nothing helps.â I drained my glass. âAnd thatâs what itâs like working for the Order.â
The clerk poured himself a shot and tossed it down his throat. âDid that really happen?â
âYep.â
âDid they kill the old lady?â
âYep.â
âJesus.â
âIf your nephew thinks he can do that, tell him to apply to the Academy. Heâs at a good age for it. Itâs hard physically and the academic load is pretty big, but if he has the will, heâll make it.â
âHow do you know?â
I swiped my stack off the counter. âBack when I was a kid, my guardian enrolled me. He was a knight-diviner.â
âNo shit. How long did you last?â
âTwo years. Did well on everything except mental conditioning. Iâve got authority issues.â I waved at the clerk and took my paperwork to one of the tables in the gloom.
Truth was, I didnât do well. I did great. Tested right off the power-scale. Got certified as an electrum-level squire. But I hated it. The Order required absolute dedication, and I already had a cause. I wanted to kill the most powerful man in the world, and that kind of desire leaves little room for anything else. I dropped out and went to work for the Mercenary Guild. It broke Gregâs heart.
Greg had been a great guardian, fanatical in his determination to protect me. For Greg, the Order was a place of safety. If my target found out I existed, heâd kill me, and neither Greg nor I had enough power to resist him. Not yet anyway. Had I joined the Order, every last knight would protect me against this threat. But it wasnât worth it, so I parted ways with the Order and never looked back.
And then Greg was murdered. To find his killer, I went to the Order and maneuvered myself into their investigation. I found the murderer and killed him. It was a grisly, nasty affair, now called the Red Point Stalker case. In the process my Academy record came to light and the Order decided they wanted me back. They werenât subtle about it, either. They made up a jobâa liaison between themselves and the Mercenary Guildâpromised me Gregâs office, his files, authority to handle minor cases, and a steady paycheck. I took it. Part of it was guilt: I had shunned Greg after dropping out of the Academy. Part of it was common sense: I had mortgages on both my fatherâs house, near Savannah, and on Gregâs place here in Atlanta. To give up either one would be like ripping a chunk out of my body. Guild gigs paid well but I had a small territory near Savannah and a big job happened there maybe once every six months. The lure of steady money proved to be too strong.
My affiliation with the Order wouldnât last. But for now, it worked. I had yet to default on either payment and once I filled out these forms, Iâd ensure I could cover my bills for another month or two.
After writing my merc ID number ten times on every imaginable piece of paper, I was treated to a âcheck yes or noâ questionnaire. Yes, I acted in self-defense. No, I didnât believe excessive force was used in subduing the suspect. Yes, I perceived the suspect as presenting imminent threat to myself and others. By the time I reached the âfill in the blankâ portion my eyes needed match sticks to stay open. In the âstate the suspectâs intent as perceived by youâ section, I wrote down, âIntended to burn down the city due to being a complete crackpot.â
When I finally stepped out of the Mercenary Guildâs heavy, reinforced steel doors, the sky was pale gray with that particular color that usually meant the sun was rising. At least I had the bolt from Jeremyâs back. And I was three hundred bucks richer, thanks to my advance. The rest of the money would have to wait until the cops approved the kill. By the time I got to the intersection, I had the advance divided between various bills. I