Rogue Descendant (Nikki Glass)

TEN




It was still raining later that afternoon when Anderson and I left for our meeting with Cyrus. Anderson had invited Cyrus to the mansion, but Cyrus insisted the meeting be held on neutral ground, so we were meeting him at a coffee bar downtown.

I whipped out my umbrella as Anderson and I walked from the main entrance of the mansion to the outbuilding that held the garage. Anderson didn’t bother with an umbrella, stepping out into the steady rain without hesitation. He jogged ahead of me to the garage before I could offer to share my umbrella. I’d have suggested Anderson not make himself look any more disheveled than usual when going to meet Cyrus—I wasn’t sure the frumpy look gave off quite the aura of power he would need to convince Cyrus he meant business—but he wouldn’t have listened to me.

I followed at a more sedate pace. I was carrying the manila folder with the article about the fire in it, and I’d also tucked in the email from Konstantin.

Anderson was waiting for me behind the wheel of his black Mercedes by the time I reached the garage, the engine already running. His car was more elegant than he was, but in this area of politicians and diplomats, black Mercedes were a dime a dozen, so his car didn’t catch the eye any more than Anderson himself did. I took a deep breath as I slid into the passenger seat. I can’t say I held out any great hope that we’d get Cyrus to see things our way, and I was more than a little worried about Anderson’s temper.

“Are you sure you can have a civilized conversation with Cyrus after what happened to Erin?” I asked as Anderson drove out of the mansion’s gates. I figured with his distorted view of Emma, he’d probably shifted a lot of the blame for Erin’s death onto Cyrus.

“Yes,” Anderson said in his familiar mild voice. “He’s an Olympian. He did what Olympians do, and I know it was nothing personal on his part.”

I was impressed with his stoicism, and wondered if that meant he was finally going to stop making excuses for Emma.

The rest of the drive passed in silence, except for the annoying squeak of the windshield wipers. The rain was just hard enough to make them necessary, but not enough to keep them silent. The noise grated on me, but that was just because of my generally crappy state of mind. It took a lot of effort to keep myself from dwelling on the deaths that had occurred because of me. I wasn’t responsible, but I was part of the chain of events that had led to them. That was more than enough to have my conscience bothering me.

Cyrus was waiting for us at a corner table when we arrived at the coffee bar. Not surprisingly, he wasn’t alone. No self-respecting Olympian would attend a meeting with Anderson and not have a pet Descendant in tow. It always seemed a bit rude to me—kind of like carrying a gun in your hand—but obviously they felt threatened by him, despite being under the impression that he couldn’t kill them.

Not being a Liberi, Anderson couldn’t be killed by the Descendant, so Cyrus’s gun would be shooting blanks if it ever came to that. Of course, I could be killed by a Descendant, so I gave Cyrus’s companion a careful once-over as Anderson and I approached the table.

He wasn’t as goonish as most of the Descendants Olympians liked to use as bodyguards, though he wasn’t a ninety-pound weakling, either. Blond, good-looking, and stylishly dressed, he reminded me more than a little of Blake. I darted a quick glance at Cyrus, wondering if the resemblance was coincidental.

Cyrus and his companion were standing when we reached the table. With his trademark friendly smile, he greeted us, shaking hands first with Anderson, then with me.

“This is my friend, Mark,” he said, indicating the Descendant, who offered his hand. “I hope you don’t mind him sitting in.”

Anderson stared at Mark’s extended hand, but made no move to shake it. There was a lightning bolt glyph on the back of Mark’s hand, telling us he was a descendant of Zeus. I didn’t like leaving him hanging there, but I took my cue from Anderson and didn’t offer any pleasantries, either. I guess Anderson found the Descendant’s presence as rude as I did.

Still smiling, Cyrus patted Mark’s shoulder, and Mark lowered his hand.

