by SM Reine
Bitter Thirst
A Preternatural Affairs Novel
S M Reine
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
OTHER SERIES BY SM REINE
The Descent Series
The Ascension Series
Seasons of the Moon
The Cain Chronicles
Tarot Witches
Preternatural Affairs
War of the Alphas
The Mage Craft Series
Dana McIntyre Must Die
* * *
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The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
This book is sold DRM-free so that it can be enjoyed in any way the reader sees fit. Please keep all links and attributions intact when sharing. All rights reserved.
Text, covers, and layout © SM Reine 2017.
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Published by Red Iris Books
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Chapter 1
December 2012
The first thing that struck me about the murder scene was the weird smell. I knew what murder was supposed to stink like and it wasn’t this. Acid, smoke, ozone.
I’d been on a few murder scenes before. Which, for the record, was never my choice. When I’d signed up to be an agent with the Office of Preternatural Affairs, my resume clearly specified “doesn’t fucking do anything involving dead bodies, period.” If “no dead bodies” had been a deal breaker, they never should have hired me.
They’d hired me. And I’d been on way too many murder scenes since. Some of them ugly, real ugly. None of them as ugly as this, which said a lot. The time that I woke up to a dead succubus in my bathtub had been bad on multiple levels. Plus I’d dealt with those ritualistic murders committed by a fallen angel. And don’t even get me started on the shit I saw going down in Reno a couple years back.
This was still worse.
Senator Peterson had been vivisected, crucified, decapitated, and hung out to dry.
“Dab some under your nose.” Fritz Friederling handed a bottle of cologne to me.
I did what he suggested. Instead of making the scene smell better, it made his expensive cologne smell like blood and perforated intestine. “Does this work for you?”
“Not sure,” he said, “never tried it.” He was peering closely at the places where Senator Peterson had been nailed to his bookshelf, right under a decorative blunderbuss and a painting of bald eagles. You know, the kind of paintings that hung all over Washington D.C., home of America, fuck yeah.
Watch out East Coast, Cèsar Hawke was in the thirteen original colonies.
These weren’t my usual stomping grounds. I shouldn’t have been there—a fact that I couldn’t stop repeating in my mind as I walked around the scene, plastic booties crinkling, palms sweating in my latex gloves.
I should not have fucking been anywhere near a crucified, vivisected politician.
And yet here I was.
There must have been better agents than me closer to this side of the country.
Chances were good I hadn’t been summoned to the scene because of my skill. Fritz and I came as a package deal and Fritz was a hell of a lot more useful than I was. A lot harder to perturb, too. Fritz was examining evidence while I kept struggling to breathe.
I’d watched this guy cut out the heart of a fallen angel, so it wasn’t a shock for him to be so serene.
“The body is suspended by spears of infernal obsidian through his palms,” Fritz said, probing Senator Peterson’s palms with tweezers.
Black fluid oozed from around the obsidian. It dribbled down the inside of the senator’s cold blue wrist.
My vision was blurring. My mouth was watering. “Huh?”
“I’m not speaking to you, Cèsar.” And then, more kindly, Fritz said, “Why don’t you look out the windows to make sure the security detail’s still there?”
Happily.
I stood in front of the window but couldn’t tell if the detail was outside. The streetlights had blown during the demon’s attack. I spotted the occasional flashlight bobbing along the sidewalk, just on the other side of the manicured shrubbery, but I couldn’t see bodies.
Any one of them could be demons.
Any one of them could have been the demon, coming back this way to clean up after himself.
The fact it was so dark outside meant that the window acted like a shitty mirror. Once the last of the bobbing flashlights passed, I had a great view of the body behind me.
Senator Peterson’s arms extended in either direction.
His cauterized neck-stump.
The head itself, sitting on the center of the desk, mouth and eyelids sagging.
The shreds of his skin dangling from his chest mingling with the shreds of cloth from his Hawaiian patterned t-shirt, like the worst beaded curtain ever.
Fuck, the room smelled bad.
Gary Zettel came through the doorway. He was King Kong wearing a tailored suit, necktie and all, which made his head look like a squeezed balloon on the brink of popping. “Yes, it’s infernal obsidian. What else?”
“That’s all I’ve got for you. I’m not an expert in infernal anything.” Fritz’s tone was mild, but I knew him well enough to tell he was getting annoyed. His reflection in the window shimmered as it passed behind me to face Zettel.
“So you don’t know anything about demons who might want to assassinate Senator Peterson?”
“I don’t know Senator Peterson,” Fritz said.
“That’s funny.” It didn’t sound like Zettel even knew what the word “funny” meant. Like he’d never used the word in his entire life. “You know everyone.”
“The ones who matter.”
“Senator Peterson didn’t matter? Did he deserve to die?”
“Try not to get yourself too excited,” Fritz said. “You’ve got a long day of meetings tomorrow. Don’t waste your energy antagonizing me, Secretary.”
