So, Alvarez and April die, Mutter becomes the new leader, only April isn’t really dead. Yeah, that was suspicious. But Keisha must have considered that. If not, I wasn’t about to get her riled up.
Keisha went on. “I liked Alvarez—she ran a good operation. She kept us up to speed on what the Inner Circle wanted, didn’t treat us like mushrooms.”
I rubbed my neck, looked out the window. “Sucks.”
We sat there for a while longer, just sharing the companionship.
I don’t know if Keisha and I were friends, but I hadn’t felt this close to someone since Lenore in Special Corrections, and prison friendships weren’t the same thing. Trust no one all the way, not even me, Leonore used to say.
We had an early dinner. Mutter said we had a day or so before the job. None of us were to leave, nor make any calls. We were basically prisoners in that damn farmhouse.
Mutter made us turn in our phones, but I still had a plastic, stealth Support burner phone in a hidden compartment in my duffle bag.
Gus cornered me on the stairs, appearing out of nowhere like he could do. “We need to talk, Mat.”
I jumped when he did his unblending act. “Geez, Gus, do you have to appear like that here?”
He was being very melodramatic, like a gangster with a secret, deadly serious. “Let’s go outside.”
“Mutter’s going to get suspicious if he sees us going off to chat, don’t you think?”
“Okay. I’ll meet you down by the river in fifteen.”
I didn’t recognize this version of Gus. He acted so determined, so sure of himself. Surprised me.
I needed to go outside without making anyone else suspicious.
Peep was in the kitchen, drinking beer, his special specs on the table in front of him. He seemed shrunken without the glasses on. l didn’t want him looking through my eyes to see Gus, but I wouldn’t put it past the creep.
He looked up as I stomped into the kitchen, heading to the back door.
The clock above the stove said 8:06. It was night now, but as long as a peeper could see a person good enough to pick them out, they could see out of their eyes. Tanya had been able to read lips; I was sure Peep could, too.
“Where are you going?” Peep asked.
“Outside. I need some air.”
“You tell Mutter?” He stared at his mostly empty beer.
“I don’t want to be grilled, Peep. I just need a walk.”
“Fine.”
I put my hand on the doorknob, turned back. Peep took a swig from his beer, drained the last of it.
Then it hit me. He was afraid. Peep, loyal follower, mister creepy, was frightened.
He pushed back his chair, went to the fridge, opened another beer, and took a long swallow, ignoring me. He wasn’t going to be following me and trying to sneak a peep.
The night felt ominous as I walked down the grassy slope to the river. Lights from some sort of industrial facility shone on the Oregon side of the river. A bird called in a tree nearby, and then there was an answering call from an island in the river. I sensed willow trees, half submerged, on that island.
I reached the water’s edge, closed my eyes, and let the quiet hum of the willows wash over me. All they knew was the water, the water-filled soil, and the water's comings and goings. The willows' world was a little island in the mighty Columbia. The trees were ignorant of the factory or whatever it was across the river, and the Interstate on the ridge a half mile behind me, beyond the farmhouse and Mutter’s secret underground villain lair.
I knew how the willows felt.
So much of this world I didn’t know. “The miracle of the powers” some said of our powers. Or the curse. Where did it come from? God? The Devil? Honestly I had never thought much about it. The great mystery of our time, the TV liked to call it. Even the Professor had said our powers “defied scientific explanation.” Even we Empowered were in the dark about where our powers had come from.
A sudden splash and swearing jolted me.
“Gus?” I whispered. Or had Peep decided to follow me down to the river?
“Yeah.” Gus appeared beside a flat rock the size of a coffee table, bent down and wiped his legs. “I didn’t see that rock.” He kicked the flat rock, cursed it.
“It’s just a rock.” I walked over to a tree stump and perched on it, hugging myself for warmth. The night had turned out to be colder than I thought.
I heard him take in a deep breath, like he was working himself up to something.
