“I am
going
to bring Joshua back, you son of a bitch.”
Walker sneered. “Exactly,” he said through bloody teeth. Calliope stared at him, shook her head, took a step forward, and kicked him in the face. He dropped to the ground, tried to rise, and went still.
Vikous slumped to the ground. “Kinda wish you'd gotten up there a little faster thanâ” Calliope whirled, leveling the gun at him. He watched the weapon with an expressionless face. “What are you planning to do with that?”
The gun shook. Calliope's eyes, like those of Gluen's security guard so many days before, were wide enough to show the whites all the way around.
“What are you?”
Vikous glanced down at himself. Enormous taloned feet gripped the ground. Blood dripped from his clawed fingers. He looked back up at Calliope, a leathery, clown-faced, albino parody of an angel with leathery bat wings, truncated and tattered and pale white under the moonlight, the stuff of forgotten myths and nightmare. “I'm your guide, Calli.”
“Don't call me that.” The gun didn't move. “What
are
you?”
“I have a hundred names,” Vikous said. His voice was calm. “A hundred things that people call my kind, because we don't have a name of our own. We hid it a long, long time ago, and we can't have it back.” He looked up at her, his plastic-black eyes shining. “I'd tell you if I could, Calli, but I can't.”
“Don't
call
me that!” The barrel of the gun shook.
“Sorry.” He sniffed, looking around at the torn ground as though searching for a place to lie down. “Look, shoot me.”
Calliope twitched. “What?”
Vikous shrugged, his tattered wings shifting behind him, finally free of their confinement. “Or don't, but you can't waste any more time on this. You have to go, with or without me.” He frowned. “You're okay, right?”
Calliope lowered the gun a fraction. “I thought he'd shot me again.”
“Yeah, sorry about that. Knocking you down was the only thing I could think of. Did you hurt your shoulder?”
Calliope shook her head. “I'll live, but you'reâ” She cut herself off. “God, how do you
do
that?”
Vikous blinked, assuming his most innocent expression. “Do what?”
Calliope glared. “Go . . . go put your coat on.”
Vikous quirked an eyebrow. “I can move?”
“Yes. Coat. Please.” Vikous pushed himself up, grimacing at the ache of the blows he'd taken, hissing through his teeth as the movement pulled at the open wounds high on his chest. Calliope frowned again. “You sure you're all right?”
“Of course I'm not all right; I was shot. Twice. Protecting
you.
” Vikous shook his head. “You and your questions.”
Calliope tilted her head. “Remember that I still have the gun.”
“Good point.” He tugged his coat on as best he could, wincing. “Ready for the end of this?”
“I hope so.”
“Me too. Can I lean on you?”
She made a face. “You're still dripping blood.”
“Right.”
Together they walked, still talking, toward the distant house on the hill, oblivious to the dark shadow that moved through the trees behind them.
Â
“I'm kind of surprised you didn't kill him,” Vikous said.
Calliope looked at him. “Should I have?” Vikous shrugged and winced. Calliope turned her attention back to the dark path. “I'm tired of death,” she said finally. “It seems like this whole thing has been about death, even when it doesn't have anything to do with what's going on. Did I tell you my dad had cancer?”
Vikous shook his head. “Is he all right?”
Calliope made a face. “I
guess
so. It's impossible to tell; he doesn't
look
all right.” She looked at Vikous. “But you see what I mean? Joshua died, you died I guess, Mahkah nearly ate us, Dad had surgery and maybe treatments for cancer and no one even
told
me until I showed up at the door with a bullet hole in my shoulder. My sister doesn't want me around her family, like I'm carrying death around with me, and I'm not sure she's wrong.”
“It's not you.” Vikous adjusted his coat. “This . . . all this right now is just life. One of the things that happens in life is death. That's part of it.” He grimaced as he stepped over a tree stump. “Granted, you've got a few more of the exciting parts going on right now than normal.”
“Exciting,” Calliope deadpanned. “I'm so excited I can barely breathe most of the time.”
“I'd say that's my line.”
“Give itâ”
“Good evening and well done, my dear,” called out another voice from the shadow of the house. Calliope recognized it even before the speaker's bulging eyes loomed out of the darkness. Faegos stepped out of the deeper shadow followed by the tall, swathed figure of Kopro. “I believe we have a bargain to conclude,” the shrunken man continued. “Something you can provide me, in exchange for something I can provide you.”
