Author's Notes: Disclaimers in Chapter One.
Something tore at Nick's
mind, at his bond; at fragile threads he hadn't realized existed. A fiery rope
yanked at him, wrenching like lava chains. A pull that howled, and hated, and
twisted-
No!
Battle-rage flooded his
veins; Godzilla, seizing what the lizard would never yield. Nick gripped him
just as fiercely, the one stability in a world shattering like glass.
Mine!
Scales diving for the
ocean floor; a human hand clenched on Mendel's labcoat collar. They were together,
and they would not yield.
Flames roared through his
mind, howling in thwarted rage. But frail threads still writhed in a fiery
grip, fraying-
Mine! Nick snarled, laying hold of the
intangible feel of his team. There was Mendel, all fearful determination.
Randy, ever-amazed - and finally horror-struck, realizing just what they fled.
Monique, strong and dangerous as an ancient katana. Elsie; bright, joyous
Elsie-
Nick yanked,
countering the tug of violet flame. Spent strength recklessly, stretched thin
and frail as cobwebs in a forge. Old, old, this fire; ancient and pitiless as
the Sphinx's gaze. What it took, it meant to hold. Eternally....
Mine. They're mine. You can't have them!
The alien power ebbed,
setting the hold ablaze with indigo sparks.
Literally ablaze, Nick
realized, scenting smoke. Struggling to lift a hand toward the fire
extinguisher, before exhaustion slammed him into darkness. Something felt...
wrong.
But his team was alive.
It was enough.
***
"So we believe the
cup could actually be of ceasg origin, created to allow the Scottish
salmon-mers to freely interbreed with humans," Egon summed up. "Many
creatures find such objects valuable, but given that they must be shaped from
cold iron, they cannot be created by the vast majority of supernatural
entities. Sea-folk have less of an adverse reaction to iron than most, though
they aren't as tolerant as the swanmays-" Egon stopped mid-lecture.
"This is bad."
"This is the
Turnpike, Egon. It's always bad." Peter craned his head toward the front
of Ecto-1, where the physicist was poring over a wildly bleeping PKE meter.
"What's up?"
"Holy cow!" Ray
breathed.
Winston yanked Ecto off
onto the shoulder, narrowly avoiding a jack-knifing tractor-trailer. A state
trooper careened off a grass-green sedan, sparks flying from tangled bumpers.
All around them traffic from Jersey to the Big Apple screeched to a halt,
drivers staring at the violet light blasting into the sky.
Peter swallowed.
"Containment breach?" The roaring light had been white last time, but
those darting golden spheres looked all too familiar.
"No." Egon
looked grim.
Violet flames rolled over
skyscrapers like a wave, pushing silver mist before them. Brick and steel
cascaded to the streets, dust visible even from this distance.
Then silver fog swirled
into a dome, and New York was gone.
"No evidence of a
dimensonal rift." Egon lowered his meter. "The city is still in this
plane of existence." A brow lifted. "Though in what condition, I
would hesitate to speculate."
"Spengs, you never
hesitate to speculate." But Peter's heart wasn't in it. Winston had
thumbed on the radio almost as soon as they'd pulled over, trying to contact
Janine. Getting nothing but static.
***
Elisa coughed, waving away
fumes as Angela sprayed foam over flames. A cabinet handle dug into her side,
someone's talons clutched her ankle; a massive tangle of nine humans and
gargoyles created when the side of the H.E.A.T. Seeker suddenly became
the floor. "Matt?"
A groan.
"Drifting?"
"Looks like." Odd;
it didn't seem nearly as dark in here as it should be. There was a strange
stifling quality to the air. Under her hand the hull creaked and grumbled, yet
the ship was oddly still. As if the harbor waves had suddenly vanished.
"Anyone know if we're taking on water?"
"I'm not sure."
A ruby-eyed rustle in the dark; Angela. "I found Randy, but he won't wake
up."
"Same here,
partner." Matt winced. "Mendel's out like a light." He felt
along the labcoat collar. "Hey - Nick's here too. He's not - no, he's breathing.
Barely."
"We've got to get out
of here." Elisa stepped and slid over tangled forms. "Whoa!"
"Partner?"
"I'm okay."
Elisa righted herself. "Got ambushed by your trenchcoat."
"I think I've found
Monique," Angela's voice echoed off metal. "Which means the door
ought to be right-"
"Angela, wait!"
Elisa held up a hand. "Listen."
The hull creaked and
bobbed, setting her inner ear on edge. Now the boat rocked, rough and quick in
waves' violent rhythm. Matt shivered. "We were underwater?"
"No leaks."
Angela ran a hand along the door's edge. "I like this ship."
"We can't stay
here." Matt hefted Nick's limp form. "He needs a hospital."
"Guess we'll just
have to be ready to abandon ship." Elisa nodded toward Angela. "Go
for it." Steel clanked, racheting open.
Rivulets of seawater
spattered through the hatch. But no more. They weren't entirely on their side,
Elisa saw. The boat was listing about forty-five degrees, leaning against a
massive, scaled forearm. A puff of fishy wind whispered down the stairs; a
slow, shallow breath, compared to those she'd last seen from Godzilla.
Godzilla took us under? She shook her head. It didn't make
sense. All the news reports claimed the massive mutant fought threats to his
territory. What did he care what happened to one boat?
Lights sputtered back on,
leaving them blinking. "Whoa," Matt breathed.
"Elisa?"
Angela's eyes were wide. "It was a spell!"
Periwinkle blue, was Elisa's first thought. Who
is she, and how'd she get in here? came hard on its heels. For it was
another gargoyle's hand in her gaze, slim and feminine and strong enough to
tear through steel.
A gargoyle's hand... that
moved when she flexed her fingers.
No. Panicked, the detective stepped
back; only now realizing she stood on three strong talons. Feeling the soft sweep
of air over midnight-blue membranes, as wings instinctively wrapped close.
"Obsidiana,"
Angela breathed. "Elisa, you look like-"
"This can't be
happening." The detective touched a distinctive crest she'd last seen in
Guatemala; paired horns, bisected by a ridge of three bony knobs. She couldn't
be a gargoyle. Not again....
"But you look like
you, too." Angela reached out a tentative hand, gripped her wing-cloaked
shoulder as if afraid she'd disappear. "I saw Delilah, but I didn't
realize you were beautiful...."
Like father, like
daughter, Elisa
thought wryly, throttling panic before it could overwhelm her. More colors were
evident as she glanced around the hold; wings that hadn't been there minutes
ago. Matt-
Human, Elisa realized as Angela rushed
to her partner's side. But... wings? Matt paled as he backed up,
brick-red wings spread behind him. "Elisa? What-" Red membranes
shifted, and Matt froze. "Oh no. Ohhh, no-"
"We've got to check
the others." Elisa laid a talon against Randy's neck, feeling the steady
pulse as the hacker coughed his way back to the land of the conscious.
Completely human, down to the last dangling dreadlock. As was the rest of
H.E.A.T. How?
"Told you not to drop
the potassium iodide-" Mendel blinked. Stared. "What happened?"
"Tell me, and we'll
both know," Matt quipped. He ran an appraising glance over his partner.
"Good thing the Trio's out of town."
"Oh no," Mendel
whispered, stepping toward them. Only slipping a little, as he negotiated the
slanted deck. "Oh, no. Nick!" He rushed to the biologist, feeling the
slow pulse. Swallowed. "We've got to get him outside."
First-aid kit. Elisa tore it from the wall,
clawed her way up tilted stairs behind them. Stopped for a long moment, seeing
the rubble-filled gaps in the New York skyline. Manhattan, Staten Island,
Brooklyn - everywhere she turned, buildings had crumbled. As if some gigantic
hand had plucked skyscrapers at random, crushing them in a steely grip.
"Dr. Craven, we have to get him to a hospital." Assuming there were any
still in one piece.
The roboticist took bright
Mylar from the kit, wrapped it around Tatopoulos' shoulders. "I... don't
think they could help." He touched emerald-gray scales, wary as a cat on a
hot stove. "Put him here."
Elisa gazed over the
harbor, where broken vessels bobbed like abandoned toys. One was aflame; she
could see the white spray of a fireboat. Matt whistled, gripping the rail.
"Somebody lose a few bombs we didn't know about?"
"Trust me, it wasn't
a nuke." Elsie's voice was grim behind them. "We wouldn't be here if
it was." She laid her hand against the pale, still cheek, wrapped the
blanket closer. "Don't do this to me. Nick," she whispered. "Not
again."
"Not again?"
Maza shivered. "What did he do?"
The ship lurched, sliding
off shifting scales. Fingers and talons grabbed for a steel railing, held tight
to wet metal. An amber eye blinked. Water ran from the H.E.A.T. Seeker's
helmroom, sheeting over the deck as massive nostrils drew in a gale of breath.
***
Blinking slow, Godzilla
righted himself in roiled water. His head ached. A lot.
And there was an ominous
quiet from his parent.
He bent to his parent's
ship, sniffing the still form in the redheaded female's arms. No scent of
blood. No echoed pain, as he would feel if his parent were injured. But where
warmth should have been... it hurt.
Rumbling gently, he nudged
Nick. Licked the still face.
Echo of comfort. A sense
of a tight knot uncoiling. Fear radiated; fear for himself, fear for his
parent's allies. Utter exhaustion.
The hot scent of his
parent's weapon, battling strangeness.
He roared. Swam for shore,
tracking the prickly scent of something wrong.
Humans unleashed this
scent. Humans - or things that looked like humans.
Find the source and he
would find who had hurt Nick. Who had hurt them both. Who was a threat to him,
his territory, and his parent.
And he would chase it
away.
Or kill it.
***
Glass shattered, air
blasting out of the Eyrie Building's forty-fifth floor. Two forms leapt out the
window, odd-shaped blurs of coffee and lavender. "You sure this is a good
idea-ahhhh!"
Dari Turlough swooped
down, steadying Spiker in mid-air. The red-headed hacker was still shaky. No
surprise, after seeing her co-workers turned into humans. She was still pretty
freaked herself; no small order, for a Xanatos Enterprises security guard.
"No. But did you want to stay in there?"
Spiker snorted, bronze
membranes spread to catch the wind. "Do I look like a Microserf?"
Whatever that meant.
"We can pay for the window later. Right now, we've got to figure out what
happened. And we can't do that when everyone thinks we're the monsters."
"And what did happen,
oh mistress of the chrome baton?"
Dari rolled her eyes.
