The Complete John Wayne Cleaver Series: I Am Not a Serial Killer, Mr. Monster, I Don't Want to Kill You, Devil's Only Friend, Over Your Dead Body, Nothing Left to Lose

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The Complete John Wayne Cleaver Series: I Am Not a Serial Killer, Mr. Monster, I Don't Want to Kill You, Devil's Only Friend, Over Your Dead Body, Nothing Left to Lose Page 138

by Dan Wells


  “Why does that suck?”

  I opened my eyes and looked at Rain. She looked back, but didn’t speak.

  “Because everyone means everyone,” I said. “And now we have to save the queen of demons.”

  CHAPTER 18

  “I need to think,” said Mr. Connor.

  “No you don’t,” I said quickly, stepping toward him in the cramped office. “We’re trying to save you two, and I know how you think, so there’s no thinking allowed, okay? The last thing that strike team is going to want to see when they get in here is one of our bodies tastefully redecorated on the floor here.”

  “They’ll shoot us,” said Carol.

  “They’ll be a lot less likely to if you’re lying down,” I said. The backpack kept singing: all three tones, over and over. I zipped it open and started turning them off. “Lying down might be a good idea for all of us, actually.” I clicked off the last doorbell ringer. “Everybody down, face on the floor, hands above your head.”

  “You can’t save us,” said Rain.

  “Don’t fight me on this,” I said, but Harold reached over and turned off the lights. “Stop that—we need to be open and welcoming and harmless,” I said. “Turning off the lights in this situation is deceptive and threatening.”

  “I can feel their minds,” said Margo. “Your friend, too—Sam Harris. They know we’re here but they don’t know where. I’m going to—”

  “No,” I said again, as firmly as I could this time. “No mind control. You don’t understand this: I’m going to save you, or at least I’m going to try very hard, but I can’t do that if you take over even one of their minds. You have to be worth saving.”

  “I need to think,” said Mr. Connor again.

  “If you’re going to be good, you have to be good,” I said. “That’s more than just not murdering anyone—it’s no more manipulation, no more stripping people of their own free will. You can’t be parasites anymore, you have to be equals.”

  “This is ridiculous,” snarled Rain. “You think they’re going to talk to us peacefully?”

  “If we’re peaceful first.”

  “You think we can just change who we are?”

  “I did,” I said. “My brain was broken, or is broken, and I don’t know why or how or if it was my father or my mortuary or my DNA or what, but I want to kill people.”

  “What?” asked Jasmyn.

  “I wanted to do it again tonight,” I said, “when I had Agent Harris unconscious in the bathroom—I wanted to hurt him and crush him and cut him until you couldn’t even tell who he was anymore, but I didn’t. Because I don’t let a broken brain tell me what to do. Because who you’re supposed to be has nothing to do with who you actually are.”

  “They’re getting closer,” said Margo.

  “I need to think,” said Mr. Connor, and his voice was darker now, almost a growl of desperation. “I need to get out of this—I need to think!”

  “Think about rules,” I said. “I will not hurt people. Say it: I will not hurt people.”

  “I … don’t know if I will or not!” growled Mr. Connor. “I need to think!”

  “I will not hurt animals,” I said. “I will not burn things. I will not call people ‘it.’”

  “The rules that worked for you aren’t going to work for everybody,” said Rain, “and even if they did, we can’t just repeat a bunch of rules and magically become good people.”

  I nodded firmly. “Yes, you can, because I did. Say it: I will not hurt people.”

  “It doesn’t work like this!” Rain shouted.

  “You’re going to come in here,” said Mr. Connor. We heard the glass in the front door break, tiny shards clattering across the floor of the entryway. “Good,” he said, “I need one.”

  “No you don’t,” I insisted. “You need self-control. It’s not magic and it’s not easy but it works.” I looked at Rain. “And work is hard, and you’ll struggle every day. But you can do it.”

  A sudden burst of gunfire echoed through the air, and I covered my head and ducked toward the ground, screaming that I needed more time. But then the shooting stopped abruptly, and we looked around, probing for damage in the darkness.

  “Everyone okay?” asked Rain.