He gestured, and Joshua White walked out of the shadows.
“HEY, CALLI,” JOSHUA
said.
Calliope's heart contracted, pushing the air out of her in a rush.
Give it time, I was going to say,
she thought.
That's funny.
She stared, her mouth slightly agape, scanning his calm face, eyes that held a hint of sadness or regret . . .
Except that it wasn't him.
Calliope's eyes narrowed. The thin light of the half-moon didn't reflect off his skin. There were odd shadows across his face that she realized were the siding on the house directly behind him.
“You're . . .” she began.
“A ghost, yeah,” he finished, making a familiar gesture with both hands that made her heart thump painfully. “A memory might be more accurate, but I'm not really sure.” He frowned. “It's hard to concentrate sometimes.”
“You're not here?” she asked.
“
I'm
here,” Joshua said, “at least for a little while longer. The body's not. That's been lying on a slab in Harper's Ferry for about a week now.” His eyes, such as they were, became distant. “They did an autopsy last Monday. Lauren flies in to identify it tomorrow.” He looked at the ground. “I think that'll be hard on her.”
Calliope watched him, aching with the need to reach out and touch his arm. “You . . . can I . . .” She made a helpless gesture. “Can I help? Is thereâ”
He shook his head, then: “Can you watch her?” He got a peculiar expression on his face, one that Calliope always associated with lost causes and hopeless battles. “Can you keep an eye on her? I can't.”
“Oh, but you
can
, Mister White,” Faegos interjected before Calliope could reply. “At least if our intrepid Miss Jenkins has anything to say about it.” He was sitting on a rusted bucket near an old rain gutter, his legs carefully folded over each other at the knee. “She likes to have a say in everything that goes on, you know.”
“That, I know.” Joshua smiled, though his expression when he looked toward Faegos was anything but amused. “Always have to be the hero, don't you, Cal?”
Calliope blinked back tears, or memories, her head bowed. “I should have taken you to meet my folks.”
He smiled, looking puzzled. “Where'd that come from?”
She shook her head, sniffing. “I don't know. It's just something I realized. You would have . . . well, my mom would have liked you.”
He tilted his head. “You went to see your family?”
“You told me to.”
Joshua raised an eyebrow. “Since when has my saying so made any kind of a difference?”
“Since you started leaving me voice mail from beyond the grave.” Behind her, Vikous cleared his throat. Calliope ignored him.
“I've picked up a few tricks,” Joshua said.
“I guess so.”
He took a few steps closer to Calliope and lowered his voice. “How'd it go?” Calliope raised her hand, level to the ground, and wobbled it back and forth. Joshua raised a pale eyebrow in response.
Calliope sighed. “It was okay. Mom and I talked. Dad too. Sandy . . .” She quirked the corner of her mouth downward in a sour expression. “We get along about as well as we ever did, I guess.”
Joshua frowned. “You should get that straightened out, with you and your sister.” He raised his hand. “And don't tell me it's complicated.”
Calliope's eyes narrowed, the old bitterness flaring up so quickly she couldn't stop herself. “More family advice from the guy with no parents and a brother he hasn't seen in fifteen years.” Joshua's expression changedâshe saw the barriers she'd forced him to build go up, and shame washed over her. “Oh god, I'm sorry.”
He shook his head, dismissing the slight but avoiding her eyes. “It's okay.”
“It's
not
, you're . . .
god,
I can't believe I said that.”
“Hey,” Josh said, his voice clear and not at all ghostlike. Calliope looked up at his too-clear face. “It's okay.” He smiled, his face full of affection, if not amusement. “It's all okay.”
Calliope shook her head. “It's not. You're dead and I'm dredging up ancient history.”
“Not that ancient,” he said, glancing back at the house. “Anyway, isn't that what you're supposed to do when someone dies?”
“I don't know.” She sniffed, her eyes stinging. “I've never had anyone die on me until now.”
“Well, trust me, this is normal.”
“Said the ghost of my best friend.” Her forced laugh caught halfway, choked out by a short sob she smothered with her hand, squeezing her eyes shut, then opening them wide to force the tears away, shaking her head side to side as if she could banish her own grief.
