chapter 9
IF I SUCCEEDED IN GETTING RID OF JAIME’S STALKER-SPOOK, I was supposed to go to her apartment and wait for her there. When I found her apartment, I did indeed wait for her…waited at least a good ten minutes. Then I started hunting for clues to tell me where she’d gone. I found the answer on the calendar—she’d been invited to an event at some city councillor’s place. That didn’t give me much to go on, but I struck it lucky a second time by finding a small stack of invitations on her desk.
Of course, tonight’s wasn’t on the top of the pile. That would be too easy. So I had to drill down through them using my Aspicio powers. That took some work—I could easily have cleared a peephole right through the stack and the desk, but going down layer by layer was much tougher. After about thirty minutes of working at it, I got down to the right invitation. That provided me with an address. Then I had to pop back to my house in Savannah, grab my book of city maps, and find out where that address led. I only knew three travel codes for Chicago, so the closest I could get was six miles away. Could be worse, I guess, but it was still quite a hike.
When I finally arrived at the house, it was past midnight. The street was lined with cars, people spilling from the house, eager enough for fresh air that they were willing to brave the cold—or too drunk to notice it.
I found Jaime in the dining room, talking to an immaculately dressed and coifed woman in her fifties. Now, I’d learned my lesson back at the TV studio. Or, I should say, I admitted that Jaime had a point about ghosts shanghaiing her when she was in the middle of a conversation with a living person. So I hung back out of her line of vision, and waited. Waited some more. Waited another thirty seconds, then decided to slip closer and see if I could politely divert her attention.
As I drew near, I got a better look at Jaime’s companion. Even from the back, she screamed upper-class professional, with perfect posture, a designer suit, and short hair artfully laced with silver, allowing the appearance of a graceful descent into maturity. An executive or a lawyer, maybe even the councillor hosting the party. Her posture and gestures oozed the confidence of a woman who’s found her place in life and settled happily into it. But when I circled around enough to see her face, it told a different story. Deep-etched lines made me add another decade to my age estimate. Her eyes were rimmed with red but dry, her face taut, as if fighting to maintain composure.
“No, I completely understand,” Jaime said. “Believe me, it’s not a question of—”
“Is it money? Money is not an issue, Jaime. I’ve said that and I mean—”
“Money isn’t the problem.”
The woman’s hands clenched around a food-stained napkin. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to insult—”
“You didn’t. But I can’t help you. Honestly. If I could find your daughter—”
“I don’t need you to find her. Just tell me if she’s there. On the other side. I just need…it’s been so long. I need to know.”
Jaime snapped her gaze from the other woman’s, her eyes shuttering. “You need resolution. I understand that. But it doesn’t work that way.”
“We could try. There’s no harm in trying, is there?”
“There is, if it gets your hopes up. I—I’m sorry. I have to…”
She mumbled something, and darted away. I followed her through the next room and out the back door. She hurried past those gathered on the deck, and walked into the empty yard, pausing only when she reached the back fence and could go no farther, then leaned against it, shivering.
“That must be a shitty thing to have to do,” I said.
Her head jerked up, then she saw me. I walked over.
“You know you can’t help her. I know you can’t help her. But nothing you say is going to convince her of that. You did your best.”
Jaime wrapped her arms around her chest and said nothing.
“Got rid of your headless stalker,” I said. “If he ever comes around again, give me a shout, but I don’t think he will.”
She nodded, still shivering so hard I could hear her teeth chatter.
“You want to go someplace warmer?” I asked.
“Not cold. Just…” She shook her head, then gave herself a full-bodied shake, and straightened. “Thanks for the help. With the stalker. I owe you.”
“And I’m sure you’ll get the chance to repay me soon. I don’t know exactly what I’ll need or when I’ll need it, but we should set up something, so I can find you when I need to.”
She agreed. The Fates gave me just long enough to make arrangements for contacting Jaime again, then sent the Searchers to retrieve me.
The Searchers dropped me off in a foyer the size of a school gymnasium. It was white marble, like the throne room, but without any decoration or furnishing—a room for passing through on your way someplace else.
Lots of people were passing through it at that very moment. Wraith-clerks, those who kept our world running smoothly. Wraiths are pure spirits, beings that have never inhabited the world of the living, and they look more like classic ghosts than we do. Everything about them is white. Even their irises are a blue so pale that if it weren’t set against the whites of their eyes, you’d miss the color altogether. Their clothing and skin are almost translucent. If they cross in front of something, you can see the dark shape pass behind them.
