Chapter 238: (End of Book 2)

Chapter 238: (End of Book 2)

A loud crack echoed out across the water, followed by the vibrating hum of metal. Nick stared at the sword in his hand with an utterly inscrutable expression. Then raised his head and bellowed to the heavens. Come the fuck on!

Before I knew what was happening, laughter poured out of me in a crescendoing wave, growing to a guffaw. Most fictional depictions of the sword in the stone comprised the sword sliding out freely, as if itd been sheathed there. This result was likely far more realistic, if not entirely anti-climactic. As Nick slowly turned toward me, utterly furious, I tried to clamp down on the laughter, snickering instead. Let me guess, this has never happened to you before?

Yuk it up, edgelord. Nick brandished the ruined blade at me threateningly. It had snapped clean in half at a jagged angle and rose to an uneven taper at the end, giving the supposedly mythic blade a toothpick-like appearance.

I raised my arms in exaggerated surrender. Please ser. Dont prick me to death.

Show you a prick. Nick muttered, holding the blade horizontally and studying it in disbelief. What the actual fuck, Gawain? I thought he actually liked me.

Something Gawain said came to mind. The way he talked, it sounded like this place was originally meant to be a tower floor, but it was abandoned and left unfinished. If thats true, it kind of makes sense.

FuuuUUuUUUUUuuUUuUck! Nick reeled back as if to throw the blade clean across the chamber, thought better of it at the last moment and swung it downward instead, swiping impotently at the air. The end caught an uplifted section of rock and shattered, taking another few inches off the sword as the fragments ricocheted and bounced, skittering across the stone and into the water with a series of plops.

I clamped a hand over my mouth. Nick was silent as a funeral. Slowly, he attempted to replace the sword into the gap in the stone. For a moment it stood upright.

Then fell over. The gemstone in the hilt shattered.

Im done! Nick threw up his hands.

Somehow, I managed not to laugh. I bent down and picked up the sword. It didnt even register as an item. No feeling of magic either, but the heft and weight felt fine, about average for a sword its size. Okay. Obviously, there are some flaws with the metal.

You think?! Nick raved.

Might be a structural issue. Thatd be on theme, flawed and unfinished like the ripple itself. I shifted my head from side to side. But the metal itself might be valuable. If we find someone to melt it down, might be enough material left to reforge a spearhead, or a dagger.

Right! Great! Lets melt down Excalibur! Nick rambled. Actually, why even make it a weapon? We could just gussy up a couple of grails while were at it. Get into the grail trading business.

Probably not enough metal for that. If you factor in circumference, thickness, the base, and the rounded edges, there isnt enough for a single grail, let alone I trailed off, as Nick looked about ready to have a heart attack. Uh. There might be enough for a small grail?

He squished his face with both hands, accentuating his reddening cheeks. Just. Gonna take five.

Yeah. Catch your breath.

Maybe the real Excalibur was the friends we made along the way.

I snorted, wisely keeping the joke to myself as I inventoried the sword, gathering the smaller metal fragments scattered around the rock as well. It probably wouldnt add up to anything, but Id consult Erik and Kai first. If they couldnt do anything with it, Id dispose of it quietly. The less said about it after today, the better.

On my stomach, I could see a glint of metal from deeper in the hole. Maybe if I loosened the rocks around the edges and came back with the proper tools, I could get the rest of it out.

Matt. Nick called, the beginnings of alarm in his voice.

I stood and brushed myself off, walking to where he stood at the edge of the outcropping, looking down into the water.

The planners were moving like ants in an overturned anthill. They were scrambling over the top of each other, water above them boiling as they moved in circular patterns, going everywhere and nowhere at once.

Did taking the sword out piss them off? Nick asked.

Hard to say. It was a classic setupgrab an item in a suspiciously safe area, only for the innocent creatures that surrounded it to take issuebut that didnt feel right. They werent trying to climb towards us or even pushing up against the rock. Rather, they seemed ignorant of us as they went about their business.

A clearing formed off to the left-hand side, the planner crabs spreading out and illuminating the dark floor beneath. There were many vertical rectangles scratched into the dirt, spaced out in an oddly familiar setup I couldnt place until I spotted the tail of a clear comet above them.

Thats the skyline. Nick said immediately, his brow furrowed.

Another clearing formed. Then another. And another.

The second was a clear representation of the tunnel. And while the hieroglyphic figures lacked detail, it was easy enough to tell who was who. Sae, retreating into the gate. Jinny immobile on the ground. Nick, depicted with a black wound on his heart, crouching over her, a crown-like aura radiating around his head. Me, my face hidden within a cowl, standing off to the side.

