by Kelly Meding
“Right.” We’d need all the muscle we could get, depending on—“And try to get a rough estimate of how many Halfies we’re looking at.”
“Of course.”
“Then let’s do this.”
Chapter Seventeen
12:45 P.M.
The fact that Phin reeked of fresh paint didn’t strike me as a concern until he was in the air and on his way toward the ferry terminal. Feathers glistening black, he was the only hooked-beak raven in existence, and I couldn’t rid myself of the ridiculous image of his human form with black paint streaks all over it. If nothing else, it was something to occupy myself with while we waited for him to return. Or for Astrid to officially declare a target.
Either one, as long as something happened soon.
Kyle twisted around in the front seat to face rear, his expression pinched. Someone he loved was out there, hoping for rescue, and I waited patiently for his accusations—that Lynn was targeted because of Kyle’s connection to me, and this was all my fault. Standard fare, really. Anyone in my orbit was fair game for inclusion in the violent insanity of my afterlife.
“You do your mate proud,” Kyle said. For a moment, I thought he was talking to someone else in the car, maybe Shelby. But no, he was staring right at me with those sad, coffee-colored eyes. I’d forgotten that in the eyes of the Therians, Wyatt was my mate. He’d declared it so during my disappearance/kidnapping, in order to secure the assistance of the Assembly. Although we weren’t technically together (if we ever were) anymore, the declaration stuck. Therians didn’t divorce. Mates were chosen for life.
Maybe if we humans chose for life, we’d pick more carefully the first time around.
“How’s that?” I asked.
“You’re here, continuing to assist in the rescue of others while he lays dying of a disease wrought by one of ours.”
“You’re wrong.” Kyle blinked, surprised by my snapped response, so I hurried to clarify. “The Lupa are not one of yours, Kyle. They’re nothing like the Therians I’ve met since coming to the Watchtower.”
He tilted his head, a gesture of understanding.
“Besides,” I added, “Wyatt would want me here.”
Phin’s cell phone rang. Crap. I yanked it out of his discarded jeans—Astrid—and set it to speaker.
“Yeah?” I said by way of greeting.
“Why the blue hell did one of my Pinnia scouts tell me that a crow about the size of the average osprey just flew onto one of those ferries?” Astrid asked without preamble. Oh yeah, she was pissed.
“I have no idea why the Pinnia scout would tell you that,” I replied. Not exactly denying it, just not confirming it.
Astrid huffed. “Regardless, they confirmed your target. Two boats, one on each side of the loading pier. Backup ETA is five minutes. If your crow returns before we get there—”
“We’re going in from the pier. Tell Baylor’s team to come down the loading driveway from the north, and Kismet’s to come up the parking lot side from the south. Everyone else, straight into the pier.”
A pause, then, “Okay. I’ll signal when we’re in position. We go in hard and fast.”
“We’ll tell you which boat we’re hitting first as soon as the crow gets back.”
“Good enough.”
After I hung up, I gave the others a wry smile. “That went better than I expected.”
Our “crow” returned before two more minutes had passed and, sure enough, Phin shifted back with black streaks running across his torso, arms, and legs. One smudge went straight across his forehead like a painted-on bandanna. “North boat,” he said.
“Did you see them?” Kyle asked as we piled out of the SUV.
“No. They’re likely being kept in interior rooms, and I couldn’t get in without being spotted. Michael Jenner’s scent lingered on the pier and deck of the northern boat. He was there within the last few hours. No scent carried to the southern boat.”
“Fabulous,” I said. I texted the information to Astrid and reported my conversation with her to Phin at the same time.
Shelby stripped off his T-shirt and sneakers, leaving on only a pair of loose workout shorts. “I’ll shift once we’re onboard,” he said. “Should scare the beejeebus out of some of those damned half-Bloods, coming face-to-face with a five-hundred-pound polar bear.”
“No doubt.” I glanced around for Kyle; he’d already shifted into his dingo form and seemed eager for the hunt. Eager to find and rescue his love.
Phin put his jeans back on, then adjusted the strap holding his Coni blade close to his hip. Blue eyes blazing, he looked at each of us in turn. “Let’s go hunting,” he said.
