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âHe has something down in the basement of the building.â Â Salâs voice sounded tight when Ctirad came to himself. Â âHere, kidâ Ctirad â drink some more water. Â Itâs not a creature, itâs some sort of really Bad Change, from what I can tell.â
âBad Change?â Â The water cut the acid taste in his mouth but not the feeling in his stomach.
âItâs, uh. Â Sometimes the things that happen to us go too far from human, thatâs the best way I can explain it. Â Like, weâre on fire constantly, or we give off poison gas, or our legs fuse together into a column of, like, stone-skin. Â That looks like one of the really bad cases. What Ermenrich said,â he added to Timaios, âwas that it was a side effect of âtheirâ power, and what it looked like was that something in the power made them fuse with – well, whatever was near, is my guess.â
âErmenrich told me not to get too close,â Ctirad remembered. âHe didnât have to, though.  It was – it was hard being in the same room as that thing.â  He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. âLike it was wrong, somehow.  Iâm not sure.â  He was still feeling twitchy over the whole thing.  âIâm not sure if Iâm missing somethingâŚâ
âNo, it was wrong.â Â Sal sounded as sick as Ctirad felt. Â âIt was an abomination. Â And it probably still is, because I canât see Ermenrich get rid of something like that. Â Itâs probably useful. Â I understand why he told you to forget it, though – and Iâm not surprised your mind didnât want to bring it back.â
âBad Change.â Â He was listening to Sal, he was, but the words had lodged in his mind. Â âThatâs, like. Â How do we know which one of them was the one with the Change? Â Imagine if you were just standing next to someone when they Changed and – urgh.â Â He shuddered.
âYouâve never heard the term- no, of course you wouldnât have.â Â Timaios made a sound like a sigh. Â âWhatever – no, thatâs a conversation for private. Â Letâs try again. Â Ermenrich has something in the basement of the McCurdy Building – someone. Â And he wants to own the building so that he owns that someone, because they are now part of the building. Â Am I following so far?â
âThat sounds right.â Â Ctirad pieced through the words slowly. Â âI donât know what the thingâs power is, but I know that it – they? – it collects things that get too near it. Â I donât know how it eats, either,â he added, swallowing bile. Â âItâs – someone should kill it, put it out of its misery.â
âIâm not generally in the business of mercy killings,â Timaios mused quietly, âbut Iâm willing to take your word on this one. Â The question is, where did this demolition come in? Â Was he unable to buy the property?â
âIf he â if he demolishes it, heâs going to.-â Â Ctirad gulped. Â âI donât think thatâs good.â
âSal, get someone on that. Â Looking into the deal, seeing who owns the building, the demolition company, who we can bribe and who we can buy and who already owes us favors. Â Â If the protesters are ââ
âGot it, sir, you want the full work-up.â Sal smirked. Â âAll right. Â Youâre gonna give Ctirad a stiff drink or two and some fresh air, yeah?â
âYou see how it is?â Timaiosâ despair was clearly mock and played for humor and still a little weird for Ctirad. Â âIâm bullied by my own staff!â
Ctirad took a gamble. Â âIf Sir does not wish to be bullied by Sirâs staff, perhaps Sir ought to invest in a nice sturdy paddle and engage in a bit of creative discipline. Â Sir.â
âHey, whose side are you on, anyway?â Â Sal made a mock-indignant face. Â âBesides, you donât know. Â We might all like it.â
âEven if Sirâs staff enjoyed it,â Ctirad continued, as if he hadnât heard Sal, âthey might find it difficult to bully Sir while being paddled.â
âAnd should I start by paddling you, mm?â Â Timaiosâ voice was warm. Â
Ctirad froze. Â For a split-second, he thought heâd gone further than he could up with.
âSir is of course welcome to paddle this one, if Sir wishes.â Â Heâd never spoken like this, not even to Ermenrich. Â It made it easier to keep doing. Â âBut this one would never bully an Owner.â
âGive it time, kid, give it time.â Sal chuckled. Â âYouâll bully him right along with the rest of us.â
âIâŚâ  He coughed uncertainly.  âThat is, this one thinks that is unlikely, given this oneâs habits and predilections.â  And then he smiled widely. âDamn, I didnât even know I knew that word.  âPredilections.â  Seriously?  Thatâs a bit highbrow for a grunt like me.â
âAnd yet it rolled beautifully off of your tongue.â Â Timaios stroked Ctiradâs hair. Â âSo you think I should paddle my employees, mmm?â
âOnly if you donât want them to bully you, sir. Â But I think youâre in the habit of, ah. Â Of letting your employees and staff push back, so that you know youâre not bullying them. Â So I guess youâre going to have to accept a certain amount of being pushed back at, in that case?â
He glanced at Timaios, wondering if heâd gone too far. Â Sal was laughing, though. Â And more importantly, Timaios was smiling.
âYouâre a very observant man, Ctirad. Â I like that. Â And I think Iâve pushed you enough for one night. Â Sal, thank you. Â You have your duties – and they can wait until the morning, you should get some sleep, too. Â Come on, if youâd like, Ctirad. Â I think we should go to bed.â
âYes, sir.â Â Even with if youâd like, he wasnât going to say no to that. Â Ctirad waiting for Timaios to stand and then stood himself, stretching surreptitiously. Â
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