Author's Notes: This story (and every other
"Urban Legend") is set in a variant of Gryph's
"Deep Water" universe, developed by Gryph
and Laura Boeff. Series splits off somewhere before
"Gambit", and Jeff O'Neill is not part of the team. Gargoyles belongs to
Seirian Mailli
(SAY-ree-ann MAY-lee); Gwydrfaen
(GUI-dra-vay-en). Spell translations and
pronunciations at the end of chapter 2.
Nothing Could Possibly Go Wrong
"Merde...."
Monique's dark eyes stared, reflecting the pillar of black light rising from
the north.
Nick felt his heart drop
to his boots. The way the top of that pillar was expanding into the clouds-
"Below!" he ordered, catching Mendel as
Godzilla seized the H.E.A.T. Seeker's hull. "Everyone
below, now!"
Mass tangle of bodies;
Nick shoved a violet wing out of his face, hearing the heavy clank as Monique
bolted the door. He felt water rush past massive scales, felt the hull creak in
a taloned grip as Godzilla raced for the open ocean.
It couldn't be what it looked like. Please, let it not be what it looked
like.... Don't look back! he warned his charge.
Dive when it comes!
Stubborn
refusal.
Godzilla would not leave him.
Then take the boat down
with you! The hull
might not hold. But he'd take that bet, over the shock wave he feared was
coming.
"Harbor Authority,
come in!" Elsie, on the radio. "This is the H.E.A.T.
Seeker. Take cover! Unknown explosion sighted in
Nick reached into his
shirt pocket, pulled out warm gold. The dragon's eyes were ablaze with light.
Colorless flames wreathed the brooch, coiling outward to wrap the whole of the
hold.
A jolt flung them against
the bulkheads; he sensed the desperate push, as Godzilla burrowed deep into
harbor water.
No time to warn
The world dissolved in
flames.
***
"Five days ago we
lost
Nate Ramsey slammed down a phone.
"That was NORAD," the balding NSA man said in disgust. "
"Equal-opportunity
death and destruction," Craig Donovan noted. "Not your average
terrorist."
Frank Parker tilted his
head. "And you're telling me nobody knows how she's doing it?"
Talmadge shook his head. "If it
weren't for Dr. Chapman's broadcast, we wouldn't even know where to look."
Frank grimaced. Nobody'd heard a peep from H.E.A.T. since. Though from the
scatter of rad readings they'd pulled through the
static, Godzilla was still out there, chasing something through the tri-state
area.
"But given that it's
"Big place,"
Frank noted.
"And we don't have
much time to narrow it down." Talmadge looked
ready to bite through nails. "It would seem it takes the threat of nuclear
bombardment for a few of our shadowy colleagues to turn loose of certain
classified data." He rubbed at a headache. "Isaac said he might have
a lead."
Black Ops, Frank thought. Why was he not surprised? "So what's this Demona want?"
"I would say, nothing
less than the total destruction of the human race." Dr. Olga Vukavitch shuffled her notes. "She's driven by a great
rage, Mr. Parker. The kind of rage that only comes from
self-hate." She glanced at the door as two MIBs
stalked through, dragging a manacled elderly man. Behind them stalked Dr. Isaac
Mentnor, normally warm gaze gone chill and angry.
"Isaac?"
"I'll tell you
nothing," the manacled man sneered. His black silk suit was rumpled, neat
creases broken by rough handling. Dark eyes flicked arrogantly about the room,
weighing and dismissing each person in turn. "You're wasting your time.
And mine." He rattled his chains. "Let me loose, and I'll see if I
can salvage what's left of your career."
"I don't think so,
Patrick," Isaac said softly. A nod from him, and the MIBs
shoved Patrick into a chair. "You will answer me. The only question is
whether you do so now, or after we order Dr. Vukavich
to use some of her... more unpleasant substances on you."
"What, without the
guts to do it yourself?" Cold brown eyes narrowed.
Mentnor checked his watch. "In three
hours, Patrick, I will do so."
Frank let loose a silent
whistle, trading glances with the rest of the table. The last time he'd seen
Isaac this ticked off, some Black Ops idiot from FEMA had tried to wipe out the
entire town of
The
first hint of fear.
"You wouldn't dare. I'd never survive it." The sneer recovered.
"And you've never had the stomach for murder."
"Murder, no.
Self-defense... I estimate Demona's forces will be
here within another eighteen hours." Noting how that struck home, Isaac
leaned closer. "Seirian Mailli. Where?"
"I don't know where
that murdering bi-" Patrick cut off his words at the angry glitter in
Olga's eyes. "I don't know where she is. It's the truth," he said
flatly. "Don't you think I'd have her arrested if I did?"
"I know you'd
try." Isaac straightened. "She's hunted you and yours for
eighty-three years, Patrick. And now she knows you lied to her about Eurielle's child."
"Yes, that was rather
helpful of you, Isaac." A glitter of pure malice in
ancient eyes. "I wonder what she would've done if she knew about
you?"
"If I'd any
idea-" Isaac cut himself off. "
A smile stretched
Patrick's wrinkles, cruel and uncaring as a shark's maw. Frank shuddered
inside, seeing eyes flat and cold as any psycho he'd taken down in the past two
years. "Dead at last. Do you know, I was beginning to suspect she'd outlive me? Shot,
stabbed, poisoned; witch didn't have the good taste to lie down and die-"
Isaac's glance flicked to
the MIBs. "Hold him somewhere secure."
"You'll never win,
Isaac!" Patrick called out as the anonymous suits hauled him away.
"She's dead; she and all her bleeding-heart kind-"
"I trust there was a
point to this?" Talmadge asked carefully.
Mentnor breathed out anger. Wiped his hands on a paper towel, as if he'd handled something
foul. "Patrick Inire," he identified
the now-vanished man. "We worked together once. Some decades later, he
asked me for a favor." The elderly scientist shook his head. "Never
grant an Inire a favor." Isaac paced slowly
across the room. "You know there are... forces that science does not
admit."
"Like your pet
psychic project," Frank interrupted.
"Far
less conventional than that, Frank." Mentnor drew to a halt.
"The creature you have seen on Demona's
broadcast is no creation of special effects. It is - she is - known to us. And has been, since the Second World War." A push of a
button brought up a freeze-frame from the newscast; the incessant, mocking tape
that had appeared throughout the world. A blue-skinned figure of nightmares
loomed over the lens; wings spread, fangs gleaming, eyes aglow with ruby fires.
Gold crowned her horns, and bloody, taloned fingers
caressed a broken human body. "She is... a gargoyle."
Ramsey looked at him
cross-eyed. "You're not going to tell us the Big Apple got wiped off the
planet by a drainspout."
"Hardly." Mentnor's
smile didn't reach his eyes. He fanned a folder across the table; Frank flipped
through it, noting weird terms like hexapodal,
diurnal petrihibernation, regenerative
capabilities. "They're very few these days. We humans tend to destroy
them while they sleep; as we have for thousands of years."
Olga sat up straight,
finger poised over a sentence. "Another sentient
species?"
"Genocide on a scale
we can only imagine." The elderly scientist toyed with his sweater cuff.
"Demona has sought revenge on us - on all of
humankind - for a very long time." He met Parker's gaze. "I don't
know how she's done it, Frank. But I can tell you how to find someone who
can."
Frank put his folder down.
"I hear a catch coming."
Isaac reached over the
table, flipped the folder to a grainy surveillance photo of a white-haired
woman. "Seirian Mailli,"
he identified the slim, elderly form. "Also known as
Sarah Ann Mary. Wanted on twenty-one counts of murder
in upstate
Donovan squinted at the
file. "She's a hundred and seven, Isaac."
"And she could most
likely kill you before you could draw a weapon. Don't underestimate her." Mentnor looked grave. "She has no reason to help us,
and above all, you must not mention my name." Knuckles turned white as he
gripped a chair back. "Inire never makes empty
threats."
"Real
sweetheart," Frank noted.
Olga shoved back her
reading glasses. "So why will she help us?"
"Because
we'll tell her part of the truth. You're there to save lives, Frank. One life in particular
that Seirian cares for dearly." Another page
flip; a photo of a young, brown-haired mouse of a scientist, that brought back
memories of rainy broadcasts from New York, of a scaly monster broken and dying
on the Brooklyn Bridge. "Dr. Niko Tatopoulos."
***
"Remember not to move
the gain knob," Talmadge instructed as they
headed for the Sphere. "Call us once you've started the feedback device.
It's still experimental, and it may take some time to catch Ms. Mailli's attention."
"As far as plans go,
Bradley, I want to say this is not one of my favorites," Frank pointed
out. He rattled the steel casing. "Lady worked with French commandos, and
you want to get her help with a headache the size of
"So long as we get
the Ghostbusters out of town, we have a fallback plan," Talmadge said briskly. "You're sure an air strike
won't solve the problem?"
"Highly
unlikely," Isaac folded his hands gravely. "Whatever objects Demona is using to manipulate these forces,
they will be small, portable, and quite likely resistant to high
explosives."
Ramsey snorted.
"Yeah, but she's not."
"On
the contrary, Ramsey. Historical records indicate Demona survived
a direct strike in
Frank gazed up at the
blue-metal ball that would wipe away the last few, horrid days. For everyone but him. "Wish me luck."
"Luck is the last
thing you need, Mr. Parker," Olga stated, stalking toward her console.
"Everyone's a
critic." Frank strapped in, gripping the control stick as he prepared to
fly the needles one more time.
***
"Arf! Arf! Arf!"
Pulling a pillow off her
face, Demona snarled at shards of sunlight. Walls and
shrubs isolated Destine Manor from human view. But for the past week one
short-legged canine had assaulted her ears with every dawn.
"Arf! Grrr! Arf!"
Enough was enough. Yanking
on a robe, Demona threw open the window nearest the
beast. "Fulminos venite!"
Lightning struck, turning
Dachshund fur to black char.
"Arf?" The beast shivered in its tracks. "Yipe yipe yipe!"
Watching it scamper back
down the street, Demona blew smoke from one
red-nailed finger.
Humming under her breath,
the gargoyle in human form dove into her shower, scrubbing lime-scented foam
into red locks. Hot running water, Demona
thought, ducking under the spray. One of the humans' few
worthwhile inventions.
Not enough to distract her
from human failure. Delilah had escaped.
Fingers digging into soap,
Demona snarled. How difficult could it be to seize
one abomination? She'd armed them well. She'd had them trained in the proper
means of capture. Thailog's creature should have been
in her clutches before the night was out, pinioned and bleeding at her feet.
The blood of one of two
races, and neither....
Necessary component in a
spell she'd sought for ages; an enchantment that would allow her to wipe every
human from the streets of
Thwarted by an overgrown
lizard!
Almost thwarted, Demona
reminded herself. Her backup team had managed to salvage pieces of asphalt from
where Delilah had first been attacked. Sevarius
should only need another day to isolate the blood.
I should have the
creature herself-
Perhaps. But one way or another, she would
be able to cast the spell tonight.
