grunts and a small number of words.
âBleedinâ âem here costs extra,â Housedress said, making a mark in her notebook.
I existed in a tiny corner of my own mind, a darkened space where I was only dimly aware of what my senses were perceiving, everything secondhand and filtered through Lugalâs distinctly alien sensibilities while the demon worked my limbs and my voice and my face.
âAll,â I said. Lugal liked the word and felt no need to learn new ones. It multitasked, crushing me with its demand for a spell while walking my body into the room. The Bleeders were breaking my heartâthese were not people making a sober economic decision, a bit of blood in exchange for some ready cash. These were desperate people, broken people. These were people whoâd accepted the possibility that the roulette wheel was going to land on fucked up and still walked into the goddamn black-tiled shower room in the back of the sketchiest bar in history. A shower room. In a bar. Done in black tile. The fact that none of them had made a break for the door told me all I needed to know about their situations.
I didnât bleed people. It was the only rule I had and the only reason I could sleep at night. I would have to work fast if I was going to minimize the damage. I could wrestle with the philosophical question of whether it was me or the demon doing the bleeding later. Right now I needed to get out with as little blood on my hands as possible.
I started with the Tricksterâs basic building block: a Charm.
There were a million Charm spells. Cantrips or mu short and sweet and designed to make people like you, all the way up to biludha that were tens of thousands of Words long and could sway thousands of people into being your cult, your army, your servants. For idimustari looking to pry a few dollars here and there from the unknowing and the uninitiated, a solid Charm Cantrip was an absolute necessity. You accost someone on the street when youâve had it rough for a few nights, sleeping in the open, bleeding gas to evade the cops, and you need a little Charm just to keep your target from fleeing the smell. I had plenty of them in the old memory banks; Hiram used them all the time, constantly, so Iâd picked up the basics from listening to him, and then Iâd improved things: Iâd pared them down and added my own innovations. I picked a short, short-lived mu ; I needed it to take effect as quickly as possible so I could minimize the damage.
Next I needed a piece from Hiramâs spell, the hun-kiuba . While Housedress unfolded a shiny straight razor and put it in my hand, I raced through the spell, following the threads and getting rid of the useless verbiage. I ripped out the seventeen Words that did the heavy lifting and swapped several, changing what it did. Hiramâs spell stopped timeâwithin a defined space, the extent of which depended on the amount of gas fed into itâfor everyone but the caster and anyone he designated; when Hiram had demonstrated it to me, weâd robbed a subway car full of people, all frozen in time while Hiram and I moved normally.
I inverted it so it would freeze the caster.
The razor was in my hand and Lugal was moving me toward the Bleeders. In agony, I raced, pulling in bits and pieces from the hundreds of small spells, piecing them together. All I knew were small spells, tricks, but what was a biludha except many small spells strung together, a chain of effects and modifiers?
I raced. I reached out for the first Bleederâs arm. She was someoneâs grandma, an old, skinny woman with nicotine-stained hands and teeth, skinny, sagging, her eyes tightly closed. When I touched her, she flinched and screwed her eyes even tighter.
Lugal demanded, squeezing me until I thought I was going to pop. I worked, filling my spell with nonsense. I took every lesson Iâd learned from shitty mages who couldnât write and plumped the spell
Phil Jackson, Hugh Delehanty