Dark Needs at Night's Edge (27 page)

BOOK: Dark Needs at Night's Edge
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39

F
orgodsakes, lay off!” Mari's voice sounded from the mirror minutes later. “We're coming!”

Néomi cracked open her lids when Conrad sank down beside her on the cot. He gently cradled her head in his lap.

“Why do you always get to go first?” Mari's voice demanded.

“Because I'm bigger than you are,” came Bowen's reply.

When the Lykae emerged from the glass, with Mari following, their eyes went wide.

Mari started for Néomi, but Bowen's hand shot out for her arm, shoving her behind him. After he scanned the area and scented the air, he turned to Conrad. “Who did this to your female?”

“Demon,” Conrad answered, his voice hoarse from yelling. “Named Cadeon.”

“That bastard!” Bowen snapped, drawing Mari to his side. “You should've let me smash him in the jungle!”

“Cade? Oh, Hekate, you can't be serious!” Mari hurried to Néomi. “So that's who's been trying to call me. It had to have been an accident.”

Néomi weakly nodded, then coughed up more blood.

Conrad squeezed her hand too forcefully, looking to be teetering on the brink.

Mari's gaze landed on Néomi's neck. “You bit her. Did you see her memories?”

“No, it was just hours ago—”

“Then how did you know to contact me through the mirror?”

“Néomi told me after…after she was…Damn it, what does it matter? Just fix this spell, witch.”

“I'm so sorry.” Mari shook her head sadly. “I can't fix it. I told Néomi this going in.”

“Heal—this—body.”

“It's just a shell. Even if I could heal her, she'd just get killed again and again.”

“If all she needs is a real body—I'll return directly!”

That's my Conrad. So intense.

“The conditions for the assumption of another's body are lengthy,” Mari said. “Chiefly among them—the body has to be donated by its owner. Not, er, commandeered.”

“Restore her old one. I knew warlocks who could revivify flesh, creating a body from a strand of hair.” He was clearly trying so hard, struggling to say the right words. “You could do that with Néomi,” he said, his voice breaking on her name.

Mari answered, “That's how they make soulless zombies.”

Conrad said, “We have a soul, waiting right here.” When Néomi felt herself becoming less substantial, he murmured, “Stay with me, Néomi.
Please, baby
.”

“Embodying a spirit isn't a science. It's an art, and it'd be outside my skill set as it is, much less if I have to revivify her dead body as well. Normally, a witch would heal the body in one step, then implant the spirit in another step. Now you want me to do both at the same time? Even though I've never done either before?”

“Yes—you must!” Inhaling deeply for control, he grated, “A dream demon marked me. I think that curse had something to do with her injury. This happened to Néomi just before the demon was killed tonight.”

Mari's eyes narrowed. “You mean a
dream demon
hijacked my subject to give you a nightmare? My mystickal signature was all over her. And some tool just ignored that?”

Bowen put his hand on her shoulder. “He might no' have seen it, Mari.”

“Anyone immersed in magick of this sort would have seen it. That really pisses me off. I'm supposed to be the most powerful witch, and my spell got owned in two weeks.”

Think…think.

Control—never had Conrad needed it more; never had he been more in danger of losing it completely.

Wait…
“Witch, if you don't do something about this, everyone will think they can overturn your spells at will. Who would pay you for spells that don't take?”

MacRieve growled, just as Mariketa said, “You think I can't see what you're doing? Unfortunately, it's working.”

“You canna think of this!” MacRieve snapped.

Mariketa cast the Lykae a troubled glance, then told Conrad, “Vampire, understand that I've never done this on a human. And another problem—I don't even
have
her body. I'd need to scry for the location of it, again while I'm doing everything else!”

“She's fading.” Conrad raked his fingers through his hair. “Time's running out! What do we have to lose?”

MacRieve said, “She could come back
wrong
.”

Conrad met his eyes. “I'll do what's necessary if she does.”

“It's no' only that,” the Lykae said. “Mari can enthrall herself in the mirror. Her eyes will incinerate anything that comes between her and her reflection, and she'll get stuck in an eternal trance. I feel for you, vampire, but I will no' allow her to put herself at risk.”

“Sebastian saved your life—and he spared you from an unspeakable fate. You owe him a debt.”

MacRieve's gaze flickered over Mariketa and changed color with some fierce emotion. Hardening his expression, he turned to Conrad. “No' a debt like this.”

Mariketa turned to Néomi on the cot. “Would you want this, honey? A mortal life?”

