“He’s like a cockroach,” I said.
Vayl nodded. “I understand fruit flies are difficult to kill as well.”
“All the creepy crawlies you expect to survive a nuking.”
Iona and Viv came in with Albert trudging behind. The Wiccan carried the harness along with the moss. Viv and Albert also toted loads of plants, mostly fungus as far as I could tell, though I might’ve spied some bark among the toadstools.
“Your timing is excellent,” Vayl said.
Iona smiled. “I do know when to step in, don’t I?”
She nodded for Albert and Viv to dump the vegetation in a pile and dropped the harness on top. As she knelt over her treasures and closed her eyes, Vayl pulled me aside. I watched Viv run to Cole, help him up while Jack ran around in circles and whumped them with the broad wags of his tail.
“Jasmine?” I pulled my attention back to my
“Sure.”
“I need for you to be sure.”
“Then will you help me gather up the diamonds the Scidairans scattered around this cairn?”
“Vayl—”
“It is the right thing to do.”
I hesitated. Sighed. Of course, I should’ve thought of it myself. “Yeah, okay.” We went outside to make like little kids on Easter Sunday. Albert helped, and within a surprisingly few minutes we’d picked the cairn clean. It helped immensely that the diamonds glittered in the lamplight, and they’d been set at even intervals around the perimeter.
Back inside, Iona’s spell had sprouted. Literally. An empty water bottle stood by her side, making me think she’d poured the contents on the stuff she’d piled at her knees. And while we’d been gone a lush green ivy had grown up through the mound of moss and herbs, twining around the harness so quickly that I could see the stem stretch and twirl, its leaves emerging and growing to full length before my eyes.
The fresh scent of Wiccan magic filled the cairn, blowing away the pollution of Scidair. Samos/Floraidh panted as Iona touched the vine to their foot and it clung, sending out feelers even more quickly now that it had a solid support to wrap around. Within a minute the vine had done a mummy wrap on the shared body. At which point it began to squeeze.
“It can’t suffocate him. Her. Can it?” I asked.
“No,” said Iona. “That’s not the point anyway. It’s not squeezing. It’s sucking.”
Floraidh/Samos bowed so radically I thought she/he might refracture her/his back. Then the vine broke.
Iona whispered words I could?€ words I barely catch and decided I didn’t want to know. As the ivy retreated into the pile, she spat on it. Then she stomped it. Three times she repeated this process as it withdrew into the mound. In the end she scattered all the ingredients, handed me the harness, and pointed to a small brown nut sitting on the dirt floor of the cairn.
“That’s all that remains of Samos.”
I glanced at Vayl. “Your turn,” I said.
He gestured to Cole. “I cede the honor to you. He did mean to steal your body, after all.”
Cole nodded his thanks, strode forward, raised his foot, and stomped. The nut split under his heel, the crack surprisingly loud in the stillness of the night. He ground it around until he was sure it could never be reconstituted, then he held out his arms to Viv.
She stood still, signed something, to which he responded, “Of course you’re worth the sacrifice. I’d never have offered to trade places with you otherwise.”
She ran into his arms and he kissed her hair as Iona beamed at them and Jack did another one of his circle- the-couple runs.
Vayl held out his hand. “Albert, I have need of my sword now.”
Without a word, my dad passed it over. Vayl unsheathed the blade, causing the Scidairan to clamp her mouth shut tight. She tried to scrabble backward as he advanced on her, but the rocks gave her no escape.
“You wouldn’t kill me!” she screeched.
“You are right.” He flicked the blade, making a clean cut across her forehead. “But I know someone else who would.” He stood up. “Oengus?”
Floraidh laughed. “Do you know how long he’s tried to get to me? I’m so well shielded I could . . .” The words jumped off the precipice she suddenly realized she stood upon as Albert and I opened our hands, showing her the piles of diamonds glittering in our palms.
“Vayl’s got the rest,” I told her. I pocketed the gems. Picked up the bowl and dumped it in her lap. We backed away as an ill wind rose in the cairn. The first slash appeared on Floraidh’s neck. Her scream was echoed by an unearthly howl, like the ones we’d heard in Castle Hoppringhill.
“We’ll still have our revenge on you!” she cried as a wound appeared across her chest and blood spurted. He’d