Saturday, July 19, 1997,
1:02 pm
San Antonio, Texas
Wagner was swamped from the moment he got back into the
office, barely sitting down before the flood began. It didn’t matter that it
was Saturday because everyone was working overtime.
Everyone had been coming in on
Saturdays for months, and a six day work week was becoming normal for just
about everyone in the FBI.
If Wagner despised his hours, he
could at least take comfort in the knowledge that none of his superiors were
lounging on the weekends either.
The upper echelons were working
around the clock in Washington to push for a larger budget, allowing them to
hire and train more agents.
Damien Greenfield was at least
helping in this regard. Only two days before, the president had delivered a
brief speech encouraging the senate to approve his budget to help shore up
national security.
Wagner snorted with mocking
disdain. The president who pushed for better security standards had also been
exploiting holes in the system for most of his political career. But more bold
was his talent for pointing out the holes to declare, “Someone could slip
through that hole and attack us!”
The cunning daemon summmoner had
positioned himself to become the lieutenant governor of Arizona, and then one
of his schemes backfiring still worked out in his favor. The dispersal of a
halfling-specific virus had killed hundreds and maimed hundreds more.
The virus had been sent out mixed
with the state’s supply of flu vaccines. At the time, Damien had no clue of the
size of the halfling population.
If Wagner understood the numbers
from Cora Collins, Damien’s miscalculation had led to the halflings in Arizona
being cut to a handful of refugees. The halflings had become an endangered
species in the state over the course of a week, and the biological attack was
nothing short of genocide.
But the only evidence he had was
the testimony of a few people. None were willing to come forward and expose
themselves to the humans, lest the rest of their families be exposed and put at
risk.
The devastating attack allowed
Damien to push the governor to resign. From there, he had moved on to campaign
for the presidential election, and his victory had given him total control to
build an army.
But what Damien hadn’t made clear
to the public was the true purpose of his plans. Because of his contact with
Jobe and Wendy Stoffel, Wagner knew more than most people did, but he still
only had a few details.
The truth was, Damien needed to
build an army to fight against an invasion from the daemonic plane, Heil. He’d
unwittingly set the plans for the invasion in motion himself by summoning a
daemon to act as his spy.
Wagner thought, It’s not that he’s lucky. He’s got people
helping him spin every mistake into a talking point. When the time comes to
announce the truth, he’ll become a hero because he never has to mention that he
started this mess himself.
Wagner hated doing nothing to stop
Damien, but the supervisor who formerly occupied his office, Deborah Pierce,
had been killed by a sniper after she’d sent Gavin on an investigation of the
late Eric Richter. Wagner had to be careful, or he would end up being shot by a
sniper too.
Damien’s men had already made three
attempts on his life, but after a car bombing had been thwarted, Wagner ordered
everyone to lay low and let the cases die quietly.
The attempts on his life ended,
and the message had come across loud and clear: Keep your mouth shut, and you’ll be allowed to live.
Wagner kept his mouth shut, and he
tried to assist his people on cases that they had a chance of solving.
Damien’s plans included larger
budgets for the investigative branches, and Wagner needed more people and more
resources if he ever wanted to get ahead of the increasing caseloads. The
promise of more backup was like an added bribe to him, another reason to pipe
down for the time being.
But.
As soon as the world had accepted
the truth of the daemonic invasion, Wagner planned to call up Cora and Wendy.
He would use whatever form of persuasion he had to in order to convince them to
testify against Damien, and then he would have all the evidence he needed to
arrest Damien for his crimes against halflings, and against humanity.
It was a good plan, he thought,
and it would just require sitting tight and waiting for the right time to bring
the cases back up.
Until then, Wagner had to juggle
more than he was trained to handle and pray that nobody shot him.
Piece of cake.
Wagner was jolted from his
thoughts when someone rapped on the door. The agents were already walking in
before he’d called them in, and from their anxious expressions, he guessed that
their problems couldn’t wait. He waved them to the seats in front of his desk,
giving the agents and their case his undivided attention.
The next two hours blurred with
too many similar briefings. Several times, it seemed as if someone had just
left his office before someone else arrived to make a report.
For most of the afternoon, he was unable
to devote any time to Gavin and Jobe. It wasn’t until Norman stepped into his
office that he could bring his thoughts back to their problems.
The lab technician’s face gave
Wagner an answer before Norman spoke. His expression was confounded, and his
wide shoulders were slouched, like he was conceding defeat.
Norman dropped into the chair, as
usual not bothering with a greeting before he started detailing his problems.
“The computers don’t have any matching samples. We’ve got nothing even remotely
close.”
“What about the metal samples from
the collar?”
“It’s a mixture of silver, tin,
and something else.” Norman made a frustrated laugh. “Every time, the computer
keeps coming up with ‘unknown,’ or, ‘no match’ for answers.”
Wagner looked down at his phone
when it rang. He wasn’t sure who’d decided to call, but he had a bad feeling he
didn’t want to know either way. He picked up the phone. “This is Wagner.”