I shifted on the stump, rubbed my arms. Why hadn’t I thought to bring my jacket?
The silence drew out until I itched to end it.
“Gus, what is it?”
“We both work for the same people.” He blurted the words.
“Excuse me. The world seemed to tilt.
“Support.”
I swallowed. “I don’t know what you’re talking about, dude.”
“Yes you do.”
How did he--? “This one of Mutter’s loyalty tests, Gus?”
He laughed bitterly. “He’d pull that kind of shit, wouldn’t he? But he’s not, this time.” He tapped his chest. “I’m”—he paused. “I’m an informant for Winterfield and Sanchez. I’m why you were selected.”
“Selected?”
The bitter laugh again. “Yeah. I was caught about two years after you went to Special Corrections—I’d been stealing food from restaurants, and one night, just after snagging dinner from an Italian place, Support hit me with sonics and a stunner. Can’t hide from that. I woke up in some secret underground facility. They gave me a choice. Prison for life or work for them.”
The same damn choice they’d given me. Bastards.
Those in the know control the ignorant.
“So you took the offer.”
“Yeah, weasel Gus, right? What choice did I have?”
Gus, the most fearful person I’d ever known in my life, getting told to infiltrate the Scourge.
“They must have had info on the Scourge cell.”
“It took me a long time to find the cell, but I finally did, and approached Alvarez. If it had been Mutter, I don’t think I’d have had a chance. The man is way too suspicious.”
“Yeah. Then what?”
“I committed crimes for the cell and the Scourge. Alvarez was killed. We thought Flame,” he paused, “I mean April, died too. Mutter took over.”
I jumped up. “Damn Winterfield,” I said, and my voice was a harsh rasp. “Mushrooms, being fed shit, that’s all we’ve been to him.”
“I couldn’t tell you, Mat. I was ordered not to. And I was afraid.”
I clenched my jaw so hard my face started to hurt, and my fingers dug into my thighs.
Alex—that flash of recognition on Gus’s face when we brought Keisha to the safe house, that should have tipped me off.
I grabbed him by the shoulders. “So, you reported on me?” Rage poured through me like lava.
“I’m, I’m sorry Mat. I had to.”
Damn those two men. They had me so fingered. Their favorite mushroom.
I shoved him away. “Why tell me now, Gus? Why break your silence? You’ve been a good little spy for Winterfield and Alex.”
He stumbled and fell.
My shoulders sagged. Just like that, my anger was gone. I just felt cold and empty inside.
“Maybe I deserved that, Mat,” Gus said. He picked himself up, holding his left wrist.
A stab of guilt ran through me but I wasn’t going to apologize.
“Why tell me now?” I repeated.
“Because Mutter’s lying about the target.”
“I knew it smelled wrong. Bullshit about tech that could alter plants.”
“That’s just it, Mat, the tech can alter plants.”
“So it’s not about the tech?”
“It is about the tech, just not the way Mutter spun it. The device we’re supposed to steal amplifies an Empowered’s ability. Makes a power way stronger and more potent. So, yeah, i
f you had the Amplifier, it would amplify your plant abilities, let you create new species, change the biology. You name it. You’d almost be like a god.”
That was a horrible thought. A device that could boost an Empowered. Turn you into a super human of super humans. Shit. I didn’t want to think about Mutter or April with that kind of power. Hell, I didn’t want to think about me with that kind of power. No one should have it.
Steam rose from the factory across the river, disappeared into the black night.
“You’d be invisible if you used it, wouldn’t you? Do you wear this amplifier whatever it is thing?”
“Yeah. Some kind of harness.” He rubbed the side of his face. “Mutter wants it for himself. I think he could create tornadoes or even worse.”
“Why isn’t this better guarded?”
“Because Support doesn’t know they have it.”
