Read Premonitions Online

Authors: Jamie Schultz

Premonitions (30 page)

“Who are you?” he asked.

Nail stared him down. These guys didn’t even seem to be armed.
Amateur hour here, folks.
“Friends. You want the bone or what?”

Both men flinched, and the younger looked around the parking lot nervously. “Quiet, man,” he said.

The other man recovered his composure more quickly. “How about you tell us where it is, and we’ll take care of the rest?”

“How about you take us to somebody in charge, so I don’t get the idea you’re gonna run off with the damn thing yourself?”

The look of horror on the man’s face was too genuine to be a scam. “Do you—? I can’t . . . That’s—that’s blasphemy!”

Damn. We got the lowest of the low rent here.
It was all Nail could do to keep from rolling his eyes. “All the same.”

The older man, his face considerably paler than it had been a few moments before, nodded and pulled the door to his room shut. “OK. We’ll go see the Revered One.”

The expedition to see the Revered One was all of a dozen steps long, culminating in the door to the next unit over. The older of the two nimrods from the previous unit knocked twice, paused, knocked three more times, then knocked again.

Jesus. A secret knock and everything.

But it did the trick, and a brief recap of the previous scene was played out—the door opened, Drew announced that he knew where the “relic” was, and a superior officer was summoned. The only real difference was when the door swung wide open and Nail found himself with half a dozen guns aimed at him.

He didn’t need to be told. He put his hands up, and Brown rapidly followed suit. Drew just frowned.

At the center of the bristling array of guns stood a thin man dressed in stained jeans, shitkicker work boots, and a red-checked flannel shirt. A scruff of ragged beard clung to his chin.
Sure don’t look like much of a cult leader. Bet he’s sweatin’ his ass off in that lumberjack shit.

“Drew,” the man said. “You have news?”

“Yes, sir.”

The man waved a hand, and his cronies lowered their guns.

“Then let’s talk.”

* * *

Nail followed Drew into the apartment’s living room with heavy-duty misgivings. Six men and two women were camped out in this one room, and five of them were armed. The ones who weren’t looked decidedly twitchy, with eerie grins plastered across their faces like they couldn’t wait for the action to start. The Revered One, formerly known as Brother Martel, stood in their midst, his hands outstretched. No gun in evidence, but he had one, Nail was sure. Just wasn’t waving it about at the moment. No need to.

“Who are your new friends, Drew?” Martel asked. It should have sounded menacing, or sarcastic at the least, but the guy delivered it with such grandfatherly charm that it seemed sincere. Nail started to get the cult thing, after all. Then the guy added in a low whisper,
“Friends,”
and the charm turned instantly to creepy.

“I probably ought to cover that,” Nail said.

Martel’s eyes flashed in irritation. “Oh?”

“Yeah. We, uh, haven’t all been on the same side until just recently. I figure that’s going to take some explaining.”

The man waited.

“One of my, er, colleagues took your relic.” There. It was out. The cult members looked to Martel and shifted their weapons, and Nail felt his body tense again.

Martel reached into his back pocket and pulled out a pair of beat-up channel-lock pliers. The green rubber grips had been ripped in places, and they were covered in dark stains. “I hope this isn’t going to lead to a ransom
demand,” Martel said. He clacked the pincers together, but that wasn’t the most unnerving thing about the exchange. Nail swore the man was mumbling under his breath between sentences—nothing Nail could make out, but enough to give him a serious case of the willies. “Surely you wouldn’t be
that
stupid.”

“No, sir,” Nail said. He had a sense that showing any fear here would cause Martel to leap on him like a mad dog, and he kept his eyes trained on Martel’s. “We don’t have the relic anymore.”

Martel waited, his hand convulsively working the pliers.

“We gave it to one of Enoch Sobell’s men, who took off with it instead of delivering it.”

Martel’s grandfatherly facade cracked, revealing something baleful and angry beneath. “So. Sobell wants it, too. Is that supposed to explain why six of the faithful were killed earlier tonight? Six of the faithful?
The faithful?

