just felt it slip away like stones dropped in a murky lake. The people inside, theyâd been, what? Gargoyles? Lizards? Some kind of aliens? It all seemed so insane to him now.
But not then. Not as heâd stood staring down the barrels of two pistols at what he swore were shape-shifting demons bent on destroying or enslaving the human race. It didnât seem crazy as the blood pounded hot in his head. It didnât seem crazy when he heard his brotherâs voice, and the Polybiusâs, too, telling him to prepare to take aim. It didnât seem crazy as that one strange word flashed over and over in his mind: Sormen.
At least no one had gotten hurt. He could comfort himself with that. Heâd pulled the trigger, that much he knew. It was only after theyâd taken him down that heâd remembered how heâd gotten the guns. Gunsâthatâs a laugh , he thought. Yes, they were all laughing, eventually. After the screaming had stopped, of course, they were all laughing at the idiot shouting about demons. They were all laughing at the idiot whoâd shot themâwith a couple of water pistols.
They were all laughing, except the policeman who tackled him, grinding his face into the cement floor with a nightstick firm against his neck.âAll right! Game over, pal!â the policeman had shouted. âWhere are the cameras?â
Cameras? Jarrod didnât know what to make of that. Not until he looked at his hand and the gun in it. The black paint flaking off in big chips, revealing the translucent red plastic beneath. Heâd come there to shoot demons, with Ludwigâs water pistols.
Jarrod wished he could sink further into the cruiserâs cool vinyl seat, knowing it was the most comfortable surface his backside was likely to encounter for some time. The cop in the front seat leaned back. âYou that same kid they pulled off the bridge?â
âSorry.â
âI said, you that same kidââ
âI know. Just saying I was sorry.â
âAhh, manâs got jokes.â He twisted the ignition, and they began to roll away from the bright lights of Times Square, away from the flashing cameras and gawking tourists, away from the madness. Jarrod wondered what his reception would be like down at the station. After the riot act that detective had read to him last time, he figured thereâd be a rock-hard slab waiting for him in the Tombs tonight. That would be his bed. He just hoped he wouldnât have to share it with a rock-hard con who felt frisky.
Maybe itâd be for the best if they did. If they locked him up for a bit, for his own good and everyone elseâs. What if Iâd taken that swan dive off the bridge? he thought. If Iâd gotten hold of a real gun, real bullets? What was he going to do next and not remember? An eight-by-ten cell, three hots and a cotâit was starting to seem okay. Prison couldnât be all that bad. Or maybe theyâd just pitch him into the loony bin.
âSo what gives? Some kinda protest? Art stunt? Trying to get on YouTube, something like that?â
âSomething like that.â The words were dead in Jarrodâs mouth. âLook, donât I have the right to remain silent or something?â
The cop grumblingly clammed up, and together they rode, not exchanging another word as they cruised into the ghost town of lower Manhattan.
âUnit Forty-two?â the radio squelched.
âThis is Forty-two, copy. Over.â
âYou are ordered to stand down. Please pull over. Over.â
âCopy. Standing down. Over.â He hung the mike back up on its hook.
Through the back window, Jarrod watched the cruiserâs blue and red flashers bounce off a long black limo behind them. A mountain with a flattop haircut, in a black Armani suit and sunshades, walked up to the driverâs-side door. âAgent Diamond. Homeland Security.â He handed the officer some papers.
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