Just me?
Camille looked at me incredulously. “You are a monster,” she said.
I stared at her, my eyes wide, hands twisting at my hair over my shoulder, but she was smiling, a wide grin that lit her whole face, green-gold eyes sparkling. “Me, too,” she said. “Me too.”
She said it like it wasn’t a curse. Like we were special. Me, special?
“What can you do?” I asked.
“Hear better, smell better - usually. And I break stuff,” she laughed. “Like you.”
“I haven’t broken anything!” I protested.
Camille pointed to the portrait leering down at us. “You broke this. The spell.”
I stared up at it in wonder. That’s what I was doing? Breaking spells?
I put my hand over one of the scrolls pinned on a table, trying to see if I could sense what was hiding the image. I felt a faint resistance in my mind, like a fine mesh over the whole parchment. I imagined peeling it away, this time slowly.
The scroll almost seemed to waver like a mirage, hazed over with a misty sheen. When I touched my fingers to the paper, the mist dissipated to nothing. The lines of the image beneath bled out from my touch, stretching into the shape of a high waterfall.
I stepped back, breathing heavily. “You’re right!” I gasped.
“Awesome,” Camille stated, looking eminently impressed.
Most of the paintings were landscapes or buildings - ancient-looking places. Forests, rivers, thatched-roof villages, castles. Some were objects - a jewelry box, a crown, a mirror similar to the one in the orchard, but with different scrollwork. A silver fox, staring back with intelligent eyes. But the portraits were the most curious of all.
Camille was staring transfixed at one in particular. I came up next to her and saw why - the face scrawled on the parchment was unmistakably Gabriel. The expression was all wrong - serious and foreboding, reminiscent almost of Rhys in one of his moods - but the features pegged him as her guardian, right down to the odd puckered scars peeking around his collar. At the bottom of the page was an icy blue symbol, like a sideways 8, and the name
“Is that his real name, do you think?” I asked softly.
She was silent a moment. “What is that?” she asked, pointing to the symbol instead.
“I think it’s the symbol for infinity,” I said, and at her faint look of confusion, added, “you know, something that goes on forever.”
“I saw that,” she said, spinning away to a different corner of the room. “Here,” she said, pointing to another portrait, “and there,” indicating the one I’d touched first. I looked back up at the green-eyed man, unsettled by his grin. The inscription read
Camille murmured something.
“What was that?” I asked.
“Three immortals,” she repeated, looking up at the woman with an odd reluctance. “Once upon a time, chosen by gods. Pawns in a war. Bets on the winner.” She shook her head. “A story Gabriel told me.”
“Who won?” I asked.
“‘Ask me later,’ he said.” She looked at his portrait, expression unreadable.
The painting pinned up next to it caught my eye.
“Camille,” I tugged on her sleeve, pointing at it. “You think this is what that guy wanted?”
It was a very plain-looking sword, in an ancient style. There was nothing distinct about the handle, or the hilt; nothing remarkable except perhaps its total lack of individuality.
“I don’t see what the big deal is,” I said. “It doesn’t even look cool.”
Camille shrugged, rubbing her bracer with her right hand as if she could scratch the skin beneath. “Doesn’t have to, if it’s magic,” she said. She looked across the room. “
I followed her gaze, seeing one blank parchment. “I thought I got them all,” I said, approaching it. I pressed my hand to it. “Show me.”
Nothing happened. “Maybe it’s really just blank,” I said.
“Yeah right,” Camille said. “Just being an ass. Show it who’s boss.”
Brows knitted in concentration, I focused on the rough paper under my fingers, trying to pull the image out of it, looking for the web of what it hid behind. An outline ghosted into my mind, sketchy and colorless, of a woman in a flowing, low-cut gown studded with gemstones, long hair cascading in looping curls down her shoulders and back. A delicate, heart-shaped face with curling lashes, looking shyly over her shoulder, partially hidden by a lacy parasol. She was almost familiar, but I needed to peel back the spell to see her more clearly. The resistance was as tightly woven as silk, and my hand on the parchment made a fist, as if I could rip it away. Sharp pains spiked up my arm. I cried out, sinking to my knees.
“Jul!” Camille exclaimed.
I looked at my trembling arm. Black, vein-like marks pulsed, until the pain subsided and they vanished. “Holy crap,” I breathed.
“Holy crap,” she echoed. “Are you alright?”
“I think so,” I said, accepting her proffered hand, standing shakily. The parchment was still blank of the woman I’d caught a glimpse of, but at the bottom in the same titling scrawl as the other paintings, was one word.
“What’s that?” Camille asked.
I shook my head. I was so far out of my league.
The latch behind us clicked and we turned.
“You idiots,” came Tailor’s horrified voice from the doorway. “What have you done?”
Mac
Who left the door to the roof open? Don’t they know catbats can escape the building that way?
The little monster cringes to a halt at the top of the stairs, apparently stunned by the sudden sunlight. Sensitive eyes, eh? Finally, something to my advantage. I bound up the stairs and grab for the scruff of its neck.
“Gotcha!” I exclaim, too soon. It skitters beyond my reaching fingers, squinting blearily at the ground. In the sun, its fur no longer looks like an extension of shadow - it’s a dingy dark grey, matted with leaves and dirt. Its eyes are as big around as golf balls, with eerie yellow irises. The long, flicking tail is tufted like a kangaroo rat. Leathery scales grow from its joints and its jaw. Its wide, catlike ears flatten as it looks back at me. It opens its mouth and hisses, jaw unhinging like a snake to show an extra-wide mouth filled with deceptively long, needlelike teeth.
I rock back slightly.
“Can it, catbatsnakemonkey,” I tell the creature. “You’re coming with me.” I advance cautiously, wary of its teeth.
It backs up, disoriented, weaving. I’m not going to let it get back into the door behind me.
“You’re going to help me prove to the principal that I’m not insane.” I hold out my jacket, inching closer. “So I’m gonna wrap you up in this, and you’re not going to give me rabies. Deal?”
It dives at me with a screech. I catch it, trying to keep it away from my face. I stumble back and trip over an exposed pipe, and fall off the roof. My jacket flutters away and I yell, still clutching the creature. In an instant, my