Being known by the company you keep.
In 25 parts, edited from the works of FinalStand.
Listen and subscribe to the ► Podcast at Connected.
‘‘Life exists in both seconds and years. Don't ignore one for the other.’‘
I would like to thank the phone operator and Chief of the Burnham, Illinois Police Department for answering my questions, despite their bizarre nature.
(Monday Night)
I should have known to not have too good a time. My karma was wacky enough as it was. It was about to get worse in a way I should have foreseen. Ain't hindsight grand?
Inside of five seconds I knew how much sharing Libra and Brooke did; a lot. On the plus side, it gave me some wiggle room with Libra where sex with Brooke was concerned. On the super-plus side, Brooke was looking forward to ratcheting up our sex play. I took her to Libra's experiences with all the extra bells and whistles.
In this case it meant adding a blindfold and ball-gag to the hand restraints. Brooke handed me a high level of trust unexpected at this early moment in our sexcapade. With a quick empathic insight, I pulled her ball-gag down as her orgasm erupted. She rejoiced in the sound of her rapture echoing around my bedroom.
I deceived her into her next climax by whispering a promise to release her then hammering her instead. The whole specter of powerlessness tore her up inside. Best of all, even as she spasmed beneath me, I released her cuffs then pulled up her mask. Her fingernails dug into my trapezius muscles. For over a minute, she clung to me with a deep hunger to feel my heat and sweat against her body.
‘‘My turn,’‘ she rasped. I pressed my shoulders and head up so I could look into her eyes. She was waiting for this opportunity since she'd talked with Libra. Without question, she'd never been tied down before, or tied a man down and had her way with him. She'd manipulated men most of her life; that was old hat.
This was primal, physical and forbidden. She was taking complete control of my person. God, I thought she'd orgasmed when she finished cuffing me to the headboard. Taunting, teasing and hot body contact followed as she put the ball-gag in. Sizzling lips sealed my fate as the blindfold was slipped in place.
Having invested so much time using all my senses soaking up the hungry beast that Brooke possessed right beneath her urbane surface, losing my eyesight wasn't a major drawback. For Brooke, this had all the benefits of anonymous sex in a blacked-out room with the bonus of her having the lights on for her use alone. My bet was she had studied stuff on-line.
From being sure she wasn't going to have sex with me when she first met, she had graduated to running naked across my living room for what turned out to be lemon slices. The 'fumph' of the Nerf gun made me assume Timothy shot her in the ass as she raced into my room. By the yip from Brooke, I knew Timothy's aim remained frighteningly accurate.
Lemon juice and cuts don't mix, or, Brooke enjoyed watching my body jolt as said juice interacted with said 'workplace' mistakes. Was I angry? Nah. Every hiss of pain was followed by lavished kisses, licks and hair lashings. I loved her long black hair draped over my body, flicked around whisk-like and tickling my nose.
Brooke was learning my keystone technique; figure out what your partner wants and give them a quick sample. Don't use any one thing too much; make it a treat and they'll appreciate the taste they get even more. When Brooke finally sated us both, it was my turn again. We talked a while. She invited me to a friend's place in the Hamptons which suggested to me the destination was more than some made-up place on TV.
I promised to think about it. Brooke took that to mean she needed to work harder to convince me. I honestly had little desire to be trotted around as Brooke's boy toy. Hoping that wouldn't be the case relied a lot on faith. I wasn't sure what I would have in common with any of that crowd, which guided me back to being a stuck up snob for treating a people as a social class and not as human beings.
I took out my social anxiety on Brooke. Poor girl; three holes, ten positions and I'm not sure how many times I took her from frenzied peak to frenzied peak. All I knew was when she'd passed all points of previous primeval ecstasy, I finally released her. Brooke curled into a semi-fetal ball and began burrowing into me.
‘‘Happy?’‘ I asked as I stroked her sweat-drenched hair. She nodded happily against my chest. ‘‘Are you glad you came over?’‘ I continued. Brooke bit me because she knew I was teasing her. ‘‘Ow,’‘ I grumbled. ‘‘I think we have a misunderstanding who is whose sex toy here.’‘
‘‘Do I need to bite you again?’‘ Brooke mumbled into my chest.
‘‘Point taken,’‘ I conceded. Brooke snuggled in even tighter. We wrestled out of bed, stumbled into the shower and took some time off with Timothy. He looked at us and smirked.
‘‘Cáel is going to be my boyfriend,’‘ Brooke tossed out there. Huh?
‘‘What in God's green earth makes you want to do that?’‘ Timothy chuckled.
‘‘He's been there when I needed him. Cáel is a real man and it has taken me having a really tough spill to realize that it doesn't matter which alumni your Daddy belongs to, but what you put on the line for your friends that really matters,’‘ Brooke enlightened us both.
‘‘Seriously Dude,’‘ Timothy looked at me with pity.
‘‘Cut down on the awesome dicking until somehow polygamy becomes legal,’‘ he added, but then, ‘‘Brooke, you know he's seeing about a dozen different ladies, right?’‘
‘‘Cáel is looking for a serious relationship,’‘ Brooke insisted. Timothy chortled because he knew the likelihood of me settling down was right up there with us sharing a White Christmas in the Bahamas.
‘‘Let's go back to bed, Babe,’‘ I redirected things to safer waters. ‘‘It is your turn to be on top.’‘ Brooke, wearing one of my fresh t-shirts and nothing else, hopped off the sofa and let me lead her back to the bedroom for another round of 'not thinking about any other part of my screwed up life except the beautiful woman with me right now' sex.
Twenty minutes later, Brooke had encased me in her wanton elixirs, was gyrating her hips as she stroked me inside her snatch while keeping me bound, blind and muffled. My phone rang.
‘‘Should I get that?’‘ Brooke teased me. She moved enough to seize my cellular device.
‘‘The number is unlisted,’‘ she mused. ‘‘Who could it be?’‘ I gave a muffled response. She removed the ball-gag enough for me to speak.
‘‘Work,’‘ I repeated. ‘‘It might be work. I'm on-call 24/7.’‘
‘‘Damn,’‘ Brooke undoubtedly pouted (still blindfolded). She answered the call then placed the phone to my ear.
‘‘Cáel, a Security Detail detachment is on their way to your quarters as we speak. You will recognized the code they will use,’‘ Katrina's icy calm voice informed me.
‘‘Katrina, what is wrong?’‘ I inquired. Normally, I wouldn't get an answer. Katrina's tone made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
‘‘There has been an incident at your Father's home in Chicago. We do not have clear intelligence at this time. I may have more when you get in,’‘ she related.
‘‘Understood,’‘ I replied. My passionate storm abated and I felt empty inside. Dad.
‘‘Cáel?’‘ Brooke sounded worried.
‘‘We need to get dressed,’‘ I murmured. I had to let Timothy know something was truly wrong. I needed to get Brooke home safely. I; I needed to know more than I did right then. Brooke uncuffed me quickly. I barely had my boxers on when there was a light series of raps on the door. I sprang up, opened my bedroom door, surprising Odette.
She must have come back to work a few minutes earlier and was unwinding with some low-volume TV and some sofa time. Timothy was asleep already.
‘‘Odette, go back to Timothy's room and warn him something bad may have happened. Go!’‘ I warned. Odette scampered back. Brooke was at my back, trying to move into the main room.
‘‘Brooke, stay here. If something unusual happens, hide in the bedroom and don't come out until the police get here. Do you understand?’‘ I met her confusion with an iron stare. She nodded. There was another, more insistent, rapping at my apartment door. I crept up to the portal and gave a counter-knock.
‘‘Crab Fisher-woman,’‘ a female voice said from the other side.
‘‘My Father's Sister,’‘ I responded. It was an imperfect code, but effective given the circumstances. I double checked through the spy hole, unlocked the door and let three SD Amazons inside. How bad was it? I doubted these ladies would know more than I did.
In Hittite, she said; ‘‘Ishara,’‘ the leader said, ‘‘we have orders to escort you to Havenstone immediately.’‘
They weren't blindly expecting me to follow instructions. They had a directive they were following to the best of their ability.
In Hittite, she said; ‘‘ Will a team be watching my domicile?’‘ I asked. The leader nodded. ‘‘We need to take a female I have been with tonight to her dwelling before going on to Havenstone.’‘
The SD team leader nodded again. There was no condescension, or argument. They were following orders as if it was my right to issue them. That was how bad things were. Time to get back to English.
‘‘Brooke, finish getting dressed. I'm taking you home,’‘ I called out.
Quite frankly, along with my desire to see Brooke back home safely was my instinct to not split up my guardians. Better a longer trip than two smaller, more vulnerable groups. I was in the process of getting dressed in the living room when Timothy and Odette came out.
‘‘Bro?’‘ Timothy asked.
