Do any of us really have control over our destinies? Maybe we’re all just as helpless as little Mortals in the end.
He heard a sound from across the tracks. The girl would wake up soon. No more time for self-pity.
Time for an offering.
So he held the cigar up in the air in front of him, raising his voice. “Barbadian. Your favorite. I’d give one to your obeah there, but I don’t think she’d appreciate it.” He lit the cigar, letting the match burn out and drop onto the tracks. Nox didn’t look directly at the flame, not even the burning cigar. Fire made him see things he didn’t like to see. “I understand you want to talk. Here I am. What do you want from me?”
He looked over at the girl across the tracks.
She was still comatose, but she raised her head when the cigar smoke reached her, and her mouth opened like a puppet’s. The voice that came out belonged to an old man—low and gravelly, with a distinct Southern accent. “What I want is to avenge my family’s honor. For my blood debt to be paid.”
His blood debt? After all the blood he’s shed?
Lennox tried to keep the rage out of his voice. “Some people say the ones who are to blame have paid over and over again. Even their friends have paid. Your family got what was coming to them. At least, you did.”
“Accordin’ to who?” The girl’s face twisted into a sneer.
“Me,” Lennox said coldly.
“Think again, boy.”
Careful, Lennox thought. He might be dead, but he’s still dangerous.
Lennox shook his head at the possessed girl. “I did what you asked. I set certain events in motion. I’m knee-deep in a pile of bones and moldering bodies, as Homer would say.” He knocked the ash from the cigar without ever touching it to his lips. “I’m glad my mother isn’t here to see it.”
“I wouldn’t worry yourself. Your mamma never gave a thought to what you did.”
Lennox snapped. “She didn’t have a chance. You made sure of that.” When you tortured her.
“I make sure of everythin’.” The girl took a moment to savor the smoke, and smiled cruelly. “Your job isn’t close to done.”
Lennox wanted to hurl the cigar at her.
At him.
“The Wheel of Fate crushes us all. Isn’t that what they say, old man?” Lennox shook his head. “That’s a dangerous business. Messing with so many people’s fates at once. Are you sure it’s worth it?”
“Don’t be a coward, like your father,” the girl muttered. “I will have my vengeance.”
Lennox only smiled. “So you’ve said.” My father should’ve killed you when he had the chance.
“What you grinnin’ at, boy?” The girl snarled at him from across the darkness. “Until I find my rest, you won’t have any peace, either.”
Lennox waved the cigar in the air between them. “I’m glad we’re moving on to the threats. I was starting to feel slighted.”
“Not just a threat. A promise. I’ll see to it myself. That, and a whole lot more.”
The Dark Caster cocked an eyebrow. “No wonder I turned out to be a model citizen. Considering I was raised in such a loving community.”
“You are not my blood.” The animated girl spat.
“Thank god for that.” Lennox was tired of the old man. Even death hadn’t lifted the burden of his presence. “Why don’t you move on already? Cross over? You spent a lifetime exacting revenge on everyone you ever met. Aren’t you bored yet?”
“I’m not goin’ anywhere, boy.” She growled. “I want them all gone. Not just the hand that drove the blade. Not just the traitor who led me there. Everyone who got them to that point, to that hour of that day.”
“All of them?”
“Every last one. You hearin’ straight? Because I want to be perfectly clear. You. Kill them. For me.”
Lennox stared down the tracks. There was nothing but darkness.
What choice did he have, really?
When it came right down to it, there was only one answer. There was always only one answer. He sighed. “I’ll do what I can.”
The words sounded strange in his mouth, as if someone else was saying them.
“I take it that’s a yes?”
“If only in the name of family honor.”
The Necromancer smiled, raising her hands. “My family thanks you.”
Lennox looked repulsed. “I meant mine, not yours. Don’t flatter yourself.”
“But our families were so close, Lennox.” The voice echoed through the Tunnel. “Almost hard to tell where the one ended and the other began.”
Not for me, thought Lennox.
