Thread of Death
I’d put out a few subtle feelers, offering my services and expertise to some of the more established and respected crime bosses, including Phillip Kincaid, but all my advances had been rebuffed thus far. Kincaid had declined my services, as had Benson. At least they knew enough to be polite about things. Donaldson had laughed in my face, while Parker had had her giant bodyguards simply pick me up—chair and all—remove me from her office, take me outside, and dump me in the street like trash. I wasn’t going to forget those slights. No, I had plans for Donaldson, Parker, and everyone else who’d mocked me these last few weeks.
I’d had a few offers for work come in, but all from those I considered beneath me, minor thugs who were too stupid to last very long, like Wallace Conroy, a vampire pimp who had on the most garish black crushed-velvet suit I’d ever had the misfortune to see. He looked like he was wearing a love seat for a jacket. Conroy noticed me staring at him and waved at me, as if it were perfectly polite to flap his hand around during a funeral service. Even worse, the motion caused the thick gold bracelet on his wrist to flash in the light. No class, no manners, and absolutely no brains. I turned away in disgust.
Either way, most everyone wanted to assume Mab’s mantle of power on their own, without any help from me. Fools. With my knowledge of Mab’s businesses, legitimate and otherwise, I could have made things so much easier for them. But of course they couldn’t see that—they couldn’t see the big picture like I could, like I’d always been able to. They didn’t have the discipline to plan and plot and think ahead like I did. I’d had to do those things just to stay alive in Mab’s employment. Skills that would serve me well, now that she was gone.
Still, if the other bosses wanted to disregard my offers of information and try to climb to the top of the crime ladder themselves, that was fine with me. I’d just sit idly by and wait until they’d killed each other off one by one. Once the dust settled and a clear winner emerged, I would reassess things.
In the meantime, there was one thing I was determined about: that Gin Blanco was going to die.
I stared past the minister at the troublesome bitch. I’d thought she might show up here today. Part of me had hoped she would, and I’d been eager to see her, eager to see just how much Mab had hurt her. If Ms. Blanco couldn’t be dead, then being horribly scarred, burned, and a small, pitiful shell of her former self would have been the next best thing. I would have been somewhat satisfied with that—for a time, anyway.
But of course Blanco had gotten some Air elemental to patch her up, probably Jo-Jo Deveraux, that old beauty queen dwarf who was standing with the rest of the bitch’s group of misfits. Blanco looked no worse for wear. In fact, her skin was positively glowing, and she looked as fresh and relaxed as if she’d spent a long weekend at a spa. Envy stabbed through me, along with disappointment.
But my disappointment soon turned to anger. I’d been in the rubble-filled courtyard with Mab and Blanco when they had their elemental duel. Once the two of them started in on each other with their magic, I got myself to safety, determined to finally, happily, watch Mab kill the woman who’d caused me so many problems.
But Blanco won instead. Somehow, she did something I didn’t think anyone could do: she killed Mab.
That was shocking enough, but what really surprised me was how far and fast I fell as well. With Mab gone, so were all the things I’d enjoyed while serving the Fire elemental: my status, my position, my power, and most important the way I could merely look at someone and see him tremble knowing exactly who my employer was and what she was capable of. Working for Mab had been stressful, but I’d enjoyed those particular perks. I’d earned them over the years with all the messes I’d cleaned up for the Fire elemental and all the long hours I’d spent soothing her raging ego.
But that was all gone, crumbled to ash just like Mab was. Now people didn’t look at me with fear in their eyes. Instead, they snickered at me behind my back. Blanco was the reason I’d lost all those precious things—and she was how I was going to get them back too.
I doubted Blanco had thought ahead to what would happen to her now that Mab was dead, but I had—and I’d already sowed the seeds of discontent among the underworld. All I had to do was kill the bitch—or, rather, arrange for it to be done. I’ve never liked getting my hands dirty that way. I’ve always found much more pleasure in orchestrating someone’s death, rather than actually pulling the trigger myself. Anyone can buy a gun and shoot someone. It takes skill and finesse to take down your enemies from a distance and get away clean, with no one knowing—or at least being able to prove—that you were ever involved.
