I think I can finally get this serial off the ground.
So here we have two stories first conveyed in novels that are now on screens. True Blood is a series on HBO adapted from the Southern Vampire Mysteries, novels written by Charlaine Harris. Twilight is the latest hot vampire commodity put to paper by Stephanie Meyer. Both deal with vampires living in the boondocks and the women who come across them. There are some similarities between the two of them, and I think it’s worth comparing the two. And not unlike the method employed recently by Benjamin Yahtzee Godzilla Croshaw, I thought we might toss these two into a metaphorical steel cage and see which one comes out on top.
Inspired by a quick rant I did over on GeekTyrant, I thought I’d get some of my thoughts on how I’d like to portray vampires “jotted down”. I’m doing it in this way to get some feedback, so please, feel free to comment. Also, in case I need to mention this for the casual passer-by, this is all fictional information.
Differences between vampires and humans.
The human body is operated by the nervous system, which uses neurons to transmit and receive various kinds of bioelectric energy, which travels through the body on a certain wavelength. The difference between vampires and humans can be explained (though grossly over-simplified) in saying that humans operate on an AM frequency, and vampires on the FM band. Human blood carries oxygen and nutrients to the various systems of the body, maintain bodily temperature and removes wastes. Vampiric blood does none of these things on its own, as the vampiric body is dead and no longer requires oxygen or produces wastes. However, both human and vampiric blood perform hydraulic & repair operations. Vampires heal very quickly in comparison to humans and are capable of feats of strength and agility beyond human scales due to the specialized nature of their blood. The higher frequency of the vampire’s nervous system also means a typical vampire has enhanced senses and higher intelligence than a comparable human – that is, provided the new vampire isn’t a corpse that’s been lingering in a grave for decades.
Vampires, blood, and reproduction.
In order to maintain function, fresh blood is required on a regular basis, as the dead organs of the vampire’s body can no longer produce living cells. The heart of a vampire still beats, though typically at a higher rate than a human’s, but other organs, such as the pancreas, liver and kidneys, begin to atrophy due to disuse. Vampires do not reproduce sexually, but sexual behavior can be emulated through the use of blood in order to attract and ensnare prey. A new vampire is created when a body drained of blood, preferably one recently dead, is fed a small quantity of blood from a vampire, then has its lungs filled from the lungs of its vampire ‘parent,’ jump-starting the technically dead systems. The ‘offspring’ must feed from a fresh source soon after this in order to maintain function. Recently dead ‘offspring’ are more capable of discerning their predicament and coping with it in various ways, while corpses dead for a lengthy period of time have typically experienced such decay of their brains that they are little more than zombies (though they crave blood instead of brains, head wounds just bleed more).
Vampires, cold iron, garlic and sunlight.
Cold iron, that is to say iron in a pure form with a minimum of refinement, is seen as a ward against evil spirits. In the case of vampires, this is more than superstition. The ferrous nature of the metal causes disruption of the hyper-active nervous system of a vampire. An iron stake stabbed or hammered into the heart of a vampire will immobilize it. Wooden stakes suffice if the vampire is at rest, as the stake will make it difficult for the vampire to rise, allowing hunters to behead it and thus destroy it – you can’t kill a vampire, as they are already technically dead. Stab a vampire who’s up and about with a wooden stake, however, and all you’ll get is a bloody shank of wood and a very angry vampire. Clever vampires being hunted will often pretend to fall when staked with wood, only to devour their would-be slayers and remove the stake, more dangerous than before. Also, refined iron and iron alloys like steel do not have the same disruptive effect. This is a fact that leads more modern vampire hunters to shoot a vampire in the heart and then stand motionless and shocked when the vampire doesn’t fall down ‘dead’. Finally, a large enough amount of iron will utterly repulse a vampire, which is why graveyards often have wrought iron fences. Despite a vampire’s ability to vault such obstacles, the nature of the wrought iron keeps the vampire out and thus deprives them of possible ‘shock troops’ or a safe haven from hunters.
Also, garlic repels vampires because their sensitive senses are especially vulnerable to the smell. Very loud noises, such as explosions or jet engines, are also irritants. Finally, vampires tend to get sunburnt more easily than humans, since their skin lacks some of the proteins living humans produce on a daily basis, but are otherwise not instantly reduced to ash by the rays of the sun. Sunlight, however, carries a great deal of power and tends to disrupt a vampire’s nervous system, though to a much lesser extent than cold iron. Walking around during the day for a vampire is not unlike a human walking around at 4 am after a full day of work starting at 6 am the previous morning; entirely possible, but the vampire will eventually grow drained, lethargic, and may begin to hallucinate. Fresh blood can maintain a vampire in the same way cans of Red Bull or lines of cocaine can sustain a human during this time, but eventually, they both need to just take a break and get some sleep.
It should be noted that vampires, in sunlight, do NOT sparkle.
Vampires are subtle.
Vampires are predators. They move through the sea of humanity the way a lion moves through the long grass of the savanna stalking its prey. Just like the ill-fated herbivores of that grassland, mortals shouldn’t know the smiling, funny and intelligent person buying them drinks and chatting them up is a blood-sucking fiend from beyond the grave until it’s far too late. This means you don’t flash your fangs at the earliest opportunity. Wearing nothing but black leather and matching longcoats is a good way to get spotted, and while the look is very badass, it’s not very subtle. Neither is an open war with lycanthropes, but the big fuzzies are a subject for another notes session. My thinking is that vampires would try to maintain their habits, dress sense and mannerisms from when they were technically alive. This would become more difficult as time goes on, of course, with ancient vampires acting in anachronistic ways and possibly being kept from humanity at large by their subordinates for the good of their society.
Vampires are a selective minority.
There was a time when vampirism was more rampant, when countrysides and villages were terrorized by these creatures of the night. But power corrupts, and having absolute control over an area leads to a vampire growing decadent and unrestrained. Just because you can rip a peasant’s head from their shoulders with a minimum amount of effort doesn’t mean you necessarily should. The Inquisition and witch-hunts of the centuries in the middle of the last millennium showed that humanity will not stand for too much that is outside of what they consider ‘normal.’ They fear what they do not understand, and how someone can remain not only mobile after death but maintain their complexion, charm and holdings is certainly difficult to understand.
This means that vampires need to be careful who they choose to bring into their fold. A potential ‘offspring’ has to have potential that is otherwise going to waste in their daily life. Most vampire ‘parents’ look for like minds who are frustrated by the restraints of mortal life, be they restrained by their job, circumstances or family situation. Some present the alternative of vampirism in a private and frank manner, while others become intimately involved with their future ‘offspring’ and bestow vampirism as a gift, which may or may not be received kindly. The minority among this selective minority are the ‘accidents’, humans who are drained to death and given vampiric breath and blood in order to save their life. This is often seen as an act by someone inexperienced or immature, as not everybody can handle the reality of vampirism and becoming emotionally attached to humans is seen by some of the older vampires as an utterly idiotic act. How attached, they reason, did you become to your steak or salad when you were alive?
Vampires are dangerous and societal.
The high frequency of the vampire’s nervous system coupled with a highly specialized circulatory system makes them powerful creatures. On instinct, the circulatory system can lengthen the incisors of the vampire into the distinctive fangs used for feeding as well as defense. With training, a vampire can use their blood to lengthen their nails as well, which make for sharp but brittle defensive weapons. The most dangerous vampires have trained themselves to strengthen these weapons to the point that they can perform truly superhuman feats when their superior strength and agility is taken into account, such as climbing walls without visible support, tearing the door from a car and hurling it away, and surviving leaps from tall buildings without breaking a single bone. While such displays are frowned upon by vampire society at large, there are times when a vampire has no other choice but to reveal the full extent of their powers. It has been argued that these powers are part and parcel of being predators of the human race, but that the most dangerous power a vampire possesses is time.
