The plan was trickier than Alex had anticipated. The mirror would fool the guards they encountered but not the cameras in the jail.
Dawes came to the rescue with an actual tempest in a teapot. Alex hadnโt thought Darlington was being literal when theyโd walked through the bizarre basement of Rosenfeld Hall, but apparently back in their heyday, St. Elmoโs had managed all kinds of interesting magic.
โItโs not just the vessel,โ Dawes explained to Alex and Turner the next day, standing at the counter in the kitchen at Il Bastone, a golden teapot and jeweled strainer before her. โItโs the tea itself.โ She carefully measured out dried leaves from a tin stamped with the St. Elmoโs crest, a sinister little design referred to as โthe goat and boat.โ
โDarlington said theyโre campaigning for a new tomb,โ Alex said.
Dawes nodded. โLosing Rosenfeld Hall broke them. Theyโve been petitioning for years, claiming all sorts of new applications for their magic. But without a nexus to build over, thereโs no point to a new tomb.โ She poured the water over the leaves and set the timer on her phone. The lights flickered. โMake the brew too strong and you could short the grid for the entire Eastern Seaboard.โ
โWhy are the tombs so important?โ Turner asked. โThis is just a house and youโre standing there โฆ workingย magic.โ He ran his tongue over his teeth as if he didnโt like the taste of the word.
โLethe House magic is spell- and object-based, borrowed enchantments, very stable. We donโt rely on rites. Itโs why we can keep the wards up. The other societies are trafficking with far more powerful forcesโtelling the future, communicating with the dead, altering matter.โ
โBig magic,โ said Alex.
Turner leaned back against the counter. โSo they have machine guns and youโre working with a bow and arrow?โ
Dawes looked up, startled. She rubbed her nose. โWell, more like a crossbow, but yes.โ
The timer sounded. Dawes swiftly removed the strainer and poured the tea into a thermos. She handed it to Alex. โYou should have about two hours of real disruption. After thatโฆโ She shrugged.
โBut youโre not going to knock the power out, right?โ Turner asked. โI donโt want to be at a jail when all the lights go down.โ
โAw, look how far youโve come!โ Alex said. โNow youโre worried about magic beingย tooย powerful.โ
Dawes tugged at her sweatshirt sleeves, the surety sheโd displayed while caught up in brewing the tea evaporating. โNot if I got it right.โ
Alex took the thermos and stowed it in her satchel, then yanked her hair into a tight bun. Sheโd told Mercy she had a job interview as an excuse to borrow her fancy black pantsuit.
โI hope you get the job,โ Mercy had said, and hugged Alex so tight it felt like her bones were bending.
โI hope I get it too,โ Alex had replied. Sheโd been happy to play dress-up, happy to have this adventure to fill the hours, regardless of the danger. The new-moon rite had felt distant, impossibly far off, but tonight it would happen. She was having trouble thinking about anything else.
She checked her phone. โNo signal.โ Turner did the same. โMe neither.โ
Alex turned on the little television that sat above the breakfast nook.
Nothing but static. โA perfect brew, Dawes.โ Dawes looked pleased. โGood luck.โ
โIโm about to commit career suicide,โ said Turner. โLetโs hope weโve got more on our side than luck.โ
The drive to the jail was short. No one there knew Alex, so she didnโt have to worry about being recognized. She made a perfectly reasonable assistant in her borrowed corporate drag. Turner was another matter. Heโd had to pop by the courthouse that morning to bump into Lance Gressangโs attorney and secure his visage in the compact.
They passed through security without incident.
โStop looking at the cameras,โ Alex whispered as she and Turner were escorted down a dingy hallway lit by buzzing fluorescents.
โThey look like theyโre working.โ
โThe power is on, but theyโre just recording static,โ Alex said with more confidence than she felt. The thermos was tucked into her bag, its weight resting reassuringly against her hip.
Once they were inside the meeting room, theyโd be safe at least. There was no video or audio recording allowed in a conference between an attorney and his client.
Lance was seated at the table when they entered. โWhat do you want?โ he said when he caught sight of Turner, who had pocketed the compact after flashing it at the scowling guard.
