The Night Country (The Hazel Wood #2)(5)
She used a pinky to push the veneers delicately into place, turning her attention back on me. “Let me start again. I’m not trying to make an enemy of you. I want you here because Hinterland blood is precious, more now than ever. Despite what you might think, you’re still a part of us. And I need you here for us, the way we’re here for you.”
I stared at her. Half the creatures gathered up those stairs would knife me for a hot dog. “Where is this coming from? Why now?”
“There’ve been some deaths lately.”
“Some … deaths?” She said it like you’d say, Some rain.
“Three since the beginning of spring.”
“Who died? How did they—”
“Killed. The Prince of the Wood first. Then Abigail.”
The prince I’d known a little. Aggressively handsome, with hair like a pony’s mane and a brick of urgently white teeth. Abigail, though. I felt shitty that I couldn’t even put a face to the name.
“And a third was killed last night: Hansa the Traveler.”
I startled. I’d met Hansa in the Hinterland. I knew she was in New York, but the last I’d heard she was living with two older ex-Stories, attending a charter school on the Lower East Side. The news shocked me into forgetting who I was talking to. “But Hansa’s a kid. And she’s actually got—she had a chance. Who would hurt Hansa?”
“What does being a kid have to do with it?”
“It’s horrible,” I said quietly. Hansa had been a little girl when I met her in the Halfway Wood. The moon’s granddaughter. “What happened? How did they die?”
Shadows moved beneath the blue of Daphne’s eyes. Looking at them too long felt like staring into infested water. “Death is death.”
“What does that mean?”
She ignored me, turning toward the door, imperious. “Now you know. And now we’ve made peace. Come on, come be with your people.”
I peered through the glass at the staircase behind it, water-stained and disappearing into the shadows of the second floor. With a longing as palpable as thirst, I did not want to go up there.
“Thanks for telling me. But I can’t right now. I’ve gotta work.” I tried out the lie for the second time that day.
“No, you don’t.” She opened the door. “Your last shift was Thursday, and you work again tomorrow. But you don’t work today.”
I couldn’t say what my face looked like when she turned around to smile at me.
“I take care of my people, even the prodigal ones. Don’t worry about a thing, princess. I’ve always got eyes on you.”
3
I followed her upstairs, because what else could I do?
Run. Hide. The thoughts were listless.
There is nowhere I am free from them.
The words came unbidden, a hard spike of realization that set my blood to humming. Nauseous with nerves, I walked into the tea-scented air of the psychic’s shop.
I’d learned quickly who to avoid back when I was coming here each week. The scary ones weren’t the ones covered in ink to their eyes, or flipping a knife over their knuckles like they were in a bad prison movie. They were that kind-eyed man in the well-cut suit, the faintest tint of blue in his cropped black beard. That boy with the hard-baked smile, no taller than me. The steel-haired woman who whispered that she had a telephone line open to the Spinner, who was going to let us back in any day.
My heart squeezed when I saw Sophia sitting cross-legged on a window seat in the back, next to a guy with the prettiest lips I’d ever seen. I’d been kind of a shit friend since spring: giving up the Hinterland meant pulling away from her, too. Being here after months away felt the same, but different. The air was lightly electrified, bodies shifting like cattle before a storm. Heads dipped, mouths pressed close to ears to whisper.
They were looking at me. Flatly, or with suspicion. I didn’t think I was imagining it. When I reached Sophia, she did a double take.
“What the hell are you doing here?” she muttered.
I blinked, surprised. “Hi to you, too.”
Her eyes stayed hard, but she linked an arm through mine.
“What’s with everyone?” I asked, low. “What did I do?”
“Most things have nothing to do with you.”
After talking to Daphne I was uneasy; now my skin was starting to crawl. “You heard about the deaths?”
“Later.” She spat the word like a bullet.
I wasn’t going to get anything else out of her. I looked to the front of the room, where a fortyish guy had taken the floor. I guess Hansa had been the first order of business; the rest of the meeting would play out like they always did, like any support group meeting anywhere.
The man up front was a stranger, but I could tell at a glance he was one of the scary ones. He was the exact size and shape of a nightmare: the man in the alley, the body crouched over yours in the dark. It was hot up here but he wore a dirty stocking cap anyway, and too-big overalls.
“That’s how I ended up here again,” he was saying. “Another woman—it’s always a damned woman. It becomes hard to hide it, too. Every time one of them makes me do it, it’s move on, start again. I want to live somewhere small, somewhere I can be alone. Like it was back home. Just me, and a woman when I want one. But they’re different here, everything’s different here, and every time I have to hide it.”