Cloak of Dragons

Home > Other > Cloak of Dragons > Page 13
Cloak of Dragons Page 13

by Moeller, Jonathan


  On the other hand, if I hadn’t become what I was, I never would have met Riordan, and maybe Nicholas would have destroyed New York with the Sky Hammer.

  I shook my head and kept walking.

  My eyes fell on a painting of a knight on horseback facing a carved standing stone. The knight looked weary, his head bowed, and there were bones scattered around the base of the stone. Something about the knight’s weariness spoke to me, and I had a disquieting memory of the Eternity Crucible, of repeating the same endless death over and over again.

  I shoved aside that train of thought before it could get up to steam.

  The accompanying plaque said that the portrait was a reproduction of a painting called “Knight At The Crossroads,” and the original had been painted about a hundred and thirty years before the Conquest by some guy named Viktor Vasnetsov. There were quite a few paintings by Vasnetsov throughout the exhibit, most of them showing either bogatyrs or figures from pre-Conquest Russian history.

  Max Sarkany had been killed before one of the paintings.

  The smell of ozone grew stronger, and I spotted the dried bloodstain on the white floor. I recognized it from the pictures I had seen of Sarkany’s corpse. It hadn’t been disturbed, which meant it had dried out by the time he had been found. The bloodstain was a few yards from the wall, right in front of another Vasnetsov painting…

  I blinked in surprise.

  The painting was entitled “Dobrynya Nikitich and Dragon,” and it showed an armored knight fighting a flying dragon with multiple heads.

  Max Sarkany had been murdered in front of a picture of a man fighting a dragon.

  Jeez. Either that was a hell of a coincidence, or someone had a wicked sense of irony.

  I looked over the bloodstain and the surroundings, but nothing jumped out at me. I suppose it would have been too much to ask to find a blood-covered dwarven power hammer hidden under a bench or something. I did notice some important things, though. The gallery was airy enough that there was little cover in here, and it was difficult to walk silently upon the polished marble floors. I could just imagine the racket a pair of high heels would make. That meant that either Sarkany had known his killer, or his killer had moved with inhuman stealth.

  Or, come to think of it, the killer could use the Cloak spell with my level of proficiency.

  I resolved to search the gallery’s offices next. I had seen cameras everywhere, and presumably, those had to link to a server somewhere on the premises. Though whoever had killed Sarkany might have been smart enough to destroy or take the server. There might be other clues in the office, something that could give a hint as to who had done this.

  There was an elevator and a stairwell marked STAFF ONLY on the far side of the gallery. I left the Russian exhibit, passed through the American section, and was halfway to the stairs when I heard voices raised in anger.

  I came to a stop, looked around, and then sat on the end of one of the observation benches scattered around the gallery. From here I would have an excellent view of anyone who came through the stairwell door, and I would have no trouble overhearing anything they said. Additionally, while I could only stay Cloaked around eleven minutes or so while moving, I could stay Cloaked indefinitely if I remained motionless.

  The door burst open, and a stunning woman stalked into the gallery.

  She stood at least six feet tall, her height further enhanced by the spiked-heel shoes she wore. She somehow managed to look both well-endowed and lean and fit at the same time, a feat that usually required obsessive diet and exercise, surgery, and fortunate genetics. The woman wore a knee-length skirt of bright red and a button-down white shirt with the sleeves rolled up. She had a thick mane of black hair that hung to her shoulders, and brilliant green eyes so intense that they looked like a special effect. Her skin was pale, and it looked flawless.

  Come to think about it, everything about her appearance looked a little too perfect to be real.

  I wondered if her appearance was an illusion…or if she was a dragon shapeshifted into human form.

  After all, if you’re going to shapeshift into human form, why not take the form of a human of stunning beauty? It’s not as if that would make the spell any harder.

  I really wish I could have gotten my aetherometer out and checked, but the Cloak spell blocked the instrument.

