ALEXANDRIA, VA
SHADOW BRANCH HQ
March 25
TEODORO DÍON HARVESTED THE last image from Sheridan’s unraveling mind, then withdrew—but not before causing, then rupturing, several arterial aneurysms within the fed’s brain. No choice; the FBI agent’s mind had been too fragile to wipe.
Teodoro rose to his feet and smoothed the wrinkles from his Italian-style charcoal slacks as Sheridan’s vitals monitors flatlined. An urgent and steady beeeeeeep filled the room. He arranged his face into a proper expression of concern and touched his fingers to the cold metal of the bed rail with just a dash of hesitancy.
A female med tech in blue scrubs dashed into the room. Teodoro stepped back from the bed and the dead man nested within its beige blankets.
“Can I do anything to help?” Teodoro asked.
The med tech shook her head, her razor-cut blonde shag sweeping across the back of her neck. “Just keep outta the way.” She lowered the bed railing.
Several more med techs hurried into the room; one pushed a crash cart, his mustached face calm and focused. Swarming around the bed, the med techs went to work, shouting out instructions and observations as they worked to resuscitate Sheridan.
Teodoro walked from the room and into the corridor, the high-pitched beeeeeeep declaring game over fading behind him with each step away.
His report to Purcell would be interesting, to say the least.
An image from Sheridan’s mind played behind Teodoro’s eyes: Light flares in the sky. Waves of intense blue, purple, and green light shimmer through the night—a dancing aurora borealis.
The statues had once been flesh.
And Dante Prejean was not what he seemed to be.
PURCELL WAS A NARCISSISTIC dickhead.
Looking all offended when she’d sparked up one of her clove cigarettes and ordering her to put it out. And what was up with his little speech to Emmett—the never presume to know what Prejean would or wouldn’t do bullshit?
Man had one seriously big honking bug up his squeaky-tight ass.
Closing and locking the door to her temporary quarters, Merri swiveled around and looked the place over. Twin bed, nightstand, little trash basket, two-drawer dresser, easy chair—all in varying shades of beige—along with a small bathroom and closet.
Not bad for an overnight stay, all considered. The recycled air stank of ozone and fake pine. Ozone. Even though she knew the odor was due to the air filtration system, a cold finger traced her spine. She thought of blue sparks skipping along white stone.
I need to let Galiana know what we discovered in the woods outside Damascus. Maybe she has some ideas about what the hell is going on.
Merri tossed her overnight bag, ugly floppy-brimmed hat, and leather gloves onto the easy chair, then flopped onto the bed. Pulling her pack of Djarum Black cloves from the pocket of her suede jacket, she lit one up and took a long, delicious drag.
Merri exhaled spiced smoke into the air and thought of her mère de sang, Galiana al-Qibtiyah, strolling the evening-drenched streets of Savannah, tall and regal in a long, gauzy, sunset-shaded dress that showcased her chocolate brown skin and wavy, black hair. Tapping ash from her cigarette into the trash basket, she sent to Galiana.
<Merri-girl, what’s wrong? Exhaustion edges your thoughts.>
<Stupid stay-awake pills. Had a job to do during daylight hours.>
<Ah. I still don’t understand why you want to work for mortals.>
<Sometimes I don’t either.>
Merri laid down on the bed and rested her head on the pillow. She described the Fallen Stonehenge circling the cave in the pine-, oak-, and elm-forested hills outside Damascus.
Blue sparks. Ozone. Heart beating within stone. Smooth wings.
<Fallen magic, girl. But on this scale … I think something huge is taking place.>
<Like what? How were so many of the Fallen transformed at once?>
<I’m not sure. Maybe this is the beginning of another war for power among the Elohim, or maybe it’s a return of the Fallen en masse to the mortal world, but …>
A return? Merri wasn’t sure she liked the sound of that. <But what?>
<Something went wrong.>
<They’re the Elohim, the Fallen. What could go wrong? How?>
<You showed faces frozen in many different expressions—some ecstatic, others surprised, disbelieving, afraid. You think these fallen angels were all caught off-guard but for one, yes?>
<Yes.>
Merri’s thoughts flipped back to the angel kneeling among the trees, knowing her mère de sang would receive the image.
