Just enough to reveal Tom's face and neck.
He was right,
Tom didn't look as he had at the time of his death. He also didn't look as
other dead people that Kyrie had seen. She expected wax-dummy pallor. She
expected the feeling she'd had when she'd seen other dead people—even when
she'd seen Tom dead, in the parking lot. That feeling that all that mattered
had fled the body and the only thing left there was. . . meat.
But there
wasn't that sense. Instead, there was as much color as she'd seen on Tom when
he was pale. Not the paper-white pallor of his anger, and not the sickly pale
of the parking lot, when they'd discovered the corpse. Just, even, ivory white.
His lips even had a faint color—pale pink. And his eyelids were closed, his
quite indecently long eyelashes—how come she never had noticed?—resting against
the white of his skin and giving the impression that at any minute his eyes
would flutter open and he'd wake up.
She looked up
to ask Rafiel if embalmers had worked on Tom, but Rafiel had left. Very decent
of him. Giving her time alone with Tom.
She ran a hand
down Tom's cheek. It felt. . . warm to the touch. She didn't know embalmers
could do that. She caught at a bit of his hair. It felt silky soft in her hand.
Clearly, they'd cleaned the body of blood.
Bending over
him, she caught herself and thought this was insane. She couldn't, seriously,
be meaning to kiss a dead man? But he didn't look dead. He didn't feel
dead, and it wasn't as though she meant to French him. Just a quick peck on the
lips. A goodbye.
She bent down
all the way, and set her lips on him for a quick peck.
His lips were
warm—warmer than she would expect, even from someone alive who was lying down
in a refrigerated room—and she would swear they moved under hers.
And then she
heard him draw a breath. She felt breath against her own lips. His eyes flew
open. He looked very shocked. Then he smiled, under her lips. He wrapped his
arms around her shoulders. He pulled her down onto him.
And he kissed
her very thoroughly.
It should have
been scary, but it was not. It was just. . . Tom. And his mouth tasted, a
little, of blood, but it wasn't unpleasant. As soon as he allowed her to pull
up, she said, "You're alive."
He frowned.
"It would seem so. Shouldn't I be?"
She shook her
head. "We're at the morgue."
He raised his
eyebrows, but the mild curiosity didn't stop him from pulling her face down
towards him, and kissing her again.
"Oh,
Hell," a voice said, startling them both; sending Kyrie flying back from
Tom; and making Tom sit up and the sheet that covered him fall.
He pulled it
back up, to make himself decent, but left his chest exposed, and Kyrie blinked,
because where she was sure there had been a torso-long rip that exposed his
insides, there was now only a very faint scar, as though the had only had a
superficial cut.
They turned to
the person who'd said "Oh, hell."
It was Rafiel,
and he was leaning against the wall, by the door, looking at them with wide
open eyes. "Shit," he said very softly. "It's nice to see you
well, Tom, but how the hell do I explain to the coroner that his corpse with
massive trauma is going to walk out of here?"
"Tell him
reports of my death were greatly exaggerated?" Tom asked, raising an
eyebrow and smiling.
"But we
need to get him out of here soon," Kyrie said. "And get him some
clothes. He's going to catch his death of cold."
"I doubt
it," Rafiel said. "I very much doubt it. Unless cold is a silver
bullet."
* * *
And life went
on even when the best that could possibly happen had happened. The day that Tom
was let out of the morgue—though the coroner had insisted he go to the hospital
for x-rays and a full checkup before admitting that Tom might, just possibly,
be alive—they'd bought a day bed and a dresser for the back room.
They'd been
quite prepared to use the rest of Tom's money and get it from the Salvation
Army, but Edward had insisted, and so Tom had a matching day bed and dresser in
southwestern style, as well as a bookcase and a bunch of books his father had
bought him to replace the ones that had been destroyed in his apartment.
The back room
was now his, and for the use of it, the kitchen and the other common areas, he
would pay half of Kyrie's rent, and half the utilities. Kyrie's bathroom had
acquired a bottle of something called Mane and Tail, which she'd told
Tom seemed more appropriate for Rafiel, and shouldn't Tom's shampoo be Wing
and Scale?
But they
weren't living together. Not exactly. They were roommates, not lovers. They
hadn't slept together, didn't know if it would ever happen.
