“Keep in mind, boy, she also has a choice. Now, keep your blood cool and draw the map. We still have work ahead of us.”
Duncan drew maps, and with Mallick plotted out their plan of attack. Timing, directions, numbers.
They hand-selected the troops, a mix of magickals and NMs, pinpointed a safe zone they’d secure to move the prisoners, any wounded, and a system for transporting them east while leaving a contingent in Utah.
They’d establish their first base in the West.
Long after Mallick went to bed, Duncan couldn’t sleep. Instead he sat at his desk sketching the land he’d seen, that desert sky, those fanciful, to his eye, buttes and mesas.
He didn’t feel the vision take him, but caught in it, his hand chose pencils, moved over the page, drawing, shading, detailing what formed in his mind.
He more than saw those images. He heard, he scented, he felt.
When he came out of it, his fingers cramped, his arm ached. He’d worn one of his precious pencils to a stub, had sharpened and used a second.
The drawing—and he knew he’d never done anything to match it—lay complete. The great towers rising, the rubble, the smoke, the circling crows in air thick with it. Streets, the vehicles jammed over them. The bodies, some torn to pieces, on sidewalks or sprawled out of the broken glass of windows, of doorways.
He’d drawn a dog feasting on what had been a man, its muzzle filthy with blood and gore, as he’d caught it in a snarl.
Something larger, even darker than the crows, winged overhead, and the forks of lightning cracked the sky.
He stood there, his sword drawn, stained with blood. She stood beside him. Fallon Swift, her sword in hand, stained like his.
They stood together in the carnage, in the smoke and the storm. And looked at each other.
“New York City,” he murmured. He only knew because the vision brought him the knowledge. He’d been only one day old when his mother had fled the city with him and his sisters.
But now he knew he would go there, fight there. And he would stand with Fallon there.
He put the sketch away. Suddenly weary to the bone, he sprawled on his bed. He dreamed of her, but the dreams faded with morning.
* * *
Considering its space and location, Fallon set up the lower level of her family’s home as the war room. Until she could build or scavenge better, she used a reclaimed sheet of plywood on sawhorses as a table. With Ethan’s help, she hauled in a motley variety of extra chairs.
Since school was out for summer, she borrowed a blackboard, bartered for chalk made from crushed eggshells and flour.
On the board, she wrote the three targets, and under Arlington listed the fighting troops from New Hope, by name and designation, that she, her father, and Will—with some input from Colin—had chosen. Then the support troops—straight rescuers, medicals, transportation.
With them she listed the enemy’s known numbers and resources, the number of magickal prisoners, the number of slaves according to their best intel and estimations.
On the table, she pinned her map of the base, and used chess pieces borrowed from Poe and Kim—black for the enemy, white for her forces—to designate troop positions.
When her father came down, a mug of coffee in each hand, he studied her work. “You’ve been at this awhile, and it’s barely dawn. I’d have helped you with it.”
“It helped me focus. So will that coffee, thanks.”
“It’s a good job.”
“I had good teachers. I got the chess pieces from Kim, but I don’t have enough for three targets. I got these from Bill at Bygones. He wouldn’t take anything for them.”
She showed Simon a container of plastic soldiers and jungle animals. “I figured we’re the soldiers, they’re the animals. Not very dignified, but—”
“It works. Nervous?”
“I thought I would be, but it’s more anxious to get started. They’ll be here soon, Mallick, Thomas, Troy, Mae Pickett, Boris, Charlie from back home, along with the New Hope Originals. It’s the first time all of them will have been in the same place, the same time.”
“And most of them are used to, more or less, running their own show.”
“There’s that.”
“We picked good people to lead, Fallon. Now it’s time for you to use their strengths, balance any weaknesses, and move forward for the whole.”
* * *
Will and Arlys arrived first, then others trickled in. She’d wait until leaders from every base came, begin with introductions, she thought. Acknowledgments. Some would fight together for the first time, or send those under their command to fight under another leader.
Acknowledgment mattered.
She stepped outside, thinking to gather herself and prepare for the diplomacy portion. Something her father was so much better at.
As she stood with the voices floating out through the open windows behind her, the first from outside New Hope flashed.
