We waited until Cee had left— and then a bit more—before we went down. The clerk pointedly nodded to us without looking directly at us, and Eli slid a coin across the counter to the young man, which appeared to startle and confuse him. I pulled my straw hat over my hair, tied the damn kerchief around my neck (which looked and felt much better), and prepared to step into the street. "He went to the right," the clerk murmured almost as if he were talking to himself, and we went to the left without saying a word. When I glanced at Eli, who was a step behind me, I saw I was actually accompanied by Jim Comstock again. It gave me a little shock, and I glared at him. "Let me know when you're going to do that," I said, and then I steered us back to one of the open-air markets and got a very thin shawl to drape around me, the kind that's not meant to keep you warm. It was just for pretty. Off went the hat, folded under my belt, and I covered my hair with the shawl and tossed the ends around my neck. It was red and green, and I was looking almost as colorful as the other young women on the street. Eli said, "It becomes you, Lizbeth." I smiled up at him and took his arm. We didn't look like an employer and his gunnie, for sure, especially now that he was Jim Comstock. We looked like an older man and his young companion, who was well paid and not abused . . . and, therefore, happy. We wandered and shopped for a little, to see if anyone was paying attention to us. I was always on the alert. It paid off. We saw a grigori, a very old woman, walking through the driveway that led to the back courtyard of our little hotel. She had a cane and her hair was white, but if you peered under the brim of her hat (which was very like mine), you could see the faded tattoos. "Shit," said Eli. "It's Klementina." "She's . . . ?" "She's the head of my order," he said. "And she's the one who sent me on this mission." "So she might be here to rescue you?" I sounded doubtful, and that was how I felt. "Klementina might be here to help me and Paulina," he said, but sounded even more doubtful than I had. "But she's not exactly a rescuer. She believes a good wizard should be able to rescue himself." She would be awfully disappointed in the wizards we'd killed in the past week. "Klementina preferred Paulina to me, by a large margin." I tried to figure out what he was really telling me. "You don't want to approach her?" "I wonder why she went to the parking space behind the hotel," he said, instead of giving a direct answer. And I figured that was an answer in and of itself. So we returned to the hotel, and the clerk was luckily turned away from us, putting notes in the key boxes. Maybe it wasn't luck. Maybe he was making a conscious effort to not see us. Or maybe it was Eli's spell. We ran up the stairs as quietly as we could, and were in our room and at the window. Klementina was looking at all the cars. From the way she bent over, I decided she was actually smelling them. Her hands were moving. She was trying to find out if a grigori had been in one of them. Because there was really nothing to say, I calculated angles. "Shall I shoot her?" Eli looked at me as if I had suggested shooting God. "She might be looking for me to . . ." "Help you? Right, so why aren't you running out there yelling, 'Klementina, I'm so glad to see you'?" "You are a sour person," Eli said. Now he looked like Eli again, and himself was being pretty judgmental, though there was a little smile on his face. "Yeah, that's my job," I said. "I just want to stay alive, and we have only each other to depend on." "I am sad," Eli said, his face expressing that sorrow. I could tell he was expressing a new and deep truth, and it had made him a different person. "I see traitors everywhere, and I don't know who is for me and who is against me." I said, "I just assume everyone is against me." Except for the few people I trusted, who all lived in Segundo Mexia. But three of those people had died less than a month ago. "And if you tell me what a terrible world I live in, I'll punch you. We do live in a dangerous world, all of us." I raised the Winchester and experimented with the shot. "I can take her." Still Eli hesitated. "What if it's not really her?" he said. "Or what if she knows we're here watching her, which is quite possible, and she is waiting for us to reveal how we are going to proceed?" "All that might be true," I said. "Make up your mind." "Hide," he said. In the next instant he opened the window and leaned out, while I flattened myself on the floor. "Revered mother," he called. "Ah, good to see you. You have saved me from having to wait for you to come, in this hot sun." The voice definitely belonged to an older woman, but there was no tremor, no hesitation. This Klementina had all her wits, and maybe more than her fair share. "She's on her way up," Eli said. "It's really Klementina." "How do you know?" I sat up and dusted off my skirt. This hotel was not as well kept as the one in Mil Flores. "She used the word 'hot,'" he said. "Code word?" "Yes." "No one else could know it?" Eli shook his head. He seemed certain. "And you don't think there's a chance that the word 'hot' would be easy to use in Mexico, even if she didn't know it was the code word?" And then there was a knock at the room door, and no more time to think about what danger we were in. Eli moved to open the door, and Klementina strode in. No