Chapter 56: Consequences
Hell Hounds
Yolanda watched the last of the enforcers leave. Two came in carrying a thirdâs gear. That third enforcer lay in the Medical Center and her people prayed sheâd pull through. Other groups complained about barely getting away with their hides intact. Theyâd pushed the Fae back away from the humans, but the toll on the secret of their existence was high. The Mages and Fianna struggled now covering up the mess. From finding video and eyewitnesses, to coming up with reasonable excuses. It became a grim task.
Ian offered to go into the field and head off some reports by creating unbelievable conspiracy theories. After all, his old job was to investigate these things and find the truth behind it. What better way to stop people from hunting a monster than to say the police are on its tail?
Hal and Aria took to the internet to help with that. Days blended into each other as they headed off the Fae with different means before they harmed anyone else. The excuses used ranged from toxic chemical spills causing hallucinations, large car accidents, and Yolandaâs favourite lame excuse.
Someone reported Fairies while on a bad acid trip. The Mages kept a record of the excuses used and when they used them, one mage mumbled something in passing to Yolanda about needing to keep them fresh to be believable. Beside Hal, a young mage sat with a book open, flipping through the next rationalization theyâd just in the most recent case.
âI am so happy I donât need to lie like this. Tried it once, failed miserably at it, and now I have a mate.â
The young mage looked up suddenly at Yolanda. âThen you did something wrong there.
Probably, your unconscious brain knew heâs your mate and made sure you didnât screw it up.â
Yolanda rolled her eyes and grumbled before she left. âNever mind, somehow you lost the joke in translation.â It felt like their heads were more in their books than in life itself. Many mages appeared to not understand humour. If theyâd have a basic understanding of a joke, it appeared in conversation at the wrong time. Which was funny in and of itself. However, their effort could ruffle a few political feathers too. Itâs yet another reason Yolanda preferred to hide within the Armory. She avoided it all, but sheâd want her mate back.
Back in the armoury, Yolanda worked with a staff sheâd never needed before this. It took several days for her to understand everyoneâs specialties and set up training sessions for the enforcers in the safe operation of the new and updated weapons. She found her life turning away from tinkering with weapons, to scheduling, and delegating. Meetings with Gregory and other leaders. She became a resource expert and advisor. What happened to her life? Ian often stood beside her during these meetings as an expert on the reaction of humans and how to circumvent disasters.
When he wasnât helping keep secrets, Ian would immediately return to her side, and the world felt a little closer to normal. Though she missed the ability to run or ride on a whim.
It did not limit this to Yolanda either. As the days and weeks went by, others felt the strain, too.
The Bearsâ encampment caused enough issues of space and territory. The Bears werenât used to living so closely with each other, let alone anyone else. Other spaces werenât an option as great cats took up there, while other spaces housed dragons, vampires, and merfolk. Representatives roamed the halls of the packhouse, making the large space feel small. Cubs and pups clashed for dominance. Poor Catherine and Juliette, the female Beta, found themselves entrusted with dealing with these conflicts.
Schooling for all the young became an issue, along with the training of adults in defensive and offensive tactics.
She needed to admit it all grew complicated. Where and when this would end always felt elusive to her. It became precious the hours she and Ian could grab for themselves. Their cottage became their haven until they lost that to enforcer training. They moved into a space in the packhouse for safety and expedience. Now she saw even less of the outdoors. The snows turned to a gray sludge.
They trekked soggy leaves and pine needles into the packhouse. Making them a slipping hazard and an almost full-time job to remove them.
Now weeks into this war, and an army milling about on the sprawling land. With the land thawing, plans to build an underground bunker for the enforcers to train together, live and work. Theyâd never leave this land now if their world survived this.
The mages sent groups to scour far-flung areas for methods to block the Fae from or within the Dream Realm. Many people thought imprisoning the Fae within the Dream Realm was justified. They wanted the Fae to learn what it felt like to be hunted, as theyâd done with countless generations of supernatural and mundane creatures. Others argued it made us monsters no better than the Fae. That faction wanted to imprison them within the Dream Realm until they devised a way to return them to their prison realm, and this time, seal it permanently.
Thereâs the rub. They could send them back one by one as time goes on. But would the portals stay closed? Thatâs where the human cult members came into the picture. The group that went to investigate them found that even though theyâd opened the portals, lost their members to the Fae. The Fae did not communicate with them at all. In the small town, where the cult has based itself. The members openly complained that they felt used and neglected. But what they believed they failed to gain was still an unknown element.
Dinner brought Yolanda out of her small workshop. The Fianna planned to enlarge that and find a place to hide a forge for their use. The shifting and moving of Yolandaâs territory just rubbed her the wrong way. Seeing Ian and spending time with him felt like a relief.
Picking up her dinner from the lobby, she made her way into the dining room to find it almost barren. Frowning, she moved among the tables, weaving to their traditional table. âWhere is everyone?â
âDonât worry, we arenât missing anything. Itâs the calm before the storm. Hereâs some more wallpaper for your pile. It appears theyâre planning on taking the fight to the Fae near here.â Ian sat back in his chair beside Hal and Aria.
âAbout time, though I thought weâd wait until we found out where the others are hiding.â
Yolanda dropped her food on the table and picked up the file folder full of the notes she needed to know. âGah, itâs a big mission. Are they ready for this?â
âGregory believes we donât have a choice. We need to get them on the defensive at some point. He wants them to understand the humans are a waste of time. That they wonât find an army or pool of slaves. The only way to do that is to turn their attention away from the humans and onto us.â
âDang. Thatâs insane, this early in the fight? I donât know about this. Then again, I just make sure the weapons work.â
âHe wants to talk to you after dinner. But we have time to eat dinner, at least. Look, if they can take out one encampment of them. Thatâs one army down.â
âOne army down and only the gods know how many others there are.â
Ian stood up, moved around the table, and embraced Yolanda. âHey, if thereâs something I found out about your Alpha. He rolls with what happens, but he does nothing on a whim. He gets the information he needs and makes educated decisions. Thatâs a sign of an outstanding leader.â
âFirst off, heâs now your leader, too. But you are correct in that estimation. I guess youâve been seeing more of him while working with Aria and Hal.â
âHeâs been picking my brain about my division and consulting me on how we might use them to get the cult to open up and reveal things to us. We may use my office to break the cult up. Itâs something that they do. The office would have knowledge about the cultâs occult practices. Iâve got one guy looking into any information they have on them.â
âWhatâs the name of this cult? I donât think anyoneâs mentioned it.â
âItâs one of those weird names. Breacadh An Lae Dearg.â
âRed Dawn? That doesnât sound menacing at all. Oh, no, I expect they have a bloody sickle as their brand symbol. I can just see their merch now. A bloody sickle on a baseball cap and t-shirt.â
âSo, I pronounced it correctly?â
âDonât listen to him. He made me type the name into google to search up how to pronounce it properly.â
âWell, thank you. At least, he respected me enough to try. Itâs like buying flowers when Iâd love a new muffler.â Ian frowned at her.
âMy bike. Itâs rude to give cut flowers to us. Itâs believed that you cut short the life to the flowers and youâre wishing that on the person youâre giving them to. Always give the whole plant, or a new part for my bike.â Yolanda couldnât help but smile at his confusion. Aria just shook her head wryly at her.
âGuys, sit down and eat. Or Gregory will call you in to talk to him, while your food gets stone cold.â