Red Mirror
Red Mirror - book excerpt
Chapter One
Larenville, Vanir.
Cornell Nightworth was annoyed. The sun was already hot out here and even if he lived his whole life in the desert, being out of Echemos was always considerably worse, maybe it was all in his head. The people with the cameras found themselves way out here in middle of the hot sand, anything for a chance at a grim tale to entertain the masses. “Get those media parasites out of here,” he said with a fair amount of anger in his voice, finally hitting his tolerance limit.
“You got it, boss,” someone replied from farther away and started to move the crowd back by pushing the magical barrier line further back. “Do you think this has any connection to the Unicorn attack in Naber?” some reporter asked and Cornell stopped and looked over at the man. “No,” he replied quietly as they were pushed away. He was pretty sure a unicorn had nothing to do with this.
“I can see it now, Mystic Force Detective slaughters innocent reporters after they asked really dumb questions,” Jenny said with a slight laugh, she was wearing a dark suit, her golden badge on the left side. Her black hair and brown eyes reflected the sunlight with an unnatural intensity. “Oh, that’d be fun but we all know reporters never really die, they just respawn from the infinite void,” Cornell replied, trying not to laugh and look professional in the presence of the public and looked forward towards the crime scene all the same.
He brushed the red dust away from his white shirt, wondering to himself why he chose to wear white in a place like this. He was sure no one was going to question him about it. Right now, no one wanted to attract attention to themselves, no one normal anyway.
“Same old questions, but no answers. Why would a Necromancer death squad come to this no name desert town?” he asked as he looked over the bodies of the victims as they all lay where they were discovered. Six elves had been stripped naked and dismembered. Three men and three women on display as if they were some twisted art project. Cornell swallowed his disgust for the people who did this. Instead he tried to focus on the details.
“I have no idea, but look. No blood, it looks like they were freeze dried or something,” she said but couldn’t make sense of it. In a scene like this there should have been a lot, everywhere. “Yeah, that was the first thing I noticed. Do we know who any of these people are yet?” Cornell asked, hoping she got some new information. “Not a clue. Six random elves who apparently had a grudge with someone, this could be a mob hit,” Jenny suggested the only thing she could think of.
“Out here, in this place. What would the Moreno family want way out here in a place like this? This isn’t their style. Then again, its clear these people weren’t killed here either,” Cornell replied and continued. “They were either dropped out of the sky, or teleported in. My guess is teleportation, we didn’t find any tracks. It’s not windy and check it out, the only footsteps around us are our own,” Cornell said as another picture was taken.
Then a van started to drive down the road and came to a stop. “The meat wagon’s here,” Jenny replied, turned and looked. She brushed her black hair out of her face as a few strands got loose. “Come on, let’s talk a few of these people, see what we can find out. We’re not going to learn anything new staring at these bodies,” Cornell said and tore his gaze off of the grisly scene in front of him.
“Yeah, I don’t think we’ll get much out of these people. The desert communities like this are all pretty quiet,” she replied as the coroners began to approach. Cornell nodded then turned to them. “Make sure you don’t lose any pieces and keep the bodies together,” he said to them. “This isn’t our first day, we got this. Don’t worry about it,” the leader of the group replied. Cornell didn’t appreciate the attitude, but chose to ignore it.
“Alright. We’ll split up. I’ll take Risbu’s general store and you go for, well, you know what to do,” Cornell replied. She smiled at him. “I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t,” she replied and the two of them walked their separate directions.
Risbu’s general store wasn’t anything special, he had seen a thousand places just like it before in countless other towns before this one. “Hello, Detective. How can I help you today?” an old elf said and came walking from out of the back. He was dressed in a blue shirt with black jeans, they weren’t anything special but for a place like this it was pretty normal. Cornell decided to get right to the point and skip the small talk.
“Yeah, did you see anything that might help with what happened out there?” Cornell asked, he knew this guy wasn’t a good suspect, but there was no reason to be hostile about anything yet.
“Those bodies out there, you mean? Oh. I sleep upstairs. I was in bed a couple hours after dark. I didn’t see anything. But sometime just before the sunrise I heard a weird, I don’t know, slurping sound?” the man said and Cornell had no idea what that might have been. “No clocks upstairs, what time was it when you heard the sound. Anything can help,” he replied.
The old elf laughed. “Oh, about three in the morning I’d say,” he replied and looked out the window. “I haven’t seen anything like it since the war,” he said off hand, his voice trailing off. The last war was before Cornell’s time, about twenty years. “What do you mean?” he asked.
“It’s an old vampire terror tactic, they would kidnap our buddies in the dark and return them in pieces, sucked dry,” Risbu replied and shuddered. “I don’t like talking about it much. You know, it’s all terrible,” he said, voice not as strong. “Vampires, have there been any around we can talk to?” Cornell replied as he raised an eyebrow.
“I didn’t serve for fifty years in the Last Light Alliance just so I could turn around and serve those razor tooth freaks, there are no vampires in Larenville. It’s why I moved to the Vanir. Most sunlight of any of the kingdoms, it keeps most of them clear,” he said with anger.