other word for it. She glared at me, and I realized she was very sharp. Well, shit. "And you are?" the older woman said. Up close she looked much older, her face seamed and cracked like dry dirt in the desert. But Klementina's eyes were a bright brown, and her hair was wiry and thick. "I'm the gunnie. Lizbeth Rose." I was too tense to be frightened, which was an advantage. "And did you want to shoot me, young woman?" "So much." "What stopped you?" "Eli says you are who you say you are. Though I'm not sure that's a good thing." Klementina laughed. "And you call him Eli, eh?" "What should I call him?" I didn't understand this question, or comment, at all. "Where is Paulina?" Klementina asked, turning to Eli, as if one thought led to another. "She's dead. She died in the desert when we were abducted, and they made her rise again to attack me." This seemed to be a real shock to Klementina. Her mouth tightened, her whole face shut down. It was possible she might be willing herself not to cry. "You must tell me everything," Klementina said, and she sat on the chair. Eli sat opposite her on the edge of the bed. I stood by the window to one side, where I wouldn't be easily seen. One of us had to keep watch. Eli told the story of the last few days well. From Josip the Tatar, who'd tried to kill them in my cabin, to the clue we'd picked up in Cactus Flats, through the expedition and all the attacks since then. He concluded with the terrible previous day. Then he told Klementina how many times I'd saved their lives, until I hadn't. Saved Paulina's. "I tried," I said, unable to stop myself. I almost added, She might have lived if she hadn't been so intent on saving Eli, but there was no point in talking about that. "I'm sure you did," Klementina said, with no meaning in her voice at all. "That wasn't her yesterday," I said, still full of anger. I hadn't liked Paulina, but someone had used her body in a horrible way. She would have hated that, I thought. Or she might have shrugged indifferently. I never knew her well enough to say, and now she would always be a puzzle to me. "That was a zombie of Paulina," the older woman said, mostly to Eli. "It really was her body, since you say it kept her appearance after you killed it again. The simulacrum of your brother was a clever use of magic. The zombie of Paulina was an even stronger use of magic. You have a powerful enemy." I glanced at Eli, who looked as though he was biting his tongue not to say, I know all that. "Don't you mean, 'We have a powerful enemy'?" I said. "Aren't you the head of his clan, or whatever you call it? So his enemies should be yours." The sharp eyes fixed on me again, but I was not sorry I'd spoken. If Eli had such a mass of other magic people behind him, it was time for them to show up and help. I couldn't do this alone, and neither could Eli. "You are very aggressive," Klementina had the gall to tell me. "Yeah, I've been trying to keep him alive for a week," I said. "And it's been killing, killing, killing. And almost being killed." "And you think I should put up or shut up?" Klementina thought using that saying was very funny, and she produced a rusty laugh. Neither Eli nor I smiled. I kept my mouth shut. It was time to hear from Eli. "I need help," he said. "Paulina was a great wizard, very tough and more experienced, but now she is dead. We have strong opponents within our own profession, and it makes my heart hurt. And it makes me very angry. Gunnie and I are trying to get out of here, get home again." "Why will you be returning, if you don't have what you set out to seek?" Klementina might as well have slapped Eli. "It's not available," he said. "The girl says she is not the daughter of Oleg Karkarov. Have any of the other searchers found a direct descendant?" Klementina looked surprised, just for a moment. I expected her to ask Eli a question, and from his face, so did he. But the old woman just nodded. "It's not her," I said, and in the interest of silence I pulled out my knife and stabbed her, under her ribs and up. Eli was so shocked his protest was just a sound pushed through a choked throat, reedy and high like a bird's cry. Klementina's eyes bored into me, and I felt the hate in her. But I had hit her first, and hardest, and her eyes dulled. That's why I like guns so much more than knives. I was too close to her. I pulled out the knife and stepped back and waited to see what happened. I am pretty sure that only the fact that we'd had sex kept Eli from attacking me. He looked from the body to me, over and over, as if that would undo what I'd done. She'd crumpled sideways to the floor, and I flipped her so the wound was up—I didn't want the blood to stain the wood. I yanked a washrag off the rack by the sink and pulled up her shirt, then pulled it back down again so it would hold the washrag in place over the incision. Not that she'd bleed much more. Eli squatted beside me and seized my shoulder, turning me to face him. I really hate being made to do anything, and I yanked myself out from his grasp. He didn't seem to notice. "Why did you do that?" His voice was shaking. "Not her," I told him. "She didn't know there were other teams of grigoris looking for other descendants. She only knew about Paulina and you." Eli looked at me, the shock clinging to his face, until gradually he began to absorb what I'd said. "How do you do it?" he said, shaking his head. "How do you kill