Chapter Thirteen

My dead dad stood above me. He was less transparent than the last time I’d seen him. I saw through him enough to make out the corner of the building and white wooden cross where his chest should be. He still, however, looked annoyed with me.

“Always set a Disbursement,” he said, so close that it sounded as if his voice were in my head. “Every time you use magic. Every single time. How many times do I have to tell you that?”

I opened my mouth to tell him to bite me. He was dead. Dead. And that meant I no longer had to lie here and listen to his lectures.

He might be dead, but he was also fast. Fast like the watercolor people. Before I so much as inhaled, he bent over me and stuck his hand on my heart.

Not on my coat.

Not on my skin.

He stuck his hand into me. Deep. And touched my heart.

Magic slipped up his fingers. He squeezed my heart and I arched my back in pain.

Magic poured out of me. He pumped my heart again and pushed magic out through my veins like bad water coming out of a swimmer’s lungs. A strange wintergreen warmth and the taste of leather at the back of my throat filled me.

I blinked. And my dad was gone.

In his place, Paul Stotts bent over me. Sirens screamed in the distance. “Can you hear me?”

“Yes,” I said, baffled. I was lying on my back, on the ground. Stotts looked worried. That made two of us.

I sat, using my elbows for leverage, and then pushed Stotts’ hands and protests away and looked around me.

“Allie, you shouldn’t move. You should wait-”

“Right.” I put my hand on his shoulder and pushed myself up to my feet. I wobbled a little, but he rose with me. I was confused but also full of energy, like I’d just had a brisk walk around the block.

Except it looked like I’d fallen on the ground, roughly right beneath the spell I was Hounding. The white cross was still on the building. A crowd of people-real people-were gathering on doorsteps and under roof eves. The watercolor people were gone.

And so was my dad.

“Where’s the fire?” I asked Stotts.

“Ambulance,” he said. “When I called, they already had a unit on the way.”

I was still scanning the crowd, looking for my dad, looking for Trager’s men, hells, looking for anyone and anything.

A leggy figure detached from a patch of shadow behind a car and strolled into the glow of a dull yellow streetlight. As soon as he hit the light, he turned and walked backward. He held up his cell phone toward me briefly, pulling it to his forehead and then away in a salute. And then he was part of the shadows again.

Davy Silvers, the Hound.

So much for the mystery of who called 911.

The ambulance rounded the corner and slowed as it neared us. Its siren switched off midwail, and the lights rolled through white, yellow, red, making the whole wet neighborhood look like a greasy disco hell.

“Why an ambulance?” I asked Stotts. “I feel fine.”

He gave me the strangest look.

“What?” I said.

“Allie,” he said, holding on to one of my arms like he was betting I was about to run or, you know, throw myself into traffic or do some other kind of curse-worthy thing. “Your skin was smoking.”

Oh. Wow. Weird.

I met his eyes, gave him my most convincing look. “I feel much better now. I can tell you who cast that spell.”

A man and a women hopped out of the ambulance and strode over to us.

“Did you call?” the woman, about my age but half a foot shorter, asked.

Stotts nodded. “She was out cold. Hounding magic. Says she feels fine now.” The tone of his voice said he obviously didn’t believe me.

That was the last time I let him talk for me.

I took a deep breath, surprised when my heart hitched with a twang of pain. Maybe I wasn’t all right. But I was right enough that I wanted to get home, get clean, and sleep off the touch of the watercolor people, the touch of my dead dad, and most especially the fact that I was about to rat out my friend to the police.

All I had to do was convince the nice emergency medical technicians that I didn’t need their services and was good to go. I’d be home within the hour.

Influence would be so easy. And so wrong.

“It was a pretty heavy spell I was Hounding. I got light-headed,” I told them. “But I feel fine now.”

The EMTs were very nice and helped me over to the back of the ambulance, where I sat down and let them check my vitals.

They asked some questions, took down all my information, recorded the results of blood pressure, and flashed lights in my eyes.

Everything checked out within normal ranges.

I threw Stotts, who had been waiting nearby, a told-you-so look, and he grunted.

Actually, I was surprised. I felt okay. Not great. I had a headache that could pound a mountain to sand, and the raw spots on my body-spots I did not point out to the EMTs, and spots that were not on my face or arms and therefore not seen by the EMTs-hurt like hell.

Sunburned and bruised down to the bone, even my heart felt sore. Kind of like someone had squeezed it.

Everywhere else, I was just stiff. Magic had taken my name and kicked my ass.

But I had survived it. Was still surviving it. And I had questions.

Why the hells had my dad showed up? What had he done, touching, squeezing my heart? And what did Pike think he was doing, throwing around blood magic, which he hated?

The EMTs and Stotts talked while I rested there on the back bumper of the ambulance, thinking. At every soft sound, at every shifting shadow, I felt my breath quicken, my heart hurt. I strained to hear if the watercolor people were out there. Coming to get me. Coming to slide their fingers beneath my skin, to tear the flesh from my bones, to suck the magic from my blood.

