by Sasha White
“True. Just supposition. But we need to be careful and hyper-aware of what we say to and around him.”
“Could be someone else,” Ralph said. “Anyone could have been in the room with Monty, after all.”
“Yes, which is why it’s supposition right now and we’re not making an arrest.”
“That’s ridiculous,” Ralph argued. “Monty’s in a huge position of trust. Clyde and the Count would never have let him get to that position if he were a double-agent.”
“See, the thing is – if you’re a good double-agent, that’s the whole point. That you look just like you should to the side you’re infiltrating.” After all, I knew we had beings in deep cover – why wouldn’t the Prince have the same? Frankly, why wouldn’t the Prince have more agents infiltrating us, not less? Double-agents, like a good double-cross, were more the Prince’s side of things than ours, after all.
“So, Monty’s a suspect,” Jack said shortly. “Who else?” He shot me a look I was familiar with – he suspected someone near us of being about to try something.
I considered who in the car Jack didn’t trust. The answer was easy. But I wasn’t going to accuse Ralph of being a double-agent right here and right now, for a variety of reasons, not the least of which being that if he was, we’d tell him that we suspected him, and that would mean we wouldn’t catch him, because he’d be on guard.
So, I considered other options, while adding Ralph to my turncoat suspects list. None of the options, Ralph included, made me happy. But then again, finding out one of your friends is actually your enemy is never fun. “Clyde.”
“Why?” Ralph sounded shocked. “He had to be rewrapped! How’s he a suspect?”
“He runs Necropolis Enforcement’s day-to-day. And yet, the Adversary made it in without issue, did his thing, and escaped. I just think it’s a possibility that he had inside help, and if he did, then Clyde’s the best choice.”
“The Count, too,” Sexy Cindy said, her voice low. “I mean, if you’re looking for who it would suck beyond belief to be on the wrong side. Martin and Black Angel One and Two, too. They were with us and angels can talk in their minds and all.”
“Yeah.” The downside of knowing we had a deep cover operative about as deep as you could go meant the other side could as well. I’d been happier back in The Pleasure Palace.
“All the angels, any angel, by those standards,” Freddy said, sounding dejected. “Even Jude. He’s supposed to be blocking the bad guys and yet all the minions are on the plane, right?”
“Right.” I wanted to throw up. “Cotton.” Suggesting him didn’t give me any pleasure. “Though I think he’s unlikely.” But ghosts had the ability to follow you without your knowing it. Not for too long, but a short time could be enough.
“Ken,” Jack offered. “He made the decisions about who to resurrect. And he screwed up Freddy and Cindy. Maybe he did that on purpose.”
My stomach was in knots. “You have a point.” My friends and my two ex-boyfriends were suspects. Throwing up wasn’t an option, neither were tears, but it took a lot of work to prevent both. I couldn’t even trust everyone in the car, since Ralph was a suspect, though thankfully Jack wasn’t going to say it aloud right now, either. Freddy and Sexy Cindy, by benefit of being resurrected by Ken could also be considered suspect. I felt quite alone and surrounded.
Ralph sighed. “Honestly, it could be anyone. Vic’s the daughter of the Adversary, Jack’s a human who’s adapting amazingly well…I could go on. I don’t think we have enough to know.”
Ralph had a point. “True. So, we work under the mole assumption and stay hyper-alert, but until we have something more, no friendships are destroyed by quick-trigger accusations. Agreed?”
The others all murmured their accord. We drove on, and I was sure the others felt like I did – like the world had just shifted again into an even scarier and sadder place.
Chapter 46
We arrived at the OLOC parking lot. Sure enough, there was our unmarked car, looking very police-like. It was getting furtive glances from the few humans wandering around. They were also clearly looking for the cops. No one had paid any real attention to us in the S-Class.
“Let’s load the weapons into our, ah, borrowed vehicle.”
“Hell with that,” Jack muttered. He went to the sedan’s radio. “Darlene, Detective Wagner. Any interesting news?”
