Vince couldn’t hear Zara’s response, but a hard knot lodged in his chest. His son thought he’d rejected him.
“Oh, little dude.” He unbuckled his seatbelt, reached over the seat and rubbed his son’s back. “You did nothing. I’ve always loved you.” He turned to Olivia. “Can you signal to Asher to pull off at the next exit?” He needed to speak to his son face to face.
A few minutes later, they were parked in front of a roadside hamburger joint. Vince jumped out and opened the back door of the truck.
“Darius, can you take a walk with me? I need to talk to you about some things. Just me and you.”
The boy’s eyes were still red from crying, but he climbed over Zara’s lap and took Vince’s hand.
“Asher and I will grab some food,” Olivia said. “Everyone okay with cheeseburgers?”
“D, do you want a peanut butter milkshake?” Zara asked. “I see they have them on the menu.”
Darius nodded, but remained quiet.
They headed to a kids’ play area next to the picnic tables. He sat Darius on a swing and knelt in front of him.
“Little dude, you did nothing wrong. Nothing. I promise.”
Darius didn’t believe him. “Then how come you weren’t there when I was little?”
His heart stung as if it had just been stabbed.
“Before you were born, your mom and I lived really far apart and we didn’t get to see each other very much. But I loved her a lot and had big plans for our future. When we learned that you were in her tummy, we decided to get married right away and be a mommy and daddy together. But then…” He cleared his throat, unsure how to explain this next part. “Then some bad people came and took me away before I could get your mom. She didn’t know what happened to me for a really long time. My mom and sister thought I must have died because they knew I wouldn’t stay away from them on purpose.”
“Why did the bad people take you away?”
Giving Darius a level look, he asked, “Do you know what a Talent is?”
“A person who knows magic?”
“Well, kind of. A Talent is someone who is born with a special ability, but sometimes you don’t know that you have one. When the bad people found out I was a Talent, they took me away and tried to make me work for them. To do bad things that would’ve hurt people.” People like you and your mom.
Darius’s eyes widened. “You’re a Talent?”
Vince nodded. “Yep.”
“Nicholas says Talents are wicked and that they cast spells on other people. They’re a-bottom-nations.”
Abominations.
Vince bristled. There were a few religious groups who taught that Talents were repugnant and that the other world didn’t really exist. A reverend with a popular vlog used to come into the prison to “heal” the sinners and drive the demons from their bodies. Given that they were there because they refused to use their talents for the army, it always struck him as odd that the army would allow the guy in.
“Well, Nicholas is wrong. I don’t know any spells, and as far as I remember, pixie dust has never come out of these.” He wiggled his fingers. “The only thing I can do is find portals to the other world, so I wouldn’t call that very magical. Not like turning someone into a chicken or something.”
Darius laughed. “That would be cool.”
“Only if you weren’t the chicken-guy.”
Darius laughed again, pushing back against the swing. Vince stood and moved out of his way.
“What did the bad people want you to do?” Darius swung forward and back, gaining momentum each time.
“They wanted me to show them how to get to the other world. But that’s where you and your mom were, so I told them no.”
“But isn’t that where the barbarians are from?”
Vince narrowed his eyes. “Who told you that? Nicholas?”
Darius nodded.
“Well, there are no barbarians over there. They’re people. In fact, everyone I’ve met from there is very nice. Uncle Asher, your mom…you.”
“Me?” Darius asked, bringing the swing to a halt.
Vince nodded. “Yes, you.”
Darius clamped his hands over his mouth and talked through his fingers. “I used to live in the other world?”
“Only when you were really little, so if you don’t remember anything, that’s why.”
Darius thought hard for a moment. “Did the bad people get mad at you when you didn’t tell them?”
Vince could tell that he was starting to understand. “Yes, very mad. That’s why they kept me away from you and your mom, even though I wanted to be with you more than anything in the world.”
“Oh.”
Vince could almost see the cogs spinning in the boy’s head. This was an awful lot for him to comprehend at one time.
“More than anything?” Darius asked.
“Yep. Anything.”
Then Darius’s eyes sparkled with mischief. “More than…a peanut butter milkshake?”
Vince grinned. “Way more than a peanut butter milkshake.”
Darius started swinging again. “How about a robot? One with laser beams in its eyes.”
Vince stood behind him and pushed. “I’d take you and your mom over a robot with laser beams for eyes any day of the week.”
“How about a billion times infinity?”
“That’s a lot.”
“That’s how much my mom loves me.”
“Yeah, well, more than a billion times infinity.” It occurred to him that it was all true, not just a silly game he was playing. He did want to be a husband to Zara, a father to Darius. A whole helluva lot. Maybe once they got to Cascadia, he could begin to put his awful memories behind him. Focus on the future for once instead of trying to right the past.
Vince continued to push Darius in the swing until he saw Olivia and Asher holding up several paper sacks.
“Food’s ready,” he said.
Tears stung his eyes as Darius grabbed his hand on the way back to the truck. He was starting to make inroads with his son, and a huge weight lifted from his shoulders.
It was almost unbearable that Darius thought he’d been the cause for Vince not being a part of his life, when nothing could be further from the truth.