  The tall woman stalked forward, and as it turns out, high heels did indeed make a sound like successive hammer blows against the floor. Two people followed the woman. One was a woman in her middle twenties wearing formal business attire – black pencil skirt, black jacket, white blouse. She had glasses, and her hair had been done up in a bun. A laptop bag hung from her shoulder, and she had a phone in her left hand. The second person was a burly-looking man in his middle thirties wearing a suit that strained against the heavy muscles of his chest and arms. His balding hair had been cut down to stubble against his dark skin, and he had hard black eyes. If the twenty-something woman looked like a personal assistant, the man looked like a bodyguard. I thought of Tarlia’s disguise this morning, how Tyth and the Royal Guards and I had looked like the entourage of a wealthy or powerful person.

  The door swung open again, and another man came out.

  He was in the latter half of middle age, and shorter than the tall woman and the bodyguard. He wore a gray suit with a gray tie, and everything about him looked mousy, timid. Almost like a caricature of an accountant or a tax lawyer. He had watery blue eyes and a graying fringe of hair clinging to the back of his head.

  “Miss Sarkany,” said the man in an upper-class New York accent. “Miss Sarkany, please wait.”

  Miss Sarkany? Tarlia had mentioned that Malthraxivorn had a niece named Delaxsicoria. Given the uncanny perfection of the tall woman’s appearance, I had a suspicion that I was looking at a real live dragon in human form.

  The tall woman whirled to face the balding man. “Why are you still chasing after me, yapping like a dog, Edina?” She had a beautiful voice, rich and strong, and right now it all but vibrated with anger.

  But Edina? That name sparked a memory. I had seen in the files that a man named Charles Edina was the general manager of Dragon Imports Art Gallery.

  “I am sorry, Miss Sarkany,” said Edina, “but I simply cannot hand over the gallery’s accounts to you without…”

  “My uncle was murdered!” shouted Delaxsicoria. Tears sprang into her green eyes, and she took a shuddering breath. The anger and pain seemed to roll off her in waves, almost as if I felt them pressing against my forehead. “My uncle was a great and noble man, and he was murdered! And you wish to bother me with this…this nonsense, with these forms and paperwork and other useless rubbish!”

  “Miss Sarkany,” said Edina, his tone gentle. “I know this is a legal fiction, but it is a necessary one. I know that you are Delaxsicoria, heir to my noble lord Malthraxivorn. But to the world, you are Della Sarkany, singer and musical artist.” I blinked. Hadn’t I heard a song on the radio sung by someone named Della something-or-other? That was what I got for not paying attention. “These things must be done according to the legal customs of humans and the United States. I am sorry for the delay, but if you are to continue to dwell on Earth, then some of the customs must be observed.”

  “You weary me with your talk,” spat Della.

  “She’s right, ma’am,” said the personal assistant in a quiet voice. Della’s furious glare turned to her. The personal assistant seemed to tense but stood her ground. “If the legal forms are properly observed now, that will save you a lot of trouble later on. Your uncle was a rich and powerful man, and some people might try to take a chunk of his estate now that he is dead.”

  “Well, we know your opinion, Helen,” said Della. Her vivid green gaze swung to the bodyguard. “And what do you think, Shawn?”

  “I think you ought to listen to Helen, ma’am,” said Shawn, his voice a deep rumble.

  Della’s lips thinned, and she looked at Edina.

  “Please, Miss S
arkany,” said Edina. “Your uncle appointed me the executor of his will for a good reason. He knew that if the unthinkable happened, I would carry out his instructions faithfully. Mr. Sarkany left you everything, and you will have control of the gallery and all his other properties. But it will take some time to arrange everything.”

  Della’s nostrils flared. “Time, time, time! That is all that anyone can say. I reported my uncle’s murder to the Skythrone and demanded the High Queen’s justice, and her minions can only say it will take time.” I remained motionless within my Cloak spell. “Delays and excuses!” She drew herself up, her impressive bosom straining against the fabric of her shirt. “While you scurry about with your legal papers, I shall compose a dirge of such sorrow and grief in honor of my uncle that the apes of this world shall still sing it a thousand years from now, just as they still play the music of Beethoven, Mozart, and Dvorak!”

