Iron Angels Read online

Page 22


  “Are you pausing for effect, Ed?” Jasper folded his arms.

  Ed stared at the vial. “This blood is missing, to put it quite simply, all of its red blood cells.”

  “You’re saying this is human blood, drained of all its red blood cells.” Jasper’s tone was flat and one of disbelief. “You know, the medical examiner determined the same during the autopsies earlier this morning. Next you’re going to say some jacked-up vampire—”

  “No, a chupacabra.” Ed said the words, but a smile crept on to his face.

  “A goddamned chupacabra—”

  Temple glared at Jasper.

  “Ed, you can’t be—wait, did Vance put you up to this? What a funny guy.”

  “But seriously,” Jasper said, “tell me this isn’t some vampire thing, please. I’m sick of vampires and zombies on TV and books. It’s all nonsense.”

  “But you’re okay with aliens, huh? And the demons Temple’s tossing about.”

  “No. I’m not.” Jasper’s ire rose. “I think we’re dealing with a group of assholes running around as part of some bullshit cult, hurting innocent people.”

  “That was certainly frank.” Greg rocked back and forth on his squeaky chair. “A cult, huh? A cult devoted to brane cosmology, but they aren’t aware of the scientific points, only the fantastical version where the other side leaks over into ours and we’re leaking into the other side.”

  “How is that different from Temple believing in demons rather than the scientific explanation?” Jasper arched an eyebrow.

  “I want to smack you when you do that,” Temple said.

  “What?” Jasper spread his hands.

  “You smirk with your eyebrow, yeah, like that!” She pointed at his face. “What you don’t understand, farm boy, is that the two aren’t mutually exclusive—God and demons and science can all coexist.”

  Jasper took a deep breath and blew it out. “Okay, fine. I can’t argue with logic that abstract—but I can tell you this. I’m still betting on the Kool-Aid drinking asshole cult.”

  “Hypothetically,” Temple asked, “what would a creature from another universe look like? How would such a creature live in our universe? If they come from a completely different universe, everything about them—their biology, chemistry, you name it—would be different. They might—they probably must—be made of different elements altogether, right?”

  Ed shrugged. “What do you think, Greg? Vance?”

  Greg’s eyes scrunched shut; he stretched his arms up over his head and yawned. Vance adopted a thousand-yard stare.

  “Wow, a regular brain trust.” Jasper grinned. “You three are like those see-no-evil monkey guys.”

  Temple snickered. “See-no-evil monkey guys, a new name for the scientific triumvirate.”

  Greg frowned. “They could appear as anything your imagination might conjure. They might live on hemoglobin, or have an affinity for iron, that make sense?” He glanced at Ed, who shrugged.

  “Maybe they can’t live in our universe at all,” Vance added.

  “I’m gonna go with that one,” Jasper said. “You watch. After all this, the cult of assholes will be the culprit.”

  Temple’s eyes lost their fire and appeared to succumb to Jasper’s opinion, but he suspected she merely lost her energy—finally.

  Ed coughed again. “I’ll end with this, because it’s getting late, and we’re all tired, but here it is,” he paused, as if lecturing to a room full of students, “No creature I’m aware of is capable of filtering blood in this manner, and also, combined with the way the bodies were mutilated, it’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen or heard or read about.”

  The office was silent for ten seconds, but felt like ten minutes.

  Ed broke the silence with a single, forceful clap. “Now, who wants some food and some drink?”

  Chapter 24

  Wayland Precision went dark once a blonde woman, and later an older, grizzled man, departed. Only two lights remained on—both outside, one out front and one in the back.

  Lali decided against using khâu for this part of the plan. Rao would brook no failure now, there had been too many disasters. Rao would never admit to it, but Lali felt his power waning, and his desire to touch the other side, cross over and absorb the powers provided by the nâga, increasing.

  She’d ditched her car, a beat-up Yaris, down Summer a ways, and mostly out of sight near a copse of trees. Few cars or trucks traveled down this road after eight in the evening, so she’d crept toward the building with ease, and without fear of being seen by chance. The closer she crept to the building, the more the hot August night smothered her. The clouds pressed down as if sealing her at this location on Summer Street.

