They all squeezed into Turnerโs Dodge like a gloomy, soot-covered carpool
โDawes up front; Tripp, Alex, and Mercy jammed into the back. No one was walking home alone tonight.
They dropped Dawes at her div school apartment first. Turner and Alex escorted her to the door, and they warded the whole building with salt knots.
โWeโll meet up tomorrow,โ Alex said before Dawes shut the door on them. โCheck in on the chat every hour.โ
Tripp was next, and he leaned forward through the gap in the front seats to give Turner directions to a big block of apartments not far from the green.
The building was nice. Exposed brick, warm faux-industrial lighting. Trippโs dad might have cut him off, but Tripp had to be drawing on some kind of trust fund. Hard times looked different to a Helmuth.
They warded the exterior and then drew a salt knot atop Trippโs welcome mat for good measure.
โYou, uh, want to come in?โ Tripp asked. All of his excitement had ebbed away, the fear creeping back in.
โYou can crash with us,โ Alex offered. โWe have a couch in the common room.โ
โNo, Iโm cool. Iโve got my seabird, right?โ
โCheck in on the chat,โ said Turner. โAnd donโt go out if you donโt have
to.โ
Tripp nodded and offered up his knuckles for a fist bump. Even Turner
obliged.
On the way down the stairs, Turner said, โIโm going to Black Elm when weโre done. I want to know Darlington is still corralled in his pen.โ
Alex nearly stumbled. โWhy?โ
โDonโt act the fool with me. You saw Marjorie Stephen. She had the life drained right out of her. Nothing natural about it.โ
โThat doesnโt mean Darlington had something to do with it.โ
โNo, but he might know if one of his kind did. If thereโs something running around out there wearing Marjorie Stephenโs face.โ
โHeโs not a demon,โ Alex said angrily. โNot like they are.โ
โThen call it a wellness check. I just want to know heโs contained.โ
They rode back to campus in silence, and Alex and Mercy said their goodbyes to the detective on York Street.
โYou sure you donโt want help with the salt and all that?โ he asked.
โNo,โ said Alex. โOur room is warded. Weโll do our entryway too, but Iโm leaving the courtyard open. I need access to Grays. You know the knot pattern?โ
โYeah.โ Turner had said he could handle warding his place himself. Alex had the feeling he didnโt want her at his house or apartment or wherever he lived. He didnโt want Lethe and the uncanny bleeding into his real life. As if he could close the cover on this particular book when this ugly chapter was finished.
โIf Carmichael shows up, donโt listen to him. Donโt let him get in your head.โ
โDonโt coach me, Stern.โ
โDonโt get that fancy suit rumpled, Turner.โ
He gunned his engine. โSee you tomorrow night.โ
They didnโt wait to watch his taillights disappear. They didnโt want to be outside longer than they had to be.
The dorm felt strangely normal, every bedroom lit gold, music and talk filtering down to the courtyard.
โHow is life still just rolling along?โ Mercy asked as they passed people bundled up in their scarves, cups of hot tea or coffee in their gloved hands. The trees seemed to have lost their summer green overnight, the yellow leaves curling like bright scraps of rind from a peeled moon.
Usually Alex liked the feeling of the normal world, the sense that there was something to return to, that there was more than Lethe and magic and ghosts, that she might have a life waiting for her when this strange work was done. But tonight all she could think was that these people were easy prey. There was danger everywhere and they couldnโt see it. They didnโt have any idea what might be stalking them as they laughed, and argued, and made plans for a world they barely understood.
Lauren was in the common room, tucked into the recliner with a problem set, Joy Division on the record player.
โWhere the fuck have you guys been?โ she asked. โAnd why do you smell like a forest fire?โ
Alexโs tired brain searched for a lie, but it was Mercy who answered. โWe had to help finish up the candy exchange and some house caught fire on Orange.โ
โThe church again? Are you guys going all Jesusy on me?โ
โI do like the free wine,โ said Alex. โAre we out of Pop-Tarts?โ
โThereโs Tastykakes on top of the fridge. My mom sent them. You guys really scared me, okay? You need to tell me if youโre just going to disappear. There was a murder on campus, and youโre just walking around in the middle of the night like nothing happened.โ
โSorry,โ said Mercy. โWe lost track of time and we were together so we didnโt think about it.โ
Lauren sipped from the big bottle of water she took everywhere. โWe should start thinking about where we want to live next year.โ
โNow?โ asked Alex, stuffing a Krimpet into her mouth. She wasnโt ready to stare down the barrel of her lack of a future just yet. Even so, she didnโt have many friends, and knowing Lauren actually wanted to spend another year with her felt good, like maybe she didnโt have to wear her damage like a warning sign.
