A retreat into the dark ages when females were totally unseen and all but possessions.
With icy clarity, she pictured that mother and her young with the broken leg back at the clinic. Yes, this was not just repressive, it was dangerous if the wrong hellren was in charge of a household. Legally, no one had any recourse against a sehcluded female's ghardian. At his discretion, he could do whatever he wished to her.
Van Dean stood in another basement of another house in another part of Caldwell, a whistle between his lips as his eyes tracked the movements of the pale-haired men in front of him. The six «students» were in a line, knees bent, fists up. They were striking the empty air in front of them with blurring speed, alternating left and right, shifting their shoulders accordingly. The air was heavy with their sweet smell, but Van didn't notice that shit anymore.
He blew the whistle twice. As a unit, the six brought both hands up as if grabbing a man's head like a basketball, and then they slammed their right knees forward repeatedly. Van blew the whistle again and they switched legs.
He hated to admit it, because it meant he was over the hill, but training men to fight was so much easier than going hand to hand in the ring. And he appreciated the break.
Plus he was good at the teaching, evidently. Although these gang members learned fast and hit hard, so he had something to work with.
And these were definitely gang members. Dressed the same. Colored their hair the same. Packed the same weapons. What was not so obvious was what they were about. These boys had the focus of military men; none of that sloppy bullshit most street thugs covered up with bravado and bullets. Hell, if he didn't know better he'd have assumed they were government: There were squads of them. They had top-notch gear. They were intense as shit. And there were a lot of them. He'd only been on board a week and he'd taught five classes a day, each filled with different guys. Hell, this was only his second trip through the park with this particular bunch of men.
Except why would the feds use someone like him to teach?
He blew the whistle for a long beat, stopping them all. "That's it for tonight."
The men broke ranks and went for their bags of gear. They said nothing. Didn't interact with each other. Didn't pull any of that macho, nut-busting routine that guys usually did when they were in a group.
As they filed out, Van went to his own bag and got his water bottle. Sucking back some, he thought about how he had to head across town now. He had a fight scheduled in an hour. No time to food up, but he wasn't that hungry anyway.
He put his windbreaker on, jogged up the basement steps, and did a quick tour of the house. Empty. No furniture. No eats. Nothing. And every single one of the other places had been exactly the same. Shells of houses that from the outside looked all cheery normal.
Fucking weird.
He went out the front, made sure he locked the door, and headed to his truck. The locations they met at had been different each day and he had a feeling they always would be. Every morning at seven a.m., he got a call with an address, and he stayed put when he got there, the men cycling through, the classes on mixed martial-arts fighting lasting two hours apiece. The schedule ran like clockwork.
Maybe they were paramilitary whack jobs.
"Evening, son."
Van froze then looked over the hood of his truck. A minivan was parked across the street, and Xavier was leaning up against the thing as casual as the mommy-mommy who should have been driving the POS.
"What up?" Van said.
"You're doing well with the men." Xavier's flat smile matched his flat, pale eyes.
"Thanks. I'm just leaving now."
"Not yet." Van's skin prickled as the guy eased off the car and crossed the street. "So, son, I've been thinking you might want to become more closely involved with us."
More closely involved, huh? "I'm not interested in crime. Sorry."
"What makes you think what we do is criminal?"
"Come on, Xavier." The guy hated it when he dropped the Mr. So he did it often. "I've done time once. It was boring."
"Yes, that carjacking ring you fell into. I bet your brother had a lot to say about that, didn't he? OhI don't mean the one you did the stealing with. I'm talking about the law abider in the family. The clean one. Richard, isn't it?"
Van frowned. "Tell you what. You don't bring my family into this, I won't drop a dime and turn in these houses you use to the CPD. I mean, cops would love to come for Sunday dinner, I'm damn sure. Wouldn't need to ask 'em over twice."
As Xavier's face became remote, Van thought, Gotcha.
But then the man just smiled. "And I'll tell you what. I can give you something no one else can."
"Oh, yeah?"
"Undoubtedly."
