Ghostly Echoes (Jackaby #3)

“Jenny Cavanaugh?” The woman’s skin glistened like rippling water, and she changed. Her blonde locks relaxed and darkened to a soft brunette, and her face transformed. She looked exactly as Jenny had in life. “Not sweet, innocent Jenny Cavanaugh?” she mocked, her voice becoming a perfect match for Jenny’s.

She tapped my body’s frozen forehead with a fingernail. “Are you really in there? This is rich. I heard rumors, but I had no idea . . . You can’t get free of my little hex, can you? Oh, this is delicious. I’ve killed a lot of people in a lot of ways, but I’ve never had the pleasure of killing the same person twice. Did you get my little anniversary present? I carved it myself.”

Jenny’s eyes all but screamed from within my frozen sockets.

Morwen reached up to take my knife from my frozen hand, but the moment she touched the silver she cried out and pulled away. Her palm was blistered. It looked as if she had grabbed hold of a glowing coal.

Morwen swore under her breath. “Awfully ostentatious, aren’t we? Who carries around a silver knife? Fine. That’s fine. If we’re going to do this again, let’s do it right, anyway.”

With a ripple like a breeze over a still lake, her hair darkened further to a deep black and her dress became a crisp skirt and white blouse. A new face emerged, one I had seen before over the top of a clipboard. She was Mayor Poplin’s secretary. She had been there ten years ago, hiding in plain sight. She reached to her belt and drew the long dagger from its sheath. The metal was as black as midnight and curved slightly, like an Arabian scimitar. She was hardly one to complain about ostentatious weapons.

“There we go. Remember this one? Just like old times, isn’t it?” she taunted. “Better, even. Last time I killed you I was in such a rush. I’ll be sure to savor it this time.”

She drew the black blade down Jenny’s cheek—down my cheek. Her brother’s threats had only been for effect, but Morwen did not hold back. The edge pierced my skin and cut a line of deep crimson from the corner of my eye down toward my jaw. Jenny’s eyes screamed from within my frozen sockets. My head swam. I couldn’t watch. I felt sick and trapped and helpless.

Abruptly, the ebony blade shot backward. It landed in the dirt behind Morwen, glowing red hot at the tip as though just plucked from a forge fire. She clutched her already injured hand and snarled with indignant rage. “What?”

I didn’t understand it myself. Blood ran down my body’s unmoving face, but what force had stopped her blade was beyond me.

On the other side of the clearing, Jackaby grunted. He wrenched an arm free and, with a flick of his wrist, flung a little red stone—the last of the Cherufe’s tears—toward his captor’s rocky arm. It hit the inside of Alloch’s elbow, and at once the giant’s granite flesh boiled. Alloch bellowed. The stony arm glowed red from the curve of his shoulder to the steel brace around his wrist. Great gobs of charred molten rock were sloughing off and dropping to the earth.

“Do it now!” Morwen commanded her brother. “Turn it on!” Her secretary fa?ade slipped away, and she was herself once more, strawberry blonde with furious panic playing across her eyes. She retrieved the black blade with her uninjured hand.

Finstern had scrambled to the machine. “I can’t!” he said. “His soul needs to leave his body first!”

“Alloch!” Morwen clasped the gray bead on her necklace with her free hand. “Throw him over the line! Now! Ouch!” The little stone bead was glowing like a hot coal.

The enormous elemental moaned—a sound like the echoing rumble of a rock slide—but he obliged, his arm swinging toward the gate. At the same moment, Finstern activated the machine.

I felt a pressure at my back, and then I was suddenly across the threshold.

Time held still.

An unseen force pulled me toward my body. I drifted past Jackaby, who was still pinned in the monster’s grip, unable to stop himself from plunging toward the threshold as I left it. I drifted past Finstern, lit by the unearthly glow emanating from his device, and past Morwen, her expression furious and frantic.

I spun as I drifted into my own sorely abused body, a new perspective snapping abruptly into place before me. The world burst back to life in the same instant. The bead in Morwen’s hand exploded, fracturing in a burst of gray shards right in front of me. She cried out in alarm and nearly dropped her wicked black blade. At the same moment, Alloch’s forearm broke free from the rest of his body, carrying Jackaby with it to land with an earthshaking thud just shy of the shadow’s edge. Finstern’s machine pulsed with a blinding white-blue beam of light for several seconds, and then it sparked and went dark again. Finstern doubled over on the ground. I was looking through my own eyes again, watching the madness around me, but I could not move.

I felt a flood of fear and fury bubbling out of control inside my skull. I could barely hear myself think. I focused. “Jenny,” I thought. “I’m here. You’re not alone.”

The storm of emotions softened. “I’m afraid,” she thought. “I’m so sorry. I tried. I can’t move.”

“Let’s try again,” I thought. “Together.”

Alloch clutched the stump of his arm, which stuck out at a gruesome angle from his broad torso, charred and broken. He shook his head and roared, loud and deep. The sound echoed through the forest, and then the colossus stalked away, shaking the ground with each step.

Owen Finstern staggered and fell sideways as he attempted to pick himself up off the ground.

“Brother?” asked Morwen, sheathing the blade at her hip. “Did it work?”

Owen stood. “Yes.” he said. “No!” He twitched and clutched at his temples. The inventor’s legs betrayed him and he toppled to the ground again.

“The sight, brother—do you have the sight?” Morwen demanded.

“No! No—he’s in my head! It hurts! Help me!” Forces within Finstern were working at cross purposes. With each frantic step he seemed to be pulling himself against his own will closer and closer to the underworld.

With tremendous effort I felt my fingers flex. My hand clenched into a fist. I could sense the magic of the hex beginning to splinter.

“Keep pushing.” The thought echoed in my head, though I don’t know if it was mine or Jenny’s. “Keep pushing.” I poured every ounce of will I had into the effort, and from somewhere inside me I felt Jenny’s energy building, resonating like an orchestral crescendo. And then we were suddenly pushing against nothing.

The hex broke. We were free. I felt Jenny’s presence leave me and I fell to my knees, once more alone in my own head. The world spun and I fought against the dizziness. My eyes tried to focus on a glittering shape that lay on the ground before me. When it had slowed to a gradual spin, I reached out and picked up the silver knife.

“Impossible!” Morwen wrapped the fingers of her good hand around the remaining bead on her necklace. “Autoch. Get back here. Now!” From within her grasp, the second bead cracked audibly.

William Ritter's books