โDo we want to live on campus or off campus?โ Lauren asked. โWe can butter up some seniors, find out which apartments look good.โ
โI might do a semester abroad,โ said Mercy.
Since when?ย Alex wondered. Or was Mercy just looking for an excuse to get away from her and Lethe?
โWhere?โ Lauren demanded.
โFrance?โ Mercy said unconvincingly.
โOh my God, fuck France. Everyone there has an STD.โ โNo, they do not, Lauren.โ
Alex took another Krimpet and sat next to Mercy on the couch. โYouโre telling me you wouldnโt choose Paris over New Haven?โ
โNope,โ Lauren said. โAnd that is called loyalty.โ
It wasnโt until they were settling in for the night that Alex had the chance to ask Mercy about France. โAre you really going abroad?โ
โNow that I know magic is real?โ Mercy had put on a vintage pajama set and slathered her face with cream. โNo way. But wouldnโt it be easier to come and go with all of this Lethe stuff if we didnโt have to worry about Lauren asking questions?โ
โIโm not in Lethe anymore,โ Alex reminded her. โNeither are you. And weโre being hunted by demons.โ
โI know, but โฆ I canโt just go back to not knowing.โ
It isnโt up to us anymore.ย Alex didnโt say it, but she lay awake for a long time, staring into the dark. Sheโd lived with magic her whole life, even if sheโd never called it that. She hadnโt had a say in the matter. The one choice sheโd gotten to make was agreeing to take Dean Sandow up on his offer when heโd appeared beside her hospital bed, when sheโd been invited into Lethe. And now that choice was being taken away too. How long could she keep running from men like Eitan? From demons like Linus Reiter? From the monsters in her past who had become so very present?
She didnโt remember falling asleep, but she must have because she bolted awake to the sound of her phone ringing.
Dawes.
โYou okay?โ Alex asked, trying to get her bearings. Sheโd overslept again. It was after 9 a.m.
โThe Praetor just called. He wants to meet with you today.โ Was this it? The official dismissal? The formal fuck-you?
โWhat did he say?โ Alex pressed.
โJust that in light of last nightโs events, the Praetor requires Virgilโs presence at his office hours.โ
Not at Il Bastone or the Hutch. โHe still called me Virgil?โ
โHe did,โ Dawes said on a tired sigh. โAnd he called me Oculus. Maybe thereโs some kind of process we have to go through before weโre โฆ I donโt know. Stripped of our offices.โ
Alex looked out the window into the courtyard. The morning sky was dark, the pavement damp. Slate-colored clouds promised more rain. It was too cold to be sitting outside, but there was a girl slouched on a bench below in just a T-shirt and jeans. Not Hellie looked up at Alex and grinned, her smile crooked, her teeth too long. Like the wolves theyโd fought in hell. As if the longer she went hungry, the harder it was for her to pretend to be human. But it was the man beside her that sent a bolt of fear through Alex. His hair was long and blond, his suit white, his fine-boned face made nearly gentle by the gray autumn light. Linus Reiter gazed up at her, his expression bemused, as if someone had told a joke he didnโt really find funny.
Alex yanked the curtains closed. Fuck having access to Grays. She needed to ward the courtyard. Maybe the whole campus.
โAlex?โ
Dawes was still on the phone.
โHeโs here,โ Alex managed, the words emerging in a strangled whisper. โHeโsโฆโ
โWho is?โ
Alex slumped down next to the bed, knees drawn up, her heart pounding. She couldnโt quite take a full breath. โLinus Reiter,โ she gasped. โThe vampire. In the courtyard. I donโt โฆ I canโtโฆโ She could hear the blood rushing in her ears. โI think Iโm going to pass out.โ
โAlex, tell me five things you see in your room.โ โWhat?โ
โJust do it.โ
โI โฆ My desk. A chair. The blue tulle on Mercyโs bed. Myย Flaming Juneย poster. Those sticky stars someone put up on the ceiling.โ
โOkay, now four things you can touch.โ โDawesโโ
โDo it.โ
โWe have to warn the othersโโ
โJust do it, Virgil.โ
Dawes had never called her that. Alex managed a shaking breath.
