Page 110 of Death's Daughter

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“Don’t look so surprised. Years of quiet and your sad little baby bites of magic, and then all of sudden death and magic and power spilling all over the place? The spawn, they’re challenging you and you’re trying to claim Beecher to keep them out.” She braces her hands against the invisible barrier to stare at me, and that painful twinge of magic grows stronger. It sizzles like ice against an exposed nerve. It doesn’t seem to bother her, though. Or maybe that’s what she wants me to think.

“That would make sense,” I say slowly. Instinct is screaming at me to keep my mouth shut. Telling her that Death’s succession planning skipped right over her seems like a very bad idea.

“But you don’t want it.” She points at me, stepping back to pace her tiny pen. “The territory or the responsibility.”

“How do you know that?” I ask, feeling oddly defensive, even though she’s right.

“Because you’re hiding from the magic, trying to pretend to be human.” She sniffs dismissively.

I hesitate for a moment, but it’s not a secret. “I just want everything to go back to normal.”

Nova tilts her head at me, as if I’ve finally said something that interests her.

“I can fix this,” she says slowly. “I’ll help you, if you let me out. Just give me your hand and pull me through. The barrier won’t keep you out, just me in.”

“Jo,” Devon says behind me, his tone taut. “We need to go. Now.”

I don’t turn to face him, but his shadow is cast on the wall in a new brightness. Another flashlight or his phone? I hope Chessa and Carter are still out by the van.

“I’ll chase off the other spawn, then I’ll leave Beecher for good. It’ll be all yours, promise. I’m never coming back to this place.” The sour turn of her mouth speaks to truth. “And I’ll keep dear old Dad off your back. Well, until he’s on his.” She laughs.

God, I hope she means by killing him. Of all the aspects the Old Ones theoretically have inspired in story and legend, particularly mythology, weird incest shit is one I hoped the humans had come up with on their own.

For a moment, though, I’m tempted by her offer. The thought of accepting makes my chest burn with longing, a match strike against the dry tinder of weariness and burden that I did not ask for.

I’m not stupid; letting her out would let loose a terror on this world. She would kill casually and at random.

But is that any different than what Death already does? The fact that he was threatened by her probably spoke more to his insecurities than her flaws.Sheshould be the new Death. She’s clearly a far better fit for the role than I would be, even if she has to battle Death for the right. Part of me would actually love to witness that particular power struggle. (From a safe distance.)

If I let her out and she follows through on her promise, Beecher would be safe, my home, my people would be safe. The only reason they were ever in danger was because Death trapped her here, starved her for fifty years, instead of just killing her. Or accepting that she could beat him.

In the distance, the sound of muffled conversation outside the mausoleum drifts toward me. Shit, someone else is here.

A shoe scrapes on the cement at the entrance to the mausoleum, and I tense. But it’s just Devon, moving to stand next to me. “We’re out of time,” he says quietly. He hesitates, then adds, “Don’t do it, Jo. He chose you for a reason.”

Nova stiffens. “Choseyou? Who chose you? For what?”

Shit.

I don’t answer.

“Oh.” Nova makes a soft sound, more like the involuntary expulsion of air after a punch.

Here we go.I brace myself for an explosion, the earth shaking beneath my feet.

“Death. He namedyouas his successor.” Her expression cycles rapidly through confusion and disbelief before landing on icy rage.

“He did, yeah,” I admit.

On the other side of the barrier, I’m steeled for her fury, her loathing, her declaration of injustices done to her. Her loud bark of laughter catches me off guard. She clamps a hand over her mouth, shaking her head, then lets go, her whole body trembling silently with… hilarity. Apparently.

“He choseyou? He could have had me, but he chose you instead? It’s just… have you ever heard anything so ridiculous?” She dabs her fingers at the corners of her eyes where tears shimmer. “I told you, he’s pathetic.”

I shift uncomfortably. Even though she’s not saying anything untrue, it still somehow feels insulting. Especially when it goes on and on and on…

Eventually, Nova settles herself back on the floor with one of those exhausted-sounding sighs that comes after a fit of the giggles. “So, now what?” she asks, dabbing her nose with her sleeve. “You’re going to take my life and my power for yourself? Keep me from hurting anyone else.” She pitches her voice to a squeaky, mocking tone, like the do-gooder animated character everyone hates.

I was so ready for an attack, to defend myself, that it had never occurred to me that I might have to be the one trying to kill.