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May Contain Spies: A Spy Thriller (Meet Abby Banks Book 1)

Page 12

by J. A. Cipriano


  Chapter 14

  I woke up in the same mauve room as before which was a little odd because that room was owned by my bio-mom, and Donovan had been the last person I remembered seeing when…

  “Mom!” I screamed, swinging my head around to look for her. “Are you alright?”

  My eyes fell upon the face of Roberto as he sat in a forest green, metal folding chair. He looked up from the book he was reading and stared at me with huge brown eyes. Very slowly he stood, pulling a crimson bookmark from the end of the book and sticking it in his spot before closing the cover and placing it on the chair.

  “Where’s my mom!” I screamed, trying to throw off my blankets and leap from the bed. Only… only I couldn’t move. Not even a single inch. I glared at Roberto, who stared at me, face locked into an emotionless, slack-jawed mask that made it impossible to read his thoughts as he stepped up to me.

  He placed one hand on the hem of my blanket, and without saying a word, pulled it back very slowly. I glanced down and saw, much to my horror, that I was bound to the bed by thick brown leather straps that reminded me of the belts you see in movies about crazy people. I shut my eyes and concentrated on not screaming.

  Maybe I’d just had a nervous breakdown and imagined the whole thing. I was just in a mental hospital because I was cracked, right? I’d forgotten to take my medication or something and hallucinated the whole thing. Any second, my mom was going to come in with a whole host of doctors and declare I was fine and should be set free.

  “I’m not crazy,” I said, opening my eyes and staring at Roberto who was watching me carefully. “You can let me go home now. I don’t need any more treatment.” I began nodding. Still he stared at me, and as he did so, the pit in my stomach grew two sizes as dread ballooned inside it.

  I swallowed, and would have waved my hands at him if I could have. “Can you hear me?” I asked, raising my voice more than I’d wanted to. “I said I’m fine and you can let me out of here.”

  “Abby,” he said after a pause so long that it wrapped around the globe. “Where do you think you are?” He quirked an eyebrow at me as he rested one hand on the strap around my right wrist. I’d forgotten how huge he was because his hand was the size of a dinner plate. It made my stick-thin arm look like a twig that he could snap by sneezing.

  I tore my eyes away from his hand and looked up at him, smiling my friendliest smile. “I’m in a mental hospital because I had a break down. I had a bad dream and freaked out or something, that’s why you guys bound me up. Now if you could call my mom for me…”

  “Abby, when you ask for your mom do you mean Esmeralda Banks?” he asked, eyes squishing up into brown slits.

  “Uh… yeah? Who else would I mean?” I asked, and despite my best efforts, my heart began to pound as cold sweat ran down the back of my neck.

  A look of sadness crossed his face, and I turned away from him so my heart wouldn’t shatter as he spoke. “Abby… Esmeralda is dead. You are not in a mental hospital. You are in the base of your real mother, Gabriella de la Mancha. You are her daughter.”

  “Stop,” I whispered, and the words barely scraped out of my closed off throat and through my teeth as tears filled my eyes. “Stop,” I repeated even softer as the world went blurry.

  “Abby,” he said, placing one meaty paw on my shoulder in what I can only assume was an attempt to comfort me. “I need to take you to see your mother. You need to pull yourself together. Gabriella cannot see you like this.”

  “My mother is dead!” I snarled, swinging my head back toward him, my limbs snapping against the restraints.

  He leaned in close to me so that his face was inches from mine. His breath was warm on my face as he spoke, and the smell of tuna fish made my stomach twist into knots. “I’m serious, Abby. If you want to live, you need to pretend that Esmeralda was a horrible kidnapper and you’re thrilled to be home.” His eyes were deadly serious as he stared at me. “Thrilled,” he repeated, and my stomach sank.

  I tried to say something, anything. I tried to tell him to go to hell but a tremor I couldn’t control rippled through my body, making my teeth slam shut. My mother would tell me to agree, to do whatever it took to escape, and as I stared up at Roberto’s solemn face, I got the distinct impression he was rooting for me. Why? I have no idea.