And she had put the time
to good use. This spell required the most sensitive, most
rare of components on the face of this planet. And
beyond.
Demona ducked her head under hot water. Winter
had best not be lying about that alloy.
Cameron Winter claimed the
shard of metal had been salvaged from a ship not of this world. All he wanted
in return was a few weeks of Dr. Sevarius'...
services.
Cheap
enough. But
there were ways to test his claim.
Sliding soap between five
slender toes, Demona calculated the most efficient
ways to inspect the alloy. She would be thorough. If Winter
had lied to her, he was dead.
Of course, if he had told
the truth... he would be dead anyway.
A cruel smile tugged at
red lips. What is it those human greeting cards say? Every day is a gift?
She would have her
revenge. It would only take a little more time.
And if the gargoyles had
sought the aid of their human detective, they'd find only a false trail. All
her hunters had once worked for Xanatos... and given
their past history, Goliath would look no deeper.
The doorbell caterwauled.
Snarling, Demona pulled on a light green robe. "Yes?" she
growled into the intercom.
"Package
for you, ma'am."
Emerald eyes gleamed.
Could it be?
Particle beam rifle in
reach, she opened the door.
The brown-uniformed human
held out a box and a clipboard. "Sign here, please."
Poison Quill, Used and
Rare Book Search,
read the label. "Yes!" Demona scratched out
the signature of Dominique Destine, seized the precious package. "Now go -
while you still can."
Shrugging, the man got
back into his truck.
Demona barely heard him pull away,
slicing open cardboard with an obsidian knife. Polished iron gleamed
silver-bright, chaining leathery covers together. Bubble wrap popped and
crackled, and she eased Aimerigot's ancient tome out
onto her desk.
Savoring her new spellbook, Demona chuckled.
"It's amazing what you can find on the Internet."
***
Blue metal shimmered into here
and now, gouging a hole in neat-clipped turf. Smoke rose from the
gleaming sphere, shrouding the orange-suited form that tumbled out onto the
grass. A seagull took off, abandoning half-eaten hash browns in favor of
getting the heck away from this uncanny thing that'd materialized in the middle
of its morning meal.
Frank pulled off his
helmet, wiping away the last traces of blood from his eyes. Tossing the helmet
into the Sphere, he tugged out his launch bag. Just the essentials; civvies,
gun, cell phone, Mentnor's little toy-
A small, white object
hurtled through the air, striking hard and painful on his knee. "Fore!"
came the high-toned shout.
Parker eyed the dimpled
ball. "A golf course. All of
Limping a little, he made
it into the trees and dialed
"Conundrum."
"Frank!" Talmadge sounded sleepily surprised. Two
hours earlier at NNL; barely morning, unless you were Hooter Owsley.
"Where are you?"
"
"They'll be on the
next plane out."
"Make it a fast one.
We've got about fifteen hours before
There was the click that
meant Bradley'd put it on speaker. "Seirian Mailli?"
Isaac sounded aghast. "Good Lord, Frank. Was there no other way?"
"You said we needed
an expert on nonphysical stuff." Frank flipped the toggle switch,
listening to the quiet hum as circuits engaged. "The name
Demona ring any bells?"
"Carillons." The elderly scientist sighed
grimly. "What happened?"
Frank snorted.
"That's the problem, Isaac. We don't know. But if we don't stop it, Demona's going to blow Solstice Technologies and
"She wouldn't."
He could almost see the shake of a white-haired head. "Not if she's
finally found a way to take her revenge on humankind."
"Humankind?" Olga asked. "She's an
alien?"
"No,
a gargoyle."
Something pricked at combat-trained nerves. "Listen, we've got to get the
Ghostbusters out of town. Something about a backup
plan-" He whirled, hand dropping to his gun.
"I wouldn't." Soft. But nonetheless deadly.
Crossbow
bolt. Lethal as any gun at this range. Staring down the shaft,
Frank raised his hands. "Seirian Mailli?"
Soft white hair cascaded
over a gray cloak, blending with shadows and sunlight. A thick walking stick
was thrust through a loop on her belt, top a knob of
knotted iron. A clear gaze weighed him and the feedback device, green and angry
as the sea. "Odd." Her accent was almost British, not quite American.
"I'd never have taken you for one of Isaac's cohorts."
Frank's gut knotted.
Barely any trail behind her, which in this brush meant she'd
had time to pick her way over the last few feet....
Meaning she'd heard every
word of his phone call.
You must not mention my
name, Mentnor had said.
Dammit, Isaac! You said dangerous. You
didn't say she could give a ninja stealth lessons!
Seirian's finger rested easily on the trigger.
"Tell me, Frank. Why should you live?"
***
"So is this the best
idea I ever had, or what?" Randy grinned. One hand splayed across a
"Or what," the
rest of H.E.A.T. said as one.
"Have you completely
lost what's left of your mind?" Mendel added, putting his
soldering iron aside. "They're the only
people in
"Ooooh, harsh." The hacker shook his head. "C'mon,
Dr. C. He's your cousin. And they're supposed to be the guys who know
about these things."
"Second cousin,"
Mendel said firmly. Brown eyes sighted down the circuit board, checking for any
unsoldered elements. "Like that's my fault?"
"They are the experts
in the field." Nick set the iron hunt cup down with a clink. "Such as it is."
"Sounds like someone
got up on the wrong side of the lair this morning." Elsie squinted in
concentration, underlining another sentence. A recent issue of Science
lay open in front of her, pencil scribbles marking important points and facts
H.E.A.T. knew were just plain wrong in an article about carnivorous dinosaurs.
The mutation biologist
scowled at meteoric iron. Telemetry from Godzilla's lair was quiet, a minor
reverberation that echoed the soft presence of a snoring lizard in his mind.
"I. Do not. Believe. In magic."
"He won't even clap
when Tinkerbell needs him," Randy whispered,
deliberately loud.
Nick ignored him.
"And I don't like the idea of you carrying that cup alone."
The paleontologist
shrugged, studying a graph. "So I bring the kids. Relax, Nick. It's
daylight."
As if
that made a difference. Nick shredded the remnants of a sugar packet. "I should go with
you."
"That would be
unwise." Monique stirred a whisper of cream into her coffee. "They
attract publicity."
"Like we don't?"
Randy rolled his eyes at the monster photos conspicuously tacked to the world
map on the wall.
Monique arched a dark
brow. "We do not carry equipment capable of identifying psychics
and mages at thirty meters."
"Oh." The hacker
grinned weakly. "Sorry, jefe. I just
thought... I mean, we already sent them the tape."
Nick waved it off, looking
over the harbor. Quiet out there. For now. "They
might get something out of the footage we couldn't. And will'owisps
showing up under
"So the
"Psychics
and mages?" Elsie tangled a finger in red locks. "You mean...."
"We are all at risk
of detection. Oui." The French agent sipped her coffee. "Exposure
to Godzilla - exposure to this facility - ensures that."
Mendel blanched.
"Ah... should we be worried about that?"
A hint of amusement curved
dark lips. "Research indicates no harmful effects." Amusement
deepened. "Aside from a tendency to attract unusual
events."
Elsie flipped a page,
starring another paragraph. "Meaning we won't even notice."
"Exactement."
"But if they pick him
up. Nick could pass as just some guy who lives on a nexus?" Randy
brightened.
"At
close range, no." Monique closed the book. "Were it a matter of simple empathy,
then yes. But it is not."
"Just be
careful." Nick laid his hand next to Elsie's. "We still don't know
why the Weird Sisters wanted it." Or why Fihr Tremayne had sent the cup in the first place.
Slim fingers touched his.
"Hey, this is us, right?"
Right, Nick thought, watching from the
roof as the three drove off toward a certain
"They are trained,
and cautious." Monique, slipping out of the shadows.
"Yeah."
"Oberon's Children
prefer to operate by night."
Nick drummed his fingers
on the rail. "Uh-hunh."
"They will contact us
if they encounter difficulty."
The mutation biologist
glanced up. "You have a bad feeling about this?"
A
heartbeat's hesitation. "Oui."
Nick blinked. A straight answer out of Monique. Funny; he didn't think it
was a blue moon. "How bad?"
The French agent scowled,
heading for the door. "If you require my assistance, I will be checking
the charge on the particle beam rifles."
Oh. That
bad.
***
"So." The crossbow never wavered, but Seirian's finger rested a hair lighter on the trigger.
"You come bearing weapons of my clan's enemies, in order to save one of
mine."
Weapons? You said headache, Isaac,
Frank thought. Then again... what was that little dial marked "gain"?
With Mentnor's handwritten warning
not to touch it unless absolutely necessary. "I know it sounds
weird. But in about...." He caught a glimpse of his watch. "Fourteen
hours, thirty-two minutes,
"Frank?" came
over the phone. Talmadge.
"I'm a little busy
right now...."
Seirian beckoned him closer.
"Isaac." It wasn't a question.
"Oh,
dear God."
Frank heard a chair scrape back, Isaac's voice closer to the speaker. "How
did you-"
"Your little toy's
rather noisy when it drops out of the sky, Mentnor.
You might want to work on that." He'd walked into deep-freezes less
chilly. "You did my clan great harm once. Why should I believe you want to
help us now?"
"Because
we're the good guys?" Frank tried.
Seirian snorted.
Right. He wouldn't have believed that
line either. Not just some old grandmother, Frank, the chrononaut reminded himself. She snuck up on you, and
that's not easy. Century-old or not, green eyes were clear; there wasn't
anything wrong with her aim.
He knew eyes. She'd shoot
him, if she had to.
He didn't think she wanted
to shoot him. He wasn't who she was angry at. But he was working with Isaac,
and from her cut-glass tones, she had one monster of a grudge against Isaac.
The elderly scientist
sighed. "I could say Inire deceived me. But the
responsibility was mine." Isaac's voice softened. "Eight
million innocent people, Mailli. And more, if Demona has her way. If you won't help me... Agent Parker knows nothing about Inire."
"I know he's a
jerk," Frank shrugged. "Believe me, lady. From what I saw, this Inire guy would love it if you took out Isaac."
Chill green eyes
considered that. "And what's to stop me from taking my kin and leaving
your city to its fate?"
"Now, wait a
minute-"
"Nothing," Isaac
said flatly. "But Tatopoulos would never leave
innocent lives at risk. There's too much of his mother in him." A soft snap, as of a hand plucking loose threads from a
sweater cuff. "Do what you must. But time is running out."
The crossbow lowered.
Frank breathed a shade
easier. "Okay, so have Donovan and Olga call me
when they get in to the airport. We're-" he caught Seirian's
frosty glance, amended his words. "I'm heading toward Solstice
Technologies. That's where it starts." He hung up.
"It won't be starting
for several hours yet," the elderly woman said, switching off Isaac's
device. Lines eased around her eyes, and she breathed a silent sigh of relief.
"Annoying little gadget."
"Sorry about that. So
you believe me?" Frank gingerly took the feedback device, stuffed it into
his launch bag. "Why won't it start yet?"
