Jim Butcher - Dresden Files Omnibus

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Jim Butcher - Dresden Files Omnibus Page 284

by Jim Butcher


  I stared at the bottled water, then thought of something and shouted, “Get ready for a U-turn!” I shouted.

  “What?” Thomas yelled.

  I picked up both flats of bottles and shoved them out the broken window. They vanished, and I checked out the rear window to see them tumbling along in our wake, still held together by heavy plastic wrapping. I took up my blasting rod, pointed it at them, and called up the smallest and most intense point of heat I knew how, releasing it with a whispered, “Fuego.”

  The rear window glass flashed; a hole the size of a peanut suddenly appeared, the glass dribbling down, molten. Bottles exploded as their contents heated to boiling in under a second, spattering that whole section of road with a thin and expensive layer of water.

  “Now!” I hollered. “U-turn!”

  Thomas promptly did something that made the tires howl and almost threw me out the broken window. I got an up-close look at the Scarecrow as the van slewed into a bootlegger reverse. It reached for me, but its claws only raked down the van’s quarter panel, squealing as they ripped through the paint. The Scarecrow, though swift and strong, was also very tall and ungainly, and we reversed directions more quickly than it could, giving us a couple of seconds’ worth of a lead.

  I gripped my blasting rod so hard that my knuckles turned white, and struggled to work out an evocation on the fly. I’m not much of an evocator. That’s the whole reason I used tools like my staff and blasting rod to help me control and focus my energy. The very thought of spontaneously trying out a new evocation was enough to make sweat bead on my forehead, and I tried to remind myself that it wasn’t a new evocation. It was just a very, very, very skewed application of an old one.

  I leaned out the broken window, blasting rod in hand, watching behind us until the Scarecrow’s steps carried it into the clump of empty plastic bottles in a shallow puddle.

  Then I gritted my teeth, pointed my blasting rod at the sky, and reached out for fire. Instead of drawing the power wholly from within myself, I reached out into the environment around me—into the oppressive summer air, the burning heat of the van’s engine, from Mouse, from Rawlins, from the blazing streetlights.

  And from the water I’d spread in front of the Scarecrow.

  “Fuego!” I howled.

  Flame shot up into the Chicago sky like a geyser, and the explosion of sudden heat broke some windows in the nearest buildings. The van’s engine stuttered in protest, and the temperature inside the van dropped dramatically. Lights flickered out on the street, the abrupt temperature change destroying their fragile filaments as my spell sucked some of the heat out of everything within a hundred yards.

  And the expensive puddle of water instantly froze into a sheet of glittering ice.

  The Scarecrow’s leading foot hit the ice and slid out from under its body. Its too-long limbs thrashed wildly, and then the Scarecrow went down, awkward limbs flailing. Its speed and size now worked against it, throwing it down the concrete like a tumbleweed until it smacked hard into a municipal bus stop shelter.

  “Go, go, go!” I screamed.

  Thomas gunned the engine, recovering its power, and shot down the street. He turned at the nearest corner, and when he did the Scarecrow had only begun to extricate its tangle of limbs from the impact. Thomas hardly slowed, took a couple more turns, and then found a ramp onto the freeway.

  I watched behind us. Nothing followed.

  I sagged down, breathing hard, and closed my eyes.

  “Harry?” Thomas demanded, his voice worried. “Are you all right?”

  I grunted. Even that much was an effort. It took me a minute to manage to say, “Just tired.” I recovered from that feat and added, “Madrigal pushed me into that thing and bugged out.”

  Thomas winced. “Sorry I wasn’t there sooner,” he said. “I grabbed Rawlins. I figured you’d have told me to get him out anyway.”

  “I would have,” I said.

  He looked up at me in the rearview mirror, his eyes pale and worried. “You sure you’re all right?”

  “We’re all alive. That’s what counts.”

  Thomas said nothing more until we slid off the highway and he began to slow the van. I busied myself checking Rawlins. The cop had kept going in the face of severe pain and even more severe weirdness. Damned heroic, really. But even heroes are human, and human bodies have limits you can’t exceed. Everything had finally caught up to Rawlins. His breathing was steady, and his wounded foot had swollen up so badly that his own shoe held down the bleeding, but I don’t think a nuclear war could have woken him.

