had the sense of speeding without moving, of flying while staying still. Then she blinked into a universe of gray- green mist and sky, dropped a couple of inches, and landed on her feet, stumbling only slightly.
Fog rose to her knees, camouflaging a soft, yielding surface underfoot. Overhead hung clouds the same color as the mist that surrounded the small group of magi, who clustered together, still linked hand-to-hand. There was nothing in the mist as far as she could see, except—
The shadow drew nearer, resolving itself into a human-shaped figure without nipples or genitalia, no hair or distinguishing features, only skin across bones, with black, pupilless eyes. The hum of red-
gold magic at the back of Sasha’s skull trilled upward as though the magic were welcoming its own.
“Ambrose?” she whispered.
Michael nudged her forward, whispering, “I’m right behind you.”
Setting her balance through force of will, Sasha lifted her chin and stepped forward to meet the
“Father,” Strike breathed, bringing her brain to a stuttering halt.
Th e
Disbelief and panic collided inside her. She wanted to back away, wanted to run, but her feet wouldn’t move; they seemed stuck in place, glued by the clinging gray-green fog. She held out her hands in a
It halted when her hands were nearly touching its leathery, desiccated chest. And incredibly, horribly, it smiled—a too-human expression on an inhuman face. “Welcome home, child,” it said in a voice that was made up of several voices speaking in harmonious descant. “We’ve been waiting for you.”
Tears burned her eyes and an unexpected sob welled up in her throat. “Where’s Ambrose?” she asked, knowing instinctively he wasn’t inside the creature she faced.
“His path led another way.” Reaching out a desiccated hand to her, the
The world tilted beneath Sasha, though the barrier firmament itself didn’t move. Confusion battered her. Her eyes locked on the dual marks on the creature’s inner forearm, the jaguar and the royal
“I am yours. You are mine.” A strange burning sensation took root where the
Moments later the burn faded, and the
“Father!” Strike said.
This time the
“Wait!” Remembering the plan, and what they’d hoped to learn from her
Do you know where Ambrose hid the scroll?”
Michael shouted, “Don’t! Let go of it!” But his voice quavered strangely on the last few words.
Sasha turned back, only then realizing that the
Michael shouted something and lunged for her, but he was too late. Just as his fingers brushed her arm, a giant force picked her up and yanked her through the gray-green nothingness.
“Help,” she cried.
The sense of movement accelerated and the wind whipped past her with howls louder than her own.
Her forearm burned. Panic jammed her chest and her pulse thundered in her ears. Then, abruptly, the wind and movement cut out. The air went wet and warm, and she was surrounded by leaves. She hung in midair for a heartbeat before gravity reasserted itself and she slammed down, landing sprawled in a wet, leafy layer of rain forest debris.
She lay still for a second, gasping for breath. There was no magic in the air, no sign of the others.
And even though she knew her body should still be back in the sacred chamber at Skywatch, she had to wonder, because what she was experiencing felt very, very real. The soil beneath her felt real; the moist air smelled real, with the scent of green things and rot. She was in Mayan territory, she knew instinctively, recognizing the feel and smell from her childhood.
With the realization came a burst of excitement and understanding. She was in a vision showing her where the library scroll was hidden. She hoped.
Scrambling up, she stood, shaking. The heavy robe was far too hot, but she didn’t dare take it off, wasn’t exactly sure what it symbolized within the barrier—if she was even in the barrier now. She scanned the scene, saw trees and undergrowth, more trees and more undergrowth—a profusion of greenery and the occasional color-burst of flowers. Parrots called in the canopy, the melody soaring up over a background of monkey chatter. Familiarity settled around her as she caught the white flash of carved stone and recognized the entrance to Ambrose’s temple. She’d been right all along, she realized. The scroll had to be in there, somewhere. But where? How was she supposed to find it?
“By looking around, idiot,” she told herself. Trying to banish the memory of what had happened to her the last time she’d searched the temple, she inhaled a deep breath and headed for the faint trail.
She’d gone barely three steps when something stirred in the middle growth to her right, bending leaves and branches.
Sasha froze, her heart pounding into her throat as she thought of jaguars and other jungle predators.
Her hand slapped for her weapons belt, but it was empty. The magi traditionally wore only their knives into the bloodline ceremony, with the potential mage going unarmed.
Sticking to that particular tradition might have been a mistake.
The branches rustled again, the disturbance man-high, making her think of bandits, Iago, and the entity the others had seen in the so-called haunted temple. They’d described it as looking like a
For all that the lack of privacy had chafed at times over the past couple of weeks, she’d grown used to the sense of safety in numbers. Now, even that was gone.
But the fireball was of little use there in the rain forest. Why was she there? What was she supposed to be