Welcome to Chapter 19.
I hope all of you had a great Christmas and are looking forward to a happy and healthy new year. At the end of 2022 I would like to take the opportunity to thank all of you; readers, supporters, editors, and friends for the reception and support that my work and I have been shown in such abundance. I hope you continue to enjoy where the story goes.
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Time is a bit of a flexible concept to an Evo in the best of circumstances. Between the time dilation effects of their cities and their bunkers and their extremely long lives, patience is not something that comes easily to them. Waiting, in any form, is far from a favored pastime because everything is dragged out to almost unbearable levels. This isn't to say that we are a necessarily impatient race. It's just that everything seems like it is taking longer than it would to the normal human, primarily because a lot of our time is spent in our own minds where time flows at a rate of about forty-five minutes to every one minute outside it. This meant that the four days it took for Miguel to respond to my message about meeting the Inquisition leadership felt like an eternity.
Of course, I tried to make that time as productive as possible. The first night, after Phillippa had left the apartment - on weak knees and with a massive smile on her face - had been spent working on the computer system. It seemed to be capable of a lot more than I had originally envisioned, and I was trying to see how far those extra abilities could be pushed. I was interrupted every few minutes by pictures from Becky showing her blonde head between Philippa's thighs and then close-ups of her tongue, delving into her lover to scoop out my seed. I remembered her note saying that her fingers would be involved, but either the plan had changed, or the pictures hadn't covered that part of their festivities.
Night two was spent balls deep in Faye, over and over again, in every position imaginable when the laws of physics didn't apply. To put into context how long we spent together and how utterly draining it was, I will only say that part of our experiment was to see how long we could go without any rejuvenation time needed between orgasms.
I came fifty-eight times, sometimes with as long as an hour between them, before we were both too exhausted to continue. We passed out in each other's arms.
The third day, unsurprisingly, was spent resting.
It was early on the fourth day that I received a call from Miguel, a week to the day since I had cornered him and 200 of his Inquisitor co-workers in Malaga. I was given an address of what the Inquisition decided was neutral ground in Den Haag, The Netherlands. I was British and new to this whole rivalry thing, so I had no idea if this really was neutral or not, but by the mid-afternoon, I was on a flight, and by late afternoon I was getting out of a cab at the address that I had been given.
I looked up at the building in front of me and blinked.
Den Haag... The Hague... not like the city, but the
actual
Hague, or at least what politicians and diplomats have called "The Hague" since the end of the second world war. Its official title was, however, a little differentβ The International Court of Justice.
"Of fucking course! I mean, why would it be anything less?"
I took a deep breath and started to walk. Slowly padding through carefully manicured gardens and then climbing the steps outside. The Inquisition had played something of their hand here. This was clearly designed as an intimidation tactic, not only to show how powerful and important they were but to highlight, in no uncertain terms, that the law was on their side. Unfortunately, compared to the intimidation tactics used by parents over the years - not to mention their willingness, bordering on eagerness, to follow up on threats made - this attempt at striking fear into me was, at best, rank fucking amateur! I knew exactly how to respond.
When responding to any bullying tactics, on any level, from the schoolyard to international politics, there are only ever two realistic responses that have any likelihood of working. One is to ignore them, the tactics, I mean. It may be fairly easy to ignore a school bully, but it's a little harder to dismiss the diplomatic representatives of an entire country... or the inquisition. The second option is to show strength. There is the tried and tested theory that bullies only respond to their show of strength with one of your own. It is a cliche, but like all cliches, it is a phrase that has been proven right so many times, in so many ways, that it has
become
a cliche. The problem with this approach, and the one that is rarely explained to the victim of middle school bullies, is that you have to be prepared to back it up. It is true most bullies are cowards and will often back down at the first hint that their prey is not going to be an easy meal. But there are more than a few who are not and will respond to this show of strength with the one thing that allowed them to be a bully in the first placeβraw aggression.
The moral of the story, for any victim of bullying taking this second option, is that you have to be prepared to show your strength. If your bluff is called, you must be ready to punch someone in the face! And, more than likely, be punched in the face in return. It doesn't matter if we are talking figuratively or literally. You are calling their bluff; expect them to call yours too.
So my options were either passiveness and diplomacy or aggression.
No prizes for guessing which one I went with.
I went through the main doors and introduced myself to a charming middle-aged, human lady at the front desk, waited for someone to come out, and was then led through what I assumed were pretty standard security checks for a building of such importance. A few different levels of metal detectors and X-rays, fingerprint and DNA tests - which the computer in my apartment would have passed, even if something had been flagged, which it wasn't, and then deleted the records - before I was led through a labyrinthian rat warren of corridors that seemed to be intentionally designed to disorientate me before being dumped into an empty room and having the door locked behind me.
I rolled my neck. This was doing nothing to make me feel nervous or intimidated. This was just pissing me off.
The room was about as empty as it was possible for a room to be. There was a floor, four walls, a ceiling, a security camera in each corner, and two doors; the one that I had entered through and another identical one directly in front of me.
I couldn't have been standing there for more than a minute or two, although it certainly felt longer thanks to that time thing, before the door in front of me opened, and three burly-looking men in dark suits stepped into the room. The first thing that struck me about them, aside from wondering if they all used the same tailor, was that each of them was almost shadowed against the bright white aura that surrounded them. Whereas every person in the building I had seen to this point had been human, these three men were unmistakably inquisitors.
The second thing I noticed was that they were all armed. I should point out here, once again, that I am British and as astounding as it may seem to people in other parts of the world, we are not used to seeing guns. I could recognize the
type