โOkay โฆ the bed frame. Itโs smooth. Cold wood. The rugโkind of soft and nubbly. Thereโs glitter in it. Maybe from Halloween.โ
โWhat else?โ
โMy tank topโcotton, I think.โ She reached up and touched the dried roses on Mercyโs bedside table. โDry flowers, like tissue paper.โ
โNow three things you hear.โ โI know what youโre doing.โ โThen do it.โ
Alex drew another long breath in through her nose. โThe flowers rustle when I touch them. Someoneโs singing down the hall. My own fucking heart pounding in my chest.โ She rubbed a hand over her face, feeling some of her terror recede. โThanks, Dawes.โ
โIโm going to text the group to warn them about Reiter. Remember, your salt spirit should work against him too.โ
โHow can you sound so calm?โ
โI wasnโt attacked by a vampire.โ โItโs daytime. Howโโ
โIโm assuming heโs not in direct sunlight. Heโll keep to the shadows, and he certainly wonโt be able to hunt until dusk falls.โ
That wasnโt reassuring.
โAlex,โ Dawes insisted, โyou have to stay calm. Heโs just another demon and he canโt change shape or get in your head.โ
โHeโs fast, Dawes. And so strong.โ Sheโd been no match for him, even with the strength of a Gray inside her. Sheโd barely escaped him once, and she wasnโt sure sheโd be that lucky again.
โOkay, but all of the reading Iโve done says he wonโt stay away from his nest for long. He canโt.โ
His precious nest full of priceless objects and white flowers. That Alex had set fire to.
Alex made herself get up and pull back the curtain. Not Hellie was gone. She saw Reiter moving across the courtyard toward the gates that would take him out of JE and hopefully away from campus. Someone in
dark clothes and a hooded jacket walked beside him, keeping a white umbrella above Reiterโs head.
โWhat if Reiter gets peckish on the way home?โ Alex said. โI brought him here. I put all these people in his sights.โ
โStop it. Reiter knew about Yale long before you. I think โฆ I think heโs here to frighten you. And maybe because we used the Gauntlet.โ
Now Dawesโs voice wavered. If Alexโs theoryโreally Rudolph Kittscherโs theoryโwas correct, then Reiter was actually a demon who had followed the real Lionel Reiter out of hell and taken on his form and identity. Heโd fed on Reiterโs soul and now he sustained himself with blood. Had the demons that followed them through the portal to hell called to him somehow? Did he care that the Gauntlet had been awakened, or did he just want payback for Alex wrecking his fancy things?
It didnโt matter. There was only one way to deal with him.
โAdd him to the list, Dawes. We get rid of the demons and we get rid of Reiter too.โ
โItโs not going to be easy,โ Dawes said. Now that the task of taking care of Alex was done, she seemed less sure. โThe things they knowโฆโ
Alex looked down at the empty bench. โDo you want to tell me what Blake said?โ
There was a long pause. โHe was outside of my window this morning.
In the snow. Whispering.โ Alex waited.
โHe said he was innocent. That he never hurt anyone. That his mother cried herself to sleep every night. He saidโฆโ Dawesโs voice wobbled.
Alex knew Dawes didnโt want to go on. But demons ate shame, fruit grown from seeds cultivated in the dark.
โHellie told me I stole her life,โ Alex said. โThat I should have been the one to die, not her.โ
โThat isnโt true!โ โDoes it matter?โ
โMaybe not. Not if it feels true. He said โฆ Blake said I killed him because Iโm the kind of girl he would never bother to fuck. He said โฆ he
said he could tell what my โฆ what I looked like down there. That I was ugly.โ
โGod, that really does sound like Blake.โ
What were these demons made of? Hellieโs sadness. Blakeโs cruelty. Alexโs shame. Dawesโs guilt. But what else? What was the difference between ambition and appetite? These creatures wanted to survive. They wanted to be fed. Alex understood hunger and what it could drive you to do.
โIt isnโt true, Dawes. We have to keep saying it until we believe it.โ It was just too easy to let those words take hold.
โIs he there now?โ Alex asked.
โThe loris bit him.โ Dawes giggled. โIt climbed right through the window and bit him on the cheek. He just started screaming, โMy face! My face!โโ
Alex laughed, but she remembered the snakes lunging for Hellieโs cheek. As if the salt spirits didnโt like the lie of the demons, the pretense of the human masks they wore.
Her phone pinged. Aย Call meย text from Turner. Why didnโt he ever just callย her?
When she hung up with Dawes, she checked the group chat: Everyone had checked in, and Dawes issued her warnings regarding Reiter. They were all armed with salt and they would meet at Il Bastone before dark. Theyโd be safer when they were behind the wards together.
Alex called Turner, expecting to hear heโd sighted Big Car lurking at the station.
โYou okay?โ she asked.
