Infernal Investigations

Chapter 43 - The Second Blow



Something pulled on my horns, and in an instant, I snapped awake. Gregory Montague sat back down across from me, sipping from a cup of tea.

“Ah, the sleeping beauty awakens,” Gregory said. “I’ll have you know that as soon as our minor disagreement was over, I fixed the room up, brought Lieutenant Calab in, and explained that because of excitement and lack of sleep, you’d passed out. She just left. We’ve been having a pleasant conversation this entire time.”

Them holding a conversation around my unconscious body was not the most important thing regarding everything that had happened, but my mind almost stuck on it, anyway.

“Please tell me that was all a dream,” I said. “Also, did you just touch my horns?

“No, I nudged them with a teacup, as it’s been a few hours. Depends on what ‘that’ is,” Gregory said. “I can hardly tell what you were dreaming after you fell asleep. Oh, do you mean ranting at me and infusing the room with enough Infernal energy that the floorboards started trying to stab me with little splinters of wood after you passed out?”

That…sounded too much like an aftereffect of Diabolism for me to discount that as a lie.

“How much of this is an act?” I asked.

Gregory cocked his head. “I’m not sure what you mean.”

“This, the easygoing lady’s man who is in constant rebellion against your father. Then we have you as a cleric who just…prevented me from doing something I’d regret but is not castigating me as some kind of Hellspawn out to tempt all into sin.”

“How many clerics have you met?” Gregory asked. “Because I can assure you most definitely do not sound like that.”

“What type of cleric do you think often comes to the Infernal Quarter?”

“I don’t. I think part of your rant was about how I know nothing about the Infernal Quarter? But I serve Tarver, God of Bards, Music, Adventuring, and Parties. The fun god! So everything you consider unclerical is actually me being the most clerical cleric I can be in service to my god.”

“I’m still dreaming,” I said to myself. I’d just gone on a rant and a rampage against a member of the nobility with Diabolism and he was just ignoring it had happened!

“It’s not. Listen, this wasn’t done because my father asked me to, although I wouldn’t be shocked if he suspects you. I did it because I wanted to make certain you weren’t here as part of some strange Black Flame scheme.”

“And that involved confronting me by yourself and hoping you could take me out?” I asked. “That seems far too risky, especially if I actually was here to do some scheme of the Flames. Which you haven’t ferreted out yet. Unless you drugged the tea.”

If he had, well, I wouldn’t be as idiotic as I was a few hours ago in making him regret that.

“Of course not. Sorry, but your little outburst was entirely you. And it’s not as bad a plan as you might think. The room’s heavily warded against the Diabolical, which I thought would be enough. It wasn’t, but it ended up working out. Who taught you how to use magic?”

Do not insult my teachings, servant of the light! She is very much an early work in progress!

Ah. How to answer this? I hadn’t mentioned the Imp, so I could settle with my old teacher from the Black Flame. He’d probably buy I’d been taught by someone who rotted their own leg off with poor spell crafting.

“You don’t need to say if you don’t want to,” Gregory said. “You’re entitled to your secrets, especially after you just spilled a lot of them to me.”

“Not nearly all of them,” I muttered, looking down at my hands. “So…what happens next? Can I get a head start on running out of here?”

“I don’t see why you’d need one,” Gregory replied. “It’s not like I’ll be telling anyone else.”

I was at a complete loss for words, none coming out till I finally forced a single word question past my lips.

“Why?”

He was about to respond when a third voice spoke up.

“Gregory, an Infernal?” a stranger’s voice said from behind me. “You’re going to sleep with her? Father is actually going to kill you this time. How did you even get her inside the manor?”

Gregory sighed.

In bed, Edward Montague had propped himself up on his elbows, blinking the bleary eyed-sleep out of his eyes.

“You pick the worst times to wake up, Edward,” Gregory said. “I don’t think Elise is going to forgive you for the time before this. She’d already had her chicken torn apart by father before you added to his horrible day.”

