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“And you’re telling me it was the Brethren and some weird-ass soul-cleaving mojo that caused it? What about the whole ‘God sent the flood to purge the Earth of Man’s wickedness’ thing?”

“Hey, I ain’t sayin’ for sure that’s not how it went down. Like I said, this shit’s been buried deep by the good guys and the bad guys both, and the only folks who’ve got the juice to answer that are like a mile above my pay grade. But it seems to me if your precious God sent the flood to wash away Man’s wickedness, he did a pretty fucking lousy job. And as far as the whole soul-mojo angle, it’s not as crazy as it sounds. All magic worth a damn requires sacrifice —an infusion of life’s essence to get the gears a-turnin’. That’s why the mystics of your species always use blood to kick-start their little parlor tricks. Sometimes, sure, animal sacrifice will do, but you and I both know human blood is where it’s at if you really wanna get anything done. And a feat of the kind we’re talking about —breaking the bonds of eternal damnation, dropping off the radar of heaven and hell both —that’d require more juice than even a genocide’s worth of blood could muster. That’d require real power. Power like what’d be unleashed if you destroyed a human soul.”

“Why Varela, though? Why’s the soul got to be unclean?”

“Could be because it’s hell’s bond he’s trying to break. Could be it doesn’t have to be at all. Probably Danny’s just going by what he’s read —which ain’t the worst plan, since the Brethren seemed to pull it off.”

“So you’re saying this could work? Danny does his little song and dance and busts open Varela and he’s free?”

“Maybe. Maybe not. Seems to me it doesn’t matter —what matters is Danny thinks it will. Once he shatters that soul, it won’t matter to the millions he’ll be killing whether his hoodoo was successful.”

“But it can’t be that easy to destroy a soul, can it? I mean, it’s not like he can just whack it with a hammer, or every time some yahoo thrill-seeker’s parachute failed to open, boom —apocalypse.”

“True enough,” Dumas conceded. “Only a demonforged instrument would be capable of inflicting the kind of damage Danny’s after. And I’ll admit, they’re hard to come by. But the boy’s already gotten this far —you think we ought to leave it up to chance he falters now?”

It was a fair point. Actually, from where I was sitting, it was a seriously unfair point, but given that I’m damned and all, that made me more inclined to believe it. I looked for any sign Dumas was putting me on with all of this, but if he was, it didn’t show. And truth be told, it jibed with what I’d seen these past few days; after all, the bug-monster’d said, “Were it not for the Great Truce, for the rules to which we three agreed, I would not abide the Nine at all. But now it seems that truce is crumbling, and with it my patience for your games. I assure you I will not abide a tenth.” So it sounded to me like the Nine and the Brethren were one and the same. And that Danny was gunning to be number ten. Only Captain Crawly had it in his head I was the one causing problems, which didn’t really bode well for me —particularly since I still didn’t have the faintest idea who the hell he was, or how he fitted in to all of this. And the rotten cherry on top of this shit sundae was if I didn’t stop him, not only would I wind up chillin’ in oblivion, but millions of people would die horribly. How’d that old poem go? “Fear death by water.”

Too fucking right, I thought.

“So the Brethren are real, and Danny’s obsessed with them, and he stole Varela’s soul to recreate an ancient mystical rite that, if he’s successful, would bring about a second Great Flood and wipe out civilization as we know it?”

“That’s about the size of it, yeah.”

“Shit,” I said.

“Yeah,” Dumas replied. “Shit.”

“So —what now?” I asked.

“What’re you asking me for? You know what I know. You wanna stop the guy, you’re gonna hafta figure out the rest all by yourself.”

“I thought we both wanted to stop the guy.”

“Yeah, and I just gave you all the help I can.”

“Says the guy who knew about Danny’s caveman ramblings from the get-go and did fuck-all to stop him going rogue.”

“You gotta understand, Sammy, coming down off a skim, you tap into something. Something greater than yourself. Something greater than the soul you’re skimming off of. It’s like, for a little while, you’re tapped into the whole of human experience or some shit. Past, present, future —who knows what the fuck you’re gonna see or why? Call it chance, call it the hand of God —from where I’m sitting, they’re the same damn thing. But whatever you call it, I just figured that’s where Danny got all this —and hell, maybe it was. I didn’t think for a second he understood a word of it. Yeah, maybe I fucked up, but if I start poking around now and then the shit goes down, it only increases the odds it all leads back to me —which is precisely what I’m trying to avoid. So sorry, champ, but you’re on your own. But hey —there’s a chance you’ll come through and save the world. A very, very narrow chance.”

“Thanks.”

“Don’t mention it,” he said, and then he smiled. “Hey, I think you and me, we just had a breakthrough in our relationship. Hashing things out all civil-like —me not killing you, you not killing me. Feels good. Feels right. Feels like maybe we oughta hug it out.”

He spread his arms. I shook my head.

“Suit yourself. How ’bout a word of advice instead, on account of how we’re such good friends now.”

Friends my ass, I thought, but what I said instead was: “I’m listening.”

“If it were me tracking Danny down, I’d be trying my damndest to figure out where worlds draw thin.”

“Yeah. That’d be more helpful if I had the tiniest idea what the fuck it even meant.”

Dumas shrugged like what’re you gonna do? “Hey, you know as well as anyone that the whole of Mankind’s prophecies and scripture amount to nothing more than a ten-thousand-year-old game of telephone. Half the time, they don’t mean shit at all, and the other half–”

But before he finished his thought, there was a muffled boom from somewhere overhead, and the very cave around us shifted, raining dust upon us both and forcing me to steady myself with one hand against the wall. The movement was unthinking, reflexive, and of course it was my bum arm I reached out with; when my palm connected with the chamber wall, a jolt of queasy, white-hot pain shot up my arm, settling in my shoulder and throbbing like an impacted molar.

Another boom, right on the heels of the first. This one loosed more than dust —the darkness above rattled as small rocks bounced off the walls on the way down, and then a not-so-small rock whizzed past my head in the darkness, parting my hair and damn near doing the same to my skull before burying its pointy self six inches into the dirt at my feet.

“The hell?” I said. “Did Psoglav–”

“No,” Dumas replied, his face set in a frown. “If Psoglav had cracked a soul, he’da brought the whole damn cave down. And whatever that was, it came from outside.”