  I ground my teeth at what I had to do next. I set my deformed left hand on the floor of the van at the angle Lasciel had shown me and let my weight fall suddenly onto it. There was an ugly pop, more pain, and then the agony subsided somewhat. It was a giddy feeling, and my hand looked human again, if bruised and swollen.

  “So,” I said, after I had worked up the energy. “It was you following me around town.”

  “I didn’t want to be seen openly with you,” he said. “I figured the Council might take it badly if they found out you had taken a White Court vampire on a Warden ride-along.”

  “Probably,” I said. “I take it you followed them from the parking garage?”

  “No, actually,” Thomas said. “I tried but I lost them. Mouse didn’t. I followed him. How the hell did they keep him away from you when they grabbed you?”

  “They hit him with this van,” I said.

  Thomas raised his eyebrows and glanced back at Mouse. “Seriously?” He shook his head. “Mouse led me to you. I was trying to figure out how to get into that garage without getting us shot. Then you made your move.”

  “You stole my coat,” I said.

  “Borrowed,” he corrected.

  “They never talk about this kind of crap when they talk about brothers.”

  “You weren’t wearing it,” he pointed out. “Hell, you think I’m going to walk into one of your patented Harry Dresden anarchy-gasms without all the protection I can get?”

  I grunted. “You looked good tonight.”

  “I always look good,” he said.

  “You know what I mean,” I told him quietly. “Better. Stronger. Faster.”

  “Like the Six Million Dollar Man,” Thomas said.

  “Stop joking, Thomas,” I told him in an even tone. “You used a lot of energy tonight. You’re feeding again.”

  He drove, eyes guarded, his face blank.

  I chewed on my lip. “You want to talk about it?”

  He ignored me, which I took as a “no.”

  “How long have you been active?”

  I was sure he was stonewalling when he said, in a very quiet voice, “Since last Halloween.”

  I frowned. “When we took on those necromancers.”

  “Yeah,” he said. “There’s…look, there’s something I didn’t tell you about that night.”

  I tilted my head, watching his eyes in the rearview mirror.

  “Remember, I said Murphy’s bike broke down?”

  I did. I nodded.

  “It wasn’t the bike,” Thomas said. He took a deep breath. “It was the Wild Hunt. They came across me while I was trying to catch up with you. Sort of filled up the rest of my evening.”

  I arched my eyebrows. “You didn’t have to lie about something like that, man. I mean, everyone who won’t join the Hunt becomes its prey. So it’s not your fault the Hunt chased you around.” I scratched at my chin. Stubble. I needed a shave. “Hell, man, you should be damned proud. I doubt that more than five or six people in history have ever escaped the Hunt.”

  He was quiet for a minute and then said, “I didn’t run from them, Harry.”

  My shoulders twitched with sudden tension.

  “I joined them,” he said.

  “Thomas…” I began.

  He looked up at the mirror. “I didn’t want to die, man. And when push comes to shove, I’m a predator. A killer. Part of me wanted to go. Part of me had
a good time. I don’t like that part of me much, but it’s still there.”

  “Hell’s bells,” I said quietly.

  “I don’t remember very much of it,” he said. He shrugged. “I let you down that night. Let myself down that night. So I figured this time I’d try to help you out, once you told me you were on a job again.”

  “You’ve got a car now, too,” I said quietly.

  “Yeah.”

  “You’re making money. And feeding on people.”

  “Yeah.”

  I frowned. I didn’t know what to say to that. Thomas had tried to fit in. He tried to get himself an honest job. He tried it for most of two years, but always ended badly because of who and what he was. I had begun to wonder if there was anyplace in Chicago that hadn’t fired him.

  But he’d had this job, whatever it was, for a while now.

  “There anything I need to know?” I asked him.

