Out of This World (16 page)

Read Out of This World Online

Authors: Charles de Lint

The trail takes me about a half mile deeper into the forest, where it suddenly disappears. No matter how much I cast around, I can't find it. I can tell where they appeared, and where they disappeared, but I just can't follow.

I bat at a pine cone with a big paw and send it skittering along the ground.

“Ready to get back to work?” Tío Goyo asks.

“Where are you from?” I ask Thorn as we make our way back down to street level.

I step over a missing stair, my hand on the stone wall of the stairwell for balance. I'm already missing the fresh air from where we had our lunch above. It smells like an animal's den in here.

“I mean, if that's okay to ask,” I add.

“My home was in Tal Avelle,” he says, “in the part we call the Sea Dales. And I tell you, without fear of sounding like a braggart, that the Dales are the finest jewels in Tal Avelle's crown, I don't care what the steppe dwellers say. Our coves and beaches and cliffs are rich and diverse—nothing like this pissant little pocket world.”

“‘Pocket world'?” I repeat. “What do you mean by that?”

He spreads his arms in a wide gesture. “Dainnan—this city—
is
the world. Or at least it is the world we're in now. It was pulled out of a dream, or created whole cloth by some mage— truth is, I've no idea how it came to be. But it's no bigger than the city as we saw it from above, and then about the same acreage of bushland surrounding it.”

I'm trying to understand this, but it's not making sense.

“What's past the forest?”

“Nothing,” he says.

“There can't be
nothing
.”

“Go see for yourself. You have the time.”

I shake my head. “No, I need to get home.”

He starts to say something, then seems to think better of it. It's not until we get out on the street again that he finally responds.

“Let me take you to see Canejo,” he says. “Maybe he can explain it better.”

“Who is he? Your leader?”

And what's his real name? I wonder. Because
canejo
just means rabbit in Spanish.

The raggedy man shakes his head. “We have no leaders. Canejo is simply a wise man who finds himself in the same situation as ours. He has been here a long—”

Suddenly, he breaks off and shoves me back into the building.

“Hey!” I start.

He cuts me off. “On your life, be silent. Go invisible.”

I have a thousand questions, but he looks so serious I keep my mouth shut and do as he says, letting the imaginary cloak of invisibility fall over me again. It's easier this time. It feels just like shifting to my otter shape—all I have to do is think about it and it happens.

Thorn has pulled his own vanishing act. I look out through the open door and can't spy anything, dangerous or otherwise. I can't hear anything, either. Then finally, after long minutes of nothing, I see the shadow of a large bird drift across the broken
pavement in front of the building. A moment later a second shadow trails in its wake. I hold my length of pipe tighter.

The shadows wheel in slow circles—once, twice—before drifting away again.

I want to ask Thorn what they were, but I figure I'll just stay still and keep my mouth shut until he judges we're safe. When he slowly comes back into view, I let my own invisibility fall from me.

“What was the danger?” I ask.

He spits on the floor. “Condors.”

My heart seems to stop in my chest. That's what Vincenzo was, and he was almost invincible until Josh finally dealt with him. But before that happened, Vincenzo killed Tomás, tossed Cory off a cliff and broke Chaingang's back.

“What—” I have to clear my throat. “What were they doing here?”

“What do they ever do except bring misery into the world?” He cocks his head to study me for a moment before he adds, “You've seen them before.”

I shake my head. “Not them. I mean there was only
one
of them. This guy named Vincenzo.”

Thorn spits again. “They should have called him Verminzo.”

“Well, he's dead now,” I say.

“Dead?” Thorn gives me a look that tells me I must be mistaken. “How can he be dead?”

“My friend kind of killed him.”

Thorn's eyes widen slightly. “Kind of,” he repeats.

Actually, Josh tore him into little pieces that he scattered all over a clifftop, but all I say is, “I can guarantee he's dead. I don't
think even an old cousin like that can come back to life when he's in as many pieces as Vincenzo was that last time I saw him.”

I remember his head lying there in amongst all the gore, and a sour taste comes up my throat.

“You have powerful friends,” Thorn says.

I shrug. I don't really want to get into that.

“The problem is,” I say, “I think that maybe those condor guys are looking for me.”

Thorn stares at me as though he's seeing me for the first time. The moment hangs so long that it starts to creep me out.

“Or maybe not,” I tell him just to say something. “I could just be paranoid.”

He blinks as though he's coming out of a trance.

“We really have to talk to Canejo,” he says.

I heard Tío Goyo approach, but saw no point in acknowledging his presence. But now I shift back into human shape and rise to my feet. My stomach growls. As usual, I'm starving after the change, but I make myself ignore it.

“I won't kill cousins for you,” I say.

