THIRTY-THREE
The parking area in front
of the Newmans’ house was crowded once we added my Land Rover to
the mix. The sleet and rain had hardened into ice as the sun had
tilted down, but this time there was no red flash across Blood Lake
at sunset; the clouds were too heavy and black overhead, leaking
fine flakes of ice-sharpened snow. Even in the premature night, I
recognized Ridenour’s park service pickup, carefully turned tail in
so leaving would be easier. Beside it was a pale blue truck I
recognized as Shea’s, its paint so oxidized it looked dusty, the
low white shell over the bed gone rusty at every corner. As we
headed for the door, I wondered where Willow was, and, not seeing
any sign of a sheriff’s car, if she’d bring Faith with her whenever
she arrived. There were a couple of small boats tied up at the dock
now, too, and I didn’t envy their owners the cold trip home.
A wind had started up as the clouds blackened
and the lake seemed to boil, throwing harsh reflections off wave
tops where the light from the living room windows fell on the
water. Even if there hadn’t been random streaks of energy and the
fog of discorporated spirits all around, the lakeshore would have
seemed haunted and dark with menace. I shivered and tightened my
red scarf around my throat—red was lucky, wasn’t it? I hoped
so.
Quinton’s coat flapped, giving him the aspect of
a crow as we climbed the steps to the porch. Geoff Newman opened
the door before we reached it, staring out at us with anxiety clear
on his face. He rushed us inside, taking our coats and whispering
into my ear, “I hope you know what you’re doing. Jewel’s so wrought
up, I don’t know what she’ll do.”
I frowned at him but couldn’t get a word out
before I heard his wife spitting out angry words behind us. I kept
my scarf, draping it over one shoulder like a sash of rank. These
were people used to having their way and I hoped the bloodred cloth
would warn them off trying it.
Turning, I stepped down into the living room.
Jewel was seated in a large high-backed chair deeper into the
center of the room, dressed regally in long layers of silk dyed the
colors of evergreens and strong tea. She swore at Costigan, who
stood nearby in his sarong and cross. He glared at her as the words
fell like red thorns between them.
At first I couldn’t see him, but I soon spotted
Ridenour hunched on a piano bench near the windows as far from
Jewel and Costigan as he could get. He looked so miserable, I could
almost imagine the ghost of his demon wife hovering at his
shoulder, pouring crocodile tears. Beyond him, hidden from the
doorway, Shea leaned against the curve of the walnut baby grand and
watched them all, looking incongruous in his Noel Coward pose while
wearing grubby work clothes. The energy in the room strobed and
banged against the walls in dizzying colors. Through the huge
windows I could see a tower of coruscating light far to the south
that seemed to reach and bend toward us. The ley weaver hadn’t left
his creation, but he was watching everyone in the room
nonetheless.
And they were all, suddenly, watching me.
Quinton kept to my side but a step back, letting me lead and giving
the strong impression no one would get to me without going through
him first.
Jewel sent me an imperious glance that was only
a little spoiled by the sickly olive color of her aura and a sudden
fit of coughing. Geoff darted to her side and tried to help, but he
only got pushed aside for his pains.
Costigan cackled.
“Shut up,” I advised him, stepping closer to the
middle of the room. I leaned a bit sideways and waved out the
window.
“What are you doing?” Jewel sputtered, covering
her mouth with a handkerchief that was already spotted brown and
red.
“Just making sure everyone’s paying attention,”
I replied. The light of Beauty flushed blue and then gold. I turned
around. “But we are still missing someone, so let me start with the
easy part.”
“Sure of yourself . . .” Costigan started.
“I generally am,” I lied, cutting him off. “You
can take it up with your loa, if you feel slighted . . . Elias.” I
swept them all with an unblinking stare before I started in again.
“You all came to the lake for the same thing: power.”
Jewel began to object, “This is my lake.”
“Only by theft. This was Sula’s lake and it
should have been her daughter’s lake, but Sula died and you grabbed
the power while you could. Because you were the oldest and the
biggest bully.”
“You can’t talk to her like that,” Newman
sputtered.
“I wouldn’t have to if you did it. She bullies
you the most, Newman. She bullied you into marrying her so she
could build this house on the nexus, and she bullies you every day
until you’ve forgotten what it’s like not to be pushed around.
Except for you and the rightful owner, the lot of you are a bunch
of opportunists and johnny-come-latelies. There used to be just one
lake keeper—that’s the way the system was meant to work since Storm
King threw his peak down and drowned the whole valley. When the
magic got loose, you all came to feed, like vultures on
carrion.”
I noticed Ridenour staring at me, a sick, dazed
expression on his face. I turned to him. “Even you. You didn’t see
it that way, but you still grabbed onto the power with both hands
when it was offered, even when you didn’t know what it was or how
to use it. You didn’t really care what May did to get you promoted
so fast; you were just glad she did it.”
“No!” he croaked, starting to rise but sinking
back down as if his legs wouldn’t hold him.
“Oh, you did. You all did. But none of you
latecomers were so greedy that you tried to get it all for
yourself. You didn’t challenge Jewel, not at first. You just
gathered what you could and used it. That was enough for most of
you.” I could feel the energy in the room flux and change as
someone opened the door. I hoped it was Willow, but I couldn’t look
back to be sure. Then a burst of confidence that wasn’t mine pushed
through me and seemed to ground me against the rising fury the
spell-flingers were building as they stared at me.
Quinton must have seen Willow come inside, I
thought, but there was more to the sensation of solidity, a
vibration in the floor that was different....
I went on, shifting my subject and hoping Willow
had brought Faith with her.
“But one of you was a lot more ambitious than he
let on. He wanted everything, and, when he couldn’t have it, he
found ways to steal it. When Darin Shea thought someone would take
it away, he killed that person. Killed Steven Leung, killed Alan
Strother—”
“No!”