Given enough time to research and train, vampires can use their unique nature to explore powers, theories and abilities hitherto unknown amongst humanity. Use of blood in the brain’s largely dormant areas can spark even higher levels of intelligence, reportedly unlocking the potential for telepathy or telekinesis. It has been theorized that the vampiric body is something more than its dead tissues and is capable of changing shape, density and even state, leading to the myth of vampires becoming “as mist” – if there is truth to this myth, vampires aren’t confirming it. In order to remain capable and unpredictable predators, vampire society cultivates an atmosphere of secrets and mystery, maintained by a codex of laws governing how vampires interact with humanity, the ‘legal’ scope and nature of research into the vampiric condition, and punishment for infractions, ranging from dismemberment of varying degrees (severed limbs can be reattached) to incineration while conscious, the most severe and final of penalties.
Vampires are territorial.
Also governed by laws are the territories of vampires and the ways in which one vampire may enter, contest or even seize the territory of another. After the Inquisition, it was decided by the oldest surviving vampires that such interactions needed to happen under certain guidelines, that would allow vampires to hunt without worrying about confrontations that might lead to the use of overt superhuman abilities and thus draw undue attention to the society as a whole. However, like any species of predators, hunting grounds will be contested and fought over. It’s become less common for these contests to be physical altercations, more often resolved in more civilized formats such as chess matches, poker games, or elaborate high-stakes gambits involving sports venues, politics or banking ventures.
Vampires are monsters.
Being formerly dead, vampires are no longer human. This can be difficult to cope with in the case of the victim turned vampire. Those who do learn to adapt, however, grow comfortable with their new state and even revel in it. Just like a wine connoisseur enjoying the perfect merlot, or a steak fanatic sampling a cut of top sirloin, vampires become selective of their prey and truly enjoy the act of feeding from a particular kind of human, with the act of feeding releasing endorphins not unlike the act of sex for humans. And with the hyper-sensitive systems of the vampire, this feeling is all the more potent. Feeding from animals does not have quite the same effect, and drinking blood from bags is the vampiric equivalent of eating cold pizza. While feeding from humans is inherently monstrous, it’s also the best and most enjoyable way to gain sustenance. It behooves individual vampires, then, to grow accustomed to the act.
That’s all I can think of for now.
Built on some ideas and characters from my first novel attempt, this 14-day story arc is more than just an espionage thriller.
~ ~ ~
My name is Morgan Everson. People use a lot of different words to describe me, ranging from glowing praise to muttered expletives, but ‘conventional’ is not one of those words. Being single, female, employed by the Central Intelligence Agency and just shy of turning thirty would have made me unconventional enough for some. I’m not one to settle for mediocrity, and I’d managed to find a way to do some work in the field rather than staying in Langley’s cryptology department working like any other clockwatching office employee with higher security clearances. It was my unconventional nature that got me in trouble that Monday morning, and started me on a journey for which I never could have been prepared.
From the moment Allan Bowman walked over to my desk and said the words “Morgan, Director Jimenez wants to see you in his office,” I knew it was going to be a bad day. Director Jimenez was my official conduit to the field operations unit there at Langley. He and my father had worked together, up until Dad’s retirement two years before I’d been recommended for field work myself. I’d told my father I wanted no special favors or good words put in on my behalf. I wanted to get there on my own merits, assisted mostly by the friend I’d made in Allan Bowman.
It was Allan, not my father, who got me into the field. And it’d been a good three years since then. The expression on Allan’s face, though, told me that was about to come to an end.
“Do you know what he wants to talk to me about?” I asked, even though I was certain I already knew the answer. I didn’t feel the need to jump to conclusions prematurely.
“I’m just an analyst,” he said with a shrug, feeding me the party line that covered his real job in an attempt to avoid giving me bad news. I watched him for a moment before his mouth drew into a hard line. It was a tell of his – it’s why he never beat me at the cryptology department’s monthly poker game. My co-workers encouraged inviting him because he tended to get fleeced.
“It’s bad, isn’t it?” I pressed. “Give me a hint, scale of one to ten.”
“Jimenez got his dials from Spinal Tap,” he told me, turning to get back to his desk. “This one seems to be an eleven. I’ll come by after.”
That was indeed bad. I drained my coffee, locked my terminal, and rose to walk to the elevator. The ride up two floors seemed to take forever. I’m not claustrophobic by nature, but those few moments were very uncomfortable for me. When the steel lift doors opened to face the closed mahogany doors to Jimenez’s office, I still felt trapped. I was headed towards a moment I’d always feared I’d face, but had secretly hoped I’d be able to avoid.
“Director Jimenez wanted to see me,” I told his secretary. She nodded, keying the intercom and raising her handset to indicate I was outside his office. A moment later, she hung up and got up to open the doors. I walked in, saying nothing to the older man behind the wide desk, as the latch of the office doors closed with the report of a gunshot to the base of my skull.
“Sit down, Agent Everson,” he said. I did as I was told, and he pushed a thick file folder towards me. “I want you to tell me what that is.”
I glanced over some of the stamps, scribbles and numbers gracing the front of the folder.
“It appears to be my field service record, Director,” I replied.
“Right you are,” Jimenez declared without a hint of humor in his voice. “Three years of operations at home and abroad. Mostly you have followed leads you yourself have discovered through decryption. And your results are things that have yielded great results both for the Agency and our country.”
“I smell a big, hairy ‘but’ coming,” I ventured, trying to break the glacial mood the Director had established in his austere office. But my effort was fruitless. All he did was look at me over the rims of his reading glasses in that incredulous manner that older men usually employ when I show any evidence of intelligence or a sense of humor. Sometimes I quietly question God’s wisdom or curse my father’s slower-swimming sperm that I wasn’t born a male, or at least not quite so attractive.
“The taxpayers have been paying for your little jaunts overseas for three years, and the congressmen and senators who distribute that hard-earned American money have grown tired of your disregard for Agency protocol and stubborn refusal to remain within the limits of your standing orders.”
“If you’re talking about that total farce you’re calling my last op-”
“You hit your contact in the face!” he interrupted.
“Hey, he was trying to cop a feel!” I protested. “How would you feel if your contact reached between your legs and squeezed?”
“That’s irrelevant,” Jimenez snapped. “He was one of the few links we have to the alleged new terrorist group springing up right here on our shores, and you knocked him out cold! Not to mention the fact he has connections to several embassies that could make our political face in that part of the world very ugly indeed.”
I sighed. I was willing to concede that. “I reacted on instinct. If you had been born with this body and this face, you’d react much in the same way when a man gets a little too familiar with you. I know what my orders said, and they said exactly nothing about becoming intimate with him. Especially considering the amount of hair I saw on his neck and shoulders and the way his breath stank.”
“The Agency would be more understanding,” the old man said as he pulled over the file I hadn’t deigned to open, “if that had been your first time pulling this sort of stunt.” He opened the file and flipped through a few pages. “Two weeks ago, you were in Belarus investigating an international synthetic heroin ring, and rather than bringing in the ringleader, you shot him dead with a sniper rifle in the rafters of his warehouse, in front of his entire operation.”
“Hey, it was that or let him kill his own daughter,” I told him. “Her boyfriend had overdosed on his poison and she’d tracked him down to tell him she was leaving the country. He didn’t trust her promises of silence and decided his best course of action was to shove the barrel of his .357 down her throat.”
“Dead men can’t give us the names of their accomplices or the information we need to prevent international incidents,” Jimenez pointed out, as if reciting a lesson a toddler should already have grasped.
“They can’t kill little girls, either,” I began before he cut me off again. This was turning into an annoying pattern.
“Two months ago, working undercover to bust a slave-trade syndicate in the Orient, you blew your cover to go with a competing agent from the Japanese government to a sushi bar.”
“He told me he’d let me meet one of the Iron Chefs! I couldn’t turn that down! Besides, cover or no, we got the bastards.” I paused. “Okay, so I got a little over-excited over meeting a celebrity. Tokyo police and the JSSDF weren’t complaining, considering what we found lead to over two dozen arrests and a score of very relieved families…”
“You have a justification for everything, don’t you Everson?” He shuffled the papers on his blood-red blotter, obviously looking for more. I cleared my throat.
