“Lady?” The driver asked, leaning out his window. “You sure?”
“I’m sure.”
Talia didn’t look back as the taxi pulled away. She followed the concrete road to the steps, and then jogged down those to the center of the lower level of the concrete circle. A deserted cafe was dark and shuttered. The place echoed with silence.
Though deep in her shadowy cloak, Talia’s heart hammered as she traveled down the sidewalk and across the jog path. The gate to the pier was open, as if the ferryman were expecting her.
Something knocked against the planking with a lonely, hollow sound. Exactly the sound her heart was making in its own mooring.
At the end of a walkway, a man stood, leaning on a staff. She couldn’t make out much about him, but by the hunch of his shoulders, he seemed very old.
Talia released her cloaking veils as she approached.
He blinked up at her sudden appearance, but didn’t stop chewing on the gristle of his white-bearded chin. His face was weathered and wrinkled like a brown paper sack. The faded plaid shirt he wore was far too warm for the summer night.
“Hello,” she said.
He chewed.
Talia frowned. “I need to get to the
The old man chewed his whiskers again. “It’ll cost you.”
Damn it. “I don’t have any money with me, but I will come back tomorrow and pay you whatever you ask. I promise.”
The old man grunted. “I’ll take you to the
The man seemed out of myth himself; Talia was not surprised that he could name her origins.
“A lock of hair?”
He nodded and gestured to a boat with an open-air seating area in the back. The interior was dirty, with a crust and smear of brownish red covering the rear seat. Probably blood.
Talia’s stomach rolled with nausea. “Okay.”
The old man pulled a pocketknife out of his pants pocket. He held the wood handle, glossy with age and handling, and flicked open a blade. He reached up and cut a curl from the mass on Talia’s shoulder.
“Done,” he said, sniffing at the curl. “Climb aboard.”
Talia scrambled down into the boat, sat at the edge of the malodorous filth, and held on for dear life.
The old man went to a grimy control panel and started the engine roaring. He angled out of the slip, away from the hum of the city, and into the lurching dark waters of the river.
No going back now.
TWENTY
THE
They angled into dark waters spotted by the gleam of other boats, small and large. In spite of the considerable haze of the city’s light pollution, the sky above was brilliantly starcrusted, as if heaven had finally brought its attention to the goings-on of Earth.
The shoreline fell behind. All hope of safety dimmed as the lights grew smaller. They traveled into an ocean of rippling darkness, as if toward the end of the world. She sought no refuge now, no hiding place from monsters or herself. All that was in her past. Running away was not an option, not when everything that mattered—good and bad—lay in front of her.
And suddenly, hell loomed on the deep.
The
Talia’s heart stuttered at the sight. No doubt the
The old man brought the boat alongside the great ship with a wrenching scrape and idled near a narrow ladder. He turned, the pallor of his skin sickly yellowed in the ship’s light.
“The
Talia’s nausea peaked as the wind died and the
“You want me to take you back?” The old man didn’t look like he cared much either way.
Talia shook her head slightly, so as not to be sick.
She could do this. Only yesterday her shadows had protected her and Adam during the failed attempt to save Custo’s life. And in shadow, she could manipulate objects with her mind. The combination of abilities would get her to Adam and then get them both to safety. She wasn’t asking for more than that. The destruction of the demon who called himself the Death Collector could wait for another time.
Right now was for Adam.
Her fear transmuted into an electric clarity that ran in a bristling current, just under her skin.
Talia stood, gathering shadow from the night. The cold, veils of darkness hung off her shoulders in billowing layers, at the ready. She pulled them more tightly around her to mask her boarding as she took hold of the ladder.
The rungs were chilly and wet on her hands.
A wraith—a woman with the slender face of an angel—leaned down the ladder to look for the demon’s newest supplicant.
Talia waited, heart pounding. Below, the
“Must have chickened out,” the wraith called to the others and ducked out of sight.
Talia continued her climb, and near the top she glanced about the deck. To one side, a raised helipad hosted a faster mode of transportation to and from the ship. Handy. Wraiths clustered nearby. Ten, twelve, their attention directed on a pair that were sparring. The cracking blows they landed each other would have killed any normal person.
With this distraction, Talia crawled on deck.
Across a flat gray expanse was a narrow doorway, rectangular with rounded edges, leading to the interior of a bulky metal structure.
She forced herself to breathe more slowly, her heart to ease its frantic pace. Freaking out would help no one. She’d start with inside rooms and work through the ship. Check every corner, carefully and methodically.
Buried in shadows, Talia kept to the edge of the deck as she moved toward the door. She insinuated herself along the natural shades of dark and light that fell in the sharp lines of the ship’s construction.
She glanced at the
A deep-toned click and snap on deck brought Talia’s head back around.
The door was open, a figure just emerging.
A single glimpse of dense blackness, and time ground to a halt. The Earth stopped spinning on its axis. The ocean stilled and the stars winked out.
All of Talia’s senses were overridden by a roar of static in her ears.