Chapter Fourteen
A thin woman covered in tattoos flitted around Dr. Uri Dobrynin, blotting makeup on his forehead, brushing lint from his suit and arranging his hair.
Good God. The attention these video people paid to their appearances boggled his mind. In all his seventy-nine years, he’d never once worn face makeup.
The woman stepped aside and turned his chair. “How’s it look?”
He examined his reflection in the mirror. No shine on his forehead, his coloring was tanned and even, and his hair appeared thicker than normal.
“Not bad,” he grinned. Hell, he looked ten years younger. Maybe these video people were on to something.
The woman pressed her lips tightly together. “Try not to smile so wide when you’re on camera.”
He was about to ask why when heels clacked in the hallway. “How’re you doing, Doc?” It was Birdie Lyons’ personal assistant. “She’s almost ready for you.”
Ready for me? Shouldn’t the woman be waiting for him? After all, he was a guest on her show.
Uri was whisked into a small studio with a fake backdrop of New Seattle behind a glass desk. Birdie sat on one of two stools and wore a bright pink monstrosity on her head that matched her lips and suit. A technician was at her feet, adjusting the position of a light shining on her legs.
“How’s it look?” the man yelled.
“Jesus. We’re not doing a vaj shot,” was the reply from somewhere behind the cameras. “A little to the left and down.”
“Doctor, welcome. Please, have a seat.” Birdie held out her hand but didn’t lean forward. He had to stretch over the table to clasp it. “I’ll do a quick introduction and then we’ll get started, okay?”
“Did you get my
bio? It should’ve been emailed to someone on your staff.”
The anchorwoman flicked her hand. “Too long so we pared it down. The viewers have short attention spans. Can’t give them a reason to surf to another channel, now can we?”
Somewhat irritated, the doctor sat back on the stool. Hearing from the head of the Institute wasn’t reason enough to stay tuned?
A cameraman held up his hand. Birdie sat straight and gave a plastic smile.
“Hello, everyone. I’m Birdie Lyons and this is the Lyon Report. Today, we’re in the studio with Dr. Uri Dobrynin. He’s the director at the prison from which convict Vincent Crawford escaped.” She turned slightly in her chair. “So, Doctor, can you tell us what was going on in the prison the day this happened?”
What about the introduction? The bio that listed all his accomplishments and degrees? “Um…uh. It…was…a normal day, I guess.”
“So you’re saying that it’s normal—” she finger-quoted and winked at the camera “—for convicts to escape from your facility on any given day?”
Uri sputtered. “Of course that’s not what I’m saying.” He looked around for Bradford, his personal bodyguard, but the lights were too bright.
She consulted a tablet in front of her. The back of the device, the side pointing to the camera, was covered in pink crystals. “According to my sources, quite a large number of dangerous criminals, all Talents of some degree or another, have escaped from the Institute since you started your research.” She looked into the camera. “Dangerous criminals like Vincent Crawford, ladies and gents.” She turned back to the doctor. “Can you tell us how something like that can happen in what is supposed to be a maximum security facility?”
The doctor quickly collected his thoughts. “While there have been some escapes, that number went way down when we started using Impedio, a drug that blocks a Talent’s special ability.”
“And was Vincent Crawford on this so-called Impedio?”
“Yes, he was.”
Birdie nodded her head thoughtfully. “Doctor, can you tell us what Vincent Crawford’s Talent is? Just what is it that makes him so valuable?”
The doctor grimaced. “I’m afraid that’s classified information.”
“Classified, huh?” Birdie raised an eyebrow at the camera. “Folks, my sources say Crawford’s talent has something to do with portals.” She turned back to the doctor. “Can you at least confirm that?”
Who the hell were her sources? Someone on his staff? If so, someone was going to pay. “No, uh, I’m afraid not.”
Unfazed, Birdie smiled. She shuffled some papers on the desk in front of her; pretended to be reading them. They were blank. It was all for show. “Let’s switch gears for a moment then, shall we?”
Uri was sweating under these lights. Things were progressing much faster than he had anticipated.
“A car matching the description of one seen at the time of the escape has been traced back to a woman who lives in Roseville with her son. A little digging on our part and we learned this woman hasn’t shown up for work since before Crawford’s escape.” She turned back to the camera. “I know what you’re thinking. What about the roadblocks, Birdie? The whole region has been hamstrung and many people haven’t been able to get to work. I agree. However,” she held up a finger, “according to the woman’s landlady, a couple had been staying at her residence to watch the woman’s son. And, no, the woman wasn’t on vacation. We don’t believe it’s a coincidence. We believe this woman helped him escape.” She swiveled back toward Uri and asked pointedly, “Doctor, what exactly is the relationship between her and Crawford?”
Anger roiled inside him. Birdie Lyons was grasping at straws, inventing gossip when there was no story. He was done trying to cooperate. He’d get up and end this ludicrous interview right now, but he wasn’t sure how that would come across on camera. “There are no conjugal visits at the Institute, if that’s what you’re asking. The prisoners are not allowed visitors of any kind.”
