Soul Hunt (8 page)

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Authors: Margaret Ronald

BOOK: Soul Hunt
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Had I had my talent in full strength, I’d have scented the fireworks-and-rain trace of magic, undoubtedly from an aversion ward of some kind. As it was, though, only the faintest tang of gunpowder made it through the fog, and every time I looked at them my eyes started to water.

I thought seriously about just turning around, but this was a hospital, for God’s sake. There were limits.

The two didn’t even look up as I approached, so secure were they in their ward. “Hey!” I said, and grabbed the man by his sleeve and the woman by the back of her coat. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”

The man gave a squeak, then looked up at me, eyes wide. I knew him: Byron Chatterji, one of the adepts that I’d even consider calling ethical. The man didn’t use any loci, or at least none that were based on bits of other people’s souls. He worked on a principle called “severance and return,” which, in his case, involved a complicated still out in an abandoned railway car in Medford. There was a lot of mumbo jumbo and mystical terminology for what he did, but what it came down to was that you really, really didn’t want to accept if he offered you a drink from his hip flask.

The thing was, he was the last person I’d have expected to do something as stupid as putting up a ward in a hospital. Which left the woman, who twisted around in my grip to focus a spiteful glare on me. “What business is it of yours?” she snapped, her earrings swinging around like little scythe pendulums.

“It’s the business of anyone who’s affected by that damn ward.”
And can notice it,
I added mentally, then paused. “Hang on, don’t I know you? Patricia Wheelwright, yes?” I’d done maybe one job for her, back when I was starting out, and since then the only thing I could remember about her was that Sarah really didn’t like her, for some reason.

Wheelwright tugged her jacket free of my hand and brushed it off as if I’d left crumbs. “The name is Sosostris,” she returned ponderously. “What’s the matter, Hound? Let a few victories go to your head and you forget everyone’s profession?”

Oh yes. That was why; Sarah had ranted to me for an hour about how Wheelwright had claimed that professional name (“and I bet you she’s never even read Eliot!” had been the gist of it, which honestly didn’t mean much to me). And the other reason was clear: Wheelwright was a scam artist, even lower than the likes of Chatterji. It’s a historied racket; you convince a mark that they’ve been cursed, then milk them for all they’re worth while “dispelling” the “curse.”

And these were the people that Sarah was trying to unite into some coherent organization. Good luck with that.

“I know yours well enough,” I said. “And you, Chatterji, what are you doing here? Both of you, for that matter. You know better than to waste yourselves hiding some plain bickering like this!”

Wheelwright sniffed, but Chatterji just polished his bowler hat on his sleeve and smiled. “We—I have come in hopes of seeing Miss Troyes, yes? I had heard she was injured, and came to pay my regards.”

“Pay regards, my ass,” Wheelwright sneered. “You wanted to get your hands on her loci.”

“While I will admit to a certain concern in that regard, I must point out that that is a regrettable falsehood.” Chatterji’s smile widened—it did that when he was embarrassed—and he bowed slightly to Wheelwright.
“At least it is when applied to
my
circumstances.”

“Are you accusing me of theft?” Wheelwright demanded.

“Not in the least—” Chatterji began, in that tone that meant a long argument over semantics was about to follow.

I cut him off, raising my hand between them. Chatterji actually flinched. “Which of you set the ward?”

At that, Chatterji looked down at his feet. “It wasn’t his fault,” Wheelwright muttered. “He didn’t want our quarrel to bother anyone.”

“Then don’t have the damn quarrel to begin with! Jesus, this is a hospital, not some back alley—you don’t throw magic around like that!”

“You do when it is necessary,” Chatterji maintained, but he didn’t look up.

“Anyway, if that moistened bint from her houseboat is here, it’s a wonder there aren’t more of us around.” Wheelwright jerked her head toward the front desk. “Only they’re not being cooperative. They tell me there’s no Miss Troyes here, and since Sonny Jim stopped by, I figured he must have pulled a fast one on their records—”

“I protest,” Chatterji responded, again meekly. The man was made of meek.

“She’s not here,” I said. If these two headed up to see Tessie, they’d drive her crazy in no time. “They moved her to Mount Auburn.”

Chatterji nodded and seemed ready to walk off, but Wheelwright’s eyes narrowed. “Then what are you doing here, Hound?”

