by Jim Butcher
The anger started fading a little. I hadn’t gotten much rest, and was too tired to keep it up. I ached. I slid down the wall until I was sitting. I rubbed at my eyes. “It doesn’t make any sense. What would she have been doing hanging around with your father?”
“God knows,” Thomas said. “All I know is that there was some sort of business between them. It developed into something else. Father was trying to snare her permanently, but she wound up being too strong for him to completely enthrall. She escaped him when I was about five. From what I’ve been able to learn, she met your father the next year when she was on the run.”
“Running from who?”
He shrugged. “Maybe my father. Maybe some people in the Courts or on the Council. I don’t know. She’d gotten into some bad business and she wanted out. Whoever she was in it with didn’t want her gone. They wanted her dead.” He spread his hands, palm up. “That’s almost everything I know, Harry. I tried to learn all I could about her. But no one would talk to me.”
My eyelids felt gummy. My chest hurt. I looked up at the portrait of my mother. She was a woman of evident vitality, life flowing from her and around her, even in the painting. But I’d never gotten the chance to know her. She died in the delivery room.
Damn it all, what if Thomas was playing it straight with me? It would mean that I knew a little more about why the White Council all watched me like I was Lucifer, the Next Generation. It would mean being forced to accept that my mother was involved in bad business. Scary, big, bad business of one kind or another.
And it would mean that maybe I wasn’t entirely alone in this world. There might be family for me. Blood of my blood.
The thought made my chest hurt worse. As a child, I’d fantasized for hours at a time about having a family. Brothers and sisters, parents who cared, grandparents, cousins, aunts and uncles—just like everyone else. A group of people who would stick together through everything, because that’s what families do. Someone who would accept me, welcome me, maybe even be proud of me and desire my company.
I never celebrated Christmas as a kid, after my dad died. It hurt too much. Hell, it still hurt too much.
But if I had a real family, then maybe things could change.
I looked up. Thomas’s face had always been difficult to read, but I saw another mirror of myself there. He was having some of the same thoughts as me. I wondered if he’d been lonely, like I had. Maybe he’d daydreamed about a family who wouldn’t be trying to manipulate him, control him, or simply kill him.
But I stopped myself before I could follow that line of thought. Things were just too dangerous, and this issue too sensitive. I wanted, on some level, to believe Thomas. I wanted to believe him very much.
Which was why I couldn’t afford to take any chances.
After a long moment, he said, “I’m not lying to you.”
My voice came out soft, quiet, and calm. “Then prove it.”
“How?” he asked. He sounded tired. “How the hell am I supposed to prove it to you?”
“Look at me.”
He froze, his eyes still on the floor. “I don’t . . . I don’t think that would accomplish anything, Harry.”
“Okay,” I said. I started to rise. “Which way is my car?”
He lifted a hand. “Wait. All right,” he said. He grimaced. “I was hoping to avoid this. I don’t know what you’re going to see if you look in there. I don’t know if you’ll still feel the same way about me.”
“Ditto,” I said. “We’d better sit down.”
“How long will it take?” he asked.
“Seconds,” I said. “Feels longer.”
He nodded. We sat down about two feet from each other, cross-legged on the floor at the foot of my mother’s portrait. Thomas took a deep breath and then lifted his grey eyes to mine.
The eyes are a window to the soul. Literally. Looking someone steadily in the eyes is an uncomfortable, intense experience for anyone. If you don’t believe me, pick a stranger sometime, and just go up to them and stare them in the eye until that moment when there’s a sudden acknowledgment of lowered barriers, that moment that inspires awkward silences and racing hearts. The eyes reveal a lot about a person. They express emotions and give clues to what thoughts are lurking behind them. One of the first things we all learn to recognize, as infants, are the eyes of whoever is taking care of us. We know from the cradle how important they are.
