but what worried me most was Nick’s casual ease with everything Inderlander, and now black magic. He wasn’t a practitioner, was he?
I stood on the sidewalk waiting for Nick to get out of the cab, estimating what I had left in my wallet before putting it away. My last paycheck was dwindling. If I wasn’t careful, I’d have to send Ivy to the bank for me. I was burning it faster than usual, and I couldn’t understand why. All my expenses were less. Must be the cabs, I thought, vowing to use the bus more.
Nick had found a pair of work-faded jeans up in the belfry. They were baggy on him, held up with one of my more conservative belts; our long-departed minister had been a large man. The gray sweatshirt with the University of Cincinnati’s logo was equally outsized, and the gardening boots had been hopelessly too big. But Nick had them on his feet, clomping about like a bad Frankenstein movie. Somehow, with his tall height and casual good looks, he made slovenly seem attractive. I always just looked like a slob.
The sun wasn’t down yet, but the streetlights were on since it was cloudy. It had taken longer to get the minister’s small wardrobe into the wash than it had to get here. I held the collar of my winter coat closed against the chill air and scanned the headlight-illuminated street as Nick said a few last words to the cabbie. Nights could be chill in late spring, but I would have worn the long coat anyway to cover up the brown gingham dress I had on. It was supposed to go along with my old lady disguise. I had only worn it once before, to a mother-daughter banquet I was somehow roped into.
Nick unfolded himself out of the cab. He slammed the door shut and smacked the top of the car. The driver gave him a casual hand toss and drove away. Cars flowed around us. The street was busy in the hours of twilight when both humanity and Inderlander were in force.
“Hey,” Nick said, peering at me in the unsure light. “What happened to your freckles?”
“Uh …” I stammered, fingering my pinky ring. “I don’t have any freckles.”
Nick took a breath to say something, then hesitated. “Where’s Jenks?” he finally asked.
Flustered, I pointed across the street to the library steps with my chin. “He went ahead to check things out.” I eyed the few people filing in and out of the library. Studying on a Friday night. Some people have an insatiable desire to ruin the curve for the rest of us. Nick took my elbow, and I tugged away from him. “I can walk across the street by myself, thank you.”
“You look like an old lady,” he muttered. “Stop swinging your arms, and slow down.”
I sighed, trying to move slowly as Nick crossed in the middle of the street. Horns blew, and Nick ignored them. We were in student territory. If we had crossed at the intersection, we would have attracted attention. Even so, I was tempted to give a few one-fingered waves, but decided it might blow the old lady image. Then again, maybe not.
“Are you sure no one will recognize you?” I asked as we moved up the marble stairs and to the glass doors. Cripes, no wonder old people died. It took them twice as long to do anything.
“Yup.” He pulled the door open for me and I shuffled in. “I haven’t worked here for five years, and the only people working on Friday are the freshmen. Now hunch your back and try not to attack anyone.” I gave him a nasty smile, and he added a cheerful, “That’s better.”
Five years meant he wasn’t much older than I was. It was about what I had guessed, though it was hard to tell under the rat-induced wear and tear.
I stood in the entryway to get my bearings. I like libraries. They smell good and are quiet. The fluorescent light in the entrance looked too dim. It was usually supplemented by the natural light coming in through the big windows running the entire two stories up. The gloom of sunset dampened everything.
My gaze jerked to a blur falling from the ceiling. It was headed right for me! Gasping, I ducked. Nick clutched my arm. Thrown off balance, my heels slipped on the marble floor. Crying out, I went down. Sprawled with my legs every which way, my face burned as Jenks hovered before me, laughing. “Damn it all to hell!” I shouted. “Watch what you’re doing!”
There was a collective gasp, and everyone looked at me. Jenks hid himself in my hair, his merry laughter ticking me off. Nick bent and took my elbow. “Sorry, Grandmum,” he said loudly. He gave everyone a sheepish look. “Grandmum can’t hear very well,” he said in a conspiratorial whisper, “the old bat.” He turned to me, his face serious but his brown eyes glinting. “We’re in the library now!” he shouted. “You have to be quiet!”
Face warm enough to make toast, I mumbled something and let him help me up. There was a nervous patter of amusement, and everyone returned to whatever they were doing.
An uptight, pimply-faced adolescent rushed up to us, worried about a lawsuit, no doubt. Amid more fuss than it warranted, he ushered us to the back offices, babbling about slippery floors, that they had just been waxed, and he would talk to the janitor immediately.
I hung on Nick’s arm, moaning about my hip and playing the old lady to the hilt. The flustered kid buzzed us through a semisecure area. Red-faced, he fussed over me as he sat me down and propped my feet up on a swivel chair. The silver knife strapped to my ankle gave him a slight pause. I whispered faintly something about water, and he fled to find some. It took him three tries to get through the buzzed door. Silence descended as the door clicked shut behind him. Grinning, I met Nick’s eyes. It wasn’t exactly how we had planned it, but here we were.
Jenks came out from hiding. “Slicker than snot on a doorknob,” he said, darting up to inspect the cameras. “Ha!” he exclaimed. “They’re fake.”
Nick took my hand and drew me to my feet. “I was going to take you down through the access in the employees’ break room, but this will work.” I looked blankly at him and he flicked his eyes to a gray fire door. “The basement is through there.”
A smile curved over me as I saw the lock. “Jenks?”
“On it,” he said, dropping down and starting to tinker. He had it sprung in three seconds flat. “Here goes …” Nick murmured as he turned the knob. The door opened to show a dark stairway. Nick flicked on the lights and listened. “No alarms,” he said.
I pulled out a detection amulet and quickly invoked it. It stayed warm and green in my hand. “No silent alarms, either,” I murmured, hanging it about my neck.
“Hey,” Jenks complained. “This is first-year stuff.”
We started down. The air was cold in the narrow stairwell, with none of the comforting smell of books. Every twenty feet a bare bulb burned, sending sickly yellow beams to show the dirt in the lee of the steps. A foot-wide band of grime made a stripe on the walls to either side of me at hand height, and my lip curled. There was a banister, but I wouldn’t use it.
The way ended at an echoing dark hallway. Nick looked at me, and I glanced at my amulet. “We’re clear,” I whispered, and he flicked on the lights to illuminate a hallway with a low ceiling, the walls stark cinder block. Floor to ceiling wire gates ran down the length of the hall, doing nothing to hide the racks of books behind them.
Jenks buzzed confidently ahead of us. Heels clacking, I followed Nick to a locked wire door. The ancient-book section. While Jenks flitted in and out between the diamond-shaped holes, I laced my fingers through the mesh and stood on tiptoe, all senses soaking it in. A frown pinched my brow. It was my imagination, of course, but it seemed I could smell the magic flowing out from the racks of books, all but visible as it eddied about my ankles. The feeling of old power emanating from the locked room was as different from the smell upstairs as a chocolate kiss is to a premium Belgium sweet. Heady, rich, and oh-so-bad for you.
“So where’s that key?” I asked, knowing Jenks wouldn’t be able to shift the heavy tumblers of the older, mechanical lock. Sometimes it’s the older safeguards that work best.
Nick