Hound of Eden Omnibus Read online




  Hound of Eden Omnibus

  Blood Hound – Stained Glass – Zero Sum

  By James Osiris Baldwin

  Based on the Dermal Highway Universe by Canth Decided-Baldwin

  Table of Contents

  Book 1: Blood Hound

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Epilogue

  Book 2: Stained Glass

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Book 3: Zero Sum

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Free Prequel Novel: Burn Artist

  Major Organizations in the Hound of Eden Series:

  Copyright Notice

  Book 1: Blood Hound

  Chapter 1

  It was a hot summer night in New York, and I was on my way to kill a man. The target was my boss’s oldest friend, Semyon Vochin, currently hiding out at his safe house on East 49th Street. It was a solemn affair. Semyon was one of us. We thought we’d known him well.

  My driver, Nicolai, was as grim as a pallbearer at the wheel. He was Old Crew, one of the first men to come from Ukraine via Afghanistan and make a name for himself in New York, just like Semyon. There was none of the usual shit-talk and banter that usually went on before a job. Semyon was a friend to nearly all the old guys in the Yaroshenko Organizatsiya... as much as anyone in the Russian Mafiya could be counted as a friend.

  My partner for the evening was nervous. He wasn’t a rookie by any stretch, but I was the first mage he’d ever met and he was clearly uncomfortable. Every anxious shift of his ass on the seat prickled my ears with the sound of wool on leather, squeaking like insect legs. His name was Mari, Manny, something like that... a Bulgarian, fresh off the boat, older than me by around five years. His face was pug-like and flat, like someone had one smashed it in with a skillet. I’d been sure to look him in the eye when we were introduced. We wizards can tell a lot from a man’s stare, and all I’d seen inside of him was a flat, dull nothingness, a void of old anger and self-entitled spite. The whites of his eyes were yellowed from too much cheap vodka and heroin; he walked with a cock-swinging swagger and had tried to crush my hand when we shook. Unfortunately for him, he reminded me strongly of my father.

  “You cool, spook?” As if feeling the weight of my thoughts on him, Manny-Mari grunted the question aloud for perhaps the fifth time that night.

  I ignored him and continued gazing out the window. My stomach swooped giddily as I watched the orange streetlights caress the pavement past my dim reflection in the glass. I realized, with a nervous little lurch behind my ribs, that we were nearly at 49th Street.

  Naturally, he took my silence as a challenge. “Hey, Sokolsky. Shortass. I was talking to you.”

  “And I was very carefully not listening.” I didn’t give him the benefit of a glance. All proper mages must know how to perfect an aura of impenetrable sourness, the better to discourage people from bothering us. Otherwise, they start on with the inane questions, like “Where does magic come from?” “Can you make my cock bigger?” “Why don’t you set this cat on fire and prove it?”

  “Eat my dick.” My partner cursed me in Bulgarian. “Fuckin’ freak.”

  I blinked, once, and resumed my meditation. I’d been called worse things by better men.

  With these kinds of jobs, repulsiveness was the most important quality I needed in a good partner - the other requirements being religious fervor and an IQ less than a hundred. To my great relief, Manny-Mari ceased trying to get me to turn my head and settled for grumbling and cuddling into his new jacket. His suit was a better cut than anything he could have gotten in Sofia, and he was already superbly ungrateful to us. America did that to people.

  I’ve imagined getting off the plane or a ship from the old country the way my parents did, taking that first yellow cab through the mythic brownstone buildings and Art Deco monoliths of New York. As far as immigrant brigadi like this guy or Nicolai were concerned, America was a soft carcass with all the organs they eat, a place ripe for the picking. But Nic had told me once that as hard as life in the USSR could be, the USA had its own kind of poison. The country corroded something inside you, and I'd bet anything that when the cabbie took off, spraying snow from the curb all up your nice new coat, and you realized he stiffed you because you didn’t know how much twenty bucks is worth here... well, suddenly New York wasn’t so romantic anymore.

  We turned the corner onto the silent road and came to a gentle stop in front of the apartments sheltering our target. Nic cut the engine and sat back, fingering a cigarette. Manny-Mari dropped the seatbelt clip he hadn’t fastened and fussed with his hair, his belt, and his gun.

  “Hold your whiskers, tiger.” Nic’s terse, staccato Russian punctured the air of the cabin. “Briefing.”

  “Oh.” The other man dropped back into his seat.

  I hadn’t moved, save to look s
idelong so I could watch Nic’s face in the rearview mirror. Nic was my Kommandant, the Commander who oversaw all the street teams working in Brighton Beach, Red Hook, and Queens. He was a dry, thin man with sun-weathered skin, heavily tattooed, and missing the tip of his left ring finger. His blue eyes were slightly cloudy with premature age, but even in his fifties, he was still as lean and sharp as a razor.