  “Okay,” I said, choking the word out. He didn’t move, and I nodded my head at him very slowly. “I’ll behave,” I added.

  He watched me for a long time before standing, his huge hands moving to the restraints and unfastening them so deftly that I was amazed he could manage it. He stood back a moment later, offering me just enough room to sit up and swing my legs over the side of the bed, but not enough to let me try to run away if I was so inclined.

  I wasn’t. I was very much inclined to let him lead me to Gabriella de la Mancha. Why? Because I was going to kill her, and as I thought that thought, I felt my heart settle down and a strange ease settled over me. Who would have known that matricide would be so calming?

  I swung my legs over the side of the bed and stood, glancing up at Roberto before looking past him toward the door. “Take me to your leader,” I intoned in my best alien voice.

  He stared at me before taking an enormous step away from me and moving toward the door. He stopped in front of it and swung his head back to glance at me over one massive shoulder. “Do you want me to hold your hand?” he asked, and the question struck me a little odd.

  “Um… no,” I said, a smirk crossing my lips as I sauntered toward him, hands on my white-scrub clad hips. “You’re way too old for me. I don’t swing that way.”

  His eyes pulsed, widening just the barest fraction before he turned back toward the door and cleared his throat. “I was just trying to be nice,” he muttered under his breath as he pressed his hand to the lock mechanism. “Why do I always try to be nice…?”

  The door whooshed open in a whir of gears and an exhalation of air before he stepped through. I followed behind him, and the first thing I noticed were the two armed guards standing on either side of my door. They were dressed in white, like Roberto and I were, but they had bulky armor that reminded me of storm troopers from a galaxy far, far away.

  The big, angry black guns in their hands didn’t move, but they still made my stomach clench a little as I passed their unmoving forms. Roberto nodded to them as we passed, and as soon as they were out of earshot, I said. “New guards? For little old me?”

  Roberto glanced at me as if trying to decide what he wanted to say. Evidently, he thought better of speaking because he looked back ahead without a word. I huffed and moved up beside him, which was no easy task in the tiny hallway. I was reasonably sure two or three people could probably walk abreast in the corridor, but Roberto took up so much space that it was hard for me to fit next to him. That, and he didn’t exactly make room for me either.

  “I’m starting to feel like you’re mad at me,” I said. “I wasn’t trying to make you mad. I mean aside from trying to watch me shower, you’ve been really nice to me.”

  He glanced down at me, but said nothing as I reached out and gripped one of his huge hands. “I’d love to hold your hand,” I added, dropping my eyes to the floor in front of me as heat spread across my cheeks.

  “I’m not mad at you,” he whispered, voice so soft that I could barely hear it. I looked up at him as he squeezed my hand, engulfing it. His eyes were brighter than they had been earlier, and it made me feel a little silly for trying to use my mostly defunct charms on him. Still, this guy, nice or not, worked for my real mother, Gabriella de la Mancha. She had nuked two cities. Nice guys don’t work for people like that.

  “Good,” I said, grinning at him like an idiot. “I’m starting to feel like maybe we could be friends.”

  “I would like that,” he said before looking away from me. “More than you’d know.”

  I thought about prying into what he meant by that, but I didn’t think it would work. Also, it would be a little less endearing than I w
as going for. I sighed and shook my head as we reached the door that led to the command center. Chances were that my mother was on the other side.

  “Are you ready?” Roberto asked, squeezing my hand one last time before releasing me.

  I looked up into his face, and it was filled with concern. That was a little weird, right? I bit my lip, steeling myself before nodding. “Yes,” I said, and the cold in my voice made me shiver a little. “I’m ready to see my mother.” And kill her, I added in my head. I still wasn’t quite sure how I was going to manage it, but she was half-dead anyway. Surely it wouldn’t be hard to finish the job.

  The door opened with that same hiss that every door in the facility seemed to possess, and half a breath later, I was staring at Gabriella de la Mancha. She was sitting in her mechanized chair, head leaned back against it, as she stared up into a view screen. A huge map of the world was spread out on it with various colors pinpricking their way across it.

