by Day Alyssa
Alaric focused his intensity and sent a greater measure of his magic soaring toward Atlantis, to reinforce the dome. The metaphysics of the connection were beyond him; the distance should have made the link impossible. He was Atlantis’s high priest, however, and the bond between them was forged of unbreakable steel.
Christophe replied immediately:
Whatever you just did, that helped, man. The pain in my head lifted a lot, and Serai says the same.
Serai entered the mental communication:
You must succeed quickly, Alaric. Christophe and I, even with the aid of all of your acolytes and Myrken, can hold this for only one more day. Two days would be our very outer limit.
Alaric couldn’t tell them what had happened. If they knew Ptolemy had disappeared with Poseidon’s Pride, they might lose hope. Instead, he told them he was nearly there, and disconnected the communication.
He needed help, and he was willing to admit it. He sent his senses winging out over the city, until he located a certain son of the god of war. Faust probably could help him find that abandoned subway station he’d seen in his vision of Quinn during the soul-meld. There was a chance that Ptolemy had returned there to plan and plot. He certainly wouldn’t have returned to that hotel.
It didn’t take long before he sensed the youngling, although a police helicopter found Alaric standing on the torch at the same time. Before the annoying loudspeaker commands could begin again, Alaric leapt into the air. He hovered for a moment next to the surprised officer hanging out of the side.
“We are on the same side, human. I will find and destroy the demon Ptolemy for you, this I swear on my oath as the high priest of Poseidon.”
With that, he transformed to mist and, leaving one very surprised policeman behind him, headed for the location where he could feel Faust’s presence burning like a flame in the heart of the city.
Only to discover that Faust was inside a police station.
Alaric groaned as he walked out from behind the truck where he’d transformed so as not to cause a disturbance. The boy was solidifying Alaric’s belief that children were far more trouble than they were worth. Although a child with Quinn . . . His steps slowed as he visualized Quinn’s flat belly rounding with his baby, and he almost walked into a police car as it pulled into a parking space.
Time for mental daydreams later.
But thinking of Quinn and his future child was like gasoline to the flame of his fury. It took every ounce of self-control he possessed to keep from blasting a hole in the side of the building and snatching the boy, but somehow he managed it.
Barely.
After a quick check to make sure that he wasn’t glowing again—he had a feeling he’d find that hard to explain to the police—he strode into the building as if he owned the place. A quick scan revealed Faust arguing with a female police officer in front of the desk, so Alaric approached respectfully, so as not to appear hostile or aggressive. Especially since his face had certainly been on television while he destroyed City Hall. The humans tended not to appreciate that sort of thing.
Luckily, there was no sign of recognition on the policewoman’s face. Lots of frustration, but no recognition.
“I apologize for my son, officer,” he said. “Is there restitution to be made?”
Faust started to protest, but Alaric shot him a stern look. “You’re in enough trouble, young man.”
The officer shook her head. “No restitution, but he can’t keep hiding street kids from the authorities. I’ll let him go this time, since he was clearly trying to help those children, but you’d better straighten him out before he gets in real trouble.”
Alaric took a firm grip on Faust’s arm and started walking, thanking the officer as he left. It was always better to cooperate with law enforcement, a lesson the boy at his side had yet to learn, from the sound of the tirade he was spewing as they left. Something about bureaucratic idiocy, but Alaric didn’t care and he definitely didn’t have the time.
When they reached a corner alley several streets away from the police building, on a street lined with small shops and eateries, Alaric finally let go of the youngling.
“Silence,” he commanded, and Faust stopped speaking, mid-sentence, and changed course.
“Um, are you going to kill me?”
“Why would I bother to remove you from police custody, if that were the case? I could have killed you there far more easily, and without having to listen to your incessant babble,” Alaric pointed out reasonably.
For some reason, Faust did not seem to be reassured by his words. Stupid human.
“I told you I’d take care of you and your friends,” he told the boy. “You can all move to Atlantis and live happily ever after, once I retrieve the tourmaline, and save the dome, so Atlantis can rise. But for now, I need your help.”
