Page 80
‘I didn’t touch my father!’ he protested.
‘No, that would have been assaultandbattery. Assault is fear of an attack, whether physical harm follows or not.’ I cuffed his hands behind him. ‘Let’s go.’
‘Where are you taking him?’ Baldred asked.
‘Our cells.’
Baldred slumped, looking more despairing than ever. I felt bad for the guy, but that wouldn’t stop me delivering justice.
I frogmarched Delvin to the cell, dumped him inside and slammed the metal door shut. The wards engaged and, just like that, Delvin forfeited his freedom.
Chapter 46
Baldred left, promising to get Leif to come in and give me a witness statement about what he’d seen; he also confirmed that he’d forward the incriminating photographs to the Nomo’s office.
I checked my phone and saw a message from Sidnee. All the councillors were on board so we’d have a full house for our raid on the Reef Mine.
‘Sorry, Sig,’ I said. ‘We have an occupied cell now. Do you mind hanging here and watching the monitors?’
She gave an easy smile. ‘No problem.’
‘I’ll send April a text message so she knows we need 24/7 coverage.’
She smiled. ‘Bunny, we’ve got this. You worry about your raid.’
‘Okay. But I should complete the paperwork for Delvin’s arrest,’ I said anxiously.
She made a shooing motion. ‘I can do it then I’ll send it over to the council’s office. Go on, Bunny. And Bunny?’
‘Yes?’
‘Stay safe, sweetheart.’
‘I will.’ I gave her a firm hug goodbye. ‘You’ll look after Fluffy and Shadow?’ I asked quietly. ‘If I—’
‘Don’t say it!’ Her eyes were watery. ‘Of course I will. Go on now, darling. I don’t want you to see me cry.’
I jerked a nod because my own eyes were hot, then grabbed my vest and a bag of weapons and headed out to meet the others at the council chambers.
We had the strongest supernats and humans in Portlock. We had a water dragon, an immortal necromancer, a demi-god, a vampire prince, a walking human armoury and a polar-bear shifter, plus their seconds all had special skills. We also had – I hoped – a top-notch MIB team with modern weapons. It had to be enough.
The minimal intel wasn’t ideal, but we didn’t have much choice other than to attack immediately. We needed to strike before the Knight Stalkers realised what had happened at their bunker, if they hadn’t already. Part of me was hoping that they’d already evacuated the mine and scarpered.
There was a cold ball of dread knotting in my stomach. I was a police officer, not a soldier. I was good with drunk and disorderly shifters, theft or murder – but war? Warwasn’t my thing. Still, it was what the Knight Stalkers had brought to us and I was no shrinking violet.
When I walked into the council chambers, not everyone was there; Liv and Stan were missing. Gunnar was near the stage with a man in camo who must have been the leader of the MIB team. I looked around for the rest, but there was only him; Gunnar had said he was heading a twelve-man team so I hope they hadn’t backed out. I had a moment of anxiety before I realised the others were probably with the boats, weapons and equipment. It wasn’t wise to leave that stuff unprotected.
Stan strode in with Mads Actos, both of them dressed in pull-off clothing for easy shifting. They didn’t really need weapons because theywereweapons: a polar bear and a Kodiak brown bear had to be among the top predators in North America. I definitely wouldn’t want to face them.
Stan’s jocular humour was missing and his expression was dark and severe. I wished like hell he would make a Bunny joke but he didn’t; he was all business.
Calliope and Soapy had their tridents, and I assumed Calliope had her pearlescent shell. Maybe I’d finally find out what it did, but it was more than likely she’d lose her temper, shift and just start eating the enemy.
Liv was the last to arrive – pulling a goat behind her. He seemed docile and trained to walk on a halter, and Iassumed he was drugged because he wasn’t going to live out the night. I wondered what a necromancer could do with the death of a single goat. Liv had freed the banshee spirits and healed the barrier with one, so my hopes were high.
She was wearing one of her colourful kaftan dresses, belted at the waist. Around her throat was a heavy gold choker with her scarab in the centre like a cameo. I shuddered. That beetle always gave me the creeps, plus who wore a dress to a gun battle? Liv, that’s who.
The mayor looked implacable. He was wearing traditional Polynesian garb and holding a short, thick staff. It didn’t seem wise to bring a stick to a gun battle, but I didn’t say so. Hopefully it had a whole array of magical power that he could shoot out of it.
