Blood & Magic (26 page)

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Authors: George Barlow

BOOK: Blood & Magic
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- Chapter 40 -
Béarnaise & Bogey-men

There was a rapping at the door, the brass knocker repeatedly slammed into its ancient support causing the entire frame to shake.

“Would you get that please, Ruth?” Meyer said.

Heavy footsteps thundered down the stairs and, assuming that it was her, Meyer carried on attending to his sauce. The Béarnaise was about ready, the tang of the white wine filling Meyer’s nostrils as he took pleasure in his accomplishment. Meyer didn’t often cook, but when he did decide to, he liked to ensure it was impressive and his version of Béarnaise was certainly that.

The general sounds of pleasantries were all Meyer could make out, until Ruth walked into the kitchen followed by young Henry.

“Good evening, Master Henry. What can we do for you?” Meyer said.

“Where to begin? Gabriel is helping me move out of my flat, he says it's no longer safe for me there?” Henry said.

“That is my doing. The house has a hundred wards carved into its walls, magus protection to stop people attacking or even finding you there. You should be somewhere safe.”

“Because of the fifth blood?”

“Oh Henry... what a mess this all is. Eat with us, I will explain everything as I see it. I think I have all the pieces now, apart from the definite identity of Grendal. Go, set another place at the table.”

Meyer returned to the kitchen and plated three dishes, Ruth helping him bring them through to the dining room. He poured wine, a very nice bottle of Châteauneuf-du-Pape, and tucked in.

“Boy, please eat. When we have finished, I will tell you everything, but it is a shame to let such great cooking go to waste.”

They ate in total silence, even Ruth did not utter a word. It was the longest he had ever known her to be silent, but the events at Sabrina's lair had left them both anxious. Meyer finished and, laying his knife and fork to rest on the plate, he began.

“First, let me tell you about the fifth blood. You know about the hybrid types, well these came about because of experimentation with the blood from individuals with all five types of alternate power. When the experiment failed with the third orders, all known fifth order alternates were put to death, nobody wanting a reminder of what had happened or the potential for more experiments. It appears that a single sample of the fifth blood remained in existence and I imagine that your father found it with the aim of stopping it falling into the wrong hands. It might explain why he told me to wipe your memories of him, he wouldn't have wanted you to be in the danger he was. I am betting Wade is aware you hold this knowledge, as he has been searching for the Inquisitor family that knows the location for years. I believe he hired Grendal to hunt down and interrogate Inks he suspected knew where the fifth blood was and your father was the last victim.”

“That is why Mark killed himself,” Henry said. “He realised he would be captured and didn't want the information to get out. So Wade
is
behind this? You have proof?”

“Some, but not enough. If you capture Grendal, we can prove Wade's guilt. I doubt he has any loyalties to him,” Meyer said.

Meyer had to admit that was easier said than done, but it was their only option.

“So who do you suspect to be Grendal? And who took my father’s body?” Henry said.

“I am still confirming that, but we know that Sabrina's brother took Mark's body from the morgue. He may be Grendal, I am really not sure.”

“What's our next move?”

“You hunt down Grendal, go to Sabrina and find Silas, he will know who Grendal is. There is a chance Silas is Grendal, so we should be prepared for that eventuality,” Meyer said.

“It's not safe,” Ruth said, surprised at Meyer's words.

“Who can we trust?” Henry said.

“Tristan, Jonny, Gabriel of course, and Superintendent Stroud - he has helped us in the past,” Meyer said.

“You can't let him,” Ruth said.

“We have no other choice. The more help the better, Grendal won't be easy to catch and Henry will make sure Tristan doesn't kill him. I have organised a meeting at your house, together you can work out what is the best plan of attack. There isn't long before Wade makes his next move, or one of the other third-orders. They all want that blood,” Meyer said.

Meyer led Henry to the front door and shook the boy's hand. He would need luck on his side for this to work and, although Meyer knew it was wrong to push this on him, what choice did he have? Meyer closed the door.

“You shouldn't have done that,” Ruth said.

“I had no choice, we need to stop Wade.”

“You will do anything to take him down but it
is not right
to have put the boy in danger to feed your hatred. Wade has done unspeakable things, but Henry should be kept out of it, the others can cope.”

“Henry will make sure they don't kill him, I can't trust Tristan to do that.”

“You have gone too far this time.”