Faust backed away a little. “You’re completely off your rocker, aren’t you? Atlantis?”
“You’ve seen the sea god in action, and you doubt Atlantis? You’re not particularly intelligent, are you?”
He started to turn away in disgust, since he would clearly receive no useful help here, but a stray thought stopped him. “How is the child?”
Faust grinned at the reminder of his tiny friend, and his shoulders relaxed. “She’s fine, thanks to you. Perfectly healthy and doesn’t even remember what happened.”
“She had no need to remember the trauma, so I removed it from her memory.”
The boy looked up at him with a new measure of respect. “Really? You can do that? Well, thanks.”
Alaric considered the boy. “How old are you?”
“I’m eighteen.”
Alaric said nothing, simply waited.
“Okay, I’m sixteen, or at least I will be next month,” Faust finally admitted. “But my ID says I’m eighteen, and I’ve been taking care of myself and the kids for almost two years.”
“Admirable.”
The boy visibly puffed up a little, probably surprised to hear approval instead of condemnation from an adult, even one he considered to be off his rocker.
“If you would thank me, do so by helping me find an abandoned subway station,” Alaric said, making a sudden decision to trust the boy.
Faust backed up as a group of women walked by, chattering about lunch plans. He waited for them to pass before he shook his head.
“For reals? Those places are seriously scary, and that’s before you get into the new players like this Ptolemy guy. I’m talking gang hangouts, rats, drug dens, rats, shorted-out electrical wires, and rats.”
Alaric raised an eyebrow. “You’re afraid of rats?”
“Heck yeah, I’m afraid of rats. They carry all kinds of freaky germs, like the next bubonic plague, probably.”
“You may be right. I will destroy the rats. Now, can we go?”
Faust sighed, and then brightened. “I’ll do it for a hundred bucks. I can feed the rest of the kids for a week on that, if I’m careful.”
“I don’t have any of your currency.”
“Man, that sucks.”
Alaric felt the new magic boiling up in him, wanting to destroy, and he forced it down again. “I will obtain some, or give you gold in the equivalent of five thousand of your dollars, to do this for me. Now. We’re running out of time, and I’m running out of patience.”
Nearly three hours later, Alaric admitted defeat. They’d searched every tunnel and hole that Faust could find, but there was no trace of Quinn. Finally, they’d come to a room that he was sure was the one from the vision, even down to the shabby sofa, but there was no trace of Quinn or Ptolemy, except perhaps for a faint trace of her scent.
Frustration borne of helpless despair rose up in him, and he blasted the couch into tiny shreds.
“This isn’t working,” he said, all but snarling at the boy, the room, and the situation.
Faust stared at the black hole in the concrete where the couch used to be. “I don’t know, that seemed to work fine.”
T
he boy flicked his finger like a gun and shot a thin finger of flame across the room to incinerate a pile of newspapers.
“Why would you fear rats, when you have that power?”
Faust shrugged his thin shoulders. “I don’t really know how to control it. My mom kicked me out when it showed up and I started fires in the house,” he said, staring down at his hands as if they belonged to someone else. “Maybe you could, you know, take me on as an apprentice when this is over.”
“I won’t be taking on any more acolytes, ever. I told Poseidon that I’m done with him.”
The boy’s shoulders slumped, but then he grinned. “You really told Poseidon—the Poseidon—that he could take his job and shove it?”
“Shove it where?” Strange human.
Faust laughed. “Never mind. Old saying. It was a song, I think.”
“I don’t care about songs or old sayings. If we don’t find Quinn soon, my entire civilization will be destroyed,” Alaric said, and then he raced out of the room and out of the tunnels, until he reached fresh air, or at least as fresh as it got in New York.
Dusk had settled its shadowy cloak around the city, and Alaric was no closer to finding Quinn. Faust arrived, slightly out of breath, and Alaric realized he had no idea what to do next. He sent his senses searching for Quinn, but only the faintest murmur of her existence echoed back to him.