“I will admit that I have deviated from standing Agency policy and at times I have defied orders,” I told him, and began to tick off points on my fingers. “However, I have never done so, however, with the intention of disgracing the Agency or the agents who have given their lives in operations such as these. I have always filed thorough and detailed reports, outlining why I made the decisions I made and how I arrived at the conclusions that informed those decisions. And for every against-policy decision I have made, I can point to three instances in which I have acted in a manner consistent with the demands and expectations of an agent in the field.”
“Regardless of your prevarications, Agent Everson, it has been decided that you are to be removed from field work effective immediately.”
Despite knowing this would be the likely outcome of this meeting, I felt rage beginning to boil inside of my gut. I’d been patient with Jimenez, for the most part, due to respect I owed him for the work he’d done with my father and his position as a Director. But he was now telling me I would no longer do the work I felt, on some level, I was born to do. I broke codes because I was good at it; I worked in the field because I was good at it and I loved it.
“Who decided that?” I asked, a bit more demanding than I intended. He glared at me again.
“My political superiors. Men at the Pentagon. The President. Take your pick. Regardless of the reasons for it, the orders are clear. You are to be removed from the active roster and relegated to strictly Langley-based decryption operations until further notice.” He paused. “I know you have refused, on several occasions, to seek your father’s recommendation or intervention in Agency-related matters. I would advise you to continue that trend. Knowing your father, he would understand the basis for this decision and support it as much as I do. There may come a time when the political environment will permit an opportunity for you to rejoin the active roster. Until then you are to continue breaking codes and splitting open malicious encrypted emails. I know it’s not the glamorous work you’ve become used to, but you will continue to do good work for the Agency and your country.”
At that moment, I had no desire to break codes. All I wanted to break was Jimenez’s head, preferably with something heavy and blunt. Despite the fact that it wasn’t his fault this had happened, he was the closest convenient authority figure. Long before moving onto the active roster, I’d trained myself to think quickly, assess a situation at hand, inventory potential weapons and escape routes, and weigh my options for fight or flight. I’d lost count of the times I’d bit my lip or clenched my fists at frustration in a situation I could not improve by making a run for a door or window, or indulging in a foolish desire to resort to violence.
And grabbing the man’s ceramic ashtray and smashing it over his head was decidedly foolish.
Instead, I exhaled and sought control over my emotions. Closing my eyes, I tried not to think of how disappointed my father would be when I told him. Opening my eyes again, I looked at the Director evenly and frankly.
“Thank you.”
He blinked, surprised. Trying not to feel too much elation at breaking his sour demeanor, I continued.
“Looking at my laundry list of sins, I’m sure more than one political penny-pincher asked for my pretty head on a silver platter. You didn’t give it to them. I could be walking out of here an ex-CIA agent, instead of going back to my desk to stare at lines of code for another few hours. As my field operations superior, you had the power to take this entire career away from me. You didn’t do that, and I thank you for it.”
Jimenez kept staring at me for a moment, then took off his glasses and wiped them, shaking his head.
“It’s amazing to me, Everson, how you could at once be one of my most intelligent agents, and one of the dumbest.”
“You should I know I got my stubbornness and snap decision-making from my father. The looks and intelligence came from my mother.”
“I figured that,” he remarked, and I couldn’t hide my reactions any longer, not with the way he was smiling, as if he’d been sweating this meeting as much as I had. “Look, you’re your father’s daughter, meaning you’re a good agent who makes bad decisions for good reasons. You and I in this room know this, because we’ve both been there. But trying telling it to a dozen men with law or sociology degrees that slid into Washington on a water slide lubricated with taxpayer dollars and false promises who see you as nothing but a pretty face and a list of near-miss operations.”
“I’m sorry I pissed you off,” I ventured.
“I’d be more pissed off if all of your operations ended this way,” he said, indicating some of the highlighted pages he’d picked out of my file, “but they don’t. I’m decidedly less pissed off than the aforementioned Congressmen. But let’s put it behind us. Tell your friend Bowman I’d like to see him this afternoon, I’ve got a job for him.” He put his glasses back on and closed my file. “And you probably have some of that thrilling encrypted information waiting for you at your terminal.”
I rose from my chair. “Will that be all, Director?”
“Yes, Agent Everson, you are dismissed.”
I nodded, and left his office. I was still mad as hell over this decision. I could count on both hands the times I’d pulled stunts like he’d pointed out. Jimenez himself had intimated that he’d seen worse. Why had the purse-holders suddenly decided I wasn’t worth the extra coin necessary for field work? Something stank here, but I wasn’t about to risk taking inquisitive pokes at the back doors of the Agency computers just to answer niggling questions. I rode the lift back down to my cubicle and sat, resting my head in my hands.
“I come bearing coffee.”
I looked up, to see Allan leaning over the wall of my cube with a steaming mug in his hand. He had taken the travel container from my workspace while I’d been upstairs getting drummed out of active duty and gotten my favorite selection from the machine in the break room. That made me smile, and I nodded my thanks as I took the offered mocha latte. Sipping it with him standing nearby brought back a lot of memories the two of us shared.
Allan was a field operative with some five years of experience off the books before I’d joined the Agency, having studied cryptology and high-end electronic encryption for five years, graduating with honors. He never talked down to me, nor did he ever try to get into my pants. He’d been dating someone at the time, and I myself was engaged to Daniel Radcliffe, a fellow code-breaker with Homeland Security. It took me a year to realize just how insufferable Daniel’s superior attitude and whining about wanting to transfer to the NSA made him, six more months of dealing with the chip on his shoulder for being disowned by his Vietnam vet turned grassroots protester father to decide to leave him, and six months beyond that to get the divorce papers signed. Allan went through a similar experience when he’d discovered his girlfriend in a lukewarm bathtub with a heroin needle in one arm and a vertical razor wound in the other. I’d held his hand in the hospital for five hours after that before we found out she’d be okay but would face years of rehab and therapy.
“He reamed you out pretty good, huh?” he asked after I’d taken a long-enough sip.
“Not without reason,” I replied, “but yeah. Apparently I make some well-fed men in sub-committees nervous.”
“I can see why. You could start a scandal in Washington with a wink and a wiggle of your hips.”
“Don’t start,” I admonished him, but was smiling in spite of my sour mood. Allan was flirtatious enough, but never crossed the line into unprofessional territory. At moments like this, I was glad for his company and would have welcomed even more lewd comments, but we both had work to do and we were still inside Langley. “He wants to see you, next.”
“More digging around in caves and sand, no doubt,” Allan commented with a derisive sniff. “I’d say it beats sitting around this place, but…”
“Don’t talk nice on my account,” I told him, taking another sip of coffee. “I’d much rather be out there, and you know it. I’m not going to spite you for doing what you do best.”
“I’m glad you’re still here,” he said with a smile. “If I know Jimenez, the most they can do is transfer you to some cushy suburban front with a Starbucks around the corner. Then at least you’d have something better than that swill.” He tipped his chin towards my mug of coffee, which I drank without looking away from him.
“Unless you have any Jameson’s to liven this ‘swill’ up, stop complaining and go make Jimenez feel better about his job.”
Allan laughed, shaking his head. We’d had drinks together on a handful of occasions, mostly when he or I had been in town at the same time as the other between jaunts overseas. He was only the second man I’d ever leaned on after a night out with complete and total trust. Trevor, my college boyfriend’s brother, had been the first. Often my thoughts on Allan invoked memories of Trevor, a quiet and understanding friend and fellow computer geek. We’d been studying together when I’d met his brother Christopher who’d arrived with a fresh pizza after his business class. As much as I had in common with Trevor, Christopher was less shy and more forward, and when he started offering to take me to dinner at expensive restaurants followed by upscale dance clubs, I wasn’t in a position to say no. But that had been a long time ago. It felt like a lifetime, on days like this.