“I didn't ask you to.”

“But that's what
you
do.”

“You're still not listening,” he says. “We rid the world of evil spirits in whatever host we find them, but that's not our principal task. Our main effort is to rouse people from their sleeping lives because if they're awake, the spirits can't take root.”

“But if you're too late, you kill them.”

“Why are you so focused on this?”

I shove him so hard in the chest that he stumbles backwards.

“Because I'm tired of people dying!” I yell at him. “Killing each other. You, Vincenzo. Me.
I've
killed people. I'm just a kid and I've already killed people!”

I step forward and shove him again. He lands on his butt in the dirt, but calmly stands back up and brushes the dust off
himself. I wish he'd come at me so that I could really let him have it.

“Chaingang's dead. Elzie could be. And you go around killing innocent people that you've decided have evil spirits in them.”

He doesn't flinch as I go to push him again. I stop myself and turn away.

I feel sick. I just wish there was somebody I trusted here. Marina. Des. My mom.

“We don't take our duties lightly,” Tío Goyo says in a quiet voice. “And we find no pleasure in taking a life. Each adds to the burden we carry.”

“Then why do it?”

“To keep the world safe.”


Your
vision of safe. As both judge and executioner.” I spit on the ground beside me.

He shakes his head. “We don't kill indiscriminately, and it's a far rarer occurrence than you imagine. We don't kill evil people, of which there are many. We only rid the world of evil spirits.”

“Meaning what?”

“Vincenzo was evil, but he chose to do the things that he did. There was no spirit riding in his body, so we left him alone. Just as we ignore the gangs, the thieves and the murderers that infest the world.”

“But what if by stopping
them
, you could help people?” I ask.

“Are we also supposed to be
luchadores
now, off fighting crime when we're not in the wrestling ring?”

“No. It's just—”

“Make up your mind,” he says. “Just now you were criticizing me for taking justice into my own hands, and now you expect me to be a vigilante. There are laws and police for common
criminals. The responsibility of the Halcón Pueblo is to banish parasites that infest the sleeping mind—to stop evil spirits that manage to escape dreams and possess a soul.”

I sigh and shake my head. A minute ago I wanted to punch him in the face. Now my anger has drained away and I only feel tired and confused. If I'm claiming that it's wrong to persecute these so-called possessed cousins, it's just as wrong to do it to gangbangers and criminals.

“Nothing is simple,” Tío Goyo says. “For now, let's concentrate on finding your friend. I think it's time I taught you how to fly.”

“Say what?”

We're seven strong, riding our bikes down Grandma's street. Though we're not all wearing our colours, no one's going to mistake us for anything but what we are: trouble on wheels. The roar of that many bikes is enough to make windows rattle as we go by.

In any other neighbourhood someone would have been on the phone to the cops as soon as we turned onto the first street. But this is the Orchards. Our turf. Having J-Dog pass through is like getting a glimpse of some famous warlord, or the Godfather—if there ever really was such a thing. Let's face it: Italian gangsters are like any kind of gangster. They're ruled by profit, not honour. Even the Ocean Avers—tight as we can be— we're out to make a buck. The difference between us and the big banks is that we're up front about it.

The first thing I see when we pull up to Grandma's place is the dead dog at the foot of the stairs leading up to the porch. It lies in a sprawl of limbs and blood, flies already buzzing around it. My gaze tracks up to find a big hole in the screen door— where other dogs entered, I think, my heart in my throat. But
then I see Grandma. She's sitting on a chair on the porch, a shotgun on her lap.

Damn. She blew that dog away right through the door.

I kill the engine and put my bike on its stand as quick as I can, but J-Dog is up on the porch before I can get there. I'm right behind him.

“Well, look at you boys,” Grandma says, “riding in like the cavalry.”

J-Dog looks from the dog to her. “Are you okay?”

She pats the shotgun I didn't even know she owned, never mind knows how to use.

“I'm fine,” she tells us. “The situation's under control. But how'd you even know there was trouble? I only just got off the phone with animal control.”

“We had a hunch,” I say before J-Dog can answer. “What happened?”

She shrugs. “Damn dog went crazy. I was starting down the hall to collect the mail when I saw him charging down the street. I didn't know that he was coming for me, but I grabbed my shotgun, just to be safe. When he came up onto the porch and charged right through the screen door, I had to shoot him.”

“Where did you even get a shotgun?” I ask.

“From the hall closet. I'm living in the Orchards, boy,” she adds at my surprised look. “People have to know that you're serious about protecting your own.”

I can see J-Dog bristling.

“Anybody ever even looks at you sideways,” he says, “you give me a call and it won't happen again.”

“Oh, like starting a war solves anything. I swear, Jason, you are your own worst enemy.”

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