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- I lifted my eyebrows at him and lifted my pentacle, willing it to light. "Here," I said. "Shiela, I hope you don't mind if they come in?"
- Butters peered up at me and then around him.
- "Harry?" he asked.
- "Yeah?"
- "Um, who are you talking to?"
- I stared at him for a silent second.
- And then a few details floated together in my mind, and the bottom dropped all the way out of my stomach.
- I closed my eyes for a moment, and opened my inner vision, my wizard's Sight, and turned to face Shiela.
- The little apartment simply dissolved, sliding away like paint being washed away by a stream of falling water. In its place I could see a dimly lit, gutted building. Studs stood naked where the drywall had been removed. There were piles of scrap wiring, half-rotted-looking ducts, and similar refuse, which had been removed from the building and thrown aside into refuse piles. The place had been prepared for renovation-but it was empty. The only window I could see was broken. Thunder rumbled, the sound slightly different than it had been a moment before. The driving rain gained a couple of notches of volume, beating hollowly on the old apartment building.
- I stared at Shiela with my Sight, and she stood there unchanged- except that I could see a faint tint of light around her, subtle but definite. It meant that she was either a noncorporeal presence or an illusion of thought and energy rather than a reality. But if she'd been an illusion, she should have faded away entirely, as the apartment had done.
- I released my Sight again. My stomach twisted on itself, a burning, bitter feeling. "Shiela," I said quietly. "Stars and stones, it's all but your real name, isn't it? Lasciel."
- "It's close," Shiela agreed quietly.
- "Harry?" Butters whispered. His eyes were very wide. "Who are you talking to?"
- "Shut up a minute, Butters," I said, staring at her. She regarded me quietly, her eyes now steady on mine. "That's what Billy was talking about. Bock started looking awfully odd when I was speaking to you at the bookstore. And you never interacted with anyone else. Never opened any doors in the store. Didn't pick up the book when I was looking for it." I glanced down at my hand, where she'd written her number in permanent ink. It was now gone. "Illusions," I said.
- "Yes," she said calmly. "Some of appearance only. Some of seeming."
- "Why?"
- "To help you," she said. "I told you that I could not make open contact with your conscious mind. That is why I created Shiela." She gestured down at herself. "I wanted to help you, but I couldn't do it directly. So I tried to do it this way."
- "So you lied to me," I said.
- She arched a brow. "I had little choice in the matter."
- "What about after you made contact with me?" I said, and my voice was bitter too. "I used the Hellfire and you came to me in a dream."
- "That was after you met Shiela, if you will recall," she said.
- "But you didn't need Shiela anymore."
- "No," she said. "I didn't. But I found that I..." She rolled her shoulders in a shrug. "That I enjoyed being Shiela. That I enjoyed interacting with you as one person to another. Without being regarded with fear and suspicion. I know that you understand what it is like. You've felt it often enough in your own life."
- Dead Beat Chapter 35, Page 312
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