Authors: Devon Monk
SHAME
The problem with falling is that there is always something to hit at the bottom.
I hit a fist.
Or rather, a fist hit me. Pounded my chest, broke a rib. Took another shot. Broke two.
Holy shit, that hurt.
Someone was yelling, cursing. Taking my name in vain. I didn't know who I'd pissed off, but there wasn't nobody having any fun here today.
“Fuck,” I gasped, “you.”
The beating paused. A woman's voice filtered through the hell in my head.
“Shame? Are you alive? You'd better stay with me, you son of a bitch, or I will carve you a new one.”
Sunny. Sounded like Sunny. I wanted to open my eyes to find out, but it was everythingâand trust me when I say everythingâI had just to fill my lungs with enough air it could wheeze out of me.
Where the hell was I?
“Just keep breathing,” she said as if that was an easy thing. “Dash! Get your ass in here. He's alive.”
I thought she might be jumping the gun a bit on that one. I wasn't even remotely close to alive yet. Hell, the jury was still out on breathing.
“Jesus,” Dash said. “Get this under his head. Here.”
There was some movement around me, but I still couldn't see Jack, and couldn't feel squat.
“Hello?” yet another voice called out. Took me a second to place it. Finally got it. Cody Miller. The one guy I always got into the most trouble with back in the day. “You two find anything? What are you doing?”
“Calling nine-one-one,” Davy said.
“Don't bother,” Cody said. “They wouldn't know what to do for him.”
“He's dying, Cody,” Dash said.
“No,” Cody said thoughtfully. “I think he's way past that.”
“Can you help him?” Sunny asked. “Cody, do you know of some way to help him?” She sounded angry, but also a little worried. I might have thought it was sweet if I didn't also know she'd been the one slugging me repeatedly in the chest just a second ago.
Where the hell was I?
The lungs were working slightly better, though I couldn't get more than a mouthful of air down into either one of them. The rest of me either was numb or felt like crap.
Time to give the eyes a try again.
One, and a two . . .
Got it. Kind of. Was rewarded with blurry light. Then Dash's face, screwed up with concern, hovering over me. “I'm calling nine-one-one.”
“Give him a minute,” Cody said. “He's almost back.”
“What the hell are you talking about?” Dash said.
“I am saying, he's almost got it,” Cody said. “The hang of living. Well, when I say living . . .”
Shame?
Eleanor floated over from across the room.
Remember why you're here. You have to live. You have to save the world, save Terric, save . . . everything. This is what you came back for. So live.
There was something different about her, something I should remember. Oh, right. She was free. She was no longer tied to me.
That's right,
she said.
I took the jump with you. But I'm here on my own terms now. You need to draw on life, on something, Shame, or you're corpsing out.
“Go,” I wheezed, trying to warn her, “away.”
Dash backed up. So did Cody. But Eleanor didn't move away quick enough.
The hunger inside me was mindless, wild. Any life would doâit just had to be close to me.
No. Not Eleanor. Not again.
I fought for control, desperate not to hurt her.
She didn't have much life in her, but she was an energy. And she was in the hunger's reach.
No!
The magic in me, Death, was too strong. It snapped out, wrapped around her neck, pulled her down to me, and drank her up.
I heard her scream. Tried to let go of her, tried not to tie her soul to me.
And then I couldn't hear anything anymore because everything in me caught fire at the same time, all nerves firing, screaming. I'd be joining the chorus, only I didn't have air for it, and was pretty sure I was rattling around on the floorâkitchen floorâseizing like a mother.
Good times.
Something turned out the lights. Maybe just the overload of pain. Maybe Sunny punched my clock, bless her violent little heart.
I woke up in a bedâmy bed. I was naked, clean sheets around me, a pillow under my head. Didn't want to move and ruin the moment, but my face itched like a million ants were swarming over it.
I lifted my right hand to try to push some of the ants off the side of my face. My hand didn't make it that far.
“Hey, Shame,” Cody said from somewhere to my right. “I thought you might be waking up soon. Welcome back.”