The room seemed frozen, teetering on a
fulcrum.
I turned to Ridenour, surprised it was he. Or
was I? I raised an eyebrow, but I kept Shea in sight at the same
time. “Are you confessing to it yourself or do you disbelieve
me?”
Ridenour looked dizzy, and his eyes didn’t quite
focus on me, but he was on his feet, clasping his hands together so
tightly, the knuckles were white. A thin violet thread winked over
his shoulder, twisting back to Darin Shea—he’d picked up a lot from
his mentor.
“Why are you accusing Shea?” the ranger mumbled.
“You don’t have evidence, or cause. . . .”
“I’m quite sure there’s more than enough
evidence in Shea’s truck. Such as a watch he couldn’t begin to
afford and that never belonged to him, just like those cuff links
you found today . . .”
Shea’s eyes widened behind Ridenour, but he
didn’t move otherwise. And something new rippled across the Grey,
two moving forces that collided near my feet, making the room
shiver. I couldn’t look back yet. Let it be Soren Faith, even if he
thought I was insane for what I was going to say, please let him
listen to the rest....
Ridenour swayed. “You came here looking for
something against him. . . .”
“Yes, I did,” I replied. “I came up here to
interview Shea for a court case, but I never could find out
anything about his background. He’s slippery as a fish and as hard
to find as the invisible man—someone who could commit murder and
never be noticed. But no matter how hard he tried to conceal it, he
does have a past and some of you know it,
if you just stop and think. He killed Steven Leung and he sank his
car in the lake. He killed Alan Strother so no one would put the
pieces together about where he went and when. He also sent your
wife back to hell.”
“He’s—he’s not like that,” Ridenour objected. He
looked mesmerized.
“Why not? Why are you defending him? Because
he’s been around for twenty years? Because he’s cheap and friendly
and always willing to help? Or because he spied on Willow and told
you she was up at the greenhouse so you could ambush her? He played
on your hate, but he’s the one who created it when he made you
think it was Willow who drove May away. Who was he friends with?” I
demanded. “Who did he do extra work for and spend extra time
with?”
“Everyone!” Ridenour shouted. I could see Shea
mouthing the word behind his back.
“Not everyone,” I snapped back. “Newman won’t
have him around. One thing I’ve learned about the rich is that they
stay that way by holding on to their money. So why wouldn’t the
richest man in the area use the cheapest labor he could find?
Because he knew he couldn’t trust him. Newman knew Shea was a
thief, a liar, and a sorcerer.”
“A what?” The words came from in front and
behind me at the same time. I’d shocked Faith, but he was listening. I kept my concentration on the men in
front of me. They were the dangerous ones.
“You heard me! Don’t play stupid, Ridenour. You
already know there’s something strange here, and you believe in it
enough to have lived with a fox-demon as your common-law wife for
years. You didn’t know she came by magic, but you knew magic sent
her away, and you believed Willow had done it because you knew
Willow wasn’t just a hell of a woodsman, as you told me. The woods
literally love her; they do what she says, even the bears and the
mysterious white ‘deer’ that came down to the ranger station. Did
you really think they were just passing by that night they attacked
the station at Hurricane Ridge? I was with you, and all you could
think about was catching Willow Leung. You didn’t even worry about
your man trapped in the station. Or me. You left me here to break
the news about finding Steven Leung’s body in the lake. Me, a
stranger you didn’t even question about how I’d found a vehicle
that had been missing for five years. You didn’t care about
anything but taking revenge. And that’s how he’s played all of you.
By your weaknesses, by your greed, and vanity, and laziness.
“He was right in front of you all the time,
taking away everything you really cared about. And you, none of
you, saw what he was doing. You saw only what you wanted. Even the
way he looks is a mirror of what you want to see. He played
you!” I roared at them.
They all stared back and the floor shook, but it
couldn’t knock me down. I could hear something in the Grey,
something singing and whispering.
Then Faith brushed past me, striding toward
Shea. He had his handcuffs in one hand and the license plate from
Steven Leung’s Subaru in the other. Shea backpedaled toward the
window. Faith threw the plate onto the piano and reached for Shea,
saying, “You’re under arrest for the murders of Steven Leung and
Alan Stroth—”
The song broke and something black shrieked past
my ear toward Faith and Shea. I whipped back to see where it had
come from and saw Willow at the edge of the room, her hands flung
out and a fierce expression on her face. “What you took, you now
will lose,” she spat. She twisted her hands as if tightening the
lid on a jar.
Behind me, Shea screamed. I spun around to see
the spiked, black torus of Willow’s curse spin and fall around his
head and shoulders. His shriek shook the room and he wrenched one
hand loose from Faith’s closing handcuffs. Then he threw himself
back against the glass, howling words that made no sense.
The window exploded outward and Shea was
propelled through with the force, into the lake, which heaved
upward as if it meant to embrace him.
To the south, Beauty burst into screaming red
light that turned the waters of Lake Crescent a bloody crimson.
Light rushed up from the depths of the lake with a rage of noise;
shafts of impossible color pierced the water and the sky like
swords and batted the tumbling shape of Darin Shea sideways through
the air. He skipped and tumbled over the surface for a moment, then
dropped into the shallows where Jin had raised the wreck of Steven
Leung’s car.
Illuminated by the howling lights from Beauty
and the lake, the shoreline was as bright as day, and we all saw
Shea stagger to his feet and vanish into the scrub. A crying laugh
and the flicker of shadows followed him.
Behind me I felt the press of others as I leaned
out to see the lake. Willow’s voice muttered in my ear, “I’m going
to make sure he dies powerless and screaming. Like my
father.”
“No, you’re not.”