Ms. Blanco didn’t know it, but Mab’s wasn’t the only funeral I’d been planning recently. She’d find out soon enough, though—and so would everyone else here today.
Calmer now, I turned my attention back to the minister and focused on his words once more. This was a funeral, after all.
An occasion worthy of respect.
Gin Blanco
Jonah McAllister dropped his eyes from mine, shifted in his seat, and stared at the minister again. Despite the minister’s somber words, McAllister’s thoughts must have been happy ones, because his mouth curved up into a thin smile, despite the smoothness of his features.
I frowned. The lawyer was up to something. I didn’t know what yet, but I knew it probably involved me—and my messy death. It seemed like McAllister was always planning that. If that was the case, he was once again going to be sorely disappointed, because I had no plans to follow Mab to her grave anytime soon.
A flash of light caught my eye. I blinked, thinking that it was just the sun reflecting off someone’s necklace or tie pin, but the light flashed again, and I realized it was coming from up in a towering maple tree about twenty feet behind the coffin. I squinted against the midafternoon glare, trying to see through the leafy branches and figure out exactly what was making that bright spot.
Suddenly a beam of light slashed across the ground, and a small red dot appeared on Owen’s arm before zooming over to my chest—a sight that was all too familiar to an assassin like me.
“Get down!” I screamed, and immediately threw myself on top of my lover.
Crack! Crack!
Two gunshots shattered the solemn silence, drowning out the minister’s words and kicking up tufts of grass and dirt where Owen and I had just been standing.
A second later everyone was in motion. Surprised shouts and screams ripped through the air as the semicircle splintered and folks scrambled to take cover behind the tombstones and trees that dotted the landscape. The giant bodyguards shoved their clients down onto the grass, covering their bodies with their own larger, bulkier ones. By the time five seconds had passed, the cemetery looked deserted, as if no one were there instead of everyone hiding behind whatever they could. Whether they lived in the genteel confines of Northtown, the rough projects of South-town, or somewhere in between, most everybody in Ashland recognized the sound of gunfire when they heard it. You didn’t live long in this city if you didn’t know how to duck and cover when the shooting started.
More red dots popped up here and there in the cemetery as the sniper kept firing, spreading his shots out over the crowd. At first, I thought he was just picking targets at random, but he focused several shots in the direction of Ron Donaldson and Lorelei Parker, even though they were both on the ground being protected by their giants. But not all the crime bosses were cowering behind or underneath their bodyguards. Beauregard Benson remained where he was, his arms crossed over his chest and a smile on his face, as if he were enjoying the chaos and the screams of those around him. Phillip Kincaid was also standing, peering around the side of a statue of an angel as if trying to figure out where the shots were coming from. I couldn’t quite tell from this angle, but I thought Kincaid had a gun in his hand, like he wanted to take out the sniper himself.
Roslyn and Jo-Jo had both ducked down behind a square headstone, and Jo-Jo had one hand on her hat, trying to keep it in place. Sophia
stood her ground, looking for the source of the shots, since her thick musculature would stop most bullets before they reached anything vital. Beside me, Finn had put himself on top of Bria and had already drawn the gun out from against the small of his back, although my sister was trying to wriggle out from under him and was reaching for her own weapon.
“Sniper!” I yelled at Finn. “In the maple tree! Cover me!”
Finn nodded, rose to one knee, and trained his gun in that direction. I got to my feet and sprinted across the grass.
Crack! Crack!
More shots rang out. I saw wood splinter on the tree ahead of me, and I knew that Finn was laying down the cover fire I’d asked him to, giving me a chance to get to the sniper.
Finn and the sniper exchanged a few more shots before the shooter pulled back behind a branch high up in the tree. He was probably reloading. I picked up my pace, leaping over the folks still cowering on the ground. Even the minister had taken cover, hunkering down behind Mab’s coffin. He knew the score in Ashland just like the rest of us did.
