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Cloak Games: Last Judge
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CLOAK GAMES: LAST JUDGE
Jonathan Moeller
Table of Contents
Description
Chapter 1: The Final Deal
Chapter 2: Family Road Trip
Chapter 3: Reunion
Chapter 4: Gambling
Chapter 5: A Night On The Town
Chapter 6: A Casual Chat
Chapter 7: Last Judge
Chapter 8: One Bullet
Chapter 9: Black Ops
Chapter 10: Interchangeable
Chapter 11: Successor
Chapter 12: An Old-Fashioned Weapon
Chapter 13: Sky Hammer
Other books by the author
About the Author
Description
My master made a deal with the devil, but I'm the one who has to pay.
Two items I've stolen for the Rebels, and I only need to steal one more thing for them.
Trouble is, it's in Last Judge Mountain, a secret military base left over from before the High Queen of the Elves conquered Earth.
There are things in Last Judge Mountain that should never again see the light of day.
And if I go into the mountain, I might never come out again...
Cloak Games: Last Judge
Copyright 2018 by Jonathan Moeller.
Published by Azure Flame Media, LLC.
Cover design by Clarissa Yeo.
Ebook edition published April 2018.
All Rights Reserved.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the author or publisher, except where permitted by law.
Chapter 1: The Final Deal
Before I tell you what happened on the day that Nicholas Connor called me to arrange the final theft, I should mention this.
It’s a Bible verse.
Revelation 20:11-12. It goes like this:
“And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.”
Judgment catches up with us all. One way or another, our debts will be resolved, and the price will be paid.
I didn’t know that verse, not back then.
But General Jeremy Shane knew it. The men of Operation Sky Hammer knew it. Oh, yes, they knew it very well. Because of there was any man who understood that judgment comes for us all, it was Jeremy Shane.
But as I stood with my phone to my ear and listened to Nicholas, I understood something else.
Soon now, very soon, Nicholas Connor and I were going to have our final reckoning.
I stood on the sidewalk in front of Nathan Vander’s shattered clinic, my heart thundering against my ribs, Rory Murdo and Russell Moran staring at me with alarm.
Huh. Russell was as tall as Murdo now. Hadn’t noticed that before.
It was my birthday. My one hundred and eightieth birthday, June 17th, Conquest Year 316 (or 2329 AD according to the old calendar). Well, technically, it should have been my twenty-second birthday, but Arvalaeon had put me into the Eternity Crucible, and some things had gotten screwed up.
I was scared out of my wits, but I wasn’t going to show that to the likes of Nicholas.
“Spare me the bullshit,” I said. “What do you want?”
“You know perfectly well what I want,” said Nicholas. “It’s time to fulfill the final phase of the Forerunner’s bargain with your patron…Lord Morvilind, I believe. We have another theft to plan, Nadia. Oh, and do bring your brother with you. I am rather looking forward to meeting him.”
I took a deep breath, and then another. Both Murdo and Russell were looking at me. Murdo was calm, but I recognized the tension around his black eyes from combat situations. Russell just looked alarmed.
One more deep breath and it was time to fight.
“Absolutely not,” I said.
“Oh?” said Nicholas. “Shall I contact the Forerunner and tell him that you’ve elected to violate the terms of the deal? If I do, I’m afraid the Forerunner will have no choice but to speak with Lord Morvilind. I imagine he will be displeased. At the very least, he will stop casting the frostfever cure spells for your brother. At worst, Lord Morvilind will have to start training a new shadow agent after you have a fatal accident.”
“Breaking the terms of the deal?” I said. “You broke them first, Nicky. You sent Lorenz after my brother.”
“Lorenz acted without my knowledge or authorization.”
“That’s crap, and you know it.” My fingers tightened on the phone. “He showed up with a small army. Orcish mercenaries, anthrophages, and a pet necromancer he hired from Venomhold…”
“What?” Nicholas sounded startled.
“Oh, you didn’t know that, did you?” I said. “For a guy who thinks he’s going to be the next dictator of Earth, you sure miss a whole hell of a lot.”
“Vastarion, was it?” said Nicholas. “There’s only one Elven necromancer at Venomhold.”
“Correction,” I said. “There was only one Elven necromancer at Venomhold. Now there are none.”
“You killed him?”
“Yep.”
“The Knight will be disappointed,” said Nicholas. “She was rather fond of the lunatic.”
“Well, you can tell her the bad news in person,” I said. “Probably at the same time that you tell the Forerunner you screwed up his deal. Bet he’ll be disappointed.”
“He will not,” said Nicholas. “Your patron, however, will. And then you shall be quite disappointed when your brother dies of frostfever. I understand it is quite an excruciatingly painful death.”
“Nope,” I said. “I’m going to tell Morvilind that you broke the deal, and then…”
“I’m afraid, Nadia, you’ve got it quite backward,” said Nicholas, his voice quiet but hard.
I didn’t say anything.
