Re-cap: First Lieutenant Werner Waltz was on his way to report to his superior Colonel Fritz von Spiel for possible corroboration with the terrorist group ELPIS. He had discovered this information from a report from Stein who stated that he had seen the colonel speaking with Omicron. Before Werner could complete the call, however, he was overridden by Cadence whose intention was to save Alma who was caught up in a Romano-on-Campana attack. Werner was injured in the aftermath, leaving his subordinates uncertain of what to do next. [https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/34.png?w=1024]
TWIN CITIES, GEMINI
Gilbert Wolff had never been an overachiever. Heâd never been an âunderachieverâ either. Just an achiever. He didnât really put much thought into it when he was younger but all the people heâd hung out with at the time thought he was âcool.â Whatever that meant. Didnât matter much when his motherâd smack him upside the head every month or so to tell him to put more effort into the things that he did. The thing was, he did put effort into things. Things he thought were important.
His nature gained him average written and maths scores at the military academy, but âin the middleâ was a comfortable place to be. On the other hand, his interest in conductors and physical activities landed him above-average combat scores. His classmates at the academy thought he was âcoolâ here too, but he once again didnât put much thought into it.
Gilbert didnât put much thought into his assignment out into the southern border eitherâeven though during his second year of the academy, he made a pledge with Greta and forcibly Werner to be in the same division together. A childish pledge. Never to come true. Gretaâs shyness made her score lowly at interviews despite her high grades and got her sent eastâaway from combat, thankfully. Wernerâs perfect scores and interviewing skills got him sent to the capital. And Gilbertâwellâcould barely remember his interview after he completed it, so he wasnât surprised at all by his path to southern hell.
But when Werner showed up at the v-train station in their home-town with a suitcase in one hand and a ticket in the other on Gilbertâs deployment day, Gilbert had thought. A lot.
âI was most likely assigned to the capital due to my fatherâs prior position as a war hero,â Werner had explained to him on the train ride. âEarning a position through nepotism is unsatisfactory. Iâll earn my standing through my own merit in the southern border. Iâll be able to serve Capricorn better this way.â
Gilbert thought and thought about what Werner really meant. But the answer never came. So Gilbert thought and thought some more.
And that ended with him starting to put some thought into his service in the south. He thought about what the point of it all was; he thought of whether or not the lives of his division-mates were worth the meter of bulleted land they were meant to protect; he even thought about what his superiors were doing while he was dodging bullets.
If all of Gilbertâs thinking wasnât stressful enough, Werner just had to go crazy and start hearing damned voices inside of his head. Right after a promotion too. Then came the underground modified conductors, the weird âsense of selfâ shit, and Werner trying not to lose control of the situation.
Which was why Gilbert hated thinking. Damn, he hated thinking.
All of that thinking landed Gilbert in his current position: sitting in the fifth-floor lobby of the Abaccio hotel without any superiors barking down needed orders and with a group of subordinates asking unneeded questions.
âSir⦠what do we do nowâ¦? Do we contact the capitalâ¦? To cancel the vacationâ¦?â
The fire crackled in the hearth stretching shadows across the grand piano nestled just in front of it. Terrible design choice in Gilbertâs opinion. Made the room look creepy as hell.
âNo need to call me sir when weâre on vacation, Emilia.â Gilbert sighed. âThough you canât really call it much of a vacation now, can you?â
Bergmann dipped her head from where she sat on the sofa across from him. Beside her, Kleine fidgeted with his glasses.
âDamn.â Crossing his arms, Gilbert ruffled his hair and leaned back against the sofa. âThe elites at the capital better give us a damned refund on this vacation. First Derik and now Werner?â
âGlory, victory, honor, duty, and serviceâ? What bull. The elites in the capital spewed out those words like propaganda machines. But Gilbert didnât see them taking a bullet to the leg at the borders, and he didnât see them out here in the Twin Cities acting as decoys for some stupid business deal either.
âSirâGilbert,â Bergmann tried, âwas it really a blown generator conductor that caused it? Both for Stein and the oberleutnant?â
Gilbert arched a brow.
âI mean⦠I was speaking with a local earlier. He said that⦠thereâs a rivalry between⦠He said that thereâre criminal organizations in this city⦠He said that theyâre warring.â
That was exactly what it was.
âWell, Iâm sure the locals know a lot more than us, so maybe thatâs the case,â Gilbert answered. âBut it doesnât involve us.â A lie. âSo we shouldnât get involved.â
âAnd Nico,â Bergman pressed on, âis heâ¦?â
Nico had his hands full with not only Stein now but Werner too. In the hours following the explosion, Nico had swept Werner out of the general hospital and had whisked him away to his underground hospitalâwherever the hell that was. Gilbert had been informed of this over a quick phone call with a dead-sounding Nico on the other end of the line.
