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Timekeepers: Number 2 in Series

Page 10

by Catherine Webb


  ‘Can’t we see her now?’

  ‘What’s the rush?’ Pulling back from him now, dismayed.

  ‘You have her address?’

  ‘Yes, but why —’

  Sam smiled, shook his head. ‘Bring it to me.’

  Ursula had finally found the good sense to get worried. ‘Give me a reason.’

  ‘Please. Hunter sent me. Gabriel has turned to the enemy. I was sent to determine whether you have too.’

  ‘Hunter… Gail…’ Her mouth worked up and down several times. Then she managed to stutter, ‘You’re… Ashen’ia? Who do you serve?’

  ‘War. Hunter sent me, from London. Gabriel has betrayed the Ashen’ia; she’s working with the enemy. I’m sorry I lied to you but I needed to know whether you’d turned with Gail. Now bring me the address book, please.’

  She looked paralysed.

  ‘Bring it now!’ he snapped.

  The sound of command in his voice seemed to jerk her awake and she hurried into another room, returning a few seconds later rummaging through her handbag. She thrust a piece of paper at Sam which bore an address and telephone number. She was shaking with shock.

  Sam patted her on the shoulder. ‘Just sit still, everything’s going to be fine.’ He headed for the door. But before he got there the phone rang.

  ‘Answer it,’ he said quietly. ‘Don’t tell anyone I’m here.’

  She nodded and picked it up. Sam looked round for another extension, and grabbed one from behind a door into the kitchen, pulling the wire taut so that he could watch Ursula while keeping his ear to the phone.

  A familiar voice said, ‘Ursula, love, you there?’ Tinkerbell. Hunter. Call him what you would.

  ‘Yes. I’m here.’

  ‘Are you all right?’

  ‘Fine.’

  ‘Look, I’ve phoned to warn you. We think Sebastian has come to town.’ Ursula’s eyes flew to Sam.

  ‘What… what gave you that idea?’

  ‘We think he might have found the address for der Engelpalast. If he has, then chances are he was the one who stabbed Hindsonn – and took your phone call. And if that’s so then he might have followed you home.’

  Silence. Then Ursula in a weak voice said, ‘I… was given a lift home.’

  ‘Who by?’ Silence. ‘Ursula, who gave you a lift?’

  Ursula’s eyes were locked on Sam. He slid one hand into his coat pocket, felt the gun. She followed his hand all the way.

  Tinkerbell’s voice was now urgent. ‘Ursula! Ursula, who gave you a lift home?’ Sam pulled out the gun, slow, leisured, letting her see that he meant business.

  ‘A… a man in an ambulance. He’s gone now.’

  ‘Look, love, don’t move. I’m coming over.’

  ‘Fine,’ she said quietly.

  Sam gestured with the gun for her to put the phone down. She obeyed. They stood staring at each other.

  Sam said, ‘Okay, I know this seems nasty, but there is purpose to it. And the Ashen’ia are mad if they think anything they did would make me discharge the Light against a Greater Power. Tell them that. The Ashen’ia are right, I am alone, and you people may be my only potential ally. But you’d have to help, rather than hinder me. And how long have you people been waiting for me to become weak enough so you can risk using me? Because you’ve screwed up big time.’

  ‘You will share in our glory.’

  ‘Lady, if you could see as many flaws in the scheme as I can, you’d never say that.’

  She gave no answer. Sam smiled wanly. ‘Anyway I did like your company, kinda. A bit off-key for my tastes, but that’s forgivable. So sorry about this.’

  She was already trying to move, but not fast enough. The air distorted around him as Sam swept his hand up and pushed, sending a disturbance that smashed into Ursula, picked her off her feet and sent her flying backwards, smacking hard against a bookcase. Briefly she slumped, head on one side. Sam pocketed the gun, looked down at the address in his hand and went in search of Gabriel.

