The Ultimate Dresden Omnibus, 0-15

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The Ultimate Dresden Omnibus, 0-15 Page 265

by Butcher, Jim


  The phage hit my shield, bringing a ghostly blue quarter dome into shape and sending a cascade of blue sparks flying back around me. At the last second, I turned and angled the shield to deflect the creature’s momentum. It caromed off the shield and went tumbling along the hallway beyond me for a good twenty feet.

  “You want some of this?” I stepped into the middle of the hall to put myself between the phage and the wounded girl. The phage rose, turning to flee. Before it could move I thrust the end of my staff in its direction and cried, “Forzare!”

  I hadn’t ever used quite that much Hellfire before.

  Power rushed out of my staff. Usually, when I employed it like this, the force I unleashed was invisible. This time, it rushed out like a scarlet comet, like a blazing cannonball. The force dipped at the last second, then came up at the phage. The impact threw it against the ceiling with bone-crushing force, and at least twice as much energy as I’d intended. The phage came down, limbs thrashing wildly, bouncing and skittering frantically, like a half-smashed bug.

  I hit it again, the runes in my staff blazing, bathing the whole length of the hall in scarlet radiance, slamming the phage into a wall with more crunching sounds. Yellowish liquid splattered, there was an absolutely awful smell, and sudden holes pocked the wall and the floor where the yellow blood fell.

  I cried havoc in the hellish light and hit it again. And again. And again. I bounced the murdering phage around that hallway until acid burned a hundred holes in the walls, ceiling, and floor, and my blood sang with the battle, with the power, with triumph.

  I lost track of several seconds. The next thing I remember, I stood over the crushed, twitching phage. “It’s the only way to be sure,” I told it. And then, with cool deliberation, I slammed the end of my staff into the thing’s eyeless skull, muscle and magic alike propelling the blow. Its head crunched and fractured like a cheap taco shell, and suddenly there was no phage, no creature. There was only the damaged hallway, the tainted smell of hellish wood smoke, and a mound of clear, swiftly dissolving ectoplasm.

  My knees shook and I sat down in the hallway. I closed my eyes. The red light of Hellfire continued to pulse through my staff, lighting the hall, illuminating my eyelids.

  The next thing I knew, Mouse pressed up against my side, an enormous, warm, silent presence. Bright lights bobbed toward me. Flashlights. Footsteps. People were shouting a lot.

  “Jesus,” Rawlins breathed.

  Murphy knelt down by me and touched my shoulder. “Harry?”

  “I’m okay,” I said. “The girl. Behind me. She’s hurt.”

  Rawlins stood shining his flashlight on a bloody section of the hallway. “Jesus Christ.”

  The phage had killed three people before I got there. I hadn’t been able to see much of them during the fight. It was a scene of horror, worse than any slaughterhouse. The phage had taken out a cop. I could see a piece of shirt with a bloodstained CPD badge on it. The second victim might have been a middle-aged man, judging by a bloodied orthopedic shoe that still held a foot. White leg bone showed two or three inches above the shoe.

  The third victim had been one of the little vampire girls I’d seen the previous evening. I could only tell because her head had landed facing me. The rest of her was hopelessly intermixed with the other two bodies.

  They’d need someone good at jigsaw puzzles to put them back together.

  Murphy went to the girl with the lighter, and knelt over her.

  “How is she?” I asked.

  “Gone,” Murphy replied.

  I blinked. “What?”

  “She’s dead.”

  “No,” I said. I was too tired to feel much of the sudden frustration that went through me. “Hell’s bells, she was moving just a second ago. I got here in time.”

  Murphy grimaced. “She bled out.”

  “Wait,” I said, staggering to my feet. “This isn’t…She shouldn’t be…”

  I felt a sudden sickness in my stomach.

  Was she still alive when the phage had turned to run? Could I have stopped or slowed the bleeding, if I had let the thing retreat to the Nevernever?

  I thought of the fight again. I thought of the satisfaction of turning the hunter into prey, of extracting vengeance for those it had slain. I thought about the power that raged through me, the sheer, precise strength of the Hellfire-assisted assault, and how good it felt to use it on something that had it coming. I’d barely given a thought to the girl’s condition.

