Part 1 (1/2)

A Dream of Stone & Shadow.

By Marjorie M. Liu.

Prologue.

It began with a knife in the heart. As usual. A fine sharp blade needling deep into the beating muscle, stilling it with a stab and cut. Charlie did not cry out. There was no real use. He was accustomed to death, and the price was not too high, given the exchange. He simply closed his eyes and laid himself down, let darkness creep in until he died.

Only then was it safe to dream.

It was always dark where Mrs. Kreer put her. Damp, too. Emma did not like to imagine what made her backside and legs moist as she curled up against the wall to rest. Andrew said it was p.i.s.s-that this place was a regular s.h.i.+t-hole, and that they put her here because she was s.h.i.+t, too.

She wrapped her arms around her knees, hugging them tight to her chest. She could feel the cold cement through her blue jeans and rocked in place, hoping to keep her backside from getting numb. She did not want to stand up; it might bring too much attention to her. In the darkness-this heavy, black, and suffocating darkness-things could hide that she would never see coming. Sometimes she thought she heard, over in the corner, scuffling. A tiny sc.r.a.pe and scrabble. Maybe the brush and flutter of wings or cloth. But she could not see enough to be sure of what moved beyond the circle of her tiny s.p.a.ce. Not in this darkness. She couldn't even see her hands. Andrew had put a towel at the foot of the bas.e.m.e.nt door, taped up the edges to keep out the light, until all Emma had left was her mind, the visions and colors that were her thoughts. That was all she was in this place.

Emma liked to imagine herself in different places, clinging feverishly to visions taken from glimpses of the outside. Like trees. She loved the trees. Those were real. Sometimes, when Andrew was slow setting up the cameras, Sarah would lean backwards on the bed and peer out the crack in the blinds and see them, tall and green, cast in sunlight.

Everything else-pictures from the magazines, women who Mrs. Kreer wanted Emma to imitate-she thought they might be real, but she could not be sure. She was not sure of anything, not unless she could touch, smell or taste it. Darkness was real, tangible. It had fingers buried in her hair. It traveled into her lungs with every breath she took.

Mrs. Kreer was real, too. So was her son, Andrew.

Emma did not remember much else that was real, except for her mother. But it had been a long time since she had seen her, and Emma thought she might be dead. She did not remember blood, but she remembered hearing screams from a distance. A loud bang. Emma did not like to think about that. It was not real.

The scuffling sounds in the corner of the bas.e.m.e.nt grew louder. Emma pressed her lips together. No crying for her. Andrew liked tears. He liked it when she was afraid.

But she still squeaked when a low voice said, ”Emma.”

The voice was so soft that she could not tell if it was a man or woman, and she was not sure she cared. Only, that the darkness around her had finally begun to pay attention, and still she could not see, could not fight-could not fight this, not when fists and kicks and teeth meant nothing against the two adults upstairs, who had finally taught her to obey.

”Emma,” said the voice again, and this time she thought it was male. Which was worse. The voice was a thing, a cloud, disembodied words floating like spirits. A ghost. She was listening to a ghost.

She squeaked again, pus.h.i.+ng up hard against the cold wall, unmindful of the damp. She wrapped her arms around her head and shut her eyes tight. She thought she heard a sigh, but her heart hammered so loud in her ears it was impossible to say.

”Please,” whispered the ghost, and the pain in his voice scared her almost as much as his presence. ”Please, don't be afraid. I'm here to help you.”

Emma said nothing. She felt something warm pa.s.s over the top of her head, and it felt like what she remembered of summer, fresh and green and lovely. The air around her mouth suddenly tasted so clear and clean, she thought for one minute she was outside, in the woods, in the gra.s.s and sunlight and sharp air. Emma opened her eyes. Nothing. Darkness.

The ghost said, ”Emma. Emma, do you know where you are?”

”No,” Emma mumbled, finally finding the strength to speak. The ghost, the darkness, had not hurt her yet. That could change, but until then, she would try to be brave. She would try very hard.