  A nearby building provided cover for her as she’d watched the building, waiting for the people within to leave. The burnt odor dissipated, or she’d grown accustomed to the ever-present acridness, but her mouth fouled and coated her tongue. She’d considered bailing out, but gathering information on Wayland Precision and the people working there was important. Rao needed a sacrifice, and in turn, Lali would benefit from the sacrifice—Rao had promised.

  The low-cut grass at the front of the building pricked her bare feet. She loved walking around without shoes and socks, but the dryness created needles out of the grass, and she winced with each step. The light around back flared out.

  Luck? No. Motion sensors likely controlled the lights.

  No one walked the streets in this area, and no headlights poked through in either direction. No residences, either. She scaled the chain link fence, the thin metal clinking and rattling. Snipping the metal would have been easier, but she hadn’t thought to bring a bolt cutter or heavy metal snips.

  Lali approached the back steps slowly and swiveling her head at every little noise. The light remained dark. Rather than use the steps, she opted for the concrete ramp leading up the side. Hopefully movement up the ramp wouldn’t trigger the motion sensor, and she’d escape detection.

  She took a few steps, nothing happened. No alarms, no lights.

  “Hmm. The break-in might be easier than I thought.”

  Another step.

  She smiled.

  Another—

  A light blared, projecting into the parking lot.

  “Shit.”

  She padded up the ramp and dug a ring of keys from her bag. Dumb luck, this part. When she’d dated Carlos, she’d made copies of all of his keys. She hadn’t known then she’d be using them to break into Wayland, if in fact, any of these keys worked. The first key she tried slid into the lock, but didn’t budge the cylinder.

  The yellow light blared, but she hoped it’d go out after a few minutes—if she kept movements to a minimum and only worked keys with the lock, and did not move her body or arms too much. How sensitive were motion sensors, anyway? She’d chosen flat black tights and a thin black jacket for the entry. Her hair was already black and she’d even painted her toenails and fingernails black, but she wasn’t Goth, not by any stretch. An image of her younger brother playing one of his silly video games flashed in her mind—Lali’s attire and actions like one of the women in the current batch of stealth games and urban fantasy novels.

  She poked key after key into the door. Her hands shook from excitement and nervousness, which didn’t help with the last few keys. Her eyes darted back and forth almost involuntarily, futilely scanning for headlights. None of the keys worked in the door. None. Zero. Good thing she didn’t break her arm patting herself on the back over copying Carlos’s keys.

  A rusted box protruded from the brick wall. She tugged open the tiny door, revealing a keypad. So, did the lock on the big door function or did an electronic system control the entire building? Circumventing alarms and electronic security systems was beyond her.

  Lali sighed.

  She dug into her bag and withdrew a leather case containing a lock pick set. During the wild days of her youth, she’d made a hobby of picking locks. Nothing major. Nothing serious like safes or ba
nk vaults, but padlocks and a few doors. Easy stuff, but her lock-picking days were in high school, long past, and her skills had eroded. At least the floodlight meant she wouldn’t have to risk chipping her teeth from jamming a small flashlight in her mouth. The first pick eased into the cylinder—

  A mechanized rattle, like a gate being pulled by a chain, echoed off the buildings behind Wayland Precision.

  Her center of gravity lowered in response. The second pick slipped from her fingers, clinking against the cement.

  Was the gate Wayland’s? From her position, the building obscured the gate situated near the front of the building on the western side.

  Lali slid from the ramp, her tights and jacket hissing and scraping against the concrete. She crouched inside a deep shadow, and waited.

  The rattling ceased a few seconds later, but no vehicle appeared in the lot adjacent to her hiding spot next to the entry ramp. After a few minutes, the floodlight above the rear entrance clicked off, the bulb’s red glow lingered a moment before fading. Good. Her eyes adjusted, but painfully slowly. She closed her eyes and waited—hoping another option would present itself.

  She scanned the darkness and found that no one had entered Wayland’s yard, but instead a building on the western side. Fluorescent lights flickered on in the building, obscured by trees and overgrown bushes.

  Lali turned and faced the ramp. She reached up, but a window at the base of the building caught her eye—a window likely leading to the basement. Breaking the window would not be a big deal—not compared with the destruction she’d render once inside Wayland. She grinned.

