Выбрать главу

“Won’t they see it moving?” Cole asked.

“It won’t matter if they do,” Bergman said. “It looks like an ant.” I set the box on the table and we all stared at it in admiration. “I wish I had more money, Bergman,” Cole said. “I’d join up with you in a second.”

“Thanks.” Only a brainiac like Miles would sound surprised to be receiving such a compliment.

“Perhaps while you all wait for your mission to develop, we can discuss the demon,” said Raoul.

Stone silence as we all realized we couldn’t avoid the subject any longer. On top of the fear that shadowed us I saw frustration too. Our odds seemed so hopeless, nobody much appreciated Raoul rubbing our noses in the fact that we only had a few hours left to enjoy our lives. I looked into my friends’

eyes and thought about how many people go to their deaths pretending everything’s just fine while knowing how utterly wrong they are.

I slapped my hands on the arms of my chair. “How many allies do you figure she’ll bring, Raoul?”

“One for each combatant she had to fight this evening and another to confront those who stood inside the circle,” Raoul guessed.

“So if you count Jack”—which I kinda thought she would—“five altogether?”

“That would be my estimate.”

“Why not more?” asked Bergman. “I figured she’d bring a whole army of demons to overwhelm us.” Raoul shook his head. “The Eldhayr would never allow that kind of massing to occur without reprisal.

But they might overlook a movement of five.”

“Would your people deal with her before she reaches us?” asked Vayl.

Raoul shook his head. “If Cassandra were an innocent I might say yes. But because a contract exists, the other Eldhayr are constrained. As I said before, it could be that the only reason I’m allowed here is to make sure Jaz survives the coming night.”

“Well, that’s comforting,” said Bergman.

Cole spat his gum into the yard and plunked both elbows on the table. “We are so screwed.” CHAPTERELEVEN

One of the greatest traits of any living creature is the desire to survive and the belief, somewhere in the most idealistic part of the mind, that we can take positive steps to ensure that whatever wants to stop us from living gets derailed. Repeatedly, if necessary. Which was why our mutual depression lasted for all of twelve seconds.

At which point Cole banged his fist against the patio table and said, “I know! We attach our souls to our bodies with duct tape. They’ll never be able to take off with them then. Hey, don’t look so skeptical. My dad uses it for everything. It’s held the headboard of his bed together for fifteen years now.”

“Even better,” Bergman joined in. “Coat our souls with Vaseline. That way nothing can get a grip and you’ve pulled off a great gag at the same time.”

And they were off. Even Cassandra had a suggestion, though how we were supposed to snag a hundred hand buzzers this late in the game I had no idea. In the end we sobered up enough to decide the only way we could win was by guerilla warfare, using weapons Raoul offered to provide.

The idea was to lure Kyphas and the other demons away from the house, into a plane where we could defeat them. It would take some time to set up, but my Spirit Guide agreed to set his other projects aside until we’d pulled this one off.

“I’ll take Cole with me to help, if you don’t mind,” he said as he stood.

Vayl and I traded startled looks. We’d been expecting to use our third’s sharpshooting skills in our primary mission. But considering Cassandra’s straits, maybe we could adjust that plan as well. “Can he go everywhere you need to?” I asked Raoul.

“He is a Sensitive,” Raoul reminded me. “That means he can travel on any plane without incurring permanent damage.” He turned to me. “Have you seen the portal I came through? The one just south of the house?”

I nodded. The others gaped a little. I didn’t tend to mention the gate that seemed to follow me wherever I went. Too Twilight Zone when I was striving more for Bewitched.

The flame-framed door that would take Raoul and Cole back to the Eldhayr’s base stood just on the other side of the fence between it and a line of acacia, its center as black as a midnight sky. It would stay that way until Raoul chanted the right words; then it would clear, showing them their ultimate destination.

I described its location to the others. And I told Cole that if someone watched them walk through it, they’d think they were just wandering behind the nearest cover for a quick pee.

Raoul folded up his drawing and said, “We’ll be back as soon as—” He stopped when Bergman’s bug tracker lit up like the table-ready pager they give you at Red Lobster.

“What do I do?” I asked as I picked it up. Blue lights blinked in succession around the edge of the screen, which, itself, had offered me a menu of options and small boxes beside each one to check. “Oh, I see,” I said. I touched the square beside the words Initiate Audio Reception .

Ruvin’s voice, warped into the falsetto adopted by the Bee Gees for most of their disco career, screeched out of the box. “Feel the city breakin’ and everybody shakin’, And we’re stayin’ alive, stayin’

alive.”

As Ruvin grooved through the song, Cole jumped out of his seat and started dancing, his hip wiggle causing Cassandra to poke her pinkies into her lips for an ear-piercing wolf whistle.

I stared for a second before dropping my head into my arms. “We are all gonna die.” Vayl said, “He is actually quite good.”

I turned my cheek and laid it on my elbow. “You can’t be condoning this!” He shrugged. “This is why I relish rubbing shoulders with humans. You live. You do it well and thoroughly. Not all of you,” he said, his glance wandering to Bergman, who’d pulled the box from my hands and was poking it with multiple fingers like it had sprouted a keyboard. “But most of those who are loyal to you know how to squeeze every last drop from their experiences. I had nearly forgotten the intensity of emotion wound around that philosophy.”

“Were you that way? When you were human?”

He closed his eyes, trying to remember past the centuries of vampirism to a time when he’d been a husband. A dad. He opened his eyes. “Life was hard then. I remember happy times as a child. And again after Hanzi and Badu were born, when we felt sure they would not die as our other babes had. But I never managed that.”

He gestured to Cole, who’d grown a goofy smile that had lured Cassandra into his dance.

I sat up and reached for Vayl’s leg under the table, ignoring the itch that fired across my back as my hand smoothed up and down his thigh. “I’m kinda glad you never had that in common with Cole. He can be such a doof.”

“And that does not appeal to you?”

The blue in his eyes began to morph to aqua as his fingers trailed across the top of my hand, sending prickles of heat up my arm, my neck, to my cheeks. My reaction? I leaned forward and sawed at my back with fingernails that I wished were three inches longer.

“Allow me,” murmured Vayl, the amusement in his voice making my jaws clench. I let him scratch at the rash and decided this moment had to be the least romantic ever, anywhere. But, damn, it felt good!

All movement in the backyard stopped as Ruvin’s voice piped out of Bergman’s doohickey again.

“G’day, mates! Welcome to Canberra! Here, let me help with your baggage!” Sounds of a hatch rising, suitcases being flung, doors opening and closing. And, after a time, Ruvin starting his Jeep.

Raoul got up. “Cole, this is shaping up to be a long, boring eavesdrop. I think we have better things to do?”

Cole nodded. But then his attention whipped to the box as Ruvin said, “Bugger me, what a fright you gave me there! I thought you were sitting in the back with the rest of the blokes!” And the reply, quiet but firm, “The Ufranites have taken your family. If you want them back safe, get out of the car and go to the rear.”