Somethingโs wrong,โ she told Dawes as she hurried across campus to meet Turner. โThe Praetor didnโt say anything about the Gauntlet or disciplinary action.โ
โMaybe Anselm changed his mind?โ
โHe was furious, Dawes. Thereโs no way he decided to give us another chance.โ
โYou think something โฆ one of the demonsโฆโ โSee if you can find out if heโs been home.โ
โHow am I supposed to do that?โ
โCall his house, pretend you work with him.โ โAlex!โ
โGoddamn it, Dawes, do I have to do all of this myself?โ โIf โthisโ is unethical, then yes!โ
Alex hung up. She felt frantic, exposed, like Not Hellie could be around any corner. Or Eitan. Or Linus Reiter.ย Demons arenโt smart, Dawes had once told her,ย theyโre cunning.ย Alex had to wonder how many people had said the same thing about her.
โOkay, so what would I do?โ she muttered to herself, watching her breath plume in the cold air as she hurried toward Chapel Street.
Hang back and watch. Look for an opportunity. Find a way to shift the odds in her favor.
If something had happened to Anselm โฆ well, that would take care of one of their problems. But Lethe wasnโt just going to shrug off his disappearance, not when two faculty members were dead too. Alex stopped in front of the University Art Gallery. Marjorie Stephen. Dean Beekman. Could Anselm be a victim as well? Not if Turner had the right suspect in
custody. Ed Lambtonโs son had no reason to go after someone barely associated with Yale anymore. Unless theyโd been making the wrong connections from the start.
A few minutes later, Turner pulled up in his Dodge and Alex slid into the passengerโs seat, grateful for the heat.
โJesus,โ she said. โDid you sleep at all?โ
He shook his head, a muscle ticking in his jaw. He was sharply dressed as always, navy wool suit with the subtlest pinstripe, slate-colored tie, Burberry overcoat laid neatly over the back seat. But he had dark smudges under his eyes and his skin looked ashen. Turner was a handsome man, but a few more nights playing tag with his personal demons and he might not be.
โWhat line did it use?โ Alex asked.
Turner navigated the Dodge back into traffic. โIt didnโt show up as Carmichael this time. Thought it would be cute to wait for me in the parking lot dressed up like my grandfather.โ
โBad?โ
He gave a single, terse nod. โFor a second I thought โฆ I donโt know.โ โYou believed it was him.โ
โThe dead stay dead, right? But he โฆ It looked like him, sounded like him. I feltย happyย when I saw him, like it was some kind of miracle.โ
A gift. A reward for all the pain. Exactly the way Alex had felt when sheโd held Hellie. Losing that again had almost broken her.
That was why Turner looked terrible. Not because he hadnโt slept, but because the demon had fed on him.
โI donโt know how much longer I can handle this,โ Turner said. โHow did you get free?โ
โHe told me we were both in danger, that I had to go with him, and I was halfway down the block when I realized how fast he was moving, how light on his feet. My grandfather had arthritis. He couldnโt take a step without hurting. I said โฆ Maybe some part of me knew he wasnโt right. I said, โHeal me, Lord, and I will be healed.โโ
โDid he burst into flames?โ
Turner barked a laugh. โNo, but he looked at me with this soft little smile, like Iโd said something about the weather. My grandfather loved scripture. He had a pocket Bible, carried it everywhere with him, kept it over his heart. If I quoted Godโs word to him, his face should have lit up like a sunrise.โ
Cunning, but not smart.
โThen things got ugly,โ said Turner. โEven though I knew it wasnโt him, I didnโt want to use the oak on him, to push him away. He seemedโฆโ Turnerโs voice tightened, and Alex realized he was fighting back tears. Sheโd seen him angry, frustrated, but never grieving, never lost. โHe was so old and frail. When I turned on him, he looked scared and confused. Heโฆโ
โIt wasnโt him,โ Alex said. โThat thing was feeding on you.โ They pulled into a parking lot.
โI know, butโโ
โIt still feels like shit.โ
โIt really does.โ He stared straight ahead, at the chain-link fence and the big brick building beyond. โYou know they call the devil the Father of Lies? I donโt think I ever really understood what that could mean until now.โ
Alex tried not to squirm in her seat. Every time Turner got biblical, she felt uneasy, as if he was telling her about some grand hallucination and it was her job to nod sagely and pretend she saw miracles too. Then again, sheโd spent her whole life seeing things no one else did; maybe she could extend him the benefit of the doubt.