When she nodded weakly, Mariketa stood and crossed to MacRieve. Gazing up at him, the witch said, “I think I can do this. I have to try. I mean, look at the vampire.”

Néomi had just gone unconscious—Conrad knew he appeared on the razor's edge when MacRieve scowled.

“We're running out of time,” Conrad grated.

Mariketa pulled MacRieve farther to the side. “You said that if I married you, you would never get in the way of my career. This is spectacularly getting in my career's way. Do you know how good this would look on my résumé?”

“I also promised your parents and your coven that I would no' let you get lost in the mirror again. You're no' ready yet, lass! It's too soon after…that last time.”

“Bowen, this has sat ill with me since I did the spell on Néomi. And I know you hate Cade, but he and his brother did save my life. He's been calling for my help with this. If I save Néomi, I'll be able to repay my debt to them.” She took one of his hands in both of hers. “Just believe in me. I can do this. I
feel
like I can.” When he clenched his jaw, evidently a sign of defeat, she smiled. “Will you get my Big-Spell gloves?”

Muttering in Gaelic, he scuffed back into the mirror.

While MacRieve was gone, the witch told Conrad, “The cost is going to be high, vampire. I'm gonna need ten mil for this one. I accept real estate, stones, or bullion. Or stock certificates from the twenties that are exponentially undervalued. And you have to vow to the Lore to pay it, since we don't have time for contracts.”

“Agreed, ten million,” he answered easily. “I vow to the Lore to pay it. But you must agree to keep this secret. If the demons know, they will only come after her again.”

“I'm bound by the mercenary code to keep our dealings confidential,” she said, but she was clearly troubled, conflicted about hiding this from her demon friend, a demon who'd apparently saved her life.

“Good, then. For the record, witch, I think you can do this, too.”

Her expression briefly turned grim. “Just be ready to make hard choices, Conrad, in case I can't.”

Still surly, MacRieve returned with a strange pair of fingerless gloves. The palms looked to be lined with some kind of bendable mirror.

As Mariketa donned them, she took a deep breath, seeming to shake off her disquiet. She told Conrad, “I like Néomi—I'd have tried this for half that amount.”

“I love Néomi—I'd have paid anything you could dream up.”

“Oh, snap! Live and learn, eh? Okay, one vampire's Bride brought back from the grave.” She slapped her gloved hands and rubbed them together. “Let's put the fun back in funeral!”

40

M
ariketa faced the mirror, tilting her head. “This is the first time I've really looked at my reflection in months.” To the Lykae, she said, “No wonder you love me. Could I be any cuter?”

“You will no' charm me from my apprehension, so doona bother,” MacRieve said. “You're tae pull back if you feel anything amiss. Do you ken?”

She nodded. “Got it. Now, I need two mirrors standing on both sides of me, stat.”

Conrad eased away from Néomi. “The broken mirrors on this wall are all there is.”

“Grab them. Bring them to me.”

He ripped a sizable shard from the wall in the studio. Blood from his fingers ran along the edges as he shoved the jagged tip through the wood floor until it stood upright. “Will this work?”

Gazing at his blood, she absently said, “It'll have to. Do the second one.”

He repeated the process. As she continued staring at the blood, her eyes went wide as if with realization, before they narrowed on the streak.

“Should I clean that?”

She hesitated for long moments. “Leave it,” she finally said with a swallow.

Conrad grated, “Witch, what is it?”

She averted her face, as if with guilt. “We're ready.”

Once Mariketa was nearly enclosed by the mirrors, she made her hands into fists and closed her eyes. When her lids slid open, her eyes were…mirrors themselves, gleaming and reflecting everything she gazed upon. Her fingers uncurled and light glowed from one of her gloved palms.

Conrad hurried back to Néomi, but she was fading. The more Néomi's form dimmed, the brighter the light in the witch's palm grew.

Just as Mariketa's toes left the ground, a language even Conrad didn't recognize began to spill from her lips, but he could sense that her words were throbbing with power. With one hand, she made a fist around the light, as if physically grabbing onto Néomi's spirit. “She's going to disappear now,” Mariketa told him, never glancing from the mirror.

When Néomi's hand vanished from his own, madness threatened. Her robe, nightgown and the ring he'd given her remained on the cot. He swallowed.
Keep it together.

He took the ring, determined to see her wearing it once more.

“Found her grave.” The witch pointed the forefinger of her other hand down and stirred. “I'm beginning the body.” Again and again, she circled that finger, seeming to be meeting great resistance. The spell began taking a toll. She grew out of breath, nearly hyperventilating.