Gilbert rubbed the back of his neck. So annoying. Bergmann and Kleine were the smartest in the unit, so he could only hold up the facade for so long. âYeah, our combat medic isââ
âWhat exactly are you discussing, Leutnant Wolff?â
At the familiar voice, Gilbert turned his neck and found a stiff silhouette standing at the threshold of the lobby. With that platinum blonde hair and those ice-blue eyes, it was hard to mistake the figure there as anyone else but Werner Waltz.
âOberleutnant?!â Kleine stammered, shooting to his feet with a salute ready.
Gilbert shot up and rushed over to the man, looking him up and down. âWhat theâWerner?! Youâreâ¦â He looked completely fine.
âIâm fine,â Werner confirmed. As usual, he was looking stern and professional. Like he hadnât just been blasted sidewise by a so-called âmalfunctioned generator conductor.â âFabrizzio is a skilled Transmutationist. He extended himself, however, and is recuperating at the moment.â
Gilbert felt a pressure on his chest lift. âDamn, Werner, I swear youâre superhuman sometimes.â
âWhat about the oberst?â Werner pressed, scanning the room. âWas he informed of what happened yet?â
âWhat? No,â Gilbert replied. âI was actually trying to figure what to do with that. The oberstâs somewhere in the west side of the city now, right? You said that heâs inviting us over for some sort of dinner today? Didnât really give us a number to ring him up about anything.â
Wernerâs gaze flicked to the left. And for a startlingly brief momentâso brief Gilbert almost missed itâa pained look crossed his face.
âI see. Since the invitation is still in place, we should prepare to attendââ
âWhat?â Gilbert did a double-take. âSeriously? You just got out of the damned hospital and you want to go to a dinner party? Just because you donât want to be late? Thatâs even a bit much for you.â
âThis was a personal invitation by the obest, Wolff,â Werner responded. âWe may be on vacation, but he is still our superior. He nodded at Kleine. âCould you give me the hour, Kleine? I would like to know how much time we have left.â
What�
Kleine fumbled around his uniform in search for what Gilbert assumed was his own personal pocket watch.
Werner watched Kleine struggle for a full minute before holding up his hand. âThatâs enough, Kleiââ
Gilbert rushed forward, grabbed Werner by the back of the neck, and slammed him into the table in front of them. He pinned the man there and pulled the manâs arms tightly behind his back.
âLeutnant Wolff, what do you think youâre doing?!â Werner snapped as he struggled against Gilbertâs hold.
And that settled it.
âWho the hell are you?â Gilbert growled, pulling the manâs arm higher. âYou think you can come waltzing in here pretending to be our oberleutnant?â
âL-Leutnant Wolff!â Bergmann stammered. âWhat are you doing?!â
âItâs me, Gilbert,â the man beneath him pressed. âI havenât been overridden by anyone. You are overstepping your bounds. I am your superiorââ
Gilbert pulled the manâs arm.
âOw, ow, ow! Saints, saints, saints, saintsâI give! I give!â the man beneath him snapped. âLet me go! Youâre hurting me!â
Gilbert didnât release the man, although his desperate shouts made Gilbert loosen his hold just a bit. Not so much out of sympathy as out of shock. But the loosened group was enough for the pinned man to abruptly snap his fingers. The snap was followed by a brilliant flash of copper light. When the light faded, Gilbert found himself staring down at a young woman with mousy brown hair dressed in a Capricornian nurseâs uniform.
âG-Greta?!â Gilbert stammered, releasing his hold and stumbling backwards.
Greta popped up a beat after, shaking the arm that he had pinned. âSheesh. Whatâs with ya Capricornians and always layinâ on with the violence first?â Common. Faintly accented. She glanced at Kleine and Bergmann who were standing tense to her left and right before glancing back at him and cracking a lopsided grin. âWell, I see someoneâs got a crush though.â
Bergmann immediately lunged for a v-lamp that rested beside the sofa, flipped it around, and wielded it like a spear. Gilbert doubted its effectiveness.
Ignoring the heat burning at the tips of his ears, Gilbert glowered. âWho the hell are you?â
Not-Greta frowned slightly. âHey, no need ta be so rude. Look, can we all just take it down a few notches?â She sighed. âIâm pullinâ a big risk just by beinâ here, and Iâd appreciate it if yaâd just listen ta me for a sec. I mean, itâs three against one. Tigers against a mouse.â Her gaze flicked left again. Pain. âAgainst an ant, really. No risk for you.â
âYou know the oberleutnant?â Kleine pressed. âAs inâ¦â He trailed off.
