Spells Of Blood And Kin - Part 23
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Part 23

But Gus smiled and slapped him on the arm and said, "You're Greek, right?"

He nodded.

"I was in Greece during the first Balkan War," she said and laughed. "I was on the Turkish side, though."

"I didn't know women fought in that war."

"Women fight in every war," Gus said. "Men don't always notice."

She was quiet for a while. Nick held still.

"It's something we can do," Gus said. "Remember that if you need it. Join the Legion etrangere or the nearest available subst.i.tute. Vive la mort, vive la guerre."

"This is crazy," Nick said for the fiftieth time, and, helplessly, he began to cry.

"Hey," said Gus. "Hey. Here, wipe your face. You don't want to look all messed up in front of the witch."

"We're going to see her?"

"We're going to see her. As soon as I think I can do it without hitting her."

MAY 26.

WANING GIBBOUS.

Saint Joseph's Hospital. Lissa stood just within the doors, struck hard by the memory of Baba on the gurney with her face slack and the blood already pooling in her veins.

If she had been home a few hours earlier, that day a month ago, she might have come in through those doors with a baba who was still living. Might have been able to say a real good-bye. Might even have seized a few more months for Baba. A few more years.

A family came in behind her, and she stumbled out of the way, shaking her head. She dug into her bag, closed her hand around the doll within its wrapping of scarf, and went to the admission desk.

They made her wait for thirty minutes, but finally a nurse took her through into the emergency ward, past rows of curtained cubicles and a few beds parked in the hall. A boy in a wheelchair spun himself in bored circles. A woman wept quietly.

"Mr. Volkov's almost ready to go," the nurse said. "You've brought him a change of clothes?"

She drew back a curtain. Lissa stopped short.

"They told me you'd been in an accident," she said.

Maksim smiled sleepily with the side of his face that was not scuffed raw. "I walked in front of a truck," he said.

"On purpose?" Lissa said.

Maksim laughed as if Lissa had been joking. He pushed back the coverlet. "My clothes?"

Lissa was going to ask what had happened to his others, but she could see the answer: deep sc.r.a.pes marked the entire right side of his body that she could see around the hospital gown, all the way down below his knee. His right wrist was in plaster, and his hand bandaged.

He slid stiffly from the bed and took the bundle she pa.s.sed him: the T-shirt he'd left at her house, laundered, and a pair of cargo shorts she'd picked up at Old Navy on the way over.

Lissa waited outside the curtain with the nurse while Maksim dressed himself.

"Someone close to him should keep an eye on him," the nurse said softly, watching Lissa.

"Of course," Lissa said blankly. She was wondering if her eggs would show up on a tox screen. Probably not. Even if they were superstrong compared to the last batch-strong enough to make Maksim unaware of his surroundings.

"The witness apparently said he just wasn't looking when he stepped into the road. But still, someone should watch him. Okay?"

"Okay," Lissa said. For a moment she wasn't sure how those things went together, and then she understood: the nurse was hinting that maybe Maksim hadn't stepped into the road by accident.

Nothing she could say seemed adequately rea.s.suring. "Okay," she repeated.

From the other side of the curtain, an intake of breath, which could have been laughter or a sound of pain, made Lissa fairly certain that Maksim had heard everything; but when he nudged the curtain back with his cast, he nodded politely at the nurse and thanked her for her care.

In the waiting room, Maksim went outside while Lissa called a taxi. He paced carefully. When Lissa joined him, he said, "My eggs were broken."

"There's more at home; I made lots this time."

"Koldun'ia..."

"Yes?"

"I did not see it," he said. "The truck."

"I didn't think you were trying to kill yourself."

"The nurse thought I was. I told her I was sick. Hepat.i.tis, so they would be careful of my blood."

"But you weren't."

"No. I was only stupid."

"Because of my eggs," Lissa said. Her fault. When she'd been so pleased with getting the recipe right this time.

"Because of my nature," he said. "Because I must do something to make myself safe, and whatever I do, there is always a price, only this one is higher than before, and I am afraid."

He said it simply, without shame, and he did not look at her.

Lissa saw the cab approaching. She held the door while he gingerly climbed in, and then she followed him in and gave the cabbie her own address.

"I'll take you home in a bit," she said, "but I didn't think to bring any eggs with me."

He laughed a little and winced. "They broke all over me when I fell. I still cannot think."

"I can make you some food too. You've been at Saint Joe's for hours. You must be ready to chew your own arm off."

