“Millions?” Tinker scoffed. “Even with a generation a decade, do they really have the numbers to hit that mark?”
“Do you think that the humans will be left out of their plans forever?” Riki asked. “There are sixty thousand humans in Pittsburgh, but with the exception of these EIA soldiers, they’re sitting on the sidelines, watching. The Greater Bloods know that if the humans took up arms, it could tip the scales in the elves’ favor, so they’re leaving the humans alone. When the time is right — maybe as long as a decade from now — they’ll kill all the men and turn all the women into breeders.”
Tinker stared at him in horror. “You can’t be serious.”
“This is a war to the bitter end,” Riki said. “The only ones that don’t know this are the humans. If the elves lose, then the humans will end up like the tengu.” He lifted his foot and flexed his birdlike toes. “Remember, we were once human.”
She knew the oni well enough to recognize the truth in what he was saying, but she didn’t want to believe it. “So — we’re going to find oni children in here?”
“That is one of the oni children.” Riki pointed at the dead tusked oni. “It’s about nine years old. Don’t worry — all the other oni ‘children’ will do their damnedest to kill us, too.”
She had just reached the door when a shout went up from the other corner of the sleeping nest. One of the marines waved and flashed a series hand signals that Tinker didn’t recognize.
“Domi, no.” Pony blocked her from moving closer to the discovery. “You do not need to see this.”
“What is it?” she asked.
“The oni killed one of the children,” he said. “A female.”
Tinker wavered, not wanting to see the dead female but feeling like she should force herself to look. She looked down at her arm. The only thing she’d done the entire fight was keep it locked in one position. It hurt so bad she felt like crying. “I feel so useless.”
Stormsong breathed out a laugh. “If you were useless, there would not be nearly a hundred warriors in this filthy hole. We would still be trying to beat the information out of the oni and failing.”
Pony hugged her. “Beloved, there is nothing you can do for this child. Focus on the ones that might be still alive.”
Beyond the back door was a maze of halls and small rooms. Tinker pushed the oni down the hallways with her shield and the sekasha. The other teams fanned out behind her, searching the rooms. Reports came back of weapon lockers, food caches, another animal kennel, and a “breeding room” that she so did not want to see. Arguments started to flare up as the tengu looted anything valuable.
“Damn thieving crows,” the marine commander muttered to her at one point, apparently unaware that they were her Beholden.
Shouts in Elvish dragged Tinker back a dozen feet, where Riki was blocking the door to a large outdoor courtyard. Wood smoke drifted in through the open door, scented with roasting meat. Smoke and heat rolled up from crude fire pits of cinder block, rebar, and corrugated metal. Clear of burnable trash, the courtyard was strewn with broken pallets, split wood, full logs, and well-gnawed bones.
“What’s wrong?” Tinker asked.
“My people will search this area,” Riki said.
“Why yours?” the marine commander demanded. “Why can’t mine do it?”
Riki looked to Tinker for appeal. “It’s the kitchen. The oni eat — the oni consider children a delicacy. It would be kinder, if they butchered one of the children, for us to recover the body.”
The looks on elves’ face were enough for Tinker to say, “Yes, do it.”
Deep in the maze, the constant pain of maintaining her shields caught up with her. One moment she was on her feet, and then she was in Pony’s arms, face pressed against the strong column on his neck. Fear jolted through her as she realized she had dropped her shields. Luckily, all the oni in the immediate area seemed dead.
“You need to rest, domi.”
She swore. “We don’t have time for this.”
“We need to let our rear guard to catch up with us. We’re spread too thin.”
Only then did she realize that there were only a handful of the royal marines with them. The rest were scattered somewhere behind them. She couldn’t argue with his logic. With the marines covering their retreat, he carried her back to a smaller room they’d already passed. The room had been so obviously void of both oni and children that they had only given it a quick scan. He settled on a tufted leather bench so she could rest in his arms, safe within his shields.
“We’re going to need to be deloused after this,” Tinker grumbled, frustrated by her weakness. Bad enough to be wading through the trash; sitting down was making her skin crawl. She eyed the bench suspiciously and realized that it was surprisingly clean. In fact, now that she looked closely, they weren’t surrounded by the normal oni filth. The litter here was entirely different; it was expensive, luxury clutter. There was good solid ironwood furniture buried under heaps of furs, bags of United States bills and Elfhome coins, and cascades of jewelry. The floor was scrubbed clean, covered with oriental rugs, and then stacked high with weavings, paintings, and electronics. If anything, the room looked like a warehouse of loot.
“Huh, what is this? A treasure room?”
“I am not certain, domi.”
The tengu were going to be overjoyed, probably much to the annoyance of the elves and the humans. Much as she hated the thought, she should assign someone the job of cataloging the loot so it could be divided among the three groups. Perhaps the EIA could send an accountant over.
The shadows stirred and suddenly moved.
Pony jerked to his feet, moving back even as the others surged forward, swords ready.
“Put me down! Put me down!” Tinker squirmed out of his hold. She had her hand to her mouth when she recognized the lean body that snaked through the wall. “Impatience!”
“Yanananam Tinker.” The oni dragon seemed large in the room, but after fighting his near cousin, Malice, Tinker knew he was actually quite small. Still, ten feet of scaled, muscled body was nothing to sneeze at.
“Can we trust him?” Pony was between her and the dragon, ready for an attack. They had fought the little dragon once when Impatience was “unconscious” and lost horribly. The only reason they weren’t all killed was that Impatience had come to his senses before he actually did lasting harm.
“He’s talking, so he’s sentient.” Tinker still backed up as Impatience came bounding through the clutter toward them. She would have thought, though, that Impatience would have stayed far away from the oni. What was he doing at the oni whelping pens?
“Radadada aaaaah huuu ha—” Impatience leapt back suddenly. His mane rose, triggering his impenetrable shield moments before Maynard’s commandos spilled into the room.
“Hold! Hold!” Tinker shouted even as her Hand shifted to protect her from possible attack from both the dragon and the commandos.
“Tinker radadada pooookaaa aaaaah huuuuu Yutakajodo haaaaa ramaaaaanan.”
What in the world was Impatience trying to tell her?
“You!” She pointed at the nearest commando. “Do you have a phone?”
“Yes.” He handed it over.
“Hello?” Jin answered on the first ring.
“It’s Tinker. Here, listen to this.”
She held out the phone to Impatience.