I made it over to the tree, sucking wind the whole time. I hadn’t sprinted that far, only several hundred feet, but my knees ached, my legs felt weak and wobbly, and my arms weren’t much better. Damn. I hated not being a hundred percent. Still, I didn’t have time to curse my lingering weakness. Instead, I snapped my head up and peered through the leaves.
The sniper was about thirty feet above me, standing on a couple of thick, sturdy boards he’d nailed into place. What had he done, built a fucking tree house up there before the funeral? The sniper had noticed my run across the grass. He leaned over to one side, peering down at me, and I realized he was a dwarf with dull brown hair that blended in with the branches around him.
The dwarf let out a curse, raised his rifle to his shoulder, and trained the weapon on me. My muscles may not have been fully recovered from my fight with Mab, but there was nothing wrong with my magic. As soon as he started swiveling in my direction, I reached for my Stone power, using it to harden my skin into an impenetrable shell.
Crack! Crack!
Two more shots came my way, making me stagger back, but thanks to my Stone power, the bullets hit my chest and then bounced right off, flying across the grass. The dwarf looked down at me, his mouth gaping, as if he couldn’t believe I was still standing. Yeah, I got that reaction a lot.
Despite the fact that he’d just tried to kill me, I could tell a hired gun when I saw one, so I decided to see if he could be reasoned with, mainly because I didn’t have any desire—much less the physical strength—to climb up into the tree and get him. Not today, anyway.
“You’re going to run out of bullets sooner or later, so you might as well come on down,” I said in a cold voice, peering up through the leaves and branches at him. “Because you do not want me to come up there after you.”
Apparently the dwarf decided to call my bluff, because he raised his rifle again.
Crack! Crack! Crack!
More bullets roared through the air, but the sniper wasn’t as careful with his aim as before, so most of the shots just thumped into the grass at my feet. Still, it was enough to make most of the mourners scream and cower once more.
The shooting stopped, and the dwarf cursed again as he reloaded. Every movement made him jingle, like his pockets were full of bullets rattling around together. I sighed: it looked like he’d brought along more ammunition than I’d given him credit for. Well, at least he’d come prepared. I had to admire that. Now I just had to figure out how to get him to stop shooting and pry him out of the tree.
There was only one choice really: I had to use my magic.
Sure, I’d already reached for my Stone power, using it to protect myself; but what I had in mind now would be a much more obvious display of my elemental ability. Most folks here might have heard the rumors about my being the Spider, but I didn’t want to give them any more hints about me or add any more fuel to the fires of speculation.
But I couldn’t risk the dwarf pointing his rifle back out at the crowd and taking shots at everyone else. Sooner or later he was bound to hit someone, and it would be just my bad luck that an innocent person would get hurt. Or, worse, that the dwarf would target my family. No, I had to get that rifle out of his hands right now. At least, most of the crime bosses were still huddled on the grass underneath the bodies of their giant guards. Maybe they wouldn’t see exactly what I was doing. I snorted. Right. Nobody was that lucky—especially not me.
I stepped forward and reached for my magic. But not my Stone power. No, this time, I grabbed hold of my Ice magic. For a moment I smiled, relishing the feel of the cool power flowing through my veins; then I pushed the magic outward. A cold silver light flickered on my palm, centered in the middle of the spider rune scar there. I leaned forward, placed my hand against the rough bark of the tree trunk, and let loose with my power.
Ice crystals spread out from my palm, climbing higher and higher into the maple, zipping from one branch, one leaf, to the next. If I wanted to, I could have frozen the entire tree in a matter of seconds with my elemental Ice, but that would have just been showing off, something I didn’t need or even want to do. So I focused on the branches closest to the sniper, forcing the Ice crystals in that direction—and then out onto the boards the dwarf had nailed to the tree.
