“That’s fine. He told me a couple of days ago that you and your aunt have access. You know the combination, right?”
I assured her I did.
“Great, I’ll let you in his office.”
I followed Iris down the carpeted hall. The ring of keys in her hand jingled with each step. She stopped at Kane’s door, fitted a key into the lock, and pushed the door open. “Take your time,” she said, stepping back to let me pass. “The door locks automatically when you close it. Just pull it shut when you’re done.”
The keys jingled their way back toward the reception desk.
Kane’s office looked the same as always—papers piled high on his desk, law books crammed into multiple bookcases, several diplomas adorning the wall, a KANE AND ASSOCIATES screensaver bouncing around his computer monitor—except for the vacuum at the center of it all created by his absence. His leather chair was swiveled to the side, as though he’d just stood up and would be back again in a minute. Even the air held his scent. I inhaled, feeling it warm my lungs and send tingles through me.
I sat down in his chair. This is how he sees the world, I thought. The windows along one wall revealed a spectacular view of the harbor, framed by tall buildings. An airplane drifted toward a runway at Logan. On his desk sat a framed photo I hadn’t seen before. I leaned forward and picked it up. It showed the two of us, the ocean in the background. Kane had his arm around me, and I leaned against him. Wind ruffled our hair, and we were laughing, our faces lit up with the joy of being together.
I couldn’t remember when the photo had been taken. The ocean suggested it was from the weekend we’d spent on Cape Cod last summer. Had it been nearly a year since we’d laughed that way? So many other things had pushed between us, turning our relationship into an obstacle course. I wanted this moment back—no, I wanted it again. And again and again. I wanted to be together, relaxed and easy and basking in uncomplicated happiness.
Should I call him? To say, “I love you, and I know we’ll get through this.” I reached for the phone, then paused. What if he was sleeping? He’d said himself he needed to rest and build up his strength. I knew he was worried about the full moon, but I also knew he hadn’t admitted even half how much. He didn’t need me to call him now to say, “Nice photo on your desk.” He’d want to know what I was doing here, and when I told him he’d insist on going to East Boston with me. Part of me wanted him there, by my side. But another part said that was selfish, that I’d be draining his reserves exactly when he needed to replenish them.
The Night Hag intended to break him. I’d do whatever I could to support him.
I touched the glass over the photo, tracing Kane’s cheek. This picture said so much. It showed that Kane believed in a vision of us, one that wasn’t marred by demons and evil and blood and death. His vision was simple: us together, laughing. And I was grateful. It was a vision I could hold onto as I did what I had to do. A hope for coming out on the other side of all this and finding each other there.
Coming together again. Holding each other, maybe even laughing.
I set the photo back in its place. Then I opened Kane’s safe to choose my weapons.
THE ADDRESS BUTTERFLY HAD GIVEN ME WAS IN EAST BOSTON, a few blocks from a popular skate park. Narrow clapboard houses squeezed together amid auto-body shops and restaurant supply stores. I found the street, and then the number; the building itself appeared abandoned. Made of yellow brick, its single story squatted behind a six-foot chain-link fence, topped with coils of razor wire. Graffiti covered the walls and boarded-up windows.
Exactly the kind of place the Old Ones would slither into and call home.
I scouted as much of the building as I could without drawing attention to myself. Weeds sprouted throughout the small parking lot, which was gated and locked, and along the walkway to the front door. A wooden sign announced the building was AVAILABLE! and gave the name and phone number of a real estate firm. Much of the paint had flaked off, taking with it the last couple of digits in the phone number. I had a feeling no prospective buyers had looked at this building for a very long time.
Across the street a face watched me from the second story of a small house. East Boston is a diverse neighborhood, and its residents keep an eye out for each other. If anything had been going on in the abandoned factory, someone would have noticed.
I crossed the street and went up the short walkway to the house’s front steps. The concrete walk was cracked, but petunias sprouted from window boxes. Grimy statues of mischievous gnomes peeked out from between the flowers. One of them, positioned to appear as any visitor mounted the steps, dropped his pants to greet you with a double-cheeked moon. Hostile or humorous? I’d find out when I rang the bell.
A buzzer sounded inside. I didn’t have to ring a second time before a short woman in a flowered housecoat opened the door. She looked to be in her late sixties. Her gray-and-white hair was pulled back tightly from her face, barrettes catching potential stragglers. Sharp lines etched her forehead and the corners of her eyes, making her look like someone who scowled as much as she smiled. She was scowling now. Or maybe just squinting in the bright sunlight.