They took us through every subsequent major event that centered on Nick: His suffering in captivity. His temptation. Then to the current moment, where he held a broken sword aloft atop an outcropping in the center of the lake. Judging from the glinting metal in the otherwise dirt scrawling, it was a safe guess that theyd used the swords metal that had fallen into the lake.

What are they Nick started.

Shh. I held a finger to my lips.

Like clockwork more clearings opened, continuing to create a circle around the rock. These were less familiar. More abstract. Meant to represent the future rather than the past. While the meaning was more shrouded, they seemed to depict Nick, climbing to the top of the tower with me at his side.

The second to last pictograph was like the one that depicted the current day. Only this time, the sword in Nicks hand was whole. And with the luminescence from the planners, it seemed to glow with an almost radiant light.

And the last picture portrayed Nick, sitting on a throne. I stood off to the side, a silent guardian as he reigned over several individuals too detailed to be generic subjects.

Thats the court, I think. Nick said.

Suddenly, everything clicked. I nearly reeled at the scale of it, the unbelievable vision. Hasturs reason for sending us here. The nature of the order. How he intended to pull one over on the pantheon, all of whom seemed to be interested in little beyond reveling in blood.

Every con starts with a story. A fiction tailored to your mark, presented so confidently that they want to buy in. If you do it right, theyll want to believe you, no matter how unlikely the story is. I had more in common with Hastur than I realized. Because unless I was completely off base, he was in the planning stages of a con on the grandest scale imaginable.

With Nick in the starring role.

Meanwhile, Nick was still fixated on the final drawing. The figure sitting on the throne beside him. Id missed her entirely, too focused on other parts of the mural to notice. With the basic drawing style, she had no definable characteristics. But she looked exactly like the representation of Jinny from the pictograph of the tunnel.

He turned to me, face downcast, shimmering eyes reflecting the light of the crabs below. Its all bullshit, right?

I dont know. I answered honestly.

Come on, He wiped at his face, his mouth tight with anger. A prophecy? Really? And not only that, a prophecy that cribs its mythos from your pseudonym, and just so happens to center around climbing the tower. A tower weve already established wants to be climbed.

I still didnt have an answer for that. The transposition was too high stress, nonstop, and as much as I tried to remember the exact thought process that led to the name, details escaped me. All I recalled was the name popping into my head and sticking there.

Is it bullshit? I chewed on that for a moment. Probably. But not for us. Were not the marks here.

Then who is? Nick asked.

There was only one answer. The pantheon.

Hastur was in the middle of something. His desiccated body was submerged in the water of a porcelain bath, the tentacle-like mycelium that covered his body extending out from the tub, giving him the appearance of an overgrown potted plant. He hadnt bothered opening his eyes and appeared serene, despite the pressure on my body.

Nick looked between me and Hastur, worriedly. Is there a problem?

The problem Hasturs natural voice was guttural, harsh. Is I told this one to clean house. Which he seems to have misinterpreted as a directive to douse it in gasoline and light a match. The casualties were expected, but short of brute forcing things, it will be nigh impossible to access the tower now.

This was always going to be the hard part. Justifying why Id made it harder for the Order to access the tower. Id intended to place blame on the feds, use them as a scapegoat. It wasnt my fault theyd tracked me down, after all. But with our new bargaining chits, I didnt have to.

And despite the overwhelming pressure, I couldnt help but smile. We were right. Hastur didnt know everything.

Let him go." The booming voice was so powerful, so authoritative, for a moment I thought someone else had entered the room. Nick took a menacing step forward, hand resting on the pommel of his sword.

Hastur opened a single eye, looking over him with interest. Someone found their courage.

All at once, the pressure that weighed me down released.

A less charitable deity might find your directness rude. Or worse, a threat. Hastur said, both eyes open now, completely focused on Nick.

Nick didnt falter. Not a demand. A request. The first of several.

Fascinating. Hastur stroked his chin. You barge into my chambers unannounced on the tailcoat of failure with requests. Or perhaps your failure wasnt such a failure after all.

Nick didnt take the bait, his expression easygoing now that Hastur wasnt trying to grind me into the concrete. It was like somewhere between here and the tower hed flipped a switch. All things considered, he was doing exceptionally well.

Dormammu, Ive come to bargain. Nick announced.

I facepalmed. Jesus Christ.

Not your best. Hastur frowned. But elaborate on this bargain, and why I should be interested.

