Interlude 11.x: Lucius

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The problem with power was that there were limits.

 

I’d worked for my power. I’d fought for it. I’d struggled and schemed and bled, and in the end I won. I crushed my enemies underfoot. I was the most powerful man in the most powerful empire in the world. My people loved me, and my enemies feared me.

 

By any reasonable measure, I had achieved success. I had risen as high as any man could hope to.

 

And yet before the pale specter of death, I was as helpless as any plebeian.


 

The wars in the east had been successful. More successful than my last attempt, certainly, though that had served its own purpose. This time I had carved out a new territory for the empire. I had expanded our borders, devastating the Parthians in the process.

 

More to the point, I had captured several cities. Cities with libraries.

 

I was hardly the first man to be frustrated by my own mortality. It was, I thought, a universal feeling. It was a natural response.

 

In all these years of trying, someone must have found a way to surpass that mortality. I intended to find out what it was.

 

Some would call what I was attempting hubris. They would say I was going against the will of the gods, and that such things always ended in sorrow.

 

Those people, I thought, were small-minded. They couldn’t attain it themselves, so they consoled themselves with the assertion that it wasn’t worth seeking. It wasn’t an uncommon response, in my experience. How many philosophers had claimed that the powerful were unhappy, while neatly ignoring the fact that they themselves were miserable in their powerlessness? Diogenes in his jar could claim that decadent society left people confused and unhappy, but at the end of the day I doubted he was any more joyous in his poverty than I was in my riches.

 

To accept the limitations of one’s birth betrays a disappointing lack of ambition.

 

I had more respect for those who said that immortality should be sought in other ways. These people, I thought, had a more reasonable position. It was true that the works of great men lingered, and some names would be spoken forever. Would anyone forget Caesar, or Alexander, or Plato? Not likely.

 

But was there any satisfaction in that? I doubted it. They were still dead, after all.

 

And aside from that, achieving such a status was not an easy task.

 

I knew my own strengths. Humility was not a sin I had often been accused of. I was a skilled general. I was a skilled politician. I knew how to gain power, how to keep it, and how to exercise it. Within this narrow field, I was a genius. But my talents were not the sort that would be long remembered after I was gone.

 

I could have made Rome itself my legacy, as Augustus had. But I was wise enough to know that not even our empire, the greatest the world had ever known, could last forever. The people of the Nile were proof enough of that. In their day they had been the masters of the world, and none had ever surpassed the great monuments they built. But we had beaten them in the end, and left them little more than a memory.

 

The people who sought immortality through great works were to be admired beyond those who scoffed at the notion entirely. But it was still settling for second place, and I had never been able to tolerate that.

 

I much preferred the notion of living forever by simply not dying.


 

The libraries had proved useless, in the end. My scholars combed through them thoroughly, and all agreed on that. There was much mention of eternal life, of those who sought for it, and no consensus of how it might be won. After searching through all the works of the ancients, they had no answers for me.

 

Some of them dared to tell me that this was a sign. That I should give it up. Memento mori, they said. Remember that you are mortal.

 

I had them reminded of the broad applicability of this fact in a rather permanent fashion, and then arranged for more scholars. Ones with more ambition.

 

In the meantime, I fought a campaign in Africa, eradicating our rivals there and strengthening the defenses. While I was there, my scholars studied in Egypt, in Alexandria and in the tombs of pharaohs. I had, at considerable expense, arranged for various texts to be imported from the east.

 

All of them were useless. The alchemists attempted various concoctions, but half of them were poison and the other half did nothing. Not that I was foolish enough to test them on myself, of course. There was no shortage of test subjects for their experiments.

 

As the wise and learned had proven useless, I next turned my attentions to the barbarians. The shamans of the Germanic tribes, it was said, were given many strange powers by their gods. Perhaps, I thought, one of them had the answer I sought.

 

And this did prove to be more successful than my previous attempts. It was in Gaul that I met an immortal for the first time.

 

Despite all my searching, this meeting happened by pure chance. It was his whim, rather than any action on my part, which brought us together. He had heard that the emperor of Rome was in the area, and decided to see for himself.

 

Some of my guards tried to stop him. They failed, thoroughly. He didn’t even kill them. He didn’t need to. They ended up chasing him into my presence, although his confidence was such that they seemed more an honor guard than armed pursuers.

 

He did not abase himself before me, showed none of the respect which was typically paid to me. I couldn’t honestly blame him, though. His sheer presence was such that I almost felt that I should kneel to him rather than the other way around.

 

“Good day,” he said. His Latin was very smooth, very clean. He could have been mistaken for a senator or legate, from how well-spoken he was.

 

“And with whom do I speak?” I asked.

 

“My name is Conn,” he said. “Pardon the intrusion, but I had heard that you were staying here, and thought that I would come and greet you. I am a king myself, you see, though I recently abdicated the position. I found it growing tiresome.”

 

“I cannot imagine growing bored with governance,” I replied.

 

“One grows bored with all things in time,” he said lightly. “Tell me, oh mighty governor, what brings you to this corner of the world? You are far from Rome.”

 

To this day, I don’t know why I told him the truth. But I did, explaining my goals, and what I was looking for in this region of the world. I told him that I had looked for answers in the south and east, and found nothing, and thus I had come to the north and west to see what I could find here.

 

Conn listened throughout in patience and silence. When I had finished, he simply smiled. “I know what you seek,” he said. “You see, I am myself what you would like to be. I am old…older than your city, and then some. So you may rest assured that it can be done. But I won’t be sharing my secrets with you. I think that would end badly.” His smile broadened. “Well, thank you for satisfying my curiosity. I will be leaving now.”

 

“I could make you stay,” I said. “I could make you give me what I want.”

 

“No,” he said, with not a trace of fear. “You couldn’t. And if you tried, a great many of your men would die. Good day.”

 

He walked out, and I let him, because I believed him. Though he looked like a youth, I believed that he was ancient. And though he was unarmed and unarmored, I believed that he was a match for any of my men.

 

Afterwards, one of my guards said that this man Conn had sounded like a Briton. So we turned in that direction, thinking to find more of his kind. Preferably one who was not so…singularly impressive as he had been.

 

We were not successful. Or perhaps we were; how would I know? He had seemed like any other man, but for his commanding presence, and his strength. Perhaps there were dozens of them among the barbarians my legions fought.

 

In any case, it soon became a moot point. Another man arrived, not long after. I later learned that Conn had sent him to me, and my opinion of him improved when I did.

 

But at the time, all I knew was that a man had arrived, saying that I would want to speak with him. He knew enough of what I wanted to convince my officers, and eventually he was shown into my presence. He was an easterner, a Hun, or something like one.

 

Immediately, I knew that he was not Conn’s equal. He lacked that man’s authority, that presence that had so impressed me. Then again, even at the time I knew that few were on his level. The world could not have born many.

 

“I can give you what you want,” he said without introduction. “I can give you freedom from the ravages of time. And I will, if you serve me for a year and never once disobey, no matter how menial the work I give you is.”

 

“I could give you a great many slaves,” I said. “They could do more service than I, in that year.”

 

“You could,” he agreed. “And if I desired slaves, that would be meaningful. But I don’t. What I want is to see the Caesar on his knees, scrubbing floors.”

 

“I could have you put to death for speaking to me like that,” I said coldly.

 

“You could,” he agreed again. “But what would that gain you? Kill me, and your own death will still be just around the corner. Serve me, and it need never come.”

 

“I will require proof,” I said. “And time to put my affairs in order.”

 

“Quite understandable,” he said, smiling.

 

“Very well, then,” I said. “A year is a small price to pay for eternity.”

 

Not long thereafter, I died after a short and sudden illness. It was a simple enough thing to arrange, and it would be accepted by my people more readily than abandonment. There was no betrayal in dying at the whim of the gods, after all.

 

I left the empire to the rule of my sons, though I knew that neither of them was fit to hold it. Those who left their legacy in the form of their bloodline were blessed with better offspring than I. I had tried to impart the cunning which brought me to power, but neither one grasped it. They could repeat what I said, but they didn’t understand why I said it. I was confident that neither would hold power long.

 

Time proved me right. The one was a trusting fool, the other a raving madman. Both died in ignominy.

 

I served my year, and never once did I complain. True to his word, he killed me and brought me back, to feast on the lives of others and extend my own.

 

I murdered him afterwards, of course. I don’t share power gladly or willingly, as he would have known if he had any sense at all. But for all his age and all his power, he was still a great fool. I ended him easily.

 

The nature of power was much the same among my new peers as it had always been, and it wasn’t long before I was navigating the new systems as easily as I had the old. I set the established powers against one another, subtly, carefully, until at last they had been weakened to the point that I could seize power myself.

 

I returned to the continent of my birth at that point, making it the center of my empire. I lacked the total dominance over my peers that I had once enjoyed, but I had enough prominence to satisfy me. I had found immortality; I was hardly going to lose it battling even older vampires than myself for the sake of pride.

 

The city I had been born in was abandoned by that point, but Alexandria still stood. Though its libraries had failed me when I was there as a mortal, I still felt some fondness for the city. If nothing else it still existed, which relatively few things from so long ago did. I established the center of my power in Alexander’s city, where it has remained ever since, through all the many challenges I have weathered.

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Interlude 7.y: Carmine

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People call me a hedonist sometimes. I don’t think that’s entirely fair.

 

I mean, it’s true. I’m a hedonist. I won’t deny it. Hell, I’ll preach it.

 

I just don’t get how people think that’s a bad thing. The way I look at it, there’s a huge world out there, and I’ve only got a little bit of time to live in it. Nothing lasts forever, after all. So how is it something to be ashamed of that I want to experience as much of what the world has to offer in this tiny little slice of eternity that I get to spend in it?

 

And it’s not just about pleasure, or sex, or physical gratification. That’s maybe the thing I don’t get, out of all the things that make people upset with me. Sure, that’s all part of it, but only part. Not even really the most important part. It’s about experiencing everything, good and bad and in between. It’s about taking everything you can get, everything the world offers you and a little bit more.

 

It’s about living.


 

The party was a disappointment. The guy who’d invited me said that it was going to be crazy and intense, but of course most of the people there were boring. They just wanted to pretend to be hardcore, and I was looking for the real thing.

 

Most. Not all.

 

One guy was doing some crazy things with fire. I watched him for a while, but after a few minutes it started to get repetitive. Still pretty awesome, and it looked like it’d be all kinds of fun to do, but there was only so long you could spend watching before it started to get boring. Like golf, kind of. I made a note to talk to him after he was done, though. Anybody who did that for fun was worth talking with.

 

Another couple was doing a fast, intense fiddle duet. That was worth watching too, though I wasn’t nearly as interested in taking part in that show. I appreciated music, rather a lot, but I had no ability to actually perform it. It just wasn’t one of my talents.

 

More than anyone else, though, my attention was caught by a guy standing alone on the periphery. He wasn’t doing much, but there was something fascinating about him. I wasn’t even sure what it was. Something about his attitude, his posture, something told me he was feeling the same sort of bored indulgence that I was. Like me, he was disappointed by how tame this whole thing was.

 

I sauntered up to him, smiling. “Hi,” I said.

 

He grinned widely, in a way that emphasized his teeth. “Hi.”


 

I’ve got a simple rule, one that’s always served me rather well. I’ll try anything once.

 

I mean, you kind of have to, right? If you don’t try something, you can’t know whether you’ll like it. Sometimes the best things in life are the ones you never realized you wanted at all. I’d seen so many people that didn’t get into something until they were past middle age, and then they really got into it. Ask them what took so long, and the answer is, “Oh, I didn’t think I’d like it. It seemed like a bad idea. It was never the right time, and then there was the pension to think about, and the retirement fund, and the kids need to go to college.”

 

There’s always an excuse not to try new things. It’s easy to put things off until it’s too late.

 

I never wanted that to be me, and I acted on that.


 

The dance floor was crowded with gyrating bodies, nice shoes and fancy hats. The music was quick and exuberant, a brass section playing like it was all they ever wanted to do and a pianist so fast with her fingers that you had to check that there wasn’t two of her.

 

I danced the first round with a man who lived for it. You only had to look at him to know that dance was his life, that everything else he did was just passing time until he could get out on the floor again. He lived in the music, his heartbeat keeping time with the rhythm, the dancer and the dance mixed together until not even he knew where one ended and the other began.

 

When the music switched to something too slow for his taste, I found myself partnered with a girl who looked like she’d been built by an artist. Her skin gleamed like marble, her black hair in such effortless curls that I was sure she’d spent a solid two hours getting it just right. It was like a statue come to life. It seemed unfair to the world that bodies like that could actually exist in real life. Granted she couldn’t dance for shit, but still. God damn.

 

And then I was looking him. I’d seen him around a few times since that first party, spent a little while talking to him. His name was Francis. Not what most people would call a particularly manly or dangerous-sounding name, but he wore it well. He spoke it without an ounce of shame or hesitation, like he was daring you to make fun of him for it. Like he was just looking for a reason to beat your face in, and you’d make his day if you gave him one. Francis was the kind of guy who had a beef with the whole world.

 

I didn’t know much about him beyond that. He was sly, evasive on pretty much every topic. He danced around mentions of his family or his past, didn’t talk about where he got his money. He probably thought it made him seem dangerous, and interesting as a result.

 

The hell of it was that he was right. I knew it was an act, of course. But you had to respect someone who did it so well.

 

He smiled like a wolf and pulled me back out onto the dance floor. I was sweaty and tingling and alive all over, and I was loving every moment of it.


