A Darker Glass
They know
All my life I’ve lived in secret, always changing my identity with my illusion magic and moving on without a trace. Or so I thought.
Just as my sister and I have begun to learn the price our family paid for that secrecy, she’s captured – by a group of conspirators out for the key to her magic. Or is it simply revenge they’re after?
Her message to me: let her die. Not a chance.
My only chance to save her is to play our enemies against each other… if I can outwit the tycoon who knows more about me every time we face off… and the police captain with his own hidden demons. And then there’s the woman who’s already risked everything to help me save an enemy of hers, and she’s one person I never meant to hurt at all.
For a man who’s worn a thousand faces, the hardest move of all is to earn someone’s trust. But with my sister’s life running out, I can’t let anyone stand in my way.
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Sample
My face and clothes were sculpted to let me hurry along the street unnoticed: a tired-looking, white-coated worker who might be an associate in any of the nearby labs. The building with the clinic was an outline of paleness in the spring night, waiting on the street ahead.
Risky, Nick. No crowd to hide among, and this time it’s…
This time these were people who’d caught Valerie, who’d be alert for me and my illusions. But my brain was choked with dead ends and frustrations from a day of standing surveillance and shaking the internet, and tonight’s gathering was still my best chance at finding where they’d taken my sister. Still, walking in among a gathering of security professionals…
As long as my source meant this was something other than a trap.
Just then a figure moved, on the sidewalk down beyond the clinic, in the neon-flickering shadows around the entrance to a late-night diner. She had a stained coat plus a cap over the hair that would be bright blonde, and she held a phone at her ear while she kept a glance around at what few people passed her. A good pose of fitting in, but her compact size and the tension in her stance gave her away to me.
The clinic door was only ten quiet steps ahead of me. So why was Emma Lynn here, now? Thinking she could help, or was she having second thoughts about passing me information, or worse? My plan tonight had nothing to gain by talking to her now…
—Or she could have some new lead on this. It did take getting used to, having an ally who knew anything about me. I strolled past the clinic door and on toward her.
Emma’s first glance slid right over me. The next time her gaze passed me, I saw an uncertain hitch in the motion.
As I walked by her, for one instant I let the illusion over my face blink off. She managed not to jump—and my hand at my side flicked in a tiny motion for her to follow me, as I walked on.
Twisting my illusion was simply the fastest way to reveal myself, though I’d rarely need it with Valerie or our parents. Still, I could just make out Emma’s footsteps far back in the rumblings of the night street, starting to move after me.
I turned the corner out of sight of the main street, and let her catch up.
Her first words were “So you’re going in there?” A distant streetlight brought out the sharp lines in her stare at me.
That same face had chatted with me as casually as if she and her mother never knew about magic, fooling me the whole time. I knew better than to give her my name.
Instead I used an easy smile. “That’s right. Once I’m inside, all the rest will just be adapting to what I find.”
Emma frowned, and her lip twitched in the start of some word she didn’t say.
I could reassure her, clarify how I hated hurting anyone who got in my way… or even make that a promise, to build on her thought that her secret support was guiding me away from taking revenge on them all. Or hand her back the gun she’d pointed at me and Valerie, days ago, that still hung heavy in my pocket. But, with the fragile trust hanging between us now, it felt strangely better to leave it unspoken.
A bulky shape stomped along the sidewalk toward us. Young, angry, with a glower that swayed between settling on us and not—I avoided his eyes and tracked his movements for signs I’d have to manage that threat. Emma’s fingers were probably twitching for a hidden weapon.
The tough moved on past us without a further glance.
“Wyatt implied Ingram Knowles will be there himself.” Emma was back to business, shifting subjects with a forced casualness. “He’s trying to sound like our loyal security head again, as if he hadn’t followed Knowles’s orders in taking Valerie. But he has to know we don’t trust him.”
“Sure. But, does he still trust you?” And did Emma’s mother? Lydia Lynn was still one of their group, someone who’d spent decades keeping watch for the “threat” of our family magic, even if she had her suspicions about the other conspirators.
