“I don’t know!”
Not exactly a surprise.
“What were you thinking when we went through the door?” Maybe calm wasn’t exactly the right word.Tight was closer.
“That if I didn’t get it right this time, you were going to give me hell.”
“This isn’t Hell.”
“How can you be so sure?” Lance demanded, turning to stare down at her with wide eyes.
“It’s my job to be sure.”
“Of Hell?”
“Of what isn’t Hell.” While he was thinking about that, she turned to face the doors. Doors were doors. Fifty feet high and solid gold, two feet high at the end of a rabbit hole—it didn’t matter. If she could get them open and fit through over the threshold, she could use them. In this particular instance, getting them open might be tricky since the doorknobs were a good twenty feet above her head.
A quick glance around determined the area was unfortunately empty of a small table holding a bottle and a note that said,Drink me.
“Incoming!”
Does he have to sound so cheerful about it? Claire turned again and watched as two figures approached from the far end of the hall. Of course, since she couldn’t see the far end of the hall that was an assumption only. Wherever they’d come from, they were moving fast.
Very fast.
Impossibly fast.
One moment they were barely visible in the distance. The next, they were standing barely two meters away.
On the left stood a cat-headed woman, barely covered from neck to ankles in a sheer linen shift. Her fur was pale brown with darker fur outlining golden eyes, lighter fur around the mouth, and two large pointed ears; both pierced, with a small gold ring in each.
On the right, a jackal-headed man, naked to the waist, wearing a pleated linen skirt held in place by a wide leather belt. Two small metal disks, stamped with hieroglyphs, hung from the front of the belt.
Do not go there, Claire warned herself.It doesn’t matter what it looks like, just do notgo there.
“I know where we are,” Lance offered helpfully.
“So do I.” When PhD candidates in Egyptology thought about Hell, they didn’t think about Dante. Granted, neither did Keepers, but that was mostly because they preferred not thinking about hell at all and they sure as…heck…had no intention of handing it helpful definitions.
“They aren’t dead,” Anubis growled.
Bast shot him a disdainful golden glare.“And once again I marvel at your grasp of the obvious.”
“If they aren’t dead, why are they here?”
“Since they aren’t dead, why don’t we askthem? Or maybe you could fill in the details with a little butt sniffing.”
His eyes narrowed.“It doesn’t work that way.”
Claire bit her lip to keep from laughing. Apparently jackals were just as clueless about sarcasm as dogs. She’d seen Austin reduce Rottweilers to twitching bundles of confusion with only a few barbed comments about their bathroom habits. Of course, the chances were good Anubis didn’t drink out of the toilet.
As though thoughts of Austin had pulled her attention, Bast turned the full force of her golden gaze on Claire.“You’re a Keeper, but this isn’t one of the realities you Keep. Why are you here?”
Lesson number one in dealing with gods: don’t lie to them. “I’m trying to return to asituation on the Otherside, but circumstances have landed me with a Bystander and his thoughts keep turning the paths.”
And the corollary to lesson one: keep it simple.
The cat goddess glanced over at Lance.“He holds his thoughts strongly?”
“Oh, yeah. Once he gets something into his head you can’t shift it.”
And right on cue:
“I know why we’re here. This is Meryat’s work! She’s trying to stop me from stopping her by sending me to the Hall of Osiris!”
“Lance…”
“No! It all makes perfect sense!” He gripped her shoulder with one hand and waved the other around the Hall. “She’s trying to cheat the afterlife by sending me…us…in her place.”
“When the ka is strong enough…” Bast began.
“This ka has been bound between life and death for three thousand years,” Lance interrupted. He ignored Claire’s elbow in his ribs—interrupting gods was never a smart action in her experience—and continued. “As soon as it was freed, it sucked the life out of Dr. Rebik.”
Anubis shrugged.“It happens.”
“It does?”
“Sure. Not as much as it used to, though.”
“But that’s not what happened this time,” Claire insisted. “I don’t know about Dr. Rebik and the life-sucking part…” Although, given that Meryat was staying at the guest house, she really hoped Dean was right and Lance’s lunatic theories were just that. Lunatic. Shehad to get back to the mall and Diana, so she’d have to trust Austin to keep Dean safe. “…but I do know exactly why we’re here.” She pointed at Lance. “Bystander. Path. Idiot.”
Bast nodded, gold ring swinging as she flicked her ear.“I believe you. After three thousand years, this Meryat would have to absorb a truly powerful ka, the ka of a Keeper, say, in order to have enough strength to rip the veil between the world of the living and the world of the dead.”
The pieces began to fall together. If Meryat would be that strong after absorbing the ka of a Keeper…“She’s waiting for me to return to the guest house. Dean’s safe enough until I get back, and then she’ll take him in order to take me.”
“I can stop her.”
Claire turned to glare at Lance.“You’re not there. And unless you get a grip on your thought processes, you may never be there!”
“That’s not our concern,” Bast pointed out a little sharply.
Right. Don’t ignore the cat goddess…
“No, it’s not your concern, and I apologize for taking up your time. If you can point us to a door, we’ll be on our way.”
Anubis pointed over Claire’s shoulder.
Right.“A smaller door?”
“That’s the only door in the Hall of Osiris and only Osiris himself can open it. If you were dead, we’d take you before Osiris to be judged, but since you’re not dead…” His muzzle wrinkled as he tried to work it out.
Bast sighed.“Dead or alive, it doesn’t matter; in order to leave the Hall, they have to be taken before Osiris.”
“But we’re only supposed to escort the dead. We could kill them,” he added, looking hopeful. At least Claire thought it was hopeful; she wasn’t too good at reading jackal physiognomy.
“Or we could just escort them to Osiris and let him work it out.”
“I’d be honored to meet the Lord Osiris!” Lance declared, striding half a dozen quick steps forward and five back. “He’d appreciate my plan for dealing with Meryat! I could show him my thesis! No, wait.” He bounced up and down on the balls of his feet. “I don’t have my thesis with me!”
“Does he exclaim everything he says?” Bast asked Claire her ears slightly saddled.
“Pretty much.”
“We could just killhim if you like. No bother.”
Without Lance, the next door would take her back to the mall. The door after that, back to Dean.“Thank you for the offer.” And she meant that sincerely. “It’s tempting, but Lance knows how to deal with Meryat and besides—that whole Keeper thing—I’m not allowed to have even the most irritating Bystander put down.”
“Pity.”
“Sometimes.”
It was a long walk to the other end of the Hall. The tiles were cool underfoot and it would have been a pleasant journey but for the heavy scent of embalming spices in the air and the sound of distant lamentation that started up the moment they’d both left the squares of red tile. At that, the lamentations were preferable to Lance’s running commentary on the Egyptian afterlife.
When Bast’s ears flattened against her skull, Claire grabbed Lance by his much less indicative ear and yanked his head down beside hers. “I’ve come to realize that telling you to shut up doesn’t work, so instead I want you to remember everything you’ve ever heard about the dangers of pissing off gods.” Not to mention cats. “Remember that the gods are invariably described as cruel and capricious and remember that everything you’ve ever learned about them is true.”