which might actually be worse. The pain had begun to flare like wildfire through Rory’s whole body. His face felt like it had met a brick wall up close and personal, and the nerve endings of his right hand and arm felt as though someone had dipped them in a vat of acid. He knew Fennrys had broken his arm—badly—but he couldn’t even lift his head to see the extent of the damage.
Roth held the crimped plastic IV tube up in front of Rory’s face.
“I hear this stuff’s pretty sweet. I have no problem whatsoever denying you access to it if you don’t tell me what I need to know,” he said, smiling dangerously. “You know . . . the Wolf busted you up pretty bad. The regular docs didn’t think there was much they could do for your arm besides putting half a dozen pins and a couple of plates in. The rehab alone would have taken months. So Dad called in favors to get you taken care of, Ror, if only so you wouldn’t end up as a totally useless waste. Even still . . . there’s only so much the witchmechs can do, y’know?”
“Maybe you were just too hurt,” Roth was saying. “Maybe you never even regained consciousness. . . .”
“Jeezus, Roth,” Rory gasped. “We’re brothers!”
“And Mason is our sister.” Roth shrugged. “Honestly? I’ve
“Nothing! I swear!” Rory’s brain went into spin mode. “She was with that Palmerston chick. And—uh—me and Overlea . . . we—we just told them we were going to a party. We told them to come along. That’s all.”
“And Mason just went with you. Just like that. Even after losing the competition?”
“Yeah. Yeah . . . I guess she was pretty upset. Maybe she just wanted to forget. I think that’s what Heather said to her . . . I mean . . . I’m sure she did. Y’know. That a party would help take her mind off it.” A flare of pain sizzled up from his arm to explode in fireworks behind his eyes. “C’mon, man! Let go of the tube—”
“Why the hell did Mason wind up on top of the train car?”
“’Cause she’s so damn stupid!” Rory gasped. “You know she does crazy shit, Roth! I was—y’know—partying with Heather in the front of the salon car, and I guess things got out of hand between Overlea and Mason.”
“You left that overgrown ape alone with her?”
“I didn’t know. I guess . . . I mean, yeah. That was totally my fault. I should have been looking out for her, I know. I guess he got a little too aggressive. Dumb jock probably thinks he’s a real Romeo. . . .”
“I think maybe Mason told him off and went into the other train car to be alone,” he continued, spinning a pretty plausible tale as he went. “I think Tag followed her. He’s used to college girls. He probably cornered her and Mason . . . y’know. She probably got all phobic. You know how she gets. I think the most likely scenario is that she just freaked.”
And, in fact, that
Roth let go of the IV tube.
“I have to go see what I can do about cleaning up this mess you’ve made,” he said, and shook his head in disgust. “Maybe I can stop things from spiraling too far out of control . . . but I doubt it.”
Rory almost wept with relief as the glowing blue magick flowed once more into his veins and wrapped him in a cloud of euphoria. He was going to be fine. He was going to be better than fine. He didn’t realize just how much improved, though, until Roth turned to go. Before he did, he glanced back at his brother, and his gaze drifted to Rory’s right arm—the one opposite to where the IV needle pumped such sweet elixir. The one that Fennrys had shattered, trying to wrest the gun from Rory’s grasp.
“I told Gunnar he was making a mistake, having them fix you up like
Rory blinked at his brother in confusion, his brain already cottony again with the painkiller. But as Roth left the room, Rory forced his head up off the pillow to see, finally, what had become of his wounded limb. He was just in time to see a strange, stunted creature tearing away the last, fibrous bits of flesh that held his forearm attached to the rest of him. There were two more misshapen, dwarfish things who carried Rory’s arm away as he tried to scream, but the glowing blue narcotic that fogged his mind had also stolen his voice. He could only watch in silent horror as another witchmech crawled up through a strange, shimmering hole in the penthouse floor, carrying a bundle wrapped in oilcloth. As he was unwrapping it, Rory caught sight of the ragged stump where his forearm used to be . . . and passed out cold.
When he awoke some time later, Rory flailed around in terrified remembrance, struggling frantically to prop himself up. In the dim light filtering through the curtains, he saw his right arm, where it lay on top of the covers.
He still had his hand.
Whole and sound, his fingers and wrist moved with supple strength as he bent and flexed the joints. But something was strange. Different. As he contracted his fingers into a fist, they felt cool and too smooth against one another. He reached over and turned on the bedside lamp. In the glow from the single bulb, Rory saw that the skin of his arm gleamed with a watery, metallic sheen. Rory lifted his hand up in front of his face and gasped. His arm—his real, flesh-and-blood arm from the elbow down—was gone.
In its place was one made—impossibly—out of living silver.
Rory watched, mesmerized, as with a thought his shining fingers slowly clenched again into a fist. It felt like a sledgehammer. He smiled to himself at the thought of bringing that hammer down on the head of the Fennrys Wolf the next time they met. Because there would be a next time. And
XIV
For the life of him, Fennrys couldn’t figure out how Rafe knew which way was which in the Between. Everything was a sameness of bleak, oppressive, darkly luminous fog. Yet somehow, the ancient god seemed to unerringly negotiate the murk and the press of wraiths, the shades of the unquiet dead.
Fenn was really only worried about what would happen once they actually reached their destination: North Brother Island—the anchor point of the rift where it manifested in the mortal realm.
“Once we get to where we’re going,” Rafe said, as if in answer to Fennrys’s thought, “we’ll need to leave.
“A boat?” Mason asked, ducking to avoid something smoky and toothy that drifted past her head.
“The rift opens up on an island,” Fennrys explained, and then turned to Rafe. “This wouldn’t happen to be the same boat that took so long to get to us last time that I almost got eaten by a sea monster, would it?”
Rafe grinned sourly. “I told Aken that if he’s not waiting when we get there this time, I’m actually gonna make him
“Sea monster?” Mason raised an eyebrow.
“
“Right. Okay. So . . . an island.” Mason waved off another wraith that was doing its best to tangle itself in