For Xolotl, a new case meant late nights at the office, mountains of paperwork and falling back into old habits.
So far, heâs got all three checked.
Thereâs a stack of financial records from the auditor he has to look through by Friday. Heâs already on his sixth
(or was it seventh?) cigarette. And a cursory glance at the clock tells him that itâs a quarter past two.
Sighing, he leans back in his chair, eyes squeezed shut, and raises a hand to pinch at the bridge of his nose. All around him, blue tendrils of nicotine-tainted smoke dance through the air, curling around his hair like dragonâs breath.
Good thing there arenât any smoke detectors in here, Xolotl muses.
The last thing he needs are the sprinklers turning on and drenching all these documents.
Heâd actually quit smoking a few centuries ago, way back during the Industrial Revolution when tobacco actually
tasted like tobacco. Nowadays, it was all filler, smoke without the buzz. Anyone with the barest scrap of discernment would know that modern cigarettes were nothing compared to a good, hand-rolled cigar from
CabaĂąas.
Still, you get used to it.
Hell, if thereâs one thing Xolotl has learned over his many,
many years of existence, itâs that you can get used to anything, even the bitter tang of tar, anise and menthol. Besides, he kind of liked having something to do with his hands, and smoking was a great excuse for lulls in conversation.
Right now, however, heâs doing it because he needed to, the whole ritual of lighting up and smoking a cigarette, drawing the fumes deep into his lungs ââ it calmed him. He isnât nervous or apprehensive, though, justâŚ
concerned. Xolotl has always prided himself on his resourcefulness, on his ability to turn any situation to his advantage. Thatâs what made him so good at his job, and why his clients were willing to dig deep in their pockets for him to represent them in court.
Rumor was you could never get Salvador Ochoa to sweat because he was always three steps ahead of everyone else in the room.
But even the most consummate professional could be caught off-guard.
When Xolotl opens his eyes again, heâs staring at a cream-colored envelope on his desk. Heâd opened it earlier, breaking through the wax seal with a letter opener, but even before he read through what was within, he already had an inkling as to what its contents entailed.
Crushing the remains of his cigarette into an ashtray, he picks up the letter again, drags a nail along the crease where it had been folded. The paper feels rough between his fingers,
heavy, but beneath it all, thereâs something else.
Something
magic.
Weak as it may be, he could still feel it fizzling away under the surface. Every deity left behind their own magical signature, and the Morrigan was no different. Hers felt like⌠electricity and ozone. The scent of petrichor after a rainstorm. If the seal on the envelope hadnât been enough of a giveaway â a crow with its wings spread and talons outstretched â Xolotl could have guessed who the sender was without even looking.
And when you received a message from the Morrigan, there was usually only one reason.
He just didnât expect it to happen so soon.
Quietly, he slides the letter back into its envelope and tucks it inside his jacket, casting another look at the clock ââ
2:21 A.M. Everyone else had already gone home for the day, and Xolotl was the only one left in the office. Thatâs how it was, most days. After the final stragglers clocked out around midnight, the whole place would be left to him alone. He doesnât mind staying late, though. It gives him a little extra time to hone in on specifics, iron out the details, and he likes the quiet.
He stands up then, walking over to the floor-length window that separated his office from the city outside. The streets below are empty, bathed in the orange glow of sodium street lamps. Occasionally, a car will zip by, and Xolotl will stare at it until it disappears into the distance. This high up, they look like toys ââ small and utterly insignificant.
âŚ
Fuck it.
He could put off preparing for the case for a day or two, but if he had to listen to
god-knows-who arguing about
god-knows-what at eleven in the morning, heâs going to need a little more than two hours of sleep. And so, trying to ignore the already-growing headache behind his eyes, Xolotl turns back to his desk to click his computer shut, slips a fresh cigarette between his teeth, and prepares for the long drive home.
Heâs up bright and early the next day ââ or the same day,
technically, but he doesnât see the point in being pedantic about such things.
Thereâs a sense of unease in the air as Xolotl goes through his morning routine. This was the first Conclave theyâve had in, what, eighty-one years? And he canât stop thinking about what could
possibly be important enough to warrant them all coming together again.
(Part of him wonders if it all couldnât be summarized in an email instead. Heâs not exactly looking forward to dealing with the Greeks. Mostly because more often than not,
they were the ones causing the problems that everyone else needed to solve. Itâs sort of become routine at this point, cleaning up after their messes, and frankly, heâs getting a little tired of it.)
But Xolotl knows as well as anyone that thereâs no sense in delaying the inevitable, and so decides to take one last look at himself in the mirror before heading out. Heâs wearing one of his cheaper suits, an Alexander McQueen knockoff heâd just gotten back from the dry cleanerâs. Itâs charcoal black, cut in a way thatâs elegant yet discreet ââ just the way he likes it.
Satisfied, he turns to leave, though not before slipping an unopened pack of menthols into his pocket.
The drive to the university is uneventful, filled only with the purr of an engine and the occasional
click-click-click of his turn signal. Once he actually gets there, it doesnât take him long to find the conference room the Morrigan had been talking about in her letter; and already, there seemed to be some sort of commotion going on inside.
Business as usual then.
âŚThe smell of vomit is new, though.
Itâs the first thing Xolotl notices when he steps inside, though he doesnât give the perpetrator more than a brief, withering glance before moving towards the two most familiar faces in the room.
âTlazĹlteĹtl. XĹchipilli.â He greets each of them with a nod, and settles down into the seat heâd been assigned. Itâs cheap, plastic, and exceedingly uncomfortable. Xolotl supposes itâs a fitting metaphor for their current situation.
âSo,â he begins, reverting to his native tongue of Nahuatl, trying in vain to find a position that
doesnât make him feel like heâs strapped to a medieval torture device. Heâs hoping XĹchipilli and TlazĹlteĹtl might be able to provide some much-needed distraction.
âI take it didnât miss anything important?â