Kate Daniels 02 - Magic Burns
The handle of the knife burned my fingers. The air in my lungs turned to heat, and my eyes watered. I pressed my face into the dusty concrete, praying it didnât get any hotter, and then suddenly it was over.
Screw this. I jumped to my feet and charged in Jeremyâs direction. The salamander flared within the sphere. I caught a flash of Jeremyâs crooked smile above the glass. It wilted as Jimâs dark hands closed around Jeremyâs throat. The arsonist slumped, ragdoll limp, the sphere rolling from his weakened fingersâ¦
I dived for it, caught it three inches above the cement, and found myself face-to-face with the salamander. Ruby-red eyes regarded me with mild curiosity, black lips parted, and a long, spiderweb-thin filament of a tongue slithered from the salamanderâs mouth and kissed the sphereâs glass in the reflection of my nose. Hi, I love you, too.
Gingerly I got to my knees and then to my feet. The salamanderâs presence tugged on my mind, as eager to please as an overly enthusiastic kitten arching her back for a stroke. Visions of flames and heat wavered before me. Letâs burn something â¦I slammed my mental shutters closed, locking her out of my mind. Letâs not.
Jim relaxed his hold on Jeremy and the arsonist sagged to the ground like a wet blanket. The whites of his eyes stared at the ceiling from his slack face, caught by death in a moment of utter surprise. No pulse check needed for this one. Shit. There goes the capture bonus.
âYou said it was a live-preferred bounty,â I murmured. The living Jeremy was worth a lot more than his corpse. Weâd still get paid, but we had just waved a third of the money good-bye.
âIt is.â Jim twisted the body on its side, exposing Jeremyâs back. A thin metal shaft, tipped with three black feathers protruded from between Jeremyâs shoulders blades. Before my mind had the time to digest its significance, I hit the deck, cradling the salamander. Jim somehow got there before me.
We stared into the gloom. Darkness and silence.
Someone had taken out our mark with a crossbow bolt. Could have taken us out, as well. We had stood by the body for at least four seconds. More than enough time to squeeze off two shots. I touched Jim and touched my nose. He shook his head. With all the sulfur in the air he probably couldnât smell a skunk if it sprayed him in the face. I lay very still and tried to breathe quietly. Listening was our best bet.
A minute dragged by, long, viscous, and silent. Very slowly Jim shifted into a crouch and nodded to the left. I had a vague feeling the door lay to the right, but in the darkness with some unknown crossbowman waiting, I would trust Jimâs senses over mine.
Jim grasped Jeremyâs corpse, slung it over his shoulder, and we took off, bending low, running fast, him ahead and me, half-blind in the gloom, slightly behind. Concrete supports flashed by, one, two, three, four. The tech hit, and before I could put down my raised foot, the magic drained from the world, leaving the battered technology in its wake. The fluorescent lamps in the ceiling blinked and snapped into life with a buzz, bathing the garage in a weak man-made glow. The black rectangle of the exit gaped ten feet before us. Jim dived into it. I lunged to the left, behind the nearest support. The salamander in the globe stopped glowing and went to sleep, looking like a harmless black lizard. My long-range weapon was tuckered out.
I set it down on the floor and slid Slayer from its sheath. Salamanders are overrated anyway.
âHeâs gone,â Jim said from the doorway and pointed behind me.
I turned. Far at the back, the concrete wall had crumbled, revealing a narrow passageway probably leading up to the street. He was right. If the bowman wanted to take us out, he had had plenty of time to do it.
âSo he sniped our mark and left?â
âLooks that way.â
âI donât get it.â
Jim shook his head. âWeird shit always happens around you.â
âThis was your gig, not mine.â
A shower of sparks fell from above the door and a green EXIT sign burst into life.
Jim stared at it for a moment, his features twisted in a distinctly feline expression, disgust and fatalism rolled into one, and shook his head again.
âDibs on the bolt in his back!â I called.
âBe my guest.â
Jimâs pager went off. He checked it and a familiar
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