  Had I let her die?

  My God. I could have let the phage run.

  I could have helped her.

  The girl’s body lay curled up, still, like a sleeping child. Her dead eyes were open and glassy.

  I lunged for a potted plant near me and threw up.

  After I did, Rawlins observed, “You don’t look so good.”

  “No,” I whispered. The words tasted bitter. “I don’t.”

  Mouse let out one of his not-whine breaths and laid his chin on my shoulder. My eyes couldn’t get away from the dead people, not even when they were closed. The hellish light in my staff slowly faded and went dark.

  “I’ve got to organize this clusterfuck,” Murphy sighed. “Rawlins, keep an eye on him.”

  “Yeah.”

  She nodded once and rose, briskly moving away, snapping orders. “You, you,” Murphy said, pointing at two nearby cops. “Get over there and help the wounded. Airway, bleeding, heartbeat. Move.” She raised her voice and shouted, “Stallings! Where the hell is my ambulance?”

  “Two minutes!” a man shouted down a dimly lit hall leading to the lobby. It looked like someone had pulled a patrol car or three up to the front of the hotel to shine their headlights into the darkened building.

  “Clear them a path and call for more EMTs,” Murphy barked. She took her radio off her belt and started giving more orders.

  Rawlins looked at the remains, and at the acid-scarred walls and the enormous areas of smashed drywall and ceiling that looked like they’d been kissed by a wrecking ball. He shook his head. “What the hell happened here?”

  “Bad guy,” I said. “I got him. Not fast enough.”

  Rawlins grunted. “Come on. Best we get up to the lobby. Until they get the lights back on, it might not be safe out here.”

  “What happened on your end?” I asked.

  “Damn candle blew up in my face. Then the lights went out. Thought for a second I’d gone blind.”

  I grunted. “Sorry.”

  “Some of the civilians were carrying. That howling thing went by in the dark and everyone panicked. Stampede in the dark. People got trampled and scared. Civilians opened fire, cops opened fire. We got one dead and a couple of dozen wounded by one thing or another.”

  We reached the lobby and found more police arriving along with the emergency crews. The EMTs set up shop at once in a makeshift triage area, where Murphy had brought most of the wounded. The EMTs started stabilizing, evaluating, resuscitating. They had the worst cases loaded in the ambulance and rushing for the hospital within six or seven minutes.

  Murphy’s stream of peremptory commands had slowed to a stop, and she stood near the triage area. I sidled over to her and loomed. Mouse pushed his head underneath her hand, but Murphy only patted him absently. I followed her worried blue gaze. The EMTs were working on Rick.

  Greene sat in a chair nearby. He had wiped his face with a towel, but it hadn’t taken the blood out of the creases. It made a sanguine masque of his features. He held the towel against his head with his left hand.

  Murphy said nothing for a while. Then she asked, “Did the spell work?”

  “Mostly,” I said. “I missed one.”

  She tensed. “Is it still…”

  “No. I picked up the spare.”

  She pressed her lips firmly together and closed her eyes. “When the candle went off, I hit the fire alarm. I wanted to clear the building fast. But someone had broken it. Just like the power and the emergency lights. Something went right
by me and hit Greene early on. Now I’m the one in charge of this mess.”

  “What happened to Rick?”

  She spoke dispassionately. “Hit by panic fire. Gut shot. I don’t know how bad.”

  “He’ll be all right,” I told her. “The EMTs would have taken him out first if he was in real trouble.”

  She watched a pair of them labor over Rick. “Yeah,” she said. “He’ll be okay. He’ll be all right.”

  She forced herself to look away from her ex-husband with a visible effort. “I’ve got to get things under control here, until we get the chain of command straightened out, and I make sure the wounded are cared for. Families notified, God.” She shook her head, and watched the EMTs lift Rick onto a stretcher and carry him out. Unspoken apology infused her tone. “After that, there will be questions, and a rain forest worth of paperwork.”

  “I get it,” I told her quietly. “It’s your job.”