For now there
were kisses, now and then, and the occasional holding of hands. Tom had
explained what he wanted with disarming frankness. "I'd like to
date," he'd told her the night he'd got out of the morgue—was it only two
weeks ago?—over dinner. "I've never dated, you know? Not even high school
dating. I groped a few girls in school." He'd grinned. "They all
complained. And I think I suck at relationships. Of any sort. I need practice.
I'd like to date. Well. . . go together, as if we were kids. And then work up
to the rest, if it works out."
The decision
to share a house seemed odd in light of that, but it wasn't. Between two
shifters, one of them should be able to watch out for the other. And also,
they'd both realized that they'd been awfully lonely. And whether they were
ever anything else again, they were friends.
They were also
partners. Not in a romantic sense, but in a business sense.
Kyrie
remembered a whole afternoon of shouting between Tom and his father. Both men
assured her they'd never raised their voices, but she remembered sitting on the
sofa in her living room while they glowered at each other and shouted, both of
their expressions very much alike, and both far more intense than the argument
warranted.
The gist of it
was that Edward wanted to give Tom the moon, the stars and happiness on a
plate—or at least the only form of it Edward could give him. He wanted Tom to
go back to school. He wanted to pay Tom's expenses while he did. He still
wanted to pay Kyrie's too. Both studies and expenses.
Tom. . .
wanted something completely different. He wanted the Athens. He would accept
enough money to go to cooking school. Not chef's school. Far too fancy. Tom
wanted to learn enough to be the cook of the Athens. And he wanted Kyrie to
have part ownership of it.
Which brought
them to this evening, two weeks later, standing outside what used to be the
Athens. There was a new sign, up front, and Keith, perched up on a ladder, was
finishing painting it. It said, in fancy old-English script The George and,
in case someone missed the reference, there was a cartoonish drawing of St.
George, spearing a flaming dragon.
It was all
very baffling to Kyrie, but Tom had insisted. And when Keith came down from his
ladder, to much applause from the four of them—Kyrie, Tom, Rafiel and
Edward—and took a bow at his artistry, and Tom led them inside, the bafflement
continued.
Tom had found
somewhere, in the bowels of the Salvation Army—while he was trying to find
replacements for some of his personal effects behind his father's back—an old,
possibly antique and definitely disgusting painting. It showed saint George on
a horse putting a lance through the chest of a dragon, who fountained
quantities of blood. He now proceeded to hang it over the big booth at the
back, the only one that could sit ten people.
"I hope
you realize it's in extremely poor taste," Kyrie said.
"Yeah,"
Rafiel said. "That would kill you. That was the difference between you and
the other corpses. The Great Sky Dragon didn't get your heart."
"I wonder
if it was on purpose," Keith said.
"I'm sure
it was," Tom said, finishing nailing his picture and jumping down from the
vinyl seat, and backing up to admire the effect. "I suspect he considered
it the equivalent of turning me over his knee."
"Has the
coroner recovered yet?" Kyrie asked. "From having one of his corpses
walk out?"
"Well. .
. Rafiel said. "He's now talking about how Tom was in comatose shock from
the injury. In another five days he'll have convinced himself that he never
pronounced Tom dead. I mean, if he told the truth, people would wonder if he'd
been drinking his own formaldehyde. He's probably wondering if he's been
drinking his own formaldehyde. People hate doubting their own sanity. He'll
make. . . adjustments."
"But
could the Great Sky Dragon know that?" Keith asked. "Wouldn't he have
feared Tom's coming back would hit the papers and blow the whole shifter thing
sky-high?"
"I doubt
it," Tom said. He turned around, a frown making a vertical wrinkle between
his eyebrows. "I very much doubt it. He's been around a lot. He knows
people."
"What I
want to know," Rafiel said softly. "Is if the great triad presence in
town was because of the Pearl Of Heaven and if they'll now thin out, or if
we're stuck with them for good. We don't have the police force to deal with an
international criminal organization. . ."
"I wonder
if they'll leave us alone," Kyrie said. "They strike me as people
with notoriously little sense of humor—whatever the Great Sky Dragon has. And
they're bound to be a little. . . miffed at us." She looked out the corner
of her eye at Edward, who had already declared his intention to leave the firm
that worked so much for the triads. He'd start again on his own. He'd made some
noises about maybe moving to Denver. She wondered if any of these intentions
would survive once he got back to New York.
