Devon Monk - Magic on the Storm
I scowled. Hounding for Stotts wasn’t always a hard job. But Davy wasn’t kidding when he said the man was cursed. A lot-too damn many-Hounds had died working cases for the detective.
“You’re injured,” I said to Davy.
He raised his eyebrows. “I had a headache a while ago. I’m good now.”
Liar.
“No,” I said.
Stotts let go of my arm. “That would be fine. Allie, step back.”
I didn’t step back, but I didn’t move forward. Davy followed Stotts closer to the center of the park, stopped, traced a glyph in the air, and then pulled magic up from the network of conduits and lines that ran beneath the streets.
Easy. Like he’d been doing this all his life. Magic answered him, did exactly as it should-followed the lines of the glyph and gave him Sight and Taste and Smell. He paced a large circuit around a couple benches and trees, the wide half circle of brick steps just south of us. Nothing else in the park except the ashes of the old spell that I could only guess still lingered there.
My hands itched and stung, like I’d slapped them against stone. I wanted to cast magic so badly, it hurt.
Instead I wiped the thin line of sweat off my forehead again. Not sweat. Blood. Great. Stotts wasn’t kidding I was hurt. Weird that I didn’t feel it.
I gently ran my fingertips through my hair, searching for a cut. Found one just inside my hairline on the left. A scratch, but deep enough to bleed.
And finding that scratch made me realize how tight and sunburned the left side of my face felt. Which meant Stotts was right about that too. I was burned. But not so badly I couldn’t have finished Hounding for him. Even my hearing was clearing up.
Fine, if I wasn’t Hounding, I was backup. Which meant I needed to keep an eye on Davy. I paced over to Stotts, still angry enough to ignore the pain of the burn and the cut. “You watching?” I asked, meaning, of course if he was watching with magic.
Stotts had his thumb and middle finger pinched together, his hand held out in front of him. I knew he was holding another glyph there, probably something like what he threw at me.
“Not yet,” he said. “I want to make sure he doesn’t go up in flame. Once in a night is my limit.”
I calmed my mind, set a Disbursement again, and traced the spell for Sight. Nothing fancy, nothing difficult. Magic lifted through me like morning fog, soft and easy, and filled the glyph.
It was like someone had turned on the sun. The park broke open into sharp colors and deep shadows. No watercolor people in sight. That was the one benefit of having my dad in my head. Somehow, his presence blocked my awareness of the Veiled-the imprints of dead magic users on the flow of magic-and better yet, he blocked their awareness of me.
I didn’t think he did it on purpose. Knowing him, he’d rather not help me like that.
Davy finished pacing the circle. I’d never watched him work before. He was a good Hound, knew when to let go of a spell that wasn’t giving him the information he wanted. Knew how to cast replacement spells quickly and quietly. The whole thing took all of two minutes tops. And in those two minutes, Davy should have gotten a full picture of what had happened magically, and who cast the magic that hurt Bea.
But even from this distance, I could recognize that spell.
A gate. Someone had opened a gate here, and closed it just as quickly. Fast enough the Closers back at Maeve’s hadn’t noticed. Unless it was a Closer back at Maeve’s who had opened it. Could they open gates long-distance?
If they could, I didn’t think they would be sloppy enough to hurt someone and leave a trace of the gate behind.
When Davy turned and looked over at us, I saw it again-the red flash in his eyes. The red eye flash had been happening ever since Tomi knocked him out and used his blood to open the gate in St. Johns that let the Hungers through. I kept hoping it was just an aftereffect of his blood being used to crack open the doors between life and death. I kept hoping it would wear off, and fade away. Didn’t look like it was getting better, and it had been months since he was hurt.
Davy strode over, hands tucked in his armpits as if he was dodging a hard chill.
I let go of Sight, and Stotts released whatever protective spell he held at the ready.
“Bea didn’t cast magic,” he said. “It’s not her signature here. But I can’t tell whose signature it is.” He shivered, looking a little tired again, and a lot cold. Why didn’t he have on a warm coat?
“No idea at all?” Stotts asked.
Davy answered him, but looked at me. “I’ve never seen magic cast like that. The glyph is crushed in on itself. It shouldn’t have worked at all, but magic followed it.”
“Could you tell what kind of spell it was?” Stotts asked. “Or what it did?”
He shook his head. “It might have been a ward of some type. A lock? It doesn’t make sense. Whatever it was, it’s too tangled and fading fast, like someone crushed their own spell to get rid of it. Really fucking weird.”
Stotts turned and stared at the area, as if he could see the magic with his bare eyes.
“Was there other magic involved, a mix of spells?”
He shook his head. “Don’t think so. I can’t tell. . ” He glanced back over his shoulder. “It’s gotta be a fluke. Magic doesn’t work like that.”
“Hmm,” Stotts said. “I’ll check into the conduits in the area, make sure none of the lines have been tampered with.”