The fallen angel’s wings curve forward as if in an attempt to shelter herself, her eyes closed, her hands clenched into fists in her lap. A supplicant for mercy unreceived.
<She knew what was coming and why,> Galiana sent.
Merri felt the heat of provocative possibilities simmering in her mère de sang’s mind. <Why there?> Merri sent. <Why did the Fallen show up in Damascus, Oregon, of all places? Who or what turned them to stone and arranged them around a newly formed cave?>
<Who took you to Damascus? Who were you seeking?>
<A couple of mortals and a vampire.>
<Research their histories. Maybe one of them is the key to this mystery. But please, Merri-girl, be cautious. I have a suspicion that events beyond the scope of mortals or even vampires might be unfolding.>
Uneasiness snaked through Merri, coiled cold in her belly. She sat up. <Beyond the scope of vampires? What the hell does that mean?>
<I need to speak to the llygaid and look into this more. Research those histories like I asked and, Merri-girl?>
<Yeah?>
<Promise me you’ll be careful.>
With Merri’s promise, the conversation ended. She stubbed her cigarette out in the bottom of the metallic trash basket beside the bed. She rose to her feet and her vision grayed. She sat down on the bed again, the springs only giving slightly beneath her, and lowered her head.
Damned stay-awake pills. It’d take several nights of natural Sleep before she was truly back on her game again. After a moment, Merri eased back onto her feet. Her vision remained clear. An excellent sign.
Rummaging through her overnight bag, Merri palmed the flash drive Gillespie had given them before she and Emmett had headed out for Portland, the flash drive containing all the pertinent data on the Rodriguez case and its suspects.
She’d learned quite a bit about both Wallace and Lyons, but Dante Prejean’s history had been slim—frontman for Inferno, a bunch of arrests in New Orleans, all misdemeanors—so she hoped she could put a little more meat on its highly classified TSP bones tonight.
Merri tucked the flash drive into her jacket pocket. Unlocking the door, she slipped out into the empty and after-hours-quiet corridor. She looked at the door across from her own, Emmett’s room. Probably in the cafeteria or snoozing. No need to bother him unless she found anything worthwhile.
Like why Gillespie had lied to her and Emmett about Prejean being enhanced.
Enhanced, my ass.
Opting for the stairs instead of the elevator to reach Prissy-Ass Purcell’s office two levels down, Merri moved down the corridor for the door marked EXIT/STAIRS at its end. She hit the door’s bar and breezed down the stairs, a blur on the security cameras stationed at each exit landing.
Yanking open the door on level five, Merri moved down another empty hall. She stopped outside Purcell’s office. Light off, door closed. Mr. Prissy-Ass wasn’t in. A small green light winked from the security keypad in the wall, indicating Purcell’s door was unlocked.
Must mean he’s coming back and soon.
Twisting the doorknob and cracking the door open just wide enough for her to slither through, Merri entered Purcell’s darkened office. A hint of clove-scented smoke lingered in the air along with a faint trace of Purcell’s cologne—a blend of ginger, green tea, and bitter orange.
Merri paused, waiting for her eyes to adjust to the near-total blackness of the underground office. Using the thin light filtering in through the door’s frosted glass panel and the yellow and green telltales on Purcell’s computer and printer, she padded over to his desk.
She tapped the mouse and the sleeping monitor flickered to life. A picture of the Fallen Stonehenge, white stone glistening in the rain, filled the screen. A chill touched the back of her neck.
Events beyond the scope of mortals or even vampires …
Fishing the flash drive from her jacket pocket, Merri inserted it into a USB port on Purcell’s Dell and went to work downloading copies of files. She grabbed pretty much everything available. She’d check them out on her laptop once she’d returned to her room, and separate the wheat from the chaff.
The sound of footsteps in the corridor grabbed her attention. Merri paused and listened. Two sets of footsteps. Two heartbeats, one a mortal’s fast patter, the other slow enough to be vampire.
Prissy-Ass and a kissy-ass, no doubt. Time to go.
Disconnecting the flash drive from the Dell, Merri straightened, then stumbled as dizziness spun the room around her. She grabbed the edge of the desk to keep from falling. Her vision faded.
Oh, hell no! Goddamned pills.
Sucking in a deep breath of air, Merri lowered her head. Her jackhammering heart drowned out all other sound—including the approaching footsteps.
