“Look, I’m the most powerful Keeper in the lineage right now, and Claire’s already closed this thing down once. Anything’s possible, so all we have to do is find the right possibility. Which we won’t find standing here.” Taking a deep breath, she added a little more distance between them. “Let’s go.”
By the time they reached the alcove where they’d been chained, they could hear the distant sound of pursuit behind them.
“I guess it’s stopped arguing,” Diana muttered as they began running faster.
“You mean they’ve stopped arguing.”
“No. The guy from the throne room is a Shadowlord, as much a shadow of Hell as the assassin; just bit more formed, is all.”
“Hell was arguing with itself?”
“It’s a thing it does. It doesn’t get out much.”
“And that’s good, right?”
Diana shot a quick, disbelieving glance at the elf. “Generally speaking, yeah.” They took a small flight of stairs two steps at a time. “This also explains why the Shadowlord thought I should know him and why he lacks a name. Bits of Hell don’t get names until they’ve really distinguished themselves in some truly disgusting way.”
“So Jerry Springer’s pretty much a gimme?”
“Pretty much, yeah.”
They were running between walls of dressed stone now. Walls that had been built rather than carved out of the bedrock. They were very close to the throne room.
“Good thing…the torches are still…lit,” Kris panted.
“Yeah. They’re lit…because I expect them to…be. We need them…to get out of here.”
“Wouldn’t Hell…know that?”
“Probably. But I don’t…think it has direct influence…this far out yet.”
Between the time her right foot rose and she brought it under her body, ready to stretch it out front once again, the torches went out.
“Of course, I could be wrong.”
* * *
The bedroom was dark when Austin woke. The day just passed had grown overcast, although no cooler, and that overcast had lasted into the night, blocking starlight and moonlight and, very nearly, streetlight. Eye open the merest slit, he could see Dean’s darker-on-dark silhouette on the other pillow and not much else, but he knew they weren’t alone. Something stood beside the bed.
Something satisfied…
He sprang without warning, over Dean and off the edge of the bed. So positive that his claws would connect with linen bandages, he was taken completely by surprise when he hit the floor.
And was blinded an instant later.
“Austin?” One hand on the switch for the bedside lamp, Dean blinked down at the cat. “What’s the matter, then?”
“She was here. Just a second ago.”
“Who was?”
“Who do you think?”
“Meryat?”
“Give the man a rubber mouse.” He stalked stiff-legged out into the sitting room. “She’s gone.”
“I didn’t hear the door…”
“Neither did I.”
“So how did she leave without opening and closing the door? She couldn’t go through it—she’s touched me, you know. She’s solid. And slow. You’ve seen how she walks.”
“Maybe she’s just pretending to be slow.”
“I think I’d know if she was faking it.”
Austin snorted. “You’d be surprised.” He padded back to the bedroom and stared up at Dean. “I don’t know how she’s doing it, but she’s been sucking your life force!”
“You sound like Lance.”
“Yeah?” Hooking his claws into the edge of the mattress, he rappelled his way up the side of the bed and stood on Dean’s thighs. “You look exhausted. Explain that!”
Dean squinted at the clock. “It’s three forty-seven a.m.”
“You were sleeping; you should be rested.”
“I should still be sleeping.” Settling back against his pillow, he gently stroked the spot behind Austin’s left ear with his thumb. “Has it occurred to you that maybe you’re having mummy nightmares because you’re a cat and cats have this whole Egyptian connection going?”
Eye narrowed, Austin glared. “You know nothing about that.”
“Not true. When I had the new strut put in the truck, there were National Geographics in the waiting room and I read this article on cats in ancient Egypt.”
“How old was the magazine?”
“Some old, but they were talking about 1,500 BC; does it matter?”
“I am not having nightmares. I am not imagining things. And I did not tell you to stop doing that.”
“Sorry.” Dean started stroking again as Austin stretched out.
“I will get to the bottom of this,” he vowed, sweeping his tail across Dean’s legs.
“Sure you wi…OW! Lord t’undering Jesus, cat! I’m attached to those!”
“Then maybe you should consider where my claws are before you make another patronizing observation.” Having leaped safely away from any physical retaliation, Austin curled up into a tight ball on Claire’s pillow and closed his eye. “Turn out the light, would you. It’s the middle of the night.”
* * *
“Where are we?”
“Based on the cannons, the parapets, and that big guardhouse,” Claire hissed, grabbing a handful of Lance’s wet shirt and dragging him down behind the buttress, “I’d say we were in a fort.”
“Which fort?”
“I don’t know.” They were still on the Otherside, although which Otherside she wasn’t entirely certain—a concept she’d take the time to find disturbing the moment she was no longer personally responsible for an idiot Bystander. Motioning for him to follow, she murmured, “Stay close,” and led the way along the inside curve of the outer wall. When she paused in the triangular shadow of a small lean-to, he tucked up tight behind her. She reached back and shoved hard enough to break the contact between them. “Not that close.”
He inched in again. “What are we doing here?”
“You yelled cannonball as you hit the water and that influenced the path.”
“This is Meryat’s doing, isn’t it?”
“No.” Claire measured the distance between their hiding place and the guardhouse and decided a sprint across open ground with a Bystander in tow was just too dangerous—no matter how much she would dearly love to lose said Bystander. They hadn’t seen any actual guards, but that didn’t mean there weren’t any actual guards.
“But…”
“Would you please shut up.”
“But why is it dark?”
“It’s night.” She didn’t know why the magic word wasn’t working—whether it was her, or him, or a combination of them both—but only an urgent need to return to the mall kept her from trying