He tossed the empty matchbook down to the tracks. Six letters were printed on the crimson cover. One word.
SIRENE.
Above the tracks, the girl slumped to the ground like a rag doll. The old man was gone. As many times as he’d seen it, Lennox was still unsettled. He waited just long enough to make sure his Necromancer was coming out of it.
She would be sick in the morning. Sick, and stinking of cigars. He’d have to work harder to make her forget this one. Maybe put a little something extra in her paycheck. It wasn’t her fault she was particularly good at communicating with dead psychopaths, but it was one of the reasons she was so valuable.
Another occupational hazard.
Lennox walked away, disappearing into the deeper dark. There was always more darkness waiting for him. He’d lived his whole life in the shadow.
He couldn’t help but spread it around.
CHAPTER 4
Learning to Fly
By the time the last burnt marshmallow dropped into the fire, no Mortal or Caster was still awake to see it. The two hybrid Incubuses watched in protective silence as their four friends slept around the campsite.
Ridley could hear them murmuring as she drifted off to sleep. Her last waking thought was of Link, just to know he was there.
Like the old days.
After that, Ridley’s dreams were filled with old memories. She wasn’t thinking of good-byes or boys or rings coming from the embers. She couldn’t know that plans much more dangerous than any fire—and infinitely stickier than any marshmallow—had already been set in motion.
How could she?
Instead, she slept on, dreaming of things that were far eerier than a ring. Even eerier than an unknown Cast—forever Binding a Siren, a Natural, a Keeper, a Wayward, and two Incubuses—under a full summer moon in a Caster county.
A full moon was for making magic.
Magic and memories.
A little fair-haired girl sat tucked between the twisting branches of the oldest oak on the grounds of the infamous Ravenwood Plantation, reading a book that was even older than that. She hooked her scrawny legs around a bark-covered branch thicker than her waist, but all the same, it wasn’t really the safest spot for either a little girl or a big book.
“You know you’re not supposed to be reading that, Rid,” a girlish voice called up from below.
“Baby,” teased Ridley, without looking up from the book. “You know you’re not supposed to change your own diaper.”
“Auntie Del’s going to skin you when she finds out you’ve been stealing things out of her closet again,” Lena, with a dark mess of curls and bright green eyes, shouted up from the safety of the grass beneath the tree.
“Tattler,” said Ridley, flipping another page. “Where’s your tail?”
The pages were so enormous, they brushed against her faded blue jeans when she tried to turn them, nearly ripping. The book’s spine was almost as long as hers.
“Your funeral.” As she spoke, Lena flung herself down on the grass, sliding a notebook and a pen out of her pocket. She pulled the cap off the pen, flipping to a clean page in her book with a sigh. “Well, go on. What’s happening now, Rid?”
“There’s a ship, Leanie-Beanie.” Ridley twisted a blond ringlet around one finger absentmindedly.
“Don’t call me that. And?”
“And th
ree mermaids. Only they’re not mermaids, because they have wings. And they’re singing—at least, one is. And another one is playing a kind of strange flute. And the last one is playing a little gold harp.”
As Ridley watched, the figures on the page moved through the story, exactly as she had described.
“Go on, Rid,” breathed Lena, bright-eyed. “Tell the rest.”
A ship came into view. A ship with sails. Surrounded by waves and rocks.
“There are sailors. And they come to visit the mermaids. They think the mermaids are the most beautiful creatures they’ve ever seen. I think they want to marry them. I think they’re in love.”
“Eww.” Beneath the tree, Lena giggled. “And now?”
“Now the mermaids are singing more loudly. Can you hear them? Close your eyes.” Ridley closed her eyes. Beneath the tree, her cousin Lena did the same.
“Can you?”
Lyrical music blew up from the pages of the book and into Ridley’s face. It grew louder and louder, filling the whole tree with harmonies, until the branches began to shake and the leaves fluttered to the ground beneath it.
Ridley didn’t care. She felt like she was a million miles away.