![]() Pocket, August 2009 Trade Paperback, 384 pages ISBN: 9781416584124
Also available as an original e-book |
CHAPTER ONE A
humid New York summer day. And someone was following him. Gabriel Bleak
always knew when he was being followed. This time, he could feel the tracker
about half a block back. He sensed it was a woman, blinking her eyes in the hot
light searing off the windows of the high Manhattan buildings. She was hurrying
through the crowd to keep him in sight. He couldn't read her mind -- but, as
long as her attention was fixed on him for more than a few seconds, he could see
what she saw. Attention itself had a psychic energy, a power he could
feel, could connect to. It was hot and humid, it was July in the city, and
the corner of Broadway and Thirty-third was thronged with people, all hurrying
along. Bleak sometimes felt as if the people were giving off the heat on a day
like this. As if the summer heat rose from the body heat of the shifting,
elbowing, insistent crowd; the humidity was a by-product of their sweat, their
countless exhalations, their sticky, thronging thoughts. Bleak figured
that illusion troubled him because he could feel their lives around
him. He didn't feel any hostility from the woman following him, and none
of that telltale psychic pulse that would indicate she was part of the Shadow
Community. So he would take his time evading her. Bleak stopped to wait
for a double-decker tourist bus to pass in front of him. Japanese, French,
German, Iowan faces looked down at him from the roofless top deck of the bus;
the Statue of Liberty's face, painted hugely on the side, slid ponderously past,
and it was as if she were looking at him too. The bus passed, and Bleak
pressed on through its cloud of exhaust, holding his breath. Dodging a taxi, he
made it to the farther corner. Yankee Hank's Bar was up ahead. He'd slip in
there, see what move she'd make when he cut the trail short. The fingers
of his right hand balled into a half-fist as he conjured a bullet of the
Hidden's force; drawn from the energy field coating the world itself, the power
pulsed down through his arm as raw energy flow, coalescing into a glimmering
bullet shape within the forge of his fingers. He cupped the bullet in his right
hand, close against his hip, so no one could see it. Bleak could see it though,
if he looked. He felt it pulsing there, hot and volatile, a mindless compaction
of life itself -- in this form, potentially destructive. He would throw it only
if he had to. If he didn't use it against his enemy, he couldn't reabsorb it,
he'd have to release it into the background field -- which would draw attention
to him. It was bright outside, no one would see it in his hand, but in a dark
room, the energy bullet would show up, as if he had a little ball of fireflies
trapped in his fingers. Bleak was aware, suddenly, that the woman
following him had an apparatus of some kind in her right hand -- an electronic
device. She would glance at it, then hide it in her palm, cupped against her
side -- echoing the way he was hiding the energy bullet. He got a glimpse of the
gadget from his flickering share of her point of view. Looked like some kind of
handheld EM detection meter...only, it wasn't. What was it? A weapon? He
turned, used his left hand to open the bar's door -- his right still cupping the
energy bullet -- and went into the suddenly cool air-conditioned room, a dark
space shot through with the light of beer signs and a couple of red-shaded
dangling overhead lamps the color of banked embers. Baseball souvenirs on the
walls. ESPN baseball was a rectangle of bright greens and whites on the flat
screen over the bar. The bartender, a man with short, curly red hair, long
sideburns, was one Seamus Flaherty, who nodded at Bleak when he came in. Bleak
was a familiar face here. He sometimes drank himself into a safe numbness in
Yankee Hank's, when his sensitivity to the Hidden became too much to bear. He
spent a good deal of mental energy separating out the material world and the
Hidden; trying to stay focused, not get lost. Bleak had learned to
compartmentalize. This is me, in the world that ordinary people share; this
is me taking part in the Hidden. That didn't always work. Then he turned to
beer -- and a few shots to go with it. Seamus didn't know about any of
that -- couldn't see the bullet of energy glowing in Bleak's hand; it was below
the level of the bar as Bleak walked by the three men on the middle stools. They
were arguing about a game. To Seamus, rinsing a beer glass, Bleak was just
a mediumheight, lanky, relatively young man with sandy hair who always seemed
