I nodded. "Please. If he did double-cross me—"
"I doubt it. You're a good judge of character."
"Yeah? I did a great job last night with that wolf-pirate."
A tiny smile. "Ah, but you didn't trust him, remember? You just gave him the benefit of the doubt. No, I'm sure Ross will be as surprised as we were to find he had the Nix in his midst. But I'll test that theory with a little… interrogation."
"Thanks." Before he could leave, I reached for his arm. "And Kris?"
"Hmm?"
"Thanks for earlier. With the Nix."
He smiled. "Anytime."
I watched Kristof go. As he rounded the corner of the house, a jolt of alarm ran through me. Would Ross tell him about the poltergeist lessons we'd arranged? Shit. I hoped not. Kris had bit his tongue the day before, not asking why I knew so much about Ross. He didn't need his suspicions confirmed now…
and we didn't need a reason to start arguing about Savannah again.
"Where is he going?" Trsiel asked.
"To interr—talk to Luther Ross. See whether he knew he was tutoring a Nix."
Trsiel shook his head, anger falling from his face. "This isn't a good idea, Eve. I know Kristof is your daughter's father, and you're obviously still close, but this is your quest. He can't help. The Fates should have explained this to you."
"The Fates sent Kris along to Lizzie Borden's house with me. They must think it's more important for me to catch this Nix, using whatever resources I have, rather than insist I fulfill my debt by myself."
"It's not that, Eve. It's—you can't—when you ascend—" He bit the rest off. "I'll speak to them. In the meantime, Kristof is right. You do need to know how to hold this Nix until I can capture her. The problem is that, as far as I know, the only thing that can bind her is this."
He lifted his right hand, said a few words, and a gleaming sword appeared, his hand already in the grip.
He lowered it and held it out for me. I leaned over for a better look. I'd seen Janah's sword so this one shouldn't hold any great fascination, but the moment it appeared, I couldn't rip my gaze away. My fingers clenched, as if imagining the feel of the hilt in my hand. I remembered how it felt and a shiver raced through me.
"So that would stop her," I said. "But I can't have one, can I?"
"Not until you're an angel. Perhaps, though…" He hefted the sword and looked at me. "I wonder if you could use mine."
"Sure—I mean, if you don't need it."
"Not anymore." His eyes clouded. "Not lately, at least."
He held it out. I lifted my hands, with every intention of casually reaching for it. Instead, I fairly snatched it from his hands. He chuckled. I gasped as the white-hot heat licked down my arms.
He grabbed for it. "I'm sorry. Here, let me—"
"No." I stepped back, hands still on the sword. "Hurts like hell, but I can handle it." I managed a wry smile. "Don't get much pain in this world anymore. Feels very strange. Is this what normally happens if a nonangel touches it? Or is it my demon blood?"
"I'm not sure. I've never had any reason to let anyone hold it before."
I lifted the sword, expecting to feel the strain on my wrist muscles, but it flung upward as if it was made of aluminum instead of steel.
"Wow."
Trsiel gave a soft laugh. "You like that, don't you?" He stepped back and looked at me, his lips curving in a mischievous smile. "It suits you."
I gripped the hilt tighter. In my hands, I held what might very well prove to be the answer to my problem with Savannah. If Trsiel was right, and I was being tested for angel-hood…
I rearranged my fingers, staring at the light filtering through them, almost hypnotized by the glow. There would be strings attached to this beautiful piece of weaponry. Responsibility, for one thing. Big responsibility. If I brought in the Nix, and the Fates offered to reward me with angel-hood, I couldn't just say "Thanks for the cosmic makeover" and run. To get those powers, I'd have to promise to use them for the purpose for which they were intended. I'd need to join the ranks of the celestial bounty-hunters.
A big price… for a big reward.
I tore my gaze from the sword. All hypothetical right now. Even if Trsiel was right about the Fates' plans, I still had the catch the damn Nix.
"If it hurts too much—" Trsiel began as my grip slackened.
"It's fine. But will it work for me?"
"Only one way to find out. Swing it at me."
"At you?"
"At me, through me, whatever. Slice away. Can't do any damage, but I'll be able to tell whether it's working as it should."
I stepped back and sized up Trsiel, then hefted the sword a few times, getting a feel for it. A practice swing, testing the arc. Then a readjustment and another trial run.
"You're not trying to decapitate me, Eve. Just take a swing."
I did, executing a samurai-worthy slash. The blade sliced through his torso and shot, bloodless, out the other side.
"Still a bit upset with me, I see," he said, rubbing the side of his abdomen.
"Did it hurt?"
"Will you be disappointed if I say no? I felt it, but, no, I don't think it hurt."
"You don't think it did?"
"Having never been human, I'd hardly recognize pain if I felt it. I can say, though, that it didn't work. In your hands, the sword won't incapacitate the Nix. Not until you become—"
"An angel, which I can't become until I finish this quest. Love those catch-22s." I glanced over at him.
"Do you think that's really what they have in mind? Testing me for angel-hood?"
"Ah, so after she holds the really big sword, she begins to think ascension doesn't sound so bad after all."
He smiled. "Yes, I'm ninety-nine percent sure that's what the Fates intend, and I'm holding back that final percent only to preserve my dignity, in the unthinkable event that I'm wrong." He reached out and touched the sword. It evaporated. "Best way to find out for sure? Complete this quest. First, we need to go back to that penitentiary. If the Nix intends to show you something, it'll be in the living world."