“You can do this, Mariketa.” Conrad swallowed. “Bring my Néomi back to me….”

The light in her hands intensified even more. The air grew heavier, ominous. As if agitated by the tension, creatures began skittering in the walls surrounding them.

MacRieve peered around him. “This does no' feel right. As if we're doing something we ought never do!”

“Shut up, MacRieve,” Conrad snapped, though he'd felt the same atmosphere, threatening, like they were challenging a force far greater than they—and might be crushed for their audacity.

She began chanting once more.
The light was building, building….
She shoved her hands out, seeming to fuel even more magick into the spell. The house began quaking.

“Have to…break through. Need to age…”

Age?

More unintelligible chanting, louder and louder, until she was practically screaming the words. The studio windows exploded. Papers flew in a tempest. “Bowen, I'm…losing it!”

“Mariketa!” With a roar, MacRieve lunged for her, trying to heave her away from the glass. But the Lykae couldn't budge the small female from the mirror's hold.

The silver glaze of her eyes darkened, as if ink flooded inside them. They began to turn wholly black. “This is bad!” she cried.

“No, Mari, doona do this!” He cupped his hand over her eyes, but the skin of his palm began to burn away in two distinct holes.

“Oh, Hekate, no!”
she screamed.

The light in her hands exploded like a bomb, so intense it briefly blinded Conrad. “What was that?” he yelled. “What is happening?”

Mariketa gasped for breath. “Néomi…embodied.”

He yanked his head around. “Where is she? Tell me!”

“There's a problem! It—” Her body stiffened, unmoving. She stared unblinking at the mirror.

“Ah, God, no' again, Mari!” MacRieve used his other hand to shield her eyes, until two smoking holes appeared in that hand as well. He snatched at her again, but even with his strength, he couldn't wrest her from that spot.

“What was the problem, witch? Where is Néomi?” Conrad was frenzied to see her. “Where is she embodied?” He charged for Mariketa. “Wake your witch up, MacRieve!”

The Lykae peered over his shoulder, baring his fangs. “Watch your step, vampire. I'm a breath from turnin'.”

“How can I find Néomi? Break the goddamned mirror!”

“No' a chance—it could kill her.”

“Put something bigger in front of her!” Conrad bit out, struggling to control himself.

“She burns anything away!”

“How long could she be like this?”

“Fucking forever, vampire!”
MacRieve roared, his irises turning ice blue, the beast flickering over his form. If the Lykae turned because his mate was in danger, even Conrad couldn't defeat him. “As I'd bloody told you!”

Pacing, Conrad stabbed his fingers through his hair. “Christ, I don't know where Néomi is!”

He'd dreamed that she was kept from him no matter how hard he fought to reach her. Nightmares of her being…trapped in the dark? He clutched his forehead.

She was trapped somewhere right now. And that was why the witch hadn't returned Néomi to him here. But where in the hell would she be?

Wait.
If the witch had been able to restore Néomi's body and put her spirit within it, but then got interrupted…

The answer hit him.

“Ah, God, I know where she is!” And he couldn't trace to her because he'd never been there before. “I need a car!” MacRieve and the witch had come through the mirror. Nikolai had driven his away weeks ago.

The Lykae ignored him, curling his finger under the witch's chin. “Mari, love, this is goin' tae hurt like hell.” He took a deep breath. And then he stepped in front of her gaze.

The skin of his torso began to melt away as if burned by lasers, but he gritted his teeth, took the pain. “Lass,” he bit out, “after this we will have words.”

Where am I?

Néomi woke in a dank, close space, blinking repeatedly in the darkness. She had no pain in her body, none at all. Her wound felt totally healed. Mari had done it! But where was everyone? Why was Néomi alone?

A horrific suspicion tried to take hold of her mind, but she fought it. Her breaths grew ragged, sounding so loud in the confines.

When her dizziness passed, she rose and immediately knocked her head.


Nooo,
” she moaned, beginning to shudder. “It isn't possible.” Tears began pouring from her eyes.
Mère de Dieu…This can't be happening!

She was in her coffin, which resided in the French Society's tomb in St. Louis Cemetery #1. At least thirty other coffins lay within.

Conrad will come for me. Somehow he'll find me….

But hours seemed to grind by. Gasping rank air, she fought not to think about the bodies decomposing all around her.

None of her bones were in her coffin—it was as if she'd reincorporated them. She was embodied, which meant she was alive once more.

Néomi had grown a body just in time for it to die….

Then the insects came.

She screamed. She screamed hysterically until the foul air grew scarce.

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