I marched toward the closed warehouse door, newly attached. The other fixes weren’t so polished. Clunky, ill-fitting boards covered the holes in the walls. It looked like a drunk with a hammer had gone at it. It would work, though. For now, anyway.
The metal of the handle was cool on my palm as I cranked it and ripped it open. No, this wasn’t a battle, but it sure felt like it. That meant being prepared for anything.
In the middle of the spacious warehouse, the dual mages hunched over a chalk circle. Dizzy pointed at something, drawing Callie’s eyes.
A flicker of movement shifted my attention to the far wall. Darius waited, unmoving except for the swivel of his head. He stared at me, showing no expression.
Nearing the center, I let my gaze drift over one of the most elaborate summoning circles I’d ever seen. There were three rings in all, the smallest in the center of the design, the largest enclosing most of it. Figures and characters were drawn in the middle, between the rings, and outside, their placement seemingly haphazard. No blood traveled the chalk outline; the dual mages had not (thankfully) sacrificed anything for the necessary power.
“You’re planning to—”
“Ah!” Callie jumped and clutched at her satchel. Dizzy flinched, staring up at me with wide eyes.
“Jiminy Cricket, Reagan, you scared the life out of me.” Callie sagged, now clutching at her chest.
“She popped up like a poltergeist.” Dizzy looked back down at the circle. “Very quiet.”
“Like I was saying, you’re planning to call a lesser-powered demon, right?”
“We’re aiming for a higher level four.” Callie straightened up.
“With just two mages and no sacrifice?” I frowned. “Can you pull that off and keep it in the circle?”
“We’re not worried about keeping it in the circle.” Dizzy put a piece of chalk in his pocket and dusted off his pants. He needn’t have bothered, given the collection of stains and holes already there. “If it gets out, you can control it or kill it. That, or Darius can kill it. We have insurance not many mages in our position do.” Dizzy puffed up with pride.
Callie stared at Dizzy for a beat that clearly implied, You are missing the important issue here. “We’ll call it by offering the blood of the damned.”
I looked up at Darius. “I bet you didn’t realize they’d planned to sacrifice you, huh?”
“Not his, sweetie. Yours.” Callie moved around the circle, looking closely at each character.
I took a step back. “Doesn’t that defeat the purpose of this adventure?”
“We just need a little, Reagan,” Dizzy said in a soothing tone. “Just a scrape, a dozen or so drops around the circle, and you’ll go back to being a spectator. Your blood is the most powerful in the room for these purposes. It will call to the demons.”
Would anyone notice if I took off running?
“Okay. We’re ready. Now.” Callie speared me with her bulldog look. “We are pulling a demon from the heart of the underworld. A strong demon, at that. But don’t you worry—we have triple-checked everything, and are experienced with circles. We aren’t putting you in any more jeopardy than you’re already in.”
“What she means is that this demon won’t go back down and tell everyone about you,” Dizzy clarified. “We will send it back to check on the rumor, and if it can’t do that for some reason, we’ll kill it. We’ve worked that into the circle. It’s kind of like a…self-destruct feature.”
“I didn’t realize you could do that,” I said. “Why doesn’t everyone?”
“Well…” Dizzy’s hand moved back and forth in a so-so gesture. “It’s experimental. Maybe I shouldn’t have mentioned it in case it doesn’t work.”
“Get moving,” Darius said without moving forward. “Reagan is losing her nerve.”
“I’m fine,” I lied, narrowing my eyes at Darius. Because yes, all my bravado from a moment ago was seeping out of me. I needed another door-kicking pep talk. It was a little irritating that he noticed, but more so that he had told on me.
“Of course. Yes.” Dizzy walked quickly to a box against the wall that I hadn’t noticed. He withdrew a wicked-looking dagger and made his way back to me. “Now, we just need some blood…”
One painful slice of the hand later, the dual mages were pushing me around the circle while shaking said hand, dotting the concrete floor in crimson.
“You can head over to Darius, Reagan,” Dizzy said, taking herbs out of his satchel. “You aren’t needed anymore.”
Sweeter words had never been said. I held my throbbing hand as I complied.
“How are you doing?” Darius asked me quietly when I leaned against the wall next to him.
“Hanging in there. Any idea why Vlad is taking the back seat on this one?”
He watched the mages for a silent beat. “I can’t be sure. I would assume he wants you for himself, but for that to be correct, there must be another piece to his plan. Another way he’s working toward his ends, one that perhaps requires him to take a more active role. I haven’t been able to find out what that might be.”
“Any other ideas?”
He shook his head slowly. “Not that fit half as well.”
“Super,” I said sarcastically.
“I will be by your side every step of the way, Reagan.”
I blew out a breath as the dual mages lifted their hands above their heads and sprinkled a green plant down. They began chanting quietly.
“Thanks,” I said, because the sentiment was sweet, and I thoroughly believed he meant it, but if the rumors were true, either he would be volunteering to die for me in battle, or to watch me disappear, alone, into the underworld, since vampires could only get into the edges. One of those I wouldn’t allow to happen, and the other was not within my power to change.
Amazingly, for the first time, I didn’t want to work alone. I didn’t want to take this on by myself. Fat lot of good it did me.
“Just FYI, in case you need a barometer reading on the day’s suckery, it is high. Very high. There is a shitstorm warning in effect.” I leaned my head against the wall.
A crack drew my focus to the circle, where a shimmering blue blob now floated in the center. Purple light sparkled within it, followed by pink. Dizzy threw something at the ground, and a flash of light gave off another crack.
The blue orb took shape. Darius shifted beside me, uncomfortable.
“Not a big fan of calling demons?” I asked.
“I am not looking forward to the affirmation that the rumors are true. We will have some hard decisions to make.”
I bit my lip, because it wasn’t necessarily the decision that would be hard, but the follow-through.
A horned, knobby thing solidified in the circle, complete with scaly gray skin and a forked tongue. Could they not have tried for a nicer looking one?
For a moment, the demon looked back and forth between Callie and Dizzy, who were still chanting and working with their herbs, then it looked at the ground. It stepped forward, and a silent blast of light flared where it had touched the circle, forcing it back.