If you bumped into him in a club or saw him walking after dark, badly lit by the street lamps, you’d think, “What a handsome man.” But he was standing only feet away, brightly lit by the late afternoon sunshine. That perfect skin wasn’t bare epithelium, but a pelt of very short and dense down. What appeared to be hair at first glance was a mass of thin, fine feathers. A Draziri. One of the higher caste, too, judging by the rank on his forehead.
“Good evening,” he said, his voice cultured and clear. Unlike the Hiru, he obviously had access to expensive tech.
“Good evening.”
“I desire a room.”
“We don’t have one available at the moment.”
He blinked, his feathered eyelashes fanning his cheeks. “I was led to believe your inn has few guests and more than ample accommodations.”
“If you’re familiar with innkeepers, then you must know that we reserve the right to choose our guests. At this time, unfortunately, I can’t provide you with a room. Perhaps at a later date.”
“I must have a room,” he said.
“There is a wonderful inn over in Dallas, only a few hours from here.”
The Draziri stepped closer.
“I know the Hiru is here,” he said, his voice quiet but charged with menace.
“You should be on your way.” Take the hint.
“Let me in. It will be over quickly.”
“The Hiru is beyond your reach.”
“You have a beautiful inn,” he said. “I can hear other guests and a child playing on the grass.”
You bastard. They would shoot Helen. That was the plan. Shoot Helen and trade her or her dead body for the Hiru.
“Your situation is complicated,” he said. “I have led many raids in my lifetime. They can be easy and fast or slow and messy. There are so many beings on the grass who could accidentally get in the way. And a child. Such a lovely child. It would be a shame if she got hurt.”
The two others moved toward the lawn. The roots shot out, impaling both figures. There was no sound. No screams. I pulled with my magic. The roots sank into the ground, pulling the two bodies with them.
The conversation on the lawn died.
The roots surfaced behind him with a rustle.
The Draziri turned and saw two corpses suspended above the ground, each with a thick inn root piercing its mouth and exiting out of the back of the skull.
“You’re right. My niece is a lovely child. It would be a shame if something happened to her.”
The Draziri stared at me, unblinking. “You’re arrogant. I’ll have to teach you humility.”
I felt Sean behind me.
“You didn’t do your homework. This is my domain. Here I own the air you breathe.”
“I always get what I want. One way or—”
“Out.”
He flew from the driveway as if jerked back by an invisible hand, cleared the hedges, and landed on the street in a clump. A truck roared down the street, threatening to run him over. The Draziri leapt out of the way, like a length of black silk jerked out of sight, and vanished into the Avalon subdivision.
“You should’ve killed the scary white one,” Wing said behind me.
“Better the devil I know than the one I don’t.”
I turned. Wing stood in the kitchen doorway. The feathers of his crest lay so flat against his head, they looked wet. He was terrified.
“Do you know of Draziri?”
The Ku nodded. “They don’t kill because they are hungry. They kill because they like it.”
“You’ll be safe here at the inn,” I told him.
“We have his face,” Sean said. “We’ll know his name, and then we’ll figure out what makes him tick.”
I dug in the pocket of my jeans, pulled out the dollar Sean had given me, and offered it to him. “You’re hired.”
“You drive a hard bargain,” he said and took the dollar.
“I know.” I put my arm around Wing. “Come on, we haven’t finished dinner.”
Outside everyone at the table looked at me. Helen sat on Maud’s lap.
“They found me,” the Hiru said quietly. An awful finality resonated in his voice. He sounded like a being who was looking certain death in the face.
They found a world of hurt, that’s what they found. “Gertrude Hunt accepts your proposition. We will grant the Archivarius sanctuary.”
You could hear a pin drop.
“Why?” the Hiru asked finally.
“Because nobody threatens me or my guests in my house. They don’t get to intimidate me, they don’t get to harm my family, and they don’t get to kill my guests. They need to learn what the word no means, and I’m going to teach them that lesson over and over until they get it.”
Nobody said anything.
Arland reached over, speared a heap of brisket with his fork, and put it on his plate. Caldenia smiled without parting her lips and sliced through her chicken with a single, precise stroke of her knife.
“We’re going to have fun, my flower,” Maud told Helen.
Helen bared two little fangs.
“Dessert!” Orro announced. “Roasted pears with espresso mascarpone cream.”
“I’ll take two,” Tony said.
CHAPTER 6
I closed my eyes and envisioned the inn. When one entered Gertrude Hunt through the front door, they saw a perfectly ordinary front room. Directly opposite the front door, on the wall, hung the portrait of my parents. It was unavoidable. If you entered the inn, you saw the portrait. During the peace summit, I formed a hallway behind the wall, moving the portrait back slightly. If you walked to the portrait, you had the option of turning right or left. One way would take you to the stairs leading to the Holy Anocracy’s wing and the other would bring you to the barracks of the Hope-Crushing Horde. Both places opened to the Grand Ballroom. According to human science, I’d bent space in ways it wasn’t supposed to function, but the inn was its own microcosm, reaching through dimensional boundaries and tangling the fabric of space.
In my mind, I pushed the Grand Ballroom back. It slid deeper into the expanse of the inn, the hallways leading to it stretching to maintain the structure of entrances and exits. Ten feet, twenty, fifty… Good enough. I reached deep below me. The core of the room pulsed and I pulled it up. A deep rumble shuddered through the inn as the chamber slid into its new place directly behind my parents’ portrait. I felt the cables sliver through the walls, anchoring the room’s equipment. The wall under the portrait split, pulling apart as if it were liquid to form a doorway. A wooden tendril caught the portrait before it had a chance to fall and carried it into the new chamber. I followed it.
The new space was a perfect sphere, its walls a smooth beige. In a time of need, the inn would send the feed from the outer cameras to it, giving me a 360-degree view of the inn’s grounds. In the center of the room, a section of the wood lay exposed, its telltale striped texture reminiscent of mahogany and bristlecone pine. A living branch of the inn, an artery to its heart. This was the war room, the heart of the inn’s defenses.
I stepped onto the wood. Magic waited, expectant. I closed my eyes and let it permeate my senses. My power stretched, connecting, flowing to the furthest branches of Gertrude Hunt. If I had wings, that’s what it would be like to spread them.
The bond between the inn and the innkeeper was far greater than the bond between a servant and master or pet and its owner. We existed in symbiosis. When an innkeeper died, the inn went dormant, falling into a deep sleep. With each passing year without a bond, the inn would slip further and further away, until finally it petrified and died. When I had found Gertrude Hunt, its sleep was so deep and it had gone so far, I wasn’t sure I could wake it.
The bond went both ways. Few innkeepers survived the destruction of their inn. Some died. Others lost their minds. The inn would do anything for the innkeeper, and the innkeeper had to protect the inn with their life. And that’s exactly what I would do.