  SEVEN

  Coming Together

  C

  lose to Gabriel’s Berlin flat, while navigating a tricky roundabout, Sam felt someone scry for him. Dizziness washed through his mind and images flickered in front of his eyes. He hastily pulled over and put his head in his hands, leaning on the steering wheel and trying to focus on the source of the scry.

  He sent his mind out, and felt…

 

 

 

 

  He could feel Jehovah hammering away at his shields, trying to pinpoint Sam’s exact location. And behind Jehovah, another mind. Sam reached out for it, felt anger and strength combined into a particularly lumpy combination. he added.

  Thor didn’t answer. A sudden stab of pain as Jehovah tried to worm his way into Sam’s eyes, see as Sam was seeing, and Sam recoiled, lashing out with tendrils of wild magic, burning across Jehovah’s senses. The scry abruptly winked out, leaving Sam shaking.

  He gripped the steering wheel and tried to breathe steadily, wondering how much Jehovah and Thor had gleaned. It was a worrisome reminder that there were other things out there, more powerful and potentially more dangerous than the Ashen’ia.

  But what to do about them without the Ashen’ias’ help?

  He drove on.

  In a tiny courtyard of high red-brick buildings, dripping black iron pipes and slippery black iron steps, lived Gabriel. Sam could see the light on in her flat. He could also tell where she was, from feeling her archangel’s power. He jogged up the stairs to her front door, and knocked, leaning away from the spy hole on the door. Gabriel’s feet sounded in the hall, and, after a pause, the door opened.

  Sam waited until she stepped out on to the metal stairs in front of her door. He looked to see that her hands were empty, and stepped forward, meeting her eyes squarely. She froze, fear bleaching her skin.

  ‘I gather,’ he said into the ringing silence that followed, ‘that I’ve been playing the puppet to your clown.’

  Gabriel made no response. He gestured at the door. ‘Shall we?’

  She moved like a robot, knowing that even though his hands held no weapon at any moment he might hit her with all the anger of a Son of Magic.

  The flat, Sam thought, looked like something Gabriel would use. Artful dabs of paint in red frames hung on the walls, a collection of small potted plants, well tended, sat on the radiator casing by the window, the table was swept clear of all but a few neatly folded newspapers, the carpets were clean and matched the wallpaper, the wallpaper matched the sofas, the immaculate kitchen, just another section of the main living room, was all stainless steel. Sam sat down on a giant sofa and smiled thinly at Gabriel, who stood looking at nothing.

  ‘So,’ he said, ‘you’re Ashen’ia. But you’re also an archangel. Admittedly a traitor, like myself, who refused to countenance Jehovah’s orders when you found out about the Pandora spirits and Cronus, but still an archangel. Shouldn’t you know better than to think I’d play your little game of let’s-threaten-the-Powers-with-the-Light-and-see-what-happens?’

  Gabriel shrugged and met his eyes. ‘We need the Ashen’ia, Sebastian, if we’re to stop Seth from freeing Cronus. When we’ve finished using them we can still just walk away.’

  ‘Who’s “we”? You, and the elusive master and mistress?’

  ‘Sebastian,’ she said reproachfully. ‘Remember when we had to get out of Mexico because of the Pandora spirits? As I fled, I was met by the Ashen’ia.

  ‘They’d been watching you. They said that with the Bearer of Light threatening the Greater Powers with destruction, the Powers would have no choice but to give the Ashen’ia magics beyond what anyone, mortal or immortal, has dreamt of. All I had to do was help them catch you.’

  Sam’s face said nothing, but his eyes spoke freely enough. ‘Who did you sell your soul to, Gail?’ he asked bitterly.r />
  She looked down. ‘It hardly matters.’

  ‘Did it make you happy?’

  Her eyes flashed. ‘Sebastian, listen to me. I told the Ashen’ia that if we moved too fast on you, you’d fight us to the last. I told them that the longer you’d have to operate against Seth, the more you’d realise you needed us!’

  ‘Yet you didn’t want me finding you.’

  ‘I knew there was no way you’d agree to help the Ashen’ia.’

  Sam’s voice was low and dangerous. ‘If you knew I wouldn’t help, why bother trying?’