To leave me empty, broken. Dead.

I heard nothing but the rain drumming like impatient claws against the ambulance roof. And even though I had a police officer armed with a gun and magic standing just a few yards from me, I was afraid.

Move over, bogeyman. There was a new hell in town.

Stotts strolled over. “They say you can go. How about I drive you home?”

Home sounded good. No, home sounded great. And once I hit my sheets, I wasn’t coming back up for hours.

Maybe days.

“I’d like to give my statement so I can get some sleep.”

We strolled over to the car, and Stotts opened the door for me. He probably didn’t think I had enough strength to do it. And even though I’d never tell him, he probably thought right.

Stotts got in after me, turned on the car and heater, and eased out into the flow of traffic.

“What did you see back there?” he asked.

“Can’t we wait until we get to the station?”

He dug in his pocket and held up a tape recorder. “How about I record it while I drive you home?”

And I swear, that was the nicest thing I’d heard all night.

“Do you treat all your Hounds this well?”

He looked over at me. Looked away. “It doesn’t always work out that way.”

Right. The curse.

He turned on the recorder and spoke his name, my name, the case number, and some other things I only gave half an ear to. That burst of energy I’d had was wearing off. I was tired. Damn tired. I felt like I’d run a marathon. Through a tar pit.

The drone of the engine, the heat of the car made it hard to keep my eyes open.

“Please tell me what you saw.” Stotts put the recorder on a little spot between the cup holder that must have had Velcro on it to keep the recorder in place.

“Both spells at the hit sites were Glamour,” I said. “The boundary lines were consistent with those I’ve seen Martin Pike use. There was also a taint of blood magic-a mix of more than one blood. I’ve never seen or heard of Pike using blood magic.”

“Did you smell Martin Pike’s blood in the spell?”

Don’t make me do this.

“Ms. Beckstrom? Did you smell Martin Pike’s blood in the spell?”

“Yes.” I’m so sorry, Pike. “But there were other bloods involved too. And something else, something more. The spell doesn’t smell right.”

“Deterioration?” he asked.

“No. That’s another thing. The glyphs and spells should have faded within a couple days. They were as strong as if they’d been cast an hour ago. Something or someone is feeding those spells.”

“Do you think Pike would do that?”

I shook my head, rolling the back of my skull against the headrest. “I don’t know why anyone would want to do that. And Pike wouldn’t be that sloppy. He’s been using magic for years. Before that, he served in the military. If he wanted to make someone disappear, he wouldn’t leave a giant glowing trail behind. He wouldn’t use magic to do it. It doesn’t make sense.”

Stotts exhaled. “Hounding is hard. On the body and the brain. Maybe he’s finally hit his limit. It happens.”

I didn’t know what to say to that, because it was true. Pike was tired. Worn-out. Moving on. Maybe he just got desperate. And stupid.

But Martin Pike had never been a stupid man.

“Both girls were hurt,” I said woodenly. “I could feel the violence used against them, could feel their fear. There might have been more than one person involved. The mix of blood means there were probably more than two people involved.”

“Could you identify any of the other blood?”

“No. Only Pike’s.”

“Could you identify the caster’s signature?”

“I am not one hundred percent sure who cast that spell.”

“If you had to make a guess?”

“I don’t make guesses.”

“I appreciate that, Ms. Beckstrom. But in your educated opinion, who do you think cast those spells?”

“Martin Pike.” The words felt heavy in my throat.

Stotts reached over, the leather seat creaking as he turned off the tape recorder.

We drove awhile in silence, each caught in our own thoughts.

“Will you be all right on your own tonight?” he finally asked.

“I’m looking forward to some alone time.”

Stotts slowed as he approached my apartment building. “I want to thank you for Hounding this, Allie. I know it’s a tough thing, fingering a fellow Hound. It was hard for the others too.”

I didn’t want to think about that. Didn’t want to know which Hounds had already told Stotts that Pike was guilty of kidnapping. Didn’t want to think it might even be some of the Hounds I met today.

“You are the first Hound to identify his blood in the spell,” Stotts said. “That could be the piece we need.”

Nail in the coffin, that’s me.

I was unable to drum up any enthusiasm for ruining an old man’s life. “I’ll send you my bill.”

Stotts double-parked on the street.

“Do you want me to walk you up?”

“No. I got it.” I wasn’t kidding about that being-alone thing. I pulled on the handle of the door. Managed to get it open on the second try.

“Allie?”

I stood up into the rain, paused.

“Is Pike your friend?”

I faced away from him. It was raining, but the wind had let off a little. I heard the train call in the distance. I closed my eyes for a moment.

No. Not anymore, I thought.

To Stotts, I said, “Hounds don’t make friends.”

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