two weeks overdue for a haircut; brittle blue eyes; a man not quite thirty, in
an old Army Rangers jacket, jeans, big black boots. Pretty much the same outfit
most anytime, though Bleak changed the tees under the jacket. Bleak had a
collection of fading rock-band T-shirts. Today he wore the Dictators. The
drinkers in the bar didn't take much notice. Yankee Hank's was decorated with
New York Yankees paraphernalia -- dusty jerseys, fading autographed balls,
curling baseball cards -- and if you were a Yankees fan, these days, you pretty
much stayed drunk, either because they were doing great or doing badly,
depending on what week it was. The drinkers were slurring drunk, not sodden
drunk, but they didn't notice much except the little drama on the sports
channel. As Bleak walked by, Seamus called out, "Thinking of starting up
our softball team, this summer, Gabe, you in?" "Sure, man, if I can
pitch!" Seamus gave him an affirming wink and Bleak strode on to the back
room, empty except for Yankees posters and neon beer signs, two large red-felt
pool tables, and restroom entrances in the farther wall. He toyed with the idea
of going into the men's restroom, waiting his tracker out. But if she was really
hunting him, she wouldn't let the men's room sign stop her. He walked over
to the other side of a pool table, turned toward the door, hesitated there,
trying to think it through. If she wasn't Shadow Community, who was she? She
could be a fed. Maybe Central Containment. Bleak decided he wanted to know
whom she was working for. And what the instrument in her hand was. He
couldn't see her, now, because she'd lost sight of him. He only had sight of
her, psychically, when she had him in sight. He waited. The energy bullet
had lost some of its power through the attrition of time, but it was still hot
in his hand. Holding it there for that long, he might get a slight burn on his
skin. Still, he pulsed a little more power into it, building it up to full
strength. Over the noise from a television ad for a men's perfume
absolutely guaranteed to attract women, he heard Seamus ask someone what
he could get for them. It was her. Bleak thought she said a glass of chardonnay,
but he couldn't hear it clearly, then she asked a muffled question, and Seamus
said, "The ladies' is back there, miss." She was still tracking him. But
whoever she was, she was staying undercover about it. His grip tightened
around the energy bullet, compressing its charge a little more. But he kept it
out of sight below the edge of a pool table. She walked in, then, a pale
woman with bobbed raven hair; she wore a conservative dove-gray dress with a
matching jacket, red pumps, matching red-leather purse over her left shoulder,
nails the same color. An expression you'd expect on a prosecuting attorney added
hardness to an otherwise appealing, heart-shaped face; pursed full lips. Her
paleness wasn't unhealthy, it was like something he'd seen in Renaissance
paintings. She was a head shorter than Bleak -- but there was no sense that she
was intimidated. She stopped just inside the billiard room, standing there with
her feet well apart. He noticed she had her purse open. He could just make out
the top of a gun butt in there. In her right hand was what looked like one of
those devices carpenters use to find metal studs hidden in the walls. Only it
was more complicated looking, sleeker. And as she came closer, she held it low
enough so that he could see its little LCD screen. Where a tiny red arrow was
pointing right at Bleak. The gun butt convinced Bleak there was no use in
playing it cute. "It'd be better if you left that gun in your purse, miss," he
warned, keeping his voice gentle but raising his hand, opening his fingers
enough so she could see the energy bullet shifting through orange, red, purple,
violet, incandescent blue, yellow; back to orange, red, purple. "And that other
thing you have pointed at me -- mind telling me what it is? I mean, it's only
fair." He smiled. Hoped it was a disarming smile. "If I had a creepy little
device pointed at you, I'd tell you why." She stared at the energy bullet
cupped in his hand, fascinated, her eyes widening fractionally. Her voice
surprisingly husky, she said, "Okay. You're the real thing. Gabriel Bleak, you
are required to come with me -- and right now. The federal government requires
your presence." He looked closely at her. When she'd said, The federal
government requires your presence, he'd sensed ambivalence. She was a strong
woman, and she could make an arrest. But she didn't quite believe in the job.
