by John Corwin
I spotted a man in a top hat, wearing a white suit and a light blue bowtie. A gray goatee and a long white staff identified the man readily enough.
Jeremiah Conroy.
Chapter 31
"You will leave," he said in a voice loud enough to wake the dead, pointing his staff toward the door.
The men wasted no time packing their equipment and hightailing it out of there while Elyssa and I exchanged confused looks. Hutchins watched Jeremiah like an eagle, never taking his eye off the man.
"What's going on?" Elyssa whispered.
I shrugged, confused as she was. Why had Jeremiah called off the attack? Didn't he own Darkwater? Hadn't Kassus told him about his plans to engage gargantuan dragons in open warfare? On the other hand, I felt immensely relieved I wouldn't have to bring the roof down.
After the last Darkwater person left, Jeremiah walked toward the dragons. My heart raced with fear. I knew what this man was capable of. On the other hand, we now had him surrounded by Templars and could probably knock him out and take him prisoner. He could order Kassus to unseal the truck.
Bam! Good guys win.
Before I could give the command, the red dragon came forward, lowering its giant head next to Jeremiah. Its snout stood nearly twice as tall as the Arcane. Jeremiah patted the snout, almost as one might pet a dog. The dragon made a snuffling noise and rumbled. Jeremiah raised an eyebrow, and I saw a shield flicker around his body. Then he bowed to the leyworm, backed away, and left.
The command to apprehend died on my lips. Had the leyworm warned him somehow? And why in the hell had it let Jeremiah Conroy pet it?
"What the hell is going on?" Hutchins said, his stoic exterior faltering.
"I really need to have a talk with those dragons," I said. "Gigantor acted like he and Jeremiah are best buddies."
"Well, now we know why he stopped the Darkwater idiots from hurting them," Elyssa said. "He's friends with them."
Hutchins looked at a device on his wrist. "Area is clear of OPFOR."
I stood and stretched as questions raced through my head. "There's a lot about Jeremiah Conroy that doesn't make sense."
"Like how he knew about the Cyrinthian Rune, and how to disable the shield around it, for one thing," Elyssa said.
"Or why he apparently hasn't given Daelissa the rune yet," I said, "assuming Mr. Gray and Lornicus told me the truth."
"He's definitely not a Seraphim?" Elyssa said.
"I don't think so." I tapped a finger against my chin. "According to Ivy, he was against the assassination attempts on your father and the others. He's had multiple chances to kill me—"
"Don't forget he nearly killed you in Maximus's stronghold," Elyssa said. "And he told Ivy to let you die before she saved you."
I shuddered at the memory of having my breath cut off. Of being held helpless with no hope of surviving until my mom had miraculously showed up and saved me. "He told Ivy not to save me, but he didn't interfere with her either."
Unfortunately, I had a lot on the stove that was more important than digging into Jeremiah's psyche. Part of me felt crushed, defeated. We hadn't even had an opportunity to capture Kassus. But wondering about Jeremiah also brought to mind resources I hadn't considered using. One in particular might be the answer.
"What are your orders?" Hutchins said, looking at Elyssa.
She raised an eyebrow, looking my way as if daring me to say something. "Remain on standby. Take your men back through the portal, but leave a scout. The minute you see activity, I want to know about it. If Kassus shows up, notify me and get in position. I showed the Arcane in your squad how to use the omniarch so you can get back here in an instant, if need be."
He saluted. "Yes, sir." Hutchins made a circle in the air with his finger, and shadowy forms of Templars appeared around him like—well—magic.
Elyssa took me by the arm and directed me toward the portal. "So, Almighty Commander," she said, putting particular emphasis on the last word. "Do you have any orders for me?"
We walked through the portal. Shelton and the others were crowded around the omniarch, eyes confused.
"What the hell just happened?" he asked.
I shook my head. "Your guess is as good as mine. I'm going to eat."
