Sirens were approaching in the distance. I fetched my phone and hit redial.
"Nicola? It's Isaac again. I think we're going to need some help cleaning this one up."
Deb was in lousy shape, but she appeared to have recovered from whatever it was the ghost had done to her. She limped down the driveway to meet the approaching police cars.
The cars stopped a short distance from the house. Deb waited with arms spread as uniformed officers exited their cars with guns drawn. They crouched behind the front of the cars, where the engine blocks would provide cover against incoming fire.
I couldn't blame them. Between the damage we had done and the sight of Deb DeGeorge standing there bruised and bloody, her skin making her look partially mummified, I wouldn't have gone near her either.
I could see the moment Deb touched their minds. She might not have been as powerful as Sarah, but she was strong enough to lure her prey into dropping their guard. The police officers lowered their weapons, and by the time they reached Deb, they moved with a slow, relaxed pace that made me think they were sleepwalking. Deb had gotten stronger since the last time I saw her.
As soon as they were fully distracted, I ran outside to retrieve my shock- gun. It was dead, as I had expected, but that could be fixed. You had to be careful, but it actually took less energy to use a book to re-form an existing magical item than to create it from scratch.
When I entered the house again, the crackle of bone and popping joints filled the room. Jeff had managed to tug off the moonstone necklace. It was glowing beneath the couch where he must have kicked it to block the light. When he finished wrenching himself back to human form, he collapsed into an old recliner and started pulling on his underwear and pants.
I grabbed my jacket from the floor, pulled Time Kings from one of my
pockets to fix my gun, then froze. Mister Sanchez was staring at us from the hallway. The black Lab cowered behind his legs.
I watched as he gathered his courage. His hands were shaking, but he straightened and stepped closer. "What are you?"
Nidhi spun. "I asked you to stay in the bathroom, Laszio."
He stared at the broken window and door, the bloodstained carpet, and the ruins of the yard and street outside. "This is about the man who used to live here? The one who was murdered."
"Yes," said Nidhi.
He gave a small nod, looking simultaneously grateful and frightened by her honesty.
"We'll find a way to cover the damages," I said softly. If the Porters wouldn't take care of this, then I would, and to hell with the rules. There were plenty of books I could use to produce everything from gold to gemstones.
His attention flitted about, stopping briefly with Jeff, then moving to Lena and her broken sword, and finally to me. His gaze dipped to Smudge. "Your spider. Is it on fire?"
I looked down. "A little bit, yeah."
"Laszio, look at me." Nidhi moved to impose herself between him and the rest of us. "We came here because of Victor Harrison, but this fight wasn't about him. It was about us. You and your family will be safe once we're gone."
He managed a nervous smile. "No offense intended, Doctor Shah, but if that is the case, I hope you'll leave quickly."
"We will," Nidhi promised.
And once we were gone, Nicola would send someone to alter the family's memories, just as easily as a Hollywood writer reworked a script. Just as Deb was manipulating the minds of the police outside, burying the truth beneath layers of magical falsehoods.
"He's a fire-spider. His name is Smudge." I think the words surprised me as much as anyone else. Nidhi gave me a sharp look, but didn't argue when I lifted Smudge's cage to eye level. With my other hand, I grabbed the Red Hots. "I created him when I was in high school. He's saved my life several times."
I brought a candy to the edge of the cage and waited for Smudge to snatch it
up.
Laszio took a half-step closer, the fear in his eyes joined by a glimmer of
curiosity. "He eats junk food?"
"Every chance he gets," I said. "He loves chocolate, but that can get messy.
He tends to melt it, and you end up with stains all over the carpet."
Laszio looked down at the bloody, blackened carpet. "Yes. We wouldn't
want that."
He sounded so serious, and I laughed before I could stop myself. He joined in a moment later, though I think it was more a release of fear and exhaustion than humor.
"The fire," he said. "It doesn't hurt him?"
"It's how he protects himself. How he protects me and helps me to stop people like the ones who attacked your home."
"I don't understand." Laszio kept watching as Smudge devoured his treat. "I know," said Nidhi. "Neither did I, the first time I saw something like this.
You're handling it far better than I did."
I doubted that, but I didn't say anything. Instead, I returned Smudge's cage to my hip and opened Time Kings. Laszio flinched when I lifted the gun. He looked back to the hall, and I knew he was thinking about his wife and children.
"It's all right." I shoved the gun back into the pages, letting the words and images of the readers transform the weapon from an empty relic back into a fully-charged shock-gun. "This is what we do."
"Ay dios mio," he whispered. Both Nidhi and Lena were watching him very closely now, ready to intervene if he lost it. "Those creatures outside. What did they want?"
"You should see to your family," Nidhi interrupted. "Reassure them. We will be gone very soon, and I promise we'll make sure you're safe."