For a moment she felt that pull to tell him everything, what Eitan had asked of her, the jobs sheโd done for him, the fact that he had been here, in New Haven. Turner knew what it was like to be backed into a corner, to do the wrong thing because all the right things just got you in deeper.
Instead she got out of the car. โI think something may have happened to Michael Anselm.โ
โBecause he didnโt show up at Il Bastone?โ
โI figured he went back to New York, but I met with the new Praetor just now and he didnโt say a word about the Gauntlet or all of us getting kicked out of Lethe.โ
โCould be Anselm wanted to talk to the board in person.โ
โCould be,โ Alex said. They hustled across the street to the entrance, and passed through a revolving door into a big, anonymous lobby. It didnโt really look like a hospital. They might have been anywhere. โOr maybe something got to him before he made it back to the city.โ
Turner flashed his badge and ID at the desk, and they headed for a bank of elevators.
โI thought the demons were tied to us. Why would they seek out Anselm?โ He sounded worried, and Alex understood why. None of them wanted these things going after their friends and family.
โWho says something else didnโt get loose? Anselm stopped the ritual.
Maybe there was blowback.โ
โYouโre guessing,โ Turner said. โOr, as we call it in the business, pontificating out of your ass. For all you know, Anselm had a fight with his wife and he just hasnโt gotten around to screwing us.โ
โItโs all guessing, Turner. But it doesnโt have to be.โ
Turner sighed. โFine. Iโll see if I can look into it without raising any alarms. Now would you focus?โ
Focus, Miss Stern.ย But Alex didnโt want to focus. All of it was too familiar. The white walls, the inoffensive art on them, the reception carpet giving way to cold tile. These were the places where sheโd learned to lie, to pretend she was an ordinary kid whoโd fallen in with a bad crowd, to tell kind social workers and curious shrinks that she liked to make up crazy stories, that she enjoyed the attention.
There had been truth mixed in too. She didnโt want to hurt her mom. She knew she was a source of headache, heartache, financial trouble, maternal woe. She wanted to make friends, but she didnโt know how. Tears had come easily. The hardest thing had been hiding how desperate she was to get better, how much she wanted to be free of the things she saw. The single upside to psych wards was that Grays hated them even more than the living.
Only once had she given in and told the truth. Sheโd been fourteen years old, already hanging with Lenโs crowd. Sheโd already let him fuck her in his narrow bed with the dirty sheets. Theyโd smoked before, after. Sheโd been
disappointed by the mess of it, but tried to go along, made the noises that seemed to excite him. Sheโd stroked his narrow back and felt something that might have been love or just a desire to feel love.
Her mother had dragged her in for evaluation, and sheโd gone along because Len had told her if she played her cards right, theyโd prescribe her something good, and also because it was better than getting sent somewhere to be scared straight again. Guys in fatigues could shout at her and make her do push-ups and clean bathrooms, but sheโd been scared her whole fucking life and she just kept getting more crooked.
Alex had actually liked the doctor sheโd met with that day at Wellways. Marcy Golder. Sheโd been younger than the others, funny. She had a pretty tattoo of a rose vine around her wrist. Sheโd offered Alex a cigarette, and theyโd sat together, looking out at the distant ocean. Marcy had said, โI canโt pretend I understand everything in this world. It would be arrogant to say that. We think we understand and then boom! Galileo. Bam! Einstein. We have to stay open.โ
So Alex had told her the things she saw, just a little about the Quiet Ones who were always with her, who only disappeared in a cloud of kush. Not everything, just a little, a test.
But it had still been too much. And sheโd known it right away. Sheโd seen the understanding in Marcyโs eyes, the studied warmth, and, beneath it, the excitement that she couldnโt hide.
Alex had shut up quick, but the damage was done. Marcy Golder wanted to keep her at Wellways for a six-week program of electroshock treatment combined with talk therapy and hydrotherapy. Thankfully it had been out of Miraโs budget, and her mother had been too much of a hippie to say yes to clapping electrodes on her daughterโs skull.