Birdie motioned with her finger for the camera to come closer. Almost instantly, a short musical clip began to play in the background. The doctor didn’t know if he was still on camera or not, so he glanced at the monitor. The screen showed a close-up of Birdie with a graphic that said A Little Birdie Told Me, but then it swung over and focused in on him.
He blinked, confused. What was going on? It occurred to him, too late, that he might be being railroaded.
“Doctor, a little birdie told me something very interesting.”
“Uh…um…”
“We believe that this woman and Crawford used to be lovers. And that her boy,” she said slowly, pausing to heighten the drama, “is Crawford’s son.”
Vincent had a son? That was the most absurd thing he’d ever heard. Choking on his spittle, the doctor stood from his stool so quickly that it clattered to the floor behind him. “Impossible.”
A pink feather on her headpiece dipped and bobbed. “The boy and his mother have been living right under your nose. This. Whole. Time.”
Now it was his turn to look smug. This woman was all about fluff and ratings. Her quote unquote facts were nothing more than figments dreamed up by a staff who should be writing fiction, not news stories. “The man has been locked up for years. He’s had no visitors. Hell, even his family didn’t know where he was.”
Birdie rolled her eyes at the camera, winked, then turned back to the doctor. “So you’re saying it’s impossible to father a child when you’re—” She counted on her fingers for the audience’s benefit, “—eighteen years old?”
“That’s not what I’m— No, we would’ve known…” Where the hell was Bradford? He was supposed to be nearby.
“A simple check into the woman’s background shows nothing beyond eight years ago. Nothing. Her son is ten. This confused us at first.” Then her perplexed frown transformed into a slow, confident smile. “But then we figured it out. Ladies and gents, we believe the woman is…” she paused again, “…from Cascadia.” Dramatic music, like an audio exclamation mark, surged throughout the studio and ended on a single violin note that held as Birdie finished her point. “And that this boy was conceived over there after Crawford visited through a portal.”
The music faded away, and Uri’s head began to pound. What the hell was she talking about? This couldn’t be possible. But even as he thought that, images of Vincent’s drawings flashed in his head. That girl was over here now? How could he have missed that? And she…they had a son? He’d pumped Vincent so full of truth serum, and he’d revealed lots of secrets. Surely he’d have admitted he had a son and that the woman he loved was over here.
Unless…
Vincent hadn’t known.
Birdie was still talking. “I’d like to know, as would my viewers, what’s to prevent them from running through a portal and escaping back to Cascadia?”
Now it was the doctor’s turn to laugh. “They can run, but they can’t hide.” He cringed at how unoriginal that sounded, but it was true. He wanted her goddamn audience to know he meant business.
He started to say more but stopped himself. Birdie and her viewers didn’t need to know that he had people over there right now setting up a sleeper-cell, thanks to the information Vincent had given him while under the influence of the truth serum.
The problem with the army was that they only knew how to use force and might to achieve their goals, when perhaps the best way was to infiltrate the enemy and get them to trust you first.
Chapter Fifteen
The Iron Haven was nestled in a remote wilderness area surrounded by a swirling layer of fog so thick it could have been a low-lying cloud. Even though it was late, a couple was waiting for them on the front steps. The man wore a kilt, his arm draped casually around the woman’s shoulders.
“That’s Rickert and Neyla,” Olivia whispered so as not to wake Darius.
Zara stood at the door as Vince gently lifted their sleeping son from the back seat of the truck and carried him inside. They fo
llowed Neyla down a hallway and into a small bedroom. She pulled back the comforter on one of the beds and removed several hot water bottles scattered on the sheet.
“We don’t have central heating,” she whispered, “so it gets pretty cold back here.”
“Mama?” Darius mumbled as Vince laid him down.
“Right here, baby.” Zara bent and kissed him on the forehead. “You go back to sleep now, okay?”
He grabbed her arm to keep her from leaving. “Where are you going?”
“I’ll just be in the next room, talking to the grown-ups.”
“But I don’t want to be by myself.”
“You’re not, buddy, I’ll—”
“I’ll stay with him, Zara,” Vince said from behind her. “If that’s okay with you, little dude?”
Zara had no idea what the two of them had talked about on the swing set, but evidently it had been impactful.
“Clear over there?” Darius looked at the other twin bed only a few feet away as if it were a mile.
“Do you want me to lay here with you till you fall asleep?”
Darius frowned. “I want you to stay here all night.”
“Tell you what. I’ll stay till you fall asleep, then I’ll go talk to the grown-ups for a little bit, then I’ll come back. But you have to promise me something.”
“What?”
“It’s really important.”
“Okay, okay,” Darius said impatiently.
“No snoring.”
Darius clamped a hand over his mouth and laughed. “I don’t snore.”
Vince flashed a conspiratorial smile. “Well, when your aunt Olivia was your age, she snored really loud. I used to tease her that she sounded like a pig.”
Darius snickered.
“Shhh. Do not tell her I told you that. She’ll kill me.”
Zara saw what Vince was doing. He was getting Darius to focus on something funny instead of worrying about the negative. Very clever.
Darius settled into the pillow and seemed satisfied with that plan.
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