 

Nothing lasts forever. Nobody lasts forever.

 

People say they know that, but they don’t act like it. So many people live a life they hate, thinking they’ll be happy someday. In twenty years, or thirty, or fifty, they’ll be happy, they’ll be able to do the things they want to. Of course, they’ll be too old to enjoy it by then, but it’ll all be worth it!

 

And I suppose you could say that they’ll be happier overall, that the sum of the happy in their life will be larger than if they hadn’t delayed their gratification. But that’s a trap. Because what if you don’t last long enough to get that payoff? Suddenly you’ve got the worst of both worlds.

 

Because of course that’s the best part, the twist of the knife. Not only won’t any of us be around forever, we don’t even get to know how long we’ll be around.

 

When I was in school, a girl I knew died crossing the street. She didn’t do a thing wrong, but it didn’t matter. She got in a wreck with a drunk driver, except she didn’t have a car. Poof, gone. One day she had her whole life in front of her, a bright future and great prospects. The next they’re scheduling a closed-casket funeral. It’s that fast, that easy.

 

So why on earth would you put life off? You never know when that van is coming your way. Or you slip on the stairs, or catch a cough that turns out to be a little bit worse than you thought, and then a lot worse. Just like that. Poof, gone.

 

So I say get out there and carpe that diem. Live for today, not for the day after tomorrow. And when you see something you want, you don’t put it off, you go for it. Because otherwise, you’ll see your last chance come and go, and you might not even know it.


 

When Francis first told me that he wasn’t human I was skeptical. Of course I was. I wasn’t a total idiot. When he offered to show me privately, as proof, I figured it was a setup. Of course I did. Again, not a total idiot.

 

But I went anyway, after taking appropriate precautions. Because what if it wasn’t? It was, it had to be, but…what if? I knew I’d spend the rest of my life asking that if I didn’t. And I wasn’t willing to do that.

 

When I saw him change, I knew that I wanted what he had. There was no doubt, no hesitation. The right answer was obvious to me. I mean, when you live to experience everything you can, being offered the chance at a whole new world’s worth of experiences is a no-brainer.

 

There were risks, of course. Even before he explained them, I knew that. There were risks, there had to be risks, because nothing good came without some kind of risk. That was all right. I wasn’t afraid of risks. There was no reason to be, from where I was standing. After all, even the guy that stands around and frowns in disapproval at how careless I am has to cross the street. It doesn’t matter how careful you are, there’s a van with your name on it.

 

And even if there isn’t, so what? You get to live to be old and sick and die in a hospital after one hell of a boring life? That’s hardly a fair trade, and not in their favor.

 

I thought Francis was actually a bit disturbed by my response. He was used to being the outsider, the freak, dangerous and mysterious. He was expecting shock and fright. Getting curiosity and enthusiasm instead threw him a bit. But eventually I convinced him that I was serious, and then I convinced his boss, and then I got to change myself.

 

And it was everything that I’d hoped, and more.


 

There are mistakes, and there are regrets. It’s inevitable. If everything works out the way you want it to, you’re not actually alive. Because nobody’s that lucky.

 

But you have to move on. Because otherwise your mistakes trap you. When you dwell on the bad things, you’re letting them rule you. Learn your lesson and move on.

 

It’s not always easy, but it’s the only solution. Anything else just makes things worse.

 

Sometimes you move on with scars. That’s fine. We’ve all got scars and broken parts. It’s another of those universal things. There are wounds too deep for healing, and if you live long enough you’ll pick some up. They hurt. But you have to get back on the horse.

 

Only the dead feel no pain, and they don’t feel anything else, either. You have to be in one hell of a bad place for that to be a decent trade.


 

Being a wolf reinforced my habits. For better or worse was an open question, of course. I thought it was a good thing, but I didn’t pretend to be a neutral source.

 

Either way, though, there was no question that it fit with my philosophy. It’s very easy, as a wolf, to live in the moment. For some people that was a problem. It got in the way of their planning, of their ordered life. It pulled their focus from past and future into the now.

 

But that was how I wanted to live anyway. In the past I’d sometimes had problems with it, with my brain getting in the way. The fact that my new nature helped with that was a nice perk to the whole thing.

 

Not that I needed another perk. There wasn’t much to it but perks, from where I was standing. Lycanthropy had opened as many doors as I’d hoped, and then some. Hunting, of course, was a thrill unlike any other. My body being so much tougher was a nice addition, as well. It meant there were a lot more things I could do to it, and I got over them faster. There were so many options that I’d never had before.

 

There were downsides, of course. Having to answer to Edward was annoying, and there were things that were hard to explain. I ended up having to cut ties with a lot of my old friends.

 

But it was worth it.


 

In some ways, the most interesting thing was how many things hadn’t changed. Parties, for instance, were still so often a disappointment. Poseurs were just as common as they’d ever been, and just as annoying.

 

A vampire smiled at me from across the room, and I considered it for a moment, but eventually shook my head. He nodded and turned away, moving on.

 

It was a tempting offer. Being fed on was….well, it was one hell of an experience. It felt like nothing else, that was for sure. Some people even found it addictive, though I’d never had that reaction myself.

 

But I was looking for something else, tonight. Something new.

 

I eventually found it in the form of an Indian man with brilliant yellow eyes. He had a sharp, mocking sort of smile, like he knew something no one else did. And his scent was…different. On the surface it was unpleasant, a nasty, sickly sweetness like something rotting. But there was something oddly compelling about it, as well, a depth and richness that most people never got close to.

 

“Good evening,” he said, smiling at me. It reminded me of Francis, those first few nights. A smile that looked down on the world and was amused at what it saw. “You, my dear, smell delightful.”

 

“And you don’t,” I retorted. I was still amused at how much of an additional dimension my sense of smell added to interacting with people. Though it should have been a dimension that this guy missed out on, since he was very definitely not a werewolf.

 

“Yet you choose to converse with me all the same,” he said dryly. “Why, I’m flattered. To what do I owe the pleasure?”

 

I shrugged. “Sometimes you want something that isn’t nice,” I said.

 

His smile sharpened slightly. “Ah,” he murmured. “Why, that I can offer you.”


 

I’m not anyone’s idea of a saint. That’s never really been in question. If basically any major religion has anything right, I’m bound for Hell. Or the closest thing they have. I’m no theologian, but I know that not everyone got into the whole punishing of sinners thing.

 

There’s something oddly liberating about that. About knowing that, hey, your ultimate fate is settled. Even if it’s for the worse, there’s a very comforting certainty about it. It removes a lot of your worries. It’s the equivalent of being given a death sentence. Sure, it might suck, but you can’t really make it worse. You don’t have to care about people’s opinion of you anymore, because you’ve made it about as bad as it gets.

 

There’s a very sweet freedom in knowing that you’re terrible, and accepting yourself despite that. Or because of it.

 

For all that, though, I did have my boundaries. There are lines that I won’t cross. There are things that even I think are unforgivable.

 

It didn’t take long for me to realize that my newest associate was far across those lines.


 

The skinwalker looked almost shocked. He wasn’t beaten often. I knew that. His ego was immense, but it wasn’t unjustified.

 

That probably meant that it stung even more to lose to someone like me.

 

The people with me weren’t much better. A changeling, a newborn vampire, another werewolf, a druid that wasn’t good for much more than a stage magician. We were small fry, as such things went.

 

The nice thing about being small is that you’re negligible. Even knowing that he’d made an enemy of me, the skinwalker hadn’t done a thing to guard himself against me. Why should he? He was a terrifying powerhouse, and we…weren’t.

 

Which probably made it particularly embarrassing that we’d not only taken away his victim, we’d also humiliated him in front of the world. Hell, this might even be the first time he’d ever been on camera.

 

“You know I’ll punish you for this,” he said quietly. His tone was quietly, utterly hateful, nearly to the point of madness. That was really what drove home just how much we’d pissed him off. He was usually very good at keeping his mask intact.

 

“Yep,” I said casually. There wasn’t much I could do about it. His ability to escape was vastly superior to our ability to capture him. He couldn’t really beat us right now—not with how thoroughly we’d outmaneuvered him. But there would be a reckoning someday. I knew that.

 

That was fine. It was in the future, after all, and I’d never cared too much about the future.


 

And then I found what I’d been looking for.


 

I was lying on the floor, panting. It had been a long run back, and the baby growing in me made running harder than it had been. That was really the only downside of the whole thing. I’d never intended to have children. Now that I was, the physical burden it put on me was a constant source of annoyance. Less so as a wolf than a human, but it was still noticeable. These runs left me exhausted.

 

But it was worth it. To be with him, it was worth it. It was the whole reason I’d moved back here, after all.

 

I was reasonably confident that someone had been trying to keep me from seeing him again. It was really the only explanation that made sense. He hadn’t concealed his own trail from me, after all, and that wasn’t something that just happened. So someone else must have done it, and the only reason I could think of was to keep us apart.

 

If so, whoever had done it had a rather perplexingly low opinion of us. I mean, it wasn’t that hard to get back to Canada. And given that he wanted to find me again as much as I wanted to find him, it wasn’t that challenging to arrange.

 

I’d come more prepared on that second trip, enough to stay for a few days. We’d worked things out then. He was smarter than I’d given him credit for, at first. He understood what I said, at least enough to make plans.

 

Since then, I’d seen him close to a dozen times. It wasn’t that hard to arrange. Oregon to Canada wasn’t that hard of a trip for me. Even as the pregnancy got more burdensome, it wasn’t too terribly difficult.

 

At the moment, I was lying on the floor of my sister’s garage, recovering. I was tired, and hungry, and considering a nap. I knew I should change back first, though, since she still didn’t know what I was. I was trying to work up the energy when someone else showed up.

 

He looked human, mostly. But his eyes resembled pits of fire, and his smile was twisted and scarred, and he hadn’t opened the door to come inside.

 

“Hello there,” he said, sitting on the floor beside me. “I’m sorry if this is a touch awkward. I don’t normally do the dramatic monologue thing. It’s tacky. And also rather stupid, but mostly tacky.”

 

I lay still and listened. So far, this was an interesting experience. Strange, but interesting.

 

“I’m sorry, you know,” he said. “For what I’m about to do. I don’t say that often. It’s not a natural reaction for me. I don’t have much capacity for remorse.”

 

At about that point, I started freaking out. I tried to stand, though I wasn’t sure whether I was planning to run or attack.

 

It turned out not to matter much. I couldn’t move. Not a muscle. I was still breathing, I was blinking, but I had no control over my muscles.

 

“I suppose you remind me of me, about a bazillion years ago,” he continued, ignoring my attempt at struggle. “I’d prefer to spare you. And, you know, the funny thing is that I probably could. I’m guessing you wouldn’t want much to do with the kid. You don’t seem the type. But I can’t take the chance at this point. I’ve got a lot riding on him, and I’m not sure I have enough time to start over again. Things are progressing faster than I was expecting. There’s an external force acting to speed it up, I’m sure of it. Though I suppose it doesn’t really matter.”

 

I continued struggling, without moving a muscle. I might as well not have bothered.

 

“I guess that’s really all I wanted to say,” he said. “That I’m sorry. It isn’t much, I know, but it’s about all I can offer you. And it would be cruel to drag this out any more. It will be painless, at least. I can manage that much.”

 

He fell silent, and a moment later I felt him grasp my mind.

 

And squeeze.

 

Poof, gone.

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Building Bridges 12.21

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“Unbelievable,” I said, watching a car burn. It crackled rather nicely.

 

“What’s that?” Aiko asked, warming her hands. It was just for show, of course; it wasn’t that cold out.

 

“Since when do I help vampires?” I asked. “Yet here we are. Lucius is one of the biggest, baddest vampires out there, and I’m seriously planning how to deal with his enemies.”

 

“You making any progress on that?” she asked.

 

I glowered at the papers he’d given me. “Not much,” I admitted. “He wouldn’t have bothered asking if it was easy. Plus they’re human. I’m…a bit out of practice at fighting humans, honestly.”

 

The files he’d given us had been fairly straightforward. The group he was competing with was almost entirely human, just a bunch of people with no real connection to the supernatural at all. But they were also aware of who he was, and what he was, and they weren’t happy about it. Which wouldn’t be a problem, except that they had a bizarrely good track record when it came to acting on that dislike.

 

They’d killed four vampires so far. That, really, was all that I needed to hear. Human beings did not kill vampires without either getting very lucky or having something special going for them. One or two I could explain away with luck, but four? That was a bit beyond what could be attributed to random chance. Even if they managed to hit all four of them in the daytime, it couldn’t have been easy. In my experience a decent proportion of vampires were still conscious and lethal when the sun was up, and the rest tended to be paranoid. Even finding their lairs was usually a struggle, and they had plenty of protections in place once you made it in.

 

There were only three ways that I could think of for a group of plain vanilla humans to manage that feat. The first was that their targets had whatever members of the neighborhood they happened to be annoyed with at the time, rather than actual vampires. Given the source of the information, I thought I could safely rule that explanation out. The second was that the entire thing was an elaborate deception of some kind. Given the source of the information, that seemed remarkably likely, but it was hard to figure out the details, if it was.

 

The third explanation I could think of involved major weapons. Not just guns and stakes, but things like bombs and fires. The kind of weapons that would inflict serious collateral damage, especially in the middle of a major city.

 

Considering that I already had solid evidence to suggest that they were willing to use toxic gas on people, that sounded disturbingly plausible. By the time you were even contemplating that, you’d taken a few steps beyond caring about collateral damage. I mean, I had some problems of that sort myself, and even I cringed at the thought of what they’d had planned.