“I’ll go see if I can help the old man out,” Allan said, interrupting my thoughts on my college days. “You take care of yourself, Morgan, in case I don’t see you.”
“Thanks, Allan. If they send you out, be sure to come back in one piece.”
“I’ll be happy with one larger than the others,” he called over his shoulder as he headed for the elevators. The next sip of coffee was my last, and I turned my attention to my e-mail, seeing quite a few projects demanding my attention. It was going to be a long day, and so far it hadn’t been a very good one.
* * * * * * *
It was a good day for Congressman Malcolm Mackenzie, Republican from Connecticut. He adjusted his tie and smiled smugly as he ignored the press and stepped into his limo, bodyguard following. Inside, his aide waited.
“The meeting went well, sir?” the young intern asked.
“Extremely, Jacob. It seems the rumors of a turf war in Hong Kong were true.”
“Was the analysis correct in that three groups are involved?”
“Quite so. The Yakuza from Japan, the Chinese Triad families, and the Russian Mafia. Nasty business. I hear one can’t walk down the street in Kowloon nowadays without catching a stray bullet.”
“And what are we going to do about it?” Jacob asked. Mackenzie, Vice-Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Sub-Committee, smiled to himself.
“Why, talk to my friends in the Senate who know arms manufacturers and arrange shipments to all three groups, naturally. I am sure they can be contacted through their legitimate businesses.”
“Ingenious, sir.”
Mackenzie smiled and nodded, then frowned, looking out the window for the first time. He didn’t recognize the neighborhood.
“This isn’t the way back to Georgetown. Driver?”
The driver didn’t respond. Instead, the limousine turned into an alleyway in downtown Washington D.C. as the sun began to climb above the skyline, ominous clouds surrounding it like a black cloak.
“Driver! What the devil are you doing?”
The limo came to a stop. The driver got out and opened the door. The bodyguard was the first one out, hand in his jacket. Mackenzie was out right after him, glaring at the driver.
“Now, what in…”
The driver, a slender young woman, took off her cap. This shocked Mackenzie, since his driver was usually male. She smiled at him invitingly as the bodyguard lurched forward. Mackenzie looked over to see the large man hit the ground, back covered in what looked like bullet wounds. But there had been no sound. The congressman looked around as Jacob moved forward, trying to get the woman between him and the shooter. Still smiling, the woman made a gesture that seemed to involve no effort on her part, as easily as she might hail a cab, and Jacob fell back, gurgling, a pointed metal star lodged in his throat. Unable to scream, unable to pray, unable to even breathe, the young intern died quietly. Mackenzie felt his heart tighten in his chest.
“Malcolm David Mackenzie.”
The voice was no louder than a whisper. But Malcolm heard it quite clearly.
“Harvard Law graduate, thanks to your father’s career and connections. On your third marriage, no children that aren’t in foster homes or juvenile hall, yet you pay no child support and won your last two divorce cases. Hence your comfortable lifestyle. You’ve peddled quite a few favors to some interesting characters to get such legal and bureaucratic backing.”
Where was it coming from? Malcolm looked around, panicked. The woman was gone. His companions were dead. He was alone, and afraid. Someone was deliberately trying to intimidate him, and looking at the corpses around him, damned if it wasn’t working.
“Whatever they’re paying you,” he began, trembling, “I’ll double it. No, no, I’ll triple it!”
“I’m afraid you can’t buy your way out of this, Congressman,” the whisper replied. “But don’t worry. This is nothing personal. We simply have our duties to perform.”
“Damn it,” Mackenzie cursed. “Who are you? Show yourself!”
The answer was a flash of movement and the glint of flickering sunlight off a steel blade. Malcolm felt something tug at his neck, then a sensation of falling. As he felt the street hit his head, he looked on in horror as he saw his own body fall to its knees in front of him. He wanted to turn, to see who had done this to him, but all he could do was blink and try to speak. His mouth moved, but no sound came forth. As he felt a raindrop hit his temple, then his cheek, he found the whisper easier to focus on. In fact, he thought, it was almost soothing, and a single black feather floated into his fading vision as the assassin spoke.
“Your wives will finally benefit from your existence, now that it has come to an end. And no more innocents will suffer on foreign shores by your hands. Now, go and face your eternal judgment.”
* * * * * * *
The sirens that wailed on the ambulances that sped past the Potbelly were not uncommon in Washington. On days like today, the traffic between Langley and the DC metro area was a worthwhile obstacle, and the radio and driving had helped clear my head. I’d pretty much thrown myself into the latest encrypted communiques to avoid thinking about my morning, praying as I ordered my roast beef & provolone with no onions that the afternoon would be better. My cell phone, however, had other ideas, and I fished it out of my purse to answer the call from an undisclosed number.
“Morgan Everson.”
“Hello, Morgan,” the quietly self-assured voice responded.
I sighed. Exasperation seemed to be the order of the day for me. “Hi, Dave. I didn’t think they let you NSA-types near the phones on Mondays.”
“I’m on my way out,” he replied. “How are you? I heard the CIA took you off their active roster.”
“Oh?” I said, feigning interest as I found myself a table with my sandwich. “Did you overhear some of your co-workers jawing on Capitol Hill or something?”
“I have my connections, Morgan, you know that,” Dave told me, his voice smoky with pretentiousness and arrogance.
“Yeah,” I replied dryly. “Thanks for reminding me.”
“Maybe even more than you do. I’m sure I’m on our list of ‘Most Dangerous Agents.’ We have one, you know.”
I rolled my eyes. I’d have laughed at how lame he was if I wasn’t in such a foul mood already.
“Is this important, Dave? I’m trying to each lunch, here.”
“I was just wondering if you’d be up to dinner tonight. You know, talk things out. I’m sure this has been a tough day for you…” He kept talking, but I didn’t hear him. I didn’t want to listen to him. I wanted to trace the call, drive to his office, key his car and kick him in the groin really hard. And I knew I could do it, even if I was no longer authorized for field ops.
Instead, again, I exhaled and controlled myself.
“We’re not getting back together, David.”
“I just-”
“No, David.”
He began to protest again, but it wasn’t his voice that stopped me mid-bite. A tall, somewhat elderly gentleman had come over to my table, a pair of milkshakes in his hands. His worn jeans and Hawaiian shirt were very different from what I’d gotten used to seeing on the nights when he came home from work, but the smile on his face and the twinkle in his eyes hadn’t changed at all.
“I have to go, David,” I told the prattling voice in my ear, and hung up.
“Hi, sweetheart,” my father said with his usual Cheshire-cat expression. “Surprised to see me?”
“Well, yeah! Last I heard, you were on a cruise in the Caribbean somewhere.”
“Things change,” he said enigmatically as he sat. “Still a strawberry fan?”
“Sure!” I took the milkshake, a little eager to spend time with him. I hadn’t seen Dad since his retirement from the Agency. It was a cute ceremony, gold watch and all. Director Jimenez had been full of praise for his long years of service, and told me later he was looking forward to more of the same from me. I had no idea how I was going to tell Dad what happened.
“So how’s the code-breaking business?”
I looked up at him, my lips still around the straw. It was a pretty blatant question for a public place, but Potbelly was pretty full and between the shouted orders for sandwiches and the Nationals game on the television, I had little reason to worry.
“It’s fine. Busy as always, between the Taliban having their own blogs and militia nutcases in our own country trying to sneak electronic plans through the Internet. I’m just thankful Anonymous hasn’t tried to mount anything major against the government. As long as they’re more concerned about protesting Scientology and enforcing the rules of the Internet, I’m a fan.” I narrowed my eyes at him. “Why do you ask?”
He took a long sip of his shake, somehow still grinning as he did before he spoke. “Honey… what makes you think I want anything more than to spend time with my daughter?”
“Hmm, I don’t know, maybe the fact that you’re a career spy and spies always have ulterior motives?” I realized how acerbic that must have sounded and I sighed, picking up my sandwich again. “Sorry, Dad. It’s been a rough day is all.”
