Notes: Meet the patriarch of the family! Jeez, what a dick.
Title: Lord of Unkindness: Chapter Thirty
***
Chapter Thirty
Photo by Franco Derbartolo
Touchdown is bumpy, made more so by the fact that Nephele hasn’t stopped ranting since Angelo’s call. She can’t talk, sure, but that doesn’t mean she hasn’t accompanied her silent screams with pacing back and forth, smashing everything she can pick up, and making her familiars so jittery that Ciro ends up covered in rats just as an afterthought, the creatures quivering in their fur as their mistress rages. Ciro stays as still as he can, and his raven keeps a sharp eye out and pecks any of the little beasts who get too nippy. His arm is still clamped and bleeding, but the pain is a distant thing at this point.
Richard is the one having a harder time of it. His familiar is already irritated thanks to her wounds, and she’s not in the mood to put up with being the climbing gym for a horde of rats. Her snarls get louder and louder, and right before they land she finally breaks and crunches one of the offending rats in her jaws, then flings it against the wall.
Richard pales. The more familiars you have, the easier it is to let their passing go; he worked for Magnus for years, and Magnus hardly even noticed when you accidentally stepped on one of his cockroaches. Nephele is different, though. She’s insanely possessive, literally and figuratively, and the second her familiar hits the ground and dissipates she’s got a blade of pure power in one hand and is driving it toward Richard’s chest with a twisted expression of fury on her face. Richard can’t react fast enough to gather his magic against the attack, and Ciro is sure he’s about to see the man murdered in front of him.
Instead, the blade strikes Richard’s chest, cuts through his suit, and then vanishes into nothing. Nephele’s empty fist hits him instead, and for a brief moment she’s stunned speechless—genuinely speechless instead of forcibly so.
Richard manages a smile. “I’d not try that again if I were you, Miss.”
She mouths something that neither of them can make out, looks around, then stamps her foot when she sees the remains of her phone. Finally, she gathers her rats and makes them spell out on the floor HOW.
“You’ll have to ask your uncle that.” Richard glanced at his watch, then outside. “We’re almost to Boston. You’d better sit for the landing, Miss.”
She snarls silently at him, then points to her former seat. Richard, apparently not interested in pushing his luck any further, goes there, and Nephele throws herself into his chair and grabs Ciro’s free hand in both of hers. She weaves their fingers together and puts their hands on her chest, where he can feel her rapid heartbeat beneath skin and bone.
He looks at her, and she mouths, slowly and clearly, YOU ARE MINE.
We’ll see. He doesn’t say anything back, and they land in silence a few minutes later.
Richard is the first off the plane. Nephele takes a moment to push her hair back from her face and straighten her jacket before they face the landing party; she’s not immune to wanting to make a good impression on Victor. Still holding onto Ciro, she stands and leads them off the plane, her wave of familiars flowing in the wake. The Doberman, at least, finally lets go once they get to the ladder, and Ciro winces in relief and pain as the release of pressure leads to a surge of pins and needles.
The Doberman runs ahead to the car waiting for them on the tarmac a few dozen meters away. It’s a long black limousine SUV, incredibly ostentatious. Ciro used to ride around in them all the time, but now he can hardly look at it without cringing. To think, this is what his father decides to spend his wealth on; riding around in a dick-mobile that screams compensation. His familiar pecks his forehead, and Ciro realizes he’s letting his emotions show on his face.
Pack it back in. Put it all away. He restores as much calm as he can and, blood still dripping from three of his fingers, follows Nephele into the back of the limousine where the Doberman had already leapt up inside. Richard gives Ciro a slow smirk before closing the door behind him, whispers, “Don’t worry, we won’t forget the girl,” and then there’s nowhere for his eyes to go except—
“Son.”
Victor Hambly has an entire row to himself in the back, one familiar resting on the seat beside him with its paws tucked together like a sphinx, the other sitting at his feet. Nephele’s rats seem incapable of crossing a line in the middle of the floor, leaving them crowding in on their side of the car. Victor, in a sharp black suit, white shirt, and red tie, whiskey glass in one hand while the other strokes the edges of his neatly trimmed goatee, looks like he could be a shoe-in for a Satan lookalike contest. The dogs really complete the image.
He’s staring at Ciro with an expression that Ciro doesn’t quite know how to parse. It’s not satisfied, exactly, or angry, or even unhappy. It’s…the closest he can come to it is “calculating.” “Back at last,” he says as they sit and the limo starts up. “I’ve gone to a lot of trouble over you these past six months, Cyrus.”
Ciro doesn’t speak. Usually that’s the best way to avoid his father’s ire, but in this case it backfires.
“Nothing to say for yourself, then?” Victor drawls before taking a slow sip from his glass. “Nothing to say about disrupting the entire family for your own selfish purposes? For hurting our bottom line so badly that I personally had to go back into the field so that we were able to fulfil our obligations? Do you know how badly you humiliated me, son?”
Ciro can guess. Oh, he can guess all too well. “You had Nephele,” he points out, because at this point he’s not going to escape punishment so he might as well earn it. “You always called her ‘the son I never had’ when you talked about her to me.” When he was young, hearing that had been like being stabbed in the heart, but Ciro had learned a lot about love and hate since then. He’d turned the corner to loving disappointing his father a long time ago, but it was especially satisfying to mess with him like this, when he knew full well Nephele was worse at the work than he was. “What, she wasn’t good enough?”
Nephele turns a betrayed expression on Ciro, her nails digging roughly into where she’s gripping his hand. Victor, to everyone’s surprise, starts to laugh.
“Listen to you,” he says with a chuckle. “Learning to play the game at last. If you’d spent more time learning how to use people when you lived at home, you’d have come so much farther in my esteem, my trust. We might even have been able to come to an agreement about the things that seem to mean so much to you.”
Ciro goes still while Nephele’s jaw drops in shock. It’s all lies, of course; he can’t trust anything Victor says to him, and yet…it shocking to hear that anything he’s ever done in terms of his father’s approval.
“And you.” He turns a glare on Nephele that has her shrinking back against the seat. “I didn’t send you out to California to start wildfires and piss off our allies.” Her eyes bug out in outrage, but Victor ignores it. “I could do something about that magic tickling your throat, but I think you’re better served keeping it for a while. Let it be an object lesson, Nephele—for both of us. You need to learn that there are limits to what people more powerful than you will put up with, and I…” He looks back at Ciro and smiles thinly. “I needed to learn that my son might be a better bargaining chip than I ever imagined he could be before.
“We’ll be home soon,” he says, pivoting effortlessly. “You’re clearly low on magic, Cyrus, so I probably don’t have to say this, but I will anyway—don’t try anything. No spells, no cantrips, no sneaking or spying with your bird. Nothing in the Tower. If I catch you fucking around, I’ll give you a permanent escort.” He nods at the dog sitting in front of him.
“We’ve got a lot of catching up to do, son. I expect honesty.”
Or else.