I couldn't smell it. At least, I couldn't smell what I expected. I should have scented the fur, dried skin, herbs, the stuffy air. But all I smelled was death. The stench of it masked everything. And it didn't come from the skins, from the room. It came from Lawrence. I wanted to run screaming.
"You're one, too," I said. "A skinwalker. You taught her."
He stood at the far side of the room, which looked somewhat functionaclass="underline" a table held a camp stove and cooking implements. Lawrence lit a pair of candles, which did nothing to brighten the place.
"No," he said. "She learned. She watched. I was careless. I let her learn."
"You couldn't stop her?" Ben said.
"Couldn't you? You aren't the only one who's been hunting her."
"If you knew what she was, if you taught her—then you had the power to stop her, and you didn't." His voice rose, along with his anger.
"I don't owe you any answers." He went to a box on the floor, a wooden crate that might have held fruits or vegetables for shipping, and pulled out a can. He started cutting it open with an old-fashioned, clawlike can opener.
The wolf skin on the wall had dark, curved claws intact.
"Yes, you do," Ben said. "A man may go to jail unless I bring the court evidence of what she was and what she did."
Lawrence looked at us coldly. "The man who killed my grandson? The man who killed Miriam?"
The strangeness of this place smothered my own anger. I felt strangely calm. "He saved my life when he killed her."
Lawrence was busy lighting the stove and pouring the can of soup into a pot. "You're lucky to have a friend who will kill for you."
So. I once had a friend who died for me, and now one who killed for me. Why didn't I feel lucky?
Ben turned his back on Lawrence and hissed at me. "We're not getting anywhere. He's not going to tell us anything."
"What do you want me to tell?" Lawrence said, and Ben flinched—he thought he'd been whispering. "That she was evil? That I am evil? Do you expect me to tell everything I know as some kind of atonement? What's done is done. Nothing will change it. Nothing will make it better. The dead don't come back."
"Wouldn't bet on that," I muttered.
"I don't have any proof for you. I can tell you that Miriam killed Joan, but the police have no record of it. The doctors say it was natural, not witchcraft. Three of my grandchildren are dead, but you won't find anyone here who will admit that they were ever alive. That's what it is to be a witch here."
"Then why do it? If it makes you disappear." If it made you live in a place like this, isolated, other.
"It never starts out that way. But the line between medicine man and witch, Curandero and bruja, is very thin. The magic comes from the same place. The danger comes with the spells that pull you one way or another. Miriam saw what her brother became, and she wanted it. Donning the coat of a wolf, tasting blood—it pulls you toward the darkness. You understand this. Both of you. You live in the dark because it's what you are."
I did understand, and hated that I did. Wolf seemed to prick her ears up at the very mention of the word blood. Beside me, Ben stood frozen, staring. His eyes weren't his own, not entirely. Something wolfish swam in them. I had to get him out of here. But I wanted more answers.
"Why did she kill Joan?"
"She had a sister to spare? I don't know. Didn't anyone warn you about asking too many questions around here?"
"Who did you kill in trade for your powers?"
He hid a smile with a bowed head. "It's a good thing for a witch to have a large family."
My stomach lurched into my throat; I wanted badly to throw up. I took hold of Ben's arm and squeezed too hard.
Lawrence continued. "Bodies disappear out here. You go out to the desert, a body gets dried up and covered with sand in a day. In a month it's nothing but bones. You tell anyone you were coming out here?"
"Let's go." I wrenched Ben's arm and steered him out of there. The door to Lawrence's shack slipped closed behind us.
Back in the open air, I felt light-headed, giddy—free. I almost ran to the car.
Ben was stewing. Fuming. His shoulders hunched, his fists closed. He kicked the dirt on our path.
"He knows, but we'll never get him into court. He knows Cormac did the world a favor putting a bullet in her. Hell—that guy probably needs a bullet put in him."
"Calm down. We'll figure something out. We still have leads." But we were running out of them. I tried to stay positive.
I stopped a few paces from the car. Something wasn't right. A sound tickled my throat—the start of a growl.
"Kitty." Ben's voice was tight. He moved toward me, so our shoulders touched. Side by side, protected—but from what?
A mountain lion leapt onto the roof of my car.
It had dodged around us in a couple of strides and made the jump without effort, so quickly I hadn't sensed it coming. Or maybe it had simply been able to slip by without us noticing. The thing was huge, solid, with thick limbs and a wedge-shaped face. It sat tall, its tail wrapped around its paws, looking for all the world like a house cat surveying its domain. Its tan fur was flat and slick, and dark smudges marked its eyes. Red eyes, bright as garnets.
Like somebody in a slapstick comedy, I looked back to the shack, then back at the mountain lion. And yes, the shack's door stood open.
"Kitty…" Ben murmured, taking my hand.
"Me or it?"
"Not funny."
We backed away.
The lion jumped off the car and stalked toward us, head low, tail flicking like a whip. Red eyes flashed.
Had to think of a plan. Had to do something. Couldn't just let this thing hypnotize me with its terrible gaze. All I wanted to do was scream. But I recognized the freezing terror that was numbing my limbs. I'd felt this when Miriam attacked me. Had to break out of the witch's spell somehow.
I whispered, "Ben, I'm going to break left. Try to draw him off while you get to the car and call for help."
"I was going to say the same thing, but with me drawing him off and you calling for help."
"No, I can fight him if I have to. I can take him."
"Just like you took Miriam?"
Details…
Both of us spoke quickly, breathily, on the verge of panic. I wondered how he was doing with his wolf. I still held his hand, which strained with tension. But no claws had started growing.
The mountain lion took another set of steps and opened its mouth to show thick, yellowed teeth, sharp as nails. It made a sound that was half growl, half purr, grating and skull rattling. Ben and I kept backing, until I slipped on the gravel. His grip on me kept me upright.
The monster crouched, its muscles bunching, gathering itself to jump at us.
"It jumps, we break," I murmured. Ben nodded.
But instead of jumping, it paused, stared at us, blinking those red eyes. It bowed its head. Then, its whole body seemed to collapse. Like the air went out of it. The face crumpled, and the eyes went dead.
A human hand reached out from under the lion's body and pulled off the tawny skin, revealing a naked man crouching in the dirt. A long gray braid draped over his shoulder.
Lawrence Wilson looked up at us and smiled.
"Louise got to you first. Lucky. Very lucky."
I touched my chest, feeling the hard shape of the arrowhead under my shirt. It worked. The damn thing worked.
"Let's get the hell out of here," I muttered to Ben.
Carefully, cautiously, we circled around the old man. Watching us, he stood, but didn't make another move toward us. Quickly we slipped into the car.
The tires kicked up a rain of gravel in my hurry to drive us out of there. Lawrence watched us go, standing at the side of the dirt road. He seemed to hold my gaze in the rearview mirror until we were out of sight. The mountain lion's skin hung limp in his hand.