A Trace of Moonlight (37 page)

Read A Trace of Moonlight Online

Authors: Allison Pang

BOOK: A Trace of Moonlight
12.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It irritated me that Maurice would be one of those lovely little things. The thought was irrational—after all, he was still technically a man and all men sleep sometimes. But the fucker didn’t deserve it, and climbing through a sociopath’s idea of the land of Nod wasn’t anything I really wanted to do.

I kept tensing, waiting for the line to snap, for us to go hurtling into the darkness, where I’d never wake up—but nothing happened. In fact, the journey was completely uneventful, which had me even more uneasy.

If Brystion noticed my discomfort, he didn’t say anything, but the long sweep of his tail curved around my calf, the furred tuft giving me a playful swipe as his hand slipped into mine. His face brushed my ear. “No regrets,” he whispered, and the sound of it carried into the void and disappeared.

And then we were there.

The Heart of Maurice’s Dreaming loomed before us. Honestly, I didn’t know what I was expecting. A midnight dark castle with evil spires, perhaps? A gloomy basement filled with butcher knives? At least something straight out of a horror movie, or Stepford-wife perfect.

But I sure as hell wasn’t prepared for an obsidian wall of glass and rock, beaming with tiny green thorns made of colored jewels. Eerie and beautiful all at once. And wickedly sharp.

And I certainly wasn’t expecting our host to greet us out in the open, calm and relaxed.

“Hello, Abby,” Maurice purred from where he stood, leaning against the wall as though he had nothing to fear from it. The Key to the Crossroads gleamed from where it mockingly hung around his neck. “Fancy meeting you here . . .”

Twenty

I
froze, his words cutting through me with an electric jolt. The weight of the world dropped away, my vision narrowing until it was just the two of us.

Me and my murderer.

Fear gave way to anger and my fists trembled with the need to beat his face into the floor, to make him admit he was a royal
douche bag
of epic proportions . . . to do
something
.

“I believe you have something that belongs to me,” I said coldly, trying to keep my voice from shaking. My nails bit into my palms and I took a step toward him, ignoring Brystion’s cough of warning. This was a trap. It had to be.

And yet, I couldn’t seem to stop.

“I might,” he said mildly, touching the Key. “But it’s not like I can give it back, now is it?”

His face barely flickered as I approached him, but his eyes narrowed, the reaction gone so quickly I couldn’t have said if it really happened.

“You seem awfully fond of those pet daemons of yours,” he observed. Maurice had a habit of talking too
much. It was his way of disabling his foes. I got that now. And there was no point in allowing it to happen again.

“Go,” Brystion murmured to me. “Keep him from reentering his Heart.”

The two of them slid away, their forms shimmering into something else entirely. I didn’t spare a glance at either, locked on Maurice. Like a swaying cobra, I had to keep his attention on me.

“You know, I never quite understood why you hated me so much,” I said. “Sure, I took your place, but why everything else? What did I ever do to you? Or maybe that’s it—all these connections that I have just by accident of birth.”

My upper lips curled at him even as I pointed to the amulet. “Everything you’ve ever had . . . any power you’ve managed to acquire . . . all of it’s stolen.” I let the power of my shield drop slightly. “Even here . . . I have more than you.”

“How are you doing that?”
he snapped. “I’m dreaming. I control what happens here.”

I chuckled. “I’m a DreamWalker. Dreams are my specialty.”

Okay, I was completely talking out of my ass, and I suspected he knew that, but this was going to play out one way or another.

“You’re bluffing. You’re a goddamned figment of my imagination.”

I blinked and realized that for all his charisma, the man looked like shit. The dark circles under his eyes spoke of personal demons that probably weren’t anything I wanted to investigate. Odd, though. And easy enough to press upon.

I took another step closer. I had no idea where Sonja
or Ion had gone, but I had to trust they knew what they were doing.

“I think you’ve been cornered, Maurice,” I said softly. “And you know it. How’s life in the Shadow Realm treating you?”

He scowled at me. “I don’t have time for this.” Abruptly the wall of obsidian broke apart to reveal a small passage.

“Ion!” I shouted the name before I could stop myself. Maurice sneered at me and melted into the metallic shield of his Heart.

“Shit.” Brystion materialized beside Maurice and snatched at his arm as Sonja attempted to keep the door from shutting. A flood of dark power erupted from the obsidian shield. Unconscious defenses, I realized. I doubted if Maurice really understood this part of himself, but I hoped that would be to my advantage.

Maurice disappeared through the door. I barely managed to get a sideways glance at Brystion before he jerked his head at me, his dark face contorted with the strain of keeping the passage open.

Neither incubus nor succubus made a move to follow me and I realized they couldn’t. OtherFolk would need an invitation or a TouchStone bond for that level of intimacy . . . but I was mortal.

Loophole,
my inner voice crowed as a plan started to form. I had the succubus blood, and though I didn’t know if I actually had the power to kill Maurice in the Dreaming, I
had
broken through the Dreaming once and onto the CrossRoads. It
could
be done.

And if I ended up in the Shadow Realm with him?

I could maybe get him to leave . . . and go straight into Talivar’s hands.

“Find me,” I murmured to Brystion. Without hesitation, I slipped in after Maurice.

Black. All of it was black. Not the comforting black of night, but the dark, rotting underbelly of a fetid pumpkin. Behind me, the door to the Dreaming disappeared, leaving me completely enclosed, surrounded by whatever demons Maurice housed in his psyche.

I smiled grimly. If it was a battle of nightmares he wanted, I had more than enough to work with. Would my sharks be able to find their way in here?