I gave up on making my hand do what I wanted it to do. “I feel like shit.”
“You should. You died.” Cody was sitting in the chair, his feet on the wooden crate of ammo I used as a nightstand.
Right. I thought I'd heard something about that. Seemed to remember there being a bar or something. “Swell,” I whispered. “How long?”
“As near as we can tell, you haven't been breathing for a week. The bullet holes look at least that old. Well, they
did.
Since you came to, you've healed. Well, you aren't bleeding and all the bullets were expelled, which isn't quite the same as healing, but it did seem to help you breathe better. You look like hell on a half shell, though.”
I heard him, I really did. But my brain simply refused to process most of what he was saying.
I'd died. Why didn't I stay dead?
Eleanor floated up behind him. She was almost completely see-through. A black rope around her throat tied her to me.
No. I didn't mean to . . . not again.
“I'm sorry,” I said. “God, I'm so sorry.”
She flipped me off with both hands. Then she floated as far away from me as she could reach, arms crossed over her chest, turning her back toward me.
I'd seen her like that so many times over the years. She was angry. At me.
And she had every right to be. I hadn't meant to consume her again, to tie her soul to me. But I hadn't been strong enough to stop it from happening either.
“Shame?” Cody asked. “Are you okay? You're staring at me.”
“I'm not okay.”
“Can Iâ” he said.
“No. Nothing.” I glanced at Eleanor one last time. Didn't know what I could do to fix what I'd done. Didn't want to talk to Cody about it. “I need to take a leak.”
He pointed to the left. “Bathroom's that way.”
“I know. This is my house, you idiot.” I pushed at the sheet. It resisted my attempts to move it.
Jesus, I was tired.
“I heard talking,” Dash said as he walked into the room. “Shame, why are you moving? You shouldn't be moving. Dr. Fischer is on the way. Where do you think you're going?”
“Bathroom,” I said. I'd pushed the sheet down to my waist and was working on sliding a leg over to the edge of the bed.
“Here.” Dash stepped to the side of the bed and half hauled, half supported me out of it. He didn't say anything about me being naked and dead, and I was too naked and dead to care.
Got me to the bathroom. I tackled the problem of the toilet by propping one elbow on the towel rack and trying not to pass out.
Having managed that, I decided to go for the gold.
Turned toward the shower. Who in their right mind built a shower three miles away from the toilet? Didn't care. I was going to wash this pain, blood, sweat, and hell off me, no matter how long it took for me to do it.
“. . . got it,” Dash said, suddenly appearing out of nowhere, his arm around my waist as he helped me toward the shower. “Almost there.”
“Dash,” I said as we crept ever closer and closer to the shower, which was already on and steaming up the room. Strange. No, Cody was over there, putting something in the shower. A plastic patio chair? What the hell?
“. . . sit,” Dash said, bending with me to fold me into the chair. “. . . dumb idea. If you die on us, Shame, I'm going to kick your ass, you understand?”
Whoa. Kind of harsh on a guy who'd just marched his naked ass halfway across the universe for a shower.
“Take it easy,” Cody said to him. “Why don't you go make some coffee and check on Sunny? I'll stay here and make sure he doesn't drown.”
Maybe Dash said something; maybe he and Cody got in a fistfight, danced the tango, or took up skeet shooting. Didn't care. There was waterâwarm, soft, life-filled waterâpouring down over my body.
Eleanor hovered across the room, still as far from me as she could get. She refused to look at me.
“I'm . . . sorry,” I said. “I couldn't stop it. I . . . El. I'll fix this. I promise.”
She still wouldn't turn.
It would have to wait. She would have to wait. I was too damn tired to do anything but sit and breathe. Everything else, the whole damn living world, would have to wait until I had my feet under me.
Lost some time again. When I woke up, it was dark out. The lamp in the corner of the room glowed softly. I was back in my bed, propped up with pillows so I was not quite sitting. Had a pair of boxers on. I moved a little and bandages scraped against the sheets. Bandages on my arms, my legs, my chest.
I felt like a piñata, the day after the party.