“I am in the wrong, of course,” said Nicholas, “and I admit it freely. Without my approval or authorization, one of my men launched an attack on you and your family. Of course, I assume you mowed down Lorenz and Vastarion and all their hirelings, making it something of a moot point. But if you complain to Morvilind, he will talk to the Forerunner, and the Forerunner will question me. Once I explain what happened, the Forerunner will instruct me to make restitution, and the pact will be restored. It’s best that we simply skip over all that tedious negotiation and arrive at the main point, don’t you think?”
“And what restitution will you offer?” I said.
“A million dollars should cover it,” said Nicholas. “Certainly, both the Forerunner and Morvilind would agree that is more than fair.”
“No,” I said.
“You refuse?” said Nicholas, his voice soft again.
“What, did you go deaf? No.” I made my grip on the phone relax. “You went too far. You think money will make me forgive an attack on my family? Lorenz might have done it against your permission, but he was still one of your soldiers, and you should have kept a tighter leash on him. No.” My decision hardened. “I’m going to go to Morvilind, and I’m going to tell him that the deal is broken.”
There was a long pause on the other end of the line.
“So that’s it, Nadia?” said Nicholas. “It’s time for
us to go to war? Think very carefully before you make a decision.”
“We’re already at war,” I said. “We’ve been at war since Lorenz and Vastarion turned up to kidnap my brother.”
“Then let me tell you how this war will play out,” said Nicholas, a hard edge in his voice. “You want to go to war, Kat?” That had been his nickname for me, and he didn’t seem inclined to change it now that he knew my real name. “You’re dangerous, yes, but so am I. If you break our deal, then I will turn the full resources of the Revolution to hunting you down. Do you think Morvilind would protect you? You might run and take your brother with you…but do you think you can protect every single person you’ve ever cared about or even liked in your life?” I heard keys tapping in the background. Likely he was looking at Lorenz’s email as he threatened me. “The…Marneys, is that it? James and Lucy, Russell’s guardians? They’re in Florida. I’ll start with them. And your brother has friends and teachers. Maybe even a girlfriend or two. Do you think he’ll thank you when the Revolution kills them all?”
“You do that, asshole,” I said, making no effort to hide my anger now, “then I’ll make sure you’re finished. I know the Lord Inquisitor himself.”
“Do you, now,” said Nicholas. “So, you are a collaborator.”
“Oh, blah, blah, blah,” I said. “Everyone’s a collaborator to you. You gave me that big speech about everyone who isn’t part of your little gang of thugs and psychopaths is a legitimate target. Don’t give me moral justification for your bullshit, I know you too well for it. But I have the Lord Inquisitor’s phone number, and if you come after those people, then I’m giving him everything I know about you and your friends.”
“The Revolution is too entrenched for even the Inquisition to destroy,” said Nicholas. “Or is Lord Arvalaeon strong enough to conquer Venomhold himself? I’ll be honest with you, Miss Moran…”
“Oh, there’s a first,” I said.
“You are in a position to do the Revolution a great deal of harm,” said Nicholas. “You could possibly undo years of work if you go on the warpath against us. But unless you can stride into Venomhold and kill the Knight herself, you can’t defeat us. You can’t stop us. You can slow us down, yes, but you can’t stop us. When the dust settles, you’ll have done a great deal of damage to the Revolution…but you won’t defeat us, and you, your brother, and everyone you’ve ever known or even liked will be dead.”
I didn’t say anything. My mind raced through the possibilities. Everything Nicholas had said was right. If he hadn’t known who I really was, if he hadn’t known about Russell, then I would have had a much freer hand to deal with him.
But he did know.
Damn Lorenz for this! If Russell hadn’t killed him already, I would have killed him again.
“So, Kat, you have to decide,” said Nicholas. “You have to decide right now. Are you going to fulfill our deal? Or are we going to fight?”
My mind kept racing. I could turn him over to Arvalaeon, could point Morvilind at him…but they might not help me. It wasn’t as if I could go to Homeland Security or an Elven noble. If I tried, they would probably arrest me…and to be honest, it wasn’t as if Homeland Security or most of the Elven nobles were equipped to deal with someone like Nicholas.
No, the only two men I could trust stood a few paces away on the sidewalk, Russell staring at me with alarm, Murdo waiting with the calm of a veteran soldier.
There wasn’t any way out of this mess but forward.
I had to play the game to the end.
I laughed, and both Russell and Murdo gave me a startled look.
“Is something amusing?” said Nicholas.
“All right,” I said. “All right, Nicky. You want to play this game, then we’re going to play it. Where and when should I meet you?”
“June 20th at exactly noon,” said Nicholas, “at Reno, Nevada.”
“Reno?” I said.
I remembered the day I had helped Nicholas and his crew rob the Royal Bank in Washington DC. We had staged the raid so Nicholas could seize an encrypted flash drive that had been found on Jeremy Shane when he had been assassinated three hundred years ago. Nicholas had unencrypted the flash drive and uploaded its contents right there in the bank vault. I hadn’t gotten a good look at his computer screen, but I had seen a satellite map of Nevada and another map of something called LAST JUDGE MOUNTAIN on his computer.