  The grass behind Wayland, what little grass grew, remained damp and quite a bit longer than its front yard counterparts. She slid along the slick grass, back against the wall until her fingers found the edge of the window. She puffed a little laugh—the window was open a smidge. For all the security, someone forgot to close and lock the window.

  Lali tucked the lock pick kit back into her satchel and lifted the window. She’d be able to squeeze through, but she removed her jacket, laying it near the open window.

  She leaned inside the window frame for a quick look.

  Darkness. Complete. No flashing red lights signaling some sort of electronic equipment. No hum. Nothing. They must also turn off the air-conditioning at night, for she didn’t hear any unit outside causing a racket.

  Lali reached for her flashlight and flicked it on once she’d thrust her hand into the opening. The thought of her hand wading into the strange darkness creeped her out a little.

  Smell. The scent within the building wrinkled her nose. It wasn’t unpleasant, but a little off, like some sort of metallic garden salad.

  She swept the cone of light back and forth, and took in a large office area, filled with filing cabinets, desks, chairs, tables, paper, and—aquariums. Inside a supposed machine shop? Strange people.

  Entry didn’t prove difficult. She slid inside and grabbed her jacket as she eased to the floor. Tile.

  Her heart rate blipped up a notch and her hands jittered. Adrenaline. She closed her eyes and took a few deep breaths. Inside enemy territory, and so far, nothing bad happened. No one saw her.

  She focused on the desk nearest the entry point and studied the contents. Papers. A lot of papers. A ledger. A few notebooks. A woman’s handwriting on almost all of the letters on the desk. She opened the ledger—a bunch of numbers. Nothing. She flipped through the notebooks. Formulas and equations, but nothing noteworthy, and in her opinion, nothing Rao might desire. Ah, but this was something—

  A stack of paper with the name Völundr’s Hammer with a hammer drawn beneath. A log of their activity. Stainless steel of various grades featured prominently in the most recent entries. She tucked the stack inside her satchel.

  Penny Stahlberg. Steve Stahlberg.

  A husband and wife team? Mother and son? Father and daughter? Brother and sister?

  She twitched her wrist and the flashlight’s beam found a photo, an eight by ten labeled Wayland Precision and the current year underneath. Her eyes found Carlos in the photo, and her heart clenched inside her chest. Why did she still have feelings for the lying, cheating asshole? He was married, and had a kid. Lali fell for him and his lies. Dirt bag.

  The blonde woman and grizzly man in the photo must be the Stahlbergs, and likely father and daughter, unless they had one of those, the phrase escaped her—fall-summer romance? A December—oh who cared? All the others in the photo were typical for the area—though predominantly white. The photo joined the papers she’d already shoved into the satchel.

  The Câ Tsang had just gained a new batch of targets.

  The other desk must have been the old man’s, Steve’s. A stack of bills rested there, but little else other than a nasty coffee mug with an image of a hammer and an anvil on the side. Boy, were these people single-minded. She peeked into the envelopes. A different address—Steve’s home address. She opened another—Penny’s home address. The other correspondences were all either Steve’s or Penny’s. She searched for payroll information—payroll would contain all the data she’d need. She poked around the third desk, but found little of use. The filing cabinets gave up the payroll information—all of their personal identifying information, actually. The perpetual smile on her face since entering widened. They, she and Rao, could seriously fuck with these people, with the information she’d obtained.

  She bit down on her desire to pat herself on her back.

  The air moved within the office, and she realized how hot and close the basement was, but the air moved, why? Had someone entered the building? A silent alarm had triggered and one of the employees had entered, and would find her. No. A ridiculous notion—paranoia.

  The odd scent returned, breaking her from thoughts of discovery. Metal and vegetal. She strode over to the aquariums. No fish. Coral? A sea thingy—an anemone? A cucumber? Whatever.

  Before moving on to phase two of Rao’s plan, she’d poke around a little more.

  A door barred her exit from the office. The knob wouldn’t turn, locked from the other side? Not too safe, really.