"I believe Mentnor wouldn't lie about eight million lives. Just one." She holstered her crossbow on her belt,
freeing her walking stick. "Demona's a gargoyle,
Agent Parker. They sleep by day."
Diurnal
whatever-it-was.
Right.
"Even if she's
obtained some charm to free her from stone sleep, it would rob her of rest as
well." Seirian cast her gaze up to the sunlit
sky. "To chant a spell of such destructive power, while short of sleep...
she hasn't survived all these centuries by being that much of a fool."
Spell? As
in magic? Frank shook his head. He'd saved D.C. with the help of a young
lady who could pull visions out of a nuclear key. Why not magic? "Listen,
I've got to get the Ghostbusters out of town. They're our backup plan-"
A slim hand touched his.
Quicksilver
and light; a rush of curiosity and caution, subtle as the play of moonlight on
the sea. For a
second he could only blink, caught in a net of gossamer emotion. "What the
heck was that?"
"Nothing you need
worry about, Agent Parker." Green eyes raked him; warm now. "So. You are telling the truth."
"Yeah, I-" Frank
shook off the lingering weirdness. "Who are you calling?"
"Someone
who can help."
Seirian finished punching in a number on a phone of
her own. "Phillipe?
C'est moi, Seirian. Ecoute; j'ai une difficulte
tres bizarre."
"How did you get
this number?"
Seirian chuckled, surprisingly youthful. "Really, Phillipe. Allow an
old woman her amusements."
A rueful
laugh. "Only you, cherie."
Someone leaned back in a creaky chair. "What is it you need?"
"A bit of
misdirection, old friend...."
***
"Ghostbusters? Uh-huh. Mist.
Bleeding walls. Gotcha. Anything else?" The redheaded secretary skewered a
glance at the lab phone. "Raining Jello
cubes?"
Minty toothpaste still tingling on his
tongue, Peter Venkman leaned near the scorch mark
from Egon's latest explosion, watching his colleagues
watch their newest tape. Janine Melnitz was taking
notes and eyeing the screen at the same time, short chocolate skirt glittering
gold as she angled for a better look. Winston Zeddemore
shifted in his chair, spare parts from Ecto-1 bubbling off rust in a beaker of
cola at his right, dark hands flexing as he gauged angles of attack on blue
jelly. Ray Stantz stared wide-eyed, barely flinching
when Janine waved cocoa in his freckled face. A stuffed bear snoozed on his lab
counter, curled next to a soldering iron. And Egon Spengler was ignoring entrancing and entranced redheads
alike, one blond brow so high it nearly brushed the improbable curl of his
hair.
Looked like Egon'd finally found something more interesting than Mycologia. Peter jerked a thumb toward the pulsing jellies
on the TV. "You two brains stuck on the Nature channel?"
"Actually,
no." Egon paused the tape.
"Apparently, Ray's cousin thought we might find this of some
interest."
"This is just
neat!" Ray ogled the glowing blue hydrozoid on
the screen. "Real, live will'owisps!"
"Your
cousin?"
The psychologist couldn't resist a smirk. "You mean the guy who fainted
dead away when Slimer crashed your family
reunion?"
"He'd had a rough
week," Ray defended him.
"Gotta
admit, Slimer's not the first thing you want to see
after dinner," Winston pointed out. "Guy chases mutations for a
living. Cut him some slack."
Egon frowned. "Whether or not Dr.
Craven's worldview can tolerate the notion of spectral entities, Peter, his
scientific perspective is sound. His work on remote sensing in hostile
environments is quite applicable."
Award-winning accolades,
as far as Spengler was concerned. Peter raised a
brown brow. "You guys actually use that?"
"Inside
the containment unit." Ray grinned. "Well, we had to adapt it...."
"Considerably." Dr. Spengler
shoved red glasses up. "The physical laws in effect in the containment
environment differ markedly from those affecting the so-called 'real
world'."
"But we caught one
Class Six megaspectre making a break for it before
there was even a breach."
Always a
good thing.
"So roll the tape."
"I believe that would
be unwise." Egon bent a blue glance on the
wide-eyed occultist. "Apparently the creature's entrancing properties are
quite intact. Even on a recording."
"Had to wave hot
cocoa under his nose three times before he woke up," Janine shrugged,
hanging up.
Spots of red dotted Ray's
cheeks.
"So how'd your cousin
get this?" Winston hit fast-forward, pointed out struggling forms backlit
by flashes of green and white. A dark-haired woman, teeth
bared in a feral snarl as she blew will'owisps into
seared gel; a flash of white labcoat past the lens.
"Doesn't look like it caught him."
"I don't think it
could." Ray pulled maps of
Egon pulled the cassette out, watching
the lighted arms of his PKE meter flash as he moved it across black plastic.
"Frequencies would seem to indicate effects of a magical entity, but one
not spectral in nature." A blond brow arched. "Given the lingering
emanations, the cassette's primary exposure has been to high levels of psychic
energy."
"That's what I
mean!" Ray tapped the map. "Take a look at that!"
Peter looked at them
askance. He knew a ley line map when he saw one; Ray
updated the
Janine popped her gum,
eyeing the blue-and-red swirl. "Thought you guys marked those in
red." She jerked a thumb at the floor. "Like this place."
"The firehall stands on a small magical nexus, yes," Egon agreed. "Thus enabling our
containment unit to work in a fashion unfeasible elsewhere. Morvan Pier, however, is a locus of pure psychokinetic
energy, unalloyed with otherdimensional
harmonics."
The psychologist rolled
his eyes. "This is Earth, Spengs. English?"
"H.E.A.T.'s
on a psychic nexus," Ray translated. "Wow, if we could get a
telekinetic in there...."
"I highly doubt the
current occupants would sanction such experiments." Egon
looked mildly amused. "Dr. Tatopoulos prefers
not to have flying objects near Godzilla."
Winston glanced up from
the dark woman's cold ferocity. "Didn't know you were into mutations, m'
man."
"Given that such
creatures violate square-cube laws and conservation of energy on a general
basis, I thought it wise to be prepared."
"I don't know, Egon," Ray said thoughtfully. "We can't just
assume they use PKE. Look at the fossil record. Nobody's found anything the
size of Godzilla yet, but there was one plesiosaur that got over eighty feet
long. Talk about Jaws!"
"Ray, we do not find
hundred-foot cicadas in the fossil record."
Peter raised dark brows at
Winston, who gave a mock sigh. Obviously this one had been going on for a
while. "Please tell me you guys didn't sign up to bust Godzilla."
"Oh,
no!" Ray
looked hurt. "We wouldn't do that."
"The creature is
apparently nonhostile unless provoked," Egon agreed. "Quite preferable to most other reported
mutations." A thoughtful frown drew blond brows down. "The literature
on possible effects from exposure to a psychic nexus is sparse...."
"You're gonna get a chance to check it out." Janine seized the
firepole as a knock echoed up from below. "That oughta be them now." Skirt flying, she dropped out of
sight.
"Them?" Peter
eyed the other three. "All right, what'd I miss?"
"Mendel called."
Ray was bouncing in place, eager to grab the pole and drop down himself.
"He's bringing something for us to check out!"
Uh-oh. "Ah, Ray. Isn't this the guy
who said he'd rather be left in a nest of giant ants than come near the spud
again?"
"That's the
man," Winston nodded dubiously.
"Hey, a guy can
change his mind," Ray said defensively.
Not without a hundred-foot
marshmallow man on the front porch. "What kind of something?"
Visions of skeleton-raising statues and mind-stealing tapestries danced through
Peter's head.
Egon tuned his PKE meter, brow lifted
at the gentle beeps. "Apparently, a psychically charged
something."
The meter's rhythm
increased as footsteps climbed the stairs. An all-too-familiar chortle echoed
off the walls, followed by a shrill shriek. "Get it away, get it
away!"
"Aww...."
"Think you hurt its
feelings, Doc."
"You want to shake
hands with an overgrown slime blob? Be my guest." Mendel Craven dashed up
the last few steps, dodging a green spook by inches. "Shoo! Go away! I
don't have anything!"
Slimer pouted. "Peter!" Green
arms spread wide.
"Clean shirt,
spud," the psychologist threatened. "Unless you want the wrong end of
a neutrona wand...."
The ghost stuck out an
impressive tongue. "Nyah."
"Well, that just hit
a nine on the disgusting scale." A bony redhead glanced around the lab,
followed close by a tall young man in dreadlocks whose gaze lit up in a way
that boded ill for Egon's computer. "Dr. Elsie
Chapman," she identified herself. "You know Mendel... and Randy came
along for the ride."
"Hey,
Ghostbusters Central." Randy ogled the scorch marks. "Flush!"
"Don't touch
anything," Elsie warned.
"Mendel! Hi!"
Ray smiled at all and sundry, offering a hand his cousin shook tentatively. "Great to see you! Where is it?"
"What is it?"
Peter asked pointedly. "Ma'am," he smiled charmingly at the redhead.
The green-eyed glare he got in return could've ignited newsprint. Ouch. Taken.
"Something the Weird
Sisters sent giant squids after," Dr. Chapman said levelly.
Ray tugged Culbert's Reckon off the shelf. "Faeries
in
The three glanced at each
other; Randy shrugged. "Friend of ours ID'd
them."
Gingerly, Mendel set a
paper-wrapped object on the counter. "It has anomalous magnetic readings
and a high iridium content. We think it's
meteoric."
"Or was, before
someone took a cold chisel to it," Elsie added as wrappings fell away from
a sculpted fox head.
Egon shoved red glasses up. "Hmm." He glanced at Ray.
"This could take a
while," the redhead admitted, rustling old pages. "A lot of sources
don't sort out enchanted objects from psychically charged ones."
"Really?" Hiding behind the other two,
Mendel looked paler than Egon after a long winter.
"Though the fact that
it was created from cold iron should narrow the possible candidates
considerably," Egon added.
"Right," Elsie
said doubtfully.
"What's really neat
is that the Three Weird Sisters wanted it," Ray enthused. "Oberon's
Children are kind of the occultist's Sasquatch. I
mean, you hardly ever see one. This is just so cool!"
"Okay." Randy
held his hands in a time-out T. "Don't know about the doc, but you suspend
my disbelief any more, it's gonna look like the
"After the first
Godzilla got through," Elsie muttered, hustling her colleagues toward the
stairs. "You guys... do what you do best. We'll be in touch."
***
"Winter!" Dr. Anton Sevarius
set down a bottle of something bubbling red, circled his lab bench with a
smirk. "To what do I owe this pleasure?
Cameron Winter smiled.
Now, here was a scientist only a businessman could truly appreciate. The
geneticist might be amoral, avaricious, and thoroughly untrustworthy - but he
was brilliant. "Just looking for some good news after
the family meeting." Waving off security, Winter
shrugged. "You know how it is.
"Fortunately,
no," the geneticist smirked. "I doubt the world could stand two of my
brilliance."
Brilliant,
maybe. But Winter was beginning to see why the lovely Dominique Destine
was willing to loan Anton out for a few weeks. The man was annoying.
Such a
mysterious woman.
Hard, ruthless, and never available after the sun went down.