Elyssa and I walked up the stairs. I felt her expectant eyes on me, waiting for the talk. I wouldn't blame her if she was mad at me, but I felt justified in what I'd done. I was disappointed in the outcome, but that had been out of our control. If she'd taken the action she'd wanted to, it could have compromised everything else. I was angriest at myself. The minute Jeremiah had been alone, I should've ordered him knocked out. Then again, how the hell was I supposed to foresee the dragon warning him?
We reached the kitchen, empty of people since just about everyone else was still downstairs. Elyssa opened her mouth to say something. I gripped her shoulder and pinned her against the wall with one hand in a blur of speed.
Her eyes flared with surprise.
"You may not agree with my decisions, Elyssa, but they're my decisions to make. This was my operation, and I should have insisted the Templars be under my control before the start. Not establishing the proper chain of command was my mistake." I paused, seeing if she'd respond, but her violet eyes stared at me, smoldering with intensity. I had the distinct feeling she might actually kick my ass after this. I continued anyway.
"If you don't agree the Templars in my operations should be under my control, then we won't use them. I feel I made the best decisions under the circumstances, and if you don't agree, I'm sorry." I took in a deep breath. "I love you, but I refuse to be treated like a non-combatant after everything I've been through. I've earned your respect, and the respect of the others, just as you all have earned my respect."
Her jaw tightened. I tensed, waiting for her to punch me. She shook her head, her gaze never leaving mine. "You," she said in a rough voice, "are so"—she narrowed her eyes—"sexy when you take control like that."
She pushed me atop the kitchen table and straddled me, pressing her lips hard to mine. We rolled off the table and thudded on the floor, still kissing, as blood turned to fire in my veins. I felt my shirt rip off. Felt her fangs sting my neck. I grabbed her hair, pulling her head back and saw the fangs beneath red lips. I nipped her neck. Heard her moan. Felt her hands press to my chest.
I heard a little growl and a yip followed by a human yelp of surprise.
"For crying out loud, people, get a room!"
We looked up, panting, into Shelton's disturbed gaze. Cutsauce stood near his feet, wagging his tail.
"This is a kitchen, not a damned bordello," he said, throwing up his hands and slamming the door shut behind him.
Elyssa and I burst into laughter. Then we gathered our things and ran upstairs to finish what we'd started.
After eating and recovering some energy from the day's activities, I called Lornicus.
"You never call, you never write," he said.
"I've been busy."
"Indeed," the golem said. "You successfully retrieved your mother, or so I've heard."
"Almost." I'd considered how much to tell him, especially with regards to the possible discovery of the arch creators. Unfortunately, I already knew what his price would be for my next request. "I need Maulin Kassus's blood."
"Ah, I can see how that might be a problem."
I told him about Kassus discovering the babies, and tossed in Jeremiah's strange behavior as a bonus. "You have spies everywhere. Can you help me get the blood?"
"Indeed I can," Lornicus said. "I can have it for you tomorrow."
My mouth fell open. "You can?"
"Yes. But there is my price."
My teeth clacked together. I knew it! "I thought we were partners."
"We are, Mr. Slade," Lornicus said. "But, as with the cost of rescuing your mother, this is a bit above simple information sharing."
"Skip to the point," I said, exhibiting the part of me I'd learned from Shelton. "What do you want?" I a
lready knew the answer, but with luck, he might have something less distasteful than baby-snatching.
"Very simple," he said. "As I stated before, I would like one of the cupids."
My hand clenched around my phone. "You want to trade blood for a baby angel. That's not a fair trade."
"It's immensely fair," he said. "You're receiving a grown angel who also happens to be your mother, and I'm receiving an angel that will require a great deal of care, changes of diapers, and all sorts of other things I can only imagine." He sniffed. "Really now, you'll have several more cupids all to yourself."
"That's not the only issue," I said, trying not to grind my teeth. "The leyworms won't let us take one. Maybe you don't remember our earlier conversation, but they won't even let us move them to keep them safe from the likes of Darkwater."
