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The Burning City 23

    Arlo Pike sat back in his chair and looked at the two piles of work that he had put


    together. Some of it would have to be handed off to Jason, and Tilda. He would have


    to take care of the things they couldn’t do.


    And the first thing he had to do was confirm if all the missing people from the


    North Side had got on the Death Train before Jason had hacked its brain out. Once


    he had done that, he could pass the word up that those people were dead and digested.


    It would take some time and wandering around the city to make sure but he was


    confident he could do it.


    The other stack went to Jason and Tilda to look around the other neighborhoods, and


    ask questions of the relatives. No one had found any missing bodies, and it was easy


    to blame everything on the Train, but he didn’t believe that, and he knew Jason


    wouldn’t. The hunting grounds were too wide apart for that.


    Jason and Tilda came in. He gestured at their stack on his desk in their official Guard


    office at the bottom of the building.


    “I need you to go over the general areas of those reports and look for anything out of


    the ordinary,” said Pike. “See if you can narrow things down to a street. I have to take


    this other stack and cross all the names off myself. Once I do that, we can go back


    over your stack, and hopefully put my stack in the solved filing for the Guard.”


    “Have you thought about taking a break, Arlo?,” asked Jason. “You have been down


    here for two days.”


    “I plan to go by my place when I get done looking around,” said Pike. “Once I make


    sure all of my victims are dead, I can take a bath and start thinking about how to find


    the other people we’re looking for in your stack.”


    “Do you think any of these people are alive?,” asked Jason.


    “Not the ones in my stack,” said Pike. “I want to make sure so I can tell Captain


    Munroe we’re pursuing all leads.”


    “All right,” said Jason. “I will take my apprentice around and show her the ropes.”


    “Avoid the dead man if you can,” said Pike. “At some point, we might have to talk


    to him about his mission, but let’s save that until we have a handle on this wider


    problem first.”


    “There’s a chance he is looking for the same person, or persons, we are,” said Jason.


    “We’re not in a race, and with this many people missing, it is either a lot of people


    involved, or monsters,” said Pike. “If it is a bunch of monsters operating, we’re going


    to look at what they are before we get too close.”


    “The Alvas?,” asked Jason.


    “What about him?,” asked Pike.


    “Where do you think he fits in?,” asked Jason. “Does he fit in?”


    “I don’t know,” said Pike. “If he shows up while you’re looking around, he has to fit


    in somewhere even if it’s to watch whatever is going on. He might be the cause of


    some of this. If he is, we might have to find a way to take him off the board to


    simplify things enough to fix them.”


    “The Alvas are not known for their inability to fight,” said Jason. He split his stack


    in half and gave Tilda the top part.


    “If he is the one causing all of this, we can’t let him run around,” said Pike. “That’s


    just asking for him to pay us a visit when we’re not looking.”


    “I agree with that,” said Tilda. She flipped through the small stack in her hands. “The


    Alvas will want to kill us if we cross him.”


    “That’s why I carry my sword,” said Jason. He tucked his stack under an arm. “We’ll


    need bags to carry all of these.”


    “All right,” said Pike. He stood up. He looked around. He found his coat and pulled


    it on. He grabbed up his notes, and pencil and put them in his pocket. “Take the writ


    and the gold in case you need it. I’m heading up to the North Side to look around.”


    “All right,” said Jason. “You want to meet later?”


    “Just bring everything back here to the office when you’re done,” said Pike. “I plan


    to go home when I get done. We’ll meet here tomorrow in the morning to go over


    what we have got done, and what we need to do for the rest.”


    “Sounds good,” said Jason. He grabbed the writ and the gold and put it in his inner


    coat pocket. “Come along, Apprentice. I will show you the fine art of beating people


    in a back alley for information.”


    “I already know how to do that,” said Tilda. “That’s how I found out my last


    boyfriend was seeing another girl down the block.”


    “I think I need to see your technique,” said Jason. “Maybe I can pick up some


    pointers.”


    Pike watched them go with a sigh. He hoped they didn’t send their quarry into a


    frenzy of prevention before they knew what they were looking to find. He doubted


    Munroe wanted them to hack their enemy apart without proof.


    But if something jumped out at Jason, it was on the monster for what happened next.


    The monster hunter was not one to run if he could cut his enemy down.


    The finder and his partners worked their ways across the city. Pike traced each of


    the victims on his list from their neighborhoods up to the North Side. Each trail ended


    with the station where they had met the disguised worm on the tracks. He marked


    off each name at the end of the trail.