โWhat? Fine.โ Of course Turner was fine. He was the mighty oak. โWe picked up Ed Lambtonโs son.โ
It took Alex a beat to remember who Lambton was. The professor at the center of the double murder. โI thought he was in Arizona.โ
โAndy Lambton is in New Haven. We apprehended him outside the apartment of one of his fatherโs fellows.โ
โOne of the people who falsified data?โ
โExactly. Weโd put a protective detail on the other faculty involved with his censure and on the fellows who worked in the lab.โ
So the Charles II lead had been right, the son avenging the father. But it all seemed so theatrical, so bizarre. โHe really killed two people because he thought his dad got the short end?โ
โIt looks like it. I want you to meet him.โ โWorst blind date ever.โ
โStern.โ
โWhy, Turner?โ The detective had been willing to involve her on the periphery of the case, a look at the crime scene, a chat about theories, but meeting a suspect was a very different thing. And now that Alex might be out of Lethe and Yale forever, she wasnโt sure she had the heart or the will to dig into a murder mystery. โYouโve never wanted me in your business before.โ
โThereโs something wrong here and no one else seems to agree.โ โHeโs got an alibi?โ
โHis alibi didnโt hold up. And he confessed.โ โThen whatโs the problem?โ
โDo you want to meet this guy or not?โ
She did. She liked that even after sheโd fallen out of favor with Lethe, Turner still gave a damn what she thought. Besides, if Turner believed something was off, there was. Sheโd been in his head, looked through his eyes. Sheโd seen the world as he did, the details of it, the signs and signals everyone else missed or ignored. Sheโd felt the prickle at the base of her skull.
โI have to meet with the Praetor this afternoon,โ she said. โI can go after that. But youโll have to give me a ride over to the jail.โ
โHeโs not at the jail,โ said Turner. โHeโs at Yale New Haven.โ โThe hospital?โ
โThe psych ward.โ
Alex wasnโt sure how to respond. Sheโd spent enough time in and out of rehabs, scared-straight programs, and twenty-four-hour observation holds that she didnโt ever want to set foot on one of those wards again. But she
also wasnโt going to tell Turner any of that. Maybe she didnโt have to. Heโd seen her life through Hellieโs eyes.
โI need to know what you told the cops and the Praetor about the fire,โ she said.
โVandalism,โ said Turner. โNo way to pass it off as an accident. They didnโt find accelerant and the fire didnโt build, it just went up. Thatโs a mystery they arenโt going to unravel.โ
Hellfire? Something else? Which weapons did the demons have at their disposal? Maybe Turner could just arrest Linus Reiter and save them all a lot of trouble.
As she dressed, she tried to think of anything but the Praetor and what might come next. She wanted to go back to Il Bastone. She wanted Turner to post uniforms outside the house to keep it safe. She wanted some promise of protection for her mother, her friends, herself. Sheโd thought of Il Bastone as a kind of fortress, buttressed by magic and history and tradition. She wondered if Not Hellie knew just how much the fire had shaken her.
She touched her wrist where the salt snake had wound around her skin. She wasnโt helpless anymore. At least next time she tussled with the thing that wasnโt Hellie or the monster that wasnโt truly Lionel or Linus Reiter, it might be closer to a fair fight.
Alex muddled through her morning classes, trying to shake the dread that sat heavy in her gut. Was this the last lecture? The last hasty breakfast between classes? The last time she would sit in WLH and try to think of something clever to say in section?
Professor Walsh-Whiteley held office hours from two oโclock to four oโclock in the afternoon, and Alex thought about waiting until the last possible moment to show up, but the worry was too much for her. Better to get it over with, to know how far sheโd fallen so she could start dragging herself back to high ground.
She popped into Blue State to get a coffee and a bagel to fortify herself. There was always a young Gray outside the empty building next door,
dressed in a plaid flannel, sometimes hovering behind the window near where there had once been a jukebox when it was a pizza place. Occasionally, she thought she heard him humming the singsong strains of โHotel California.โ But today, he was sitting on the steps, as if he was waiting for the door to open so he could buy a slice. Alex let her eyes pass over him, then stumbled when someone gave her a shove from behind.
She barely caught herself and spilled hot coffee down her coat. โThe fuck?โ she said, whirling around.
For a long second, she didnโt recognize Tzvi, couldnโt reconcile the presence of Eitanโs bodyguard here, in New Haven, but there was no mistaking his wiry body, the tidy beard, the stony expression.
โHello, Alex.โ Eitan stood just behind Tzvi in an ugly leather coat, hair cut close and smelling of expensive aftershave. A golden Chai glinted at his neck.
