human. The only way for a human witch to get that much power was to bargain with things not human. I hadnât counted on that. None of us had.
He was talking to me, but I hadnât heard. My mind was screaming, âLeave! Leave now!â But if I did that, Alistair was still free to kill his wife and torture other women. Me leaving would keep me safe, but it wouldnât help our clients. It was one of those moments when I had to decide, was I going to earn my paycheck or not.
One thing I did know. The guys in the van needed to know what Iâd found out. âThe ward isnât to keep things out, is it, Alistair? Though it will keep out other powers. The ward is to keep anyone else from sensing how much power youâve got in here.â My voice sounded breathy as if I was having trouble breathing.
He looked at me then, and for the first time I saw something in his eyes that wasnât pleasant or smiling. For an instant the monster was there in those brown eyes. âI should have known youâd sense it,â he said. âMy little Merry, with her sidhe eyes, hair, and skin. If you were tall and willowy, youâd pass for sidhe.â
âSo Iâve been told,â I said.
He held his hand out to me. I reached for his hand, but I had to reach through the power in the room, like pushing my hand through an invisible, skin-tingling thickness. His fingers touched mine, and a jolt of energy like static jumped between us. He laughed and wrapped his hand around mine. I forced myself not to pull back, but I couldnât make myself smile. I was having too much trouble breathing through the power. Iâd lived in places so full of power, the walls groaned with it, but this power had been allowed to fill the space available like water until there was no air space left. Alistair probably thought he was a big, powerful witch to be able to call this much power, but he was a baby witch if he couldnât control it better than this. A lot of people can call power. Calling is not the measure of your strength as a practitioner. Itâs what you can do with the power that counts. Though as he pulled me, gently, through the brush of the hovering energy, I did wonder what he was doing with all this magic. He might be wasting a lot of it just letting it swirl around, but you donât get this much energy without having some idea of what youâre doing and some plan of what to do with it.
My voice sounded strange even to me, strained, and breathy. âThe living room is full of magic, Alistair. What are you going to do with all of it?â I hoped everyone in the van was getting this.
âLet me show you,â he said. We were at the closed door in the left-hand wall.
âWhatâs behind the door?â I asked. It was the only door visible from the entrance. There was an open hallway that led from the rear of the living room farther into the house, and an open entranceway into the kitchen. It was the only closed door, and if the guys had to come save me, I didnât want them wandering around. I wanted them to come straight in and get me out.
âLetâs not pretend, Merry. We know why youâre here, why weâre both here. Itâs the bedroom.â He opened the door, and it was the bedroom. It was red from the four-poster bed to the drapery that covered every wall to the carpet. It was like standing inside a crimson velvet box. Mirrors were set between the heavy drapes like jewels set to charm the eye. There were no windows. It was a closed box and the center of the magic that had been called to this place.
The power rolled over me like suffocating fur, warm, close, choking. I couldnât breathe, couldnât speak. My feet stopped working, but Alistair didnât seem to notice. He kept leading me, pulling me into the room, so that I stumbled, and the only thing that kept me from falling to the polished wood of the floor was his arms. He tried to lift me in
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