The Wild Ways (25 page)

Read The Wild Ways Online

Authors: Tanya Huff

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic

BOOK: The Wild Ways
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There were no charms on or around the back door even though the birches would have been the easiest place for Auntie Catherine to emerge from the Wood.
The downstairs of the house had been simply furnished with the sort of heavy, handmade eighteenth century pieces that would cause the most stalwart antique dealer to have palpitations as he worked out his commission. Provided he could find buyers willing to ignore the slight scent of fish.
The decor in Tanis’ bedroom jumped ahead a few centuries to come down in the land of online shopping. Comforter, sheets, shams, curtains, rug . . . everything matched. Bed, dressers, and bedside tables were MDF, shipped flat-pack and assembled. The art prints on the pale blue walls were generic landscapes. The room looked like it had been put together by someone not quite Human but trying hard. Personality showed only in the pile of romantic comedies by the television in the corner, the brightly colored clothing piled and draped over every possible surface, and, the poster of George Stroumboulopoulos on the plaster-and-lathe wall between the two dormer windows. The CBC late night talk show host, who declared he was everyone’s boyfriend, had apparently not been told that Canadian celebrities, particularly those on the CBC, didn’t smolder.
Charlie admired the poster a moment longer, then asked, “So where was your skin?”
“In my underwear drawer. No, the other one,” she added as Charlie reached out.
If the skins could be the size the Selkies wanted, Tanis had obviously wanted hers to not take up much room in a drawer crammed full of matching bra and panty sets. If that wasn’t enough, and it looked like enough for two or three women, a leopard print demi bra hung from one corner of the dresser mirror, sharing space with a fuchsia cami and a lime-green thong.
Charlie waited to see if her fiddler had anything to say, wasted another moment imagining Eineen in a thong, then took a deep breath and set about methodically searching the room for charms. Nothing.
“You were in the room when it was stolen?”
“Bo and I both were. Sound asleep.”
Every other entrance into the house was as bare of charms as the back door. Charlie even checked the chimney just to be on the safe side. Nothing. Just like the RV.
Back in the bedroom, Tanis pulled the note from the drawer in the bedside table and handed it over.
Support the well on Hay Island and your skin will be returned when the wellhead is in place.
The only difference between it and Neela’s note was the entirely expected tearstains.
Leaning back against the big dresser, Charlie hit paper and ink with every
WTF?
charm she knew and discovered nothing. Nada. Goose eggs all around.
But something nudged at her, twanged her subconscious like a familiar song she could only just . . . barely . . . hear. Almost had it . . . nearly . . .
Distracted by the lime-green thong and its reflection, she lost it.
“What now?” Tanis asked as they went back downstairs.
“I have no idea. But I’m not giving up,” she added hurriedly as Tanis started to sniffle. “Maybe I should talk to Amelia Carlson.”
“She’s the head of the second largest oil company in Atlantic Canada.”
“And I’m Charlie Gale.”
Tanis paused at the front door, brows raised. “Can you just walk up to her, then?”
Charlie shrugged. “Don’t know. I’ve never tried.”
The view at the front of the house was amazing. A flagstone path led to a gravel road, across the road a narrow band of beach grass, across that a tidal beach, and across that, the sea. Turquoise close to shore, darkening farther out, distant waves topped with white ruffles—only water separated that shore from Europe. One hell of a lot of water.
And a Selkie.
Eineen crossed the sand, her hair wet and flowing down over her body like a midnight veil, her face too narrow, her eyes too large and too dark, her proportions wrong. Every time her foot touched the sand, it added another note to the song wrapped around her . . . wild seas and drowning men and bones white against the seabed. She met Charlie’s gaze and held it and between one step and the next was still beautiful but no longer
other.
Except for the sealskin she held in her right hand. That was pretty freakin’ other, Charlie amended.
 