  “Fine here,” I said. I listened for movement in the hall but heard nothing.

  “I think it was outside,” said Jasmyn. We turned to the window, and she pulled aside the curtain. The sky was growing lighter—it was almost five in the morning and dawn was almost here. We saw cars, all black and unmarked, but only one person: a body, lying still and lifeless on the ground.

  Soaking wet.

  Shelley wailed.

  “She’s here,” said Margo.

  “Who’s the drowner?” I asked. “The third Withered you were covering for—who is it? How does she work?”

  “Her name is—” Margo started, but stopped suddenly when another man appeared out of nowhere, banging on the window and screaming in terror.

  “Let me in!” he shouted. “Let me in! She’s killing us! Let me in!”

  Just as suddenly the man was caught in a storm—a rainstorm, or even a hurricane, so fierce and deadly it shattered the window and rattled the walls. Shards of glass flew in, and Jasmyn shrieked as the storm pelted her with water and glistening blades. I shielded my eyes, but then watched in horror as the falling water encircled the man, trapping him in wind and rain, cutting off all his air. His eyes bulged, his hands clawed uselessly at his rain-slick neck, and he suffocated completely, drowning barely three feet away from us. The fury of the storm abated, and the man fell dead to the ground.

  “Her name is Dana,” said Margo, and we watched as the tiny maelstrom shrank and shriveled and coalesced into a woman: the homeless woman. She looked at us with haunted eyes, and then her gaze locked onto me—not feral, like in the desert, but sharp and lucid and full of a fathomless sadness.

  “I’ll hold them off,” said Dana. “Try to get away.”

  Then a bullet caught her shoulder and she exploded again, a warhead made of wind and water and fury, and she spun off across the front lawn toward the men who had attacked her.

  “I made her sixty years ago,” said Margo. “The first I’d tried since the old days. And the last.”

  “What did she give up?” I asked.

  “Her mind,” said Margo. “She has nothing in her head but chaos.”

  “Until she kills,” I said, thinking about the tortured intelligence I’d seen in her face. “No mind at all until she steals one from a victim, and then she realizes what she’s done.”

  “For sixty years,” said Jasmyn.

  “Try living like this for ten thousand,” said Mr. Connor, “and then come crying to me about how hard it is.” He froze, and then he looked up sharply. There was another crash of glass, and shouting and boots and the sudden, deafening roar of gunfire. The attack was inside this time.

  Mr. Connor turned toward the door. “I need to think,” he said, and ran into the hallway.

  CHAPTER 19

  Mr. Connor ran through the hall, with Harold close behind him; I sprinted to catch up, but they were too fast. We rounded a corner into the main hallway to find a group of three men in bulletproof vests—useless against the furious force of nature that had assailed them on the lawn—struggling to bar the shattered glass entrance with couches. Mr. Connor crouched low, but Harold roared and barreled forward in a rage.

  “Stop!” I shouted, but he either didn’t hear me or didn’t care. The agents turned around just as Harold reached them, but they were holding a couch and couldn’t defend themselves. Harold dropped one with a punch to the face, kicked another solidly in the stomach, and turned to grapple with the third.

  “Rain!” I shouted; I turned to look for her, and she was close behind. “I told you not to hurt them!”

  “I’m not,” she said, and took cover in a doorway. “He’s been controlled so long he just … It’s instinct. He’s not under my control right now, but he’s
not under his own, either. All he can do is defend me.”

  “Make him stop!”

  “He’s dead already,” said Rain, and I turned back to see that it was true—the agents had recovered, dropping the couch in a broken heap and raising their weapons. Harold sunk his teeth into the shoulder of the man he was fighting, and when that man fell to the ground with a scream the other two men shot Harold a dozen times or more.

  “No!” I shouted. “We have to stop!”

  The agents turned toward us, and I saw Agent Harris standing in the middle of the group. They raised their guns, and Harris called out: “Nobody move!”