Van shook his head, unimpressed. "Isn't this a little early to invite me in? What if I'm not trustworthy?"
"You will be."
"Your faith in me is so fucking sweet. But the answer's no. Sorry."
He expected argument. All he got was a nod.
"As you wish." Xavier turned and walked back to the mini-van.
Weird, Van thought as he got into his truck. These boys were definitely weird.
But at least they paid on time, And well.
Across town, Vishous took form on the side lawn of a nicely kept apartment building. Rhage was right behind him, materializing into flesh and blood in the shadows.
Shit, V thought. He wished he'd taken a moment for another smoke before he'd come here. He needed a cigarette. He needed something.
"V, my brother, you okay?"
"Yeah. Perfect. Let's do this."
After pulling a little mind bend with the lock system, they walked in the front door. The inside of the place smelled like air freshener, a fake orange stench that coated the nostrils like paint.
They skipped the elevator because it was in use and hit the stairwell. When they got to the second floor, they headed past apartments C1 and C2 and C3. V kept his hand under his jacket and on his Glock, although he had a feeling the worst thing that could come at them would be a hall monitor. The place was neat as a pin and QVC cutesy-pie: Fake flower bouquets hung on doors. Welcome mats with hearts or ivy on them were on the floor outside each apartment. Framed inspirational pictures of pink and peach sunsets alternated with ones of fuzzy puppies and clueless kitties.
"Man," Rhage muttered, "someone hit this place with the Hallmark stick."
"Until it broke."
V stopped in front of the door marked C4 and willed the locks to shift.
"What are you doing?"
He and Rhage wheeled around.
Holy shit, it was one of the frickin' Golden Girls: Three feet high with a crown of kinky white on her head, the old lady was decked out in a bunchy quilted robe, like she was wearing her bed.
Trouble was, she had the eyes of a pit bull. "I asked you young men a question."
Rhage took over, which was good. He was better with the charm. "Ma'am, we're just here visiting a friend."
"You know Dottie's grandson?"
"Ah, yes, ma'am. We do."
"Well, you look like you would." Which was evidently not a compliment. "I think he should move out, by the way. Dottie died four months ago and he doesn't fit in here."
And neither do you, those eyes tacked on.
"Oh, he's moving out." Rhage smiled pleasantly while keeping his lips together. "Moved out, really. Yeah, tonight."
V cut in, " 'Scuse me, I'll be right back."
As Rhage shot him a don't-you-dare-leave-me-with-this-hot-potato glare, V stepped inside and shut the door on his brother's face. If Rhage couldn't handle the biddy, he could just swipe her memories, although that would be a last resort. Older humans sometimes didn't deal well with the erasing, their brains no longer resilient enough to withstand the invasion.
So, yeah, Hollywood and Dottie's neighbor were going to get tight while V cased the place.
With a sneer, he glanced around. Man, everything smelled of lesser. Sicky sweet. Like Butch.
Shit. Do not think about that.
He forced himself to focus on the apartment. Unlike most lesser pads, this one was furnished, though obviously by its former occupant. And Dottie's taste had run toward flower prints, doilies, and cat figurines. She fit right in with this building.
Chances were good the lessers had read about her passing in the paper and had copped her identity. Hell, maybe it even was her grandson camping out here after he'd been inducted into the Society.
V walked through the kitchen and out again, not surprised there was no food in the cabinets or the refrigerator. As he headed for the other half of the apartment, he thought it was so curious that the slayers didn't hide where they crashed. Hell, most died with ID on them that was accurate. Then again, they wanted to encourage conflicts
Hello.
V went over to a pink and white desk where a Dell Inspiron 8600 was cracked open and running. He swiped his finger across the mouse and did a quick poke around. Encrypted files. Everything password protected up the wazoo. Blah, blah, blah
Although lessers were all welcome mat about their cribs, they were very tight about their hardware. Most slayers had a compy at home, and the Lessening Society pulled a lot of the same protections and coding maneuvers that V did at the compound. So basically their shit was impenetrable.
Good thing he didn't know the meaning of impenetrable.