โYouโve got one hour,โ the guard said. โDonโt push it.โ
Gressang shoved back from the table, looking from Turner to Alex. โWhat the fuck is this? Are you two working together?โ
โOne hour,โ the guard repeated, and locked the door behind him.
โI know my rights,โ Gressang said, standing. He looked even bigger than he had at the apartment, and his bandaged hand didnโt do much to put Alex at ease. She had made it her business not to get trapped in small spaces with men like Lance Gressang. You didnโt want to be the only thing in sight when their moods went sour.
โSit down,โ said Turner. โWe need to have a conversation.โ โYou canโt talk to me without my lawyer.โ
โYou walked through a wall yesterday,โ said Turner. โThat in the penal code?โ
Lance looked almost sheepish at the accusation.ย He knows heโs not supposed to be using portal magic,ย Alex thought. And he most definitely wasnโt supposed to be seen doing it by a cop. Lance had no way of knowing that Turner was associated with the Houses of the Veil.
โSit down, Gressang,โ Turner repeated. โYou might be glad you did.โ
Alex wondered if Lance would just pop a mushroom in his mouth and vanish through the floor. But slowly, sullenly, he dropped back into his seat.
Turner and Alex took chairs opposite him at the table.
Lanceโs jaw set and he jutted his chin toward Alex. โWhy were you at my place?โ
Myย place. Not our place. She said nothing.
โIโm trying to find out who killed Tara,โ said Turner.
Lance threw up his hands. โIf you know Iโm innocent, why donโt you get me out of this shithole?โ
โโInnocentโ is a big word for what you are,โ Turner said in that same pleasant, condescending tone heโd used on Alex just a few days ago. โMaybe
youโre innocent of this particular bit of brutality, and if thatโs the case it will be my great pleasure to make sure the murder charge against you is vacated. But right now what I want to convey to you is that no one knows weโre here. The guards all think youโre chatting with your lawyer, and what you need to absorb is that we can do whatever we want.โ
โAm I supposed to be afraid?โ
โYes,โ said Turner. โYou are. But not of us.โ โHey, he can be afraid of us,โ said Alex.
โHe can, but he has bigger problems to worry about. If you didnโt kill Tara, then someone did. And that someone is just waiting to lay hands on you too. Right now youโre a useful scapegoat. But for how long? Tara knew things she wasnโt supposed to, and maybe you do too.โ
โI donโt know shit.โ
โIโm not the one you need to convince. Youโve seen what these people can do. Do you think that they care about wiping away a little shitstain like you? Do you think they will hesitate to eradicate you or your friends or that entire neighborhood if it will help them sleep a little better at night?โ
โPeople like you and me donโt matter,โ said Alex. โNot when we stop being useful.โ
Lance placed his injured hand gingerly on the table and leaned forward. โWho theย fuckย are you?โ
Alex held his gaze. โIโm the only person who thinks you didnโt kill Tara. So help me figure out who did before Turner loses patience, shuffles me out that door, and leaves you to rot.โ
Lanceโs eyes darted back and forth between Alex and Turner. At last he said, โI didnโt hurt her. I loved her.โ
Like those things couldnโt go hand in hand. โWhen did you start working with Sveta Myers?โ
Lance shifted in his seat. He obviously didnโt like that they knew that name. โI donโt remember. Two years back? Tara went up there for a plant sale, got to chatting with her. They got on real good, talking about community gardening and shit. We sold to her for a while, then we started growing with her, giving her a cut.โ
โTell us about the Merity,โ Alex said. โThe what?โ
โYou werenโt just growing cush. What did you grow for Blake Keely?โ โThat model guy? He was always sniffing around Tara, flashing cash like
heโs a celebrity. I canโt stand that asshole.โ
Alex didnโt know how she felt about finding common ground with Lance Gressang.
โWhat were you growing for him?โ Turner pushed.
