Other men came down the street, dressed in tough nondescript uniforms and carrying assault rifles and grenade launchers. Their leader stopped, raised a hand in a gesture Adrian recognized, spoke a
Word
. The ragamuffins tensed; then one sprang up, screaming and slapping at himself, then gouging his own eyes into bloody holes in his face. Three more simply slumped over, dead before they hit the ground. Another leveled a pump-action shotgun at the newcomers and pulled the trigger.
Crang!
The shells in the magazine gang-fired, and he ran three steps waving the spouting stumps of his arms below a ruined face and then toppled to lie still. The rest broke in panic, scuttling like rats back into the tangle of ruins. The newcomers opened fire, short accurate bursts, the empty shells sparkling in the sunlight as they spun up and the flat elastic
crackcrackcrack
echoing off the dead buildings. The
shoonk
. . .
boom!
of grenade launchers sounded.
Their leader stopped and removed his helmet. Pale hair showed beneath, pale eyes, a sharp-nosed Slavic face, though his followers were of half a dozen races. His eyes were faded blue, with tiny golden flecks visible only when the light struck at an angle.
“
Kakoy naverh trahaviy
!” he said, with limitless disgust in his tones.
Adrian’s observing mind translated automatically:
“
What a fuckup!
”
“We return,” he continued in English. “There’s obviously nothing worthwhile here.”
The pointed nose wrinkled at the corpses, and his upper lip rose to reveal his teeth.
“Not even any clean blood, and I am
hungry
. We go!”
Adrian sat upright—or tried to. The restraints around the wounds in his forearm and thigh stopped him, and the tubes and holders rattled where lines dripped plasma and saline and carefully metered drugs into him. He sank back with a hiss at the sharp stabbing pain and looked around the room by rolling his head from side to side.
“Hospital,” he muttered.
The institutional smell, clean and dismal, was unmistakable; the tray of congealing food somewhere near made it even plainer with its scents of overdone green beans and reconstituted mashed potatoes. Green-beige walls, linoleum on the floors, tracks on the ceiling for privacy curtains to be drawn around the beds. This was a smallish room, set up for two patients.
Waking up in hospitals without being sure exactly how he’d gotten there was no new experience. But . . .
Wait. I’m retired. I haven’t done this shit for years and years.
Memory crashed in, the killers with the silvered knives in the Japanese bathhouse. Ellen. His sister.
Ellen woke me up. I could
feel
it. It’s been a while. I was deep in trance, and then the link with Ellen.
He shivered, and continued to flog his mind back into working order. There was a drained feeling to it, as if he’d been Wreaking at high level without blood, forcing the Power to feed on himself.
Harvey
, he thought.
The other man was lying on the next bed with his boots off, limply asleep. Adrian blinked in shock at how
old
he looked, silver stubble showing on his cheeks and the eyes fallen in a little.
When did that happen?
In his mind’s eye Harvey Ledbetter was always a vibrant thirty-five, a tireless mass of gristle and bone and lean muscle and sharp penetrating blue eyes. Adrian was alert now, however weak his body. He let his head fall back on the pillow and closed his eyes, because that weakness made them prickle with half-shed tears.
All human beings are mortal
, he thought.
Including those you love, Adrian. Prepare yourself for more of this grief, unless you plan on dying soon.
The other bed creaked. He opened his eyes again; Harvey was sitting up, stamping his feet into the boots and lacing them, rubbing at his face. The grin was back, and the sparkle in the eyes that made you forget the gray and the wrinkles and the way the hands were getting knobby.
“You look like shit, Harv,” he said—or croaked.
“Said Mr. Kettle to the honey-bucket. You look like shit that’s been through the baby twice. Hold one.”
He went out; a few minutes later he returned with a big mug. Then he put a hand behind Adrian’s head and put it to his lips. The scent of the blood hit him a second before that, revulsion and longing together. It was almost
warm
. He looked a question.
“Usual source, just a bit fresher. Pretty well straight from the donor. You need it, ol’ buddy. We got connections here, but it ain’t altogether a Brotherhood establishment. Drink before someone comes by and asks questions.”
