Magic Rises kd-6
Page 6
“The People,” Julie said, understanding in her eyes.
“Exactly. My father chose to call himself Roland and started gathering individuals with the ability to navigate vampires. He organized them into the People.”
The People were a cross between a corporation and a research institute. Professional and brutally efficient, they maintained large stables of vampires and had a chapter in every major city.
“Nobody ever talks about Roland,” I told her. “Most people don’t know he exists. And almost nobody, not even the navigators, know that shortly after he awoke, Roland fell in love. Her name was Kalina and she also had powerful magic. She could make anyone love her. Kalina wanted a baby, so Roland decided to give her one. I was that baby.”
Julie opened her mouth. I raised my hand. If she interrupted me, I might not get through this.
“My father always had issues with his children. They turned out powerful and smart, and as soon as they wised up, they tried to nuke him. Roland changed his mind and decided I’d be better off not being born. My mother knew that to save me she had to run away. She needed a protector, and Roland’s warlord, Voron, seemed like a good choice. Voron was bound to Roland by a blood ritual, and my mother had to use every bit of her power to make Voron love her, so much so that she made Voron slightly insane.”
“So she basically used him,” Julie said.
“You got it. Together they ran away. My mother gave birth to me, but Roland was closing in on them. She knew that Voron was better suited to keeping the baby alive and Roland would never stop chasing her, so she stayed behind to buy Voron time. Roland caught up with her and killed her. Voron ran with me and then spent every moment of his life training me so one day I could kill my own father.”
Julie turned pale.
I waited for her to digest all of it.
“Do you want to kill him?”
That was a complicated question. “I will if I have to, but I won’t go out looking for him. I have Curran and you. All I want to do right now is keep both of you safe. But if Roland ever finds me, he will confront me, Julie, and I’m not sure I would survive. Remember the picture of a man I showed you? Hugh d’Ambray?”
I’d given it to her a few weeks ago and told her that he was an enemy. At the time I wasn’t ready for long explanations.
“Yes.”
“Hugh is Voron’s replacement. He’s Roland’s new warlord. Not many people know about the lost baby, but he does. He stumbled across me and now he’s very interested.”
Now came the hard part. “When you were turning loup, I couldn’t heal you. Nobody could heal you. So I . . .” Robbed you of your free will. “. . . cleaned your blood with mine to burn off the Lyc-V. It was the only choice. Without it, I would’ve had to kill you.”
Julie stared at me.
“We’re bound now. Some of my magic is yours. My blood contaminated you. I dreamed tonight. I saw a plain, a sunset, and towers. And I saw you and called you.”
“What does it mean?” Julie whispered. “Does that mean Roland is in our heads?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know if we’re seeing the past or the future or if it’s my father messing with our minds from several states away. Whatever the hell it is, it isn’t good. You have to take precautions. Don’t leave your blood where it can be found. If you bleed, burn the bandages. If you bleed a lot, set the scene on fire or dump bleach on it. Hide your magic as much as you can. I’m not planning on dying. I will come back and I will help you sort this out. But if something happens to us, Jim knows. You can trust him.”
A door swung open behind us. Doolittle stepped into the room.
“Doolittle knows, too.” I told her. “There are some books in my room. I’ll make you a list of what you need to read . . .”
Maddie stirred. A bulge rolled across her chest, like a tennis ball sliding just under her skin.
“Involuntary movements,” Doolittle said. “Nothing to worry about.”
I realized my hand was holding Slayer’s hilt and let go. If Maddie went loup and lunged out of that tank at Julie, I would cut her down with no hesitation. That thought made my insides churn.
Julie’s eyes were huge on her face.
“It will be okay,” I told her.
“I don’t think it will,” Julie said. “Nothing is okay. Nothing will be okay.”
She stood up.
“Julie . . .”
I watched her walk out. The door clanged shut. That didn’t go the way I’d wanted it to. I wanted a do-over, but in life you rarely get those.