She was... intriguing.
His family didn't approve
of his interest. Winters didn't associate with unknowns; he'd had that rammed
through his skull after Audrey Timmonds had ignored
him.
But then, anyone who ran a
multi-million dollar corporation was hardly an unknown.
Serious competition, Winter
thought. Intelligent, lovely, and rich. The
family would hate her... but they could never ignore her.
Getting closer to Ms.
Destine was well worth one of the precious Leviathan samples he'd managed to
obtain. Having the use of Anton's skills was a bonus.
Granted, Dominique was a
little odd. Take the list of items she'd bartered for from him; scales of a sea
monster, metal from beyond the stars, flames born of lightning's strike. It
sounded like some fairytale witch's potion.
But if the redheaded
beauty could help him permanently ruin Nicky's day... well, that made her just
about perfect. "Godzilla's immune system?
"For an overgrown
iguana, it puts lab rats to shame," the geneticist mused. "Isolated
cell samples can't really give you a good look at the immune response. But
between those and the results from your chameleon...." He flipped through
a few pages of graphs. "See for yourself."
Winter took the graphs;
winced. No result blared from the top of each, with smaller notes on
just what events had led to the cells slicing and dicing his specialized
viruses like so much confetti. "This is not what I wanted to see."
"I never fake my lab
results." Sevarius laid a hand on the counter.
"I'm afraid it's quite clear. The beast has an immune response that puts
our sluggish systems to shame. Any virus which could make a dent would probably
wipe out half the planet in the bargain."
No profit in that.
"Back to square one," Winter murmured.
The geneticist started
filing away the graphs. "Still, it was a nice break from artificial cell
organelles."
Winter studied the
two-liter bottle of violet liquid stored on the shelf. "Mitochondrial
mimics?"
"All
the foreign DNA you could want, wrapped up in one neat package. A cell
couldn't even realize it'd been invaded." Anton tapped the glass.
"Theoretical research, unfortunately."
Winter cast him a sidelong
glance. "It sounds like it would be the perfect mutagen."
"Oh, yes," Sevarius curled a lip. "If you could
get it into a subject's cells in the first place." The
gray-streaked head shook. "Even if you destroyed your subject's immune
system, it's far too fragile to invade a living creature. You'd have to get it
from your vial to the inside of the target cells, without passing through any
membranes on the way. It can't be done."
Maybe
not yet. "Dominique's project." The project he was going to
have a little talk with her about, and none of this nonsense about not being
available after dark. Nightstone was a powerful
corporation, but nowhere near Solstice.
"She has her little
whims." Sevarius chuckled.
Cameron crossed his arms.
"And how is my other pet project coming?"
"Rather well, given
that you don't want a pet." The scientist's Ups
pursed in a frown as he lifted a sample box from the shelf. "Nor do I.
Cloning is fun the first time, work the second. I'd really rather not try for
three."
Winter leaned against a
counter. The familiar sharpness of rubbing alcohol rose from freshly-scrubbed
benches; the burnt-sugar-and-earth scent of a cooling autoclave prickled his
nose. A stirring rod rattled quietly in a glass beaker, and a
hot water bath sloshed, incubating flasks of experimental bacteria.
"I thought cloning was what we were after here?"
"Nothing that
simple," Anton shrugged. "Although it did require
DNA extraction and duplication." He opened the case, taking out
numbered vials of shards. "I found a way to retrieve the chromosomes from
the solidified matrix. Technically this is cast-off tissue, after all. And I
already knew what I was looking for in the
"Good."
The geneticist tapped a
second water bath. "Toasty warm. Mmm."
Turning a knob, he started a rack of test tubes sloshing. "You should have
your first batch for analysis sometime tonight."
"Why do I get the
strangest feeling I should have had them sooner," Cameron mused, eyeing
the red liquid.
Catching his glance, the
geneticist casually moved the bottle to another shelf. "A
rush job. Ms. Destine is still my primary employer." An offhand shrug. "When something unexpected comes up,
she calls for the best."
"Our agreement was,
the items she requested for three weeks of your time," Cameron reminded
him. "Your uninterrupted time." A hand waved
it off. "But you're right. It's not your responsibility." A thin smile. "I'll take this up with Ms. Destine
myself."
"Good luck." The
door closed and sealed, and Anton sniffed. "You'll need it."
***
"Oooh! I feel good," Matt Bluestone sang along with the radio, prancing
about his ironing board as he creased a suit. "I knew that I
would..."
Elisa Maza
regarded her blissful partner from the doorway. Boxers.
Undershirt. Socks. And not a stitch of dignity to be seen.
"I feel nice, like
sugar and spice...."
Not a bad dancer. Good
slide there, shoulder-lifts in time with the trumpets, overall attractive
flexing of muscles. Small wonder squadroom gossip had
her sneaking off for less-than-professional meetings with Matt whenever the two
of them dropped out of sight.
Better that than who
I'm really seeing, I guess. Racial integration didn't quite cover seven-foot-plus purple winged
types.
"So good, so good; I
got to move-"
"You know, if Goliath
saw you doing that, they'd find pieces of you in five zip codes."
"Aaahh!" Matt hid behind a closet door. "Elisa!" Some
color came back into his face. "You couldn't knock?"
Elisa rattled the front
door key. "I did."
Pale blue eyes peered out
from behind the slotted panel. "Like he has any room to
talk. Do you mind?"
"And don't think I
haven't heard from my dad about that." But she turned around, listening to
the soft swears of a guy dressing in a hurry. "I'm not the one dating the
clan leader's daughter."
"It wasn't a
date!"
Uh-hunh. Sure. "Movies?"
"One
movie. One." A comb yanked through red hair. "And it got
broken up by a giant squid!"
"Goth
club?"
Elisa pointed out.
Shoes hit the floor.
"She wanted to go dancing."
Nice try. "The Trio looking for you - and not in a good way?"
"Oh, man." A tie
rustled under a collar. "I don't even want to think about that...."
Elisa turned around,
serious.
Mutiny
in blue eyes.
"So?"
"So be careful,
partner." Maza put her hands on her hips.
"Right now, Angela's the only female gargoyle in the clan. And she's going
to be alone, with me, for at least three days while the rest of the clan's
chasing gargoyle rumors in
"What, they'll catch
me in a dark alley?" Matt jerked the knot in his tie into place.
"Look. We're friends. If they can't handle that, they need to grow
up."
"No argument
there." Elisa gave him a wry smile as they walked down to the Fairlane. "Just keep out of punching range,
okay?"
Matt snorted. "Guys who can claw through sheet steel? Do I look like
an idiot?"
Unlocking the driver's
door, Elisa chuckled.
"Hey, wait a
minute...."
At the station, Matt
barely paused by his desk before heading toward a certain janitor's closet.
"And where do you think you're going?" Elisa asked.
A faint flush appeared on
his face. "Ah... to leave a note." Matt
waved. "Back in a few."
"Now there's a guy
who just fell hard," Morgan noted, leaning near her desk. "Who is
she?"
"Friend of my
Mom's," Elisa evaded. Not really a lie; Angela and Diane had gotten along
well, ever since they'd met in
"That's what he
thinks-" Morgan stopped, mouth open. Stared past her.
"Oh, man. You'll never believe what just walked in."
"What-" Elisa
turned, hearing a subtle hush fall over the station.
A slight man stood in the
doorway, framed in a hint of afternoon sun. Dark hair fell almost to his brown
collar, and a visitor's pass was clipped absently on the neck of his
olive-green t-shirt. Hiking boots were quiet on old linoleum; a trick most
officers Elisa knew hadn't mastered. Blue eyes casually swept the room, noting
each and every exit.
"Oh, man,"
Morgan muttered. "If he's here on business, I'm out of here."
Morgan's current partner
drew near; a redheaded rookie by the name of Gallaher.
"Is that who I think it is?"
Morgan nodded. "Dr. Niko Tat- Tato-"
"Tatopoulos,"
Elisa supplied.
"The
guy that works with Godzilla?" Gallaher's freckles stood out
as he paled. "Funny. He doesn't look crazy...."
"I'm looking for
Detective Maza?"
Almost as one, the room
turned its collective gaze on her.
Morgan leaned close.
"You know," he said in a low tone, "Somehow I thought he'd be
taller."
Elisa sighed. "Dr. Tatopoulos," she said briskly, striding forward to
offer a hand. "What brings you to my neck of the woods?"
Nick shook it firmly.
"Your partner said you had a few more questions about the other
night." The dark head tilted. "Frankly, I have a few of my own."
"Such
as?" Way
too much time around Goliath, Elisa thought.
A brown brow arched up.
"Detective, someone tried to shoot me and one of my team. I'd like to know
why." He gazed at her steadily. "And if they'll be back."
Hearing the whispers
intensify, Elisa grabbed her jacket. "Have you had lunch?"
"Lunch?" He glanced pointedly at the clock.
"Or... whatever time
it is." Working with gargoyles, you tended to get a skewed clock.
Nick shrugged, evidently
just as aware of the myriad listening ears. "Lunch sounds good."
She scribbled a note for
Matt, stuck it to his screen. "Great. I know where you can get the best
hot dogs in
Nick winced. "Ahh... how about pizza?"
Cop's intuition pricked
up. "What's wrong with hot dogs?"
"Detective," Tatopoulos began as they walked out the door, "Have
you ever been attacked by a hot dog cart?"
***
"Thanks
for trying, Hooter." Frank hung up, swearing under his breath.
"No luck?" Donovan asked, dark cap pulled low.
"Seems gargoyles
don't show up on the regular databases," the chrononaut
grumbled. "Isaac's trying to pull details loose from somebody so
classified Bradley's never heard of him."
Olga shook her head.
"How long will that take?"
"Too
long." A
shadow in gray and green, Seirian stepped into view.
"I'd suggest evacuating
"Olga, Donovan, Ms. Seirian Mailli." Frank waved
Craig's hand away from his gun. Not that he didn't
sympathize. How the heck had Seirian snuck up
on him twice?
"Let what
loose?" Olga asked. Her gaze rested doubtfully on Frank. "Mr. Parker
said something about a spell-"
A quiet
nod.
"Magic is rare, but on occasion, quite potent." The elderly woman
gazed out at the sunset. "She'll be rising soon."
Donovan looked grim.
"And all we know is she'll be at Solstice Technologies just before
eleven."
"For some time before
then, I should imagine." A slight smile crossed Seirian's
face. "Magics that deadly
usually take some time to prepare."
"Usually?" Frank groaned. "Terrific. Now
all we have to do is get through enough security for
The smile grew stronger. "Don't
worry, young man. We'll have a distraction."
***
"Are you sure this is
safe?" Angela peered down the path. No one was in sight, but gargoyle ears
could hear the first murmur of Elisa's voice.
"To trust a stranger
is never safe." Goliath gestured toward the waterfall. "But here I
have a path of retreat, the ground is neutral for us both... and he is but one
human, alone, and unarmed." A rumbling sigh.
"I doubt we could arrange safer circumstances."