He drank. For an instant it tasted only of salt and metal, a sign of how drained he really was. Then it was like tofu—stale tofu with an overtone of slightly spoiled milk. There was only the mildest quiver of nausea as it hit his stomach, empty though that felt.
“Ahhh,” he sighed. “My God, don’t give me this Grand Cru Burgundy too often, Harv.”
“It’s back to the rotgut as soon as you’re out of here. I was gettin’ worried. You were in a trance lockdown—I had to jimmy those with a Wreaking—”
He pointed at a bank of monitors, which were now showing his
real
heartbeat and respiration and blood pressure. It would have been hard for the older man; everything came from his own reserves.
No wonder he looked so exhausted!
“—but it didn’t seem to be doing you all that much good, not like a real healin’ coma. Thought I might have to hold your nose and pour the blood down your gullet my own self.”
Adrian made a dismissive gesture. “Ellen woke me. Adrienne was . . . feeding on her.”
“You’ve got a pretty close link with that girl, don’t you?” A grin. “Don’t work with just
blood
, does it?”
“Dirty-minded
salop
,” he replied. Then: “Ellen is becoming acclimated to it, developing the addiction pattern. That was . . . not pleasant to observe. She was very frightened, and then . . . nearly ecstatic.”
Harvey sighed. “Look, ol’ buddy, you knew that was going to happen. It actually makes things easier for her and less likely to get on the receiving end of an overfeeding frenzy—which in case you hadn’t noticed, is
fatal
while blissing-out isn’t.”
“She has an addictive personality. She knows it and deals with it well. But in this situation she is more vulnerable.”
Harvey shrugged. “She can go through detox when we get her back. Concentrate on getting healed up so we can
do
something about it.”
Adrian crossed his arms and rested his hands on his shoulders. Breath in, out, in, out . . .
A few seconds later he opened his eyes again and hissed, “Damn those knives! I’m healing only a little faster than . . . ah . . .”
“Us normals,” Harvey said cheerfully. “Well, that’s what the blades were designed for. Sort of ironic, isn’t it? The Shadowspawn using ’em, that is.”
They had been witchfinders’ tools originally, the predecessors of the Brotherhood as the Order of the Black Dawn and kindred groups were of the Council of Shadows.
Adrian shrugged. “I’m going to give it another try. Flash cards for me, would you?”
Harvey grunted agreement; he pulled out a set of blanks the size of playing cards and spent a moment marking them with the artist’s pencils from Adrian’s pack.
“OK,” he said. “This is the
s-at’lauissi it’k-baiy
sequence.”
Adrian sank back again. As the glyphs were held before his eyes he murmured words—Words, rather, one of the earliest patterns children learned when the Power came on them.
I’ve failed World Lit; now I’m back to using alphabet blocks.
There was a soft heavy resistance, the lingering traces of the knives in his flesh. Let the pattern grow stronger, let the Mhabrogast syllables echo in his mind, louder and louder, until his personhood felt their edges . . .
He was gasping when his eyes opened again, but the pain in arm and leg had grown to a fiery itch. There was no way of avoiding
that
, and he set himself to ignore it.
“More,” he croaked.
Harvey lifted his head again. The blood vanished as if his tissues were soaking it up, but his head felt less light. Then water, and he sighed.
“I’ll be walking in a day or two. Real recovery . . . not too much longer.”
“If we live that long,” Harvey said grimly. “Got the make on those two mooks we assisted to shuffle off. Definitely Tōkairin clan muscle, partners who worked together regular. Up-and-comers.”
“Why?” he said, mystified.
“Could be general principles. They did edge out the Brézés for top-tiger position on the West Coast back when.”
“As if I cared! They know that.”
“The two you got were part of a security detail run by Michiko Tōkairin. She manages that for this section of the West Coast. Old Hajime lettin’ family feeling overcome prejudice about the weaker sex.
”
“Tōkairin Michiko,” Adrian corrected absently as his thoughts spun. “Surname first.”
“Well, excuse me your exalted multiculturalist poobah-ness. She ain’t really Japanese. Hell, strictly speaking you could argue whether she’s human.”
“And she’s a sibling-of-blood to Adrienne. And definitely not the weaker anything.”
Harvey made a grimace. Among Shadowspawn the sibling-of-blood relationship was a kind of fictive kinship; it also had sexual overtones but mainly referred to shared kills.