  “I need a muse,” Mr. Connor hissed, and raised up to run. I grabbed him, but he slapped at me with his hand—not slapped, but slashed, for his fingers had all elongated into eight-inch razors of yellowed bone. They raked my arm, as sharp as a surgeon’s scalpels, and I fell backward as my skin opened up in four long lines. The cuts were deep, but so sharp I couldn’t even feel them. Mr. Connor launched himself at the agents, and they fired back in an overwhelming volley; I dropped to the floor, covering my head with my hands and praying that none of the bullets flew wide enough to hurt me. The sound of the gunfire was deafening, drowning out even the screams. I think I screamed when something grabbed my legs, but it was lost in the noise, and no one could hear anything. I kept my hands tight over my head and felt myself get yanked helplessly back into the darkness.

  More hands grabbed me, pulling me farther; I slapped at them, but there were too many. When the shooting stopped I looked up, expecting the tooth-filled maw of a ravenous Withered, but I saw only Jasmyn, wide-eyed and panting, trying to sit me up against a wall. Rain was next to her.

  “Are you okay?” I asked, but my ears were still ringing too loudly to hear my own voice, let alone her answer.

  “They will never listen to us,” said Rain, though it wasn’t her voice but her mind, speaking directly to mine. Her thoughts entered mine like dragons in a medieval village, ancient and overwhelming, bringing destruction even where it wasn’t intended; I felt memories and emotions and even reason corroding at her mental touch, toppled as casually as a wooden hut caught by the flip of a great, forked tail.

  “Let go of my mind,” I shouted.

  “Your hearing will return in a moment,” said Ren, for now there was no other name for her but the primeval one—the mother of darkness. Her words rang through my mind like wailing spirits. “We need to get out of here.”

  “They’ll only keep chasing us,” I thought back. I felt like I was kneeling before an angry god. “We have to talk to them. Harris is there—let me reason with him.”

  “After all of this?” Her mental sneer scraped across my consciousness.

  “They’ll pin the mutilations on Mr. Connor,” I thought, “and the Dark Lady stuff on Dana—they’ll conflate that name with the drownings, just like I did. But they don’t know about you. I’ll save them later if I can, if I can find a way to reason with Harris, but we can save you now. Don’t do anything suspicious or dangerous or supernatural and we can still get out of this.”

  “Jasmyn can,” thought Ren. “And you. But not until after they cuff us and search us for weapons. At that point, there are certain things I can’t hide. I’m too obviously Withered.”

  “So what will you do?” I asked.

  Ren didn’t answer, and I heard a distant shout. My hearing was coming back.

  “I don’t know,” she thought at last. “I could fight back, and I could win.”

  “But you haven’t yet,” I said. That meant more than I dared to hope.

  “No I haven’t,” she said at last.

  “John!” I heard the voice, cutting through the ringing that still filled my physical ears. Ren pulled her thoughts away from mine, leaving me alone again in my own head, and the world seemed to snap back into focus. “John!” the voice shouted again. I took a deep breath, feeling a thousand pounds lighter than a moment ago. “John Cleaver, are you there?”

  It was Harris’s voice. I nodded, taking another breath, and then shouted back. “I’m here,” I said. “I’m here. Are you okay?”

  “Are you on their side?” he demanded.

  I looked around and saw that Ren, Jasmyn, and I were holed up in the chapel, hiding behind a low wooden pew; the wide double door was riddled with bullets, and one side of it was hanging from a single hinge. Agent Harris’s voice floated in from the hallway, probably still crouching in the shelter of their makeshift barricade.

  “I’m trying to stop this fight,” I said.

  “Then you’re on their side,” he said. “They’re the enemy, John, they need to be killed. There’s no room for treaties here.”

  “Then the circle will never end,” I said. “One side has to give.”

  “It’s not going to be us,” shouted Harris.

  “That’s okay,” I said, “the other side already did. Now all you’ve got to do is stop shooting.”

  Harris’s voice rose a few tones in disbelieving anger. “Are you kidding me? That thing you were with has already killed one of my men and dragged another off to who knows where—and that’s not even counting what Hurricane Katrina is doing to the rest of the team outside.”

  “She’s trying to save us,” I said. “It’s complicated, but her heart’s in right place.”