“Blood test,” I lied equably. “Had to pick up my results. No, you don’t get to know what they were. Now dispel this damn thing and get out of here.”

Wheelwright glared at me, working her lower lip between her teeth. Chatterji, however, straightened and whispered in her ear. I caught the words “Bright Brothers” and “just herself” and even if Wheelwright
still looked skeptical, she nodded after a moment. “Fine. But you just watch yourself if you come down my way. I don’t like being bullied.”

“And I don’t like bullying,” I said as she took a length of rowan wood about the size of a lipstick case from her purse and twiddled it between her fingers. “So we’re well matched.”

Chatterji, meanwhile, had taken a long pull from his vile hip flask, then flicked a few droplets from it in the four directions, dispelling his part of the ward. He mistook my look of revulsion—again, I was glad my talent wasn’t picking up the scent of the flask—for reproof and gave me an apologetic shrug. “It seemed necessary. For precautions. You understand?”

“Not really,” I said, but I followed them out. Precautions were wards in your home, not tossed down to hide an argument. Something was seriously wonky with the world if this sort of thing was becoming routine. Or perhaps something was just wrong with Chatterji and Wheelwright. I waited until they disappeared around the corner, then bent to unlock my bike.

Maybe it was an aftereffect of that burst of anger, maybe it was the result of being nearby when Wheelwright and Chatterji dispelled their respective wards, but this time, I caught the scent before I saw the person. A thin trace of damp woodchuck and burnt-out matchsticks wove past me, and it was probably a sign of how bad it had gotten for me that I didn’t recognize it until I’d stood up again. “Deke?” I whispered, and turned around, the helmet in my hand whacking against the bike rack so hard it rebounded into my leg.

No fires. No immediate sign of him—but there, coming out of one of the EMT bays on foot was a hulking figure in a leather bomber jacket dwarfing a little skittish shadow at his side. “Deke!” I yelled.

The shadow spun like a cornered cat, but the minute he saw me his face lit up, and he started yanking on his friend’s arm. The big guy turned, and a
chill trickled down my back as I recognized the gray-bearded man who’d carried Deke out of the fire. Deke grinned—a wider grin than I’d ever seen on his face—and waved like a deranged marionette. “Hound! See, I told you I’d find her, this is the one I was telling you—”

I tucked my helmet under my arm and approached, still not quite sure what to make of the other man. You know how there are some people that seem like they’re made for certain situations? The guy with the Santa Claus beard, or the thin-lipped woman who just needs a nun’s habit and a ruler? This guy was a little like that. He had a clipped, gray-going-to-white beard and a long white ponytail. Drop him into the middle of a Renaissance festival and you’d never see him again, or put a yellow rain slicker and hat on him and you’d expect there to be fish for sale nearby. He looked a little older than Deke, but in much better shape, though given Deke’s shape that wasn’t difficult. And his eyes—very bright blue, like the sky above us—were as hard and keen as awls.

Though I couldn’t rely on my nose as fully as I was used to, I didn’t sense any reason for concern: the man smelled of salt and tar, with maybe a touch of granite worn by waves, and more important, Deke seemed at ease around him. Whatever had spooked him so, it no longer affected him. “Hey, Deke,” I said. “You all right?”

“What? Oh, I’m fine, I’m fine.”

“He got a bit of smoke in his lungs,” the big guy said. “We were just getting him checked out.”

“Yeah, Tessie got it too. She was in the boat,” I added to Deke’s look of incomprehension. “Got her out, but she’ll be in the hospital for a bit longer.”

Deke’s face fell. “Tessie? Oh, no. No, I didn’t know that.”

The big guy hadn’t quite stepped between me and Deke, but something about his posture made him look like a bodyguard sensing a threat. “You’re the girl I
saw on the fishing boat,” he said. “You saw me carrying Cam out of there.”

“Cam?”

“’s me.” Deke thumped his chest. “’s my name. Roger knows it. We knew each other in high school.”

Oh yes. Deke’s full name was Decameron Croft, the legacy of parents who were classics professors at some little college on the Coast, parents who’d disowned him a long time back. I wasn’t sure I blamed them, knowing how much crap Deke could get into if left alone.