‘‘My Father's home was attacked. I have no other details right now,’‘ I explained with a sinking feeling in my heart. Timothy read my soul, came up and engulfed me in his mighty arms. Odette added herself to the heart-felt love-pile.
‘‘Do you want me to take Odette and head back to Queens for a while?’‘ Timothy asked.
He sensed we had limited time.
‘‘They,’‘ and by 'they' he knew I meant Havenstone, ‘‘will have a team watching this place. There are not enough resources to go back and forth to work. I wish I could tell what would keep you safe, but I don't know anymore.’‘
‘‘We'll stay put,’‘ Timothy declared. Odette nodded. ‘‘We'll be here for you when you get back. If any of these psycho-broads want to stop by from time to time, I won't say no.’‘ I shot a look to the security team leader and she gave a curt 'okay'.
‘‘You'll need an overnight bag!’‘ Odette squeaked. Off she went.
Brooke finished getting dressed and came to my side. To your average Lothario, what she did might seem odd. To me, it was the normal refrain; Brooke shoved her panties into my jean's pocket. That was a not so subtle 'Call Me' for when I got back.
‘‘Three minutes, Ish; Cáel,’‘ the leader updated me.
My amateur guess was this was the team from across the street. They had back-up vehicles and personnel streaking down from Havenstone to provide extra security for my move.
‘‘Velma,’‘ she gave me her name. A quick description was in order. The three Amazons all had Bluetooth devices, shooting glasses and steel-gray long coats that had to be uncomfortable in this upper seventies evening heat.
Underneath, they had on light ballistic body armor on their torsos, arms, and legs. Even their dull grey, all-terrain boots looked armored. They had a hip holstered sidearm, most likely a back-up pistol at the small of their backs and a deadly blade, or three. Their main deterrence was their H and K UMP 40 caliber; my second favorite Amazon killing device.
Timothy snuck off to get my toiletries, returning around the same time Odette trundled out with an overnight (or three) bag. There was a final round of hugs then Velma indicated it was time to leave. The fourth member of the team was stationed at the top of the third floor stairs. That gave her a good view of my hallway as well as the passage going up and down.
Two SD's to the front, Velma and the fourth watching our backs and Brooke caught between giddy and freaking terrified. Things got even more exciting when we hit the bottom of the stairs. Two more ladies were waiting. They put a trench coat on Brooke and she nearly collapsed. The freed up Amazon took my bag while the second put a trench coat on me.
I grunted as well. This bitch had to weigh 25 kg. That was some serious ballistic and blast protection. The closest newcomer began attaching my pistol with hip holster on my side while Brooke was 'buttoned up'. I was slipped a few spare clips then was buttoned up as well.
‘‘I'm not sure I can walk in this thing,’‘ Brooke gave me a weak smile.
‘‘Don't worry,’‘ I smiled, ‘‘I'll carry you.’‘ I slipped my arm around Brooke's waist and, on Velma's signal, we rushed out to the middle of three Mercedes Armored GL550s. The doors had barely shut before we were racing away from my favorite home. I walked Brooke up to her apartment, we hugged, kissed and she insisted I go to the Hamptons with her this weekend.
I left with that promise unanswered. I didn't ask the Security Detail to do anything else outrageous and they didn't give me any crap about Brooke. Their vigilance didn't end at Havenstone either. No; they formed a tight knot of outward hostility until we marched into Katrina's office. Even then, they spread out over the Executive Services offices as an extended perimeter.
Katrina's office was another step up on the unsettling meter. It was Katrina, Saint Marie, Buffy, Helena, and a woman I didn't know yet seemed to belong.
‘‘Excuse me?’‘ Saint Marie shot a hostile look my way; actually right behind me.
‘‘Don't mind me,’‘ Pamela snorted. She was in the process of sneaking into the room.
‘‘I'm here for moral support,’‘ she concluded then took a seat.
‘‘Cáel?’‘ Katrina queried, as if I could somehow exile Pamela from the room.
‘‘What's going on?’‘ I began the meeting instead.
‘‘Your Father is dead,’‘ Katrina reported. If someone ever asked me what it felt like to have an arm cut off, I could truthfully answer them 'Yes'. Dad.
‘‘From what we have been able to gather from the video and audio gear the four Amazon Security Detail team assigned to watch over him transmitted, the team was setting up a perimeter when three vehicles with ten men stopped on the juncture of Janus and Kerr streets and approached the house. The team leader made formal recognition and was attacked,’‘ Katrina told me.
‘‘Are they okay?’‘ I mumbled. I didn't want to know how my Dad died. Had he been in pain? Which side had killed him? Would knowing make a damn bit of difference?
‘‘Three of the four members were killed,’‘ Saint Marie interjected. ‘‘The team commander was killed instantly. The second died defending that corner of your Father's domicile.
The third member was killed attempting to rescue your Father. The surviving member stopped the enemy from escaping with your Father's body, but was too badly injured to extricate herself and is now in police custody.’‘
‘‘What are we going to do about this?’‘ I inquired. Pamela was a lying bitch.
She'd lied to Brianna because the truth would have gotten me and Dad killed. Dad had still died, but Pamela had kept me alive.
‘‘There is nothing we can do,’‘ the stranger spoke up. ‘‘Troika of House Šauška.’‘
‘‘You are joking, right?’‘ I stared at her.
‘‘He was a male, not of;’‘ Troika began to state.
‘‘You do know your Amazon law, correct?’‘ I countered. She gave a curt tilt of the head. ‘‘Recount the means of succession to the Head of a House then please explain to the room how my Father, the descendant of Vranus, fits into all that.’‘
Cha-ching!
‘‘Oh, by the Seven Goddesses!’‘ Saint Marie jumped up. ‘‘They murdered the Head of House Ishara!’‘ Katrina was already back on top; ahead of the game.
‘‘But what does that make him?’‘ Troika pointed at me.
‘‘It confirms him as the Head of House Ishara. We can sugar-coat it and say Cáel, being the only 'active' member of Havenstone 'represented' the Head of House Ishara. By our traditions though, Ferko Nyilas was the lawful head of a 'First' House. Certainly four days were not enough time to settle the manner in an acceptable way,’‘ Katrina said.
‘‘At the very least, House Ishara would have been given 28 days to resolve any matters of succession internally,’‘ Katrina pointed out. ‘‘There was no deception. Cáel worked for Havenstone, so was our active member. The existence of his Father was known. It is in his basic file. It was highly unlikely that ANY House wanted to bring another male into the mix so the matter of his ascension was left unquestioned.’‘
‘‘This is Casus Belli,’‘ Troika stood up and declared in a firm voice. ‘‘I will inform Hayden. We must know the perpetrators of this act, Katrina. I will prepare to relate this breach of the Protocols to the other Signatories.’‘
‘‘To make sure I have this straight, I can defend any member of my family, no matter who they are, without violating the Protocols?’‘ I questioned. ‘‘Can I kill them?’‘
‘‘That is correct,’‘ Troika appeared confused. ‘‘Other Signatories cannot harm, or detain your family in any way.’‘ I gave a bitter, hollow laugh. Dad; Dad wouldn't have understood, but Mom would have, no doubt.
‘‘Troika; hell, everyone but Pamela and Katrina, I am Cáel Nyilas, grandson of The Cáel O'Shea and those people who murdered my Dad very well may have been my family,’‘ I felt like crying.
That was good because I was crying. I had talked to Dad early Monday morning. I had been so nervous about not leaving any trace of Mom behind that I couldn't recall if I said 'I love you' to him. I'd never get the chance to make up for that oversight. As I began to take in the faces around me, I realized Ishara had gifted me with a respite. No one else knew who Cáel O'Shea was; yet.
‘‘Troika,’‘ I started out. I could tell she was still having difficulty with the 'Man as someone worthy of stating an opinion' moment. ‘‘When the Council decides that the Illuminati have breached the Protocols, do I have a deciding vote on what we do; since Dad was my family?’‘
‘‘No,’‘ Troika clarified, ‘‘and what makes you think it was the Illuminati?’‘ Pamela laughed at her.
‘‘Because I killed Cáel's Grandfather when that man was head of the Illuminati; slit his throat and rendered him incapable of resuscitation. The rest of that twisted clan have only now discovered that there is a successor, genetically, to the Old Man and you are looking at him,’‘ Pamela related in an amused tone.
‘‘Perhaps; just perhaps; they were interested in what happened to Cáel's Mother and the man she mated with to produce Cáel; who also happened to be the Head of House Ishara and now leaves this man (me) as the last of his kind; coming and going,’‘ Pamela finished, ‘‘for both the Amazons and the O'Shea family/the Illuminati.’‘
Troika was having problems fitting all the puzzle pieces. Saint Marie cut to the heart of the matter because she listens to me.
‘‘If you go to war against the O'Shea's you are being forced to fight your own family,’‘ the Golden Mare stared at me in shock.