Damn. Sobell ought to be here to explain this. I’d leave it to Brown if I didn’t think he’d fuck it up.
“I think that was all a misunderstanding. He wanted Anna—the woman. In any event, he contacted us. He’s prepared to help you recover the relic.”

“Lies.
Lies.
I can see right through your lies.”

“No lies.”

Martel narrowed his eyes for a moment and then grinned. With that grin, all traces of the avuncular were gone. “I see. Sobell’s lackey has used the relic to displace him.”

“That is my understanding.”

“Well, then. Perhaps we can reach an arrangement after all.” He muttered something inaudible. “An arrangement.”

Chapter 28

Karyn sat in the
passenger seat of Anna’s car and picked a lump of blind
out of the plastic bag. She let it rest in her palm, a chunk no bigger than a pencil eraser. It would taste like shit, she knew, acrid and eye watering, and she didn’t even know how much of an effect this amount would have on her, as bad as the hallucinations had gotten.

“You gonna take it, or what?” Anna asked.

“Give me a minute, OK?”

Anna started the car. Karyn stared at the lump in her hand.

“It isn’t going to bite you,” Anna said.

“Don’t be so sure.” Karyn checked the landscape outside the car window again. It didn’t look like L.A. anymore—it barely even looked like Earth. It was a jumble of structures and creatures and things that might have been either, some symbolic, some merely projections of their future selves, and maybe even some that appeared as they were right now. It was impossible to tell.

Karyn ate the tiny chunk of blind
.

Anna pressed the gas, accelerating the car away from the broken-down building Adelaide called home.

Karyn watched the world outside as they passed by. Things hadn’t calmed down yet, but it was early. The taste of the drug still coated her tongue like some foul turpentine. It would be long minutes yet before it worked. Even so, she fought a dim panic that, this time,
it wouldn’t do anything at all, fought the urge to take a handful from the bag and eat that, too. Anything to get some reassurance that she wasn’t doomed to propel herself headlong into madness.

Still, though, she knew it would be a bad idea to take too much. Look what had happened last time. And, given her low supply and no certain source of more, moderation made sense.

She closed her eyes and leaned her head back against the headrest. Watching the craziness for signs of improvement would be akin to watching water and waiting for it to boil, only twice as maddening.

“How are you feeling?” Anna asked.

“Honestly? Like somebody put my brain in a blender, pureed it, and poured it back into my head. I think they slopped some on the floor when they did it, too.”

“That good?”

“And better all the time.”

“About what I said earlier . . .”

Karyn waited as the words trailed off. Anna obviously wanted her to cut in and say it was all OK, but Karyn didn’t have that kind of energy right now. And, anyway, she wasn’t sure it
was
all OK.

“If you gotta sit this one out, that’s OK. I mean, I’ll be OK with it.”

Karyn considered that. On the surface it sounded great, but it wouldn’t work. If somebody got hurt or killed, and she could have stopped it, she’d never forgive herself—and she had plenty of that flavor of guilt already, thank you very much. Besides, she needed the cash. After the job, if somehow they managed to find a new hookup, it would cost. She didn’t think she could stand it if Anna came back from the job with a few hundred grand and handed her a big wad of money on the grounds that Karyn was her new favorite charity. Fuck that. Anna had been looking out for her since forever, but that was a bridge too far.

Unless, of course, the blind
didn’t work this time. Then she’d be a complete liability.

“We’ll see,” Karyn said. “As long as I can tell the ground from the sky, I’m in. Just, you know. That’s not exactly guaranteed right now.”

A sound of movement as Anna shifted position. “Yeah,” she said quietly.

The rest of the trip passed in silence, and Karyn kept her eyes closed until Anna stopped the car and turned it off.

“Ready?”

Karyn opened her eyes. Outside, in the spotty light from the streetlamps, the suburbs hardly looked strange at all.
That doesn’t mean anything. But it’s a good sign.

“Yeah.”

