IT WAS HALF PAST SIX when Ethan Rayne steered his rental car into the parking lot of the Blue Horizon Restaurant and Lounge. Midway along the stretch of Sunnydale’s coastline, and also about halfway between the beach and the docks, the Blue Horizon sat on a stony promontory overlooking the crashing surf. It was an older restaurant, built sometime in the forties, if Ethan guessed correctly, and it had long since seen its better days.
Still, with its high windows looking out on the ocean, and a fresh coat of white paint on its clapboards, it was a stately old place, frequented mainly by locals and older tourists. It wasn’t hip. It wasn’t happening. But the owners apparently still did enough business to keep it running. It seemed like the kind of place Americans always gravitated to when it came time to hold their wedding receptions.
Ethan smiled as he got out of the car. The Blue Horizon had been his idea. He’d eaten here several times on his visits to Sunnydale, and though the menu was pedestrian, the preparation was first-class. And, given that most of the other restaurants in the area—at least those that were currently popular—served either Mexican food or what was dubiously called “California cuisine,” Ethan was happy to go anywhere he could get a decent steak au poivre.
With a spring in his step, he mounted the stairs to the door and went in. The Blue Horizon was never really busy, and tonight was no exception. Plenty of diners, but no wait. He ignored the hostess and wandered into the lounge, eyes roving over the people at the bar. Though he hadn’t seen the man in nearly fifteen years, it didn’t take him long to spot Calvin Trenholm. The man’s blond hair had all but disappeared, leaving a ring around Trenholm’s head that was more nostalgia than actual hair. But the face was the same, without a doubt. Trenholm had wide, prominent eyes, almost fishlike, and thin lips that added to the overall bloodless, pale look about him.
The man raised his hand in a small wave, and in his smile Ethan detected both curiosity and fear. Exactly the emotions he had hoped to elicit from the man—the very same emotions he had always brought out in Calvin Trenholm, back in the old days.
Trenholm stood as Ethan approached. “Ethan Rayne, you right bastard,” he said with an uneasy grin. “It’s been an age.”
“So it has.”
“How on Earth did you find me in bloody California of all places?”
Ethan shook his head as if he, too, found this incredible. “Sheer luck, Trenholm old man. Look here, why don’t we have some dinner before my stomach crawls up my gullet looking for something to feast upon, eh? We’ll catch up after we’ve ordered, all right?”
For a moment, Trenholm looked at Ethan oddly, as though he were wondering if his comments about his stomach might hold some bizarre truth or hidden meaning. Then he seemed to exhale, and together they walked back to the hostess and let the woman find them a table.
Wanker, Ethan thought, as Trenholm ordered a drink. Some people never change.
Once upon a time, Ethan had been part of a small circle of young people who had wanted to tap into the power of magick. Their experiments might have been foolish games played by students in search of a thrill, or made gullible by their desire for something to make their flawed lives perfect. They might have been. But they were not.
Their magick raised a demon.
Most of the others in the group turned their backs on such dealings, recognizing the danger in them. One of those was Rupert Giles, who would later become a Watcher and combat the very things he once toyed with himself.
Ethan Rayne never turned away. The horror of that night taught him only one thing: be more careful. And he was. And so were the many other people he came into contact with over the years, in one group or another. He learned a great deal, and taught things to others in return. Sometimes, for his friends—those who had taught or given him something he wanted—he would perform certain favors.
For Calvin Trenholm, that favor was making an extraordinary young woman named Kymberly Egler fall in love with him. Ethan had been happy to do it. He’d never liked Kymberly, and having her be trapped for life with a fool like Trenholm was quite amusing. When Trenholm left her to join the Sons of Entropy, Ethan wanted to kill him. At least, until he realized that the man’s departure only made Kymberly’s situation all the more ironic, and all the more agonizing.
The sadistic side of him—which was, to be honest, his only side—took great pleasure in that.
So Trenholm was still alive. For the moment.
The waiter came by to take their order. Ethan eagerly requested his steak au poivre, with the wonderful garlic mashed potatoes Blue Horizon’s chef could whip up, and a side of sautéed asparagus. He asked for a scotch to be brought right away. Trenholm also ordered another glass of wine, asked for the swordfish, and then looked at Ethan nervously, waiting. Simply waiting.
Ethan let him wait. Finally, when his scotch arrived, he took a long sip, swirled the glass around to watch the ice spin, and then set it down, looking up at Trenholm and feeling the mischievous spirit that he could never quite control rising up within him.