‘‘Let me get this straight,’‘ Troika stood up, waving for silence. ‘‘When the O'Shea's killed Ferko Nyilas, they murdered the Head of a First House. They also murdered a member of their own family by way of marriage.’‘ She seemed totally flummoxed. Everyone agreed about how screwed up everything was. Breach? No Breach?
‘‘Welcome to life working with Cáel Nyilas,’‘ Katrina declared. There was a pause.
‘‘I'll let the professionals figure out the finer points of diplomacy. I have to go,’‘ I said.
‘‘Were do you think you are going?’‘ Buffy popped up. Until this moment, she'd had no role in affairs. My safety though;
‘‘I am going home to bury my Father, Buffy,’‘ I announced. This was not a discussion.
‘‘Shouldn't we take his body to the cliffs?’‘ Troika suggested.
‘‘My Father will face the Afterlife with my Mother at his side. It was his wish and I'm not going to start dictating to my Ancestors now,’‘ I sighed.
I was trying to make light of my pain. By the looks on their faces, I was failing. I had barely exited the office, Buffy, Helena and Pamela in tow. The security team was closing in and my phone rang.
‘‘Cáel Nyilas,’‘ I answered sadly.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, this is Investigator Brewster of the Burnham Police Department. I need a few moments of your time,’‘ a man's voice requested. I hesitated. I looked at my watch.
‘‘Yes; Dad?’‘ I finally spoke.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, your father seems to have been murdered late this evening in a bungled attempted burglary,’‘ he lied. It was a good lie.
If he really believed a bungled robbery consisted of two heavily armed groups shooting a small residential home to pieces he was; nah, he was lying.
‘‘I'm on the next flight to Chicago,’‘ was the response I chose. I had so many 'loser' replies to choose from.
‘‘That would be helpful, Mr. Nyilas,’‘ he told me. ‘‘Do you know when I can expect you?’‘
‘‘Ah; I have no idea when the next plane from New York to Chicago is, but if I can buy a ticket on it, I'm there,’‘ I countered. Admittedly, me having a plane ticket for home would have been damn suspicious.
‘‘One last thing, Mr. Nyilas, do you have any idea why someone would want to murder your father? Anything you could tell us could be of great assistance,’‘ he pressed.
‘‘Yes, I have a clue who murdered my Father and I'll point you to the dead bodies when I'm done,’‘ I snapped; quite literally and mentally snapped. Pause.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, I understand you are upset, but do not do anything rash. Now, could your father have been murdered for anything you might have done, or are doing?’‘ Det. Brewster kept is game face on.
‘‘We'll have this chat when I get to Chicago. Until then, take care,’‘ I said before hanging up.
‘‘Smooth,’‘ Pamela gently chastised me.
‘‘I actually liked him going all 'Mafia Don' on that cop,’‘ Buffy countered.
‘‘I'll arrange for Havenstone to get us transportation to Chicago,’‘ Helena added.
‘‘No,’‘ I countermanded her. ‘‘You two stay here and finish up business. Join me late Tuesday night, or early Wednesday morning.’‘
By the looks Buffy and Helena gave me they were surprised; and proud. I was keeping to my 'Runner' induction time table. My family would not be diminished by this tragedy. It would grow. Come Wednesday morning, we would add twenty new voices to Ishara's war cry.
‘‘I'll take the first commercial flight available,’‘ I continued.
‘‘We cannot protect you on a civilian aircraft, Ishara,’‘ Velma warned me.
‘‘They; the authorities are expecting me to show up at O'Hare, so I'm showing up at O'Hare, like a normal person,’‘ I reminded her. ‘‘I'll also need to know at what hospital they are keeping our sister.’‘ Our sister; the sole surviving Amazon who nearly gave her life for Dad.
The SD picked up on that immediately. Another leap had been made. I wasn't a masculine monster, raging against a female warrior who had failed. By the tone of my voice, they knew I was in grief yet not overcome by it. She was the last member of the Host to see my Father alive and she might hold the closure I needed.
‘‘It will be done,’‘ Velma decided. ‘‘We will have your team meet you at O'Hare.’‘
‘‘My team?’‘ I asked.
‘‘Rachel; her team,’‘ Velma clarified. That was enough good for me.
‘‘Oh, and get Pamela a ticket as well. I'd hate to have her mug another passenger and take theirs,’‘ I sighed. Pamela patted me on the back; an 'atta boy'.
(Monday Noon)
(The hospital)
That was not the first time I wondered about how fatal Pamela had been in her prime. In fact, I wasn't sure that post-60 wasn't her best time yet. The only mistake the police officer guarding the Amazon's hospital room made was to sit in a chair. Pamela had long ago mastered the peon-craft that Rosetta had started to teach me.
The policeman looked up, stared right through her then looked the other way. His gaze never swept back in my direction. She jabbed him quickly underneath both arms, paralyzing them for a few seconds. That was all she needed. Hers hand clamped over his eyes and on his throat, cutting off the blood flow to the brain before his hands could recover.
He appeared to the outside world to have taken a nap. According to Pamela, we had roughly three minutes before he came around. Pamela kept walking down the hall as if nothing happened. I came ten steps behind, guarded by a gun-less Rachel as I entered the Intensive Care Unit. A few of the staff looked our way, but no one impeded our progress.
According to the Duty Nurse, the Amazon had exited surgery barely an hour ago. Her eyes opened to slits as I approached her beside.
‘‘We stand before the Eye of the World,’‘ I whispered. That meant surveillance. ‘‘I cannot tell you what is in my heart. My name is Cáel Nyilas. Does that name mean anything to you?’‘
Her hand flopped. I put two fingers into her feeble gasp. One squeeze; yes. ‘‘I am grateful for your prowess and I share in your sorrow for those who will no longer fight in this life. Please heal and grow strong for this is the start, not the finish,’‘ I completed. She squeezed my fingers once more. I stepped aside, letting Rachel take my place.
They didn't exchange words but communicated volumes. We slipped out of the room while the guard was still groggy. Pamela was nowhere to be seen. That proved to be pre-sentient when a group of people with the propensity to flash IDs caught up to me at the ground floor.
Had the backdrop of this fiasco not been the death of my Father, I might have enjoyed the twitching/counter-twitching going on between Rachel, who desperately wanted any one of her guns, and the cops who were picking up on that desire.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, I am;’‘ and the introductions came pouring in.
I had Theodora Chumwell and Brock Miklos, Special Agents of the FBI, John Rios, Special Agent with the ATF, Investigator Horace Brewster from the Burnham PD and Homicide Detective Lisa Capella from the Chicago PD.
‘‘We would like to talk with you,’‘ Theodora took charge.
‘‘Can I ask a question first?’‘ I raised my hand. That appeared to set them off their game plan.
‘‘Of course,’‘ Theodora allowed.
‘‘Okay; FBI, ATF, a homicide detective from Chicago and the only law enforcement official who has any business being here,’‘ I finished with Brewster.
‘‘I may not be a Rhodes Scholar, but this seems a bit extreme for the burglary/murder of a long-time employee of Illinois Power and Light. Does anyone care to fill me on what the hell is going on?’‘ I looked over the group. ‘‘Oh, and thank you Investigator Brewster for your call. I know I didn't take the news well.’‘
‘‘Was that the part where you said you would point to the dead bodies?’‘ Theodora took charge.
‘‘Yes, I think that was the gaff I was referring to,’‘ I agreed.
‘‘Why are you here, Mr. Nyilas?’‘ Lisa Capella jumped in. She had decided to not go along with the FBI playbook.
‘‘I came to see the woman found alive in my family home,’‘ I replied smoothly.
‘‘She is probably still in surgery,’‘ Lisa gave a twist of the lips; sex.
‘‘Oh, she got out an hour ago,’‘ I enlightened them.
‘‘Let's take this conversation to FBI Headquarters,’‘ Theodora 'suggested'; you know, in the way that really wasn't a suggestion.
‘‘Have you gone to see that woman?’‘ Lisa wouldn't let up; good for her. It was upsetting Theodora and I'd already decided that Brewster was my go-to guy on this investigation.
‘‘Yes,’‘ I responded to Lisa.
‘‘Isn't she under police protection?’‘ Lisa and Theodora blurted out together.
‘‘There was a policeman at her door,’‘ I shrugged. ‘‘We went in and I talked to her.’‘
‘‘What did she say?’‘ Theodora brushed Lisa aside.
‘‘Nothing. She had one of those tubes down her throat. Whatever I said; well, I was emotional,’‘ I evaded. ‘‘She was barely conscious.’‘
Lisa was urgently contacting her guy who was supposed to be watching the only person in custody they had. He claimed to have 'blacked out'. He couldn't remember anyone coming in to see the woman and swore he hadn't been unconscious for any length of time. He went in, checked up on the Amazon and she was fine; for someone who had been shot six times.
