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I cocked my head. “How do you know this?”

“That’s the other reason I brought you here,” he said. “When you look around this room, you just see a crowd of people.”

I looked around, really only seeing a bar filled with customers and nothing more. “Well, what do you see?”

Caleb raised his hand in a subtle manner and began pointing around the room at various tables. “Witch, witch, druid, warlock—”

“How can you tell?”

“It’s all in the details,” he said. “To be fair, I’ve worked with or for a bunch of them before. But the details are what you need to start focusing on. Look at the first woman I pointed at. That medallion around her neck is a Wiccan symbol. The man across from her has a Green Man tattoo on his forearm, so I’m going with druid for him. That guy who just walked by you, the one in the knee-length leather coat—it caught on one of the chairs, and he had some kind of shiny, retractable bat hanging from his belt inside it. Probably silver.”

I followed the movement of the man Caleb had just mentioned. “He looks familiar,” I said. “I think he used to come in the Lovecraft Café all the time when I was still working there.”

“Eccentric Circles attracts a certain type of crowd,” Caleb said.

“Eccentrics,” I said with a smile. “You sure this isn’t a date?”

“Paranormals,” he corrected. “Focus. It would serve you to learn your own kind.”

“I’m sorry,” I said, unable to take my eyes off the crowd all around us. “It’s a lot to take in. The counting, finding a whole bar filled with our kind of people. It’s distracting.”

“Perhaps too distracting,” he said, standing. He gestured toward the front of the bar. “Come on.”

I stood, still marveling at the crowd. “Where are we going?”

“Back to your place,” he said.

“Cheeky!”

“Still not a date,” he said. “Trust me. I just need somewhere where we can concentrate. And maybe try a little practical magic.”

• • •

Caleb refused to talk to me until he had me back at the Gramercy Belarus Building and had helped settle the stone wings I had been constructing on my shoulders.

“I still don’t see how going to the bar is supposed to help with all this,” I said, adjusting my balance so I wouldn’t fall over from their weight. “What’s that got to do with my learning to fly?”

“Tonight was bigger than just flying, Alexandra,” he said. “It’s about why you’ve been having trouble with the higher abilities you’ve been toying with as a Spellmason.”

As he led me across the broken library out onto the terrace, I asked, “How so?”

“I’ve been asking some questions here and there,” he said, ducking my wings through the hole where the French doors used to hang. “There’s one thing most of the practitioners back in Eccentric Circles have in common. All of them possess an ability to split their mind, which I don’t think is something I’ve seen mentioned in what you’ve shown me on Spellmasonry.”

“And that’s helpful how?”

“You spend your time trying to bring stone to life with your main focus,” he said, pulling out a vial of Kimiya and rubbing it along the top edge of the wings, “but I think your arcane discipline demands you hold focus on several things at once. You have to be able to split that focus several different ways. It’s not enough just to control stone; you also have to be able to finesse it in other ways. Bringing you someplace with a lot to concentrate on hopefully loosened you up to that a bit. At the very least, it should have helped you a bit with focusing your back mind on counting. Which is what I want to test now.” He checked the inside lining of his coat. “I’m really starting to run low on the Kimiya. And my reverse engineering it is still likely to blow us both up, so that’s still an issue, but right now we need to do two things: First, you need to practice with these wings.”

“How?”

“By flying,” he said.

I laughed, nerves behind it all. “Are you serious? Now?”

“No time like the present,” he said with a smile.

“And what will you be doing?” I asked.

“Watching you,” he said, “and also thinking about the second part of my plan for your flight. I have to come up with the best way to capture Stanis.”

My stomach sank, knotting up. “So I’m . . . what? Bait?

“That’s such an ugly word,” he said, pulling out his notebook and beginning to scribble in it. “I prefer to think of you as . . . motivational material.”

No matter what Caleb called it, I still felt like a worm ready to be put on the end of the line. Still, I hated to be defeatist. Maybe I could keep myself in the air. Sure, failure was an option, but so was success.

I stood there, the wings feeling all the heavier now that we had moved out into the wind on the terrace. “So what do I do?”

“I want you to concentrate on bringing the stone to life, then using that rhythmic count, keeping it in time and using the tempo to lift yourself off the terrace.”

I gave a grim smile. “You make it sound so simple,” I said. “Dying is simple, too.”

“Just go up a few feet and hold your position,” he said. “We just need a proof of concept, not breaking the sound barrier or anything.”

“Right,” I said, and pushed images of my falling out of the night sky from my mind. I pressed my power out into the wings, grinding them to life as my connect set in. With the memory of Rory’s Swan Lake audition piece in mind from our youth, I forced the wings into a quick and fluid pattern. Ignoring the press of their physical weight against my body, I pressed them harder and harder as I quickened my count. When my feet left the stone of the terrace, I pushed the count to the back of my mind, rising several feet into the air.

“I’m doing it,” I said, unable to suppress a giddy laugh. “I’m actually doing it.”

“Okay,” Caleb said, looking up from his notes. “Now tell me about the people back at the bar.”

I wavered in the air as my wings fell out of rhythm. “What? I’m flying!”

“Just do it!” he shouted with such force, I almost lost my rhythm again and banked closer to the edge of the terrace, veering toward the alley but pulling myself back up in time.

“You don’t have to be so mean,” I muttered.

“I’m not,” he said, lowering his notebook but not really softening, “but if you can’t do two things at once, or deal with a little surprise, then you might as well let Stanis tear you apart right now because that’s what he’ll do.”

“I’m not going to have to outfly him, am I?” I said, counting. Always counting. “He’s got centuries of practice.”

“And you’ve got now,” he said. “So I suggest you work at it. And no, you won’t have to outfly him. At least, not for too long, anyway.”

“Because you’re going to capture him,” I said. “How?”

Caleb held up his notebook, waving it at me. “I’m working on it,” he said. “But by rough calculations, we may exhaust what remains of both our Kimiya supplies. Unless you want to try my home brew again, but that still has a 70 percent chance of blowing us up.”

All of the remaining Kimiya? “What do you have planned?” I asked.

“You work on your part, and I’ll work on mine,” he said. “Now, tell me about the people you saw at the bar.”

I thought back on earlier that evening, this time my wings staying at a constant rate, holding me in place about ten feet over the terrace. Now I needed to work on splitting my mind to recall the people in the crowd, not to mention that it was already splitting away wondering how we were going to deal with the Kimiya shortage . . . My wings wavered but I refocused my efforts, hoping this would help when it came to flying against Stanis once Caleb’s plan was ready.