“Do you want to talk about it?” he asked, letting me swallow my bite first.
“Well,” I began, and then paused.
He stared at me. “It’s Jimenez, isn’t it?” His tone was suddenly much darker.
I nodded. “He called me into his office. He cited a few of the maybe eight times I’ve flubbed an op due to my moral compass, and told me that his congressional masters had come to the conclusion that I wasn’t worth the taxpayer dollars to send on covert operations anymore. So I’m off the active roster and back to constant code-breaking monotony.”
“Those stuck up-!” He looked like he wanted to hit something. I know the look; I see it in the mirror occasionally. “I don’t believe this. Why didn’t you call me? I mean I know you’ve wanted to do all of this on your own merits, and it only makes me more proud of you, but dammit, Morgan, sometimes you need to not be so stubborn and-”
“It’s all right, Daddy,” I said, laying a hand on his. “The CIA might be full of red tape and regulations, and sometimes they rub me the wrong way, but I do good work there. My code-crunching might not be as thrilling as being in the field but I might be able to do that again.” I took a long sip of my shake and looked around the restaurant. “Besides, I get to spend more time with my cat, now. Get caught up on the latest buzz on new encryption methods and how hackers are breaking them. That sort of thing, the kind of thing one can’t do if they’re always on the move, you know?”
“I hear you. I’m actually glad they put me out to pasture.”
“That’s odd,” I commented. “You always told me and Mom how much you loved your job.”
“Yeah, I know, but I still kept tabs on the Agency even after your mom left. Between the meddling of the congressional types and the strain on all of the agencies due to this crusade against terrorism, things have gone downhill.”
A chime came from Dad’s jeans pocket. He pulled out a Blackberry and peered at the display. I quietly ate my sandwich as he looked over whatever he’d gotten, and from the expression on his face, he didn’t like what he was seeing.
“What is it?” I asked finally.
“There’s been another murder,” he told me. “A Congressman, this time.”
Before I could ask him why he’d gotten such a thing sent to his phone, he laid some money on the table and took a final sip of his milkshake. “I’m sorry, sweetheart, but I have to go. I’ll probably be calling you in a bit.”
I rose to protest, but he was already walking out. I sat back down and tried to muddle through my confusion. My father appearing out of nowhere to check up on me like that was certainly welcome considering how my day started, but his abrupt departure was disconcerting. We’d gotten used to having meals without him when I was little, considering how much he travelled, but since retiring he’d promised to spend more time with me. I’d been to his villa in the Bahamas twice, on his dime.
It wasn’t the fact that he was in Washington that continued to bother me as I finished off my sandwich and drank down the rest of my milkshake. It was the timing of his visit. He’d chosen the day I was removed from the CIA’s active roster to ‘drop in,’ and he did it while I was having lunch, which I could have had in the office or any number of other eateries in the Metro area. Yet there he’d been, right across from me in the crowded Potbelly, acting surprised and outraged at my demotion. Something didn’t add up.
I made my way back and tried to put the emotional roller-coaster of lunch behind me. I went through a couple militia communiques and found nothing of interest when I got an e-mail from my father. My desk phone rang a moment later.
“Everson,” I said into the receiver, as I always did.
“So am I,” my father replied. “I just sent you something I want you to look at.”
“You know I can’t look at porn when I’m at work, Dad.”
“Very funny. I only did that once. And that guy totally deserved it.”
Sighing, I opened the attachment to his email.
“What is this?” I asked him a moment later.
“It’s an encrypted file. See what you can do with it.”
“I’ve never seen this cipher before, Dad.”
“I believe in you,” he said, and hung up. I sighed a bit. Some people had teased me in college for taking my studies so seriously, since with a family member in the CIA and aiming to go there myself, I didn’t need better than passing grades. But I didn’t want to just coast in on my looks and pedigree alone. I’ve always enjoyed solving puzzles, and my father was always happy to pitch me a fresh one. I took a deep breath and started to look over the cipher, picking out algorithms and determining the best route to attack the message. I latched onto something almost right away, and I lost track of time as I started to take it apart. By the time I was gone, most people had left the office, but I had a completely decrypted message.
I sent it back to my father, and minutes later he was calling me again.
“That’s fantastic work, Morgan. I can’t believe you knocked that out in an afternoon.”
“It wasn’t that hard,” I said, rubbing the bridge of my nose to relieve my eyestrain, “just time-consuming.”
“Did you read it?”
“I didn’t read the whole thing, just whatever I was decrypting. I know it was about that Congressman who was killed today.” I thought back to the bits and pieces of the message. “MacKenzie.”
“It was a report on a successful test. We need to know what’s being tested, and why.”
“Who’s ‘we’, Dad?”
“I’m sending directions to the GPS in your car. Follow them.”
The line went dead and I admitted I was starting to get aggravated. Sure, Dad was good at giving me interesting puzzles, but being this cryptic with me wasn’t like him. He was still my father, however, and he’d earned my trust over the years. I got in my car and began following the instructions. It turned out being a 4-hour car ride, and the night seemed even darker as I arrived at my destination. I took the designated exit and arrived at the Greenbrier Valley Airport in West Virginia. I was directed to a nondescript office building in the industrial park. It was one story, and the interior was bare save for an elevator and a large desk with a woman sitting behind it.
“Everson?” she asked me.
“Yeah,” I replied. “My father…”
“I already know,” she said, waving her hand as she filled out some paperwork. “Sign here. And I’ll need any weapons you’re carrying.”
I looked over the paperwork, which was an ‘intake form’ with all of my vital information already filled in. I didn’t see anything untoward on the form, so I signed it, then unholstered my sidearm and laid it on the desk, following it with the short Japanese blade I carried at the small of my back. She looked at the tanto for a moment before regarding me with a raised eyebrow.
“Never runs out of ammo,” I told her with a shrug. She didn’t change her expression, but reached under her desk and pressed a button. The elevator doors opened.
“Please step inside, Miss Everson.”
I did as I was told, and the elevator started to descend. I didn’t feel entirely comfortable, and what happened next didn’t help.
“You made good time,” came my father’s voice. I almost jumped out of my skin and looked around as the elevator came to a stop.
“Dad? What the hell’s going on?”
“I know you’re tired and you have a lot of questions,” was his disembodied reply. “I promise I’ll explain everything and you’ll get a chance to rest, but first I need you to do me a favor.”
The elevator doors opened. I was staring at a very long corridor with unadorned concrete walls, harsh overhead lighting, and a moving walkway. I peered down towards the other end and thought I could make out a pair of metal doors as well as the occasional mirror on either side.
“Let me guess, I’m getting on the walkway and remaining still?”
“Head of the class,” said my father. “I’ll see you on the other side.”
His jovial tone of voice didn’t make the experience any less disconcerting. As the moving walkway carried me towards the opposite end of the corridor, I passed several mirrors that were probably manned on the other side. More than once I heard a humming noise from one side or the other, and it was my assumption that something a bit more powerful than an airport metal detector was giving me a once-over. Finally, the walkway ended, and I stepped off in front of a pair of metal doors with no visible handle. A bas-relief lighthouse atop a rocky pinnacle dominated the doors. I heard heavy bolts retracting, and the doors swung open slowly, to reveal my father, now dressed in a simple gray suit.
“Hi, Morgan,” he said with a smile. “Sorry for the theatrics. Welcome to Lighthouse.”
“What’s Lighthouse?” I asked him, stepping through the doors into a much warmer corridor. As the doors closed, another man approached us, dressed in a waistcoat and sporting a mustache and sideburns the color of his lion-like silver hair. His eyes were piercing and direct, hazel in color, and despite the lines on his face he moved like a man who knew how to handle himself. When he spoke, it was with an Oxford accent.
“Lighthouse is a covert international investigative body, sanctioned by the United Nations with a very specific charter.” He extended his hand. “Miss Everson, I’ve heard quite a lot about you. My name is Sir Geoffrey Aldersgate.”