Doolittle was looking at me. “It’s good you told her.”
It didn’t feel good. It felt downright crappy. “I need a favor.”
“If it is within my power,” he said.
“Curran and I have both written our wills. If I don’t come back, Meredith will take care of Julie. I’ve already spoken to her. But if I don’t come back, at some point, Julie may come to you for answers. I’d like you to have my blood. Studying it might help.” He’d already done some analysis on it once. He would be the best person to study it more.
Doolittle rubbed his face, hesitated—as if deciding—and finally said, “This trip is a foolish endeavor.”
“There is a chance we will succeed.”
“A very small chance. We can’t trust these people. They don’t intend to honor their promises.”
“I’ll force them to honor them, if I have to. I can’t sit by Maddie and watch her die a little bit every day. It’s not in me, Doc.”
“It is not in me either,” he said. “I’m afraid we’re drawing it out. Delaying the inevitable only leads to more suffering. That’s why death must be quick and painless.”
“You told me once that we don’t have a choice in what we are. We do have a choice in who we are. I’m the person who must get on that boat or I won’t be able to ever look Maddie’s mother in the eye. Will you please draw my blood?”
Doolittle sighed. “Of course I will.”
* * *
“Kate?”
Curran’s voice slipped through my dream. Mmmm . . . I smiled and opened my eyes, still half-asleep. Curran leaned over me. My handsome psycho. When I came back from speaking with Julie, I crawled into bed. I awoke a couple of hours later when he slid into bed next to me. He pulled me close, his body so warm against mine. We made love and I fell asleep on his chest.
“Kate?” Curran repeated. “Baby?”
I reached over and touched his cheek just to make sure he was really there. “You should stay in bed with me.”
“I’d love to,” he said. “But I just spoke with Barabas.”
“Mm-hm.” He really was ridiculously handsome in a gruff, kill-anything-that-moves way. Exactly how I liked it. “What did he say?”
“Saiman is waiting for us in a conference room. He says he owes you a favor and Barabas called him to invite him to the Keep on your behalf.” Gold flared in Curran’s eyes. “Would you care to explain this, because I’m all ears?”
Ten minutes later Curran and I marched down the hallway toward the conference room. When you live in a building with excellent acoustics populated by people with supernatural hearing, you learn to argue under your breath, which was precisely what we were doing.
A month ago I’d gotten a late-night call from the Mercenary Guild informing me that Saiman had been kidnapped. An information broker and a magic expert, Saiman was a shrewd businessman who had his fingers in all sorts of pies, from illegal gladiatorial combat to a shady import/export business. He charged exorbitant prices for his services, but because I amused him, he had offered me a discount in the past. I had consulted him a few times, but he kept trying to entice me into his bed to prove a philosophical point. I’d put up with it until he had the stupidity to parade our connection in front of Curran. The Beast Lord and I had been in a rough spot in our relationship, and Curran didn’t take that exhibition well, which he expressed by turning a warehouse full of luxury cars Saiman had slipped past customs
into crushed Coke cans. Since then, Saiman, who feared physical pain above all else, lived in mortal fear of Curran.
Saiman maintained a VIP account at the Mercenary Guild for times when he needed to use brute force, so when some thugs decided it would be a good idea to hold him for ransom, his accountant put the call in to the Guild, which in turn called me. I’d dealt with the kidnappers and rescued Saiman. In return he owed me a favor. Yesterday I’d called him and told him that I would like to collect.
I had successfully managed to hide the incident from Curran precisely because I knew he would go ballistic. Explaining all this now proved a little complicated.
“The clerk called and said Saiman was kidnapped. What the hell was I supposed to do, leave him there?”
“Let me think . . . Yes!”
“Well, I didn’t.”
“He doesn’t care about you. If you died saving him, he wouldn’t give a shit. Nobody even knew where you went.”
“Jim knew where I went.” Aaand I shouldn’t have said that.
