Chapter 157

Chapter 157

The outcome was already decided. That much was certain.

Their side of the room had something of a frustrated air, as if they were all waiting for a foregone conclusion. Even if the detractors werent entirely onboard, theyd toe the blue line if the majority decided to pull the trigger.

They were waiting for Miles.

Which meant my only outward advantage going into thisthat Miles was doubting himself, unsure of the course hed put into motionwas somewhat mitigated if they were less likely to listen to him. As expected, this was more trial than inquiry.

Still. There was a sliver of hope.

No conviction is a sure thing. The guiltiest person in the world can escape out from under a mountain of evidence if they create enough doubt in the trial.

My fathers words.

And from cursory research in the matter and my personal delve into legal minutia, he was correct. Juries blew bird-in-hand convictions all the time because prosecutors failed to use the bounty of evidence at their disposal to create a convincing narrative. My circumstances here were, in many ways, worse than a fair trial. My judge, jury, and prosecution comprised the same group of people. Which meant, on top of the evidence, there was a mountain of bias that would be insurmountably difficult to overcome.

Alternatively, the advantages were scant. But not insignificant.

Its several magnitudes more difficult to get a conviction for a death penalty case than a multi-year imprisonment. The threshold of proof is higher, the jury acutely aware that any lingering doubt will sit far more heavily once the sentence is carried out.

The same concept applied here to a much greater degree. If they got it wrong, the death of an innocent person would be on their heads.

And sure, it was possible that I was overestimating their humanity. That theyd done the ruthless arithmetic and reached the conclusion that the possibility of killing one innocent person was worth the high-chance of taking out a monster capable of destroying an entire region and killing hundreds of thousands off the board.

But I didnt think so. If that was the case, Id either be hanging upside down in some basement while one of them worked me over with a car battery, or dead.

Miles might have been the holdout, but they were all taking a serious risk, questioning me here. Putting both themselves and the Adventurers Guild in peril. A risk that was borderline idiot if they didnt have some form of counter-measures in place.

A strong suppression ability, or something along those lines?

No, still too risky without knowing definitively it could be contained.

Instance?

It rankled that I still didnt entirely understand what instancing did. I knew it was an uncommon ability that some Users possessed to isolate a selected area from civilians and spying eyes. That it was sometimes used to tidy up bodies or contain volatile powers. And that there was more than one type.

This whole set-up supported that theorydangling me here by the back window for Myrddin to see didnt make sense if all instances created a visual interference or a pocket dimension. More than likely, this one contained abilities and possibly people.

If that was true, there was a simple enough way to test it.

I drank my milkshake. When I reached the bottom and was noisily sucking air, I made a show of looking around for a trashcan and, finding none, stood and walked towards the door. One second, let me toss this.

Wait Miles said.

Of course, the only skeptic on my side also happened to be a wet blanket. Get more specifics if you can. Next?

Cook hates himself almost as much as he hates you. Which is impressive, considering how they suspect you of literal wholesale slaughter.

Why?

Hes doing his best to suppress it, but Im still getting flashes. They had him in a behavioral analysis unit, reviewing footage. Twisted subject matter, even by my standards.

Let me guess. Cook found something he liked in the footage.

A little too much. Cant nail down exactly what it is, but it totally unsettled him. Was on a leave of absence until Miles pulled him back in.

I can work with that. Keep going. Hawkins and Waller?

Hawkins is solid. DEA. She was working with Miles to take down Roderick on a RICO case, stayed with him when the focus shifted to necromancers. Hawkins might be the only person in the room who doesnt believe youre manipulating Miles to get out of this. They all think highly of him, but she has Miles on one hell of a pedestal.

So Miles is DEA, then? I asked. The Roderick RICO connection was concerning, especially considering their alliance with the Merchants Guild, but Id need to pull on that thread later.

Azure hesitated. No. I get the feeling he was assisting Hawkins in an unofficial capacity. And that isnt unique to her. From what I can tell, Miles has filled in as a pinch hitter for almost everyone in this room. Every one of them owes him. And theyre incredibly loyal.

Fucking fantastic. Feds had a well-recorded history of not playing well with other institutions, both at the local level and with other federal agencies. Normally, I could have leaned on that a little, but Miles being a divide-crossing messiah had just nixed that tool from my toolbox.

Anything from Miles himself?

No. Still drawing a blank. But Matt, he's not the one you should be worried about.

Wallers a rabid dog disguised as a beancounter. Yeah. I know the type.

Azure sounded panicked. Its worse than that. That profile Miles blasted out at the emergency meeting? It came from Waller. This is his area of expertise. And hes convinced youre the one theyre looking for. He knows

I cut Azure off quickly, Dont tell me the specifics. Whatever he throws at me, my reaction needs to be as authentic as possible. Just amp up his confidence in his findings.

But hes going to crucify you.

Let him. The stronger he clung to his profile, the more jarring it would be when I pulled the rug out from under him. Id interrupted Azure before he could get into the details of the warning, but the context was clear.

I couldnt bullshit my way out of this without falling into one of the many traps Waller had undoubtedly laid.

The best way forward was playing this straight. I looked up at Waller. Is it okay if I start a little further back, for context?

Waller inclined his head. Certainly.

I took a deep breath, my brow furrowing in focus. I was walking home from school, the morning the meteor hit