Street traffic was moderate for midmorning—mostly delivery trucks and the occasional lost motorist. We stuck to the alley we were in, and it led us due west. Past the next block, we crossed a one-way street and came out close to the boarded-up Terminal building. In the shadows of its cracked-glass walls and faded aluminum roof, Phin bi-shifted, allowing his majestic, powerful wings to appear. Streaked in black paint and as menacing as I’d ever seen him, Phin no longer looked the part of the angel I’d once mistaken him to be. He looked like a demon about to unleash his wrath upon unsuspecting victims.
His phone chirped; he checked it. “Other teams in position,” he whispered. “It’s now or never.”
My pulse sped up, as did my breathing. Adrenaline coursed through me. My toes tingled, and I pulled one of my guns, testing its unfamiliar weight. Hard and fast, just like I liked it. I pulled at threads of loneliness, fueled by my need to have Wyatt battling by my side today, and my tap to the Break sparked. I kept that spark close, tickling the front of my mind, just in case I needed it.
“Time to have some fun,” Tybalt said.
Boarding the north ferry was something of a blur, spurred by adrenaline and fraught with the lingering fear that, by doing this, we were ensuring the deaths of those we’d come to save. Shelby had shifted, and he used his furry white bulk to break down the passenger loading doors. The ferry was anchored so close to the pier that a ramp wasn’t necessary. Just a quick jump across a slice of stagnant water, and we were onboard.
Onboard and in a stairwell of sorts. Most of the glass partitions were shattered, only metal frames remaining. Straight ahead was an empty area where the loaded cars parked. To our right and left, metal staircases led to the upper passenger decks and observation areas. Nothing stirred in the car lot, so up we went. Phin, me, and Kyle-the-dingo to the left; Tybalt, Paul, and Shelby-the-polar-bear to the right.
Our entrance must have both alerted and confused the Halfies we found on the next deck. I barely caught a glimpse of dormitory-style futons and cheap furniture behind the bodies of the Halfies swarming toward us from all directions. Young, in shape, and clear-thinking due to whatever it was Thackery was feeding them, they attacked with a precision and coordination I didn’t expect.
Phin launched himself at the crowd with a cry and a gust of wind from his wings. Kyle snarled and pounced on the nearest bare throat.
I aimed away from them and began firing. I’d never be a perfect marksman, but human torsos made nice big targets. Three half-Bloods went down right away, screeching and clawing at their chests. Bullets hurt no matter who you were; bullets laced with something your kind was violently allergic to hurt like fucking hell.
I fired again, and a fourth went down. The crush of bodies increased. A hand crashed down on my wrist, and I lost the gun. Air exploded from my lungs—I felt the ache in my back a split-second later. My knees buckled. Instead of fighting it and losing my balance, I instinctively dropped to a crouch—well timed, as the air of a missed punch whizzed past my head. Using my right hand for support, I plucked a blade from my ankle with my left hand, then shot that foot out backward. Connected with something hard and made someone scream.
The roar of a bear vibrated the floor, as did the thundering of additional footsteps in the metal stairwell nearby. Backup or more Halfies—we’d soon see.
> I sliced upward with my left hand. Blade met skin, and warm blood splashed my arm. I contemplated my backup gun just as a symphony of shots popped off nearby. Too many to be my lost weapon. Backup was here.
A Halfie about my age, long blond hair done up in dozens of small braids, slammed into me sideways. We hit the deck in a tangle of arms and legs. Fangs snapped at my throat. Her breath smelled like old pennies. I worked one leg up between us and leveraged her away, rolled us somehow, and came up on top. I drove my knee down into her stomach. She hissed and kept an iron grip on my left wrist, the blade angled away.
A hand tangled in my hair and yanked so hard that I saw stars. I lost my hold on the girl and was pulled, via hair, to my feet. I couldn’t stop the scream of shock and pain. Strong arms looped around my waist and held me tight to a strong chest.
Shit.