“Just a precaution,” Cyrus said, sitting back down. “I figured you probably weren’t too happy with me right now. I also figured you probably wouldn’t do anything stupid in a public place, but one can never be too careful.” He reached over and stroked Mark’s back like he was petting a dog. “I promise he won’t interfere as long as we’re just talking. You won’t even know he’s here.”

Anderson was still standing, giving both Cyrus and Mark his best scowl. I’d never had much patience for posturing, so I pulled back my own chair and sat without waiting for Anderson.

“Were you hoping we’d bring Blake so you could make him jealous?” I asked Cyrus.

He grinned and looked over at Mark in a considering manner. “Yes, there is a certain resemblance, isn’t there?” Mark looked more uncomfortable now than he had when we’d refused to shake his hand, and I felt momentarily bad for him. Then I reminded myself that he was an Olympian-wannabe, which meant he was not one of the good guys.

Anderson slowly took his seat.

“Would you like to order something before we begin?” Cyrus asked. Both he and Mark had cups of espresso in front of them, though it looked like Mark had barely touched his.

I’d have loved to have a cup of coffee to fidget with, if not to drink, but Anderson wasn’t interested.

“This isn’t a social call,” he said coldly, “and there’s no reason to pretend it is.”

Cyrus stuck out his lower lip in a pout. “We can talk business without completely skipping the social niceties.” He motioned to the barista, holding up two fingers. “Two more shots for my friends, please,” he called.

“You know, the polite way to order at a coffee bar is to go up to the register and talk in a normal tone of voice,” I said, not willing to be charmed by his genial manner.

Cyrus was hardly chastened by my rebuke. “I’m a regular, and I tip really, really well. Amazing the kind of service that buys me.”

“You don’t actually think we’re buying your good-ole-boy act, do you?” Anderson asked.

“It’s not an act. If you’re expecting me to act all stodgy and self-important like my father, you can forget it. That’s not my style.”

The barista brought over two demitasse cups of steaming, fragrant espresso, putting them before me and Anderson. “Need anything else?” she asked Cyrus with a coquettish smile. She probably thought he would make a great catch with his good looks and his propensity for throwing money around.

“No thanks, Lacy,” he said, and I wondered if he actually remembered her name, or was just reading her name tag. “We’re good for now.”

She wandered away, disappointed.

“Now, since you’re so anxious to get down to business,” Cyrus said, “why don’t you start talking.”

Anderson turned to me, and I told Cyrus about the two fires that had devastated my life over the last week. He listened in silence, and I passed the folder with the news article and the printout of the email across the table to him.

I’m not a big fan of espresso, unless it has a lot of steamed milk in it, but I was too jittery to sit still while Cyrus read, so I took a sip. Anderson hadn’t touched his.

Finally, Cyrus finished reading and tucked the papers back into the folder. He shook his head and gave me a look of genuine sympathy.

“I’m sorry you’ve had to deal with all this,” he said. “I’m sure being tossed headfirst into our world is stressful enough without adding this crap to it.” He slid the folder back to me with a sharp gesture that spoke of annoyance. “But I can assure you Konstantin isn’t behind it.”

Anderson snorted. “He claimed responsibility!”

Cyrus rolled his eyes. “As I told Nikki before, an anonymous email isn’t proof of anything.” He looked at me. “My father hates your guts, I won’t lie. But not because he blames you for his troubles. He can be petty, but he’s not stupid.”

“Oh, so he readily accepts the blame for what happened with Justin Kerner?” Anderson asked with patent disbelief.

Cyrus smiled ruefully. “Of course not. It’s the incompetents who didn’t bury him deep enough, and Phoebe, whose visions weren’t clear enough, and, hell, me because I met with you a couple of times and didn’t stop his secret from getting out. There’s plenty of blame to go around. And Nikki, he hates you, but you’re nowhere near important enough to him to warrant this kind of attention.”