She wasn't completely one of them. She'd do her job. But he could hear
the doubt in her voice; see it in her eyes. Too bad he had no time to persuade
her to let him go. Other agents would be not far away. And they'd be here
soon. Bleak shook his head. "Like to help you out. But last time the
government 'required' me, things kinda...didn't work out." He tossed the
energy bullet from his right hand to his left, as if one hand were playing catch
with the other. The flaring, hissing passage of it startled her -- she took half
a step back. He grinned. "Easy with that thing," she snapped. "Just -- get
rid of it. Trust us and it'll be all right. I can't guarantee your safety if you
don't surrender." "Mind telling me, for starts, what happens if I go with
you?" "I was just told to get a...a confirmation on you. Then I bring you
in. I don't know any more than that." She delivered the disclaimer
believably. But Bleak could feel dishonesty the way someone else might feel a
sudden cold breeze. She'd been honest right up to I don't know any more than
that. He looked into her eyes -- and felt himself held there. An indefinable
familiarity hummed between their interlocked gazes, in that long moment. As if
he knew...not her face -- but something inside her. She glanced over her
shoulder, showing a flicker of irritation -- and not irritation with
him. He tossed the energy bullet back to his other hand. It made a
sizzling sound passing through the air. "Expecting someone?" She looked at
the glow of power nestled in his hand. "Put that thing out and
just...come along. We'll talk, Mr. Bleak. All right?" "Love to have a
drink with you, if you had a different profession, miss. I might even have gone
with 'just come along.' But...just 'come along' with a government agent?" He
shook his head. "I've got work to do, for one thing." "You're a skip
tracer, from what I've heard. You can do that anytime. We don't need to be in
any kind of...of confrontation, here." "Sure, okay, but -- come to think
of it..." He tossed the energy bullet up so it hissed and spiraled, caught it in
his right hand. "You haven't even shown me ID. They make up badges for your
department yet?" He smiled. There was something about her... She grimaced,
glanced over her shoulder again. "Someone slow to back you up?" Bleak
added thoughtfully, "You're not NYPD or FBI. I'd have had their badges stuck in
my face till I was blind...so that leaves CCA, right?" She looked at him
flatly, then tilted her purse so he could see the badge clipped to the inside
flap: Homeland Security, Central Containment Authority. "CCA agent Loraine
Sarikosca. So you know about CCA. Not many are aware it exists. Lot of you
people know?" "I think I read about it on the Internet somewhere." Truth
was, all the ShadowComm knew. A few had escaped and told their stories. And the
Hidden disclosed a good many secrets. She gave a small shake of her head.
"The Internet. I don't think so." "Way it is now, anybody can be detained.
So I guess I won't ask what authority you have. But" -- he tossed the
energy bullet from his right hand to his left -- "what excuse do you
have?" "What?" She seemed startled. As if she'd been wondering
herself. "What rationale? What excuse? To just take people
away." Her eyes followed the energy bullet as it went back to his right
hand. "There is a...a national security directive...having to do with
extraordinary paranormal capabilities. The risk to the public...the possibility
you could be of..." She broke off, licking her lips. "What were you going
to say -- about the possibility? That I could be useful?" "We'll talk
about it in the car." "Will we?" Bleak saw the uncertainty in her
eyes -- and saw it locked away, a moment later. Her eyes going
cold. "Yes," she said, her voice flat. "Now...I'm going to ask you to make
that little fireball of yours go away. Here -- I'll turn off the detector. Even
steven." She clicked the device off with a flick of her thumb, put it in the
purse as casually as a woman putting away a cell phone -- but her hand came out
of the purse with the gun. Bleak knew the gun was coming and was already
releasing the bullet with a snapping motion -- like a man snapping a whip. The
energy bullet sped from his hand like a spinning meteor, straight at her rising
gun-hand, whistling faintly as it went. She shouted in surprise and pain as the
packet of energy struck her snub-nosed .38 square in the cylinder, sent it
flying from her singed fingers -- its metal glowing red-hot, trailing
smoke. "Get down!" he yelled, rushing around the pool table to tackle her,
the two of them going heavily to the tiled floor. The gun clattered against the
wall -- and exploded, as every bullet in the gun went off, detonated by the
energy charge, bullets cracking into the ceiling and the floor, the room acrid
with gun smoke. She tried to pull away...he thought he felt her heartbeat, for a
moment...hoped she knew he was trying to save her life. "What the fuck!"