Not-Greta pointed a finger-gun in his direction and winked. She then snapped her fingers.
This time Gilbert watched as a copper light slipped up her arm from her fingers and enveloped her entire body. The light then cracked and shattered revealing Werner smilingâcreepy. ââCourse, how would I get every single fine detail of our dear oberleutnant down to a T, if I didnât?â
This was a Transmutationist⦠right?
Not-Werner cast Bergmann, who had lowered her makeshift spear, an amicable smile. âThere we go, âmilia. I already thought ya were lovely even with that terrifyinâ look on your face but without itâwellâIâm heart-struck.â
Bergmann did a double-take. âHow do you know my name?â
âWellââ
âHey,â Gilbert warned.
Not-Werner waved him off. âIâm a good pal of your oberleutnant.â
âYou really areâ¦â Kleine tried again. âOne of the people thatââ
âWoah, ya really like jumpinâ on things, donât ya?â not-Werner interjected. He took a step backwards and dipped into a deep bow. âYou can just call me Cadence.â
Gilbert frowned. That Cadence? The one that was involved in the Twin Citiesâ underbelly? The one connected to Werner. What the hell was she doing here?
Bergmann stared. Kleine looked like he was connecting the pieces together, and his face brightened.
âHate to say this, Kleine,â Cadence interjected with a sympathetic expression that looked out of place on Wernerâs face, âbut youâre still half in the dark as it isââ
âHey,â Gilbert interjected. He paused, met her eyes. âYou really need to shut your mouth if you donât know what youâre saying.â
âLook, Iâm doinâ this on Wernerâs behalf.â Cadence locked eyes with him. âI just need an ear. Three pairs of ears.â
Gilbert frowned.
âCome on, Gilbert.â
The voice was the same.
Kleine and Bergmann were looking to him to decide.
Gilbert ran a hand down his face. âHurry up and spit it out.â
* * *
On Cadenceâs request, they all moved into Gilbertâs room before Cadence gave her explanation. Gilbert knew all the details already so hearing about it again was a pain. Cadence didnât mention the whole weird mental connections thingâgood. But not once during her entire recall of events did she mention ELPIS playing kidnappers with the cityâs overlords. But maybe that was what Werner wanted, and so Gilbert refrained from mentioning it.
âSo weâve been receiving illegal conductors from a crime organizationâ¦?â Kleine paled, staring at his hands. He looked up at Cadence who still wore Wernerâs guise. âCapricorn is okay with thatâ¦? That doesnât make sense.â
âI get why itâs pretty shockinâ,â Cadence said sympathetically. âBut I can see where theyâre cominâ from. Ya guys are neck-to-neck with the Argoans, right? Sometimes ya gotta make some tough choices. The ends justify the means.â
âWhat if Ophiuchus finds outââ
âLook, Klaus,â Cadence drew, âthe Romanosâve been circlinâ product for years, and no oneâs caught them âem yet.â She tapped her chin in thought. âThough I canât say whatâll happen if Capricorn finds out if you guys know about it now. Thatâs probably why ya should keep everythinâ here our secret, right?â
Kleine paled and glanced at Gilbert. Shaking his head, he addressed Cadence again: âWait, so Oberleutnant Waltz wasââ
âYeahâ¦â Cadence frowned, gaze flicking left again. âHe was caught up in the Romano-Campana fall out thatâs been happeninâ since the beginninâ of the month. It wasnât on purpose though. He was just at the wrong place at the wrong timeâ¦â
Gilbert jerked his head at her. âSo. Whyâre you here?â
âWell, Werner⦠before the accident⦠he was investigatinâ your oberst, ya see. Heâs a bit suspectâthe oberst, I mean.â She glanced at Gilbert. âDid he mention that ta ya?â
âThe last thing he said to me was he needed to make a phone call,â Gilbert replied. âThen he ran off and got blasted sideways.â
âWaitâhe was investigating Oberst von Spiel?â Kleine pressed. âWhy? The oberst isââ
âYa put too much faith in humanity, Klaus,â Cadence tutted. âYour oberst is one of what âemâwhaddya call âemârichies? Heâs the type ta think people come with price tags. Butâheyâcan ya blame âim? People born with gold spoons in their mouth tend ta be that way.â
âYou got that right,â Gilbert grumbled.
