Eventually, a seething Stephanie managed to right herself. "If you're going to kill me, get on with it."
I threw the knife behind me. "I want answers."
"Go to hell."
"Now, I know you don't care if I kill you, but if I walk out the front door they're going to know you didn't complete your job. And then I'm guessing you'll end up talking to the sheriff and his friends. Do you really want that?"
Stephanie glared at me, but shook her head. "No," she almost whispered. "What do you want?"
"What are you all doing here? I'm certain everyone is in on it. I just can't figure out what it is."
"The hills have diamonds in them. We don't want anyone from outside to find them."
"And that's why you're killing people? To get rich?"
"We're going to make our town separate from the rest of this godforsaken country. The sheriff told us that once we have the diamonds and our protector has his soldiers, we can start to take back what's ours."
"Protector? It wants to take over America?"
She shook her head. "Only Montana. To make sure it never becomes part of the Union. And anyone in our way dies."
"The ranch-holder was in your way?"
"She found out what we were doing, what we'd planned. She had to die."
A thought occurred to me and I took a hunch. "You were there, weren't you?"
Stephanie glanced down briefly, but when she spoke she maintained eye contact. "I have no idea what you're talking about."
I knew a liar when I saw one. "You watched her murdered. Did you stab her yourself? Did you enjoy it?"
"I only watched," she snapped before she could stop herself. She immediately realised her mistake. "The sheriff and his men got half a dozen of the town occupants to help kill her. They opened the barn doors so that everyone else could watch."
I stalked toward her and placed my hands on the edge of the tub. "You watched her scream for mercy, watched as people started to cut on her. What the fuck is wrong with you?"
"She went against the town. She had to be silenced."
"Are there any children in town?"
She shook her head. "It's a town rule. Kids can come later when we have things straightened out. The sheriff doesn't want any of them to see what needs to be done."
"What needs to be done," I said absentmindedly. "Goddamn it. Get out of the tub."
"What?" she asked, but I was in no mood to ask again. I grabbed her arm and dragged her from the tub with one pull, dropping her onto the floor with a splat as her wet flesh hit the wooden floorboards.
"Get your ass in that chair," I snapped.
She dragged herself into the wooden rocking chair. Her arm was red where I'd grabbed it, but as far as I was concerned she was lucky to still have both her arms.
I removed the tiebacks from the window, and tied Stephanie's arms behind the chair, making sure that she couldn't get up. I took the second tieback and attached it to the first, using the other end to tie it to the handles on the chest of drawers. If she started yanking at the rope, she'd get out, but it would take a while.
"You want me still so you can kill me," she said, and spat at me, missing by a few feet.
I stood in front of her and rolled up the sleeves on my shirt, letting her watch the orange glyphs light up on my arms. "If I wanted to kill you…" A small sphere of flame appeared in the palm of my hand, and Stephanie's eyes opened as wide as possible. "…you'd already be cinders."
The flame vanished, and I put on my coat. "You're going to give your friends in this town a message. They have forty-eight hours to leave. To run as far away as they can. Because in two days I'm going to come back, burn this entire fucking town to the ground, and piss on the ashes."
Chapter 22
New Forrest, England. Now.
After the fight with the ghouls, I waited around long enough for the LOA emergency paramedics to turn up and check that everyone would be okay, before leaving and heading home.
Agent Greaves was almost back on his feet by the time I left, and Olivia was nursing a sore, but healing, wound on her shoulder. Everyone got away with minimal injuries, a lucky break when it came to dealing with ghouls.
I took the time to head home, get a shower, and wash off the grime from the incredibly long day. Dealing with ghouls, finding another murdered girl, searching Vicki's house, and interviewing Neil had left me feeling emotionally, if not physically, exhausted.
Even so, after making an important call, I managed a few hours' sleep, only to be woken by someone banging continuously on my front door until I made my way from the bed to open it.
"Hey, Tommy," I said, with all the joy that I could muster after just being woken. "Could you possibly be a little louder? I think there are some rivets in the house that you haven't worked loose."
"Nice to see you, too," he said stepping inside, and closing the door behind him.
"I don't think my kitchen can take another fridge raid," I told him as we made our way to the kitchen, where I made both of us a cup of white tea.
"I'm not hungry," he said.
"Okay, what's wrong? You're always hungry. Are Olivia and Kasey okay?"
He nodded firmly. "Yes, thanks for that. You saved Olivia's life. And Kasey is… concerned for her mum. She'll be okay, though."
I waved his thanks away. "Glad to hear it. We were all in the wrong place at the wrong time."
"They've taken Olivia to the medical clinic at my office building. We've got some of the best trained people in the world. They want to keep her in for a few days to make sure that the neurotoxin has worked its way out of her system. Olivia's pissed off and wants to hurt something, but she'll live."
"And Agents Greaves and Reid?" Agent Reid had been found unconscious, covered in his blood a few streets away from the police station. He'd been incredibly lucky.
"Greaves is less than happy that he's under my people's watchful attention, but he's healing well. Reid was bitten by the ghoul who used to be Vicki. He's going to be in the infirmary for a day or so like Olivia."
"How did you come to have such a good medical team?"
"We did some work for a medical centre whose staff was getting harassed by a pissed off ex-employee and his friends. Apparently, trolls hold grudges. Who knew? I offered them a place to work without worry, whilst we dealt with it, and they ended up staying. So they work for me, but are pretty much their own little section of the business."
"And I guess it helps having the people who are there for treatment being right next to the people who might look into such things without notifying Avalon."
“The thought never crossed my mind.”
"Why are you here? I assume it's not just to give me an update on Olivia and the rest, as good as it is to know they're all okay."
Tommy's expression changed to one of seriousness in an instant. "Ghouls, Nate. There are goddamn ghouls and a lich in my city."
"I know, Tommy," I assured him. "I made a few calls earlier today. I'm expected at the airfield in about two hours."
Tommy chuckled. "Off to Canada?"
I didn't need to answer. Tommy knew full well that the answer was yes.
"Right, well, I'll go get ready and meet you there."
I opened my mouth to argue, but thought better of it. If I'd said no, he'd only have been at the airfield waiting for me anyway. "Fine, meet me there in two hours exactly."
"Done," Tommy said, dashing off and out of my home seconds later.
The old airfield had been officially abandoned years ago, leaving the twelve-foot-high chain-link fence to guard nothing more than the grass, which broke through the tarmac, and the vines, which grew over an old hanger, threatening to consume it like a slow moving predator.