He sighed. “Because I understand. If my mate were gone, I would find him. No matter what it took. He would do the same for me. Where one of us goes, the other follows.”
“Thank you,” I said.
“You’re welcome.”
“With the two of them, we had enough, but we needed a medmage. Doolittle couldn’t go, but he asked for volunteers.” Curran nodded at Nasrin.
The medmage shrugged. “I go where I’m needed.”
“Then I had to make fucking arrangements to make sure the Pack didn’t fall apart while we were gone. The Council pitched a fit. We didn’t set out until the next morning.”
The way he said that didn’t bode well for the Council. “They didn’t want you to go.”
“Somebody got excited and told me that I couldn’t go since it wasn’t in the best interests of the Pack,” Curran said.
Figured. No matter how well I served the Pack, my life wasn’t worth risking Curran or the other alphas. It should’ve hurt, but I was used to it by now.
“They were panicked,” Robert said.
“What did you do?” I asked Curran.
He shrugged. “I reminded them that I was the one who decided things.”
“It took us two days to get here,” Robert said. “There is a really fast ley line coming back from here that starts around St. Louis, but there’s almost nothing going northwest.”
“The roads are shit,” Curran said. “We didn’t exactly know where Mishmar was in the first place, and when we finally got here it took another day to find a way in. But the real issue was that we couldn’t move during tech. Christopher suspended your hair in some solution and we used it as a compass, but it only worked while the magic was up. I had to sit on my hands and wait half of the time. We’ve been wandering through the damn place for days.”
Poor Christopher. I’ll follow you to the ends of the earth, but not there. I cannot go there again. But he did. He came to Mishmar for me. If we got out of here alive, I would find a way to repay him.
“Did Christopher tell you to bring the saws?”
Curran nodded. “He said there were prison cells . . .”
Curran raised his head. Robert turned toward the doorway.
A rhythmic staccato of shots was coming from somewhere down the hallway. Ten to one, it was Andrea.
Thomas stuck his head into the doorway. “We have to move.”
• • •
WE RAN THROUGH the narrow hallway. Well, I wasn’t really running. I was dragging myself forward.
Curran leaned toward me. “Are you going to be a hardass about this?”
“What do you think?” We were already down by one, because Ghastek couldn’t walk and Jim decided to carry him. I wouldn’t tie up Curran’s hands by making him carry me, too.
“If you say you got it, you got it. But if you fall down, I’ll pick you up.”
“Deal.”
Falling didn’t seem like such a bad idea now.
The narrow hallway kept going, its plain brown walls punctuated by doorways that opened into offices filled with filthy shattered furniture. The two wererats led the way, both in half-form, lean, shaggy, and fast. Nasrin followed, then Curran and I, Jim with Ghastek, and Christopher and Andrea bringing up the rear. Behind us, the vampires dashed through Mishmar. I could feel their minds. There were close to twenty now, six directly behind us and the rest above and on the sides. It felt like they were moving through the walls.
Thomas, the larger of the two wererats, made a sharp turn. I followed just in time to see him jump through a jagged hole in the floor. I ran after him and looked through the hole. A nine-foot drop. Sure, why not. I climbed into the hole. Ow. I stumbled. Okay, this wasn’t a good idea. Curran dropped down after me.
“Got it, baby?” he asked quietly.
“Piece of cake.”
Nasrin was already jumping through another hole a few feet to the right. I checked the height. More like twenty-five feet this time and too narrow for me and Curran to go through at once. “I’ll take that help.”
Curran jumped in and landed down below. “Go.”
I dropped into the hole. He caught me and lowered me to the floor. “Good?”
“Good.”
“Necro in the hole,” Jim called from above. I looked up in time to see Ghastek falling out of the ceiling. Curran caught him.
“This is ridiculous,” Ghastek said.
Jim jumped down. Curran handed Ghastek off and we were on our way. The room we were in now was wide and stretched for hundreds of feet. It resembled a hotel lobby: tall gray columns of natural stone, textured ceiling, steps with some glossy black finish, dusty elaborate chandeliers that had somehow survived the disaster . . .
The magic rolled over us like a viscous invisible wave.
Black stalks spiraled out of the ground.
Curran and I moved at the same time. He scooped me up just as I jumped in his arms and then he sprinted across the room like a bat out of hell. When a magic wave hits and something weird pops out of the ground, you don’t wait to find out what it is. You put some distance between you and whatever the hell that thing is.
Behind us, Andrea barked. “Run, Christopher!”
All around us the stalks split, their offshoots widening into triangular leaves.
Curran flew across the room. Ahead of us a wall loomed, with a wide stone staircase leading upward. The steps were flower-free. Nasrin was already there, waving.
The stalks sprouted fat black bulbs.
Undead magic smeared my mind. I glanced back over Curran’s shoulder. Andrea had locked Christopher’s arm in a death grip and was pulling him across the floor. Behind them a vampire fell through the hole in the ceiling and charged after us.
Curran leaped and landed on the stairs. Jim with Ghastek was only a step behind.
The flowers opened, releasing a dense corona of thin filaments glowing with pale purple, as if someone had taken the fringes from several passionflowers and strung them together on the same stem.
Andrea reached the stairs, dragged Christopher a few steps up, and let him go. He collapsed.
The vampire glided among the blossoms, silent and quick.
“Don’t kill it,” Ghastek murmured. “I need a ride.”
The flowers shivered. A cream-colored shimmering mist rose from their petals. The vampire stumbled, reared back in complete silence, and collapsed.
“Damn it,” Ghastek swore.
The stalks rustled. Black hairy roots stretched over to the bloodsucker’s body.
“Beautiful,” Christopher whispered. “Mortem germinabit.”
“Come on, Christopher. We have to go.” Andrea hauled him upright and we climbed the stairs.
“I know we’ve been following our own scent trail, but I don’t remember any of this,” Jim said.
“That’s because we didn’t come this way,” Robert said.
“But I remember the two holes we climbed out of on the way up,” Andrea said. “I smelled us. This lobby or whatever it is wasn’t supposed to be here. This should have been a hallway. Are you saying the room moved?”
“We don’t know,” Thomas said.
The stairs ended in another door. Robert eased it open. A typical hotel hallway rolled out before us, complete with long red carpet and numbers on the doors.
“So we have no idea where we’re going?” Nasrin asked.
“We’re going down,” Curran told her. “Unless this place develops its own gravity, the direction shouldn’t be that hard.”
I wouldn’t bet on that.
• • •
FOUR FLOORS LATER the section of Mishmar that was lifted from a hotel ended. We took the stairs, squeezed through a gap in the wall and suddenly the carpeted hotel hallway was gone, replaced by the hardwood floors and open plan of a modern apartment. The walls changed from beige to polished glossy red, rich like the color of arterial blood. The dark gray furniture stood intact, the couch and chairs arranged as if waiting for a party to begin. Even the pots still hung from a baker’s rack above the range. Now how did my father manage that? How does one pick a chunk of a building and set it on top of other buildings without the furniture sliding around? Maybe someone put it all back together after it became a part of Mishmar?
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