Chapter 773: Cold Gift
Chapter 773: Cold Gift
Elliot took another small, measured sip of his scotch, the liquid gliding across his tongue like liquid amber aged in the bones of empires.
Harold leaned forward, the shift in his posture was small and conversational, pleasantries had expired and the hour for business had arrived, and Elliot registered the change like an old predator noting the first shift in the wind across open savannah.
"Which," Harold said, voice smooth as oiled steel sliding from its sheath, "is why I asked you to make time this evening."
"Yes."
"It is time, Elliot, to begin tying the loose ends."
A brief silence settled between them, thick enough to taste.
"All of them," Harold added, the words falling with the quiet finality of a guillotine blade finding its groove.
Elliot’s hand remained motionless on the crystal.
"You mean what is left of them," he answered quietly, "after Danton vaporized one of mine on Heavenchild grounds."
The words landed on the teak table with the patient weight of a sentence Elliot had been carrying since the moment Harold’s car had purred through the gate.
Harold’s smile did not waver by so much as a fraction.
"Yes."
A pause.
"Pemberton was the first."
Elliot’s fingers tightened, fractionally, on the crystal. The ocean wind moved the candle-flames along the terrace railing in restless golden tongues.
"You sent your son onto my ground without consultation, Harold."
"I did."
"You used my household to test the operation."
"I did."
"Forty years of service. Vaporized on my own ground without consultation. Not even a body to recover."
"Yes."
The civility in Harold’s voice never slipped and his smile remained, serene as a blade resting in velvet.
He sipped his scotch with the unhurried confidence as though he had rehearsed the next sentence for the past hours and had decided, in the end, that it required no softening whatsoever.
"And you should thank my Danton, Elliot."
Elliot’s gaze remained locked on him, unwavering... he finally said:
"Thank him?"
"Yes."
Harold set his glass down on the teak with a soft, deliberate click. He leaned forward a fraction more—patient, civil, he had just reached the part of the conversation he had genuinely been anticipating.
"Pemberton was not burned with mortal fire... he was burned with the Golden Flames of Beginning. The flames Danton awakened from his bloodline inheritance—the flames that belonged, originally, to Her as you know. You know what those flames do, Elliot. Better than most. They do not consume. They unmake. There is no ash. There is no residue. There is no soul left behind in any for a returning Cosmic Dragon to find when he comes looking for the names that orchestrated the afternoon ten years ago."
A small, considered pause.
"For all we know, the boy could enter Cycle of Reincarnation tomorrow, Elliot. We do not know what he’s capable of. Thanks to Dantone, even if Phei were to starts to search every stratum he can reach, cross every substrate his powers can permit. He will find nothing.
"Not Pemberton’s memory much less the old butler’s soul or Pemberton’s residual essence anywhere the boy’s power can reach. The man who had taken part in the accident ten years ago has been erased from existence at every level a Cosmic Dragon can investigate. The single most dangerous living witness to the chain that connects your house to mine as accomplices to his parent’s murder has been removed from the cosmos so cleanly that existence itself no longer remembers he was ever there."
Harold lifted his scotch again.
"Is that not wonderful?"
Elliot’s jaw moved once, almost imperceptibly.
He held Harold’s gaze across the teak table. The ocean wind continued its patient work along the terrace.
The candle-flames in the lanterns held their steady, committed glow.
What Harold had said was true... that was the worst of it.
In the primordial mathematics of cleaning a forty-year-old liability from a chain that linked two ancient houses to an orchestrated murder, no flame in any known stratum was as mercilessly clean as the one Danton had awakened. Mortal fire left ash. Divine fire left soul-residue.
Even the Heavenchilds’ own ancestral flame—when Marcus had access to it, which he did not—would have left forensic traces a Tiamat could read across lifetimes.
The Golden Flames of Beginning, however, were the only class of flame in the upper world that left absolutely nothing behind at any level.
Harold had not used Pemberton merely as a test of the Loose Ends operation... Harold had used Pemberton because Pemberton was a leak and link.
The most dangerous loose end between the two families.
And Harold had used the most powerful flame, now in his son’s arsenal on him first, before any other thread, to demonstrate—at this exact table, on this exact evening—that the Maxton family was committed enough to the cleanup to spend cosmic-tier resources before ever seeking consultation.
It was a gift... coldly delivered, yet impossible to refuse.
Elliot held the scotch but did not drink.
Harold’s smile deepened by the smallest, most satisfied margin.
"I knew you would understand."
"The rest follows now."
Harold’s voice had returned to the patient, civil one he had opened the meeting with, but the cold beneath it had not retracted.
"Specifically—every remaining thread that connects our houses to the accident ten years ago. The Tiamat car... the orchestrated piece of work my brother Danny oversaw. The post-incident records your people doctored. The witnesses your people retired. All of it."
There was one loose end they could not erase though, the witch, and both of them seemed to tense in their own hearts to mentions her.
Elliot did not blink, but his fingers, resting on the glass: "Why now."
Harold’s smile remained patient.
"Because the boy has become this strong; this soon. None of us—none of us, Elliot—projected this rate of awakening. He should have been sealed for another three to five years. He should have been a manageable problem deep into his twenties. Instead, he is like a Cosmic Dragon at full initial stage of his awakening. The primordial artifact had assured us his bloodline would remain dormant until well after our arrangements were finalized. So much for assurances. The women your Marcus tried to retrieve at the Empyrean four nights ago are now his property."
Elliot inhaled.
Slowly.
Held it.
Released.
"And the witch... she’s a loose end and has been taken. But where?" Elliot finally asked the forbidden.
"That is not yet entirely clear. But she is gone. We should expect the worse now that they have her, for example, we should think that the veil she put around his sealed memories has been unmaintained for some time now. We do not for know how long. Danton suggests Phei has some of his memories for some time even way before hey took the witch. Possibly days. Possibly longer."
"Possibly longer," Elliot repeated.
"Yes."
Harold sipped.
"The seal on the boy’s memory of the afternoon ten years ago will not hold indefinitely without the witch. It may not hold at all, depending on whether his recent awakening has accelerated the recovery. Soon—and soon is a word I am using here in the primordial-clock sense, Elliot, not in the comfortable mortal sense—soon, the boy will remember the afternoon. He will remember the truck. He will remember the driver. He will remember everything."
Elliot’s expression did not change.
"He will remember my brother," Harold said. "He will remember Pemberton sitting in the cab beside him. He will go looking for Pemberton, and he will find—nothing. The trail will end at there. But it will also not end there, Elliot. He is a Cosmic Dragon. He will not accept a missing thread as a closed thread.
"He will trace forward from Pemberton’s position to Pemberton’s master. And once he traces Pemberton’s master, he will trace the chain back to you. And once he traces you, he will trace the chain back to every name in every record that touched that afternoon. Which is why every other name on that chain must be erased—cleanly—before the boy gets there."
"Yes."
"Which is why," Harold said, "we will be tying the loose ends."
A pause.
"Together."
Another pause.
"Quickly."
Elliot held his scotch in both hands now.
The sea breeze moved the candle-flames in the lanterns along the terrace railing in the small, patient dance.
He nodded, once.
"Yes."
Harold smiled.
"I knew you would understand."
He raised his glass.
After a moment, Elliot raised his.
The two old monsters touched the rims of their crystal in the patient, civil alliance that had survived a generation and would, with the small additional grace of the next several weeks of quiet, patient work, survive another.
"To loose ends," Harold said.
"To loose ends," Elliot answered.
They drank.
novelraw