* * *

It was another hour before Genevieve and Sobell returned, an hour Anna spent napping in the corner chair and Karyn spent fidgeting on the couch. It would be a good idea to catch some sleep, Karyn knew, but she’d never slept well before a job, even a well-planned one, and this promised to be more half-assed than most. Given that it was three in the morning and they didn’t even have a plan yet, “half-assed” might be an overstatement.

The blind
had done some of its thing, but not enough. The structure around her still flickered from one state of decay to the next, and the strange images coming from Anna were as varied as they were incomprehensible. After thirty minutes of watching the scenery change, Karyn ate another couple of pieces of blind.
That’s all for now. I need to be lucid when we do this.
Pity she wasn’t sure yet when “this” would happen.

When Genevieve knocked on the door, there wasn’t much of a door to knock on, just a rotting hole with a few boards standing up in it. Karyn heard the sound, though, even as she saw Genevieve whacking on air. She got up and crossed the room, wondering how she was going to open a door she couldn’t exactly find. In the end, she had to close her eyes and run a hand along the edge of the door to find the lock and open it. She did find it, though, and she smiled a shaky smile of relief as the shape of the
cool metal resolved itself against her hand. She turned the bolt.
Definitely getting better.

Genevieve came in hurriedly, and Sobell strode in after her, coat flapping behind him. Genevieve shut the door and dropped to a crouch, messing with some of the glyphs near the floor. Sobell watched. His face was unreadable.

“What did you find out?” Karyn asked.

Sobell took off his gloves, folded them, and put them in his pocket. “Precious little.”

Genevieve nodded miserably as she worked. “Place is locked down. Shitload of security guys out front. Fewer in back, but he says they can get a dozen or more to any part of the first floor in less than a minute. And they have the cops, too.”

Anna was sitting up now, attentive in the corner. “They ‘have’ the cops? What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Means the chief of police was paying a friendly visit when we stopped by. I guess that means when they call, the cops will come running.”

“What else?”

“I’ve got an idea, but it sucks.”

“I thought it rather inventive,” Sobell said. “And interesting, if you’re up for acrobatics and derring-do and whatnot.”

“You gonna make me beg?” Anna asked.

“That could be fun,” Genevieve said, a shadow of her usual smile on her face.

Anna wasn’t smiling. “Come on, what is it?”

Karyn looked from face to face. Nobody seemed to be bleeding or sprouting new body parts or sporting any kind of funky aura. Would wonders never cease?

“Where’s Nail?” Genevieve asked. “I’d like to run this past him first. It seems like the kind of thing that might be up his alley.”

“I like it already,” Anna said.

“He’s not back yet,” Karyn said. “Still out recruiting the Brotherhood.”

Genevieve frowned. “Still?”

“Maybe they take a lot of convincing,” Karyn said uncertainly.

“Great.”

Anna crossed her arms. “He’ll get back to us later. Come
on.
Let’s hear this idea of yours.”

“OK, OK. Here goes.”

* * *

Genevieve sketched out her plan while Anna made pained faces and Sobell looked on, grinning sardonically. If Karyn was any judge of these things, she was right—the plan sucked. Unfortunately, she couldn’t think of anything better.

Genevieve finished the rough outline and stood back, hands on her hips, waiting for a response.

“Magical defenses?” Karyn asked.

Sobell nodded. “Some, but of course I know what they are and where. I can take care of that part.”

A tinny speaker spit out the opening strains of Queen’s “Under Pressure,” or maybe “Ice Ice Baby.” Genevieve pulled her phone out and answered it. “Hello.” A pause, during which her face fell from a nervous but excited grin to a sick grimace. “You sure?” she asked.

“Fuck yeah, I’m fucking sure!”
somebody shouted through the phone, loud enough for Karyn and the rest of the room to hear. It sounded like Nail. He followed up with a few more choice words, too quiet to make out.

“All right,” Genevieve said. She held the phone out to Sobell. “It’s for you.”