Her first thought wasย run. Her second wasย kill them both. Neither was a reasonable option. If she ran, theyโd find her. And murdering two people in broad daylight on the streets of New Haven did not seem like a strategic move.
They stood staring at each other on the crowded sidewalk, people navigating past them on the way to classes or meetings.
โCome on,โ she said. She didnโt want to be seen with either of them. They stood outโthe coats, the hair. It wasnโt so much that they were criminals but that they were Los Angeles criminals. Too slick and glossy for New Haven. She led them to the driveway that ran between the music school and the Elizabethan Club.
โHere is good,โ said Eitan, and with a combination of frustration and pride she realized he didnโt want to be out of sight of the busy street. She didnโt know if Eitan and Tzvi were afraid of her, but they were being cautious. That was the problem with Eitan. He was very good at staying alive.
โYouโve been to Elizabethan Club?โ Alex shook her head.
โYou have to be member. They have Shakespeareโs Firstโฆโ
โFolio,โ Alex said without thinking. And a first edition ofย Paradise Lost. All kinds of literary treasures squirreled away in a vault. And more importantly they served a plush afternoon tea. Darlington was a member, but heโd never taken her there.
โYes! Folios,โ said Eitan. โYouโre on your way to class?โ
Alex thought about lying. It would be easy enough to claim she worked in the dining halls. Sheโd told Eitan she was moving east with her imaginary boyfriend. Heโd even offered to get her a gig at one of the casinos. She had hoped he would leave her alone, but instead the jobs on the East Coast had picked up right where the West left off. Eitan had business everywhere and friends who he was happy to grant favors.
Even so, if Eitan was here, that meant he knew more than he should. He would have already had someone dig up everything he could on her, and if heโd been able to find her in the middle of a campus packed with students, he must have been watching her for a while.
โNo,โ she said. โIโm done for the day. I was going back to the dorms.โ โWeโll go with you.โ
That was one step too far. No way was she bringing these assholes anywhere close to Mercy and Lauren.
โWhat do you want, Eitan?โ
โLetโs be nice, Alex. Be polite.โ
โYou almost got me killed. That does something to my manners.โ
โIโm sorry. You know this. I like you. You do good work for me. Reiter has been difficult.โ
He did sound genuinely sorry. The way someone would be sorry for eating the last slice of cake or being late to a dinner party.
โDo you have any idea what he really is?โ Alex asked.
โI donโt need to know,โ said Eitan. โHe is problem. You are solution.โ
โYou want me to go back there?โ Not a chance. It had been bad enough seeing Reiter lurking in the courtyard, but if Dawes was right, he was weaker when he had to hide from daylight and when he was away from his nest. In his lair, he had the advantage. Even the thought of that big white house made her lungs tighten, caught her breath, wound it fast on a spool. What had the Gray teacher said? Heโd killed hundreds, maybe more.
โYouโre happy here,โ Eitan said.
Alex wasnโt sure what happy looked like. She was pretty confident it didnโt involve being hounded by demons or losing her scholarship. โHappy enough.โ
โFix Reiter for me, we can be done. You can have new life. You donโt have to worry about Tzvi showing up at your door.โ
โThatโs why you came here? To send me to die?โ
โI had business in the city. And this is a good market. Lots of young people. Lots of pressure. Everyone trying to have fun.โ
That felt like a threat. Was Eitan going to push her to deal on campus? There had to be a line somewhere. There had to be an end to this. Alex felt too aware of the people around her, their vulnerability, their weakness. Easy preyโfor demons and for men like Eitan. He didnโt belong here and neither did she. They were serpents in the garden.
Alex weighed her choices. โI take care of Reiter, weโre done. Thatโs the deal. No more jobs. No more bargains.โ
Eitan smiled and patted her shoulder. โYes.โ
โAnd if I donโt come backโฆโ Alex dug her nails into her palm, remembering the feeling of Reiterโs fangs entering her body. โIf I donโt come back, you throw some money my momโs way. Make sure sheโs okay.โ
โDonโt talk like this, Alex. You will be fine. I see what you can do.โ Alex held his gaze. โYou have no idea what I can do.โ
He didnโt flinch. Eitan wasnโt going to let her get him alone, but he wasnโt scared of her. She might have sway with the dead, but he ruled the living.
Again he patted her shoulder, as if he was offering encouragement to a child. โFinish this job and we say goodbye, yes?โ
โYes,โ said Alex.
โThis is fair. You make amends. Everyone is happy.โ
She doubted he was right about that, but all she said was, โSure.โ โGood girl,โ said Eitan.
He wasnโt right about that either.