 

Unfortunately, that didn’t give me any better idea of how to track them down. Alexandria wasn’t exactly a small town. Hunting down a group of humans in that crowd was nearly impossible.

 

Oh, it was hard to find other things in a city as well. A vampire or werewolf could hide very well indeed in a city of almost five million. It could be like finding a needle in a haystack. But this was more like finding a needle in a needlestack. It was just as hard to locate it, if not harder. More than that, though, even if I did find them, I’d have a hard time knowing it.

 

“I still wonder why he even needs us,” Aiko said. “I mean, he can obviously handle this. They’re just people, and he’s…not.”

 

“They’re people who’re expecting him, and have a proven track record of beating vampires,” I pointed out. “There’s a difference.”

 

“Does it matter? He’s like two thousand years old, right?”

 

“Yeah, and he didn’t get to be that old by doing what people were expecting from him.” I shook my head. “I’m sure he could take them head-on, but that isn’t how he operates. It’s not how his brain is wired, you know? He’s all about manipulation, schemes, hitting people when they don’t expect him. And he’s paranoid. He must have been, to live this long. No, it makes perfect sense for him to want someone else to deal with this.”

 

“Are you dealing with it, then?”

 

I shrugged. “I figured I’d ask you, see if you had anywhere else to be. But at the moment my inclination is to say yeah. Having Lucius owe us one is worth quite a bit. Particularly when the only thing we have to do to get it is kill some people that honestly sort of deserve it.”

 

I felt a bit uncomfortable saying that. It was hard to admit that they did deserve it. They were trying to do the right thing, after all. In their own way, I really thought that they were trying to do the right thing. But the lengths they went to in that effort were too much.

 

“It is kind of nice to be working with the system for once,” Aiko said meditatively. “I spent so long on the other side it almost feels weird.”

 

“I know what you mean,” I said. “Although it’s not as nice as I thought it would be. It’s not like we’re actually getting any help out of it.”

 

“Oh, I don’t know,” she said thoughtfully. “I think we might be able to get some assistance. It’s just a matter of knowing what to ask for.”

 

“What do you have in mind?”

 

She told me.

 

I stared at her for a few seconds after she was finished. The only sound was the crackling of the flames.

 

“Well, it’ll work,” I said, after a few moments, my tone a mix of admiration and disgust.

 

“Of course it will,” she said. “Just like old times, huh?”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

“Well, it’s basically the first trick we ever pulled together,” she said. “Almost brings a tear to your eye, doesn’t it?”

 

“Not quite,” I said. “Well, we might as well get started with setup. Tomorrow night we can do it.”

 

“Yep,” she said, grinning. I couldn’t help but smile as well, and felt guilty for doing it. I shouldn’t feel happy about this plan, but it was so slick I couldn’t help it.


 

The next eighteen hours were a blur of frantic activity. I stopped in at Lucius’s, where the party was pretty much over. The music had changed to ambient electronica, and quieted down; the lights were dimmer, and slower. The room had emptied out considerably, and most of the people who were left were out cold.

 

Lucius was still up in his office, though, looking out over the room. As expected, once I’d explained our plan he was more than happy to loan us a vamp. He seemed to find our scheme deeply amusing; he was still grinning as I left.

 

I hugged Aiko, and then took off for Italy. In Milan, I found Jacques and reminded him that that request for info on Lucius had been an urgent one. He griped about that, and more when I added the vampire hunters to the list, but a few thousand dollars shut him up.

 

Next I imported half a dozen jotnar and twice as many ghouls to Alexandria, along with a couple of mages that were rather important to my plan. Aiko’s plan, really, but I was the one making it work. She was good at a lot of things, but logistics weren’t really one of them. Snowflake came with, bouncing excitedly. She was looking forward to this.

 

Once they were settling into the city, I went back to Colorado Springs to manage my plans. I finally had those meetings that I’d been putting off. Selene had made appropriate reparations for the shop that Aiko had burned, but there was nothing quite like a personal touch with that sort of thing. The new wards needed their final checks, and I had to finish paying Alexander for his work. That entailed a long chat with Tindr, since Alexander’s payment was the kind of thing that put a noticeable dent in even my budget.

 

Once that was done, it was time to go chat with the Guards and keep up my identity as Jonathan Keyes, better known as Shrike. Things weren’t great there. Tawny was clearly out of sorts about the creature she’d summoned and which I’d arranged to have stick around, and she was terrible at keeping secrets. Everyone could feel that there was something uncomfortable between her and me. They came to some rather hilariously wrong conclusions about it, though. The general consensus seemed to be that she’d tried to hit on me and gotten nowhere. The comments on that topic got laughs from both of us.

 

That was damn near the only positive thing about that situation, though. David wasn’t happy about how little time I’d been spending with the group, and even less happy when I told him that I had other work to do again the next day. The others didn’t ask questions, but I could tell they were burning with curiosity about what was so urgent.

 

If the intention had been to set myself apart from the rest of the group, I was starting to think that I’d been too successful. There had already been a fair amount of tension there, but now it was a constant presence, impossible to ignore. More importantly, it was starting to reach the point of being a problem. Almost all of them could plausibly screw me over at this point, and with that relationship in its current state I wasn’t sure they wouldn’t.

 

It would be hard to change the first impression I’d made, though, and it was a delicate balancing act between the dangers of alienating them too much and all the reasons I’d wanted distance to begin with.

 

And I just didn’t have the time right now. As soon as I’d made my excuses, it was back to my other crew to check on the thing from the Badlands, since Tawny had reminded me about her. I eventually found her sitting on the roof, seemingly asleep. The cold and snow didn’t seem to bother her any more than me.

 

I didn’t wake her. She looked bizarrely peaceful in her sleep, and I got the impression that it had been a long time since she last slept. I’d have felt bad disturbing her rest. And besides, I still had a lot to do. I confirmed the financial transfers Tindr wanted to make to settle out various debts, grabbed Kyi’s latest report to read, and then started on the next portal.

 

Another couple of hours went by as I was picking up various useful tools from our castle in Romania, largely because I had to pause and make one of them. I’d used the last of my disposable alarm wards a while earlier, and forgotten to get more. The one I made was reverse engineered from that design, and it was at best a crude copy. But it was functional, and it wasn’t like I cared how long it would last. If it went twelve hours without being used, I’d be quite surprised.

 

Then it was back to Egypt, where it was already well into morning. I did one more check to make sure that everyone knew the plan, then ate a solid five pounds of meat and crashed for a few hours in the house we’d taken over as our temporary headquarters. I didn’t need to sleep, but I’d thrown quite a bit of magic around on all those portals, and sleep would help me recover faster. It also kept me from obsessing over whether every detail of the plan was right, which was a good thing.


 

Snowflake licked my face around an hour before dusk, waking me up. Come on, she said. It’s almost time to go.

 

I groaned and pushed myself upright. “Fine,” I growled, getting out of the couch. “Tell me there’s food.”

 

Vigdis picked up some fast food. I think she probably bought them out of stock, actually.

 

“Close enough,” I said, tugging my armor on. I hadn’t taken most of it off, of course. Sleeping in armor was all kinds of uncomfortable, but I’d cope.

 

Snowflake hadn’t exaggerated the quantity of food involved. Jötnar and ghouls eat a lot, and there were a lot of them here. Add in the rest of us, and I wouldn’t have been surprised if Vigdis had needed to bring along a minion to carry it all.

 

I practically inhaled two of the cheapest hamburgers I’d ever laid eyes on, and grabbed a third as I headed out to survey the scene and make sure it was ready.

 

I had to admit, I was impressed with how well it had been arranged. The alley was already narrow, but carefully placed heaps of garbage cut the space down further. There were two snipers with a good line of sight, though I could only see them through the eyes of a raven. The entrances to the alley were rigged to collapse on trigger, leaving anyone inside nowhere to run. The bombed-out shop across from the house was still boarded up, but it was mostly for show. From the inside, the door would open smooth and easy.

 

We were ready.

 

The vampire showed up about half an hour after dusk. It wasn’t Lucius, or anyone like him. This one could have passed for a living teenager with minimal effort, and while appearances could be deceiving, in this case I thought it wasn’t too inaccurate. He’d have sent one of his weakest minions for this.

 

“I’m guessing that Lucius told you to follow my orders, and that you’d die horribly if you failed him,” I said, standing in the street outside our carefully prepared alley.

 

The vampire grinned. “Good guess,” he said.

 

“If she gets hurt, I’ll do worse,” I said.

 

“How cute,” Aiko said dryly, pushing me away. “Come on, let’s do this thing.” She grabbed the vampire’s hand and simpered at me.

 

I snorted and walked into the alley, doing my best to make it look like I was throwing a temper tantrum. The vampire leaned into Aiko, nuzzling her neck. Not biting, if he knew what was good for him. I hadn’t been bluffing.

 

I walked into the house and settled in to wait with the rest, wrapping shadows around us. The others layered on their own concealments, of whatever sort, until we were practically undetectable.

 

The same as our first trick, sort of. Except turned inside out. Way back when, we’d used Aiko as bait, counting on our enemies’ nature as predators to drive them to attack vulnerability.

 

This time we were counting on…well, more or less the opposite of that.

 

I almost felt bad about it. Almost.

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Building Bridges 12.20

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I was sure something would go wrong on the way out of the party. Lucius would stop us, or a gang of monsters would be waiting when we made it back out to the dance floor, or those drugs Aiko had grabbed would turn out to be less harmless than she’d thought. Hell, even if the guards just didn’t let us out, that would potentially be a very big problem.

 

But none of those things happened. The most dangerous thing waiting when we got out into the main room was pounding music, a nausea-inducing lightshow, and an instant headache. The wendigo—Annabel, according to Lucius, though I had my doubts as to whether the concept of a name was even applicable to such a creature—was standing near the door into the back hallways. It just smiled at us as we passed. There were scraps of meat in its teeth, fresh since the last time I saw it. No surprise; a wendigo was always hungry. It was almost the definition of what they were.

 

The party itself was going at about the same pace, or a little slower. The atmosphere was a little different, a little less frenetic. There were fewer people dancing, and more people partied out and collapsed in the corners. It wasn’t just the food, either. Even most of the monsters were slowing down.

 

The guards waved us out without question or comment. Presumably Lucius had told them not to bother us.

 

That, or they weren’t actually keeping people in at all. Now that I thought about it I wasn’t sure I’d actually seen them stop anyone. I’d just been assuming that it was a sort of pitcher plant, a lure to get the prey inside and the goons to keep them from leaving once they realized what they’d gotten themselves into.

 

In an odd way, that was more comforting than the alternative—that Lucius was being honest, and these people were here because they wanted to be. Even knowing what happened here, what was going to happen to them, they didn’t want to leave. That was an incredibly disturbing prospect. I knew that some people glorified leeches, but for it to be happening on this scale and to this degree was something else.

 

I was feeling deeply, deeply unsettled as we climbed out of the basement up into the cleaner air of the street.

 

I took a moment, once we were out, to breathe deep and clear my head. Just being down there left me feeling dirty, in a way I couldn’t quite explain. The funny thing was that it wasn’t like this was the worst thing I’d ever seen. Not by a long shot. There was just something about it that bothered me to a rather disproportionate extent.

 

“Well, I’m not sorry to leave that behind,” Aiko said, echoing my thoughts. She shook her head briskly. “I’d forgotten how nasty those parties were.”

 

“Have you gone to many?” I asked.

 

She shrugged. “A few. They were never really my thing, but I used to know some people that went to them all the time, and I tagged along a few times. Not many. Is it just me, or is that guy down the block looking this way a little too closely?” The segue was smooth, without even a hitch to mark the transition.

 

“Yeah,” I said, not looking directly at him. I didn’t need to. Alexandria, it turned out, was a decent city for raccoons. “You want to go check it out?”

 

“I’m undecided. On the one hand, he’s probably with this mysterious rival trying to take over the city, which means that going over there is basically guaranteed to get us involved with a mess that’s none of our business. On the other, not knowing what the fight’s about is going to drive me crazy.”

 

I shrugged. “If you’re that curious, I’m fine with heading over and finding out.” I started walking in that direction.

 

Aiko had to hurry for a few steps to catch up. “Are you serious?” she asked, drawing even with me.

 

“Yup,” I said. “See, I’ve heard the whole ‘you’re free to go and I won’t coerce you into making a deal’ line before. In my experience, they pretty much always find some way of roping me into it anyway. So I figure we might as well beat him to it and at least go check it out.”

 

“That’s an exceptionally cynical way to look at it,” she commented.

 

“Not an inaccurate one, though.”

 

“Nope. Oh look, he noticed us.”

 

Sure enough, the guy had clearly realized that we were walking towards him deliberately, and not just coincidentally wandering in his direction. He looked like he wanted to bolt, but couldn’t quite make up his mind.

 

I wasn’t in the mood to chase him down. Especially not in a city I’d literally never set foot in before tonight. I was guessing that I was faster than him, but raw speed didn’t necessarily guarantee success in chasing someone down. Not when he knew every twist and turn, every back street and hidey-hole around.

 

So as we got closer, I raised my hands to display that there were no weapons in them. I wasn’t sure whether I had a language in common with him, but some messages are universal.

 

Aiko’s was another of those. She had her carbine out and pointed in his general direction as we got closer. Which was probably sending a bit of mixed messages, but I thought we were getting the point across. We were here to talk, and unless he was faster than a bullet running wasn’t the best option for him.

 

“You come from the monster house,” he said as we got within about fifteen feet. His English was rough, at best, but I could more or less figure out what he was saying.

