chapter 3
I LANDED HARD ON THE MARBLE FLOOR OF THE throne room. It didn’t hurt. I wished it did. I even slammed my fist into the floor, hoping for a jolt of pain to knock the rage from my brain, but my hand only bounced off as if I’d socked a pillow.
I scrambled to my feet. The middle Fate stood there, watching me.
“Send me back,” I said.
“Eve, you—”
“Send me back now! You can’t show me that and then rip me out of there before I can do anything about it.”
“You can’t do anything about it,” she said softly. “It’s over. Long over. What you saw was a memory.”
I rubbed my face. A memory. A glimpse into the past. I stared at the white wall, let it clear my mind. I didn’t have a clue who the people had been. Obviously serial killers and probably infamous, but I’d never been one to follow crime. In my world, the killers I had to worry about were the ones in my little black book, not the ones on the eleven o’clock news.
When I glanced up, the elderly Fate was at the spinning wheel, and I braced myself, sure she’d jump on me for an answer. Yet she didn’t even look up. Just clipped off the length of yarn the middle Fate had measured out for her, then handed it to a wraith-clerk. Then the child Fate took over and threaded the spinning wheel. She lifted her eyes to mine, then quickly looked back down.
So what was the connection between the two sets of murders? Or were they two sets? There was only one spirit missing from the nether regions. Two women, similar in appearance, both killing teens. So they had to be the same person. To a human, such a thing would be impossible, but supernatural minds are more open to other possibilities.
I knew I should think through those possibilities, and come up with the most likely one, to impress the Fates with my astounding capacity for logical reasoning. I knew that…and I blurted out the first thing that came to mind.
“Vampire,” I said.
The youngest of the Fates glanced around the spinning wheel, her face screwed up in a look every mother recognizes as “Huh?”
“Two sets of murders, both committed by the same woman, who doesn’t age between the time of big hair and miniskirts and, well, big hair and miniskirts. Similar fashion styles, but definitely a twenty-five, thirty-year gap without so much as a wrinkle. She must be a vampire. Most vamps stick to their necessary kill quotas but there are always those who get a taste for it and—”
The crone took over. “It’s not a vampire, Eve. We have our own ways of dealing with vampire spirits, which you would know if you took any interest at all in the world around you. Try again.”
The old Fate’s bright eyes pinned me like a butterfly to a mat. In school, I’d had very little respect for my teachers, and for grown-ups in general. Only one teacher had ever been able to make me squirm. Grade six. Mrs. Appleton, the kind of sour old woman whose very gaze is acid to your self-confidence, who always looks as if she expects very little from you, and is never disappointed. The old Fate had that look down pat.
“Uh, I, well…” I straightened. “Okay, well, I don’t know a lot about time-travel”—I caught her look—“but I do know that’s not what’s going on here. So the explanation must be…”
I studied her gaze. No clues there. Forge ahead.
“Reincarnation,” I said.
The crone morphed into the middle-aged woman. “How much do you know about reincarnation, Eve?”
A lightning-bolt switch and the old woman cut in. “Not nearly enough, considering she’s been here three years.” She fixed me with one eye, squeezing the other shut. “Well? Let’s hear it. Everything you know about reincarnation. Should take a good five, ten seconds.”
“I know it’s possible,” I said. “Rare, but possible.”
“Three seconds? I overestimated you again.”
The middle Fate appeared. “Yes, it’s rare, Eve. Very rare. It’s allowed only under special circumstances, when a spirit meets certain criteria that lead the Creator to decide that the soul should be allowed another chance at life.”
The old Fate cut back in. “And murdering children doesn’t qualify.”
Again, the middle Fate pushed her sister aside. “What we want you to find is called a Nix. Do you know what that is?”
I expected the hag to pop back and needle me again, but she didn’t.
“Demi-demons,” I said slowly, as my memory banks creaked open. “In German folklore a Nix is a mischievous temptress spirit. A cross between a siren, an imp, and Mae West.”
“That’s the mythical version,” she said. “And the reality?”
“I—I’m not sure. I’ve never run into one, or anyone who has.” I thought harder, then shook my head. “I don’t remember reading any references to a real version.”
