He sat at the center. And the center was contracting.
SEVENTEEN
The safehouse on Esplanade sat above a shuttered print shop whose owner had left New Orleans after the last hurricane and never come back. Baptiste kept the lease current through arrangements Bastien had never asked to understand. The second floor held two rooms, a bathroom with plumbing that protested its own existence, and a kitchen whose only reliable appliance was the coffeemaker.
Bastien had brought Delphine here after the figure on Chartres Street. He would not take her back to his apartment. The apartment sat inside the curse’s radius of reception now, the beacon broadcasting from its walls with an insistence that had changed in quality since the kiss. Whatever had stood at the far end of the block had received that broadcast and answered it, and Bastien would not sleep there again until he understood the architecture of the signal he carried.
The safehouse smelled of old ink and turpentine from the print shop below. A live oak pressed its branches against the windows and filtered the streetlight into shifting patterns across the floor. September heat had thickened overnight, and the single box fan in the window moved air without cooling it.
Delphine sat at the kitchen table with her notebook open and her pen uncapped. She had not written anything in twenty minutes. The page held the same half-sentence she had started when they arrived—pattern deviation in the fourth victim’s sigil placement—and the ink had dried while her attention rested elsewhere.
On him. She studied him with that same patient, relentless focus she turned on documents that resisted surrendering their information.
Bastien stood with his back to the room and his hands braced on the sill of the window. The live oak threw moving shadows across his forearms. Beyond the tree, Esplanade Avenue held its late-night traffic: a couple walking arm in arm beneath the canopy, a delivery truck idling outside the corner market, a bass line vibrating from a house party three blocks toward the river.
What he carried had dropped to a frequency he had not experienced before the kiss. The pulse had become a sustained tone, continuous, humming through his body and pushing outward against his skin. The figure on Chartres had catalyzed the shift, and it had not reversed in the hours since.
He had told Delphine nothing about the figure. He had told her the apartment was compromised, which was true. He had told her the safehouse was secure, which was as close to true as any location could be when the thing hunting him lived inside his body.
“You haven’t moved in eleven minutes,” Delphine said.
He did not turn from the window. “Counting?”
“Observing.” Her pen tapped once against the notebook. “You’ve been standing there with your weight on your left foot and your right hand pressed to your left arm. You shifted your hand twice. Each time, your shoulders locked, and your breathing stopped for three to four seconds before resuming.”
His neck stiffened. She had tracked all of it.
“I’m fine.”
“You’ve been saying that since Chartres Street. Your definition offinehas expanded to include leaving your apartment at two in the morning and bringing me to a building that smells like a nineteenth-century newspaper office.” She closed the notebook. The sound landed between them. “A curse reaction happened after I drove away tonight. Tell me what it did.”
He went still. She had placed the kiss and the crisis in the same sentence without hesitation. Delphine did not retreat from what had happened. She incorporated it and moved forward.
“The curse reacted,” he said. “Stronger than before.”
“To the kiss?”
“To my attention shifting. The mark is a beacon. When my focus narrows, the signal changes. Tonight it changed enough to draw a response.”
“A response from what?”
He turned from the window. The safehouse kitchen held little: the table where she sat, two mismatched chairs, the coffeemaker, a row of cabinets whose paint had yellowed past identifying the original color. The overhead light had died months ago. A floor lamp in the corner threw warm amber across the room’s angles and left the ceiling in shadow.
Delphine sat in the lamplight, her jacket draped across the back of her chair. The blouse beneath had loosened at the collar, and the line of her throat caught the light where fabric fell away from skin. Dust from the Dauphine apartment still showed at the seam of her sleeve.
He had carried the taste of her mouth across two hours of silence and emergency relocation, and it had not faded.
“I don’t know yet,” he said. “An entity that recognized the signal. One that has been waiting for it to change.”
She studied him, her eyes searching his face for the gap between what he stated and what he meant. The pen lay still on her closed notebook.
“You brought me here to protect me,” she said. “Not to protect the investigation.”
“Both.”
“Bastien.” His name arrived with the weight she had learned to place on it—not to close a door, as he had done with hers, but to open one and wait on the other side. “You kissed me in your kitchen three hours ago. You kissed me and then you put me in my car and then whatever scared you was bad enough to abandon your apartment. If you want me to trust the decisions you’re making about my safety, you have to give me the full shape of what we’re dealing with.”
He crossed to the table and pulled out the second chair. The wood protested against the floor as he sat.