“Alright old timer, relax. I didn’t mean to bring up anything. I just need to find every answer,” Cornell asked, but now he felt like the old man knew more than he was telling. “No, I don’t know anything else. I don’t know why some maniacs would show up here and leave their work like it was some kind of art project. But I didn’t see anything, but the camera might have,” Risbu replied and started moving towards the counter.
Cornell followed him. “Well let’s see the footage,” he replied and Risbu nodded. He got behind the counter and pushed a few buttons. A screen popped up out of it. “I’ll play the last few hours,” he said and pushed the button. Cornell watched. All it showed was the inside of the store. Seeing anything from this angle was going to be almost impossible.
Risbu sped up the footage to just before three in the morning. Neither of them saw anything that had changed. “Are you sure about what time you heard it?” Cornell asked, already getting a little impatient. Just before the old man answered, the outside windows flashed with bright purple light. There was no sound but the light only lasted a few seconds. “I swear I never saw any light like that. I just heard that weird sound,” Risbu replied. Cornell didn’t believe him, but that was just part of the job.
“Can I keep this footage?” he asked and the man looked at him. “Do you have a warrant?” Risbu asked right back. Cornell narrowed his eyes just a little, his frustration was rising. “Kidding, young Elf, take it. If it helps put the people behind this away I’ll sleep easier,” Risbu said with a laugh. Cornell didn’t want to play games today, his sense of humor was wearing thin already this hot morning.
“Thank you, and if you remember anything, call me,” Cornell said and a white business card appeared in his hand. “Sure, the name is Andy Risbu, if I call at least you’ll know my name,” he said. Cornell nodded as Risbu handed him the disc that was in the machine. Cornell took it and, smiled and started walking towards the door.
“Not even a thanks, damn kids today,” Andy said mostly to himself as Cornell walked out of the building.
Jenny had her own theories. There was a crowd of villagers gathering just outside the barrier line. She put on her best smile and walked towards the crowd. “Does anyone know anything?” she asked the crowd as she walked in their direction. “Anything can help, any detail, any ideas, theories, leads. Anything,” she said again as she approached the crowd.
No one was too eager to say anything. “We don’t talk to Pixies,” someone yelled out from the back. “Who said that?” Jenny asked and stared into the crowd with her deep brown eyes. No one answered.
“I am a Mystic Force Detective. I am one of the only people who gives a damn about protecting you out here way out in the middle of this dusty wasteland. The people who did this, they can come back at anytime and do it again, so I ask you again, what one of you inbred hicks decided that now was a good time to be a loudmouthed idiot?” she asked again with force. Her black hair began to shimmer with golden energy as the anger grew.
“Okay, it was me,” a man came walking through the crowd. He was and older elf dressed in a red shirt and blue jeans. His green eyes narrowed at her as he came into view. “Great, why?” she asked in a hurry. “Pixies are evil, you are evil. You shouldn’t be here,” he replied and she shook her head. “You elves, I swear you get worse every year. Tell you what, if you decide to tell me what you know. I’ll leave and you’ll never see me again. If you don’t. If you hold anything back I will make sure a whole horde of Pixies just like me come down and scour every single piece of evidence out of this place we can get, come clean now,” Jenny said and the man swallowed, the fear in his green eyes was easily seen.
“I don’t, I swear I don’t know anything. Drank last night at the Arrow and Quiver. I woke up just a couple of hours ago,” he said and Jenny rolled her eyes. “Okay, how about anyone else. Surely someone saw something,” Jenny said again. Hoping to get some kind of a lead.
“I did,” someone said, someone young. Jenny turned her attention to the barely thirteen-year-old elf. She walked to her. “What did you see?” she asked. “It was a man. He was dressed all in green. It was only for a split second. He made a weird movement his hands. There was a purple light. The…they appeared on the ground as you see them now,” she said, trying to remember everything. “Then the green man left,” she said and Jenny needed more.
“How tall, old, anything you can remember,” she asked, trying to soften her voice then. “No, the green was like a cloak. I saw nothing. But he was about as tall as him,” she pointed. Jenny turned and looked only to see Cornell walking in her direction. “Thanks,” she replied and walked over to him.
“Get anything useful?” she asked. “Just some bad video footage of a strange purple light,” he said and she nodded. “Yeah. Someone saw a person all in green doing some magic, but that’s about it,” Jenny replied and Cornell shook his head. “Well this whole thing is likely a message of some kind, but is it for us, or for this whole town? I guess we’ll be stuck here for a while to try and figure it all out,” he said. “Damn it,” she replied, feeling a whole lot less comfortable after her last encounter.
“Don’t be so upset about it, it could be worse. We could be assigned to the Outside,” he replied and she nodded. “Alright, we’ll set up at the hotel, hope its not a complete disaster. Then we see what we can find out from there,” she said and Cornell nodded. It was a good as plan as any.
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