"I believe you're intentionally forgetting something which could prove indispensable in such an endeavor," he said. "Namely, your omniarch."
Damn it. This golem thinks of every angle. "And once you have the angel, you'll indoctrinate it and turn it into a terror."
"No sense in being melodramatic, Mr. Slade." A smug note sounded in Lornicus's voice.
I still didn't see any possible way I could rationalize kidnapping an infant, no matter how much I wanted to save Mom. Giving a child to a complete stranger, not to mention a golem, was just plain wrong. It's just one angel. I can rescue Mom! "You realize these babies aren't fresh out of the oven. They're different. I think the same thing happened to my mom when the Grand Nexus was destroyed. Her memories returned as she aged. What makes you think you'll be able to control whoever I give you?"
"There are no guarantees," Lornicus replied. "But I must try and hope for the best. It is better than extinction."
"Extinction?" I said. "What are you talking about?"
"Will you do it or not?" he asked in a brisk tone.
"I need to think about it." I should have just flat-out told him no, but didn't want to burn the bridge just yet.
"The clock is ticking, Mr. Slade. Your mother may not last much longer."
I choked back a nasty response. "I guess you have no conscience about it one way or the other. After all, you're just a soulless golem." I disconnected. Son of a bitch! I hissed an angry breath between my teeth. I had to find an alternative.
In the war room, I found a tray with spherical indentions designed to hold ASEs, and sorted through them until I found the one with the invoices for the supernatural transportation trucks. After flicking through the files for a few minutes, I located the routes for the trucks, and traced the one from the Conroy's house to the industrial park they'd planned to take Mom. I took out my phone and marked the spot on my map for future reference. I scanned through more and more documents, hoping to find what I needed.
I lost track of time until Elyssa showed up, a concerned look on her face. "Why didn't you answer my texts?"
Glancing at my phone, I saw two missed texts from her and one from Shelton. "Sorry, I guess I didn't hear it."
"More like you filtered everything out," she said, pulling up a chair next to me, a mug of steaming liquid in her hand. "Why are you going through this stuff again?"
I told her about Lornicus's demand.
"It's no different than before," she growled. "What do you want to do?"
My eyebrows arched. "I want to get my mom back, but I can't just hand over a helpless baby."
"That doesn't answer why you're going through the information we stole from Darkwater."
I told her what I was looking for and why.
She took a sip from her mug, eyes never leaving mine. "I guess it could work."
"Gee, don't encourage me too much." I sighed and flicked to another page, scanning the dates.
"I'll help."
"You don't have to."
She punched me in the shoulder. "Stop feeling sorry for yourself, punk."
I grabbed another ASE with a copy of the information and gave it to her. "Is that coffee?"
"It's tea."
"I need coffee. All this reading is about to put me to sleep."
Her lips curled into a smile. "Shelton just made a fresh pot."
"Maybe I can ask him to help."
Her smile turned amused. "I don't think you want to disturb him right now."
I felt my eyebrow arch. "Why?"
She snickered. "Let's just say there's probably a tie hanging from the doorknob to his bedroom right now."
"Oh," I said, dragging out the vowel. "I wonder how he handles Bella without supernatural strength."
Elyssa shuddered. "Gross, Justin! TMI."
I laughed, left the room to get some coffee. Cutsauce yipped and raced ahead of me, stopping in my path and growling as if he wanted me to follow. I did so, and found something dead and furry in the hallway. It looked like a rat. My hellhound barked and sat next to it, tail wagging.
"Great job," I told him, petting him on the head. "You're keeping us all safe, big fella."
He growled, prodding it with his nose.
I really didn't want to touch the nasty thing. "Uh, why don't you take it outside," I said.
Cutsauce pushed the rat over with his nose so I could see how the skull was crushed.
"Jeez, did you do that?" Apparently, the little hellhound was stronger than I thought. I considered going to the kitchen and finding a stick to pick it up with when I realized something very strange about the corpse. The floor around it was unstained by blood. The fur was clean. With a crushed skull, there should have been brains and gunk all over the place.
