Nine of Stars
Page 1
Dedication
For my husband, Jason, who understands winter.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1: Falling Stars
Chapter 2: The Vanishing of Sal Rutherford
Chapter 3: The View from Above
Chapter 4: Free Advice Isn’t Free
Chapter 5: The Alchemist in His Natural Habitat
Chapter 6: The Underworld in Sal’s Backyard
Chapter 7: The Legend of Skinflint Jack
Chapter 8: In the Dark
Chapter 9: The Chemical Wedding Night
Chapter 10: Relics
Chapter 11: The End of the Road
Chapter 12: Blood Engines
Chapter 13: Beneath the Fire
Chapter 14: The Crucible of Fire and Snow
Chapter 15: Waking Up
Chapter 16: The Pack
Chapter 17: The Gunslinger and the Stag
Chapter 18: That Old Black Magic I Forgot Once Upon a Time
Chapter 19: On the Witchery Way to Sepulcher Mountain
Chapter 20: The Dream of Wings
Chapter 21: Snow Madness
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Laura Bickle
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Falling Stars
Winter was always the cruelest season.
It had been true since the very beginning of the pack’s collective memory. When the air turned sharp and crisped the leaves, the brutal cold was coming. The Nine Stars pack migrated away from their home in the summer valley, where the grasses were warm and teeming with newly born food. With the shadows of Canada geese flickering over them, the wolves of the pack followed herds of pronghorn to the gentler climate of the meadows. As the cold deepened, they culled the weak prey.
Winter was the wolves’ glory.
Their coats grew shaggy and the fat thickened around their ribs as they worked the ragged edges of winter. Food in this territory had always been plentiful. As long as they stayed within the invisible boundaries of what men had deemed the park, laced with blacktop roads and fences, they were free. The ancestors of the Nine Stars pack would likely have considered this a gilded cage. Their ancestors were, after all, not quite wolves. But the Nine Stars pack had worn the skins of wolves for so long, they had forgotten what it was like to walk upright. They had grown both fat and feral, concerned with little more than seeing that their pups were fed and that men were avoided.
Until last winter. Last winter had been brutal, even by wolf standards. The pronghorn had fallen ill. The Nine Stars pack could smell it—their blood was all wrong. The prey began to bleed from their mouths and fell to the ice with steaming blue tongues. Humans had descended on them, shooting the infected and taking away the bodies.
Ever wary of men, the wolves had backed away. There was little food that winter; they subsisted on what they could steal from the otters and eagles. They lost two of the adults, and all three pups born that year, to starvation.
This winter there would be no such starving. Ghost, the alpha male, and Dancing Shadow, the alpha female, had decided to find a new winter range. Humans weren’t much risk in this place. Nine, the omega, hadn’t smelled any at all, not since they left the warm summer valley. The human roads were covered with snow and no lights or noisy machines had been seen in weeks. Nine suspected that the humans were as fearful of winter as most other creatures.
Nine was the omega, and she had no say in any of this. She simply followed, the last in line, nosing along behind the clumsy pups. There were only nine adults left, and four pups who had been born in spring. They were nearly as tall and lanky as the adults, but inexperienced in the ways of winter. Snow was still fascinating to the pups, and they blundered and rolled in the powder, play-fighting. It would become less of a novelty when it reached beyond the backs of their parents, but the small drifts were exciting now.
This was new terrain to Nine. She had heard tales of the northwest, that there was steaming colored water there that reeked of sulfur, where buffalo brined themselves in its warmth. Mountains so tall that one could lick the moon. She wasn’t sure if these were pack stories or if they came from her own experience. She’d lost sense of her age and time. She only lived in the moment, suspended in the changing seasons of the wheel of the year.
But she was certain that this new place had to have better pickings than last winter, or she would not survive. Nine was skinnier than the others; her fur sank into the spaces between her ribs. As the omega, she ate last. She dreamed of a place plentiful enough that there would be more left for her than just the marrow.