“I didn’t make her decide that the best place to make out with her boyfriend was my room,” Edward Montague groused. “Or that she should try dating an orc without father’s permission, whose family only received a title one generation ago as well. Is this one a similar story?”

“This one,” I said icily. “Can speak for herself. I am an Infernal, a commoner, and an alchemist who was brought here to examine you to make sure you’ve only been poisoned with Angel’s Sorrow. Congratulations, your lordship, you only merit one type of poison.”

If my words bothered Edward Montague, he did not let it show.

“I thought you said the Infernal supplying my cure had pink skin,” he said to Gregory. “I almost missed it since you spent so much time talking about other aspects, but I remembered that much.”

“No, that one later turned out to be part of some scheme by the Black Flame to blackmail father, Edward,” Gregory gleefully told him. “She also turned out to be a Diabolist who terrified father and tore a hole in the fabric of reality.”

I had not! Not intentionally, anyway. Also, what ‘Other aspects’?

“The Black Flame?” The other Montague frowned. “Never heard of them.”

“Only because you don’t bother to read files in the restricted stacks. They’re a criminal syndicate who almost took over the entire city and also are all Infernal. Miss Harrow here also happens to be a member.”

“Former member,” I answered automatically. “Also, never the entire city. Versalicci’s best-case goal was only ever a quarter. Getting half of the city was mostly because of incompetence on everyone else’s part.”

That and all the devils and such. But it was amazing how much human nobility was willing to think someone was too dumb to comprehend things because they were lowborn and Infernal. And how easily they could be set on each other in return.

Edward Montague’s expression didn’t shift as both I and Gregory talked. “I’m going back to sleep. And hopefully, whoever this is doesn’t cut my throat. I’m actually starting to feel good again, so it would be really unpleasant if you did.”

“Well, I will leave you to your arduous task, brother,” Gregory said before turning to face me. “Voltar and my father?”

“Voltar and your father,” I agreed.

In many ways, I was grateful for Edward Montague waking up. The hells had I been doing?

***

The good news was it only took ten minutes to reach where Lord Montague and Voltar were in a small sitting room as decorated as his front hall, also enjoying tea and biscuits.

That’s where the good news ended.

“Oh, that?” Voltar said after I’d explained my revelation to him. “I figured that out the moment you told me of the involvement of Shape-changers.”

“I don’t believe you,” I told him. “You have not mentioned it once.”

“As much as I am reluctant to provide reinforcement for this man’s points, he was discussing it with me hours before you barged in here. I expected this one to lack manners, but I was hoping you’d at least learn some, Gregory.”

“I am afraid I must disappoint you, father, as always.”

“It was all rather simple when you make the connections between the relevant information,” Voltar told me. “It might seem far-fetched, but it’s just good deductive reasoning.”

“You’re an incubus,” I muttered.

“I’m sorry, what?” Voltar asked, nonplussed.

“An incubus. Dawes said you weren’t fey and I believe him, so now I think you’re an incubus. You used diabolism to overhear me or read my mind , or you traveled through time to steal my thunder.”

Lord Montague groaned. “Voltar, it’s bad enough you are bringing Infernals with you. Do you have to bring broken ones as well?”

Voltar barely spared a glance for our noble host.

“While I can…see the general shape of your idea, I am not an incubus,” he told me. “It’s a simple manner of connecting facts. Besides, I do not nearly fill the quota of trysts an incubus would need to stay on the mortal plane.”

“It’s quite a few,” Gregory said. “I should know. Father tried to convince the church I was one so they would execute me.”

“They only barely avoided doing that. More’s the pity,” Lord Montague added.

I…that was banter. Probably.

“You lust for mysteries or something similar,” I accused Voltar. “So, if you already knew, what you told me about wanting to test the son for other alchemical substances, true or not?”

“True. I’ll admit I came here to talk to Lord Montague about this, but your task is a legitimate one.”

“And as loath as I am to agree with you on anything or do what you request, I will find the information you requested from the archives,” Lord Montague said. “Pain that it will be. This will be in the older stacks, the one grandfather never organized.”