We all looked back over at the spot where Bea had been found. Her blood was still on the ground. But without Sight, there didn’t appear to be any magic in the park at all.
“You saw no signs of attack?” he asked.
“No. There’s traces of a few day-old spells, cheap Illusion, and maybe Mute, but that crushed spell is less than an hour old. And it’s almost gone. It’s like she got in the way of someone else casting. Was caught off guard and the magic hit her. How bad is she?”
“They want to look her over at the hospital. Hit her head, possible concussion. Backlash from magic is what they’re most worried about. She was found unconscious. Disoriented. Couldn’t remember what happened to her.”
Davy nodded and nodded.
I worked hard not to give in to the panic that had me by the throat. Why would the Authority do this? Who in the Authority would do this? Why didn’t they stop to help Bea?
“I’ll make sure you’re paid for your time,” Stotts said. “And I’ll need a sworn statement. Come by the station tomorrow. I’ll be there.”
“Right,” Davy said.
“Allie,” Stotts said, “I want you to get checked by a doctor. Do I need to make those arrangements?”
Yes, Stotts was my boss, but it was more of a contract-by-contract basis. He didn’t have any real right to tell me what to do. Normally I would have reminded him of the boundaries of him sticking his nose up my business. But he was also my best friend’s boyfriend. And I think it was more that relationship than our working relationship that was prompting his concern.
“Afraid Nola will read you the riot act?” I asked, faking calm and collected and getting damn close.
A soft smile curved his lips. “It came to mind. Plus, you are singed and a little bloody. A trip to the emergency room makes sense.”
“I’m going to go by the hospital to check in on Bea anyway. Which hospital did they take her to?”
“OHSU. Need someone to drive you there?”
“I got it.”
“Good.” Stotts started toward the taped-off area again.
“What else aren’t you telling me, Davy?” I asked once Stotts was out of hearing range.
I could smell the fear on him. “Nothing,” he lied.
“Want another go at that?”
He licked his lips, looked at Stotts, who was talking to a police officer-no one I recognized-who stood nearby.
“I don’t know how to explain it.”
“Try words. If that doesn’t work, we’ll move on to interpretive dance.”
Not even a faint smile out of him. “That spell was really strange. Like it was an Unlock or opening or something. Bothers me.”
I didn’t know what to say to that, because there was nothing I could say to that. Nothing he could know without having to be Closed. And I refused to let that happen to him.
Davy had gotten a lot paler and was shivering harder. It was time to get him back to the car, and probably to the hospital to have him checked out too.
I glanced back at Stotts, who was going through the procedures to reestablish the park for the public. Since there was no sign of magical crime, other than Bea being hurt, this would be treated a lot like a fender bender. Just an accident where the driver used poor judgment and got in the way of someone else’s oncoming spell.
The wind shifted, bringing me the faintest scent of the spell. Blood, copper, and bitter burnt stink of blackberries. It was just a moment, the slightest hint. But I knew that scent.
Greyson.
Holy shit.
No. He couldn’t have gotten out. They had a cage on him. And with the whole inn filled with powerful magic users, there would be no way he could access magic from there. This had to be something else. Someone else. I had to be wrong.
I inhaled again, sorting smells, searching for Greyson’s. But the scent was gone, lost to the heavier scents of the city.
Davy looked worse than just a minute before. I think he’d been putting up a brave front so Stotts would let him Hound the spell.
He looked like he was going to puke.
“I think I’m going to puke.” He stumbled over to some rhododendron bushes, and heaved.
The cops didn’t even look our way. A puking Hound wasn’t that unusual.
Stotts, however, noticed we were still there and came over. “I thought you were going to the hospital.”
I waited for Davy to pull himself together. He stood back and wiped his mouth with the heel of his hand.
“We are.” I hoped Davy had remembered to take the keys when he got out of the car. “If you need me,” I said, “if you need someone else to Hound that, or if anything comes up, call, okay?”
“The spell’s gone now,” he said. “I think this is done.”
When I didn’t answer, he exhaled. “You want to tell me something?”
“Have you noticed anything strange about magic?”
“Other than you trying to burn the park down and Mr. Silvers telling me that was a spell he’d never seen before?”
Okay, maybe I shouldn’t tell him. But I liked Stotts. Enough to give him at least a small heads-up. I know I had sworn to keep the Authority secrets secret. I wasn’t going to tell him anything that would get my memory erased.
I hoped.
“I don’t lose control of magic like that,” I said. “Not with something as simple as Sight. But magic lagged when I tried to use it. Then it came pouring out too fast.”
Stotts was not a stupid man. He had one Hound in the hospital, one barfing in the bushes, and one burned and bleeding in front of him. He knew how to put three and three together. They taught that sort of thing in detective school.
“We’re checking into the networks and conduits here,” he said. “Making sure no one hacked into them.”
I hadn’t really thought about people hacking the networks, but it made sense. “Maybe it’s more than just the networks.”