They were climbing at night, over the rippling foothills of a mountain, when Ghost caught the scent of an elk up ahead. He made a soft yip, and Dancing Shadow slowed with the other mother, Starling, the pups ranging behind them in a tangle of skinny legs. They paused in the shadow of a stand of pines. The pups were old enough to try to tussle with an elk, but Dancing Shadow was an overprotective matriarch. They could watch, and learn. After losing all the pups last year, she would abide no risks to them.
Nine followed Ghost and the others, trotting across solitary hoof tracks that had not been scrubbed clean by the wind. Elk were formidable in herds, but a lone one might be an easy supper. Her mouth watered in anticipation.
Lightning nipped at her flank, and Nine growled halfheartedly, baring her teeth. Lightning was always harassing her to move faster, to plunge forward. Nine, frankly, didn’t have the instincts that Lightning did. She hesitated. Which was why she was the omega.
There. Ahead. The full moonlight picked out a shadow. A massive rack of antlers splayed out over a dark figure on the ground.
He was down. Alone. He was food. Nine’s heart soared.
Lightning was first, as always. He plunged into the snow, pale white fur a blur against his perfectly winter-camouflaged body. Nine ran as fast as she could, but Lighting was still faster. He was even faster than Ghost and the other, bigger males. It was a great point of pride for him to take the first chunk from prey, then offer it to Ghost. And they were all suffused in the heady thrill of the hunt.
Nine’s nose wrinkled. The wind had changed and something smelled off. She had not smelled anything like it, not in her recent recollection. She reached back, deep into her ancestral memory . . .
She skidded to a stop and barked a warning.
But the others didn’t hear her, or didn’t care. Likely, they dismissed her as being too timid.
Lightning had reached the antlered shadow on the ground. He leapt upon the elk with teeth bared, snarling, reaching for its throat before it had a chance to try and get up.
But it was no elk. Human arms reached out of a black cloak winging open on the snow. Had a human hunter already claimed this prize? Would the man fight for the stag?
No. He was the stag. He walked upright on massive hooves. Antlers grew on either side of his head and he tossed them the way an angry elk would, at Lightning. A spur caught the wolf under the ribs, and the man-shaped creature flung the wolf away. Lightning shrieked as he hit the ground.
Nine crouched down, paws digging into the snow. Whatever this was, it was not human. Was it an old god of men, awake and angry? She glanced at Ghost for guidance. Ghost advanced upon the man, his white ruff raised, growling, with teeth bared. Nine and the others followed suit. If blood had been drawn, the pack would not allow this to go unpunished.
The Stag rose up to his full height. He was taller than any man should be, gathering night around him. His cloak was made of pelts—pelts of wolves, she realized. If she concentrated, she could smell the fear that still clung to them. His long-fingered claws gli
ttered around bone knives.
He lowered his head, and his eyes glowed behind a mask of bone.
“You will pay for what you did,” he growled, in a voice rusted black with hate.
Nine’s instinct was to flee. People scared her, enough that she would go miles out of her way to avoid them. They were terrible, with their guns and cars and traps, killing things that they would not even bother to eat. She would rather face an angry bison than a man on any day. And this was not even a man. This was something more. This creature smelled like sour magic, like rotten carrion too spoiled for vultures to touch. Every instinct in her urged her to run.
And in another time, another place, the pack might have run. But the Stag had hurt Lightning, flinging the pale wolf into a snowdrift. The wolf bounced and flipped like a salmon plucked out of the river and flung to earth by a bear, red spotting his hide.
This was not something that Ghost would permit. The alpha wolf lunged for the Stag, and the other wolves in the pack followed suit, kicking up snow. There was, after all, only one of him. And the wolves of Nine Stars acted as one.
The Stag spun in the powder, his fur cloak scraping bare earth. Ghost’s teeth clamped down on his arm, but the Stag shook him off with a mighty thrash, sending Ghost sliding across the ground with a yelp. Bent Arrow and Falling Stone leaped on his back, sending the Stag reeling, clawing and snarling.