“Are you awake, Shame?” Sunny asked. I heard her shift in the lounger chair set in the corner of the room.
I tried to get moisture in my mouth. “Who do I have to blow for a drink of water?” I rasped.
More rustling; then she sat on the bed next to me. “You don't have to blow,” she said. “Just suck it, Flynn.” She angled a straw into my mouth.
Funny. I sucked and the water hit my mouth with a shocking clean coolness full of flavor. Water had never tasted so good. I got a few mouthfuls of it down before Sunny took it away.
“You are a piece of work,” she said quietly as if she didn't want to wake the other people in the house.
“What, this?” I said, trying a smile. God, that hurt. “It's nothing.”
“Shame,” she said, “you've been dead. For a week.”
“Miss me?”
She didn't say anything for a second or two. Then, “We can't find Terric.”
Gut punch.
“What? What does that mean?”
“He's not here in the house. He's not anywhere else either. A lot of old blood on your kitchen floor, and we're pretty sure not all of it is yours.
“I followed up on some leads on Davy. Think I have a pretty good idea where Davy's being held. Then I came back to get you. To make you come with me and kill the bastards who are holding him. Only no one had seen you. For days. And no one had seen Terric. So Dash, Cody, and I looked everywhere. We finally came here. Don't you ever lock your front door?”
“Why? What could go wrong?”
“Goddamn, Shame. This isn't funny. This isn't one of your play-it-loose-and-it-will-all-work-out schemes. People are dying here. Davy. Maybe Terric, if he's still alive. And you, you jackass. I need you to get your head in this. I need you to . . .” She waved her hand at me.
“Be a weapon so you can save Davy?” I asked.
She gave me a long look. One thing I had to give the woman. She did not back down. Blood magic users. Tough as steel.
“Yes. I need you, and I need the Death magic you carry. You do still carry it, don't you?”
“I don't know.”
“Can you? Know? I need you to know, Shame. Because if you don't have it, then I'm going to go after Davy without you. Tonight.”
“Where?”
“There's a warehouse up in Washington. Outside Ephrata. I think he's there.”
“You worked the Spokane lead?”
She nodded. “I think Eli's there too.”
“Who else have you told?”
“Just a few Hounds. Well, and Dash and Cody.”
“Who has Dash told?”
“No one,” Dash said from the doorway. He looked a little rumpled in a T-shirt and jeans but had his boots on. He also had two mugs in his hand. I thought I smelled tea. “This is off the radar, Shame. We agreed we don't want to drag anyone else into it if we go get Davy.”
“We?” I asked.
He walked in. “Sunny, Cody, and me. We didn't want anyone else in the Authority involved, which is why I haven't even told the boss man, Clyde. He'd just tell us not to do whatever it is we are going to do anyway. And we certainly didn't want to worry Zay and Allie.”
Allie. The baby.
A memory scraped across all the raw and screaming in my head. Something about Allie. Something about her baby. “Is she? Did she have her daughter yet?”
Davy handed me one of the mugs. Half-full, black tea with honey and cream. I pulled it toward me and took a sip. Braced for the explosion of scent and flavor, lost myself to it for a minute or two.
This “living” was a heady thing.
“. . . girl?” Dash was saying. “Shame? Are you listening?”
“No. What'd I miss?”
“Did Allie tell you she was having a girl?”
I looked up at his cautious concern. Checked out Sunny, who was giving me the same look.
“No. Maybe. I don't know,” I said, chasing memories. Someone had told me. Said she was having a girl. Told me more. That I had to save Terric, save the world. Kill Eli. Stop Krogher. No matter the cost.
“Has she had her? Or it? Has she had the baby?”
“Not yet,” he said. “Any day, though. Why?”
I took another swallow of tea, filling my whole mouth with it, shuddering through the glorious riot of flavor. It burned all the way down. “We need to go now.” I held the cup out for Davy, who took it. “Before the baby is born.”
Then I pushed the blankets off.
“I don't think that's such a good idea,” Dash said. “Dr. Fischer wanted you to rest. She said she'd be here in the morning to check on you.”