  Roberto pushed me into the room, just a little bit of force on my shoulder to make me move. My breath caught in my throat as I stumbled half a step into the room before forcing down my fear. Steel filled me with each successive step I took so that by the time I reached her side I was an invincible robot.

  Gabriella still hadn’t turned to look at me as I glanced from her to the huge map. “Colorful,” I said, my words cold and uncaring. “What’s it supposed to be?”

  “The pink ones are the places I’m going to bomb in the first wave. Red is where we expect the secondary fallout shelters will be. Black,” she turned to look at me as she spoke, “black will be where we unleash the viruses.”

  “Viruses?” I asked, running a hand through my hair in a show of brazen nonchalance. “Small pox?”

  “Yes, actually,” Gabriella replied, reaching out to poke my arm. Her flesh felt like paper as she pulled up my sleeve to show a bright red pinprick. “I took the liberty of having you vaccinated.”

  “Thanks,” I replied, barely resisting the urge to throw off her hand as she started to stroke my arm. “That was very kind of you.”

  “I know,” she said, looking past me toward Roberto. I didn’t see what he did but my mother nodded once before switching off the screen. Her chair swiveled toward me, and she seized my hands in hers. The movement was surprisingly quick for a lady who looked to be on her last legs. “You might think my methods are a bit…” she paused, twirling one hand in thought, searching for the words.

  Crazy, insane, diabolical? I offered in my mind.

  “Extreme,” she said after a moment. “But let me assure you, they are not. My actions will undo centuries of elitist bullshit. We say we have a meritocracy, and that’s how we justify the fact that the rich get richer while the poor get poorer. But it’s a lie.” She swiveled around so that her chair was facing the screen. She pointed at it and the huge screen flickered to life, showing a thousand companies in an instant… only it was spread out like a family tree.

  “Maybe it’s merit that the son of the CEO of Mega Corp 1 is the executive vice president of Mega Corp 2.” She glanced at me to see if I was paying attention, and then satisfied, she turned back toward the screen. “But all this inter-relation can’t be coincidence. You mean to tell me that the best and brightest all belong to the same couple families?”

  She grinned, showing her teeth. “We’re all just serfs pretending that we have choices in countries where presidencies are handed down through families like the kingdoms of old. I’m just going to stop the nepotism. Give us a chance to reset. Besides, if those people are so great, they’ll rise back to the top.”

  “With you as the leader?” I asked, not able to tear my eyes from the map because… unfortunately it made her seem slightly less crazy.

  “Me?” She laughed, and it turned into a wet, choking cough. “How am I to lead the world, Abby? I’m going to die in about three days. No…” She turned, pulling the visor off her head to reveal a pair of hazel eyes that looked exactly like mine. They were rimmed with red and bloodshot with deep purple bags under them. “My daughter, you are to rule the world.”

  “What?” I asked, trying to reach out toward her as the world went all sorts of topsy-turvy.

  “It’s why we broke you out, my dear. You are to inherit everything. You are to rule over it all. When my body fails, only your biometrics will unlock the keys to my kingdom. Once I’m done kicking over the elite, you’ll be the most powerful woman in the world.” She coughed again, bloody spittle dribbling down her lips before she could dab it away with a napkin that was blotched with red-brown stains. “It’s why they keep stealing you away from me, my daughter. They want to keep you from your inheritance.”

  “My inheritance? You just said you were going to give control over the whole world to a sixteen-year-old girl. Are you crazy?” I asked, unable to look at her because if what she said was true then the government had been lying to me. Which… okay, they had been doing for my whole life, but it also meant that Stephen and Esmeralda had been lying to me too.

  “I can assure you, Abigail, I am perfectly sane,” my mother replied, her lips in a tight smile.

  “What if I don’t believe you?” I asked before I could stop myself.

  “Well, it’s fortunate that my plans do not fully rest in the hands of a sixteen-year-old girl. I have contingencies in place, after all,” Gabriella de la Mancha said, waving one of her hands in dismissal. “In three days’ time, you’ll know the truth for yourself. If you don’t step up and seize control, the world will fall into chaos. Sure, I’ll kill a billion people… but you’ll kill so many more.”

