Witches Incorporated (43 page)

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Authors: K.E. Mills

Tags: #Science Fiction/Fantasy

BOOK: Witches Incorporated
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He nearly fell over.

Oh, lord. Oh, Reg. It worked. How could it work? I don’t know what I’m doing. I’m making this up as I go along.

Incredibly, what he’d managed to achieve, it seemed, was the insertion of his
potentia
into the actual matrix of Rottlezinder’s warding hexes. It was still his, but somehow it was
mimicking
Rottlezinder’s thaumic signature. The most fortuitous fluke, surely: this could only have worked because he stuck his toe in the door at a precisely perfect split-second of the hexing process.

If I’d tried to do it on purpose I’d never have managed it. Gosh. When Monk hears about this he’s going to go spare.

But while it was exciting, he wasn’t sure what it meant. Could he now
break
Rottlezinder’s wardings? Or could he—maybe—possibly—

He walked through them as though the hexes weren’t there. As though he were Haf Rottlezinder himself.

Dazed, he spun about to look behind him. To the ordinary eye the wizard’s hexes were invisible, but he could sense them in the ether, thaumic barbed wire, slashing claws and tearing teeth.

That shouldn’t be possible. I shouldn’t have done that. Could anybody do that… or is it just me?

In the pit of his belly, a faint, sickening tremble. If that wasn’t something any First Grader could do… if what he’d just done was a trick reserved for rogue wizards…

What else can I do that we don’t know about yet? And how long will it take for my own side to start thinking I’m more wizard than they can handle?

Horrible thoughts… but he’d have to think them through later. Right now he had to get inside the factory and find out what Errol and Haf Rottlezinder were planning next.

With enormous care he cloaked himself in another obfuscation hex; not Reg’s, this time, but one he’d learned from Sir Alec. The good news was that it muffled his thaumic signature until he was practically invisible. The
bad
news was that it interfered with his
potentia
, but he’d have to live with that. Secrecy was the most important thing right now.

He looked up. There, just as Reg had said, was the faint trace of light leaking between the top floor windows’ shutters. That was where he needed to be, and quickly. Before Errol and Haf concluded their treacherous business.

Scarcely daring to breathe, he eased himself into the abandoned boot factory. It was pitch dark inside, like being smothered with black velvet. His half-blindness wasn’t much help, either… but he didn’t dare try an
illuminato
incant.

The tracer crystal.

He dug it out of his pocket and held it in front of his good eye, squinting. The tracer glowed steadily, indicating Errol’s nearby presence, but it wasn’t bright enough to make a difference to the dark.

Damn
.

Shoving the useless thing back in his pocket, he reached out with his muffled senses and began to pick his way across the floor to where he thought, he hoped, the stairs were located—heart-thuddingly aware that time was ticking past, that Errol and Haf could be planning another devastating portal attack and he wasn’t anywhere near enough to overhear and stop them.

Come on, come on, Dunnywood. Get a move on. Don’t let them win
.

He found the stairs and, tread by uncertain, unseen tread, climbed them. Up one floor. Then another. Another. He was breathing in dust and who-knew-what kinds of filth; he wanted to sneeze and cough, but couldn’t. His sinuses were burning. His legs were burning too—climbing stairs was hard work and he’d never been an athlete. Maybe Reg should have nagged him a little harder about getting outdoors for some healthy fresh air and calisthenics.

As he reached the top floor at last, the blood thundering through his veins and arteries, he heard raised voices. Errol and Haf Rottlezinder were arguing. Under the cover of their anger he crept along a little faster, guided by the spill of light from a room at the end of the corridor that led off from the staircase.

“—always were one of the best, Haf,” Errol was saying. “But is this any way to prove it? I thought you’d learned your lesson five years ago.”

“I’m not trying to prove anything,” Rottlezinder sneered. “That was your game, as I recall. Appearances always mattered to you. They always will. Me? I don’t care how a thing looks. I never did. The world is a lie. Everyone is a liar. Even you, Errol.
Especially
you, I think.”