Sobell raised his eyebrows and cast a long, disparaging look at the phone, but he took it and pressed it to his ear. “Yes?” His expression betrayed nothing, but as Karyn watched, the skin of his forehead split open and peeled back, pouring blood down his face.

“I see. I will meet you shortly.” He handed the phone back.

“Hello?” Genevieve said. “Shit.” She put the phone in her pocket. “Oh, shit.”

“What was that all about?” Anna asked.

“The Brotherhood.”

“Huh?”

“Indeed,” Sobell said. “It appears they do not fully trust your colleague.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means they are amenable to participating in an assault on my office building, but only if I physically accompany them.”

“Why you?”

“I can think of a number of reasons. Possibly they think your group is trying to use them to attack me, regardless of where the bone might be. If I am present, they can rule that out. Alternatively, they think I’ll afford them some protection from my security staff—not a bad assumption, if you don’t know what the hell is going on. Or perhaps they think we’re less likely to use them as pointless cannon fodder if I am in their midst. In any case, it’s a smart request.”

“I can’t feel good about that,” Anna said.

“Truly, I’m touched.”

Genevieve shook her head, almost violently. “No, this is fucked. Sobell knows the layout, he knows the rough security plan, and remember those magical defenses you were so worried about? He’s the only one who can turn them off. I don’t even know what’s there.”

“Unless you have another sort of diversion in mind, I don’t know what choice we have,” Sobell said. “We simply don’t have the manpower to deal with the small army Greaser has stolen from me.”

“We could, I don’t know, blow something up. You know, like a distraction.”

“That only works in the movies, I fear. The building isn’t going to disgorge all its security personnel to come check out an explosion—my security chiefs have not been notably bright in the past, but they haven’t been incompetent, either. I have no reason to believe that’s changed.”

“Jesus,” Genevieve said.

“I suppose I’ll have to tell you what I can, and give you some instruction on how to disable the more, ah, arcane defenses.”

“You can do that?”

“I can teach it. Can you learn it? We haven’t got a lot of time.”

Genevieve hesitated. “All right. Let’s do it.”

The scene that followed did not fill Karyn with a great deal of confidence. First, Sobell grabbed up the phone book from the stand near the TV and produced a fountain pen from his pocket. He began by sketching a floor plan, right over a page full of Ramirezes, and then he launched into a mess of gobbledygook.

“Then you’ll need to transect an inverted cadaver sigil with a Scythe glyph . . .”

Genevieve waited, mouth pursed tightly shut and eyes darting back and forth across the page, trying to follow the lines. It looked like she was waiting for a pause, but if one was coming, it would be a while.

This was going to be a mess, if Karyn didn’t say anything. “Mr. Sobell!”

Sobell looked up from his phone book. “Yes?”

“She doesn’t know what most of that stuff is.”

One glance at Genevieve’s face erased most of the cockiness from Sobell’s expression. “Fuck,” he said. “Fuckety-fuckety-fuck.”

“Sorry,” Genevieve mumbled.

“Never mind. I’ll draw up the diagrams you’ll need in the car.”

“In the car?”

“Well, yes. You didn’t think I’d drive myself to this fiasco, did you?”

“Uh, no. ’Course not.” Genevieve shot a wide-eyed glance over at Karyn, who just shrugged. Not much to be done for it now. She just wished Sobell’s head would stop gushing blood all over the place.

“Hey, Mr. Sobell,” she said. “I think this might be really dangerous for you.”

He gave her a bland, deadpan look loaded with enough sarcasm to fell an elephant. “Is that your professional opinion?”

“Yes, actually.”

“I have been shot at by my own employees, robbed of my worldly riches, and betrayed by my otherworldly
minions. Amazingly, I had already reached the conclusion that my continued good health comes with no guarantees tonight. Is there anything specific you’d like to add?”

She shrugged. “Watch your head.”

“Of course. Ms. Lyle, shall we depart?”

“Hold up,” Anna said. “Is there anything left to do here?”

Karyn shook her head.

“All right, then. Let’s load up. We’ll drop you off on the way,” she said to Sobell.

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