When had that happened?
“Danny,” he whispered back.
“I…” Why did the words I’m sorry stick in my throat? “I want to know something.”
“Hm.” His fingers played with his staff, bones shifting slightly but not clacking against each other. His skin was so fine, so dry… and once I looked closely I could see the beautiful arch of his cheekbone, the fine fan of his eyelashes tipped with gold. Japhrimel had studied me this intently once, as if I was a glyph he wanted to decode.
Lovely, Danny. You’re touching Jace, and all you can think of is a dead demon. “Why did you give up the Family?”
Jace’s eyes flew open, dug into mine, oceans of blue. I smelled his Power rising, twining with my own. “I don’t need it, Danny,” he answered softly. “What good is a whole fucking Family without you?”
If he’d hit me in the solar plexus with a quarterstaff I might have regained my breath more quickly. My skin flushed with heat. “You…” I sounded breathless. My fingers sank into his skin, his desire rose, wrapping around me. The threads of the tapestry hung on my west wall shifted, the sound brushing against sensitive air, and for once I did not look to see what Horus and Isis, in their cloth-bound screen, would tell me.
He tore away from me, his staff smacking once against my floor, and stalked across the room to my fieldstone altar, set against the wall between the living room and the kitchen. He’d set up his own small altar next to it, lit with novenas; set out a half-bottle of rum, a pre-Parapsychic-Act painting of Saint Barbara for his patron Chango, a dish of sticky caramel candy, and a brass bowl of dove’s blood from his last devotional sacrifice. The candleflames trembled. “Even the loa can’t force a woman’s heart,” he said quietly. “Here’s your invitation.” A square of thick white expensive paper, produced like a card trick, held up so I could see it over his left shoulder.
“Jace.”
“You’d better go.” His voice cut across mine. “I hear the Prime doesn’t like to be kept waiting, and I had to pay to get this.”
“Jace—”
“I’ll have any dirt on your normal by tomorrow afternoon. Okay?”
“Jason—”
“Will you just go, Danny?”
Irritation rasped under my breastbone. I stalked up to him, snatched the paper out of his hand, and heard the proximity-chime ring. The hoverlimo was here. Jace tapped his datband, keying it in through the house’s security net. I pulled the shields apart slightly to let the big metal thing maneuver into my front yard. I took a deep breath, scooped up my cloak and the pictures, and stamped out of the living room.
If I hadn’t been part-demon, with all a demon’s acuity, I would never have heard his murmur. “I had to give it up, Danny. I had to. For you.”
Oh, Jace.
I shook my head. He was right, I was going to be late. And in Santiago City, you never wanted to be late while visiting the suckheads.
CHAPTER 13
After the Parapsychic Act, many paranormal species got the vote and a whole new code of laws was drawn up. Advances in medical tech meant cloned blood for the Nichtvren, enzyme treatments to help control werecainism, protection against human hunters for the swanhilds, and a whole system of classification for who and what qualified for citizen’s rights. Most of the night world had come out to be registered as voters, some of them reluctantly. The Nichtvren, of course, having shepherded the Act through after decades of political maneuvering and hush money, came out first of all. In more ways than one—Nichtvren Masters were the prime paranormal Powers in any city, keeping the peace and dispensing swift justice to any werecain, kobolding, or any other nonhuman that flew above the radar and made too much trouble. The Nichtvren were courted by both Hegemony and Putchkin, and if you had to deal with the paranormal in any city, a good place to start was with the suckheads. They had their long pretty fingers in every pie.
The House of Pain was an old haunt. Feeding place and social gathering spot at once, it had been a hub of the paranormal and parapsychic community ever since its inception; after the Awakening, it had closed to humans and started catering exclusively to other species. The Nichtvren who ruled it, the prime Power of the city, was rumored to be one mean sonofabitch.
I wouldn’t know. Humans, especially psions, aren’t allowed in Nichtvren haunts unless they’re registered as legitimate indentured servants or thralls. I sighed, settling back against the synthleather of the limo’s back seat. Several paranormal species didn’t precisely like psions, but we were marginally more acceptable than normals. Psions and Magi had been trafficking with paranormals since before the Awakening, trading their own uncertain skills for protection, knowledge, and other things.