 

“Yeah,” I said. I was trying to get a grasp on him, and it was hard. He stank of chlorine, to such an extent that I was almost sneezing fifteen feet away from him. I couldn’t remember having run into magic that smelled quite like that in the past. The closest I could think of were a couple of mages who’d had a note of bleach to the standard human disinfectant.

 

“They tell you to kill me?” he asked. He seemed fairly comfortable for a guy with a gun pointed at him.

 

I shrugged. “Maybe,” I said. “The guy that owns that place wanted me to take out some enemy of his. He might have meant you; I’m not sure. I told him I wasn’t interested.”

 

“And he let you leave?”

 

I snorted. “For the moment. In my experience people like him always find a way to drag you back in somehow. But enough about me. I want to talk about you. More specifically, why you’re so interested in what’s going on over there.”

 

“You no like the people there, yeah?” he said. “Us either. They are evil. So we work against them. Tonight we heard that they have many people here, so I come to watch and see if this is true.”

 

“Okay,” I said.

 

Then Aiko sneezed.

 

I knew what that meant. The reason that scent seemed odd was that it wasn’t magic. He just actually smelled like chlorine.

 

On its own that wasn’t such a bizarre thing. A lot of people smelled like chlorine, at least by my standards. My sense of smell was acute enough that I could sometimes pick it up even if someone just washed their clothes with chlorine bleach.

 

But this was something else. This guy stank like a swimming pool. It wasn’t just me and Aiko. Normal humans would notice this stench. They’d probably give him a wide berth to avoid it.

 

There weren’t very many reasons to smell that strongly of chlorine. Given that I knew he was here to deal with his enemies, the only one that really came to mind was poison gas. Chlorine was an old chemical weapon, but it was still nasty.

 

Except that it was an asphyxiant. Chlorine had other effects, but it was strongest by far when it got into your lungs.

 

And vampires didn’t breathe.

 

The second I put that together, everything clicked into place. Just to be sure, though, I looked at him and said, “That gas won’t work on the monsters.”

 

He twitched, obviously caught by surprise. It took him a second to recover his composure. “It isn’t for the monsters,” he said after a few seconds.

 

Of course not. I almost laughed. “The humans in there are the victims,” I said. “They don’t deserve to die.”

 

“They are food. The monsters will be less without them.”

 

I nodded. “You set this up, didn’t you?” I said conversationally. “You arranged this whole thing. Well played.”

 

“I do not understand.”

 

“Not talking to you,” I murmured. “You might as well come out now. You’ve made your point.”

 

There was no warning. No hint of movement. Lucius just appeared next to the man, and snapped his neck in an instant, with a flick of his fingers.

 

“Bit of a drama queen, aren’t you?” I asked. “You told them to show up tonight?”

 

“Through certain channels,” he confirmed. “They knew it was a trap, of course, but their responses are somewhat predictable.”

 

I nodded. “How did you know I’d follow up on it?”

 

“The same reason that I know you can’t tolerate this attack,” he said. “I know you, Wolf. I know you better than you know yourself. You’re as bad as Voltaire, in your own way. You may disapprove of the choices my guests make, but you’ll defend to the death their right to make those choices. That goes for you as well, of course,” he added, nodding to Aiko. “But I think we all knew that.”

 

“And this is a typical attack for them?” I asked.

 

“This is the first time they’ve tried something quite like this,” he said. “But it’s very much in keeping with their general approach, yes.”

 

I groaned. “Fine,” I said. “Give me the info.”

 

He smiled and handed me a sealed envelope. “I thought you might say that,” he added unnecessarily. “Have a pleasant evening.” He tipped a fiercely violet hat and disappeared as suddenly as he’d shown up.

 

“See?” I said to the corpse. “I told you they always find a way to pull you back in. Come on, we have a car to set on fire. I’m very definitely feeling the need for that pick-me-up right about now.”

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Building Bridges 12.19

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I shoved the rakshasa off the knife and then cleaned and sheathed it. The rakshasa looked like he was thinking about doing something stupid, but he thought better of it after a few seconds. It probably helped that nobody looked that interested in helping him out.

 

We stood there for a few minutes, waiting for Lucius to get back to us. The silence was a bit awkward—or would have been, anyway, if there had been silence. As it was the music had switched to another track, one that was even louder and faster than the last. It was just as well that I didn’t have much to say, because even if I were screaming, I wasn’t sure anyone would be able to understand what I was saying.

 

After around five minutes, another girl walked up. She was small, and she looked pretty awful. She was visibly underweight, and her pale complexion was almost ashen. Her lips were gashed, like they’d been bitten repeatedly, and the numerous piercings in her face likely weren’t helping. She smelled foul, sick, and she stank of chemicals, of which alcohol was the most innocuous.

 

But for all that, she seemed confident and assured as she made her way over to us. She was swaying in time to the music, slipping through the crowd so smoothly they probably never even realized that she was moving towards a destination rather than just dancing. She had violet armbands around either arm, confirming my guess that that was used to mark house employees here.

 

“You’re the ones who are here for a meeting with the boss?” she asked. I didn’t feel like trying to scream loud enough to be heard over the music, so I just nodded, and she gestured for us to follow.

 

We weren’t half as smooth as she was getting across the dancefloor. Well, I wasn’t, anyway. Aiko was almost as good as our guide, which probably wasn’t a huge surprise. I managed to keep up with them, pretty much by brute force. The nice thing about a party where more than half of the people present were food animals was that I didn’t have to worry too much about starting a fight by pushing the wrong person out of the way.

 

“You aren’t much like the usual people we get here,” she said, detouring around a young man who’d passed out in the middle of the dancefloor. He was pale from blood loss, and he smelled like the pill Aiko had given me. As we walked past, one of the security guards came to drag him off to the darkened corner of the room.

 

“No,” I shouted back, watching the scene distastefully. “I don’t imagine we are.”

 

“Maybe you can help me, then. Will you let me out?” I wasn’t sure how her voice carried so well through the music; it didn’t sound like she was screaming, but I had no trouble understanding her. Practice, I supposed.

 

“It’s more complicated than that,” I said.

 

“It doesn’t have to be. Please, I didn’t know. I want to go home. Won’t you take me out of here?”

 

“I can’t.”

 

“You can,” she said, clutching at me. She was standing between a strobe and a black light, leaving her face alternately crimson and violet. The mirrored wall just beside her threw the light back on her from another direction, further confusing it, and the reflected beams of lasers played over her skin strangely. “Please. Just say you’ll help me. I’m begging you.”

 

“I think I’m insulted,” I said, carefully pulling her hands off without making skin contact. “Did you really expect me to fall for this? Seriously?”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

I sighed. “Come on. You might as well drop the act. You’re apparently one of Lucius’s higher-ranking minions, if he sent you to fetch me. You work for the house here. You seriously think I’m going to believe that you’re still this pathetic? Because I’m pretty sure that if you were as innocent as you want to seem, you’d have been eaten up a long time ago.”

 

“Maybe so,” she said. “You’d be surprised how many people don’t take the time to think it through, though.”

 

“You really thought the hard sell would get me to agree to something without knowing what it was?”

 

“No, but I had to try,” she said, grinning. Grinning too wide. Her bloody, tattered lips were stretched across her face, showing sharp teeth that were stained crimson by more than just the lighting. The expression accentuated the gaunt lines of her face, her narrow features and sunken eyes. I hadn’t quite grasped just how thin she was. Or possibly she had a way of masking it when she wanted to seem human. Now that she wasn’t, she looked almost skeletal.

 

Suddenly I could smell her. Not just the faint scent of sickness that I’d caught earlier, but a stench of decay and corruption, like a cold wind blowing across an open grave. The smell was cold and isolated, and carried a powerful feeling of hunger. There was magic in that scent, a magic of guilt and need.

 

It was the olfactory equivalent of seeing myself through a glass darkly. That scent had a lot of the same elements as my own—the cold, the hunger. But there was an ugliness to it as well, the corruption and decay, something much darker lurking under the surface.

 

Under other circumstances, I would have been hard pressed to identify it. But here and now, it was a bit simpler. This party attracted a very specific sort of clientele. It was a place for things that preyed on humans, in every sense. That narrowed things down a lot.

 

The stench of death and decay was pretty standard; that was how my brain interpreted the energy associated with a lot of nasty things. The cold was more unusual, but hardly unique. The yuki-onna was evidence enough of that. But the feeling of hunger and isolation, and especially of guilt, narrowed it down some. Her physical appearance, now that she wasn’t hiding it and I was paying attention, left me with only one real guess for what she might be.

 

I wasn’t sure, not completely. Not enough to call her on it. But I was confident enough to be very, very glad that I hadn’t agreed to help her get out. If I was right about what she was, I had some ideas what form that help might have taken, and it wouldn’t have ended well. I was guessing that by the time I’d died there would have been a whole lot of bodies on the ground, and people would have told stories about the whole thing for years afterward. There are some things that just shouldn’t go together.

 

She opened a concealed door in the mirrored wall and waved us inside. I went first, catching another glimpse of her grin in the mirror. Even by my standards it was a ghastly expression. I’d already noticed that her teeth were too large and sharp, and I’d seen that those teeth were red. But she wasn’t a vampire; she took more than just blood when she fed. If I’d had any doubt of that, it vanished when I saw a bit of flesh between her teeth, a scrap of stringy muscle.

 

As though she’d noticed me noticing, a long wet tongue flicked out. It looked almost prehensile as it wiped that bit of raw meat away. She slurped it down and grinned at me in the mirror.

 

I repressed a shudder and kept walking.

 

The hallway behind the mirror was narrow, and it was spooky. It would have been spooky even without the context, I was pretty sure. It was too small, lit only by dim red rope lights that would have been barely enough for a human to keep from tripping over their own feet. I could still hear the music in the main room, loud enough that I could feel it vibrate in my chest.

 

The hallway didn’t run quite straight, and it split several times. Our guide kept us in the halls that stuck close to the room we’d just left. We went up a cramped set of stairs in which the risers were all slightly different heights, and then stopped outside of a massively heavy vault door. Our guide stepped past us and rapped a complex pattern on the door before unlocking it with a key from around her neck.

 

The room on the other side was…well, it was one of the stranger offices I’d seen. It was large, and luxuriously furnished—a couple small couches and some chairs, all upholstered in leather, and a couple of hardwood tables. It was very dim, though, considerably darker than the room with the party. I knew that, because the wall across from the door was one huge window, looking out over the dance floor. From the other side it had been a mirror; I hadn’t been able to see any hint of this room from in there.

 

Lucius was looking out over the party, sitting in an expensive-looking leather chair. He was wearing a purple suit this time, with pinstripes that fluoresced under the ultraviolet lights.

 

“Your guests are here,” our guide said as she stepped in. She nodded, not quite bowing.

 

“Thank you,” Lucius said. “You may go.”

 

She straightened and left, closing the heavy door behind herself. The sound of the music cut off abruptly as she did, leaving the room silent. It was soundproofed. It was very well soundproofed, to keep out that music.

 

“She kinda creeps me out,” I said, watching her leave.

 

“Annabel has that effect on many people,” Lucius said. “But she’s very good at what she does.”

 

“She’s a wendigo?” I asked. More for confirmation than anything. I was feeling pretty confident in my identification by this point.

 

“Indeed. You’re quite good at that, you know.”

 

I sighed. “This place just gets better and better. Was this really necessary? The secrecy, the mind games…it just feels like a waste.”

 

“We could hardly have a civil conversation out there,” he pointed out. “I’m familiar with lycanthropic hearing. I’d be surprised if you could understand a word I said over the music. And while I appreciate that you find Annabel’s nature discomfiting, she’s the one I typically send to escort guests up to my office. It isn’t as though I singled you out.”

 

“I get that,” I said. “And honestly, that’s not the part that bothers me. No, I’m annoyed by the guy that you sent to cause trouble. Thinking that moron was even a consideration for us is just…insulting.”

 

Lucius paused. “What are you talking about?”

 

“Some rakshasa tried to hassle me at the bar on the way in,” Aiko said. “It was pretty much a nonissue.”

 

The vampire’s expression tightened slightly. It was a tiny change, but considering who it was, that was still pretty damned significant. Vampires didn’t really react to much. They didn’t have much in the way of automatic responses, which meant that any such response they did have was much more important than it would be on a human. When it came to someone like Lucius, any tell was something to take seriously.

 

“I see,” he said. “That wasn’t my doing. I wouldn’t have insulted you in that way. A moment, please.” He pulled a phone out of his pocket, tapped a few buttons, and then sat and waited.

 

Vampires didn’t wait like people. They didn’t fidget. They didn’t even blink, or breathe. It was more like they turned themselves off entirely.

 

I was impressed by the speed of the response. It was probably less than a minute later that the door opened again, and a pair of guards dragged the rakshasa inside. He wasn’t struggling. No surprise there; he could probably have taken out two humans without any trouble, but these guys were Lucius’s personal employees. You’d have to be a special kind of stupid to attack them here.

 

“These two say that you accosted them as they were trying to reach me,” Lucius said. “Is that true?”

 

The rakshasa shifted uncomfortably. “Don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said.

 

“You’re lying,” Lucius said instantly. “And badly.”

 

“All right,” the rakshasa said. “I may have stopped them. And said some things. But it was all in fun. Nobody got hurt.”

 

Which was pretty much true. From the smell he’d already healed the knife wound I’d given him.

 

“You accosted one of my guests,” Lucius said, not sounding terribly impressed with this excuse. “We have rules here. That invited guests are not to be bothered is one of them.”