Thomas, Minh, with Sabine and Vick—two of the witches she’d asked to join the elf colony. And one more.
The last time she’d seen Mick he’d stood at the edge of the woods surrounding Mallick’s cottage, his hand lifted in farewell as she’d left for home.
He’d been her first friend away from home, the first elf she’d formed a bond with. He’d been her first kiss.
He grinned at her now, those leaf-green eyes alight. He’d grown his bronze-colored hair longer, had trios of thin braids on either side of his head to hold it back. His face had fined down, and he sported a triangle of beard on his chin.
But he looked so much the same.
“Mick!” She leaped forward to throw her arms around him. He swung her, laughing.
Stronger, she realized, and more solid. A soldier now who still wore the braided bracelet with the charms she’d made him as a parting gift.
“Fallon Swift.” He eased her back to study her face. “You look good.”
“You, too,” she said even as she tugged on the beard.
“Thomas, Minh.” She embraced them in turn, shook hands with the others. “You’re well? And everyone?”
“We are,” Thomas told her. “And prepared.”
“Let me take you inside. I want you to meet my parents, and the others.” She gripped Mick’s hand. “We need to catch up.”
Others arrived, and she did her best to greet each personally, to make those introductions. And gauge reactions, moods.
Then Mallick stepped in, alone.
She moved to him.
“Mallick the Sorcerer.”
“Fallon Swift.”
She kissed his cheek, stepped back. “You’re alone.”
“I am. I have the map of the base in Utah, and its surroundings.”
“All right.” She turned, took the map to the table to pin it with her own and the one Thomas had brought.
She looked at those gathered. Elves, faeries, witches, shifters, farmers, teachers, mothers, fathers, sons, daughters.
Soldiers all.
“We begin. Here, we work together to coordinate three simultaneous attacks on enemy bases. We will take those bases, free all prisoners, secure and fortify those bases and all assets within as our own. We will send a message to Jeremiah White and all who follow him that we will end their reign of fear and brutality. And that message will reach all who threaten the light and the lives of others. We stand here today, magickals and non-magickals, together for one purpose. To push back the dark.”
She paused. “Thomas,” she continued. “Will you report the results of your scouting mission?”
She listened to the details, watched as he pointed out areas on the map, gave his estimation on enemy numbers, prisoners.
Nodding, she added the information to the board. “How many troops, and support forces, will you need to take the base?”
To her surprise, Thomas looked at Mick, who took over.
“We can take it with sixty. Seventy would be better because it’s spread out. See, we’d…” He moved to the map, picked up one of the toy soldiers—grinned his Mick grin at it. “Cool. They’ve got sentry posts here, here, here.”
She didn’t comment he’d used the soldier toys for the enemy. No doubt Mick preferred to be represented by a lion or tiger.
But his strategy rang clear as he moved pieces.
“They’ve got four boats—two sail powered. We could cut off any escape attempts by water if we had, say, three to five merpeople.”
“We’ll get them,” Fallon told him.
“That cuts them off to the east,” he continued. “They keep the prisoners here—it’s basically a fortified hut on the beach. One guard. Slaves are on this level of the main base.”
“It was a hotel.”
“Lots of rooms,” he agreed. “The top PWs have the top floor.”
“For the views,” Poe put in. “And the status.”
“I guess.”
Mick went over the compound, point by point.
“How do they get power?” Fallon asked.
Sabine answered. “They have three generators, powered by battery and magicks.”
“They have DUs?”
“No.” She had golden skin and deep, dark eyes, wore her hair, black as a raven’s wing, in a straight fall to her waist. “It may be they tortured witches into helping them gain power, or used DUs at one time.”
“We cut the power. Can you do it?”
“I can countermand the magicks. I need one other witch to do it. But Minh says if the batteries are charged, they’d still operate. I don’t know how to deactivate them.”
“We’ll get someone who does to work with you.” Fallon wrote it down. “With the power down, after the initial attack, after they have time to send out the alarm, the leaders will have to get to the battle by the stairs.”
When Mick finished the report and plan, she moved back to the board.
“Seventy troops, including four of the mers, twelve support for medical and rescue transport. How many do you have ready for the mission?”