The ether shivered again, teeth and claws returning.

“I don’t know what you mean, Haf,” said Errol, sounding cautious again.

“Of course you do,” said Rottlezinder, softly dangerous. “Don’t treat me like one of your pathetic subordinates, Errol. We both know you didn’t ask to see me because you changed your mind.”

A gentle sigh. “You’re right,” said Errol. “I didn’t. I’ve no intention of joining you, Haf.”

Gerald froze, shocked to a standstill.
What
? Errol
wasn’t
involved? But—

“You’re a fool,” said Rottlezinder, contemptuous. “We are talking about a great deal of money.”

“I don’t care about the money!” Errol spat. “I’ve got plenty of money. I
care
that the wrong people are asking questions about me!”

“So let them ask. What is that to you? You don’t have anything to hide, do you, old friend?”

Rottlezinder’s voice was taunting now. What the hell was going on? Gerald stared at the open doorway. It was six feet away but he didn’t dare creep any closer. Obfuscated or not, the risk was too great.

“Why should you worry?” Rottlezinder continued. “The records were sealed. What we did—what
you
did—was winked at. Youthful indiscretions, isn’t that what they call them?”

“It’s what they were, Haf!” Errol was close to shouting. “I was young and ignorant and I
never
would’ve dabbled in that—that
business
if it hadn’t been for you. Why do you think I turned you down this time? Do you think I’m stupid? You used me at university and you wanted to use me again.”

“Ah… you hurt my feelings,” said Rottlezinder, mocking.

“Believe me, Haf, I’ll hurt a lot more than that if you don’t stop this insanity,” said Errol. “I
told
you not to get involved with this mess. But you couldn’t resist, could you? Not the money, and not the chance to make the little people squirm. You always were greedy. Well,
friend
, now your greed is threatening
me
and I won’t put up with it. I have a reputation, Haf. I am one of Ottosland’s elite. And I’ll not stand idly by while your hatred and greed threaten what I’ve worked so hard to achieve!”

“Oh, such a typical Haythwaite response,” said Rottlezinder, contemptuous again. “Errol, you have not changed a bit. Always you are so—so
predictable
. All your outrage reserved for yourself. None left for the little people caught up in the madness.”

“I’m not interested in your personal opinion of me,” said Errol. “I’m interested in watching you leave the country.”

Rottlezinder laughed. “I’m not leaving. I still have work to do.”

“No, you haven’t. Get it through your thick skull, Haf. This ends here tonight. I’m ending it, is that clear?”

As Rottlezinder laughed again, Gerald felt the hair prickle on the back of his neck.
Careful, Errol. Can’t you tell he’s dangerous? He’s not some Third Grade minion you can order around.
But that was Errol’s problem, wasn’t it? His arrogance was blinding.

“Oh, Errol,” said Rottlezinder, spuriously sad. “You think you’re so much better than everyone else, don’t you? You think because you have old blood, because the roots of your family tree go down so deep in Ottosland’s rotten soil, you can snap your fingers and everyone will fall in line. You think
I
will fall in line. This is not true.”

“Yes, it is,” said Errol, his voice strained to breaking point. “Did you not hear today’s news? Your sabotage of the Post Office portal failed. Now the net’s closing around you, and if you don’t leave you’ll be caught. For old times’ sake I’m giving you this once chance to escape. But if you don’t take it—well…”

So close to the open door, to Errol and Rottlezinder, Gerald felt another ominous shiver in the ether. Even muffled he felt it, blowing through him like a wind full of knives.

Oh, lord. That’s not good.


Errol… Errol… what did you do?” Rottlezinder whispered. “Did you call the authorities? Did you
tattle
on me?”

“Of course I bloody called them, Haf! What choice did you leave me?” Errol demanded. “It was only a matter of time before somebody
died
!”

“How could you?” said Rottlezinder. He sounded… bemused. “After I turned to you for help. After everything I shared with you. Everything we did.
This
is how you thank me? With
betrayal
?”