  “It’s my job.” She focused her eyes in the distance. I could feel the trembling tension in her. I’ve known Murphy for a while now. I’d seen her like that before, when she wanted to fall apart but couldn’t take the time to do it. She was better at managing that kind of thing than me. There was nothing in her expression but calm and confidence. “I’ll put off everything I can and get back to you as soon as possible. Tomorrow sometime.”

  “Don’t worry about me, Murph,” I told her. “And don’t be too hard on yourself. If you hadn’t gotten in Greene’s face and stayed here, a lot of people would be dead right now.”

  “A lot of people are dead right now,” she said. “What about our bad guy?”

  I felt my mouth stretch into a sharp-edged, wolfish smile. “He’s entertaining unexpected guests.”

  “Is he going to survive them?”

  “I doubt it,” I told her cheerfully. “If one of those things had jumped me, instead of vice versa, it would have taken me out. Three of them would filet me.”

  Murphy’s attention was drawn to the door. Several men in wrinkled suits came in and stood around rubbernecking. Murphy straightened her clothing. “What about collateral damage?”

  “I don’t think it will be an issue. I’ll track them and make sure.”

  Murphy nodded. “Rawlins,” she called.

  The veteran had been hovering not far away, feigning disinterest.

  She hooked a thumb up at me. “Babysit for me?”

  “Shoot,” Rawlins drawled. “Like I got nothing better to do.”

  “Suffer,” she told him, but she smiled when she said it. She put her hand on my arm and squeezed hard, letting out some of the pressure behind her calm facade through the contact. Then she strode over to the rubbernecking suits.

  Rawlins watched her go, his lips pursed. “That is one cast-iron bitch,” he said. His tone revealed a quiet respect. “Cast iron.”

  “Hell of a cop,” I said.

  Rawlins grunted. “Problem with cast iron. It’s brittle. Hit it right and it shatters.” He looked around the foyer and shook his head. “This isn’t going to go well for her.”

  “Huh?” I said.

  “Department is going to crucify someone for it,” Rawlins said. “They have to.”

  I let out a bitter bark of laughter. “After all, she probably saved a lot of lives tonight.”

  “No good deed goes unpunished,” Rawlins agreed.

  Greene blinked blearily at us from his chair and then slurred, “Rawlins? What the hell are you doing down here? I sent you home.” Anger gathered on his vague expression. “You son of a bitch. You’re defying a direct order. I’ll have your ass on a platter.”

  Rawlins sighed. “See what I mean?”

  I lifted my hand with my thumb and first two fingers extended, the others against my palm, and moved it in a vaguely mystical gesture from left to right. “That isn’t Rawlins.”

  Green blinked at me, and his eyes blurred in and out of focus. The distraction derailed the train of thought he’d been laboriously assembling. It wasn’t magic. I’ve taken head shots before. It takes a while for your brain to start doing its job again, and the vaguest kinds of confusion make things into one big blur.

  I repeated the gesture. “That isn’t Rawlins. You can go about your business. Move along.”

  Greene fumbled with a couple of words, then shook his head and closed his eyes and went back to holding the towel against his head.

  Rawlins arched an eyebrow. “You ever handle any divorce negotiations?”

  I jerked my head at Mouse and said, “Come on. Before his brains unscramble.”

  Rawlins fell into pace beside me. “Where are we going?”

  I gave him the short version of what I’d done with the other three phages. “So now I track them, and make sure the guy who called them up is out of play.”

  “Demons,” Rawlins said. “Wizards.” He shook his head.

  “Look, man—”

  He held up a hand. “No. I think about this too much and I won’t be any good to you. Don’t explain it. Don’t talk about it. Let me get through tonight and you can blow my mind all you want.”

  “Cool,” I told him. “You got a car?”

  “Yup.”

  “Let’s go.”

  We went outside and down the street to the nearest parking garage. Rawlins drove an old, blue station wagon. A bumper sticker on the back read MY KID IS TOO PRETTY TO DATE YOUR HONOR STUDENT.

  Mouse let out a sudden warning growl. An engine raced. The dog flung his weight at my thigh and sent me slamming up against Rawlins’s station wagon. A van rushed at me in my peripheral vision, too fast for me to try to avoid. It missed me by less than six inches.

