Not able to fight my way back to sleep, I left Ben in bed, pulled on an oversize T-shirt, and wandered to the living room.
My head pounded, and my eyes were caked with grime. My hair smelled like soot and fire.
I checked my phone. It hadn’t rung, which I took as a good sign.
The first person I called was Shaun. I needed to tell him what had happened before the lunch crew showed up for its shift and saw the damage firsthand. We needed a plan to get the place repaired and functional.
As the phone rang, I squeezed my eyes shut really tight. I still didn’t want to tell him. Like if I didn’t say the words “New Moon almost burned down,” I didn’t have to believe it.
Shaun picked up. “Kitty.”
“Hi, Shaun. How are you?”
“I don’t know—how are you?” His voice was coy.
Deep breath. Had to get it out. “Not good. There was an accident at the restaurant last night—”
“I know,” he said. “It was in the paper this morning.”
“What?” I was relieved and chagrined. I didn’t have to explain, but—he was going to yell at me for not calling him last night, wasn’t he?
But he didn’t. “Is everyone okay?”
“One person’s in the hospital,” I said.
“Shit,” he said. “What are we going to do?”
“Make repairs. Reopen as soon as we can.” We had to continue, onward and upward. What choice did we have?
“Does the fire have anything to do with that thing that went after us the other night?” His voice was numb, like he didn’t want to believe it had really happened, either, and didn’t want to give voice to the truth.
“Probably,” I said, wincing. “It had the same smell.”
“When’s it going to stop? How are we going to stop it?”
Saying
“I’m working on it, Shaun. I’m sorry I don’t have a better answer than that.”
“Let me know if there’s anything I can do.”
“I will. Thanks. I’ll talk to you soon.”
He hung up without saying goodbye. I’d make it up to him, I promised myself. I’d make this right.
Next I called Tina for an update on Gary. Jules answered her phone.
“We’re still at the hospital,” he said. “Tina finally conked out, so I’m letting her sleep.”
“How’s Gary?”
“Awake, but groggy. He doesn’t really remember what happened. But he’s going to be okay.”
I repeated my promise to myself: No one was going to die. We’d figure this thing out.
“Any other news on your end?” I said.
“Not yet. I’m waiting to get replies to some of my e-mails and calls. We still need to talk about what we’re doing next. We could meet this afternoon, if you like.”
“Sounds good.” We agreed on a time and place—the hospital cafeteria—and said our farewells.
I made another call. Grant picked up on the first ring.
“You’re probably getting sick of hearing from me,” I said.
The barest hint of a smile touched his voice. “If I were, I wouldn’t answer the phone.”
Ah, the magic of caller ID. What did we ever do without it? Strangely enough, I was comforted.
“What’s happened?” he said.
“There was a fire.”
I told him, starting with the incident with the van, even including the part about the Ouija board, even though that was a little embarrassing. I didn’t want to leave anything out in case it turned out to be important. But we’d had enough attacks now to discern a pattern: heat and fire. Something invisible that struck suddenly and left no trace.
“It’s rare finding someone who can read anything through a Ouija board. It’s not the most efficient tool.”
And I’d been worried that he’d make fun of me for going along with it. Grant seemed to take everything seriously.
“What
“Oh, this and that.”
The trouble with the real-deal psychics and magicians is they didn’t like to talk about what they could do. Like Tina covering it up because she wanted her colleagues to take her seriously.
“What does something like this?”
“I’m starting to get some ideas,” he said.
“What are we supposed to do in the meantime? This thing is getting more violent. I don’t want anyone else to get hurt.”
“What do you know about protective magic?”
“You can crush St. John’s Wort pills and scatter them with breadcrumbs to get rid of a fairy,” I said.
After a pause, he said, “I didn’t know that. Interesting.”
Hey, my side gets a point on supernatural
“But that’s probably not going to be useful here,” Grant said.
Oh well.
“Try this instead.” Grant gave me directions: “Take the dust from a ruin—”
“Ruin? Like old temple, Roman aqueduct? How am I going to get—”
“You live in a city—what’s been knocked down recently? An abandoned shed going to weed will work just as well. Mix it with blood—”
“How much blood? Human blood? I’m trying
“Cow, sheep, pig, chicken. Special order it from a butcher shop. Not human.”
Grant was being very patient with me. “Oh. That makes sense.”
“Mix the dust and blood, then sprinkle the mixture around whatever you need protected. Probably the homes of everyone who’s involved. Any other structures. You can even carry a jar of it with you, to use in a pinch.”
Kind of gross. But I wasn’t going to question it. “What kind of spell is that?”
“I adapted it from an old Egyptian potion. Ideally, it’ll form a protective barrier.”
“And it works?”
“In at least one case it did, yes.”
Now, there was a story I needed to get. But later, when this was over and we were all still alive.
“Thanks. We’ll give it a try.”
“This still won’t stop it,” he said. “This isn’t an ideal solution. I’ll try to come up with something better.”
“I appreciate the help.”
“I took it upon myself to keep that group from causing trouble. Much of this is my responsibility.”
Grant was usually calm, emotionless, a good guy to have at your back. But he was sounding downright frustrated.
“There’s only one of you and like a dozen of them. Just think how much damage they’d be doing if you weren’t there.”
“It’s kind of you to say so.”
I tried to sound cheerful. “Let me know when you come up with anything else. I’ll talk to you later.”
“Until then.”
We clicked off and I felt better, because now I had something I could do. I started thinking about taking a shower.
By this time Ben had gotten up and was making phone calls of his own, in bed, a pen and notepad beside him.
I said, “Grant has this protection spell I want to try, but I have to get ingredients. Do you want to come?”
He glanced up. “Do you need me to?”
“No, I guess not.” We were married, after all. Not attached at the hip.
“I still have to call the insurance company and try to figure out what we’re going to do about New Moon. I called the fire department a little while ago. They’re going to inspect the building for structural and gas-line damage, but if it checks out we should be able to make repairs and open back up in a couple of weeks.”
Which was good news. We were still in the game.
“Call me if anything happens,” I said.
“You too. Be careful.”
Which, when Ben said it, also sounded like “I love you.”
Chapter 8
It turned out you really could go to the butcher shop and get blood. It wasn’t easy—I had to call all over town to find one that could special order it from their slaughterhouse. But I found one that was willing—and they were certainly willing to charge me for it. I also got a couple of steaks to go along with the blood. Any excuse.
For the ruin, I went to where a set of 1920s townhouses was being—tragically, in my opinion—torn down to make way for high-priced lofts. I had always wondered what made a place a loft