They found the fire escape by chance. A short venture for a window free of the grimy, wet bars led them to the fourth floor of the motel, and from there King found a human-sized pane free of shackles and locks. Just beyond the frosted glass was a red-painted gathering of railings and stairs and ladders. He hadn’t expected the motel to have safety means of any kind, infact he didn’t even realize it rose up passed two stories. His disdain for the drab establishment was lifted ever so slightly as he squeezed his way onto sturdy metal and sucked in a breath smoggy city air. The mist gathered mostly below them, though the fire escape was just as dew wet as the windows two stories down had been.
King dug his heels into the textured metal, carefully rounding towards the edge of the railing. In front of them sat a sturdy and high brick wall, and below was a messy alley. It wasn’t a long fall. King heard his mind repeat that thought,
it wasn’t a long fall, and with an annoyed click of the tongue he twisted on his heels and held out an eager palm.
“This good enough? Gimme a cig already.” King said, pressing back against the creaky and soaked railing, “I’ll pay you back at the next store or something.” With his free hand, King twisted his father’s lighter out of his back pocket and gave the ZIppo a curious flick. Fire snapped to life and then simmered away.
Gravestones hung in front of his eyes. King shook them away in favor of glaring apathetically at Malcolm.
“Ask nicely,” Mal said, pursing his lips while his eyes sparkled with good humor. His gaze was focused on King, and it didn’t slip even for a second to stare at the pattern of wiggling, writhing symbols that filled the air around them.
“You know – with ‘please’ and ‘thank you’. Maybe add on a, ‘Yes, Master,’ to the end of that.”His fingers deftly worked through the cold to pull out two cigarettes, leaving only three more inside the carton. He stuck one of them between his lips, and moved to hold out the other one, ready to jerk back teasingly unless the magic word was said.
“Kinky.” King’s lips upturned ever so slightly, forming the shadow of his usual smirk,
“I’ll give you a ‘thank you’ when I get the damn thing but until then--” He held the lighter between his fingers and rose his hands up in a fake prayer. One step forward planted him an inch closer to the smirking Malcolm, another allowed him to be close enough to hiss an emotionless,
“Please give me a cigarette?” His palm upturned and fingers curled expectantly.
Malcolm passed it over, smiling fading into a serious expression for three heartbeats until he glanced away at a sprinkling of rust on the metal beneath them. The cigarette slipped from between his lips so he could say,
“See? Clearly I can teach an old dog new tricks.”His grin returned swiftly in a blinding flash of pearly white.
“Here – show me how that fancy new Zippo of yours works. I even left my lighter in the room. C’mon,” Mal prompted, sticking the cancer stick back where it belonged, held in place by pursed lips. It left his belated,
“Please,” to come out rather mumbled.
King shoved his own now-lit cigarette between his lips pointedly before passing on the Zippo. Acidic smoke coated his tongue as he breathed in, eyes flicking down restlessly to watch the cherry of the cigarette gleam in the misty-white light. Gray smoke mingled with water, heavy and deep in color, and King took two steps back to lean against the railing.
“I’m not a dog.” He commented belatedly, one eyebrow quirked,
“And don’t expect this manners bullshit to be a running gag.”“You’d be a cute Golden Retriever. King’s totally a dog name.” And Mal had no idea where he was going with that, almost as if his concentration shut off in the middle of a sentence to save himself from future embarrassment. He busied himself by lighting up.
“Si vis pacem, para bellum,” Mal quoted, reading the engraving on the side of the lighter expertly.
“Well, that’s some dramatic irony.”King had tuned out Malcolm at the first mention of golden retrievers, but in an instant his attention was singled and burning. His father’s voice echoed in his head, along with the clack of a gun and the bang of it firing against his brow. Ash crumbled as he tightened his hold on the quickly diminishing cigarette, but he tried hard to make it last, taking a small puff instead of heaving in a gust of smoke like he intended.
“Sounds like you know what it means.” King let a hand fall back onto the railing of the fire escape, squeezing until his knuckles were as white as the air. Curiosity glowed in his bright eyes.
“Well then,” He urged, leaning forward,
“Wanna share with the class or not?”“Really, dude? It’s a pretty generic phrase – ‘panem et circenses’ style. I’m sure frat boys all over the country have tattoos of it.” Mal didn’t even need to think back to his rudimentary understanding of Latin (the product of two years of hideous summer school lessons and some mild interest in old Roman alchemical practices) to understand what it meant.
