Guardians of the Gates - Part 1, The New Breed by Jeff Schanz (best novels ever .TXT) đ
- Author: Jeff Schanz
Book online «Guardians of the Gates - Part 1, The New Breed by Jeff Schanz (best novels ever .TXT) đ». Author Jeff Schanz
Sebastian said, âYou look fine. No problems.â
He let her chin drop and she blinked slowly, rhythmically. Her thoughts were completely blank for a moment. Sebastian sighed. It would be nice if she didnât completely forget me, but I doubt sheâll remember any details. Too bad. It would be nice to talk to a girl for once without it involving scrambling her brain, either intentionally, or accidentally.
He covered her with a throw blanket she had folded on the couch. She sat still, blinking. âThank you,â she said softly, to no one in particular. âThat was a weird dream. Iâm so sleepy.â
Satisfied she was sufficiently confounded, he folded Frankâs coat across a chair and headed for the door. As he grasped the handle, he noticed several individually wrapped chocolate wafers in a plastic bowl. She had indeed just bought some biscuits, hadnât she? He grabbed two of them and quietly said, âthanksâ before he walked out.
Sebastian was running on fumes. He had gone to London two days ago to help with a group of wolfers in the English countryside that had given the British Saint field agents a hard time. The wolfersâ elimination took longer than expected. Then, heading back to his hotel already tired, he passed by Regentâs Park and caught the strange, bloodthirsty thoughts of something both feral, yet human enough to speak English in its mind. Quickly changing course, he interceded, tapping into energy he wasnât sure he had in reserve. It had already been a long two days in London. Killing wolfers in the countryside was exercise enough. Stalking and killing another one in Regentâs Park, plus carrying an unconscious woman to her apartment, not to mention the fancy footwork to sneak her there without being noticed and fingered as some rapist who drugged his date, and then the effort to scramble her thoughts, and donât forget the jetlag, all added up to one very exhausted Saint. A hungry Saint too. Two cookies, a.k.a. âbiscuits,â were not enough to sufficiently replace the energy lost. But energy or not, he had more work to do. No sightseeing this trip, even though he had been at the entrance of the immense British Museum just the other day visiting a very âspecialâ antiques dealer. That antiques dealer had a secret side occupation that was important to Sebastianâs work. And before the evening was over, Sebastian would have to return there as well.
Edwin Fryer ran a very respectable antiques and artifacts shop. He never bought or sold anything controversial, or gained anything from anyone controversial. In essence, he was as clean as a whistle to all the authorities who dig into archeological dealers and their business practices. Probably way too clean for anyone who might be looking for suspicious activity. Sebastian had no idea how Edwin had managed to escape judgmental inquisitors when it was well known that the first rule of good cover stories was to not look too spotless. Whatever. Not my problem. Squire Fryer was as crooked as he needed to be when it came to lending out the essential tools in the Saintsâ trade. Sebastian had only met him a couple of times, but was still his favorite supplier. He loved the European medieval gear almost as much as Japanese medieval weaponry. Granted he shouldnât care as long as it did the job, nevertheless, medieval long swords were as cool as they came. And he still had to eventually return the sword Edwin had loaned him, just not yet. Still things to do tonight.
Next stop: A demon-infused little runt named Nigel.
He doubted he needed the sword for Nigel, but you never know. Nigel wasnât a typical demon. He wasnât a typical anything. But he referred to himself as a âreformed demon.â As a rule, it was never wise to confront someone possessed by, or suffused with, demon energy, albeit a âreformedâ one, without a stable weapon. Demons arenât to be trusted, period. But then, who is?
Sebastianâs trip to Nigelâs apartment in Queenâs Docks hadnât taken long. It was not a difficult trip at this hour, and even easier if you had a motorcycle. Like the sword, the bike had been borrowed off one of Sebastianâs associates. Sebastian loved the simplicity of them when you were traveling light, and it was also nice to be able to weave through traffic. No traffic at this hour to worry about though. All the better for Sebastianâs faltering alertness. Plus, the less time he spent on the eastern side of London, the better. Some pockets of clean living were all around, but they were bordered by some of the scariest city dwellers anyone could find. The food delivery vehicles long ago quit doing any business in Queenâs Docks, as they kept losing money when their drivers were robbed. Of course, the drivers, like all London denizens, werenât allowed to carry weapons, so it followed that when enough employees threatened to quit, the employers dumped the route. But Sebastian did have a weapon, and he didnât think a bunch of gangster malcontents were more difficult to handle than a seven-foot croco-wolf-thing.
Sebastian stared at the number on the door. It looked different than the last time he visited. At least, he thought so. Was this even the same place? He knocked underneath the numbers â6â and â9,â which were not consistent with the other apartment numbers. Nigel always had an adolescent sense of humor.