"I don't know that. Yet." She'd always wanted to be a P.I., but this
wasn't how she'd planned her first case. "But I know who might."
"Yeah?" Spiker
soared over her, getting the feel of the wind. "A whole building gets
turned into humans - who'd know about that?"
Fangs gleamed as Dari
grinned. "Who ya gonna call?"
***
"...And stay
out!"
Smoking neutrona wand in
hand, Janine watched for any more traces of that eerie violet fire. Dark lines
charred the walls, remnants of the conflict between blue-white proton beam and
purple flames. Half the day's paperwork smoldered on her desk, caught by a
stray burst. A green vapor hovered behind her shoulder, burbling in panic.
"Sorry, Slimer."
Wide eyes opened.
"Janine okay?"
The secretary smiled,
lowering her wand. "Yeah, spud. I-" Janine cocked her head and swore.
Without the crackle of a proton stream, the blaring alarm was suddenly clear.
Slinging on her proton
pack, she pelted downstairs to the containment unit. Didn't sound like a
breach. That alarm haunted her nightmares.
No; the towering unit
looked fine. But a small console across the room was bleeping like crazy.
Janine trailed a red nail
across the display, absently munching tasteless gum as she noted the enormous
spike in the local PKE. Fading now, but something had set off a psychokinetic
blast equal to a four-fold cross-rip.
The redhead whistled,
rubbing the hairs standing up on the back of her neck. No wonder she'd felt a
sudden urge to grab her proton pack.
It wasn't the first time a
Ghostbuster had grabbed a pack with no evident reason. Egon and Ray theorized
that constant exposure to low levels of PKE from the fireball nexus, coupled
with the occasional high blast from an annoyed spook, was increasing the
strength of their auras. Dr. Venkman thought they were just getting more subconsciously
attuned to the existing clues detectable by the five conventional senses. And
Winston said years of practice were honing their reflexes.
Whatever the reason,
Ghostbusters learned to pay attention to their hunches.
"Bad magic,"
Slimer whimpered behind her. Odd; usually this was the one place in the
fireball the little ghost wouldn't go. Aside from the lab in the middle of
Egon's experiments. "Bad, bad magic."
"You're telling
me." A few keystrokes, a quick grab of Egon's handwritten manual, and she
was looking at a snapshot of the last minute's PKE readings. Frequencies
definitely in the hostile end of the spectrum. With black overtones that
indicated someone calling on Powers best left uncalled-on. Ugly. Very, very
ugly.
Janine shivered. Good thing
she hadn't let those flames touch her.
Saving the file, she
grabbed a printout and ran back upstairs. She could read the charts, but when
it came to subtle implications, she'd rather grab a tall blond.
"Central to
Ecto-1." Static. Switching frequencies, Janine tried again. "Central
to Ecto-1. Guys, come in!"
Nothing.
Tossing her gum in the
wastebasket, Janine ran through the emergency frequencies. Okay; fire,
ambulance, police bands all up and running, full of voices ranging the gamut
from professional to hysterical. Harbor, CB radio-
Hello. Something about a
wall of mist? Right across the Jersey Turnpike, Janine realized,
snatching out a map of New York. And between that, and the New Jersey
frequencies she should have been getting....
Nothing outside New York
was getting through.
Okay. Janine pushed the queasy feeling
in her gut aside. So she couldn't contact the guys. But a blast like that
would've tripped PKE meters in Maryland. Sure as blazes, they'd be heading back
here.
So hold the fort until
they do get back.
No reason to believe there wouldn't be another blast coming. The containment
unit had held up to one. It might not survive two.
Not without help.
Pulling out some of the
more interesting gadgets in her desk, Janine started shoring up the fireball
defenses.
***
"Monsters!"
Cherry-red talons clung to Delilah's shoulders as if to the last life-raft off
the Titanic. "They've all turned into monsters!"
Wincing at her shriek,
Delilah tugged the transformed woman out of sight. The Labyrinth was half a breath
from riot; wings, tails, and shrieking people of two races diving for cover.
Talon and Maggie were in there somewhere; she could hear the mutate clan
leader's roar cutting through the chaos. Brentwood had left her side a few
seconds ago, rescuing a bully from his suddenly much stronger victim. Magic,
the hybrid thought, remembering the burning tingle that had swept through her
veins. It has to be magic. "Laela, calm down. Talon's not a
monster."
"Not them, them!"
Black hair flipping over her motorcycle jacket, Laela Kozakura pointed at the
untouched crowds. "They've all turned into humans!"
But you're a- Delilah shook away the protest.
Magic could warp the mind, make you think things that weren't true. And this
time they didn't have Nick here to break it.
Not here, she realized,
watching near-riot start to calm as Talon and her brothers physically separated
the most terrified victims. But H.E.A.T. was in New York. Mendel had left her a
message just last night. "Come on."
Dropping to all fours,
Laela followed her down the tunnel. "Where are we going?"
"To find a
phone." Mendel. She had to know Mendel was okay.
And if she found Mendel,
she'd find H.E.A.T.
***
Coughing, Sevarius
scrambled out from under fallen ceiling tiles. Rubble was thinner than he'd expected;
apparently the explosion had tossed him clear of the main damage. "This
was not covered in my contract," the geneticist complained. Not that he
expected an answer. Whoever that hawk-nosed man had been, his aim had been
quite accurate.
Not that it would do him
any good when Demona revived.
Dusting himself off,
Sevarius grimaced. Wrecked. The samples, the lab - the entire complex, from
what he could see in the light of sparking cables - all so much ruins. One of
his employers was temporarily dead on the floor, the other appeared to be
buried in a half-ton of plasterboard, and whoever they'd so thoroughly annoyed
was coming around with a groan and a spate of swears he'd not heard the like of
since Talon's rants.
Still, something could be
salvaged from this fiasco. So long as he could reclaim his computer files-
The ground shuddered. A
puddle of water rippled.
Sevarius stood very still.
Laughed once, uneasy. "Surely not."
More ripples. Faster. Closer.
Footsteps like
accelerating thunder.
Sevarius ran.
***
Demona sucked in air,
feeling the bullet wound close. Straight through the heart, she noted,
touching puckered flesh as it smoothed. Blinking dust out of her eyes before
she clawed her way clear of shaking rubble. If I'd been human, at least.
But collateral damage had
done the job. As that hastily-thrown burner had, shattering the poison she'd
meant to fuse with human cells. She plucked her spellbook from the wreckage,
snarling. Dragon alone knew what-
A falcon's shriek split
the air, and Demona's fangs gleamed. At least that much of her spells had gone
right. She felt feathered, furry strength bend to her will. My gryphon.
Mine!
Clambering free of the
outer walls, she raised a hand to the silver-domed sky, beckoning like a
falconer. "Come!"
Slate-gray feathers. Ebony
talons. Smoke-blue fur. A shape of myth, magic and vengeance. The gryphon
banked overhead, preparing to land and greet its mistress-
Black scales knocked it
from the sky.
Fangs bit. Talons raked.
Obsidian and gray fell and swooped, membraned wings constricting the feline
form. A howl of distress and rage blasted feathered ears, a black neck coiling
on itself to savage slate feathers.
"A wyvern,"
Demona breathed. "Here?" But how? Why?
Roof-shattering roar; the
gargoyle clapped hands over her ears, twisting toward the harbor. Asphalt shook
under her talons, vibrating to the tread of multi-ton feet. A mountain of
emerald-gray scales hurtled through shattered buildings, heading her way faster
than an Apache helicopter.
Demona was a New Yorker.
And no fool. If Godzilla was in New York, then Dr. Tatopoulos had been. And if
her spell had slain, as she'd meant it to-
Attack it! she willed her gryphon, clawing
her way up the nearest building. There was still one place in Manhattan which
might have resisted her spell; one last place to destroy, before the humans had
a chance to strike back. Kill it now!
***
Godzilla snapped at gray
fur, scenting the same wrongness that had attacked his parent. A birdlike call
mocked him, soaring up and out of reach, its wounds flowing like mist into
unmarred flesh.
Not quite out of reach.
Eyes flashed amber, green flame gouting out to sear and destroy.
Fur and feathers shattered
into ash. But the bird-cat flew away, feathers growing out of silver mist.
Healing, Godzilla
realized. Faster than he ever could. This was one threat that needed more than
flames. Nick!
Distress. Fear. Deadly
exhaustion.
Obsidian scales landed in
a tattered coil. He snarled at the winged stranger, more than willing to
continue the fight.
Red eyes met his, gleaming
crimson against black. Ducked away, bending in deliberate submission. Ebony
membranes shifted with a plaintive whine, the strange creature angling its
glance toward piled rubble.
Godzilla rumbled, curious.
Settling dust carried human scents. One was an enemy. He didn't know the
others.
But from the slow,
deliberate movements the stranger made, ignoring its own wounds to tear at the
rubble, it did.
Tilting his head, the
mutated lizard took a delicate step toward the ruin. Reached down toward the
pile, one claw testing its stability. Snorted.
Gently he butted the
stranger aside. This was going to take an expert.
***
"Don't tell me what
you can't do! Get me a satellite view of New York, or find someone who
can!" Major Tony Hicks hung up his phone with a snarl, running fingers
through disordered brown hair. Soldiers in cammo and clerical staff in more
formal greens dashed back and forth through the command tent, compiling updates
on the ominous mist that had claimed New York. "Look. I appreciate the
offer," he told the four agitated men in jumpsuits. "But this is a
heck of a lot bigger than a walking marshmallow."
Phillipe Roache watched
from shadows near a mud-spattered truck as soldiers overflowed New Jersey's
Sandy Point military base, a wall of steel and olive drab against what lay
across the river. A wall that might as well be paper, for all the good it would
do against magic. Seirian, if you knew....
No. The French spy reined in his
suspicion. If Mailli had known, she would have spoken. Those of Clan Wyvern had
no skill at lying. At best, they could avoid the truth.
Horrible for a spy. But
for those who dealt with the great beasts, perhaps it was as well.
Phillipe clamped down on
growing anxiety, the sure knowledge of what might occur were he to be
discovered here. What little he knew of magic was enough to outweigh caution.
For anything that could so strike New York, with all its defenders, would not stop
until it had destroyed the United States... and perhaps the world.
Dr. Venkman leaned
forward, all charming self-confidence. "Major, I can see you're running
the show here. And I have to admit Dr. Spengler is a little upset... like
anyone else who's got friends in New York. All we'd like to do is offer a
little helpful advice, some information-"
"Didn't help you see
this coming, did it?" Hicks' glance was seriously skeptical.