But Edward
didn't notice her look. He was still staring at the picture of St. George, wide
eyed. "Good Lord, Tom," he said. "It will put customers off
their food."
"I very
much doubt it," Kyrie said. "Tom has been hiding talents. He can
actually cook."
"And
college students will eat anything," Keith said.
"There is
that," Kyrie admitted. Then she looked at Tom, who was looking at her with
a little smile. When he looked like that, it was very hard not to kiss him, and
she'd been trying very hard not to kiss him in public. It only gave people
ideas. Besides, they were at the George. They were supposed to behave as
business partners. "So, what's the symbolism, Tom?"
"Can't
you tell?" he asked softly. "I thought you'd get it." Smiling,
he looked around at the still-empty tables. The door was closed, the closed
sign firmly in place. In a minute, Keith—who wanted to work for them part-time,
at night, even while going to college—was going to go out and hang the
"Grand opening" and "Under New Management" signs out there.
But for now everything was quiet.
"The
pheromones that Frank laid down will take years to wear out," Tom said.
"Rafiel," he looked at the policeman, "Has had them analyzed,
and they are very potent. It's not unusual for little beetles to lay down chemical
signs that attract mates and prey from miles away. These ones might very well
act on the whole country. And they're specific for shifters. We'll have
shifters coming out of our ears for years to come. Chances are," he said,
looking at Rafiel. "That we'll have to keep order in our own little
strange community. So many occasions for people to go over the edge. And we
can't afford for the more out-of-control of us to expose us all to danger. So.
. ." He waved expansively towards the picture on the wall. "We get to
be both the beast, and the dragon slayer. It's perfect."
"If you
say so," Kyrie said.
"There's
people milling around out there," Keith said.
"Those
aren't people darling," Kyrie said, turning around, and surely surprising
poor Keith with the playful appellation. "That's the poet and pie lady.
They just want to come and loiter all night, eating too little food." She
grinned at him. "Go open the door."
"And I
suppose I'd better eat something," Edward said. "I'm taking the last
flight to New York." He looked at the menu. New menus, freshly laminated.
"Good Lord," he said. "What are these?"
"It's old
diner lingo. Tom insisted. There's a translation in front of each item."
"You
really have to learn to start saying no to that boy," Edward said,
smiling. "He has entirely too many crazy ideas for his own good."
"Oh,
trust me," Kyrie said. "I say no enough." And had Tom's father
blushed?
He looked away
from her and backed, to sit at a table facing the counter. Keith was opening
the door. Behind the counter, Tom had put his—blue, emblazoned in gold— apron
on. Yesterday he'd spent the whole day scrubbing the counter and kitchen area
till it glimmered. And they'd interviewed and hired the staff. Anthony. And a
couple of the day girls. And Keith, and half a dozen other new faces.
They,
themselves, would have to work twelve hours or more a day, everyday. It didn't
matter. That it was their place made all the difference.
Keith was
writing stuff on the glass window. Most of it incomprehensible to the normal—or
even abnormal—mind because it was taken from Tom's research of old diner lingo.
There was for instance Moo with Haystacks, which she thought was supposed to be
burger and fries, for $5. She was going to have a talk with Keith and get him
to write stuff everyone understood.
But for now,
it was the first night, and she didn't mind if only the regulars came in.
Edward looked
up from his menu. "I think I'll try the hash," he said.
"Really?"
Kyrie asked.
"Really.
I haven't had it in years, and since my own son is cooking, the chances are low
he'll poison me. They're there, but low."
"All
right," Kyrie said, and glanced in the menu to see the fancy name that Tom
wanted hash called. Getting back to the counter, she looked over it at Tom.
He'd tied his
hair back and tied a scarf over it, pirate style, to keep hair from the grill.
Which just meant that he wasn't in the spirit of cooking in a diner yet. And he
smiled at her, which made all thoughts flee her mind for a while.
It took her a
few seconds to remember Edward's order, and to relay it in the new-menu-speak.
"Gentleman will take a chance," she told Tom.
His features
crinkled up in a smile. "Oh, yes. I am quite sure he will."