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"I still don't see why he gave up Mount Taylor."
"He didn't give it up," Ruthie said, and something in her voice told me the truth.
"Sawyer took it from him."
Luther's chin dipped toward his chest in acknowledgment.
"Guy's going to be so happy to help me raise the man who stole his magic mountain," I muttered. Indians are understandably touchy on the subject of land grabbing.
"Sani will help you. He'll have to."
"Why?"
"When your journey is complete, you'll know all you need to know."
I really hated it when Ruthie said s.h.i.+t like that.
I didn't bother to quiz her about what I'd learn from the journey. Even if she knew, she wouldn't tell me. The journey was part of the . . . journey.
"What does Sani mean?" I asked.
"Old One."
"What did they call him when he was young?"
"Sani was never young."
I opened my mouth then shut it again. I really didn't want to know.
"What's wrong?" Ruthie asked. "I figured you'd grab your bag and be out the door before the location left my mouth."
I'd thought I would be, too. But while I wouldn't pose questions about my journey, I did have questions about something else.
"I have a little problem," I said, then lowered myself to my knees and dragged the hissing, spitting kitten from beneath the mattress.
Ruthie stared at it for a minute then lifted her gaze to mine. "Got no time for a pet."
"This was a baby ten minutes ago."
Luther's bushy brows lifted. "Don't say."
"Do."
Ruthie snorted. "Well. How'd that happen?"
I let the kitten skitter back beneath the bed and reached for the blanket, holding the soft material up so she could see the truth. "Get the picture?"
Luther's eyes widened. "No foolin'?"
"You didn't know?"
"No."
I wasn't sure I believed her. Ruthie existed these days in her own personal heaven. There the sun always shone and it never, ever rained. She watched over children who'd left this earth too soon, usually violently, giving them extra love and attention before sending them on their way into the light.
She also directed our side of the war from beyond. I might carry the t.i.tle leader of the light, but the true leader was Ruthie and always would be.
However, sometimes she kept things from us. She had her reasons, or so she said. She also manipulated us, lied to us, and moved us around like living chess pieces. At times I'd hated her for it. Eventually I'd come to understand she'd do anything to save the world, because so would I.
"You'd have no clue who her mother might be?" That was bothering me more and more. The mother. Who was she? Where was she? Most importantly . . .
What was she?
"None," Ruthie answered.
"Huh." I wasn't sure what I was going to do about that. As far as I knew, Sawyer didn't have a little black book.
"We're going to have to work something out for the child," Ruthie said. "You need to go to Sani. He no longer leaves Inyan Kara."
"Cursed?" Until recently Sawyer had been unable to leave Navajo land as a man. His whack-job of an evil spirit b.i.t.c.h mother had cursed him. No sooner had the curse been broken, allowing him to walk on two feet instead of four anywhere that he wanted, than I'd had to kill him. Talk about bad luck.
"Yes." Ruthie shook her head, and Luther's curls bobbed. "No. Well, you'll see."
I loved it when I knew exactly what I was getting into.
"What am I going to do with-?" I jabbed my thumb toward the bed.
"Protect her."
Sheesh, I wished someone would sing a new tune.
"How?"
"You need a powerful ally who's been fighting Nephilim for a long time, who's very, very good at killing. Someone you trust. Someone who would do anything you asked just because you asked and would die before he let you down."
"Ah, h.e.l.l," I muttered. "Not him."
CHAPTER 3.
"Yes," Ruthie said. "Him. Take the child to Jimmy."
Jimmy Sanducci and I had history-a lot of it. We'd loved and lost each other and then- I wasn't quite sure what to call what had happened lately. I still loved him, but I kind of thought he hated me. I couldn't blame him, but it still hurt. Declaring to the universe that I also loved Sawyer had not helped the situation.
Jimmy and Sawyer did not care for each other. Asking Sanducci to watch over Sawyer's child was going to be as much fun as asking your boss for a raise right after you wrecked the company car.
"There's gotta be an easier way."
"In your experience, Lizbeth, is there ever an easier way?"
"No."
"You can't send another to Inyan Kara. You have to be the one to go."
As far as I knew, only skinwalkers could raise ghosts. I'd become one the first time I slept with Sawyer. Besides being psychometric, with latent channeling abilities, I was also a s.e.xual empath-I absorbed supernatural powers through s.e.x. Talk about a mood killer.
While I supposedly had the power to raise ghosts, I hadn't been able to raise Sawyer-another check mark on our "why we need a skinwalker" list. I hoped Sani could reveal what I was doing wrong.
"I'll take Faith with me," I said.
"Not a good idea." Luther's great big hand went up, forestalling my inevitable why? "Sawyer stole his mountain, child. You think Sani's gonna forgive that? You think he's gonna let the opportunity for revenge pa.s.s him by?"
"I can protect her."
"Maybe you can; maybe you can't. You don't know what kind of magic the Old One has found on top of that Lakota mountain. You wanna take the chance he's strong enough to go through you and get to her?"
"Fine." I sighed. "I'll leave her with Luther."
"He's a child himself."
"Don't tell him that."
Ruthie's lips curved. "I've brought up plenty of kids, Lizbeth. Along the way I did learn a thing or two about teenage boys and their egos."
"You could watch her. Just stay . . ." I waved vaguely at Luther's body. "In there."
But Ruthie was already shaking Luther's head. "I got children back home that need me. Can't just leave 'em on their own when they died the way they did."
"Jimmy isn't going to like this," I said.
"He don't like much lately. What's one more thing for his list?"
Ruthie was right. I couldn't leave a baby with a teenager-no matter how responsible Luther was, no matter how vicious he could become-and the only other person left alive with whom I'd trust a shape-s.h.i.+fting infant was Sanducci.
"Where is he?" I asked.
"The Badlands."
I narrowed my eyes. "Convenient."
"Coincidence or fate?" Luther's shoulders lifted then lowered. "You be the judge."
"Why's he there?"
"Nest of Iyas."
"Some type of vamp?"
Jimmy was a dhampir-the son of a vampire and a woman. His father had been an a.s.shole-I mean a strega-translation, "Italian vampire witch." No one knew what his mother had been. Probably lunch.
Dhampirs can sense vampires, and they're very good at ending them. Jimmy was ultra-fast, super-strong, and d.a.m.n hard to kill. Once again, due to s.e.xual empathy, so was I.
"Lakota storm monster," Ruthie explained. "Possesses a hunger food can't satisfy. Only blood."
Sounded like a vamp to me. "What else?"
"Wherever they walk, winter follows. They wear the heads of their victims as trophies."
"How exactly do these things blend in?"
Luther's lips curved. "They're human when they choose to be. Only in battle do they become Iyas, faceless monsters of the storm."
"How do you kill them?"
"Sunlight."
For a vampire storm monster, I guess that made sense.
"We'll leave this afternoon," I said. I was going to have to bring Luther along. I couldn't handle Faith by myself.
"Why not now?"
"I promised Megan I'd be here for her daughter's birthday party."
"Tell her you can't make it."
"No," I said firmly.
"Lizbeth-"
"No," I repeated. "I won't stay for the whole party but I am going."
I'd broken one promise to Megan. I hadn't taken care of her husband. Instead I'd gotten him killed. I'd sworn not to break another promise to her again if I could help it.
Max Murphy had been my partner. He'd trusted my "instincts." He'd wound up dying because of them, because of me.
I hadn't been able to stomach remaining a cop after that so I'd taken a job as a bartender in the tavern owned by the widow. It was the least I could do.
"All right," Ruthie agreed. "How long until you reach Inyan Kara?"
"A day or so. I'll have to drive."