âAnyway, point isâthe details arenât importantâthe oberst was fishy and is set ta do some stuff probably not sanctioned by your military in that restaurant, so Werner was itchinâ to report him to the policinâ authorities. Urgently. âSpecially after what happened with Ersatz.â
This book's true home is on another platform. Check it out there for the real experience.
It was weird to hear Ersatzâs name being mentioned. No one had really talked about him since the whole border disaster.
âBut the thing is, the higher-ups probably woulda probably asked him to gather more details on that bit,â Cadence continued, âsince the only evidence of the oberstâs suspicious activities was a secondhand account from Stein.â
Bergmann stiffened. âYou donât think thatâ¦â It was the first time sheâd spoken during the entire ordeal.
âDonât know.â Cadence shrugged, some of the easygoingness leaving her with the motion.
âSo you want toâwhat?â Gilbert arched a brow. âHelp out?â
âLook, whatâs important ta Werner is important ta me,â Cadence said, placing a hand to her chest. Her brows met, and she stared at the ground. Her gaze flicked subtly left again. âI just wanna get the information he was gonna have ta gather. Which involves me goinâ ta that dinner party the oberst invited us into and gettinâ the details of what heâs really doinâ there. After we get the scoop, Iâll leave it to ya ta turn in the information.â She spread her arms wide. âSo what do ya say?â
Kleine and Bergmann looked to Gilbert expectantly.
Damn. If Gilbert could travel back in time and turn down that military promotion, he would.
Gilbert considered Cadenceâs reasoning for a moment before sighing and muttering, âFine. But if heâs pissed, you handle him.â
Cadenceâs gaze shifted to the left again. âYeah⦠I willâ¦â
Gilbert followed her gaze there and found nothing.
âAnyways, thanks!â Cadence rose from the bed. âDonât worry. All ya gotta do is just come with me to that place the oberst invited us to and act normal.â She approached the door. âIâll handle the rest.â
âAnd when exactly are we going to meet up?â Gilbert arched a brow.
Cadence paused at the door. âMm⦠around 4 or somethinâ plus or minus a few. Thatâs why I asked for the time, yâknow? Eh. Ever heard of beinâ fashionably late?â
This person was more careless than he was, Gilbert realized. Or maybe she was just pretending to be that way.
âReally, ya donât need to worry about a thing.â Cadence offered a wink before pulling the door open. Then she paused, stared at the suit-wearing, somewhat balding man who stood in the doorframe. âRusso?â
As if acknowledging the name, the man cracked her in the jaw and sent her flying backwards into Kleine. Bergmann was on the offender in an instant, pinning him to the ground.
âHey, hey, letâs all be calm-like here!â Cadence said, cradling her cheek as she rose to a stand. She placed a hand on Bergmannâs shoulder. âI know him. Itâs okay.â
Gilbert nodded at Bergmann. She released the man and allowed him to get back on his feet. The man sneered in return, brushing off his shoulders with a look of disgust.
Bastard.
âHeâs a lackey of someone I work for,â Cadence explained, sliding a hand into her pocket. She nodded at Russo, speaking in Geminian that Gilbert barely understood: âYa followed me on Cavalloâs orders?â
âYeah,â Russo affirmed in Geminian with a sneer before glowering at the rest of them. He spat in Common: âHere I was hopinâ to catch you being a rat, but instead I find a group of Capricornian rats instead. I overheard everything. Ready to follow their leader into a dirty deal with the Campanas. You really are sheep like they say.â
Gilbert barked out a laugh and rolled up a sleeve. âSay that again so I can time my punch right this time.â
âHey, now,â Cadence interjected, switching to Common and stepping between them, all smiles. âLetâs take a breather, aight? If we donât take a good look at our situation, we might miss the opportunity.â
âAnd whatâs the situation?â Russo snapped, looking Cadence up and down. âWhy in saintâs name are you playinâ soldier?â
âAbout thatâ¦â Cadence threw an arm around Gilbertâs shoulder. She thumbed him and nodded at Kleine. âThese guys here are the perfect opportunity for gettinâ me in with the Campanas. Since theyâre high-tier guests, securityâll be a bit laxer. I can slip in with my conductors unlike last timeââ
Gilbert shrugged her arms away and pushed her aside. âThe hell is this all really about?â
A look of hurt briefly, startlingly crossed Cadenceâs face. He wondered if heâd imagined it though because it disappeared in a flash.
âThe whole situation is a bit complicated so I didnât really go into detail,â Cadence drew slowly, âbut like I said, thereâs a bit of organizational family rivalry involved in all of this. Which makes the colonelâthe oberstâeven more suspect since he kept pushinâ for a Campana deal despite everything that happened.â She looked like she was going to elaborate but caught herself and ended with a half-hearted smile.