Deke, oblivious to my train of thought, punched Roger in the arm, and Roger, a brief, fond smile breaking out under his beard, punched back, sending Deke staggering a couple of paces. “We go way back,” Deke said happily, then paused. “I’m sorry Tessie got hurt.”

“She’ll be all right. But what were you even doing out there, Deke? I mean, I know you like fire, but that —”

Roger held up one scarred, slablike hand. “That’s my friend’s business, and you’ll just have to—”

“No, no, it’s okay! This is Scelan, the one I told you about. Hound, the finder, remember? She could help you!” Deke turned that happy smile on me and back to Roger. Guy looked like a puppy on Christmas—okay, a bedraggled, mud-rolled puppy that had fallen on its head one too many times, but still that innocently enthusiastic. It wasn’t something I was used to seeing from Deke, but it was certainly a step up from the paranoia I’d encountered so far today.

Roger’s brow creased. “Maybe. I don’t know, Cam, okay? And now’s probably not the time to talk about it. I gotta get moving or she’ll be pissed.”

“Then when would be a good time?” I asked, stepping back a little, arms crossed. If I could get something out of Deke, I might be able to figure out if what scared Tessie was still around to be reckoned with. And a job … well. We’d see.

“Tomorrow?” Deke said. “Or—or the day after? Anytime. Anytime is good.”

I glanced at Roger. “For you too?”

He sighed and ran a hand over his face. Yes, I’d seen that look before, on the face of anyone who had to deal with the undercurrent on a regular basis but who preferred to stay out of it themselves. He caught my recognition, and the corners of his eyes crinkled up; not quite a smile, but enough to say
adepts, huh?
to someone who knew what was going on.

Yeah, maybe I liked him. At least I could respect him for saving Deke.

“If you’re Scelan, then I owe you thanks for keeping Cam safe this long.” He thumped his friend on the shoulder again, and Deke grinned up at him. “But yeah, come find us anytime. I’m not going anywhere for a while. Not least,” he added with a wry glance at me, “because that was my boat.”

Five

I
n hindsight, I should have headed home, or gone in to Mercury Courier and begged Tania’s forgiveness, or even gotten in touch with Rena to smooth over what had happened. Anything to keep hold of that elusive clarity. Instead, I lost a few hours, biking down to the locks by Lechmere and watching the fresh water meet the sea.

You ever been so tired that actually thinking takes effort? So drained that it’s either a choice between moving and thinking, and by a certain point the distinction becomes moot? Yeah. That was kind of what it was like, but with no goddamn reason. I’d slept—God, it sometimes seemed like I’d been sleeping forever with no benefit to show from it—and I’d had everything else in order. So why the grayouts, why the lethargy, why the damnable fog that kept me from hunting?

At this rate, I might even be glad to meet the Hounds when they came for me at midwinter.

I shoved that thought away. I had a long way to go before I hit that point.

Besides, even if the undercurrent was having another upset, at least one person in it was doing all right. It helped to know that Deke had someone looking out for him. You needed that, in the undercurrent.
Especially for seers and pyromancers and the like; they’d have trouble knowing which way to move if you didn’t point them in the right direction.

The thought jostled something else loose, and I checked my phone. Yes, I had just about enough time to get there.

Schools these days are a bit more paranoid about who they let walk off with their kids. Not that I blame them; Katie herself had run into trouble with someone who’d falsified records to make it look like he was an accepted guardian. I’d gotten her out of that, which was only fair since it had been my fault she was even there to begin with, but falsifying records might have been the easier way to go based on how much information I had to turn over before it was okay for me to pick her up from school. It wasn’t something I did often, but my schedule was better for it than Nate’s, most days, and while Katie was usually fine on her own, I knew she liked having someone to meet her.

So I pulled what little volition I had together to bike down to Allston and stand outside Katie’s school with a permission slip that said it was okay for me to be there. There were worse places to be on a day like this; the bright blue of yesterday’s October had faded into sullen gray, one month clocking over into the next.

A lingering scent of oil smoke hung in the air, turning the usual dry-leaves tang of fall into something richer and heavier. I could just catch the nuances of it if I concentrated hard. Leaves burning, maybe. I focused on that as the bell rang and the doors slammed open, using it to keep me grounded as the first wave of kids swarmed out of the building.

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