    There were not going to be any bodies for the Guard to hand back to the families


    waiting for the news of their loved ones. He was glad he wasn’t going to have to


    deliver those words.


    Jason and Tilda’s work was more convoluted. None of their victims had been


    anywhere they needed to use the train. Instead they had vanished close to their haunts,


    almost within sight of others. Some of the witnesses and the local Guard told them


    that the sound of a bell had been heard at the time their victims had gone missing.


    There was another thread visible to the monster hunter that he didn’t like. Some of


    the people had disappeared close to a local hotel. He had looked the place over and


    he didn’t like it. He wasn’t the finder his partner was, but he was sure they would


    This novel''s true home is a different platform. Support the author by finding it there.have to go in there and sort things out eventually.


    He relished the chance to do that.


    “What do you think?,” Tilda finally asked. They had decided to take a break and get


    something to eat not far from Rowena’s school.


    “I think we’re going to have to kill a lot of monsters in the next few weeks, maybe


    months,” said Jason. He inspected his johnny cake and bacon with a critical eye.


    “Arlo was right about that.”


    “I thought there was something wrong about that Love Hotel,” said Tilda.


    “I did too,” said Jason. “I think that was separate from the rest of the problem. It’s


    something we’ll have to suss out with Arlo.”


    “You’re not going in there on your own?,” asked Tilda. She had cheese and fried ham


    on two pieces of bread.


    “I would love to, but I don’t think it’s that important compared to these other sites,”


    said Jason. “When we have the majority of our missing accounted for, then we’ll look


    at that hotel and see why it looks bad to us.”


    “I can see that,” said Tilda. She dug in. “What do you think is going on?”


    “I think our dead man is here chasing after whatever is causing the monsters,” said


    Jason. He cut the cake and bacon up and used a fork on the mix. “If we found him,


    and could track him to his targets, we might be able to shortcut all this searching.”


    “I can see that,” said Tilda. She sipped her lemonade. “We don’t have any way to


    check with him about who he’s chasing. He might be here after something else. He


    is a finder after all.”


    “That would be one more problem on our plate that we would have to take care of


    eventually,” said Jason. “I’m hoping he finishes his business before we can get to


    him. If he solves our problems while he is doing that, I am more than willing to give


    him a hearty thank you and farewell.”


    “You ever run into one before?,” asked Tilda.


    “No, but there are stories,” said Jason. “And the stories are bad enough on their own.”


    “Tell me one,” demanded Tilda.


    “I’ll tell you while we’re walking,” said Jason. He hastily finished his meal and


    downed his tea. “Let’s go.”


    Tilda stood and sipped her lemonade. She put the cup down as she hurried to catch


    up with the monster hunter. She ate her sandwich as she walked beside him. He


    seemed intent on something down the street.


    “You promised a story,” said Tilda. “What are we doing?”


    “We’re walking,” said Jason. He smiled at her. She noted that his hand rode on


    his sword as he walked.


    “A story,” said Tilda.


    “You’re very single-minded,” said Jason.


    Tilda made a gesture for him to get on with it.


    “All right,” said Jason. “Let me think.”


    They walked along. Tilda noted they were following a group of girls from the school.


    She didn’t know who they were, but felt Jason would tell her when he decided to


    do more than walk behind them.


    “Several cities had engaged in battle,” said Jason. “This was before they had


    consolidated into what we have now. Magic and powers were being thrown around


    like balls. It looked like it was something that would drag on for years as each power


    jockeyed for position.”


    The pair walked along slowly. Jason had his eye on his surroundings and thought he


    had seen his Alvas moving behind them. He said nothing. If the vagrant approached


    they would have words.


    “It was said that things had come down to a mad magician and his wooden dog


    blowing things up,” said Jason. “Before that, a dead man got involved. The story goes


    he cut his way through two armies to get to one of the magicians throwing spells. He


    supposedly killed hundreds with arrows made of fire, and a sword of light. Once he


    killed the magician, one side dispersed and left most of their magical equipment


    behind. Then the magician got involved and blew everything up to keep people from


    using what was left.”


    “Do you believe that?,” asked Tilda.


    “They say that’s where the Crater came from, and why the Rhiem and Alvas are south


    of Bern,” said Jason.


    “You’re kidding,” said Tilda.


    “Don’t look at me like that,” said Jason. He smiled. “The story says the explosion


    created the desert and pushed most of the survivors out, but the sandworms are all


    that is left over from that war.”


    “I know you’re pulling my leg now,” said Tilda. She would have laughed, but had an


    image to maintain.