Nick counted off on his fingers, undeterred. Youll remove my geas. If you want Matt to clean house, I cant be beholden to the current leaders. Theres a good chance theyll try to use me against him, once they figure out were working together, and potentially compromise his identity. Well also need resources, people who arent amateurs assigned to us. A permanent position in the court.

And why would I do that? Hastur countered.

Because you want a backdoor into the tower. A discrete way for the Order of Parcaes Users to come and go. I said.

A metric fuck-ton of planners. Nick added.

And, just spitballing here, but Im guessing you might want the legendary sword at the top of the tower that the people who run it are looking for. And a hero to wield it. I smirked.

That it took Hastur a moment to connect the dots was disquieting. Highlighted the reality that the way forward that Nick and I had found, was truly one of many. When he finally got it, however, his smile was full.

I see. This is the path youve chosen. If you were aware of how astronomically unlikely this outcome was, youd understand my reticence, Hastur said. I could almost see the calculation in his expression as he focused on Nick. You were so angry, so lost. While Im glad to see you back from the brink, I cant help but wonder. Will you regret it?

There was an audible scrape as Nick ground his teeth together. I put my hand on his back, and it stopped.

Maybe. Nick finally admitted. But looking at it from both sides, Id regret the alternative more. No matter whats fair, or just, or whatever. Keiths brother was the one who pulled the trigger. And if I start taking everyone who wrongs me to task, itll be impossible to focus on the big picture.

Inspiring. Hastur nodded thoughtfully. Surprising, but inspiring. Im not terribly fond of moral victories, but it would have been a travesty to lose a disciple with so much potential.

Then why offer him up like a lamb to slaughter? Nick growled. It would have never crossed my mind if you didnt put it there.

Yes. It would have. Hastur retorted, imparting a certainty to his words that was undeniable. Nick looked away as he continued. Eventually. To answer your question, it was a matter of triage. The order is on the verge of fracture, to say nothing of the court. Losing him cost me less than losing you. And while this might sound monstrous, I have lived too long to allow naivety to blunt the blade of reality. An uneven trade is always preferable to an outright loss.

His frigid eyes snapped to me, and I felt a fraction of the weight from before. And you. You are certain you wish to remain as you are?

I shifted under the weight, keeping my expression stoic. Yes.

He pointed at my gauntlet. That recent acquisition of yours will prove a challenge. A boon, to be certain, but a challenge. And whileas youve both guessedmy current state limits the extent of my gaze, and the tower itself is well protected, I witnessed your encounter with a certain caster. One in Mr. Fields Camp.

Maria.

Her surprised expression popped into my mind, as she looked down at the knife in her chest.

From a technical standpoint, it was brilliantly handled. Outmatched, worn down, and you still emerged victorious. But in the aftermath, your soul trembled. Youve killed before, but not like that. And if you remain on this path, serving as the Ceaseless Knights dark vanguard, she will not be the last. Hasturs voice was forlorn, almost sympathetic. He doesnt know what hes asking of you. But I do.

Did I want to be normal? To walk into a room without immediately looking for an exit route, meet someone without the automatic mental calculation of what they could do for me and how I could best use them, and the most efficient way to kill them if they turned on me?

Of course I did.

But

Nick grabbed my shoulder. There was nothing but concern and understanding in his expression, a silent question in his eyes. Hed support me no matter what I decided. And somehow, knowing that made it easier.

Our world was about as far from normal as you could get.

Maybe it always has been.

The things that made me different also kept the people I cared about healthy and alive.

It was time to stop fighting that. No more hand wringing. If we made it through, thered be time to work through my issues. Maybe go back to therapy. Find a kinder way to live. But the best chance of that happeningreturning to a semi-normal, semi-functional worldwas ending this before the next transposition event wiped out another massive swath of the population. I needed to keep in check. Everything else was fair game.

Im sure youll find a more lucrative way to compensate me. I finally said.

Hastur blinked, then laughed. Opportunistic as always. How fitting. Make no mistake my young friend. When I reach my zenith, you and yours will want for nothing. I will respect your decision. He smirked. But if you ever wish to know the truth of your nature, you need only ask.

It was clear bait, placed before me with no effort to disguise it. He was still working an angle. The question was why.

Before I could think on that further, Nick stepped forward. So?

Hastur raised his arm and drew a lazy circle with his finger. Nick grunted. When he unfastened his gauntlet, the Orders mark was gone, and presumably, the geas with it.

The desiccated god closed his eyes and relaxed, sinking deeper into the bath until his shriveled face was the only visible part of him. The Ordinator and the Pendragon. Old and new, joined as one. Yes. Itll be different this time. Mark my words, and mark them well. Were going to do great things together.