 

The rakshasa licked his lips, then started to run.

 

I never saw Lucius move. Not even a little bit. He was just standing on the other side of the room, seemingly without having crossed the space in between.

 

The rakshasa ran into him at full tilt, and bounced off. It was like he’d run into a wall. The vampire didn’t even rock back on his heels.

 

“I take it that you’re aware of the consequence of breaking that rule, then,” Lucius said. The rakshasa fell backward and scrabbled away.

 

In another of those blindingly fast movements, Lucius snatched him up off the floor and shook him. I could hear bones shatter from where I was standing, one after another.

 

I smelled magic in the air, something very dark and very empty and very, very old. And then the rakshasa crumbled into dust.

 

I gulped. I’d seen a lot of rakshasas die. I’d killed more than my fair share myself. And admittedly this one had been low on the totem pole. The strongest of their kind were basically demigods, but this guy hadn’t even been comparable to me. But still, seeing him get killed that easily was more than a bit intimidating.

 

Which had been Lucius’s intent, of course. He said that he hadn’t actually sent that rakshasa to cause trouble, and I believed him. I didn’t have all that much of a grasp on Lucius’s personality, but from what I’d seen he wasn’t the type to lie. Why would he? In a weird way, it was the same as those painfully tasteless suits. Lucius liked to announce that he was so powerful that he didn’t have to care what people thought of him.

 

So when he said that he hadn’t sent that rakshasa, I believed him. But he’d dealt with it like this for a reason. You didn’t get to be that old and powerful by doing things without a reason. It was yet another statement of power. He wanted to remind me that any fight between us could only end one way.

 

“I’m sorry for the inconvenience,” Lucius said, brushing a bit of dust off his suit. “Now that we have that bit of unpleasantness out of the way, let’s get down to that chat I mentioned.”

 

“Yeah,” I said, eyeing what was left of the rakshasa. “Let’s. What did you want to talk about, anyway?”

 

“You, essentially,” he said, grinning. His teeth were very white, and very even. They didn’t look like fangs at all. “Please, have a seat.”

 

Aiko and I sat on one of the couches, a little gingerly. I wasn’t comfortable sitting down around Lucius. Not that it would matter if he decided to kill us; that was abundantly clear by this point. The two humans left, closing the heavy door behind themselves. Once again, the music cut off as the door slammed shut, leaving the room in utter silence.

 

Lucius sat in his chair again, spinning around to face us. This left him framed by the party, the mad, darkly hedonistic revelry going on just on the other side of the glass. Seen like this, it was hard to remember that those were real people. The mirrors and the lights made the scene seem unreal. I could see people dancing and shaking in time to the music, but in here it was dead silent.

 

“I confess I don’t fully understand you, Wolf,” Lucius said. “What do you want? What drove you to seek me out?”

 

“We’ve already been through this,” I said. “I don’t want to have to defend my territory against hordes of vampires and rakshasas all the time. Plus I’ve had more than enough legal problems related to killing people that earned it. If I have to kill some of your people because they’re too dumb to know when to quit, I’d rather it not turn into another of those situations.”

 

“Those are proximate causes,” he said dismissively. “I’m looking for something deeper. I’ve seen a great many people take power in my life, Wolf, for a great many reasons. And I’m curious what reasons drove you. By all accounts, you were fairly unambitious for most of your life. I want to know what changed that.”

 

“I didn’t have a choice,” I said.

 

He snorted. “Bullshit.”

 

“No, for real. I’ve got Loki breathing down my neck. That’s the kind of thing that doesn’t leave a lot of room for disagreement. The only choice I had at that point was to grow or die.”

 

“To an extent that’s true,” Lucius said. “But only to a point. I’ve looked into you a bit since our last meeting, Wolf. Loki didn’t force you to take over a city. He might have encouraged, he might have been glad to see it, but the choice was yours. So why?”

 

I frowned. “It’s hard to explain. At the time I needed the fighting over the city to stop, and exerting my own claim was the only way to get the other sides to reach a compromise. Afterwards, I couldn’t get rid of the job. Things have just…sort of spiraled from there.”

 

“You see it as a means to an end, then,” he said.

 

“Yeah. Yeah, that’s a fair statement, I think.”

 

“That’s good. Too many people think power is its own reward. That’s not a healthy attitude for a ruler to have, in my experience.”

 

I noticed that he didn’t say whether he shared it.

 

Lucius nodded. “I would like to make you an offer, Wolf.”

 

“You said this conversation was payment for what we agreed upon,” I said sharply. “Not that we would agree on payment here.”

 

“Yes, and I’ve already done what I said. It should work out just fine, by the way. It’ll be a few more days before we know for sure, but I haven’t heard anything to suggest that there will be problems.” He smiled. “You did, however, agree to this conversation. Including listening to additional offers I might make.”

 

I sighed. “Fine.”

 

“Very good,” he said. “So here’s what I propose. I happen to have a certain problem, a person trying to challenge my hold over the city of Alexandria. Due to the specifics of this person it’s difficult, both politically and practically, for me to deal with him myself. I think it would be quite simple for you to do so, however, and I would be very willing to express my gratitude for such a service.”

 

“See, here’s the problem,” I said. “You aren’t the only one who’s been doing research recently. And it turns out there aren’t actually that many African emperors named Lucius who would have been in a position to see the Colosseum in its glory days.”

 

“Aren’t there?” he asked mildly.

 

“No,” I said. “Not many at all, in fact. Add in the fact that you’re savvy enough to still be around, and there’s really only one I could find that makes any sense. And this offer is starting to sound an awful lot like how you got to be the emperor of Rome in the first place. Which, as I recall, really only ended well for you.”

 

He smiled. “Most people assume it’s just a false name,” he commented.

 

“Is it?”

 

“No. But you may be ascribing too much importance to events that happened thousands of years ago. Have I actually given you any reason to think that my offers are untrustworthy?”

 

“You mean aside from that?” I asked, gesturing at the view through the window.

 

Including that,” he said. “Really, Wolf. I would have hoped that you would be more open-minded. I’m not betraying anyone with these parties. I’m not even hurting anyone. These people chose to be here. They want this.”

 

“Just because you want something doesn’t make it a good idea,” Aiko said. She was watching the party through the window. Her expression was calm and blank, which was never a good sign.

 

“That’s a rather amusing thing for you, of all people, to say,” Lucius commented.

 

She shrugged. “Hey, I’m fine with bad ideas. Don’t think that’s ever been in question. I’m just saying, the fact that you’re giving people what they want doesn’t excuse what you do to them.”

 

“You don’t seem to understand,” he said. “I don’t do anything to them. Those who come here make their own choices. I simply don’t feel a need to restrict their choices because some long-dead puritan said that pleasure is evil. For these people, sweet dreams are made of this. Who am I to disagree?”

 

“Cute,” I said. “But by that logic, you have just as little right to disagree when I say that I want nothing to do with what you do here.”

 

“Quite so,” he agreed. “I believe you know where the exit is. I would have Annabel escort you, but from how you reacted to her I suspect that you would rather I not.”

 

I paused. “Wait. Just like that? I can just…leave?”

 

“Of course,” he said. “I have plenty of people who are happy to work for me,” he said, gesturing at the crowd. “Why would I turn to someone who would rather oppose me? No, Wolf, I’m not going to strong-arm you into making a deal with me. You two are free to go. I will send you the details on that problem I mentioned, in case you change your mind, but if you’d rather not deal with it, I won’t force you to.”

 

I hesitated, wary, but Aiko was already leaving. I joined her, walking just a touch faster than we usually might have.

 

Lucius sat and smiled as we left.

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Building Bridges 12.18

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The security guards were expecting us, apparently. They waved us in without question, without even searching us. I was almost disappointed.

 

The actual party was downstairs, underground. I could feel the wards parting around us as we went down into the belly of the beast, one after another. There were some impressively strong ones, easily as strong as anything on my house. I wouldn’t have liked to be the one assaulting this place with the defenses up. But at the moment they weren’t active, and we passed through without any trouble.

 

I could hear the music, as we started getting closer. It was dance music, fast-paced electronica with lots of synthesizers and a pounding bassline. It was loud, too; as we started getting closer to the party it got to be almost painfully loud, and I started wishing I’d brought earplugs.

 

The stairs ended at a heavy steel door with another pair of security thugs watching it. This pair looked a little more serious than those aboveground, openly carrying assault rifles and wearing body armor. One of them looked at us in a way that suggested he’d be glad for the excuse to do something and break up the monotony of his day, but they didn’t actually stop us. One of them opened the door and waved us inside, and we walked into the party like we owned the place.

 

We’d showed up exactly on time, but the party was already in full swing when we walked in. Not a surprise, exactly, but I hadn’t wanted to come to early. That was something that could easily be seen as rude.

 

The room was dim. That wasn’t a surprise; this wasn’t the sort of place that was brightly lit. I’d expected that. What I hadn’t expected was how it was dim. I was used to the people I dealt with being somewhat old-fashioned, and I’d sort of assumed that Lucius would be similar, since in my experience you didn’t get to be that powerful without being at least mildly ancient. Thus, I’d somewhat naively been expecting lanterns and candles, or magical light.

 

What I got instead was strobes and black lights. The result was a room that was barely bright enough for me to see, but the light was inconsistent. It was a good thing I didn’t have epilepsy, because the intense colors and flashing lights were already giving me a headache. The walls were mirrored, creating an illusion of space and making the lighting even crazier than it would have been otherwise. It didn’t help that they were set to a rhythm totally distinct to that of the music, and trying to reconcile the two was a constant irritation.

 

The second thing that caught me by surprise was how many humans there were. Almost half the people in the room seemed to be normal humans, dressed for a night of clubbing. Most of them seemed to be in their teens or early twenties, and they looked like locals, although a handful were Asian or European in appearance.

 

A lot of them were probably something else. I was guessing some of them were vampires, or one of the many, many other things that could look a human being. Some of them were probably mages. But most of them looked and smelled human, and I wasn’t all that easy to fool about that.

 

It wasn’t hard to figure out why a vampire would have so many humans at his party—especially not humans like this. They were young, attractive in one way or another, mostly dressed in either very little or a whole lot of the kind of clothing that looked more naked than nothing at all. More than anything, they looked vulnerable.

 

They were food. And a lot of them knew it, too. Not all—some looked blissfully ignorant of their role here. But at least half clearly weren’t so innocent. Roughly half of that group looked scared, while the other half looked like kids waiting while the adults finished their dinner so that they could have dessert.

 

The unsettling thing about it, though, was how normal it all looked. At a glance, you could have mistaken this for any slightly edgy but basically harmless party. It wasn’t until you looked closer that the wrongness became apparent. The figures moving through the crowd with the smooth grace of predators, eyeing people with a hunger more literal than what most people were accustomed to seeing in such a setting. The way that a sizable proportion of the humans here were tagged in one way or another, marked as property—wearing collars, or colored armbands, or in one case actually branded with a set of initials. The people lying in the shadows at the edge of the room, unconscious or dead. The way that the guards were letting people in, but nobody was really leaving.

 

I could easily picture some poor sap wandering in here, and not realizing until too late just what this place was. There was one born every minute, after all.

 

“Oh,” Aiko said, pausing just inside the door. “Fun. It’s been a while since I went to this sort of party.”

 

“I never have,” I said, looking around suspiciously. I had to shout to be heard over the music, and the lightshow was already getting a bit disorienting. I could smell smoke and various chemicals, and I was willing to bet that only a fraction were anything like legal.

 

“Of course you haven’t,” Aiko said, patting my arm. “It’s adorable how innocent you are. Hang on, I’m going to get us something.”

 

She skipped over to one of the humans who looked more at home here, and who was surrounded by a small crowd. A minute or so later, she came back with a pair of blank white pills and a paper cup of water, and handed one of the pills to me.

 

“What is this?” I asked, looking at it curiously.

 

“Special K,” she said happily.

 

I eyed her. “Aiko….”

 

“That dosage of ketamine won’t do a thing to someone with your metabolism,” she said, much more quietly and in a deadly serious tone. “But it will make you look like you belong here. As it is some of the wrong people are starting to pay attention to us, and believe me when I say that you do not want to attract that kind of attention.”

 

“You’re sure it’s harmless?” I asked, similarly quietly.

 

“Under the circumstances, yes,” she said. “It takes a ridiculous amount of that stuff to get a werewolf dopey. Just don’t take any other pills. Some of the things here like their meals seriously fucked up, and you don’t know how to tell the difference between the safe stuff and things even you don’t want to touch.”

 

“Your skills never cease to amaze,” I muttered, swallowing the pill. I didn’t bother with the water.

 

“I do my best,” she said, swallowing her own.

 

“So what about you? Do I have to worry about you passing out?”

 

“Kitsune aren’t susceptible to ketamine,” she said. “That’s why I picked it. Now laugh and grab my hand. Try to look nervous. We’re playing you up as the nervous newbie going to his first party with an experienced friend.”

 

I did what she told me, though the laughter was a bit forced. That was probably not a bad thing, really. “Are you sure this is necessary?” I asked, under my breath. “Lucius guaranteed our safety, remember?”

 

“That was before I knew what kind of party this was,” she said, tugging me forward. “Standards are different here. You can get away with a lot before it starts falling under definitions of harm. Speaking of, though, we should go and find him. Come on.”

 

I followed along somewhat bemusedly as she pulled me through the crowd. We passed several vampires, a yuki-onna in her shroud of icy fog, two unnaturally perfect figures that smelled the same as the succubus who’d been with Lucius last time, and a rakshasa. None of them said or did anything to us, although a couple looked at us in disturbingly appraising ways as we passed.