Meyer pushed past Ruth and headed to the library, taking his old leather chair by the fire. Ruth followed him in, standing with her hands on her hips, blocking the firelight.

“What do you
really
think Wade wants the fifth blood for? I mean, what could he do with it?”

“To make more third orders? Although given the fact that one of them-”


Adrianna
. I’m not scared of her bloody name,” Ruth interrupted.

“Ok then. Given Adrianna wants to kill Wade, why would he want more like her?”

Meyer looked to the files laid on the nearby table, the word 'Potential' just visible in the firelight as flames danced in the whiskey glass next to it. Who would they go to on the council? Meyer knew them all pretty well but, as much as he trusted the likes of Robin or Ione, they had little sway over things.
Oberon
. Meyer was sure he could trust him, he would take the evidence and Grendal himself to Oberon, let him cope with Wade.

“What about the man who spoke to Sabrina?” Ruth said.

“She delayed him by, what, six months? We have that long to find him and kill him. Sabrina will be our first clue as to where he is, I will enter her mind and find out.”

“There aren’t many of the five he could have been is there? If it is
him
, how could he have survived this long?”

“Grendal and Adrianna have, why not the others?”

“I don’t like any of this, something doesn’t add up here Meyer, and it doesn’t end there. Rosalyn got back to me about that thing you found in Wade's office, she will drop it round tomorrow. She said its a thingy that will activate physical magus in a human, said it was unlike anything she has seen before, she couldn’t even be sure of all the things it was made of.”

Meyer smiled at her.

“She may have said all that with a few more technical sounding words, but you get the gist,” Ruth said.

“I do. Making humans alternates? Why would Helena do-”

A mentalist's sight is something akin to radar, but far more descriptive of the people it meets. That is, except if those people have had blocking training or are in fact mentalists themselves, in which case they appear as a blur of consciousness. It was sensing two groups of such blurs, approaching in what must have been vans given the closeness of them and their speed as they came to a stop simultaneously at the front and back of the house, that brought a pause to his words.

“Ruth, we have company. Get out of here,” Meyer said.

Ruth stood up and raised her hands in front of her, making small circular motions with each wrist, whispering something under her breath.

“Twelve of them, seven at the front, five at the back. All strong life forces, if I were to guess, I would say they were all-”

“Inquisitors.”

He could sense that fact, not only were the mental signatures of the people that approached the house blurred, but the amount of blurring increased as individually they cycled through their powers, coming to a rest on Mentalism.

“You need to run,” Meyer said.

“I'm not going anywhere.”

There was an explosion, the sound of splintering wood coming from the front and back doors at the same time. Meyer rose from his chair and threw his walking stick to Ruth.

“Thanks my dear,” she said.

Inquisitors sent to kill them, or just to capture them? He imagined he would find out soon, his only real regret was that Ruth was here. She deserved to be safe, he had never wanted her to get mixed up in this.

The gentle sound of footsteps converged on the room and through the door to the library walked a group of figures in dark clothes, their weapons just visible beneath their long coats.

“Meyer, you are under arrest for treason. You will comply or be detained by force,” a woman's voice said from his side, although he didn't recognise it.

Meyer looked to Ruth, who was tightening her grip on the stick. They weren't going to go peacefully. He built up his power in his mind, taking as much as he thought would be needed and looked to Ruth, giving her the slightest of smiles.


Obliterate
,” Meyer said.

His mental projection flew towards the woman. Around her consciousness was a fortress of defences, but Meyer was throwing a hurricane at a sandcastle, she had no real protection. She fell to her knees, slumping to the floor unconscious as the rest of the group charged at them.

Meyer focused his power for another attack and aimed at the man closest to him, who went down with a satisfying thud. Two were on Ruth and from the corner of Meyer's eye, he could see her fighting off their attacks. Ruth moved too quickly for them, however tides change and it wasn’t long before they found a far easier target. Meyer.

He was not going to be quick enough to dodge them, that much was obvious, but there was another trick available to him. Charging his magus up, he released it.


Tempus
.”

Meyer let a pulse of magus leave his body, a spell meant to startle his attackers, slow their mental movements and give Ruth precious moments to attack. Six or seven of them staggered back, their minds overcome, but the rest did not. Meyer saw the gun rise and fire not once, but four times. The plasma was hot on his skin as the stunner took its effect. His body was forced into unconsciousness. Even with all his power he could not stop it. He fell to the floor, like a felled tree and as he did so, glimpsed Ruth rushing towards him. A second later, Meyer heard his stick clatter to the floor.