‘‘We should go to the FBI offices,’‘ Theodora repeated.
‘‘I'm going home,’‘ I sighed sadly. ‘‘I want to go home.’‘
‘‘It is still an active crime scene,’‘ John told me. ‘‘There won't be any civilian access for some time.’‘ Translation: until they decided to give me the carrot instead of the stick.
‘‘Please, come with us,’‘ FBI Special Agent Brock added his weight.
‘‘No. I'm going with Burnham PD,’‘ I countered. ‘‘You can find me there.’‘
‘‘That's not how it works,’‘ Theodora upped her authority meter. Lisa had fallen back, trying to take in the bigger picture.
Brewster was clearly trying to recall if he had Any history with me, or my Dad, that would make me trust him over the others.
‘‘I may be a liberal arts major from northern New England, but I know how a larynx works,’‘ I regarded Theodora. ‘‘Unless I choose to make a sound, it does nothing. Nothing is about to be all we have left to do and say.’‘
‘‘Don't you want to help solve your Father's murder?’‘ Brock tried to sound both sympathetic and threatening at the same time. I was suddenly bombarded with the taste of Lime Sherbet and Jalapenos Ice Cream.
‘‘Really? Fine; I'm going to hang out with the only person in this room I know is working on my Father's murder, not on their career,’‘ I reposed.
‘‘We are all trying to;’‘ Lisa got out.
‘‘You maybe,’‘ I gave Lisa that much. ‘‘My Father made around $70,000 a year after twenty-six years for Illinois P and L. He had almost paid off the colossal debt built up by my Mother's illness and my college expenses.’‘
‘‘As far as I know, he took out one loan his entire life; from a bank; and he paid it off,’‘ I continued. ‘‘He was a lapsed Catholic, a member of the IBEW; Local 9, and he jogged. He barely used e-mail and had no close friends I am aware of. The only woman he loved was my Mother and he mourned her to the day he died.’‘
‘‘What about your activity?’‘ Theodora inquired. We weren't running off to her playground; yet. Handcuffing a grieving son would look bad and, by my attitude, wouldn't make me talkative in the least.
‘‘I have the unfortunate habit of sleeping with every woman I meet,’‘ I began.
‘‘So that's over 200 erotic encounters. I get annoyed with people throwing their weight around,’‘ I continued, ‘‘which is why you and I are getting off on the wrong foot, Special Agent Theodora Chumwell. I work for Havenstone Commercial Investments, getting paid an insane amount to fetch laundry and keep secrets. Good enough?’‘
‘‘No, it is not;’‘ Theodora simmered.
‘‘How did you know about the existence of the woman upstairs and how did you know to come here?’‘ Lisa interrupted.
‘‘I grew up in that house, know the neighbors and know this is the closest EMS center to home,’‘ I lied convincingly.
‘‘Who are you?’‘ Brewster decided that I wasn't exiting the hospital gracefully so turned on Rachel. She didn't speak, choosing to be creepy and brandishing a wallet instead. I kept forgetting that most full-blooded Amazons had minimal socialization with outsiders. Having graduated elementary school, everyone else knew this was a bizarre reaction.
‘‘Rachel Louis,’‘ Brewster read off the license in the wallet. A normal person would have acknowledged that somehow; not Rachel. ‘‘You are Rachel Louis, aren't you?’‘
‘‘Yes, she is,’‘ I intervened. ‘‘Rachel is a co-worker at Havenstone and she is misanthropic misandrist.’‘
There was a pregnant pause. The confusion wasn't with 'misanthropic'. It was a grown-up word in usage with colorful police-types. It was 'misandrist' that had them stumped.
‘‘Rachel is an unsociable man-hater,’‘ I explained. ‘‘Standing at my side in this hospital is ten kinds of Hell for her.’‘
‘‘What kind of piece do you normal carry?’‘ Rios asked her. Unsocial didn't mean stupid.
‘‘I use a Glock-22 and Rachel carries a STI Perfect 10,’‘ I answered. ‘‘We have been experiencing quite a gopher problem around the office.’‘ I could have done better; I should have done better. I was just too tired inside to create an inventive lie.
‘‘Do have gun licenses for those weapons?’‘ Mr. ATF kept prodding at our cover story.
‘‘It seems Ms. Louis; is it Ms. Ms. Louis?’‘ Brewster continued. I flashed Rachel a look which she interpreted correctly.
‘‘Yes, my name is Ms. Rachel Louis,’‘ Rachel replied. To me, ‘‘I find this distraction to be annoying. We should go.’‘
‘‘It would seem Ms. Louis has all kinds of;’‘ Brewster got out before Rachel snatched the wallet from his grip with the speed of a Peregrine Falcon. Brewster had this stunned look familiar to crows, doves and starlings the world over as one of their kin passed into the next life in a flash. A combination of 'No you didn't!' with 'what the flock?'
‘‘Ah;’‘ Brewster got out.
‘‘On that note, I think we will be going,’‘ I shrugged. To Rachel, ‘‘You do not get out enough.’‘
‘‘Can I see your wallet again?’‘ Brewster was still confused by Rachel's rudeness. He was a cop for the love of God. People not wanting to go to jail do not snatch things from a cop's hands.
‘‘I gave you my wallet. I am not to blame if you used its time in your possession unwisely,’‘ Rachel counterattacked. ‘‘Unless there is a legal technicality, we shall be leaving. If there is a legal issue, here,’‘ she produced a business card with a flourish, ‘‘is the contact information for our legal department.’‘ Theodora took the card gingerly then read it.
‘‘Havenstone again,’‘ she mused. ‘‘Are you sure this is the path you wish to take, Mr. Nyilas?’‘
‘‘Are you insane?’‘ I trembled with emotion. ‘‘I want to be back in New York, working my queue and thinking about what my date and I will be doing tonight. I want my Dad to be alive. I don't want to be thinking that the last time we talked I forgot to tell him I loved him.’‘
‘‘Path, you Idiot!’‘ I screamed at Theodora. Screw it, I was crying again. ‘‘Not a damn thing any of you can do will bring my Dad back to me; so fuck off!’‘ In a strange way, that was what they had been looking for. Not my wounded soul, but my rage and pain toward a World suddenly found to be cruel and pointless.
Behind my crumbling façade was another worry. Outside in the parking lot were three Amazons with weapons ready to rush to my aid. It wasn't that the Host was rash, or reckless, by nature. I was one of the fifty-six most important people in their society. Three other SD members had died in the defense of House Ishara already and they were damn sure those women would not have died in vain.
I wasn't leaving in federal custody willingly and if I walked out in restraints, I wasn't sure if they would decide offing some law enforcement agents and staging my kidnapping was the best course of action. Remember, I wanted to bury my Father. They wanted to keep me alive. If those two goals collided, they would apologize after the fact.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, I really believe we should;’‘ Theodora got out then I brushed past her. It was a delicate moment and the chemistry between Rachel and I wasn't lost on most of them. She was a bodyguard yet my servant too. It was professional tribalism; two words that don't normally get along. Rios picked up on the other undercurrent.
He recoiled from Rachel, retreating to buy space when/if Rachel attacked. Unlike the rest, he sensed that aggression by law enforcement would be met with lethal force. The Amazon didn't care about the badge and the legions of fellow officers backing it up. She was fearless. Things weren't over yet.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, where are you going next?’‘ Detective Lisa came after us.
‘‘I; I don't know,’‘ I muttered. ‘‘Where is my Father's body? I know he wanted to be cremated and buried beside Mom; I guess.’‘ Brewster came hurrying along.
‘‘He is at the Medical Examiner's Office,’‘ Lisa informed me. ‘‘Come with me.’‘
‘‘Why don't you give me the address?’‘ I sighed.
‘‘Do you and your buddy know your way around Chicago, Hometown Boy?’‘ Lisa kept it up. She was hitting on me and lining me up at the same time.
‘‘How about we cut to the chase?’‘ I looked at her with tear-soaked eyes.
‘‘We'll take my cars; cars with an 's',’‘ I offered. ‘‘I am a hometown boy. I've never had a reason to locate the Medical Examiner before. Since I have a boatload of angry women with guns who will not fit into your sedan and leaving them behind isn't an option, mine is the only means of travel that makes sense.’‘
Low and behold, the two cops looked at each other then followed Rachel and I to our little caravan. We were too close for the officers to have missed Rachel snapping off some quick, coded instructions to her team; most likely to hide the seriously illegal firearms. To say the Amazons were not pleased with my decisions spoke volumes to their concern for me and lack of police experience.
Pamela, who had beaten us back to the cars, seemed privately entertained as always. Rachel was reluctantly sitting up front. Lisa, Brewster and I were in the second row and Pamela sat in back. Not only did the two not get a good look at Pamela, she was perfectly placed to do all kinds of mischief unseen.