Joshua started to reach out to her, then looked at his hand and lowered it. “Okay, it's not normal, but the ancient-history-dredging part is. Calli, it's all right.”
“It is
not
, and quit saying that.” She glared at him, her eyes damp. “Someone
killed
you, probably because of me.”
He frowned. “How do you figure that, master detective?”
“I've got some sort of quest I'm on and it all started when you . . . when you called.” She looked down. “Feels like you died just to get me moving.”
“That's a little egocentric, isn't it?”
Calliope looked up. “What?”
“You got my message, right?” He tipped his head. “The one I left with that fatâ”
“Gluen,” Calliope interjected. “Yeah.”
“I
told
you what happened.”
“Did you?” Calliope's voice sounded shrill in her own ears. “Because it didn't make much sense to me.” Her voice dropped, mimicking his: “I had to do this, Calli . . .”
“Try to fix it.” Josh's face was etched with grief of his own. “I made a promise.”
“What
happened
?” Calliope demanded, asking the only question she'd really ever wanted answered.
He looked away. “It was a private thing.”
“But you called
me.
” Her left hand pressed against the ache in her chest.
“I'm really sorry about that.” He looked up into the starry night. “I was making my best play at the end, hoping it would pay off.”
Calliope blinked her damp eyes. “Did it?”
Joshua said nothing.
The corners of Calliope's mouth turned down. She searched Joshua's face, desperate for some kind of affirmation.
“Did it?”
“We still have to see about that, don't we, my dear?” said the dusty voice to her right.
Calliope turned toward Faegos, rubbing at her eyes. “Yeah. Sure. We can fix this. Do your deal.”
Joshua turned his attention to the two of them. “What deal?”
“I will be happy to, once you provide your payment.” Faegos ignored Joshua's question. “I would like . . .” He wet his lips. “Your companion's name.”
Calliope frowned. “Don't jerk me around. You knew that already, the last time we met.”
“Oh, goodness me.” Faegos sighed, frowning in mock disapproval and leaning to the side to look over Calliope's shoulder. “You really have been shamefully lax in your duties,” he said to Vikous, then turned back to Calliope. “I'm not talking about your guide, my poor girl.” The thin point of his tongue edged out of his toothless mouth, sliding over his narrow lips. “I'm speaking of your companion. The dragon.” His bulging eyes were bright.
“Dragon?” Joshua said.
Calliope blinked. “Mahkah?” Her eyes narrowed in confusion. “What does Mahkah have to do with it?”
Faegos's perfect posture slumped somewhat, his eyes flicking reproachfully toward Vikous. “Your companion has everything to do with âit', as far as I am concerned. I want you to give me its name.”
Calliope frowned. “I just did.”
“
Earth and sea,
” Faegos shouted, looking to the sky. He closed his protuberant eyes and lowered his chin to his chest. He stayed in that position for several seconds, then looked up. “I apologize for my outburst. I forget that nearly every sig-nificant element of this world has carefully avoided your attention.”
The trials and wonders of her tripâof which the desiccated garden gnome in front of her knew next to nothingâplayed through her mind. Calliope's face tightened. “I've done everything I was supposed to do,” she growled, her voice a fair match for Vikous's. “If you can't claim your prize after all that, it's not
me
failing.”
Faegos hesitated, his bulbous eyes narrow. “Indeed.” He clasped his hands over his folded knees and leaned slightly forward. “I want the dragon's
true
name, Calliope, the only one of any significance.”
Calliope frowned. “I don't . . .” She glanced at Joshua, whose own eyes were wide and shifting back and forth between her and Faegos. “I don't know it.”
Faegos's eyes narrowed as much as was possible, his face pressing forward a scant few inches as he studied Calliope. His head tilted. “Indeed, you do not.” He sighed and stood with a nimbleness that belied his frail form. “That is a shame. I believed there was real potential in you.”
“But”âCalliope looked from Faegos to Joshua, scrambling desperately for some way to salvage the situation before it spiraled out of her graspâ“youâ”
“I think we're both well aware of the limits of our agreement, my dear,” Faegos said. “You do not have what I want.”
“Iâ”
“PERHAPS WE CAN BE OF SOME ASSISTANCE IN THAT REGARD,”
said a voice that thrummed out of the ground.
Â
Calliope jerked toward the sound and the flickering darkness that loomed in that direction. “Mahkah?”