The room twirled to a halt, and the black flecks stealing her sight vanished. Shoving the flash drive into her pocket, Merri bolted for the door. The footsteps were closer, but she still had time to split without being seen.
Merri slid through the cracked-open door, then eased it shut. Given that Purcell seemed to be in a vampire’s company, she tightened the shields around her mind. She hoped her frantic heartbeat hadn’t already given her away.
Merri moved into a side hall and stopped inside a darkened office doorway, tucking herself into its shadows.
A few moments later, two men strode past the hall juncture in quick strides. The man walking with Purcell wore a slim-cut suit and was very tall, around Emmett’s six three, with golden-brown hair razor-cut in a hip, European style. With his tanned olive skin, he sure as hell wasn’t vampire. She caught a whiff of vanilla spice and dandelions and, laced underneath that, a hint of ozone.
No vampire. But not mortal either.
“And you’re sure what you saw wasn’t just madness? Delusion?” Purcell said. He opened the door to his office, flipped on the light, and went inside.
His companion paused at the threshold, then looked back toward the juncture he’d just passed and tilted his head. His eyes—a startling violet—gleamed, full of captured light.
Merri held her breath and quieted her heart. Sank deeper into the shadows.
What the holy living hell is he?
After a moment that stretched out into decades, the man stepped inside Purcell’s office and shut the door.
Relief curled through Merri. She had no idea exactly what Purcell’s buddy was, but she didn’t intend to hang around and find out. She’d do a little digging later.
She moved.
When she reached her room, Merri relocked the door, then fetched her laptop out of her bag. Plunking down onto the bed, she retrieved the flash drive from her pocket. She inserted it into one of the laptop’s USB ports and started scrolling through files.
One titled Bad Seed caught her attention.
What kinda TSP was Prejean a part of?
HQ’s playing this one real close to the vest. All I was told was that it was a joint project—us and the feds—devoted to the study of sociopaths.
In other words, their monster slipped its leash and they want us to fetch it.
Monsters. Sociopaths. Bad Seed.
Merri clicked open the file and began reading.
MERRI CLOSED THE LAPTOP, fire smoldering in her heart, an unholy image from the Bad Seed file etched into her mind.
In a blood-spattered straitjacket, Dante is suspended upside-down from a huge hook in the ceiling, chains wrapped around his ankles. He hangs above the bodies of those he’skilled—including the body of his princess, his Winnie-thePooh-loving Chloe.
ADIC Johanna Moore enters the room—its walls a Jackson Pollock–worthy masterpiece in high-velocity blood spray—and bends over Chloe’s body. With a touch of her fingers, Moore pushes the child’s eyelids open. Makes sure Chloe’s empty gaze remains fixed on Dante.
Setting the laptop aside on the bed, Merri rose to her feet. Her muscles felt hand-cranked-wire tight. A True Blood. Not an “enhanced” vampire. But a True Blood wrenched away from his mother at birth.
And the things done to him from that moment to this …
A muscle flexed in Merri’s jaw. It looked like all the minds behind Bad Seed were the true sociopaths.
Oh, let’s not forget Purcell. He’d participated in Bad Seed as Wells’s errand boy. Seemed to delight in all the nasty things done—especially to Dante.
Merri lit up a Djarum Black and paced the small room while she smoked it, Prissy-Ass Purcell’s words still ringing in her ears.
Fucking little psycho.
She needed to let Emmett know what she’d learned. Given Dante Prejean’s programming and where he’d ended up—the Wells compound—she wondered if he’d been deliberately triggered and used to murder Rodriguez.
A sense of unease rippled through Merri as though she’d jumped into a lake and found the water too cold and too deep and too dark. Found herself sinking while a leviathan rose beneath her, jaws open.
Talk to Em. Get some perspective. See if you can make sense of this shit.
Merri walked into the bathroom and tossed her cigarette in the toilet. As she turned around, the room dipped and twirled. Black spots speckled her vision. She reached for the wall to steady herself, but missed. Her flailing hand grabbed at empty air.
She fell, crashing onto her side across the bathroom threshold, her damn-near lacquered ponytail lashing her cheek. Sleep poured into her like a waterfall, tumbling her consciousness away in a roaring rush of unstoppable black.