โIt wasnโt for him. Not at first. We were selling green to his frat for a whileโnone of this shit is admissible, all right? Itโs all off the record?โ Turner waved him on. โNothing special. Dime bags, twenty bags. The usual shit. Then this year, this girl Katie shows upโโ
Alex sat forward. โKate Masters?โ
โYeah. Blond, real cute, but kinda butch?โ โTell me more about your taste in women.โ โReally?โ
โNo, you ass. What didย Katieย want?โ
โShe wanted to know where we were growing and if Tara could make some space at the greenhouses for something new. Some medicinal shit, had all these specific rules about moisture or I donโt know what. Tara got real into working on it with Sveta. Took a minute but eventually it started growing pretty well. I tried some of it once. Didnโt even give me a buzz.โ
Jesus. Lance Gressang had gotten his hands on Merity and he hadnโt even known it. When Alex thought of the damage he might have done if heโd realized the control it could give him over others โฆ But someone else had gotten there first.
โYou thought it was worthless,โ said Alex. โA shit buzz. So you sold it to Blake.โ
โYeah,โ Gressang said, grinning.
โAnd what did you think when he came back for more?โ Gressang shrugged. โHappy to take his money.โ
โDid Kate Masters know you sold Merity to Blake?โ
โNah, she was real uptight. Told us it was poisonous and whatever, not to mess with it. I knew sheโd be pissed if she found out. But Blake kept hitting us up for more, and then he brings this other guy around who wants to know if we can get mushrooms.โ
โWho?โ Turner asked Lance. But Alex already knew what Lance was going to say.
Lance wriggled in his seat. He looked uneasy, almost scared.
โIt was Colin Khatri, wasnโt it?โ said Alex. โFrom Scroll and Key.โ โYeah. Heโฆโ Lance leaned back. The bravado had gone from him. He
looked at the wall as if expecting to find some kind of answer there. The clock was ticking, but Alex and Turner stayed quiet. โI didnโt know what we
were starting.โ
โTell me,โ said Turner. โTell me how it began.โ
โTara was at the greenhouses all the time,โ Lance said haltingly. โComing home late, staying up to try mixing shit, putting the mushrooms together with I donโt know what. She had this little yellow dish Colin gave her. Called it her witchโs cauldron. Colin couldnโt get enough of the tabs she made. He kept coming back for more.โ
โTabs?โ asked Turner. โI thought you were dealing with mushrooms.โ โTara distilled that shit down. It wasnโt acid. I donโt know what it was.โ
Lance rubbed his good hand up his other arm, and Alex could see his skin had puckered with goosebumps. โWe wanted to know what Colin was using it for, but he was real cagey about it. So Taraโs like, guess I wonโt be cooking for you guys anymore.โ Lance held his hands out like he was pleading with Alex. โI told her. Iย toldย her to just leave it alone, just keep taking Colinโs cash.โ
โBut it wasnโt enough,โ Alex said.ย Rather die than doubt.ย Tara had sensed something big at play and sheโd wanted to be part of it. โSo what happened?โ
โColin caved.โ Alex couldnโt tell if he sounded more smug or regretful. โOne weekend, he and his buddies come get us at the apartment. We all take the tabs Tara made and then they blindfold us and take us into this building, this room. It was real pretty, with these screens with, like, Jewish stars on them, and the roof was open so you could see the skies.โ Alex had been in that room the night of the failed Locksmith ritual, when theyโd tried to get to Budapest. Had they staged the whole thing knowing it wouldnโt work without Taraโs tabs? โWe stand in a circle at this round table and they start chanting in, like, I donโt know, Arabic maybe and the table just โฆ opens up.โ
โLike a passage?โ asked Turner.
Lance was shaking his head. โNo, no. You donโt understand: There was no bottom. It was night down thereโsome other nightโand night up top, our night. It was all stars.โ There was real awe in his voice. โWe walked through and we were standing on a mountaintop. You could see for miles. It was so clear you could see the bend in the horizon. It was incredible. I was sick as shit the next day, though. And, God, we smelled. It didnโt wash off for days.โ Lance sighed and said, โI guess it just went on from there. Colin and that whole crew wanted Tara to keep cooking up her stuff for them. We wanted to keep tripping. Tara wanted to see the world. I only wanted to fuck around. We went to the Amazon, Morocco, those hot pools in Iceland. We went to New Orleans for New Yearโs. It was like the best video game ever.โ Lance released a little laugh. โColin couldnโt figure out how Tara was mixing the shit. He
acted like he thought it was funny, but I could tell it pissed him off.โ
Alex tried to reconcile this Colinโgreedy, jealous, tripping with drug dealersโwith the ambitious, perfectly groomed boy sheโd seen at Belbalmโs house. Where had he thought this would end?