I patted the vial of succubus blood in my pocket, its weight solid. One of these days I’d have to ask Sonja how physical objects could make their way in and out of the Dreaming, but I supposed it was a form of magic unique to her kind.

“Woolgathering,” I chastised myself, glancing up to see . . . nothing.

The blackness spun out in an infinite plane, without even the silver glow of the CrossRoads to relieve it. What sort of monster was he that he didn’t even have dreams?

A hollow wind blew around me and I instinctively tightened my shields before pushing them out to give me a little space between me and the darkness. It was like being in a tomb, and even though the distance didn’t really have an effect on me, there was something about the way it pressed down.

Getting the fuck out of here was a tremendously appealing idea.

“I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised to see you here,” Maurice said, his voice oddly accentuated to seem deeper.

I steeled myself and turned around, but there was
nothing there except . . . Maurice himself. Nothing bowed or broken about his stance, but the gleam of madness roved thick in his eyes . . . matched by the shining blue of the amulet around his neck.

“And here I half expected to see just a giant head,” I murmured. “ ‘Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain’?”

“I remember that movie. Saw it when it first came out—took Moira to see it. She couldn’t stop laughing at the fairy in the bubble thing. Glinda.”

I blinked, unsure of where this conversation was about to go. I’d nearly forgotten he’d been Moira’s TouchStone for at least seventy years or so. “She must remember it fondly, because she certainly seems to be rather keen on dressing like her sometimes,” was all I could think to add.

“Fae arrogance, to mimic what they cannot create.” He shook his head, his hair paling as though the color were draining out of him. “I would assume you’ve seen that by now. For all their arrogance, the OtherFolk are helpless without us.”

I had nothing to say to this. On a number of levels, he was correct. Our souls were the anchor to the mortal realm. But still.

“So why this destruction? I understand you had your beef with Moira . . . with me, even. But why the hell would you break the Tree?” I didn’t expect him to answer, and he didn’t. I was sure the CliffsNotes version would indicate he only did it so no one else could have it, but in the end it didn’t really matter.

“I didn’t destroy it all. There’s a branch or two still around.” He gave me a wan smile. “I keep one in a little pot. Doesn’t seem to be doing particularly well, though.”

The realization of what he meant snapped through me.
That
was what Eildon Tree had been trying to tell me. Not the Key at all, but that Maurice had a part of her . . .

“A Tree like that needs tending outside any mortal hands. Does she sing to you?” The thought sickened me, though it made a fair amount of sense.

“It hasn’t, not for a very long time now.”

If there was sadness in his tone, I couldn’t hear it, and I had the distinct feeling his indifference wasn’t feigned. He genuinely didn’t care anymore.

We stood there, staring at each other for another few minutes. He sighed. “Well, I suppose we should get this started.” He winked, a malicious twinkle shining from beneath his brows. “I’ve never fought a Dreamer directly. I imagine it ought to be rather . . . enlightening. Besides, I know what you’re afraid of.”

Before I could comment, Maurice disappeared, the flickering of the Key swallowed up into the darkness.

He might not have been a Dreamer or had a Dreamer’s powers, but I was in his Heart, and he would definitely have the high ground. It had been hard enough for me to manage in Melanie’s Heart—and I was her friend and buoyed by Ion’s incubus power.

But here?

The ground opened up beneath me, sweeping me away so that I fell. I let out an involuntary cry, but I was done being a victim.

“Oh no you don’t.” I pulled the Dreaming around me and shifted. Feathers and pinions, tail and talons, I shimmered into the silent shape of a great horned owl.

Gravity wasn’t quite what I had expected here, but I could still manage to arc my way so I wasn’t simply
plummeting downward. I glided forward as best as I could, and my owlish vision scanned the mist.

My beak clicked in frustration. Why was I even playing this game? I just needed to break through to the other side, right?

I hit the wall. A transparent wall, in fact, but I slammed into whatever it was hard enough to break my neck, and the irony of that made me want to laugh. Pain lanced through my skull, and I dropped the owl form, my concentration broken. I slid down the force field, my ears ringing as I tried to retain my equilibrium . . .

 . . . and straight into a deep pool of water.

I had to hand it to the fucker. He certainly did his homework concerning the nightmarish aspects of my dreams. When he’d had me painted into an oceanic Shadow Realm before, he’d undoubtedly watched as I’d fled from my sharks.

On the other hand, he didn’t really know me. He only knew what he’d seen. And afraid of the things or not, I now had a modicum of control over them. Still . . . could my sharks find their way here?

The waves slid over my head, saltwater pouring into my mouth, my lungs, compressing and compressing until I was silently screaming. I closed my eyes and forced myself to calm.

Shift. Shift. Fins, scales . . . gills. If we were going to play this out, I was gonna do it right. A moment later and I was breathing normally, the water filtering through the gill slits at my neck. Surely Sonja would scoff at me if she saw this—after all, she’d gotten on my case more than once for my limiting adherence to physics while inside the Dreaming, but no point in fighting what my instincts told me to do.

I slipped off into the inky depths, my hair streaming behind me. But I was still going to need light. I concentrated again, conjuring a tiny iridescent ball. Nothing too bright. No sense in blinding myself when all I wanted was my bearings.

Other books

Fábulas morales by Félix María Samaniego
No Quest for the Wicked by Shanna Swendson
Tidal Rip by Joe Buff
The Obituary Society by Jessica L. Randall
Against the Grain by Daniels, Ian
Give Me Love by McCarthy, Kate
Tidetown by Robert Power