Read Modern Sorcery: A Jonathan Shade Novel Online

Authors: Gary Jonas

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Urban, #Paranormal & Urban

Modern Sorcery: A Jonathan Shade Novel (25 page)

BOOK: Modern Sorcery: A Jonathan Shade Novel
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Brand laughed.
 
“A bloody rare steak sounds good.
 
Under different circumstances, I’d take you up on that offer.
 
You’ve got spunk.
 
Alas, I’m under orders to kill you.”

 

“Hey, it was worth a try,” I said.
 
“If I have to choose, I’ll go with the sword.”

 

“Good choice,” Brand said.

 

As he moved to draw his blade, his weight shifted just enough so I could finally get my feet flat against the wall.
 
I grabbed his legs with my arms and pushed off the wall as hard as I could.
 
I hoped my feet wouldn’t just go through the plaster.

 

Luck was with me.
 
Brand toppled backward, smashing through the drywall.

 

I swung around and scissor-kicked one of Kelly’s captors’ legs.
 
As soon as Kelly’s foot touched the ground, she bounced up and kicked the guy who held her other leg.

 

About that time, the elevator doors opened and revealed six police officers, guns drawn.

 

“Hold it right there!” one of the officers shouted.

 

Kelly ignored the shout and drove the two warriors who held her arms back into the hotel room.

 

I started to get up but dropped to the floor when one of the warriors drew a sword and started toward the cops.

 

“Shoot them in the head!” I shouted.

 

Brand pulled free of the drywall and tried to grab me, but I kicked at his legs, and he had to jump aside to avoid having his shins pulverized.

 

Gunfire filled the hallway.
 
I chanced a look toward the elevator.
 
Two warriors strode toward the cops, who kept firing at the chest as they’d been taught.

 

“Head shot!” I yelled.

 

One of the cops listened.
 
He shot a warrior in the head, and the warrior fell down.
 
Another cop shot the second warrior in the head, and down the old boy went.
 
By that time, the first warrior sat up.

 

My hands were full with Brand, who grabbed me and tried to throw me through the wall again.
 
This time I kept my balance, twisted, and flipped him instead.
 
He hit the ground hard and tried to roll with it, but I kept hold of his wrist.
 
As he tried to pull free, I twisted harder and tried to snap it, but he was too strong.
 
I wished I had my gun, but the damn thing was down in the car.

 

I tried to break Brand’s neck, but bullets zinged past me.
 
“Fuck this,” I said and dived into the hotel room.

 

Kelly had managed to disable one of her warriors and as I entered the room, she tossed the other through the window.

 

“Behind you,” she said.

 

I spun to see Brand thrusting a sword at me.
 
I blocked with the outside of my arm.
 
The blade cut deep and hard, but the wound was superficial.
 
It hurt like hell but I’d live.

 

By the time I hit the floor, Kelly took hold of Brand and sent him out the window after his brother.
 
She took a moment to pick up a dropped sword and decapitated the other warrior.

 

“Where’s Esther?” I asked, holding a pillow to my injury.

 

She walked through the wall.
 
“I don’t like watching violence,” she said.

 

Gunfire still filled the hallway for a moment.
 
Then I heard screams and bones snapping.

 

“I think our other two playmates are coming back,” I said.

 

“How’s your arm?” Kelly asked.

 

“It hurts.”

 

“Poor baby,” she said.
 
She nodded toward the hall.
 
“Guess I owe those two an ass-kicking.”

 

She stepped into the hall.

 

“Shit,” she said.
 
“They’re gone.”

 
 
 
 
 

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

 
 

“I’m afraid,” Esther said.

 

“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” I said.
 
“Ravenwood has a major head start, and I need your help to find him.”

 

We were in my car, cruising down I-25.
 
It was late afternoon, and traffic was gearing up for another slow commute.
 
We’d lost much of the day answering questions for the police.
 
Fortunately a few of the officers in the elevator survived and were able to back us up.
 
We played stupid about the Sekutar because it’s easier for the police to accept guys who are hopped up on drugs than those who are magically engineered to be virtually indestructible.

 

Eventually they let us go.
 
On the positive side, I got medical attention for the gash on the arm.
 
It throbbed a bit, but I was fortunate not to have lost too much blood and not to have gone into shock, which often happens with wounds from bladed weapons.
 
The wound was nicely stitched up and bandaged.
 
With a little luck, I wouldn’t tear out any stitches as we hunted Ravenwood.