 

On the way through, I heard some of the most bizarre and disturbing snatches of overheard conversation I’d ever encountered—a pretty impressive claim, really, all things considered. A few of the marked humans were discussing the relative technique of several different vampires in strangely matter-of-fact tones. One of them mentioned having never experienced a yuki-onna’s touch, and another raved about the peaceful feeling she’d had with one before when she was on the verge of losing consciousness from hypothermia.

 

The strange thing about it, though, was that I really wasn’t sure how much of their attitude was genuine. I was sure that they were encouraged to present themselves that way, but I got the impression that their enthusiasm wasn’t entirely a lie. And if not, how much of it was because the creatures here had trained them to feel that way, and how much was that they’d deliberately preyed on those who were already susceptible?

 

Either way, there was something profoundly disturbing about people who were being eaten alive piece by piece, and knew it, and willingly came back for more.

 

The bar was on the other side of the room, lit with a particularly intense blue-violet strobe. The bartender was a tall, bald human man with a prominently displayed violet cloth around his arm. I’d seen several other humans with that particular marker, now that I thought about it, and they hadn’t been being hassled by anyone. No wonder, if that indicated a house employee. They might just be humans in a crowd of far more dangerous things, but they were humans with Lucius’s favor. That was the kind of thing that you didn’t ignore lightly.

 

“I’m looking for the boss,” Aiko said, elbowing her way through the crowd around the bar and pulling me along in her wake. “He’s expecting us.”

 

“Don’t know what you’re talking about,” the bartender said, mixing another drink. It fumed, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to know why.

 

“Talking about Lucius,” Aiko said impatiently.

 

The effect of that name was pretty dramatic. The bartender practically dropped the drink he was mixing, and the vampire that had been about six seconds from getting my fist in his face found something else to be interested in.

 

“You aren’t one of the rabble, are you?” the bartender asked.

 

“Bingo,” Aiko said. “Now come on, time is money. Who do I need to talk to make things happen?”

 

“That would be me,” a rakshasa said, stepping up next to her. “I thought I recognized you, but I wasn’t sure. You hang around with the man that killed my brother. If I can’t get my revenge on him for that, you’ll do.”

 

He started to reach for her. I didn’t wait to see what he was going to do before I stepped up behind him. I grabbed his hair with one hand and shoved a knife into his back with the other—not enough to kill, or even really wound, just enough to make him really aware of my presence.

 

“I’m almost insulted,” I said. “I get that I look different when I’m not wearing the armor, but you could at least have noticed that she wasn’t alone.”

 

“Neither am I,” he said, sounding surprisingly happy for someone with a knife in his back.

 

“Yeah,” I said. “I know. If your friends decide to start something, I can finish it. Now listen, because I’m only going to say this once. The tip of this knife is about a quarter of an inch from your spine. It didn’t have to stop there. It doesn’t have to stop there. The only reason I haven’t already killed you is out of respect for our host. Speaking of, where should I go to chat with him?”

 

The bartender looked at me, then shrugged. “I’ll let him know you’re here,” he said.

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Building Bridges 12.17

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“Okay,” I said to Aiko, as the rest of the crowd dispersed. Crimson was walking back to the Guard headquarters, where she would have a lot of stories to make up. Jack was driving the thing from the Badlands back to the house, since he was one of the few people who could reliably survive if she turned violent. The rest of my minions were going back to whatever they’d been doing before I called them. “So what was that about?”

 

“What?” she asked innocently.

 

I sighed. “Come on, Aiko. Why did you feel the need to offer her a place to stay?”

 

“I don’t know,” she said. “It’s just…look at her. She obviously doesn’t fit in anywhere. It’s like looking at a puppy out in the rain.”

 

“Since when do you give two shits about puppies locked out in the rain?”

 

“You oughta know,” she said, elbowing me in the ribs hard enough for me to feel it. “Puppy. So are you going to let her stay?”

 

I sighed. “Until she causes problems,” I said. “I get the impression that’s more of a when than an if. But I’ll give her a chance if you want.”

 

“You’re adorable,” she said. “Also, this is seriously messing with my head. How often do I convince you to do the nice thing?”

 

“Trust me, my mind is equally blown,” I said dryly. “Although knowing you that’s probably the whole reason you did it.”

 

“Nah,” she said. “I mean, I would, but in this case I actually did feel sorry for her. So how’d your evening go?”

 

“Couple of the mages who attacked the house set a trap for me,” I said. “I blew it on an easy fight and had to get rescued by a girl that dresses in a silly costume and calls herself Crimson. Then I chased down a monster that used to be human and comes from somewhere called the Badlands that I’ve never heard of, and now I feel terrible because I was going to kill her for something she might do before you stopped me.”

 

“That’s rough, Shrike,” she said sympathetically.

 

I growled. “I’m already sick of that name,” I said. “I’m sick of this game, the false identity, the whole thing. This isn’t me, you know?”

 

“I know.”

 

I sighed, walking towards the Lamborghini. “Anyway. How was your night?”

 

“Not half as exciting as yours,” she said. “I’m jealous. There was a guy who was behind on his payments to you, so I went and burned his place down. Other than that nothing much happened.”

 

“Aiko. You know I’m not actually running a protection racket. I don’t burn people’s shops down when they don’t pay me.”

 

“Of course not,” she said lightly. “Fire isn’t really your thing. You’ve got minions for that part.” After a few moments, she added, “This guy earned it. I’ve heard some stories; trust me, you don’t need to feel guilty. Sorry you missed it, maybe.”

 

“If you say so,” I said. “Still, I should go look into it. See if there’s anything I need to do as a follow up measure to make sure this doesn’t get blown out of proportion. I need to talk to Selene anyway, make sure those new wards are finished and operational.”

 

“No,” she said, not reaching for the ignition. “You need to come home with me and get some sleep.”

 

“Why?” I asked.

 

“Because it’s already one in the morning,” she said. “Meaning we have to leave for Lucius’s party in around six hours.”

 

I blinked. “Seriously? It’s already that soon?”

 

“Yep.”

 

“Okay,” I said. “But that means I need to take care of this even more. It needs dealt with, and I might not be able to get to it for a while otherwise.”

 

“Winter,” she said, in a tone somewhere between the one you use with a person standing on the edge of a bridge and the tone Aiko would use with such a person. “Just because you don’t need sleep anymore doesn’t mean you don’t need rest. You’re trying to do too much. You’d completely forgotten about this party, hadn’t you?”

 

“Not completely,” I said defensively. “I’d just…sort of forgotten when it was.”

 

“See? You go there with your head in that state, they’ll eat you alive. Maybe literally.”

 

“All right,” I said. “You might be right. Let’s go home, then. Take a few hours to get ready before we leave.”


 

I’d been to quite a few dangerous parties by that point in my life. This one was different than the rest, for a handful of reasons.

 

The first was that it was in my world, rather than an Otherside domain. That, in itself, was a pretty huge difference. For all that I’d spent a lot of time in the Otherside by now, I was still a stranger there. I was a visitor, not a native. It made everything that happened there feel a little removed, a little bit less than wholly real. Going to a party in Alexandria, there was none of that comforting distance. It didn’t feel like a dream, or a visit to another world.

 

The second distinction was that this party wasn’t being thrown by the Sidhe Courts. That was terrifying. Oh, the Sidhe were dangerous, and only a complete moron could fail to recognize the threat posed by going to one of their parties. But with them I knew the rules. I had an idea of what I could and couldn’t safely do, and I knew how to navigate the environment. It wasn’t much of a safety net, but it was better than nothing.

 

Here, I didn’t even have that. I didn’t know the rules here. I didn’t know what mistakes were just unfortunate, and what mistakes would get me horribly killed. Hell, I didn’t even know who was going to be at this party. All I’d gotten was an address and a time to show up. I had no idea what the scale of the party was going to be, whether it was just a few other people or there would be enough attendees to fill a stadium.

 

That made it hard for me to plan ahead. It’s hard to know tools to bring when you don’t know what situations you might need to deal with. I wasn’t even really sure what weapons were best against vampires. I’d mostly tried to just limit my interaction with them in general, and while I had an idea of what tactics were and weren’t effective, I was far from an expert on the topic.

 

And that wasn’t even considering the other things that might be here. I wasn’t too concerned about succubi—their only real tactic under the circumstances was seduction, from what I’d heard of them, and I was pretty thoroughly vaccinated against the honey trap. Similarly, once I’d refreshed myself on yuki-onna I wasn’t too worried about them. When you’re a heat vampire, and your main tactic was freezing people to death, I was just about the last guy you wanted to attack.

 

But I had no way of guessing who else might be at this. There were enough factions that were politically aligned with the Vampires’ Council that it was essentially impossible to guess what I might see, and that wasn’t even counting other things that Lucius might have invited. I hadn’t been able to get much, if any, reliable information on him. Apparently the guy was obsessed with security. I’d hired Jacques to put together a dossier on him, and I was confident I’d get something, but it was going to take more than a couple of days.

 

So in the end, after much agonizing, I went with a very generic loadout. I had some knives, an assortment of stored spells, and some generally useful things—powdered silver and iron, chalk, permanent marker, lengths of string and chain, and such. I had a flask of holy water and a handful of holy symbols that I’d arranged to have blessed by various priests. I also had my amulet around my neck, the wolf’s head gleaming on my chest. I’d never had a whole lot in the way of faith, but if I had to pick a symbol for what I did have, that was the best I could do.

 

Aiko was a lot less dependent on toys than I was, and I was more than slightly jealous of how little equipment she was bringing. She did have her own flask, though, and she had a gold pendant in the form of a apple prominently displayed.

 

I felt a momentary gratitude that neither of us was particularly religious, at least not in any way that most people would recognize. A crucifix, or a Star of David, was easy to recognize as a symbol of faith, and faith was a legitimate weapon against vampires, for reasons I’d never fully understood. But a wolf’s head and a golden apple? Not so common.

 

Neither of us had ever been to Alexandria, which made going straight there with a portal sadly impossible. But I knew a guy who could open a portal to Cairo for us, and after that it was fairly easy to drive. The man we bought the car off of didn’t speak English, but Aiko managed to work out enough pieces of various languages in common to make the deal.

 

“We definitely overpaid him,” she said, as we were driving through Alexandria looking for the address. “This thing doesn’t handle worth shit. And the stereo? Useless.”

 

“You only paid him a couple hundred bucks,” I pointed out.

 

“And stole half of it back while he was trying to cop a feel,” she agreed. “And it still isn’t worth it. Can we set it on fire after we’re done with it?”

 

“Let’s wait on that one,” I said. “I’m thinking we might need a getaway car if this party goes wrong. Or failing that, a pick-me-up afterwards.”

 

“Cool,” she said. “Just so long as you don’t forget. So how wrong do you think this is going to go?”

 

“It might not go wrong,” I said defensively.

 

She eyed me. “Winter. You remember what I said before we went to that meeting with the Pack?”

 

“I remember.”

 

“I think it was something about how I was looking forward to seeing you turn a diplomatic meeting into a total disaster?”

 

“I said I remember.”

 

She grinned. “Was I wrong?”

 

“Well, it wasn’t a total disaster,” I said. “It turned out all right in the end. For me, anyway. Mostly.”

 

“Point stands,” she said. “When you’re around, it’s going to go wrong. We might as well be honest here. So how wrong?”

 

I looked at the building. It was dark and quiet, with some security guards outside showing people inside. The building looked ominous, and it reeked of vampire.

 

“If I had to guess? I’d say about as wrong as it can get.”

 

“Sounds like fun,” she said, getting out of the car. “Let’s do this.”

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Building Bridges 12.16

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The car I had handy was a rather bland SUV, rather than Aiko’s high-powered sports car. Which was probably a good thing, since I doubted Crimson could really handle the Lamborghini, but I still found myself wishing for it. We were in a hurry, and the difference in speed between the two was rather substantial.

 

She made decent time in the SUV, though, certainly much better than we could have managed on foot. The empty streets helped a lot. With almost no one out and about after dark, little things like “speed limits” and “traffic signals” weren’t so much rules as casual guidelines.

 

While she was doing that, I grabbed my phone. It was still intact despite the falls, bites, and fire, for which I was once again grateful for the magically reinforced, industrial-strength case I had on it.

 

Some people can send text messages faster than they can talk. I’m not one of them—it just isn’t something I do often enough, and it’s not like I learned it as a kid. They barely even had cell phones when I was a kid.

 

But I was in a rush, and Crimson had already heard and seen enough suspicious things from me that one more wasn’t the end of the world. So I dialed a number from memory and tried to pretend that this wasn’t a terrible idea.

 

Kyi answered on the first ring. “Jarl?” she said.

 

“Three suspects fleeing on foot from my location,” I said. “Two human, one something else. Take the humans down if you can, preferably without killing them. The other one is fast and tough; don’t engage with it, but try to keep aware of its location.”

 

“Got it,” she said instantly, hanging up a moment later.

 

And that, essentially, was what I liked about Kyi. She could be a bit of a hassle at times. She could be obnoxious and even a touch disrespectful, though she never went so far that I had to do something about it for the sake of my reputation. But when things were serious, she was all business.

 

I frowned, trying to think of who else was in the area, then called another number.

 

Selene, also, answered on the first ring. “Boss?”