I believed every word of what Cyrus was saying. For a while, I’d allowed myself to accept that Konstantin really was behind the fires, but the motive had never quite made sense. Hearing Cyrus shoot down the theory without even momentarily considering it just cemented my opinion.

Anderson, of course, saw things differently. “Did it ever occur to you that his misfortunes might have caused him to become a bit . . . unhinged?”

“No,” Cyrus said. “It never did. I’ve been in regular contact with him, and I can assure you, he’s acting like his usual, ornery, domineering self.”

“And I’m supposed to take your word on it?”

“Why would I lie?” Cyrus picked up his cup and frowned at the contents. “Mine’s gone cold. Are you going to drink that?” He gestured at Anderson’s untouched espresso.

“You’d lie because that’s what Olympians do.”

“There’s no reason to be such a dick,” Cyrus said, reaching for the espresso without Anderson’s go-ahead. “I’m telling you my father isn’t behind these particular attacks. I’m not trying to tell you he’s a nice person, and I’m not telling you he wouldn’t take an opportunity to hurt Nikki if it fell into his lap. But he’s not going to go through this elaborate bullshit in a quest for revenge.”

“Of course, you also said Emma wouldn’t do this,” I pointed out, more to give Anderson a moment to cool down than because I thought the point needed to be raised, “and she’s the only other person I can imagine wanting to hurt me. You’re wrong about someone, either your father or Emma.”

“I suppose it’s possible,” Cyrus conceded with a careless shrug. He took a sip of Anderson’s espresso. “But I don’t think it’s likely, and you didn’t ask for this meeting because you wanted to solve the mystery of who’s behind the fires, now did you?”

I think Anderson wanted to snap something about there being no mystery, but he refrained. I suspected that somewhere down inside, he had to see where the evidence was pointing, even if he wasn’t ready to admit it.

“No,” he said, wiping the emotion from his face. “I asked for this meeting because I want you to put a stop to it.”

Cyrus took another sip of espresso, as nonchalant as ever. “Can’t help you there. Property damage isn’t covered under our agreement.”

“Property damage?” I cried in outrage, pushing my chair back so I could leap to my feet. “Three people were killed, including an infant, for Christ’s sake. That’s murder, not property damage!”

And here I’d been worried about Anderson losing his temper. Mark’s hand had disappeared into his pocket, and he was watching me with studied intensity. I assumed his hand was on a weapon, and that he’d be on me in a heartbeat if I made anything that he could construe as a hostile motion toward Cyrus.

“Sit down, Nikki,” Anderson said, still calm and unruffled.

“At ease, Mark,” Cyrus said in a similar tone of voice.

I wondered if they were going to tell us to heel or fetch as a follow-up. Mark didn’t seem to mind being given commands. He took his hand slowly out of his pocket, but he kept his eyes on me. I minded a lot more, but I knew emotional outbursts were counterproductive. I wished I hadn’t just lost my temper in front of the enemy, but there was nothing I could do about it now except try not to make it worse. I sat down and tried to relax, though I was practically shaking with rage.

“Sorry,” Cyrus said with a grimace. “I should have known you’d be more upset about the casualties than about your property. I’m sure the intent behind the attack was to destroy something that belonged to you, and that doesn’t fall under the purview of our agreement. Nor do the incidental deaths that accompanied the damage.”

This was exactly the response Anderson had warned me to expect, but that didn’t make it go down any easier. Cyrus made such a good show of being a nice guy that no matter how much I reminded myself what he was, I couldn’t ever seem to make the knowledge stick.

“So you’re okay with your people burning down buildings filled with innocents, and it doesn’t bother you in the least when those innocents die.”

Cyrus shrugged. “I wouldn’t do something like that, but I’m not going to get all worked up about it. If I got all worked up every time an Olympian killed somebody, I’d never have survived to adulthood.” He leaned forward and gave me an earnest look. “Look, I’m sorry about what’s happened. You seem like a good person, and I’d rather not see you get hurt. But unless the treaty is broken, my hands are tied.”

