Annie managed to keep calm faced and quiet through a quarter of the meeting. She sat and listened as Dale laid out logistic and organizational missions to the living dead that sat around the table -- listening to them as they responded in turn. The people, the ghosts, the zombies, the revenants that Dale had brought to their headquarters in San Francisco, all of them were the reanimated souls of people with enough force of will, enough personality, and enough raw grit that they had come back with intelligence, personality, memories.
That was
why
Annie's teeth ground together harder and harder as Dale said: "Now that we've secured the nukes in France, I want to begin reanimated and binding souls to the reactors in question. Local undead can do the rough design work -- I've got the specifications loaded on the ClouDocs, just have your local sentients acess it with the passwords provided, and get to work inscribing the runes. Once the runes are complete, I or Annie will teleport to the plants and enchant them." He rubbed his chin. "Can we get some local camera crews down there to film the process -- we need to show people what we're doing and why it is for the best. I'm sure knowing that their nuclear power plants will run, repair, restock and refuel themselves will put a lot of them at ease..."
Annie saw Heydrich incline his head and mutter an affirmation.
And that was the last straw.
She slammed her palms down on the table and stood. "Dale. Outside. Now."
Dale, looking as shocked as if he had been flicked in the forehead, blinked at her. Then, coughing, he nodded. "Yes, well, you have your orders. See to it." He stood and followed after Annie, who walked across the corridor and into one of the adjoining meeting rooms of the complex they had taken. In the distance, she could hear a murmuring sound -- it was coming through the walls, but distantly. Like a surf's roar on the seaside. She put it out of her mind for the moment. Instead, she glared at Dale.
"What the
absolute
fuck, Dale?"
Dale pursed his lips. "Is this about Heydrich?"
"Yes, it's about
fucking
Heydrich!" Annie shouted -- her voice breaking at the last as she flung her arms wide. "It's about the fact that your council of sentient undead administrators, a sentence that I will
never
get used to saying or thinking by the way, happens to have a fucking Nazi on it. Not a neo-Nazi, not a Trumpist, not a Ecotist, but an actual literal real life swastika flying 20
th
century fucking goddamn Nazi piece of shit."
Dale ducked his head forward.
"Do you know who he is?" Annie hissed. "I googled him during the meeting. He's not just
a
Nazi. He's
the
Nazi." She scowled. "He practically designed the Holocaust. He was so bad the British made sure to assassinate him early just to make sure he was fucking
dead
. He-"
"Don't you think I know that?" Dale asked, scowling at her, his head snapping up. "Don't you think I knew that this army of mine would be have almost as many monsters as it would have heroes? The Confederates we have securing the eastern seaboard of North America are almost as bad -- less industrialized, but just as brutal-" He stopped himself, shaking his head. "I have him under my control. Under
our
control."
Annie pursed her lips. Then she turned to the door and felt the magic inside of her bones. She closed her eyes and channeled it up -- shaping it into the spheres that Dale had taught her. The chilling emptiness of the void filled her, echoing out from her bones and she lifted her hands, her fingers twitching as if she was playing with a puppet. Her finger arched and she dragged a line of force from where she stood to the meeting room -- and felt it hook and
tug
. A moment later, the door opened and the ghostly form of Heinrich Heydrich stood before them. His face was twisted with pain and his hand clutched at his chest. Annie frowned at him.
"Yes, fra-ah!" He gasped as Annie twisted her hands. He fell to his knees.
"I'm going to make this very clear," Annie said, her voice soft. "Right now..." She looked down her nose at the ghostly figure, her fingers trembling. There was something horrible about pain -- about seeing it. She listed the massacres she had seen printed on Wikipedia, a list of Eastern European sites, each one left buzzing with flies because of this man. When he had been alive, he had been a monster. But every second she saw his face, she felt her own guilt swelling inside of her -- his teeth, bared in pain. His forehead furrowing. His hand clutching at his chest, as if he was being hit with a heart attack. Annie's fingers relaxed despite herself. "Right now..." She said, her voice as hard as she could make it. "If I...if I ever hear of you doing
anything
even slightly fashy, anything cruel, anything evil, I will...
personally
have Dale tear your soul
apart
. I will have him forge you into soulsteel and use you as a fucking bidet. Got it?"
Heydrich nodded, his face relaxing as the pain faded.
Annie flipped her hand. "Go."
The Nazi staggered to his feet and turned -- blurring through the wall as he did so, not quite reaching the door with his staggering, drunken stance. Annie turned away from the door, her arms crossed over her chest. She wanted to be sick.
What
was
she?