He clapped the Dell shut and unplugged the power line from the unit and the wall. He stuffed the electrical cord in his pocket, zipped up his jacket, and tucked the laptop in close to his chest. Then he went deeper into the apartment. Bedroom looked like a chintz bomb had gone off with flower and frill shrapnel covering the mattress and the windows and the walls.
And then there it was. On a little table beside the bed, sitting next to a phone, a four-month-old issue of Reader's Digest and a colony of orange pill bottles: a ceramic jar about the size of a quart of milk.
He flipped open his phone and dialed Rhage. When the brother picked up, V said, "I'm outtie. I've got a laptop and the jar."
He hung up, palmed the ceramic container and held it tightly against the hard body of the laptop. Then he dematerialized to the Pit, thinking how handy it was that humans didn't line their walls with steel.
Chapter Fifteen
As Mr. X watched Van drive off, he knew the ask had come too soon. He should have waited until the guy was a little more hooked on the power trip he went on when he trained the slayers.
Except time was passing.
It wasn't that he was worried about the loophole closing. The prophecy hadn't said anything about that kind of thing. But the Omega had been righteous pissed when Mr. X had left him last. Hadn't taken at all well the news that the contaminated human had been offed by the Brothers in that clearing in the woods. So the stakes were mounting, and not in X's favor.
From out of nowhere, the center of his chest began to warm, and then he felt a beating where his heart once had been. The rhythmic pulse made him curse. Speak of the devil, the master was calling him.
Mr. X got into the minivan, started the thing up, and drove seven minutes across town to a shitty ranch house on a ratty lot in a bad neighborhood. Place still reeked like the meth lab it had been up until its former owner had been shot by a professional associate. Thanks to the lingering toxicity, the Society had gotten the digs at a discount.
Mr. X parked in the garage and waited until the door squeaked shut before getting out. After killing the security alarm he'd installed, he headed for the back bedroom.
As he went along, his skin was irritated and itchy, like he had a case of prickly heat all over his body. The longer he put off responding to the master, the worse it would get. Until he was crazed from the need to scratch at himself.
Settling on his knees and lowering his head, he didn't want to get anywhere near the Omega. The master had radar instincts and Mr. X's goals were now his own, not the Society's. Problem was, when the Fore-lesser was called, he came as summoned. That was the deal.
As soon as Vishous walked into the Pit, he heard the quiet and hated it. Fortunately, within fifteen minutes of his cracking open that lesser's laptop on his desk, there was a pounding on the door. He glanced at a monitor, then sprang the locks with his mind.
Rhage walked in munching on something, his hand shoved in a Ziploc bag. "Having any luck with Mr. Dell's fine product?"
"What are you eating?"
"The last of Mrs. Woolly's banana nut bread. It's awesome. Want some?"
V rolled his eyes and went back to the laptop. "No, but you could bring me a bottle of Goose and a glass from the kitchen."
"No problem." Rhage made the delivery, then leaned against the wall. "So you find anything in there?"
"Not yet."
When silence expanded until it crowded out the air in the Pit, V knew there was more to the visit than a check-in on the Dell.
Sure enough, Rhage said, "Listen, my brother"
"I'm not much for company right now."
"I know. That's why they asked me to come."
V glanced over the top of the computer. "And who's 'they'?" Even though he knew.
"The Brotherhood's worried about you. You're getting damn tight, V. Twitchy as shit and don't deny it. Everyone's noticed."
"Oh, so Wrath asked you to come play Rorschach on me?"
"Direct order. But I was on my way over here anyway."
V rubbed his eyes. "I'm fine."
"It's okay if you aren't."
No, it really was not. "If you don't mind, I'd like to go through this PC."
"We going to see you at Last Meal?"
"Yeah. Sure." Right.
V fiddled with the mouse and kept scanning through the computer's file systems. As he stared at the screen, he noticed absently that his right eye, the one with the tats on its side, had started to flicker like the lid was shorting out.
Two massive fists knuckled down on the desk and Rhage leaned in tight. "You come or I come for you."
As Vishous glared up at his brother, Rhage's teal gaze just stared back from his towering height and his mind-bending beauty.
