A Rope of Thorns (Hexslinger 2)
Page 97
. . . Tezcatlipoca, Ixchel sighed in his ear, so close—so cold—her undead tongue crisped the skin of his lobe.
Yes, sister.
Those lips Rook’d once hung on, kissed and bit ’til they were sore as bruised fruit. The mouth that’d cursed him a hundred times over, first in jest, then deadly earnest. That skin, that face, that body—all of it Chess, Chess, and nothing like. A ghost-god’s puppet. A walking devastation.
It turned its dead black eyes on him, now, and laughed at how he flinched.
You yearn to break her hold on you, conquistador—regret your choices so sharply, back to the very beginning, that you might wish yourself hanged and rotten away to dusty bones, if only this one I wear still ran wild through the world. Yet here I am now, your lover reborn, to make all your dreams of freedom real . . . if you only break your oath to her and bow down to me, in her stead.
Ixchel watched for his reaction, curiously incurious. And if his head-shake made her happy, he—in turn—did not care enough to want to know.
“I might, at that,” he allowed, “you really were him. But you ain’t.”
And here Ixchel laughed yet once more, icy-rippling as ever. You see, she told her Enemy, I chose well after all, when I made this man my mate . . . a traitor so far forsworn already he would never break faith again, at any price. Not even with me.
One more smile greeted this proud assertion, dreadful as the rest. And yet—might that really be something else Rook saw underlying it, almost too dim to glimpse, the way even the dirtiest water still throws a reflection back?
Perhaps, the Black Trickster replied, thoughtfully—crossed-bones king of Smoke and Mirrors alike, spreader of indiscriminate chaos. Then was gone, along with his blue-skinned Chess-body, completely as a rock dropped through the same stagnant pond-skin.
“Nice to finally know what you really think of me, honey,” Rook told his awful wife, without rancour.
To which she simply shrugged and snapped her fingers, summoning the chittering dragonfly swarm ’round them once more, and threw back: Am I to be jealous, knowing you have preferred your little warrior from the start? We are king and queen, husband. Our business is to conquer, to build, to rule.
“Won’t be doin’ much of any of that, he does what he said and lays his wrath down on us, like at . . . what was that place?”
Tollan, City of Jade. They insulted him, and paid dearly for it.
“Like Sodom and Gomorrah. Or . . . here, when me and Chess were through with it.”
And look what has happened since. She wrapped him up, digging her bony chin into one collarbone’s curve, so sharp it was like she aimed to piece him through. All wounds may be reversed, no matter how deep, if blood enough is shed to pay for it.
“So you say, but here’s what I see: the only other one of yours in all creation you’ve managed to shake awake, coming to knock our gates down with both guns blazin’. How’s that anything but bad?”
Oh, husband. You must learn to trust me, eventually.
And before he could reply, she enshrouded him completely, flapping her hands—like bleached-blind bats—to flutter them both away.
In the wake of such outright insanity, Yancey and Morrow clung fast together, too shook to move. But then, all of a sudden, Grandma’s suit was yelling something at Yiska—and before they could wonder what, with a yelp of acknowledgement, the Navajo-turned-Apache had already swooped in to grab Yancey up out of Morrow’s arms and boost her ’cross her saddle, then take off for the hills at full gallop, crew at her heels. It all transpired so damnable swift, Morrow couldn’t’ve hoped to draw a bead after any of ’em, even if he’d still had a gun to do it with—so he was left spot-rooted, howling after Yancey, as she went out of sight.
“Hold on, girl, hold on! I’ll come for you, I swear on a stack of Bibles—I will find you, Goddamn it all to Goddamn fuckin’ hell—!”
In the opposite direction, meanwhile, Songbird—still dazed from her ordeal—came to just in time for that lumbering dustpile to scoop her up, kicking poor Doc Asbury aside like trash, and go barrelling after Yiska and company; she was borne away likewise, weakly flailing. Soon, there was nothing left behind but tracks, the Chinee witch’s screams echoing away into the night.
“Yancey!” Morrow yelled out again, in despair. And fell to his knees, head bowed, expecting nothing but a bullet for his pains—well-deserved, wherever it might come from.
Above, the sky stretched out blank, an endless darkening bruise; the wind blew cold, ruffling ’round Bewelcome’s reassembled edges, and he thought he could hear the stealthy steps of its returning citizens, none of whom he figured wished him well. But Ed Morrow stayed right where he was, not even bothering to sigh over how just how badly his life—already precarious—had gone, in these last few seconds, to complete and irretrievable shit-pudding.
If Chess was still here—the real Chess—he’d’ve made sure it turned out right, somehow, he found himself thinking, foolishly certain. Knowing full well just how insane the very idea of that belief would’ve struck him, just a scant year or so past.
“Aw, pull yuirsel’ together,” Pinkerton said, briskly, from behind him. “For there’s no sight quite as wracking as a grown man gone womanish when there’s work tae be done in Justice’s cause, and vengeance aplenty tae be taken, along the way.”
Here their eyes did meet, at last, with a flinty little spark—and Morrow was somewhat startled to find his former employer rendered either once more human or mostly so, as though the stolen hex-fire were already draining from his veins. Even that accent of his seemed considerably less accelerated, the man himself re-sized to fit Morrow’s memories of him, from the days when both had held each other in good opinion.
“Thought it was me you wanted to wreak justice on,” he said, “not so long back.?
?
“Did I say that?” Pinkerton asked, with a shrug. “Well . . . might be I overspoke, a trifle. For war’s on its way, and we’ll need every last man standing tae make our assault—and courage in battle washes all clean, or so they say, no matter what mistakes a fella may have made, previous.”