Nine dove in low, her paws digging into the frozen earth, nipping at his knees. Her stomach wrenched, tasting fear and the stink of magic on his skin. But she held on as the Stag crashed to earth. She worked her jaws back and forth, expecting to taste a gush of hot blood.
But there was no blood. Nothing—it was like biting a sapless stick.
Yelps of pain rattled across the snow. Lightning had rejoined the fray, slamming his white paws into the Stag’s chest.
The Stag lowered his head, the cage of sharp antlers aimed at Lighting.
Nine tried to hold fast but was kicked away with a blow that drove the breath from her lungs. She landed in the snow, whimpering, in enough time to see the Stag pin Lightning to the ground, goring him.
Ghost howled, tearing at the Stag’s cloak. But it was no use. The antlers had pinned the squirming wolf to the ground. A great red stain spread out from Lightning’s hide to the snow.
He was done for. They knew it. They could see it in the way his eyes rolled back, showing the whites, in his cry and the way red foam leaked from his mouth.
The Stag lashed his head from side to side, flinging Lightning’s body away. He turned to face the rest of the wolves, stinking and bloodless.
Ghost gave three yips: a retreat.
The wolves limped to his side, loping over the bloodied drifts. Nine struggled to her feet, wheezing, and tried to follow as best she could.
She looked back over her shoulder. The Stag had picked up Lightning’s body by the scruff of his neck and brought his knife to the wolf’s throat. A trickle of steam leaked into the darkness as the blade slid through the carcass.
She couldn’t look anymore. Limping, she ran.
She didn’t understand what she’d seen, but she knew instinctively that this thing that was shaped like a man and fought like a beast would be the end of them all.
There were seven stages of grief and seven stages of alchemy. To Petra Dee, this was no coincidence.
She sat in a chair in a doctor’s office, staring out the window. Her hands were folded in her lap, underneath her battered leather coat. She’d made some effort to look respectable today, wearing dark jeans and the cleanest pair of boots she had. Her blond hair was pulled back in a ponytail. She didn’t own an iron or an ironing board, so her white dress shirt was a bit rumpled. She had tried to hide that fact by rolling her sleeves up, maybe making it a fashion statement, but the effort only served to show the scars on her arms: a burned handprint, slashes, and a pale speckle from corrosive acid. The doctor had asked about these during her exam, probably fishing for some evidence that she’d cut herself. Petra had simply said that she’d had a colorful life, but her voice had quivered when she said it. If she’d told him that the handprint had been the last touch of a lover who died in a fire, he’d have referred her to grief counseling. If she had confessed that the slashes were from an attack by a drug lord, he’d write her a prescription for a few weeks of Klonopin. And if she dared tell him that the speckle was from the blood of a basilisk she’d taken to the spirit world . . . well. He’d have the looney bin on speed-dial and be offering her a new white jacket with fancy hardware.
She reached up to rub her thumb over the back of the gold pendant at her throat. It had been a gift from her father, a self-proclaimed alchemist. It depicted a green lion devouring the sun, a powerful alchemical symbol of transformation. In the last weeks, she’d developed the nervous habit of rubbing it like a worry stone. It seemed to have no more power than that, no matter how much she willed it to be different.
Petra had seen magic before, things she couldn’t easily explain. But her scientist’s mind was still trying. She was that, before all else. She was a geologist, a scientist. She worked with her hands in the dirt and her eye in a microscope. She believed in laws and rules and the miracle of deductive reasoning.
But she was also the daughter of an alchemist. She had seen amazing things, felt shocking wonder and bewildering pain that left physical scars behind. But grief touched her most deeply now, as she gazed outside the window.
A man in a parka was rolling a black body bag on a gurney across a freshly shoveled sidewalk. A nondescript van, filthy with a coating of blackened road salt, had pulled up to the back entrance, and a man in a snowsuit came out to load the body into the back. Apparently, hearses didn’t have four-wheel drive.
