Night Terrors (Sarah Beauhall Book 4) Read online

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  When Qindra called I’d see if she had any news of Frederick. It could explain some of his behavior after JJ’s funeral. If Katie was awake, I would’ve driven down to Portland and visited the great lizard myself. The battle with the necromancer had not been kind to him, but he’d lived. Too bad many others couldn’t say the same.

  Katie first. If she was hiding someplace, as Gletts suggested, then I had to redouble my efforts. I’d take Gram with me and maybe scare up some more help. Wherever Gletts had been reminded me of Bub. Maybe he’d have a clue. The diary may hold some answers as well. Had he seen the light from the diary, or was it something else? Was that the key to bringing her home? Something in my gut told me it was all related.

  Yep, I’d have to really explore that scary ass book. I just hoped like hell it didn’t kill me when I touched it in meat space, as Gletts called it.

  And how embarrassing would it be to be killed by a diary, I mean, seriously.

  Twenty-six

  I called Skella and she agreed to come to the apartment. She said she would get here as quick as lightning once she walked over to the cave she kept the mirrors in—her little subway stop through the Sideways. It had taken me about thirty minutes to drive down to Kent, a drive I would be happy to never make again, frankly.

  Traffic was not getting any better on the Eastside. We needed to find a place north, way north. I was thinking Marysville or the like. Maybe I’d start looking for a realtor. It was past time. Besides, living above a gun store had its charms, but the place was feeling less like home every time I walked through the door.

  I had my gear, including Gram, stacked on the dining table, and I was stretching. I was a little stiff from not working out and a lot grumbly. Nothing food wouldn’t cure.

  Of course, Skella only had to step through a mirror. She’d stopped to pick up Chinese takeout, which very likely made me love her more than before. I took that as a good opportunity to get down a couple of glasses of water, paper towels, and plates. I was afraid to open the fridge after all the time away.

  “Thanks for calling me,” she said, pulling a pair of chopsticks from their paper wrapper and snapping them apart. I mimicked her and we both sat there rubbing our chopsticks together, worrying off the splinters.

  “Unun is becoming despondent,” she said, sliding a box of steamed dumplings my way and nabbing the box of mu shu pork. “I keep telling her that Gletts will come home when he’s ready, but she’s losing hope.”

  “How much longer can his body stay alive without his spirit being there?” I asked.

  She shrugged. “There are signs that he’s beginning to fail now. He’s the last of the fallen in the great healing hall. The others have either passed on, or recovered enough to return to their families.” She shoveled a mass of pork into her mouth and paused to chew.

  “I thought he was in some sort of stasis,” I said. “While he’s out wandering the spirit world.”

  She drank half her water, wiped her mouth on her sleeve and grabbed a dumpling out of the box in front of me.

  I dumped most of the remaining pork on my plate and sat back, watching her. I wanted to tell her about talking to Gletts, but I wanted to see if she’d tell me about her dreams first.

  “Tell me about your sudden interest in Bellingham,” I said scooping rice into my face.

  Skella shrugged, began digging the last vestiges of rice out of the take-out container.

  “I was thinking about going to college. Learning new stuff, you know?”

  “That’s cool. It’s a good school.” I watched her, waiting for some other reason.

  “You’ve met some new folks, what did you call them? Hamsters?”

  She laughed. “Yeah, Bellinghamsters, ya know? It’s punny.”

  I rolled my eyes at her. “Great. Folks your age?”

  She shrugged again. “Either in college or just out. They’ve got some strange ideas about the world, but they’re pretty cool.”

  “College kids are all mostly strange,” I agreed. “But what made you go down there instead of one of the Vancouver schools?”

  “I don’t know. Why?”

  I wasn’t sure why I wanted her to broach the subject first, but that was failing, so I jumped in. “I spoke with Gletts.”

  Her chopsticks clattered to the floor followed by the mostly empty takeout carton. Tiny grains of rice and bits of pork scattered across the floor.

  “You what?” She leaned forward in her chair, reaching across the coffee table toward me. “Where? How?”