so easily?" "Easy?" Now I was the one who was taken aback. "You think this is easy? No, no, no. It's quick. But it's not easy." "Do you pay for this? Inside yourself?" "Eli, how do you feel when you take a life?" Eli didn't answer in words, but he nodded after a moment. "I'm not lesser than you," I said. But this is what I'm good at. This is my job. And I have standards. Eli still didn't seem to be sure I'd done the right thing, but whether right or wrong, the thing was done. "They'll come looking for her," he said. "Whether or not she really was Klementina." "If she was such a great wizard, why didn't she stop me?" That seemed to hit Eli right between the eyes. "Why not?" he said very quietly, as if to himself. "Indeed." And there was a knock outside. We hadn't even heard footsteps. I was getting too involved with Eli's feelings to do my job. I drew out my gun and pointed it at the door. Eli stood, took a deep breath, and readied his hands. We both stepped out of a direct line with the door. The body on the floor had not changed its form. A little doubt began to niggle at me. What if this really had been Klementina? But I pushed that little doubt down in the hold where it should be. "Who is it?" Eli's voice was so quiet I almost asked him to repeat his words. But our new caller heard him just fine. "It's Klementina, you idiot," she said. Eli said a word I'd never heard him say before. He stepped to the door, grasped the knob and turned it, and stepped back, out of the line again. And Klementina, in the doorway, looked down at her dead self. "What an interesting situation," she said. "Who killed me?" "I did. Do I need to do it again?" Klementina glanced at me. "I certainly hope not. You seem to have done a good job the first time. Who are you, young woman?" I didn't speak. Eli needed to step in and do some work on this situation. "Klementina, what's your code word?" Eli said. "Hot. But it's a bad choice for April in Mexico." There was a long moment where anything could happen. "Who's on the other team?" I asked. The woman gave me a look that would have withered an apple. "As if I would tell you," she said scornfully. "Tell me," Eli said. For the first time the woman seemed to notice that Eli's hands were at the ready. "As if you could defeat me," she said, a little wonder in her voice. "Tell me." He was not going to back down. Her gray brows drew together. "You're serious." Eli did not speak. She looked down at the body. Then she came into the room and shut the door behind her. "All right, I guess you have reason. Benjamin the Brit, Anna, Andrei, Evgenia, Peregrine, Belinda . . ." Paulina had been proof that there were English wizards in the Holy Russian Empire, driven there by the scorn and mockery of their countrymen, but I hadn't known there were so many. "Belinda?" I said. "Would that be Belinda Trotter?" Klementina looked at me curiously. "She might go by that name. She's a middle-aged woman, as nondescript as they come. Wears frumpy clothes." She sat on the chair, the same one she'd been sitting on before I killed her. I shivered. "Why do you ask?" the old woman said. "This one"—and Eli nodded at the body—"didn't know that. Didn't know any of those names." "So you killed her." The real Klementina looked directly at me. "There have been people all along the way who weren't who they looked like," I said. "And I killed them, too. Though Eli and Paulina did their share." I didn't know what to make of this woman, but I knew she was scary. "Of course they did," Klementina said, but she wasn't thinking about the death-dealing excellence of her junior grigoris. She was still thinking about me, and I didn't like it at all. Maybe I'd kill this Klementina, too. Killing the same person twice would be a real milestone. I dug my nails into my hand. My brain felt itchy, like this woman was trying to get inside my skull and rummage around. I wasn't going to let that happen. I gave her stare for stare. Eli put his big hand on the old wizard's thin shoulder. "Klementina," he said, his voice hard. "Leave her be." "Oh, have you found a sweetie?" she said, her voice dripping distaste. "She's saved my life over and over," Eli said. "When it would have been far easier for her to save herself and let us die." The old wizard turned her eyes on him. "But my Paulina, my star, she did die." Maybe that was what Eli had intended, to turn Klementina's focus on himself. If so, I was grateful. The relief of being free of her gaze was like cool water on a dry throat. "Tell me about Paulina," Klementina said. Ordered. She was telling Eli, so I got to stay out of it. I was on my feet, but it was an effort. That old bitch packed a punch without even reaching out a hand. This was the second time Eli had related our adventures to Klementina, and it was easy to think of something else. I kept watch, standing carefully to one side of the window. Right in the middle of Eli's story, I saw Chauncey in the courtyard below. It was weirdly like seeing the false Klementina only a short time before. I waved my hand, and Eli's voice came to a stop. "What is it, girl?" Klementina snapped. "Is this really my friend Chauncey, or is it someone else in his body?" If anyone could tell me, this old woman could. A backward glance told me she was mindful of that compliment. She rose and came to the window, and I made plenty of room for her. I did not want to touch her. When I stepped back, I