the stage at the east end of the Mall to a spot just short of the steps to the Washington Monument, the earth bulged. It swelled up like the wall had at Fagin’s, shaping itself into segment after segment of stony worm eight feet thick . . . ten feet thick . . . twelve. Bodies rolled off as it formed itself. And, horribly, some bodies remained, incorporated into its mass along with sticks and stones, purses and grass.
The earth groaned as the creature began undulating. Moving slowly toward the first elemental.
A white but detailed Drummond darted in front of her, his mouth moving. Clearly impatient, he tried to grab Lily’s arm. His hand went right through her. She didn’t feel a thing. No cold chills. Nothing.
He grimaced and beckoned fiercely.
For one more second she stared at the enormous monster of earth and stone advancing slowly toward its smaller cousin. She couldn’t do anything about elementals. Nothing. Maybe Cullen could—if he was still alive. If he healed from the concussion fast enough.
She spun and followed Drummond.
José and the other wolf who’d been harrying the demon wolf had chased it well away from the knot of people. They didn’t seem to realize yet it was time to get away. Maybe they didn’t know where to go. Someone shoved to the edge of the mob. A woman. A woman in dirty jeans and a red shirt, with a face that would make any man hunt for a cloak to throw over puddles. “Lily!” Deborah cried. “It won’t listen to me! It’s angry—terribly angry—that it was called and wasn’t fed, and it’s angry that those others invaded its territory!”
A man slipped up behind Deborah. He wore a good-quality suit, no tie, and was tall and thin, with short honey-blond hair. And—like Drummond had said—a prissy mouth. “That’s the way it goes sometimes,” Paul Chittenden said as he slid his arm around Deborah’s neck and squeezed. “Lily Yu, isn’t it? Stop right there. I can break her neck in a second.”
Lily slowed, not quite stopping, holding her hands out to demonstrate her lack of a weapon. “Scott,” she whispered. “Can you—?”
“We’re too far,” he whispered back. “If he knows what he’s doing, he could kill her before I get there.”
Chittenden applied more pressure. Deborah’s face turned bloodless. “I said stop.”
Lily did. So did Scott.
The people closest to Deborah and Chittenden had pulled back a few paces. “Hey,” said a beefy man with a crew cut. “What do you think you’re doing?”
“Stopping evil from spreading,” Chittenden said, smiling. “Do you believe in the Second Amendment, sir?”
“Yes, but—”
“So do I.” He drew a gun from inside his jacket and shot the man.
No one screamed this time. Maybe they’d overloaded on the horrors of the day. No one moved or spoke.
“Now,” Chittenden said, turning that prissy smile on Lily, the gun held casually in the hand that wasn’t choking Deborah, “we’ll have a chance to get acquainted while my pets are doing their work. So . . . do you come here often? What’s your sign? If you were stranded on a desert island—”
The woman who jumped Chittenden must have been at least sixty, and probably weighed a hundred pounds soaking wet. She belted him in the head with a purse the size of a small suitcase. He staggered, his gun-hand swinging around, his smile gone—and his attention diverted.
Scott shot forward like a bullet from a gun.
Chittenden backhanded the woman, who collapsed. And, from ten feet away, Scott leaped.
Quickly Chittenden brought his gun up. At point-blank range, he fired.
Scott smashed into Deborah, knocking both her and Chittenden to the ground.
Lily had shoved into a run the same moment as Scott. She was slower, but she got there. She got there seconds after Chittenden shoved Deborah and Scott off of him, just as he started to scramble to his feet. She got there with her weapon in hand, and she jammed it into his ear while he was still couched on one knee.
“Give me a reason,” she gritted. “Give me one tiny little reason. I’d love to blow your brains out.”
He froze.
Deborah lay on the ground, breathing hard, but stirring. Scott didn’t move.
“Hell with it,” Lily said, and reversed her weapon and struck him in the temple, hard, with the butt of her gun.
He collapsed.
She followed him down and hit him again, just to be sure. Then checked his eyelids. Oh, yeah, he was out. “Deborah, you okay?”
“Yes, I . . .” She wheezed. “Hurts, but I’m okay.”