For wizards like me, that kind of eye contact is even more intense, and even more dangerous. Looking into someone’s eyes shows me what they are. I see it in a light of elemental truth so clear and bright that it burns it into my head forever. I see the core of who and what they are during a soulgaze, and they see me in the same way. There’s nothing hidden, no possibility of deception. I don’t see absolutely every thought or memory that passes through their head—but I do get to see the naked, emotional heart of who and what they are. It isn’t a precise research technique, but it would tell me if Thomas was playing it straight.
I met Thomas’s grey eyes with my own dark gaze and the barriers between us fell.
I found myself standing in a stark chamber that looked like an abstract of Mount Olympus after its gods died. Everything was made of cold, beautiful marble, alternating between utter darkness and snowy light. The floor was laid out like a chessboard. Statuary stood here and there, all human figures carved in stone that matched the decor. Particolored marble pillars rose up into dimness overhead. There wasn’t a ceiling. There weren’t any walls. The light was silver and cold. Wind sighed mournfully through the columns. Thunder rumbled somewhere far away, and my nose filled with the sharp scent of ozone.
At the center of the forlorn ruin stood a mirror the size of a garage door. It was set in a silver frame that seemed to grow from the floor. A young man stood in front of it, one hand reaching out.
I walked a little closer. My steps echoed among the pillars. I drew closer to the young man and peered at him. It was Thomas. Not Thomas as I had seen him with my own eyes, but Thomas nonetheless. This version of him was not deadly-beautiful. His face seemed a little more plain. He looked like he might have been a little nearsighted. His expression was strained with pain, and his shoulders and back were thick with tension.
I looked past the young man into the mirror. There I saw one of those things that I would want to forget. But thanks to the Sight, I wouldn’t. Ever.
The reflection room in the mirror looked like the one I stood in at first glance. But looking closer revealed that rather than black and white marble, the place was made from dark, dried blood and sun-bleached bone. A creature stood there at the mirror, directly in front of Thomas. It was humanoid, more or less Thomas’s size, and its hide shone with a luminous silver glow. It crouched, hunched and grotesque, though at the same time there was an eerie beauty about the thing. Its shining white eyes burned with silent flame. Its bestial face stared eagerly at Thomas, burning with what seemed to be unsatiated appetite.
The creature’s arm also extended to the mirror, and then with a shiver I realized that its limb was reaching a good foot past the mirror’s surface. Its gleaming claws were sunk into Thomas’s shaking forearm, and drops of dark blood had run from the punctures. Thomas’s arm, meanwhile, had sunk into the mirror, and I saw his fingers digging in hard upon the flesh of the creature’s forearm. Locked together, I sensed that the two were straining against each other. Thomas was trying to pull himself away from the thing. The creature was trying to drag him into the mirror, there among the dried blood and dead bones.
“He’s tired,” said a woman’s voice.
My mother appeared in the mirror wearing a flowing dress of rich, royal blue. She watched the silent struggle while she drew closer. The portrait had not done her credit. She was a creature of life and vitality, and was more beautiful in motion than she could be in any frozen image. She was a tall woman, nearly six feet, and that was in flat sandals.
My throat tightened. I felt tears on my face. “Are y
ou real?”
“Why should I not be?” she asked.
“You could just be a part of Thomas’s mental landscape. No offense.”
She smiled. “No, child. It’s really me. In some measure, at least. I prepared you both for this day. I laid this working within each of you. A little portion of who and what I am. I wanted you to know who you were to each other.”
I drew a shaking breath. “Is he really your son?”
My mother smiled, a sparkle in her dark eyes. “You have a perfectly serviceable sense of intuition, little one. What does it tell you?”
My vision blurred with tears. “That he is.”
She nodded. “You must listen to me. I cannot be there to protect you, Harry. The two of you must take care of each other. Your brother will need your help, just as you will need his.”
“I don’t understand this,” I said, gesturing at the mirror. “What do you mean, he’s tired?”
My mother nodded at Thomas. “The girl he loved. She’s gone. She was his strength. It knows that.”
“It?” I asked.
She nodded at the mirror. “The Hunger. His demon.”