Zettel wasn’t secretary of anything. “Who’s a secretary?” I asked, turning.
Bad idea. As terrible as the room’s reflection looked, the reality of it was so much worse. Worse in smell, worse in color. Every light had been turned on so that I could see exactly how dark the dry, tacky smears of blood were becoming.
Even when I’d stopped turning, the room kept swimming. I grabbed the windowsill for balance and hoped that it was subtle.
“Gary Zettel has become Secretary of the Office of Preternatural Affairs,” Fritz said. Now his tone was so blank that even I couldn’t pick emotion out of it. Instead, I got his emotion through our bond.
Did I mention we’re magically bonded? Yeah, we’re magically bonded, which meant that I could feel his emotions if they were strong enough.
Fritz’s disgust was really strong.
“Since when is Zettel the OPA’s secretary?” I asked.
“Since POTUS appointed me to his cabinet,” Zettel said. Such a casual way to talk about the president. POTUS. Like it’s a word. Who the fuck even refers to a fellow human being using an acronym? Zettel, that’s who.
“Cabinet positions are public information,” I said. “Does he have a secret cabinet now?”
“No,” Fritz said.
I’m not the brightest tool in the picnic basket, but even I could add up two and two to reach four.
Two big things were happening right now.
Gary Zettel—Secretary Gary Zettel—had summoned Fritz and me all the way to the ass-end of the country because of Fritz’s connections in Hell. You know, Hell. The place demons come from. Fritz was bona fide human, but his in-laws weren’t. His family had mines in Hell staffed by human slaves.
If it makes you feel any better, the slaves usually didn’t survive long enough to be miserable.
So that was the first big thing happening. Zettel was deliberately picking on Fritz for whatever reason.
The second thing was worse.
The fact that Zettel now had a fancy-ass title meant that things were changing in the OPA.
I’d been working for the OPA for…God, I don’t know, enough years that they’d given me a commemorative pen. And yes, the pen was black with white lettering, just like everything that the OPA has. It had also stopped working about two days after the first use. Also like everything the OPA has.
In the time I’d worked for the OPA, I’d been a ghost agent working for a ghost agency. The kind of people in suits that conspiracy theorists wore tinfoil hats to avoid.
The advantages to secrecy were enormous. Sure, skulking around in the shadows meant that I spent at least half my time in the field cleaning up evidence and wiping memories of the incident, so there’d be less of that.
Secrecy also meant no accountability. Not externally, anyway. I did shameful things with the OPA, and nobody knew about it. That was great.
It was also about to end.
Now I couldn’t tell if my dizziness was because of the enormity of the fuckery to come, or if it was because Senator Peterson’s head was looking at me. Swear to God, looking right at me.
I was probably imagining Peterson’s stare. I wasn’t imagining Fritz’s. When I finally looked away from Senator Dead Guy, I caught Fritz watching me, his face carved into lines of grim resolve.
He looked the way I felt.
This is what we’ve been waiting for. I projected the thought toward Fritz as clearly as I could.
He would get only my emotion, not the words. I got his emotion in return. It was validating me, agreeing with me.
And my response to his response was sort of like, Shit, fuck, crap, fucking crappy shit.
Fritz returned his attention to Zettel, but before he turned away, I saw his mouth twitch into a smile. “I can tell you that the demon who did this to Senator Peterson didn’t originate from Dis, nor from Malebolge or any other infernal city I have dealings in.”
“But you recognized the obsidian,” Zettel said. Bet Fritz was thinking about punching the smug gleam out of his eyes. I know I was thinking about it.
“It’s Lilith’s touch,” Fritz said, “a power that was unique to Lilith and her offspring. We killed the last of them in Reno.”
If this had anything to do with the kind of demons we’d seen in Reno, I was out. “I’m going to get some air,” I said.
“Stay here,” Zettel said. “I want to talk with you before you leave.” He turned back to Fritz. “I thought it was Lilith’s touch. Just needed confirmation. In that sense you’ve been helpful, Friederling. I don’t think you know exactly how helpful. We’ll be able to make an arrest in no time.”
Man, that sounded ominous.
“Do some of her offspring remain?” Fritz asked, looking much more interested in the subject matter than I was.
“That’s classified.” Which meant yes. “They don’t present a public threat. Response to this assassination won’t be looking specifically at Lilith’s offspring, but at preternaturals who present a public safety risk.”
“Response” sounded ominous too.
Or maybe I was panicking.
Zettel ushered us out of the crime scene. Senator Peterson’s office was an island of fancy old woodwork among a sea of cubicles not unlike my workspace back in Los Angeles. It was currently occupied by Union personnel. You could always tell Union kopides by how weirdly graceful they were, the black tactical gear, and the branded Bluetooth headsets.
We hung just outside of Senator Peterson’s door, and the rest of the Union staff hung far enough back for us to have the illusion of privacy.
One of the Union guys broke away from the others to bring an iPad to Zettel. “Email from the agency’s president,” he said.