They had lost.

- Chapter 41 -
And then things got worse

Henry left Meyer’s house, his mind a daze with theories and myth. He could count the people he could trust on one hand, and even some of those he was unsure of, having only known them for a span of days. Looking to his phone, Henry had expected a message from Gabriel, but there wasn’t one. He had gone to collect Henry’s stuff from his flat to Mark's house, under order of Meyer. Henry dialled Gabriel’s number and waited as the ringing chime repeated over and over, but there was no answer.
Odd
. Deciding the most likely out of the two possibilities of where he would be, Henry headed to the house. Gabriel was probably already helping himself to the whiskey.

The underground was quiet at that time of night and Henry found himself there within half an hour, something that would have been impossible merely hours earlier in the five o’clock rush. Entering the house, Henry knew something was wrong. Gabriel was nowhere to be found, but more concerning was the fact none of Henry's stuff was either - Gabriel hadn't been here at all. He tried his phone again, but the same repeated tones greeted him, never to be answered. Where was he?

Five minutes later, Henry was back on the tube at Baker Street, taking the Jubilee line down to Bond Street and then the Central line across the Bank.

Leaving the station, Henry's phone rang and he answered it immediately.

“Gabriel?”

“Who's Gabriel?” a female voice said, it was Elle.

“Oh… sorry. I was expecting a call from... A friend. Everything alright?”

“Does something have to be wrong for me to want to talk to you?” Elle said and Henry could tell she was smiling.

“No, of course not.”

Henry approached the door of the flats and rang the buzzer for his own apartment. There was no answer. He tried again.

“So, I am having a house party tonight,” Elle said.

Damn. Where was this leading? Was she going to invite him, wasn't she? The idea of that many people all trying to have fun and him being a bore in the midst of it all sent Henry’s chest thumping.

“Oh, that’s nice.”

“And I was wondering if…”

Damn! Why couldn’t he just relax around people, enjoy the things normal people enjoyed. Henry reached for his keys, but realised that he didn’t have them, having given them to Gabriel.

“...you fancied coming along? It should be good fun,” Elle said.

“Oh, well, I…”

“You have plans?”

Henry fumbled through the equipment until he found the multi-tool device, waving it across the entry system until the door beeped open. That thing was going to be infinitely useful.

“I said do you have plans?” Elle said.

“No, but…”

“So you’ll come? You know my address?”

“I do, but actually, I’m going to have to pass.”

“Why?”

That was a very good question. How could he phrase this.

“I’m alright thanks.”

“Alright with what? Not sure that made sense.”

She was right, it didn’t. Damn it. Why would she even want him there?

“I’m not in the mood, some other time?”

“You always say that.”

“I don’t.”

“You do. You never come out and you always promise you’ll go
next time
, but then you never actually do. It’s an effort to get you to come for a drink with me and Dixie. What’s wrong Henry, don’t you like our company?”

Henry stepped into the lift and took a deep sigh, what the hell could he say?

“I do, I’m just not really a party kind of guy.”

“Oh.”

He had been, although he was a different person back then. What was he doing with his life? Henry punched the elevator wall with his fist, the pain easing his anger for a moment.

“Well, part of the reason I wanted you to come was… Oh, it doesn’t matter.”

“What were you going to say?”

“It isn’t important.”

“Oh come on, tell me.”

“Because I wanted to talk to you, properly. Drink always helps you speak more freely.”

That was true, drink did help. The only problem was, in order to get to a situation where he could half relax, Henry had to consume such a large amount, it was both a danger to his health and his wallet. He had to drink and keep drinking, which resulted in his body for the next few days being quite a hostile place to inhabit. He hated to have to do it in the first place, it made him feel stupid and weak, so he had taken to avoiding the process at all costs.

The elevator doors closed and the lift growled into action.

“What about?”

“Just about choices. I don’t know Henry, I feel you keep so much hidden, I want to know the
real
you.”

She really didn’t want to know the
real
him. Henry hated knowing the
real
him and he wasn’t going to put that uncomfortable burden on anyone else.

“I want to talk to you, and I want you to feel you can talk to me, about anything. You see-”

The elevator doors opened. Along the corridor, all of the lights were off and as the doors of the elevator chimed shut behind him, Henry was left in complete darkness. His heart pounded, beating in his ears - the situation was an all too familiar one.