There were seven stages of grief, weren’t there? She seemed to remember that from a college psychology class. Shock, denial, anger, bargaining, guilt, depression, and acceptance. Was that the right number? She felt as if she’d jumped straight into guilt and had been swimming through it without coming up for air. In the last few months, she felt she’d managed to screw up her own life and the lives of everyone around her. Go directly to guilt in the game of life. Do not pass go. Do not collect two hundred dollars. Did the stages have to be worked through sequentially for a healthy psyche? She couldn’t remember. Probably.
Alchemy seemed to be more or less sequential: calcination, dissolution, separation, conjunction, fermentation, distillation . . . and . . . coagulation? Was that the last one? Her brow knit. She’d have to ask her father. He’d give her a right proper lecture about it, and then warn her about the perils of skipping around . . . if he didn’t fall asleep in his oatmeal midway through. Petra had never worked alchemy herself, but she understood enough to know that in some idealized world that didn’t exist, the processes should be worked in sequence, and Ta-da!—gold or eternal life to the winner. Player’s choice.
The door opened, and Petra turned.
A thin man in a white doctor’s coat held a folder with her name on it. “Good morning, Ms. Dee.” He reached over to shake her hand. His hand was cold as lunch meat.
“Good morning, Dr. Hoffer.” Petra had picked him out on the Internet. He seemed about as qualified as she was going to find in this neck of the woods, and he took her insurance.
Dr. Hoffer slid behind his scarred wooden desk and opened her file. “I wanted to talk with you about your test results in person.”
“Of course.” It was never good when a doctor wanted to see you in person. Never. But Petra had been hoping that this guy was just old-fashioned. For chrissakes, he still kept paper records and had a corded phone on his desk. She twisted her fingers together in her lap.
“How have you been since I last saw you? Anything unusual?”
She shook her head. “Nope.” Other than the complete insanity that my life seems to be? Should I tell you about my dad’s latest crackpot theory about the composition of the universe, that ether is a real thing that can be created in a bottle? Maybe you wa
nt to hear about where I lost my shoes on my last trip to the spirit world? How about the underground world beneath the Tree of Life, where the undead sleep? Yeah. No.
He opened the folder. “Your blood work shows some significant abnormalities. Your white blood cell count is elevated, as was noted by the ER in your last visit. You have enlarged lymph nodes, and you’ll remember we did a needle biopsy of your right axillary lymph node, to see if there’s sign of infection.”
Petra resisted the urge to rub under her arm; it still hurt like a sonofabitch, even more than a tetanus shot. “And?”
“I’m afraid that it looks as if you have leukemia.”
She sat back in her chair, silent. Fuck. No candy-coating that.
The doctor continued. “Based on your history of exposure to chemicals in the petrochemical industry, it’s likely that you have acute myeloid leukemia. Exposure to benzene is a risk factor in such a diagnosis.”
She nodded. She’d been up to her neck in petroleum for years before she came to the quiet-seeming town of Temperance, Wyoming. “Okay. So . . . how advanced is it? What’s the treatment? How do I fit that around my work schedule?” Her brain was already trying to leapfrog ahead to the next stage.
“I’m going to send you to the university for treatment. They will want to do a bone marrow biopsy. The results will determine the course of treatment. They’ll probably discuss chemotherapy with you. That can last weeks or months, depending on a number of factors.”
Her hand slipped up to her neck, and her thumb rubbed the back of her pendant. “Will this be on an outpatient basis? Or will I be hospitalized for the treatment?”
“We’re really getting ahead of ourselves.” Dr. Hoffer closed the file folder. “The important thing is that we get a handle on the extent of the problem, and then work to find the optimal course of action.”
She gave a sharp nod. That sounded eminently rational.
“I’ll go get a referral set up for you. Please take your time.” He awkwardly slid a box of tissues across the desk to her, though her eyes were dry.