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The Burning City 28

    Arlo Pike lived in a small building not far from their office. He said it made it easier


    for him to keep an eye on the place.


    Jason thought it was because the landlord’s wife tended to wander, and the landlord


    needed them to find her. So it was easier to make sure she didn’t hurt herself if


    someone was there to keep an eye out.


    The monster hunter didn’t think she had long in this world. He had seen other cases


    over the years. The ancients wound up lost in their memories until they died.


    That wasn’t a concern at the moment. He needed to get his partner and they needed


    to track down their villain. After that, some type of justice would have to be


    dispensed.


    Hunting monsters was Jason’s life. Hunting monsters who made other monsters was


    just a wrinkle that he rarely encountered. It would be good to deal with the source of


    so many problems and cut that off at the root.


    The fact that the city was threatened just made the hunt all the more vital in his


    opinion. Exposing and killing the mastermind would allow them to find any other


    girls he had turned into wombs for his creations. Then they could do something about


    the girls they had already lost to this madness.


    The fact that Percy Macri’s madman and his wooden dog was on the scene made it


    possible the city could be turned into a crater at any moment.


    Anyone else would have doubted they were dealing with the same individual. Jason


    had looked the man in the eyes and had seen something. He didn’t know what it was,


    but it wasn’t human.


    And the wooden dog was unique enough to identify the man.


    Constructs of various types were common in Bern. The Rhiem and Alvas occupied


    the lands in the south. Machinists and summoners worked in the city proper. You


    could pick out one of the artificial creatures anywhere you went.


    None of them had the life Woody had. The dog had his own mind, and you could see


    that in the way he moved. And he was just as dangerous as his companion in blue.


    Jason assessed risks all the time. He knew a confrontation with the two would end


    badly if he were by himself. He might be able to chop the dog apart, but the magician


    would rip him up while he was doing it.


    His respect for the Konstantins grew if they had dealt with the man and walked away


    with all their limbs intact.


    Jason climbed the steps to Pike’s apartment. He knocked on the door. His partner was


    probably asleep in his chair. He had sorted everything for them and handled the


    search through the North Side. His skill took a lot to use.


    And they needed to put it to use once more if they wanted to stop their enemy in his


    tracks.


    The fact that he had kept an eye on the girls had not been lost on Jason. Either he was


    watching to make sure no one like Jason interfered, or he was watching to see which


    one would explode next.


    Did he know Sonya Konstantin? If he did, he knew the girls were close to someone


    who could help them. If he didn’t, did he have some way to trigger the process and


    kill all the girls at once?


    That was something that could be important if they couldn’t come up with a cure


    quickly.


    Jason knocked again and listened. He heard movement. He pictured Pike stumbling


    around in the dark, trying to get to the door. He put on a smile when the wooden


    barrier moved out of the way a few inches.


    “I thought we were meeting tomorrow,” said Pike. He held a poker in one hand to use


    as a club.


    “We have a development in the Rowena case,” said Jason. “I need your eyes.”


    “What kind of development?,” asked Pike. He leaned the poker against the door, and


    smoothed down his hair with his hand.


    “Rowena’s friends made a deal with the Alvas I told you about,” said Jason. “In


    exchange for fighting murdering witches, he turned them into potential murdering


    witches. We need to find him.”


    Jason watched the gears turn in his friend’s brain. Pike nodded as pieces fell into


    place.


    “All the missing people that wasn’t in the North Side are connected to this,” said


    Pike.


    “The missing school girls are most likely our culprits,” said Jason. “Their change


    happened and they set up their hunting grounds sideways to the city.”


    “Let me get dressed,” said Pike. “You can tell me what I need to know on the way.”


    Pike closed the door. He roamed his apartment for a few minutes. Then he opened the


    door in a fresh suit and his messenger bag. He pulled on his coat. He shut the place


    up as he waved for Jason to lead the way.


    “I need some coffee,” Pike said.


    “We’ll get it on the way back to the Konstantins’ neighborhood,” said Jason. “That’s


    where I last saw our quarry.”


    “How sure are you of all this?,” asked Pike. They clomped down the stairs of his


    building.


    “Reasonably sure,” said Jason. “We might have a bit of a time limit if the Konstantins


    and their guest can’t stop the changes from happening.”


    “Guest?,” asked Pike.


    “While we were discussing options, one of the Konstantins’ old friends showed up


    with his wooden dog,” said Jason. “He seems to be an expert in magic.”


    “Wooden dog?,” said Pike.


    “A living wooden dog,” said Jason. He smiled at Pike’s puzzlement. “You’ll see for


    yourself when we get there.”


