Fine,
Syrinx replied with icy superiority.
Follow us in, then.
Etchells derived the voidhawk’s wormhole terminus. Which was impossible. They were swallowing
inside
the arkship. There were cavities in there, he could feel them. Tenuous bubbles within the hard rock. So very small.
He didn’t dare. That kind of accuracy was staggering.
The Tyrathca ship had risen above the arkship’s horizon. It launched fifteen combat wasps straight at him. He swallowed away
fast.
______
The level-one cavern was quickly and silently saturated with light, revealing the cyclorama of frozen water. Ripples and waves
were caught in mid-swell, drained of colour as they had been of heat. The endocarps were different. Flat cliffs of rock, rimmed
with ledges of metal just above the ice. One of them boasted a tiny pinprick of warmth. Five armour-suited figures hovered
in front of it, watching the light source expand; twisted fragments of starlight threaded through the length of the wormhole
to spray out at random. There was no other indication of the terminus opening.
As the light dimmed it shone across
Oenone
’s marbled blue hull, glinting off the crew toroid. The huge voidhawk swept round the lake’s curvature towards the exploration
team, skirting the rickety old axial gantry with simple grace.
You’ve no idea how good it is to see you,
Samuel said, accompanying the statement with a wash of gratitude and relief.
You too,
Oenone
replied.
I knew I could do this.
______
Etchells conceded defeat. He wasn’t going to find out why the two starships had come here, not now.
Oenone
was inside the arkship for less than five minutes before swallowing away again. Its wormhole terminus opened out above the
star system’s second planet. The Adamist ship jumped there as well.
Etchells joined them, at a non-threatening distance, observing the Adamist ship fly round the planet on a tight slingshot
trajectory. When it jumped, Etchells tried to follow. But it must have used multiple consecutive jumps, because he couldn’t
find it anywhere near the emergence coordinate. With his energy patterning cells badly depleted, and his nutrient reserve
getting low, he began the long, lonely trip back to New California. It was time to hand the whole problem over to Kiera and
Capone.
Candles shaped like dark lily pads bobbed about over the bath water, never managing to touch the two bodies resting in the
middle. Several of them had become mired in the burgs of apple-scented bubbles, their wicks sizzling as the flames struggled
to stay alight. More candles were flickering gamely along the bath’s marbled rim, half a metre tall; they were cemented into
place by thick rivulets of wax. As the only source of light in the suite’s dilapidated bathroom, their weak yellow flickers
bestowed an appropriately dingy appearance.
For years the Chatsworth had been one of central Edmonton’s most renowned five-star hotels, attracting the wealthy and the
famous. But successive changes of management and ownership had seen it decay badly over the last two decades as too much of
its cash flow had been diverted from maintaining standards to inflating shareholder dividends. Eventually it was trading solely
on its name, and that could never last. Now it was closed for a much needed refurbishment and re-launch. But the work crews
and their mechanoids hadn’t even started stripping the old fittings out when New York’s problems with the possessed hit the
AV news. After that, most of Earth’s long-term commercial investment projects were put on hold while the financiers and entrepreneurs
waited to see what the outcome would be. The Chatsworth included.
Quinn had taken it over with quiet efficiency to use as his home base in the arcology. The three-man caretaker team left inside
were possessed, and every last connection to the outside world was severed: power, water, data, air conditioning. He knew
that police and government security forces tracked the possessed by the glitches they caused, but they could only do that
when there was working processor-governed machinery nearby. So he and his loyal followers made do with the water left in the
hotel tanks, cooked on camping gear in one of the ritzy function rooms, and used candles. Bath water was heated purely by
energistic power. The soaps and oils were stolen from a local mall. Along with booze.
Quinn reached for the bottle of Norfolk Tears chilling in an ice bucket among the candles, and poured the pale liquid over
Courtney’s glistening breasts. She giggled as her nipples hardened from the cold, and arched herself further out of the water.
There were bruises and teeth marks on her gold-tanned skin, evidence of Quinn’s recent predilections. She didn’t mind the
kind of sex he wanted; it was kind of interesting, the physical things he could do with his new black magic. That kind of
misused power really turned her on, further proof of his omnipotence. He didn’t have to worry about censure, or being caught.