Stunned, I took his hand. This was arguably the best agent MI6 ever had. During the Cold War, he was discussed on the far side of the Iron Curtain as ‘Shadow-Lion’, a reference to both his homeland and his method of operation. I tried to compose myself, since meeting him was like an up-and-coming actress meeting Dame Helen Mirren.
“It’s an honor,” I told him. “I had no idea you were an Oxfordshire man.”
“Raised and educated there,” he replied. “I’m surprised you picked that up so quickly.”
“I had to study how people communicate, sir. Part and parcel of cryptography, which I’m assuming is why I’m here.”
“Indeed. That was impressive work this afternoon. We’d like to see more of it.”
“I already have a job with the CIA, sir.”
“I’ve made arrangements with Jimenez,” my father put in. “He owes me, and we need you more than he does.”
“We can discuss this more in the morning,” Aldersgate said. “You’ve had quite a long drive, Miss Everson, and I want you fresh and your mind sharp.”
“Thank you. I am pretty tired,” I admitted. We walked down a few hallways, decorated by art of various lighthouses and towers, until we came to a side room that contained a cot, a desk, and a coat rack.
“Make yourself at home,” Aldersgate said. “There are thicker sheets under the bed if you get cold.”
“We’ll talk tomorrow,” my father told me, and gave me a hug. “I’m glad you made it.”
“Good evening, Miss Everson. We’ll fetch you in the morning.”
“Good night,” I said to both of them, closing the door. The light switch was next to the cot, which was a good thing because I forgot how tired I was until I laid down and turned off the light. Despite my wonderings about the purpose of Lighthouse and the reason I’d been brought here, fatigue pounced on me like a cat desperate for attention, and I was asleep less than a minute after the light went out.
* * * * * * *
“She’s a fine young woman,” Aldersgate said as they walked away from the room Morgan was sleeping in.
“Takes after her mother more than me,” Charles replied with a shrug. “I know she’s got a lot of questions about this entire operation and how I found her earlier.”
“Shows good instincts,” the British man nodded. “She’s going to need them in the days ahead.”
“I’m not entirely thrilled about her being a part of this, Geoff. It’s a dangerous and unpredictable world she’s coming into, and it swallows people.”
“We need the best minds to puzzle out the meaning of these occurrences, Charles. Take it as a compliment. Your daughter’s the best, in both cryptography and field work. We don’t have the red tape problems the CIA has. And she’s an unknown. These are all powerful weapons in her arsenal for what’s to come.”
Charles looked over his shoulder at the door behind which his daughter slept. He smiled but his voice completely belied his expression. “I hope we’re right about this, Geoff. For my daughter’s sake.”
“For all our sakes, Charles.” Sir Geoffrey touched his friend on the shoulder. “Get some rest. We’ve an early start tomorrow.”
* * * * * * *
She looked out over the Philadelphia skyline. The lights on the roadways went to and fro, as they always did, oblivious of being observed. The voice in her ear prattled on, and she looked at her manicured nails as she contemplated switching off the Bluetooth headset.
“I know you’re upset,” she put in finally. “I know how valuable MacKenzie was to you. But you know he suffered the same fate as my top police resource. Why would I dispose of that valuable a resource, even to smokescreen depriving you of yours?”
“You’re being coy,” was the response, “and that to me smacks of rudeness. There was no interference in your interests, Countess, and destroying MacKenzie was absolutely senseless.”
“Which is why I didn’t do it,” the Countess insisted. “Baron, still your tongue and use your brain. If you weren’t trying to muscle in on my territory – which, I might add, I would have known about long before tonight – why would I try to muscle in on yours? We have a standing agreement, you and I, to say nothing of the greater treaties that exist between us, the Five Boroughs, New England and the South. This entire seaboard has been somewhat destabilized by these events, and it doesn’t take a genius to see that someone is trying to pit us against one another.”
There was a pause. “That might be. All the same I have called a gathering. Am I correct in assuming you already know if it and am making arrangements?”
She sighed. “Yes, Baron, and it will be here in Philadelphia. I’m sure you have travel arrangements to make, so I will leave you to that. I look forward to seeing you.”
Before the Baron could question her sentiment, she terminated the call. She was removing the earpiece when her assistant, Evans, stepped into her office.
“Sorry to disturb you, Countess,” he said, “but I need to ask you about tomorrow night’s gather. Is there anything you need me to look after other than the venue and seating arrangements?”
“As a matter of fact, Evans, there is,” she replied. “I want you to monitor the intelligence networks. Look for anything unusual. If our friends at Lighthouse are catching wind of the connections between the murders, chances are someone new is going to be sent into our area for some reason or another.”
“Of course.”
“And it goes without saying, Evans, that none of the others are to know about this. They are unaware of Lighthouse. It’s best for all involved if it stays that way.”
“I shall be discreet as always, ma’am,” Evans told her, and with a short bow, he walked out of the office. The Countess turned back to the skyline, folding her arms. Without her police contact, the amount of information she had on the murders was limited. There was certainly something about them, however, that pointed to something undeniably sinister. This wasn’t Lighthouse’s style, either. She knew Aldersgate and his operations tended towards the subtle and sublime, and this was overt and gruesome.
There was a new player involved. And the Countess got the sneaking suspicion they didn’t care about the rules, and that made them not only unknown, but dangerous.
Set in feudal Japan, this story is not for the faint of heart.
Until her release from the Hell of the Vast Cold countless days after the night of her murder, Lady Takahashi Makoto did not fully grasp the concept of cosmic balance and the role of akuma, or demons, within it. On that night she died, as she applied the hairpins that made her black tresses an immaculate aspect of her beauty, her focus was more on her boredom and disgust than on things beyond the ken of mortals. As she always did when dealing with her husband or his sycophantic subordinates, she hid her seething anger and abyssal loneliness behind the mask of powder and paint she spent hours applying each morning. As her husband, Lord Takahashi, discussed with those fattened generals plans to sweep down upon the forces of the young and powerful Nobunaga Oda, and then over the whole of Japan, she found it more difficult than usual to ignore the emptiness that was the throbbing echo of his rough violations of her supple and bruised body.
One couldn’t even call it lovemaking, she reflected. It had been her hope, when dapper men took her away and left a substantial dowry in her place for her parents, that her husband in this arrangement would be kind, which would have made her duty to be an obedient wife much easier. But Takahashi was anything but kind. Beside the physical abuse, he often taunted her with a life she could have known, pressing her into service like any common girl rather than allowing her to help in running the household.
This hurt more than the blows from his hand or the curses murmured at her in the throes of his passion. The women in her family before her were not so abused. They learned martial arts, they married men who saw them as equals, they even inherited property, and here she was shuffling about serving tea with mute obedience. Takahashi enjoyed this, using and abusing her in these various ways, and it had been like this every day since her arrival five insufferable months ago.
“A hunter’s moon tonight,” one of the generals said, the predatory word rousing Makoto from her dark reverie. “An auspicious omen for our endeavor.”
“I agree,” said another. “But that much light on this night bothers me. What if our respective lords see their armies leaving?”
Makoto tried not to pay any mind to what they were saying. She went about her duties, cleaning up plates from their meal and pouring fresh cups of tea. The generals pretended like she didn’t exist, as Takahashi had instructed them on numerous occasions. This was the way she and every other woman in the castle was treated: like an animal or an object, something unworthy of notice, devoid of honor. It burned under Makoto’s skin, but she still remembered the way he broke her arm after her first protest four months ago. She was not eager to repeat that experience. The bruises and soreness every morning after he came to her were enough.
“Do not worry about your lords,” Takahashi hissed. “When the dawn comes, your secret blood-oaths to me will bear the fruit you each desire. And do not worry about Oda. That, too, is taken care of.”