  “Perhaps they shall, Miss Sarkany,” said Edina. “Perhaps they shall.”

  “Come,” said Della to her bodyguard and assistant. “We shall return to my condo, and I will devote myself to the composition of my uncle’s funeral dirge.” She turned a baleful stare upon Edina. “And see to it that you attend to these legal matters. My uncle labored hard to build all that he possessed, and I will not see his work fall into the hands of unworthy interlopers.”

  With that she spun on her heel and stalked away, her footsteps echoing through the gallery. Helen fell in beside her, and Shawn took the lead. Edina stared after them, and for a moment his calm mask cracked, and I saw bitter loathing and icy contempt there.

  He didn’t like Della Sarkany, not even a little bit.

  Edina yanked a chunky, obsolete-looking smartphone from his coat and tapped a few commands into it.

  Then the calm mask returned, and Edina turned and walked to the doors leading to the lobby. He waited until Della and her entourage left the building, then let himself into the lobby, locked the gallery doors behind him, and left.

  I let out a long breath, thinking over what I had just seen.

  It was clear that Edina and Della were the prime suspects for Malthraxivorn’s death. Della was the more likely one, frankly. Her tears and grief for her uncle had seemed genuine, but I can start crying on cue, too, and she might have the physical strength to inflict a wound like the one that had killed Malthraxivorn. Edina obviously hated Della, and he might have hated his late employer. He wouldn’t be able to inflict the wound that had killed Max Sarkany, but he might have found a way to do it. I mean, Paul Ricci had been just a restaurant owner, but he had gotten his hands on a copy of the Summoning Codex.

  And the departure of Della and Edina meant that I was likely alone in the Dragon Imports Art Gallery, which gave me an excellent opportunity to look through the office area.

  I got up, crossed to the STAFF ONLY stairwell, and checked the door handle. It was unlocked, so I eased it open and started up the stairs. The second floor opened into a room that was just as lavish as the gallery below. The floor was covered in white marble, with the wall-sized windows looking towards the greenery along this part of the Hudson River. A long desk was large enough for five different receptionists, though God only knew why an art gallery needed five receptionists. Maybe dragons measured wealth in the size of the entourages they gathered around themselves. I looked down the hallway behind the receptionists’ desk. I expected to see a long row of office doors, which I did, and I decided to investigate both Max Sarkany’s and Charles Edina’s computers and files. Sarkany might have owned the gallery, but it was clear that Edina did a lot of the heavy lifting.

  I did not, however, expect to see a damaged door lying on the floor of the hallway.

  Curious, I walked towards it. It was a steel security door, thick and heavy, and it had been wrenched loose with such force that the metal hinges had torn. The door had come from a frame a few paces down the hallway, and I peered through it. A blast of cold air hit me in the face, and I looked into a small server room. Probably Sarkany kept all his data here. There were a pair of server racks loaded with blinking black boxes, but one of the machines had been smashed.

  I stepped into the server room and looked closer. The smashed computer was a WTS Corporation camera control server, capable of capturing and archiving tens of thousands of hours of security camera footage. It was a boxy cube of a computer, about the size of a small refrigerator.

  And someone had smashed a hole through its heavy metal casing at precisely the right angle to crush all the hard drives. I peered at the drives through the hole in the chassis. The server held dozens of hard drives, and every single one had been physically shattered into pieces. Not even the experts at the Inquisition would be able to pull any data off those drives.

  I looked at the door, at the broken server, and then back at the door.

  It was simple enough to reconstruct what had happened. Someone had ripped open the door, strode inside, and crushed the server’s hard drive array. I had the uneasy feeling that whoever had destroyed the server had done so with one blow. I could probably crush the server’s drives like that, but it would take me multiple castings of telekinetic spells. I couldn’t do it with one hit.

  Just as I couldn’t kill a dragon with one blow.

  I straightened up and dropped my Cloak spell, taking a few moments to catch my breath from the strain of holding it. There was no reason to keep the Cloak up. Until that camera server was replaced, the cameras scattered throughout the gallery and the offices were just wasting electricity. Some versions of WTS Corporation servers stored their video footage off-site, but not that particular model.