‘‘So the woman upstairs works with you?’‘ Lisa asked as we pulled out.
‘‘Where to?’‘ Tiger Lily (I still wasn't used to that name) requested of our Police 'buddies'. Lisa popped off the address. It was 'I'll scratch your back, you'll scratch mine'. Tiger Lily entered the data into the onboard computer and off we went.
‘‘No. She does not work for me, or my boss, directly. She was at my Father's on my behalf though I was unaware of it,’‘ I related.
‘‘Are you going to tell us what the hell happened?’‘ Brewster prodded.
‘‘That I don't know. I am not personally aware of anyone who would want to kill my Father, or me,’‘ I answered.
‘‘Anyone who would want to get at me would come at me, not Dad,’‘ I continued. ‘‘I don't live in a fortress. It is a hardly spacious apartment near the East River. I share the place with my roommate, Timothy Denver, and a; companion by the name of Odette Sievert.’‘
‘‘Companion? Is she; a working girl?’‘ Lisa went searching.
‘‘No, I use the term companion to indicate she's too nice a girl for me. She's sweet, conscientious and giving. My only wish for Odette is that she finds a guy who can appreciate her a hell of a lot more than I do,’‘ I explained. ‘‘Timothy is my gay, body-building tattoo artist best friend. I've gotten the feeling he's busted some heads in his time. Hardly anything noteworthy.’‘
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, have you ever considered that you live a very messy life?’‘ Brewster pondered.
‘‘One does not 'consider' what one knows to be true. One knows it to be true and moves on,’‘ I grumbled. ‘‘Yes, I know I live a screwed up life.’‘
‘‘What about your friends here?’‘ Lisa indicated the other three women in the vehicle. This elicited another groan from me.
‘‘Investigator Brewster; Horace and Detective Capella; Lisa, please call me Cáel. This is the point I accept that I am exhausted and not in any shape to make good decisions. I'll plead the Fifth,’‘ I confessed.
‘‘We already know you were in New York when your father was murdered, Mister; Cáel,’‘ Brewster stated.
‘‘Everyone we've talked to says you and your father were very close. Barring some expensive Life Insurance policy being taken out on him, we have no reason to suspect you had a direct hand in his death. Not being a suspect, that implies you have no Fifth Amendment, or Miranda Rights to hide behind; just so we are clear,’‘ Brewster schooled me.
‘‘I can make this game of footsy easy on all of you,’‘ Pamela whispered. The officers jolted in their seats. ‘‘Cáel cannot talk to you for the very reason the Fifth Amendment exists.’‘
‘‘You are not like the rest of this menagerie,’‘ Lisa noted.
‘‘Nah, I kill people for a living. The rest of the group has some code of conduct that keeps you two alive,’‘ Pamela smiled.
Those two didn't know what to make of Pamela's statement because it was so sincere yet incredible.
‘‘If Cáel tells you anything else he will be admitting to his involvement in a criminal conspiracy. Said conspiracy is why Ferko Nyilas is dead, but Cáel had nothing to do with it,’‘ Pamela enlightened them.
Fact digestion time for the two law dogs. Brewster recovered faster.
‘‘But why was Ferko Nyilas murdered?’‘ he asked.
‘‘The men didn't come to kill him,’‘ Pamela kept talking about the tea and crumpets. ‘‘They probably showed up to escort him to a place where some far more important scumbags could talk with him.’‘
‘‘The all-girl squad was there and Ferko was caught in the crossfire,’‘ Lisa mumbled. ‘‘Why was there a firefight if his life was in danger and both sides wanted him alive?’‘
‘‘Stupidity,’‘ Pamela replied. ‘‘Give any group of people guns and then surprise them, stupid shit happens; I apologize Cáel.’‘
‘‘I don't buy that,’‘ Brewster said. ‘‘They simply started shooting at each other; no.’‘
‘‘Okay Horace, let me break it down for you. The ladies were told to go there and guard the guy without being told why. The men who showed up were most likely told to grab Ferko without knowing why either.’‘
‘‘That makes no sense,’‘ Lisa protested.
‘‘Congratulations. That is why Cáel can't talk to you anymore,’‘ Pamela smirked. ‘‘This is the sort of crap he has inadvertently been caught up with; no fault of his own. If he did any of this on purpose, I'd kill him myself.’‘
‘‘He is some poor schmuck who only wanted a 7 to 5 job, to make tons of money and bedding a different girl every night,’‘ Pamela teased me. ‘‘He's no criminal mastermind, or even a convincing criminal. If he has a failing it is that he tends to merely beat up people who deserve to have their spleens ripped out instead. I'm training him to be smarter than that.’‘
‘‘Who are you?’‘ Brewster gawked. Pamela gave a sinister smile. Lisa looked at me.
‘‘I've fought a woman with a twelve foot stick with a pointy bit of metal at the end with little thought to my personal safety. This lady (Pamela) scares me. She is with me because I have no means of stopping her and I put saving others a great deal of pain and suffering over my own unsettled nerves.’‘
‘‘Do you really think you are that good?’‘ Lisa half-turned around to face Pamela.
‘‘Do you want your gun back?’‘ Pamela offered up a police issue Glock 22, grip first. My kind of gun. How sad. I was too depressed to seduce Officer Lisa. Brewster reached around to check is firearm. It was still there, much to his relief.
‘‘How did you do that?’‘ Lisa wondered as she retrieved and inspected her weapon. Pamela tapped Brewster's shoulder with the man's magazine. Brewster was aghast. She'd stolen his gun, taken out the ammo and returned it without him noticing.
‘‘I found it on the floor. The truth is a bit more expensive than you are willing to pay at the moment, believe me,’‘ Pamela grinned.
Why had Pamela showboated? She was buying me some mental respite. She was also exhibiting to the two police folks that there might be some truth to her outlandish tale of criminal conspiracies. Unlike the other Amazons, Pamela knew we had to maintain friendly relations with some part of law enforcement if I was going to bury my Father.
(The Medical Examiner's Office)
So much happens in life we rarely put the timespan of events in context. Talking with a person in line who turns out to make your day better/worse, become a friend and/or a date. In a matter of a few seconds your life has been altered. Two minutes later and you would have missed getting the concert tickets where you meet your future; whomever.
Two minutes sooner and you get caught in the 'speed trap' instead of the other poor sap who you drive past as they sit on the side of the road keeping the patrol officer company. His/her insurance rate goes up while you have that extra money for later. Had we arrived two minutes earlier to the morgue; disaster aborted. Two minutes later would have equated to a frustrating mystery.
Life was not so kind. It was the same group as before; Detective Lisa, Investigator Horace, Rachel and I. We had just added an Assistant Medical Examiner who was going over information garnered from the autopsy with the two cops. Pamela was 'checking things out', whatever that meant. The key to it all was Rachel being Rachel.
Security Detail are more than simply elite fighting-women. They are also bodyguards, security specialist and normally stack a third specialty into the mix. When Rachel spotted five armed people in the hallway right outside the Medical Examiner's autopsy room, her alertness spiked. Only one was a uniformed police officer. Rachel was still gun-less.
The two EMS personnel rolling an occupied body bag out on a gurney shouldn't have had on their heavy jackets on a late June afternoon. The other two men were chatting about something. That wasn't unusual. Where they were standing was; to Lisa's experienced eye. Rachel's heightened anxiety made Lisa double-check everything.
Horace didn't know what was wrong yet when Lisa's hand came to rest on her piece, he put his hand on his Ruger SR45.
‘‘Excuse me,’‘ Lisa called out. No one stopped moving. ‘‘Excuse me,’‘ Lisa demanded in a louder voice. ‘‘I am Detective Lisa Capella, Chicago Police Department; Homicide Division. What is going on?’‘
That was a reach. Bodies exit the morgue all the time. The two people with the body made sense. The two 'odd' fellows weren't breaking any law. In cop-talk, this was called 'gut instinct'. She produced her badge. There was a quick look by the two ambulance folk to the farther of the two 'talking' men.
That group were rather competent, just not competent conmen. The two EMS guys turned and tried to give Lisa a causal look.
‘‘What can we do for you, officer?’‘ the designated diplomat asked nonchalantly.
‘‘Whose body is that?’‘ Lisa inquired.
‘‘I'm not sure; all we do is pick 'em up and take them to the appropriate funeral home,’‘ he shrugged.
‘‘Take ten seconds and show me the release order,’‘ Lisa gave a chilly command. The cop at the far end of the hall; the one with the door that lead to the loading/unloading area, was starting to clue in that something wasn't right.
‘‘Oh, by the Great Pumpkin, this is bad,’‘ Brewster muttered under his breath like a thousand other fathers who engaged in the daily struggle to not curse at work so they wouldn't curse around their children.
‘‘Of course, Detective Capella,’‘ the diplomat nodded. ‘‘Is there a problem?’‘ He carefully pulled out his smart phone and handed it over.
