'I have a special assignment. You can direct your enquiry to my superiors. Or rather, you have the right to address your enquiry to your superiors.'
The witch and the warlock exchanged glances. No matter how opposed our goals and moralities might be, the two hierarchies had to collaborate.
Only, to be quite frank, nobody really liked involving the bosses.
'Very well,' the witch agreed reluctantly. 'Anton, we will limit ourselves to a verbal warning.'
I looked around. All round me there were people, moving slowly through the grey gloom. Ordinary people, incapable of moving out of their own little world. We were Others, and though I stood on the Light Side and the other two were on the Dark Side, we had far more in common with each other than with any of those ordinary humans.
'On what terms?'
You should never try to second-guess the Dark. You should never make any concessions. And it's even more dangerous to accept any gifts from it. But rules are only made to be broken.
'No terms.'
Well, that was a surprise!
I looked at Alisa, trying to figure out the catch. Pyotr was obviously indignant at his partner, he was angry, he wanted to expose an adept of the Light as a criminal. That meant I didn't have to worry about him.
But where was the trap?
'That's unacceptable to me,' I said, with a sigh of relief – I'd spotted the catch. 'Alisa, thank you for your offer of a peaceful resolution. I can accept it, but in a similar situation I am bound to forgive you a minor magical intervention, up to and including the seventh degree.'
'Very well, Other,' Alisa agreed readily. She held out her hand and I automatically shook it. 'We have a personal agreement.'
The owl on my shoulder flapped its wings. There was a furious screech right in my ear. And a moment later the bird materialised in the Twilight world.
Alisa took a step back and the pupils of her eyes rapidly extended into vertical slits. The young warlock took up a defensive stance.
'We have an agreement,' the witch repeated sullenly.
What was going on?
I realised too late that I shouldn't have entered into an agreement while Olga was there. But then – what was so terrible about what had happened? As if I hadn't been there when other guys from the Watch had concluded alliances like this, made concessions, agreed terms for co-operating with the Dark Ones, even the boss himself had done it! Sure, it's undesirable, but sometimes you have to.
Our goal is not to exterminate the Dark Ones. Our goal is to maintain the balance. The Dark Ones will only disappear when people conquer the Evil in themselves. Or we'll disappear, if people decide they like the Dark better than the Light.
'The agreement's been made,' I told the owl. 'Cool it. It's no big deal. Just standard collaboration.'
Alisa smiled and gave me a wave. She took the warlock by the elbow, and they started moving off. A few moments later they were out of the Twilight and setting off along the pavement. An ordinary young couple.
'What's wrong with you?' I asked. 'Well? Field work has always been built on compromises.'
'You made a mistake.'
Olga's voice was strange, it didn't match her appearance. Soft, velvety, musical. The way werecats talk, not birds.
'Oh! So you can talk now?'
'Yes.'
'Then why didn't you say anything before?'
'Everything was okay before.'
I laughed, remembering the old joke about the child that didn't speak for years.
'I'll leave the Twilight, okay? And meanwhile you can explain what mistake I've made. Minor compromises with the Dark Ones are inevitable in this line of work.'
'You're not well enough qualified to make compromises.'
The world around me became coloured. It was like switching modes on a video camera, when you change from 'sepia' or 'old movie' to the standard view. The comparison is really quite apt in some ways: the Twilight is an 'old movie'. A really old one that humankind has managed to forget. They find it easier to live that way.
I set off towards the steps down into the metro, snarling to my invisible companion on the way:
'And just what have qualifications got to do with it?'
'A high-ranking Watch member is able to foresee the consequences of a compromise. Whether it's no more than just a minor trade-off and the effects are self-neutralising, or a trap, a trick.'
'I doubt if a seventh-grade intervention's likely to lead to disaster.'
A man walking along beside me glanced at me in surprise. I was just about to say something like: 'I'm harmless, the non-violent kind of psycho.' It's a great way of curing excessive curiosity. But the man had already lengthened his stride, probably having come to a similar conclusion himself.
'Anton, you can't predict the consequences. You overreacted to a minor annoyance. Your little piece of magic led to intervention by the Dark Ones. You agreed a compromise with them. But the saddest thing of all is that there was no need for magical intervention in the first place.'
'Okay, okay, I admit it. So now what?'
The bird's voice was sounding more lifelike now, developing more expression.
I suppose it must have been a long time since she'd last spoken.
'Now – nothing. We'll have to hope for the best.'
'Are you going to tell the boss what happened?'
'No. At least, not yet. We're partners, after all.'
I felt a warm glow. This sudden improvement in relations with my partner made any mistakes worthwhile.
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