He wrote the rules now. And there was never much pain, nor did it last long. He didn’t have to hurt her to confirm their relationship;
he knew she had submitted herself completely to him and the cause. Joyfully, too. By embracing the serpent beast in its dark
lair, Courtney’s life had changed, becoming so much better. Hotter. Brighter. She got all the stuff like clothes and AV fleks
she wanted now; and she didn’t have to take shit from anyone anymore, either. Not bad going for a sect whore.
Quinn threw away the bottle, and started to lick the luxurious drink off her skin. “This is the fucking max,” he said. “You
know, it really is true; the bad guys get the best of everything. Best clothes. Best drugs. Best babes. Best parties. Best
sex. It’s fucking
great
.”
“We’re the bad guys?” Courtney asked, puzzled. “I thought we were doing the right thing smashing up the world?”
Quinn stood up, sending the floating candles surfing into the bubbles. His erection grew to a thick flesh sword hanging over
Courtney’s upturned face. “We’re both; we’re bad and we’re right. Believe it.”
Her confusion vanished, and she was smiling with simple contentment again. “I believe in you.” She cupped his balls, squeezing
like he’d taught, and started to lick the length of his dick.
“After I’ve finished fucking you, I’m going to go over and kill another one of Banneth’s people,” Quinn said. “This time,
I’m going to do it right in front of her. Force her to see how impotent she is.”
“I don’t get it.” Courtney sat back, glancing up inquiringly. “Why don’t you just march in there and start torturing her?
It’s not like she can stop you, or anything.”
“Because this is exactly what she did to me. To us. All of us. She frightens people. It’s her bang. What she can do to you
up in that sanctum of hers is so fucking freaky and scary it hammers into your brain like some monster prick. All you can
think of is how to stop her doing anything bad to you. Everybody in the coven knows they’re gonna be strapped down on one
of her tables some day. All you can do is ask God’s Brother that when it’s your turn, she does something that boosts you.
Nothing you can do about the pain. That’s fucking standard issue with Banneth.”
“I see what you’re doing,” Courtney said, pleased with herself. “You’re stalking her.”
“That’s a part of it, yeah. Each time I go over there and kill one of her people, it ruins a little more of what she is. The
Banneth they all fear is growing smaller and smaller every day. Even dickheads that dumb are going to realize that the one
person who can defeat anything is utterly helpless against the coming Night. I want her sitting there while the entire headquarters’
coven freaks out and deserts her. I’m going to make that he-bitch feel what we all did. That she’s a total nothing; all that
power she’s spent fuck-knows how many decades building up isn’t worth shit any more. She used to make people piss themselves
just by being sarcastic.
Sarcastic
, for shit’s sake! Can you believe that? But that’s how strong she was. Well now she’s going to
know
what I’ll do to her, and she’s going to
know
there’s no way out when I come for her. That puts me in control, and me on top. It switches her whole life around; screws
with the way her brain’s wired. I love that almost as much as I love the pain I’m going to inflict.”
Courtney rubbed her cheek along his dick, eyes closed in dreamy admiration. “I want to watch.”
“You can.” He beckoned. She was taken up against the wall, hands pinned above her head. A loutish violation of hard thrusts,
energistically strengthened muscles overcoming any hindrance to pummel his body against hers. In his mind he let it be Banneth,
enhancing the pleasure.
Halfway through, when Quinn’s orgasm was building, Billy-Joe knocked tentatively on the door. “Get in here, you little shit,”
Quinn yelled. “Wait. Watch us.”
Billy-Joe did as he was told. Standing well out of the way. Keeping still, but with inflamed eyes following every aspect of
Courtney’s contortions. Quinn finished with her, and let go. She sank to the floor, propped up clumsily against the wall,
shivering heavily. Her hands stroked gingerly over her body, touching the fresh bruises.
“What do you want?” Quinn asked.
“It’s one of the possessed come to see you,” Billy-Joe said. “He’s one of the new ones. Come from the Lacombe sect. Says he’s
got to see you. It’s like real urgent, he says.”
“Shit.” Quinn’s skin dried; his robe materialized around him. “Hey! You want any of those healed up?”