Lisa wasn't born yesterday. She handed the phone to me instead of looking at it herself. She was keeping her eyes on the guys with guns. They really did have an order to transfer my Father to a mortuary. Apparently I had requested this be done; without my knowledge.
‘‘Cáel Nyilas requested his father be taken to the Green Meadows mortuary in Cicero,’‘ I informed Lisa, Rachel and Horace.
‘‘I need to talk to Mr. Nyilas,’‘ Lisa informed them. ‘‘If I can't talk to him, I can't let the body leave this building. This is an ongoing investigation.’‘ The 'diplomat' was worried yet Lisa had given him an out. After I returned his phone, he called his off-site boss, who gave him a number which the diplomat gave to Lisa. Lisa called 'me' without my phone ringing.
Even so, 'I' confirmed the authorization. The four gunmen relaxed as Lisa hung up.
‘‘One more question,’‘ Lisa pulled a 'Columbo', ‘‘was this a rush job, or are you all 'not ready for prime time players'?’‘ The 'diplomat' made one last lunge at deception.
‘‘Detective Capella, our work order is legitimate,’‘ he shrugged helplessly. ‘‘I don't know what you mean?’‘
‘‘Funeral homes have their own uniforms; they do not dress as EMS,’‘ Lisa deconstructed their illusions. ‘‘The bodies of murder victim are not released by the Medical Examiner until a cause of death is known and that information is released to the homicide detective assigned to the case; that would be me, if there was any doubt.
Your two buddies down the hall could have read and critiqued the Magna Carta in the time it has taken for you to do your 'song and dance',’‘ Lisa pointed out. ‘‘Oh, and the real Cáel Nyilas is standing next to me. Whoever talked with me on the phone is going to jail too. Now I suggest the four of you face the wall, put your hands over your head, palms against the wall and no one will get hurt.’‘
Darwin check time; they drew their guns. Of course they drew their guns. Why would they not draw their guns considering the farthest enemy was all of 4 meters away and the only immediately cover was my Dad's horizontal corpse? Gurneys tend to be lightweight and mostly empty space.
The quickest on the draw was one of the two 'talkers'. He whipped out a 357 Magnum revolver and popped two shots into the police officer next to him; right in the center mass at less than 2 meters; ouch. Rachel was next, making a diving front roll between the two cops, toward the two fake EMS guys. I was right behind her, except my plan was to vault Dad's body and get at the second talker. I was not acting sanely.
The second talker went in the next split second. He had brought a sawed-off automatic shotgun to the fight. His first salvo blew a chunk out of the wall next to Lisa's hip. She was less than an eye-blink behind as she put two slugs into the 'diplomat's' armored chest. He was kind enough to drop his Mac 11 from his twitching fingers and into Rachel's hands.
Less than a single heartbeat later, the 'diplomat's EMS buddy revealed his own Mac 11. His mistake was not shooting his first target; Brewster. He was tracking Rachel and me instead, hoping to catch us together in a spray of lead. The general feeling was that, for all his law enforcement experience, Investigator Brewster had never actually shot at anyone before.
His cop instincts kicked into overdrive. The perpetrators appeared to be wearing body armor and possessed a small arsenal of illegal weapons. His aim tweaked up, he pulled the trigger and a 45 ACP round effectively decapitated his target; our first confirmed casualty. My encounter with the Latin Kings had been a lesson in poor tactical flexibility.
This time, by unspoken agreement, the two talkers were exercising their tactical acumen as they began withdrawing toward the exit. With the short range, width of the hall and lack of cover, being shot at by a shotgun, or a 357 didn't make much difference. I was trying to jump onto the gurney and launch myself at the two when my toe caught on the bottom of Dad's body, turning my heroic rush into a face-plant on Father.
The men's cover fire worked on Lisa and Horace. Lisa, being more exposed, had to dive flat. Horace crouch-ran to Rachel. Rachel, with her submachine gun, was firing a steady stream of bullets from between the gurney's top surface and bottom shelf. Her shots shattered shotgun guy's shins and blasted off his knee caps.
As that bastard screamed and toppled forward, Rachel emptied the magazine into both his thighs and his right hip. By the copious nature of the blood spray, an artery had been clipped, if not severed. Horace grabbed the back of my jacket and yanked me off the gurney, down to his side. Lisa fired off a few shots at the vanishing leader, but he was already out the door.
Rachel was rifling the closest EMS's headless body, looking for a fresh clip for the M 11.
‘‘Don't,’‘ Horace cautioned her. Lisa was running to the door.
‘‘Rachel, leave the gun and follow me,’‘ I commanded.
‘‘Wait,’‘ Horace called out. He was in an impossible situation. The bold Assistant ME began looking for any survivors, starting with the diplomat.
Detective Capella was chasing after a possible cop-killer. I was already running after Lisa and Horace couldn't ride herd on Rachel, catch me and support Lisa all at once. Rachel muttered in Hittite 'dirty goat' at my fleeting form. I was sure its true meaning was far nastier.
‘‘Da-darn it,’‘ Horace grimaced as he started rushing after the three of us.
I doubted it was any consolation to Horace that Lisa shot me an evil look when I caught up to her at the loading dock. There were no cars peeling away and had the bad guy fled out the huge doors 15 meters away, she would have seen him. Rachel arrived next.
‘‘Secure my Father's body,’‘ I instructed. She wasn't pleased but she wasn't talking back either.
Horace showed up last of all. He was talking over his walky-talky, updating the Chicago PD on all the crazy, tragic crap that had gone down. Rachel slipped past Horace on her way back to Dad. The unspoken order was for her to re-arm and stay close, something she couldn't do under Horace's watchful gaze. Lisa and Horace were working out a plan to take their perpetrator down and it didn't include me. I was a civilian after all.
My thinking was traipsing in a different direction. They were thinking criminal evasion. I was thinking stone cold, bad-ass killer. He may have already killed one police officer in cold blood. Why not make it three? There was also the mathematics of it all. Two guns are more likely to hit a target than one; I had learned that bit of tactical insight from my time with Aya.
My disadvantage was my advantage. I didn't have a gun so I didn't have to position myself so I could shoot at anyone else.
‘‘Here I go,’‘ I alerted the two officers. My body was flying onto the loading deck before they could stop me. My cockamamie idea saved my life.
Maybe he thought I stumbled and lost my piece. Maybe, at the last second, he saw through my deception. Maybe he was wondering what the last episode of 'Defiance' would be like. We'll never know. According to Lisa, he was tracking my fall with his 3 57 Magnum. He didn't shoot because he only had two bullets left, hadn't been able to reload yet and his Berretta 9 mm back-up pistol was on the other side of his body.
Two bullets; two cops, he was probably sure he could beat me to death. Anyway, when he figured out the sacrificial lamb was the unarmed me, he returned his aim to the entryway, Lisa and Horace. The guy wasn't behind any sort of cover. He was pressed against the wall so he wouldn't be able to bring his other pistol into play inside that first split second.
When Lisa shot him, it had to hurt, but didn't put him down. She shot again; missed. He shot, missed, shot again hitting Lisa and knocking her back and down. The leader pivoted off the wall, bringing his Berretta to bare on Investigator Brewster. A lifetime inside the blink of an eye; Horace's bullet hit the criminal; major brain splatter. Poor Horace.
Horace was falling onto his side, taking a wild shot and hoping to keep the gunman from shooting Lisa and I when he accidentally ended the man's existence. The lead bad guy's final shot zipped passed Horace's left shoulder, over my legs and ricocheted off the loading dock wall and into space.
Good old Lisa, she staggered to her feet then stumbled over to the gunman, seeking some signs of life. He was alive. Horace's 45 slug had 'only' removed the top half of his brain so the heart and lungs were still being told to beat and breath. As she was making her own call for Emergency Services, a piece of the man's skull that had been clinging to the wall plopped down.
That broke Horace. He began vomiting. I rolled over to a sitting position. Rachel peeked in then utilized her blue tooth to stop the rest of the SD team from swarming me in a public building. Cops began showing up. As soon as Detective Capella had made her initial report and dealt with the traumatic injuries among the survivors, she turned on me.
‘‘Are you insane!’‘ she screamed at yours truly.
‘‘Yes,’‘ I muttered. ‘‘I've been trying to tell you that for over an hour now.’‘
‘‘This is not a joking matter,’‘ Lisa moved into my personal space. Was I really so far gone I didn't want sex? Nah; I could do her. ‘‘I could have killed people.’‘
‘‘To be fair,’‘ I stood up, ‘‘you didn't kill anyone.’‘ The policeman was clinging to life, the 'diplomat' had been saved by his body armor and the second talker's prospects didn't look promising. ‘‘Horace buried two and I'm betting the guy Rachel shot isn't going to survive having both his femoral arteries cut.