yelled Seamus from the next room. Bleak had an impulse to see if Agent
Sarikosca was okay -- he liked her nerviness, and he knew she was just doing her
job -- but he made himself get up and dodge into the men's room
instead. "Come back here, dammit!" she yelled, behind him. So good. She
was okay. "Call nine-whuh-one!" one of the barflies yelled, in the
background, as Bleak turned, slammed the door shut, then shot a burst of energy
from his hand to melt the metal of the lock. Not enough to hold it forever, but
it'd slow her down. A moment later the door creaked as someone on the other side
slammed it with a shoulder. "Call nine-whuh-one!" shrieked the barfly again,
muffled now. Two booths on the right, urinals left, sink and window
straight ahead. He shook his head, looking at the glazed-glass window over the
sink. Painted shut, and anyway too small for him. But he heard her out
there, talking on a cell. "Yeah, just get in here -- he's blocked the door
somehow -- " Then an aside to Seamus: "I'm sorry, sir, this is federal business,
you're going to have to stay out of here.... No, sir, there's no fire, just a
small explosion.... No, sir, I'm not hurt, now you're going to have
to..." Bleak walked over to the sink, examined the wall. Touched it with
the palm of his hand. Maybe. Thump! as someone slammed into the
door. Grunted in pain. Slammed it again. And there were more agents
coming. Bleak sighed. It seemed he'd used up this bar. Seamus wasn't going
to be happy with him. Nothing to lose. He put his hands on the wall above
the sink, closed his eyes. Drew energy from the background field, channeled it
through his arms... He stopped, aware of a spiritual scrutiny. Deep
contact with the background field exposed any disembodied entities handy; it
revealed the Hidden. And someone was there. Bleak opened his eyes and
found he was staring at himself in slightly reflective window glass over the
sink -- and saw that something...someone...was behind him, looking over his
shoulder. A set of disembodied eyes. A face was filling in, around them. Looked
like a teenage boy, maybe eighteen. Just old enough to get into a bar in New
York. He could even make out the acne, because that was how the ghost thought of
itself. A drug OD, Bleak suspected. The ghost might have been here for
years. "You ought to let go, kid," Bleak said. "You're stuck here. You're
dead, see." The kid shook his head, at first like someone shaking their
head "no," then faster and faster, till his face was a blur, as he receded, his
denial becoming a retreat through space itself -- and Bleak closed his eyes
again, focused the power he'd drawn, directed it into the wall above the sink,
felt the plaster crack and shudder and give way. Something clanged noisily to
the floor. Bleak opened his eyes to see a rough oblong hole, a gap three
feet high in the wall, the sink broken down on the tiles, water gushing from a
pipe, wetting his boots. He heard the door breaking down behind him --
He reached out, caught the still-hot edges of the wall, wincing at the
contact, put his right foot on the pipe, and levered himself up and through, out
partway into the alley behind the building. Running footsteps behind him;
someone grabbed his left ankle but he twisted free, got to his feet in the
alley. A car was just pulling in twenty-five yards to his left, one of the dark
blue, compact natural-gas hybrids favored by the CCA. Bleak thought about
invoking help from the disembodied, but he didn't want to incur debts if he
didn't have to. He started to the right, looking for a way out -- but it was a
dead end. Trash cans against a brick wall. He turned back toward the car
rolling slowly, inexorably toward him. Someone was hurrying up behind the car --
a blond man in a suit, an agent in wraparound mirror sunglasses, raising a
pistol. Someone behind him yelled, "Keep your head down, Arnie!" "You!"