Oh, so they were going to play chicken with the eyeballs, huh? Well, fuck you, V thought.
Except Vishous was the one who lost. Moments later, he looked down at the laptop, trying to make like he was just checking on something. "You need to back off, okay. Butch is my roommate, so of course I'm going to be bleeding for him. But it's no big thing"
"Phury told us. About your visions drying up."
"Christ." V burst out of his chair, pushed Rhage out of the way, and walked around. "That gum-flapping motherfu"
"If it's any consolation, Wrath didn't really give him a choice."
"So the king brass-knuckled it out of him?"
"Come on, V. When I've whacked out, you've been there for me. This is no different."
"Yeah, it is."
"Because it's you."
"Bingo." Man, V simply couldn't talk about this shit. He, who spoke sixteen languages, just had no words for the mind-bending fear he had over the future: Butch's. His own. The whole race's. His visions of what was coming had always pissed him off, but they were a strange comfort, too. Even if he didn't like what was around the bend, at least he'd never been surprised.
Rhage's hand landed on his shoulder and he jumped. "Last Meal, Vishous. You show or I'm picking you up like mail, dig?"
"Yeah. Fine. Now get the fuck out of here."
As soon as Rhage left, V went back to the laptop and sat down. Except instead of returning to IT land, he called Butch's new phone.
The cop's voice was all gravel. "Hey, V."
"Hey." V held his phone between his ear and his shoulder and poured himself some vodka. As the juice hit the glass, there was the sound of shuffling over the line, like Butch was rolling over in bed or maybe taking his jacket off.
They were silent for a long time, nothing but an open cellular connection.
And then V had to ask, "Did you want to be with them? You feel like you should be with the lessers!"
"I don't know." Deep inhale. Long, slow exhale. "I won't front. I recognized those bastards. Felt them. But when I was looking into the eyes of that slayer, I did want to destroy him."
V lifted his glass. As he swallowed, the vodka burned down his throat in the nicest possible way. "How you feeling?"
"Not so hot. Queased out. Like I lost some ground." More silence. "Is this what you dreamed of? Back in the beginning, when you said I was supposed to come with the Brotherhood did you dream of me and the Omega?"
"No, I saw something else."
Although with everything that was going down, he couldn't see a path to what had been shown to him, couldn't see it on a lot of levels: The vision had been of him naked and Butch wrapped around him, the two of them high up in the sky, entwined in the midst of a cold wind.
Jesus Christ, he was deranged. Deranged and perverted. "Look, I'll come at sundown and hit you with a little hand action."
"Good. That always helps." Butch cleared his throat. "But V, I can't sit here and just wait this out. I want to go on the offensive. What say we pick up a few lessers and work them over, get them to do some talking for a change."
"Hard-core, cop."
"You get a look at what they did to me? You think I'm worried about the frickin' Geneva Convention?"
"Lemme talk to Wrath first."
"Do it soon."
"Today."
"Good deal." There was another long silence. "So you got some tube in this place?"
"Flat screen's up on the wall to the left of the bed. Remote's I don't know where it is. I don't usually yeah, TV's not on my mind when I'm there."
"V, man, what is this setup?"
"Pretty self-explanatory, don't you think?"
There was a little chuckle. "I guess this was what Phury was talking about, huh?"
"When he said what?"
"That you were into some kinky shit."
V had a sudden vision of Butch on top of Marissa, the male's body surging while she gripped his ass with her beautiful hands.
Then he saw Butch's head lift up and heard in his mind the hoarse, erotic moan that broke free of his roommate's lips.
Despising himself, Vishous hammered a shot of vodka and quickly poured another. "My sex life is private, Butch. So are my unconventional interests."
"I hear ya. No one's biz but yours. One question, though."
"What."
"When the females tie you down, do they paint your toe-nails and shit? Or just do your makeup?" As V laughed in a loud crack, the cop said, "Wait they tickle your pits with a feather, right?"
"Smart-ass."