âThat ainât a bad idea, Morello.â Russo grinned with a nod. He looked her over and shrugged. âSorry about the roughhousing. You know how it is.â
âOh, do I,â Cadence reassured him. âSo Iââ
âIâm coming with you,â Russo interjected. âJust transmute one of your disguises over me. Can collect better info that way.â
A nervous pause. âThat sounds like a good idea and all, but how is that gonna work? I mean, I can transmute a disguise on ya but Iâm an intraneous user. Itâs gonna break eventually if I donât have contact with ya, and as much as I like ta hold handsâ¦â
âProto-conductors,â the man said after a beat of thought. âThe new ones where Conductors can store their vitae inside of âem. Just pack your vitae in there, and Iâll slip on one of âem.â
âAnd yaâve got one for a Transmutationist that can conduct vitae intraneously?â
ââCourse,â the man affirmed. âIâll just go as Nico. Heâs with the lot, isnât he?â
âGo as Nico?â Cadence arched a brow. âI mean, again, thatâs a brilliant idea and all, but Nicoâs still a Romano associate.â She placed a hand on his arm. âCome on, Russo, I donât wanna see ya riddled with bullet holesââ
âThen put one of those invisible transmutations over me,â Russo demanded, grabbing her by the scruff. âLike how you covered the boss and the Foxmans when you did Verga in.â Before she could get a word in, he released her then and jabbed her in the chest. âYou wait here, Morello. Iâll bring âem.â
â⦠Ya know Iâm patient,â Cadence replied sing-song.
âYou lot better wait too,â Russo grunted, nodding at Gilbert and Kleine and then sneering at Bergmann.
Saints. Gilbert wanted to punch him. But before Gilbert could take a swing, Russo was out of the room.
* * *
Russo returned a couple of hours later carrying a briefcase.
âYou gotta remove all your conductors before you can use it,â Russo said to Cadence as he placed the case on the bed.
Cadence eyed Gilbert, Kleine, and Bergmann with hesitation before she snapped her fingers. She shed Wernerâs appearance with a shimmer or orange light and shrugged her shoulders.
Gilbert was a bit startled by Cadenceâs true appearance. He sure wasnât picturing a short, boyish, freckled red-head. But there she was, fingers littered with rings. It was hard to tell which ones were conductors. Maybe that was the point. She slid all her accessories off, pocketed them, and wiggled her fingers outwards. Russo undid his suitcase, revealing a cluster of conductor rings, bracelets, and gloves. They didnât look that much different from regular conductors of those designsâsave for the large insulation tubes that took up more than half of their bodies.
Kleine leaned forward with interest.
âSo, do I just transmute the disguise I want on?â Cadence asked, plucking one from the case. âOr do I just blast it with my vitae, and you handle the outfit bit?â
âTransmute the disguise you want on,â Russo grumbled.
âYes, sir,â Cadence said, sliding the ring on and snapping her fingers. She disappeared in a flash of copper and reappeared a second later as she slid the ring off. Its encircling insulating tube was now filled with her copper-colored vitae. She dropped it into Russoâs waiting hand.
Russo slipped on the ring, gave his stubby fingers a wiggle, and disappeared in a flash of copper. Then came the satisfied bark of laughter.
Kleine visibly shivered.
âWell, letâs hurry up and get this over with,â came Russoâs voice from the empty space. His still open suitcase floated up in the air. âDamn. I gotta put this somewhere firstâ¦â
Russo didnât notice it. But Gilbert did. There were only two ring conductors left in the case as the invisible man snapped it shut.
* * *
Gilbert along with Bergmann, Kleine, one Cadence who was disguised as Werner, and one Russo who was disguised as a damned ghost took to the streets. They winded down cement sidewalks that bled into cobblestone walkways before passing over a series of bridges beneath which interconnected streams littered with gondolas flowed.
Cadence abruptly stopped short at a crosswalk that divided the Gamma District from the Louvre District. She then glanced across the street towards some commotion that was breaking up the flow of pedestrian traffic there. A cluster of suited men of Geminian descent were surrounding a Sagittarian foreigner who looked like heâd just been tousled by a storm.
âThe hell is Donatoâs son doinâ over here?â came a voice from the empty space beside Gilbert.
Cadence held up a loose hand and paced across the street. Gilbert followed on after her, signaling for Bergmann and Kleine to stay put. As they neared the boisterous tousling group, the person whom Gilbert assumed was the ringleader turned on his heels to face them. The Sagittarian, who was being held up by the scruff by two of the ringleaderâs lackeys, gave them a grateful look.