"We were out on a
call," Dr. Stantz tried to defend the foursome, ignoring Venkman's subtle
hints to hush. "And now Janine's in there alone-"
"With eight million
other people." Hicks shook his head, taking a clipboard from a saluting
sergeant. "The minute a major U.S. city disappeared off the map, it became
a matter of national security. Your five minutes are up, gentlemen. Good
night."
"But you can't!"
Dr. Stantz protested.
Hicks' lips were a thin
line. "Watch me." He waved an impatient hand. "Get them out of
here."
"Major-"
Brisk MPs escorted the
protesting Ghostbusters from the tent.
"Can't go telling a
Major he can't. Ray," Mr. Zeddemore said in an undertone. "Just makes
things worse."
"But the man has no
concept of the potential danger," Dr. Spengler complained. "PKE
readings are fully consistent with someone unleashing a multi-level curse. If
whoever's casting it should go unchecked-"
"Save it for the
press," the MP sergeant snarled.
"If you would only listen-"
"Ah'll take them from
here, Sarge," Phillipe said, secure in Elvis Presley's accent and the
lieutenant's bars on his cammo. "If y'all will follow me?"
Green eyes slid over him,
seeing just another soldier; sharpened. "C'mon, guys," Dr. Venkman
said, carefully casual. "Let's let the nice Army guy show us out."
"From which I deduce
you are not, in fact, a member of the armed forces," Dr. Spengler said
thoughtfully, once they were past the gate and out of casual earshot.
"E-gon," Peter
groaned.
"That would depend on
your definition," Phillipe said levelly, removing borrowed insignia as
they headed for the Ghostbusters' - unique - vehicle. "Come. We have much
to discuss-"
"Roache!" A
clatter of safeties; a horde of wide young eyes, as Hicks' men emerged from
spotlit darkness.
***
Digging, Nick thought, feeling the echo of
a tug against his fingers. He could almost see the chunks dislodged, judge
exactly which one had to be moved in order to keep the whole pile from crashing
down-
Something hot and far too
sweet filled his mouth. He swallowed reflexively. "Gaah-"
"You had us worried
there." Elsie held sugary coffee away. "Nick?"
"Hurts," he
managed. Not physically; though the roar of the engine seemed far too loud, and
Mylar felt like a rasp on his skin. But inside, where frail threads hung,
half-burned. "Cold. Team?"
"We are -
intact." A hint of hesitation in Monique's voice.
"More or less,"
Elsie allowed.
"A little less than
more." Mendel appeared, rubbing a sore neck. "There's water everywhere."
Randy shook damp
dreadlocks. "And check out the Goth chick."
Blue and red wings caught
Nick's eye. A dark-haired gargoyle held the helm, wearing Maza's face.
"Um." The biologist rubbed his eyes, sipped more coffee. Only to find
Elsie had switched cups. Hot and spicy, just a hint of raisin; Randy's beef and
pasilla bajillo pepper stew. Blanket, sugar, caffeine, protein,
capsaicin, Nick ran down the checklist; Monique's terse instructions on
what to do when a psychic overextended himself. Right after she said not
to do that... Ow. His head felt like someone had taken an anvil to it.
Repeatedly. "Problem."
"Your grasp of the
obvious never ceases to amaze."
Sarcasm was good. Sarcasm
meant Monique was willing to fight. He blinked at the silver fog shrouding the
horizon. "Explosion." Nowhere else they would be heading; not if he
knew his team.
"G-man beat us
there." Randy pounded on his keyboard. "Man, something's seriously
twisted. I can't even hook up a satellite!"
"The fog seems to be
some sort of EM barrier," Mendel reported, reading Nigel's sensors.
"It's blocking all transmissions, in or out."
Nick tried to think past
the pounding headache. "So no one knows we're still here." Oh, joy.
Elsie followed his gaze
toward New Jersey. "You don't think Hicks would-"
"I hope not." He
tried to stand; reconsidered when his knees folded. Where are you?
Relief. Soothing warmth, tiptoeing
gentle through the wreckage in his mind. Shards of color and sound flitted
through their bond; a scaled shape of wings and night, sparking cables,
someone's low swears. "Someone's caught in the rubble. I think he's
digging them out. I-" Clamping his lips shut, Nick glanced wildly about.
"Easy. Easy!"
Elsie rubbed his shoulder. "They're driving." Her arm wrapped around
him. "It's okay," she said softly, wiping away one lone tear.
"You're safe."
"Tired," Nick
mumbled, burying his face in scarlet tresses. Vanilla, a touch of seawater, the
warm scent that was just Elsie. "Hurts."
Monique nodded. "What
else?"
Nick reached for Godzilla;
winced. Ow. "He missed whoever set it off. But there's something
else." Gray feathers, black scales, coupled with feelings of anger and
acceptance. "Two creatures. One got away. The other doesn't want a fight.
I think." Hard to be sure. Everything ached.
A phone shrilled.
"Dr. Craven," the roboticist answered. His face lit. "Delilah!
What -where-" He listened intently.
"Aw, they're so
sweet," Randy grinned.
Mendel hmphed.
"For your information, this is important." He bent back to the phone.
"You're sure? Everywhere?" A soft whistle; he knelt by Nick, beckoned
the rest of the team in. "Guys, you'd better hear this...."
***
"They're hiding
something," Elisa growled. "I can feel it."
"Leave it alone,
partner," Matt said firmly. "We're alive, right?"
Angela leaned near him.
"Are you all right?"
The redhead managed a
shadow of a smile. "As long as I don't think too hard."
Elisa's phone trilled.
"Maza," the detective said, after a moment's fumbling with the
buttons. "Captain! Ah, we're sort of in the middle of - what?" Elisa
stared at the receiver. "Turned into humans," she said slowly.
"What?" Matt
made a grab for the phone.
Elisa dodged, then held it
so both could hear. "Yeah, Matt's with me. No, he didn't get turned into a
human... exactly. Is the precinct okay?" Dark eyes narrowed.
"Captain, we've got some concerned citizens heading for the blast.
H.E.A.T., a few others. Should we-?" A nod. "Okay. Got it." She
hung up. "Guess what, Angela? You're legal."
"Chavez and
Morgan?" Matt shook his head.
"And who knows who
else."
***
Rubble shifted above Frank
Parker, a fragment ticking against his aching skull. "Ohhh...."
Somewhere in the chaos, he
heard Donovan mouthing insults worthy of a Marine drill sergeant.
"Donovan! Olga!"
"Here." Donovan
coughed, something rattling off to his right. There was a painful gasping near
him; Olga. "Can you move?"
Frank's fingers met piled
plasterboard. "Not much. You okay?" They were alive. That much of the
timeline had changed. But they weren't alone. "Seirian? Ms. Mailli?"
"Not... so
loud...."
Frank scrabbled at the
rubble to his left, trying to get closer to that pained whisper. Something in that
tight voice shouted broken ribs. "Just hang on, lady."
"I'm... getting too
old for this...." Hitch of breath. "Try to... stay calm. Help is
coming."
Help? "Lady, this place and who
knows how much of Manhattan just got blown to smithereens. What kind of help do
you think's-"
A low rumble shook his
bones; like a passing freight train, like oncoming thunder. But too alive to be
either.
Pressure lifted off his
legs, concrete and plasterboard swept away by a massive shadow in the night. An
amber orb hung above him, set in a shape of darkness-
It blinked.
***
Merde. Phillipe gauged distances; then
shrugged, and raised his hands. If he was known, he was known. So little, so
very, very little against the frantic fear of Dr. Chapman's last radio call,
the burning knowledge that Monique had missed her weekly report.
He'd lost so many of his
people. He would not lose another.
"Insurance get
old?" The major's eyes were cold and angry. At his glance, a determined
youth gestured with a rifle. "You men want to step back."
"No, I don't think we
do," Winston said thoughtfully. Dark hands were raised like the others,
but there was a stony stubbornness in brown eyes. "Case you hadn't
noticed, we're off the base." The ex-soldier stood his ground. "Which
makes this out of your jurisdiction."
"Winston?" There
was a world of caution in Venkman's voice.
"Trust me on this
one, m'man." Winston lowered his hands. "You two want to work this
out?"
Hicks' nostrils flared.
"I ought to bury you so deep it'd take the French a miracle to find
you," he bit out. "If you think I'm going to let one more U.S.
citizen take orders from you like Tatopoulos does-"
That slight could not go
unanswered, no matter the cost. "If you believe that any man could give
Dr. Tatopoulos orders, M'sieur, you know less of him than I had thought,"
Phillipe said softly.
Be alive, my friend. For Nick, for H.E.A.T., he had
risked this. As he knew the scientist would risk all for him; a gift he had
never expected, that rainy afternoon in New Jersey.
A gift Hicks had spurned.
At times, he could pity
the man.
The major looked as if he
wished nothing less than to pull the trigger. "What do you know?"
A Gallic shrug.
"Information reached us that someone... or something... intended to strike
New York, by means unknown. And that if these gentlemen remained within its
boundaries, they would not survive." Phillipe met the shocked eyes about
him. "My source is skilled in dealing with the darker side of the arcane.
Unless we receive information to the contrary, we must believe that those
within the mist have not perished."
Egon cleared his throat.
"That would be consistent with our readings," the physicist said
quietly. "Is your source a sorcerer?"
Phillipe shook his head.
"One who counters sorcery, when the need is great." He glanced toward
the mist. "Those efforts were not entirely successful." A hand
opened, dismissing the matter. "You could pierce the wall?"
"If we had our
destabilizers." Ray's shoulders slumped. "There's got to be some
way."
"Oh, I think there
is." Peter studied the spy casually.
Phillipe hid a smile. A
pity the man was not French. He would have made an excellent agent.
"Indeed." His gaze flicked to Hicks. "It will not allow the
passage of many."
"The heck-"
"One must have the
right tool for the task at hand, Major. They do." And you do not.
"If there is an
active sorcerer in there, your men would only be more targets," Egon
stated flatly.
"No offense, but I'd
rather not be ducking bullets the same time I'm dodging spooks," Winston
added. "Bullets and protons just don't mix, know what I mean?"
Hicks finally waved off
the guns. "You're not going in there alone."
"No. They will not
be."
The major stared at him.
"You're not serious."
Phillipe lifted a
gray-flecked brow. "Nick," he said deliberately, "Is my
friend." I will not abandon him. I will not betray him.