"Hey, I'm just curious." Butch's own laughter faded. "Do you hurt them, though? I mean"
More with the vodka. "It's all about consent. And I don't cross the line."
"Good. Little freaky for my Catholic ass, granted 'cept, hey, it's whatever gets you off."
V swirled the Goose around in his glass. "So, cop, mind if I ask you something?"
"Fair's fair."
"Do you love her?"
After a while, Butch muttered, "Yeah. Fuck me, but yeah."
As the laptop's screen saver came on, V put his fingertip on the mouse square and interrupted the metastasizing pipes. "What's that feel like?"
There was a grunt as if Butch were rearranging himself and was stiff as a board. "Hell, right at this moment."
V played with the arrow on the screen, making it whip around the desktop. "You know I like her with you. The two of you make sense to me."
"Except for the fact that I'm a blue-collar human who could be part lesser, I'd say I agree with you."
"You're not turning into a"
"I took some of that slayer in me tonight. When I inhaled. I think that's why I smelled like one afterward. Not because we'd been fighting, but because some of the evil wasisin me again."
V cursed, hoping like hell that wasn't the case. "We're going to figure this out, cop. I'm not going to leave you in the dark."
They hung up a little later and V stared at the laptop while swirling the arrow around. He kept up the forefinger workout until he became thoroughly unimpressed with the time he was wasting.
As he stretched his arms over his head, he realized that the cursor had landed on recycle bin. Recycle Recycle to reprocess in order to use again.
What was it with Butch and the inhale thing? Now that V thought about it, when he'd pulled that lesser off the cop, he'd been aware he was breaking some kind of connection between them.
Restless, he took his Goose and glass and went over to the couches. As he sat down and swallowed some more, he looked at the pint of Lag that was on the coffee table.
V leaned forward and grabbed the Scotch. Unscrewing it, he lifted it to his lips and took a slug. Then he brought the Lag to the lip of his glass of vodka and poured. With low-lidded eyes, he watched the swirling combination, seeing the two blend, the vodka and the Scotch both diluted of their pure essence and yet stronger together.
V brought the combo to his lips, tilted his head back, and swallowed the whole damn thing. Then he eased back into the couch.
He was tired way fucking tired ti
Sleep came to him so fast it was like getting slammed in the head. But the shut-eye didn't last long. The Dream, as he was coming to think of it, woke him up minutes later with its characteristic violence: He came to on a scream with a splitting feeling in his chest, as if someone were using a rib-spreader on him. As his heart skipped, then pounded, sweat broke out all over him.
Ripping his shirt open, he looked down at his body.
Everything was where it should be, no gaping wound to be seen. Except the feelings remained, the horrible pressure of being shot, the crushing doom that death had come upon him.
He breathed raggedly. And figured that was it for shut-eye.
He left the vodka behind and lurched over to his desk, determined to get good and intimate with that laptop.
When the Princeps Council broke up, Marissa was totally drained. Which made sense, as dawn was close. There had been a lot of discussion about the sehclusion motion, none of the talk negative, all of it centered around the lesser threat. Clearly, when the vote was taken, not only would it pass, hut if Wrath didn't issue a proclamation, the Council was going to look at it as evidence that the king lacked commitment to the race.
Which was something Wrath's detractors were dying to have come to the forefront. Three hundred years of him passing on the throne had left a bitter taste in the mouths of some of the aristocracy, and they were after him.
Desperate to leave, Marissa waited and waited by the library's door, but Havers kept talking to the others. Eventually, she went outside and dematerialized back home, figuring she'd camp out in his bedroom if she had to in order to talk with him.
As she came in the front door of their mansion, she didn't call for Karolyn as she usually did, but went straight upstairs to her bedroom. Pushing the door open, she
"Oh my God." Her room was a ghost town.
Her walk-in closet was open and empty, not even a single hanger remaining. Her bed was stripped, her pillows gone, along with her sheets and blankets. All of the pictures were down. And cardboard boxes were stacked up against the far wall next to every piece of Louis Vuitton luggage she owned.
"What" Her voice dried out as she went into the bathroom. The cabinets of which were all barren.