Random searching was worse than useless.
He had failed. Atlantis and Quinn were doomed, and it was entirely his fault.
“What we need is some food,” the boy said.
Before Alaric could answer, that damnable voice was speaking to him again, and he whirled around to find the portal forming behind him.
“You have need?”
“No,” Alaric shouted, but yet again it was too late, and the portal took him. He and Faust fell tumbling through the vortex and into Atlantis.
“Take me back, now. I must find Quinn and Poseidon’s Pride,” Alaric roared, but the portal blinked out of existence.
A solid minute of calling it yielded nothing but a hoarse voice.
“Somehow, sometime, I will find a way to choke you to death,” Alaric told the spirit of the portal, which apparently either wasn’t listening or chose not to respond to the death threat any more than it had listened to his calls to return.
Gathering the tattered shreds of his calm, Alaric turned to find Faust slowly turning in a circle, trying to see everything at once.
“Oh this is wicked cool,” the boy yelled, gazing openmouthed up at the dome, as Marcus and the portal guards stared at the two of them in surprise.
“You would think so,” Alaric said. “Don’t start any fires. Marcus, please ask one of your men to take the youngling to the kitchens and see that he’s fed. I’m going to find Conlan and Christophe and Serai and see what’s happening before I completely lose my mind.”
“You know that you’re glowing, right?” Marcus’s face was impassive as he posed the question, as if it were a regular occurrence for Poseidon’s high priest to light up like a bonfire.
“Yes. It’s a new development,” Alaric said tersely. “I’ll explain later, if we survive this.”
It was a very big if.
When he reached the palace, it was to find Conlan attempting to destroy the throne room, using his royal sword to smash his throne into shards of wood, gems, and precious metals, while Ven tried in vain to stop him. Conlan’s shirt was loose, and his back was wet with the sweat of exertion, so he’d been at it for some time. The high prince whirled to face Alaric.
“Alaric? Do you have the stone?” Conlan pointed the sword at him. “Where is it? We need to get out of here and find Riley and Aidan and the others. Did you hear from them?”
“We need to find them, now,” Ven said, his eyes wild.
“And I thought I was the only one going mad,” Alaric said, calmly enough for a man who’d managed to lose the woman with whom he’d soul-melded. Even as he thought it, he realized Conlan and Ven were in the exact same situation.
“We will find them again,” he told them. “Healthy and whole. I swear it.”
Or he would destroy the entire world.
But they need not know he held on to sanity by only the slenderest of threads.
“We need—” Ven began again, and then the godsdamned portal decided to materialize in the middle of the throne room.
“You have need?”
And it dumped out a precious cargo, indeed: Keely and Eleni walked out, followed by Erin, and then Riley holding Aidan.
As Conlan dropped the sword and ran to embrace his family, and Ven did the same with Erin, Alaric watched the portal, hoping without cause for one final traveler, but it again vanished before he could reach it.
“You’re defective,” Keely shouted after it, and he noticed that, oddly enough, her nose was sunburned. Her entire face, actually.
“Where were you?”
Riley looked a little embarrassed, but she held up Aidan for everyone to see, which was tough since Conlan was holding his family so close. When she finally managed to squirm free, Alaric saw that the baby was wearing a shirt that said ALOHA.
“You were in Hawaii?” Ven swung Erin around and then put her down. “Hawaii? While we were here going out of our minds?”
“Like we had a choice. What? You think we were surfing?” she snapped. “We were going crazy wondering what was happening back here. Is it fixed?”
“Not hardly,” Conlan announced grimly. “In fact, the Trident is worse.”
“So why did it bring them back? So we can all die together?” Ven tightened his hold on Erin. “We were better off before.”
“Nobody is going to die today,” Alaric said. “I’m going to the temple now, to determine how I can help reinforce the Trident’s containment, and then I will find Quinn if I have to blow up the portal to do it.”