“I’d say he does. But don’t worry about me,” she added. “I set up enough work tonight to cover my being out. And if they do spot you in there, they’ve seen enough of your tricks that they won’t guess I had to find the meeting for you.”
“Or, I don’t let them spot me.” The grin I added helped me push my hesitation away.
“So then… is there any side of this I can help with?” she said.
“Not really. I could be using any ‘side’ of the problem, or changing faces a dozen times.” Not that I carry enough magic to waste it like that. “Whatever move fits the moment. That means being free to deal with them on my own.”
Free of everyone who wasn’t Valerie or myself, raised to see those openings.
“Alright then. But, I’ll be around,” she added.
“Good to know.” Saying that felt oddly right—so with that I turned and started the long way around the block, while she headed back toward the diner.
First thing: the face I wore had been seen with her now, and in passing the clinic by once. But, walking around the block gave me time to find an alley with nobody in view to see me move. So I stepped off the street, crouched in among the shadows of a stack of cardboard boxes, and reshaped my illusion.
Soft warmth washed over me from the moonstones I carried. Putting up a different image was a simple stretching out of my will, to match one of the plausible-looking faces I’d just refreshed my memory on. Creating looks would be the easy part tonight.
Then I was walking on, steady steps, trying not to think about the building filled with some of the nervous hired guns I’d barely escaped once. Or how my daring to come near this gathering all rested on trusting Emma’s secret sympathy for my captured sister.
But, it’s my chance to find out about Valerie.
That one thought put a not-too-hasty strength in my step, down the quiet street. Firm enough that what people I passed barely glanced at me, certain that I belonged.
The building with the clinic had only the one camera by its entrance. I picked my moment to step over against the wall, unnoticed.
Then my illusion shifted, to camouflage me as part of the wall’s smooth whiteness and the empty sidewalk along it. Fading myself away was always easiest right up against a wall, where nobody would be looking at me from more than one side, and easier still with dim light to hide what blurring I left and a long night for people to forget to pay attention in the first place,
I slid along the cold wall, whisper-soft. Most of all, I aligned the image of empty space to cover me from the angle of the camera above.
The door was locked tight, as I expected. With a crude, bulky-looking lock, easy enough for my picks.
The two prongs of metal worked their way in among the tumblers. Weird—Valerie lived twelve years alone, the same as I did after we got separated, and she tried to live a typical life while keeping her past hidden. What would she say if she knew her brother was dealing with Emma Lynn?
That was easy: like she’d already decided, Valerie would vanish out of town and go on to start some other life. Once I got her free.
If she was still alive.
That thought jolted through me again as the lock clicked over.
Opening a door in secret was always a knife-edged moment, trusting I could predict what its other side looked like enough to project the image of that side still shut. At least the space beyond sounded quiet enough to risk…
Then I was inside. The corridor lay softly lit, stretching past several doors with medical and technical names along them, and most of them looked silent. Ingram Knowles was a senior partner here, so had he cleared these offices out for the night or just taken advantage of their usual hours?
Most importantly, I saw no cameras, and I stepped inside and reverted to my new lab-worker face. And two doors did show some light, one off near where the corridor bent toward the back, and the other my target at First-1 Medical itself. The closer I came to there, the more I caught the soft, contained ripple of voices beyond it.
But the door still muffled them even when I stood in front of it. Cracking it open would be its own risk, while the corridor’s turn might lead to a back way in… I started toward that first.
The other lit door swung open ahead of me.
An older woman in dreadlocks scampered a few steps toward me. In an anxious hush she said “What are you doing?”
“Just…” I nodded back toward the First-1 Medical door, not trying to explain why I’d already walked past it. But I had to keep her from asking who are you next.
“I thought we were all closed up,” she said.
“I heard that too.” I matched her nervous softness and it only added to the tension, but at least it kept us from being overheard beyond that door. “I guess not, if…” I motioned to her.
She took a step back. “Neither rain nor snow stops the paperwork. You should finish up what you’ve got and get out of their way.”
She turned and ducked behind her own door.
And nothing had changed from the door behind me. Still, this woman was right near the corridor’s bend, ready to notice if I went exploring down there for a back way into the gathering… that probably wouldn’t be there anyway. You’re stalling, Nick.
