Cape Storm Page 0,106
and spattered in an arc around her. She willed away the Miss America costume in favor of her more usual tailored pantsuit - in bloodred, not neon.
She turned her back before Moira's pallid, dying body toppled.
Bad Bob was holding her bottle, and unlike Moira, that evil old bastard knew every trick.
"Freeze until I tell you to move again, Rahel," he said. "That was a goddamn stupid waste." There was no genuine emotion left in him, not even for his own child. He saw it as a waste, all right - because Moira hadn't measured up, in the crisis. "Jo. Come out."
"Yeah, not likely!" I yelled. I tried to slow down my breathing, order my thoughts. "This isn't going well for you, Bob. Maybe you should just give up now." He laughed. "No."
He still had the book, and even though he hadn't bothered to bring it out yet, he also had the spear, the Unmaking. I hadn't even managed to free Rahel, dammit, and if his daughter's bloody end hadn't been enough to distract him, I couldn't think of much else to try.
"Fair enough," I said. "Want to call it a draw? Lose/lose?"
"I want to call the game," he said. "On account of the death of the world." I'd have liked to think he was just being grandiose, but there was a dark undertone to his voice now. Seeing Moira die had destroyed his fun, apparently; he was ready to just skip right to the end, which in his book was and then the universe blew up. The end.
"That really what you want?" I slowly got up, hopping on my good right leg, and braced myself on the boulder I'd been using for sparse cover. "Come on, Bob. If the world ends, so do you. I thought you wanted to destroy the Wardens and savor your victory first."
"As long as we all go out together, I'm fine with it," he said. I expected him to reach for the Ancestor Scriptures, but instead, he stretched out his hand, which disappeared in a tingle of blue sparks and reemerged holding a thick, matte-black cylinder like a spear, sharp on both ends.
The Unmaking. Its presence set up a horrible crawling repulsion in me, an itching all up and down my nervous system. I wasn't sure if the scientists were right, and it was stable antimatter, or if it was something even more exotic, like dark matter. Whatever it was, it did not have a place here, not in this world.
It was wrong.
It was also radioactive as hell, and it had almost destroyed me the last time I'd come anywhere near it. Now I was so closely connected to David, sharing the same well of power, that I didn't dare risk it again. If I was poisoned, he might be, too. And through him, half the Djinn.
Bad Bob rested one end of the shaft against the stones at his feet and leaned on it. The thing was a little taller than his head now, wickedly pointed. "You really bamboozled me, you know. I never thought you'd come alone. Never thought David would let you."
"He didn't," I said. "Nobody lets me do anything. You know that." He nodded, but the look in his eyes was far, far away. "I liked you," he said. "Back in the day. Before things went wrong."
"I liked you, too." I hadn't, exactly, but I'd admired him. We'd all admired him. "I know you took the Demon Mark on for the right reasons - you wanted to save lives. You just weren't strong enough, in the end."
"Neither were you," he said. We weren't accusing each other now; there wasn't any heat to this exchange at all, just simple fact. "You'd have hatched out a Demon in the end, if you hadn't gotten all tangled up with the Djinn. But look what it did for you - all the things you've seen, all you've done. I made you stronger." He wanted my approval.
I felt a hot breath of wind, then a gust off the ocean. Something was stirring out there.
It blew my hair into a writhing cloud, and waves crashed the rocks at my back, dousing me in spray.
"Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger," I said. "And whatever does kill you - "
"Makes you invincible, if you're lucky," Bad Bob said, and smiled. I sensed a kind of good-bye in that smile, because it was real. Not a manic stretch of his lips, but a genuine expression of feeling and warmth. "You'll