Not as you did.
A flicker of give in hard
brown eyes. "I have my orders."
"As do I."
Orders Nick had never held against him; even when he'd been sent to destroy
Godzilla. The scientist had simply never given up trying to prove the
creature's innocence.
As he had, once Winter's
chameleon was revealed.
The French agent smiled.
"So. Shall we see if they might intersect?"
***
"What was this
place?" Angela asked, talons flexing nervously as she clambered through
the ruins.
"Solstice
Technologies." Rifle in hand, Monique covered their advance toward the
blast center. "One of Cameron Winter's research facilities."
Leaning on Elsie's arm,
Nick smiled grimly. Scents were a dense miasma in his brain; shattered
concrete, sparking wires, the lingering stench of the enemy. "I wonder if
Cam was in."
Maza shot him a dubious
look. "You don't hope he was in there."
"Why not?" Elsie
wove past leaning ceiling tiles. "I do."
"Ditto here, amiga."
Trenchcoat over a
wing-cloaked shoulder, Matt eyed H.E.A.T. warily. "What is with you
people?"
"Practicality."
Dark humor flickered in Monique's tones.
Angela's gaze narrowed.
"I thought you helped people."
Mendel sniffed, guiding
Nigel around a puddle of something gooey green. "After the third
explosion, the milk of human kindness tends to sour." He tapped his
readouts. "Massively fluctuating EM. This is it-"
Gunshots split the night.
Annoyance crashed through the fragile shield
Nick had pieced together, followed by the feel of a thrashing body pinned under
a massive talon. "Son of a-" echoed weirdly through his mind, from
two sets of ears.
Somehow Nick made his way
to familiar scales. "Stay still!" he ordered the dark-haired stranger
Godzilla held so delicately down. "He doesn't like guns."
"You're telling
me," came the airless gasp.
"Mr. Parker?" A
woman's voice, flavored with tones he'd last heard in Chernobyl. A half-burned
lab manual slid off a pile of rubble.
More fragments slid.
"Frank, you okay?"
"Depends. You're the
doc, Olga." Frank managed to lift his head an inch. "Anybody ever die
of embarrassment?"
Olga coughed out dust.
"If they did, you would be quite immune, Mr. Parker."
Nick ignored the byplay,
fixed on obsidian scales. Small, much smaller than Godzilla, though between
coiled neck and tail it might be as long as the H.E.A.T. Seeker. Ruby eyes
narrowed at him; the wyvern hissed, digging at the pile of twisted metal near
Frank.
Godzilla snarled.
"Elisa, look
out!" Matt drew his revolver.
"No!" Nick held
out a warding hand as Maza dodged right back out from behind her partner.
"No, that's defensive behavior! Stay back!" He could feel deadly heat
building, about to break free-
"Okay, Nick."
Matt's aim was steady, straight at a ruby eye. Red wings curled, ready to leap
at the enemy. "You know these things. What do we do now?"
I don't know this one. But he had to try. Godzilla had
been willing to work with it; that argued for intelligence. "Easy,"
Nick said softly. He held out an open hand, projecting calm, peace.
"Easy."
Dark nostrils sniffed his
fingers. Curiosity trickled in, swamped by a stronger flood of protect.
Faint image of a silver-haired woman, of strength and laughter and blood.
Nick's breath caught.
It... wasn't like Godzilla. Feathery wisps of emotion, not a crashing torrent.
Pictures faded, yet as full of intricate detail as an ancient tapestry.
But the burning gaze
eased. A plaintive whine echoed from the dark-scaled throat. Talons peeled back
one more shattered lab shelf, unearthing a bloodied hand.
"'Vaen." A bare
whisper as shaky fingers reached up, stroked obsidian scales. "Old
friend."
"Nick?" Elsie,
knuckles turning pale on his shoulder.
"Help her," Nick
said, sinking to a clear patch of floor. "He won't stop you."
"How do you know
that?" Maza pounced.
"Color pattern's
consistent with male reptiles," Nick said, deliberately misunderstanding
her question. "Randy, Mendel-"
Sneakers skidded through
debris. "If it's got data, jefe, it's ours."
"Good." Nick
leaned on gray-green scales. When this was over, he planned to sleep for a
week. "Elsie-"
"Sample anything that
looks suspicious." Hands on her hips, the paleontologist shook her head.
"Think we can haul off the whole place?"
Nick chuckled. You
okay?
Amused wuffle. A wall of
scales nudged his chest. Scratch?
A smile bent Nick's lips.
Closing his eyes, he dug his fingers into scaled armor, relaying the touch to
that warm mind. A few minutes rest wouldn't hurt.
***
So this is H.E.A.T., Frank thought, dusting himself
off. Resisting the urge to shake, as he noted the dent one giant talon had made
in his leather jacket. Funny. I thought they'd be taller. "Olga,
you okay-" Words died in his throat.
A pale jade form emerged
from under a shattered lab counter, muttering rough Russian curses. She had
Olga's scarlet hair, Olga's high cheekbones, and she wore the physicist's neat
- if dusty - suit-dress. But spikes pierced red locks, taloned feet were bare,
and one moss-hued batwing splayed open to reveal membranes the ephemeral green
of sunset.
Frank rubbed his eyes. No
change. Except that now Donovan was in view, too; another spiky, six-limbed
shape in cammo, brown and black. "Oh, this is not happening."
"What's not-"
Olga caught a glimpse of herself. Shrieked.
Humans clapped hands to
ringing ears. Even the gargoyles winced. High and shrill, somewhere between a
Siberian tiger's roar and a sea eagle's cry, it rattled down loose bits of
plaster.
"Aaughhh,"
someone moaned. White hair lolled out of a pile of debris, glasses bent askew.
Godzilla rumbled, low and
menacing. Nick's head snapped up. "Cameron."
Frank's hand moved toward
his holster; closed, as he remembered his gun was a hunk of mangled steel.
Tatopoulos' voice was deadly even, tones he hadn't heard since the last time
Talmadge grabbed hold of an officer who'd sent his people into an ambush.
Dark eyes blinked behind
glass. Focused on scales, then the angry scientist beside them. The white
goatee bristled. "You!"
"Me."
A slim hand slammed into
the side of Winter's neck.
Nick sighed.
Monique dusted off her
hands as the billionaire collapsed. "He would not have given us useful
information in any event."
Elsie's grin had a
definite vicious edge. "You don't hear me complaining."
"Easy, ma'am."
Matt brushed a few last pieces of rubble off Seirian. "We're with the
police. You should stay still until we can get somebody out here."
"They're... cracked,
not broken, young man. I'll be well enough." A quiet cough. "Assuming
I don't pull any more damn-fool heroics."
"Maza, 23rd
Precinct," a blue gargoyle said briskly. "Who did this?"
"Don't suppose Demona
means anything to you." Frank put an arm under Seirian's shoulders.
"On three. One, two-"
Seirian sucked in a
breath, and the wyvern snarled. But she was on her feet, even if she did lean
heavy on her cane.
"Mother." Angela
looked bleak. "Where is she?"
"Somewhere under
there." But drops of blood led away from shattered concrete, and Frank's
gut knotted. "Or she was. Seirian, that's a monster-"
The monster was currently
rubbing its scaled cheek against white hair, almost purring. "There,
now," Seirian said softly. "I'm all right, 'Vaen. Shhh." She
stroked the dark mane.
Tatopoulos was white as
falling snow. "Seirian. Seirian Mailli?"
Frank glanced from black
scales to emerald-gray, seeing the same slight frame, the same air of wide-eyed
wonder. What must it be like, the orphan chrononaut wondered, to run into
family you never knew you had....
Seirian's smile was a
faint thing, a shape of shadows and starlight. "I'd planned this wonderful
first meeting. I know Rhedyn had her heart set on a grand gala, all the clan
invited; lights and feasts and dancing into the dawn." Her smile
strengthened, touched with a glint of wry amusement. "It's good to see
you."
Wordless, Nick could only
shake his head.
Green eyes winced.
"Demona?"
Donovan was studying
dripped blood. "Something walked away from here."
"Gargoyle,"
Monique declared.
"Heading
toward-" Mendel paled. "Delilah's going that way!"
***
Someone was pounding on
the door like the NYPD SWAT team with a hangover. "It's open!" Janine
called, setting the proton pack out of sight on her chair. She kept the
neutrona wand ready. Night like this, you couldn't be too cautious.
A cocoa-hued figure of wings
and spikes yanked the black door open, tossing a cherry red creature in biker's
leathers over the threshold. "Help-"
Something grey and
feathery struck.
A scream lingered in empty
air, angry and afraid. "For goodness' sake!" Slinging on her pack,
Janine ran for the howls.
The groaning red tangle of
wings sure looked demonic. But demons generally didn't come to the Ghostbusters
for help.
And when they did, only an
idiot ignored them.
Shrieks split the air; a
rainbow of membranes and talons, slashing at a mist-edged gryphon. Three
creatures, Janine registered, taking aim; cocoa, and a new pair of
security-uniformed blue and t-shirted coffee. "Get clear!"
Wings dove away as protons
crackled through the air. The gryphon caterwauled, mist searing in the blue-white
beam.
Not a ghost, the secretary
knew, watching the effects of her stream. Over her shoulder she saw two of the
winged creatures bolt through the door, bruised and bleeding.
The cocoa one stayed
beside her. "Come on!"
Firing one last shot,
Janine dove through. The white-haired female gripped the door as a huge body
crashed into it; held it, fangs gritted, as Janine slammed the bolts home.
The gryphon battered at
solid wood, claws scraping down with a screech to put chalkboards to shame. It
chattered at the lock, like some darkling cross between a falcon and an
Abyssinian cat the size of the Library Lions.
Snap! ZiiiIIING -
KA-POW!
Janine closed her eyes in
relief, hearing the electrical crackle as Ray and Egon's defense system kicked
in. A peregrine's screech, and the gryphon decamped in a thunder of wings.
Breathing hard, Melnitz
could only stare at the four creatures who'd taken refuge with her. She'd seen
things out of Ray's books turn up before, but the guys had been sure
these were extinct. Holy - are these gargoyles? Man, Ray's going to
be sorry he missed this....
"Delilah!" The
red gargoyle shrieked. "She's a human too!"
"Laela-" Delilah
threw up her hands. "Thank you, Ms. Melnitz." Favoring a bruised leg,
the white-haired gargoyle gave her a painful smile. "Mendel was right. You
are kind."
"Mendel." She
didn't know any Mendels, except- "You mean Dr. Craven?" And the
guy faints when he sees Slimer, Janine thought at her nod. "You gotta
problem?"
"Can't you
tell?" Laela flung out clawed hands. "You don't have any wings!"
"No," Delilah
groaned, knuckling her horns as if to rub out a headache. "I told you.
You're supposed to be human!"
The blue-skinned blonde
shook her head. "You're kidding, right?" Turlough, read the
nameplate on her uniform blouse. "Lady, I know you're confused, but Spiker
and I really need to talk to the Ghostbusters-"
"They're outta
town," Janine interrupted. "An' unless you know somebody who can make
a radio sit up and beg, we can't call 'em." She pointed at Delilah.
"They're not supposed to be gargoyles?"
Delilah shook her head.
"I think it's a spell," she stated, rubbing a sore, spiky knee.
"It just hit a little while ago." She hesitated. "Mendel knows
radios."
Right. If he could stay conscious
long enough to cross the circuits. "Thanks f' the offer, but-"
The ceiling shuddered.
Dust filtered down; chunks of shattered brick dropped past the window.
Janine swore under her
breath. Just because the gryphon couldn't cross the threshold, didn't mean it
couldn't get them. All it had to do was-
Crash. More masonry thundered down.
Flatten the building, the secretary finished the
thought.
"Screw it," the
Bronx native said flatly. "Call "im."
***
Touching down on a
half-crumbled roof, Demona laughed. Sirens, wailing alarms, the shrill shrieks
of human panic - oh, what wondrous music!
But her target still
stood. Streams of blue-white fire shot from shattered windows, holding her
gryphon at bay.
Only two. The gargoyle sorceress smiled
grimly. Most of the Ghostbusters must have been struck down. Whoever remained
should be easy prey for one last curse.
And then there would be no
one to shatter her spells. No one at all.
Fangs glinting, she raised
Aimerigot's spellbook high. A green glow misted around her hands, wrapping her
in a coat of verdant flames. "Omnes audite-"
Zzzap!
Across the street, Janine
blew smoke away from her neutrona wand.
***
"One, two-"
H.E.A.T. and Donovan heaved the white-painted Solstice Labs SUV upright,
backing off as it rocked on black wheels. "Get Nigel in," Nick
ordered, prying at the back door lock. Know there's a way to do this-
"Stick to handcuffs, jefe,"
Randy advised, slipping the screwdriver from his grip. "This needs an
expert."
Stabbing a crowbar through
steel, Monique yanked it open.
"That works,"
the hacker acknowledged.
"Technically, this
counts as grand theft-" Matt started.
Nick wanted to pound his
head against sheet steel. Not now! Godzilla was crouched and ready, tail
lashing, battle-rage rising like an oncoming storm. The threat's scent
beckoned, an alien taunt in the wind.
The gryphon wouldn't yield
to fire. The biologist clung to that knowledge like the last anchor in a
hurricane. Godzilla couldn't do this alone.
Wait, Nick tried to convey. Please
wait. We're coming.
Frank held up his badge.
"As a duly authorized agent of the NSA, I hereby commandeer this vehicle
for the duration of the emergency." He grinned.
Olga sighed. "You've
always wanted to say that, haven't you, Mr. Parker."
"Well... yeah."
Monique plucked out a dive
knife. "Randy, your assistance," she directed. "Lever the casing
off in this direction...."
Elisa winced as plastic
popped free, exposing wires the French agent expertly twisted together. Sparks
snapped; the engine revved. "We could just glide there."
"Maybe you
could." Donovan blew out a breath, wrapping ebony wings a little closer
around himself. "Rest of us are a little new at this."
"I can talk you
through it." Grabbing a wall, Maza started climbing.
Angela smiled shyly at Matt.
"You might like it."
The redhead blushed.
"Ahhh...."
"You'll never keep
up," Elsie called out, as she helped Mendel lift Nigel into the SUV.
"Have you ever seen Godzilla move?"
"From a
distance," Seirian said softly, leaning on the borrowed vehicle. "I think
Gwydrfaen can come close. And if he were flying level, gargoyles could use the
backdraft...." Wrinkled fingers beckoned. "Could you give me a hand,
Frank?"
"Yeah, sure -
whoa!"
Gleaming fangs plucked the
NSA agent off the ground, deposited him just forward of Gwydrfaen's wings. The
wyvern sniffed him over, tongue flicking at dark hair. "Hang onto the
mane," Seirian advised.
"Hang - oh, sh-"
Spans of silky black swept
wide, the boom of air cutting off speech. Rearing back, Gwydrfaen launched.
H.E.A.T. winced at the
scream.
"Well, I can't ride
him," the elderly woman pointed out, one arm hugging her side as she got
into the SUV. High above, colored wings were swept up in the wind from
Gwydrfaen's flight. "And we'll need some eyes in the air."
"I can see the family
resemblance," Mendel muttered, following.
What?! "Excuse me?"
Randy thumped his
shoulder, got behind the wheel. "Face it, Nick. You, problem, bulldozer -
what can I say?"
"Which isn't a bad
thing," Elsie gave him a smile as she climbed in. "As long as you're
not the problem."
They had to be kidding.
"Floor it!"
***
"Try an' pick your
shots," Janine called up the firepole to Delilah. The characteristic
crackle of a proton stream sounded, followed by an earthshaking thump.
Gryphon tryin' to
flatten the firehall,
the secretary thought. Buildings down all over the five b'roughs, a
gargoyle's using my spare pack, an' H.E.A.T. still has t' find a car... She
fired again, clipping ivory talons. Outside a' that, the day's just fine.
"Gryphons aren't
ghosts," Dari blurted. "Shouldn't a blast scare it off?"
"Blasted it
already." Zap. Crash! "Think it's a - what'd Egon call 'em - a
construct. Zap it, an' the mist keeps puttin' it back together."
"It's Demona's,"
Delilah panted. "She's after me-"
"Jump out that
window, an' I'll fry you, Del!" Janine yelled. "Laela, set up there
an' stop her from doin' something stupid-"
Thunder cracked.
Green lightning danced
around a gargoyle's hand, emerald sparks flying between the gold points of her
headdress.
"Guess we found the
sorceress," the secretary said dryly. She got up? Full-force blast- an
she got up?
Lightning flew, scorching
its way along the building. "She's trying to take the place apart!"
Spiker cried.
Dull roar; the wall of the
firehall exploding, Janine realized, brushing brick dust out of her face.
Streetlights shone into the lab, a few throwing scatters of sparks.
The gryphon screeched,
hovering over the street. Circled, arrowing toward them.
Heart sinking, Janine
raised her thrower for one last stand. "Guys' Get down to the basement.
An' lock the door!"
Multicolored wings
vanished down the hole. Delilah dropped down the pole jumped clear to stand
side by side with her. "I said get outta here!" Janine snarled. The
defense systems could cover broken windows. But not a hole you could drive a
truck through.
"No," Delilah
said quietly. Standing rock-still, pack almost jarring hers. "You need
someone to watch your back."
Janine abandoned the
argument, firing at misty flesh. But the gryphon wasn't stopping, no matter how
many holes they punched in it. Lion claws swooped toward them, gleaming knives
of ebony. Funny. Never thought I'd go out like this....
Boom. Car alarms squealed. Boom.
Glass rattled.
An SUV's engine revved
into hearing range, screeching around a corner.
A slatey beak snapped shut
bare inches from her arm. Janine caught a blur of black, a sweep of tail-
With a squawk, the gryphon
wasn't there.
"Wah-hoo!" the
secretary cheered as gray feathers drifted down. "Guys, I think the
cavalry just got here!"
***
Speeding down the avenue,
Godzilla watched for the gryphon's attack.
It knew fire couldn't kill
it. It knew teeth couldn't break its spine. And it wasn't bound to the ground.
Pausing near a seared
brick building, Godzilla stopped. Sniffed the air, though the gryphon earned
little more scent than the mist of wrongness that formed it. Glanced about.
No sight of the enemy.
Careful, Nick wished, worry like a gray
haze.
Godzilla snorted. Clawed
into asphalt, digging fast and furious, rubble flying in a dark cloud.
Wind whispered through
feathers.
Godzilla leaped aside,
talons raking blood from the side of his neck. Teeth closed on misty feathers.
Crunch.
***
Man oh man. Frank rolled onto the rooftop,
trying to keep his breathing quiet as Gwydrfaen soared upward. Not easy, after
that pulse-pounding ride over the rooftops, Manhattan spread under him like a
frayed, jeweled tapestry.
But the glowing figure on
the roof-edge was enough to cut off breath entirely. A chained book was in her
arms, electricity had charred her halter to almost nothing, and she was
laughing. Demona.
"Yes, come,
humans," the sorceress murmured as H.E.A.T. and Olga all but fell out of
the SUV, diving behind rubble as lightning struck around them. Particle beam
fire lanced up at the roof, green bolts of science splattering against magic's
shield. "Make it easy for me to kill you." She drew in a deep breath.
"Omnes audite... omnes oculae-"
"Now!" Elisa
yelled. Four sets of wings dove from the sky, tackling the sorceress to the
roof.
"Who dares-"
Frank dove into the
taloned heap, dodging blows that could punch holes through steel. Book,
he thought, grabbing for iron chain. Have to get the book....
***
Godzilla worked teeth over
misty flesh, listening to bones snap and crunch. No taste of blood flowed. No
scent of death. Only an endless, ongoing flood of mist into broken flesh,
reforming whenever his grip loosened.
A toothed beak bit hard
into his lip.
Snarling, Godzilla flung
the gryphon into the rubble pit. Bones shattered.
But the gryphon launched
itself back into the air, wings pumping desperately for altitude-
Obsidian scales struck it
from the sky.
Gwydrfaen snapped feathers,
tore fur, coiled a tail to break magical bones. Held the creature in the pit,
while Godzilla shoved and clawed asphalt up around it.
The piles were high
enough. The mutated lizard began to inhale.
***
Donovan hit the roof edge
hard, flung by blue talons. Matt collapsed in a smoking heap, barely breathing.
Elisa and Demona were clenched in a bloody deathgrip, fang to bared fang.
Green bolts slashed past
Frank's head, holing the sorceress' wings. Angela leapt from Matt's side, tears
streaking her cheeks as she sank claws into the immortal gargoyle's tail.
"I won't let you do this. Mother!"