“Darlene is off shift, Detective. This is Susan.” There was something odd about how she said her name, but I couldn’t place what. I tried to remember what she looked like but couldn’t. Blonde, maybe.
“Oh, right, sorry, losing track of time. How’re you doing?” Jack sounded friendlier than normal. I figured he’d picked up that he’d annoyed her in some way.
“I’m good, thanks for asking. Are you still on shift?”
“Yes, Detective Wolfe and I are both going to have to keep on rolling.”
“Bummer.”
“So,” I interjected, “what’s going on today and what went on last night that we might not know about?”
“Last night was another quiet night. Nice change. Darlene told me the Chief is worried, though.” Susan sounded bored.
“Nothing at all on the radar?” Jack was fishing for something, but I didn’t know what.
“Minor stuff so far today. Someone stole a car from the National Cemetery.” Jack gave me the “I told you so” look. “Road work’s blocked off most of the Estates area. Nothing for Night Beat to worry about, though.”
“Most of the Estates, but not all?” I asked, since Susan had no idea what we actually were doing or needed to worry about.
“Apparently there’s some big religious deal going on at the Little Church, big fundraiser,” Susan said. “They’ve been advertising it for months. They have the streets blocked off – you can’t get in without a ticket and they’re cross-checking against a list or something. Why is this of interest to you or the police department?”
“Just want to know how to get in or out if you don’t have a ticket.” I was used to Darlene’s level of sarcastic help. Susan seemed a lot more difficult to work with. I didn’t envy the day shift.
“Utility road, where city workers go in and out. Anything else, Detective Wagner?”
I ignored the snub. “Yeah. A couple of nights ago Darlene said there was a riot. Can you tell me about that?”
“You could come into the station and read the officers’ reports.” Susan definitely wasn’t into the give and take I was used to.
“We could. Or, you know, you could give us the highlights and we could continue on, fighting crime, keeping Prosaic City safe for dispatchers with attitude.”
“Vic,” Jack hissed. “Sorry, Susan. We’re both tired. Been a long night after a couple of longer nights. Can we have those highlights?”
Susan sighed the put-upon sigh of a woman forced to actually do something when she was going to paint her nails. I decided I didn’t like her. “Fine. There was a riot at the stadium. Even with a lot of reports, we have no clear idea why or how it started.”
“There wasn’t a game this week,” I mentioned.
“Right you are,” Susan said snidely. “There was a revival.”
“Revival?”
She sighed again. She was big on sighing. I moved to intense dislike. “Reverend Johnson brought in religious leaders from all over to do an old-fashioned tent revival. Big rally kind of thing. As the kickoff to the fundraiser starting today. Do you ever read the paper or listen to the news?”
“No. I like to remain unaware and get all my news from dispatch. Until this morning, never been a problem.”
“Right. So anyway, some thugs, or kids, or criminals, no one was really sure, crashed it and thanks to Detective Wagner’s tip, our officers were able to get there in time to get things back under control.”
I knew the tip had come from Ken. Needed to ask him what he knew. If he wasn’t the mole, of course. Well, I had to ask him whether or not he was the mole. The question
was going to boil down to – could I trust his answers? I hated the way this day was going.
But not as much as I currently hated Susan. I’d picked up the massive emphasis on “Detective Wagner” and I was getting the distinct feeling that Susan had the hots for my guy. This was not an acceptable thing. I considered going to headquarters and eating her, but decided going for demure and sweet might be better, particularly since Jack looked both embarrassed and frustrated.
“Yes, Detective Wagner’s the best, isn’t he?”
“You have no idea.” Susan sounded just a little too smug. And Ralph wasn’t the only one with a werewolf nose. Jack was giving off guilt pheromones.
“I’ll bet. Anyway, Susan, thanks so much for all your help. We’ll be checking in later, I’m sure.” I hung up the radio. I almost opened my mouth to discuss this little situation with Jack, but the presence of three other beings helped me stay quiet. He was allowed to have dated other people before we got together – I certainly had. He’d met them. Lucky me. But the point was, if he’d had a relationship with Susan the Dispatcher from Hell, that was his business. Going forward it was my business, but retrospectively, not so much. So I went for cool. Not a canine trait, as mentioned before, but sometimes we can do it. “We need to ask Ken what tipped him off to that riot and what he picked up from it.”