Angela gripped his
forearm. "I'll keep lookout." The young gargoyle disappeared into the
forest.
Eyes narrowed, Goliath
considered Elisa's note. True, it held the details they'd discussed; a
face-to-face meeting with this very unusual human. But they'd meant to arrange
that some time later, after the clan had returned from
Yet Tatopoulos
was here. And Talon had asked him to intercede; Delilah refused to stay in the
Labyrinth, slipping out night after night to visit
A human
idea, that; groups without clan ties. When gargoyle clans had been more numerous, youths of
different clans might band together. But that had been long in the past, even
in Princess Katherine's time.
Still. From what
A rare instance of
human sanity,
Goliath thought. Yet... he remains free. As Sevarius did, despite Elisa's best efforts within human law.
Human ways are not our
ways, the gargoyle
knew. But H.E.A.T. protected, much as his own clan did. They acted to save
lives, not to take them.
So he would approach this
human as he would a fellow clan leader; on neutral territory, with one of his
clan known to both of them to act as intermediary.
And hope for the best.
"-So your mother
chased me out of my lab." Crunching a last bit of pizza crust, Tatopoulos wiped his hands on a sauce-smeared napkin.
Elisa laughed.
"You're kidding."
Nick shook his head.
"She told me if I didn't get out of there and find something to eat that
wasn't canned, freeze-dried, or ready-mix, she'd show Randy how to cook huevos rancheros." Humor lit blue eyes.
"I didn't feel that brave."
That was Elisa's mother,
true enough.
"Let me guess."
Dark eyes creased in an impish smile. "He burns water?"
"Nooo,"
Nick drew out, tossing the napkin into a battered trash can. "But I've
seen what he can do to eggs." A wince. "I'd
rather take my chances with a hot dog."
It was good to see Elisa
laugh. Sometimes Goliath worried that her secrets kept her apart from other
humans; kept her from sharing the pain and joy of her life. His heart ached, remembering how she'd wept in the darkness after
Derek became Talon, unable to tell her parents the truth because it might put
his clan at risk.
Perhaps he could never
lift the need for secrets from her. His clan was too few, their need for
concealment too perilously great. But if Tatopoulos
was trustworthy....
Then perhaps the weight
would lighten. And perhaps, just perhaps, there would be no more tears in the
darkness.
"So why are we here,
Detective?"
"Doctor?" Elisa appeared innocent.
The scientist stopped,
casting a glance around the secluded clearing. "I doubt you came here just
for the scenery."
A quiet nod. "There's someone I'd like you
to meet." Framed by the waterfall, Elisa cast a glance into the brush that
concealed him. "Goliath, Dr. Niko Tatopoulos. Dr. Tatopoulos,
Goliath."
Wings spread,
the clan leader pushed branches aside, and watched the human blanch. But Tatopoulos did not retreat, even when Goliath stepped
within easy striking range.
Brave, Goliath concluded, caping his wings. And...
curious. There was wonder amidst the fear,
tempered by wary caution. Blue eyes flickered to the stream, the rocks, the
forest about them, calculating every possible escape route. And then returned
to him, studying him with the same wise wonder he'd once seen in the Magus.
"Hello," Nick
ventured.
He'd heard what Elisa and
the others could tell him about this man. Time to learn for
himself. "Why did you help a creature before your own kind?"
A chestnut brow lifted.
"I didn't." The man's gaze went to Elisa, found only crossed arms and
cool wariness. "We had a seriously injured creature and a group of armed
trespassers. I sent two of my people down to check on the helicopter. If they'd
found someone in danger... then we probably would have done something
different." He met Goliath's gaze squarely. "H.E.A.T.'s
a research team. We can handle dangerous mutations. That's our job. But I
wasn't about to put my people or the people in the helicopter at risk by trying
to take them into custody."
My
people. As a gargoyle would say, my clan.
"Are you... related
to Delilah?" Nick asked warily.
"She is not of my
clan." That was true enough. "But Elisa's family cares for her. I
would not see her come to harm."
Nick glanced between them.
"Diane said she was created by a geneticist."
"From
the blood of one of my kind. Yes," Goliath nodded. Something in him still
shuddered at the thought. That Thailog would combine
one he had loved, with one he held as close as a rookery sister... it was a
wonder Elisa accepted the poor creature. Surely Demona
would slay her, had she ever the chance.
"She told you
that?" Elisa pounced.
Nick held up a warding
hand. "We were already looking at her genetic profile. S.O.P., when
something falls out of the sky on top of us." The fleeting grin vanished.
"Your mother wanted us to look for anything out of place. She's been
worried that Sevarius might have left some sort of...
genetic booby trap."
"A
flaw, in his own creation?" Goliath snarled.
"We haven't found
anything," Nick said frankly. "But it'll take time to be sure."
The dark head shook. "One of your kind. There's more of you than Angela? What are you?"
"You humans call us
gargoyles," the clan leader stated. "And we are... few."
"It's a long
story," Elisa stepped in. "But they came here from
Nick groaned. "I am
never going to live that one down."
"But they're
real." Angela stepped out of the woods. "We saw them, too."
"Angela,"
Goliath warned.
"He's a good
person." Fangs glinted in her smile. "And I like the way they
write."
Nick glanced at the
detective. "We kind of... borrowed one of your files for a few
minutes," Elisa shrugged.
The biologist looked them
over, obviously connecting wings, roof, and the one time the detectives had
been near his files. "So what does your clan want from me?"
"Only what you would
wish for your team, were humans few and gargoyles many."
Goliath offered a taloned hand. "A chance for
friendship."
Nick's grip was not the
strongest he'd felt from a human. But blue eyes were clear and fearless as
Elisa's had been, that long-ago night atop Castle Wyvem.
Not trusting. Not yet. But
there was the chance for trust. And perhaps-
Elisa's phone rang.
"Hang on. Maza," she sighed into the
receiver.
Another trill; Nick dug
his own phone out. "Tatopoulos.
What?"
"A
pigeon?"
Elisa said in disbelief. "Partner, you've got to be kidding."
"Where?" Nick said, facing the other way.
"
"Ah, Randy... I'm in
Static hissed from both
phones; Elisa yanked hers away with a wince. "What gives?"
"Electromagnetic
interference."
The biologist was holding his own phone at arm's length, head cocked as if
listening to the raucous static. "Strong and
close." Eyes narrowed, he took out a small device that clicked
quietly.
Elisa tucked her phone
into a pocket. "You may be the only guy in
"Scintillation
counter, technically," Nick said absently. He shook his head. "Either
it's not close, or it's not radioactive."
Angela turned to Elisa.
"What's not close?"
The detective stepped
back, arms crossed. "Come on, Nick. You don't think there's a mutated
pigeon in
"Homing pigeons sense
magnetic fields. That's how they navigate when they can't see the sun."
Eyes on the sky, the biologist started down the path. "They ought to be
coming in from the south end."
"Who?" Goliath demanded. Annoying; the
man had the same manner as Elisa, when some crime had suddenly come to her
attention. All else had fallen aside, even matters of kin or clan.
"My team," came the distracted answer. Hiking boots jerked to a halt.
"Ah, you'd better stick together when you leave," Nick noted, turning
back towards them. "Doves usually prefer fruit, but most mutations are
omnivorous. Depending on how large it is, one gargoyle
alone might seem like prey."
Elisa unzipped her jacket.
"What about one human?"
The biologist gave her a
dry smile. "This is my job, Detective."
"And you don't have
to do it alone." Elisa held out a hand. "Look. This is my precinct,
and my watch. If Matt can't reach me by phone, he's going to come
running." She glanced toward the gargoyles.
And he'd likely bring the
rest of the clan. Goliath nodded slightly. "We will be near."
Nick stood fast. "It
could be dangerous."
The clan leader lifted one
brow ridge. "Gargoyles protect."
"This is our city,
too," Angela added, spreading her wings. "We can help."
Nick sighed. "Then
I'd better get to my team first." He cast them a wry grin. "Monique
doesn't miss."
***
"He wants what?"
Demona snarled into her phone. Her red suit-dress
hung on a hook as she donned the ivory deerskin top of a true gargoyle. Her
employees knew better than to ask why she had such garb in the office.
"A
meeting. Tonight." She could hear Sevarius
pacing the lab, tapping against glass.
"Impossible,"
she said flatly.
"He won't release any
of my work until you do. And I don't think I can sneak your project out."
The gargoyle growled.
"Speaking of, are you
sure these are what you want? If you just want to wipe out humans, I could
always bioengineer you a good plague. I've explained the limitations-"
"The limitations are
precisely why I want it." Her ancient gaze regarded Sevarius'
report. "Humans and gargoyles are genetically close. Your research shows
that. Any virus you developed might mutate as it crossed the globe." Fangs
gleamed. "I don't take foolish risks."
A briefcase snapped shut.
"So what are you planning, exactly?" Sevarius
inquired.
A full lip curled.
"Be off
"How could I refuse
such a generous offer." She could almost see his
thin, cruel smile. "I take it you plan to make an unscheduled
withdrawal."
Talon tapping against her
teeth, Demona considered that option. But... Winter had been useful. And might
still be, if he survived the night. "He'll see me. At
A cough
of surprise.
"Might I ask how you plan to pull that off?"
"That's none of your
concern." Smirking, Demona hung up. Her new spellbook held magics of illusion
as well. Tedious to prepare, and nowhere near as long-lasting
as the Grimorum's wards... but they would work.
Long enough to put one human in his place.
And the binding magic she
needed to chant over Sevarius' work could only be
cast in the small hours of the night, when the walls between the world grew thin.
I will not be delayed! the
gargoyle growled. Humanity will pay for what they have done to our kind!
Anton's lab would be as
good a place as any to cast the spell.
The
beginning of the end, Elisa Maza. Your death starts tonight!
***
Nick shielded his eyes
from the rotor wash as the H.E.A.T. copter powered down. "What've we got,
people?"
Randy helped Mendel guide
Nigel onto the path, while Elsie nodded at a shivering blond in a gray sweatsuit and a police-issue blanket. "Jogger swears
he nearly got carried off by the world's biggest rock dove," the
paleontologist said dryly.
"It seems he has the
feathers to prove it," Monique stated, tranq gun
in hand. "And the local radio reception has suddenly become - how do you
say - so much dead air?"
"Oh, Dispatch is
going to love that," Detective Maza muttered.
"Matt! Let's see that evidence bag...."
"Let's just hope it
steers clear of La Guardia." Nick motioned H.E.A.T. into a huddle while Maza chased feathers. "Quick
briefing, people. If you see something humanoid you don't recognize,
don't fire on it first. Hudson and Angela aren't the only ones."
"Cool!" Randy breathed.
"Like Talon?"
Mendel said apprehensively, pulling a grocery bag of stale bread out of the
copter.
"Oooh,
not cool," the hacker muttered, punching keys on his laptop. "So not cool."
"A
nest?"
Monique's dark eyes narrowed. A duffel bag clinked as her foot brushed past.