As she stumbled from the bath, Havers was standing by the bed.
"What is this?" She swept her arm around.
"You need to leave this house."
At first all she could do was blink at him. "But I live here!"
He took out his wallet, removed a thick wad of bills, and spread them on the bureau. "Take this. And go."
"All because of Butch?" she demanded. "And how's this going to work with that sehclusion proposal you put to the council? Ghardians have to be around their"
"I didn't propose the motion. And as for that human" He shook his head. "Your life is your own. And seeing you with a naked human male who had just engaged in a sexual act" Havers's voice cracked and he cleared his throat. "Go now. Live as you wish. But I will not sit back and watch you destroy yourself."
"Havers, this is ridiculous"
"I can't protect you from yourself."
"Havers, Butch is not"
"I threatened the king's life to ahvenge your honor!" The sound of his voice ricocheted around the walls. "And then to find you with a human male! II can't have you near me anymore. I don't trust this anger you bring out in me. It triggers acts of such violence. It" He shuddered and turned away. "I have told the doggen they are to deposit you wherever you wish to go, but after that, they will return to this household. You will have to find your own."
Her body went completely numb. "I am still a member of the Princeps Council. You will have to see me there."
"No, because I am not required to render you mine eyes. And you assume you will stay on the council, which is doubtful. Wrath will have no cause to deny the sehclusion motion. You will be without a mate and I will not function as your ghardian, so you will have no one to grant permission for your presence to be out in the open. Not even your bloodline can override the law."
Marissa's jaw unhinged. Holy heaven she would be a total social outcast. A veritable no one. "How can you do this to me?"
He glanced over his shoulder. "I am tired of myself. Tired of fighting the urge to defend you from choices you make"
"Choices! Living as a female in the aristocracy I have no choices!"
"Untrue. You could have been a proper mate to Wrath."
"He didn't want me! You knew that, you saw it with your own two eyes! That's why you wanted to have him killed!"
"But now when I think on it, I wonder why did he feel nothing for you? Perhaps you didn't work hard enough to engage his interest."
Marissa felt a raw fury. And the emotion grew hotter as her brother said, "And as for choices, you could have stayed out of that human's hospital room. You chose to go in there. And you chose to you could have not layed with him."
"Is that what this is about? For God's sake, I'm still a virgin."
"Now you lie."
The three words snapped her out of her emotions. As the heat drained away, clarity came, and for the first time, she tally saw her brother: brilliant of mind, devoted to his patients, loving of his dead shellan and utterly rigid. A male of science and order who liked rules and predictability and enjoyed a precise vision of life.
And he was clearly willing to protect that worldview at the cost of her future her happiness her very self.
"You are absolutely correct," she said with a strange calm. "I do have to go."
She glanced at the boxes that were filled with the clothes she'd worn and the things she'd bought. Then her eyes found him again. He was doing the same, staring at them as if measuring the life she'd led.
"I shall let you keep the Diirers, of course," he said.
"Of course," she whispered. "Good-bye, brother."
"I am Havers to you now. Not brother. And never again."
He dropped his head and walked out of the room.
In the silence that followed there was the temptation to fall on the bare mattress and cry. But there was no time. She had maybe an hour before light.
Dear Virgin, where would she go?
Chapter Sixteen
When Mr. X came back from meeting the Omega on the other side, he felt like he had heartburn. Which seemed logical, as he'd been fed his own ass.
The master had been teed up about a variety of things. He wanted more lessers, more vampires bleeding out, more progress, more more But the thing was, no matter what he was given, he would always be unsatisfied. Maybe that was his curse.
Whatever. The calculus of Mr. X's failure was up on the blackboard, the mathematical equation of his destruction outlined in chalk. The unknown in the algebra was time. How long before the Omega snapped and Mr. X got recalled for eternity?
Things needed to move faster with Van. That man had to get on board and in place ASAP.
Mr. X went over to his laptop and fired the Dell up. Sitting down next to the dried brown stain of a blood pool, he called up the Scrolls and found the relevant passage. The lines of the prophecy calmed him: