Balance (The Divine, Book One) (17 page)

An
earthquake? I had thought the pressure was internal. “Was anybody hurt?”

“No,
“ he said, “but the cops think it was a terrorist attack or something. They
already questioned me. They just want to talk to you, see if you know or saw
anything.”

“Is
that how I ended up here?” I didn’t even know how long I had been out. By the
fact that Oblitrix was still hanging around, it couldn’t have been too long.

He
nodded. “Yup. I didn’t want to just leave you like that, especially after what
I saw you do. I hung around and made sure nothing else from my nightmares
popped up until the cops showed. Good thing I have a permit. I told them I
didn’t know what had happened, but I was trying to protect you.”

I
looked at Oblitrix and tilted my head. After what he had seen, he could have
just kept running in the tunnel and left me to be destroyed. Not only had he
come back,
but
he had stayed with me when I was most
vulnerable.

“Thank
you,” I said. “You didn’t have to come back.”

He
laughed again. “I don’t care who or what you are, nobody deserves to get eaten
by whatever those were. You’re the
one
who sent me the
PM, aren’t you? The screen name looked familiar, but from what I hear that guy
died like six months ago.”

“Yeah,
that was me,” I admitted. “Death didn’t work out so well.” I held out my hand.
“Landon Hamilton.”

He
didn’t hesitate to grab my hand and give it a firm shake. “Obi-Wan Sampson,” he
said. “Most people just call me Obi.”

“Obi-wan?”

He
sighed. “Yeah. My folks were huge Star Wars fans, the classic trilogy anyway.
I’m just glad they didn’t name me Jar Jar.”

“So
am I,” I said. “You’re a crack shot with that hand cannon of yours.”

“I
did four years in the Corps,” he said. “Two in the field, two behind a
computer. I still work out every day, and hit the range at least once a week.
Once a Marine, always a Marine.
Semper Fi, you know.”

“I’m
impressed, and super glad to meet you,” I said. “If you want to stick around,
I’d love to chat some more, but right now I’ve got to get out of here before
they try to come in.”

He
looked back at the detectives. “Alright man. I’ll distract them so you can slip
past. The elevator is down the hall to the...”

I
went over to the window and flung it open.

“There’s
bound to be a Starbucks nearby,” I said. “Meet me there.”

I was
on the third floor. Not too high to jump, so I did. I focused my will on the
air below me as I fell, feeling it give to my demands. It became denser,
heavier, slowing me down as though I were falling through mud. I landed almost
gently and looked up to where Obi was hanging out the window. I gave him
a thumbs
up and headed down the street, thoroughly impressed
with myself.

I
changed my appearance and circled back around to the front of the hospital,
getting out front just as Obi pushed his way through the large glass doors. I
let him walk by, then tailed close behind him as he headed away from the
building. It wasn’t that I didn’t trust him. Okay, it was that I didn’t trust
him. Divinity was making me paranoid, and I didn’t have any confidence that his
bravery wasn’t one huge setup. I didn’t see any downside to being extra
cautious.

He
rounded the corner ahead of me, and I followed a good twenty feet behind, mixed
in with a few other pedestrians who were headed in the same general direction.
When I turned the corner I could see the Starbucks sign dead ahead. What I
didn’t see was Obi.

I
sensed the danger before I saw it, and reacted immediately. I ducked to the
left to avoid a strong right hook, then reached out and twisted his other hand
away before he could get a shot off with his gun. I pulled us both off to the
side of the pavement to get clear of the bystanders, who hadn’t even noticed
the attack. I was going to drop my disguise, to show him it was
me
, but he had already relaxed his guard.

“What’s
up, Landon,” he said. “Nice moves.”

“What
was that all about?” I asked him. “How did you know it was me?”

He
dropped his gun back into the messenger bag. “I knew it was you when I left the
hospital. You started tailing me, so I decided to jump you. Figured if you were
hostile you would kill me, otherwise you’d trust me.”

“You
do know I’m throwing an illusion, a glamour?” I said. “You aren’t supposed to
recognize me.”

He
laughed. “Sorry man, I only see you. There’s this weird haze around you, almost
like looking through some foggy glass, but that’s it. Hey, do you think you
could tell me what all of this is about?”

I was
hesitant to let him get involved. “Are you sure you want to know?”

“This
is the most action I’ve had since Afghanistan,’ he replied. “Computers are fun
toys, but nothing compared to an adrenaline high.”

“Come
on,” I said, leading him towards the Starbucks. “I’ve got a craving for an
Americano.”

I put
us in the corner, out of earshot of all but the most adept listeners. Obi
opened his bag and pulled out a manila folder, then sat down.

“Why
don’t you tell me what you already know, and I’ll try to fill in the blanks,” I
said.

He
handed the folder over to me. I opened it up, and was greeted with a photo of
two vampires, fangs and claws extended, looking as if they were about to tear
each other apart.

“A
still from the video,” he said. “I was walking home from work; I’m a backend
developer for a startup. Anyway, I hear this commotion in the alley, and being
the nosy-ass son of a bitch I am, I make my way down with my cellphone camera
running. That’s what I saw.”

I
flipped past the photo to a print out of a message board thread.

“What
is this?” I asked.

“After
I saw those guys go at it, I hit the internet in search of information about
real vampires,” he said. “What you saw on SamChan was just the tip of the
iceberg, I didn’t expect much from that collection of miscreants... no
offense.”

I
couldn’t help but smile. “None taken.”

“Cool.
So I started digging a bit more, hitting up some Tor sites, looking for a lead
into illegal blood trade. I figured if these guys are real, they’ve got to eat.
If they’ve got to eat, there’s bound to be suppliers. That’s my pay dirt.”

I
looked at the printout again. Everything was written in code.

“You
cracked this?” I asked.

“Yeah
man,” he said. “That wasn’t easy though. They’re using a lexical encryption
based on Romanian, circa six hundred A.D. Figures right? Anyway, it took me
close to ten hours to find a reference to the language, another four to crack
it. In a nutshell, it’s a blood exchange. The most twisted market you could
imagine - with a premium for two things.”

He
stopped talking and started tapping his fingers on the table.

“You’re
going to make me guess?” I asked.

He
nodded. I thought about it for a couple of minutes while he waited.

“Angels,
and young girls?”

He
slapped his hand on the table. “Close; angels, and
virgin
young girls.
It was the angel part that got me going. I mean, vampires and angels? So I
followed the trail a little further.”

I
flipped past all of the prints of Romanian cryptography, and my breath caught
in my throat. She looked like she was looking right at the camera. Josette.

“You
know her?” he asked me.

 I
knew my expression was giving me away.

“We’ve
met,” I said.

“She’s
an angel,” he said. “From what I can gather, she’s worth quite a bit of coin to
capture alive. I’m guessing they think she’s the best of both worlds.”

She
was an angel, and a virgin. In seven hundred years, had she never found love?
Or was it forbidden for angels to get involved in those kinds of relationships.
I hoped it was the latter. The thought of her spending all of those years alone
saddened me.

“How
did you find her?” I asked.

“The
vampires are tracking her for a guy named Reyzl,” he replied. “They have all
kinds of spotters trying to keep their eyes on her. She still manages to fall
off their radar from time to time, but she always turns up again. When I took
the pic, she was working at a soup kitchen down in Chelsea. You can see the
entrance in the background. Anyway, the homeless I talked to seemed to know
her, so I guess she works there pretty regularly.”

I
fought back a sudden bout of embarrassment. I had been under the impression
that angels kept the balance by hunting demons. It had never occurred to me
that they would take on such mundane tasks as manning the line at a shelter.
Then there was Reyzl. He seemed to be involved in everything around here, and
not in a good way. I took note of the sign on the building, ‘Holy Trinity’. I
should have guessed.

“What
do you know about Reyzl?” I asked.

He
shook his head. “Not much man. The vamps seem like they’re afraid to even type
his name.”

He
sat back and took a sip of his Quad Caramel Latte with Extra Caramel. If
vampires ran on blood, I imagined Obi ran on sugar.

“Your
turn,” he said.

Until
he said it, I had never considered how I would explain myself to a mortal. He
knew what vampires were, and he knew angels existed, so that was a good start.
I gulped my Americano and took a deep breath.

“So
you have angels, and you have demons,” I said. “And then you have me. I’m kind
of a Divine mutt, the only one my kind.”

I
told him everything I knew, using much the same description that Dante had used
with me. Obi was stoic through it all, not reacting to anything I said, but
analyzing every word. When I was finished, he just sat there for a minute, then
licked his lips and reached for his bag.

“Silver
won’t work on me,” I told him.

He
didn’t say anything. I watched while he opened the messenger bag, pulled out
the Desert Eagle, and handed it to me, butt first.

“Knights
used to pledge their swords,” he said. “I don’t have a sword.”

I
didn’t take it right away. I looked into his eyes. He looked back, unflinching.
I could see the strength in him, the conviction. If I was going to champion
mankind, he was going to squire, and nothing I said or did was going to change
his mind. I reached out and took the offered handle.

“You’re
probably going to be dead within a week,” I told him.

His
laugh was loud. “You have a strange way of welcoming people, man.”

He
reached out and clapped me on the shoulder. I discreetly handed the gun back to
him.

“So
what’s next?” he asked me.

I
picked up the folder. “I need to find out what the demons know about the
Chalice Jesus drank from at the Last Supper, the Holy Grail. They’ve begun
using it to make themselves near invincible.”

I had
just told him that the Holy Grail was real. I might as well have told him his
shoe was untied. He was all business.

“That’s
heavy stuff,’ he said. “I think I can help you out there. There’s a vampire
named Merov. He’s a big deal in that circle, one of the largest suppliers on
the exchange. He’s having a big party tonight at his penthouse. From what I
gather, its his daughter’s eighty fourth birthday.”

That
sounded promising. “You have an address?” I asked.

“I
wouldn’t have mentioned it if I didn’t,” he replied.

I
swallowed the last of my Americano and stood up. “Let’s go,” I said. “I’d say
we could stop by your place, but I’m going to venture to guess it’s been
trashed by now. Was there anything on your computer that might give them a clue
you know about this party?”

“Unencrypted?”
he asked, offended.

I
smiled. “Right. Then we’ll go back to my place. Maybe you could teach me to
fight.”

It
was good to have a friend, for as long as he lasted. I had a feeling the
lifespan of mortal Purgatorian sympathizers was pretty short.

Chapter
12

“Man,
you need a serious upgrade.” Obi looked around my apartment. It was the third
or fourth time he had commented on my lousy living conditions.

“It
suits my needs,” I told him. “It’s not like I get social security or anything.
I’ve got about three thousand dollars to last me the rest of eternity, or until
a die, whichever comes first. I’ll take bets on which one it’ll be.”

“Come
on man, I saw you. I don’t think anything can keep you down.”

“If I
lose my head, I die. If I take enough damage, I could be thrown in a safe
somewhere and buried for all time. I won’t die, but I’ll be trapped.”

I
hadn’t thought about that scenario before. I had to fight back a wave of panic.
With any luck the other players wouldn’t think about that one either.

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