"I didn't see any
more like Talon." Nick flicked a glance toward the detective, noted the
heated conversation she was having with Detective Bluestone. "And the word
they used was 'clan'."
"So they're
intelligent, they form related groups, and they use human cultural terms to
describe themselves," Elsie summed up. "Any idea how long they've
been here?"
Nick shrugged. "Probably longer than Delilah. Goliath - the large male
Maza took me to meet - said she was created from one
of their kind."
"And of course, you
wish us not to fire upon them." Monique rolled her eyes.
"I said, don't shoot
first," the biologist clarified. "If they're intelligent, they can choose
to be as dangerous as any human."
"But Talon's the only
one who's tried to fry us," Mendel pointed out. Short fingers tapped keys
on his handheld computer, tracking electromagnetic emissions.
"The gargoyles
couldn't fry us if they wanted to," Elsie stated, passing Nick his field
pack. "I ran the fur Monique grabbed; not even close. We're dealing with
two different types of creatures-"
"Heads
up, compadres." Randy nodded towards the woman
getting out of a blue-and-white. "Company."
"Captain
Chavez," the tall woman in the blue suit-dress identified herself.
Bluestone and Maza fell in behind her, while uniforms
held off the gathering crowd. "You want to tell me what's scrambling every
radio in my precinct, Doctors?"
"We're working on it,
Captain." Nick turned to his team. "Mendel? Elsie?"
"So light a thing,
upon which rest such weighty hopes," Nigel's vocal circuits reported,
sucking the bit of down into a sample chamber.
"One of these days,
I'm going to microwave your Shakespeare CD," Mendel grumbled.
"You have to find it
first." Randy grinned.
Chavez stared. "Detective?" Her tone was an accusation.
"Just give them a
chance, Captain." Bluestone rested his hands in his trenchcoat
pockets. "They're only half as crazy as they look."
Monique hmphed. "This from the man who raided my
coffee." Dark eyes raked him. "Several
times."
"It was good,"
Matt defended himself.
"But of course."
Dark brows flicked up. "It was French."
Elsie bent an iridescent
feather in gloved hands, green eyes squinting in suspicion. She sighted down
the quill as an archer would an arrow shaft, tapped the broken end where the
growing tip had been left in the mutation's skin. "Nick? Does anything
look odd about this keratin deposition to you?"
Gloves on, Nick took the
plume. "Hmm."
"Ahh,
is that safe?" Matt wanted to know.
Mendel shrugged.
"Nigel's programmed to alert on known toxins."
"If it were
hazardous, we would see a reaction in the witness by now," Monique added.
Maza glared daggers. "You mean
that man could be sick. Or dying."
"C'est possible." The French agent scanned the
darkening park.
"Are you saying my
officers may have been handling hazardous material?" Chavez' gaze turned
flinty.
"Whoa, whoa, time
out!" Randy formed a T with two hands, getting between cops and the team.
"Look. Frenchie tends to look on the dark side,
okay? You gotta get used to it." He pointed to
his laptop screen, where Nigel's readouts were starting to scroll. "Hang
around these guys enough, you start to get a feel for these things. I don't see
any spikes in the danger zones."
"Mass spectrometer
and chemical analysis," Mendel clarified, zooming on various small spikes.
"No heavy atomic weights. Neutral pH." A few
more keystrokes. "No chemical formulas that would
indicate neurotoxicity or any other known
toxicity."
"Looks like plain old
keratinaceous compounds," Elsie observed,
leaning over his shoulder. She glanced back. "Basically, it's bird
down."
"So, your guy's just
fine," the hacker summed up.
"Ah-choo!" Mendel smeared a tissue. "Id's a pidgeon,
all ride," he sniffled.
Randy spread empty hands. "Unless he's allergic to feathers."
Chavez blinked. Glanced accusingly at her detectives.
"They take some
getting used to," Elisa admitted.
Nick tapped the feather
barbs, listening to the subtle, metallic ring. "No heavy metals in the
down?"
"Not in the down, no." The paleontologist shoved back a strand of
crimson. "Let me get a piece of that."
Nick fanned the feather
through the air, listening to it hum in the wind. "If the flight feathers
are similar in composition, how did it get off the ground?"
Elsie shrugged, shears
snipping. "Positive thinking?"
Randy waved a hand in the
biologist's face. "Jefe?
You want to translate for the rest of us?"
Nick poked a finger
between two vanes, separating the right side of the feather down to the quill.
"Ordinary feathers have barbs that interlock to form a flat surface. If
wind or an impact separates the vanes, the bird can just zip them back together."
He slipped the parted vanes between pressing fingers. "But listen."
Barbs clinked back together, a subtle cascade of tinny notes.
"Metal
feathers?"
Monique raised dark brows.
"High iron
content," Mendel reported. "Seems to be
preferentially deposited in the leading edge."
"Granted, this is a
chest feather," Elsie told the captain. "But flight feathers usually
aren't that different in structure." She tapped the iridescent plume.
"Whatever grew this needs a high-iron diet if it wants to have enough energy
to get off the ground."
"I don't care what it
eats, as long as it's not people." Chavez stepped into Nick's personal
space. "They say you're the expert on handling mutations, Doctor. But
frankly, your team has a reputation that makes demolition experts weep with
envy."
True. Too
true. Most of the time H.E.A.T. didn't even notice anymore; after a
while, you expected buildings to crumble around you. You learned how to run
when the ground was shaking, how to hotwire a truck in the middle of
catastrophe, how to find the most stable point in an unstable world.
Intruder? Sleepy, but
rousing fast.
There was stability. Don't
know yet, Nick replied, relaxing in the sudden warmth. It was safety,
protection; pure, uncomplicated love-of-parent. With that humming in the background,
he could face down a horde of captains. We'll look for it.
Curiosity. Come?
Chavez glanced at her two
oddest detectives. "I'm not going to make this an order."
Matt's eyes widened.
"You want us-" he waved a hand in his partner's vicinity, "To go
with them." He pointed at H.E.A.T.
"Radios are
out," the captain stated. "If this ends up as a cross-town chase,
they're going to need badges to clear the way." A grim
smile. "And you two are good at fielding the weird ones."
Elisa nodded. "We'll
handle it. Captain."
Matt gulped. "We
will?"
Nick held up a hand. "Two things. Detectives. First,
don't shoot unless you have to. Pigeons are diurnal; if we can find it
roosting, we may be able to capture it."
"And
second?" Maza asked.
Monique handed the tranq gun to Elsie, pulled a particle beam rifle from the
copter's lockbox. "If we say move... move."
***
"Stay clear,
lads."
Lex shook his head. "Too
much interference."
"Easy, boy,"
"A
very... unusual human." The clan leader caped his wings, Angela
landing beside him. "But his intentions seem honest." He cast
a glance about the clan. "We will watch them."
"We're not going to
meet them?" Angela stepped forward. "He already knows about me."
"But not of the rest
of the clan," Goliath said sharply. A rumbling sigh.
"Better to trust too slowly than too swift. Elisa is not easily fooled...
yet it has happened."
Broadway squinted down at
the park, where the yellow robot was wheeling down the bike trail. "Hey...
are those bread crumbs?"
Talons gripping the rail,
"So.... they mean t'
lure it out, then."
A galvanized steel garbage
can rolled into view, semicircular hole gouged in its side. Tatopoulos
held up a halting hand, motioned toward Monique and Elsie.
"Looks like some kind
of... electronic net." Lex frowned, watching the
two women unroll glinting metal. "If that's the positive end, and the
network's wired that way...." Yellow-green talons snapped. "It's a
Faraday cage!"
"A
who what?"
Lex leaned perilously far over the
rail, eyes bright. "You use it to protect computers from solar flares.
Take a wire mesh, trickle an electrical current through it, and it blocks
electromagnetic emissions. They made it into a net." Randy clipped
batteries to coppery leads, while Mendel used a remote to slowly guide the
robot toward the garbage can. Back by Nick, the detectives held pistol and
revolver at the ready. "Don't tangle with it, guys. It's got enough
voltage to put
Broadway whistled.
"These guys are serious."
"Aye,
lad. I've seen
a many of young Audrey Timmonds' reports."
Goliath tapped a talon on
steel. "What of Godzilla?"
The gray mane shook.
"A dragon's a chancy ally. They'll not want to summon it; not here, not
amidst so many fragile walls."
"He's not really a
dragon," Lex pointed out. Tail twitching, he
glanced up from the tense silence below. "He's a mutation. Some kind of... radioactive lizard."
Metal rattled. Something
large pushed at the underbrush, rustled like tinfoil under the trees.
Nick's hand was up. Wait,
was clear in his stance, even from their rooftop perch. Not yet.
A soft cooing echoed on
the wind; as of a covey of doves, all murmuring in unison. An eye gleamed red
in the night, higher than Goliath was tall.
Three fingers dropped. Get
ready.
A dark beak pecked at torn
crusts, tossed them down an iridescent throat. The red eye swiveled, taking in
the still plateau of shadows. Monstrous toes gouged the ground as the mutation
weighed food against possible danger.
"What are they
waiting for?"
Goliath's hand held him
back. "Steady, lad."
"They're human, and
that net's no bit of lace."
Head bobbing, the gigantic
pigeon rustled its way down the bread trail. Fifteen feet.
Ten.
Mendel suddenly buried his
face in his sleeve. Next to him, Elsie cast a panicked glance at Nick.
The biologist's lips set
in a grim line, but his finger twitched slowly back and forth. Wait. Wait....
"Ah-choo!"
Screeching, the pigeon
flung steel-edged wings wide, scattering H.E.A.T. like bowling pins. The net
was already in the air, settling over the creature's neck - but now only two
people held the anchor ropes.
Not enough.
Shrieking, the mutation
battered its way into the sky, ignoring the frantic pair dangling from its
neck.
"Aaahhh!"
"Mendel, you are so toast!"
"Back
to the chopper!" Nick ordered, leading the way.
"They're
leaving?" Lex hopped onto the rail, watching the
pigeon jink over the sky. Mendel and Randy clung to
braided nylon, narrowly missing each other as the bird bobbed and banked.
"Those are their friends!"
"And they've no wings
t' reach 'em with."
Catching updrafts, the
clan closed the distance with the weaving mutation. "One bird, coming
down,"
"Be careful!"
Angela soared upwards. "This isn't like the Steel Clan!"
"It's a pigeon,"
Screeching, the pigeon did
a swift wing over, doubling on its own trail. Lex
dodged left. Broadway dodged right.
Smack.
Groaning, the red gargoyle
fell out of the sky.
"Whoa!" Randy
grabbed for a passing tail, wrapping his left arm solidly in the rope. The bird
lurched to the left, flapping furiously against the added weight. "Geez Louise," the hacker grunted, "You weigh a
ton!"
"Randy!"
Unbalanced, the net slid up over the mutation, pulling the roboticist
up in range of grasping claws. Mendel sneezed furiously, swinging to the side
as metallic talons raked at his shoulders. Tearing eyes widened, taking in
skyscrapers heading their way. "Oh, no...."
Wings folded, Goliath dove
under them. "Let go!"