“It’s all right, Quinn,” Courtney said thickly. “I’ve got some cream and stuff to rub on. I’m fine.”
______
“This better be fucking important,” Quinn said. “I told you dickheads not to move around the arcology. The police are going
to be watching for you.”
“I was careful,” the possessed man said. His name was Duffy. He’d taken over the Lacombe coven’s magus. Unlike the magus,
Quinn judged him devout enough to God’s Brother. Duffy had been left in charge of the coven, organizing several successful
strikes against Edmonton’s infrastructure.
Quinn sat down in one of the lounge’s fraying leather armchairs, and let his mind wander through the Chatsworth and its neighbouring
buildings. They were only a couple of blocks away from Banneth’s headquarters, a location perfect in every respect.
There were no suspicious minds anywhere near. If Duffy had been spotted and followed, then the police were keeping well back.
Quinn resisted the impulse to go over to the window and pull back one of the tatty curtains to peer down onto the street.
“Okay, you haven’t completely fucked up. What is it?”
“This magus, Vientus, I been squeezing him. He ain’t a magus, not a real one. Doesn’t believe in God’s Brother.”
“Big deal. None of those shits ever did, not really.”
Duffy played with his hands, wretchedly nervous. Nobody liked the idea of telling Quinn what to do—like shut up and
listen
—but this was vital.
“All right,” Quinn grunted. “Go on.”
“He’s some kind of secret police informer. Has been for years. Every night he makes a report to some kind of supervisor about
what the coven’s been doing and what’s going down on the street.”
“That’s impossible,” Quinn said automatically. “If the police had that kind of information they would have raided the coven.”
“I don’t think the supervisor’s that kind of police, Quinn. Not like you get in the local precinct house. Vientus never met
them, he just datavised the information to some eddress each night. There was other stuff going on, too. Vientus sometimes
got told to target people for this supervisor, local business people, buildings that needed to be firebombed. And they’d talk
about what other gangs were doing, and if they needed to be chopped back. Real detailed shit like that. It was almost like
the supervisor was running the coven, not Vientus.”
“Anything else?” Quinn was listening, but not really paying attention. He was too involved thinking through the implication,
and with that came a growing sense of alarm.
“This supervisor must have had some influence with the cops. Quite a bit, I guess. There were times when Vientus got useful
sect members released from custody. All he had to do was ask the supervisor for them, and the cops would let them go. Easy
bail, or community work sentence, some shit like that.”
“Yeah,” Quinn said quietly. That recollection was one of the most bitter he owned. Waiting in Edmonton’s Justice Hall for
days with the dwindling prospect that Banneth would get him released. Banneth could make the whole legal system do tricks
for her, like every judge owed her a favour. Murder suspects out on parole within an hour. Stim suppliers given house arrest
sentences.
“Er.” Duffy was sweating badly now. “And, er… the supervisor had told Vientus to look out for you.”
“Me? The supervisor used my name?”
“Yes. There was a visual file on you and everything. The supervisor said you were using the possessed to take over sect covens,
and they thought you’d try to kill Banneth.”
“Shit!” Quinn stood up, and sprinted for the door. Halfway across the lounge he shifted into the ghost realm, running through
the closed door without breaking stride.
______
Half past two Edmonton local time, and the arcology was at its quietest. Solaris tubes suspended underneath the elevated roads
between the uptown skyscrapers shone down on deserted streets. Hologram adverts swarmed up the frontage of the ground level
shops, bright fantasy worlds and beautiful people shining enticingly. An army of municipal mechanoids crawled along the pavements
in front of them, spraying their solvents on tacky patches and guzzling down fast food wrappers. The only pedestrians left
to avoid were a few late night stimheads thrown out of clubs by the bouncers, and romantic youthful couples slowly strolling
the long route home.
Quinn adopted Erhard’s image as he hustled along the street. Not an exact replicant, but a reasonable facsimile of the pathetic
ghost. Good enough to deceive any characteristics recognition program scanning pedestrian faces through the street monitor
sensors for a glimpse of Quinn Dexter. He stopped by the taxi rank a full block from the Chatsworth, and the barrier slid
down. One of the sleek silver Perseus cabs glided up out of the subway garage, opening its door for him.