Two decades of Law and Order has taught me that some sort of Internal Affair's investigation is going to happen. I imagine there is a great deal of surveillance video so you should be vindicated quickly. We are still going to part ways for a while,’‘ I pointed out. ‘‘Take care.’‘ I made to leave.
‘‘Where do you think you are going?’‘ Lisa grabbed my arm. ‘‘You were involved in a gunfight in a major municipal building. You can't walk away.’‘
‘‘Yes I can,’‘ I grunted. ‘‘Horace, I've pointed you at the dead bodies,’‘ I told the Burnham investigator.
‘‘Good luck,’‘ I patted him on the shoulder. The look he came back with wasn't one of resigned defeat. Oh no, he was going to figure out what the fuck was going on, or else. The rest of the Chicago PD wasn't letting to let us leave either, so off Rachel and I were taken to the closest Precinct where we were non-communicative.
(Back with the Feds)
Theodora rescued me and Rachel into Federal custody where we were equally useless. It didn't take me long to figure out that, compared to Rachel, I was being downright verbose. If me being a jackass was a bonus for the Feds, they didn't exhibit an ounce of appreciation. I really loved Special Agent John Rios getting all 'super ass-kicker' on me.
I was looking at 'serious' federal jail time. I was a 'domestic terrorist' and under the Patriot Act; then I fell out of my chair laughing. I was fatigued; my ability to separate desire from reality was fading plus I always fought back with my wits before my fists.
‘‘I've been awake for thirty-six hours,’‘ I chuckled as I regained my seat.
‘‘What is your excuse for being delusional?’‘ I snorted.
‘‘I trip up cocky bastards like you all the time,’‘ John sat on the table, hovering above me. ‘‘You think you've got all the angles covered. You don't, Mr. Nyilas. People like you take things for granted, screw up and then you are all turning on each other like rats.’‘
‘‘Ugh,’‘ I sighed. ‘‘Fine, Brainiac, what am I doing wrong? To clarify the question for you, what crime am I involved with that makes me a criminal, a terrorist, or a criminal terrorist?’‘
‘‘Guns, Cáel Nyilas,’‘ John sneered. ‘‘With all the people running around with all those firearms, it is pretty freaking obvious.’‘
‘‘Wow; uh; John;’‘ I started.
‘‘Special Agent Rios,’‘ John interrupted.
‘‘John, and I'm calling you John in the hopes that you will get pissy like a little school wench and storm out in a tantrum,’‘ I continued, ‘‘did my Father have any illegal guns on his premises that weren't brought in by one of his attackers?’‘
‘‘Why did such heavily armed assailants show up unless they were expecting a nasty firefight?’‘ Rios stabbed a finger at me.
‘‘Ask Horace and Lisa,’‘ I grinned. ‘‘As soon as they finish their Internal Affairs investigation, I might help them figure that out.
They are honest, hard-working law enforcement agents, unlike you, you mentally-bereft catamite,’‘ I finished. ‘‘I want my lawyer. Now scoot and don't let the Patriot Act hit you in the fundamentals on the way out.’‘ John glared then left. Time passed, my Havenstone-hired lawyer sat down with me and we went over the case.
Winslow Pratt was from a nice law firm. He also knew nothing about what was going on, or he gave me no signal he knew jack about real events. He wanted to know the truth. I told him my Dad had been murdered, I had come from my home in New York City to Chicago/Burnham to bury him and settle his estate. What did I want? To see my family home, to get a good night's sleep and go home without being shot at again.
He encouraged me to trust him. I asked why. He said he was my lawyer. I repeated, 'why should I trust you'. He could only help me if I told him everything.
‘‘If that's the case, you are clearly substandard and you are fired. Good bye,’‘ I dismissed him.
‘‘Mr. Nyilas, you don't understand the serious nature of your case,’‘ Winslow kept at it.
‘‘I'll make it easy on you,’‘ I shook my head. ‘‘What do the cops know?’‘
‘‘We won't know everything until the discovery phase of the prosecution's case,’‘ he politely answered.
‘‘It keeps getting better,’‘ I sighed. ‘‘They have nothing because there is nothing. As far as I know, my Father never fired a gun in his life.’‘
‘‘I'm not a gun-runner. I'm not a runner of any kind. I'm a cyclist. I've never been arrested for anything. I'm pretty sure my Dad never was. All my wages in sin were earned through my philandering ways. When sex is involved, I can be incredibly deceptive,’‘ I told him. ‘‘Outside of sex, I've never seen the point.
So you don't know me and you don't know what's going on yet you assume I'm guilty; thus in need of your services. I have proven I don't need someone who knows less about this shit than I do. You can go out there, find out what I'm charged with and what evidence they have, proving your worth, or you can get lost. Either way, good day, Mr. Pratt,’‘ I yawned.
Off went Lawyer Pratt and down my head went on the table for a bit of a nap. They had taken all my clothes and accessories at the Medical Examiner's crime scene. I had no way to tell time, except through my hunger and thirst. Theodora came storming into my room, hellishly infuriated. She flashed a phone at me.
‘‘What is the meaning of this?’‘ she snapped. Two other agents were crowding into the room. I looked at the picture of an African-American girl around seven.
‘‘It is a girl,’‘ I responded. Theodora looked like she was going to slap me.
‘‘Which one of your sick friends broke into my house and did this?’‘ she was truly steamed.
‘‘What? Huh? Is the girl okay?’‘ I stammered. I was seconds away from a police brutality suit.
‘‘Someone broke into my house and did this; put the bows in my daughter's hair,’‘ Theodora trembled with rage.
‘‘Why do you think it was me? For starters, you've stolen my phone and clothes. I've been held in this box for God knows how long and I don't want to know you, much less your little girl,’‘ I growled as I stood.
Theodora tried to slam me back into my seat, but I blocked her and retreated to the corner. Hands went to their holsters.
‘‘Sit down,’‘ Theodora seethed. I sat down in the corner. ‘‘Sit in the chair.’‘
‘‘Wow; you've just told me you suspect me in something odious happening to your daughter,’‘ I said. I was also curious why Pamela had done that to her daughter. I'd find out later.
‘‘Why you are even investigating this is beyond me,’‘ I added. ‘‘Conflict of interest maybe?’‘ Brock pulled Theodora back.
‘‘Take your seat, Mr. Nyilas,’‘ he demanded. I took my seat. ‘‘Now; ‘‘
‘‘Shut the fuck up,’‘ I lost my temper.
‘‘Shut the fuck up. You are keeping me in custody without charging me with a damn thing,’‘ I spat my outrage. ‘‘I get the feeling this is SOP for you sons of bitches. Congrats. I'm sure there is a long list of people sick and tired of you shitting on their lives and getting away with it under the cover of law and justice.
Now, since none of you are shouting about a death, or kidnapping, I'm going to guess that someone screwed with Theodora here,’‘ I kept attacking. ‘‘From my limited experience with you dipshits, she deserves it for forgetting she; and the rest of you; are public servants. So some wacko broke into your house and put bows in your daughter's hair. Boohoo.’‘
‘‘You get to go home tonight to your family. I get to sit in this room because; hell if I know why? Is it because I know people? Guns? Drugs? Terrorist chatter? Speeding? Jaywalking? An illegal wire-tap? Littering?’‘ I mocked them. ‘‘Theodora, you are giving me shit over your daughter who you can hug tonight; if it is still night, while I will never get to do that to my Father and you don't seem to care about the 'who', or why.’‘
‘‘When I pin this on you, Nyilas, I'm going to find out what real law and justice is,’‘ Theodora menaced me.
‘‘I don't know what is more hilarious,’‘ I groaned, ‘‘you switching your priority to a maniacal bow-tier, from some group that has been running around, shooting up Chicago, or;’‘ I coughed.
My throat was getting dry from my blathering and a lack of something to drink.
‘‘Or, you have learned nothing. Whoever did this was sending you a cautionary note. Having been under your boot heel for-fucking-ever, I couldn't have sent anyone to do anything because of your perverse fascination with pummeling my civil rights.
So, someone else was/is trying to send you a message,’‘ I muttered. ‘‘If it wasn't some helpless child involved, Theodora, I'd wish on you the heartache of losing someone you love so you will have an inkling of how bad I feel right now. I'm not that guy though. I hope your family stays safe. When I have a problem with someone, I come right at them.
I certainly don't hide behind the innocent; the legal system, or the abuse of power,’‘ I wound down. There was a knock on the open door. Holy Shit! It was Nicole Lawless, Attorney at God.
‘‘Who are you?’‘ Brock spun on the newcomer.
‘‘Hey Nicole,’‘ I yawned.