  “Okay. Vochin hired his own spook to do him up with some heavy magic. If you know what’s good for you, Moni, you’ll shut the fuck up and do what Alexi says. Anything he says. Whatever Sem’s got up there ashed the last two guys who tried to pay him a call. Hit Vochin and anything else alive you find. Make a scene, but not too much of a scene. Got it?”

  Moni—that was his name—looked sidelong at me and furtively licked his teeth. By the shift in his manner and the look in his eye, I knew what he was thinking before he said it: “And if the wife’s up there?”

  “Don’t leave a mess.” Nic’s flat voice turned a little stiff with distaste.

  Pig. I finally stirred from my seat and left the car, masking my own opinions behind a pleasant nothing-face. I put the wave of disgust aside with my first breath of fresh air. Fresh, at least, by New York standards. I could taste pennies on my tongue. The wind was metal-tinged, heavy and humid after the last summer rain, and ripe with magic.

  After you pierce the Veil for the first time and make the switch from 'dabbler in the Occult' to 'mage', something in you changes forever. You develop a sense of presence, of something else thinking behind your own thoughts. Many of the greatest mages describe it almost like another person, and it has many names: The Holy Guardian Angel, the Genius, Anima, Neshamah. I had never had the compelling relationship with this presence that other mages had described to me, but I could tell that it was less like an angel and more like a large, patient snake gazing upon a world of mice. As I tuned into the street, I could feel it looking out through me. Magic crept and crawled and waited in a thousand places. Some of it was old and ghostly, arcane architecture coded straight into the design of the city itself. Some of it was newer, still shining like spiderwebs. Burglar alarms, house-blessings, benedictions, curses, wards of all kinds. Wards are the most common form of magic found in cities: static enchantments written onto the energetic matrix of a structure, place, or object. Of those wards, most are really just simple alarms: they alert someone when the ward is breached. Evocation wards—complex, dynamic spells that can do all manner of wonderful things—are in the minority. They are used, for instance, to blow people up.

  Only about two hours ago, our boss had sent two men to kill Semyon Vochin in his car. They pulled up alongside Semyon at a red light, the hatchet man had stuck his pistol through the driver’s-side window, and he’d exploded. The driver hadn’t been any luckier. Semyon’s protective wards turned them both into cat food and caused a six-car pileup on Water Street. Then, like a frightened rodent, he’d scampered back to his burrow.

  I know if someone had tried to pull a hit on me the way Lev had done with Semyon, I’d have split town while I was still in the car. Clothes, money, they could all be replaced. But life? Not unless you knew a good necromancer. Heavy magic and big guns had a way of making men overconfident, though. The apartment lights were on, shielded by heavy drapes.

  Moni trailed behind as we headed for the foyer, hats pulled down. Even with the heat, this was an occasion for Russian Mafiya formal—hats to hide our faces, overcoats to conceal our weapons, and gloves to hide our fingerprints. We had ski hats on under the brims so we didn’t lose any hair for the cops to find later on. With forelocks, we could have passed for a couple of rabbis.

  “So, uh, what’cha gonna do up there?" Moni spoke as we passed the desk. "Sacrifice a goat or somethin’?”

  “If there just so happens to be a goat handy in this New York penthouse suite, why not?” My voice stayed deep and dry, a little flat.

  He scowled. “Are all Americans assholes, or is it just you?”

  “I have on good authority that I occupy the extreme end of the bell curve.” God, he was nervous. I could smell him, the sour red tang of spent adrenaline. The Bulgarian was half a foot taller than me, big and brawny, but he was sweating like a new side of lamb. “But in all seriousness, I will look over the wards, examine them for flaws, and either use those flaws to destroy them or find another workaround.”

  “The hell does that mean?”

  And here was why I discouraged questions about magic. Very few people really want to know what they think they want to know, and even if they do, the information rarely sticks. I sighed.

  “Heap big magic,” I said in English. “Wizard do things good.”

  Moni’s brow furrowed. He didn’t understand a word. “What?”

  I half-opened the door and turned back to glare at him. “Blood magic. Now, please. I need to concentrate.”

  The foyer was stripped clean of spells, but like so many of these old buildings, it had been made to handle them. The Freemasons and Rosicrucians once had and still do have a significant hand in the building of America, and sure enough, we passed across a checkered floor and between two columns, one black, one white. Beneath the dome overhead lay the compass within a circle, a very powerful magical construct in its own right. A chandelier hung down from the center of the dome over the compass rose, like a knife poised over a beating heart. The core of these old buildings channeled magical energy like a lightning rod. If I concentrated, I could sense its unimpeded flow.