“I’ve got to go,” Henry said, ending the call.

He picked up the multitool again and activated the torch, harsh white light cutting through the darkness around him. Nervously, he moved the torch up and down the corridor.

Christ, he had just hung up on Elle. She was trying to get through to him, heck she wanted to speak to him and he had put a stop to that. He was such an arse sometimes, although for once, his reason for escaping had been a genuine one.

Henry moved along the carpeted floor towards his apartment, fumbling for his gun. Focusing his magus, it activated with a buzz as he gripped the handle tightly, pointing the weapon ahead of him. For a moment, he stood beside his front door, which was ajar, and pondered what they usually do next in the movies. Henry took a deep breath and slowly pushed the door fully open.

He tried the switch, but the light didn’t turn on, the single room which comprised of his living and dining area remaining dark and still. Too still. Every movement of a car outside caused shadows to run across the walls, like rats scurrying through a sewer. Henry kept his back to the door, scanning in front of him as he moved further in. The living room had been ransacked, chairs overturned and his glass table shattered. He shone the torch on the fragmented pieces scattered across the floor and noticed the distinct colour of blood decorating the shards. Moving left and towards the kitchen, Henry kept the gun trained on the middle of the room. He prayed his training would work when he needed it to, that all of Ruth’s efforts hadn’t been made in vain.

The kitchen was untouched, a microwavable meal still sitting on the counter, it’s packaging stuck to the worktop. There was a creak from behind him and Henry spun round, but he couldn’t see anything. His stomach ground to a halt, as nervous butterflies lay dead in that moment of silence. Henry surveyed the rest of the room, clutching the gun tightly between his palm and fingers, a layer of sweat building between them, the grip slipping ever so slightly.

One foot gently placed in front of the other and avoiding the remnants of tables, papers and pictures that lay in pieces around his feet, Henry moved across the living room. Everything he owned had been destroyed. They had been looking for something, but what? Henry moved toward the bedroom door, which was half open and, filling his lungs with as much air as they could take, Henry kicked the door wide open and shone the light across the room. To the right of the bed, Henry saw a pair of legs lying motionless on the floor. Gabriel. Henry found himself having to fight himself not to run to him, for all he knew, the attacker was still here.

Henry had seen the crime photos, Grendal’s victims never knew he was coming, he moved too fast, without noise, without warning. If Grendal had killed his father, what chance did Henry have against him? Something brushed against his shoulder. Henry span round and fired the weapon into the darkness, the room revealed in bursts of bright blue light, but the flat was empty. Had he imagined that? Henry turned back to the bedroom as a pair of blue eyes flew towards him with impossible speed, rising into the air before landing on his chest, hard. Henry’s arms flew up to defend himself, but he wasn’t quick enough. As he fell, the gun flew from his grip, turning back into a solid metal box as it hit the floor, its connection to Henry’s magus lost.

The weight on Henry’s chest increased as they hit the floor, a gown of black cloth falling over his body as the blue eyes stared unblinking, inches from his own. He could not make out any other features, hypnotised through fear as fingers closed around his neck. Henry frantically tried to move his arms to defend himself, but they were pinned. This was the last thing Mark had seen before he died, it was the only part of the memory that clung with Henry and now he was witnessing it again, first hand. Henry felt his body go numb, his limbs becoming as heavy as lead. With no air to breath, no way to resist, this was it, this was how it ended.

It seemed like an hour, but was in fact, it can only have been minutes that Henry lay unconscious. He awoke gasping for breath, life more like a dream than reality. He struggled to sit up, clawing himself across the room to Gabriel’s side. He was still breathing. Neon blue light poured in through the windows as the ambulance finally arrived. Surrounded by paramedics, Henry was pushed aside as they lifted Gabriel’s limp body, scarred with cuts and bruises, onto to a stretcher. Reaching the hospital, Gabriel was wheeled along sterile corridors and taken out of sight into ITU, leaving Henry behind in the corridor.

He had been in the same room as Grendal, but had survived. For some reason, Grendal had let him live. Henry sat alone in the waiting room, at least that was how he felt amongst the crowd of faceless people. More alone than he had ever been. His guardian, his ally, and perhaps even his friend, was fighting for his life in a nearby room and there was nothing Henry could do to help.

This had to end. Tonight.

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