  “Here, actually.” I stood, waved her to follow. She scrambled out of her chair, kicking the rice container across the room to bounce off the bar that divided the dining area from the kitchen. “Careful there,” I said, smiling.

  “Right, sorry.” She composed herself and followed me into the bedroom. I pointed to the mirror hanging there.

  “I came by this morning to pick up a few things for Jai Li and me when I heard him calling to me.”

  She went over and touched the mirror causing the surface to shimmer like water, rolling back and forth in the frame.

  “Gletts?” she asked, looking in the mirror like a window. “Gletts, where are you?”

  He didn’t appear, not that I really thought he would. “Sorry,” I said when she stepped back dejectedly.

  “That’s twice you’ve seen him,” she said, leaning against the wall, staring into the mirror.

  Scenes flashed by at her touch. Black Briar, Monkey Shines, the bathrooms at the driving range near her home in Stanley park, on and on, faster and faster, like she was riffling the pages of a book.

  “He said he’s been coming to you as well,” I said, quietly, placing my hand on her shoulder. “Told me he’s been talking to you in your dreams.”

  She stiffened for a moment, then let her shoulders slump. “So those are real?” she asked, turning to me. Tears streaked her face. “I even went to Bellingham in the hopes they were real, but I haven’t found what he’s looking for. He scares me sometimes,” she said, taking a deep breath. “He sounds so desperate; like he’s running out of time.”

  “Isn’t he?”

  She turned back to the mirror and continued flipping the mirror from place to place.

  “He was really happy,” I said. “Said that he’d found a way home, back to Álfheim.”

  “Could be,” she said, shrugging. “Or he could be delusional. He’s been away from his body a long time. There is no way of telling if he’s lost his mind or not.”

  Good point, that. But I didn’t think so. “He seemed lucid to me, even managed to get a comment in about my panties.”

  She barked a laugh then, wiped her face with one hand, and turned away from the mirror, smiling. “He’s such a boy.”

  I smiled back. “Always. So, what do we do? How do we proceed here?”

  “I’m not sure,” she said. “There’s something about the place my friends live—Sprocket and Dante. It’s a boarding house. The place is amazing. I’ve been there dozens of time. It’s safe, homey. But there is a power there. Something I can’t define.”

  “Could it be the portal Gletts is looking for?”

  She shook her head. “Not that I’ve been able to figure out. I’ve checked all the mirrors, snuck into all the rooms. Really the only thing odd is the woman who runs the place—an odd duck named Mimi who’s obsessed with karaoke.”

  “She sounds charming.” I hated karaoke. Made my head hurt. Horrified me, really. Being up there with all those people staring at you. I shivered.

  “All the Hamsters hang out over there,” she continued, ignoring my comment. “It’s a cool place. But I haven’t found anything out of the ordinary. I’m not sure it’s the place, but it’s close. I can feel it.”

  “Maybe when Katie’s better we’ll head north and check it out.”

  She smiled big at that, changing her face from sullen and pinched to open and pretty. I bet without all the heavy, dark makeup she’d be cute. Not that I was into changing peop
le’s appearances. God knows I’d had enough of that as a kid.

  She passed her hand over the mirror again, returning the reflection of us and the room. “Tell him to come home,” she said, quietly, staring into her own face. “I miss him so much.”

  “I told him,” I said, sliding my hand across her shoulder and giving her a squeeze. “He said finding the way to Álfheim was more important than he was.”

  “He’s a fool,” she said and walked out of the room.

  We cleaned up the spilt food before Skella headed home through the hallway mirror since it was tall enough to walk through. She paused and stared at the bedroom mirror for a bit first, calling to Gletts, willing him to make an appearance, to no avail.

  As she stepped through the mirror and back to Vancouver, she glanced back at me and waved. “Tell him I love him,” she said, and was gone.

  Twenty-seven

  I packed up Jai Li’s undies and a few nightshirts, grabbed a couple of books, some packs of needlepoint floss that had fallen under the coffee table and a couple skeins of yarn; I wanted to start knitting some gloves. That was my next project before I thought about tackling something complicated like socks or, heaven help me, a sweater.