  “We take the stairs,” I said, already heading for them. The security desk was unmanned. Lev had called and arranged the bribe in advance. “The elevator will be trapped.”

  Moni made a stupid, thick sound in his throat, but he followed. Thank goodness I only had to work with him for one night. I clamped my teeth together and locked them just to feel them click.

  The stair climb was a good way to relieve some tension, and by the time we hit the fifth floor, I felt better. Sweating, laboring, thighs trembling a little—but not too much—my heart thumping with every step, I felt properly alive. My intuition was playing my body like a violin, and my fingers vibrated more the higher we went. I don’t know how I knew Vochin and his wife were still in their rooms when common sense told me they should have already fled. I am not very powerful as mages go—with the right tools and a lot of my own blood, I can break wards and move paper clips around on a table without resorting to magnets—but this sense of fatedness has been my guide ever since I was a child, and it has yet to fail me.

  The first ward was on the sixth-floor landing. I pulled up hard as the hum washed over me, holding up a hand to wave Moni back. The hissing ozone smell of magic filled the echoing stairwell, but we hadn’t pushed past the threshold. “Wait. It’s here.”

  “What?” Moni drew his pistol from his coat, as if it would do him any good. “Where?”

  “Put your pistol away. And don’t move.” I breathed in deeply, scanning the greasy walls, and focused my will into a sharp point of intent. The faint dizziness from the climb helped my vision split between the two closely knit layers of reality on Earth: Malkuth, the material plane, and Yesod, the subtle aetheric layer. On one level, I saw nothing but stained concrete and peeling metal railings. On the other, my vision swam with fine blue lines that danced and glimmered like strands of hair in sunlight. The threads led back to the landing door in a fine web and were bound to a square foot of wall beside the exit. A freshly enchanted sigil, crawling with energy. The mage had drawn it in lemon juice and salt water, that old invisible ink recipe we all learn as kids.

  “Go back down, and watch the stairwell. Try and head anyone off,” I said. “Magic draws attention. People might come out to gawk.”

  Moni holstered his pistol and glared at me reproachfully, but to his credit, he obeyed. He excelled at following orders. That was good.

  I reached into my coat for one of my oldest tools: a knapped obsidian knife with a small, leaf-shaped blade. Calmly, I rolled back my sleeve with two precis
e turns of the cuff, exposing my forearm. The humming of the magic rose an octave and spilled out, reacting to the stirring energy that built in my blood and hands. Wards fed off ambient energy, and this one sent out little tentacles towards any focused source of power, like a plasma globe. Moni couldn’t see it, but he could feel the creeping weirdness. He looked back. That was not good—he was too jumpy, and it made the energy wobble and shift slippery around us.

  “Bi-en bol baltoh.” The words bubbled up as I faced the sigil, eyes closed. I brought the knife up and around, drawing it through the soapy film of energy to find its flow and pattern. The words themselves were fragments of Enochian, a language which had to be spoken slowly, each letter intoned at a specific pitch. “Comselha cilna nor-molor.”

  Enochian was invented by John Dee, the court wizard of Queen Elizabeth I. He believed he’d discovered the language of the angels. I suspected he’d actually taken a lot of drugs and made it up, but it was the ideal magical language for someone who saw sounds in color. Every sound had a unique color and texture, and I could taste both with every well-shaped word. They tripped sweet and syrupy from my tongue, rolling, weaving into the ward, and my senses began to expand. I could feel Moni twitching and flinching from ten feet away through my fingertips. This was not even the high weirdness, but magical disturbance was unnerving for Blanks – non-mages - with no ability to understand what was happening. They feel dread, I am told: a twisting in the belly that screams “wrong!” like a siren going off in the animal part of the brain.

  I carefully pricked the skin of my wrist and watched the red well up, only to be sucked away. The first drop twisted upwards and vanished, then the next. A giddy rush of energy flooded me then, pushing and clamoring. I tipped my head back and let it connect, feeling out along the ward as it fed from my body. It did not take long to find what I was looking for: the chink. The delicate error where the mage’s drying finger had not quite connected the circle. I felt it out with the prying fingers of my mind, braced myself, and shoved.

  My arm bled. The ward swelled, then snapped. My grasp on it turned from caress to assault as I shunted hot power through the fine filaments of magic. The air of the stairwell blackened and buzzed like television snow around us; the lights flickered, one of them bursting with the pop and fizzle of spent Freon.