He slowly stood, zeroing in on a sound like that of rustling fabric, and he fired the gun once.
Yeah, weird shit, he thought, charging into the darkness of the living room to confront who knew what.
You can fucking keep it.
• • •
It had stopped raining on Gunkanjima Island.
Remy stood off to the side, watching as the children gathered up their meager belongings to take with them to their new home. A pile of things that would have been discarded as trash by most had formed in the center court area of the mining settlement.
“I doubt they’ll be able to take all that with them,” Malatesta said, coming from the building where Prosper had kept his office. The Vatican sorcerer was carrying two steaming mugs of coffee.
“Well, I’ll be,” Remy said, taking the offered cup. “All the comforts of home.”
The two drank their coffee silently, watching the children interacting with the women from Prosper’s charnel house. There was no precise way for them to know which child was theirs, but somehow, they seemed to know. And they also seemed to be taking to their new role as mothers quite easily, jumping right in to help the children gather up their things.
“Any idea where they’re going?” Remy asked Malatesta.
“The Keepers have many places of learning around the world,” Malatesta said. “I’m sure one of them will be the perfect fit.”
Remy still had mixed feelings about handing the children over to the Keepers, but he had very few options. He just couldn’t imagine them out there on their own.
“I’ll be keeping close tabs on them,” Remy said, eyes still staring at the scene before him.
“I’m sure you will,” Malatesta responded.
“Do you think your bosses are aware of that?”
“I think it foolish to say that they wouldn’t be.”
“And your problem?” Remy said. He looked to the sorcerer. “How’s that?”
Malatesta took a drink from his mug before replying. “The child’s touch helped me to regain control, but it doesn’t mean the Larva spirit isn’t still there, struggling to take it away. It got a taste of freedom, and liked it. It won’t take much for it to be free again.”
Remy felt bad for his part in all of that, but again, there hadn’t been a hell of a lot of choices.
He caught sight of Gareth then, standing alone near his quarters, watching his brothers and sisters. There was a certain look in the teen’s eyes that Remy understood only too well. He was questioning his own actions, wondering whether he had done the right thing.
Remy approached the boy cautiously, not wanting to rile him. The level of power in this teen was quite awesome, if not a little frightening.
“I think they’ll be all right,” he said to the young man.
“I hope you’re right,” Gareth said. “My father talked about a war and the part we would play.” The young man grew quiet, continuing to stare ahead at the children who looked to him as leader.
“That war is still coming,” he finally said quietly.
Remy was about to reassure the youth, but he never got the chance.
The sound came from across the water, multiple rotor blades spinning with blinding speed as a helicopter drew closer.
“This is it,” Gareth stated, and then sighed, his eyes turning toward the gunmetal-colored sky, before looking directly at Remy.
“The beginning of the end.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
In an area of the island that had once been set aside for the children of miners, was a park, now overgrown with a thick, tall grass that bent in the artificial winds created by the Chinook helicopter as it slowly descended from a darkening sky.
The copter touched down, back end pointed toward Remy and the collected children. There was a high-pitched whine of hydraulics, and the back of the large craft began to open; a loading ramp slowly lowered to the weed-covered lot.
Malatesta left the gathering, running across the grassy expanse toward the helicopter, shielding his eyes from the debris kicked up by the craft’s slowing rotor blades.
“Am I going in that?”
Remy looked down at the child who had temporarily repressed the sorcerer’s demon. He’d learned that the boy’s name was Apple, because he liked apples. “Yeah,” he said. “You all are. It’s going to take you to your new home.”
Remy was watching Malatesta standing before the loading ramp, waiting for his superior, when he felt the tiny hand find its way into his. He glanced back at Apple to see him staring up at him, a smile that was almost blinding on his dirty features.
“Thank you,” the little boy said, and all Remy could do was smile back, and give his small hand a gentle squeeze of assurance.
An old man, dressed in a black cassock, a golden crucifix about his neck, carefully descended from the loading ramp. He extended his hand toward Malatesta, who bowed his head and kissed the man’s ring.
The two talked as the rotors spun above them, and Malatesta briefly looked back in Remy’s direction. The sorcerer’s body language seemed to be trying to tell him something.
“Are we leaving now?” Apple asked, hand still in Remy’s.
“Not quite yet,” Remy said as several other men, also dressed in the robes of their faith, began to exit the belly of the mighty Chinook and spread out.
The angel let go of the boy’s hand, and walked toward them. Malatesta turned and Remy caught sight of the look on his face. Immediately he knew they were in trouble.
The Keepers acted as one, suddenly raising their hands and uttering an ancient spell in some long-forgotten language. The atmosphere became instantly charged with unnatural energy, calling forth another storm.
“What’s going on?” Remy demanded, still heading for Malatesta.
The Vatican sorcerer extended his hand, gesturing for Remy to stop. The old man standing beside him glared at the angel, and Remy saw a glimmer of something he’d seen long ago in the eyes of their church’s leader—the cold detachment of an act of betrayal.
The magickal force erupting from the hands of the Keepers wove a canopy over their heads, an undulating dome of supernatural energies hovering above the overgrown playground.
Remy stopped cold, as the magick turned the gray sky to a blood red.
How appropriate.
His wings came on reflex, and the fires of Heaven raced from where they churned in his chest to pool in his hands. But he had no opportunity to act, for Malatesta’s magick lashed out like the tail of a whip, wrapping itself around his neck as he attempted to take to the sky. The power coursing through him was overwhelming. He struggled to flap his mighty wings, but they were no longer in sync, and floundering he dropped to the ground, the tendril of humming magick still wrapped about his throat.
Remy dug his fingers beneath the band of preternatural force, desperately trying to rip it from his neck, but it seared his fingers, leaching away his strength even as he fought.
“I’m sorry Remy,” he heard Malatesta say, realizing that the sorcerer was controlling the leash of magickal energy that was attempting to strangle him. “For the good of us all it must be this way.”
Remy thrashed upon the ground, turning toward the children. The Keepers had used their spells to corral the children, and they cried out in surprise—and fear.
Another group of Vatican agents had separated the mothers from their children, moving them away, toward the transport chopper.
“What are you doing?” Remy managed, his voice rough and full of rage.
The old priest from the chopper walked over to stand above Remy. “Calm yourself, soldier of Heaven,” he said.
“I’m nobody’s soldier,” Remy rasped. “What are you doing to those kids?”