    “Believe what you want,” said Jason. “Some of my forebears killed sandworms that


    weren’t confined inside the desert. The reports were of a bloody mess.”


    “Monster hunters were there?,” asked Tilda.


    “Some of us,” said Jason. “Perseus Macri was the one to report the dead man on the


    field.”


    The girls formed up in front of a small house in a shabby neighborhood toward


    the southeast of the city. They seemed to be undecided on what they should do next.


    Jason stood down the street. He watched the neighborhood. He thought he saw the


    Alvas down the street in a reflection of a window. He wondered what the interest was,


    and where it really lay. Was the Alvas watching the girls, or him?


    An older man in a plain shirt and pants opened the door. He smiled at the girls as he


    waved them to come into the house. He looked across the street at Jason and Tilda,


    and then further down toward where the Alvas lurked. Then he shut the door in their


    faces.


    “What do you think?,” asked Tilda.


    “He’s an adventurer,” said Jason. He frowned as he examined the neighborhood


    again. He almost fit in with the clothes around him, but he had been picked out almost


    instantly by the other man. He knew the people who should be there, and the two of


    them shouldn’t be. “I think we should ask him some questions about what’s going


    on.”


    “Do you really think we should just butt in?,” asked Tilda.


    “That’s part of our job,” said Jason. “Just watch for an Alvas in rags so he doesn’t


    come up behind us.”


    He started toward the house. He spotted the warding almost immediately. If you


    weren’t human, you weren’t going to live to get to the door from what he could see.


    Maybe the other man was a monster hunter like himself.


    “I saw your man,” whispered Tilda. She trailed behind Jason. “He’s hiding in an alley


    down the street, on the left, next to the little alchemy shop.”


    “Don’t step off the marked path,” said Jason. “We don’t want to start anything by


    accident.”


    Tilda nodded. She stayed behind him in case she had to use him for a shield.


    Jason knocked on the door. He tried to look less of a threat. He had the bag with the


    files in it, his coat, pants and boots. His sword rode at his hip. He might look like a


    traveler if he tried enough.


    Tilda didn’t look like much of a threat with her slim frame, black clothes and hair


    long on one side of her head and gone on the other. Anyone seeing the marks of the


    Rhiem on her cheek would think different. The Fae didn’t have a good reputation


    in Bern.


    The door opened. The adventurer looked at them. He smiled, but he was ready to


    fight. Jason could see it in the way he held himself. And he was ready to punch Tilda


    first from the way he looked at them.


    “Hello,” said Jason. “I’m Jason, and this is Tilda Crass. We’re finders. We wondered


    if we could ask some questions of the young girls that came in a few minutes ago.”


    “I don’t see why I should allow that,” said the home owner.


    “We’re trying to find the monsters,” said Jason. “We think they are involved


    somehow.”


    “Really?,” said the home owner. Jason knew he was going to lie. He could see it in


    the way the man’s face shifted.


    “Let them in, husband,” said a woman from inside the house. “We might need a


    monster hunter before this is over.”


    “Welcome to my home,” said the ex-adventurer. “I’m Pavel Konstantin, and this


    is my wife, Sonya.”


    The woman indicated wore various bracelets and rings, a yellow dress with pink


    flowers sewn into it, and a ribbon to tie her graying hair back. Her eyes were dark and


    a little irritated at the intrusion.


    “Hello, girls,” said Jason. “We meet again.”


    Tilda waved the fingers of one hand at the group.


    “I think we should have dinner, and then we will talk,” said Madam Konstantin.


    “Take them into the dining room, husband. I will get the plates ready.”


    “We already ate,” said Tilda.


    “You can stand to eat a little more as thin as you are,” said Madam Konstantin. “Now


    go. Afterwards, we will talk business.”


    “Come with me,” said Pavel. “She has been slaving all day in the kitchen. Refusal


    will cost you an arm and a leg.”


    Jason hoped he meant figuratively and not literally.


    Pavel led them into a room lit by lamps hung overhead. A massive table dominated


    the space. Places had been set for the girls and the Konstantins. He waved Jason


    and Tilda to empty spots.


    “I will be right back with your plates and silverware,” said Pavel. “We hadn’t


    expected more guests.”


    He bustled out of the room.


    Jason looked the room over. It seemed bigger than the house. He leaned back in his


    chair and unbuckled his sword. He laid it down beside his chair where he could


    get at it if he need it, but it wasn’t poking him while he sat for dinner.


    He doubted it would do him much good against Pavel’s wife in any case.


    “This is kind of awkward,” said Tilda.
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