“I saw Kymberly not long ago,” he lied. “She still hates you. Because she still loves you.”
Trenholm sipped his wine, trying to pretend he was not afraid of Ethan. He nearly pulled it off, too, but only because there was someone he was even more afraid of. The fact that Ethan already knew that gave him complete control over what would happen next.
“I’m sorry for that,” Trenholm answered guardedly. “Sorry for . . . for her.” He wiped a bit of sweat off his smooth brow.
“Yes, well, you had to do what you had to do, of course,” Ethan replied. “Your friend the Maestro required that, didn’t he? Complete dedication. Was going to teach you a great deal about magick, wasn’t he?”
Trenholm was agitated, and nearly enough so to look it. He lifted his weak chin and clenched his teeth. “Il Maestro has taught me a great deal, Ethan. You would have done well to join him when I did. Perhaps then you would be among those who will . . .”
Ethan raised an eyebrow. “Who will what?” he asked, smirking.
The other man did not reply, but looked away instead.
“Oh, don’t be daft, Trenholm,” Ethan sighed. “I could lie to you about why I’m here in Sunnydale. That would be simple enough. But the truth is, I’m here because you’re here. I know what your man Fulcanelli is up to, and I may want a piece after all.”
Eyes darting like those of a frightened rabbit, Trenholm glanced about the restaurant nervously, then glared at Ethan.
“Watch your mouth, Ethan Rayne,” he reprimanded. “You’ve always been a bit off, yourself. More than a bit. The rebel, you are. But one wrong word could have you roasted where you sit.”
Ethan shook his head in amusement. “You know what’s important to your boss?” he asked Trenholm. “That you believe that. He only has to make it happen once or twice, and none of you ever knows if he’s breathing over your shoulder or not.
“How do you suppose he does that?”
Trenholm blinked, frowned at him. “It’s magick, of course,” the man replied.
With a soft chuckle, Ethan shook his head again. “So he’s the great grand wizard, is he? It’s amazing to me how many men, particularly those in search of power, don’t even pay attention to what’s going on around them.
“He’s powerful, all right, but not that powerful. Not without help. Not without sponsorship. You know what I’m saying, Trenholm. You know exactly what I mean.
“He’s got a plan, has he? You blokes will bring civilization down around our ears and then you’ll be in charge, that it?”
Trenholm grew cold then, his nostrils flaring. He took a sip of his wine. “Something like that,” he said, then sat back a bit in his chair. “You know, Ethan, you really ought to watch what you say. It could get you killed.”
Ethan laughed. “I’ve never been very good at keeping my mouth shut,” he admitted.
“That’s true. Quite true.”
“So you must have heard something. Whispers in the night. Seen something, even? Something that doesn’t need to be there. I shouldn’t have to explain this to you, Trenholm. We do magick, and we call on all sorts of ancient horrors, gods and devils and men. But for the most part, they don’t attend services, eh? And when they do, there are repercussions. Always repercussions. Trust me. I know.”
Ethan smiled at him. Trenholm seemed to deflate suddenly, his eyes wandering as his mind did the same. When they settled on Ethan again, he looked terrified.
“You’re saying . . .”
“Quite.” Ethan sipped his scotch. Made Trenholm wait. Then, at length: “Your man has a demon sponsor, old friend. And that demon is not going to help out for recreation. He’s sold you out. All of you. Now I’ve . . . aligned myself with those who’d like to stop him. Hell on Earth would be a terror, wouldn’t it? So much competition for attention. My little games would be mere trifles in that light.
“I need the demon’s name, Trenholm. And your master’s location. He’s holding the Slayer’s mother. I need to know where.”
The man’s usual deathly pallor had turned a shade of green, as though he’d died right there in his seat. After a long moment, he blinked several times as though waking from a long sleep.
“You know I can’t,” he whispered. “Even if what you say is true . . . he’d kill me.”
Ethan leaned toward him, eminently reasonable, swirling the ice in his scotch glass. “Trenholm, dear boy,” he said, “let me make this easy for you. Number one, if you don’t tell me, and Hell intrudes upon Earth, you’ll suffer for eternity. Which in your case would be well deserved, if only for your idiocy.
“Number two, can you feel your feet?”
Taken off guard by this seemingly inane question, Trenholm scowled, began to make some retort, and then his face froze. He glanced down. His face crumbled, and a tear appeared at the corner of his left eye and began to stream down his cheek.