โHow did Blake and Colin know each other?โ Alex asked. She couldnโt imagine them hanging out.
Lance shrugged. โLacrosse or some shit?โ
Lacrosse. Colin seemed so distinctly un-jocklike it was hard to picture. Had he seen one of Blakeโs nasty little videos and recognized Merity the way Alex had? The Locksmithsโ magic had started to fail. The nexus beneath their tomb wasnโt working anymore and they were desperate for ways to open portals. And Colinโbright, friendly, polished Colinโhadnโt reported what Blake had been doing with the Merity. He hadnโt stopped him from hurting girls. Instead, heโd seized an opportunity for himself and his society.
โWhat about Tripp Helmuth?โ said Turner. It felt strange to ask about rosy-cheeked, good-vibes-only Tripp, but Alex was glad he wasnโt ruling anyone out.
โWho?โ
โRich kid,โ said Alex, โsailing team, always seems to have a tan?โ โThat could be a lot of guys around Yale.โ
Alex didnโt think he was playing dumb, but she couldnโt be sure. โThe other day you opened a portal in the jail,โ said Turner.
โI had a tab on me when you guys picked me up.โ Lance grinned. โPlenty of places to stash something that small.โ
โWhy not just escape?โ asked Turner. โGo to Cuba or something?โ
โWhat the fuck would I do in Cuba?โ Lance asked. โBesides, you canโt portal big distances from anywhere but the table.โ
He meant the tomb. Scroll and Key still needed the nexus. Taraโs tabs werenโt enough on their own.
โWait,โ said Alex. โYou wasted your only tab going back to your apartment?โ
โI thought I could get some cash, maybe make a run for it or get something to trade in here, but your asshole cops had tore the whole place apart.โ
โWhy didnโt you just portal to the tombโthe tableโand then go wherever you wanted?โ
Lance blinked. โShit.โ He slumped back in his chair.ย โShit.โย He trained his gaze on Alex. He looked impossibly mournful. โYouโre going to help me,
right? Youโre going to protect me?โ
Turner stood. โKeep your head down, Gressang. As long as you look like youโre taking the fall, you should be safe in here.โ
Alex expected Lance to protest, try to bargain, maybe even threaten them. Instead, he just sat there, his big body frozen like a stone idol beneath the fluorescent lights. He didnโt say a word when Turner knocked on the door and the guard came to fetch them, didnโt look up when they left. Heโd been to the jungles of the Amazon, explored the markets of Marrakesh. Heโd seen into the mysteries of the world, but the mysteries of the world had taken no notice of him, and after all of it, heโd still ended up here. The doors had closed. The portals too. Lance Gressang wasnโt going anywhere.
Turner and Alex rode back to campus in silence, the Dodgeโs heater cranked up against the bitter cold. She texted Dawes to let her know they were in the clear and that sheโd be at Black Elm by eight at the latest, then slipped off the pumps sheโd borrowed from Mercy. They were a half size too small and her feet were killing her.
It wasnโt until they were exiting the highway that Turner said, โWell?โ โI think we may have more motives than we started with.โ
โIโm not taking Gressang off the table. Not until we can put someone else at the scene. But Colin Khatri and Kate Masters are looking a lot more interesting.โ He tapped his gloved hands on the wheel. โItโs not only Colin and Kate, though, is it? Itโs all of them. All the little children in their robes and hoods pretending theyโre wizards.โ
โTheyโre not pretending.โ But Alex knew exactly what he meant. Colin was the most direct connection between Scroll and Key and Tara, but all of the Locksmiths had shared their rituals with outsiders and hidden the truth from Lethe. If Tara had become a danger to the society, any one of them could have decided to shut her up. It also didnโt seem likely Kate Masters had opted to go rogue from Manuscript. Alex remembered what Mike Awolowo had said about the rarity of the drug. Maybe theyโd all thought they could cut out their Khingan Mountain supplier and start growing their own. Heโd seemed genuinely surprised that the Merity had gotten out, but that could have been an act.