shouted "Arnie" from behind the car. "Hands up! You've assaulted a federal
agent! I've got every right to take you down! Hands up, do it now!" He was
aiming his pistol over the top of the car. Bleak backed up, coalescing
another energy bullet in his right hand. Agent Sarikosca appeared at the
alley's mouth, behind Arnie, her mouth open. She'd been running. She glared past
the blond agent. "Bleak! Put your hands on the wall, give it up! I promise
you won't be harmed!" "Don't make promises you can't keep," Bleak said,
looking up toward a fire escape. No, out of reach. The car was bearing
down on him...and stopped, rocking on its shocks, about thirty feet
away. He thought he might be able to hit the sedan with a compacted energy
bullet to make the engine explode, but if he did that, he'd probably kill the
guys inside. And he didn't want to kill anyone if he didn't have to. He
knew what surrendering to the CCA could mean. Maybe the stories about its
prisoners were just rumors, but he thought it wiser to believe them. "I'm
counting two and I'm opening fire!" Arnie yelled. That made up Bleak's
mind for him. Heart thudding so loudly he seemed to hear it echo in the
alley, Bleak snapped the energy bullet toward the agent -- aiming it so it'd
whip close to the man's left ear. Scare him into screwing up his aim. The agent
yelled, ducked aside from the meteoric energy bullet, fired his weapon as he
stumbled. A bullet cracked past Bleak. He'd heard that sound often enough in his
life to know what it was. Still recoiling from Bleak's energy bullet,
Arnie stumbled back -- Bleak ran straight for the car coming at him. As
he went, he reached out to the planetary field, felt it concentrated between the
narrow walls of the alley. A pretty strong water source must run under the
pavement. That helped. He stretched out his arms wide as he ran, caught
the energy in his opened hands, compressed it with the extension of his senses,
molding it into a shape formed by his mind. The car's driver and passenger
were opening their doors, getting out with guns in hand -- but Bleak was running
up an invisible ramp in the air. Right over their car. "Son of a
bitch!" the driver shouted -- he was another set of sunglasses in a suit
-- as Bleak ran through the air above the car, creating more of the invisible
ramp ahead of him as he went. He waved the ramp away just as he passed the trunk
of the car on the far side, and the support vanished from under him. He dropped
down to a crouch behind the agents as one of them, the driver, got out of the
car and turned, fired at him, the bullet cutting the air near his
shoulder. Then Arnie was there, right in front of him on the sidewalk,
raising the gun. Bleak used more standard combat skills, Ranger hand-to-hand. He
set himself and kicked out, connecting with Arnie's wrist. Arnie yelped in pain,
grimacing, as the gun spun away. Agent Sarikosca came from behind her partner,
tried to barricade Bleak, but he dodged past her, like a quarterback with the
football, and kept going, leaving her and Arnie behind. Running, Bleak
sensed someone he knew on the sidewalk ahead. Wondered if it was coincidence. It
was Pigeon Lady: an elderly woman no more than five feet tall, who seemed to
live in a perpetual flurry of pigeons; a droppings-white watch cap pulled over
her spray of gray hair; she wore layers of bird-spackled wool, whatever the
weather, stuck with fallen pinfeathers. And she wore pigeons like more clothing,
something like thirty of them whirring and cooing about her, sitting on her
head, her shoulders, her arms, whether she was feeding them or not. Her seamed
face turned toward him; her watery eyes took him in, running past. Nodded
distantly to him, turning to see men with suits, sunglasses, and guns five
strides behind him. Feds, aiming at Bleak's back. The pigeons erupted from
her in a volcanic cloud of flapping blue and gray, making whickering sounds in
their flurrying, to fill the air just behind Bleak. They flew at the faces of
the CCA men; flapping wildly, blocking all sight of the agents' quarry, for
several long, precious moments. Carried on the psychic wind of their
wings, Bleak heard thoughts, other people's thoughts he could never ordinarily
have heard. He was not usually telepathic -- not like that. Mostly he could only
hear the minds of the dead. Run, cross the street, Bleak, the
Pigeon Lady thought. We'll keep them back.Someone else thinking, What
the hell's up with these birds? It's like that Hitchcock movie...the damn
things're too close to my eyes...the smell, the feathers --
Where's he gone? There -- I've got a shot at
him! "No, Drake, hold your fire, you'll hit civilians!" Sarikosca
shouted, as Bleak sprinted up Thirty-fifth toward Broadway, running full out,
suddenly aware of the humid heat. As if he were running upstream through hot
water. He drew his power from the living environment around him, but the process
took something from him too -- had taken a great deal for that last little gag,
running on the air -- and he was feeling it. And thinking, "Drake" she said?