Now Alex knew none of it would have worked for her because the Grays were real. No amount of medication or electricity could erase the dead. But at the time, sheโd wondered.
Yale New Haven was at least trying to keep itself human. Plants in the corners. A big skylight above and pops of blue on the walls.
โYou okay?โ Turner asked as the elevator rose.
Alex nodded. โWhatโs bothering you about this guy?โ
โIโm not sure. He confessed. He has details of the crimes, and the forensics all line up. Butโฆโ
โBut?โ
โSomethingโs off.โ
โThe prickle,โ she said and Turner startled, then rubbed his jaw. โYeah,โ he said. โThatโs it.โ
The prickle had never led Turner astray. He trusted his gut, and maybe he trusted her now too.
A doctor came out to meet them, middle-aged, with highlighted blond hair cut into fashionable bangs.
โDr. Tarkenian is going to observe,โ said Turner. โAlex knows Andyโs father.โ
โYou were one of his students?โ the shrink asked.
Alex nodded and wished Turner had prepped her better.
โAndy and Ed were very close,โ the doctor said. โEd Lambtonโs wife passed a little over two years ago. Andy came out for the funeral and encouraged his father to move out to Arizona with him.โ
โLambton wasnโt interested?โ Turner asked.
โHis lab is here,โ said Dr. Tarkenian. โI can understand that choice.โ
โHe should have taken his son up on the offer. By all accounts, his doctoral candidates had almost no oversight. His head just wasnโt in it.โ
Alex saw the way that assessment troubled Tarkenian. โYou knew him,โ Alex said.
Tarkenian nodded. โI did my doctoral work with him years ago. Iโm afraid you didnโt see him at his best.โ Her expression hardened. โAnd I knew Dean Beekman too. He didnโt deserve that.โ
She led them down the hall to a sunroom where a man in his thirties was seated, handcuffed to a wheelchair, his back to a spectacular view of New Haven. His lips were chapped, and his fingers flexed and unflexed on the armrests as if they knew a secret rhythm, but otherwise he looked fine. Healthy. Normal. He had dark hair and a close-cropped beard streaked with gray. He looked like he worked at a microbrewery.
That could be me, she thought.ย Thatย wasย me.ย Sheโd met Dean Sandow in a hospital. Sheโd been handcuffed to the bed, no one yet sure if she was a
victim or a suspect. Some people were probably still trying to figure that out.
Behind Andy Lambton, gray clouds hung low over the city. She could see the gap of the New Haven Green, East Rock in the distance, the big Gothic spike of Harkness Tower, though she doubted anyone could hear the bells from here.
โThatโs quite a view,โ Alex said, and Andy shuddered. They sat down across from him.
โHow are you, Andy?โ Turner asked. โTired.โ
โHas he been sleeping?โ Turner asked the doctor.
Alex cut him off. โDonโt talk like heโs not right here. You sleeping okay?โ
โNo,โ Andy admitted. โItโs not exactly a restful environment.โ โIโve seen worse,โ Alex said.
Andy shrugged. โI donโt like it here.โ โIn the hospital?โ
โIn this town.โ Andy glanced over his shoulder, as if New Haven were listening, as if it had snuck up on him.
But Andy was calm, his manner easy. Alex wondered if he was medicated.
Turner leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees, interlocking his fingers. โI need you to talk to us about what happened, strictly off the record, no tape recorder, no notes, nothing can be used against you in a court of law.โ
โWhy? I told you what I did.โ โIโm trying to understand.โ
Andy Lambtonโs eyes shifted to Alex. โAnd sheโs supposed to help you understand?โ
โThatโs right.โ
โSheโs covered in fire,โ he said.
Alex forced herself not to look at Turner, but she knew they were both thinking of the blue flame that had surrounded her in hell.
โI told you I did it,โ Andy said. โWhat else do you want?โ
โI just need clarity on a few things. We had a good look at your computer. Aside from some pretty unremarkable porn, your search history didnโt turn up anything to speak of. And nothing related to Professor Stephen or Dean Beekman.โ
โMaybe I cleared it.โ
โYou didnโt. And thatโs unusual too.โ Andy shrugged again.