Wraith-clerks can’t speak. Can’t or don’t—no one is sure. They can communicate telepathically, but never telegraph so much as a syllable if a gesture will suffice.
As I walked through the foyer, wraith-clerks flitted past, pale feet skimming above the floor. They smiled or nodded at me, but didn’t slow, intent on their tasks.
From the center of the room, I surveyed my directional choices. Too damned many, that was for sure. At least a dozen doorways off the foyer, as well as a grand arching staircase in each corner. No helpful building map to show the way. Not even discreet signs above the doors.
“Okay,” I muttered, “what am I doing here and where am I supposed to be going?”
Without so much as a hitch in their gait, the four wraiths closest to me lifted their translucent arms and pointed at the northwest staircase.
“And what’s up there?” I asked.
An image popped into my head. A winged angel. Whether the wraiths had put it there or I’d made the mental jump on my own, I don’t know, but I nodded thanks and headed for the staircase.
The staircase ended at a landing with three doors and another, narrower set of stairs spiraling up. As I stepped toward the nearest door, a passing wraith-clerk pointed up.
“Thanks,” I said.
I climbed the next staircase, found three more doors and another, still narrower staircase. Again, a wraith showed me the way. Again, the way was up. Two more landings. Two more sets of doors and a staircase. Two more helpful wraiths. I knew I’d reached the angel’s aerie when I had only a single choice: a white door.
Beyond that door was an angel. A real angel. I’d never met one before. In the ghost world, angels were rarely discussed, and then only in tones half-derisive, half-reverent, as if we supernaturals wanted to mock them, but weren’t sure we dared.
Angels are the earthly messengers of the Fates and their ilk. Every now and then we’d hear of an angel being dispatched to fix some problem on earth. Never knew what the problem was—probably some tear-jerking misfortune straight out of a Touched by an Angel episode. The angels went down and flitted about, spreading peace, joy, and goodwill like fairy dust, realigned the cosmos before commercial break, and winged back up to their clouds to await the next quasi-catastrophe.
Why the Fates would dispatch an angel to catch that murdering bitch of a demi-demon was beyond me. Like sending a butterfly after a hawk. The Nix had done exactly what I’d have expected, chewed the angel up and spit her out in pieces. But, as the Fates admitted, they’d had no idea how to handle the Nix. When she’d escaped, their first reaction, understandably, had been to send their divine messengers after her.
As I reached out to knock on the door, a jolt of energy zapped through me. When I caught my balance, I looked down at my hand and flexed it. No pain…just surprise. A mental shock.
I cautiously extended my fingers toward the door again, braced for the jolt. Instead, a wave of some indefinable emotion filled me, amorphous but distinctly negative. A magical boundary. Instead of physically repelling me, it triggered a subconscious voice that said, “You don’t want to go in there.”
But I did want to. I had to.
So, pushing past the sensation, I knocked. For a split second, all went dark. Before I could even think “Oh shit,” the darkness evaporated. The door was gone. The foyer was gone. Instead I stood in yet another white room. This one, though, appeared to have been built of brick, then plastered and whitewashed, the pattern of the brick just barely showing through. The floor also looked brick, but darker and patterned. In the middle was a large reed mat surrounded by several high-backed wooden chairs, a few tables, and a carved sofa piled with embroidered pillows.
A window covered the far wall. Beyond it was a desert dotted with boxy pyramids. An illusion, I assumed, but a nice one nonetheless. If the people who ran that psych hospital had given such thought to their patients’ surroundings, I doubt the haunters would have found them such easy pickings.
“Hello?” I called.
No one answered.
As I turned to look for a door, something moved at the base of the window. I peered around the divan. On the other side, huddled by the window, sat a woman, her back to me. A flowing, silvery robe swallowed her tiny form. She couldn’t have been more than five feet tall. Bird-thin wrists poked out of the loose sleeves. Dark hair tumbled over her back, the ends kissing the floor. No wings that I could see, but that billowing gown could have hidden wings and a set of carry-on luggage. One thing was for certain—I sure wouldn’t have sent this fragile little thing after a Nix.
“Janah?” I said softly.