 
 
“We all keep some clothes here,” Tanis explained, pouring boiling water into a teapot as Eineen showered off the salt. “Between you and me? Given how much time Eineen’s spending at the festivals and working with the environmental group, I think she’s ready for another landlife.” Her mouth made a perfect O of dismay. “I don’t mean with you,” she added. “I mean, you’re nice and you’re helping and all, but . . .”
“But she’s not really helping, is she?” Eineen had thrown on a purple tank and black cotton skirt. Her hair was still wet but merely hair rather than unearthly tresses. “Or have you found something here?”
“Not a thing,” Charlie admitted, sniffing a homemade cookie for traces of cod. “To paraphrase Dr. McCoy, I’m a musician, not a detective. There isn’t a mark on either site. There isn’t even a place where a charm’s been removed. I have no idea how Auntie Catherine is getting in and getting the pelts out.”
Wrapping her hands around a mug of tea, Eineen looked thoughtful. “Maybe you’re asking the wrong question. Before you ask how, you should ask where.”
“What?”
“How did your Auntie Catherine know
where
to look? How did she know there was a pelt in this house? In Glera’s house? In Seanan’s boat? In Neela’s trailer? How did she know where the skins were hidden?”
Charlie swallowed and sucked chocolate chips off her teeth. “Someone told her?”
The temperature in the room dropped about ten degrees. Eyes, face, webbing, teeth . . .
They had remarkably pointed teeth, Charlie realized. She spread her hands, thought of Aston, reconsidered, and tucked her fingers between her thighs and the stool. “According to Tanis, it always ends with betrayal. If that’s true, then what’s to say you haven’t been betrayed?”
Eineen’s features softened, and Tanis burst into tears. “Bo didn’t betray me!”
“Oh, for . . .” Eineen sighed, stood, and gathered Tanis into her arms. “Hush, little one.”
“Actually, I very much doubt Bo betrayed her.” Charlie reached for another cookie. She appreciated baked goods that weren’t layered in charms. “Gale girls know besotted and he’s clearly, completely besotted.”
This brought on a fresh burst of tears.
“Happy tears?” Charlie guessed.
Eineen shrugged, rubbing comforting circles on the small of Tanis’ back. “The husbands of the other three know,” she admitted. “One of them could have betrayed us.”
“No. Not to Carlson Oil.” Tanis lifted her head from Eineen’s shoulder and wiped her nose on the back of her hand. “I worked with all of them when we stopped the seal hunt and while they might sell us out for a guarantee the drilling would never happen, they’d never do it get a well put in. Not so close to shore. Not so close to the rookery.”
“Jobs . . .”
“They’re fiddlers.”
Charlie shrugged. “It’s Cape Breton; who isn’t?”
“And sure,” Tanis continued, ignoring her, “Glera’s brother-in-law works the oil fields out west . . .”
“Fort McMurray?”
“I don’t know. Does it matter?”
“Evidence of a small world.”
“This one,” she agreed. “But he couldn’t betray Seanan; he doesn’t know about the boat.”
They were almost at something. Charlie could hear all the notes now but not the tune. Not quite. “Auntie Catherine went straight to the underwear drawer. She had to have, because she wouldn’t have bothered cleaning up after herself if she’d had to toss the place.” It was a little harder to tell that Neela’s trailer hadn’t been tossed, given the mess, but the mess, in turn, helped support her theory. It would have taken hours to search through the scattering of toys. “Auntie Catherine has the Sight. Maybe she saw where the skins would be. She could have seen it years ago and only just found a use for the information. Now me, I’m not an auntie, not even second circle—they’re all about connections—and I certainly don’t have the Sight . . .” Charlie couldn’t think of much worse than getting glimpses of the future and having to decide whether or not to interfere. Okay. Advance warning of Justin Beiber might have been worth it but not much else. “. . . so no, not a hope in hell I can find them the same way. But
this
is who
I
am.” She picked up her guitar from where she’d leaned it against the wall, settled it on her lap, and barred her way up, and then down the fretboard before settling to play.