  I called out to the farm to make sure Jai Li was ready to go out to Black Briar. We were going to visit Katie, see if talking to her would help in any way. Jai Li wanted to make her a new cross-stitch and I was going to knit while I talked. Okay, talk between rows. If I tried to talk while I knitted most days, it ended with swearing and tinking. That’s the polite way of saying unknitting. I had other words for it that were not for polite company.

  Sitting with Katie would be peaceful and unnerving at the same time. Not relaxing, exactly. More of a helpless time where I gave up the urgency and the need to solve everything in favor of just being with my family, being in their presence.

  I rolled into Circle Q and packed an overnight kit for me and the girl, just in case. Jai Li asked about the Ducati which was stored out at Black Briar. She asked if we could ride it home later.

  “Well, honey,” I started, but I looked over at the women of Circle Q who all gave me that mom look that told me I was about to do something really stupid. I think Edith would’ve punched me if I tried, Mary just looked disappointed that I even considered it, and Julie shook her head, giving me the boss look that told me I was contemplating a child protective services-level event. Tough crowd.

  “When you’re older,” I said, poking her pouty lip with one finger and smiling. “You won’t like it, it’s very loud.”

  She made a face, and shrugged.

  Whatever, she signed. That was one I’d picked up. Girl had a bit of sass in her.

  I know how to pick my battles. Most of the time, anyway. So we drove out in the truck. Jai Li twirled through the radio stations, bypassing anything I found to be palatable, to land on something that made me think of bubble gum and sock hops. I grinned as she bopped along, wiggling and dancing in her seat belt. Would’ve been enjoyable if the music didn’t make me want to scream.

  Jimmy was out working with the horses and Deidre was in town with Trisha getting groceries when we arrived. The farm was pretty quiet. Stuart was at the house with the nurse, watching Katie, but he’d gotten a call from work, so he was glad I was there to relieve him.

  Jai Li and I set up shop in the room, taking our normal places and began working on our individual fiber projects. It scared me sometimes how absolutely quiet the girl could be. I had to look up and make sure she was still in the room. Of course, when I dropped a stitch (which I did twice in two rows) or started reducing when I wasn’t supposed to, I swore, which made her giggle.

  I may have said a few minor swear words just to check she was still breathing throughout the afternoon, but the girl’s giggles were better than alcohol for buoying my spirits.

  Nancy and Gary from Trisha’s squad had the troll twins under wraps, but when they woke from their nap, Bub came in to alert Jai Li. There was no holding that girl in the room with that news. There was tag and hide-and-go-seek to be had in the world. She tucked away her needlework as fast as her little hands would move and hastily kissed Katie on the cheek.

  “What about me?” I asked, as she dashed past. She rolled her eyes, ran back over, and patted me on the leg, not even pretending to give me a kiss. Then she dashed from the room, grabbing Bub’s hand on the way and dragged the four-foot kobold down the hall. I quite enjoyed his laughter as well.

  “They’re good kids,” I said to Katie, knowing she wouldn’t respond.

  I told her about the meeting with Gletts and Skella. Reminded her of the first time we’d met the elves, lamenting the missed weekend when they’d poisoned us so they could try and steal Gram. Good times.

  “I’ve been thinking,” I told her, setting my knitting aside and taking her hand in mine. It was warm, but stiff. The nurses moved her limbs every day and kept a set of pressure stockings on her legs which inflated and deflated at regular intervals. It was supposed to help keep blood clots away. There were too many machines in that room. The noise was driving me bonkers.

  “We should move,” I told her. “The apartment is really too small, and Jai Li needs her own space. It would be nice to have our own room again, you know?”

  This wasn’t the first time we’d discussed it. But we’d been ignoring the conversation while Katie was still teaching. She loved her kids, loved being a teacher, and didn’t want to leave them while school was still in session. Of course, all that was moot now. The school had brought in a sub for the rest of the year, and Katie was in a coma.