She didn’t move. I slid across the room, moving slowly so I didn’t startle her.
“Janah?”
She lifted her head and turned. Huge brown eyes locked on mine. Those eyes were so devoid of thought or emotion that I instinctively yanked my gaze away, as if they could suck what they lacked from me.
I crouched to her level, staying a few yards away.
“Janah, my name is Eve. I won’t hurt you. I only came to ask—”
She sprang. A mountain-lion screech ripped through the room. Before I could move—before I could even think to move—she was on me. I pitched back, head whacking against the floor. Janah wrapped both hands in my long hair, vaulted to her feet, and swung me against a grouping of urns. Pottery shattered and I sailed clear over the divan.
“Div farzand,” Janah snarled.
She charged. I lunged to my feet and spun out of her reach. When I cast a binding spell, it didn’t even slow her down. I leapt onto the divan and bounded across the cushions, then jumped onto the table. As she charged me, I tried to blind her. Either that didn’t work on angels or she was indeed blinded…and didn’t give a damn.
I swung around for a sidekick, but a mental barricade stopped my foot in mid-flight. Kicking a mad angel? My moral code may be a little thin, but that broke it on two counts.
I jumped across to an end table and looked around for a door. There wasn’t one. The only way out of this gilded cage was the window, and I knew that was an illusion. Here, walls were walls. Even ghosts can’t walk through them.
As I leapfrogged back onto the coffee table, I recited the incantation to take me home. It didn’t work. Tried another one. Didn’t work, either. Whatever mojo the Fates had going in this angel’s cell, it was obviously designed to keep her in. All things considered, that didn’t seem like such a bad idea. If only I weren’t in here with her.
“Yâflan dâdvari!” she spat at me.
“Yeah? Right back at you, you crazy bitch.”
She stopped and went completely still. Then she stepped back, lifted her arms and face to the ceiling in supplication, and began an incantation.
“Hey, I didn’t mean it,” I said, stepping to the edge of the table. “If you’re calling the Fates, that’s fine. They sent me.”
Something shimmered in Janah’s raised hands, slowly materializing from the ether. It looked like a piece of metal at least four feet long and so shiny it seemed to glow. Etched along the side were inscriptions in an alphabet that looked vaguely familiar.
As the object solidified, a burnished handle appeared on one end. Janah gripped it, fingers closing around the handle, eyes shutting, lips parting, as if sliding into a glove of the softest leather. She raised the object over her head—the pointed shaft of the biggest goddamned sword I’d ever seen.
“Holy shit!”
The words were still whooshing from my lips as that sword cleaved through the table legs like they were sticks of warm butter. As my perch crumbled, I managed to scamper onto a chair. When I dove over the back of it, the sword sheered toward my knees. I hit the floor. The tip of the blade jabbed through the upholstery, within an inch of my shoulder.
Janah leapt onto the chair and plunged the sword down at me. Ghost or no ghost, I got the hell out of the way. Doesn’t matter how invulnerable you think you are, facing off against a psychotic angel with a four-foot samurai sword is not the time to test that theory.
I scampered across the room, casting spells as I ran. None of them worked.
“Demon-spawn!” Janah shouted.
Couldn’t argue with that.
“Infidel!”
Debatable, but sure, I’ll give you that one, too.
“Satan’s whore!”
Okay, now that was uncalled for. I spun and kicked. This time, my conscience stood down and let my foot fly. I caught Janah in the wrist. She gasped. The sword flew from her hand and clattered to the floor. We both dove after it. As Janah’s fingers touched the handle, I smacked it out of her reach, then twisted and grabbed the blade.
White-hot pain ripped through my arm. I screamed, as much in shock as pain. In three years I hadn’t suffered so much as the pang of a stubbed toe, and never expected to again, so when the blade lit my arm afire, I let out a scream to rock the rafters. But I didn’t let go. I lifted the sword by the blade, pain still throbbing down my arm.
Then all went dark.
“I think you were supposed to wait for me.”
The voice was male and so rich it sent chills down my spine. I looked around. I was sitting on the floor in Janah’s front hall, outside the white door.
In front of me stood a pair of legs, clad in tan trousers with an edge sharper than Janah’s blade. I followed the legs up to a green shirt, then up higher, to a pair of eyes the same emerald shade as the shirt. Those eyes were set in an olive-skinned face with a strong nose and full lips quivering with barely concealed mirth. Tousled black hair fell over his forehead.