He ignored their barrage of questions, left the palace, and raced for the temple, traveling as mist, sparing a thought for what Marcus and the others would make of Faust. Hopefully the boy hadn’t set anybody on fire. Alaric flew up the temple steps and transformed back into his body as he reached the Trident’s room, where Myrken and several of the acolytes slumped outside the doorway, their faces white with strain and exhaustion.
“We’re still holding it, my lord,” Myrken said. “It’s just easier to do while sitting down. Lord Christophe is inspecting the dome for further damage, but he still lends his support, as does Lady Serai.”
“I’m here, at least for now. Go get some sleep. You all look like you need it, and you certainly deserve it.”
Alaric headed for the door, preparing his magic for the barrage he was sure he’d find inside. He wasn’t disappointed. The Trident was putting on quite a show, bucking and twisting in its protective barrier like a wild animal trying to escape—almost like it sensed its final gem was missing.
Could this be due to Poseidon’s Pride leaving for a demonic dimension outside the Trident’s range?
“I, too, want to find that gem for you,” he told it.
He realized he was wasting time talking to an inanimate object. He called to his new, more powerful magic, and found that its force had intensified by a hundredfold now that he was in Atlantis. He funneled quite a bit of it into stabilizing the Trident and the dome, until slowly, bit by bit, the Trident slowed its gyrations and floated down to its cushion and lay still.
At least temporarily.
Myrken staggered into the room, holding his head. “My lord? Was that you? I have never felt such power—”
“I’ll explain later,” Alaric said, yet again.
Then he tried one more time to reach the portal.
“I call to you, spirit of the portal who has taken Gailea’s place,” Alaric said, as respectfully as he could manage. “I have need. Come and get me. Now.”
But, yet again, the damned portal didn’t seem inclined to answer.
He probably shouldn’t have threatened to choke it to death.
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Chapter 26
Big Cypress National Panther Preserve headquarters, Florida
The portal spirit, who up until just a few days previously, when a killer wave had lived up to its name, had been a surfing champion named Danny, was a little drunk on his new power and self-righteously determined to carry out Poseidon’s instructions. After all, the sea god had saved him from a broken neck and subsequent drowning and transported him to this new, awesome reality. Dude was wicked amped, for a mythological divinity and all. Said he needed new blood in the portal, now that Atlantis was rising.
Atlantis. How massively bitchin’ is that?
The spirit concentrated on Florida, specifically the panther headquarters, and flashed his lovely new oval shape into existence in the center of the room, where a meeting had been taking place.
The room’s occupants, who included two panther shifters and one Atlantean warrior, all stared at the portal with varying degrees of surprise.
“Expecting company?” the warrior called Bastien asked the male shifter, Ethan.
The portal spirit stretched its dimensions a bit; after all, Bastien was nearly seven feet tall with very broadly muscled shoulders. He might not fit in so easily.
Ethan stood up eagerly. “No, but Marie doesn’t always let me know when she’s coming.”
He looked disappointed when his mate Marie, whom the spirit knew to be Bastien’s sister, didn’t appear. This was sad, but the spirit knew it would be soon resolved.
The woman shifter, Kat, Bastien’s mate, looked puzzled. “Is it here for you?”
The Atlantean shook his head. “No, I didn’t call it, and nobody seems to be coming through. I wonder—”
“You have need,” the portal spirit said happily, and sucked them all into its vortex and off to Atlantis, chortling to itself. A shape-shifter had never before set foot in Atlantis. This was going to be interesting.
Somewhere in the wilds of Montana, at a secret rebel training facility
The portal spirit watched as Atlantean warrior Alexios and his mate, Grace, descendant of the moon goddess Diana, who was also known as Artemis, sparred in a demonstration bout. She was quite obviously pregnant, but it didn’t hamper her in any way, although Alexios was careful that his practice sword never came anywhere near her. They were fluid in all of their movements; a study in perfect symmetry and deadly intent. When they finished their demonstration, they simultaneously turned in neat half circles and bowed, and then gestured to their students to pair off and spar.