Drake Zweig from military intelligence? It would be a natural jump, from
Army Intelligence to CCA. Maybe Zweig had ID'd him. He hoped it wasn't that
particular prick. Bleak saw the female agent at the corner, with Arnie
just behind her. Trying to block him off. He took in a deep breath and cut to
the right, dodging around a wheezing fat woman with runny eye makeup and a
bearded man in a turban; ducked behind a disused mailbox, then cut between two
parked taxis and ran into traffic, right in front of a bus. He sprinted past the
front of a big city bus a whisker ahead of being run down, the bus blaring its
horn -- then he turned to follow it through the intersection, running along
beside it. Traffic was heavy and the bus was moving only as fast as he could
run. Bleak used the bus's bulk to hide behind as he crossed Broadway,
aware that a round-mouthed little girl was ogling him from a window just beside
his head, her pudgy fingers pressed to the glass. He waved at her and she waved
back, then, wheezing, he angled off into the thick crowd on the sidewalk, cut
into a department store...and lost them. For now. "We lost him," said
Drake Zweig, coming back to the car in the alley. "Dammit." Zweig was a
short, middle-aged man in a gray suit tight over his barrel chest. He wore his
gray hair in a kind of oily pompadour, to give him height; wide face, eyes set
slightly too far apart, his mouth almost lipless. He had large hands -- there
was a story he'd used those big thumbs on the eyes of detainees, back in Iraq,
years ago, when he'd worked for the CIA at Abu Ghraib. "What about the
detector?" Arnie asked, ruefully rubbing his bruised wrist. "Out of range
-- he must've slipped off to a subway. Caught a lucky train." Loraine
Sarikosca was standing by the car, spraying her burn with analgesic, then
winding a bandage around her hand. She wanted to tell Zweig he should have taken
her advice, brought in four more cars for this guy. She just wondered why it'd
taken so long for her backup to show, in the bar. Had General Forsythe told them
to hold off -- see how she handled it alone? It was quite possible. "I can
confirm the ID, all right," Zweig went on. "Gabriel Bleak." Arnie tilted
his dark glasses back on the top of his blond head, revealing pale blue eyes.
"Hot as hell out here. So, Drake -- how you know this Bleak?" "Let's take
it to the car," Loraine said. She knew Zweig didn't like her talking as if she
had rank on him -- only, she did have rank on him, so he could stuff it. She
didn't want them airing this on the street. They all got in, Loraine in
the back behind Zweig, Arnie beside her. Zweig's partner, riding shotgun, was
Dorrick Johnson, an African-American agent who rarely contributed more than a
cynical shake of his head to any conversation. But Dorrick had good judgment.
Such as the good judgment to put on the airconditioning as soon as Zweig got the
car fired up. "How's your hand, Loraine?" Arnie asked. "It's okay,
just a little red." It hurt like a bastard but she didn't want to be taken off
the job. "Your wrist?" "Throbs. Doesn't seem broken. If I run into that
guy again..." "Keep a professional attitude, Arnie, okay? Forsythe wants
them intact." Zweig just then got around to answering Arnie's question, so
it sounded like a non sequitur. "Bleak fucked with me on intel, of course, in
Afghanistan." Zweig snorted. "He was Army Rangers. Supposed to be a tough bunch.
But he was such an old lady about the civilians." "Some 'old lady.' "
Arnie said ruefully. "Almost blew off Loraine's hand. And he made us look like
dicks." "Used magic," Zweig snorted. "Didn't have the stones to use a gun.
