The Diamond Dragon (Kip Keene Book 4)
Page 18
The two walked slowly about the clock tower’s ground floor, searching for the others. The smoke appeared to be coming from outside, wafting beneath the large double-doors, rather than from the building.
Still, Keene didn’t want to stick around too long and test his luck. They found Alessia, Linus and Carmen after a few minutes, and the five of them proceeded to exit the tower.
“Jesus Christ,” Keene said when he stepped outside. All of Tillus was burning.
“Stevens, that son of a bitch,” Carmen said under her breath.
Keene glanced up the street, where the bank once stood. It was now a spindly skeleton of ash. The cop cars out front were burned out husks. Anything that wasn’t on fire was smoking, a mere shell of its former self.
He covered his mouth as he walked up Main Street. It was difficult to see with all the smoke, but some of the fires looked fresh. The UCD must have started with the heart of town and fanned out.
Keene turned towards Carmen. “You take Linus and Strike.”
“We shouldn’t split up.”
“The UCD knows me, they know you,” Keene said. “They don’t know her.” He nodded towards Alessia. “And if they find out, well…”
“Got it.” At the end of Main Street, the group split up. Keene tugged Alessia up the road, towards the inn.
“Where are we going?”
“I think there’s someone you might want to see.” He stared at the vacancy sign. This street hadn’t been destroyed yet. “Better run, though.”
They hurried towards the small-town inn. Keene burst through the door, chest heaving. The innkeeper stood behind the counter, in the same place where he’d first seen her.
“How far can you go outside the limits,” Keene said, saving introductions for later.
The woman glanced up. “Ten miles. But I have nowhere to…” Her voice trailed off when she looked to Keene’s left, at the girl he had brought along. Tears filled her eyes. “Oh my god, it’s you.”
She came around the counter slowly, approaching Alessia with measured steps. Her hand came up to brush her lost child’s face.
Then she embraced the girl.
“You brought her back,” the innkeeper said with a wide smile. “You brought my daughter back.”
33 | New Beginnings
Keene leaned back in the beach chair and reached for his drink. It was one in the afternoon, but he was already a few deep. A week had passed since they’d made it out of Shambhala alive. He’d dropped Alessia and her mother in a barn outside Tillus, then gotten the mother’s tracker removed so that they could both be free. That part felt good. Saving the girl. Saving the world, less so. The taste of smoke still clung to his mouth, no matter how much he drank or brushed his teeth or bit his tongue.
But Keene knew it wasn’t actually smoke, but the choice. Was there another way? He’d never know. And no one else would know either, because Shambhala—and every other universe out there—was invisible to Earth. But that wasn’t the same as nonexistent.
He reached for the beer, but a hand came out of nowhere and knocked it over.
“You bastard.” A wild-eyed Strike stared down at him. She looked ready to strangle him.
“I was drinking that.”
“It wasn’t your choice to make,” Strike said. “To try to fix me.” She threw a balled up piece of paper at his head. Her injured arm shook in its sling. “Partners rely on the truth.”
Keene knew what this was about before he even saw the paper.
“Partners rely on the other one not being high as shit, too.” Keene reached over to pick up the sheet. “So Linus spilled that we sent you to rehab, huh?”
“It wasn’t your decision to make.” She stalked off, flipping him the bird. Could be just a tantrum, but the way her eyes were an electric blue—hurt by the betrayal, the lack of honesty—Keene had no way of telling. With Linus and Carmen at their own place—Keene couldn’t even fathom that, but it was the truth—that left the mansion entirely empty.
At least there was plenty of booze in the basement.
Keene sighed and picked up his beer. There was sand in it.
Screw it.
He drank the whole thing in one gulp and closed his eyes.
He awoke around four. A tall, pale man in a black suit stood staring at him with a look of intense curiosity.
“So you’re Mr. Kip Keene,” he said in a gravelly voice. The man was about fifty, but the lines on his face made him look older. “I expected more.”
Keene rubbed his throbbing temple. “And you are?” He tried to swallow, but the cotton-mouth was bad. Too much more of this and he’d become a cliché.
“Supervisory Agent John Stevens,” the man said, extending a hand that Keene didn’t take, “the head of the Unexplained Crimes Division.”
“Lovely,” Keene said. “You didn’t bring me a beer by any chance, did you?”
“Carmen said you were an interesting one,” Agent Stevens said. “Capable, but somewhat…aloof.”
“Did she now,” Keene said. He pushed the rim of his shades back up the bridge of his nose. “Tell me why you’re here.”
“Your performance was quite impressive, saving the world like that. I admit, our personnel didn’t take that particular threat seriously enough. Then again, few are experts in quantum physics and multi-verse theories.”
“Thanks for the compliment,” Keene said. “Door’s that way.”
“I should think you would be more interested in what I had to say,” Agent Stevens said.
“You thought wrong.”
“Be that as it may, Mr. Keene, I am a man who gets what he wants.” Agent Stevens smoothed out his suit coat and stared out at the ocean. “And what I want now is to discuss The Jade Jaguar. And how you might be of instrumental utility in recovering it.”
“I’m retired,” Keene said. He looked out at the endless waves. His mouth was dry enough that drinking seawater almost sounded like a good idea.
“We do have a little incentive to sway your decision.”
“You seen this place? I don’t need money.”
“Not money, Mr. Keene,” Stevens said with a vulpine smile. He reached into his suit pocket and extracted a bent 4 x 6 glossy photograph. He tossed it towards Keene, then began to walk away as the picture fluttered to the sand. “Your sister has done some regrettable things, has she not?”
“My sister’s got nothing to do with anything.”
“Whether that is true remains entirely up to you, Mr. Keene,” Stevens said, his voice trailing away. “And your abilities.”
Keene knelt in the warm sand to pick up the photograph. Lorelei Keene’s dirt-streaked face, eyes wide with terror, stared back at him from behind bars. He balled up the photo in his fist and flung it towards the waves.
“What do you want from me?”
“To pass a little test before we begin,” Steven called back, his gravelly tenor carried on the sea breeze. “And then to search for the truth.”
“What truth?” Keene screamed.
But Stevens was gone, and Keene was by himself, right back where everything began. Lost. Alone. Confused. One thing was different, though.
He knew exactly where this ended.
Keene was going to bury Stevens in a plain pine box, six feet under, while the rest of the UCD burned.
He unballed the photograph and stared at the neat handwriting on the back.
Pack a jacket, Mr. Keene. For it’s about to get cold.
Yes.
It was about to get very cold indeed.
For everyone.
THE END
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