  ‘The Ashen’ia are going to fight Seth, even though they’ll almost certainly destroy themselves. But they’ll severely weaken Seth in the process. Possibly so that you, the Bearer of Light, can finish the job.’

  Sam stood up and turned towards the window, staring into the darkness. ‘This could just be an elaborate trick.’

  She shrugged. ‘Where will you go if it isn’t? You know that alone you can’t win. And you know that only the Ashen’ia can resist the power of the Pandora spirits, because the spirits target souls, and our souls are split, hidden in places they can’t find.’

  ‘If the Ashen’ia are so powerful, let them deal with Seth. I can tuck myself away in a quiet corner of Hell and let this pass me by.’

  Her laugh sent a chill through him, made his hand twitch near the gun. She said, ‘The Ashen’ia won’t move without the Light. Somehow they’d drag you back in. Assuming, of course, that Thor didn’t find you first.’

  He looked at her, saw the expression on her face, and turned back to the window. ‘I can deal with Thor,’ he said quietly. He added, ‘Who’s the master and who’s the mistress?’ His voice had a low, insistent edge.

  The smile in her eyes died, and something hard passed over her face. ‘They are Waywalkers who have given their souls.’

  ‘To whom, Gail?’

  She didn’t say.

  He looked sadly down at her. ‘When you served Freya I thought so much of you. You had abandoned Jehovah, your master for a thousand and more years because he was freeing the Pandora spirits, you had put your life on the line for others, risked everything, become an outcast from Heaven. What happened to the archangel I knew?’

  ‘Cronus will be freed, Sebastian. Not-living, not-dying, not-changing. This puts the steel in anyone’s soul.’

  Sam sagged wretchedly against the window, eyes fixed on a distant point. ‘You know I have nowhere else to go.’ Time have mercy, he was tired. ‘You know I’ve no choice.’

  ‘You never did have a choice, Sebastian,’ she replied. ‘From birth to death your single purpose has been this – stop Seth from freeing Cronus. That’s why they called you the necessary child.’

  Sam didn’t say anything, he was watching her with a look of half-recognition, half-disgust on his face. Disgust at what? At her? He didn’t think so.

  Gabriel ignored his look. ‘Of course, you couldn’t be legitimate. That’s common sense. The more you’re alienated, the more you’re pushed into being alone, the less dependent on others you are. You’re sharpened against betrayal, cynical, suspicious, a fighter. Everything that Balder wasn’t.’

  ‘Time loved Balder,’ said Sam bleakly, wanting to close his eyes, forget about everything, sleep…

  ‘And his beloved child died. How much easier, therefore, to risk losing a child that he doesn’t love?’

  Sam smiled faintly. ‘You’ve learnt to play nasty, Gail. I should have expected that.’

  ‘Why bother to fight, Sebastian?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ he said with a half shrug. ‘Pride? Perversity?’

  There came a knock on the door. Then a hammering. Sam sighed. ‘That’ll be Tinkerbell. Does he know you plan to destroy the Ashen’ia?’

  ‘No,’ said Gabriel, heading to the door. ‘I don’t think he’s in it for the power. But involved he is, whatever his reason, and I’m not going to test his loyalty to the Ashen’ia.’

  She pulled the door open a few inches. A large, red fist caught her squarely across the jaw, then picked her up and threw her backwards across the floor. A long red arm followed the fist, one large sleeve rolled up over bunching muscles. A red nose, a square red face, red hair. Thor himself stepped through the door, turned, looked at Sam, smiled.

  ‘Little light, little fire,’ he whispered. In a strange voice that reminded Sam of… Hindsonn?

  Sam sighed and pulled the gun out of his pocket. ‘It’s been a really bad month, have I mentioned this?’

  Thor looked at the gun with a frown on his huge butcher-slab face, as if trying to work out what it was.

  ‘You pull the trigger and it kills people,’ Sam explained wearily when Thor didn’t move. ‘I’ll demonstrate.’ He raised the gun and pumped four shots into Thor, with perfect accuracy.

