“But if you use that magic to break the curse, my first order of business will be to kill you.”
At the moment, I didn’t care. I was angry, grungy, and not a little worried about what Cassandra had told me. And for some reason, I was convinced I couldn’t fight this ununculous until I’d scrubbed myself clean. I was obsessing, yes, but I didn’t care.
I looked up at Coyote, unafraid. I knew by the expression on his face that my eyes had gone ice green, the color of my mother’s eyes. “Get out of my way,” I said calmly. “Or I’ll do this through you.”
Coyote lunged for me. I stared in shock, not really believing he meant to kill me, but at the last minute, when his hands were wrapping my throat, I realized—yes, he did.
And then Mick was there. Mick ripped Coyote away from me and took the big man down. Coyote’s god power outweighed Mick’s dragon magic any day, but with them both in human form, neither using magic, they were well matched in strength.
While the two of them fought it out on my earth-colored tile floor, I raised my hands, willing the worst of the Beneath magic to come out and play. White-hot light roared from my fingers and hit the door full force. The hotel shuddered, glass tinkling in the windows.
I threw back my head and laughed. I hadn’t felt power like this in months. I’d forgotten how much I loved it.
“Feel that, sorcerer,” I said, my entire body crackling with magic. “Fucking feel it.”
There was a sizzling noise, and sparkling electricity danced across every wall. A high-pitched scream shrilled from the kitchen.
Maya.
I snapped off the Beneath magic—or tried to. A glowing nimbus clung to my hands as I turned and sprinted for the kitchen, Fremont and Cassandra right behind me.
FOUR
WE FOUND MAYA SITTING ON THE FLOOR against the wall, cradling one arm, her black dress hiked up to her hips. When she saw me charge in with my hands glowing white and my eyes bright green, she screamed again.
“Are you all right?” I yelled at her. “What happened?”
Maya’s face was streaked with mascara and tears. “What do you think happened? I shocked myself. What the hell are you doing?”
Fremont crouched next to her. “Didn’t you switch off the power?”
“Of course I switched it off. I threw the main. I’m not stupid. A big arc jumped out of the generator and wrapped around my arm. Damn, and I’d almost gotten it working.”
Had I done this? With my wave of Beneath power, had I sent electricity through the building to electrocute Maya? Or was it the curse simply not wanting Maya—or me—to get the lights back on?
“Don’t worry about the electricity, Maya,” I said, trying to bring myself under control. “We have plenty of candles, and we’re going to break this spell. Let Cassandra look at your arm.”
“She’s a medic?” Maya asked.
“No, but she’s good with a healing spell.”
“A magic medic.” Fremont grinned.
Cassandra tented her hands over her mouth, tears trickling from her eyes. “I’d better not. If the ununculous behind the hex is after me, using magic will draw him here faster.”
“Cassandra,” I said, my jaw tight. “You need to hold it together and help us.”
“I can’t.” Cassandra started to sob, crumpling to her knees. “I can’t. Don’t make me.”
“What’s wrong with her?” Fremont asked, wide-eyed.
I wished I knew. I’d never seen Cassandra lose her cool, no matter how desperate the situation. “Either the hex is making her a little nuts, or the ununculous really is that terrifying.” I sighed. “So, that’s one powerful Wicca and one god down for the count.”
“You still have me,” Fremont said quickly.
“Yes,” I said, giving him a grateful look. “And me. And Mick.”
And the mirror, I added silently. Time to have it send messages. Dragons knew everything about everyone, even though they mostly sat back and observed. I had no doubt that Bancroft of the dragon council would have heard of the ununculous and know who he was. Time to call in my favor.
I dug in drawers for emergency candles, happy we had so many. In the desert, storms summer and winter could easily knock out electricity, and even though we had our own generator, it didn’t always work—like now. Fremont started helping me set the candles into holders and lit them with a butane lighter.
“Fremont, can you and Cassandra fix some food for all of us? Something simple, even chips and dip would work. Maya, come out front with me, and Mick will take a look at your arm. He has healing magic, too. We’ll have our little meal and figure out how to beat this.”
“She’s being team leader again,” Fremont said.
“It’s better than sitting on our asses waiting to be picked off. Now do it.”
Cassandra looked up from her huddle on the floor. “Sorry, Janet.”
Fremont helped Cassandra to her feet and gave me a salute. “Aye-aye, ma’am. We’re on it.”
I put my arm around Maya’s waist and guided her to the lobby. Mick was back at the walls, the fight over. Coyote sat on the stairs to the second floor, near the statue of the coyote my friend Jamison Kee had made for me. Blood stained Coyote’s face where it had run from his nose and a cut on his lip, but Mick looked whole and unscathed.
I gave Maya to Mick’s capable healing—for a man his size, he could be incredibly gentle—and strode into the saloon.
Through the saloon windows I could see the Crossroads Bar, now teeming with life. Floodlights glared to illuminate the motorcycles parked in front, and I saw movement inside the open door. Oh, to be there sipping beer provided by the taciturn Barry Dicks, fending off unwanted passes from drunk bikers. Paradise compared to being stuck in a curse-ridden hotel.
As I turned away from the windows and moved to the mirror, Maya wandered in. She still cradled her arm, but less tenderly now. Mick’s magic would have easily fixed whatever burn or damage she’d sustained.
Maya walked to the window in her high heels and looked out at the bar with the same wistfulness I’d had. “Mick and Coyote are growling at each other again. I never thought I’d say this, but you are acting the least weird of anybody, Janet.”
She flattered me. I went behind the bar, unfolded the stepstool I kept back there, and stepped up to look into the mirror.
“I think it’s time to get Drake,” I murmured to it. “And while you’re at it, tell him to call the Hopi County Sheriff’s Department.” I couldn’t have the mirror contact Nash directly, because Nash was unable to hear it, but Drake knew who Nash was and would find him.
Silence met me.
“Hello?” I tapped on the mirror. “Is this thing on?”
“Janet?” Maya said from the window.
I stood on tiptoe and shook the mirror in its frame. “Wake up, damn you.”
A piece of glass fell out and shattered on the floor. The mirror made no sound, and my breath stopped. It hated pieces of itself breaking, would scream in melodramatic terror when it happened. Simple breakage couldn’t hurt it, but the mirror always acted as though it was on death’s door when a piece broke.
“Hey.” I shook it again. “Talk to me, or I pulverize you.”
Nothing. No Oh, sugar-pie, don’t hurt me, I’ll be good. Or Only if you promise to wear a leather bustier and thigh-high boots.
“Janet, who are you talking to?” Maya asked. “I take it back about you not being weird.”
“Damn it all to hell.” I jumped down from the stool and fetched the broken pieces of mirror, cutting myself on one. I put the pieces into an ashtray, selecting one of the smoother ones to shove into my pocket.
I’d been arrogant, thinking that while the ununculous might be a big, bad sorcerer, we stood a chance to defeat him because we had a magic mirror. Even a minor witch can face the strongest mage if she has a magic mirror behind her.
If the hex had rendered the mirror dormant, we could be seriously screwed.