“I haven’t betrayed you, Haf,” said Errol. “Nobody knows you’re here. Nobody
will
know. Not from me. Do you think I want anyone knowing I’m involved with this madness? Just…
leave
. I’m begging you. Let it all end tonight.”

“I am a fool,” said Rottlezinder, his voice thickened with rage. “I let sentiment defeat pragmatism. Get out, Haythwaite, and do not come back. Next time my wards will tear you apart.”

“I’ll go when you do,” said Errol, defiant. “Come on, Haf. It’s
over
.”

“No, it is
not
over!” shouted Rottlezinder. “Not until
I
say so!”

“Then you
are
a fool!” Errol retorted. “You’re forcing me to stop you. And you know I can, Haf. You know—”

And then Errol let out a shout of pain.

Flattened against the cracked corridor wall, Gerald felt Rottlezinder’s
potentia
flare, felt the saboteur lash out at Errol with an incant full of flame and fury. He heard Errol shout again, felt his instinctive defence. Felt the ether writhe and shudder as Errol fought back.

“Haf! Are you mad? Stand down, man, before you trigger that bloody hex!”

His head snapped up. What? What bloody hex? What did Rottlezinder have in that room? Surely not another incant destined to destroy a portal?

Oh, no. This madman could blow up the whole building. Lord, he could blow up half of South Ott.

Heart pounding, Gerald tried to control his panicked breathing. Booming in his ears, Sir Alec’s inviolate first rule:
Never ever compromise your identity.

But if he didn’t do something… people were going to die.

Sorry, Sir Alec. I don’t have a choice.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

B
ut as he took a deep breath and stepped into the open doorway Errol and Rottlezinder hurled grotesque hexes in a desperate attempt to vanquish each other. Colliding, the hexes ignited in an eye-searing thaumic explosion.

The etheretic wave trembled the factory on its foundations. Tossed him into the corridor’s far wall. His head thwacked the rotting plaster so hard he saw stars. Teeth rattling in their sockets, he dropped to his hands and knees. Dazed, giddy, he looked up—and choked on a shout.

Errol and Rottlezinder lay crumpled on the room’s filthy floor. On a rough workbench near its shuttered window sat a clear crystal container, and inside the container—pulsing malevolently—was Rottlezinder’s next portal hex: activated and close to discharge.

“Oh, no.”

He could feel the hex’s matrixes coalescing… constricting… drawing in a deep thaumic breath before exhaling annihilation.

This wasn’t like Stuttley’s. He wouldn’t survive this explosion. He had to get out. He had to get Errol and Rottlezinder out. But there wasn’t time—there wasn’t time—he could save one man, but not both. So who? Rottlezinder, the saboteur, who could unmask his employer? Or Errol, who wasn’t guilty. Not of this crime, anyway.

Inside its crystal prison the wicked hex began to shudder. The ill-lit room washed with red light, and all around him the ether started to scream.

Gerald threw himself into the room, grabbed hold of Errol’s ankles and dragged him into the corridor. Haythwaite was insensible, blood trickling from his nostrils, his face sweaty and chalk-white. Bending over him, Gerald grabbed Errol’s wrists, hauled him upright then let him topple over his shoulder. Staggering like an inebriate he made for the staircase at the end of the corridor.

Not having to hide any more, he panted out the
illuminato
incant, his spine buckling under the strain of running with Errol on his back. He could feel the ether torquing, feel Rottlezinder’s hex warping and distorting its delicate fabric.

Down the stairs, three treads at a time, sobbing for air, sobbing for speed, punishing his bones and muscles, knowing he had scant moments… knowing he might die. That Rottlezinder would die. Another death at his door. How many more before he’d not be able to open it?

A scream was building in his chest and throat, terror and pain and despair throttling him. Blinding him. He skidded down the final staircase, almost fell as he hit the floor, blundered across the refusescattered factory entrance towards its partially-boarded front door. He had enough wit and strength left to smash the door with a demolishing incant, then staggered through the rain of splinters into the chill night air. The
illuminato
floated with him like a tethered balloon.

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