âThe hell you looking atâ¦â The ringleader trailed off as he registered what Gilbert assumed was his and âWernerâsâ height and prowess.
Maybe, Gilbert thought, the guy had even recognized their uniforms. It was one of the pluses of wearing them.
âWhat appears to be the issue here?â Cadence asked, matching Wernerâs icy tone to startling perfection.
âThe only issue here would be you stickinâ your nose in where it donât belong,â the ringleader snapped.
âYouâre disturbing the public,â Cadence informed him coolly, gesturing to the pedestrians flocked around them. âAnd you are causing an obstruction due to the disturbanceâ¦â She trailed off, gaze drifting to one of the lackeys who stood behind him.
Lackey in question had a face that looked like it was healing from getting run over by a v-ehicle. Purple bruises, split lip that looked like it was healing incorrectly, patches of hair missing. If this city was as dangerous as Cadence was painting it to be, then Gilbert assumed that the man had probably been tousled in a similar way to how the Sagittarian was currently being tousled.
âFeliciano,â the bruised lackey stammered, âwhy does he keep lookinâ at me like that?â
âShut up, Luigi,â Feliciano snapped.
Luigi pushed past the other lackeys and placed a hand on Felicianoâs shoulder. âHey, Feli, I already took a beatinâ earlier, and I donât want to end up a stiff likeââ
âThat is enough,â Cadence said, stepping forward and causing the group to skirt backwards. âYouâve caused enough of a disturbance this evening. I kindly ask that you leave this street and this poor man alone.â
Gilbert stepped forward too just for the dramatics.
Feliciano skirted back some more but still kept one leg planted forward. âWe were just leavinâ.â He waved his hand loosely in the air, and his lackeys dropped the Sagittarian. Feliciano turned to the freed man and jabbed a finger at his chest. âKeep your mouth shut.â
And with that, the flock of bastards left, leaving the Sagittarian only mildly flustered. The pedestrians who had gathered turned on their heels and began to filter away from them. People really only did like to watch when things got violent, Gilbert thought.
The Sagittarian man brushed off his shoulders, straightened off his suit, and then abruptly dipped into a deep bow. âI am grateful for your kindnesses, dear stranger. And I humbly offer you my life.â
Damn. This man was off his rockers.
Cadence lightly pressed her gloved hands against her throat, and a warm light pooled beneath her palm. âWell, ya already owe me a favor, but if ya wanna lay on one more then thatâs alright with me, Hide.â
The Sagittarian man snapped up immediately, eyes wide. âThat voiceâ¦â
Cadence sounded like how sheâd sounded when she took on her normal appearance.
âI probably look a bit different now but Iâm still the same person inside,â she said with a wink. She removed her hand from her throat, and the glow on her skin there faded.
âWhyâitâs Cadence Morelââ
Cadence lifted her hands in the air. ââEy, âey, letâs not get too excited here. Iâm kinda doinâ some top-secret undercover stuff at the moment. Ya mind keepinâ it on the down-low?â Her voice sounded like Wernerâs again.
Hide slapped a hand over his mouth and nodded. âYour secret is safe with me.â
âGreat. By the way, mind if I cash in that favor now?â Cadence asked, placing a hand on Hideâs shoulder.
âAbsolutely!â
âAlrighty. Thatâs the spirit. Would ya mind headinâ over ta that new casino located between Gambino Street and Loretta Street back in the west side? Rosario Round. Ask a waiter that youâd like to speak to the boss, and tell âem Morello sent ya.â
Hide nodded.
âAnd tell âem everything that the guy Feliciano told ya not ta speak about. And tell âim you saw Feliciano with that Luigi guy too, would ya?â
Hide paused.
Cadence offered him a look of sympathy. âI know that may be a bit risqué since Feli justââ
âYouâve got it, Miss Morello!â Hide sang, dipping into a deep bow. âI will fulfill my duties to you with honor.â And with that, he too disappeared down the street.
âWhat was that about?â Gilbert muttered.
Cadence glanced back at Gilbert. Gave him a look of familiarity. Which wouldâve been normal if she were actually Werner.
âComplicated stuffâ¦â she said. âGivinâ myself a headache thinkinâ about it.â
âWell, welcome to the club.â
Cadence chortled. ââ¦By the way, how did ya know I wasnât him?â She turned on her heels, gesturing to her guise. âI mean, doinâ this is my job. Iâve been a bit rusty lately, butâ¦â
Gilbert hesitated.