“Dad didn’t strike me as the frat boy type.” King muttered, and louder yet he grumbled,
“I don’t know what this panam it-- whatever you said-- is, but I don’t think it matters much.” He snatched his cigarette from his lips and waggled it in the direction of the lighter, dark smoke seeping out from his parted lips.
“What’s that saying mean, Mal?”“‘If you want peace, prepare for war,’” Mal answered promptly with a hoarse laugh. While the relevance of the phrase to their current situation struck him as ominous, particularly when the memory of the Vision Cave was fresh in his mind, he was certain it meant little to him.
“Literally, the most basic phrase someone could Google to put on an edgy engraving. I mean – I’m sure it meant something to him, but it’s like… It’s like ‘carpe diem’.”“Huh.” King reached forward to tug the lighter from Mal’s grasp, inspecting the stainless steel with a steady gaze.
“Dad didn’t strike me as a ‘carpe diem’ type either. Full of surprises, full of surprises…” He rolled his shoulders, feeling the sting of a long-healed bruise just to remind himself that he was present and fine. The lighter flicked to life again. Flame licked high at the white-painted sky. Mindlessly, King let the flame grow taller and taller, muttering soft incantations to himself to allowed the fire to shift from orange to blue and back again.
Parlor tricks were a Richard King speciality, though he rarely shared them with anyone besides Astrid. His eyes flicked up to give Malcolm a curiously calm stare, and then he took a long drag from his cigarette and sighed into the morning. Black smoke churned from his lungs and hung heavy and damp in the air before him.
“I heard dad say that to me in my dream.” He confessed, eyes still locked on the fire,
“He said that and then I died. Maybe it’s bad luck or something to keep this thing around. Maybe I should get rid of it.”“Maybe you should. Or you could keep showing off with it,” Mal noted as he breathed out smoke in such a way that it formed a precise ring shape – no magic required. He pulled out his faint black Sharpie again from his back pocket, and started doodling on his hand in straight, precise lines. The burn from the night before was still there, scarred in a triangle formation.
“I mean, it’s not like anyone’s gonna see us using magic through that mist so we’re good but – try not to give me a heart-attack next time? It’d be just our luck if a cop appeared.”King glanced down at the alley below. A short fall stared back, and then the fire licked high and gleamed bright green. King bit on the filter of the cigarette to keep it from falling as his now-free hand rose to skim over the tip of the fire. The color shifted again, green to purple, and King watched the odd lights formed by the light streak out against the fire escape. Aurora road roared out of sight. That little fact gave King enough courage to turn the fire to quiet, crackling sparks akin to the fireworks.
“No one's gonna see us out here.” King confirmed,
“Whatcha doodling?” He breathed out a smoky sigh, eyebrows quirked.
Mal hummed distractedly, eyeing up the fluidity of the squiggles on the mist for inspiration. With his free hand, he snuffed out the remains of his cigarette, then returned to drawing two solid lines up his thumb and middle finger.
“Magic stuff,” he returned.
“Efficiency is everything in alchemy.” And with that, he snapped his fingers with a loud crack to produce a dancing, living flame in the palm of his hand.
It didn’t burn. One of the thirteen sigils he’d drawn negated that risk entirely, and he grinned smugly at King. He snapped his fingers again, and it winked out of existence. Snap, and it was back.
“Ha,” King said, watching the fire form and vanish,
“You didn't even need my lighter. Mooch.” The lighter returned from sparks to flame and then finally smoke as he snuffed out the heat and turned to stare out at the brick wall. Mist swirled through the air. Behind him, King felt images of eyes and odd runes. A stiff lip sent the strange thoughts away, thinking them to be passing memories, but all at once he was left with the residual feeling of someone else’s mind invading his own.
King leaned over the railing slightly, staring down as the world tilted and then righted itself. Idly, he glanced over his shoulder and said,
“What are you thinking about?” And then, after a brief pause, he hissed,
“Or, what do you see?”Mal quirked an eyebrow before looking back, reluctantly, to the psychedelic runes hanging in the air. How could he describe it? They were the same colour as the iridescent swirls inside a soap bubble, oily and thick and wholly unnatural.
“The mist’s magical in origin,” he summed up after a few moments, allowing only a curious glance at King as if he didn’t expect the question.
“Oh? Should we be standing in it?” King eyed the foggy surroundings calmly, not doing much despite realizing that magical mist wasn’t the safest thing to be inhaling. He took one last drag before flicking the dirty filter of his cigarette over the railing, and then breathed out a dark cloud. This time he watched it get eaten away by the mist and fade away into more white.