The sniper let out a surprised shout and backed up, trying to get away from the encroaching crystals, but there was no escaping them—or how slippery they were. The dwarf’s boots skidded this way and that on the elemental Ice, and he held on to the rifle, his arms twirling around like he was a figure skater, but he couldn’t stop the inevitable. One foot slipped over the side of the platform, then the other.
The dwarf screamed all the way down to the ground.
I let go of my magic, dropped my hand from the tree trunk, and stepped to one side. The sniper hit the ground with a satisfying thump. I had no illusions he was dead, though. The shooter’s body didn’t look as thick and strong as Sophia’s, but he was still a dwarf, which meant that he could take a lot of damage before he was down for the count. A thirty-foot fall probably wouldn’t even break any of the bastard’s bones.
The drop stunned the dwarf for a second, but he recovered quickly. I’d just started to reach for him when he rolled over onto his side away from me and scrambled to his feet. His eyes dropped to the sniper rifle, which lay between us, and I could see him wondering whether it was worth it to try to lunge for the weapon and shoot me at point-blank range.
The dwarf made the right decision and decided not to go for the weapon. Instead, he bared his teeth at me, turned, and ran to the left, hurrying across the cemetery lawn as fast as he could. I sighed, hating the thought of having to chase after him. Why did they always have to run—
Crack!
Crack! Crack! Crack!
Crack! Crack!
Shot after shot rang out, until it seemed like the whole cemetery had erupted in gunfire. I clapped my hands over my ears and turned around. Apparently, the giants and other bodyguards had decided to earn their keep today, because many of them had gotten to their feet, pulled out their guns from their suit jackets, and opened fire on the running dwarf. Earlier, I’d been right when I thought that Kincaid had a gun, because he’d joined the ranks of the bodyguards, firing shot after shot from a silver revolver.
The dwarf was quick—but not quite quick enough. A bullet clipped him in the shoulder, spinning him around so that he was facing the crowd and letting the bodyguards get a bead on him.
Crack!
Crack! Crack! Crack!
Crack! Crack!
Bullet after bullet thumped into the dwarf’s chest, arms, and legs. Dwarves were tough, but this one never had a chance—not with so many people firing so much lead at him. His body vibrated back and forth from the force of the dozens of bullets slamming into him, until finally his legs went out from under him and he dropped to the grass. The bodyguards lowered their weapons, and the cemetery was silent once mo
re, except for the overlapping echoes of all the gunshots rattling up the ridge above. The smell of burned gunpowder filled the air, overpowering the earthy scent of the grass and trees.
When I was sure that everyone had lowered their guns and no one was going to turn their weapons in my direction, I let go of my Stone magic, walked over to the dwarf, and dropped to a knee beside him.
He was a fucking mess. The sniper’s clothes hung in tatters from his body, his entire chest black with bullet holes and red with the blood that was gushing out of them. Still, I leaned forward, dug my hands into what was left of his shirt, and jerked him up toward me.
“Who hired you?” I demanded. “Were you here for me or someone else? One of the other crime bosses, maybe? Tell me who you were trying to kill!”
But it was too late. The dwarf tried to say something, but his answer was lost in a gurgle of blood that oozed out of the side of his mouth and dripped onto the grass. He shuddered out a breath, his eyes glazed over, and his head lolled to one side while the rest of his body relaxed. Dead.
I dropped him, and he flopped back down to the ground. I got to my feet and turned around to find people staring at me. Everyone—all the bodyguards, all the bosses, even the minister—was peering at me with wide eyes. Now, instead of the Fire elemental, I was the center of attention.
I sighed yet again. So much for a solemn service.
Owen, Finn, and Bria got to their feet and hurried over to me. Sophia helped Jo-Jo and Roslyn stand up, and I waved at the three women, letting them know that I was okay. They waved back and started walking in our direction.
“Gin! Are you all right?” Owen asked, hugging me tight, then holding me out at arm’s length and scanning my face and the rest of my body for injuries.