“Spoken like a true Olympian,” Anderson said sourly.

Cyrus raised an eyebrow. “You expected something different? I’d have thought Blake had told you all about my deficiencies of character.”

“I’m not the one who expected something different.”

“Ah.” He gave me that earnest look again as his voice dropped until I could barely hear it over the roar of the espresso machine. “I’ve stopped the Olympian practice of disposing of Descendant children. You have no idea how far out on a limb I’ve already gone. I can’t go forbidding my people to bother you just because Anderson asks me to.”

If he thought I was going to sympathize with his delicate political situation, he was nuts. He was still looking at me, this time expectantly, though I didn’t know what he was expecting.

Suddenly, Anderson gave a harsh bark of laughter. I didn’t get the joke.

“What?” I asked, looking back and forth between the two of them.

“Let me translate what Cyrus just said,” Anderson answered. “It comes down to: what’s in it for me?”

I hadn’t fully registered Cyrus’s words until that moment. He hadn’t said he wouldn’t stop his people from tormenting me. He said he wouldn’t stop them just because Anderson asked him to.

“You bastard,” I said, scowling at Cyrus.

The insult rolled off him. “I’m not running a charitable organization, Nikki. I like you, but I’m not going to go sticking my neck out for you just because I’m a nice guy. You want my help, you have to make it worth my while.”

“You’re just a goddamn shakedown artist, aren’t you?”

“Do you want to bargain with me or not?”

If it had been Konstantin offering me some kind of a deal, I’d have refused without even exploring the possibility. In fact, if it had been any other Olympian, I probably would have gotten up and walked away. But there was a part of me that still kept insisting there had to be some redeeming qualities to Cyrus. Naive? Maybe.

“All right, I’ll play,” I said. “What would it take to get you to order your people to leave me alone?”

I realized Cyrus had planned to take us into a negotiation all along, because he didn’t even have to think a moment before he named his price.

“Give me an IOU for one hunt, to be cashed in at my convenience.”

“No,” I said instantly. I knew more innocents would likely die if I couldn’t get Emma (or Konstantin, if I was wrong about him) off my back, but I wasn’t willing to actively cause someone else’s death. I’d just have to find some other way to fix things.

“I understand that you have severe moral qualms about hunting for us,” Cyrus said. “How about if I promise that whomever you hunt will not be killed?”

I’d seen how creatively the Olympians could torture someone without killing them. “Not good enough. You’d have to take rape and torture off the menu, too.”

Cyrus thought about that a moment, then nodded. “I could do that. We don’t always have nefarious purposes when we’re looking for people.”

I glanced at Anderson, wondering if there was some big loophole I was overlooking. I was pretty sure that Cyrus would be getting the better of this deal, but as Anderson had told me, we had no leverage.

“I think Cyrus is about as close to honest as an Olympian can be,” Anderson said in answer to my questioning look.

“Gee, thanks,” Cyrus said with another of his grins.

“It’s up to you whether you’re willing to put yourself in his debt,” Anderson finished.

It still wasn’t exactly a rousing endorsement. The idea of owing Cyrus held no appeal, but if that was what it took to keep the other Olympians off my back, then I’d just have to suck it up. “Just to clarify,” I said, “if I promise to hunt someone for you in the future, you will get whoever’s been setting the fires to stop?”

Cyrus shook his head. “I can’t promise it will stop. If I’m wrong and my father’s behind this, he might not listen to me. But I will warn all of my people off, and if anyone acts against you after my warning, then they’ll be disobeying my direct orders. I’m not as much of a hard ass as my father, but I will not tolerate disobedience.” He leaned forward and looked back and forth between me and Anderson. No charming smiles this time, and the look in his eyes said that he was dead serious. “And let me make this perfectly clear: if you go after my father, all bets are off.”

“What if he sets another fire after you warn him off?” I asked.