I squared my shoulders as if I weren’t walking back through a corridor of clear, wide-open space with just one barrier between me and the enemy. Time to risk it.
Pressing against the wall, I shaped the camouflage to hide me, and then an image of the door still closed as I edged the knob around and cracked it open.
The first sound that came clear was right there—feet shifting, only a pace from me. I froze.
A murmur of low echoes whispered through the tiny gap. There had to be a large room’s space to swallow the sound—that would fit with the doors’ spacing in the corridor—but low mutters and restless sounds still came from three, five, more people there, under the muffling of scattered objects and the faintest hum of equipment.
“There you have it,” came the voice.
That rich voice was straight out of the company videos—I could picture Ingram Knowles right there, gray and thin with his perfectly trimmed little beard. The pharmaceutical leader whose holdings went far beyond Lydia Lynn’s investments. The senior partner in their group’s long-running efforts to track down us and our magic.
And it wasn’t Lydia who got my parents killed. So maybe…
Another, stammering voice chimed in then. “You, you can each read your own r-results.” This man sounded younger, and on edge being in this private gathering. “In a nutshell, everyone’s toxicology is clear, healthy.”
Toxicology? What did that have to do with finding Valerie—what is Knowles doing with them tonight—
“So what was this gas they hit us with?” That rumble came from the man just beyond my door.
“Uh, its full name would take a while to say.” This time the nervous tone had him simply lying, I was sure of it.
“Do you want a chemistry lesson?” Knowles slid smoothly into the pause. “Or do you want the clean bill of health and a few of the extra benefits of working for me?”
A ripple of sound passed around the room, a rumble of unease swallowed by greed. Definitely five men there, besides Knowles and his tech.
“What matters is, you’re free of any lingering hallucinations or other effects.” Knowles could almost keep the trace of smugness out of his voice. “And I’m grateful we could get a terrorist off the streets.”
Terrorist. Hallucinations.
So that was it—Knowles had brought his people together to explain away the illusions Valerie and I had used trying to escape them. He had them meeting here at a clinic he controlled, after hours… all to make that cover story more intimidating.
If he was working that hard to cover up our magic, he’d never have Valerie here. But that secrecy was leverage for me.
The door behind me rattled.
An arm, in a familiar suit, opening the door from the street–
Patrick Wyatt, the Lynns’ bodyguard—
About to step in and see me, or I could hide, or grab this one chance if I could keep him out of here—
I yanked on the image of the woman in the next office. Our conversation was enough to recreate her, dreadlocks and all, and Wyatt couldn’t know her that well.
As the big man stepped inside, the same nervous steps she’d used swept me up to him, and his young, deliberately-stern face tightened.
“Did you see someone out there? Prowling outside?” My going straight to the ‘problem’ would cover whether I should know him or not. “He tried the door, couldn’t get in.”
“I’ll take a look. It’s probably nothing.”
“Probably. And I’ve got reports—neither rain nor snow, after all.”
Wyatt nodded, and something eased in his face. He did know this woman, but my quoting her words had put him at ease.
Behind us the clinic door swung open, and a tall man in a lab coat rushed out, fumbling with papers as he fled—that had to be the clinician that Knowles had placed out in front of his men. He only glanced at us as he made for the door outside.
“Careful—” Wyatt called, and headed out after him.
Better yet. If Wyatt was busy escorting him out, I just might get my chance to walk inside using Wyatt’s face. It would still mean getting close to five guards and their mastermind, but it was for Valerie…
The clinic door had swung shut. I flattened against the wall beside it, and began by blending myself in and cracking it open again. Now I needed the right moment.
Knowles was speaking again, quieter now. “—know I rely on you as a team, on your professionalism and your discretion. If you have any concerns, I want to hear them.” That was a boss’s voice, friendly but with an edge meant to keep complaints down. For a moment there was only silence.
Then one of them did speak. “It’s only… I saw cops out there with us that night. Guys I know don’t go moonlighting. If they’re hushing this up too, just how big is it?” Someone else muttered an agreement.