  Trouble was, Thor had moved.

  And Sam had never seen anyone shift so fast. Not even a Son of War should be able to move that quickly! There were four holes in the wall behind Thor – and a loud ringing in Sam’s ears – and Thor was straightening up, axe raised in one giant’s paw, a grin on his big, idiot, bearded face.

  His eyes had a translucent film over them, like a fish…

  ‘Hell, you really have sold out to Cronus, haven’t you?’ muttered Sam, disbelief temporarily drowning out the fear. He dropped the gun back in his pocket and fumbled for his sword. Thor caught Sam’s wrist as he tried to yank the sword from its bag, picked Sam up bodily and slammed him against a wall. The ringing in Sam’s ears grew. Thor’s face was an inch from his. His breath stank like a misused chemistry set.

  Thor dropped his axe and closed his fingers round Sam’s other wrist, which went up above his head to join its partner, pinning him helplessly against the wall. Seen this close, the grey film over Thor’s eyes was resolved into a whirlwind of strange colours and patterns. He grinned, and spoke in the strange, distorted voice Sam recognised from Hindsonn when possessed by War. ‘Little light, little fire,’ he said again. ‘That’s what they called you in Heaven, wasn’t it?’

  Sam brought a knee up into Thor’s groin. Thor’s eyes widened, he made a little whump sound, and staggered, head rebounding against Sam’s, but his grip on Sam’s wrists hardly faltered. Slowly, catching his breath back, Thor raised his head again and grinned. His teeth were yellow and uneven: clearly this was one Son of Time who hadn’t appreciated the dental revolution.

  ‘Little light and little fire needs to grow up,’ he said softly. Bones grated together in Sam’s wrists, taking a lot of nerves with them.

  ‘You’re imprisoned, Cronus,’ Sam managed through gritted teeth. ‘You’re possessing a Son of Time in the universe of Time. And I guess Daddy won’t be happy about that, so bugger off before the cavalry comes!’

  ‘I’m coming back, little light, little fire. I’m coming back – and then see what your “Daddy” can do to protect you.’

  ‘Clearly you’re worried.’ Sam gasped as the pain in his arms shot down to his elbows and up to his fingers, turning them numb. ‘That’s why you’re so interested in killing me: you’re afraid. Cowardy Cronus, doesn’t dare come out of his prison for fear of a little light, a little fire…’

  Thor, or the creature possessing Thor, growled, shook Sam like a doll. Sam forced out an agonised laugh, which acted like sandpaper down his throat. ‘Thor, you always were a great one for wit. I see Cronus takes after you.’

  Cronus/Thor gave a snarl of rage and pulled a hand free of Sam’s wrists, hitting him hard across the face. Sam fell to the ground and tried to crawl away, but the possessed Waywalker still moved fast. A boot connected with his side, then hands grabbed him and pushed him back against the wall, his legs sprawled in front of him, hands limp at his side, eyes dazed.

  Thor’s face swam in front of his vision. ‘Little light, little fire dies as easily as the first one,’ he growled.

  ‘First one?’ echoed Sam dully. ‘Oh, Balder. Only you see, Time loved Balder.’

  The dagger was out, Sam’s
hand shot forwards, drove into Thor’s thigh. A faint sigh, a whimper escaped Thor’s lips as Sam pushed harder with all his might, driving the blade in.

  ‘That’s something you can’t say about me,’ muttered Sam, worming his way out from Thor’s grasp. Thor staggered to his feet, stared in horror at the dagger embedded in his thigh. The weapon of a Son of Time would create a wound that couldn’t be easily regenerated, it would take time to heal, real time…

  As Sam watched, he saw Thor grit his teeth, reach down and pull the dagger out. The merest act of touching Sam’s blade seemed to cause him more pain, and Sam wasn’t about to waste a weapon in another’s hands when it was specially tuned to him. He called to it, whispering of fire and lava, and the blade began to glow red hot in Thor’s bloody hands.

 

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