It took almost two minutes and another series of knocking before the door finally opened. Holding the knob was a short, skinny, sallow-faced man who was in his late twenties, but whose body had seen enough chemical infusions to resemble a man much older. His large bug-like eyes closed and he squeezed his lips tight as he recognized his visitor. He quickly regained his composure, or more likely remembered to fake this composure, and smiled broadly.
âAh, Sebastian, me olâ sod. How are ya, mate?â said the sallow-faced man. His accent was the clichĂ©d mix of cockney and gutter English. It sounded more like a foreign actorâs attempt at English rather than a genuine accent. If Sebastian didnât know better, he wouldâve accused the man of faking it.
âNigel,â said Sebastian, with a broad, just-as-fake smile. âItâs been a long time, hasnât it?â
Nigel examined the air, smile fading slightly. âWerenât you âere three months ago?â
âWas I? I missed you that much, I guess,â said Sebastian. He stepped into the doorframe. Nigel shifted uneasily.
âYour, uh, brother isnât âere is âe?â asked Nigel.
Sebastian just grinned as he abruptly pushed past Nigel into the hallway.
âAh, come on, mate. Iâve gotâŠ,â Nigel made a meaningful tossing motion with his head. âGuests,â he finished.
Sebastian grinned. âIâm a guest too, Nigel.â
âYeah, but you donâav tits, do you?â
Sebastian entered Nigelâs kitchen and peered into the small living room. It was furnished with an assortment of outdated paraphernalia like lava lamps, doorway beads, and glow-in-the-dark fantasy posters. Nigel apparently resigned his decorating tastes to the secondhand stores, with the exception of a few recent playmates of the month on the rear wall.
Two ladies of questionable moral character lounged in the center of this retro palace, wearing only their undergarments. Neither looked particularly aware of anything in this room, or in this world for that matter.
âNigel, you brought one for me? So sweet of you.â
Nigel rolled his eyes and turned on his kitchen light. âYeah, right. Perhaps you want to tell me what in the bleedinâ hell you want so I can get back to entertaininâ me guests.â
Sebastian smiled and knelt near one of the ladies. Her eyes were about as dilated as possible as she smiled and stared unblinking at Sebastian. He turned to Nigel with an arched eyebrow.
âWhat?â said Nigel. âThey were this way before they got âere.â
Sebastian smirked and shook his head slightly.
âOi, itâs some shit I got from a bloke in Limehouse,â said Nigel. âSwear itâs straight.â
By âstraight,â Nigel meant not from any kind of rift-altered substance, or dimensionally enhanced artifact. Sebastian didnât really care, and Nigel knew that too, so there was no response to Nigelâs comment.
âWhatever, mate,â continued Nigel, opening his refrigerator for a beer. âWhat dâyou want?â
Sebastian caught a glance inside the fridge, briefly wondering if there might be something in it worthy of eating. But Nigelâs fridge was worse than his own. Nothing but condiments and beer.
âJust some information, if you have it,â said Sebastian.
âYeah, yeah. Like Iâm Deep Throat or something. You Saints think I hang around dodgy bastards all day so I can get enough shit to pass on to you. Just âcause me job donât pay me much, you think I go around peepinâ anâ creepinâ. Youâre a bunch of lunatics, you are.â
âNever said we werenât.â Sebastian wasnât in the mood to be bartered with. He had paid Nigel before, and may even do so again, but he had no cash on him now, and he was very tired. It was true Nigel wasnât really a player anymore, however, he had associations with many of the very troublesome entities that haunted the earth. Entities that Sebastian and The Saints referred to as demons. Although the term demon was used very loosely regarding pretty much any entity or energy that came out of any dimensional rift, however in Nigelâs case, it fit.
He called himself a âreformedâ demon, which he said sounded better than a possessed human. There was nothing reformed about Nigel other than he didnât get caught doing the shady things he did. Sebastian had heard Nigelâs story about how he escaped some sort of slavery in the other dimension and ended up inhabiting Nigelâs body. The questionable details of the story seemed to change every time Nigel told it, but the reality was that the human part of Nigel did seem to welcome the outer-dimensional entityâs presence. The demon Nigel had a kind of power the human Nigel didnât understand but wanted. The human Nigel was a lonely and depressed communications technician, the demon Nigel needed a body, and they came to an agreement. Almost like a movie about some schmuck who sells himself to the devil for fame and fortune, Nigel got a demon makeover to become Nigel 2.0. He still looked the same, still did the same stuff (yes, Nigel still actually worked), but he had a strange magnetism that got him what he wanted. Plus a thin moral core which further helped him get what he wanted. And as long as he didnât call attention to himself too much, he stayed in the clear. The new Nigel craved sex like a man in the desert craves water, and spent most all his days building up to the next great conquest. Tonight looked like a mission accomplished.
The two ladies in his living room were surprisingly attractive. Sebastian doubted they wouldâve come here for free. Certainly, they wouldnât have been interested in Nigel under legitimate circumstances. But the demon
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