“You could ask your children,” Gregory said. “We’ve been rummaging through those old documents as long as we’ve been alive.”

“Not the ones in the restricted stacks, those are under lock and…” Lord Montague trailed off, severe expression growing worse. “How many of you have accessed the restricted stacks?”

“That I know of? Three, including myself. Of everyone? Probably all but Edward.”

“At least he knows obedience.”

“He doesn’t want to risk his inheritance from you are the words you are looking for, father.”

Lord Montague groaned. “I thought this was over and done with by just keeping Edward protected, now you tell me that the moment the cure is administered we’re going to be hip-deep in Shape-changers trying to get in here and replace him.”

“Oh, I think I know when they might intrude,” Voltar said. “A week from now, to be precise.”

For a second both Lord and Gregory Montague looked about as confused as I felt, but realization dawned on the both of them.

“The ball,” Lord Montague said to himself. “Oh bollocks. You might be right on that.”

“Might be? He definitely is?” Gregory said. “We have to bring in outside help for these, as well as all the invites. Some of them bring their own guests. Of course they have limited access to the manor, but if Shape-changers are involved in this, it’ll be child’s play. Of course, they could do it at any time.”

“Why take a risk, though?” I said. “The timing is about right as well. From how your son’s symptoms have been described to me, the antidote will have to go in sometime in the next two to three days. Then a week of bed rest to recover, after which any personality changes would become apparent.”

“They’ll be disappointed,” Lord Montague said. “I was already going to cancel the event. It was going to be a chance for Edward and Lady Karsin to become better acquainted with each other, and with him still suffering from this poison, he will not attend. Best to call the whole thing off.”

“Or we could make a trap,” Voltar suggested.

Lord Montague’s expression darkened. “My son is not being bait in a trap, Voltar.”

“Lord Montague, we have to consider that the individuals carrying out this little replacement plan may very well be trying to run clean-up on this operation. Especially if they are working with Versalicci. Malvia, if you could elucidate?”

“The Black Flame always holds that if an operation has been fully cocked-up to the extent this one has, the first order of business is eliminating any potential witnesses or adversaries with full prejudice, and using proxies. If Versalicci is working with the shape-changers, he will use them to clean as much of this up as violently as possible and rely on being in an entirely different place before anyone sifts through the wreckage enough to find him. Using the shape-changers means killing two birds with one stone, since it’ll prune them as well as a potential risk.”

“Then we fetch the Watch and do not risk me or my family,” Lord Montague insisted.

“It sounds like we are already at risk, Father,” Gregory said. “If they plan to try to eliminate us already, this won’t change things.”

“Wrong,” I interrupted. “If you approach the Watch, the additional pressure on Versalicci may make him move faster to eliminate as many links between him and this as possible.”

“Keeping the ball going, on the other hand, lets us control what time the attack will take place,” Voltar said. “It provides a tempting enough opportunity that they will forgo an earlier attack to take advantage. We will of course contact the Watch, but elements we can count on to aid us and be surreptitious about it.”

“I have my security we can use for this event as well.”

“Let me suggest something a step further, that you have among your hired security someone who is one of the best people to ferret out such a being, in disguise. They could attend your ball and add just that extra layer of security, as well as helping us all figure this mess out faster. Only if you wish, my lord, but it should only be three, the Empire’s greatest detective, his trusted companion, and his new apprentice.”

To my absolute horror, he gestured towards me at that last word.

Attend? Disguise? Apprentice?

“This is why people don’t like you,” I told Voltar. “This is exactly why!”

He smiled while Gregory, perhaps sensing my sheer murderous intent, moved a few steps to the side.

“My tendency to take people to parties? I would think that’s a point in my favor.”

I could not go through life kicking Voltar every time he irritated me. Not only was it pure violence, just for a brief moment of catharsis, sure to cause people who witnessed it to think of me as a violent brute, but it was not the way to actually try to resolve these things.

All of this occurred to me after I did it for the second time today.


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