"I doubt it. You're a good judge of character."
"Yeah? I did a great job last night with that wolf-pirate."
A tiny smile. "Ah, but you didn't trust him, remember? You just gave him the benefit of the doubt. No, I'm sure Ross will be as surprised as we were to find he had the Nix in his midst. But I'll test that theory with a little… interrogation."
"Thanks." Before he could leave, I reached for his arm. "And Kris?"
"Hmm?"
"Thanks for earlier. With the Nix."
He smiled. "Anytime."
I watched Kristof go. As he rounded the corner of the house, a jolt of alarm ran through me. Would Ross tell him about the poltergeist lessons we'd arranged? Shit. I hoped not. Kris had bit his tongue the day before, not asking why I knew so much about Ross. He didn't need his suspicions confirmed now…
and we didn't need a reason to start arguing about Savannah again.
"Where is he going?" Trsiel asked.
"To interr—talk to Luther Ross. See whether he knew he was tutoring a Nix."
Trsiel shook his head, anger falling from his face. "This isn't a good idea, Eve. I know Kristof is your daughter's father, and you're obviously still close, but this is your quest. He can't help. The Fates should have explained this to you."
"The Fates sent Kris along to Lizzie Borden's house with me. They must think it's more important for me to catch this Nix, using whatever resources I have, rather than insist I fulfill my debt by myself."
"It's not that, Eve. It's—you can't—when you ascend—" He bit the rest off. "I'll speak to them. In the meantime, Kristof is right. You do need to know how to hold this Nix until I can capture her. The problem is that, as far as I know, the only thing that can bind her is this."
He lifted his right hand, said a few words, and a gleaming sword appeared, his hand already in the grip.
He lowered it and held it out for me. I leaned over for a better look. I'd seen Janah's sword so this one shouldn't hold any great fascination, but the moment it appeared, I couldn't rip my gaze away. My fingers clenched, as if imagining the feel of the hilt in my hand. I remembered how it felt and a shiver raced through me.
"So that would stop her," I said. "But I can't have one, can I?"
"Not until you're an angel. Perhaps, though…" He hefted the sword and looked at me. "I wonder if you could use mine."
"Sure—I mean, if you don't need it."
"Not anymore." His eyes clouded. "Not lately, at least."
He held it out. I lifted my hands, with every intention of casually reaching for it. Instead, I fairly snatched it from his hands. He chuckled. I gasped as the white-hot heat licked down my arms.
He grabbed for it. "I'm sorry. Here, let me—"
"No." I stepped back, hands still on the sword. "Hurts like hell, but I can handle it." I managed a wry smile. "Don't get much pain in this world anymore. Feels very strange. Is this what normally happens if a nonangel touches it? Or is it my demon blood?"
"I'm not sure. I've never had any reason to let anyone hold it before."
I lifted the sword, expecting to feel the strain on my wrist muscles, but it flung upward as if it was made of aluminum instead of steel.
"Wow."
Trsiel gave a soft laugh. "You like that, don't you?" He stepped back and looked at me, his lips curving in a mischievous smile. "It suits you."
I gripped the hilt tighter. In my hands, I held what might very well prove to be the answer to my problem with Savannah. If Trsiel was right, and I was being tested for angel-hood…
I rearranged my fingers, staring at the light filtering through them, almost hypnotized by the glow. There would be strings attached to this beautiful piece of weaponry. Responsibility, for one thing. Big responsibility. If I brought in the Nix, and the Fates offered to reward me with angel-hood, I couldn't just say "Thanks for the cosmic makeover" and run. To get those powers, I'd have to promise to use them for the purpose for which they were intended. I'd need to join the ranks of the celestial bounty-hunters.
A big price… for a big reward.
I tore my gaze from the sword. All hypothetical right now. Even if Trsiel was right about the Fates' plans, I still had the catch the damn Nix.
"If it hurts too much—" Trsiel began as my grip slackened.
"It's fine. But will it work for me?"
"Only one way to find out. Swing it at me."
"At you?"
"At me, through me, whatever. Slice away. Can't do any damage, but I'll be able to tell whether it's working as it should."
I stepped back and sized up Trsiel, then hefted the sword a few times, getting a feel for it. A practice swing, testing the arc. Then a readjustment and another trial run.
"You're not trying to decapitate me, Eve. Just take a swing."
I did, executing a samurai-worthy slash. The blade sliced through his torso and shot, bloodless, out the other side.
"Still a bit upset with me, I see," he said, rubbing the side of his abdomen.
"Did it hurt?"
"Will you be disappointed if I say no? I felt it, but, no, I don't think it hurt."
"You don't think it did?"
"Having never been human, I'd hardly recognize pain if I felt it. I can say, though, that it didn't work. In your hands, the sword won't incapacitate the Nix. Not until you become—"
"An angel, which I can't become until I finish this quest. Love those catch-22s." I glanced over at him.
"Do you think that's really what they have in mind? Testing me for angel-hood?"
"Ah, so after she holds the really big sword, she begins to think ascension doesn't sound so bad after all."
He smiled. "Yes, I'm ninety-nine percent sure that's what the Fates intend, and I'm holding back that final percent only to preserve my dignity, in the unthinkable event that I'm wrong." He reached out and touched the sword. It evaporated. "Best way to find out for sure? Complete this quest. First, we need to go back to that penitentiary. If the Nix intends to show you something, it'll be in the living world."