Magic Shifts (Kate Daniels 8)
“How’s school?” Roland asked Julie.
All of my senses went into high alert.
“Fine,” she said. “Thank you. I just got an A on my essay on Daniel.”
“Did you use the Apocrypha?” Roland asked, his voice mild.
“Of course,” Julie said.
The Apocrypha, a collection of ancient writings that had been edited out of the modern Bible for various reasons, had a whole chapter on Daniel. The ancient Daniel kicked a lot of ass, unlike his modern version that stressed humility and passive resistance. It was entirely possible that I was reading too much into this conversation, but the way they spoke suggested that this wasn’t their first discussion. Julie had some explaining to do. And my father had to stop inserting himself into my life, or he would regret it.
“Your grandmother is in poor health,” Roland said to me.
Who, what? Where? “My grandmother is dead.” And her magic, trapped between life and death, fueled the madhouse of Mishmar, my father’s prison.
“Your other grandmother,” he said.
I froze.
“Your mother’s mother is still alive,” he said. “Barely. She is eighty-nine years old. I visit her sometimes and she is rapidly declining.”
“Does she know what happened to her daughter?”
Roland shook his head. “She knows she died.”
He kept finding ways to avoid saying my mother’s name.
“She does know about you. She doesn’t have much time. If you wish to know more about your mother, I can arrange for transportation so you can speak before this chance is lost forever.”
My world turned upside down. I didn’t remember my mother. Not a hint of her face, not a whisper of her voice, not even her scent. He was dangling bait in front of me and I wasn’t sure if I hated him more for using her memory or myself for considering snapping it up.
“Where is she?” I asked.
“Seattle,” Roland said.
There it was. He wanted to get me out of the city and away from the ifrit. He’d picked a hell of a lure. Sure, he would arrange transportation there. He said nothing about arranging it for the trip back.
“You can be there in three days,” he said.
In three days Eduardo would be dead. I was sure of it.
Curran glanced at me and I saw a warning in his eyes. Yes. I know. He is trying to distract me and get me out of town. For some reason, my father really didn’t want me dealing with the djinn, and that was precisely why I had to stay.
“I’m sorry, but I have to pass.” The words hurt coming out. “I have things I need to do here.”
“Kate, you won’t get another chance.”
“I’m not going to trouble an old woman who has never seen me in her final days. My place is here. I have something to do and I can’t leave until I see it through.”
“Very well,” Roland said. Not a hint of disappointment. Very nice, Dad.
I wanted to jab him with my fork. He’d used my mother’s memory to manipulate me. He would regret it.
“Besides, you knew Kalina best.”
I watched him closely and the corners of his eyes trembled when I said her name. How does your own bitter medicine taste, Father? Have another spoon on me. “Why don’t you tell me about her? You were there till the end. You saw the light go out of her eyes.”
Roland took a swallow of his wine.
“If you wish to know how your mother died, I will tell you, Blossom. Ask me.”
Walk away. Walk away, because that way lie dragons.
Screw the dragons. I needed to know. “Tell me how my mother died, Father.”
He waited.
We were stabbing each other and pretending that it didn’t hurt.
I wanted to squeeze the word out through my teeth, but I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction. It took all of my will to make it sound casual. “Please.”
“There is a small café in the south end of Wolf Trap,” he said. “That’s where I first saw your mother.”
Wolf Trap, Virginia, northwest of Arlington, was a new town, built from the ground up by the Order. That was where the Knights of the Merciful Aid made their headquarters. My mother had worked with the Order for a while. And my father had visited it, walking its streets in the plain view of dozens of knights, knowing they would fall over themselves trying to kill him if they only knew who he was.
“She sat at a table by herself reading a book and drinking coffee from a chipped white cup.”
His voice weaved a spell, filled with longing, love, and grief. I wanted to believe it was false, but it felt so genuine. So real.