The population growth of humanity had eaten away at the habitat of almost every paranormal species—and even the Nichtvren had reason to fear mobs of normals with pitchforks, stakes, or guns. To the other species, humans were evil at worst, psions a necessary evil at best. They have long memories, the paranormals, and they remember being squeezed out of their habitats by humanity, or being hunted when they tried to adapt. Silence, blending in, and clannishness had kept them viable as a species; the habits held even though they hadn’t had to hide for a long time.
A psion could go her whole life without really interacting with a paranormal, even if she was a Magi or an Animone. The few humans who studied paranormal physiology and culture were given Hegemony grants and worked in the academic fields, and some anthropologists even studied paranormals… but those were few and far between. Despite the stories of psions being taken in by swanhilds or taught by Nichtvren, it just didn’t happen that often. Paranormals were more likely to view humans as food—or a disease. Given how we’d treated nonhuman species throughout most of our history, I don’t blame them one bit.
The alley off Heller Street was full of milling people, most with press badges. The Nichtvren paparazzi were out big-time; the gothed-out groupies clustered with them, trying to look exceptional and maybe buy a Nichtvren’s notice. A faint, listless sprinkle of rain splattered down. Full night had fallen, orange cityglow staining the sky. I saw the thick pulsing of power on the brick wall at the end of the alley, an old neon sign pulsing the word Pain in fancy script over the door. A red carpet unrolled from the door down the alley, and red velvet cords on heavy brass stands kept the crowd back. Two hulking shapes I was fairly sure were werecain instead of genespliced bouncers lumped on either side of the door.
“Ma’am?” the driver asked, almost respectfully. His voice crackled over the intercom.
I came back to myself with a completely uncharacteristic sigh. “I’ll be out in a few hours. You’ll be here?”
“I’ve been contracted the entire night,” the staticky voice said. “Yours until sunup, Miz Valentine. Do you want to get out now?”
Great. I’ve got a comedian for a driver. I sighed again. “All right. No time like the present.”
He hopped out, then the doorhatch clicked and fwished aside. The white-jacketed driver offered me his hand, and I took it, careful to place no weight on it as I stepped out of the hoverlimo, my boots grinding slightly on wet pavement. I smelled night and human excitement, and a dash of something dry and powerful over the top—I wished again I could shut down my nose.
Laseflashes popped. They were taking pictures. I blinked, settling the cloak on my shoulders, shaking the folds of material free. The papers, tucked in a pocket I’d thoughtfully sewn into the skirt, rustled slightly. I set my chin, nodded to the driver—a short, pimple-faced young boy squeezed into a white and black uniform with gold braid—and set off down the red carpet. Behind me, the driver’s footsteps echoed, then I heard the whine of hovercells as the limo lifted up to float in a slow pattern, joining the other hoverlimos and personal hovers already threading through the parking level above the House of Pain.
“Hey, Valentine! Valentine!” Some enterprising soul called my name. I didn’t acknowledge it. Soon all of them were yelling, trying to catch my attention. I
strode down the carpet, head high, feeling the weight of my hair and the stilettos caught in the twist. I hate this.
If Japhrimel had been with me, he would have walked with his head up, his hands clasped behind his back, utterly unmoved by the human hubbub. Jace might have grinned, mugged for the cameras a bit, or caused some mischief. Gabe would have lit a cigarette, and Eddie would have snarled. The thought of Jado or Abracadabra dealing with this was ridiculous enough to be laughable.
But me, I couldn’t imitate any of them. I strode toward the lion’s den with no time to waste.
The things by the door were indeed werecain, hulking bipeds covered with fur, halfway between human and huntform. I’d taken the required classes in paranormal anatomy at Rigger Hall and beyond, at the Academy, but it was odd to see them up close. In the old days they might have worn clothing or stayed in human form. Now all they wore were ruffs of hair around their genitals. I didn’t look.