 

“There’s a nonhuman entity in this area,” I said. “Moving west, fairly quickly. I want to know where it is and where it’s going, and I want the option to bring it down if necessary. Call Kris for surveillance, and see if Jibril has people in the area. Once you’ve contacted both of them, send a car this way with a group of thugs and Jack.”

 

“Jack’s sleeping.”

 

“For what I’m paying him,” I said irritably, “you can wake him. Clear?”

 

“Crystal, boss. I’ll send them your way.”

 

“Okay,” Crimson said, a couple seconds after I put the phone away again. “That wasn’t David.”

 

“Nope,” I said. “Something like this, I think we’re better off not bringing the others into it.”

 

“Why?” Her tone was a little harsh, maybe even accusatory.

 

Because David would want to take control of the situation, and the others are about as much use here as minnows fighting a shark, I thought.

 

That was very much the wrong thing to say right now, though. So instead, I just looked at her and said, “They’re impulsive, and she obviously isn’t that stable. Putting the two together doesn’t seem like a great idea.”

 

“I suppose,” she said reluctantly. “What about David, though?”

 

“I don’t know him well enough to trust him to do the right thing here,” I said. “Whatever we decide the right thing is.”

 

Crimson looked like she wanted to argue, but she didn’t. “So who were you calling?” she asked instead.

 

I shrugged. “Just some people I know,” I said. “Friends, guys that owe me favors, that kind of thing.”

 

“What kind of friends are we talking about?”

 

I sighed. “Crim,” I said, “there are questions you don’t want to ask. You don’t want to think too hard about this, understand? We’ll all be happier that way.”

 

“No,” she said. “No, I don’t understand. What the hell is going on? Who are you, why don’t you trust the other Guards, and why the hell do you have an army on speed dial?”

 

“There are two ways this can go,” I said. “The first is that you can take this at face value. I’m Jonathan Keyes, also known as Shrike. I’m a violent, antisocial guy with severe paranoia and multiple other psychological disorders who joined the Guards as a form of work release. Anything you hear or see which suggests otherwise is either a trick of your imagination or an elaborate deception on my part.”

 

“I don’t like that option much,” she said. “What’s the other one?”

 

“You keep asking inconvenient questions,” I said. “Sooner or later, one way or another, you’ll learn some things you really aren’t supposed to know. The Guards will be pissed at me, but they can’t really do a whole lot about it, so they’ll take it out on you. Between that and the fact that you’ll have taken a nosedive onto the ‘liability’ side of the fence, I’d bet dollars to donuts that something happens to take you out of the picture. Maybe you have an unfortunate accident, or something goes wrong in a fight, or you just disappear one day and we never find out what happened. Something.”

 

“You’re making it sound like there’s some conspiracy or something,” she said. Her fingers had tightened on the wheel, though she was still driving quite competently.

 

“No,” I said. “I’m spouting insane conspiracy theories, because I’m a paranoiac and I’m enough of a sociopath to get off on drawing other people into my psychosis. I’m nuts, remember?”

 

She laughed, though it sounded a little uneasy, and she hadn’t relaxed her grip on the wheel.

 

I caught a glimpse of movement out of the corner of my eye, and stuck my head out the window to get a better look. Sure enough, there was a hawk perched on a building nearby. As soon as I saw, it took off and flew across the street, disappearing behind the garage to my left.

 

“We’ve almost caught up with her,” I said, pulling my head back into the car and rolling the window up. It was a cold night out there, and while I registered the cold breeze only as mildly refreshing, I knew Crimson would find it uncomfortable. “Turn left at the next intersection.”

 

“How do you know that?”

 

“Because I’m crazy, remember?” I said lightly. “Although I’m also right, so do take that turn.”

 

She snorted. “If I can keep all of this straight,” she said dryly, “I think I’ve got a future in politics. This is too much doublethink for any other line of work.”

 

I laughed, and she was grinning as she turned at the next intersection. But there was still a tension in her posture that she couldn’t quite cover up, and the silence after I stopped laughing was deep, and ugly.

 

This lie that the Guards wanted me to tell had a limited shelf life. I couldn’t realistically keep this mask up indefinitely; I wasn’t a good enough actor, and doing my job without the people I was working with realizing that there was something strange going on wasn’t possible. The Guards were smart enough to have realized all of that, too. Guard hadn’t fallen off the truck yesterday.

 

I was more than a little concerned by the implications of that.


 

Kris led us further west, and slightly north, towards the outskirts of town. It seemed clear that our quarry was trying to get out of the city. I doubted that she knew the layout of the city, but there were enough lights towards the center of town that she surely knew where the population was concentrated.

 

She was moving fast, but Kris was a bird, and we had a car. She wasn’t fast enough. Kris mostly stayed out of sight, high enough to track our target easily; she only dropped down occasionally when we needed a course correction.

 

The streets started to feel more and more familiar, as we got back into a part of the city that I knew very well indeed. I wasn’t surprised when I saw the Lamborghini parked at the side of the road. It figured that the chase would end here.

 

Crimson parked next to the Lamborghini and we got out. I could see figures in front of us, and hear voices, so I started walking that direction.

 

Crimson stumbled a little as she started to follow me, reminding me that she couldn’t see in the dark. It was after midnight, with a cloudy sky, and there were no streetlights around here; it was more than dark enough to cause problems for her. She was, after all, only human.

 

I offered her a hand to help her. She didn’t seem too thrilled, but she took it. She was too practical to turn down help just because she didn’t like me very much at the moment.

 

The people were gathered on the spot my house had stood on, once. It took me a second to recognize it. It had been a lot of years since my cabin burned to the ground, now. At first there had least been a scorch mark to show where it was, but that had faded long ago. If I hadn’t known better, I wouldn’t have guessed that a structure had ever stood there.

 

Crimson fell behind a bit as we walked up to them, letting me take the lead. There were around a dozen people there. Most of them were ghouls in their human masks, spread out in a loose semicircle. There were three people standing in the center. Closest to us—and furthest from the ghouls—was the creature we’d chased here. Aiko was standing across from her, fully armored; next to her, Jack looked surprisingly good in his tailored suit, considering that he’d been asleep not that long ago.

 

“Hi,” I said, walking up to them.

 

The creature Crimson had summoned spun to look at me. I was impressed at the speed of her movement. Even though I’d seen very well just how quickly she could move, it still seemed strange to watch. She looked like she should be slow.

 

“Leave me alone,” she said, in that strange, slightly stuttering voice.

 

“Can’t do that,” I said. “Not without knowing what you’ll do. You’re obviously dangerous, when you choose to be. I can’t just let you loose in the city without some assurance that you won’t turn into a menace.”

 

She frowned, with a creak of breaking stone. It was a fairly intimidating expression, all things considered. “I just want to be out,” she said. “Just want to not be there.”

 

“Where?”

 

“The Badlands,” she said, shuddering slightly.

 

I glanced at Aiko, who shook her head. It was a small enough gesture that I doubted anyone else had noticed it, but I knew what it meant. She didn’t have any idea what the Badlands might be, either. Not that that was so surprising. We’d both been around a while, but the Otherside was pretty incomprehensibly huge. For every domain that either of us knew, there were probably a dozen that we didn’t.

 

“And you can’t get out on your own?” I asked. It seemed like a natural conclusion, but I was still trying to get a grasp on how Crimson’s magic worked.

 

She shook her head. “Never out,” she said. “It wants me back. I can feel it pulling me back down now. I’ve gotten this far before, but eventually something happens and I’m back there. Can’t leave, can’t even die. I just wake up back in the Badlands.”

 

“I could probably kill you permanently, if you’d like,” I said. I started to call Tyrfing, then remembered that I wasn’t supposed to have it as Shrike and stopped. I got lucky; it didn’t decide to come anyway.

 

She shook her head again, more vehemently. “Don’t want to die,” she said. “Just saying. Can I stay here for a while?”

 

“How long is a while?” I asked suspiciously.

 

She shrugged. “A while.”

 

“She doesn’t have the best grasp on time,” Crimson said. “She understands the concept, but she doesn’t really get it. I don’t think she fully understands the idea of the future, or intervals of time.”

 

“How do you know that?”

 

“This is what I do,” Crimson said. “I’ve got enough of a connection to her to get some idea of what she is.”

 

“Okay,” I said. “Are there other concepts she doesn’t get?”

 

“Self-consciousness, for one. You know how you’d feel awkward having strangers talk about you like this right in front of you? She doesn’t have that reaction. There are others, but I don’t have enough of a grasp on them to put them into words yet.”

 

“Wonderful,” I muttered. I had a killing machine who was seemingly made of stone and lacked basic concepts in her mind that would make interacting with humans nearly impossible. How special.

 

I eyed her, considering how to take her down. I wouldn’t be using Tyrfing, for numerous reasons, but I was guessing that at least one of the knives I was carrying could make an impression on that skin. The ghouls could hold her down with sheer numbers, and Jack could probably ensure that nobody was injured. It was a basic plan, but I thought it should work.

 

About a second before I could give the order, Aiko suddenly said, “Sure, why not. You can stay at my place for however long you end up being here.”

 

I grimaced, but I didn’t want to openly contradict her. So instead I just said, “All right, then. Well, if you don’t cause problems for the people of the city, that should be fine.”

 

“I thought you wanted her dealt with,” Crimson hissed at me.

 

“This is dealt with,” I said, not bothering to keep my voice down. I was guessing it didn’t much matter; this creature gave the impression that it could hear a heartbeat, let alone a whisper. “The situation is resolved and she has a place to stay.”

 

“How am I supposed to explain this?”

 

“Don’t,” I suggested. “Tell them it was a totally routine patrol, and any doors you happen to have opened were closed shortly thereafter, the same as usual. In fact, if anyone other than David asks, we never ran into those two to begin with.”

 

“I don’t like this,” she said.

 

“I’m not exactly thrilled about it myself,” I replied, looking at the creature from the Badlands. “But we work with what we’ve got.”

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Interlude 9.c: Tyrfing

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Luck is a strange thing. Men speak of good luck and bad luck, but who is to say which is one, and which the other? One man’s pain is another’s pleasure, one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, and often neither knows which he’s found until much later.

 

So when they say that Tyrfing is bad luck to everything it touches, who’s to say whether it’s the truth? Liberty for the wolves means death to the lambs. So if a wolf should die, that may be tragic to the wolves, but the lambs rejoice. But liberty for the lambs can often be the death of the grass. So is this good luck or bad? Who’s to say?

 

Some call the sword a force of destruction, and these folk are wiser than the first. But the line between destruction and protection, as well, is a narrow one, and more blurred than a casual onlooker might imagine. Protect a man, and live with the destruction he causes. Destroy a man, and protect those he might have harmed. It is not an easy thing to find the one without the other.

 

Consider, then, the proud and powerful king, betrayed by his servant and laid low by his own sword. This is a tragedy, it seems, but dig deeper. Is the king a good man? Is he wise, is he kind, is he noble, is he just? Does he deserve life? Those who his armies laid waste to might have a different answer than the king himself.

 

The man who slew him gives the sword to his eldest son, the first of twelve, and every one a savage berserker. The dozen of them raid and ravage their way across the land, and kings tremble in fear of them. Are these good men? They would say that they are great, and those they fight for would agree, and even those they fight against could be persuaded. But what of the wives and children of those they slay?

 

One of twelve lusts for a king’s daughter, and though she favors another, he will not be dissuaded, and challenges this hero and his companion. Twelve fight two, and of the lot only the companion of the man challenged walks away from that island. The king’s daughter chooses death rather than to live with the loss of the man she truly loved. Is this a sad story? Perhaps, but where lies the blame? Is it with the sword that killed the hero, or with the men too proud to listen to the truth when they hear it?

 

The father lays his sons in state upon the isle of his death, and leaves the sword in the barrow of the eldest. But his daughter will not be satisfied with things of peace and plenty, and makes of herself a raider and a killer. She hears of her father’s sword, and decides to claim it for herself. The captain of a ship dies and she takes his place, and none think to ask why such things would happen.

 

She goes to her father’s barrow, though forewarned by peers and kin, and asks of him the blade. He warns her away, but she will not listen, and in the end she goes away with the sword in hand. Is this the sword’s fault, then, that she rejects the wisdom of all those who would warn her away?

 

Is it the sword to blame when she takes it up and makes of herself a great killer of men? The sword is the reason such can happen, certainly. She would be a skilled fighter without it, but with the sword in her hand she is so much more, a great warrior that can lay berserkers low with a single blow. She comes to dominate the land, and many, many people die at her hands. But is the sword at fault for what she does with it? Perhaps not.

 

She has two sons, and one is kind and one is cruel, and it is not the sword that makes her love the cruel more. It is not the sword that makes the cruel to kill his brother; that darkness was born in his own heart. When that boy takes the sword and goes out on his own to go to war, he would say it is a very good thing that the sword slays all his foes for him, and his new king would agree with him. His foes, naturally, would not, but is that opinion worth more than the other?

 

When the cruel boy grows to be a cruel man, it is not the sword that makes him ask for his king’s daughter in marriage, nor is it the sword that makes the king agree. When he then turns on the king, and kills him, it is the sword that strikes the final blow. The king’s daughter then takes her own life, for how could she go on to live with the man who slew her father? Again, there is a tragic story to be seen, but who bears the burden of guilt? Is it the sword, that drew the blood? Is it the cruel man, who swung the sword? Is it the king, who clutched a viper to his breast? Or perhaps the right answer is that all of these must share the fault.

 

When the cruel king is visited by a wise man, and by and by this man reveals that he is none other than the All-Father himself, and the cruel king draws the sword against him all the same, is that to be blamed upon the sword? No, though the sword was used in the act. Lay fault at the feet of the wise, or of the foolish, for both played a part in bringing it to that point, but the blade itself was merely the tool.