  He shook his head, a tiny gesture. His reticence worried me. Though he’d been repeatedly humiliated, Thomas had never had any trouble talking—complaining, really—about the various jobs he’d tried to hold. Once or twice, he’d opened up to me about the difficulty of going without the kind of intense feeding he’d been used to with Justine. Yet now he was clamming up on me.

  An uncharitable sort of person would have gotten suspicious. They would have thought that Thomas must have been engaging in something, probably illegal and certainly immoral, to make his living. They would have dwelt on the idea that, as a kind of incubus, it would be a simple matter for him to seduce and control any wealthy woman he chose, providing sustenance and finances in a single package.

  Good thing I’m not one of those uncharitable guys.

  I sighed. If he wasn’t going to talk, he wasn’t going to talk. Time to change the subject.

  “Glau,” I said quietly. “Madrigal’s sidekick, there. You said he was a jann?”

  Thomas nodded. “Scion of a djinn and a mortal. He worked for Madrigal’s father. Then my father arranged to have Madrigal’s father go skydiving naked. Glau stuck with Madrigal after that.”

  “Was he dangerous?” I asked.

  Thomas thought about it for a moment and then said, “He was thorough. Details never slipped by. He could play a courtroom like some kind of maestro. He was never finished with something until it was dissected, labeled, documented, and locked away in storage somewhere.”

  “But he wasn’t a threat in a fight.”

  “Not as such things go. He could kill you dead enough, but not much better than any number of things.”

  “Funny, then,” I said. “The Scarecrow popped him first.”

  Thomas glanced back at me, arching a brow.

  “Think about it,” I said. “This thing was supposed to be a phobophage, right? Going after the biggest source of fear.”

  “Sure.”

  “Glau was barely conscious when it grabbed him,” I said. “It was probably me or Madrigal who was feeling the most tension, but it took out Glau, specifically.”

  “You think someone sent it for Glau?”

  “I think it’s a reasonable conclusion.”

  Thomas frowned. “Why would anyone do that?”

  “To shut him up,” I said. “I think Madrigal was supposed to go down for these attacks, at least in front of the supernatural communities. Maybe Glau was in on it. Maybe Glau arranged for Madrigal to be here.”

  “Or maybe the Scarecrow went after Glau because he was wounded and separate from the rest of us. It might have been a coincidence.”

  “Possible,” I allowed. “But my gut says it wasn’t. Glau was their cutout man. They killed him to cover their trail.”

  “Who do you think ‘they’ is?”

  “Uhhhhhh.” I rubbed at my face, hoping the stimulation might move some more blood around in my brain and knock loose some ideas. “Not sure. My head hurts. I’m missing some details somewhere. There should be enough for me to piece this together, but damned if I can see it.” I shook my head and fell quiet.

  “Where to?” Thomas asked.

  “Hospital,” I said. “We’ll drop Rawlins off.”

  “Then what?”

  “Then I pick up the trail of those phages, and see if I can find out who summoned them.” I told him briefly about the events of the afternoon and evening. “If we’re lucky, all we’ll find is some maniac’s corpse with a surprised look on his face.”

  “What if we aren’t lucky?” he asked.

  “Then it means the summoner is a hell of a lot better than I am, to fight off three of those things.” I rubbed at one eye. “And we’ll have to take him down before he hurts anyone else.”

  “The fun never ends,” Thomas said. “Right. Hospital.”

  “Then circle the block around the hotel. The spell I diverted the phages with had the tracking element worked into it. Sunrise will unravel it, and we don’t know how long it will take to follow the trail.”

  I directed Thomas to the nearest hospital, and he carried the unconscious Rawlins through the emergency room doors. He came back a minute later and told me, “They’re on the job.”

  “Let’s go, then. Otherwise someone will want to ask us questions about gunshot wounds.”

  Thomas was way ahead of me, and the van headed back to the hotel.

  I got the spell ready. It wasn’t a difficult working, under normal circumstances, but I felt as wrung out as a dirty dishrag. It took me three tries to get the spell up and running, but I managed it. Then I climbed into the passenger seat, where I could see evidence of the phages’ passing as a trail of curling, pale green vapor in the air. I gave Thomas directions. We followed the trail, and it led us toward Wrigley.