  It didn’t miss Mouse. There was a meaty sound. The dog let out a bawl of pain. Brakes screeched.

  I turned, furious and terrified, and the runes in my staff seethed with sudden Hellfire.

  I had a split second to see Darby Crane swinging a tire iron. Then stars exploded in front of my eyes and the parking garage rotated ninety degrees. I saw Mouse, sprawled motionless on the concrete thirty feet away. Glau, Crane’s lawyer, stood beside the open driver’s door of the van, holding a gun on Rawlins.

  See what I mean about head shots?

  Fade to black.

  Chapter Twenty-six

  I came to with a headache, and my stomach attempted to slither out of my mouth. Its escape attempt was blocked by some kind of gag. I had the taste of metal in my mouth, and my jaws were forced uncomfortably wide. The blindfold on my face was almost a mercy, given the headache. I was pretty sure any light that got into my eyes would hurt like hell.

  My nose was filled with scents. Old motor oil. Gasoline vapors. Dust. Something metallic and elusively familiar. I knew the smell, but I couldn’t place it.

  I lay prostrate on some cold, hard surface—concrete, at a guess. My arms were held up above my head, my wrists bound in something cold that prickled with many tiny, sharp points. Thorn manacles, then. They were meant, along with the gag and blindfold, to keep me from using my magic. If I tried to start focusing my will, they would bite and freeze. I didn’t know where the damned things came from, but Crane wasn’t the first bad guy I’d met who kept a pair on hand. Maybe there’d been a sale.

  I’d heard one person claim that they’d been invented by a two-thousand-year-old lunatic named Nicodemus, and I’d heard others claim they were of faerie make. Personally, I figured they were more likely a creation of the Red Court, materiel for their war with the Council. It would certainly be to their advantage to make sure as many people as possible had a set of restraints with no purpose but to render a mortal wizard helpless.

  Hell, if I was in the Red Court, I’d be giving the things away like Halloween candy. It was a scary notion, and for more than one reason.

  I was in trouble up to my eyebrows, but my nausea was severe enough that it took me several minutes of effort to care. Come on, Harry. You aren’t fighting your way clear of this. Use your head.

  For starters, I was still alive, and that
told me something all by itself. If Crane had wanted to kill me, he’d had all the time he would need to do it. He wouldn’t even have had to worry about the death curse a wizard could lay down on his enemies on his way into the hereafter. Unconscious wizards can’t throw curses. I was still breathing, which meant…

  I swallowed. Which meant that he had other plans for me. It did not seem like a promising way to begin thinking my way clear.

  I tried to say Rawlins’ name, but my tongue was being held in place by something, and it sounded like, “Lah-tha?”

  “Here,” Rawlins replied, his tone very quiet. “How you doing?”

  “La tha yahnah.”

  “They got me cuffed to a wall,” he said. “My own damned cuffs, too, and they took my keys. I can’t get to you, man. Sorry.”

  “Ooah ah yee?”

  “Where? Where are we?” he asked.

  I nodded. “Yah.”

  “Looks like an old auto workshop,” he replied. “Abandoned. Metal walls. Windows are painted over. Doors chained shut. Lots and lots of cobwebs.”

  “Ooah lah kuh phruh?”

  “The light? Big old shop lamp.”

  “Ah eeoh heh?”

  “Anyone here?” Rawlins asked.

  “Yah.”

  “Creepy little guy with fish lips. He won’t talk to me, even when I asked pretty please. He’s sitting in a chair about three feet from you pretending he’s a guard dog.”

  Anger returned to me in full force, and made my head pound even harder. Glau. Glau’d been driving the van. Glau had killed my dog. Without consciously making the effort, I found myself reaching for my magic, for fire enough to cremate the little toad. The manacles became a frozen agony that wiped anything resembling thought from my head.

  I bit down on the mouthpiece and forced myself to relax my will. I could not afford to allow my impulses to control me, or I’d never get out of this. There would come a time when I wouldn’t have to bite back on my emotions—but that time was not yet here.

 

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