leaned forward as if trying to keep the door closed. She couldn’t stand this for much longer.
But she had an ally. She needed to call up power again. To do that, she needed life, energy that a bodiless soul and a shadow creature couldn’t draw on.
She turned inward and cried, “Cormac!”
And he
Spheres of energy formed in both his hands. She brought Cormac’s callused fists together, aimed them at the beast. She couldn’t contain the power, couldn’t guide it. Could only force it away from her and hope for the best.
Colored light bathed the world, at least the space of it in front of her. She closed her eyes, ducking away from it, and still it burned.
The demon took the full force of it. The light chipped away at its form, tearing off pieces until it became pockmarked, full of holes, and the holes grew larger, and it screamed. Then there was nothing but light, and the light itself disappeared.
She blinked—or he did. She was having difficulty with pronouns. They looked around together.
An amplified voice filled the cavernous room, barely audible. Prisoners milled, confused, staring perplexed at bloodstained hands. Projectiles flew in from far corridors, people scurried out of the way, and white smoke began to fill the air. Someone shouted.
A soft hand lay across his brow. A woman’s hand, smelling clean, like soap and lavender. He opened his eyes and saw Amelia sitting at his bedside.
Taking stock: He wasn’t in a cell, but in a soft, single bed, part of a row of them lined up, heads against the wall. Several of the other beds were occupied by sleeping, bandaged figures. Prison infirmary.
He didn’t feel hurt. Only tired. He also didn’t want to try and move.
Amelia smiled at him. “Good morning.”
He was confused. He was here, awake, and she looked solid. He could feel her, flesh against flesh.
“Are you real?” he said.
She tipped her head, acknowledging the question. “A bit. Partly. I’m not sure.” The smile faltered.
“I can smell you.” He reached for her hand. She gazed at his for a moment, almost startled. Then took hold of it. Then disappeared.
A man in a white lab coat walked to the bed. “Good, you’re awake. How do you feel?”
His fist was clenched at his side, as if he had grabbed at something that had slipped away. That was it, then. She’d done what she came here to do. Stuck around long enough to say good-bye. And now she was gone.
He tried to tell himself that was okay.
The doctor checked his chart, then picked up Cormac’s wrist and counted against the numbers on his watch.
“I’m a little tired,” he answered finally. It was his body she’d used to battle the demon. Of course he was tired.
“You have second-degree burns on your face and hands,” the doctor said. “There was a fire—you’re probably lucky to be alive. You’re sedated to help you rest and to keep the pain down, but in a week or so you should be back to normal.”
He remembered the fire, the riot, and the demon—but what did the people in charge think had happened? So he asked, feigning amnesia.
“The warden’s still trying to figure that out,” the doctor said. “Now, get some rest.”
Cormac felt like something was missing. He’d lost something.
At night, the infirmary never got completely dark. A nurse was on duty in the next room, and light from the hallway filtered in. A piece of monitoring equipment made a faint clicking noise. Red status lights peered out. Cormac stared at the ceiling, wondering. He could live a million years and never understand what had happened. Maybe she wasn’t a ghost but an angel. Trying to give him purpose in the world.
So. Now what?
“Amelia,” he said.
He uncurled his right fist, the one without the IV needle in it, and raised the arm a few inches. It glowed. Faint, blue, with a nimbus of static. Without his bidding, his fingers, snapped, and the glow dissipated in a crackle of energy. A wizard’s spell.
She was still with him, her power still flowed through him.
He settled more firmly on the pillow. He hadn’t realized he’d been fighting the sedative, holding himself taut. But now, he was floating. He had stopped worrying.
He was ready to go after two days, even if it meant returning to solitary. He still didn’t know what the fallout from the riot—and his part in it—was going to be. If the powers that be would blame him for something and add a decade or so to his sentence. Hardly seemed to matter because he’d won. They’d won.
But two days on his back was plenty. He didn’t even hurt much. The aggravating itching was all on the outside, now—the burns were healing. At least they’d let him take a couple of books from the prison library. He was in the middle of another of Kitty’s recommendations:
When Olson entered the infirmary, Cormac scowled, preparing the arguments to get him out of here. The counselor didn’t seem to notice and pulled over the chair at his bedside. “You’re looking much better.”
Cormac frowned and looked at the ceiling. “You’re going to ask me what happened, and you won’t believe what I tell you.”
Olson made a thin, wry smile. “Actually, I think I might. We have surveillance footage of most everything that happened. We’ve collected the evidence we need in a few assault and murder cases we’ll be prosecuting. You’re not involved in any of them, if you’re worried. But you did … something, didn’t you?”
“That didn’t actually show up on film, did it?” Most of this stuff didn’t record too well in any form, or it would have come out a long time ago.
Olson narrowed his gaze, a perplexed expression. “I can’t exactly say what I saw. I saw you. You did something—and it all ended. I was hoping you could explain it to me.”
Cormac stared. Where did he even start? There are more things in heaven and earth … “I don’t know how to explain.”
“Just tell me,” Olson said. “Tell me everything.”
Cormac did. Everything except Amelia. He made vague explanations about a demon haunting the place, hungry for blood, gathering power, and about how he’d picked up a spell that banished it. He tried to make it sound matter of fact, like he hadn’t even been sure it would work and he’d have been just as happy to mind his own business. It all sounded crazy and Olson wasn’t buying any of it, he was sure.
“What would have happened?” he said at the end of it. “If you hadn’t done what you’d done to stop it?”
Cormac shrugged. “I don’t know. I suppose you folk would have dropped in your tear gas and knocked everyone out anyway. The riot would have died down eventually.”
“But that thing would still be on the loose.”
The statement didn’t require commentary. Cormac kept quiet, lying calmly, book folded across his stomach.