  She picked a lighter from her satchel and turned back for the stacks of papers on the first desk. Rao wanted the building vandalized, well, more than vandalized, burned to the ground. But she entertained a different notion. Even if she paid the price by enduring the man’s twisted desires, she wouldn’t burn the building, not yet. Why be obvious when screwing with the people and torturing them presented itself? Burning the building would only send the Völundr’s Hammer guild into a rage.

  No doubt Rao would desire Penny for sacrifice, but what if he desired Penny in other ways rather than sacrifice, the way he did Lali? Rao would never want a sworn enemy like that for a concubine, but would he force himself on her? She pushed the thought from her mind. The truth was, she didn’t really care either way. She only sought the power Rao promised, not Rao himself. She’d spent her whole life feeling powerless, and she was sick and tired of it.

  For Lali, Carlos should suffer. She’d feel no guilt over his torture and sacrifice. What if she could talk Rao into sacrificing him to the nâga and allow her to touch the other side? Ambitious thinking. Dangerous thinking if Rao became angered over her decision.

  One more circuit around the room revealed nothing of value. The strange scent remained unanswered. She shrugged and tossed her jacket and satchel through the open window, and glanced back one more time to make sure she’d left nothing behind. She pulled herself up and through.

  The spotlight above the rear entrance remained off, and the night sky twinkled through wispy low-lying clouds. She stole into the black alongside the building, scaled the fence, and saw not a person or vehicle on the way to hers. Success. Of course, Steve and Penny would notice the missing items, which would cause them worry. Let them be paranoid, and perhaps they’d blame someone from within, Carlos perhaps.

  Lali sat in her car for a few minutes watching the darkness—even the fluorescent light in the next bu
ilding over was no longer on. She hadn’t heard the gate rattle, but it had likely happened during her time inside, down in the basement.

  A half hour passed. A few cars drove down the road, but no one stopped at Wayland Precision. Not a single vehicle even slowed down or so much as tapped their brakes as they passed the building. She started her engine and drove off, back to her apartment per Rao’s instructions, in case someone followed after her break-in.

  Chapter 25

  A phone call robbed Jasper of sleep once again. Since driving with his eyes practically glued shut wasn’t at all safe, he took a shower before leaving. But that wasn’t really much help. He’d stayed out very late the night before with Temple and Ed, eating and—mostly—drinking. Wisely, Vance and Greg had begged off.

  Temple had dropped him off only a few hours ago, and now he was on his way to pick her up at the hotel in his bucar.

  Damn.

  He flipped the air conditioning on max and reached for the large black coffee he’d picked up at Starbucks as they opened. He needed the caffeine desperately. His tongue tingled after the scalding liquid burned all the way down his throat.

  He reached for the sunglasses compartment built into the Charger’s overhead but discovered it was empty. He’d probably left them at home, since he hadn’t used the bucar yesterday and been off his typical routine when Temple picked him up, rather than the other way around.

  He took another sip of coffee. The fog in his brain—no, the sandbag filling the entire cavity—eased up a bit. What made him think he’d achieve a full night of sleep, anyway? Any night out with Ed White usually ended the same way, with at least one of them hugging the commode and both of them with hangovers.

  More coffee.

  He popped open a bottle and dumped a couple of ibuprofen down his gullet.

  * * *

  The impetus that had dragged him out of bed at the literal crack of dawn was a frantic phone call from Carlos. “Come to Wayland Precision. This is serious. I think I know who did it.”

 

