"I… well…" he stammered. "I wasn't meaning to brag. But yes, I suppose it is rather nice. Please, sit down." He gestured toward a nearby table.
The interior of the home was amazing. Electric lights were on every wall. "This is the nicest dining room I've ever seen," Faye said, settling into a padded chair.
"Well… actually, this is where the help eats. The dining room is back there…" he drifted off, uncomfortable. "Sorry, bragging again."
For some reason his embarrassment made Faye smile. She liked this Francis. She ate her sandwich. It was good.
Lance returned a minute later. "Here's the deal, you seem like an all right kid, Faye, but we deal with some… strange types, and there's more than a few folks who'd want nothing more than to see him dead. In fact, the predicament we're in now is because I didn't do my job a few years ago, and somehow somebody got through and put a curse on him. It ain't nothing personal, but I'll be needing to hold onto your little gun, and if you try to use any magic on the General, I will kill you. Do you understand?"
"No need to be impolite," Francis said.
"I once saw a six-year-old slash a man's throat with spikes that came shooting out his fingers," Lance pointed out.
"Fine," Faye said, removing the Iver Johnson from her pocket and passing it over to Francis. "I want that back. It cost ten whole dollars."
They left the kitchen area, through some sort of service room, past a workshop full of machines, out into a giant foyer, then up a flight of stairs. Lance's limp was more pronounced going up the stairs, almost like one leg was shorter than the other.
"What happened to your leg?" Faye asked.
"I left part of it in a demon's stomach," he responded without turning around.
Francis leaned forward and whispered in her ear. "You can't get a Healing if too much time's passed. If it's healed on its own wrong, it'll stay that way. A surgeon tried to fix it later by cutting out all the poisoned bone. He's sensitive about it."
He heard. "Shut up, Francis."
"You can control animals?"
"Sorta…"
Faye smiled. "That would be the best Power ever back on the farm. No cow would ever kick me in the hands again! What was that mark you put on that man's head? What's with the funny writing on the gate and in the house?"
"Magic spells. Do you ever get tired of asking questions?"
Faye thought about that for a second. "No. Where are we?"
Lance sighed as they reached the top of the stairs. He knocked politely before entering the first room. A beautiful blonde woman, wearing a white sundress, was sitting in a chair, reading a thick book. "Hey, Jane."
She looked Faye over as she stood. "Oh, honey, what happened? You've got a hole in your foot! And something bit your hand! You should have called me and I would have come down… Imagine, making the poor thing walk up here with a hole in her heel."
"How'd you know?" Faye asked, but was ignored.
"She didn't tell me nothing about foot problems," Lance said defensively. "Damn, woman. How was I supposed to know?"
"Is she okay?" Jane asked, looking to Francis for confirmation. "She must be since you brought her up here."
"She didn't burst into flames when we crossed the barrier, did she?" Francis said, pointing back at the doorway. There were more of the curious letters carved into the wood.
"Hold still," Jane ordered as she set her hands on Faye's shoulders. Jane's hands were extremely warm, so warm that Faye could feel the heat through the coarse fabric of her traveling dress. Then her hands were ice cold, and now Faye was hot, like she was burning with fever. She wobbled for a moment, dizzy, as the flash of warmth passed.
"What just happened?"
"The hole in your foot will be closed by supper," Jane answered. "I just gave you a little help is all."
Faye's thumb felt puffy. She held it up and the punctures from the squirrel bite were now just purple indentations. An actual Healer! Only millionaires had Healers. Faye felt lightheaded. "I can't afford to pay you…"
"Oh, honey, you've been listening to too many radio programs," Jane clucked reprovingly, picked up her book, and returned to her chair. "Don't keep the General up too long. He's having a bad day."
"It's about to get worse," Lance muttered. Western Colorado The dining car was nearly empty. Sullivan grunted politely as the waiter dropped off his third thick steak, then he went to town, carving the beef into huge triangles and hungrily gulping them down. "Oh… yeah… that's better," he mumbled. To him, magic was almost like physical exercise, and running his Power dry always left him exhausted and famished.
Heinrich Koenig and Daniel Garrett watched how much he consumed in amazement. The bookish Garrett pulled out a pack of smokes and offered them to his companions. The German turned him down, but Sullivan never turned down anything free, took one, and stuck it behind his ear for later.
They had procured clothing for Sullivan at the last stop. He would have to get it tailored later, as no one made clothing sufficient to fit his shoulders and arms, but Sullivan was forced to admit that this was now the nicest suit that he owned. The bandages were thick and itchy under his new white shirt. Once Dr. Rosenstein had decided that Sullivan wasn't going to die on him, he had gotten off in Denver to catch a flight back to his practice.
"So, about this job… I'm listening."
Garrett lit up his smoke and leaned back in the booth. "So, Sullivan, where do you think magic comes from?"
"Well, that's an odd question," Sullivan answered, still chewing. "The best scientists in the world don't know that. How should I? I'm just a po' dumb ol' Heavy, Mr. Garrett." His voice dripped sarcasm like the rare steak dripped juice.
"Call me Dan, and we both know you know more than you let on."
Sullivan wiped his mouth on a napkin. "The first documented case of Powers occurred in 1849, a Chinaman in California who could bend steel rails with his hands. Newspaper attention brought in some scientists, and the rest is history. Dr. Spengler's research indicates that there may have been isolated individuals in rural communities as early as the late 1830s, but those were usually hushed up or run off by the superstitious. Dr. Kelser from the University of Berlin claimed to have proof of one in 1818, but I think his methodology was flawed… and he was a quack."
"You know your history," Heinrich said.
"I read a book once." In reality, his tiny apartment was filled with them, and he'd visited every university library he could. He could devour a thick book faster than most educated men could get through the daily paper, and he never forgot any of it. People tended to equate well-spoken with well-read, but that was a mistake with Jake Sullivan. "It didn't even have pictures."
Garrett smiled. "You evaded my question rather nicely. Do you know where magic comes from?"
"I can only guess," Sullivan answered. "Some folks say it's hereditary, but you can have two parents with Powers, and there's no guarantee their kids get anything. You have lots of cases where the same Power seems to run in a family. Those eugenicist assholes have been tinkering with that for generations, trying to breed Powers, and they've still got nothing. Rumor is that the Japs are heavy into this, even doing some scary medical procedures to the people they conquer to try and make more Actives."
"I can tell you that the Soviets are doing it as well," Heinrich said. "I've seen things with my own eyes that you would not believe. Cog science creating terrors beyond your wildest imaginings."
"Disgusting," Sullivan agreed.
"So you don't like eugenics?" Garrett was curious.
"We're people. Not horses."
"Agreed," Heinrich said, taking a drink from his coffee. "There was a movement back home that espoused that sort of thing. Luckily, their crazy leader, some washed-up painter, got the firing squad. Good riddance."
"So if it isn't from…" Garrett paused, trying to think of the proper word.