Read The Triad of Finity Online
Authors: Kevin Emerson
This book is dedicated to the readers who commented tirelessly on my message board or emailed me demanding more Oliver, Emalie, and Dean. I couldn’t have made it through this whole series without you.
And to M.W. and M.B., whose belief in these books never wavered.
Prologue
At the center of everything stood a Gate.
The Gate had never been opened. It had been made, and then shut. Some said that the sound of its closing began the universe. And ever since then, it stood watch over the airless, blood-red plains of Nexia. Above, stars and planets hung like crystal ornaments in a pure-black sky. Nebulae and galaxies fluttered and shimmered. Rings of dust and star fire arced and spun. Wormholes spiraled in inky swirls out to the wide universe beyond.
The Gate stood among the ruins of an ancient civilization: broken amethyst spires, jade columns, enormous statue heads with blank expressions and solid gold eyes, all stuck in the crimson rock as if it had solidified around them. The Architects had once lived here, and there was much debate about who they really were, and what they really wanted.
But as to what they had done, most beings who were
in the know
understood: The Architects had built the universe, then the Gate. When they were finished, each had taken up a sentry position in one of the worlds. They were guardians of their creations. Watchers. All except one, and she, much to the displeasure of her brothers and sisters, had been very busy.
This Architect had taken a most dangerous assignment, watching over the world of Earth, where the effects of Finity were most severe. Finity was time with an end. In the matter-based worlds like Earth, things formed and unformed, lived and died, all ruled by time. It was a maddening state of existence for any creature, knowing that their time would someday run out. It was especially maddening for any being whose existence had formerly been
in
finite.
This was the case with the Architect, Désirée. Though Finity wasn’t going to snuff her out, it had warped her otherwise far-reaching mind and made it prone to Finity’s poles: light and dark, which created the intense qualities of good and evil on Earth. The rest of the Architects had known this was a danger, but so were most things in the universe. And besides, Désirée had asked for the job, actually competed for it, because—and it would shock the many higher beings of the universe to hear this—
life
was the Architects’ most prized creation.
But Désirée was not the only being on Earth who was suffering due to Finity. There was another group, demons of the higher worlds who had been exiled to Earth for their crimes, the ultimate form of universal punishment. They’d been put inside mortal bodies and doomed to die as dust within just a few short centuries. These pitiable beings were known on Earth as vampires, and they did not like their lot in the universe one bit.
And so they were planning to escape. To open the Gate and restart the universe, to be eternal once more, to be free. That opening the Gate would cause a great upheaval sure to reshuffle the entire order of the universe, not to mention kill all the living beings, was of little concern. Anything was better than being trapped in the eternal tomb of Earth.
The Gate didn’t care about the yearnings of the
vampyr
or the manipulations of Désirée, or even about the price of happy thoughts on the Merchynt market or any of the other business of the many worlds. All it cared about was its function. There was a great debate about whether or not the Gate was meant to be opened or to remain closed, but the Gate knew exactly what it had been made to do. And it knew that this purpose was soon to be tested, and that this test involved the ancient demon who was now before it.
He’s late,
said the Gate.
The gentleman Illisius, an ancient and powerful demon whose features seemed ageless, sat cross-legged in the middle of a road made of black obsidian shards. He pushed up the cuff of his fine pinstriped suit and checked the seven dials of his silver watch.
Somewhat,
he replied.
Perhaps your plan is in jeopardy.
Illisius smiled.
On the contrary. Our plan is nearing its completion. You sensed the Anointment, did you not?
Indeed. Yet it did not go as you expected.
That would be true, if we were foolish enough to believe in expectations. We cannot know what will happen until it happens. Therefore, the fact that the Anointment happened means it was a success.
The Gate sighed.
Yes, but there were complications.
Illisius smiled.
One being’s complications are another being’s opportunities.
I suppose,
said the Gate.
Two years passed.
Then a sound broke the total silence. Beeping. Illisius once again consulted his watch.
Ah, yes.
He stood, brushed off his pants, and picked up his briefcase. It was made of iridescent, scaled skin, and refracted prisms of the golden Gate light.
Going somewhere?
The Gate asked.
As if in reply, hooves crunched against the road. Illisius turned to see the distant form of a coach, pulled by two zombie horses, clattering near.
I thought you were waiting for the vampire boy,
said the Gate.
I was.
The stagecoach door opened. A pale hand retreated back into the coach, belonging to a figure sitting in the shadows.
The Gate considered this figure.
Interesting.
Isn’t it?
said Illisius. He turned, a broad smile revealing his bright, blade-edged teeth. His ancient eyes, the color of battle-scarred bronze, gleamed.
Like I said, things happen.
He started toward the coach.
Seems I’ll be making a house call, instead. And when we return, we shall open you.
Bold words, from someone who said we can’t know the future,
said the Gate.
Illisius laughed.
True,
he said,
but all the same. … See you soon.