  Not a whole hell of a lot of industry was going on in my aching skull, but after a few minutes something began to gnaw at me. I looked blearily around, and found that the neighborhood looked familiar. We kept on the trail. The neighborhood got more familiar. The vapor grew brighter as we closed in.

  We turned a last street corner.

  My stomach twisted in a spasm of horrified nausea.

  The green vapor trail led to a two-story white house. A charming place, somehow carrying off the look of suburbia despite being inside the third largest city in America. Green lawn, despite the heat. White picket fence. Children’s toys in evidence.

  The vapor led up to the picket fence, first. There were three separate large holes in the fence, where some enormous force had burst the fence to splinters. Heavy footprints gouged the lawn. An imitation old-style, wrought-iron gaslight had been bent to parallel with the ground about four feet up. The door had been torn from its hinges and flung into the yard. A minivan parked in the driveway had been crushed, as if by a dropped wrecking ball.

  I couldn’t be sure, but I thought I saw blood on the doorway.

  The decorative mailbox three feet from me read, in cheerfully painted letters: THE CARPENTERS.

  Oh, God.

  Oh, God.

  Oh, God.

  I’d sent the phages after Molly.

  Chapter

  Thirty

  I got out of the van, too shocked to see anything but the destruction. It made no sense. It made no sense at all. How in the hell could this have happened? How could my spell have turned the phages and sent them here?

  I stood on the sidewalk outside the house with my mouth hanging open. The streetlights were all out. Only the lights of the van showed the damage, and Thomas turned them off after only a moment. There was no disturbance on the street, no outcry, no police presence. Whatever had happened, something had taken steps to keep it from disturbing the neighbors.

  I don’t know how long I stood there. I felt Mouse’s presence at my side. Then Thomas’s, on the other side of me.

  “Harry?” he said, as if he was repeating himself. “What is this place?”

  “It’s Michael’s house,” I whispered. “His family’s home.”

  Thomas flinched. He looked back and forth and said, “Those things came here?”<
br />
  I nodded. I felt unsteady.

  I felt so damned tired.

  Whatever happened here, it was over. There was nothing I could do at this point, except see who had been hurt. And I did not want to do that. So I stood there staring at the house until Thomas finally said, “I’ll keep watch out here. Circle the house, see if there’s anything to be seen.”

  “Okay,” I whispered. I swallowed, and my stomach felt like I’d swallowed a pound of thumbtacks. I wanted nothing in the world so much as to run away.

  But instead, I dragged my tired ass over the damaged lawn and through the house’s broken doorway. Mouse, walking on three legs, followed me.

  There were sprinkles of blood, already dried, on the inside of the doorway.

  I went on inside the house, through the entry hall, into the living room. Furniture lay strewn all over the place, discarded and broken and tumbled. The television lay on its side, warbling static on its screen. A low sound, all white noise and faint interference, filled the room.

  There was utter silence in the house, otherwise.

  “Hello?” I called.

  No one answered.

  I went into the kitchen.

  There were school papers on the fridge, most of them written in exaggerated, childish hands. There were crayon drawings up there, too. One, of a smiling stick figure in a dress, had a wavering line of letters underneath that read: I LOVY OU MAMA.

  Oh, God.

  The thumbtacks in my belly became razor blades. If I’d hurt them…I didn’t know what I would do.

  “Harry!” Thomas called from outside. “Harry, come here!”

  His voice was tense, excited. I went out the kitchen door to the backyard, and found Thomas climbing down from a tree house only a little nicer than my apartment, built up in the branches of the old oak tree behind the Carpenters’ house. He had a still form draped over his shoulder.

  I drew out my amulet and called wizard light as Thomas laid the oldest son, Daniel, out on the grass in the backyard. He was breathing, but looked pale. He was wearing flannel pajama pants and a white T-shirt soaked with blood. There was a cut on his arm; not too deep, but very messy. He had bruises on his face, on one arm, and the knuckles on both his hands were torn and ragged.

 

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