”There are trees,” she added. ”I see them sometimes.”

”Good,” said the ghost, and this time Emma did not have to try so hard not to be afraid. His voice was strong and soft-a voice like the heroes had in the cartoons she watched so long ago. She loved those heroes.

”Who are you?” she asked him.

”A friend,” he replied, and again Emma felt warmth upon her head, moving slowly down her face. Soothing, like sunlight. She closed her eyes and pretended it was the sun.

The bas.e.m.e.nt door rattled. Emma heard tape rip away. Lines of light appeared above her at the top of the stairs. She turned and looked and saw the outline of a man beside her. She could not see his face, but he was very large. For a moment she was afraid again, but that was nothing to her fear of Andrew and Mrs. Kreer, and she whispered, ”Help me.”

”I will,” the shape said, but Emma did not see his mouth move. She looked closer and thought he had no mouth, no eyes. Faceless. His entire body was nothing but a lighter shade of night. An imprint.

”Andrew's coming,” Emma said.

”I won't leave you,” he replied.

She begged. ”Don't let him touch me.”

The ghost said nothing. Emma felt warmth upon her face, and then, quiet: ”I'll be right here with you.”

”Please,” she said, ”I want my mommy.”

”Emma-”

The door opened. Emma s.h.i.+elded her eyes. Andrew stood silhouetted in the light: narrow and lean, tall and strong. His hair stood up off his head in spikes.

”Time to get you cleaned up,” he said, and his voice was not soft, but hard instead; not strong, but thready, with a sharp edge. Emma looked into the darkness beside her, but the ghost was gone. She swallowed hard. Tried not to cry.

And then warmth collected at the back of her neck and she heard, ”I'm here,” and when Andrew said her name in a bad way, she stood up, still with the sun at her back, and found the strength to hobble up the stairs into the light.

Chapter One.

The hunt was on.

Aggie had a gun chafing her ribs and a very panicked man at her side as she drove ninety miles an hour down a residential backstreet, narrowly missing the jutting b.u.mpers of badly parked vehicles, the slow moving bodies of several elderly men out for a stroll, and one very large garbage can that truly rolled out of nowhere and which required a quick jerk on the wheel, sending Aggie's little red Miata spinning deliriously into an empty intersection. She pulled hard on the emergency brake-the tires squealed; the world spun. The car slammed to a stop. Her partner made a choking sound.

Perfect.

”Oh, G.o.d,” said Quinn, clutching his chest.

”They're coming,” Aggie snapped, rolling down the window. She clicked off the safety on her .22, but kept the gun in its rig. She needed her hands free, and Quinn was the better shot. ”Yo, did you hear me? They're almost here, Quinn. Are you ready?”

He made gagging sounds. Aggie wondered if that greasy lunch at Tahoe Joe's was going to make a repeat appearance. The Miata's leather seats were not vomit friendly. But then her vision s.h.i.+fted and she glimpsed Quinn's immediate future, and puke was not involved.

But death was.

Aggie undid Quinn's seatbelt and reached across him to open his door. ”Gotta move, gotta move,” she murmured, still with the future rolling quick inside her head. They had less than a minute; already she could hear the roar of a powerful engine gunning down a nearby road. So much for a quiet neighborhood. So much for a peaceful life.

”I'm going to kill you,” Quinn said, wiping spit from his mouth. ”It's the humane thing to do.”

”Keep talking, little man,” Aggie replied, and shoved him from the car. Quinn was not the most graceful person in the world, but he managed to keep his feet. He gave her a dirty look, which to anyone but Aggie would have felt menacing-those dark eyes, that wild bushy mountain man hair. He was not quite five feet tall-but his extremely short stature meant nothing when he had that expression on his face. Quinn was a law unto himself.

He leaned against the inside of the Miata's open door and reached inside his leather jacket for his gun. He hesitated before drawing the weapon. ”Why aren't you getting out of the car?”