The crush of Halfies near the stairwell left a semi-open area that looked like a poor college campus’s version of a rec room. I pulled on my tap to the Break and let its power tingle through my body. Focused on that open space and shattered. Heard the Halfie cry out in surprise.
The brief, headache-inducing teleport put us away from the main fight, next to a stained futon. The shock of it loosened the Halfie’s arms. I broke free, and spun and sliced his throat in one quick motion. He flopped onto the futon.
I paused a moment to catch my breath. The air reeked of something both familiar and foreign—and ultimately nauseating when I realized it was the smell of sex. I guess the Halfies, being of a certain virile age, needed something to entertain themselves.
This entire deck seemed to be a hangout for the Halfie horde, which meant Thackery was either on the deck above, or he was hiding below in the engine room. And up seemed less likely than down.
Additional familiar faces had entered the fray, and bleeding bodies were piling up. Tybalt moved through the fight like a dancer, his prosthetic blade slicing throats and torsos and limbs, carving a path for more of our fighters to join in. On the other end of the deck, Paul fought like a whirling dervish, cracking skulls and breaking bones with each resounding contact with his aluminum bat.
Phin broke away from the battle, arms streaked with red, eyes blazing with battle lust. He had a particularly wriggly Halfie by the throat and was dragging him along like a piece of luggage. Phin threw the Halfie hard against a metal bulkhead, and I swore I heard bones crack. Maybe twenty years old, the Halfie slumped to the floor, whimpering. Phin stepped on the kid’s ankle, and this time I did hear a bone crack. The half-Blood screamed.
“Where are the Therians being held?” Phin asked. The intensity of his appearance aside, by his tone he could have been asking for directions to Uptown.
“Down below,” the kid replied, sobbing openly. His small fangs had torn through his lower lip, and blood streaked his chin.
“Thank you.” Phin reached down and snapped his neck cleanly. The body slumped to the ground.
The heart of the continuing battle was centered around the stairwell—the only visible access to the lower decks. Phin could fly through easily, but I’d have to fight my way past and that would take time. “The parking area is below us, right?” I asked.
“Yes.”
“Empty, open, no obstacles that you saw?”
He seemed to understand where I was going with this. “None that I recall. Can you?”
“We’ll see.”
“I’ll meet you down there.”
Phin rose up in a gust of air, his wings beating hard in the enclosed area. He soared close to the ceiling, slicing a few Halfie throats as he went. I pulled on my tap again, opening up to even more power. Everything snapped and crackled as I teleported through the floor of an old ferryboat and materialized on the deck below. A dagger of pain poked me between the eyes, and I stumbled. The din and crash of fighting continued overhead, as well as outside and across the dock, echoing through the cavern of the parking deck.
“This way,” Phin said.
I spun toward his voice. He stood across the parking area from the stairwell, about ten yards from me. I jogged over and didn’t see the door until I was almost on top of it. Probably designed to fade into the walls and not be noticed by passengers, the metal door had NO ADMITTANCE printed in small block letters. Just below it, hand-painted, was a late-addition caveat, probably put there by Thackery: Without Permission, Under Penalty of Execution.
Dude ran a tight ship. So to speak.
“Bingo,” I said. The only thing I didn’t see was a handle of any sort. “So what do we do? Say Open Sesame?”
“An explosive of some sort would be useful,” Phin said.
“I left my C4 in my other pants.”
He huffed. Took a step back and slammed his foot down on the spot a doorknob would normally be found. The reverberation shook the wall and echoed behind. Phin stumbled back, eyebrows furrowed, lips tight.
“Sounds hollow just behind it,” I said. “Pray it stays that way for the next twenty seconds, or this is really going to hurt.”
“Evy?”
I closed my eyes and imagined an empty stairwell landing just behind the metal door. Fell into the Break and let it shatter me. The knife between my eyes stabbed a little deeper, burned a little hotter, and I moved through the door. Sensed the open space around me, and pulled back out. A wave of vertigo nearly bowled me over. Three teleports in less than five minutes. My body felt like jelly, my head like a zit about to pop.