Not that that is altogether different from the way
actual
siblings among Shadowspawn act
, Adrian thought.
The older man reached under the bed he’d been napping on and hauled out a cardboard take-out box.
“Whatever the reason, if she came after us once, she may again. Put the cops on our trail, or Homeland Security spooks, too. We’re not official Brotherhood and we’re vulnerable.”
“I shall live with it,” Adrian said. “What have you got there?”
“Chicken
bánh mi
sandwiches on sourdough with cilantro, chilis and five-spice. And some croissants that actually taste like croissants, which ain’t so easy to find this side of the Atlantic.”
Adrian accepted one of the sandwiches gratefully; the mere scent of it drove out the smell of limp green beans and reconstituted mashed potatoes and mystery-meatloaf from the trolley out in the corridor. Accelerated healing required
food
.
“And Sheila came through with the report on the Brézé-clan properties,” Harvey went on.
He carefully cut the cards he’d marked with the glyphs—ideographic Mhabrogast—into confetti-small pieces and scraped them into a plastic Ziploc, to be burned later.
Then he wrapped his mouth around a huge bite of his sandwich. Indistinctly:
“Whole
lot
of Brézé properties, but there are only three or four likelies in the Central Coast area.”
Adrian’s lips thinned. “That is the problem. I got a visual impression with that . . . feeding incident, and the distance was less. Adrienne and Ellen were traveling. She’s
moving
, Harv. Where?”
“Getting closer, you said?”
“I think so.”
“Then maybe . . . we need to talk to the Tōkairin honcho ourselves.”
Adrian looked at him in surprise, and he went on: “Michiko likes Adrienne. Hajime don’t. I’ll put out feelers, but if he accepts, it’ll be you he wants to talk to. I’m just an ape, remember?”
“How could I forget, my old? You
are
an ape.”
Harvey laughed. “Now you need some more sleep.”
“Yes.” He sighed. Then: “No. First I must tell you of the Seeings I had, before the feeding woke me.”
He did. Harvey whistled. “Sheila was right. They
are
plannin’ something a mite drastic.”
“Several things. Those were unrealized alternates. They both felt . . . loose, not nearly determinate. And Adrienne and Dmitri were in both. Somehow something
we
do affects those outcomes.”
Harvey’s mouth twisted. “Neither of ’em’s what I’d call desirable.” Adrian shrugged, half-conscious. “Ellen. I must rescue Ellen. The rest . . . it can wait.”
Harvey leaned over him and smiled, a tender expression incongruous on the rugged bristly face.
“Right, ol’ buddy. You get some shut-eye.”
“Ellen,” he murmured, and sank into the waiting darkness.
Hungry,
Ellen thought, as the motorcycle burbled to a stop amid a small parking lot.
Stiff. Cold.
She’d been drifting for most of the ride through the endless outskirts and suburbs south of the city. Now they were in San Francisco’s core, bright and lively. Ellen shivered again as she glanced at the people and traffic.
It’s all a false front
, she thought.
Now I know what’s real. And oh, God, how I wish I didn’t.
“We’ll get you warm and fed,
chérie
,” Adrienne said.
The restaurant was on Post Street, near Union Square; Ellen had a confused sense of recently-renovated antique magnificence, arched ceilings with mosaics and Art Nouveau marine-themed lamps. For a moment she felt hideously underdressed in her plain jeans and rumpled T-shirt and wind-tangled blond thatch; then her stomach twisted at the subtle scents.
I look like I’m homeless!
“And I’m in motorcycle leathers,” Adrienne pointed out. “This is San Francisco. Nobody would bat an eye if you were in a bustier and pink boxers with your head shaved.”
The maître d’ came up, smiling. “This way, Ms. Brézé. Ms. Tōkairin just arrived and is in the Sevruga room.”
He had the art of being deferential but not oily. The door to which he ushered them had an unusual addition; two Japanese-looking men in expensive suits flanking it, standing with their hands crossed. Within was a small private dining chamber, restrained in white and beige, the walls mostly covered in a wine library—bottles on slightly inclined shelves. There were a couple of nautical-fisherman paintings as well. The round table could have held four comfortably. The young woman sitting there was alone, and—