without thinking. It felt soft, cold as if it had been in a refrigerator, and it tingled with a subtle, dangerous energy.
"It isnt tied off," I said quietly.
"Nor should it be," Winter said. "It is an Unraveling."
"A what?"
"An unmaking, boy. I am the unmaker, the destroyer. It is what I am. Bound within those threads is the power to undo any enchantment done. Touch the cloth to that which must be undone. Unravel the threads. It will be so."
I stared at the square cloth for a moment, Then asked quietly, " Any enchantment? Any transformation?"
"Any."
My hands started shaking. "You mean I could use this to undo what the vampires did to Susan. Just wipe it away. Make her mortal again."
"You could, Emissary." Mother Winters tone held a bone-dry amusement.
I swallowed and rose, folding up the cloth. I slipped it into my pocket, careful not to let any threads trail out. "Is this a gift?"
"No," Winter rasped. "But a necessity."
"What am I supposed to do with it?"
Mother Summer shook her head. "It is yours now, and yours to employ. We have reached the limits of how we may act. The rest is yours."
"Make haste," Winter whispered.
Mother Summer nodded. "No time remains. Be swift and wise, mortal child. Go with our blessings."
Winter withdrew her frail hands into the sleeves of her robe. "Do not fail, boy."
"Hells bells, no pressure," I muttered. I gave each of them a short bow and turned for the door. I stepped over the threshold of the cottage and said, "Oh, by the way. I apologize if we did any harm to your unicorn on the way in."
I looked back to see Mother Summer arch a brow. Winters head shifted, and I could see the gleam of light on yellow teeth. Her voice rasped, "What unicorn?"
The door shut, again of its own accord. I glowered at the wood for a moment and then muttered, "Freaking weirdo faerie biddies." I turned and started back the way I had come. The Unraveling was a cool weight in my pocket, and promised to get uncomfortably chilly if I left it there too long.
The thought of the Unraveling made me walk faster, excitement skipping through me. If what the Mothers said was true, Id be able to use the cloth to help Susan, which was something just this side of divine intervention. All I had to do was to finish up this case, and then I could go find her.
Of course, I thought sourly, finishing up this case was likely to kill me. The Mothers may have given me some insight, and a magic doily, but they sure as hell hadnt given me a freaking clue as to how to resolve thisand, I realized, they hadnt really said, "Aurora did it." I knew they had to speak the truth to me, and their statements had led me to that conclusionbut how much of it was this mysterious prohibition from direct involvement and how much of it had been another fistful of faerie trickery?
"Make haste," I rasped, trying to impersonate Winters voice. "We have reached the limits," I said, mimicking Summer. I quickened my pace, and frowned over that last little comment Winter had made. She had taken an almost palpable glee in making it, as though it had given her an opening she wouldnt otherwise have had.
What unicorn?
I gnawed over the question. If it was indeed a statement of importance, not just a passing mutter, then it had to mean something.
I frowned. It meant that there hadnt been a guardian around the little cottage. Or at least not one Mother Winter had put there.
So who had?
The answer hit me low in the gut, a sensation of physical sickness coming along with the realization. I stopped and clawed for my Sight.
I didnt get to it before Grum came out from under a veil, Elaine standing close behind him. He caught me flat-footed. The ogre drove a sledgehammer fist toward my face. There was a flash of impact, a sensation of falling, and cool earth beneath my cheek.
Then the scent of Elaines subtle perfume.
Then blackness.
Chapter Twenty-seven
I came to on the ground of that dark Nevernever wood. Spirit realm or not, I felt cold and started shivering uncontrollably. That made playing possum pretty much impossible, so I sat up and tried to take stock.
I didnt feel any new bruises or breaks, so I hadnt been pounded while I was out. It probably hadnt been long. Mother Winters Unraveling was no longer in my pocket. My