A perfectly preserved, very beautiful Creole woman lay inside.
Alice Cromley.
Her dress was in decayed shreds, but her skin and hair looked like she’d been put in the stone coffin only hours earlier.
“This is impossible,” I whispered.
A chuckle made me turn away from the macabre scene, to find Sebastian grinning at me with one black eyebrow raised. “After all you’ve seen? Vampires. A goddess. A
“Yeah, and every single one is impossible. Just like this.”
Sebastian’s chuckle sounded wrong in our current predicament. “Not in New 2. In New 2 anything is possible.”
“Even defeating a Greek goddess?”
Sebastian unzipped his bag. “We should hurry before the sun rises.” He pulled out garden shears.
“Jesus.” My stomach went from tense to sickened in a flash.
“Guess that means I’ll be doing the honors.”
Apparently he hadn’t expected anything else, because he was already turning toward the coffin. He leaned inside and lifted Alice Cromley’s bare foot. I noticed she was missing a little toe.
I turned away and flinched. The snap of bone between the shears bounced off the marble walls. Any minute it would wake the dead. The angry dead, angry for defiling one of their own. I almost fled the tomb.
“Quickly,” Sebastian whispered, sitting down with his back against the sarcophagus and pulling out the mortar and pestle from the backpack, skinning the small toe bone and then drying the piece and dropping it into the bowl. He began grinding, glancing up to see me on my feet and standing very still. “You want to know or not?”
I swallowed, forcing down the panic and fear that made my limbs numb and weak. Everything in me was shouting,
Somewhere in the back of my mind I knew the contents of that bowl were going to find a home inside my body. But I didn’t think about it. Just watched and let my mind go blank.
Seventeen
AFTER SEVERAL LONG MINUTES, SEBASTIAN TAPPED THE PESTLE against the rim of the mortar bowl, sending a minuscule shower of bone powder back into the bowl. “Hold out your hand.”
My nostrils flared. I didn’t move. I couldn’t. My gaze locked onto Sebastian’s, his gray eyes deep and unreadable. A tick flexed his jaw. Just one, but I saw it. Then he reached out, grabbed my hand, and dumped the contents into my palm.
“It freaked me out too,” he said quietly. “But I’d do it again, if I needed to. It’s just bone. Dust. No taste at all. It’s like inhaling a pulverized rock.”
“Pulverized rock,” I repeated.
I trained my mind on the small quarter-size amount of powder in my cupped palm.
It swept through my nasal passages and hit the back of my throat, grainy and. . like rock, as Sebastian said. It gagged me. Too dry against an already arid throat. I couldn’t swallow. It clumped together. My stomach gave a sickening wave, wanting to vomit, sending the signal to my throat just as my vision swam and a tingling sensation surged through my body, snaking under my skin like lightning.
The tomb tilted, rolling over like a carnival fun house.
The side of my face hit the floor. No, not the floor. Sebastian’s hand, which softened my landing and then gently slid out from under my cheek.
My eyes were fixed, my view on the long glow of the candle, which sat on the floor, Sebastian’s knee in one corner and the shadowed bone boxes in the darkness beyond.
I was frozen, completely paralyzed, but my mind kept rolling, kept circling slowly on the fun ride. My eyelids grew heavier and lower, finally able to close in a burst of white.