A Vigil in the Mourning (Soulbound #4) - Hailey Turner Page 0,77
his eyelids. The sound of his phone going off had him fumbling it out of his pocket to answer it.
“Are you all right?” Jono asked without even a hello.
“Yeah. I’m fine,” Patrick said.
“You’re such a bloody liar. I felt that.”
“Something hit the ley lines.”
“So why would you feel it?”
Patrick hesitated. Without Jono, he couldn’t tap a ley line. The only answer he could think of pointed at Hannah, and nothing good would ever come from that. “I can’t talk about it here.”
He didn’t want to talk about it ever, but he knew he had to tell Jono as soon as they were alone.
“Right. Me and Wade are coming to you. We’ll find a Starbucks near your building, or anything that is open in this bloody weather, and wait for you to pick us up. If you need me”—Jono stressed the word, making it obvious what he meant without outright talking about the soulbond—“I’ll be close by.”
Patrick bit the inside of his lip, holding back all the words he wanted to say but couldn’t while in a building surrounded by SOA agents and workers. “Might have better luck with a Dunkin’ Donuts.”
“I vote Dunkins,” Wade said loud enough that Patrick could hear him through the line.
“You just ate,” Jono said.
Patrick snorted. “Stay warm. Talk to you soon.”
He ended the call and went to find SAIC Andrew Dabrowski.
The Chicago SOA field office only employed about a dozen mages, half of which were assigned to the Rapid Response Division. The fluctuation had ricocheted through every mage, whether they were tapped into a ley line or not. It had caught people unawares, even through their shields.
Which means Ethan doesn’t care if we know he’s taking that power. Patrick grimaced as he got in the nearest elevator and pushed the button for the twenty-ninth floor. Frigg is right. We’ll need to shield the nexus.
His thought seemed to be shared by Dabrowski, because the second Patrick stepped into the SAIC’s crowded office and the older mage got eyes on him, Patrick became the center of attention.
“Collins,” Dabrowski said, cracking open a potions bottle one of the witches on staff must have given him. He looked about as green as the potion he poured into a cut-crystal glass. “We’re shielding the nexus.”
“Hope you don’t expect me to help with that, sir. My shields aren’t the greatest, and I can’t tap a ley line or nexus,” Patrick replied from the doorway.
Dabrowski waved off his words. “I’m sending you and other agents to Lincoln Park. Special Agent Alara Bowen will locate the epicenter of the spell. Near as we can tell, the hit came from a ley line beneath that neighborhood. My guess is it’s the same bastards who came after you last night. I want to know what the hell they’re doing and why.”
Hopefully not sacrificing a god, but Patrick didn’t put the odds in their favor. “Understood, sir.”
Patrick didn’t know what they’d find in Lincoln Park, but he knew it wouldn’t be good.
Wade stuck his arm between the two front seats, a frosted pink donut with sprinkles resting on a napkin. “Donut?”
Patrick didn’t look away from the street he was driving down that had been recently cleared of snow, despite more falling. The snow plows and salt trucks were out in full force right now, and they apparently did not mess around. “Not now, Wade.”
The donut disappeared. “Fine, then. More for me.”
The sound of rustling paper bags came from the back seat of the SUV. “Don’t make a mess.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
“Are you going to tell me what happened?” Jono asked from the front passenger seat.
Patrick tightened his fingers on the steering wheel, wishing the SUV had sirens. He’d picked up Jono and Wade from the Dunkin’ Donuts where they’d found shelter, which put him behind the other agents in getting to the scene. The snowstorm was still terrible, but it wasn’t whiteout level yet. Weather witches were fighting to break it up. The reactionary storm had stalled over Lake Michigan, still aiming at Chicago, and Patrick didn’t know if that was due to magic or interference from any of the immortals running around Chicago looking for Odin.
“Aksel Sigfodr turned out to be Odin. General Reed’s people were wrong about him knowing anything about the staff, but the government was right about him being a criminal.”
“How so?”
“You know how I told you he’s big in Chicago politics? Odin runs a pay-to-play scheme for politicians, but money isn’t enough. Seems he wants souls instead of prayers for his pantheon. The