I followed her nod with my gaze. The image-Thomas snarled something under his breath. The Hunger in the mirror answered in a slow, slithering tongue I did not understand. “Why didn’t you help him?”
“I did what I could,” my mother said. Her eyes flickered with something dark, an ancient spark of hatred. “I made sure that his father would endure a fitting punishment for what he did to us.”
“You and Thomas?”
“And you, Harry. Raith yet lives. But he is weakened. Together you and your brother may have a chance against him. You will understand.”
The Hunger hissed more words at Thomas. “What is it saying?” I asked.
“It’s telling him to give up. That there’s no point in fighting anymore. That it will never leave him in peace.”
“Is it true?”
“Perhaps,” she said.
“But he’s fighting anyway,” I said.
“Yes.” Her eyes focused on mine, sad and proud. “It may destroy him, but he will not surrender himself to it. He is of my blood.” She drifted to the very edge of the mirror and reached out a hand. It emerged from the mirror’s surface as if from a motionless pool.
I stepped closer myself, reaching out to touch her hand. Her fingers were soft and warm. She wrapped them around mine, and squeezed. Then she lifted her hand and touched my cheek. “As are you, Harry. So tall, like your father. And I think you have his heart as well.”
I couldn’t answer her. I just stood there, silently crying.
“I have something for you,” she said. “If you are willing.”
I opened my eyes. My mother stood before me holding what I thought was a small gem or a jewel between long fingers. It pulsed with a low, gentle light.
“What is it?” I asked her.
“Insight,” she said.
“It’s knowledge?” I asked.
“And the power that goes with it,” she said. She gave me a half smile, touched with irony. It looked familiar. “Think of it as a mother’s advice, if you like. It doesn’t make up for my absence, child. But it’s all that I have to give.”
“I accept it,” I whispered. Because it was the only thing I could give her in return.
She passed me the gem. There was a flash, a tingling pain in my head, and then a lingering, dull ache. For some reason that didn’t surprise me. You don’t gain knowledge without a little pain.
She touched my face again and said, “I was so arrogant. I laid too great a burden upon you to bear alone. I hope that one day you will forgive me my mistake. But know that I am proud of what you have become. I love you, child.”
“I love you,” I whispered.
“Give my love to Thomas,” she said. She touched my face again, her smile loving and sad. Tears slid from her eyes as well. “Be well, my son.”
Then she drew her arm back into the mirror and the soulgaze was over. I sat on the floor facing Thomas. There were tears on his face. Both of us looked at each other, and then up at my mother’s portrait.
After a moment I offered Thomas his pentacle on its chain. He took it and put it on.
“Did you see her?” he asked. His voice was shaking.
“Yeah,” I said. The aching, lonely old hurt was overflowing me. But I suddenly found myself laughing. I had seen my mother with my Sight. I had seen her smile, heard her voice, and it was something I could never lose. Something no one could ever take away from me. It couldn’t wholly make up for a lifetime of loneliness and silent grief, but it was more than I ever thought I would have.
Thomas met my eyes, and then he started laughing too. The puppy wriggled his way from my duster’s pocket and started bounding back and forth and in circles in sheer, joyous excitement. The little nut had no clue at all what we were happy about, but evidently he didn’t feel he needed one to join in.
I scooped up the puppy and rose. “I’d never really seen her face,” I said. “I’d never heard her voice.”
“Maybe she knew you wouldn’t have,” Thomas replied. “Maybe she did it like that so you could.”
“She told me to tell you that she loved you.”
He smiled, though it was sad and bitter. “She told me the same thing.”
“Well,” I said. “This changes things some.”
“Does it?” he asked. He looked uncertain as he said it, frail.
“Yeah,” I said. “I’m not saying that we’re going to start from a fresh slate. But things are different now.”
“They aren’t for me, Harry,” Thomas said. He grimaced. “I mean . . . I knew this already. It’s why I tried to help you wherever I could."