Maksim shuddered. "No ... no, thank you, koldun'ia."

Lissa watched bars of sun and shadow slide over the sc.r.a.ped side of his face and the eye that slowly closed.

She resolved to do it.

A moment later, she'd changed her mind.

Break Law? When she didn't know the penalty? On behalf of a man she'd known only a month? She owed him something on behalf of Baba, and maybe something more because she hadn't been more careful to warn him about the eggs, but how much?

He might be pitiful now, but he had not always been. He had done terrible things. He hadn't told her any of them.

He was sleeping now, with his head tilted back against the cab seat, his breath whistling quietly between his teeth. The near side of his lip was swollen. Lissa didn't think she'd ever seen him without an injury of some kind.

She paid the cabbie and tried to help Maksim out; he waved off her hand and heaved himself unsteadily up and onto the walk.

He followed her in, a little too close, dumb and blinking. She led him into the kitchen and microwaved some frozen chicken noodle soup for him.

She watched him drag his spoon through the bowl without taking a bite.

"Aren't you normally kind of a big eater?"

He nodded, shrugged.

"Look, if it's not good, I can get you something else. I didn't even make this; it was one of the church ladies."

"It is only that I have no hunger," he said and then ate a big bite as if to oblige her.

Lissa went about packing up two dozen eggs, wrapping them in two layers of paper bags and then a plastic one. She'd made a lot this month, but she hadn't counted on so many of them being hit by a truck.

A truck, for Christ's sake, and here she was wondering why Maksim had lost his appet.i.te.

She came back into the kitchen to see Maksim curled against the wall, with his plastered hand sheltered against his chest. He might have been sleeping.

"I'm thinking you ought to have someone give you a hand for a day or two. Your friend's name is Augusta, right? How do I get hold of her?"

Maksim, without opening his eyes, said, "She does not have a telephone. But she will come to me in any case."

"How will she know to do that?" Lissa asked.

"She will find the boy, or she will not. Either way, she will want to tell me."

"But how do you know?"

Maksim jolted up, spilling his soup, and began to laugh, a sweet and slightly mad sound. "She is nearly here," he said. "You may ask her yourself. And I would tell you to put away your breakables, only I do not think there is time."

MAY 26.

WANING GIBBOUS.

"He's here," Gus said, seizing Nick by the wrist.

Nick already knew. The good smell. It was stronger, and there was blood in it. He edged up the walk behind Gus, nostrils and eyes wide, cataloging. Lilacs; a tree with nuts growing on it, like the one near the patio at the Cammy; someone cooking Indian food a few doors down. And something else.

He elbowed Gus in the hip.

"I know," she muttered. "I know that stink." The other smell, the storm smell, she meant. She didn't tell him how she knew it.

It did not belong to Maksim Volkov, of that much Nick was certain. And it did not exactly smell like a storm, but that was the closest thing Nick could find to it in his nascent library of scents. It was the kind of smell that made his hairs rise, made him want to check the horizon.

It came, he discovered, from a girl.

She was his own age or thereabouts. Long fair hair in braids; round-cheeked, pink, plump. She looked like a Swiss girl in a b.u.t.ter ad, except that she was not smiling or wearing a frilly blouse, and she was blocking the doorway.

"Maksim's been expecting you," she said coolly.

Gus, despite all the whiskey, stood squarely in her heavy boots and crossed her arms. "You must be the witch."

"You may call me koldun'ia," the witch said.

"Where is he? What did you do to him?" Gus said. Her hands fisted in the fabric of her sleeves. Nick felt his own knotting in response.

"Nothing," the witch said. "He'll be okay. He walked in front of a truck." Her eyes stayed level on Gus. Her breathing was even, though Nick could see the pulse beating in her neck.

For a second, Gus only stared back.

Then she bulled forward, tossing the witch away from the door like she weighed no more than a child, and disappeared into the house.

Nick followed. The witch had landed sprawling in her hallway, back against the stairs. She was coughing.

"Are you okay?" Nick said, lifting her easily to her feet. He could tell she wasn't really that light, but it didn't make a difference to him, the way he was now, any more than it had to Gus. He steadied the witch and tugged her tank top back into place over her bra straps and got another lungful of that crazy smell.

She rubbed a hand over the reddening bruise on her arm and nodded.

"Sorry about that. Gus is afraid of you," Nick said.

"She should be," the witch said, shaking off Nick's hands and heading away down the hall.