Curran stopped and stared at me.
“I took backup,” I told him.
“Like who?”
“Grendel and Derek.”
Curran’s eyebrows came together. He realized that Derek knew and hadn’t snitched. I shouldn’t have said that either.
The best defense is a vigorous offense. “You’re overreacting.”
“You left in the middle of the night to rescue a man without any shred of conscience who cares nothing about your safety, who schemed and manipulated to seduce you, and when he found he couldn’t, acted like a coward and put you in danger. How am I supposed to react?”
“Last time I checked, I was a big girl, all grown up and able to put on my shoes and swing my sword all by myself. You don’t have to like it.”
“Kate!”
“He owes us a favor. A big favor.”
“I don’t need any favors from him,” Curran snarled.
“Yes, you do. Do you remember that warehouse of luxury cars you demolished?”
Curran just looked at me.
“How did those expensive foreign cars get into the country?”
The realization hit Curran like a ton of bricks. His scowl vanished. “He shipped them in.” He started down the hallway, accelerating.
“Exactly.” I matched his stride.
“And he avoided customs because they came in on his vessel. He owns a fleet.”
“Bingo.”
We turned the corner. A shapeshifter heading in our direction saw our faces and tried to abruptly reverse her course. Curran pointed at her. “Get Jim for me, please.”
She broke into a jog.
“We don’t even know if his ships go to the Mediterranean,” Curran said.
“Yes, we do. During the Midnight Games he brought in a minotaur from Greece.”
We reached the door and I opened it.
A beautiful Asian woman waited for us in the North Conference Room. She was on the cusp of thirty, of average height and flawless build, with a slender, delicately curved waist and long legs. A dark green sweater dress, complete with a draped cowl and a sash, hugged her figure, showcasing her beautiful dark hair.
A male shapeshifter was watching her the way one would watch a rabid dog cornered in an alley.
Curran didn’t miss a bit. “Saiman, you look lovely. Thank you for dressing up.”
The woman looked up and I saw the familiar air of disdain in her eyes.
“Did you come as a woman so Curran wouldn’t hit you?”
The woman grimaced. Odd bulges slid over her face and arms, as if someone had struck billiard balls under her skin with a cue and they spun, rolling in all directions. I willed my stomach to keep still.
“No,” the woman said, as her flesh crawled, stretching, twisting, and reshaping itself in a revolting riot. “I simply had a prior appointment.”
Her hair shed, her breasts dissolved into a flat male chest, her hips narrowed, all moving simultaneously in a grotesque coordinated process. Acid burned my tongue. Shapeshifter change was an explosion, a quick burst of movement over in a couple of seconds. Saiman’s change was a controlled methodical adjustment, and watching it never failed to make my stomach panic and attempt to empty itself by any means necessary. I closed my eyes for a long moment, opened them, and saw a slender bald man crossing his new arms. In his neutral form, Saiman was a blank canvas: neither ugly nor handsome, average height, average features, average skin color, sparse frame. The sweater dress made him look completely ridiculous. I had a sudden urge to laugh and clamped down on it.
“I’ve brought some currency.” Saiman pointed at the suitcase next to him. “I believe the standard Guild fee for rescuing a kidnapped victim is ten percent of the ransom. Feel free to count it.”
Of course. Money was Saiman’s default response. Paying us off would be the easiest way to get rid of his debt.
Curran offered him a chair with a sweep of his hand. “We’re not interested in money. Would you care for something to drink?”
“Is it poisoned?”
“It’s Saturday,” I said. “We only serve poison during the week.”
“Yes, we’re not complete savages.” Curran sat. “Shawn, could you please bring some water for me and Kate, and a scotch for our guest?”
The male shapeshifter nodded and departed.
“Feeling better?”
Saiman didn’t look at me. “I’m sorry, I’d love to answer that, but you see, if I attempt a conversation, your furry paramour will pummel me into bits.”
Oh, you fussy baby.