“YOU WILL FORGIVE US OUR INTRUSION. WE HEARD THE SOUNDS OF WEAPONS AND CHOSE TO SEE HOW THE STORY UNFOLDED OURSELVES.”
“
Ex
cellent.” Faegos's toothless mouth stretched in a pleased smile. “All is not lost.”
“YOU MAY HAVE OUR NAME IF YOU DESIRE IT, CALLIOPE.”
“Calli,” Joshua said. “What are you doing?”
“Shut up,” Calliope said without turning. Her eyes narrowed as she looked into the half-seen movements of the shadows. “Why?”
Silence greeted her question. Then:
“WE REVILE THE CREATURES THAT CRAWL, LIKE YOU, ACROSS THE SURFACE OF OUR WORLD,
BUT THE IRONY OF OUR NATURE IS SUCH THAT WE PROGRESSâWE
CHANGE
âONLY BY SHARING OUR EXISTENCE WITH YOU.
” Something in the darkness shifted.
“BY KNOWING YOU, WHO SHARES HER SOUL WITH THE WORLD WHEN SHE SINGS, WE HAVE GROWN BEYOND WHAT WE HAD LONG THOUGHT OUR PINNACLE. WE DO NOT FORGET SUCH GIFTS.”
Calliope drew a shaking breath at the dragon's words. The weight of themâthe sheer, terrifying
responsibility
âbowed her head until her chin rested on her chest. “Thank you, Mahkah,” she murmured, and turned to Vikous; tattered, bloody, and most of all, silent Vikous. He watched her, his black eyes filled with reflected stars. “I know what the true name does, don't I?” she asked.
Vikous nodded. “I suppose you do.”
“It is power, my dear girl.” Faegos exhaled into the night air, his eyes half lidded. “The power to
know
a thing; to bind it, if desired.” He straightened his posture and adjusted his jacket, catching Calliope's expression. “To call it into service, as I imagine you and your guide did.”
Calliope shook her head, frowning. “No . . . it wasn't like that.” She looked into the darkness. “We got its attention, but we didn't bind it.” She hesitated. “We didn't bind you, did we, Mahkah?”
“WE ASSUME THE QUESTION IS RHETORICAL.”
Calliope's mouth quirked, glancing at Vikous. “Absolutely.” She turned to Faegos. “Why do you want the name?”
Faegos smiled, his lips pressed together. “It is in my nature to suss out the mysteries of the universe. The dragon is one such mystery that lies unknown to me. I would not have it so. I must understand it. I must
know
it.”
One of Calliope's eyebrows lowered. “And that's it.”
“That, as you say, is âit'.” Faegos folded his hands together.
“You don't have to do this, Calli.”
Calliope started. Hearing Joshua's voice was still a shock. She turned to him, her eyes bright. “Oh”âshe drew in a long, shaking breath and let it outâ“I know.” She kept her eyes locked on to Joshua's as she spoke. “Mahkah?”
“WE ARE HERE, CALLIOPE. WE ARE ALWAYS HERE.”
“I know,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper. “I'm sorry.”
“IT IS ALL RIGHT, CALLIOPE. YOUR KIND HAVE ALWAYS HAD THE POWER TO MAKE OR UNMAKE OURS. AT OTHERS' HANDS, IT WOULD SHAME US, BUT WE WILL GIVE OVER WILLINGLY TO YOU.”
“Thank you.” She searched the darkness for the shadowy, sinuous bulk behind the dragon's lantern eyes, trying to see some further detailâsomething she could rememberâbut her eyes shifted away; her mind wandered.
The first rush of cold air and speed and distance and motion.
Wings stretched out on either side in the thin starlight.
The dragon singing, sad and brave.
“They might be any of those things,” she murmured, “or all of them.” She raised her voice. “Thank you, Mahkah.” She swallowed past a lump in her throat. “But no.”
“YOU ARE SURE?”
“What?” Faegos's rasping voice rose in surprise and anger.
“I'm afraid I'm going to have to reject your bargain, Mister Faegos,” she said, her voice driven high and shaky by the emotion caught behind it. “The cost is too much for me.”
Joshua smiled. That helped.
Faegos snarled. “The cost is irrelevant to you, girl.” He leveled a shaking finger in Mahkah's direction. “I want that thing.”