to smile.” He did—it just didn’t look like much of a smile with all those pointy teeth. “And he’s always trying to boss me around, and he doesn’t look that much older than me. When I asked him his age, he said he was only three months old. He told me all about howHermeneus spirits can reincarnate into new bodies when they die and that they usually reincarnate into babies, but sometimes they get lucky and can hop a ride on an older body. Which is what he did. Crazy, right?”
“Crazy.” And more than I knew about Priya’s new body. At least, more than I remembered knowing.
“But I asked him how long he had his previous body,” Jupe continued, “and he said he’d only had it for eighteen years. Is that true?”
“I never thought to ask him.”
Jupe looked at me as if I were nuts, but I wasn’t about to explain how Priya had once been a sexless, subservient projection with the personality of cardboard and that most magicians don’t make small talk with their guardians. But still, if Priya was eighteen, that meant he’d been all of ten years old the first time he’d attached himself to me. And that weirded me out.
“Priya will tell you almost anything if you ask,” Jupe informed me proudly. “And I asked him all kinds of shit.”
“Clearly.”
“Don’t worry. I reported everything Priya told me to Dad.”
I glanced at Lon. One quirking brow and the flare of his nostrils confirmed that his barely restrained impatience with Jupe’s energetic questions hadn’t changed. This made me simultaneously want to laugh and cry. In a good way. Lon’s eyes squintedat me in shared amusement while Jupe chatted on, oblivious to our silent conversation on the sidelines.
“Priya says you can’t fall asleep at night. Like Nightmare on Elm Street . Your mom is Freddy.”
But instead of killing me when I dreamed, she’d just puppet me into killing Lon. Or Jupe. Or whomever the hell else she wanted.
“He also says your mom is trying to do some complicated magick ritual in the Æthyr, and—”
“Jupe,” Lon said sharply. “Remember what we talked about?”
“I’m sorry.”
“What?” I looked at Jupe, waiting for an answer.
“Dr. Mick says not to bring up anything too upsetting until you’re on your feet again.”
“I’m fine,” I said. “Go on, Jupe. What else did Priya tell you?”
Jupe glanced between us before continuing. “She’s undergoing some kind of purifying ritual, where she fasts for a week. Like, she only drinks water, and she does some sort of weird meditation. Priya wasn’t very good at explaining it,” Jupe said, assuring me the communication problem wasn’t on his end, which I didn’t believe for a second. “Anyway, your mom doesn’t know you’re awake. At least, Priya’s pretty sure she doesn’t know.”
That was something, I supposed.
“But don’t worry,” Jupe continued. “Priya figures you’ve got anywhere from a few days to a couple of weeks before she finishes the ritual and crosses backover to earth to control you. So all you have to do is find the spell your mom used when you were born and reverse it. That way, you’ll break your connection with her, and she can’t get inside your body. You can do that, right?”
I glanced up at the sigils on the ceiling before giving Lon a look.
We needed to make some plans. And I needed to get better, faster.
“Bring me my box of medicinals.”
Although I tried several times that night, it wasn’t until the following morning that I could finally reach out for electricity and pull it into my body—my benchmark for normal health—and another day before I could walk around the yard for half an hour without getting winded, which was Lon’s benchmark. He pushed me hard, forcing me to walk and bend and stretch, and it was worth every bit of frustration. Because when I fell asleep that next day, sore and exhausted, mentally and physically, it was in his arms. I don’t think I’d ever appreciated just how