Would the third theft have something to do with the Sky Hammer?
Hell, who was I kidding? Of course it had something to do with Shane and Operation Sky Hammer?
“Yes, Reno,” said Nicholas. “Specifically, the Desert Road Café.” He rattled off an address. “One of us will meet you there, and then escort you to the actual meeting place.”
“Why, Nicholas, it’s as if you don’t trust me,” I said.
“Yes, it’s like we just threatened to kill each other,” said Nicholas. “What a shocking thing.”
“And then what?” I said. “What do you want me to steal for you this time?”
“You know better than to discuss that over the phone,” said Nicholas. “You’ll find out when you get here. Be seeing you soon, Nadia. I am quite looking forward to meeting your brother.”
I wanted to get the last word in, but he hung up first.
I stared at my phone screen for a bit.
“Shit,” I said, and I shoved the phone into the pocket of my coat.
“Trouble?” Murdo said.
“Yeah,” I said, pacing back and forth on the sidewalk. “You could say that.” I stopped, took a deep breath, and turned to face them. “All right. It looks like before we killed Lorenz, he set up a delayed email to Nicholas…”
“Damn it,” muttered Murdo.
“It was his last failsafe in case we killed him,” I said. “If he had won and killed us, he would have canceled the email and never mentioned any of this to Nicholas. But he lost, and we killed him…”
“And so the email went to Connor,” said Murdo.
“This Nicholas Connor guy is the Rebel Overseer you were telling me about?” said Russell.
“Yeah,” I said. Nicholas Connor was my ex-boyfriend, which was bad enough. He was also the leader of the Rebels, which was much worse. He had forged an alliance between the Rebels and the Knight of Venomhold, giving them a safe refuge beyond the reach of the High Queen. And through the Forerunner’s deal with Morvilind, Nicholas had been using me to track down the ancient secrets of Operation Sky Hammer.
And whatever the Sky Hammer was, Lorenz had been sure it would give Nicholas victory over the High Queen. Lorenz had been a rat, a man who would only side with the winners…and he had been utterly certain that Nicholas and the Rebels were going to win.
“How much does he know?” said Murdo.
“He knows my real name,” I said. “He knows about Russell. He knows about Lord Morvilind. He knows about the Marneys.” Russell flinched at that. “Hell, Rory, he knows everything.”
Murdo considered this. “How bad is it?”
“It’s bad,” I said. I ran a hand through my hair, trying to calm myself down. It didn’t help. My hair had gotten long and shaggy and hung down to the middle of my back, and every time I touched it, I just thought I needed a haircut. “He’s summoned me for the third theft of the deal…and he wants Russell to come.”
Russell blinked. “Me? Why?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” I said. “He wants to use you to control me. Make sure I cooperate with whatever dumbass thing he’s got planned this time. I…damn it!”
I paced in a circle, so angry that I wanted to call my magic and blast something to ashes. Or blast out a window. Or use a burst of telekinetic force to flip a car onto its roof. The part of my mind that was thinking rationally pointed out that would be a terrible idea, so I forced myself back to calm.
I wanted to blame myself. Maybe I should have. But I couldn’t see what I could have done differently. Kill Lorenz faster? Wipe out Nicholas and his crew? Even if
I didn’t get myself killed trying to do that, it would break Morvilind’s deal with the Forerunner, and Russell would die of his frostfever.
What could I have done differently? Oh, probably like a billion things. But none of them would have mattered because Nicholas Connor had found out my real identity.
So, I was furious at Morvilind. I was also furious at Lorenz. If Russell hadn’t already killed him, I would have killed him all over again.
And I was enraged at Nicholas.
I paced in a circle a few times. Murdo and Russell waited until I calmed down. They were both used to me, albeit in different contexts.
“Should…I go with you?” said Russell. “It doesn’t seem like a really good idea.”
“No,” I said. “It’s not. It’s not even a remotely good idea. But I don’t see how we have any other choice. If we leave you here, Nicholas will send someone to kidnap you at the first opportunity. Probably scoop up the Marneys while he’s at it. At least if you’re with Rory and me, we can keep an eye on you.”
“Should I hide somewhere?” said Russell.
“Where?” I said. “Where can you hide that the Rebels can’t find you? You saw how they can go back and forth from Venomhold. Anywhere you go, they can find you.”
“Maybe we should go to Lord Morvilind,” said Russell.
“He would take it badly,” said Murdo.
Russell considered that. “You’re right. He probably would.” He looked back at me. “So, what are we going to do?”
For a minute, just a minute, I considered telling them to run with me.
Because Morvilind was no longer the only way I had to cure Russell.
Russell’s shop teacher had turned out to be a paroled Elven Archon named Nathan Vander. (Somehow, I doubted that “Nathan Vander” was his real name, but whatever.) Vander was a bloodcaster, with the magical talent to heal nearly anything. He could heal frostfever, but he needed a rare magical artifact called a dragon pearl to do it.
Which meant if I could get Russell, Vander, and a dragon pearl in the same room at the same time, Vander could cure Russell’s frostfever.

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