Tired of the ceiling, Evelyn rolled onto her side and stared out the window, through a crack in the blinds. She knew the ocean was close, but she couldn’t see it from here. All she could see were tall pines, close to the building, waving in the wind, and beyond that an expanse of green hills.

Her last assignment had been no different from any other — she, and her sisters, had been ordered to Los Angeles, where they worked their way into predetermined social circles, romances, and jobs. All of their lives had a relationship in some way to a specific import-export firm owned by one of the Operator’s cartels, and they’d wormed their way well inside it. They’d taken on the local color, become invisible, part of the herd.

Evelyn genuinely did think of humans as a herd — and why not? She meant nothing unkind by it. Cows were benign by nature, patient and useful. She did not consider the comparison to be unflattering.

She and her sisters had collected information, made reports on the mundane activities of their day-to-day lives, and waited for orders. Evelyn had taken a husband, an executive in the company that she was surveying, and had rapidly charmed and won over his two daughters from a previous marriage. She’d spoiled them; Evelyn was too old for children of her own, and she was surprised to find how much she enjoyed it.

It might have been different had they been younger. Evelyn wasn’t much for holding babies and PTA meetings. But both girls were already teenagers, and while they’d been wary and hostile at first, it hadn’t taken Evelyn long to win them over. She hadn’t even used her powers — Evelyn was pretty, fun, and fond of spending money and stylish clothes. She acted more like a friend and less like a mother, taking them for manicures, spa treatments and shopping expeditions in Beverly Hills, and within a few months, she could sense the adoration and hero-worship from the two girls.

Evelyn didn’t feel bad for them, she wasn’t capable of empathy. But she did feel bad for herself, because she’d enjoyed her time with them, their laughter, their whispered confidences, and their shy adoration. She felt bad for herself because she’d been happy, for a little while.

Orders were orders, and even as she poisoned her family’s dinner, Evelyn was philosophic. She planned on living for a long, long time, after all. There would be many more such opportunities, stretched out over as many years as she could manage. And some Witches grew very old indeed.

Still, she was angry with her sister Yolanda. The poison she’d provided was meant to be quick and painless, but had instead induced cramps, vomiting, diarrhea, and then, finally, death. It had taken hours, and it had been disgusting. The girls had been able to beg her to call for help almost up until the end. She was still feeling ill, so maybe that was why she didn’t notice the shadow until it was almost too late.

Or, it could have been the other way — it could have been that since Evelyn was an old and cunning Witch, because she took precautions and slept fully clothed, that her senses were sharp from the misery she’d consumed earlier. Or maybe the Auditors were simply terrifyingly capable, bypassing both the building’s defenses and her own considerable additions effortlessly, but not quite good enough to overcome her instinctual drive to live.

Evelyn stared blankly at the shadow on the wall, cast by her bed and her prone form on top of it, as it seemed to thicken and writhe. She blinked her eyes to dispel the illusion, holding them closed as long as she could manage the nausea, and then opening them again.

The woman stepped neatly out of the shadow on the wall, one foot on the safe house floor, the other still somewhere in the dark behind her, disappearing at mid-calf. Her black hair hung in braids and was knotted with trinkets and coils of wire, almost like a Witch herself. She was tall, taller than Evelyn, and wore something black and heavy that was probably armor, stretching from her ankles to her neck, and heavy, blunt-toed black boots. She waved cheerfully at Evelyn, an automatic shotgun with a conical silencer and nylon grips held meaningfully in the crook of her other arm.

“Good evening, you miserable cunt,” the woman said with a cheerful smile. “My name is Alice Gallow, and I am here in regards to an open Audit, under the authority of Central. Please do resist, as I am in one hell of a terrible mood.”

Evelyn didn’t respond. She was already too busy with a working, or rather, a series of workings.

First, she threw fire in the direction of the Auditor — it was a minor working, and she had no illusions about its chancing of doing anything other than distracting the Auditor — but the illumination and the smoke gave her the opening to activate a second, major working, one that she’d kept almost complete for years, for exactly such a situation.

Evelyn dove backwards, through the wall, into her sister’s room. An outside observer would have been forgiven for thinking that she found a duplicate of herself watching TV in bed in the adjacent room — both she and her sister shared identical features, blond hair, and ice-blue eyes. Even the loose blue dresses they wore were similar.

“Light,” Evelyn screamed at her sister, the one who sometimes called herself Nadia.

Nadia looked up from the television, clearly shocked at her sister’s sudden arrival.

“What do you mean? What’s happening?”

She reached into a pocket and pulled a small, rose quartz sphere from it.

“A transporter, an Operator. She uses the shadows to port,” Evelyn said hurriedly. She removed a length of braided red silk from her pocket, and began tearing it at intervals. “As much light as you can, right now. No shadows.”

Nadia shook her head, swallowing questions, and closed her eyes. Her hand whitened as it clenched tightly around the crystal, squeezing until a fine stream of dust emerged, a small pile of ground crystal on the shag carpet.

The room lit up bizarrely, every surface burning from within; the walls, the bedding, the carpet all shown with an internal radiance. It was brilliant, and hurt Evelyn’s eyes, but it left only the faintest shadows. Evelyn finished tearing the scarf, and red smoke began rising from it, coalescing in a halo that rotated lazily around her head, describing a circle a meter-wide in gently swirling crimson embers.

“Is she an Auditor?” Nadia asked, inclining her head in the direction of Evelyn’s room.

She could only manage a nod, out of breath from the effort of the rapid series of workings. The woman had to be an Auditor; Evelyn had even heard rumors of one who could walk from shadow to shadow. And it was unlikely that the Auditor would have come alone. There was, she knew, no fighting them, not even if they outnumbered her three to one. But, where to run, and how to make it there?

“What about our sister?”

Nadia asked the question softly, as if they were hiding from the Auditor. They both knew she was referring to their other sister, the one whom, just lately, had started calling herself Yolanda.

Evelyn shook her head.

“If she could have, she would have made it here by now.” Evelyn’s glance kept darting to the door and the window, and she wondered what to do. “But, if she were dead, we would know. So we have to assume they already taken her.”

Evelyn felt the ebb and flow of power, as Nadia started another working, probably some kind of attack. Apparently, her sister had finally grasped the seriousness of the situation.

“Don’t think that I don’t appreciate your position.” Evelyn recognized the mocking voice of Alice Gallow, coming from somewhere in the hall, outside the room. “You’ve got to be wondering ‘How did we attract all this attention? What did we do to merit an Audit?’ Am I right?”

Evelyn had, in fact, been wondering exactly that. She’d been prepared for potential interference from Operators, and she’d anticipated trouble ever since the orders had come down to break up the job before it was completed. But the Auditors? What she had been working on shouldn’t have been big enough to merit their involvement.

Well, to be totally accurate, Evelyn had been wondering that, until she heard the Auditor’s voice, still glib and cheerful. Since that time, however, she’d mainly wondered if the working she’d held in reserve would be enough to stop her, or any working that she was capable of for, that matter.

“Plus, you have to be wondering what happened to your sister, right?”

Evelyn shuddered at the implication.

“Well, personally, I hate suspense. So, I’m going to do you bitches a favor, and answer that question right now. Xia, do you mind?”

The window shattered inward, spraying glass as something heavy came crashing through it. Yolanda collided with the bed like a rag doll, and then crumpled on to the floor, limp and motionless. She was naked, mostly, with her clothes reduced to patches and her hair to a smoldering ruin. Her skin was brilliant red over much of her body,

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