‘No, that would have been assaultandbattery. Assault is fear of an attack, whether physical harm follows or not.’ I cuffed his hands behind him. ‘Let’s go.’
‘Where are you taking him?’ Baldred asked.
‘Our cells.’
Baldred slumped, looking more despairing than ever. I felt bad for the guy, but that wouldn’t stop me delivering justice.
I frogmarched Delvin to the cell, dumped him inside and slammed the metal door shut. The wards engaged and, just like that, Delvin forfeited his freedom.
Chapter 46
Baldred left, promising to get Leif to come in and give me a witness statement about what he’d seen; he also confirmed that he’d forward the incriminating photographs to the Nomo’s office.
I checked my phone and saw a message from Sidnee. All the councillors were on board so we’d have a full house for our raid on the Reef Mine.
‘Sorry, Sig,’ I said. ‘We have an occupied cell now. Do you mind hanging here and watching the monitors?’
She gave an easy smile. ‘No problem.’
‘I’ll send April a text message so she knows we need 24/7 coverage.’
She smiled. ‘Bunny, we’ve got this. You worry about your raid.’
‘Okay. But I should complete the paperwork for Delvin’s arrest,’ I said anxiously.
She made a shooing motion. ‘I can do it then I’ll send it over to the council’s office. Go on, Bunny. And Bunny?’
‘Yes?’
‘Stay safe, sweetheart.’
‘I will.’ I gave her a firm hug goodbye. ‘You’ll look after Fluffy and Shadow?’ I asked quietly. ‘If I—’
‘Don’t say it!’ Her eyes were watery. ‘Of course I will. Go on now, darling. I don’t want you to see me cry.’
I jerked a nod because my own eyes were hot, then grabbed my vest and a bag of weapons and headed out to meet the others at the council chambers.
We had the strongest supernats and humans in Portlock. We had a water dragon, an immortal necromancer, a demi-god, a vampire prince, a walking human armoury and a polar-bear shifter, plus their seconds all had special skills. We also had – I hoped – a top-notch MIB team with modern weapons. It had to be enough.
The minimal intel wasn’t ideal, but we didn’t have much choice other than to attack immediately. We needed to strike before the Knight Stalkers realised what had happened at their bunker, if they hadn’t already. Part of me was hoping that they’d already evacuated the mine and scarpered.
There was a cold ball of dread knotting in my stomach. I was a police officer, not a soldier. I was good with drunk and disorderly shifters, theft or murder – but war? Warwasn’t my thing. Still, it was what the Knight Stalkers had brought to us and I was no shrinking violet.
When I walked into the council chambers, not everyone was there; Liv and Stan were missing. Gunnar was near the stage with a man in camo who must have been the leader of the MIB team. I looked around for the rest, but there was only him; Gunnar had said he was heading a twelve-man team so I hope they hadn’t backed out. I had a moment of anxiety before I realised the others were probably with the boats, weapons and equipment. It wasn’t wise to leave that stuff unprotected.
Stan strode in with Mads Actos, both of them dressed in pull-off clothing for easy shifting. They didn’t really need weapons because theywereweapons: a polar bear and a Kodiak brown bear had to be among the top predators in North America. I definitely wouldn’t want to face them.
Stan’s jocular humour was missing and his expression was dark and severe. I wished like hell he would make a Bunny joke but he didn’t; he was all business.
Calliope and Soapy had their tridents, and I assumed Calliope had her pearlescent shell. Maybe I’d finally find out what it did, but it was more than likely she’d lose her temper, shift and just start eating the enemy.
Liv was the last to arrive – pulling a goat behind her. He seemed docile and trained to walk on a halter, and Iassumed he was drugged because he wasn’t going to live out the night. I wondered what a necromancer could do with the death of a single goat. Liv had freed the banshee spirits and healed the barrier with one, so my hopes were high.
She was wearing one of her colourful kaftan dresses, belted at the waist. Around her throat was a heavy gold choker with her scarab in the centre like a cameo. I shuddered. That beetle always gave me the creeps, plus who wore a dress to a gun battle? Liv, that’s who.
The mayor looked implacable. He was wearing traditional Polynesian garb and holding a short, thick staff. It didn’t seem wise to bring a stick to a gun battle, but I didn’t say so. Hopefully it had a whole array of magical power that he could shoot out of it.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85