“Then I’ll have to conclude I’m a gullible idiot and declare open season on him. But that’s not going to happen, because he’s not behind this in the first place.”

Anderson leaned back in his chair and didn’t say anything. I didn’t for a moment think he was going to let Konstantin go for my sake, at least not in the long run. He would have his revenge, one way or another. But he would have to find a new way to convince me to find him if the agreement with Cyrus worked out. That was a problem for another day.

Both Cyrus and I were looking at Anderson expectantly.

“What?” he asked. “I’ve already agreed to let him be. Do you need me to agree again?”

“Yes, I think I do,” Cyrus said, and I think he was as skeptical about Anderson’s agreement as I was. After all, he’d already sort of caught me on the hunt after Anderson and I had both agreed to leave Konstantin alone.

“All right,” Anderson said. “I’ll say it again. Neither I nor any of my people will harm Konstantin as long as he is an Olympian, and as long as he commits no acts of aggression against us. Satisfied?”

“I guess I am.” Cyrus didn’t sound convinced, and I didn’t blame him. “Shall we shake on it?”

A round of handshaking followed. This time, Mark didn’t even try to participate.

I returned home from our meeting with Cyrus more than a little unsettled. I couldn’t shake the feeling that although Anderson had raised no objection, I had made a tactical error in promising Cyrus a hunt. The fact that I’d specified no violence made me feel marginally better, but I imagined there were any number of ways Cyrus could twist my promise into something I’d later regret.

I was so worried about what I might have gotten myself into that I went looking for Blake, whom I usually preferred to avoid. The door to his suite was ajar when I arrived. I rapped on it as I pushed it open and stuck my head in, but apparently Blake didn’t hear me, because he didn’t look up. When I saw what he was doing, I wasn’t sure whether to laugh or to gape in shock.

He hadn’t heard me knock because he was wearing earbuds, his head nodding along to whatever was playing on his iPod. He was sitting on his couch, one leg tucked under him, as he concentrated intensely on the pair of knitting needles he was holding. I couldn’t tell what he was making—he only had about four or five inches of fabric so far—but the yarn was a thin, silky-looking crimson, and the little bit he had done was almost lacy. He executed some complex maneuver with the yarn and needles, his forehead creasing with the effort, then came to the end of his row and let out a sigh of what sounded like satisfaction.

If you had asked me what Blake did in his spare time, I’d have put knitting somewhere at about 1,001 on the list of possibilities. He wasn’t as macho as guys like Jamaal and Logan, but despite his pretty-boy looks and his onetime romance with Cyrus, he’d never given me the impression that he might be the sort to engage in such a stereotypically feminine pursuit.

“What are you making?” I asked, loud enough that Blake could hear me over whatever was playing on his iPod.

He jumped and practically dropped his needles. He’d been concentrating so hard that I doubt there was any way I could have made my presence known without startling him, but I gave him a sheepish smile anyway.

“Sorry,” I said, as Blake pulled out the earbuds and laid his knitting carefully on the coffee table. “I knocked, but you didn’t hear me.”

He eyed me suspiciously from his seat on the couch. I guess my sudden and unexpected appearance in his suite worried him. Maybe he thought I was going to try to warn him away from Steph for the millionth time.

“I’m making a scarf for Steph for Valentine’s Day,” he said, that wary look still on his face. “I haven’t knitted for a long time, so I thought I’d get an early start.”

The admission made me strangely uncomfortable. The idea that he was making something for Steph by hand, something he expected to take him nearly a month to complete, suggested a deeper attachment than I’d allowed myself to imagine. I’d known Blake was fond of Steph, and I’d even had to admit to myself that he genuinely cared about her, but I’d hoped it was something fun and casual. You don’t spend a month knitting something for someone if the relationship is casual.

“I wouldn’t have taken you for the knitting type,” I said. My voice came out a bit tight. I’d promised not to voice my disapproval of his relationship with my sister, but that didn’t mean I didn’t feel it.