“It’s handled,” Knowles said. “Or it is for now.”
A murmur said “So’s she.”
She—they were talking about manhandling my sister—
It was one chance—
I sent out one soft ripple of magic, a whisper of sound to go where one voice had been: a low, masculine “Heh-heh.” Then I flicked a second chuckle out near another of the guards, just the softest, simplest noise, to tip the mood of the room and turn the conversation to the worst case.
“What?” Knowles said. “You have something to say?” His footsteps started across the room, searching among his men.
One of them said “I just mean… if she’s so dangerous, did you have to take her off alone? It would be more professional if we—”
“Are you implying something about this being a woman? I know she’s being treated well, better than she deserves.” His voice moved across the room, growing closer. “She’s a threat to our business and the safety of the city, but she’s still a human being.”
That angry edge sounded real. My ears strained for a lie, but all I heard was a hint of sincere offense at the idea. Does that mean Valerie is safe for now? And if he took her away himself, what’s he up to?
The door outside opened again, and Wyatt walked toward me.
I’d missed my chance to go in. But I had my camouflage over me, and my hand had whole seconds to ease the door fully closed and slide clear of it, all while I held the wall’s image and my breath. Even a security leader like Wyatt couldn’t stop and notice every glimmer of light that might not match the wall, he couldn’t…
The air brushed against me as he stepped past and on inside.
I cracked the door open again, in time to hear Knowles say “What kept you?”
“I’m here now.” A bit of light banter, but I caught some tension under it.
So Wyatt did have a history with Knowles, maybe too much for me to fake even just long enough for a glimpse among them. And I’d been willing to risk everything for that glimpse.
“As I was saying,” Knowles went on, “there shouldn’t be any lingering symptoms for any of you. But if you do have concerns, come to me first. Let’s keep this between us.”
“And if the cops come asking?” someone said. “There were gunshots that night.”
“If they ask? Of course you cooperate, and you keep quiet until the company lawyer arrives. Let him do his job.”
“If they ask,” someone muttered smugly.
Did some of them guess, that Knowles had a police captain as the third member of their circle? But at least now Knowles was the one I could link to Valerie’s capture, not Captain Harrison.
“Now, I’ve kept you long enough…”
None of them protested, and I eased the door back and slid clear of it. The farther out of their line of sight I was, the better.
Men filed out past me, five of them. It was my first glimpse of them tonight, all inconspicuously dressed but walking with that controlled predator’s pace that could be so unsettling in a pack.
Two nights ago some of them had shot at me, and dragged my sister away… My fingers wanted to twitch, and I could feel the weight of the gun I’d taken in my pocket. Anger just blinds us to our options. If I’m grabbing anyone, it’s going to be Knowles himself.
“Huh…”
That sound always brought the first jab of fear—hearing that curious, uncertain mutter from one of the guards as he looked back toward me at the wall. This was the same mustached man who’d chased me away from Valerie before, and he was looking right at my camouflage now…
I willed another sound out, a low mm? to rise from in among the men behind him. With every muscle motionless, I nudged that sound out with just the slightest hint of impatience. It had to work.
The mustached guard turned away and joined the rest in walking out. Not ready to tell his friends he might still be “hallucinating” from the “chemical” two days ago.
That should be all of them out except Patrick Wyatt and Ingram Knowles. Their conversation could be the one I needed, and I should be moving back to the door… but the wash of fear left my legs motionless.
These people aren’t the usual crowds, those two know they should be watching for illusions, and it only takes one mistake to get me caught and lose Valerie’s last chance.
Valerie. I had to tease out where he had her. Or take Knowles prisoner myself—it might be the only way.
The clinic door swung open again. Wyatt stepped out past me.
I watched him, let him go. Whether he was choosing Knowles over his own job with Emma and Lydia, or simply so afraid of magic he got pulled into that scheme, he wasn’t the one that mattered.
But he was still in the corridor when Knowles himself walked out. The leader looked taller in person, striding along and dressed in simple gray to go unnoticed… If Wyatt had been a few steps farther out of sight I might have caught Knowles alone.
Instead they walked away, out into the street. And I crept after them.