 

“Esther,” I said.
 
“All you have to do is pop over to Naomi, see where they are, then pop right back here.”

 

“What if he sees me?”

 

“You’ll be gone before he can do anything.”

 

“I don’t know,” Esther said.

 

“He can’t do anything to you.”

 

“He can scare me.”

 

“But he can’t hurt you.”

 

“Says you!
 
He blasted me into a thousand pieces.”

 

“And yet, here you are.”

 

Kelly ignored the conversation and stared out the window at the other cars.

 

“What if he can use the typewriter key to hold me there?”

 

“I doubt he can do that.
 
And certainly not if he doesn’t know you’re coming.”

 

“Maybe he will know.
 
Maybe Naomi told him.”

 

“While it’s possible he might have culled the information about the key from her head, it’s unlikely.
 
Do it for me.
 
Please?”

 

Esther frowned.
 
She gave me a sigh then popped away.

 

A moment later she popped back.
 
“I don’t know where they are,” she said.
 
“Some house.”

 

“Can you go back and look around please?”

 

“I just went there.”

 

I pulled off the interstate to stop at a gas station.
 
“I know you were just there.
 
He didn’t see you, right?”

 

“So?”

 

“So go back and see if you can step outside.
 
Check for landmarks or an address.”

 

“I’ll try,” she said and vanished again.

 

“You want something to drink?” I asked Kelly as I eased up to the gas pump.

 

“Water.”

 

“You all right?”

 

She looked over at me.
 
“Get your gas.”

 

I climbed out of the car and shook my head at the outrageous gas prices.
 
I wondered if wizards could power a car with magic.
 
If so, it would save a fortune.”

 

I swiped my credit card and grumbled about having to buy premium.
 
While the tank filled, I went into the little convenience store and bought a couple of bottles of water.

 

When I stepped outside, Esther stood before me.

 

“Anything?”

 

“Not really.
 
Naomi—Ravenwood is talking to the torpedoes.
 
He wants to know why you’re still alive.”

 

“What about the house, Esther?”

 

“I couldn’t reach the front, so I can’t tell you much.
 
It’s just a house.
 
Nothing special.
 
There’s a big backyard, though.
 
It could be anywhere.
 
Sorry.”

 

“That’s all right.
 
You tried.”

 

“I can go back and listen some more.
 
See if he tells those guys to come after you.”

 

“It’s up to you.
 
If he spots you, though, I want you to get out of there fast.”

 

“You know it.”
 
She disappeared again.

 

I gave Kelly a bottle of water.
 
“You’ll get another shot at your brothers,” I said.

 

“Whatever.”

 

I topped off the gas tank and got my receipt.
 
As I entered the car, I said, “Whatever?
 
You don’t want to rain down holy hell on them?”

 

“I can do that, but unless we can strip Ravenwood of his magic, it’s pointless.”

 

I wheeled the car over to the street and waited for traffic to clear.
 
“Yeah, but it could be fun.”

 

“I want Ravenwood dead and gone forever,” she said.
 
“The dojo can be rebuilt, but the lives he’s taken can’t be replaced.”

 

I’d been thinking much the same thing.
 
Ravenwood had killed hundreds of people trying to get to us.
 
I couldn’t wrap my mind around that concept.
 
All I could think about right then was that poor engineer.
 
The guy had been minding his own business when Ravenwood took him.
 
Then he’d been forced to watch as Ravenwood used several wizards to try to kill us.
 
And finally Ravenwood had killed him more casually than your average person swats a fly.
 
I didn’t even know the engineer’s name, but his death affected me more than the hundreds who died earlier.
 
Part of that was because I watched him die and couldn’t do anything about it.
 
Part of it was that hundreds of people come off as a statistic while a single person is more personal.
 
Most of it was because I couldn’t help thinking about his family—his wife and daughter—who would know only that they’d lost a husband and a father.

 

Kelly and I didn’t speak as I drove across town.
 
We were both lost in our personal thoughts, though I suspect they weren’t all that different.

 

I rolled up to Lina’s house.
 
“You coming in?” I asked.

 

“I’ll wait here,” Kelly said.
 
“Anybody looks suspicious, I’ll kill them for you.”

 

“I can always count on you for murder and mayhem.”

 

“That’s not funny,” she said.

 

I nodded.
 
She was right.

 
BOOK: Modern Sorcery: A Jonathan Shade Novel
12.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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