  Which meant that any recording of Sarkany’s murder was gone as well.

  Whoever had killed him had thought things through.

  I reached into my coat pocket, pulled on a pair of thin gloves, and stepped into the hallway again. If I couldn’t find Sarkany’s killer, the Inquisition was going to go over this place with a fine-tooth comb, and better that I didn’t leave any fingerprints behind. I walked down the hall and let myself into Sarkany’s office.

  I wasn’t in the least bit surprised to see that Sarkany had given himself the corner office. I hesitated when I saw the enormous windows looking at the street below, fearing that I would be visible from the sidewalk, but then I remembered that the windows had been tinted. No one would see me unless I stood right in front of the glass, and even then, I would only be visible as a silhouette.

  The office’s furnishings screamed that Sarkany had money and a lot of it. The carpet was thick and green and probably larger than my first apartment. All the furniture was dark, polished wood. There was a small wet bar with a variety of expensive alcohol, a ring of leather chairs around a low table, and a desk the size of a car. There were a few small sculptures around the room on stone pedestals, the largest of which was a statue of a bronze dragon in flight.

  I wondered how many of Sarkany’s employees had known that he and his niece were dragons. Edina did, obviously, and so did Shawn and Helen, though they worked for Della. Well, I suppose it wouldn’t be any different than working for an Elven noble, and millions of people worked for the Elven nobles in the US alone. Working for a dragon had to be like that, except with more secrecy.

  I crossed to Sarkany’s desk. Despite its size, its surface was still mostly covered with neat stacks of paper. Likely Sarkany wanted to keep a close eye on his fortune, like a dragon coiled in his lair and brooding over stacks of gold coins. Except instead of gold coins, to judge from the documents on the desk, most of Sarkany’s vast wealth was in his artworks, real estate, brokerage accounts, stocks, bonds, and investments in various companies and enterprises.

  Oh, and he did own some actual gold and platinum coins held at the Royal Bank in Washington DC.

  Maybe Malthraxivorn had been a traditionalist.

  One document caught my eye. It was a shipping invoice from a transnational shipping company, along with a customs form from the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey. A freight
er from St. Petersburg in the Russian Imperium had put in at New York in September, and Sarkany had taken possession of five crates from the vessel. It didn’t seem significant. Likely the crates had contained some of the Russian artworks on display downstairs.

  I turned over the document and froze.

  An old, old piece of paper was next in the stack, thick and yellowing. All the other papers on Sarkany’s desk were crisp and orderly and looked as if they had just come off a high-end laser printer. This looked much older, and the printed letters weren’t nearly as crisp.

  Also, it was in Russian.

  I didn’t read or speak Russian, and I didn’t know the Cyrillic characters. That said, I did know how to read dates in Russian. Long story short, I had needed to steal some documents for Morvilind, and the documents were in Russian. But Morvilind only wanted me to steal documents from a specific day, so I had memorized how to read Russian dates.

  The old document was dated July 12th, Conquest Year 109.

  “What the hell?” I muttered. Maybe it had something to do with the artwork downstairs, or maybe it was a document that had come with those five crates on the freighter. But it looked out of place, and I wanted to know what it said.

  I started to reach for my phone and its translation app.

  Then Della Sarkany appeared out of nothingness in front of the door.

  I flinched in surprise.

  She had just come out from underneath a Cloak spell. Her face was a mask of livid rage, her lips pulled back from her teeth in a snarl of fury. How the hell had she known that I was in here?

  Her nostrils flared, and I realized that I had made a serious mistake.

  Dragons would have keener senses than humans and Elves. The Cloak spell would hide me from all senses, including scent. But it would do nothing about the odor trail I left behind me. And apparently, Della had been able to smell the trail I left behind and had realized that someone else had been in the gallery. She had thrown that raging fit in front of Edina and then returned after he left.

  She had a cooler head than I had realized.

 

‹ Prev