The waiter brought their meals, happily asked if there would be anything else. Ethan ordered another glass of scotch, and, out of pure kindness, asked for another wine for poor Trenholm.
When he’d left, Trenholm could only stare at his food. “What have you done to me?” he asked, without even looking up.
“Hmm?” Ethan mumbled, even as he contentedly chewed his first wonderful bite of steak. It was perfect here, every time.
“Oh, right. Well, it’s just a little spell, really. Made slightly more difficult by the restrictions I placed on it. I’ve given you time, you see, it’s going to take effect quite slowly. And, of course, I know precisely how to counter it, assuming you give me reason to.”
“Ethan,” Trenholm snarled through gritted teeth. “What have you done to me?”
“It’s the Gorgon’s Eye, I’m afraid,” Ethan said, and a small thrill ran through him as he watched the tic in Trenholm’s right eye begin to flutter. “It’s probably moving up your legs right now, yes?
“That’s right, old man. You’re turning to stone.”
Trenholm didn’t have a response for that.
Ethan took another bite of steak, chewed several times, and then paused. “I’m going to eat my dinner now. When I’m through, I’ll expect those answers. Otherwise, I’ll just leave you here.”
He ate very slowly. Trenholm didn’t eat a single bite. He moved less and less, and by the time Ethan wiped his mouth with the heavy cloth napkin he’d had on his lap, he thought the man was likely stone from about the navel on down. When he finally met Trenholm’s gaze again, there was hatred in the man’s eyes such as even Ethan had never seen.
But Trenholm told him what he wanted to know.
Ethan smiled. “Thank you so much, Calvin. You may have just saved the world. And you’ve certainly saved your life.”
“Until Il Maestro destroys me,” Trenholm said.
“Well, then, if I were you I’d be off to a church as soon as I was able,” Ethan advised. “I wouldn’t want to die with what you’ve got on your soul. Not if you believe that sort of thing.”
With a flick of his wrist, Ethan produced a small box of wooden matches. He reached for the white candle that burned on the table, blew it out, and then relit it with a match of his own. Black smoke burned up from the candle for a moment, and then it burned white.
“Just a whiff or two should do it,” he explained.
The man complied, inhaling the smoke, and his features seemed to relax as his lower half began to return to its fleshly state. While that process was taking place, Ethan waved the waiter over and procured the check, which he then paid in cash.
“Shall we be off, then?” he asked when the waiter had gone. “You might be a bit shaky on those legs at first, but you’ll adjust.”
They walked outside together, and Ethan was right. Trenholm had trouble putting one foot in front of the other. But by the time they reached the parking lot, he’d fully recovered.
Trenholm rounded on Ethan, who had begun to stroll toward his rental car, whistling “Over the Rainbow.”
“I should kill you, you know!” the man declared.
Ethan nodded. “I wholly agree,” he said. “But you won’t. If you were going to kill me, you would have done it years ago, when I first seduced Kymberly. I’m not surprised you left her, you know. Insufferable witch.”
Trenholm reddened, and for a moment Ethan wondered if the man would actually attempt to attack him. It would be a change for him, at least. But then his question was interrupted, and would forever remain unanswered, as a black Jeep roared suddenly out of a space behind Trenholm and shot across the pavement at him, its lights out. The man barely had time to scream before the vehicle shattered his body, throwing him to the ground a lifeless shell.
Tires squealed as the Jeep turned, backed up, and started for Ethan. An elderly couple had come out of the restaurant in time to see Trenholm’s murder, and now were screaming at him to run for his life.
Ethan rolled his eyes. He’d prepared for this. The Sons of Entropy acolytes behind the wheel knew that Trenholm was likely a traitor, but they couldn’t have known who it was he’d been meeting.
Or they’d have sent sorcerers instead of assassins.
“Janus, oh golden idol,” he said quickly, gesticulating with his fingers. “Transform, begone, from human’s eyes; fur and ears, now smaller size.”
The men behind the wheel turned into rabbits and the Jeep crashed into several parked cars. Ethan was glad his rental had been spared. While the people on the restaurant stairs called out to him, he climbed in, started the engine, and drove off, laughing softly to himself.
He just loved coming to Sunnydale.
* * *
Angel wasn’t at the library when Buffy returned. They’d planned to meet there at seven, and from there to continue the search for her mother. But when she pushed through the swinging doors, the room appeared empty at first.
“Hello?” she called out, as she moved farther into the room.