“Probably because it’s very obscure knowledge. In folklore, as you said, they are considered mischievous spirits, water pixies, actually…”
The Fate continued, giving me the condensed version of Nixen mythology. Some humans believe a Nix is a siren who lures humans to watery graves. In other words, an excuse for idiots who dove into deep water and discovered they couldn’t swim. Mythological Nixen were both male and female, but the females were more successful at capturing their victims, maybe because guys are more likely to stand on a riverbank and yell, “Hey, watch this dive!”
The truth is, Nixen have nothing to do with water. When early folklorists learned that Nixen were temptresses, they’d probably jumped to the conclusion that they were a form of siren. Nixen are also all female…or that’s the form they manifest in, as full demons manifest as male. It’s probably more an aesthetic choice than a gender difference. Finally, Nixen aren’t truly temptresses at all. Instead, they are sought out by those who already are tempted—by wealth, power, or sex—and looking for a delivery shortcut. What a Nix provides is the resolve they need to carry out an act they lack the courage to perform, murder being most common.
“Okay,” I said when she finished. “Nixen help people kill, and those scenes you showed me were obviously murders, but where’s the connection? Those women were humans. How would they have conjured up a Nix? Even if they did, you sure as hell can’t want me to chase down a Nix. They’re demi-demons, not ghosts, so they wouldn’t be in one of your hells.”
The youngest Fate cut in. “Don’t worry. We didn’t expect you to see the connection. It’s all very strange.” She leaned around the wheel, her eyes aglitter. “See, what happened was—”
Her middle sister took over. “This particular Nix is quite different from her brethren. In the seventeenth century, she made a deal with a witch who wanted her father dead.”
“And gave her the guts she needed to do it.”
“That’s the usual process. However, in this case, it didn’t work. A Nix’s power has one significant limitation—she cannot compel a person to kill. The will and the intent must still be there. Conscious will and conscious intent. This witch was conflicted over her wish. Yet Nixen thrive on chaos, and they don’t appreciate being summoned without that end reward, so the Nix made a suggestion. She told the witch where to find a spell that would allow the Nix to take over the witch’s body, temporarily, and commit the act herself. The witch agreed, and the Nix—”
The girl leapt in, bubbling with the enthusiasm of a child who simply must tell the rest of the story. “—takes her over, and kills the woman’s father. And then she’s supposed to give the body back. Only she doesn’t. She uses the body to cause all kinds of trouble.”
The middle sister cut in. “And many people died…including the Nix herself, eventually. Trapped in a corporeal body, she died the death of a corporeal being. Having been in a witch’s form, she was brought here, to the supernatural realms. Although we aren’t equipped to handle a demi-demon, we managed to trap her in a hell dimension. For a while.”
“She escaped.”
“And that is a serious problem because this Nix isn’t flitting about the living world as a spirit. Having moved into a human body once, she is now able to do it at will.”
“So that’s the connection. It’s not the same woman. It’s the same Nix in different women. She takes them over—”
“Not exactly. Being a dead spirit, she can no longer fully take over a living body. Instead, she must cohabit, giving them resolve to carry out their desires.”
“So she doesn’t jump into innocent women and turn them into rampaging killers. Are the hosts always women?”
The Fate nodded. “Having first leapt into a host of that gender, she is now restricted to it.”
I paused. “If you ladies know so much about how she operates, I’m guessing she’s been out there for a while.”
“A little over a hundred years.”
“Uh-huh. I suppose that means I’m not the first person you’ve sent after her.”
“There have been three who’ve gone before you. We took three different approaches with varying degrees of success. All three…ended badly.”
“What did she do to them?”
The child Fate appeared, laughing. “Her first question, and it’s the one none of the others even thought to ask. When we told them that the others had failed, they only asked how the Nix got away. That’s what they figured she’d do—give them the slip and run. But you know better.”
“Common sense. The best way to stop being chased is to stop the person doing the chasing. But that’s a problem here, isn’t it? Can’t kill a ghost. Can’t even hurt one. So how the hell do you force one to stop chasing you?”
The middle Fate returned. “There are worse things than physical torture.”
“Not if it’s done right.”
The eldest one popped in, glower already in place.
“You have an answer for everything, don’t you?”
“No, I was just pointing out—”
“You want to know what she did to one of your predecessors, Eve? Let me show you.”