    “What did this expert think?,” asked Pike.


    “That we have eight monsters loose in the city eating people and using the Alvas


    room magic as a spider web,” said Jason. “Which is what we thought when we started


    isolating the cases.”


    “Eight of them could be bad,” said Pike. “We’ll have to let the Guard know we might


    need one of their magicians to help us deal with it.”


    “I think our expert is all we need,” said Jason. “It seems he destroyed Mim’s Tower


    This narrative has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road. If you see it on Amazon, please report it.by himself.”


    “You’re kidding,” said Pike.


    “I overheard them talking before I had to show the wooden dog to the parlor,” said


    Jason. “The Konstantins and their friend were there. And their friend destroyed


    Mim’s tower and ended the battle. He said he lost ten years doing that.”


    “The Alvas might come into the city looking for him if they know he is here,” said


    Pike.


    “I think most reasonable Alvas will be scared to confront someone who blew up part


    of their border by himself and walked away from it,” said Jason. “Whatever he is, I


    doubt he’s human enough to have to worry about any attempt they might make to get


    revenge for what he did.”


    “So we might possibly be dealing with a minor god,” said Pike. He rubbed his face


    with his hands. “I need some coffee.”


    “He’s friendly enough,” said Jason. “He reminded Tilda of the Crater Desert legend


    I told her. It might be the same man, or god if you prefer.”


    “You’re making this sound worse and worse as you go along,” said Pike. “Quit


    talking.”


    “Our part in this will be the easy part,” said Jason. “We’re going to have to hunt the


    Alvas down and take him so he can’t cause any more trouble. The Konstantins and


    the expert are going to have to do something about the monsters.”


    “So we’re getting the most dangerous part of things,” said Pike.


    “Would you have it any other way?,” asked Jason.


    “You know the answer is yes,” said Pike. “What kind of question is that? Of course,


    I would love to let someone else take on a magic using menace so I can stay way back


    out of the way. I find things, not fight things.”


    “That’s why we’re the perfect partners,” said Jason. “You find the things we need to


    kill, and I kill them. Make no mistake, this Alvas needs to be killed. He is sponsoring


    death across the city.”


    “He might be what the dead man is looking for,” said Pike. He broke off their line of


    travel and went into a place that just sold coffee for people heading into work and


    passing by.


    Jason waited for him on the sidewalk. The sky filled with stars as he waited. This


    close to the Rheim, and some of them danced in their positions before settling down.


    He considered the words and agreed with his partner. They had an agent of chaos in


    the city. The Underworld was reportedly against chaos since it fouled up their


    process. Sending a dead man to put a stop to the disruption would be the kind of thing


    they would do.


    The others slain could be targets of opportunity, or names on a list. Jason couldn’t


    decide which would fit better, but he could see both things happening, and if more


    than one problem was in the city, it explained why the dead man hadn’t moved on yet.


    He liked that other forces than him and his partner were looking for their menace, and


    wanted to do away with him.


    How many other enemies did the Alvas have?


    Pike returned with a cup of coffee in his hands. He gestured for Jason to lead on. He


    sipped at his coffee as they walked.


    Jason let the finder wander in his own mind. He knew his friend perceived


    connections that others didn’t. That was how he found things. Putting this Alvas


    down as the main cause of their problems in the city probably shone a light on a lot


    of other minor problems that had been in the files and the monster hunter had missed.


    And they would put him down. Jason assured himself of that. The city was done


    losing citizens to cursed girls.


    And Jason was done with having innocents victimized by their desire to help others.


    “I’m going to need a starting point,” said Pike as they headed back to the old


    neighborhood.


    “The last place I saw him was an alley down the street from the Konstantins,” said


    Jason. “Errant, the Konstantins’ friend, was also looking for him and missed him


    which means he moved when he sensed a greater power in the area.”


    “He is afraid of this Errant, but not of you, or the Konstantins?,” asked Pike.


    “That’s my reading,” said Jason. “If we have to deal with Errant, it would be a tough


    fight decided by how fast we are.”


    “He would murder us if he was ready,” said Pike.


    “I have no doubt in my mind that he is just as fast as a monster hunter, and prone to


    throwing lightning,” said Jason. “I doubt protective measures would stand up to what


    he can do.”


    “That’s unexpected of you,” said Pike.


    “It’s a realistic assessment of our capabilities matched against a perception of a


    legendary action,” said Jason. “If he is the same man that destroyed Mim’s tower, and


    created the Crater Desert, atop of what I saw, he could destroy part of the city with


    a wave of his hand.”


    “And if the Alvas saw him coming, it would be enough to make the Alvas flee,” said


    Pike.


