Path of the Fury

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Path of the Fury Page 4

by David Weber


  It didn’t. Nothing did, and that was . . . wrong. The images were there, clear and lethal in every brutal detail. Everyone she loved had been destroyed—more than destroyed, butchered with sick, premeditated sadism— and the agony of it did not overwhelm her.

  She raised a hand to her forehead and frowned, thoughts clearer than they ought to be yet oddly detached. Memories flickered, merciless and sharp as holovids but remote, as if seen through the time-slowing armorplast of the tick, and there was something there at the last, teasing her. . . .

  Her hand froze, and her eyes widened as memory of her final madness came abruptly. Voices in her head! Nonsense. And yet—she looked about the silent room once more, and knew she should never have lived to see it.

  a cold, clear voice said.

  She stiffened, eyes suddenly huge in the dimness, yet even now there was no panic in their depths. They were cool and still, for the terror of that silent voice eddied against a shield of glass. She sensed its presence, felt it prickle in her palms, yet it could not touch her.

  “Who—what—are you?” she asked the emptiness, and a silent laugh quivered deep at her core.

 

  “Tisiphone?” There was an elusive familiarity to that name, but—

  the voice murmured like crystal, singing on the edge of shattering, and its effort to soothe seemed alien to it.

  Alicia’s eyes opened even wider, and then she closed them tight. The simplest answer was that she’d been right the first time. She must be mad. That certainly made more sense than holding a conversation with something out of Old Earth’s mythology! Yet she knew she wasn’t, and her lips twitched at the thought. Didn’t they say that a crazy person knew she wasn’t mad? And who but a madwoman would feel so calm at a moment like this?

 

  “Touche,” Alicia murmured, then shook herself. Immobilizing tractor collars circled her left leg at knee and hip, lighter than a plasticast yet dragging at her as she eased up on her elbows. She raked hair from her eyes and looked around until she spied the bed’s power controls, then reached out her right hand and slipped her Gamma receptor over the control linkage. She hadn’t used it in so long she had to think for almost ten full seconds before the proper neural links established themselves, but then the bed purred softly, rising against her shoulders. She settled into a sitting position and folded her hands in her lap, and her neck craned as her eyes flitted about the room once more. “Let’s say I believe in you . . . Tisiphone. Where are you?”

 

  “You mean,” Alicia said very carefully, a tiny tremor of fear oozing through the sheet of glass, “that you’re inside my head?”

 

  “I see.” She inhaled deeply. “Why aren’t I hanging from the ceiling and gibbering, then?”

  the voice added a bit dryly,

  “Well,” Alicia surprised herself with a smile despite the madness which had engulfed her, “I guess that would be the rational thing to do.”

 

  “I imagine it would.” She pressed her hands to her temples, feeling the familiar angularity of her subcutaneous Alpha receptor against her right palm, and moistened her lips. “Are you . . . the reason I don’t hurt more?” She wasn’t speaking of physical pain, and the voice knew it.

 

  Alicia closed her eyes again, lips trembling, grateful for the pane of glass between her and her loss. She felt endless, night-black grief waiting to suck her to destruction beyond whatever shield this Tisiphone had erected, and it frightened her. Yet there was resentment in her gratitude, as if she’d been robbed of something rightly hers—something as precious as it was cruel.

  She sucked in another breath and lowered her hands once more. Either Tisiphone existed, or she truly was mad, and she might as well act on the assumption that she was sane. She opened her hospital gown and traced the red line down her chest and the ones across her abdomen. There was no pain, and quick-heal was doing its job—the incisions were half-healed already and would vanish entirely in time—but they confirmed the damage she’d taken. She let the gown fall closed and leaned back against her pillows in the quiet room.

  “How long ago was I hit?”

 

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