  Jimmy came in a little while later and poked his head into the room. “Saw Jai Li terrorizing the boys,” he said, grinning. “Thought I’d find you in here. Where’d Stuart go?”

  “Got called back into work,” I told him.

  Katie’s breathing was slow and steady, the sound of her breather a counter point to the heart monitor and the leg cuffs. It was a cacophony.

  “Been meaning to talk to you, anyway,” he said, straightening up. “Mind if I come in?”

  I shrugged and waved him to an open chair. He turned around, sat facing me, and took off his ball cap, running one hand through his hair. He pulled out a long piece of hay and tucked it in his shirt pocket.

  “Gunther has done some poking into the Mordred crew,” he said. “His order knows a bit about them. Pretty hard to be active in this region and not be noticed by the monks, ya know?”

  “Have you ever met them? The monks, I mean. I know he was raised by them as a tyke, but aren’t they like cloistered or something?”

  He nodded. “Yeah, it’s strange. They live in a monastery over in Seattle, near Montlake. Over by the gardens there.” He waved his hand. “Not that it matters. They rarely leave the place. I have no idea how they know so much and keep an eye on so many things when they never leave the property, but that’s a mystery for another time.”

  I smiled at him, letting him ramble.

  He smiled back and paused, looking at me. “You letting your hair grow out?” he asked.

  I sighed. “Not you, too. Jai Li was pointing that out the other day. I just haven’t had time to take care of it. Is it that bad?”

  He laughed. “Hey, I don’t care how you look. That’s between you and my sister.” He glanced at Katie and the smile died on his lips. “Damn it, Sarah. What are we going to do?”

  “Maybe we could contact the dwarves,” I offered, thinking. “Maybe they could make a box out of crystal like they did for Snow White.”

  “Keep her preserved?” he asked, smiling again. “I don’t think we know the same dwarves,” he said. “But you can ask Rolph what he thinks about the idea. I just want my little sister back.”

  “She’s not so little anymore, Jim.”

  He reached over and placed a hand on her blanket-covered ankle for a moment, then jerked his hand back as the cuffs began to expand again.

  “I hate this,” he groused.

  We sat there for a
few more minutes, watching her.

  “What about the Mordred crew?” I asked, breaking the silence.

  “Good and bad,” he said, turning his head toward me slowly. “Your boy, Hague, is who he says he is. Newly recruited, veterinarian, and all the rest. But the rest of them, the old guard. They’re something else entirely.”

  “Gottschalk is an old school witch, right?”

  He raised his eyebrows and nodded. “Russian, been here since before the gold rush.”

  “That’s old.”

  “And she has ties back to Minsk. Gunther’s crew thinks maybe she’s tied to the dragon there. There’s no clear connection, but she’s got some powerful allies in that region. The kind of allies that can make people disappear, explode, spontaneously combust, or generally kill themselves in nasty and creative ways.”

  “Lovely. So, bad guys?”

  He shook his head. “Not clear. No friends of Nidhogg, that seems to be clear. They were routed out by Qindra’s mother before she died. Several of their cells have been destroyed since then, but our guys don’t think Nidhogg and her crew knew they were all part of the same faction.”

  I got up and went around Jimmy to look out the window. You could see the fence from there, the one that we’d secured with magic, the one that the necromancer had breached. We’d resealed it once we learned what had happened, but it felt vulnerable.

  “Do you feel safe, Jim?”

  “No,” he said, immediately. No hesitation. “But I asked my dad that same thing before he and mom left for Europe. He said that when you felt safe, that’s when you were in the most danger. Made you careless.”

  I stared out over the fields toward the road, thinking. Nidhogg had named me her Fist without talking to me about it, and I hadn’t spoken up to argue against her. “Something’s happened, Jim. Something I need you to know about.”

  He didn’t say anything, but the tension in the room went up several notches.

  “It’s Nidhogg,” I went on. “She’s offered me a deal. A deal to protect us, protect Black Briar.”

  “Bullshit,” he growled, standing.