The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) π
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- Author: Brad Magnarella
Read book online Β«The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) πΒ». Author - Brad Magnarella
βYou promised the battle would be defensive,β I stammered.
Arnaud chuckled. βWell, you know what they say. The best defense is a good offense.β
βYou lied to me.β
βYes, about thatβ¦β He and the shadow fiend continued to stalk me in the dark. βI take my pledges very seriously. I have a reputation for my word being as reliable as gold. Itβs what elevated me to the heights of lower Manhattan while lesser of my kind ended up in the filth of Forty-second Street. The late Sonny Shoat, for example. But in your case, Mr. Croft, I made an exception to my own rule. And you have your grandfather to blame.β
βMy grandfather? What in the hell does he have to do with this?β
I could feel the talons of Arnaudβs mind probing my thoughts. What he found was terror and uncertainty.
βYou know about the original Pact, of course,β Arnaud said. βThe union between wizards and vampires to resist the enforcers of the Inquisition. Why, you used the Pactβs binding power against me in our first meeting. That never should have happened. Your dear grandfather violated the Pact when he double-crossed not only me, but his fellow wizards.β
Anger flared hot in my cheeks. βBullshit.β
βOh, I donβt blame you for not knowing, Mr. Croft. He hid the deception very well. Indeed, even I wasnβt aware of what heβd done until after his death. But I received a visit one day from someone in your Order. A representative, I suppose. The fellow asked some interesting questions, and though he disguised his mission well, I soon understood what he was after. You see, during the campaign in Eastern Europe, some powerful artifacts were stolen, including the Scaig Box over there. I, along with others, had always assumed the Church to have taken and destroyed them. But by the nature of the fellowβs questions, it became clear he suspected a vampire of the theftsβme, in particular, given my movements during the war. I must have said enough to convince him otherwise, because he left, and I never saw or heard from him again. It got me thinking back, though. Your grandfather, the Grand Mage himself, had been with me or close by during much of the war. He was at the same places the fellow from the Order had mentioned during our interview.β
I continued to ease along the wall of the vault as he talked, chanting quietly.
βFortunately, I kept close tabs on your grandfather since his arrival in Manhattan. He was behaving quite curiously, performing work far beneath his station. A stage magician and insurance man? I was convinced the war had addled his mind. Some form of shell shock. But after the fellowβs visit, I began to wonder whether your grandfather had been hiding something.β
Though I kept up the chant, I couldnβt help but think about Grandpaβs strange habits, his odd hours.
βEvery so often he would take a trip out to Port Gurney. If you havenβt been, itβs a waterfront town, very working class. Old dockyards, warehouses, a few bars as well. Your grandfather would go directly to one bar in particularβa place called the Rhein Houseβand sit on the same stool, sometimes for hours. He would then emerge, perfectly sober, and drive home, scarcely having spoken. Maybe the man just liked to spend time in a place suggestive of his German past. Or maybe, I thought, there was more going on than met the eye. Late one night, following the fellowβs visit, I dispatched a pair of slaves to that waterfront bar to have a look around. And do you know what they discovered?β
βWhat?β
βA vault in the barβs basement. Despite considerable coercion, the owner seemed not to know how to open it, claiming the vault was closed and locked when he bought the establishment. After a bit of research, I discovered a strange clause in the property deed. The vault could not be considered a part of any subsequent sale. Very curious, wouldnβt you agree?β
βWhatβs your point?β
βWhen we finally managed to open the vault, we found the Scaig Box alongside a host of artifacts. Ones belonging to both vampires and wizards. It appears your grandfather used the Pact to steal them. I care not for the wizardsβ grievancesβthat is for them to sort out. But he stole from me. Did you know the earliest vampires were shadow fiends? Only a precious handful remain, and your grandfather took one for himself, the thief.β
From the darkness above, the shadow fiend smacked its lips.
βSo yes, Mr. Croft,β Arnaud said, swooping in close, βmy point is that your grandfather violated the Pact first, effectively dissolving it.β
I kept moving, trying not to allow Arnaudβs words to challenge my concentration. But the things he was saying β¦ The vampire had no reason to deceive me now, unless it was to incite confusion and dismay, to fill the vault with more of my stress hormones. But I had felt Grandpaβs magic on the Scaig Box. And if Grandpa was as powerful as he seemed, he could easily have cast a projection spell to make it seem as though he were at the bar, drinking for hours, while, in fact, he was down inside the vault, checking on the artifacts.
But why?
βIβm not my grandfather,β I said defiantly.
βOf course not, Mr. Croft,β Arnaud agreed. βIf you were even a tenth of the man, you would not be in this precarious position. But thatβs neither here nor there. The penalty for violating the Pact is death, and since your grandfather is no longer among us, that penalty defaults to his descendants. Or descendant in this case. Be grateful you didnβt sire children.β
I was at the back of the vault now, moving past the altar.
Almost readyβ¦
βOne final thing,β Arnaud said, his voice tightening. βYou called me a liar, but remember this. Every mistruth, every furtive act, was in accordance with seeing justice through.β
βHow noble,β I scoffed. βYou just left out the part about
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