Adam Drake - Blackout

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7 BILLION PEOPLE REDUCED TO ONE PRIMAL INSTINCT — SURVIVAL
Day one of a terrifying new future.
The lights are gone and the darkness is forever.
Countless millions will perish.
Few will survive only by embracing this chilling new reality.
Even fewer still will understand what has occurred.
But one immutable fact will emerge from the chaos:
It’s not just the lights that have gone dark.
Nate, a disgruntled hitman, realizes there’s opportunity within this chaos and decides to settle old scores.
Wyatt, a homeless man with a mysterious past, must somehow deal with this dark new reality or risk losing the only important person in his life.

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The man cleared his throat. “I’m Winimar Hubertus. Might I ask who you are?”

I stepped into the little room. Fairfax stood in the doorway, blocking it while trying not to look like that was his intent.

“Mister Hubertus. My name is Mayra Beeweather, and this is Constable Fairfax. We were wondering if we could ask you a few questions.”

“Well, I think -,” Hubertus said before the woman in blue interrupted.

“Don’t say nothing without a lawyer present, Win,” she said and glared at Fairfax. “I don’t like the looks of that one.”

Winimar pulled himself up into a sitting position and said, “Why not? I’ve done nothing wrong. Can’t hurt to speak with these fine police folk, now can it?” He gave me an inquisitive look. “You are police aren’t you?”

Inwardly I sighed. “Yes, I am the Acting Detective for this case.” If Fairfax wasn’t playing his role he would have grinned.

The blue woman looked me over. “Acting, eh? What happened to the other detective that came round before? Oswall was it? He got himself fired for drinking on the job?” She turned to Winimar and said, “That man stank of whiskey and chips. You would have gotten along with him.”

Winimar sighed, “Pasha, please. That is not called for.”

I considered the response. If I mentioned that Oswall was dead, these two would become even more alarmed and clam up shut. Then I’d have to wait to speak with Winimar through a lawyer. There was no time for such nonsense.

“Detective Oswall is no longer on the case. I’ve taken over.” To the blue lady I said, “Your name is Pasha, is it?”

She frowned at me. “That’s right. Pasha Hubertus. His wife. Third, actually. And he won’t be needing for another wife after me. Ain’t that right, Win?”

Winimar rolled his eyes. He said, “Is this about my being spelled? I woke up just a few hours ago. Slept all these days! Bit of a farce that.”

“Yes. I understand that was what happened,” I said and removed paper and a pencil from my satchel to take notes. “Could you tell us what happened that night? If you can remember.”

“Oh, I remember,” Winimar said. “Was making my rounds as usual. One circuit of the museum at the top and bottom of each hour. Every hour from nine at night until six in the morning until Mister Othmar opens the front doors.”

“They don’t pay him enough for that kind of boring work,” Pasha said. “Can make someone go crazy walking in circles all night.”

I wanted to keep Winimar talking. “Then what happened?”

“Well, I was making my rounds at about half past midnight and I needed to take a quick break. I walked to the lavatory which is between the Third and Fourth Era war displays. And as I rounded the corner to head down the hall, something caught my eye.”

“They should have given you a pistol, is what they should have done,” interrupted Pasha. She looked agitated.

“I don’t need no pistol,” Winimar said to her. “If there’s any trouble I just pull an alarm and run like a Mudhump caught digging through the trash. If I had a pistol I’d probably just shoot myself in the foot.”

Again, I redirected Winimar. “Something caught your eye?”

“Right. I looked over at the wax figure of General Tykish on his horse. And there was movement behind the General. Like a shadow or something.”

Pasha said, “It’s a good display, that. Even though Tykish messed it up and lost the battle, the display is quite pleasing to look at.”

“A shadow?” I said to Winimar.

“Yeah. So I stopped and said ‘Who goes there!’ My heart was thumping right mad in my chest. I might be the night caretaker but I ain’t no hero like Kadmik the Adventurer.”

Pasha’s eyes shot wide open. “Oh, now Kadmik makes for a good display!”

“Hush, now, Pash,” Winimar said, giving his tone a rough edge. “I’m talking to the detective.”

Pasha went silent and sulked.

Winimar said, “Anyway, I shouted out and imagine my surprise when the shadow answered back!”

“What did it say?” I said.

“Well, that’s the thing. I dunno. Fell asleep, I figure, right there and then. Next thing I know, I wake up in this here bed with my Pasha at my side.” He took his wife’s hand, and they smiled at each other.

“Do you recall what the shadow said, at all?”

He shook his head. “Nothing. Only I know it spoke. Deep voice. But I don’t remember the words. Or even if it was words.” He shrugged. “That is all there was to it. Glad the shadow, or whoever it was didn’t have a mind to do anything to me while I slept the night away on that floor.”

Pasha made a tsk-tsk sound, and held his hand closer.

I said, “So you are aware items were taken that night?”

Pasha said, “I just told him after he woke up not two hours ago. As big a surprise to him as one would expect.”

“Yeah, I’m aware now,” he said. “Disappointed that I had to be the one on duty. Now I get all the blame.”

“No one is blaming you for anything, Mister Hubertus. I’m just trying to get the facts as you remember them.”

“Oh, he got the blame, all right,” Pasha said. “That blow hard Othmar said as much when he was here.”

“He came here?”

Pasha scowled. “Yeah, and not in a good manner of way, either. Hollered and yelled so much the nurses had to get an orderly to ask him to leave.” She looked at Hubertus. “Blamed him for all of it. Said he must have been in on the job. Or if not, was foolish enough to let it happen. Like Hub here could defend himself from being spelled. Can you believe it?”

“He fired me,” Hubertus said. “Told poor Pash, here, that once I woke up she was to inform me that my employment was terminated.”

I said, “I don’t think Mister Othmar has the legal grounds to do that.”

“Legal or not, I’m fired now,” he said, looking mournful. “My cousin had to pull all sorts of strings to get me that job, and now I’m back looking for work.”

“And with a hospital bill to pay for now, too!” Pasha said.

Winimar patted her hand. “We’ll check out, today, sweetheart. Don’t you worry.”

I asked him, “Do you recall anything unusual that night, before you were spelled, while making your rounds? Anything at all.”

“Nothing, ma’am. Was the same as any other night.”

There was nothing else to ask at that moment although I intended to follow up with him once more facts from the case came to light.

“We will leave you for now, Mr. Hubertus,” I said. “Perhaps later we can talk once you are feeling better. Which reminds me. Might I get your address?”

“Yes, all right,” he said, and I wrote it down.

I thanked them both and turned to leave when I realized something. To Pasha I asked, “Mrs. Hubertus, what did the other detective ask you while he was here?”

She blinked at me as if trying to remember. “Oh, not much, really. Since Win was fast asleep as a newborn babe, there wasn’t much he could ask. Oh, I remember. He wanted to know if me or Win here knew of a woman.”

“What woman?” I said.

She scrunched her face up with thought. “Ip-Horn, I think.”

I recalled the name on the back of the bookstore business card. “Ipthorn, perhaps?”

Pasha’s face brightened. “That’s what it was. Ipthorn. Strange name that.”

“Did he ask anything else? Maybe why he was enquiring about this Ipthorn woman?”

Pasha shook her head. “No,” she said with a shrug. “And we know no one by that name.”

Thanking them for their time Fairfax and I withdrew to the hallway.

“Let’s talk to the Warding Master,” I said to Fairfax before he could speak. I knew what he would say.

After searching the halls I spotted her. Unlike the nurses and doctors who wore white, the Warding Master wore a deep red robe with black swirling patterns.

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