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- The skull's eye sockets burned colder yet, but he said nothing.
- I swallowed. Bob... wasn't Bob anymore. I'd known that he was bound and beholden to whoever possessed the skull he resided within, and that their personality would strongly influence his own-but I'd never really imagined what that might be like. Bob wasn't precisely a friend to me but... I was used to him. In a way he was family, the mouthy, annoying, irritable cousin who was always insulting you but who was definitely at Thanksgiving dinner. I had never considered the possibility that one day he might be something else.
- Something murderous.
- The worst part was that Bob had given Cowl good advice. My death curse might well mess up this spell, but on the other hand, Cowl did not seem one to be afraid of death curses. If he gave me the chance to wait until he was actually at the delicate moment of drawing down the power, I wouldn't need anything as strong as a death curse to upset his balance.
- Of course, it would kill me. Kumori's blade would see to that. But I could stop him if I was alive when it went down.
- Cowl set the skull aside on the grass, then raised his hands above his head and let the sleeves fall back from his long, weathered arms covered in old scars. He began a chant in a low voice, steady and strong.
- The vortex quivered. And then, almost delicately, it began to descend to Cowl, drifting toward him as lightly and slowly as a drifting feather of down.
- Power rolled through the heavens, the clouds, the whirling vortex. Spirits and swirling apparitions screamed and wailed their tormented replies. Kumori's hands never weakened or wavered, but I could sense that almost every fiber of her attention was directed toward Cowl.
- I might have one chance.
- "Bob," I said. "Bob."
- The blue eye lights turned toward me.
- "Think," I said quietly. "Think, Bob. You know me. You've worked with me for years."
- The blue eye lights narrowed.
- "Bob," I said quietly. "You've got to remember me. I gave you a name."
- The skull quivered a little, as if a shudder had run through it, but the eyes continued to burn cold and blue.
- And then one of them flickered into a shade of its usual orange, then immediately back to cold blue.
- My heart thudded in sudden excitement. Bob the skull, my Bob, had just winked at me.
- Cowl continued his chant, and the clouds spun more and more rapidly. The rain abruptly stopped, as swiftly as if someone had turned off a faucet, and the air filled with spirits, ghosts, apparitions and specters, caught in some vast and unseen whirlpool that dragged them in accelerating circles. The power in the air made it hard to breathe, and the roar of wailing spirits, vast wind, and an earth-deep rumble grew steadily louder.
- "Bob," I shouted into the cacophony, "you have my permission!"
- Orange light streaked from the eye sockets of the skull and blazed away from the circle of overturned picnic tables-but even so, I saw Bob's glowing body of energy pulled by the whirling currents of magic. He fought against that horrible vortex, and I suddenly realized that without the shelter of the skull or some other kind of physical body, Bob was no different from any of the other spirit beings trapped in that vast maelstrom. If the Darkhallow was completed, he too would be trapped and devoured.
- Dead Beat Chapter 42, Page 382-384
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