“Not at all,” Curran said. “I have no plans to pummel anyone this morning.”
Shawn stepped into the room, bringing a platter with a pitcher of water, a decanter filled with amber-colored scotch, and three glasses. Curran took it from his hands and set it on the table. “Thank you.”
Shawn left, and Curran poured water into two of the glasses and scotch into the third. “There is no reason we can’t all be civil.”
His tone was light, his face relaxed and friendly. The Beast Lord was in rare form. We really needed the ship.
Saiman sipped the amber liquid and held it in his mouth for a long moment. “So. You refuse my money, you serve me thirty-year-old Highland Park scotch, and we’ve been in the same room for approximately five minutes, yet none of my bones are broken. This leads me to believe that your back is against the wall and you desperately need me for something. I’m dying to know what that is.”
In his place I’d be careful with my choice of words.
“I have a business proposal for you,” Curran said. “I’d like to hire one of your shipping vessels to transport the two of us and ten of my people. We will pay you a reasonable rate.”
“My reasonable or yours?” Saiman studied his drink.
“Ours. In turn, you will no longer owe the Pack and we will make your life less inconvenient. For example, we’ll stop blocking your real estate purchases.”
“You’ve been blocking his purchases?” I looked at Curran.
“Not me personally.”
“The Pack and its many proxies.” Saiman drained his glass and poured himself more. “If I choose to move on a project, the Pack will inevitably bid against me, drive up the price, and then abandon the bid, leaving me holding the purse strings. It’s been most inconvenient.”
I bet.
“You’ve always struck me as a man who enjoys attention,” Curran said.
“That was completely unfair.” Saiman pointed his index finger at him while still holding the glass. “Let’s cut to the chase. I know that a delegation of shapeshifters disembarked in Charleston, I know that Desandra Kral, formerly of the Obluda pack, is having twins, and I know that you have been invited to act as her bodyguard and mediator of the inheritance dispute and that you will be paid in panacea to do so.”
Saiman in a nutshell. I had no idea how he knew all of this, but he did.
“You need a ship. This vessel will
have to be oceanworthy, will need an experienced crew, and will require cabin space for at least fifteen people. What’s the destination?”
“Gagra on the northern coast of the Republic of Georgia.”
Saiman blinked. “You mean the Black Sea? Do you really want to go to the Black Sea?”
“Yes,” Curran said.
I nodded. “We do.”
Saying things like We think this is a trap and We would rather cut off our left foot than go would endanger our ship acquisition and our badass image.
Saiman poured himself more scotch. “I can’t help but point out that the three packs involved could’ve found someone in the immediate vicinity to act as a neutral fourth party.”
“Your opinion is noted,” Curran said.
“Have you ever tried to reverse engineer the panacea?” I asked.
“Yes, as a matter of fact I have,” Saiman said. “I can give you the exact list of ingredients and quantities. The secret isn’t in the chemical composition; it’s in the process of preparation, which I’m unable to replicate. To put it plainly, they cook it with magic and I don’t know the specifics. I’m also reasonably certain that the panacea is manufactured by a single entity or organization and then distributed throughout Europe.”
“Why?” I asked.
“It’s a well-known secret that five years ago your partner offered three hundred thousand dollars and Pack protection to anyone willing to sell him the recipe and demonstrate its preparation. If the panacea were manufactured by each pack individually, someone would’ve been desperate enough to take him up on his offer.”
Curran grimaced. “It’s five hundred thousand now.”
“Still no takers?” Saiman arched his eyebrow.
“No.”
Saiman swirled the whiskey in his glass. “Suppose I provide a vessel. Crossing the Atlantic is a dangerous venture. Between the hurricanes, the pirates, and the sea monsters, there is a very real possibility that your ship will sink and not at all in a metaphorical sense. I’ve been in shipping for over a decade and I still lose two to four ships per year. If you were to meet your untimely demise, your thugs would blame me.”