The man reached down to pull me up. His grip was firm and warm, almost hot.
“Thanks for the rescue,” I said, “but I think I had things under control.”
The grin broke through. “So I saw.” He jerked his chin at the door. “Not what you expected, I suppose.”
“No kidding.” I glanced down at my hand. It looked fine, and the pain had stopped the moment I’d let go of the blade. “So that’s an angel?”
“By occupation, not by blood. She’s a ghost, like you. A witch as well…which is probably why she went easy on you.” He extended his hand. “Trsiel.”
I assumed that was an introduction, but it didn’t sound like any name—or word—I’d ever heard. Though I refrained from a rude “Huh?” my face must have said it for me.
“Tris-eye-el,” he said.
His phonetic pronunciation didn’t quite sound like what he’d said the first time, but it was as near to it as my tongue was getting.
“Bet you got asked to spell that one a lot,” I said.
He laughed. “I’m sure I would have…if I’d ever needed to. I’m not a ghost.”
“Oh?” I looked him over, trying to be discreet about it.
“Angel,” he said. “A full-blood.”
“Angel? No wings, huh?”
Another rich laugh. “Sorry to disappoint. But putting wings on an angel would be like hitching a horse to a motor car. Teleportation works much faster than fluttering.”
“True.” I glanced toward Janah’s door. “But teleportation doesn’t work for her, does it? Or is that because of the anti-magic barrier?”
“A bit of both. It doesn’t always work for full-bloods, either. There are places—” His faced darkened, but he shrugged it off. “Even full-bloods can be trapped. Like Zadkiel.”
I nodded. “The last one who went after the Nix.”
“Normally, he’d be here, helping you. That’s his job, to assist on the inaugural quests. But obviously he can’t, so I’ve been asked to step in. I’ll be helping you with anything that might be difficult for a non-angel, like talking to Janah.”
“So that’s her problem. Now that she’s an angel, she doesn’t like talking to us mere ghosts?”
“It’s not that. She picked up the demon blood in you. Her brain, it misfires, gets its connections crossed, especially when it comes to anything that reminds her of the Nix.”
“She sensed demon, and saw the enemy.”
He nodded. “She even does it to me now and then.”
I frowned.
“Because of the demon blood,” he said.
“I thought you said you were—”
“Demon, angel, all the same thing if you go back far enough, or cut deep enough. I wouldn’t advise saying that too loudly, though. Some don’t appreciate the reminder. When Janah sees you or me, she sees demon, which to her means the one demon she can’t forget: the Nix who put her in there. I can usually get through to her, though. Ready for a rematch?”
“Bring it on.”
San Francisco / 1927
THE NIX ROUSED HERSELF INSIDE JOLYNN’S CONSCIOUSNESS, struggling to stay alert as the woman droned on about her life. The subject, as dull as it was, wasn’t the only cause of the Nix’s lethargy. She was growing weak—a concept so repugnant that she fairly spit each time she thought of it. Once she’d sipped chaos like fine wine; now it was like water. Too long without it, and she weakened.
She was too particular in her choice of partners. Yet she still refused to lower her standards. Selecting the wrong partner was like quenching her thirst with sewer water.
This time she’d waited longer than usual, probably because her last partner had been such a disappointment. That’s why she’d taken a chance with Jolynn. No smarter than her last partner—perhaps even stupider—with the vacuous self-absorption that sometimes afflicted young women with not enough going on behind their pretty faces. Yet Jolynn lacked more than common intelligence—she had an empty head, and an empty soul to match. The Creator, perhaps realizing the defect, had given her to a minister and his wife, as if hoping they’d supply what she lacked.
Jolynn’s missing soul had proved to be a moral blank slate. Her parents inscribed goodness on it, and she became good. She married a good man, a doctor many years her senior, and followed him into the wilds of Africa, bringing medicine to the afflicted. But when she contracted malaria, her husband sent her home to recuperate, not with her aging parents, but in a California sanitarium. Freed from the watchful eyes of parents and husbands, the truth about Jolynn’s soul became clear. It was indeed a slate, and could be erased just as easily as it had been written.
Jolynn had never returned to Africa. She found a job, took a lover, and fell into a crowd that valued a good martini over a good deed. But, after five years, she was growing bored. When the Nix had been looking for potential partners, she’d stumbled on Jolynn and, seeing what the woman was contemplating doing to ease her boredom, the Nix had offered her help.
Now Jolynn sat on the porch behind her apartment, mentally prattling on about what she was going to wear to the party that weekend, who she hoped would be there, and so on, the trivialities streaming from her empty head like bubbles. The Nix felt herself drifting with those bubbles, becoming weightless with weakness and tedium, fluttering—
“Can we do it after the party?” Jolynn asked. She didn’t speak the question, just thought it, directing it at the Nix, who’d taken up residence inside her.
The Nix roused herself with a shake. “Yes, that should give us time to plan. How do you want to kill them?”
A pout. “I thought you were going to tell me that.”
“I could…and I will, if you’d like, but you’ll derive more satisfaction from it if the method has some meaning to you.”
From the mental silence, the Nix knew she was talking over Jolynn’s head…again. She bit back a snarl of frustration. Patience, she told herself. Take her hand and show her the way, and she will reward you for it.
“We’ll work on an idea together,” the Nix said. “It might help me plan if I knew why you want to kill them. They’ve been your friends for years. Why now?”
Jolynn brightened. “Because now you’re here to help me.”
“No, I mean why them. What have they done to you?”
“Done to me?”
“Never mind,” the Nix said. “Let’s just—”
“No, I should have a reason. It’s only right.” She squinted up at the bright sky. “Ummm, they’ve been sleeping with my man, and I’m jealous.”
“Of course you are. That must have come as a horrible shock.”
“Oh no, I’ve known about it for years. I don’t mind—heck, I introduced him to them.” She paused. “But it’s a good excuse, don’t you think?”
Jolynn sat in her friends’ tiny kitchenette, sipping hot milk and chatting about the party. Earlier that evening, Jolynn had introduced her lover to a pretty blond nurse, and Nellie and Dot hadn’t been pleased about it. Jolynn didn’t understand the fuss. There was more than enough of Bradley and his money to go around. When Jolynn introduced him to a little tomato that he liked, more of that largesse came her way.
Maybe that’s what Nellie and Dot were in a snit about—that they hadn’t found someone for him first. Whatever the reason, they were mad. Not mad enough to argue, but, as the Nix whispered, the situation might be useful, if things came to that. As Jolynn sipped hot milk and listened to Dot and Nellie chatter about the party, the Nix whispered ideas in her ear.
“…not just jealousy,” the Nix said. “It has to be more than that. They’re angry because…because of something about the nurse. She has…syphilis. That’s it. They heard a rumor that she has syphilis.”
“They did?” Jolynn nearly sloshed milk onto her lap.
“Why didn’t they tell me? That’s horrible. If she has syphilis, she could give it to Bradley—”
“She doesn’t have syphilis. But that’s what we’ll say, if things go wrong. Naturally, they’d be furious with you for exposing them. You tried to tell them it was just a rumor, but they accused you of being careless, thoughtless. You tried to leave, but they wouldn’t let you.”
The Nix continued to plot. Such an imagination. She was so clever. Jolynn shivered, counting her lucky stars that the Nix had chosen her. As a child, Jolynn had always wanted an imaginary friend, but she’d never been lucky enough to find one. She’d always thought, if she did, she’d name her Victoria.
“I’m going to call you Victoria,” she announced.
The Nix stopped whispering. “What?”
“I’m going to call you Victoria.” She paused. “Unless you’d prefer Vicky, but I don’t really like Vicky.”
“Victoria is fine,” the Nix said. “Now, we—Wait, they’re talking to you.”
Jolynn popped out of her reverie and smiled at her friends.
“Hmmm?” she said.
“That dress Rachel was wearing,” Dot said. “That’s the same one you wore to Buzz’s party last month, wasn’t it?”
“Probably the exact same dress I wore. I did donate it to charity.”
Dot snickered.
“Oh, and speaking of cast-offs,” Nellie said. “Did you notice Millie’s handbag?”
Dot arched her brows. “Was that a handbag? I thought she was carrying…”
Jolynn tuned out again and stifled a yawn.
“Can I kill them yet?” she asked the Nix. “I’m getting awful sleepy.”
“Yes. That’s the perfect excuse,” the Nix—Victoria—said. “Yawn again, but don’t hide it. When they notice, tell them you should be leaving, and get up.”