    The Grantville Gazette Volumn VI Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn VIGrantville Gazette, Volume IX Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IXRing of Fire III Read onlineRing of Fire IIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIIIGrantville Gazette V Read onlineGrantville Gazette V1635: The Eastern Front Read online1635: The Eastern FrontRing of Fire Read onlineRing of FireMother of Demons Read onlineMother of Demons1824: The Arkansas War Read online1824: The Arkansas WarGrantville Gazette 43 Read onlineGrantville Gazette 43Forward the Mage Read onlineForward the MageThe World Turned Upside Down Read onlineThe World Turned Upside DownRing of Fire II Read onlineRing of Fire IIBoundary Read onlineBoundaryGrantville Gazette VI Read onlineGrantville Gazette VI1812: The Rivers of War Read online1812: The Rivers of War1633 Read online1633All the Plagues of Hell Read onlineAll the Plagues of HellGrantville Gazette, Volume 7 Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume 7Worlds Read onlineWorlds1632 Read online1632The Alexander Inheritance Read onlineThe Alexander InheritanceDiamonds Are Forever Read onlineDiamonds Are ForeverThe Philosophical Strangler Read onlineThe Philosophical StranglerGrantville Gazette, Volume VIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume VIIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIV Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIVGenie Out of the Bottle Read onlineGenie Out of the BottlePyramid Scheme Read onlinePyramid Scheme1636- the China Venture Read online1636- the China VentureGrantville Gazette, Volume XII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XIIGrantville Gazette, Volume I Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IThe Demons of Constantinople Read onlineThe Demons of ConstantinopleThe Macedonian Hazard Read onlineThe Macedonian Hazard1634- the Galileo Affair Read online1634- the Galileo AffairThe Shaman of Karres Read onlineThe Shaman of Karres1636: The Ottoman Onslaught Read online1636: The Ottoman OnslaughtThe Genie Out of the Vat Read onlineThe Genie Out of the VatThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II1636: The Saxon Uprising Read online1636: The Saxon Uprising1634 The Baltic War Read online1634 The Baltic War1636: Mission to the Mughals Read online1636: Mission to the Mughals!632: Joseph Hanauer Read online!632: Joseph HanauerGrantville Gazette-Volume XI Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XI1637: The Peacock Throne Read online1637: The Peacock Throne1636: The China Venture Read online1636: The China VentureThe Rats, the Bats & the Ugly Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats & the UglyGrantville Gazette, Volume X Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XThe Course of Empire Read onlineThe Course of EmpirePyramid Power Read onlinePyramid Power1636: The Devil's Opera Read online1636: The Devil's OperaRing of Fire IV Read onlineRing of Fire IVGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire)1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards)The tide of victory b-5 Read onlineThe tide of victory b-51634: The Ram Rebellion Read online1634: The Ram RebellionThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2 Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2Castaway Resolution Read onlineCastaway ResolutionCouncil of Fire Read onlineCouncil of FireSlow Train to Arcturus Read onlineSlow Train to Arcturus1637_The Volga Rules Read online1637_The Volga RulesBoundary b-1 Read onlineBoundary b-11637: No Peace Beyond the Line Read online1637: No Peace Beyond the LineThe Sorceress of Karres Read onlineThe Sorceress of KarresDestiny's shield b-3 Read onlineDestiny's shield b-3In the Heart of Darkness b-2 Read onlineIn the Heart of Darkness b-2Grantville Gazette.Volume 22 Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume 22Carthago Delenda Est э-2 Read onlineCarthago Delenda Est э-21635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards)1812-The Rivers of War Read online1812-The Rivers of WarThe Dance of Time b-6 Read onlineThe Dance of Time b-6Belisarius II-Storm at Noontide Read onlineBelisarius II-Storm at NoontideIron Angels Read onlineIron Angels1636:The Saxon Uprising as-11 Read online1636:The Saxon Uprising as-111812: The Rivers of War tog-1 Read online1812: The Rivers of War tog-1Jim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6Fortune's stroke b-4 Read onlineFortune's stroke b-41637 The Polish Maelstrom Read online1637 The Polish MaelstromThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1 Read onlineThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1Grantville Gazette.Volume XVI Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVI1636:The Kremlin games rof-14 Read online1636:The Kremlin games rof-141824: The Arkansas War tog-2 Read online1824: The Arkansas War tog-2Time spike Read onlineTime spikeJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1Grantville Gazette.Volume VII Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume VII1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards) Read online1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire)Jim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 5 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 51635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette. Volume 21 Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume 21Rats, Bats and Vats rbav-1 Read onlineRats, Bats and Vats rbav-11636_The Vatican Sanction Read online1636_The Vatican SanctionThe Aethers of Mars Read onlineThe Aethers of MarsJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 5 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 51634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards)Grantville Gazette Volume 24 Read onlineGrantville Gazette Volume 24TITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire) Read onlineTITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire)Ring of fire II (assiti shards) Read onlineRing of fire II (assiti shards)1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards) Read online1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards)Jim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4In the Heart of Darkness Read onlineIn the Heart of DarknessMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3 Read onlineMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3