Jack looked relieved and nodded. “I agree. Hope we can trust his answers.”
“Me too. Now, like I said before, let’s move the equipment from this car into the nice car we’ve borrowed while in pursuit of dangerous criminals.”
“Great spin,” Jack muttered as Freddy and Sexy Cindy started to shift our stuff.
I considered what to do with our bag of pawned goodies from Cotton, and decided they didn’t need to come along. I shoved the bag behind the spare tire and handed another set of crossbows to Freddy. As I did I noticed Ralph looking at Jack, eyes narrowed. I was about to say something about this when he gave the canine snort of dismissal and trotted back to the S-Class.
“What’s wrong with our beloved wolfhound?” Jack asked, sarcasm dripping.
I had a few guesses, but I kept them to myself. “No idea.”
“So, your plan?”
“We’re going to infiltrate via the only road that’s apparently letting beings in and out.”
“How? We drove by. We saw nothing but Hellfire.”
“True. But we now have the means to go through Hellfire unscathed.”
Jack raised his eyebrow. “Really. I carried a lot of crossbows and swords and Evil Fairy Repellent, but I didn’t see any fire retardant suits.”
I picked up the last thing in the unmarked sedan’s trunk. “Nope, you didn’t. And you didn’t carry it to the car anyway. It was already here.” I held up my prize.
Jack stared at it. “It’s a fire extinguisher. Are you telling me that Hellfire is put out just like a campfire?”
“Nope. This didn’t come with the car. I put it in months ago. Read the label.”
Jack read aloud. “Spray widely in an up and down and back and forth manner.” He gave me a look that said I’d lost it. “You mind explaining how this is going to help?”
Sexy Cindy came over and looked at the label. She grinned and shook her head. “Savior Spray for all your firefighting needs.” She snorted. “You all have a sense of humor, I’ll say that.”
“I still don’t get it,” Jack said flatly.
Sexy Cindy shrugged. “Spray widely in an up,” she pointed to her head, “down,” pointed mid-chest, “back,” left shoulder, “and forth,” right shoulder, “manner. Or, for the marvelous detective, make the Sign of the Cross while spraying.” She rolled her eyes at me. “Is he always that slow?”
“Some consider him the best detective on the force.” Susan, for instance. Me, under most circumstances. The Chief occasionally.
Sexy Cindy apparently not. “Really?” She sniffed. “When an undead hooker’s ahead of you, maybe you should rethink your career choices.” She sashayed off to the S-Class while I tried not to snicker.
“I don’t like her,” Jack muttered.
I grinned. “I think she’s great.”
Chapter 47
Back in the S-Class and rolling. I found myself wondering if there was going to be any way we could keep the car for good. We’d achieved far more stealth in it than we’d ever had in the unmarked sedan. And it was comfort to die for. Well, not literally.
While Jack drove, I contacted Ken on my wrist-com. “How’re you doing?”
“I’m in my coffin. I was trying to sleep.”
“I know, and I’m sorry. I need info on the riot from the other night.”
“What? Oh…yeah, that. Sorry, so much has been going on.” Ken was quiet for a few moments. “You want to know what, exactly?”
“How’d you know, what did you get from it, the works.”
“You know,” he said slowly, “I can’t remember too much.”
I found this horribly suspicious in that mole way. “Try, if you can. I know you don’t feel well.” I hoped it was because he’d been bashed around by the Adversary, not that he was in league with the Adversary. Having someone who’d been that intimate with me and who I’d been that close to emotionally as well as physically turn out to be part of the Prince’s loyal squad made me nauseous. Almost as nauseous as thinking about a mole in the first place.
“I didn’t get what I would normally.” Ken sounded like he was trying to remember. I hoped it wasn’t an act. “I knew there were a lot of humans in one area, I felt fear and anger, all the signs of a riot. Really, that’s about it. I was focused on getting the police over there and trying to stop the demon.”