As he spoke, the doors of the hall flew open. Makoto looked to the sound, but saw not who opened them. It couldn’t have been the samurai walking in, for his arms remained at his sides, as relaxed as his measured strides. Watching him, she knew he was a predator, and she could almost smell the thick and exotic scent of blood on him. His hair, black as his lacquered armor, trailed behind him in a long thin queue like ink from a brush.
Then his eyes turned to her. Pale blue, the blue of ice on a river at dawn, they settled on hers and did not stray to her curvaceous form, paid no attention to her finery. Makoto felt as if her painted mask was melting, her clothing burning away, and every bit of her being lay exposed to him, giddiness and terror both gnawing at her heart.
“Ah. The assassin with no name.”
The nasal hiss of her husband brought Makoto back to reality. She caught her breath, wondering why she suddenly felt so warm.
“You are here for the map?”
“And a meal. Perhaps a bath.” His voice was a whisper, yet Makoto heard him clearly across the hall. Takahashi smiled thinly.
“Yes. Of course. My wife will see to your needs while we finalize our battle-plans. Then I will tell you how you’ll be my tekken; yes, my fist.”
Takahashi was full of his plans, and himself, moreso now than ever before. It didn’t concern him in the slightest how unsavory it was to send his wife off with a strange man, endangering her honor. To him, she was just another tool to be used, abused or discarded as he saw fit. Every time he had her serving tea to his gathering of traitors, every guest she guided alone through the castle was another sharp blow to her soul as damaging as his fists. Yet, through her seething hatred, she felt the eyes of the man in black boring into the back of her neck.
“Do you desire to eat or bathe first?” she finally managed.
“My desires are not quite what you think,” he whispered in reply. “Instead, I ask you yours. What do you desire?”
The frankness of his manner, and the complete lack of fear in his voice as he asked such a thing of another man’s wife, let alone the one of the likes of Lord Takahashi, left Makoto speechless. Then a wave of melancholy and sadness washed over her in a dark tide and her eyes fluttered shut as she surrendered to it, her strength gone like sakura petals on the wind.
“Freedom.”
“Not an uncommon desire. What makes yours special?”
“You’ve met my husband.”
“I have.”
“Then you know why.”
“He is ambitious. And powerful.”
“Things any commoner could tell you, with a voice full of fear.”
“He is more than that,” the wandering swordsman continued. “His lust and greed are exceeded only by his pride. And those generals with him are traitors.” His words caused heat to rise to her face again. She had no idea how he knew these things. Yet he continued, showing a peculiar insight that was perhaps fueled by the same scrutiny igniting her passion and her dread. “He doesn’t beat you out of anger or insecurity. He does it because he can, and because he enjoys causing you pain.”
They stepped out into the open air, and she turned her eyes to him in wonder. His face was downcast, shadows falling over it like black curtains. He stopped walking, turning to face out across the courtyard. The overhang above them kept off the first few drops of rain, and the wooden floor under their feet seemed less substantial to Makoto for some reason. She shook her head, trying to seize control of her emotions.
You have only known him a few moments, woman, she told herself.
Yet, he had spoken barely a word to her husband, and he instantly knew the heart and soul of that evil man. And when his eyes turned to her, she felt it again. She felt her breath shorten, the sensation of exposure, of revelation, of vulnerability and, strangely, desire.
“How do you know these things?” she ventured, halting in her walk.
He was silent. He turned his gaze from her, his face a taut mask of pain and sorrow. He walked further into the darkness away from her, and turned over his shoulder to address her in his audible whisper.
“Tonight. You will have your freedom.”
The words sank into her belly like a hot blade, the sensation oozing down her thighs and making her knees weak. She doubled over and struggled to grab the wall, moaning softly. What did this mean? How could she feel this way? Sick, yet enthralled and exhilarated all at once? Desperate wishes and unspoken prayers, seemingly about to be answered in the person of this dark assassin, gave fuel to a flame of desperate hope that fluttered in the breeze of a nameless and creeping fear that crouched on the edge of Makoto’s soul like a stalking panther anticipating the right moment in which to pounce.
Makoto gathered herself best she could. She had to maintain composure. It was unseemly for her to act thus. She wanted time to consider these feelings as best she could. The night air chilling her skin seemed to murmur in her ear that what she had set into motion now could not be undone, and reinforced her sensation of falling.
The alarms began to sound, whistles and bells madly making themselves heard. Makoto looked around, confused. Time had lost all meaning in the face of her desires. She gathered up the loose folds of her kimono and walked as best she could towards the sounds.
Men in armor ran past her, swords, spears and halberds at the ready. She quickened her pace, reflecting on how shaken the hardened warriors had looked. The guards at the door to the stateroom tried to stop her, but she pushed past, to find a scene belched forth from a screaming nightmare.
The floor was slick with blood. The generals of the other lords lay eviscerated around the table. The maps and plans on that same table were the funeral dressings of Lord Takahashi himself. His hands and feet had been severed, one laying on each of the four corners of the room. An ugly wound lay between his legs, and his head rested on top of his body, facing the door, his mouth open in a silent scream, his face streaked in tears of blood from the open sockets where his eyes had once were. From the spatters and footprints around the scene, it was clear that it had taken this master of traitors a long time to die.
Yet, in the face of all this carnage, Makoto felt no fear or even revulsion. From the moment she’d first beheld her husband, she had expected and even wished for this, regardless of its cost.
“He’s this way!”
The cry of the guards tore her attention away from the scene before her, and she followed them to the courtyard, the same courtyard where she had stopped earlier, struck by the dark visitor.
All fifty of Takahashi’s samurai surrounded the assassin, weapons at the ready. He seemed to show no fear, or anger, no emotion whatsoever, only cold precision, taking a measure of each man arrayed against him. Both of his swords were drawn, one in each hand.
“You’ve killed our lord! You will pay!” one of them shouted.
The dark man said nothing, closing his eyes and shaking his head.
“Speak, fool! Speak before you die.”
“Go. Leave this place, find your own paths, before your lives are cut short. I only warn once.”
Screams of rage met his mellow whisper, and they fell on him. Silently, his blades sliced through the air, armor and parrying blades unable to prevent his assault. Even as they got close enough to strike, the samurai and guards fell back, dead or dying. One of them, near Makoto, struggled with a matchlock rifle, trying to load it. She wanted to shout a warning, but she wouldn’t have been heard over the battle. Instead, she kicked the man in the head. The matchlock went off, shooting down the man about to slice for the dark swordsman’s throat. The bullet passed through the guard’s body and smacked into the warrior’s arm, as others at the courtyard’s edge readied their own rifles.
He winced, growling “Damn your modern weapons, you cowards.”
Anger rose within him. He reared like a scowling beast and sheathed his blades. The power came to him, almost unbidden, unholy laughter welling up from around and inside of him. He felt it, the quickening of his blood, the burning of his flesh, the armor melting into his very body and the powers of Yomi, the dwelling place of the dead, surging forth from the darkest place of his soul, and he welcomed it as an enamored wife welcomes her lover’s caress.
Makoto gasped. The dark man’s face became a mask of anger, even as his skin took on the color of his armor. The lacquered suit sank into him, his muscles standing out in dark obsidian relief. Gleaming claws sprang from his fingers, his eyes taking on an angry crimson glow, and black leather wings highlighted by red veins unfurled themselves from his broad shoulders. Her desire was now entirely swallowed by fear.
“Akuma…” she whispered.
Revealed, the demon grinned at the remaining men. There was a flicker of dark movement, a hiss of razor-sharp wingtips sailing through the night air, and Makoto’s vision was suddenly obscured by something warm, sticky and wet. She dropped to her knees, struggling to clear her eyes, her sobs drowned out by the screams of Takahashi’s guard.
Cries of vengeance were cut short. Pleas for mercy ended in soft gurgles. Whispered prayers to spirits or ancestors were punctuated by crunching bone and splattering gore. Every sound and scent wafted at Makoto as she tried to restore her sight. When she did, she looked down at her hands, and felt a chill deep in her gut as she realized the bloody spongy viscera between her delicate stained fingers had once been a bodyguard’s brain matter.