โHow did you get into Dean Beekmanโs home? Professor Stephenโs office?โ Turner continued. โDid you follow them? Stake them out?โ
โI just knew how.โ โHow?โ
โHe told me.โ
Turner practically growled in frustration. But Alex had the sense that Andy wasnโt being stubborn. Something else was going on here.
โWhoย told you?โ Turner demanded. Now Andy hesitated. โI โฆ my dad?โ
Turner leaned back in his chair, appeased. โDid he know you planned to hurt these people?โ
Andyโs head snapped up. โNo!โ
โHe just handed you his key card and rattled off their work schedules for fun?โ
โHe didnโt rattle off anything. The ram told me.โ Andy smacked his lips, scraping his tongue over his teeth as if he didnโt like the taste of the words.
Alex stayed very still. โThe ram?โ
Andy rolled his eyes. It wasnโt a look of contempt. There was something wild in the movement, like an animal caught in a trap, straining to get free.
Even so, his voice was reasonable. โIt wasnโt a big deal to find them, to get them to let me in. Iโve spent most of my life at Yale, okay?โ He jabbed a finger at Turner. โAnd donโt try to bring my dad into this. You said we were off the record.โ
โIโm not going to get your dad jammed up. Iโm trying to understand what happened here.โ Turner studied Andy. โTalk to me about Charles II.โ
โThe โฆ king?โ
โWhy did you open Marjorie Stephenโs Bible? Why Judges?โ
Now Andyโs face flashed with anger. โShe cost my father everything.
And over what? Someone elseโs mistake?โ
Turner spread his hands as if he was just laying out the evidence. โMy understanding is he was the person in charge of the lab. Oversight was his responsibility.โ
โThey went too far.โ
โHe has tenure. He isnโt out of a job.โ
Andy laughed, a harsh, serrated sound. โHe could have handled losing his job, but he became a joke. A study on honesty that used falsified data? He couldnโt show his face at conferences. He lost his reputation, his dignity. He was a laughingstock. You donโt โฆ You donโt know what that was like for him. He doesnโt want to teach anymore. He doesnโt want to do anything anymore. Itโs like a part of him died.โ
โThey judged him,โ said Alex. โThey signed the death warrant and as good as executed him. You wanted revenge.โ
โI โฆ did.โ
โYou wanted to humiliate them.โ โYes.โ
โKnock them down off their high horses.โ
โYes,โ he hissed, the sound curling through the room. โBut you didnโt want to kill them.โ
Andy looked surprised. โNo. Of course not.โ Turnerโs eyes narrowed. โBut youย didย kill them.โ
Andy nodded, then shook his head, as if he was a mystery to himself. โI did. He made it easy.โ
โThe ram?โ Alex asked.
Andyโs eyelids fluttered rapidly. โHe was kind.โ โYeah?โ Alex pushed.
โEasy to talk to. He โฆ knew so much.โ โAbout what?โ
Again Andy looked over his shoulder. โThis town. The people here. He knew so many stories. He had all of the answers. But he wasnโt โฆ He
didnโt lord it over me, you know? He just wanted to help. To make things right. He was polite. A realโโ
โGentleman,โ Alex finished for him. Cold sweat had broken out over her body, and she struggled not to shiver.
The ram told me.ย Alex thought of Darlingtonโs horns, curled back from his forehead, glowing behind the protection of the golden circleโhis prison.
But maybe the circle had been an illusion. Maybe Darlington had let them believe it kept him at bay when it had been nothing more than fairy dust.
She had known there was something off about the crime scenes, elaborate stage sets steeped in New Haven lore. A game a demon might like to play.
Turner was watching her. โSomething you want to share with the class, Stern?โ
โNo โฆ I โฆ I have to go.โ
โSternโโ Turner began, but Alex was out the door, striding down the hall. She needed to get to Black Elm.
Darlington, who knew everything about New Havenโs history, who had โrecognizedโ the quote from Davenportโs sermon. What had he said that day?ย I always admired virtue. But I could never imitate it.ย Alex tapped the quote into her phone. The search results popped up immediately: Charles II. Darlington had said he was the hermit in the cave. And of course, heโd meant Judges Cave. Anselm had warned her:ย Whatever survived in hell wouldnโt be the Darlington you know.
Demons loved games. And heโd been playing with them from the start.