“What? Leave? But I haven’t killed them!”
A sigh fluttered through Jolynn’s mind. Victoria explained the plan again. She was so clever. They were going to be best friends. Yes, siree, friends for life. Jolynn shivered, barely able to suppress her grin.
“Good,” Victoria said. “Now follow that with a yawn.”
Jolynn yawned, and lifted her hand to cover it, but missed.
“Oh, my,” she said, wide-eyed. “Excuse me.”
“I think someone’s getting sleepy,” Dot said with a smile. “Do you want to stay here tonight, hon?”
“Oh, please, if I could.”
Jolynn lifted her handbag from the chair. She peeked inside. The shiny metal of the gun winked. She winked back.
“Oh, wasn’t that fun,” Jolynn said as she rummaged through the kitchen cupboards. “Did you see the look in their eyes?” She pouted. “Too bad we couldn’t let them scream.”
“Not with people sleeping in the apartment overhead. The gunshot was loud enough, even through the pillow.”
“You’re right. And Nellie did kind of shriek. That was nice.” She lifted two knives from the drawer. “The boning knife or the cleaver?”
“You’ll probably need both.”
“Good idea. Oh, and what about a saw? I think Dot keeps a saw in the closet. One of those little ones, for cutting metal and stuff?”
“A hacksaw.”
“That’s it. Should I get that, too?”
“If you can find it.”
Jolynn found the hacksaw right where she remembered seeing it, in the closet with some other tools. With the hacksaw and boning knife in one hand, and the cleaver in the other, she headed for the bathroom, where Dot was waiting in the tub.
This was going to be such fun.
Two trunks. That was all that remained of the luggage from that morning’s train from San Francisco. Two black trunks with silver handles. They looked brand-new, not the sort of thing you’d expect someone to abandon at the train station…unless they had a good reason.
The moment Samuel saw those big trunks, he knew someone was up to no good. Damn things were big enough to fit two, maybe three, crates of bootleg hooch. The owner probably saw a few uniforms milling about, got cold feet, and ran. The Southern Pacific railway didn’t hold with bootleggers. As a baggage-checker it was Samuel’s job to, well, check the baggage. And if there were as many bottles in these trunks as he suspected, no one would miss one.
He marched over to the trunks. The minute he got within a foot of them, he reeled back, hand shooting up to cover his nose. Goddamn! If that was hooch, he didn’t want even a sip of it. Smelled like something curled up and died in there. He was surprised the baggage-handlers in San Francisco hadn’t noticed. Maybe it hadn’t smelled that bad before spending a half-day in a baggage car, baking in the August heat.
As Samuel reached for the latch, a pickup truck backed up to the receiving dock. A young man stepped out from the driver’s side, but Samuel barely got a look at him before his attention was snagged by the passenger. A brunette. A real doll. Swanky, like some kind of movie star.
The young couple walked toward him, the woman holding out a baggage-claim slip.
“These your trunks, ma’am?” Samuel asked.
She smiled. “They are. Sorry we’re late. I got off the train, then realized I had to get my brother to bring the truck around for the trunks. They’re quite heavy.”
“May I ask what’s in them?”
“Oh just…personal items.” She smiled. “You know how women pack.”
Her brother snorted. “Got that right. Two trunks for a weekend visit. You’d think she was moving back home.”
The young man moved toward the trunks, but Samuel lifted a hand.
“There’s a…funny smell coming from them, ma’am.”
The woman’s blue eyes widened. “There is?”
“There sure is,” her brother said, nose wrinkling. “And there’s something oozing out the bottom. Jeepers, Jo, what you got in here?”
Before she could answer, Samuel stepped up to the first trunk. He reached for the latch, but saw that it was locked.
“Ma’am? I’m going to need to ask you to open these.”
Jolynn stared at the baggage-handler, as if not understanding his request.
Victoria? What do I do now?
She waited, but her friend didn’t answer. She must have been thinking up a plan. As the baggage-handler and Ricky waited, Jolynn rummaged through her purse, pretending to look for the keys.
Victoria?
“Ma’am, I need those—”
“Wait,” she snapped. “I’m looking for them.”
Victoria? Please, please, please. We’re in trouble.
Nothing.
Victoria!
The name echoed through the silence of her brain.