Lies & Omens: A Shadows Inquiries Novel

Free Lies & Omens: A Shadows Inquiries Novel by Lyn Benedict Page A

Book: Lies & Omens: A Shadows Inquiries Novel by Lyn Benedict Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lyn Benedict
more helpful here, she thought. Never mind saving the child. But that was logic, that was reason, that was fear at being hopelessly outclassed. A gun did her no good if she couldn’t get the bullets to her targets.
    Really, she was grateful that Erinya was still child-focused,still protective. That Dunne-programmed core of her—
avenge crimes done to children
—had been untouched by her change in god status.
    Sylvie swallowed, anxiety like the taste of dry metal in her mouth, and headed toward the ISI building. Ground zero.
    It was hard to think, hard to hear with the roar of the water, but her little dark voice was an internal sound, something even deafness wouldn’t allow her to escape.
    Be grateful to Lilith,
it growled.
Be grateful to me; without me, you’d be just another victim waiting for death to roll in with the tide.
    Water roared in her ears until they rang with the echoes of it, a waterfall that wrapped itself—rising and falling and rising again—around the ISI hotel, as tightly as a strangling vine.
    One of the dark SUVs lifted off the asphalt, was swept swiftly into the canal waters, its glossy finish going dull as the water rose up to envelop it.
    Something supple and quick rose out of the water, cracking the windshield with a single hard tail-lash, and vanished back into the darkness. It had been matte grey-beige, as rubber-plastic as a shark. Sylvie was left with the impression of rolling teeth and black eyes before the SUV sank, the men inside doing nothing at all as they were drowned.
    Fuck,
Sylvie thought.
Fuck it all.
    Water danced in the air before her, making breathing a chore, trying to filter out the rainbow shards of suspended droplets, flung into the air with such violence that they seemed like projectiles.
    The main glass door was sheeted with water, crashing and foaming; dirty water roiled behind it—a blurry, ominous shadow.
    Pressing up against the entry, Sylvie was soaked to the skin in a second as she forced the door open. The motion sensor had given up the battle at the first impact, seizing up. As she forded her way in, she cast a last glance back to see if Erinya might have returned, and caught a glimpse ofanother person moving among the bespelled. Dark-eyed, peak-faced, and frowning, he raised a hand toward her as if he might draw her back. His hair curled sleek and wet along his face, dripped like seaweed.
    She shook her head. Witch or whatever—she was committed now. He was on his own.
    The lobby was more peaceful than she’d expected, having had horror-movie images of bloated bodies suspended in seething waters stuck in her head. The lobby had been mostly empty when the waves struck, the clerks slumped over the desk, their legs bobbing in the water. The hotel security—
ISI agent
—seemed the only casualty, floating facedown in the water, jacket flaring wide, exposing his gun. A few guests, seated on lobby furniture, drifted, staring and uncaring through the room, bumping up against walls, unmoored from the earth.
    Sylvie flipped the guard, but one glance was enough to tell her he was dead past reviving, skin already softening, bloating in the water.
    She stripped him of his keycards, left him floating. Sylvie waded toward the stairs and the cascade of water coming down, a shattering amount of noise in the concrete confines of the stairwell. She gritted her teeth, wished for earplugs, thought she was never going to find the ripple of water soothing again, and headed upward. The mermaid song—penetrating concrete, steel, glass—followed, resonating in the walls as if the rebar that supported the building acted as enormous tuning forks.
    Sylvie might be immune to the song’s effects, but it set her nerves on edge.
    The ISI had the fourth floor all to itself. Four flights wasn’t much normally, but climbing through cataracts?
    She was sweating hard with nerves and exertion by the time she made it to the fourth-floor door. Water flowed sluggishly out beneath the rim, and

Similar Books

Emergency Reunion

Sandra Orchard

Murder Under Cover

Kate Carlisle

SEVEN DAYS

Silence Welder

Snapped in Cornwall

Janie Bolitho

Undertow

Michael Buckley

Hungry as the Sea

Wilbur Smith

Season Of Darkness

Maureen Jennings

Addition

Toni Jordan