Blake shrugged. “I grew up with three sisters. I was a rebel, so when my parents told me boys don’t knit, I immediately wanted to do it.” He grinned. “I learned by unraveling a couple of my sisters’ projects so I could figure out how it worked. Strangely enough, they weren’t very happy with me when they found the piles of yarn I left behind.”

I chuckled, reluctantly charmed. “How old were you?”

“Nine, the first time. Dad took his belt to me something fierce, so next time, I was more sneaky about it and buried the evidence. I’m pretty sure Dad knew it was me, but there was an outside chance the dog had made off with it, and he wasn’t going to thrash me unless he was sure.”

I imagined blue-eyed, blond-haired Blake had been a pro at looking angelically innocent as a child.

“But you didn’t come here to talk about my hobbies,” Blake said. “What’s up?”

I hesitated, unsure if bringing up his relationship with Cyrus would come across as some kind of subtle rebuke under the circumstances. But it was why I’d come to Blake in the first place, so I straightened my spine and closed the door behind me. Blake hadn’t invited me to sit, so I stood awkwardly and put my hands into my pockets so I wouldn’t fidget.

“You know Anderson and I went to meet with Cyrus this afternoon, right?”

He nodded, and his suspicious look made a return appearance.

“Cyrus promised to tell all the Olympians to back off me if I promised to owe him a hunt someday.” Blake’s eyes widened in alarm and surprise, and I hastened to clarify the details of the deal we’d made. “My question is, is Cyrus like Konstantin? Will he try to find some way to make this deal hurt me despite the conditions I set?”

Blake thought about it a moment, and I decided to sit down despite the lack of invitation. I suspect it hadn’t even occurred to him to issue one—he’d just assumed I’d make myself comfortable. He wasn’t as formal as Anderson or as standoffish as Jamaal.

“Here’s the thing to understand about Cyrus,” Blake said slowly, thinking over his words carefully before he spoke. “Unlike Konstantin, there’s no malice in him. He’d never go out of his way to hurt someone, and he’s even capable of being a nice guy, when the spirit strikes him.”

“Nice guys don’t lead the Olympians!” I protested.

“I said he’s capable of it. He’s not in the least bit malicious, but what he does have in common with his daddy is a deep, abiding selfishness. He’ll be nice and actually help someone, if it doesn’t cost him anything and he’s in the mood. But if you’re standing between him and something that he wants, all bets are off. So in answer to your question, no, he won’t look for a way to make the deal bite you in the ass. But he won’t hesitate to exploit a loophole if he finds one and it’s to his advantage.”

I shook my head. “How the hell did you end up involved with someone like that?” I asked, not really expecting him to answer.

A hint of sadness crossed Blake’s face. “I honestly thought I could change him. He was a good friend for a long time, and I’ve seen sides of him that no one else has seen. He could be a good person, if he wanted to be.” Bitterness now colored Blake’s voice, the sadness gone. “But I found out the hard way that he has no desire to change. And that’s all I have to say on the subject.”

From some of the things I’d heard Cyrus say to and about Blake, I got the feeling the desire to change each other had been mutual. Cyrus would have loved to convert Blake into a full-scale Olympian, and the fact that his current boy toy bore such a striking resemblance to Blake made me wonder if he’d ever fully abandoned that hope.

“Did this stuff make you feel better, or worse?” Blake inquired.

Honestly, I had no idea. “Knowledge is power, right?” I said with a shrug that was supposed to look careless, but probably didn’t. “I’ll just have to hope he finds some inoffensive use for me before anything potentially sticky comes up.”

What I didn’t say, but I suspect we both knew, was that if something sticky came up, I might balk at it despite it fitting the letter of our agreement. The consequences of balking might turn out to be disastrous—no way would Cyrus take it well if I failed to honor our agreement—but I would just have to cross that bridge when I came to it. And hope I never did.





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