I don't really see the advantage of this weird-ass trick of his. Making a gun
blow up." "Think about it," Loraine said, gingerly touching the bandaged
hand. She winced. "He shoots me, that's a real clear crime. He makes the gun
explode with a power the court doesn't recognize as even existing, he just says,
'What, so your gun went blooey, why is that my fault?' No weapon, nothing the
police can hold him on, really. No forensic evidence. He doesn't have to reload
the thing -- seems to pull it right out of the air. It's always there, even when
he seems disarmed. And then there's the psychological effect -- I was pretty
startled, I got to admit." "We're feds. New rules, we can take him in,
don't need 'evidence,' " Dorrick pointed out. Dorrick was new to CCA -- which
was itself fairly new. Dorrick was a transfer from FBI. Not his
choice. Loraine nodded abstractedly. "We don't need evidence if we can get
him without the police being involved -- not always possible, from what I hear."
Her mind mostly on wondering if the agency had brought the other detectors into
the area, as she'd requested. They were testers -- only a few prototypes
existed. Bleak might still be close by. She'd been standing so close to
him -- why didn't she just tackle him? Would he really have used that energy
bullet on her, directly? She wasn't sure. She suspected he probably wouldn't
have. But she wasn't sure why she felt that way. I won't ask what
authority you have...but what excuse do you have? The words haunted
her. She'd asked herself the same thing, more than once, since signing on with
CCA. And somehow he knew that. There was an official rationale, of course.
ShadowComm types were breaking a law that almost no one knew existed. Something
you were told about once you were detained: a law against using paranormal
abilities -- the real thing, ShadowComm abilities, not the usual fake psychics
and pseudowitches. Specifically, it was forbidden to use ShadowComm powers
except in a contained and controlled government context. Otherwise, the
government claimed, you were doing the equivalent of experimenting with
plutonium in your garage. Thought to be that dangerous. Especially since the
phenomenon started popping up all over, during the last thirty years. And who
knew what political orientation any ShadowComm had? Suppose they were anarchists
-- or Jihadists? Too big a risk. But still, the question bothered her.
Could the "containment" be justified? They were officially at war -- always,
always at war, with the Pan Jihad -- and detaining ShadowComm, till they could
be retrained, was a bit like the internment of Japanese-Americans in World War
II. But even so... Her cell phone buzzed. She reached for it, and its
vibrating corresponded unnervingly with the throbbing in her burned hand.
"Sarikosca." "Loraine, the police are at the bar." It was Dr. Helman, at
CCA's Washington, D.C., office. His low voice almost like a man parodying an
affectless monotone. He seemed to consider it a classy detachment. She pictured
him, a chunky little man, perhaps forty-five, with slickedback, dark black hair
and black eyes and old-fashioned, professorial suits, probably polishing his
wire-rim glasses on his tie -- usually a broad silk tie with hand-painted lilies
and mums on it -- as he spoke into a rather old-fashioned Bluetooth earpiece.
She found him odious but he was her boss, and as expert as anyone in their most
peculiar area of expertise. "We're sending people in to cover it for you, you
won't have to go back in there." "That's good." How would she have
explained it to the cops? "We screwed up. I guess I screwed up. He got away.
But...I got a good look at him." "Oh, we have confirmed the ID. We know
all about Mr. Gabriel Bleak. I was hoping you'd meet face-to-face. Did
you...well. We'll discuss it later. I want a full report on your encounter with
him. Everything -- every last thing." We know all about Mr. Gabriel
Bleak. She opened her mouth to ask if she was being sent on assignments
without a full briefing. Then she closed it again. You never got full briefings,
at CCA. Which was typical of intelligence services -- sometimes it had been like
that when she'd worked at the DIA. But CCA struck her as particularly "Chinese
boxes" oriented: every shut box always contained another. The agency's primary
mission seemed to have another one tucked away inside it. Theoretically the CCA
existed to prevent supernatural destabilization of the country -- and to use
specially talented individuals to defl ect threats to the USA. Terrorists with
WMDs were hard to detect -- but with the supernatural on your side, you might
catch them. Only, sometimes she thought there was another mission she
hadn't been told about. "How's the hand?" Helman asked. "It's just a
minor burn." Close enough to true. "Good. Because you're going to be busy.
Today, see if you can fi nd Bleak, pick up his trail. This is straight from
General Forsythe -- Bleak's a priority." "Why Bleak especially? There are
a lot of other possibles out there." "The general was adamant. We fi nd
him or we fi nd another place to work." |