The Shadows (Black Dagger Brotherhood, #13)(14)
The statues beyond filled her with terror. The elegant figures within the encircled acre were not actually made of stone—not in the sense that they had been carved from blocks. They were the frozen bodies of those who suffered from the same disease she had.
These were dead bodies of her sisters who had walked the path her own feet trod upon, frozen in poses that they had chosen, sealed in a fine mineral plaster that, coupled with the strange atmospheric properties of the Sanctuary, preserved them for eternity.
The trembling came over her anew as a wave—
—and once again, the quaking did not last.
This time, however, the cessation did not usher in a return to normalcy.
As if the sight of those frozen in the final stage had been some kind of inspiration for what ailed her, the large joints in her lower body locked tight, and then so did her spine, her elbows, her neck, her wrists. She became utterly fixed in place, immobile whilst fully aware, her heart continuing to beat, her eyes undimmed, her panicked mind hyper-aware.
With a shout, she attempted to shake herself free of it all, tried to pull her legs up, fought to move her feet, her arms, anything.
There was but a slight give on the left side, and that rendered her off balance. Upon a pitch and spin, she landed face-first on the ground, the fine filaments of grass getting into her nose, her mouth, her eyes.
Knowing she was in danger of suffocating, she put all the strength she had into wrenching her head to the side so that her air passages were clear.
And that would prove to be the last move she made.
From her vantage point, she was a camera overturned, the odd-angle view of the Sanctuary like something projected upon a screen: blades of grass close-up and big as trees, with the Reflecting Pool’s temple far in the distance, nothing but the roof showing.
“Help…” she called out. “Help…”
Straining against her bones, she tried to remember the last time she’d seen any of her sisters up here. It had been …
Too many nights ago. And even then, no one came this far into the landscape, the cemetery being rarely visited at its peripheral site save for sacred remembrance rituals—that were not due to occur for months.
“Help!”
With a colossal pull, she fought against her body. But all that transpired was a twitch of her hand, the fingers dragging against the lawn.
That was it.
Tears flooded her eyes and her heart hammered and she wished absurdly that she had not e’er asked for an expiration date …
From out of the depths of her emotions, an image of Trez’s face—his almond-shaped black eyes, his cropped black hair, his dark skin—came to the forefront of her mind.
She should have said her good-bye sooner.
“Trez…” she moaned against the grass.
As her consciousness receded, it was a door that shut softly, but solidly, blocking out the world around her …
… such that she was unaware, sometime later, when a small, silent figure approached her from behind, floating above the grass, a brilliant light spilling out from beneath flowing black robes.
SIX
SALVATORE’S RESTAURANT, OUTSIDE OF LITTLE ITALY, CALDWELL
With a curse, iAm ended the call that had just come through on his cell phone and braced his upper body on the counter in front of him. After a moment of arrhythmia, he yanked on his wool peacoat, the black one with the forty in a hidden pocket on the left side and an eight-inch hunting knife stitched into the lining on the right.
He might need the weapons.
“Chef? You okay?”
He glanced across the industrial kitchen at Antonio diSenza, his executive chef. “Sorry. Yeah. I gotta go—and I already started the mise en place.” He picked his cell phone back up. “You can finish it tomorrow.”
Antonio took off his toque and leaned a hip against the massive twelve-burner stovetop. All the equipment used for dinner service was cleaned up, the lingering steam from the dishwashers making the forty-by-twenty-foot kitchen seem like something out of the Amazon rain forest.
Too quiet, iAm thought. And the brightly lit place smelled like bleach instead of basil.
“Thank you, chef. Do you want me to stew the tomatoes before I leave?”
“It’s late. Go home. Good service tonight.”
Antonio wiped his face off with a blue-and-white dish towel. “Thanks to you, chef.”
“Lock up for me?”
“Anything you want.”
With a nod, iAm left the kitchen and cut through the tiled delivery hall to the back exit. Outside, two of his waiters were loitering around their cars and smoking, their tuxedo jackets off, their red bow ties loose and hanging from their open collars.
“Chef,” one of them said, straightening.
The other immediately came to attention. “Chef.”
Technically, he was more boss than chef here at Sal’s, but he did do a lot of the cooking and recipe R & D himself, and the staff respected him for it. Hadn’t always been that way. When he’d first stepped in to take over the Caldwell institution, he had not exactly been welcomed. Everyone from the waiters to the chefs to the busboys had assumed he was an African-American, and the deep pride and tradition of Italian ownership, cooking, and culture would have worked against anyone who didn’t have Sicilian blood in his veins.