The net lurched.
"Catch!" Randy gasped, letting leathery skin slip from his fingers.
Shaking off the blow,
"It is no
robot," the clan leader stated, snatching his second in command from a
water tower's threatening embrace. "It has a mind, and a will to survive.
Guard yourselves!"
"-liath,"
Angela's radio crackled, static fading in and out. "Coming-"
Rotor wash tore the wind.
The helicopter door slid open, and Nick leaned out, chestnut strands flying
around his face. "Hang on!"
Randy was shaking the
sting out of one strained wrist. "No problemo,
jefe."
Feet dangling, Mendel shot
the copter a disgusted look. "Like we're going to do anything else?"
Monique sheared off as
they dodged another office building, dove closer when it looked as if the
pigeon meant to head downtown. The helicopter slammed on a spotlight, causing
the bird to pull up short at bright reflections in window glass. Dipping and
veering, the dark woman wove a dangerous dance around the mutation, herding the
screeching bird higher above the city.
"Nick!" Mendel
yelped. "I think what we want is down?!"
"Not enough room to
maneuver!" the biologist called back. "We checked the map; these
roofs aren't rated for a helicopter landing. If we force you down on
them-"
One razored
talon sliced at a labcoat; the roboticist
kicked and spun, dodging a slash of beak. "I could be in a well-funded,
temperature-controlled government lab, tinkering with Nigel...."
Randy grabbed for another
anchor rope. "Come on, Dr. C. No mutants? No G-man? No life-threatening,
race the clock, do or die?" The hacker shook his head. "You'd keel
over in a week."
"Hah!" Mendel
flipped his blond pony tail back, grabbed his rope with both feet. "Some
of the people on this team may be adrenaline junkies-"
Soaring above, Angela
shook her head. "They sound almost as bad as the guys." She dodged
the backwash, cupping hands to her mouth. "How can we help?"
Nick's head ducked back
into the copter, reappeared with a familiar darkhaired
detective. "We're going to try to head it east," Goliath's radio
crackled to life. Elisa peered over the city, judging distances as the wind
snatched her hair. "If we can get it near the
The clan leader nodded.
"Well enough." He gestured to the trio. "Fan out, and stay clear
of the wash. Angela! Cover us from above. Such birds are accustomed to falcons;
giant or no, a stoop should rattle it.
"We don't sound like
that," Lex said indignantly. He traded glances
with Broadway as they soared into position. "Do we?"
***
So much for a boring
evening in the lab,
Elsie thought, firing a careful burst of green energy. The pigeon shied east
again - but the jolt sent Mendel lurching downward. She drew a breath, tapped
her head mike. "Anybody got a plan?"
"We're here,"
Nick calculated frantically, drawing a finger across the map Elisa held against
the wind.
"Next block,
"We're out of
time." Nick leaned toward the cockpit. "Pick a spot."
"That park,"
Monique declared, banking the copter. "We will have no better
chance."
"Oh man, not my
apartment...." Matt groaned from the copilot's seat.
"Deal with it,
partner." Maza turned their way. "So what's
the plan?"
Nick picked up the tranq rifle. "Anything to
contraindicate?"
"Not on the
bioassay," Elsie assured him. There were limits to what they could
determine from just the feathers, but Nick knew that as well as she did.
The tranquilizer might be
toxic. But Mendel and Randy couldn't hold on much longer.
"We get above it, we tranq it, we force it down," Nick explained to the
detectives.
"And hope there's
nobody under it when we do," Elsie added.
"That's a plan?"
Matt choked.
"Yes." Harness
on, Nick leaned out the door.
Elsie covered him from the
side, listening to the familiar thwack as Nick pulled the trigger.
Ordinary tranquilizer darts could be stopped by thick clothing. H.E.A.T. used
ammunition that would pierce steel... meaning it would affect mutations, if you
could hit a thin patch of skin.
Nick had a knack for it.
They weren't sure if it was intuition, bleed-over from Godzilla, general
biological knowledge, or some combination of the three. Whatever the reason,
Nick could usually find a creature's weak points; and when it came to firing
from a moving helicopter, even Monique wasn't much better.
"This could take a
minute to kick in," Nick told the cops, lining up another shot.
"Masses about a quarter-ton...." Thwack. "Extra iron in
the system will probably bind a certain percentage...." Thwack.
"How
does he know how much to use?" Matt called back, while his partner gave low orders on
her radio.
"Take the average
dose for the probable base species and multiply by the mass increase," the
paleontologist said frankly, hearing the mutation shriek. "Minus a certain
percent for average neural conductivity, plus a certain percent for variable
toxin resistance...."
"You guess?"
Darn. He really was a
detective. Even Major Hicks hadn't figured it out that fast.
Thwack. "Can your friends grab those
ropes?" Slipping the safety on, Nick gestured towards Randy's side of the
net. Wingbeats were slowing, but the razored beak still slashed at a flapping labcoat.
Maza nodded. "They're
coming."
"Then let's take this
bird down." With one last look at the approaching trees, Nick leaped.
Dammit, Nick!
Gloved hands caught a rope
on Mendel's side. The mutation biologist curled and twisted, taking a blow
meant for Mendel's hands on his harness.
Elsie shoved her heart
back down her throat. "Down, now!"
Monique had already angled
the wash, blowing the wind out of the pigeon's wings. Bright-colored forms
swooped out of the sky, seizing nylon in taloned
grips. Three different wing forms, the paleontologist noted
automatically. In one species?
"Incroyable,"
Monique breathed. One hand flicking over the console, she used the copter's
engines to tug the bird down.
"They're something
else," Maza smiled, eyes on one large, purple
form. Her glance flicked to a dangling biologist. "But they have
wings."
Elsie kept her hand on the
winch control. A foot of slack one way or the other and Nick's rope might have
a fatal intersection with the rotor blades. "Nick knows what he's
doing." Usually.
A surreptitious glance at
the
Nick tried to keep his
giant charge clear of the city. But when the biologist started chasing
mutations, Godzilla was never far behind.
Elsie'd take the property damage, any day.
Feet and wings hit the
grass like a roll of thunder. Nick fit a springloaded
stake through one knotted loop, slammed it into the ground to anchor the net.
Mendel rolled shakily aside as
"Yee-ha!" Randy cheered. "One
down, on the ground!"
The web-winged gargoyle
poked a cautious talon at the net. "I bet we could set one of these
up."
The red one shrugged.
"Why would you want to?"
"Three words, tough
guy. Puck and Oberon."
Nick unclipped his rope,
holding it while the rotors slowed. "Mendel? You all
right?"
"I think I strained
every muscle in my body," the roboticist
groaned, sitting up. Horrified eyes regarded the shredded labcoat.
"Aaaah!"
"Easy." Nick
peeled back torn cotton. His face eased into a relieved smile. "Just a few scratches."
"More tetanus
shots," Mendel moaned.
Randy rounded the netted
bird, dodging multicolored wings. "Yo, Doc.
Didn't you have one of those last month?"
Ducking under the rotors,
Elsie brought out the first aid kit. Off to the side she saw Detective Maza head for the large purple gargoyle. Wearing a radio,
Dr. Chapman noticed. So that's who she was talking to. Goliath?
Name sure fits. "Trust me, Mendel. The last thing you want is to
develop an allergic response to the shots."
Craven sighed. Sniffled. "Aah- aa-"
Elsie shoved a tissue in
his face.
"Danks."
Nick,
Monique, me. Dr. Chapman ticked off the armed
people on her team. Not sure Mendel could aim right now. Randy's been
working with Monique, he should be okay. She didn't think this would turn
ugly. But she could feel the team drawing together, poised and waiting.
H.E.A.T. hadn't made it this far by taking things at face value.
Nick glanced around the
gathering crowd. "Everyone else okay?"
A red one with a beak
rubbed the side of his head. "Outside of a headache the
size of the
Angela shook her head. Related
to Goliath? Elsie wondered. They're the only two with similar coloring.
If that meant anything in this species. It might not.
"I tried to warn you." She stepped forward, clawed toes flexing on
the grass. "Hi."
"Nice to see you
again," the paleontologist ventured, taking the offered hand. Skin
feels different than Delilah's, she noted. A little
more leathery. But soft. Of course, shock could affect a lot of things. She
hadn't had as much time to check Delilah over as she wanted. "That's
Mendel; you already know Randy and Nick...."
The biologist was halfway
under the net, checking the pigeon's pulse and respiration as Monique made sure
every stake was solid. "Looks okay," he reported, carefully teasing
out each dart. "We should check again in five minutes, see if we need any
antagonist."
"Or deliver another
dose," the French agent said matter-of-factly.
Nick suppressed a sigh.
"Neutralize, remember? I'd say it's neutralized." Foam tipping the
darts, he clambered out.
"For
now."
Nick glanced around. "Mind introducing us. Detectives?"
"I fear 'twill have
t' wait, lad."
"Busted," the
green one muttered.
"Travis
Marshall?" Elisa cocked an eyebrow at her partner.
Matt shaded his eyes,
peering up at the choppers. "That's WVRN, all right. And
- WIDF?"
"Audrey." Nick
buried his face in his hands.
Elsie winced. Nick was
over the blonde reporter; she knew that. But Timmonds
still knew him well enough to slide questions under his skin like bamboo
slivers.
"We will meet another
night," Goliath declared, wings cloaked. "Elisa will tell you
where."
Dropping to all fours, the
gargoyles disappeared into the shadows.
Randy let out a low
whistle. "Okay, compadres." The
hacker stared at settling branches. "Even by our standards, that was
bizarre."
"Welcome to our
world," Matt grinned. He cast a nervous glance at the wire-covered pigeon.
"Ah, do you do this a lot?"
Randy scratched his
dreadlocks. "Do what?"
"Improvise mechanical
solutions to biological problems?" Mendel guessed.
"Oh," Randy
nodded. "Track down giant, man-eating monsters?"
Elsie eyed Nick.
"Dangle out of helicopters?"
The biologist fought a
smile. "Only three so far."
"The answer to your
question would appear to be - yes," Monique noted. "I will keep
watch." She stalked toward the helicopter.
"Monique doesn't like
publicity," Nick explained, taking the pigeon's pulse again as the news
crews started touching down.
Mendel flipped open his
cell phone as Elsie moved in with the iodine. "Major? Yes, I'm sorry, we
do know what time it is. Ouch!" The roboticist
shot her a dirty look. "It's not that big, but it does need electrical
containment...."
You could hear the groan
across the clearing. "Tatopoulos!"
***
Shrouded in illusion, Demona tapped a talon as Sevarius
emerged from the shadows. "Is it done?"
"Oh, yes." The
geneticist opened a lab cabinet, unwrapping charcoal-gray foam.
Clear glass glinted under
the fluorescents, violet liquid almost black in the dim light. "How are
you doing that, by the way?" He smirked at the counter. "No human
fingernail leaves that kind of dent."