It was also pitch black, so regaining my equilibrium took a moment. A fist pounding on the other side of the door helped orient my sense of direction. I felt along the rectangle of cool metal until I found a solid bar. Pushed down and out, and the door swung open.
The flash of light illuminated a steel stairwell that went both up and down—probably staff stairs to get from the upper deck to the engine rooms. Phin slipped inside with me, and we descended. I kept my hand firmly on the slick, grimy rail as the door swung shut and cast us both into blackness.
At the bottom, I traded my knife for my second gun, unsure what we’d find behind Door Number Two. My heart hammered against my ribs, and my mouth was dry.
“I smell them,” Phin said, his voice barely a whisper of sound. “Stay behind me.”
I considered objecting, but this was Phin’s family. His heritage as a Coni. He slipped around me. Metal squealed. Light splashed through the door, along with the most bizarre odor combination of antiseptic and scorched hair. We were at one end of a long, low-ceilinged corridor of gray metal. Exposed lightbulbs ran along the ceiling, spaced every five feet or so, giving the gray metal a sickly yellowish glow. I expected warm, dank air, something like a basement, and instead got a waft of coolness around my ankles.
Wings tucked close to his back, Phin crept silently forward. I allowed the door to close as quietly as I could, but it really didn’t matter. Thackery had to know we were here.
A few paces from the stairwell, we found a long row of Plexiglas windows inserted where walls had probably once stood. Behind them, our Holy Grail. Individual cells, each roughly the size of a modest bathroom, composed of stark metal walls and floors, with a plastic bucket and nothing else. And in each cell, a naked, prostrate body.
Phin pressed his palm flat against the Plexiglas window of the first cell, shoulders tense. “Joseph,” he said.
The wrinkled, ancient Coni lay facing us, one bony arm stretched out toward the Plexiglas window. His thin chest rose and fell, and a small puddle of drool had formed on the floor by his open mouth. A bloodstained white bandage was taped to his temple—the source of the blood we’d found at the country house, I’d bet. The sight constricted my chest and settled a ball of hot anger deep in my guts.
The cell wall had a rectangular line that framed the window much like a door, but there was no handle or indication of how the damned thing opened. While Phin continued inspecting the cells I smashed the butt of my gun against the Plexiglas, and the impact shook my wrist without making a dent.
“Leah de L
oew, Lynn Neil, Dawn Jenner,” Phin said as he spotted each person.
With every name, the heavy weight on my heart lifted just a little. I followed him down the line, glancing at each person, horrified to find each one as naked and unconscious as Joseph. God, what had Thackery been doing to them?
Phin stopped at the last cell and stared. Aurora and Ava had to be in that one. His silence ratcheted up my pulse. I stepped to his side and glanced in, braced to see a helpless child asleep on the floor.
All I saw was an empty cell. Two more windows stretched past us. I checked each one; neither was occupied. “Goddammit!” I said.
A metallic bang echoed from the far end of the corridor. I didn’t wait; I just ran. Past other doors that led to unused engines and storage rooms, past newer-looking doors that probably hid whatever horrors Thackery had been conducting down here these last few months. Or maybe years. The lit bulbs thinned out to every third or fourth, and the air took on a slightly danker feel. We were moving out of the used portion of this deck, toward the bow of the ferry, which meant—
“He has a way out,” Phin said, keeping pace behind me.
A lot of snarky retorts—no shit, ya think?—died before they made it past my lips. I wasn’t angry at Phin. I was angry that Aurora and Ava were still missing, and that Thackery had a head start on us. Assuming he was on board in the first place.
The corridor ended at a T junction. To the right was a hatch marked Buoyancy Tank, and to the left another heavy door. Probably a stairwell. I had only a vague idea that a buoyancy tank wouldn’t make a good escape route, but the stairwell should take us back up to the sundeck and navigation. If Thackery was getting off the boat, it was from above.
We thundered up the stairs, once again in pitch dark. Light sprinkled down briefly from two decks above, and an upper door banged shut. The narrow, twisty stairwell made it impossible for Phin to fly straight up, and I didn’t have the concentration to attempt another teleport—not with zero idea of what to expect on the sundeck.