with the most colorful horse-drawn wagon I’d ever seen. Usual y books covered the design, but since I’d come Vayl had gotten better about putting them back onto one of the three black floor-to-ceiling shelves against the wal s.
Most of Vayl’s rugs had been imported from the Middle East. Beautiful Persian designs that seemed to reveal a new picture every time your eye fel on a different section. Underneath the rugs the floors were wel - maintained, deeply stained pine. But in the den he’d chosen a hand-woven rag rug in al the colors of the rainbow that stretched nearly the length and width of the room. The colors were muted just enough that they lifted the spirit when you walked in, rather than making you want to bang your head against the wal .
The rug stopped at the black marble fireplace. Covering the opening was an iron grate in the shape of a dancing woman, her skirt twirling and her hair flying as she spun in front of the flames.
One night he’d confessed that she reminded him of his mother. Not that he’d ever seen her. Just the picture he’d built in his mind, gathered from watching his grandma and his aunts working through the day. But at night they always seemed to have the energy for at least one dance. That was when I’d asked him about the wagon on his table.
“I painted it,” he’d told me. “It was my first home.” And that was al he’d say. But I spent every moment I could spare staring at it, memorizing the red mini-caboose shape of it that was highlighted by gold-painted slats, a four-square window, and a green roof, al of which rode on ridiculously spindly tires with red spokes. Every time I saw it I thought I understood a little better the motherless boy who’d traveled so far inside that tiny, beautiful rig.
I’d been gazing at that wagon when my twin had said, “I think I can find him,” had risen from the love seat, and left his fiance’s side to stand beside the mantel. He’d real y caught my attention when he grabbed the mantel with both hands, like he needed the help to keep from fal ing.
“Dave?” I asked.
He stared at the single white earthenware pitcher Vayl had set above his fireplace, like if he eyebal ed the wedding party marching across it long enough he might be able to make the flower girls dance right off the container. When he turned around everyone in the room went stil .
My brother is a commander. That alone causes people to sit straight and shut up. But as I looked around the room, at Vayl and Cole on the couch beside me, at Bergman and Raoul in the wing chairs and Cassandra on the love seat, at Aaron uneasy in a chair brought in from the dining room, even at the animals curled up beside the cold fireplace, I knew they shared my dread. It wasn’t just the fading scar on Dave’s throat, an unwelcome reminder of the fact that he’d spent time in the service of a necromancer. It wasn’t only the no-bul shit gleam in his piercing green eyes, or the fact that his time in the desert had hardened him into a lean, muscular warrior worthy of the utmost respect. It was also the haunted look in his eyes, and the way his lips pul ed against his teeth, like he could barely stand the taste of his thoughts.
Cassandra stretched her arm over the back of the love seat, her gold bracelets clinking musical y as she reached for him. He nodded to her.
Cassandra jerked toward him, every one of her ten pairs of earrings shivering in alarm, but he held up his hand. “No. I’m not gonna put pretty words on it. My soul might not’ve been al owed to move on, and that’s why Jaz and Raoul could ultimately save me”—he stopped and bored his eyes into each of us, like he could bury his gratitude so deep we’d feel it every time we woke up—“but basical y I was just a slave with skil s. Anyway, ever since then, some weird things have been happening.”
Suddenly he couldn’t look at any of us. His eyes skirted the room and final y landed on the window, where Vayl had used a couple of bright red shawls in place of curtains. He went on. “I talked to Raoul about it, and he told me it’s a function of my Sensitivity. How, when people agree to serve the Eldhayr, the circumstances of their deaths burn themselves into their psyches. And that they often develop special talents related to that.”
I thought about some of my own abilities—to sense violent emotion, to cause sudden and deadly fires—and immediately understood his point.
He went on. “During my last mission we were tracking an imam who’d reemerged from hiding after fifteen years and was, yet again, recruiting suicide bombers. We had a pretty good source in the area, but when we went to him he told us the guy was dead. We said that was impossible. Our psychics insisted that he’d been active as recently as the previous month. So he showed us a picture of the body. He even said he could take us to where it was buried, because it had become a local shrine. So we went.”
Dave realized his hands had started to shake, so he clasped them behind his back. At that moment I realized how much he resembled our father, Colonel Albert Parks, the ultimate marine.
Strong. Determined. And wounded. Why is it you never recognize the pain in your parents until it’s too late?
I wanted to cal my dad. And, more urgently, go to my brother. Lend him a shoulder. But I knew he needed to stand on his own. Just speaking, knowing I heard without judging, would push him closer to healing than anything else I could do at this moment. So I sat without blinking as he said, “The grave had the right name, and the date of death lined up with when we’d last lost contact. But our psychics are the best in the country. So we dug for proof. Halfway to the body I started to feel sick.
Because the corpse was
“Instant reintegration of the soul into a new body,” Raoul murmured. “That never happens. Unless the dying imam cal ed upon some powerful y foul magicks.”
“I have no doubt about it,” Dave replied. “This kid
He was able to access this guy’s wisdom and direct his evil plans without admitting it to anyone. You wouldn’t think older guys would listen to him, but his charisma was already off the charts.” Dave nodded. “I’ve convinced my superiors to let us go after him next.” Cassandra’s hand clenched into a fist. An instant of intense worry aged her face by twenty years.
Then it passed and she smiled up at him proudly as he said, “I think I can do the same sort of thing for you,