“And how would you know something like that? Have you been keeping secrets?” His lips curled to form a small, cruel smirk.
“Never,” Mal said, brows furrowing into a firm, fierce line. Despite his words, he didn’t answer.
King hummed a low note, twisting back around to press his hip against the wet metal. The air around them was heavy with an emotion King liked to call irritation. For a full minute King stared ahead, eyeing Malcolm curiously as he so often did. Both hands clamped down on the railing behind him, squeezing tight as he tried and failed to force more images from Malcolm’s mind into his own.
Blank canvases came up, as well as the occasional gravestone. Worthless. Cursing his ornery new found power, King withheld a sigh and glanced at the mist instead. His gaze lingered when he finally rolled his shoulders again and said,
“It’s rather hard to lie with me around, don’t you think?”“I don’t lie,” Mal said with a chilled smile.
“I resent that.”“There's such a thing as lying by omission.” King stated, take a step forward to be level with Mal’s cold grin. He returned the expression with a dazzling smirk. Despite the growing tension, King couldn't help but let his eyes flick down to glance at Mal’s lips.
“I think there's something you haven't told me yet.”Mal let out a long breath through his nose – a dragon breathing out fire. His thumb pressed down hard into the dark lines drawn on his palm to distract him, and the feel of sparking magic at the place of contact worked just as clenching his fist would have.
“And that bothers you, does it? It shouldn’t. You’re not entitled to anything from me.”The road-trip would be a problem, if this was starting already; if
dislike was flooding his system in a wave of stinging salt.
King shoved his fists deep into his jean pockets, eyes dark and filled to the brim with curiosity.
“That's true.” He paused to lick his lips wet and shift from foot to foot restlessly,
“But I can't help noticing things about you, or Aiden or Jess or Az.” He tilted his head down, leaning in to glare unabashedly down at Mal’s gaze.
“It's in my nature to be bothered, and it's in my nature to worry about things that could hurt me or my sister.” King made a low noise, another energetic hum, and then he growled,
“So I'll ask again: have you been keeping secrets?”“Nothing that concerns you,” Mal replied with a glare of his own. Perhaps it would have been easier to just explain his newfound magical ability, but indignation pushed him on. He didn’t answer to
Richard King of all people.
“So you can fuck right off with your Spanish Inquisition. I don’t answer to you.”King rolled his shoulders again, feeling the fire of irrational unfurl as Malcolm’s aura seemed to overtake his own. Phantom pains kept his face horribly twisted. A mocking smile pressed indefinitely against his lips and furrowed his brows to a dark glare. His voice was a low growl as he hissed,
“I'm not asking you to answer to me, I'm just saying you should share with the class before–” King cut himself off instantly as he felt the twist in his wrist.
He wanted to throw a punch.
Such an instinctive response to being berated made King wince expressively. He took half a step back and waited, waited for a swap in emotions or a change of expression. Offhandedly, he said,
“Philips is keeping a secret too.”There wasn’t even the slightest change in Mal’s current tide of annoyance.
“So this is what you do now? Spread around other people’s secrets, injecting yourself into every little thing people might be – you know – wanting to keep to themselves?” Mal shook his head, not in the least bit interested in Philips’ secret.
“I don’t care. It’s none of my, and it’s none of your business.”“That kind of thinking is going to kill all of us!” King tightened his fists, clenching down on the rage that was threatening to lash out,
“We can't afford to keep out of everyone’s business; we are all we have.” He made a sweeping motion between the two, and then down towards the building.
“If someone is lying or withholding information then– then we’re all fucked. This isn't a ‘you do you’ kind of trip.” King brought a hand up to bury it into his hair, tugging on the strands anxiously as he failed to meet Mal’s glare.
“We’re all in this together. Secrets aren't any use to us.” He muttered. The air simmered, red in color and taste. King hated it.
Mal stared up at him, undaunted.
“Well, if you think like that, I might as well get my stuff and–” A second – if even that – was all Malcolm had as warning, and he interrupted his previous thought as quickly as it had come as the air around them thickened ominously. Energy malicious and malevolent bled through the runes and stole the breath from his lungs as he watched the jigsaw pieces of spellwork fit together expertly like a lock and a key meeting.
He could see patterns.
Vengeance was one of them.
Fire was another. And, despite the rumbling that started on the earth several feet below their position on the fire escape, Mal read
Protection in the foreign tongue.
“Hold on to something. King– hold onto something.” Mal made a grab for the window they’d came from.
An earth-shattering, ear-shattering boom rippled outwards from the park across the road.