"Big beefy guy like you should have a tattoo," I said, clamping my free hand down on his and twisting it round so I could grab it with my trapped one. "Why not try one of mine?"
And then I let all the mana in my left arm surge into the snake tattoo, which reared to life and hissed at Walrus. He screamed and tried to get away, but I held on as the snake slid off my arm and latched on to his.
Walrus stumbled away, tumbling to the ground. "Get it off me!" he screamed, twisting, doing a passable St. Vitus's dance. All he was doing of course was irritating the hell out of it; you could hear the tattoo hissing and sparking as it coiled over his body, looking for a comfortable home. "Get it off me! Get it off me!"
"Ready to give up?" I said, dropping my vest, pulling off my turtleneck and my sweat pants to reveal a sports bra, short pants- and a hundred magical tattoos.
"-get it off me-get it off me-" Walrus screamed, getting up and stumbling away.
"Crap," I said, watching him go. Apparently my snake wasn't coming back. "I'm going to have to tattoo another one."
I heard motion inside the Masquerade, and twisted around sinuously, drawing mana from within my body, concentrating it in my hands, and letting it sparkle across every inch of my tattoos. I prayed this would work; I'd never tried it before. It relied on one very simple thing: magical tattoos aren't just designs. Their meaning depends on the intent of their wearer.
The vines on my body leapt out into the air into a beautiful spiral cloud, and I stretched forth my hands and murmured, "Spirit of falclass="underline" peace, and quiet" I could have said anything, but somehow, I knew just what I wanted and just what to say. It was perfect-and a thousand falling maple leaves in a hundred different colors seemed to detach from the vines and blew gently into the entrance, a glowing, quiet wind.
I stared in awe at the magic I'd created. I'd never understood the full extent of my power until that moment. The crucible of the last few days had opened me up to profound sensations, and my new role as Cinnamon's protector added a fierce rush of energy to my fear and
… and my rage. Suddenly, I commanded a universe of raw emotion, all of it bursting from the visions inked on my skin.
Two men ran out in complete silence, their mouths moving without sound. One drew a gun and raised it at me, and I curled the opposite way, murmuring, "Spirit of home: safe and sound." The vines contracted, the remaining leaves curling around me, and the bullet he fired bounced harmlessly, almost soundlessly, away.
One of the men paused, but the shooter kept running straight at me, raising his gun like a club. I cried, "Spirit of fire: color and light!" and the head of the dragon reared up, dousing his face with a rainbow of flame. But I could tell I was running out of juice, so as he fell back, I clenched my fists, concentrated on my back, knelt and said, "Spirit of air: take to flight!"
A hawk tattooed onto my back detached itself and flew at the final man, who ran away, screams muffled by the silence spell. The shooter was writhing on the ground, his face a flickering mass of tattooed fire, his cries silenced by the gentle fall of glowing maple leaves. He'd live, but would be sore as hell with some pretty hardcore face tattoos. Walrus was similarly gone-but as I turned, Baldy stood back up, blinking.
I decked him flat, and my knee started to throb.
I left the downed guards outside and stepped into the Masquerade. The lights were out, but I could see pretty clearly. The stairs to Heaven were blocked off with boards and the door to Hell was locked, but Purgatory was open. As I moved out of the range of the dissipating silence spell, I started to hear the world around me again. Then a deep, resonant voice spoke, closer than I expected, and I ducked down.
"Show me," the voice commanded.
"Let's save it, at least until the guards bring her in," a petulant, higher-pitched voice responded. "After all, I prefer to work with an audience-"
"Stop balking," the voice said. "Show me what you mean by 'creative.'"
"You don't get it, do you," the petulant voice said. "Sure, you've got the guts to strip off a bit of skin of someone you've killed-"
"I must work on the living," the deep voice said. "The magic will not work otherwise-"
They were at the far end, at the little dance area past the DJ stand. I crouched low, trying to worm my way along the right wall to the bar, to get closer. There were piled boxes and glasses at the end of the bar; slowly I raised my head up, to get a better view. There was a rough table, a steaming black kettle, and- ^
Transomnia, holding the pruners in one hand-and Cinnamon aloft in another.
38. GLOVES OF LIQUID FIRE
"Sure, you work on the living, but you never make it last," Transomnia said. He'd upgraded his coat to a long, black Hellraiser affair. In one hand he effortlessly held Cinnamon, whimpering and bleeding, arms bound behind her with silvery barbed wire. In the other, he held the pruners, twitching, snipping the air with them. "You've got guts. But no strategy."
"You're stalling," the other figure said, a shorter, hooded figure in an ornate brocaded robe whose face was completely hidden from view. "You don't have the will to-"
"Maybe you don't know me as well as you think," Transomnia said. "You're an expert at sacrifice, but you don't know the first thing about torture. Punching, slapping, bruising-fine for foreplay. But snipping- you can't take it back."
"We're going to kill them," the robed monk said. "We need hold nothing back."
I gathered my power into the yin-yangs. If I could hit him hard enough with a burst of lightning, it might knock Cinnamon from his hands and give me a chance to save her.
"If you're gonna kill them, fine, you can do things you can't take back, but for hostages-you save that," Transomnia said. "If you keep the hostages unspoiled, it leaves you free to say: 'That's far enough, Dakota.' "
I froze. The hooded figure looked around sharply, and Transomnia grinned widely, showing his long, sharp teeth as he raised the pruners and pointed straight at me. The hooded figure looked over in shock, but I stayed frozen behind the bar… until Transomnia drew the pruners back aside and pointed in front of the two of them in invitation.
"Now, Dakota," Transomnia said, "or I show you both what I mean by 'creative.'"
I stepped out to the end of the bar. Nothing now stood between them and me but the table, and the steaming kettle of black fluid.. . sitting atop a tin of canned heat.
The hooded figure shifted slightly. "Are those the last whispers of a silence spell, Miss Frost?" he said, extending his hand in a slow movement through the air. "And fire? And a bird-of-prey projectia?" He rubbed his fingers together, as if he could feel the very texture of the mana in the air. "I am impressed. You have exceeded my expectations."
"Well," Transomnia said. "I can't say the same for my rent-athugs."
"I told you to warn them about her magic," the hooded figure hissed.
"I did. Perhaps they didn't believe me, or perhaps they thought she would have more sense than to risk a hostage," Transomnia said, glancing at Cinnamon. She mmmm'd and kicked, and Transomnia shook her once, a sharp snap that flicked her head back and forth and made her body go limp. "Did you kill them?"
"No," I said. "They're all still alive. I just ran them off-"
"Damnit, if you were going to fight you could have at least done us the courtesy of killing them," Transomnia snarled, fangs flashing. "Now I'll have to run them to ground. I hate tying up loose endsspeaking of which, step up to the table, Dakota."
He pointed to the table with the shears, but I stood frozen.
"Ever smashed a cat's brains out against the wall?" he said, giving Cinnamon another shake. "Like salsa made from steamed cauliflower and cranberry sauce-"
I swallowed. Cinnamon claimed she could soak up bullets; but you could kill a were by cutting off her head, so there was no way letting him slam her brains out could be good. I stepped forward to the table, scowling. "Hurt her, and I'll-"