Now! With Demona's arms and tail fully
occupied, Frank dove in after the book.
"You won't stop
me!" Curling on herself, Demona whipped a foot toward him.
The chrononaut saw
starlight gleam off knife-edged talons. There was just enough time to dodge-
Frank grabbed the chain
instead.
Ribs gave way under the
razored blow. The roof was suddenly gone, and the street loomed large below. I
think this is going to hurt-
Jade arms caught him,
talons screeching against concrete. Olga lifted him one- handed to the ledge
just below the roof; clawed her way up to huddle against the wall, gasping.
Leaving the book in her
shaking arms, Frank climbed toward the caterwaul of the world's worst catfight.
Brick shrapnel nearly took
his head off. Elisa shook off the blow, rolling under Demona's punch in a neat
cartwheel of wings and tail. Bleeding from a dozen gashes, the detective
blasted a fist into Demona's solar plexus. "That's for Parker!"
Stomped an instep, tearing with blue talons. "That's for Angela!"
Shoved a spiked elbow up into Demona's throat, hands linked and pushing hard.
Blood gushed down her arm. "That's for Matt!"
Once again, the light died
in green eyes. Elisa snarled, picking the immortal up bodily. "And
this," she gritted out, stepping to the roof edge, "Is for me!"
Demona hurtled past him
like a half-ton brick.
***
Black scales leapt away
from the humanoid bullet. Tearing out a misty jugular, Gwydrfaen scrambled
clear.
Godzilla breathed fire.
Asphalt melted, a tarry
torrent of black. Dark liquid flooded the pit, covered misty and blue flesh in
impenetrable ebony. Head and claws shoved stone and brick over the pool,
burying thrashing tar.
Steaming silence.
A high, rattling cry shook
the air; the wyvern spread silk-black membranes wide, displaying with thrashing
tail.
Godzilla roared in answer.
Sniffing black tar, he
snorted. The threat wasn't dead. Not yet.
But this ought to
keep it busy awhile.
***
"We've got an opening
for insertion," Hicks said sharply. Ranks of green lined up behind him,
glancing nervously at the Ghostbusters. "We should head in now."
"We cannot bring so
much mass across," Phillipe stated. "To proceed without tactical
information would be foolish."
"There's no way
this'll work-"
"On the
contrary." Egon Spengler held the transistor case as Ray soldered a last
circuit, firmly ignoring the panic shuddering in the back of his mind. Behind
them all stood the wall of mist around uptown New York; as close as they could
get to Manhattan. Janine. "It's quite clear. Inverse phase
amplification, powered by nuclear acceleration, coupled with the PKE frequency
filters to remove the worst interference from the spell-"
"He's sure,"
Peter interrupted. "So - which button do we push?"
Egon shot him a dark look.
Sometimes he was halfway convinced Peter deliberately ignored the fundamentals
of mechanical engineering. "Flip the toggle switch to your right. Not
the button."
"Egon, you mad
scientist, why not?"
And other times he was
sure. "It would be bad."
"Tres mal,
oui?"
Phillipe looked amused.
"Une explosion
tres magnifique,"
Egon replied wryly.
"I heard explosion in
there," Winston pointed out.
Ray flipped the switch.
"Janine? Janine, come in!"
"We should be contacting
the city authorities-" Hicks started.
"And what do you
think they will do with a sorcerer, Major?" Studying the mistwall, the
French agent stepped back. "Throw red tape?"
Static snapped. "-Out
of here," came over the speaker. The characteristic thud of the firehall
doors sounded in the background. "Ray! Ray, is that you?" A snarl of
voices muttered nearby. "Are the guys all right? Egon?"
The physicist let out a
breath he hadn't realized he was holding. "We're fine, Janine. And
you?"
"There's buildings
down all over the five b'roughs, we got a construct an' a gargoyle sorceress
buried in the street, an' there's a thirty-story lizard blocking traffic.
Outside a' that...."
***
Monique flipped a page.
"What have you discovered?"
Nick rubbed his eyes, leaned
back from the microscope. Focusing on samples in someone else's lab wasn't
easy. But he'd done it before.
Just not with a seriously
ticked off lizard in his head.
Breathe. He couldn't lose it now. Not with
Dr. Vukavitch watching; even if she was frightened half to death at what had
happened. Not with a bloody agent of the NSA huddled in the corner, refusing to
go to the hospital until they knew whether those affected could be cured.
Not with Seirian Mailli in
the streets outside.
She knew who I was. It ached, sharp and bitter. She
knew.
Intellectually he knew
there might be good reasons why the elderly woman hadn't simply shown up on his
doorstep. The main reason being that dark-scaled creature currently helping
Godzilla keep watch on smoking asphalt. No sane person would bring a possible
threat into Godzilla's territory. And given what he'd sensed from Gwydrfaen,
there was no way the wyvern would have let Seirian go anywhere without him.
But intellect wasn't
working that well right now.
First things first. Let
go of the focus knob before it breaks.
"First off, the
affected samples are normal," the mutation biologist managed. "At
least as normal as Delilah's."
"Yet we know Delilah
is half human." Monique nodded at Olga's four taloned digits, where Delilah
had five.
"On the basis of
which, I would say some of their human DNA is being suppressed." He
glanced toward yellow metal. "Mendel?"
"According to what we
have on record-" The roboticist looked up. "All Elisa's DNA is still
in her cells. It's just - something else is there on top of it."
"And right now, it's
acting as a matrix of dominant polygenes," Elsie added, tapping a pen on
her readouts. "A lot of human proteins have been replaced by gargoyle
homologues. Don't ask me how."
Nick waved it off. They
could work on how later. Right now they needed to know what.
"What about Detective
Bluestone?" Olga asked. Jade hands shook; she patted her clothes in an
ex-smoker's absent search for nicotine. "He's still...."
"Not as human as you
might think." Brown brows lifted. As a person, he ached for those
affected. But as a biologist, it was absolutely intriguing. "Results fall
somewhere between Delilah and regular human biochemistry."
"Area effect?"
Elsie suggested.
"Looks like."
Olga abandoned her search.
"Effect of what?" Her hand gestured out at New York. "If this
has affected the entire city...."
"Not Demona's
phenomenon." He was not going to call it a spell. "Apparently
nonphysical phenomena... don't work as well around me. Sometimes."
"Which falls under
the general category of good things." Randy pressed the key that triggered
a password-cracking program. "Not that it couldn't be cool," he added
hastily, glancing toward Olga. "Gliding, tossing cars around like
phonebooks the whole Goth look. Flush...."
Monique took pity on him.
"Seirian also has such effects," the French spy stated. "They
are limited in area, and work best on those whom one has associated with for
some time." The agent turned another ancient page. "Mam'selle Mailli
and I should be able to decipher which spells Demona used."
"Sure. Let loose some
more funky phenomena." Elsie slanted a sardonic glance her way.
"That's just what we need."
"Seirian cannot use
magic."
Nick lifted a dark brow.
"You seem to know a lot about her." More than I ever did.
Was that a hint of
understanding in dark eyes? "I encountered her in a meeting with Phillipe.
She was instrumental in providing us with information on-" Her gaze barely
flicked toward the NSA agents. "Certain neurolinguistic techniques."
She's an empath. Fihr's letter had hinted at it,
but.... "Shielding?"
An infinitesmal nod.
"Her work with the Maquis was the basis of much of our research."
"The French
Resistance?" Olga shoved her predicament aside, looking up with renewed
interest. "Is she really a hundred and seven? She barely looks
seventy."
"It runs in her
family."
A hundred and seven, Nick thought. So often H.E.A.T.
worked from day to day, moment to moment. The prospect of years, possibly
decades of working with the giant mutant....
Crocodilians can make
it past a century. You knew you were in this for life.
It'd just never seemed so
permanent before.
"Check this
out." Randy pointed to files opening on his screen. "We got El Mad
Doctor's research results." A few keystrokes. "Manhattan clan,
Guatemalan samples...." The hacker frowned at scientist-ese, sounding out
the words. "Method for extraction of deoxyribonucleic acid from
petrihibernation remnants?"
"Gargoyle skin,"
Olga stated. "Or so Isaac's records called it." A brow ridge lifted.
"The source of the DNA, I'd imagine."
"Results of viruses
on mutant lizard samples-"
Nick snarled. "That
egotistical, megalomaniac-" There weren't words harsh enough. "I
should've dumped him in the East River!"
"It will be
arranged."
The agent's
matter-of-factness hit like a splash of Arctic water. "Ah, Monique-"
A slim hand stopped his
protest. "His interference becomes hazardous," the French spy noted.
"It is unlikely we will have the satisfaction of dealing with him
ourselves."
"Artificial cell
organelles...." Randy shrugged. "Looks like it-"
"Open that!"
Nick stalked over to examine the shot of purple liquid, coupled with
magnifications of sausage-shaped vesicles and a diagram of ribosome complexes.
"Elsie, take a look at this."
The paleontologist
frowned, tilting her head to peer at the results. "Mitochondria aren't
exactly my field, Nick." Her breath caught. "But they aren't, are
they?"
"Carrier
agents." The thrill of the hunt surged in his veins; a cooler, more
intellectual reflection of the hot joy Godzilla felt on sighting his prey. Got
you! a dark corner of his mind snarled.
Predatory interest. He
felt the massive body uncoil outside, preparing to rush in to fight the
intruder.
It's too small. Labwork, Nick tried to convey. We found
out what happened to Elisa. "We should check the listed compounds
against your analysis...." He felt the surge of battle-rage, tried to ride
it.
"Dr.
Tatopoulos?" Olga drew back, alarm paling jade skin.
Thunder of footsteps
below. "In here!"
A tall blond in pale blue
jumpsuit advanced up the stairwell, PKE meter flashing and beeping.
"Definite psychokinetic spike, along with a decaying otherdimensional
signature...." The man shoved up red glasses, eyes traveling up to meet
the biologist's gaze.
Oh... damn, Nick thought faintly.
"Egad." Dr.
Spengler shut down his meter. The rest of the Ghostbusters peered past him,
throwers at the ready. "Dr. Tatopoulos, I presume."
***
"Conundrum."
"Frank!"
Talmadge let out a sigh of exasperated relief, punched the phone onto speaker.
Owsley shoved his chair over with one push of a foot; Isaac approached in a
more dignified walk. "The military's on full alert; we've had to do some
fast talking to keep their response minimal. What's your situation?"