Instead, I held up the invitation, and dropped the outer edge of my shields. Power blurred, stroking against the building’s cold blueblack glow. A radioactive wellspring of Power from Saint City’s deep black heart bathed this place. It had been here for centuries, the crackling energy of paranormals gathered in one place seeping into the concrete brick and stone. A heartbeat of music thudded out through the walls.
The werecain said nothing. One of them jerked his chin, motioning me inside. Flashbulbs popped.
I wanted to curl my right hand around my swordhilt. I also wished my left shoulder didn’t buzz and burn as if red-hot iron was held just above my skin. Anger curled through my stomach, a welcome thread of familiar heat. I would be damned if I would be treated like a second-class citizen to be hustled into this goddamn place, even if I was human.
I measured both werecain with a slow, steady gaze. I could take them. I could take them both. I could gut them. I’ve got a sword again.
Then I remembered I wasn’t just human anymore, but I still didn’t back down, holding eye contact and playing the dominance game. It would be a bad start to act weak here at the door.
Finally, one of them gave me a jerky half-bow. “Come on in, lady.” His voice, shaped by lips and tongue and teeth no longer human, sounded thick and grumbling. “Welcome to the House of Pain.”
I gave them a nod and swept past, my head held high. Who am I? I would have never done that, before.
CHAPTER 14
Inside, a migraine-attack of red and blue lights throbbed, and the music was a slow haunting melody over a pounding bass beat. Nothing I recognized. There was a time when I would have known, back when I used to go dancing with Jace, his spiky aura closing me off from the backwash of crowd-feeling. Inside the House, there was no tang of humans or human desperation, no sweet knifeblade of human desire or straining sex in dark corners; there were no ghostflits riding the edges of the crowd’s heat. No blur of alcohol, no swirls of synth-hash cigarette smoke either.
Instead, Power rode the air in swirls and eddies, a lazy bath of energy that made me shiver slighly, my lips parting, my entire body stroked and teased in a hundred different ways. If I’d known—
No wonder they don’t let humans in here. A psion could get addicted to this, they could have a whole community of Feeders in here. The overcharge of carnivorous Power in here would addict a human psion faster than Chill would hook a junkie, and they would keep coming back for more—or looking for the same charge out on the streets, draining anyone they could to feel the crackling feedback of Power. I was lucky to be safe behind a demon’s shielding, closed off from the dozing, razor-toothed buzzing that could swallow me whole. Good thing I’d left Jace at home, too.
The place was warehouse-sized, and full of bright glittering eyes and long hair, beautiful pale faces, and the massive shapes of werecain. I saw a gaggle of swanhilds in one corner, their feathered ruffs standing erect around their heads, and a group of something I recognized as kobolding in another, downing tankards of beer. Each time one of the squat gray-skinned things took down another pitcher, the others would cheer.
Long floating sheets of material hung from the ceiling. I glanced up, wished I hadn’t, and glanced back down. Cages on the ceiling, I thought incoherently, swallowing. I couldn’t afford to gray out from shock now. If Japhrimel had been here—
Stop thinking about that. The image of a lean saturnine face and piercing green eyes rose in front of me, I shoved it down. Set off across the cement floor. A few steps in, slick stone reverberated under my feet. They’d paved the whole place in marble. The sound bounced and echoed. I shook my head slightly, wishing once again I could shut my ears off, or turn the volume dial down just a little.
The area that vibrated most intensely with power was a booth done in red velvet, facing the bar. I skirted the dance floor, trying not to notice the infrequent pattering drops from the cages overhead, or the bright, inhuman eyes peering at me. The Nichtvren didn’t act as if they noticed my presence, but I sensed a few of them trailing me. They dressed in silks and velvets, some of them in ultrahip modern pleather and spiked hair, gelglitter sparkling on pale cheeks. One of them, a tall man in bottle-green velvet with fountaining lace at the cuffs, smiled widely at me, showing his fangs. My right hand curled into a fist. I considered stopping, reaching for my sword—but my legs had already carried me toward the booth, as if set on automatic.
This was dangerous. I couldn’t afford to lose focus now.