“Thanks, Dante.” Zettel barely looked at him, but I could feel a weird tension between them. My face tickled when they got close to each other. Sort of like when you try to drink a too-fizzy soda and get bubbles up the nose.
I scrubbed my upper lip furiously as Dante walked away, trying to interpret the sensation. He must have been a witch. He had rune ribbons hanging from his belt and his sidearm was stamped with runes too. Plus he was too stringy to be a kopis, who were naturally ripped with muscle.
Why was a random witch assisting Zettel? “Where’s Allyson?” I tried to make the question sound casual. Not like I was asking after my least favorite human being on the planet.
Zettel clutched his chest and sagged. First time I’d seen anything resembling weakness on the guy. “Allyson.”
Fritz seized my sleeve to drag my ear down to whisper-level. “She died defending the Fernley installation.” That was a Union base outside of Reno.
“Jesus.” Just the mention of an aspis dying freaked me out. The bond between kopis and aspis was strong—as in, dying-together strong. Losing Fritz would feel pretty much like getting crucified and decapitated by a demon.
Zettel recovered from the reminder of his aspis quickly, but now that I knew he was suffering, it was easy to see the physical symptoms. The lines on his face had gotten deeper. His skin was paler. Looked like his hairline was receding, too. Most kopides didn’t live long enough to lose hair. “Allyson Whatley sacrificed her life in the service of the OPA. Dante is my aspis now.”
“Man, I’m sorry to hear that,” I said. Couldn’t have happened to a nicer person, I didn’t say.
“If we’ve given you the information you need for this case, Agent Hawke and I should return to Los Angeles,” Fritz said. “The changing environment is going to cause upheaval all across the country. We’ve got to get ahead of West Coast public reaction while we have time.”
“I need to borrow your aspis before you leave,” Zettel said. “You understand.”
“I don’t,” I said. It wasn’t like aspides were interchangeable. It was a lifelong bond, and you could swap an aspis even less easily than you could swap wives with your neighbor.
Zettel glared at me with expectant King Kong eyes.
Fritz was looking at me too. And jerking his head subtly in Zettel’s direction.
Secretary of the OPA. Right. That meant that Zettel had turned from a demoted butt-monkey into the king of the jungle. I was the butt-monkey now.
I straightened my shoulders and said seriously, calmly, “Yes sir, I’ll be happy to help.”
“I’ll wait in the car,” Fritz said. “I should make some calls.”
He left, and I leaned after him like Michael Jackson in the “Smooth Criminal” video. Damn it, I didn’t want to be stuck with Gary Zettel. I wanted to go with my asshole rich-guy kopis who had my favorite brand of protein shake in his limousine.
“We’ll speak in private, Agent Hawke,” Zettel said.
And he swept his hand toward the crime scene.
Chapter 2
You wanna feel uncomfortable? Try having a secret meeting with your mortal enemy—who has recently become your boss—right next to a dead guy. “Wards,” Zettel said the inst
ant the door closed.
I cast wards on the office. I used to suck bad at wards, but I’d gotten enough practice now that I sucked good. The quality was great even if it took me forever and a day to finish the wards from scratch. Zettel was jiggling his foot with impatience by the time I was done.
The magic snapped into place.
“You know what Allyson was doing,” Zettel said without preamble.
I scratched my chin. Pretended to be interested in a random book on the senator’s shelf. I was familiar with Allyson’s dirty laundry, skid-marks and all, but it wasn’t right to accuse the dead of shitting her underwear. “You’re going to have to be more specific.”
“She was facilitating the sale of human slaves to the noble houses of Hell.”
All right. We were talking skid-marks.
Fuck it, go for broke. “Not trying to call you out, sir, but kopides and aspides operate as a unit. Also, I think Director Friederling and I have made our intent to be quiet clear, and—”
“I knew what Allyson was doing, but I wasn’t involved,” Zettel said.
“If you weren’t involved, why didn’t you stop her?”
“I didn’t care,” he said.
I wasn’t sure if I admired how blunt Zettel was. Most guys would have at least pretended that they cared about human lives.
“The Office of Preternatural Affairs is going public,” Zettel said. “We’re going to be under scrutiny. We can hand-wave the disappearing people in Reno—”
“The slaves Allyson sold.”
“—because my aspis is dead, and that makes her a good scapegoat.” His Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed hard. “She’d have wanted it that way.”
“I bet she’d have wanted to not be dead.”
“Take my word for it. She got what she wanted in the end.” Zettel rubbed a hand over his jaw. “My time’s important so I’m not going to beat around the bush. Now that the OPA’s going public, Lucrezia de Angelis is a problem.”
“In the same way that icebergs were a problem for the Titanic,” I said. “Sir.”
“Exactly. Lucrezia directed the sale of those slaves, and she’s not dead. She’s still the vice president of our agency. She’s also old-money, a foreigner, and has skeletons in her closet worse than you can imagine.”