Overcoming my distaste, I knelt down and looked at the skull. It wasn't made of bone, but wood. The fur felt strange, like polyester or something similar. The flesh beneath the fur was actually rubber or foam. To outward appearances, this thing looked exactly like a rat. On closer inspection, I realized it was a golem.
Chapter 32
I picked up the fake rat by the tail and took it back inside the war room, dropping it unceremoniously on the table. Elyssa shrieked and leapt several feet into the air.
"Why the hell are you putting a dead rat on the table?" she asked, her surprise turning to anger.
"It's not a dead rat," I said, and explained the fake corpse.
"You think Lornicus has these things spying on us?" she asked.
"Most likely."
Elyssa turned it over in her hands. "What crushed its skull?"
"I think maybe Cutsauce bit it."
"Strong puppy."
"He might be cute and tiny, but he is a hellhound." I wondered if Lornicus had sent these inside the house as part of the bargain for keeping me safe from the Black Robe Brotherhood, or if they'd been here longer. It also explained how he seemed to know things before I told him. If so, why did he deal with me at all? The only reason I could think of was his desire for a cupid.
I called Stacey. She and Ryland were staying in the mansion, but the place was so large it saved time just to phone. Plus, I didn't want to risk finding a tie on their doorknob.
"Yes, darling?" she purred.
"We have a rat problem." I gave her the details.
"How very fortunate I am your friend." She let out a throaty laugh. "I'll take care of it."
"I don't think your friends will like the way these taste."
"It is of no matter," she said. "The hunt is the fun part."
I dropped into a seat at the table. "I hope the muffle wards on this room kept those damned things from hearing our conversations."
"We'll just have to assume Lornicus knows everything," she said, looking around the room.
The room was barren of anything but the table, which would make it difficult for a rat to have slipped in unnoticed. I had to admit using rodents was pretty ingenious. I wondered if they were in the walls, too. A place like this had to be riddled with secret passages even if the walls seemed solid.
"Templars use golem roaches," Elyssa said. "They're useless for recording intel because of limited storage, but they're great for m
apping."
"I haven't seen many bugs around this place, not since the golem butler cleaned it up." I picked up Cutsauce and scratched behind his ears. "You're awesome," I said. "You're the bestest little hellhound in the whole world."
He growled, probably at the term "little" but still licked my nose with his black tongue. His sulfurous breath didn't smell too awful to me, though I had to wonder if that had something to do with my infernal nature. I made a second trip to the kitchen, this time procuring coffee and some snacks, and went back to the war room where Elyssa and I pored over documents. We discovered all sorts of interesting things, keeping conversation limited and typing or writing notes to each other instead of saying anything important in case rat spies hid in the walls.
We discovered more transport jobs to the warehouse Darkwater had been planning to keep my mom in, and dozens of transports out to Kobol Prison. How many people were they locking up?
We can't let this stand, Elyssa wrote on an arctablet, making another notation about a transportation route to the prison. We have to find out who they're keeping there and save them.
Yes, but first Mom, I wrote back.
She smiled. "I know, I know."
Adam's program had downloaded a lot of other information from the Darkwater node, including other business dealings the organization had. They ran all sorts of dirty little rackets, including quite a number in the mortal world. They had gambling clubs, strip clubs, and a variety of other rackets involving organized crime. Shelton had been right about them being the equivalent of the Overworld mafia. We found personnel files. It seemed the vast majority of Darkwater employees were also with the brotherhood, aside from clerical workers. Nearly every Arcane had notations which indicated whether they'd be a good prospect for brotherhood membership or not.
On the other hand, they still employed a large number of Arcanes who apparently knew nothing about the true nature of the business. They tended to be less skilled battle mages and were sent to do simple security jobs for clients.
It was on one of the personnel dossiers I finally found the information I'd been looking for. "Eureka!" I shouted.