โWho do you like for this?โ Turner asked.
Alex tried not to show her surprise. Turner might just be using her as a sounding board, but it felt good to be asked. She wished she had a better
answer.
Alex flexed her aching feet. โAny member of Manuscript could have used a glamour to make Tara think she was meeting Lance. Plus if Keys relied on Tara for the secret sauce, why would they want her dead? Their magic has been a mess the last few years. They needed her.โ
โUnless she was pushing too hard,โ said Turner. โWe have no idea what her relationship with Colin was really like. We donโt even know exactly what was in those tabs of hers. We arenโt talking about magic mushrooms anymore.โ
That was true. Maybe Colin the chem whiz hadnโt liked being shown up by a town girl. And Alex doubted anyone in Scroll and Key liked being blackmailed into sharing their rites. It was also possible someone had cracked Taraโs recipe and decided they didnโt want her around anymore.
โColin Khatri had an alibi that night,โ Alex said. โHe was at Belbalmโs salon.โ
โYouโre telling me he couldnโt just open up a convenient little portal, pop through, kill Tara, be back before anyone noticed?โ
Alex wanted to smack herself. โSmart, Turner.โ โItโs almost like Iโm good at my job.โ
Alex knew she should have thought of it herself. Maybe she would have if she wasnโt too busy hoping Colin wasnโt involved in the worst of this, that her perfect, promising summer with Belbalm could remain untouched by the ugliness of Taraโs murder.
Turner steered the car up Chapel and pulled in at the Vanderbilt gates. She saw North hovering by the steps to her entryway. How long had he been waiting? And had he found Tara on the other side? With a shiver, she realized heโd been killedโor killed pretty Daisy and himselfโonly blocks from where she was sitting.
โWhat would you say if I told you thereโs a ghost outside my dorm?โ asked Alex. โRight there in the courtyard?โ
โHonestly?โ asked Turner. โAfter everything Iโve seen the last few days?โ โYeah.โ
โIโd still think you were screwing with me.โ โWhat if I told you heโs working our case?โ
Turnerโs real laugh was completely unlike his false chuckle, a deep, full belly laugh. โIโve had weirder CIs.โ
Alex shoved her feet into the too-tight pumps and pushed open the car door. The night air was so cold it hurt to breathe, and the sky was black above
her. New moon rising. She was due at Black Elm in a matter of hours. When Dean Sandow had first started talking about the ritual, Alex assumed they would try to contact Darlington from Il Bastone, maybe even using the crucible. But Sandow really did intend to call him home.
โIโll shake Kate Mastersโs tree tomorrow,โ said Turner. โColin Khatri too.
See what falls out.โ
โThanks for the ride-along.โ Alex shut the car door and watched Turnerโs headlights recede down Chapel. She wondered if sheโd ever get to speak to the detective again.
Everything might change tonight. Alex had longed for Darlingtonโs return, and sheโd feared itโand she couldnโt quite pull apart those feelings. She knew that when he told Dean Sandow what sheโd done, what she really was, it would mean the end for her and Lethe. She knew that. But she also knew that Darlington was Taraโs best chance at justice. He spoke the language of this world, understood its protocols. He would make the connections that the rest of them were missing.
She could admit she missed his pompous, know-it-all ass. But it was more than that. He would protect her.
The thought was embarrassing. Alex the survivor, Alex the rattler, should be harder than that. But she was tired of fighting. Darlington wouldnโt stand for any of what she and Dawes had been put through. He might not believe she belonged in Lethe, but she knew he believed she was worthy of Letheโs protection. He had promised to place himself between herโbetween all of themโand the terrible dark. That meant something.
North kept his distance, hovering in the golden light of the streetlamp, murderer or victim, but partner either way. For now.
She nodded to him and left it at that. Tonight she had other debts to pay.





