whore for his car, the best disguise he could wear was simply generic clothing-nondescript grays and black. Not only had I spotted him on Batofar, where he had been the man I had mistaken for a centurion, but he had been at the airport too. He'd been Watching, like a true brother. At least, until he'd tried to warn Henri on the bridge. 'You their hunting dog?' I asked.
The leys, coming back.
Rene ignored my jibe. 'They're back there,' he said, pointing with his chin. 'In the next chapel.'
Girard cracked his knuckles, an ugly smile splitting his face. 'Henri said you were back,' he said. 'I'm glad he didn't kill you. I wanted that pleasure for myself.'
There was some new scar tissue around his right eye, and the iris canted inward. I caught myself wondering if he had gotten that from the mob at Bechenaux. I had gone to ground for some time after Bechenaux, staying away from the old haunts, so I wouldn't
Nor for Antoine, really. But, then, I had been specifically targeting him. The rest got caught in the middle of our pissing match.
'You sure you boys want to do this?' I asked. The Chorus danced on my fingertips, energy angels ready to strike. 'Here. Now. You think you have enough strength?'
Jerome and Charles had come prepared. They side-stepped around the brothers, pulling guns from beneath their coats.
The Ossuary wasn't laid out like a regular chapel space. Not so much as an afterthought, but more from the long period over which most of the buildings on the mount were raised, the Ossuary became a hodge-podge of pillars and vaults. Nothing really matched, and other than the space along the inside wall, there weren't very good sightlines. Which made it easier for me to raise the Chorus' peacock shield and get behind a pillar without taking a bullet.
The report of their firearms was close thunder in the room, and the bullets whined as they ricocheted off the walls.
The Chorus had already put together an overlay of the Ossuary, marking each of the Watchers for me. The Vaschax brothers, for all their bluster, knew I was a distraction, and under the cover of the Travelers' guns, were making a move toward the Chapelle Notre-Dame-sous-Terre. Rene wasn't hanging back like I expected him to; he was creeping along the eastern wall, trying to surprise me from the other side. I couldn't really afford to play cat and mouse among the bays and niches of the Ossuary. There were too many of them. I needed to take the fight to them, and quickly. Jerome and Charles had the only guns-so far-and they were semi-automatic hand cannons from the sound, but the others would be able to do some magick. Nothing big and dramatic. Just the quick and dirty sort of spells that had been my bailiwick for years.
I went to my right, toward Rene, and nearly took a barrage of gunfire in the face. The rounds left floating star marks in my etheric shield, exploding nimbuses wreathing the hot metal. I ducked behind another pillar, spitting out dust and rock chips as more bullets chewed the column near my head.
Hot and misshapen, they sizzled in my palm when I spit on them, and the Chorus outlined each bullet with violet light. Steam rose between my fingers as I squeezed them tight, marking them with saliva and flesh.
Rene was closer than I expected him to be, and I didn't get my fist primed soon enough. He blocked the jab easily and countered, forcing me to react and step back. One of the bullets slipped from my fist, and without the proper motivation of my energized Will, it tumbled slowly through the air, turning end over end like a fat and lazy bumblebee. Rene ignored it, knocking aside my arm with a sweep of his own, before landing a solid blow against my stomach.
There was power in his fist, and I had to divert energy or he would have pulped my intestines. It was like getting kicked by a horse, and I was still recovering when Girard came at me from my left. Head down, arms wide. The Chorus folded over me, and I tucked my chin against my chest and tried to cover my head as Girard slammed into me. The Chorus groaned as the magus' Will slammed into me too, and I blinked. .
. . on the ground, Girard on top of me, his fists banging against my arm and shoulder.
For a moment, the impact of Girard's hands vanished, and I felt nothing. Floating in a zone outside the flesh, outside time. I stared at Rene, and he stopped pulling at Girard. I couldn't see his eyes behind the glasses, but I knew he was staring at me.
He let go of the other man as I spiked Girard with the Chorus. Right through the chest. All the blazing fury of his soul suddenly laid out before me. The Chorus slammed into his center, and he jerked back, as if I had suddenly become electrified. He wanted to hit me again, the fierce intent was still in his eyes, but his hand wouldn't move. He tried to open his mouth, but it wasn't his anymore. He had no control over his flesh, and as the Chorus lit up his spine to sever the connection between the soul and the flesh, the light in his eyes changed. He knew, too.
Rene reached across the nave with his Will and grabbed the wooden bench near the wall. He jerked it toward us with magick and the bench slammed into Girard, knocking him off me. The physical connection between us was broken, and the Chorus snapped hungrily at the tender core of Girard's soul, but they couldn't break it open. They had their hooks in him, but without physical contact, it was going to take them a moment to take him apart. A moment he was going to spend fighting back.
One of the pair with a gun came around the edge of a column, and Rene was already half-turned toward him when I rolled over, whipping my arm around. Even though I had lost track of time, I hadn't stopped protecting what lay in my hand, and as I moved, I transferred the energy in the two bullets. Potential becomes kinetic, and the bullets burned in my hand as I let them go.
Girard was on one knee, shaking and spitting as his soul found purchase in his flesh again. He was aware of what flew out of my hand, and he flinched. It was all he could do.
Not that it mattered. He wasn't the target.
The gunman gurgled-it was Jerome-and his head went back, a new hole opening in his neck. Rene caught the gun as it fell from his hand-having Seen that future-but he paused as something else clattered to the floor of the chapel. He stared at the black shape on the floor, the broken shard of an object that seemed out of place, and it took him too long to realize that it was a piece of his sunglasses.
Rene turned his head in my direction and his sunglasses, the right lens shattered and broken, hung crookedly on his face. 'No,' he whimpered. There was blood on his cheek from where the bullet had grazed him.
The Chorus blew through him as they dove for Jerome's soul, and he shuddered at their touch, knowing it was his turn next. They hit the coruscating column of light coming off the fallen gunman, and Rene shielded his naked eye from the sudden flare of psychic light as the Chorus devoured the rising soul. I felt it almost immediately, the cells of my body singing with all the energy coming back through the perpetual contact I had with the spirits.
Girard started shouting a spell, his mouth wide. I didn't even listen to his words. They didn't matter. He