âDonât worry. Russo ainât here.â She nodded across the street where Bergmann and Kleine stood waiting. âI didnât really make his transmutation perfect, so thereâs a bit of distortion where heâs standing. Ya probably canât see it but itâs my work so I can.â
What a cheeky person.
âYou asked for the time,â Gilbert explained after a beat. âWerner keeps his pocket watch with him all the time. Never asks for the time. Dead giveaway.â
âMust be some important pocket watch, huhâ¦â
âHis sister made it for him,â Gilbert responded after a beat. âYou didnât know that? Thought you guys crisscrossed memories or whatever.â
Smiling, Cadence rubbed her wrists. âSurprisingly, we donât get much from Wernerâs end of things. Yaâd think weâd be the same person by now, but guess thatâs not how it worksââ
âI know itâs late to ask this,â Gilbert interjected, arms crossed, âbut did Werner actually want you to do this? Telling Kleine and Bergmann about this. The thing is, if he didnât, then this is pretty messed up.â
There was a beat of silence.
âOkay.â Cadence sighed. âWell, ya know the lieutenant never goes outta his way goinâ around askinâ people for help. He kinda goes all quiet-like. Waits until the very end to see if he really needs ta ask for help.â
âYou mean he has restraint?â Gilbert arched a brow. âHeâs cautious?â
Cadenceâs gaze flicked left again. There was nothing there though. Just a phone booth.
â⦠Look,â she said. âI know a liar and untrustworthy person when I see one. You guys donât fit that bill. Donât know if itâs that Capricornian sense of honor or whatever but thatâs the vibe Iâm gettinâ. And ya know whatâ¦â Pain again, briefly. âWernerâs a reliable guy, but he doesnât have that many people he can rely on himself. Doesnât seek people like that out. So Iâm sorta doinâ half of the seekinâ out for him.â She gestured to herself, smiling thinly. âIâm not the type who worries about appearances. Theyâre deceivinâ. So Iâm fine with grovelinâ like this if I have to.â
Gilbert scoffed. âYouâre kidding. Youâre telling me youâre a saint? That youâre not doing any of this for yourself?â
Cadenceâs eyes widened slightly, and her gaze flicked left again. Nothing there. Just the telephone booth.
* * *
The oberst welcomed them into the five-star restaurant like the bastard he was. It wasnât a restaurant any fancier than any of the others theyâd seen in the city. Same art decorations, same circular tables dotting a fancifully carpeted floor, same pillars popping up in between the tables. There was even a stage at the back where a woman wearing a satin red dress was performing at a piano.
After sitting them down at a table covered in a red cloth embroidered with gold, the oberst excused himself. Cadence remained seated for quite some time, throwing glances at the pianist in between paces of conversation. When the pianist finished and took a deep bow, Cadence was amongst the loudest clappers in the audience. The pianist took notice and locked eyes with Cadence from across the restaurant.
Cadence excused herself to the restroom as soon as the pianist left the stage. Off to âdo the job,â Gilbert assumed. And after a lot of thinking, Gilbert ordered Bergmann and Kleine to stay put and he followed Cadenceâs trail. It took a bit to find the restroom given how big the restaurant was. He was so irritable by the time that he found it that he nearly threw himself through its bright-red doors. But a conversation from within gave Gilbert pause just outside those doors.
âWould ya give me a break, kidâ¦?â Cadenceâs speech patterns with Wernerâs voice. âIâm trying ta make up for iââ
A beat of silence.
âOkay, okay, ya make a fair point but what else can I do about it?â
Another beat.
âKid, thatâs not healthy. Ya canât go around beatinâ yourself up like that for somethinâ ya did in the past. Yeah, ya did it, but it doesnât define ya. I mean, I barely recognize ya from the brat three months ago. And back then, with you⦠it was just the situationââ
Silence.
âYes, I do understand that ya gotta take responsibility. And, no, Iâm not tryna twist this around ta make an excuse for myself, but I can see why ya see it that way.â
Silence.
âLook, I feel terrible about what happened. Sincerely. That disappointment ya feel is not yours alone, kid. Itâs mine too. And flower girlâs, captainâs, and detectiveâs. Itâs a five-way slaughterhouse.â
An even longer silence.
ââAlma doesnât care about me but Werner does?â â¦Kid, what do you know?â
And then a wry chuckle. A cruel chuckle.
