Strange Brew
said. She looked around, and I noticed that a broken lamp lay on the floor, and the end table it had sat on had been knocked over, evidence of a struggle. “But I feel so good now…” Smoldering blue eyes found me. “Harry. Come sit down with us.”
    “You should,” the woman murmured. “We’ll have a good time.” She produced a bottle of Mac’s ale from somewhere. “Come on. Have a drink with us.”
    All I’d wanted was a beer, for Pete’s sake.
    But this wasn’t what I had in mind. It was just wrong. I told myself very firmly that it was wrong. Even if Karrin managed, somehow, to make her gun’s shoulder rig look like lingerie.
    Or maybe that was me.
    “Meditrina was a Roman goddess of wine,” I said instead. “And the bassarids were another name for the handmaidens of Dionysus.” I nodded at the beer in her hand and said, “I thought Maenads were wine snobs.”
    Her mouth spread in a wide, genuine-looking smile, and her teeth were very white. “Any spirit is the spirit of the god, mortal.”
    “That’s what the psychic conduit links them to,” I said. “To Dionysus. To the god of revels and ecstatic violence.”
    “Of course,” the Maenad said. “Mortals have forgotten the true power of the god. The time has come to begin reminding them.”
    “If you’re going to muck with the drinks, why not start with the big beer dispensary in the arena? You’d get it to a lot more people that way.”
    She sneered at me. “Beer, brewed in cauldrons the size of houses by machines and then served cold. It has no soul. It isn’t worthy of the name.”
    “Got it,” I said. “You’re a beer snob.”
    She smiled, her gorgeous green eyes on mine. “I needed something real. Something a craftsman took loving pride in creating.”
    Which actually made sense, from a technical perspective. Magic is about a lot of things, and one of them is emotion. Once you begin to mass-manufacture anything, by the very nature of the process, you lose the sense of personal attachment you might have to something made by hand. For the Maenad’s purposes, it would have meant that the mass-produced beer had nothing she could sink her magical teeth into, no foundation to lay her complex compulsion upon.
    Mac’s beer certainly qualified as being produced with pride—real, personal pride, I mean, not official corporate spokesperson pride.
    “Why?” I asked her. “Why do this at all?”
    “I am hardly alone in my actions, wizard,” she responded. “And it is who I am.”
    I frowned and tilted my head at her.
    “Mortals have forgotten the gods,” she said, hints of anger creeping into her tone. “They think the White God drove out the many gods. But they are here. We are here. I, too, was worshipped in my day, mortal man.”
    “Maybe you didn’t know this,” I said, “but most of us couldn’t give a rat’s ass. Raining down thunderbolts from on high isn’t exclusive territory anymore.”
    She snarled, her eyes growing even brighter. “Indeed. We withdrew and gave the world into your keeping—and what has become of it? In two thousand years, you’ve poisoned and raped the mother earth who gave you life. You’ve cut down the forests, fouled the air, and darkened Apollo’s chariot itself with the stench of your smithies.”
    “And touching off a riot at the Bulls’ game is going to make some kind of point?” I demanded.
    She smiled, showing sharp canines. “My sisters have been doing football matches for years. We’re expanding the franchise.” She drank from the bottle, wrapping her lips around it and making sure I noticed. “Moderation. It’s disgusting. We should have strangled Aristotle in his crib. Alcoholism—calling the god a disease .” She bared her teeth at me. “A lesson must be taught.”
    Murphy shivered, and then her expression turned ugly, her blue eyes focusing on me.
    “Show your respect to the god, wizard,” the Maenad spat. “Drink. Or I will introduce you to Pentheus and

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