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“Interesting,” Mulvehill said, moving past the young officer and behind the barrier.

“Are you going in, Detective?” DeWitt asked.

Mulvehill took his eyes off his destination for just a moment.

“Duty calls,” he said with a chuckle. “And on my fucking day off, too.”

Both of the officers laughed nervously.

A woman approached them with a panicked expression, asking how she was going to get home if her car was parked in the garage below the plaza.

“I’ll catch you two when I’m coming out,” Mulvehill told them with a wave. “See if I can’t get you a better handle on what’s going on.”

They both waved, appreciative of his offer, as they began talking to the panicked woman.

Mulvehill continued up Boylston. One more block and he saw it: the Hermes Building, looming off in the distance, towering above many of the other buildings surrounding it. It looked as though there was a thick black cloud surrounding the top of the skyscraper… And what’s that swirling around in the sky above it? he wondered. It looked like a whirlpool in the sky.

The crowds and emergency personnel in front of him appeared impenetrable, so he headed back down Exeter Street, hoping to cut through on St. James Ave and approach the building from the other side. He was still moving against the flow of traffic, the looks in people’s eyes reminiscent of the news reports he had seen on 9/11. What did they experience? he wondered, fear whirling like the thing in the sky, but in the pit of his stomach. Then he was reminded of the weight of his gun by his side, and it allowed him to go on.

Mulvehill found it odd that the closer he got to the location, the darker it seemed to be getting. It was almost as if he were entering a different time zone or something, the shadows of dusk crawling across the faces of businesses and brownstones, but in all reality it would be hours before the sun started to set.

The fear churned, almost as if he could sense the unnaturalness of it all. Maybe I’ve developed some kind of weird shit detector, he considered, still moving forward.

The crowds were becoming more sparse, and when he did see anyone coming from that area, they were running…running as if the Devil himself were chasing them.

Or something worse.

Images of the things he had faced while helping Remy Chandler flashed before his mind’s eye, and he actually found himself flinching. Mulvehill slowed slightly, blinking his eyes repeatedly as he tried to force the terrifying recollection to pass.

There was a through alley on his left that would take him that much closer to the Hermes, and he decided that he would cut through to see how close he could actually get. There was a woman, a cute blonde, in jogging shorts and a T-shirt coming down the opposite side. A little bit of a thing, no more than five-one, she must’ve been out for an afternoon run when the shit hit the fan.

He wasn’t exactly sure why, but he wanted to tell her to hurry it up, to move as quickly as she could through the dark, shadow-filled alley to get to someplace safe.

Where there were lights and others.

He was just noticing that she was wearing earbuds, an iPod attached by a band around her biceps, and that she wouldn’t have heard his urgings, anyway, when the shadow on the brick wall to her left seemed to explode.

It didn’t make a sound as something long and snakelike shot out from the dark patch on the wall, wrapped itself around the woman’s bare legs, and yanked her violently to the filthy ground.

The woman had no idea what had happened as she went down and was dragged across the alley toward the area of shadow that undulated and moved like the surface of a lake on a windswept day.

Mulvehill did not hesitate; he did not question what he was about to do, even though fear had grasped his heart in an ever-tightening grip and he thought that he might actually be having a heart attack.

But he wasn’t listening to the pain or the panic; all he saw was the look of fear on the jogger’s face as she was dragged toward the shadow moving on the wall.

“Hold on!” Steven cried, taking his gun from his jacket pocket. He doubted that she could even hear him, deafened by the iPod and her terror. He ran to her side, holding his pistol at the ready, and she began to scream as she saw him.

His gaze fell on the pool of darkness from where the limb-the tentacle? — originated. He didn’t want to fire the weapon too close to the woman, so he decided to shoot where the limb came from.

Taking aim, he fired at the base of the black arm, one shot right after another hitting his target.

And the terrible limb reacted.

The tentacle recoiled, releasing the woman from its grasp and withdrawing into the pool of shadow on the wall.

The woman lay on the floor of the alley, hysterical, and he went to her, helping her to rise.

“Thank you. Thank you so much,” she said over and over again between gasping sobs.

Mulvehill checked her out to be sure she was okay. She had circular bruises along both shapely legs but otherwise seemed unscathed.

There was a sudden explosion of some kind from close by, and he could feel it in the air, a vibration that made the skin of his face tingle and itch. That was followed by screams off in the distance.

“Get out of here,” Mulvehill told the woman, waving his gun around as he turned his attention to the other end of the alley.

He did not watch her leave, feeling the pull of his destination at the end of the alley.

There was no stopping him now; Mulvehill knew exactly where he needed to go.

Where he needed to be.

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

Like a faithful dog, the power of the divine was coming back to him.

Deacon could not help but smile as he was filled again with the energy Stearns had so desperately coveted. He held Stearns tightly by the shoulders, watching as the divine force the sorcerer had tried to rip from him flowed back into his own body.

He allowed wings of flame to unfurl, reveling in the rush of cosmic energies that made him feel like the next-best thing to the Creator Himself.

“What was that, Algernon?” Deacon asked the man who had started to wither and age in his grasp. “What was that about taking away what’s mine?”

“Please,” Stearns gasped as a bloody tooth fell from blackened gums to dribble on a string of spit to the floor. “Leave me with something…just a taste.”

Deacon threw his head back and laughed, catching sight of the rip in the fabric of reality swirling above his head. Is that getting larger? he wondered offhandedly.

“I gave the power to you, Algernon.” Deacon turned his attention back to what was left of the sorcerer. “A gift…but you were too weak to contain it.”

“Please,” the old man begged, the flesh on his face sagging.

Deacon had never felt so strong.

“Please?” Deacon repeated, giving the man a violent shake. “If I had begged for my wife’s life…or mercy for my little boy, would you and your cabal have granted it?”

Stearns looked away, his eyes closing.

“I thought not,” Deacon said. “All those years I spent in the shadow place…all those lonely, lonely years…it led me here…led me to this very special moment.” He gave Stearns another shake.

“Do you hear me…old man?” he asked with joy.

Stearns’ eyes flickered open, hooded at first but growing wider by the second.

“Yes, that’s it,” Deacon urged. “Wake up for me…wake up for that special moment when I take it all from you.”

He was about to flex the full extent of his power, to allow the fires of the Seraphim to surge through his body, down into his hands, to incinerate the sorcerer to cinder and ash. Until he realized that Stearns’ milky gaze was focused not on him, but on something somewhere beyond him.

And his mortal enemy was smiling.

Deacon began to turn but was not fast enough.

Two daggers of metal entered the resurrected flesh of his back, just below his beautiful wings of fire.