‘‘Hey Cáel,’‘ she answered. To the rest, ‘‘I'm Nicole Lawless with [the Legion of Undead Litigators] and I'm taking over Mr. Nyilas' case.’‘
‘‘Wait!’‘ I raised my hand. ‘‘I need to know something first.’‘ There was a pause. ‘‘Nicole, are you wearing underwear?’‘
‘‘Sweet God, you are exhausted,’‘ Nicole compassionately noted. ‘‘No, I'm not.’‘ Underwear.
‘‘Great. You are hired,’‘ I declared then slumped in my seat. After Nicole's arrival, things got easier. My only request of Nicole was that she rescued Rachel as well. That minor miracle accomplished we left the federal offices; the Federal Plaza downtown didn't contain this madhouse.
The first stumbling block was instantaneous. There was a nice stretch limo waiting for Nicole, me; and Rachel with the two well-dressed bodyguard types by the front and back doors. Since Nicole was certainly a tool of my aunts and my aunts had set the wheels in motion that got my Father killed, I went with option B; the second outdoor couple; Pamela and this woman I didn't recognize.
‘‘Cáel?’‘ Nicole was surprised when I deviated and headed down the street.
‘‘Nicole, you could be working for the people who had a hand in my Father's murder,’‘ I enlightened her. ‘‘I don't hold it against you. I don't think you knew. I'm still not getting in that car. When I figure out where I'm going to end up, I'll give you a call.’‘
‘‘Cáel, are you sure?’‘ Nicole called out.
‘‘Absolutely. Let me get some sleep and we can talk,’‘ I sighed. ‘‘Tomorrow over breakfast?’‘
Nicole nodded, a bodyguard opened the door and followed her in. The woman by the front-passenger door got in then the limo pulled away.
For me, it was back to the GL550s and away we went.
‘‘I am Esmeralda Carbonne,’‘ the newcomer introduced herself. She was a 'Runner', probably working with some Havenstone operation in Chicago. The Amazons couldn't be everywhere in strength. They weren't built on the octopus-model like the Illuminati, or Egyptian Rite.
They had three types of holdings as far as my Executive Services experience had shown me. There were only a handful of urban strongholds, Havenstone HQ NYC being the biggest. The most common holding were rural centers much like Doebridge; places where Amazons were the majority, if not all of the entire population.
The third kind of holdings were like Chicago with a few businesses owned by Havenstone being monitored by a small band of Amazons. Esmeralda was one of the latter. She'd be our eyes and ears in my hometown and it was clear Esmeralda was unhappy. Figuring out why wasn't all that difficult.
There had been a serious miscommunication between Esmeralda's group and the SD team sent to Chicago that had ended up at my Father's. The SD had requested an address and background information then insisted they perform their own reconnaissance. Afterwards the locals had been frozen out of the information flow.
‘‘Hang on to your disbelief,’‘ I cautioned Esmeralda. ‘‘My Father and I are descendants, by an ancient male line, of a deceased Amazon First House. My ancestor dates back to the end of the Second Betrayal. He was sent on an official mission and told someone would come back to him and the few males with him.’‘
‘‘Since he was on the rolls of the Host, so were all his offspring; until my Father and me,’‘ I said. I let her digest that.
‘‘Your father was the; Head of a First House,’‘ Esmeralda gasped. ‘‘I had no idea.’‘
‘‘I don't think any of us truly appreciated the position my Father was in,’‘ I met her worried gaze.
‘‘I was awarded the Head of House Ishara because I was the only active duty member of Havenstone. Late Sunday night/early Monday morning, it was revealed that my Father had married a prominent member of the Illuminati. That is what went wrong,’‘ I confessed.
‘‘We should have been;’‘ Esmeralda grumbled.
‘‘You weren't because we both work for some highly competent, trained, brave and proficient knuckleheads,’‘ I espoused the frustration Esmeralda felt. Her eyes flickered to the SD team. ‘‘I'm a Head of House,’‘ I patted her knee. ‘‘I can get away with crap like that. There is no denying the SD team fought well.’‘
‘‘Had a member of the local holding been present they would have only performed better; in my opinion anyway,’‘ I added. Esmeralda was soaking up a freight train of new information. Male; male Amazon; male member of the Host; and finally, Male Head of House. She had psychologically defied a male-dominated world and here she was confronted with a male authority figure.
The social experiment went to the next level.
‘‘How so, Ishara?’‘ Rachel challenged me.
‘‘Good question; Esmeralda, it is late at night, a team is scouting out the side and back of a single family, corner lot dwelling. Three cars roll up, covering both streets. What do you do?’‘ I asked Esmeralda.
‘‘During a recon; I would assume hostile intent, let them deploy into the yard then verbally confront from cover. That many people in that situation; I would prep an ambush,’‘ she said.
‘‘The Protocols,’‘ Rachel countered.
‘‘The second they cross the property line of a dwelling under our protection, they are acting with hostile intent,’‘ Esmeralda answered.
‘‘There is a codicil concerning the presentation of force,’‘ Pamela spoke up, ‘‘that agrees with Esmeralda. The section of recognition agrees with the Security Detail. Rachel, the team at the Nyilas house did nothing wrong. They would have been better off adding a few local 'Runners' to provide situational relevance. We honor the dead by learning from their deaths.’‘
‘‘I concur,’‘ Rachel admitted. ‘‘In haste, we failed to utilize the local sisterhood's expertise.’‘
There was a long hiccup in the conversation. Rachel and Esmeralda had both been right, but Esmeralda had been 'more' right. For Esmeralda, it was another awakening. It was unlikely that she was in Security Services, so her 'expertise' wasn't combat.
Different from other secret societies, every Amazon was taught to think tactically. A security detail guarding a Head of House had just validated her opinion, and in front of a Head of a First House. That had to be especially satisfying.
‘‘Where are we going, Tiger Lily?’‘ I asked my driver. Esmeralda gave me a curious look. I shrugged.
‘‘We are going to the Hotel Burnham,’‘ she informed me. Groan.
‘‘You do know that the Hotel Burnham is nowhere near the town of Burnham, right?’‘ I sighed.
‘‘Then why do they call it the Hotel Burnham?’‘ Rachel rebounded.
‘‘The hotel is named after the famous Daniel Burnham, not his far less famous cousin, Telford Burnham, who founded my home village,’‘ I related the elementary school facts.
‘‘I suppose we should have asked Esmeralda first,’‘ Pamela teased.
‘‘Wouldn't have done any good. I'm from Yakima in Washington State. I've only been in Chicago three years,’‘ the local shrugged.
‘‘Do we deviate to a closer location, or stay on course?’‘ Tiger Lily requested.
Rachel, Pamela and Esmeralda were looking at me.
‘‘Havenstone will be sending our gear and reinforcements there, so we stick with the Hotel Burnham,’‘ I decided. ‘‘Also, Tiger Lily, what's with the name?’‘ She gave a long suffering sigh.
‘‘My mother was adopted from the Shoshone tribe one hundred and fifty years ago, I have no worries about crocodiles, pirates and ship anchors, and I do not wish to kiss a flying boy,’‘ Tiger Lily clearly retold her constant source of teasing.
‘‘I am named for my grandmother, who was named after her mother's ally during World War II. As far as I know, that woman never read Peter Pan, though I wish she had,’‘ she finished up. Without a doubt, an Amerindian Princess named Tiger Lily was giving me, Cáel aka Cabbage-Head, and Bomophoto a run for our money in the 'cruelest names for kids' category.
(Hotel Burnham One)
‘‘E; fuck it all if I'm calling you Esmeralda every time; might be best utilized for close contact with Cáel,’‘ Pamela spoke on our final approach to the hotel. ‘‘I'll be out and about.’‘
‘‘We need a second team in town immediately,’‘ Rachel spoke. With her blue tooth in Federal custody, she had to get a new set of toys to communicate off the grid.
‘‘I will not tell you how to do your job, Rachel,’‘ I was telling her how to do her job. ‘‘Why do you need extra people? I have faith in the team we have.’‘
‘‘Ishara, were we not a few minutes ago liberated from governmental containment by agents of the Illuminati, who most likely murdered your father and tried to steal his body,’‘ Rachel responded patiently.
‘‘Rachel, they will not try to kill me because I am a member of the Illuminati,’‘ I said straight-faced.
‘‘Ishara, that is a poor jest,’‘ Rachel politely scolded me.
‘‘The jest is that he's not lying, Rachel. He is a member of the same faction that could have accidently killed his father,’‘ Pamela spoke with chilling forcefulness.
‘‘They didn't want my Father, the descendant of Vranus,’‘ I continued. ‘‘They wanted Ferko Nyilas, husband of Sibeal O'Shea.’‘ Oh crap; it had been so long since I'd used Mom's name. She was always Mom; Mom; Mom. ‘‘Sibeal O'Shea was the daughter of Cáel O'Shea. Cáel O'Shea was head of the Illuminati and the Amazon's assassinated him.
To be continued in Part 20
By FinalStand for Literotica.