    “If he assessed things the same way I did, without knowing the other things,” said


    Jason. “If he was at Mim’s tower with the Konstantins and Errant, he knows who and


    what he is dealing with, and knows he might have a small chance in an open duel.”


    “So he hides until Errant goes away, doubles down and makes more problems until


    he is caught, or runs,” said Pike.


    “I doubt he will run,” said Jason. “I don’t think that is an option. It’s more likely he


    will go after Errant and the Konstantins and think he can beat them while ignoring


    us.”


    “How likely?,” asked Pike.


    “I would give it good enough odds to bet on it,” said Jason.


    “A sure thing then,” said Pike.


    “He won’t survive the fight if he goes that way,” said Jason. “I expect some kind of


    hostage taking, or a trap to tilt the odds in his favor. It’s what I would do if I was a


    ruthless monster.”


    “I see where this is going, and I don’t like it,” said Pike.


    “We’re the best ones to be the designated hostages,” said Jason. “After all, we’re the


    only ones who can find him now that we know he’s responsible.”


    “Why not let Errant be the designated hostage?,” asked Pike.


    “Because our enemy would never let him get that close,” said Jason. “You don’t let


    a cannon point at your front door for long.”


    “I hate this plan,” said Pike. “And I think the only reason you came up with it is


    because you want to personally skewer this monster maker, instead of letting others


    do the job.”


    “Don’t forget it’s a reasonable risk for us to take,” said Jason. “He won’t be expecting


    us when he is on the lookout for the others.”


    “Tilda?,” asked Pike.


    “It’s too risky to have her along,” said Jason. “She’s marked by the Rhiem, and I


    doubt the Alvas will let us get close if he can see her coming a mile away. And he


    knows she is with me since he was following us while we were following his


    experimental subjects.”


    “I think it’s because you don’t want to get a girl killed,” said Pike.


    “It would be a blemish on my spotless record,” said Jason. “And I need to keep that


    as spotless as I can when I have my final reckoning with the Master.”


    “But I don’t count for your record?,” asked Pike.


    “You qualify as my assistant,” said Jason. “Theoretically, I could use you as bait and


    not have to worry about if you get killed other than our friendship.”


    “That’s nice to know,” said Pike.


    “I would never let one of my assistants die unless I had to,” said Jason.


    “That’s even nicer to know,” said Pike. “I think I should go home.”


    “We can’t do this without you,” said Jason. “The fate of the city rests in your hands.


    Errant believes our quarry wants to find the one girl he can use to destroy the city. We


    can’t let him do that.”


    “I guess we can’t let him do that,” said Pike.


    “Here’s the train station,” said Jason. “Let’s get over to the Konstatins and check in,


    and then we can get started. I have a feeling that if this Alvas has a lair, it will be


    sideways to the city.”


    “So we might have to find a door to get into his place so we can kill him,” said Pike.


    “He might have doors scattered across the city.”


    “I know,” said Jason. “It will be a lot easier if we can catch him in the open. Chasing


    him into his home can’t be a good move unless we’re desperate.”


    “Maybe we can get this Errant to shut down any doors in the city,” said Pike. “That


    might give us a chance either way.”


    “I see what you mean,” said Jason. “If we can trap him in his home, we can search a


    limited area for him. If we can trap him out of his home, he has a harder time hiding


    from us.”


    “It makes our job easier no matter how we look at it,” said Pike. “The hard part would


    be what happens when we do find him because I don’t see him giving up on his own.”


    “I agree with that,” said Jason. “He’s invested a lot of time in this scheme.”


    “Especially with the amount of missing and presumed dead people we have on our


    list,” said Pike.


    “We might have another problem,” said Jason. “I put it aside so we can talk about this


    primary problem that we’re dealing with first.”


    “Let’s hear this other problem,” said Pike. He watched the platform, noting the people


    to make sure no one was a threat.


    “We found a building that might not be involved in the Alvas’s planning,” said Jason.


    “I planned to check it when we were done with the Alvas.”


    “It looks bad?,” asked Pike.


    “It’s a hotel,” said Jason. “It seems threatening to me. I just planned to take a closer


    look to cross it off our planning.”


    “All right,” said Pike. “What attracted your attention?”


    “There’s a random circle around the hotel of bodies being found with bite marks,”


    said Jason. “It’s a possible monster using it as a lair of some kind. I didn’t have time


    to look at it closely before we followed the girls from Rowena’s school down to the


    Konstantin house.”


    “But we know it’s not the Alvas because bodies are being left behind,” said Pike.


    “Exactly,” said Jason. “Here comes our train.”
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