âOh, I get it. Ya really are a sweetheart ainât ya, kid? Youâre thinkinâ that all of us are some type of family, right? Atiennaâs like your mom, Wernerâs like your pop, Iâm your screw-up older sister, and Maria and Jericho are your weird aunt and uncle? Yep, that really is how ya see it, isnât it?â
A painful silence.
âWell, Iâm just going to lay it down for ya so ya donât get hurt in the future. This niceness that we all got goinâ on is just playinâ pretend. We gotta act like this ta make it work. Itâs fine pretendinâ like itâs family if ya want. Maybe you can even make us be that way. I mean, ainât that what youâre doinâ to Wernââ
Silence.
Frowning, Gilbert stormed through the doors and found Cadence still in Wernerâs guise standing in front of the bathroom mirror holding her cheek. It looked like sheâd been slapped. When she lowered her hand, however, her cheek was pale. She locked eyes with him through the mirror and whipped aroundâ
âGilbert?â
âTalking to yourself is not a good look,â Gilbert replied.
Cadence chuckled hollowly, rubbing her cheek. Her eyes were dry, making Gilbert wonder if heâd been mistaken when he saw them as wet earlier. âWhat are ya doinâ here?â
Gilbert ran his hand through his hair and sighed. âLet me come with you,â he said. âTo the meeting. In a disguise, obviously.â
Cadence did a double-take.
âLook,â Gilbert said, staring directly into Cadenceâs eyes, âWerner asked me to keep him in line when this whole damn thing started. I promised to do that⦠And you know what? I messed up.â
Cadence stared at him, wide-eyed, pale, nauseous; and by the look on her face, he could tell she was about to drop a bombshell.
âYou messed upâ¦?â Cadence chuckled. âIâm the one who messed up.â
And then she laid it on him. Just like that. How sheâd overridden Werner to save that âAlmaâ. About how Werner had gotten knocked sideways because of that override. About how Werner was investigating the oberstâfor his connections to ELPIS. About how Werner was going to report his suspicions to the capital and to Ophiuchus and call it a day. About how she was being pushed to investigate the Campanas by both ELPIS and her crime organization.
It was fucking ridiculous.
âSo you should just skedaddle, Gilbert,â Cadence said at the end of it all. âThis really doesnât involve ya at all.â
Letting out a sigh, Gilbert pinched the bridge of his nose. And then he reached out a hand and slapped Cadence upside the head. She yelped and was met with another slap upside the head.
âIâd punch you across the damned room if I didnât think Wernerâd feel it too. The hellâyou think telling me all of this is gonna make me say âOh no, youâre so right. I should just sit my ass down and let you do your thingâ?â
Cadence stared at him wordlessly.
âI know the type of person you are. I see people like you all the time in the capital,â Gilbert growled. âYou never get your hands dirty. You force other people to, and when those people end up getting hurt or dying, you show up saying, âIt couldnât be helped. It was the situation.â Just like them. They end up convincing themselves that thatâs how it is!â
Cadence paled.
âLike hell it canât be helped! Thatâs just damned lazy thinking. Easy for you to say that when youâre not getting your ass personally handed to you. Itâs apathy through and through. Thatâs why youâll never change.â He glowered at her. âDo you actually give a damn? Do you actually care? Because, obviously, people care about you. A bad investment if this is how you really are.â He took a breath, locked eyes with her. âAnswer me. Do you actually care about any of the people youâre connected with, or are you just swindling them like how the capital swindles us, like how youâre swindling Nico?â
âSwindling Nico? Iâm notâof course, I careââ
âThen prove it, you bastard!â He pressed a fist against her chest. âEvery damn word you speak, every damn action you takeâit has consequences. So you own up to your damn mistakes, and you donât feel sorry for yourself. Get your head out of your apathy, and get some damn control of your life. Take some damn responsibility. Grovel if you have toâlike you said.â A pause. âIs that understood?â
Cadence stiffened. âY-Yes, sir.â
âGood.â Gilbert took a second to recollect himself and straightened his uniform in the mirror. âAnyways, with the way our capital works, they probably wouldâve sent Werner on a damned goose chase so you made a good call about investigating Oberst Bastardââ
The bathroom door abruptly swung open and closed but no one entered. Russo.
âWas scoping out the place,â came the expected voice from the empty space in the corner of the bathroom. âHurry up and transmute yourself so we can head in.â
Cadence threw something at Gilbert, and he caught it deftly. A ring conductor. She exchanged a couple of words in Geminian with Russo, and the latter grunted.
âJust hurry it up then,â Russo grumbled.
Cadence nodded at Gilbert, and so he slipped the ring on. Giving it a flick, he watched as his reflection disappeared from the mirror in a shimmer of copper.