In the cage, Oz snarled and threw himself against the metal mesh. He stalked back and forth across the small space, glaring at her, saliva sliding from his fangs.
“Down, boy,” she said in a low voice. “You got up on the wrong side of the moon this morning.”
The werewolf snarled.
Behind Buffy, the door opened. She turned to see Giles coming in with a cup of coffee in one hand, holding a book open in the other.
“You could get hurt doing that,” she said.
Giles looked up, startled, and his coffee spilled on his hand. He hissed and held the cup away from him.
“See,” Buffy said reasonably. “It’s bad enough, the whole walking and reading thing. But carrying hot coffee? Major potential for household injuries.”
“Yes, well, perhaps if you weren’t sneaking around . . .” Giles began, even as he put the cup and book down and went in search of a paper towel.
Then he looked up, as if startled by his own words. “I’m sorry, Buffy,” he said. “I’ve just been growing more and more frustrated, trying to figure out where your mother might be held. Sunnydale is actually a larger town than it would appear, though—unsurprisingly—not very thickly settled in most areas.”
Oz growled again.
Giles looked over at him, rolled his eyes. “Oh, do shut up!” he snapped.
The werewolf paused, looked at him a moment, then went about his business of being caged up.
“Oh, great, Giles, lash out at the defenseless werewolf,” Buffy said, raising her eyebrows. “Look, Angel was supposed to meet me here. Has he shown?”
“Not yet,” Giles replied. “No. But there are some things we have to discuss, Buffy.”
There was a tone in his voice that was all too familiar. Giles picked his coffee up again and turned to regard her. The silence inside the school was too much for her.
“What is it, Giles?” she asked weakly. “Something with my mom? Is she . . .”
The Slayer could not finish that sentence.
Giles’s eyes widened. “Oh, Lord, no, Buffy. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to imply anything of the sort. But there is a connection, I’m afraid. You see, earlier today when I was at Angel’s speaking with Micaela, young Jacques told us that he could sense his father, well, dying.”
“That’s nothing new,” Buffy replied. “It seems like he’s been on the verge of checking out for, okay, ever.”
“Indeed,” Giles agreed. “But this is different. It’s the first time Jacques has felt anything of the sort. It likely means that whatever has been sustaining Jean-Marc Regnier, the Cauldron, the house, what have you . . . that those things can no longer help him.”
Buffy took that in, and then let its meaning sink in for several seconds. If it was true, it meant that Giles’s flying to Boston with the kid, with Jacques, just wasn’t going to work.
“I’m not going,” she said bluntly.
Giles blinked. Ran a hand through his hair. Began to speak, then thought better of what he’d been about to say.
“You know I can’t go,” she said. “Angel can go. Oz can . . .” she glanced at the werewolf in the cage. “All right, maybe Oz can’t go. But Angel can. I’m not leaving this town until I find my mother, Giles. I can’t just take off and leave her a prisoner of some psycho who really wants me instead.”
“We’ll find her,” Giles insisted.
Buffy swallowed. “Sorry. You had your shot.”
“This is too important, Buffy,” he told her, growing angry now. “I’m sorry, but to simply pawn this off on Angel, who has several handicaps of his own, if you hadn’t noticed . . . The world hangs in the balance.”
“My mother’s life hangs in the balance!” she snapped, and then all the energy left her, and when she spoke again, it was nearly a whisper. “Right now, she’s all the world I have.”
They stood together in silence. The only sound in the room was the grunting and heavy breathing of the werewolf in the cage. Oz, Buffy reminded herself. It’s Oz, not just some monster. And Oz needed Willow.
Buffy needed Willow. Things just seemed to make more sense, decisions seemed to be easier to make, when Willow was around. She always seemed to know the right thing, hard as it might be to say it. And Xander . . . If he’d been here, he’d have volunteered to lead the charge into the ghost roads. Crazy and stupid and unbelievably brave. But now he’s . . .
“We should have heard from them by now, Giles,” she said, hanging her head in despair.
They had no idea what had happened to Willow and Cordelia, and even if they made it to the Gatehouse, Cordelia’s cell phone didn’t work there. There had been no answer on the regular ground line, and Buffy feared the worst.
Xander might be dead.
Her mother was a prisoner, and might as well be dead, if Buffy couldn’t find her.
The world was falling apart around her, Hell trying desperately to spill into Earth. The Gatekeeper was on his deathbed. It all seemed so hopeless.
Buffy lifted her head. No, she told herself. Never hopeless.