“Yeah?”
I spoke to her through the screen of the aluminum storm door. “Sorry to disturb you. I’m interested in the building across the street, and I wondered if you could tell me anything about it.”
“That dump? Been empty for years. Used to be a factory making cardboard boxes. My Salvatore worked there. It’s why we moved here, so he’d be close to his work. Then they closed down the place. Sal was out of a job, and we were stuck here. Story of my life.”
“How long ago did it close?”
“Seven years. Sent all the jobs down south somewheres. Any work Sal’s gotten since then has been half the pay at most. He was a security guard for a while at Boston Garden, but even at that job they fired him. Hired a bunch of zombies instead—they don’t got to pay zombies minimum wage, you know.” She shook her head, looking more tired than angry. “I don’t know what this country’s coming to.”
“So you haven’t seen any activity around this building?” I gestured across the street to remind her of what we were talking about.
“Seen? Nah. Heard? Oh, Lordy.” She pressed both hands to her ears to show the extent of the noise. “At night, sometimes you hear these awful screams. Last night, for example. Stupid drunk kids, that’s what it is. It was so bad I woke up Sal. I was sure they’d gotten hold of a stray cat and were torturing it. Not that I like the wild cats that have taken over this street. Nasty pests, scratch you as soon as look at you. But still. I told Sal to call the cops, but he said to ignore it and go to sleep.”
“Did you?”
“Yeah. The screaming stopped, sudden-like. I figured they’d had their fun and done the poor thing in. Cops would’ve taken hours to get here, anyway. If they bothered to come at all. Think cops care about a stray cat?”
I thanked her for her time and went back down the path. The gnome mooned me again. Now, the statue seemed like neither a joke nor an expression of hostility—more like a comment from a disappointed woman who knew she was at the end of her road. She’d never get any further in life than where she was right now. So she’d plant flowers, but she’d also let the world know this was not where she’d intended to be.
I put petunias and bare-assed gnomes out of my mind and went to call Daniel.
WALKING ON MERIDIAN STREET, I FELT LESS CONSPICUOUS. There was more traffic here, along with the occasional pedestrian. A mother sat on the front steps of a triple-decker, holding her sleeping baby and enjoying the sunshine. I pulled out my cell phone and called Daniel. His work number went straight to voice mail. I didn’t leave a message. Daniel had worked all night. He was probably home sleeping, like Kane and Mab and Juliet and everyone else with any sense at all.
I called him at home. The time to raid the Old Ones’ hideout was in daylight, and I’d burned enough of that already.
It took four rings for him to pick up. “Costello,” said a voice heavy with sleep.
“Daniel, it’s Vicky. I know where the Old Ones are hiding.”
His voice went from sleep-addled to alert in zero-point-two seconds. “Where?”
“East Boston.” I gave him the address.
“Wait. Where did you get this information? Juliet and I didn’t get to that part of town last night.”
“A little birdie from the demon plane told me. My informant has been inside, Daniel. When Pryce grabbed Tina, it followed them through the demon plane and into this world. It saw Pryce hand Tina over to Colwyn.”
“A demon informant. Are you sure you can trust what it tells you?”
The million-dollar question. “I’m sure this is the address. I spoke to a neighbor who confirmed she heard screaming there last night. That screaming must have come from Tina.”
“Wait, you’re there? Vicky, get away—now. This is a job for professionals; I’m sending in a paranormal SWAT team. I can’t have a civilian screwing up the operation.”
A hot tingling began in my demon mark, and I clenched and unclenched my fist. Daniel wouldn’t even know where to send his damn professionals if it weren’t for me. The tingling intensified to a slow burn. Stupid know-it-all cop. Without me, he’d be snoozing away in his nice, warm bed, while Tina and the others cowered in their pitch-dark cells.
Tina. I couldn’t help her if I let the rage take over. I took a couple of deep breaths. The tingling settled back to an itch. One more breath made sure my voice remained steady.
“I’m not screwing anything up, Daniel. I’m telling you where you can find the Old Ones and the missing zombies.” He started to say something, but I talked over him. “And I’m not leaving. A friend is in there, and I’m going to make sure she doesn’t get hurt. I’ll stay back and let your SWAT guys do their work, but I’m not going to be pacing my living room biting my nails and hoping they don’t screw things up.”