“He’s hunting outside of Boerne.”
Wagner wanted to berate the berserker
for calling the office. But instead, he swallowed down his anger. Exploding in
front of Norman would be a mistake, and Wagner’s phone line was still tapped.
Swallowing back his admonishment,
Wagner asked, “He’s on the news?”
“Yeah. Sometime last night, he
crashed into a house and killed an elderly couple and their dog. There’s some
good news. I don’t think he likes the taste of humans. The old man has a nasty
bite wound, and his wife was stomped to death. Probably because she wouldn’t
stop screaming. But the dog was picked clean.”
“Terrific.” Wagner rubbed his
forehead. “Is there anything else?”
“Yeah. Two miles to the northwest,
there’s a dead cow stripped to the bones, so I don’t think the dog was much
more than a snack. Another four miles west, a farmer called in a report on an
animal sleeping in his barn. The farmer is dead, and the deputy who reported to
the scene is at the hospital, babbling about Bigfoot attacking him.”
Wagner looked up at Norman, his
mouth compressed in a thin line while a conflict played out in his mind. “If I
let you go, what do you plan to do first?”
“I’ll use Gavin to get into the
hospital to talk to the deputy. We’ll have to recruit him fast. We don’t want
him wandering off and making any new friends.”
“No,” Wagner said.
He suppressed a grimace as he
considered the threat not as a curse, but as an infection that could be passed
any number of ways.
“You’re just going to walk in and
announce yourselves?”
“There’s no point in sneaking,
boss,” the berserker said. His voice broke in growling laughter. “People are
bound to notice me since I’m bright red and stacked like a brick bunker. But
I’ll nod and try to keep my mouth shut. Gavin can wave his badge, and he can
cover for me by claiming I’m a consultant. He’s already told that story before,
and nobody questions us. So I think we can use the same story to get in and out
without making a scene.”
Wagner nodded to himself, grateful
that the berserker was trying to be discreet. “I want regular reports, and
you’re not allowed to approach the animal unless you have my approval.”
“Paperwork is Gavin’s job, but
I’ll let him know. We’ll keep our distance until you let go of our leashes.”
Wagner started to say that the
berserker shouldn’t call the office, but the line clicked. He set down the
phone and opened his mouth. He was still taking a breath to speak when the
phone rang again.
“Gotta be kidding me,” he muttered
as he picked the phone up. “This is Wagner.”
“Wagner, it’s Mark. I’m going to
stop by your office tonight, so I’ll need you to stay late.” Mark Grissom, the
regional supervisor paused. “That won’t be a problem for you, will it?”
“No, of course not,” Wagner said.
“I have a few cases that need more attention, so I’ll call out to order
something for dinner. Do you know what time you’ll expect to be in the office?”
“Possibly seven, though I might be
later,” Mark said.
“May I ask what this is in
relation to?”
“I’m afraid I’m in a hurry, so
I’ll have to wait until I arrive to explain. I will tell you that you aren’t in
trouble over anything.” Mark huffed, but Wagner wasn’t sure if it was a laugh
or a sound made in irritation. “Does that help?”
“Yeah, it does, actually,” Wagner
said. He was lying, but he sounded convincing. “Thanks, Mark. I’ll see you when
you get in.”
He set down the phone and waved at
Norman. “Wrap up everything and turn in your reports when you can. Move your
people on to something else.”
“All right,” Norman said.
Under better circumstances, he
might have asked for more time to study all of the samples. But the caseload in
the labs was larger by an exponential factor then the files that Wagner had to
sort through.
Their workload grew faster than
the cases, since every case had many samples to send into the lab for a
multitude of tests. The technicians had a constant backlog of work to dig into,
and they were so crunched for time that satisfying curiosity had become a
luxury.
As soon as Norman walked out of
the office, someone else knocked on the door. Wagner held up his hand, shaking
his head at the same time. “Whatever it is, go walk a lap and take a coffee
break. I need fifteen minutes to breathe, all right?”
“Right.” The agent nodded and backed
up, shutting the door behind herself.
Wagner dropped his head into his
hands and rubbed his temples. His gaze wandered to the phone. The berserker
called the office, and within seconds of that call, Mark was scrambling to make
a meeting, probably with Damien.
He didn’t want to be paranoid
about all of his superiors, but Mark had been the most helpful in covering up
any cases involving the elites, Damien’s group of hand-picked moles. The timing
of the call was too close for him to think anything else.
But the question was, what could
they need to talk about so urgently if he wasn’t in trouble?
***
Saturday, 4:27 pm
Gavin’s shirt collar was too tight, and he had to open the
top button. It didn’t make the air in the cab feel any less stifling, and the
shirt was uncomfortable for the way his sleeves dug into his armpits.
He had no clue what was going on. He’d
gone back to sleep after packing down a massive lunch, and the berserker woke
him from a sound sleep by clapping as he shouted, “Road trip!”