 

When, for his foolish hubris, his own slaves take the blade and slay the king, the sword is just a sword. When the king’s son takes the blade and slays the slaves, the sword is just a sword. When he goes to war with his own brother for the birthright, and cuts him down amid a great battle that fed the crows for miles around, the sword is just a sword.

 

Men say that the sword Tyrfing is bad luck to everyone. This is a foolish thing to say for many reasons. The first is that they are hypocrites. No man or woman ever held Tyrfing except that they were a killer; they kill, but they expect the sword not to. Worse, for they expect the sword to kill their enemies, and leave them untouched. But why should the sword care for such a distinction? It is just a sword.

 

The second reason it is a foolish thing to say is that good luck and bad luck cannot be so easily distinguished. The world looks different depending on where you’re standing.

 

The third reason it is a foolish thing to say is that the sword does not judge nor decide the circumstance of its use. One man wields the sword to defend the innocent, another to crush them. Either way, the choice belongs to the wielder. The sword is just a sword.

 

The fourth reason it is a foolish thing to say is that the blade has a reason to be. Sometimes the cure may be a harsh one, but that does not make it less necessary. The sword was forged for war and built for blood, made to serve a terrible purpose; to expect it not to do terrible things in the pursuit of that purpose is a naive hope.

 

The fifth reason it is a foolish thing to say is that those who fall foul of the sword are seldom pure of heart. It attracts a certain sort of person to be its wielder, and that sort of person seldom find themselves in conflict with the innocent. There are exceptions, but for the most part those who taste the blade’s edge have done something to earn their fate.

 

The sixth reason it is a foolish thing to say is that the sword was designed to limit the damage it inflicted, not to exacerbate it. In order to achieve their goal, its makers had to tap into great and destructive forces, the power of raw, untamed possibility. What mortal men call a terribly destructive blade is the gentlest application of this power that they could manage, and should be judged as such.

 

The seventh reason it is a foolish thing to say is that death and entropy are natural processes. In accelerating that the sword is not doing anything that is not in line with the natural course of events.

 

The eighth reason it is a foolish thing to say is that the sword does not do force its wielder to do anything. When it drove the soul that held the hilt to wrath and violence, it was not so much forcing them to the fight as unlocking something already held within their heart. Men are eager to blame their demons for their own faults, but the devil almost never makes anyone do anything. That’s the whole point.

 

The ninth reason it is a foolish thing to say is a secret never to be told. The best is what none but one’s self does know.

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Building Bridges 12.15

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“Don’t you want to talk this one over,” I said, backing away a little. “I know the other guy said no, but he’s not here. You could stop for a chat, I could explain things….”

 

“Not interested,” the woman with the fire said. She flexed her fingers, and the fire flared up brighter and hotter.

 

“Not even a little bit,” the guy added, as another shadowy dog-thing began to weave itself into shape beside him. This time I felt him pulling matter in from the Otherside, infusing the shadows with enough reality to let them take on a physical form that could have some semblance of an independent existence.

 

“Okay,” I said. “Suit yourself.”

 

Then I lunged forward and slammed my knife home to the hilt in the nearest construct’s chest. I’d rather have gone for one of the mages, but they were out of easy reach, and likely to be protected against such a simple attack anyway.

 

But I stabbed the one construct, and then slashed through another’s neck, and in just a couple seconds both of them were collapsing into darkness, dust, and a trace of slime. At the same time I was gathering the cold around myself, and I slipped a thin piece of slate out of my pocket with my off hand. I was already twisting out of the way as the next blast of fire came in, the cold insulating me from any heat that might have managed to hurt me even if it hadn’t hit. I threw the knife as I dodged, in time with the movement, and while it wasn’t half so impressive as it looked in the movies, I at least managed to cut one of the constructs.

 

All of that happened in just a couple of seconds. I was rather pleased, all things considered. I might be outclassed, but I was still good at this game.

 

I drew a quick design on the slate, arming it, then threw it at the woman’s feet. It exploded in a burst of sound and noise not unlike a flashbang. She cried out and staggered away, and I was already turning back to the constructs, drawing another knife. One of them bit my left arm, leaving bruises even though its teeth couldn’t penetrate the layers of armor. I stabbed it in the eye and tried to shake it off, but its jaws were still clamped down tightly even as its body started collapsing in on itself. The weight slowed me down, threw me off, and another of the creatures managed to pull my left out from under me.

 

I hit the ground, fairly hard, and more of them started piling on. I tried to slash with the knife, but they were pinning me down, and one of them managed to knock the knife out of my hand. They still weren’t getting through the armor, but those things hit hard. They were leaving bruises as they bit and slapped at me, possibly even breaking bones, and the woman wasn’t going to be incapacitated much longer.

 

Then Crimson finally got her bearings and kicked into gear. She pulled a fused loop of rubber out of her pocket and threw it on the ground, stepping into the circle it formed as she gathered her magic. It was a surprisingly quick, fluid series of actions, considering how little time she’d had to practice it.

 

She threw her power against the world, and tore a hole in it a moment later. From my angle I didn’t get much of a glimpse at what came through, beyond that it was small and red. One of the constructs leapt up and bit it out of the air, and it squawked like a chicken made out of scrap metal as the dog-thing tore it to pieces.

 

I recognized the next thing she brought through, a barely-present wisp that was visible only as a slight distortion in the air, and smelled like rushing wind and freedom. It was an air spirit, a creature from the Otherside that had only a marginal physical presence. They were weak, but hard to detect and harder to stop; there were few barriers that an air spirit couldn’t get through with enough trying.

 

The constructs didn’t even have to get involved this time. The man who made them flicked his fingers, and a cord of shadow and force formed in the air to follow the motion, lashing through the air spirit. It dispersed, and by the time it was reforming it was already slipping sideways from the world. It wanted nothing to do with him, and Crimson wasn’t remotely powerful enough to keep an air spirit somewhere it didn’t want to be.

 

A moment later, the other mage stepped into view. She wasn’t fully recovered yet—she was leaning on one of the constructs to stay standing, and even so she was staggering quite a bit. But she was there, and the fire was burning all around her, sliding across her skin much like it had been the first time I’d seen her.

 

I grimaced, and got ready to call Tyrfing and just start swinging. I knew I wasn’t supposed to use the sword in this persona, but this situation was getting too real. If it came down to a choice between losing my position with the Guards or dying, it was a pretty easy choice for me to make.

 

Then Crimson said, “All right, you assholes, you asked for this.”

 

We all turned to look at her. I wasn’t entirely sure why; there was just something in her voice, a note of confidence that made me take notice.

 

And then I saw what happened when she opened a door that wasn’t so small.

 

It started the same way. The air in front of her seemed to warp, and twist, and then there was something else there.

 

This was just…a rather more impressive something than the last few.

 

It looked human, in its general shape. Two arms, two legs, and a head, even of more or less the right shape and size. It was about my height, and even thinner than me, which took some doing anymore.

 

That was about it, though. Once you got past the surface level, the most obvious features, it looked nothing like a human being. Its skin was grey and rough, something like an intermediate stage between skin and granite. One eye was sort of normal, though also rather greyed; the other was a pale, featureless sphere that looked something like bone or ivory. Its limbs were long, and they moved strangely, in a way which suggested something very odd beneath the surface. When it bent its legs, they creaked, in a way that sounded something like stone under strain, and something like the shocks of a car.

 

And yet for all of that, it was clearly not totally alien. It was dressed, wearing a heavy coat that had been worn to rags, and skins that looked like no animal I could name.

 

I’d seen some crazy things in my life. I was pretty much more comfortable in the presence of monsters than people. And if I’d seen this thing on the street, I’d have given some serious thought to turning and walking the other way.

 

The reaction of the mages was instant and violent. The woman blasted it with fire, easily as intense as the first hit she’d thrown at me, and the man directed three of his creations to leap at it.

 

None of it did a thing to the creature. The fire left some of the clothing smoldering, but that was about it. What good was setting fire to something that might very well be made of stone? Similarly, the constructs had no luck. They were strong, but they hadn’t been able to get through my armor, and I was getting the impression this creature was nothing but armor.

 

It looked slow and lumbering, with the stony skin and the odd limbs. That impression was dangerously mistaken. When it moved, it was faster than me, and it hit like a freaking truck. Its fist caved in the skull of the first construct in an instant, then it threw the next one against the wall of the alley so hard it splattered, then picked the third one up and shook it, like a dog shakes a rat. I could hear things break inside it, and when it dropped the construct, it was already dissolving into nothing.

 

As I struggled to get out from under the constructs on top of me, I found myself almost idly trying to figure out whether I could take the thing Crimson had called up. I thought so—I had the advantage of reach, and I was guessing that my armor and natural toughness could take a hit from it more easily than it could take a hit from Tyrfing. But it wasn’t a foregone conclusion, by any means; if I slipped up, that was a fight that could turn against me very, very quickly.

 

The woman threw more fire at it, stronger this time, but it didn’t do a whole lot more. The creature’s skin cracked and scorched a little, but it didn’t seem to feel any pain. It wasn’t slowing down, anyway.

 

The man muttered to himself, drawing more power together into something that felt a good bit more substantial than the dog-things. Before he could finish, though, the creature pulled something out from under its tattered clothing and threw it at his face.

 

It looked like a lizard, in about the same way as the other thing looked like a human. It was about as big as my head, with scales the brilliant, vivid colors of precious stones. It was clawing at his face, and it was drawing blood. More blood than claws that size should have been able to draw.

 

He screamed and pulled it off, and it pulled chunks of skin with it, leaving small bleeding holes in his face. He threw it at the wall, but it twisted in midair, hit the wall feet-first, and stuck. It raised a ruff of skin, something like that of a frilled lizard, and hissed. Its teeth were disproportionately long.

 

More of the constructs jumped at the humanoid creature, some even leaving me behind to go after it instead. They died, insomuch as death was a valid concept for something that had never lived.

 

The mages started to run. They were understandably reluctant to go past Crimson and her minion, but I was still down, and they managed to get by me. I tried to reach out and grab one of their ankles, but ended up just getting one of the constructs.

 

I pulled it down and broke it as the others ran away, mostly just to reassure myself that I could. I was feeling a little insecure after watching that performance.

 

The lizard leapt over to the humanoid creature, who stroked its neck delicately before tucking it back under its clothing. They started after the fleeing mages, with Crimson looking like she was thinking about following.

 

“No,” I said, standing. “Let them go. You don’t want to chase them.”

 

I could tell that Crimson wasn’t so sure, but she didn’t fight me. “All right,” she said. “Time for you guys to go back home.”

 

“No,” the humanoid creature said, startling me a little. It sounded so…normal. There was a hint of howling winds in it, but by and large it just sounded like a person. The voice was feminine, a bit high-pitched, but very human, overall. It sounded more normal than I did, a lot of the time. “I don’t want to go back there.” The lizard hissed what sounded a hell of a lot like agreement, poking its head out from under the cloth.

 

“You have to,” Crimson said. I could feel her starting to work her magic again, doing something that felt even stranger than when she brought things through. Before it hadn’t taken her more than a moment to dismiss the creatures she brought, but apparently the process was more involved with “larger” creatures.

 

“Hang on a second,” I said, walking closer. “Who are you? Or maybe I should ask, who were you?”

 

“I don’t know,” it—she?—said. Her voice had an odd catch, not quite a stutter, though that was the closest word I could think of. It was more like listening to a skipping audio playback; her voice would catch on a sound and repeat it a few times rapidly before moving on. “I forget.”

 

“But you are a person?” I pressed.

 

“Give it up,” Crimson said, sounding almost pitying. “It’s a monster.”

 

“So am I,” I reminded her. “Besides, I don’t think she’s quite as monstrous as you’re giving her credit for.” I sniffed, and got about what I’d expected. Her magic smelled like dust and stone, howling winds and bone, but under that there was just the tiniest trace of human disinfectant. “You were human once, weren’t you?”

 

She nodded, an odd gesture that didn’t seem quite human. Or at all, really. “I was. A long time ago.”

 

Crimson reeled like she’d been slapped. The creature—whatever the hell she was; I didn’t have a name for her, but human was definitely a past-tense sort of thing for her—took advantage of the momentary lapse in concentration to bolt. She scrambled up the side of the building at a pace that a human would have to work to match on level ground and bolted for the other side.

 

“Oh, shit,” Crimson said, staring after her. “It’s a person?”

 

“Was,” I corrected, though that wasn’t entirely correct. I was guessing she was still a person, at least under a loose enough definition of the word. “Come on, we’d better catch her.”

 

“Why?” she asked, not moving.

 

“I’m something of an expert on monsters that used to be people,” I said dryly. “I’m not saying that you have to send her back to wherever the hell she came from, but we probably ought to get more information than this before you decide not to.”

 

“Right,” she said, nodding. “You think we can catch her? She was moving pretty fast….”

 

“Yeah, I think we can manage something,” I said. “You can drive, right?”

 

“Sure.”

 

“Good.” I pulled a set of keys out of my pocket and tossed them to her. She caught them out of the air. “Let’s get moving. Oh, and Crim?”

 

“Yeah?”

 

“Thanks for the save,” I said.

 

Even behind the mask, I could see her grinning at that. Regardless of what name she was using at the moment, Tawny was obviously desperate for praise.

 

I almost felt bad about exploiting that need for validation. But I was guessing it would distract her enough that she didn’t ask too many of the wrong questions, which made it worth it.

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