"Probably guzzling
tequila in a bar off 42nd Street," Ramsey commented, scribbling notes for
a trace.
"Actually, we're in
Ghostbusters Central. Weird place." Something burbled in the background.
"And I only wish I was drunk. Olga's green."
"Frank!" Dr.
Vukavitch hissed.
"We're going to have
to tell them sometime."
"Not like this!"
"H.E.A.T.'s fixed
nastier things," Donovan spoke up. "Let's just... let it slide,
okay?"
Donovan wanting to let something slide?
And what was that rustling in the background; like silk curtains, slipping over
each other with no sound of wind. Talmadge raised gray brows. "Frank? Is
something wrong?"
"Not
exactly...."
***
Olga huddled in the
firehall stairwell, ignoring the growing clamor of human, gargoyle, and ghostly
voices. All of it seemed distant, unconnected from reality. Shock,
Backstep's psychologist deduced. You should do something. Find something to
do.
But H.E.A.T. and the
Ghostbusters were coordinating strategy, Maza and Bluestone were contacting the
23rd Precinct for the latest updates on their APB on Sevarius; Donovan, Seirian
and Dr. Craven were guarding the rubble burying the gryphon... God, even the
coffee had been made.
"You okay?"
Frank perched on the step beside her. "Stupid question," he muttered,
sneaking a comforting arm into the spiky tangle of wings and talons.
"Forget I asked."
"I want to go
home." Wanted it fiercely; so fiercely it frightened her. She felt she
could close her eyes and walk to Nevada, and never miss a step.
Or close her eyes and
soar....
No. She curled on herself, wrapping
her arms about spiked knees. No. You're human. Human....
Sidelong glance from dark
eyes. "Please tell me you're not planning to jump off a roof."
"If you do, remember
to open your wings," Elsie said briskly, stepping down to their level.
"I've been looking for you. Dr. Spengler says he needs someone who
actually heard the spell."
"Duty calls,"
Frank sighed. He hugged the psychologist, fingers stroking over hair turned odd
and velvety as scarlet down. "Keep the step warm, okay?"
"Actually, I was
looking for both of you," Elsie offered a wry smile as Frank trotted
upstairs. "Far as we can tell, gargoyles are instinctively territorial.
Find a home area and stick to it. I thought that might kick in badly since
you're an immigrant."
A voice of sanity.
"Everything feels different." Olga's voice shook with it; the glide
of air over silky membranes, the tap of her tail against cool bricks, the
bone-shaking strength that felt so frighteningly right....
Fragile human fingers
gripped her wing-cloaked shoulder. "Elisa told us she's been a gargoyle
before," the paleontologist said simply. "Delilah's always been what
she is. And the others weren't near anyone who could block part of the spell.
They think we're the crazy ones." Fingers squeezed gently. "If it
helps, I think Matt's scared stiff. And he actually went after mutant jellyfish
once."
The psychologist felt
vaguely comforted. "So why aren't you up there?"
Elsie snorted. "Ever
watch Randy irritate someone out of a blue funk? It's not a pretty sight."
***
"Aimerigot's
spellbook!" Ray enthused, flipping ancient pages. "I never thought
I'd get to see it."
"I wish we
hadn't," Nick growled. Monique, Randy, and Detective Maza, were huddled in
a corner, draining Janine's coffee reserves. Roache had been and gone,
declaring Melnitz' brewing quite tolerable before he left. Though he had
snagged two packets of cream.
"In Sekhmet, dej
medew?" Egon
asked.
"Yeah," Frank
agreed, hanging back by the wall. "That's what I heard."
The physicist ignored
Frank's skittishness. Magical tomes had a tendency to make psychically charged
individuals nervous; and from his scans. Agent Parker was carrying quite a
charge. Though not nearly as high as H.E.A.T. And as for Tatopoulos.... Egon
shook his head. By Sekhmet, "words spoken", he transcribed
from ancient hieroglyphs. Each and every not born of gargoyle, all born
brave, shape each essence for eternity to my desire; establish this matter
within, of the body to unite. "And you say she meant to combine this
enchantment with plasmids containing Hydrophiidae venom genes. Ingenious."
"Egon!" Ray
looked up, hurt.
"Thoroughly
malicious," the physicist allowed. "But ingenious." He shoved
back red glasses. "We should thank Mr. Roache for arranging our absence from
the city. I doubt any of us would have survived."
"Bad?" Winston's
hand lingered near his thrower.
"Yow." Janine
leaned over Egon's shoulder, one of Ray's references in hand. "Sekhmet.
Eye of Ra, Lady of Plagues. Lioness goddess an' all-around smiter of vengeance.
Nasty spook."
The physicist inclined his
head. "Very bad."
"So," Randy
ticked off points on dark fingers. "We got a Scottish gargoyle using U.S.
biotech, Guatemalan DNA, intergalactic metal, and Welsh and Egyptian spells
from a Basque book." The hacker shook his head. "Is it just me, or
has globalization gone way too far?"
"Welcome to the
United Nations." Nick rubbed the side of his throat. An odd habit. Or
perhaps not so odd, considering the man's readings.
Egon watched the young
biologist from the comer of his eye, marking the predatory stride, the twitch
of irritation, the overall haggard air. Tatopoulos was running on instinct and
coffee.
He'd have bet two weeks of
laundry duties that instinct wasn't human.
"So this is how the
mimics got into our cells?" Elisa asked.
Egon bookmarked the page
with a spare screwdriver. "I believe so."
"The spell was
attracted to high PKE charges," Ray explained. "That's why it went
after Janine."
Peter held up a wall,
fingers tapping lightly. "I thought you two said that charge made us a
little magic-resistant, Spengs."
Egon grimaced.
"Against ordinary spellcasting, yes. Against a complicated ritual
enchantment, using arcane components, bio-engineered elements, and a spell over
three thousand years old...."
"Rock-through-paper
time. Gotcha."
"First things
first." Elisa held up a hand. "How are we going to get the mimics
out?"
Nick stalked the lab.
"That could be tricky."
The blue gargoyle rolled
her eyes. "So we grab Sevarius. He came up with a cure for the mutates
once-"
Nick snorted.
A glint of ruby appeared
in Maza's gaze. "Excuse me?"
Turning, the biologist
paced back. "Detective, getting foreign DNA into cells isn't easy. Getting
it out - getting only selected segments out, without shattering the rest of the
cellular makeup - is all but impossible." Another turn; another stalking
stride. "Demona used an artificial organelle. The gargoyle DNA may be
acting as a dominant, but it's outside the cell nucleus. If we're lucky, we may
be able to get people's bodies to reject it. Sevarius used a virus. He affected
the mutates' nuclear DNA. And as of now, we don't have any way to fix
that."
"You
cold-blooded...." Elisa drew back in disgust. "No wonder you and the
lizard get along."
A low rumble shook the
building.
Egon ignored the reptilian
anger outside. Instead he marked Randy's careful grip on the biologist's
shoulder, the pale fists clenched out of Maza's sight.
The deadly gaze Monique
leveled his way.
"Detective."
Nick's voice was tired. "I'm not a geneticist. But I am a biologist. And
I've dealt with enough of Winter's creations to know exactly what we can and
can't do with biotech. If Sevarius told you he had a cure, he lied." Pale
fingers uncurling, he glanced at Monique. "Where is Phillipe?"
A flicker of dark
amusement. "He has... how do you say, gone to tie up a loose end?"
Another rumble outside.
Frowning, Nick headed downstairs. "I'll be back."
Egon glanced at Peter and
Winston. Tipped his head toward the firepole.
With a wink, the parapsychologist
leapt to polished metal. "Hey, Winston. Want to help me check the road
crew?"
***
"Easy, big guy,"
Nick crooned, stepping near the massive head. Mendel met his gaze with a sigh
of sheer relief, gripping Delilah's hand. A few blue-and-whites from the 23rd
had dared to enter the area, setting up roadblocks across each end of the
street. "What's wrong?"
Quiet rumble. Godzilla
splayed taloned fingers over still-hot asphalt, tilting his head to eye
steaming rubble. Nearby Gwydrfaen hissed, glaring at molten black.
Vibration, Nick realized, dropping to one
knee to press his own hand against the street. "Please tell me you're
kidding."
"I wish," Mendel
muttered, fiddling with Nigel's ground-penetrating radar.
"By the pricking of
my thumbs, something wicked this way comes." Nigel blinked, readings
definitely showing a large quadraped clawing its way to the surface.
"Constructs are hard
to destroy." Leaning heavy on her cane, Seirian glared at rubble.
Donovan turned a lighter
charcoal. "You're not telling me they're digging out?"
"It's digging
out," Venkman corrected, PKE meter flashing. "One signal."
"There should be
two." Nick tried to get a good glimpse of the meter. What on earth did
those blinking lines mean? "Demona's down there."
"Look, we're only
reading one," Winston stated. "You guys might want to get out of the
line of fire-"
Asphalt shattered upward.
"Down!" Nick
knocked Mendel to the street, wincing at the high hum as two proton streams
struck the screeching gryphon. Behind him he heard Donovan yelling for backup,
Delilah snarling over them.
Green and yellow fire
seared at the gryphon, crumbling feathers and flesh. But fast as flames burned
it away, mist flowed in, layering muscle and fur over charcoaled bones.
More proton streams
slashed the night. One intersected green flame.
A shard of blue-white fire
snapped back, striking yellow metal with a scream and a crash of shattered
steel.
"Nigel!" Mendel
wriggled out from under Delilah's sheltering wings. "No!"
"Griffwn,
datgorffori!"
Elsie's voice knifed through the chaos. "Chwilfriwio i curlaw!"
The beast wailed like a
lost soul, turning translucent in a burst of raindrops.
"Throw it!"
Winston shouted. Ray's trap clinked down, snapping open in a hum and flood of
light.
Shrieking, the gryphon
dissolved, sucked inside in a whirl of mist and feathers.
Clunk. Striped doors snapped shut. Beep.
Beep.
Suddenly free of mist, the
night sky gleamed with stars.
Gwydrfaen sniffed the
steaming hole. Snarled.
Seirian bit out a curse.
"Gone."
"Gone?" Nick
leaned on a massive talon, accepting the weird shift in perspective to see the
asphalt pit with Godzilla's eyes.
The empty pit. Damn.
Godzilla snorted, moving
gently away. The threat was gone, and it'd been a long night. He wanted sleep,
fish, and a chance to heal, not necessarily in that order.
Stepping over the police
barricade, he headed for the Harlem River.