There were no cries now. No pleas or prayers. Only a soft sucking sound broke the silence. She blinked, looking up at the akuma. It was bent over several corpses, feeding. It turned, letting one fall away and lifting one over his head. It looked up at the guard, grinning, and the other struggled. Makoto knew she should cry out for the akuma to stop. The guard turned her way, and his eyes went wide, pleading.
“Why bother?” she whispered, resigned to the price of her desires.
The akuma grunted, and the guard’s body broke apart, showering the demon in blood. His mouth open, grinning, the akuma drank in the essential fluid as it flowed down his strong arms from the shattered body of what had once been a family man, a dedicated student of bushido, and a loyal follower of Takahashi. Even as he licked what was left from his clawed hands, he realized, again, that he had touched each of the souls he’d taken mere heartbeats before sending them to Yomi to dwell with their departed and damned lord.
The akuma turned, walking away, his stature returning to what it had been, wings disappearing into his back as his armor separated from his skin, flawless and gleaming in the moonlight, his swords at his side once more like a constant companion. In his wake he left a confused, bloodied, and breathless young widow.
~~~~~
“Wait!”
He turned. Makoto’s faltering sprint caught up to him and she came to a halt, short of breath.
“Why did you follow me?” he whispered.
“I wanted to ask you something, akuma,” she replied as she regained her composure. “While I am free of my husband, and am thankful for that, what will you do now that your employer is dead?”
He closed his eyes.
“Is that the freedom you truly seek?”
Her brows furrowed. “What do you mean by that?”
He turned and looked out. The province of Mutsu, on the northern tip of the main island of Nippon, shared much of its border with the sea. Takahashi’s castle had been situated atop one of the jagged cliffs that overlooked the violent shore, and it was along that precipice that the dark man had walked, and that the young widow had followed him.
“Your life is a joyless one. That blood-soaked castle holds no more hope for you than this wind-swept road does now. Even if you stayed there, your destiny would continue to be defined by men of power without the temperance to use it. I’m no different, in a sense.”
“Yes, you are. You’re all alone, just like I am now. And besides, what good is freedom if you don’t have anyone to share it with?”
He sighed. “You do not know true freedom yet.”
She blinked. “What?”
He looked out over the dark waves. “This is a cruel world, Makoto-chan.” She blanched a bit at be referred to the way one refers to a beloved child or sibling, but did not interrupt. “The cruel and strong subvert the monies and abilities of those less able or less cunning, and give them lives that amount to little more than slavery. The only escape, the only freedom, is the cool and pale caress of death.”
She shuddered. “You’re going to kill me, then.”
“I must. You know who, and more to the point, what I am.”
She was stunned for a moment, and then regained her composure. “You think you frighten me, akuma? And is that your name, or should I make one up for you?”
He closed his eyes for a moment. Then he laid them upon her. In them was no longer the bloodthirsty spark that had laid waste to threescore samurai and guardsmen, nor the cold distant glance of the stranger that had stepped into Takahashi’s castle. She saw pain, and sorrow; a deep, abiding resignation to fate, and the faint glimmer of hope that he might, someday, make a difference, even as he walked a path of darkness, blood, and death.
He reached out his hand, and pulled her to him. She held back a shriek, then let her eyes flutter shut, listening to his heart beat, feeling the warmth of his body, and embracing what she felt in her own soul, which was not fear, but something else entirely.
“I am the fist of the Thousand Hells,” he whispered in her ear, “I am death incarnate, my love. I have no choice but to deliver each to their destiny. But, doing so to you breaks my heart into a thousand shards. That’s why I walked away, but your pursuit of me leaves me no choice. Forgive me for doing the only thing for which I am suited.”
With that, he pushed her into the winds that lay beyond the edge of the cliff.
As she began to fall, she was surprised at herself. She wasn’t screaming. In fact, she was laughing. She laughed all the way down to the craggy rocks below.
~~~~~
Her laugh haunted him. For countless days after that night, he wandered, slaying the wicked and claiming their souls for Yomi, the Thousand Hells, the crucible in which he had been confronted with his own wickedness and found the strength to strike a deal for atonement. He had left all aspects of his old life behind, from his name to his dreams, and crawled back into the world of the living, a world in which he walked and spoke as a man but existing and acting as something else entirely. He walked that way for a long time after that night, never resting and always alone.
The akuma had long ago resigned himself to his solitude, and his mission, one he pursued to the exclusion of all else even on the night he’d murdered the first woman since his release from the Hell of Being Skinned Alive to cause the unfamiliar and somewhat terrifying notion of love to stir deep in what remained of his soul. Despite the pain of it, despite the tears he’d silently shed standing on that cliff, he’d carried out his duty, and continued on from there until another night when the capricious but just hand of the cosmic cycle brought that woman into his life. This time, it occurred in the last way he could have anticipated.
Another battle, so similar to the others he’d waded through in his sanguine path, had passed and left him the last one standing. Now, as the commander of the former army knelt in pain before him, he cleaned his short wakizashi with a single flick of his wrist, blood and gore flying from the blade like water off the back of a duck, spraying across the face of the fat feudal lord.
“I… I can pay you…”
“I have no interest in your money,” the akuma whispered, smiling as his katana whispered free of its scabbard, hearing the screams of it’s previous victims roar in his ears like the surf Makoto had plunged toward years ago. The Yomi-forged blade gleamed maliciously in the moonlight.
“Only your soul.”
It was over quickly. Too quickly. The akuma left the dismembered corpse behind. Hours of walking later, even after such violence and joyous work, he was still nagged by the questions. He looked up, realizing he was passing the camp of his recent victim’s rival. Sounds of lovemaking came from the largest tent. He drew closer, only to hear the man’s grunts cut short with a vicious snap that could only be made by a neck broken in strong hands. The woman’s moans continued, grew louder, then faded and ended with a sadistic chuckle. There was the sound of fabric being gathered and replaced, and the flap of the tent came open.
For the first time since his rebirth, the akuma found himself surprised.
“Nihao, Hajime-kun,” Makoto Takahashi said with a soft smile, using the other’s birth name. Her skin was the very color of the moonlight, her kimono-like robe revealing tantalizing cleavage. With every silent step of her bare right foot, her leg peeked through the hem, inviting and deadly all at once.
“You…”
“I am no longer the fainting widow you sent plunging to her fate,” she murmured in a seductive whisper that was all too much like Hajime’s own soft tones. “I am akuma, like you, only I prey upon men’s lusts for flesh, not power or glory like you do. You might be the fist of the Thousand Hells, my darling, but I am the geisha of the Lords of Yomi. You are the Blade that Skins Alive; I am the Vast Cold personified.”
He tried to hide his true feelings, but her eyes bored into him. Is this how they feel when I flay their souls open to my scrutiny? he wondered.
“You should not have come back.”
“Oh? And what will you do now, Hajime-kun? Slay me again? Or shall I, perhaps, slay you?” She took a step towards him, taking his trembling hand and sliding it under her kimono against the ivory skin of her bosom, sighing as her eyes fluttered shut at his touch. “Cool beneath your fingers, is it not? Like frost clinging to cherry blossoms before the morning sun rises. Only you can warm me, my darling. But will you do it with the love that I know still slumbers in your heart, or with the soul-hungry blade in that other hand of yours? It is your choice entirely.” Her blood-red lips curled into a seductive smile that would have made Takahashi, Nobunaga, and every man in Nippon weak in the knees and longing for her favor. “But only one choice will place me at your mercy. That is where you’ve desired me from the moment you met me, not broken at the base of a windswept cliff, but broken by your strength and bent to your will. Of course, I could be wrong.” She shrugged, her kimono sliding from her creamy shoulders. “If I am, you’ll try to murder me again.” Her eyelashes lifted slowly to fix the elder akuma with her amethyst gaze. “Either way, I assure you, I will challenge and exhaust you. Make your decision, my dark brooding darling. I am breathless with anticipation.”
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