I blinked slowly, the pain in my shoulder spiking, then easing a little. I could tap into the Power here and blow the whole goddamn place down, if I wanted to. Without even the slightest hesitation or hint of backlash. Now was not the time to be glad that Japhrimel had altered me, but… I still felt glad. A little. In a weird, heart-thumping kind of way. Playing with the big boys now, Danny Valentine was in a whole different league.
I stopped in front of the booth. Two men that looked almost human, both with a glaze of Power and the musty, deliciously wicked smell of Nichtvren on them, stood on either side. One of them eyed my swordhilt and opened his mouth to say something. I fixed him with a hot glare.
“Let her in.” The voice cut through the pulsing noise. The dance floor seethed behind me, a sharp spiked flare of Power matching a rise in the music’s tempo. I hoped my hair wouldn’t fall down.
Nikolai, the prime Power of Saint City, leaned back on the red velvet of an antique couch carved to within an inch of its life. An equally antique table rested in front of him, pocked with gaps I recognized as bullet holes. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and dressed in nondescript dark clothing that looked silky. No amount of simplicity could disguise the weltering onslaught of Power he commanded.
I would have been impressed if I hadn’t dealt with Power all my life. As it was, I cocked a hip for balance and leverage in case anyone came at me, looked into his cat-sheened dark eyes, and held up the invitation.
He had a shelf of dark hair falling over his eyes, a wide generous mouth, and high sculpted cheekbones. He would have been handsome without the flat shine of his eyes, like a cat’s eyes at night when the light hits them just right, and the utter inhuman stillness he settled into. He wore a dark button-down shirt, probably silk, and a pair of loose silken pants, a pair of very good Petrolo boots, and no jewelry.
Beside him, leaning forward with her elbows on her knees, sat a Nichtvren female with a fall of long, curling blonde-streaked hair, her dark-blue eyes liquid and fixed on me. She had no catshine to her eyes, and none of Nikolai’s immobility—instead, her fingernails tapped at the air, her lush lips parted slightly, the tips of her fangs showing; she wore a frayed red V-neck sweater and a pair of dark ratty jeans, beaten and scarred combat boots, and a thick silver cuff-bracelet with a tiger’s eye the size of a mini credit-disc on her right wrist. She measured me from head to foot, and then smiled, half of her mouth pulling up.
I’m glad someone’s having fun. I stepped forward, into the booth through a sticky sheet of Power that snapped shut behind me. Instantly, the noise they called musi
c went down in volume, and I gave an involuntary sigh of relief.
Nikolai said nothing, examining me. It was like being eyed by a wild animal that hadn’t quite made up its mind to eat you or simply crush you with a clawed paw.
I nodded at the female, knowing that his Consort was the way into his good graces. Rumor had it she was the only thing in the entire city that Nikolai valued. Rumor also had it that he went crazy if he even thought someone had messed with her.
Aw, now ain’t that sweet. “I’m Danny Valentine, and I’m grateful you agreed to see me, ma’am. Sir.”
Anyone who knew me would have expected the words to sound sarcastic. I was faintly surprised they didn’t.
Nikolai still didn’t move. The Nichtvren female laughed. The deep, husky sound surprised me and made my hackles rise, her eyes flared a dark luminous blue. She was exquisite, and I caught a thread of an odd scent; some type of musk that reminded me of sexwitch over the musty caramelized-dark-chocolate scent of Nichtvren. “Hi,” she said. “Sit down. Nik’s just in a mood. We have to see a werecain delegation after you, and he finds that unpleasant. Want something to drink?” Her accent was old Merican, the vowels shaped oddly, like they used to be around the time of the Parapsychic Act but before the great linguistic meltdown of the Seventy Days War. So she was old too.
Not nearly as old as him.
I wouldn’t trust the liquor in here, lady. I shook my head, let my cloak fall to the floor. It was a good gesture, it showed I had nothing but the ordinary weapons. I settled myself on the couch to their left, easing down gingerly, wishing I could hold my sword across my lap. Steel would be better than empty air between me and these two.
Nikolai finally moved. “What is it you require?” he asked, and the woman’s pale expressive hand came down on his knee; the tiger’s eye on her bracelet flashed with light. He had been immobile before, now he looked over at her, and a stone would have looked frenetic next to him.