was against Eli's front, and I inched away to stand free. I was working. Klementina said, "I can't tell." I felt angry. And unhappy. "But that means I do know who's behind this whole sabotage," Klementina went on. That sounded promising. Knowing who the enemy was . . . that was a great step forward. "Who?" Eli didn't sound like he'd been in suspense. And that was a big step backward. He sounded terrified. "Your father," Klementina said. I could have smacked him with the butt of my gun, but I did not let my face change, because I knew the older wizard would see that. Eli was the only ally I had. I'd thought of him as a real young oak tree; he was a reed. But look what I'd done to him, led him on a wild-goose chase when I could have told him my father was dead and gone, and I was his best hope. And look where that had gotten me. Look at all the bodies that had piled up. I did not turn to look at Eli. When he spoke, he said, "I was afraid of that. But I could not believe he would sacrifice me. Gunnie, make me a promise." "What's that?" I was trying to follow this, but I was stunned. "If you ever see my father, kill him for me." "Sure thing," I said. "He thinks his goals are for the good of the country," Klementina said, strictly to Eli. Her voice wasn't consoling, but her words were. Maybe. "He's a traitor," Eli said, and there was no give-and-take in this. "He owes fealty to the tsar. Anything else is treason." "This is big news," I said without any excitement or pleasure. "But it doesn't solve the problem we have now at this instant, which is that a man I know is down there trying to find me and kill me or Eli, if we assume he's following the pattern of the past few days. Chauncey's got a kid, and I'd just as soon not have to kill him. Can he go back to his right mind?" Klementina gave him another, longer look from the window. This time she had her eyes closed. "No. The damage to his brain is considerable." Klementina didn't have any give, either. Well, hell. "All right," I said, leaving with Jackhammer and a knife. "Where are you going?" Klementina asked as I shut the door behind me. "She's going to kill him," Eli said, though I had to imagine the last two words, because I was moving quickly. I went up the steep attic stairs—not far from our room—unlocked the door at the top, and climbed onto the flat roof. The next building was jumping distance, and almost level with the hotel, so I leaped over. It was easy, even with the skirt. I went to the far corner of the building, which gave me a different shooting angle. Hopefully, it would not look like Chauncey had been killed from the roof of the little hotel. While I was aiming, a woman in her sixties emerged through a trapdoor, stepping out onto the roof, dragging a basketful of wash. I should have noticed the clotheslines. I could have blocked the door somehow. "What are you doing?" the woman asked with more curiosity than alarm. "I'm sorry," I said. I hit her with the rifle butt. She went down like someone had cut her strings. I shook so much after that I had to wait a moment before I could take up my rifle. I blanked my mind out. It took a big effort, but I managed long enough to aim and fire. And then what was left of my friend Chauncey was gone. I do not remember going back across the roof and down the stairs to the second floor and going to our room. The two wizards were at the window, looking down into the courtyard. The body of the Klementina stand-in had changed to that of a woman, maybe thirty, with raven-dark hair. She was still dead. I squatted to check. "You need to do something with this," I said. I stood, just looking at Klementina. "What's wrong with her?" Klementina just sounded grumpy. "That was her friend she just shot," Eli said, but he knew there was something more. Anyway, it was done, and it had had to be done, and I'd done it. Hitting the woman in the head was better than killing her, I told myself. "We have to get rid of this body," Eli said. "Do you have any suggestions about that?" Klementina said. Eli glanced at me for ideas, but I didn't say anything. The body had looked like Klementina, so it should be her problem, especially since she was supposed to be so all-fired amazing. Reluctantly I said, "Turn it into a sneak thief." "I've never transformed a dead person," she said as casually as I'd say I'd never eaten grapes. "Transformation is Eli's father's specialty, not mine." "What's your dad's name?" I said, looking at Eli. "Vladimir Savarov," he said, looking off to the side. "Prince Vladimir Savarov," Klementina said, grinning at me. "Eli is Prince Ilya." I held on to my temper with a desperate grip, but my fingers slipped. "Screw you all. I'm outta here," I said, and picked up my stuff and headed to the door. Just to show I had no hard feelings, I gave gave Klementina the gunnies' good-bye. "Easy death," I told the old grigori. It was a great sound, that door shutting behind me. The skirt was dragging around my legs and after I draped the shawl over my head, it limited my side vision. I could hardly wait to wear my own clothes again. Now I had a whole heap of new problems. I had to figure out how I was going to get home. I had some money, courtesy of Eli—excuse me, Prince Ilya. I had more than enough for a train ticket. I'd seen a few train signs in my wanderings, so I knew the station wasn't far. At least the problems I faced now were my own. For me to solve.