“Yeah, Slimy was the sort to rivet your attention.”
“What are you doing? Where are you?” Ken sounded drowsy and out of it.
I chose to go with reassuring. “We’re good. Following up some leads. You get some rest and feel better. I’m sure we’ll need you back in action fast.”
“Yeah. Vic….”
“What?”
He took a deep breath. “Vic, be careful.”
“Always.”
“No, I mean it. Be really careful. I feel like I should tell you to trust no one. Whatever’s going on, I think it’s bigger than anything we’ve ever dealt with. Not just me, but you, too. Maybe everyone. Watch your back.”
“Will do.”
“Promise me.” Ken sounded stressed and a little freaked.
I decided to ensure relaxation. “I promise.” I looked behind me. “I’ll watch my back and trust no one.” Ralph glared, Freddy shook his head, and Sexy Cindy grinned.
“Good. See you later, V-One-Nine-Six-Zero out.” My wrist-com went dead.
“Ken’s really hurt,” Ralph said quietly.
“Why do you say so?”
He snorted. “That warning was for you alone, Vic. I don’t think it occurred to Ken that you had anyone else around, or that anyone else could hear him, even though he was talking to you through the wrist-coms. He doesn’t make stupid assumptions.”
“True.” Very true. Oh good. More things to worry about.
“Maybe he knew we were all here and is trying to create suspicion among the five of us,” Jack offered.
Sadly, I knew that Ken didn’t need to do that – we were all undoubtedly suspicious enough of everyone else already. Of course, he wouldn’t know that if he was the mole. But if he wasn’t, that meant he was hurt badly enough not to be thinking clearly, and that meant very badly.
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly. Worrying about a mole was destined to drive me crazy. Maybe we weren’t infiltrated. Maybe we were. I’d worked for Necropolis Enforcement for a long time and it had never been an issue before. Maybe the best thing I could do was stop trying to find the mole and go back to business as usual.
All this introspection had taken time and we were back at the outskirts of the Estates. Jack drove slowly and we looked for the servant’s entrance.
“There
it is,” Ralph said, pointing with his nose, possibly to get it right back by my face.
But he was right. We’d missed it before because it was designed to be missed and we’d been looking at the Hellfire.
“You sure that’s a road?” Sexy Cindy asked. “Looks more like a bike path.”
“No, I see a road sign,” Jack said. “Workmen’s Access Road. Yeah, this is it.” He stopped the car. “But I still see the Hellfire.”
“Yep.” I got out of the car. Ralph scrambled over the back of the front seat and came with me. I decided not to argue. “Good doggie, coming to protect Mommy-Dog while she puts out the nasty fire.”
“Hilarious,” he growled. “I just don’t want you alone out here.”
“Can’t argue with your judgment.” I lifted the trunk and got out the Savior Spray. We trotted over to the Hellfire and I looked for the right spot to spray.
Hellfire was interesting in a variety of ways. For one thing, and against all human expectations, it didn’t burn hot. Until you were engulfed in it, you couldn’t feel that it was there. Once engulfed, it burned like ice. Nothing dusted you faster than Hellfire, though.
Ralph and I stayed a respectful distance back from the burning. “How deep do you think it goes?”
He sniffed. “Looks about ten feet, smells like less.”
“Huh.” I couldn’t argue, that’s about what I’d come up with as well. I chose my spot and sprayed in the correct pattern. Nothing looked different.
“No change,” Ralph noted.
“No kidding.” Something wasn’t right. Savior Spray was designed to douse Hellfire. So, why wasn’t it working?
Ralph whined and nudged up against me. I looked around to see a jogger coming down the access road.
“Morning!” the man shouted cheerfully. “You folks having some trouble?”
“Ah…yes,” I answered lamely, trying to come up with why I was holding a fire extinguisher and standing with what truly looked far more like wolf than hound.
The jogger trotted blithely through the Hellfire and came over to us. “Engine fire?” he asked, seeming fully ready to pop the hood and take a look.