Chapter 1
The Menteur’s Heart
Night falls pleasantly early in Seattle in November. The days are brief, cloudy, barely ever seeming brighter than twilight. On the rare afternoons when the sun even appears, it cowers in the far corner of the sky, pale, fleeting. The mountains gather their first blankets of snow, the ocean cools to gray, the last leaves fall. Humans wrap themselves tightly in coats and scarves. They retreat into their homes earlier, huddling in the warmth and light to celebrate their harvest. And beyond their closed window shades, the city’s other inhabitants enjoy the long, dark hours.
This November had been exceptionally rainy, and that put a spring in the lurking steps of all who woke at dusk, with the notable exception of a certain vampire family, who rose one Thursday evening with a foreboding event on their calendar.
Mr. Crevlyn was scheduled to arrive promptly at eight.
“This sucks,” said Oliver Nocturne as he entered the kitchen and slouched down on a stool at the center island.
“Now, now,” said Phlox from across the kitchen, where she worked over the gleaming titanium forge, her back to him. “It will be fine.”
Oliver dropped his heavy backpack to the polished stone floor with a thud and leaned on his elbows. He brushed his hair from his eyes—he’d been letting it grow the last few months, and had even put a green streak in the front—and took a sip from the lead goblet before him. He was glad for the sweet, slightly citrusy taste of kangaroo blood. It was one of his favorites. Still, it wasn’t enough to change his current mood. “It’s not going to be fine,” he muttered.
“Well,” said Phlox, turning around with a steaming skillet in one hand and a spatula in the other, “there’s nothing we can do except endure it.” She was dressed smartly as usual, her platinum hair wrapped up in a severe bun.
Oliver rolled his eyes. How many times had Phlox said that lately? “Why do we have to endure it? How about we tell them
no
, for once, and then—”
Phlox’s eyes flared from their usual hazel to a brilliant turquoise. “Charles,” she began—but stopped.
Oliver looked away. It rarely happened anymore, but sometimes, when she was flustered, Phlox still slipped. Oliver didn’t feel mad at his mom for this. Instead, he felt a surge of … weird. It only happened when he was acting defiant or insolent, like his older brother Bane used to, before he’d been slain to dust. Actually, Oliver was maybe proud of that, of being able to channel his brother now and then. Except it made him miss Bane, too. Right about now, Bane would have come sauntering up the stairs, probably slapped Oliver on the back of the head before dropping down beside him. … Instead, the kitchen was silent.
“Sorry,” said Phlox quietly. She slid a trio of deep-fried dumplings onto a cast-iron plate. “Oliver,” she began again, “you have to understand …” Her eyes, no longer glowing, arched toward the ceiling. This was Phlox’s now well-understood reminder that everything they said was being monitored by hidden microphones.
Oliver sighed. “I know,” he said dejectedly, “but, sometimes I just …” He shook his head. “Whatever.” He reached for the plate and Phlox’s delicate ivory hand fell atop his. He felt the reassuring cool of her skin, the razor scratch of her burgundy-painted fingernails.
“It will be okay,” she said.
Oliver nodded, but that was getting harder to believe. He slid the plate over and took a bite of a still-sizzling fritter, his taste buds delighting, in spite of his mood, at the burst of molten chocolate inside, spiced with habañero concentrate and especially sweet with the addition of extracted lynx adrenaline, which not only tasted like mint but was known to have relaxing properties. Like the kangaroo blood, this was another rare treat that Phlox surely intended to counteract the ordeal Oliver was about to endure.
Footsteps clicked up the stone staircase and Sebastian swept into the kitchen. “Hey Ollie,” he said, rubbing Oliver’s hair as he passed. He was dressed in a sleek black suit. He picked up a goblet at the far end of the island, took a long swig, then traded it for a stone mug of coffee which had been sitting on a small warming plate on the counter, bubbling away. Vampires liked their coffee hot, preferably boiling. He tapped a dash of cayenne pepper into it before drinking.
“Any updates about our guest?” Phlox asked as she opened the refrigerator. Its silver door rose upward to the ceiling with a hiss.
“Nothing new,” said Sebastian. “Same as the other visits, as far as I’ve been told.”
“You know,” said Phlox thinly as she arranged the clear plastic bags of blood hanging on racks in the fridge, “Mother told me that Mr. Crevlyn’s not even technically a physician anymore. Apparently he was formally stripped of his license for
questionable
practices. That’s why he took the job at the Asylum Colony. They have looser standards.” Oliver’s grandparents lived in Morosia, the underworld beneath Europe.
“Sounds like the perfect person to be the new head of Half-Light,” said Sebastian grimly.
Phlox turned to him and her mouth curled skeptically.
“What did he do, anyway?” Oliver asked. “To lose his license?”
“Well,” Phlox began, “it’s all confidential, but Mother says the word in Morosia is that at the Asylum Colony, Mr. Crevlyn was in charge of the demosapien alchemy division.”
“What’s that?”
“The mixing of demons with living humans,” said Sebastian gruffly, checking his watch, “and it’s nothing we need to discuss further.”
Oliver was fine with ending the talk. Humans and demons … it reminded him of something he didn’t want to think about, anyway: the
other
thing he had to do before school tonight.