  I opened my mouth to say something. What, I’m not sure, but something definitely, but just as the words were about to squeak out, Gabriella gestured at Roberto. “Why don’t you show my daughter back to her room? She has a lot to take in. Besides, there’s a certain someone there, whom I’m sure she’s dying to ask questions.”

  The world fell away at the sound of her words. Who would I want to question? Was it my mom? No… she was dead. That left only… Stephen.

  Chapter 15

  The door to my room swung open to reveal Donovan sitting on my bed. His golden hair fell around his face in a wave that made him seem girly rather than attractive. He was leaning back so that his chest muscles strained his black tank top. When he saw me looking at him, he grinned and raised one hand, waving at me.

  “Yo,” he said so casually that I couldn’t believe it. Hadn’t this jackass just killed my mother, and what about Stephen? Was he dead at the bottom of the ocean?

  Before I knew what happened, I was across the room. My hand lashed out, trying to slap him across the face, but it didn’t work. Donovan’s hand shot forward, seizing me by the wrist. He held me away as a wry grin spread across his face.

  “Mon petite, are you upset?” His voice was cool and calculated. His eyes filled with amusement. “Surely, it cannot be over the Esmeralda Banks business, can it?” he asked, quirking an eyebrow at me.

  Behind me, I heard the door whoosh closed, and as I glanced over my shoulder, I saw Roberto was nowhere to be found. I was all alone in this room… with Donovan.

  “Yes,” I snapped, turning back toward him in a rush, my other hand already moving.

  He sighed, free hand lashing out and smacking into my shoulder. Stars shot past my eyes as my limb fell limply to my side. He stood, jerking me forward off my feet and flinging me on the bed like a rag doll.

  I bounced once on the hard mattress, and a predatory gleam swam beneath the surface of his eyes. My heart went haywire as I scooted myself backward on the bed, kicking up the sheets as panic distilled everything into jerky movements.

  “Don’t worry, Abby,” he said, licking his lips before leaning back and putting his hands in his pockets. “I’m not going to have my way with you.”

  I stopped moving, heat rising across my cheeks as the panic was replaced by embarrassment because I was pretty sure that trying to do something bad to me in the middle of Gabriella’s base was
a death sentence. I sighed trying to think of way to ask him about Stephen, and more importantly, whose side he was on.

  “I can see thoughts flashing through your eyes, flitting to and fro like tiny fish beneath the waves,” he said, taking a step toward the bed so that his legs were resting against the edge. “Care to share?”

  “No,” I choked, my throat closing up so that the word was a sort of half-shriek. That had been my chance to ask him and I’d blown it. Why? Because I was scared he’d tell me the truth. That he was a traitor and that Stephen was dead. As long as he didn’t come out and say it, I could hang onto the last shred of hope that Stephen was still alive and coming to save me.

  “Look, Abby,” he said, suddenly serious as he sat down on the bed and patted the spot next to him. “Esmeralda and the rest of them are liars. What Gabriella told you is true. Well, at least as far as the whole, only your biometrics will control her system when she dies, thing is,” he waved his hand dismissively, “I’m not sure about the whole nepotism thing, though. That seems a little crazy.” He grinned at me, flashing his perfect teeth. “The idea that there’s a secret society of elites governing our every move is, to put it bluntly, insane.”

  “You work for a secret government agency that kidnaps children and fosters them in a fake town,” I said, looking at the spot beside him. Did he honestly think I was going to sit next to him? After he shot my mom in the gut and left her to die? “And right now, you seem like a traitor.”

  “Yes, and because of that, I know just how inept our government is. Yeah, they can hide secrets and things, but what goes around is mostly happenstance and poor planning. There’s corruption sure, but it’s mostly harmless.” Donovan shrugged, and his golden hair bobbed around his face.

  “Mostly harmless,” I repeated. “Gabriella de la Mancha just nuked two major cities. She’s going to firebomb a dozen others and unleash small pox on even more. All because they are ‘mostly harmless?’” I asked, making air quotes while I spoke. “I don’t think so, Donovan. Gabriella might be crazy, but if what you’re saying is even remotely true then she has nothing to gain.”

 

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