"Whoa. You're saying
someone was in there?" Winston peered down, troubled.
"An enemy to every
human that walks the face of the planet." Seirian held a hand over empty
air, as if feeling for unseen heat. Nostrils flared, echoing Gwydrfaen's sniff.
"Hmph. Some sort of teleport, I'd wager."
Closing the spellbook,
Elsie rattled iron links. "How much damage can she do without this?"
Seirian shook her head.
"I'll set the clan to watching."
"We could help you
with that." Venkman unleashed his most charming smile, took her hand.
"You wouldn't believe how reasonable our fees are...."
The elderly woman shook
him off in one swift motion. "Young man, the last time I met a human so
feckless, he was being swallowed by a sea serpent." Green eyes squinched
in amused memory. "Gregarinos never have had much luck with creatures of
legend."
Sea serpents, Nick thought. It was almost
enough to ask her to stay. Here was someone who'd met unnatural creatures long
before H.E.A.T. had been more than a glimmer of a thought. Someone who could
tell him about Eurielle's life, and just why his grandparents had shuffled him
off with no more care than giving away an unwanted kitten.
Someone... he had
absolutely no idea how to deal with.
Wrinkled fingers held a
laminated card before him. "I know... you may never wish to see us,"
Seirian said softly. "But this is who we are, and how to find us."
Passing the card to Monique, she inclined her head. "If you call, we will
be there."
"I'd..." Nick
hesitated. "I'll think about it."
Leaning on a wing of silky
black, Seirian smiled.
Moving back towards his
team, Nick drew a deep breath. "Let's go home."
***
"So it's not a
cure." Holding the cold iron cup of spring water, Olga looked almost as
queasy as Elisa felt.
"It was created by
people who wanted their children to be part of both worlds," Ray pointed
to the relevant paragraphs in Muircath's Guide to Denizens of the Deep.
"Not just one."
"In effect, it should
stabilize the imported DNA as an alternate form, achievable by voluntary
transformation," Egon stated. "You could remain as you currently are,
but given that these are artificially created organelles, the likelihood of
their eventual disintegration is high."
"So it's this
or...." Donovan trailed off.
"Total cellular
destabilization," Egon supplied.
"Ouch," Frank
muttered.
"It's not that
bad," Angela said wistfully. "At least you could see the sun when you
wanted." She gestured toward Delilah's curled, sleeping form. The hybrid
was decked with myriad small bandages, but she had Ray's teddy bear in arm,
Mendel's notebook under her hand, and an empty mug at her side, still dark from
Janine's rich hot cocoa. "As soon as Delilah stops concentrating, she
turns to stone."
"And H.E.A.T. had
this?" Elisa asked, rubbing at a nagging headache. She could sense dawn
coming on. Another hour, and they'd all be statues. Permanently, if they were
unlucky and Sevarius' mimics destabilized in mid-change. "Why?"
"I'm afraid we're not
at liberty to discuss that."
"This have anything
to do with why Roache got your team out of town?" Matt asked.
"I'm afraid-"
"We get the
point." Frank looked curious. "Who is that guy, anyway?"
"Hooter says he works
for La Rochelle Casualty and Property," Donovan reported, rolling his
eyes.
"Insurance? Get out
of here."
Her cell rang.
"Excuse me." Elisa walked out to the stairwell. "Maza."
"Elisa!" Diane's
voice was light, despite the late hour. "We just got settled in. Did you
want to talk to your friends?"
Oh no. "Matt!" the detective
hissed. "It's my mom!"
"Diane?" Worry
eased from Angela's eyes as she and Matt joined Elisa in the stairwell.
"Elisa, what's wrong?"
"She's putting your
father on the phone, that's what's wrong!"
"This could get
complicated," Matt acknowledged.
"What am I going to
tell them?" Elisa moaned as her parents handed the phone over.
"Relax,
partner," Matt assured her. "You'll think of something."
"Elisa," came
the familiar rumble.
"Goliath." The
detective swallowed. Breathe. Just... breathe. "Hi."
"Hi!" Lex was
ecstatic. "The flight was so cool!"
"Anything interesting
happen while we were gone?" Brooklyn asked.
Elisa and Matt glanced at
each other. "Ahhh...."
Leaning possessively on
her detective's shoulder, Angela only smiled.
***
"You said there was
one more thing, Frank?" Talmadge asked.
"Well..." Frank
stroked red hair away from Olga's sleeping face. She and Donovan were both
snoring away on the Ghostbusters' spare cots; a side effect of metabolic stress
caused by the transformation, Spengler said. "Isaac, what's the word on
Seirian's rap sheet? The real word."
Drowsing in a chair, Mailli
pried open a sleepy green eye.
A sigh from Nevada.
"The autopsy results are on record, Frank."
"Yeah." He'd had
Hooter check that. Dead by fire, or claw, or sword. Carnage to match any jungle
ambush. "But I worked with the lady, Isaac. She's one of the good
guys."
A thoughtful scratch of
pen on paper. "I believe the cases can be closed."
Silence across the room.
But Frank felt that sea-green gaze bore into him, sharp and fierce as blizzard
lightning. Something moved on the roof overhead; a black tail-tip flicked past
the window. "You sure on that?"
"We owe her." A
quiet chuckle. "It's not as if it will be difficult. Gunshot wound or no,
the investigators were sure there was no way on Earth a woman could have
traveled over a hundred miles in one hour. Only Inire's interference has kept
the warrant alive this long."
"And our operation
has enough pull to outweigh that," Talmadge said thoughtfully.
"Thanks to you, Frank."
"Couldn't do it
without you guys." He yawned, about ready to drop into a sleeping bag
himself. "Night."
A soft creak; Seirian
watched him from half-closed eyes. "I wouldn't have asked you to do
that."
Frank glanced at his
hands, thinking of Hansen's Island, and Jimmy. Even in the black pit of
insanity, what had hurt most was knowing his son was growing up without him.
"Yeah, well... I know what it's like, not to be able to see your own
kid." He grinned at her. "So how's about that adoption?"
Seirian only smiled.
***
Cameron Winter struggled
against his bonds, cursing as what felt like steel links stayed put. Padded
cloth covered his eyes, turning the world almost as dark as the Dupres woman's
fist. A musty scent hung in the air, tanged with salt air. "You have no
idea who you're dealing with. I'll sue you into the next century. You, H.E.A.T.,
Nickels - you'll all go down! When my lawyers get through-"
"There will be no
lawyers, M'sieur." Knuckles cracked. "And you are... quite
alone."
***
Home. Leaning on the double-locked
door, Nick breathed a sigh of relief. Gargoyles or not, he felt safer than he
had since he'd walked into the 23rd Precinct.
"Randy, check the
Internet." Looking over the docked H.E.A.T. Seeker, Nick ran down a
mental checklist of what was on board, what they should load on, what they
could live without. "Messages, reports... anything that was supposed to
get to us and didn't."
Tapping away, the hacker
nodded. "Looking for something specific, jefe?"
"Some reason to get
out of town?" Elsie guessed. Chain clinked in her arms, binding a certain
headache-causing tome together.
"Any
reason," Mendel wished fervently, toting yellow parts. "I'd rather
put Nigel back together in the middle of a tornado than deal with this!"
Monique finished
sharpening her knife. "It would be wise to be elsewhere while the city...
comes to terms."
Keys clicked. "We got
a possible mutant shark off Miami," Randy offered.
Nick swept his gaze across
them all. "What's the verdict?"
Silent glances. Broken by
a quiet, thoughtful voice. "I have never seen your shuttle take off."
"Me neither."
Mendel perked up.
"White sands beach
party." Randy grinned. "Flush!"
"That is, if our
fearless leader can see taking a day or two off at Canaveral," Elsie
pointed out, leaning on a chair as she waggled red brows. "Florida, sand,
sun...."
Elsie in a swimsuit. The
thought had its attractions. Definitely. But-
Ring.
"H.E.A.T.," Nick
sighed into the phone.
"Is anybody
going to do something with this - this - thing?" a plaintive man's voice
wailed. In the background could be heard a loud, annoyed squawk, as of a flock
of pigeons in metallic chorus.
"Pigeon," Nick
said numbly. After the rest of this night, one magnetically-charged avian
mutation had totally slipped his mind. "Right. The pigeon. Ah...."
Dark-nailed fingers
plucked the phone from his grasp. "The mutation is the property of the
United States armed forces," Monique said briskly. "Deliver it to the
Sandy Point military base. C.O.D." Click.
Nick stared, agape.
Monique gave him a small,
secret smile. "Let us depart."
***
"I'm going to kill
him." Plucking metallic feathers out of his cap, Hicks strode through the
command tent like an annoyed hurricane. Staff scattered out of his way, drifts
of snowy down skirling in their wake. Soldiers came to hasty attention, bits of
iron-laced keratin rattling off their buckles.
Hicks glared at the
electrical cage at the end of the runway; the cage some penny-pinching
bureaucratic idiot had opened. Couldn't have Uncle Sam signing for some
unauthorized shipment, now could they?
The idiot had run for the
hills. Two helicopters had almost collided, five planes had made emergency
landings, three satellite broadcast companies were calling in complaints, and
Hicks' containment team had gotten one heck of a workout.
And pigeon feathers were everywhere.
"I don't know how,"
Hicks snarled, glaring out at
Pronunciation and
translation:
Fulminos venite! (Ful-men-os ven-i-te) Latin:
Lightning here!
Niwlen gafael hwn lle,
cylchfan. (Nee-oo-len ga-va-el hoon (th)lee, kulch-van) Welsh: Mist grip this
place, round about.
Griffwn beiddgar, fy
Dialwres bod.
(Grif-fon beith-gar, vi dee-a-loo-res bod) Welsh: Gryphon bold, my Avenger be.
In Sekhmet, dej medew:
Neb nid mes-en garugoyrue, neb mes keni, kheper neb ka en jet er ib, men ta ket
imy en-khet sem.
Egyptian: By Sekhmet, "words spoken": Each and every not born of
gargoyle, all born brave, shape each essence for eternity to my desire;
establish this matter within, of the body to unite.
Omnes audite, omnes
oculae- Latin. All
who hear this, all who see this. (Spell unfinished.)
Griffwn, datgorffori! (Grif-fon, dat-gor-for-ee) Welsh:
Gryphon, disperse!
Chwilfriwio i curlaw! (Khooil-vri-wio ee cur-law) Welsh:
Shatter into pelting rain!