“I’ll take him,” she said. “Get him here.”
Giles nodded, but there was no sense of victory in his manner. He went to reach for the phone—
“And, Giles?”
“Hmm?”
“Find her.”
Before he could answer, the swinging doors of the library opened again, and Angel stepped in. But he wasn’t alone. Micaela and Jacques were with him. The looks on each of their faces made Buffy freeze.
“Oh, Rupert,” Micaela said fretfully.
“What is it?” Giles asked. “What now?”
It was Angel who answered. “It’s the Gatekeeper,” he said, turning to crouch and put an arm across the shoulders of the heir to the Gatehouse.
“He’s dead.”
“Dear God,” Giles whispered.
Buffy closed her eyes. “We’re too late.”
* * *
“Oh, God, Willow, what’s wrong with him?” Cordelia shrieked, grabbing Willow’s shoulder.
“I don’t know, I don’t know!”
The girls looked down at Xander, who lay in the Cauldron of Bran the Blessed. He had been there throughout most of the day. At first, they’d thought him dead. But then he’d moved, just a little. And a little more. But now . . . this.
His body was shaking violently in the Cauldron, spasming, his arms and legs pivoting, his head slamming back against the iron walls of the Cauldron. He should have shattered his entire body by now. But he hadn’t.
Xander’s eyes were wide open and he stared at them. Plaintively, he spoke. “Will. Cor. Help me.”
Tears coursed down Willow’s cheeks. Cordelia’s makeup was running down her face in black streaks. Both girls tried to reach into the Cauldron, tried to hold Xander down, but it was no use.
The door to the chamber, the Gatekeeper’s bedroom, slammed open and a punishing wind whipped against them, blowing them both back slightly from the Cauldron. Willow leaned forward and gripped the edge of its rim. She grabbed Cordelia, and then they were both hanging on.
“Oh God, oh God, oh God, Xander!” Willow said, terrified for him. Then she looked at Cordelia again. “We’ve got to get him out of there!”
“Get his arms!” Cordelia shouted over the galeforce wind.
Lamps shattered. A large bust of some Egyptian god crashed through the window and flew out into the courtyard.
“Where did Antoinette go? The ghost? We need to know what’s happening!” Willow yelled.
“Just get him!” Cordy replied.
The two girls reached into the Cauldron and grasped Xander by the wrists. Both were instantly jerked upright by an electrical shock that ran through their bodies. The surge threw them back, away from the Cauldron.
With a sudden hush, the wind died.
Inside the Cauldron, Xander let out a long, chilling scream.
“Willow, look!” Cordelia cried.
The ghost of Antoinette Regnier floated through the open door and into the room. There were gossamer tears on her face, and yet, despite the tears and the rumbling of the house beneath them, the ghost seemed strangely content.
“Is this the end?” Willow asked her. “Have we . . . did we lose?”
Cordelia stared at her. “You don’t think . . .”
Antoinette floated now above the Cauldron, looking down at Xander with kind eyes. Tendrils of blue light shot suddenly from every corner of the room, from the ceiling above and the floor beneath, and together they struck the Cauldron. It lit up in an aura of crackling blue light, and then, as the girls looked on, Xander floated up out of the Cauldron, jerking as the magick swirled around him.
He floated on the air.
And he smiled.
“My son Jean-Marc has joined me now,” whispered the ghost. “The Gatekeeper is dead. But when last he immersed himself in that Cauldron, he left a part of himself behind, a bit of his life force drained away. The Cauldron saved your friend, but it also washed him in my son’s life force.
“The house did it, you see. The Gatehouse thought that he was one of us, that he was a Regnier.”
“What do you mean?” Cordelia demanded. “The house can’t think! It isn’t alive!”
“No. But the magick is alive. The spell that Richard Regnier wove so very long ago. All the power and knowledge of the Gatekeeper will pass to the heir. Without Jacques here, the house sought out the heir.”
Willow stared at Xander, blue fire crackling around him.
“Xander,” she whispered. “It thought Xander was the heir.”
“What?” Cordelia cried. “Willow, that’s insane.”
“No,” Willow replied. “It’s true. Otherwise, the world would have been destroyed.”
“Xander?” Cordelia asked, plaintively, looking up at him where he hung above the Cauldron.
He looked down on them and smiled beatifically. Tendrils of blue magickal fire snaked out to stroke their faces, to touch their hair, but they did not burn.
The house stopped shaking when Xander spoke.
“I am the Gatekeeper.”