  “I can’t wait to find out where Agent Gray’s heart’s going to be when that skinny guy gets through with him,” snarled Harris. “Do you think he’ll balance it on top of the guy’s head, or maybe carve it open like a turnip rose first? Make a nice centerpiece or something.”

  “I tried to stop him!” I shouted. “And maybe all we can do is kill him, and if that’s how it has to be then—”

  “Maybe?” cried Harris. “John! He’s killed three agents so far, and who knows how many more that we don’t know about. He’s been going for ten thousand years.”

  I closed my eyes. “People change.”

  “That’d be great if they did,” said Harris, “but when? I have a responsibility to keep people safe, and I can’t do that by letting a dangerous murderer go free. The circle can’t end on him, John. That should be as clear to you as to anybody. And that thing outside can’t end it, either, no matter how much you talk about her trying to do the right thing, because anyone who thinks that killing a dozen faithful law-enforcement officers counts as doing the right thing does not get to make any more of those decisions. They can’t. And that third one…” he said, and I shook my head: he knew there was a third Withered. Ren shifted behind me, and I turned just in time to see her creep backward into the shadows. I clenched my jaw, trying to think of a way out of this. Everything was falling apart.

  Harris continued his tirade: “… the third Withered, the mind controller, she tried to kill me once already. She tried to use me to kill my partner. She tried to kill you, John! For crying out loud, what does it take to piss you off anymore? Can’t you see that these things are evil? That they need to be destroyed? I know you’re trying to turn over a new leaf and be all good and righteous and I respect that; I applaud it. I think it’s exactly the direction your life needs to go. But self-defense is a thing. You can’t stalk someone and murder them for no reason, but when you see someone else doing it, it is your right—it is your responsibility—to step in and stop them. As an officer of the law or a citizen of it. And if that means killing the aggressor you do it, and that is right and legal and moral. The Withered are threatening the world and everybody in it merely by their existence; they kill and hurt and torture as a matter of course. It’s as natural to them as breathing, and people like that cannot be allowed to live.”

  He stopped talking, though his words seemed to hang in the air like ghosts. I looked at Jasmyn, and she looked back. Terrified but determined. Ren was gone.

  I looked back at the broken doorway. “Does that mean you would have killed me?”

  He waited several seconds before answering: “That’s different, John.”

  “No it’s
not.”

  “You’re a human being!”

  “So are they.”

  “They’re killers!”

  “So am I.”

  “You’re a sociopath, John. You don’t feel the difference between right and wrong, but you know it. You make choices to follow it, no matter how bad things get. They don’t do that.”

  I smiled. “Then why aren’t you being mind controlled right now?”

  Agent Harris said nothing for a while. I crawled closer to Jasmyn, and she grabbed my hand and held it fiercely.

  “Is she here?” asked Harris.

  “She is,” I said. “I don’t know where, but she’s definitely close enough to hurt you if she wanted to. But she’s not.”

  “Then she’s planning something,” said Harris. “This whole building is a trap.”

  “Occam’s razor,” I said. “Why use an elaborate trap when she could just make you all shoot yourselves in a couple of seconds?”

  He paused again, then shouted back: “Are you armed?”

  “No.”

  “Then why are we shouting?”

  “Because you don’t believe me,” I said.

  A moment later Harris peeked his head around the edge of the blasted door. I stood up and pulled Jasmyn with me. Harris stepped inside and pointed his gun at us.

  “Jasmyn Shahi?”

  “I’m not armed either,” she said, and I saw that she kept her cool well enough not to raise her arms at the sight of his gun. “And I’m not a Withered or whatever the hell.”

  “Hell is close enough,” said Harris. Now that he was close I could see a bad cut on the side of his head, and a patch of purple skin and dried blood around it. “I’m going to pat you both down just to be sure.”

  “Oh, my word,” I said.

  “I’m not an idiot, John.”

  “I just gave you a whole speech about breaking the cycle of violence,” I said, though I let go of Jasmyn’s hand and spread my arms and legs wide. “I’m not hiding a shower curtain in my back pocket, if that’s what you’re worried about.”

  He patted my legs and chest with a sneer. “I bet you’ve been saving that one all friggin’ night, haven’t you?”

 

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