An Occupation of Angels
A Novella by Lavie Tidhar
This novella is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
AN OCCUPATION OF ANGELS
Copyright 2005, 2010 by Lavie Tidhar
Cover Art Neurotic Indisposition by Vitaly S. Alexius
Cover Design by Justin Stewart
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce the book,
or portions thereof, in any form.
Published by Apex Publications, LLC
PO Box 24323
Lexington, KY 40524
www.apexbookcompany.com
lavietidhar.wordpress.com
www.svitart.com
To Adam Hall, and Quiller
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
The gun was under the pillow and so I used it, emptying three bullets that tore through his torso before exploding, the crystal casing fragmenting and the blood inside hissing as it touched skin.
He was inhumanly large, and as I sent another bullet his way, I watched the blood--human blood, Whitehall volunteers, probably had a drop of mine in it, I hated to give blood, the needles and the smell of medical alcohol and the nurse watching you like a specimen--burn his skin away.
I turned at a sound like breaking glass but it was only a Chinese urn, Ming clay, they were suckers for Ming vases, and I turned back and shot him again, twice, once in each wing.
The blood exploded when it came in touch with the underside of his wing, and his feathers began to burn, the acrid stench making me gag.
Target reached and eliminated , or something like that. I waited as Raphaels great bulk fought to stay corporeal and lost.
Raphaels body shimmered and burnt, reducing to nothing. A halo of light expanded from it, white and clean-burning, almost reaching me.
Then his essence was gone, and it was time to get out of there.
Animal instincts taking over, I was out of the bedroom door and running, scanning for the hidden assassin who could get me at any moment, and then what would they say at the Bureau? We dont talk about our work, and if Whitehall could help it, we wouldnt be talking to each other at all, but sometimes you have to, if only to say, Tomlin, yeah, I was with him in Tangiers, good man, imagine the East Germans cracking his network, stroke of bad luck, when what we mean is what we know in our hearts, that Tomlin might have been a good guy, but he blew the mission and there was nothing much left of him when theyd finished what they were doing and dumped him in the river, and that this could be us, me, next time, and it was pride, old stupid pride that kept me going as I ran through the mansion and out into the gardens, and continued to run until I reached the gate and opened it and jumped in a taxi and said, Airport, please.
Yes, Ma'am.
He hit the gas and we drove away from Raphaels House of Horrors, now minus one, at least, and I could feel myself relax and that was wrong; that was dangerous, and when things seem too easy I get worried.
Which airline do you need? he said.
North Western, I said, which was the agreed code, and he said, Really? I prefer British Airways, the whole ridiculous affair remaining ridiculous until the second you forget to use it and its the knife in the kidney, the knife you didnt see inside the wrong newspaper, or the poison-tipped umbrella scratching your leg because you let your guard down for just one second.
We need to get you out of the country, he said, switching to English, but he didnt take his eyes off the road and that was a good sign; the only thing that could get me out of Warsaw alive right now was a fast car on a one-way journey to the border. When you waste someone like Raphael, there are no doors, there are no holes through which you can escape, and they will hunt you. And dont even think about flying.
But-- Stop.
He wasnt telling me anything I didnt know, but there was one thing he didnt understand, and its this: I work alone.
I relied on Control to get me a vehicle, but that was as far as it went, and so I told him to stop, and when he did I pushed him out, had to make a credible job of it, his face roughed up just enough so he would have a legitimate story to tell if he ran into them before he got back to the safe house, not that they like listening to stories, legit or otherwise, when they could just as easily kill you, or suck away the very core of you as you tried uselessly to struggle--it didnt make any difference. Theyd take the core of you out and cut it into nice, neat lines and let their disciples snort the remainder of your soul through a straw. If they caught you.
I didnt intend to be caught.
I drove through a road block, and the nerves started playing up, but I was Merely Mary, I was innocent Mary Webb that day, an English teacher, thirty-one and working for VSO, and the soldier didnt look more than twenty and cheerful, and his, Documents, please, was delivered with a smile, but still--they got Baggott in Iraq with a smile and left him with one, carved like a half-moon into his throat. I never liked the miserable bastard, but still.
The soldier at the checkpoint waved me through. I drove, foot to the accelerator, across barren cold fields.
The guy you roughed up is going to need a doctor.
Better that than ending up dead.
Ford waited at the rendezvous point, five kilometres from the East German border. When were in the field, we expect our Controller to work out the bigger picture, and Ford was good, a short thin man with a balding head and a pair of reading glasses, looking like a maths teacher or a Bible salesman, youd lose him in a crowd--which is the whole point, really.
Roads clear, I said.
Ford looked tired. Not without a fair bit of muscle, he said. We even had to activate a deep-cover mole, a sleeper. I dont suppose shell live. He said that with a soft apologetic air, coughing, and, Anderson on the Eastern Europe Desk is rather unhappy.
Which is Fords way of saying Hopping mad, but I didnt care. He wouldnt say anything without a good reason, but if he meant to push me it didnt work--you cant be pushed past a certain point, and your entire being concentrates on one thing: survival.
So I said, Can we get a move on? and he said, Yes, obviously , and if I was in such a hurry , and I got into the microlight, Id sit Ford behind me; he was good but I wanted to survive, and when you do, there is only one person you trust.
Id slid into a pair of overalls and now speeded up along the track road and then we were in the air and climbing, and I was grateful for the overalls. It gets cold quickly up there, and you need the insulation.
Flying blind and in fear of angels, the action is a strange dance, trying to keep between the two realms. Theres the human one below, the realm of the Sluzba Bezpieczestwa and Stasi , of dank cells and rats and beatings, blood in water--but I wasnt going to think about that, I was going to think ahead, to safety, to getting away with it.
Just dont fly too high.
Theres the human realm, and then theres the heavenly one where the winged predators ruled.
We flew over the border into East Germany and I consulted the map as I let the microlight glide, unassisted, then grabbed hold of the bars again and swooped north, Ford behind me--and I knew the thing with Raphael had been serious, they wouldnt let someone like Ford out of bed for less than a revolution, nukes, or angels.
And they wouldnt have asked for me.
Racing through cold clear air, waiting, the nerves on edge, piano wires stretched to snap.
But still we werent disturbed; the air remained clear and bright, no sign of unfriendly visitations, no sign of wings, and the ground, as much of it as I could see, remained clear of their agents, and we flew until I could smell the sea cutting like a blade against skin, salty and smoky at the same time, and a flare went up and I made an awkward landing, bumpy, but we rode it until the microlight stopped and I got out and, not waiting for Ford to unstrap himself, jumped onto the deck of the boat without ceremony and commandeered the ladies bathrooms.