Eineen’s song was deep and mysterious and dangerous, and Charlie couldn’t so much play it as evoke it, letting the bass strings ring as she built the melody above them. Outside, across the road, across the beach, the waves beat out the percussion against the shore. With a wail of strings, her fiddler joined in.
Charlie stood and walked up the stairs, following the music, the stairwell barely wide enough for her to keep playing even with the guitar tipped. The second bedroom held a narrow bed and a lot of clothing; different styles, different sizes, different eras. She stopped in front of a line of brass hooks screwed into the wall behind the door. Stopped playing. Lifted a powder blue chenille dressing gown. Lifted a yellow windbreaker. Lifted a shawl . . .
And found herself holding a sealskin.
It was heavy, it smelled like fish, and the empty eyeholes were creeping her the hell out.
“I’ll take that.” Eineen reached past her, tugged the skin from her hand, and it was a shawl again. Then a fabric belt, wrapped around a narrow waist.
It was possible, likely even, that Auntie Catherine had been able to maintain the glamour. Somehow, Charlie couldn’t see her dragging what looked like a skinned seal all over the province.
“I took Tanis through the Wood,” she said, leaving the room. “I know her song and her skin is a part of it. It doesn’t matter where Auntie Catherine has hidden it, I can track it the same way I found yours. It’s not even tracking really; it’s just joining the pieces. Second verse, follows the first.”
“Now?” Staring up at her from the bottom of the stairs, Tanis’ eyes were open painfully wide.
Charlie flexed her fingers. The Band-aid on her thumb made her grip on the pick uncertain, so she tugged it off with her teeth and then shoved it in the pocket of her shorts.
“I can get rid of that.”
“Thanks, but I’ll take care of it.” Gales didn’t leave their blood just lying around, not if they wanted to survive adolescence. Or, specifically, their siblings’ adolescence. Those sorts of charms always went wrong. “Stand beside me, hand on my shoulder, like when we were traveling . . . and why are you crying now?”
“I just . . . it’s almost over.”
“Shouldn’t you be outside? If you’re going to be traveling,” Eineen expanded as Charlie turned toward her.
“Not yet. First I have to find the missing piece of the song, the part that links Tanis to her sealskin. Once I have it, we ride that to the final chorus. Safer to fill in the blanks before we start moving.”
Feet braced, Charlie relaxed her shoulders and played the opening notes. Listened. Built Tanis’ song up from the touch on her shoulder, from the waves, from her tears, from the love on Bo’s face when he looked down at her. She touched the absence of the skin and, this time, felt the shape of its absence, followed that shape out, away, and . . .
And. . . .
And. . . .
Eineen’s fingers were cool around her wrist as she stopped the movement of Charlie’s right hand. “You can’t get there, can you? And you’re bleeding again.”
Charlie had no memory of losing the pick.
Tanis, predictably, was crying.
“Auntie Catherine knows I’m here,” Charlie growled around the thumb in her mouth. “She’s deliberately blocked me.”
“So now what?”
“Now, I’m heading home.” Early afternoon had become early evening while she played. The three-hour time difference was about to save her ass. “While I’m gone, you guys and your lifejacket group are going to set up a press conference, where you discuss how maybe possibly, a shallow water well wouldn’t be such a bad thing.”
“Why would anyone believe that?” Eineen demanded, arms folded.
“Talk about how many jobs it’ll bring to Cape Breton, that’s the usual ‘get out of jail free card’ around here. But don’t talk to anyone one on one; you’re not actually trying to change people’s minds, you’re just putting on a dog and pony show so Amelia Carlson thinks you’re going along with her plans and doesn’t grab another skin.”
“She’s not stupid.”
“Clearly. But from what I’ve seen, she’s all about the sound bite. She uses television spots to sway popular opinion without ever saying a damned thing. She’ll think you’re doing the same.”
“All right . . .” Eineen nodded, acknowledging Charlie’s analysis. “. . . while we’re doing that, what will you be doing?”

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