The immortal gargoyle
snarled, seizing her prize. "You wouldn't believe me if I told you,
Anton." Laying a green gym bag on the countertop, she began taking out her
spell components. A rustle of silk-wrapped items; the quiet
rap of a plastic test tube, containing the amber fluid of bio-engineered
plasmids carrying genes for sea snake venom. Amusing; the humans
themselves had created the key tool she would use to destroy them.
The iron chain of her spellbook rattled against tile glaze. "If I'm
disturbed, it will be your neck."
"No one comes in my
lab who isn't ordered to." Sevarius
tapped his fingertips together. "You'd think they didn't like me."
She didn't even dignify
that with a reply. "A knife forged of metals from beyond the stars," Demona murmured, taking out the thin gray blade. "A
cup carved from a sea monster's scales, to hold the blood of one of two races
and neither." She held out a hand.
Gray-touched brows were
level with cruel caution. But Anton took in the hint of red glowing from human
eyes and handed the vial of Delilah's blood over. "I never knew you cooked
gourmet."
"A
fire born of lightning's strike, to burn in a pyre of serpent bone." She nursed the tiny, oil-fed flame
to a bright glow, set it amidst slivered vertebrae. White splinters caught fire
in a burst of green, letting off heat far beyond a mortal flame.
Swiping a burner stand, Demona set the blood-filled cup over green flame.
"Seawater touched by the moon's first rise, and dust of a forgotten
grave." She stirred them in with the knife. "When it boils, speak the
words."
Brushing off sweat, Sevarius stepped back. "That shouldn't take
long."
"You'd be
surprised." Ignoring the heat, Demona kept up
her patient rhythm. "Death should take time."
***
"I didn't think
Angela would agree to the boat," Matt said in an undertone, watching the
young gargoyle catch up with the H.E.A.T. Seeker. By this time the clan
and the older Mazas should be on a plane out of
LaGuardia, heading west to
"You can get a good
updraft off the bay. And it's safer than the waterfront at night. At least for humans." Elisa watched the lights of
Matt chuckled, pulling his
trenchcoat tight against the breeze. "Don't know
whether the guy's skittish, or the only one of them with a sense of
self-preservation."
Elisa gripped the rail as
Angela touched down. "You want to talk skittish?" She jerked her head
toward the biologist at the helm. "I've never seen anybody dodge reporters
so fast."
Matt eyed the smaller man.
"You wonder what he's hiding."
"Besides
a few gargoyles?"
Bluestone crossed his
arms. "Everybody hides something, partner." A hand touched his suit
lapel, as if fingering a hidden pin. "And it doesn't always have
wings."
Elisa arched a delicate
brow. "And I suppose you want to know what."
"Hey, I'm a cop. I'm
supposed to be nosy."
Elisa drew her shoulders
up, jaw set. "Let's go be civil, first."
Stepping in, Elisa
introduced Angela to the team. Good thing we moved the meet here, the
detective thought, watching H.E.A.T. visibly wrestle with the idea of
mythological creatures who'd been trapped under a
mage's curse for a thousand years. And she hadn't even mentioned Avalon. The
clan's used to magic; waking up in
But Nick's team were scientists, first and foremost. Mention
enchantments, and their whole world-view had to shift.
Like mine did, Elisa thought, smiling at the
memory of that explosive night at the
As the boat was Nick's;
she could see that, in the way he matched each move to the pitch of the deck. The kind of unconscious grace that only came with pacing his ship
in every kind of weather, at speed or a dead stop. "Umm...."
The biologist cast a desperate glance her way. "Spell?"
Angela frowned. "You
don't believe us?"
Elsie chuckled.
"You're talking to the guy who didn't believe in the Loch Ness monster
until it almost sank a sub." The redhead cast Nick a wry smile. "With him in it."
"So I was wrong that
time." Nick spread empty hands. "But magic...."
Mendel shrugged, Nigel
blinking beside his shoulder. "We know some individuals can manipulate the
world in a nonphysical fashion."
"Oui,"
Monique agreed, standing in the helmroom door.
"Telepathy, telekinesis, empathy; these we have seen."
Matt started. "You
have?"
"Long story,"
Randy replied. "Short version - if you ever see guys with glowing eyes,
break out the track shoes."
"Not to mention the
dynamite." Elsie shivered.
Nick covered her hand with
his. "It's okay," he said softly. "It's over." A subtle
turn placed him between her and the detectives. "It's still a far step
from floating guns to turning people to stone for a thousand years."
Soothing, protecting,
and changing the subject, Elisa thought, impressed. Whatever it was, Dr. Chapman must've
been caught up in it.
And it must have put the
team in serious danger, if those flinches were any indication. A cop added
Nick's glance and Monique's silence, and didn't like the conclusion. It
could happen again, Elisa knew. They know it and she knows it.
"Magic isn't that
common," Angela shrugged. "It's... not always a good thing."
"You didn't know it
was Puck," Elisa pointed out.
"And the way he
bounces around, we won't know the next time, either," Matt pointed out.
"You say he worked for Demona once. I'm not
looking forward to a sequel."
"Puck?" Randy brightened. "As in, Midsummer Night's Dream?"
"The
one and only."
Elisa shook her head. "Oberon, Titania; we've
met more than I want to count."
"Faeries." Nick stepped back, rubbing his
head. "Excuse me." He headed for the empty prow.
Angela frowned.
"What's wrong with him?"
"Nick doesn't have a
high tolerance for the unusual," Mendel said, checking that the chocks
under Nigel's wheels were solid.
"You're talking about
a guy who chases monsters," Elisa pointed out.
"Oui." Monique frowned at the solitary figure facing into the
wind. "Yet Dr. Tatopoulos investigates the world
as it is. He has no love of the - how do you say, lunatic fringe?"
"He even used to
throw the horoscopes out," Randy shrugged, fiddling with his laptop.
"Just give him a while."
Nice act, guys, Elisa thought, listening to her
partner and Angela quiz H.E.A.T. about the Loch Ness monsters they'd met. But
you're worried about him. Why?
Was it more than just a
headache? She hadn't seen any signs of a concussion. And she doubted the man
who'd been so careful of his team's health would ignore his own.
"Hello." Randy
was frowning at his screen. Static hissed from the speaker. "Something
gnarly in the local EM."
"Ah, guys?"
Mendel looked a bit pale, pointing out toward
Angela's gaze narrowed,
taking in gathering clouds in a once-clear sky. Lightning flashed in the
distance, thunder reaching them a few breaths later. "That's not normal
for
Monique ducked out of the helmroom, dark lips set. "The instruments still
function. But they waver."
Nick stalked by the
detectives, heading below. "Tell us if it starts heading this way. Randy,
Elsie, with me."
"What are they
doing?" Matt asked.
"Opening
the arms locker." Mendel pried his fingers off the rail, started tying Nigel down.
"They ran into something like that before."
"It is not the
same." Monique lowered a nightscope.
"Instrument readings remain stable."
"Great," the roboticist muttered. "One lab break-in's enough for a
lifetime."
***
Green and scarlet light
entwined about Demona's tome, weaving snakes of
sparks through the lab air. The gargoyle sorceress was lost in her work, magic
humming in her blood. Three intricate spells. Three great works, that -
combined - should wreak her vengeance on
"Niwlen gafael hwn
lle, cylchfan." Demona
wiped a drop of sweat from her brow ridge before it could drop into her brew. Mist grip this place, round about.
Silver light shimmered up,
mist that spread and whispered through the walls.
"Ah, Winter! Yes, I
know she's early. No, now is not really a good time...."
"What is she doing?
She's set off every IR monitor in the building, and somebody's broken through
Security-"
Winter
and Sevarius. And some amount of guards spreading through the
lab. Not important.
***
"Running out of time,
Frank," Donovan grunted, throttling another guard unconscious.
"I know, I
know." Frank waved a few more guards out of the way with his pistol. Not
nearly as much security as he'd expected. Whatever distraction Seirian'd come up with, it was a doozy.
"That's it, guys. Be smart."
"We must be getting
close," Olga noted, cinching down plastic restraints on the latest set of
guards.
"Yeah. Seirian,
where'd you-"
Thwack!
"Yow!" A hapless
black-haired guard stumbled out of a corridor alcove, sub-machine gun
clattering from numb fingers.
"Hmph!" Hefting her iron-knobbed walking stick, Seirian prodded the young man forward. "Amateur."
Frank grinned. Some grandmother. "Ever thought about adopting?"
***
"Griffwn
beiddgar, fy Dialwres bod." Demona blew gently into the bubbling brew. Gryphon bold,
my Avenger be.
Golden balls of light
lifted from the brew like so many fireflies, swarming past the shouting guards.
A man shrieked as a golden sphere shot through him, clawing at his own skin as
he staggered back into shelves of chemicals.
"You fools; you can't let those mix! Get back-"
Flames,
licking up toward the ceiling with a black cloud of chemical smoke. But no matter.
Her potion was at full, rolling boil. All that remained were the mimics - and
the poison.
She opened the jar of
mitochondrial mimics, poured in the burbling brew. Violet light blazed, bright
as lava. A spell first chanted when the pharaohs cast down
"There!" An old woman's shout, raging with fury. "Demona, stop!"
"Neb mes keni, kheper
neb ka en jet er ib-"
A man's
snarl.
"Hell with this."
Pain. White fire
through her heart. A bullet, Demona realized,
feeling Death reach out to claim her. Again.
But there was still enough
time. Just enough.
Talons tipped an amber
test tube. "Men ta ket
imy... en-khet sem..."
Caterwaul of rage.
Something dark and cylindrical hurtled through the air, jarring sea snake
plasmids from weakening fingers. Bunsen burner, the gargoyle thought
crazily. My revenge!
"My
samples!" Sevarius lunged toward a teetering box.
Too
late.
Glass vials cascaded into
the violet brew.
"Oh,
no."
Violet exploded.
***
"Merde...."
Dark eyes stared, reflecting the pillar of violet light rising from the north.
Nick felt his heart drop
to his boots. The way the top of that pillar was expanding into the clouds-
"Below!" he ordered, catching Mendel as Godzilla
seized the H.E.A.T. Seeker's hull. "Everyone
below, now!"
Mass tangle of bodies;
Nick shoved a violet wing out of his face, hearing the heavy clank as Monique
bolted the door. He felt water rush past massive scales, felt the hull creak in
a taloned grip as Godzilla raced for the open ocean.
It couldn't be what it looked like. Please, let it not be what it looked
like.... Don't look back! he warned his charge.
Dive when it comes!
Stubborn
refusal.
Godzilla would not leave him.
Then take the boat down
with you! The hull
might not hold. But he'd take that bet, over the shock wave he feared was
coming.
"Harbor Authority,
come in!" Elsie, on the radio. "This is the H.E.A.T.
Seeker. Take cover! Unknown explosion sighted in
Nick reached into his
shirt pocket, pulled out warm gold. The dragon's eyes were ablaze with light.
Colorless flames wreathed the brooch, coiling outward to wrap the whole of the
hold.
A jolt flung them against
the bulkheads; he sensed the desperate push, as Godzilla burrowed deep into
harbor water.
No time to warn
The world dissolved in
violet flame.
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