“I guess you did,” I said quietly. “I thought you were just saving up for a favor. But you weren’t. Thank you.”
He shrugged. “What are you going to do about Arturo?”
I frowned. “Protect him and his people, of course. If I can. What did Lara mean when she said that Arturo’s independent streak was a matter for the White Court?”
“Damned if I know.” Thomas sighed. “I thought he was just someone Lara knew from the industry.”
“Does your dad have any connection to him?”
“Dad doesn’t advertise what he’s doing, Harry. And I haven’t spoken more than twenty words to him in the last ten years. I don’t know.”
“Would Lara?”
“Probably. But ever since Lara worked out that I wasn’t just a dim-witted ambulatory penis, she’s been on her guard when we’ve talked. I haven’t been able to get much out of her. So now I mostly sit there and nod and look wise and make vague remarks. She assumes that I know something she doesn’t, and then she thinks the vague remark is actually a cryptic remark. She wouldn’t want to move on me until she’s figured out what it is I’m hiding from her.”
“That’s a good tactic if people are paranoid enough.”
“In the Raith household? Paranoia comes bottled, on tap and in hot and cold running neuroses.”
“What about your dad? He know any magic?”
“Like maybe entropy curses?” Thomas shrugged. “I hear stories about things he’s done in the past. Some of them must be close to true. Plus he’s got a huge library he keeps locked up most of the time. But even without magic, he can just rip the life out of anyone who pisses him off.”
“How?”
“It’s like when we feed. It’s usually slow, gradual. But he doesn’t need that kind of time or intimacy. Just a touch, a kiss, and wham, they’re dead. That whole kiss-of-death thing in The Godfather? He was where that phrase originated, only for him it was literal.”
“Really?”
“Supposedly. I’ve never seen him do it myself, but Lara has, plenty of times. Madeline once told me once that he liked to open conversations that way, because it made sure he had the complete attention of everyone still breathing.”
“Stories. Supposedly. For someone
on the inside, your information isn’t real helpful.”
“I know,” he said. “I’m not thinking clearly right now. I’m sorry.”
I shook my head. “Can’t throw stones.”
“What do we do?” he asked. “I’m . . . I feel lost. I don’t know what to do.”
“I think I do,” I said.
“What?”
Instead of answering him, I offered him my hand.
He took it, and I drew my brother to his feet.
Chapter Twenty-two
I waited until the predawn gloom had become full, dismal, rainy morning to leave Château Raith. Thomas helped me pull a few things together while I waited, and I borrowed a phone to make some calls.
After that, the puppy and I got back in the Beetle, hit the drive-through at McDonald’s, and puttered back home to my apartment. I got out of the car and noticed a couple of blackened spots on the ground. I frowned and looked closer, discovering that they were in a methodical pattern. Someone had been trying to force their way past my wards, the magical protections I’d set up around the boardinghouse. They hadn’t broken through them, but the fact that someone or something had tried made me more than a little uncomfortable. I got the shield bracelet ready to go as I went down the stairs, just in case, but nothing frustrated from fruitless attempts to break in was waiting for me. Mister appeared from under my landlady’s car and followed me down the stairs.
I got into my apartment fast and shut the door behind me. I muttered a spell that lit half a dozen candles around the room, and braced myself for Mister’s greeting. He made his usual attempt to bulldoze my legs out from under me with his shoulders. I put the puppy on the floor, where he panted happily at Mister, wagging his tail by way of friendly greeting. Mister did not look impressed.
I kept moving, trying to stay focused. I didn’t think I had any time to waste. I shoved aside the rugs over the stepladder down to the lab, hauled the door open, and slid down into the lab. “Bob,” I said. “What’d you find out?”
Mister padded over to the top of the stairs. A cloud of flickering orange lights arose from the cat and flowed down the stepladder to the lab. The lights streamed over to the skull on its shelf, and Bob’s eye sockets flickered to life. “It was a long, cold night,” he said. “Saw a place where a couple of ghouls set up shop, out by the airport.”