Inwardly he cursed.
“We are unaffected by cold.” The Swimmer pulled Felon from his thoughts.
The assassin stared into the Swimmer’s eyes. They were black. Unblinking, they might have looked ridiculous in different circumstances.
“We have watched for you.” The Swimmer’s voice echoed. “Like the Watchers.” The thing’s voice bubbled. “But we listen underground, ear to plumbing pipes and nose to grates. Vibrations say much.”
“Why?” Felon urged himself to speak. He would have to communicate to gather weapons for survival.
“ They spoke your name. They spoke of your coming.” The Swimmer dunked his head under the water-resurfaced.
“Who?” Felon worked his fingers. They were numb and cold, the skin prune-like.
“Those who use you.” The Swimmer drooled water as he spoke. His brethren bobbed behind him.
“Who?”
“We listened. Through the hull of his ship, we listened to the Councils of Balg.” Water streamed from the creature’s face.
“So?” Felon wanted to retreat into silence.
“He met with Angels. They will destroy the living. They will conquer.”
Scenarios played out in Felon’s head. He didn’t trust any of the creatures involved any more than he believed the Swimmer.
“They met in secret. They bargain for the souls of the dead. They bargain for dominion over the living. They seek the destruction of the world.” The Swimmer’s glazed and milky eyes held Felon’s. “You are their tool.”
“So.” Felon felt no jibe in what the Swimmer said. As long as he was paid, the situation was fine. Had he become a liability to his employers?
“Balg forged an alliance with the Firstborn, Gabriel.” The Swimmer coughed spraying water from his lungs. He submerged briefly then returned drooling water. “They did not agree with the book.”
“Book?” Felon wrung his hands.
“That book which built the Tower. That book that threatens the world.” A hint of emotion wandered across the Swimmer’s face. “The book that foretells the end.”
Felon wanted a cigarette. Immediately he dug the package from his coat. He laid the wet tobacco by the fire.
“That book that speaks of the Judgment.” Something like life entered the Swimmer’s tone, and was gone.
Felon’s hands were tingling. He pondered the idea of removing his boots-dismissed it. His eyes were adjusting to the darkness. He watched the Swimmer shift his weight from hand to hand.
“God works through His servants. They do His bidding.” The Swimmer licked nacreous teeth. “Who would institute the deeds foretold in Revelations?”
“Christ carried a scroll.” Felon’s mind whirled around the thought.
“And as the seals are broken they are law.” Dead hands smoothed water into algae colored hair. “And great perils fall on the earth.”
“War. Plagues, earthquakes,” Felon said the words without purpose. His body was shaking with returning vigor. “The Horsemen.”
“And the Angels enact these changes.” The Swimmer kicked his feet in the water. “You see now?”
“Change doesn’t fit.” The assassin knew his fingers could pull a trigger. The knowledge put new vigor in him.
“True.” The Swimmer snarled or smiled. “The Change is not that which was revealed.”
“So?” Felon’s nerves had steadied. His legs still felt like wet sand, but his shoulders and arms itched for murder.
“You see what Balg spoke about.” Anticipation filled the Swimmer’s dead face. “What we heard in the darkness. Why we brought you here.”
“Betrayal.” The assassin’s face flushed with feeling. He saw some sticks of driftwood, put them on the fire.
“Balg spoke to them.” The Swimmer smiled. “But brave Michael guarded the way as before. He is God’s arm and sword.”
Felon searched his memory. There was something.
“…the Principalities shall be as one,” the swimmer said, and coughed. “Man shall be set beside God, equal to Angels.”
“Gabriel didn’t like that,” Felon finished. “Balg wants?”
“He who judges will cast Balg out when the seals are broken.” The Swimmer smiled to himself.
“Judgment Day…” Felon dropped his gaze. His fingers tingled, but their color had returned. “Who judges?”
“The Shepherd. The Lamb of Seven Horns.” The Swimmer sank beneath the water, resurfaced.
“I kill Michael, so the seals won’t be broken.” Felon thought of the walking dead and the Change. “Gabriel is the Angel of Death.” The assassin identified one of his enemies. Uriel guarded the gates of Eden. “Raphael?” Felon remembered the other Archangel’s name.
“None know.” The Swimmer submerged again-came up hair pasted to his head.
“Their own Apocalypse.” Felon looked mournfully at his cigarettes.
“Just so. You are as we expected.” The Swimmer gestured to his sunken comrades. “We knew this.”
“What do you want?” Felon crouched over the flames now.
“We brought you here so that you could act.” The other corpses floated forward. Their unblinking eyes gleamed with firelight.
“Act?” Felon’s stomach rumbled. He had not eaten at Lucky’s.
“As you must.” The Swimmer crawled out of the water toward him. “As you were made.”
“How did you find me?” Felon cast an eye to the doorway behind him. He could see the first step in a series that led upward.
“We watch. We listen.” The Swimmer’s body grated against the sand. “ They spoke of you. We heard it. We know the waterways beneath the City. We are many. We waited.” The Swimmer paused. “Those who spoke of you saw your companions.”
“Who?” The assassin coiled for action. The Swimmer’s shoulders were powerful-his skin like marble.
“Your enemies.” The Swimmer looked back to his companions. “Those who set you on this path.”
“Riddles!” With returning vigor, his ire flared.
“There is no riddle.” The corpse moved closer. “There is nothing that will happen that you do not expect. That we do not expect.”
Felon grabbed his gun, got to his feet.
The Swimmer gazed at him. Its face softened. “There are some among us, that have nothing. They float. They are dead, and not dead. We care for them. But they scream.”
“So.” Felon had nothing for the Swimmer.
“So do what you were created to do. Do what you want to do. Do what you are expected to do.” The Swimmer’s eyes warmed a moment. Something resembling life filled them. “Kill them, as you desire. Vengeance is thine. That is what we want. That is no riddle.”
The assassin picked up his sodden coat and jacket.
“We wish to die.” The Swimmer looked to his companions. “There is but one way.”
Felon hated the piteous looks that hung on the Swimmers’ dead faces. One by one, they floated free of the water.
“Kill,” the Swimmer said and raised a hand toward the doorway. “Stairs lead up to a street that will take you to the harbor. A boat is there that will return to the Sunken City. If you miss it, you will take another.” The creature turned, slithered toward the water and the waiting Swimmers.
Felon’s shoulders clenched against a chill. The gun trembled in his grip. He turned away from the Swimmers and hurried up the steps as quickly as his numb legs would allow.
68 – Redeemer
Dawn wept as Nursie carried her down a corridor that ran at right angles to the main hall. The monster accessed the passage through a doorway that was set in the wall a short distance from the room of experiments. It was invisible until a couple of points on the wall responded to slight pressure from the monster’s fingertips.
Nursie was wearing her human skin again, slipping it on after sucking the Doctor’s body clean of fluids. Now she hummed worriedly to herself as though her recent excesses with the Doctor and the First-mother had gone far beyond rules she was previously forced to observe.