He’d explained nothing while Gavin
dressed, but his reason was that the cab had already arrived at the house to
pick them up.
Once they were in the back seat, Gavin
asked where they were going. The berserker shook his head, pointing to the
driver to hint that it wasn’t the best time to talk.
The car pulled into a shopping
center, but until it stopped at the curb in front of a car rental office, Gavin
was clueless to their destination.
He got out of the cab, his hand
drifting to his side, though he only felt a minor twinge of pain. He followed the
berserker from the curb to the car rental office, and the pendant thumped his sternum
with every step.
The clerk behind the counter
raised his head, smiling politely when Gavin walked in behind the berserker.
“Good afternoon.”
The berserker grinned and said, “Hi,
I called to reserve a car for Gavin Lebowitz.”
The clerk nodded. “Oh, right, the Mustang.”
Gavin’s mouth opened, but he
snapped it shut before he could ask, “The what?” Instead he nodded and said, “Yes,
he reserved it for me. What do I need to sign?”
Gavin filled out the insurance
forms and signed the lease contract. While the clerk went to fetch the keys, he
glanced at the berserker. “I’m driving.”
“For now. And you’re welcome.”
Gavin let it go, forcing himself
to smile when the clerk handed him the keys. The old man walked with them
through the office to the back door, pointing out the bright red Mustang in the
rear parking lot.
Starting the car, Gavin sat back
and listened to the engine hum.
He said, “All right, we’re alone
now. Please fill me in on your plan.”
“First, drive back to the house so
we can pack weekend bags.”
Gavin backed out of the slot and
pulled away from the shopping center while the berserker described his plan.
Gavin nodded his agreement,
offering nothing to the discussion while he drove back to the house. He didn’t
interrupt to ask questions, and when the berserker finished, he wasn’t the least bit concerned about the
road trip, or the case.
No matter what he did, his life as
he knew it was over. His mind insisted on coming up with incessantly stupid
questions like, What will I tell
Stephanie? It was followed by another, How
will I keep my job?
As if dating or keeping his job
were the biggest problems he had. How could he live under such an awful curse?
The berserker said, “You could
always munch a bullet.”
Gavin sighed. “Of all the
questions I was thinking, why did you choose to answer that one?”
The berserker shook his head. “I wasn’t
answering any question, just thinking out loud.” He glanced at Gavin. “I
thought you’d gone mind numb, because I’m not getting anything from your
thoughts.”
“No, I’m a full flurry of
mental—” Gavin snapped his head around fast as recognition came to him. “You can’t read me?”
“You started blocking me just a
few minutes ago. The last I got was, ‘why me,’ and some other whiny shit.”
Gavin’s face bunched in a look of
annoyance. “I never thought, ‘why me?’”
“Close enough.”
Gavin smirked, glancing over to
see that the berserker was too.
He asked, “So who do you think
will win?”
The berserker frowned, the
confusion in his brown eyes fading before he offered a shrug. “It’s hard to
say. You’ll have the claws and fangs working in your favor, and all I get is
bigger muscles. I think it will depend on how much bigger you get when you go
furball.”
He might have had more to say, but
Gavin pulled into the driveway, and they both spotted the elf sitting on the
porch.
Erick stood as the car drove up
the long gravel path to the house. His black face was held in a look of awe,
and even after Jobe and Gavin got out of the Mustang, his gaze was locked on
the car.
Erick asked, “What is that?”
His voice rumbling in a chuckle,
the berserker said, “That is a Mustang.”
Erick blinked, his expression
becoming confused. “That no horse.”
Gavin snorted. “Where did you
learn English?”
“I take lessons, in childhood.
But...never use. English not useful at Lissand.”
“I’ll start packing,” the
berserker said, already walking toward the house. “You can try to sort out what
he’s saying.”
Erick asked, “You have collar?”
“I do,” Gavin said.
Erick stared at him with a muddled
expression. “You keep?”
“Yes, I think I’ll need it. Are
you sure you can’t make another?”
“I...to get more collars, I must
return home. But I...I cannot say if I will return to Earth. If I go home, I
become...prisoner?”
“You’ll be in trouble for bringing
the orc here,” Gavin said.
“Yes.”
Gavin sighed, dropping his head. “Well,
Erick, I don’t know what to tell you. You brought this mess here, and unless
you return home, this is going to end in a lot of dead werebears.”
“Werekin.”
“It’s the same thing.”
“No, you no understand,” Erick
said.
His tiny mouth tugged in a tight
bow-shaped frown while he tried to find words to express himself. “All werekin
cursed, become animals. But animal you become...” He trailed off, sighing in
frustration while he tried to finish.
Gavin nodded. “I think I
understand. Just because I got attacked by a bear, it doesn’t mean I’ll become
a bear myself.”
“Yes,” Erick nodded, his face relaxing.
“You become animal closest to your...your soul?”
Gavin cringed and asked, “You mean
I’m going to become a weasel?”
|