He stepped close, dared to put his hand on my shoulder. “I spied on Mutter and April after the Lansing Building heist. They used that as cover to go after Van Cleeve, because he’d been involved in a secret power boosting project for the Hero Council, a long time ago.”
“The Amplifiers.”
“They were supposed to be destroyed, but for some reason Van Cleeve arranged to have two kept intact and hidden inside Support. They were hidden at the bottom of this Sequoia complex. A long time ago.”
The Professor told me once that the best way to lie is to hide it inside the truth. That’s what Mutter had done. What Van Cleeve had done.
Mutter would be worse than just dangerous if he had that thing. “And he needed to keep the Scourge in the dark.”
Gus exhaled sharply. “This is his plan. For him only.”
Winterfield and Alex would want to know, but if they knew, they might stop it. I needed my freedom. If Mutter was captured, my family would be in his sights.
“Okay, so now we know,” I said.
“We need to leave, Mat.”
“What? No.” No way I’d leave now. I couldn’t let that bastard have an amplifier. He’d become king of the world.
“We have to,” he insisted. “Mutter’s going to kill us all.”
“No, if we leave, he’ll come after us.” Or come after my family.
“It’s the only way to survive.
“Make a beeline to Support, is that it?”
He leaned in close to me. “Yes! Let them nab the guy before he could get his hands on the amplifier.” He looked me pleadingly.
But that would blow any chance I had of worming my way into the Inner Circle. By the terms of my assignment, I would have failed. Back to prison for me. And, like I said, Mutter could still hurt my family from Special Corrections. No, I needed to end this. Permanently.
“I’m staying.” I crossed my arms.
“But Support needs to be told about his plan.”
I shook my head. “That’s not my assignment, Gus.”
He shook his head. “What? What are you up to, if it isn’t to spy?”
Funny. Gus wasn’t thinking. Now that I knew he was Support’s informant in Mutter’s cell, Winterfield’s plan was even more obvious—of course I was supposed to find a way to get to the Inner Circle, otherwise why did Support need me?
But Support hadn’t told him. Once a mushroom, always a mushroom.
I pulled Gus close, whispered in his ear. “This goes further than just ratting Mutter out.” If I wanted, I could tell Support. I had the burner phone, I could use it.
“Damn it, Mat, we are in the shit now.”
“We’ve been in the shit for a long time now, Gus.”
If he had a burner phone of his own, I was screwed. But he hadn't said anything, and I wasn’t going to ask him and tip him off that I had one.
He begged me again, but I wouldn’t budge. He disappeared.
I called out, but there was no answer. Fine. I had to do this.
CHAPTER 16
A cyclone invaded my nightmares. I stood on one of the bridges over the Willamette. The sky was a bright blue, blue as could be with the sun shining down. And then the winds began to blow and blow. Buildings swayed. Cars slammed together and smashed into guardrails. The bridges swayed. The wind’s howl became a scream. The hurricane winds pulled trees from the ground and hurled them into high-rise buildings.
I thought I heard someone sobbing, wailing tearful pleas amid the raging storm, but I couldn’t make out who it was. I slept.
Someone was shaking me. I tried to stay asleep but they kept shaking me.
“Mat.” The voice was an urgent whisper.
I groaned. “What is it?”
Keisha knelt beside my bed. It was still night. “Mutter wants us down in the bunker.”
“At this hour?” I sat up. “What time is it?”
“Too damn early.”
I rubbed my eyes. “Don’t we get to eat breakfast first?” This is where the hurry began, and the run up to Seattle.
“After.” She gripped my arm. “Listen, I can’t find Gus.”
My empty stomach twisted. He had done it. Gus had taken off. “He’s not in his room?”
“That was the first place I checked. He’s not hanging out.”
“Maybe he’s just hiding. Blending.”
“I don’t think so. You know he can’t keep it up for more than a little while.”
“Shit. Shit. Shit. Mutter’s going to…" I stopped. Closed my eyes. I didn’t want to think about that. “Do something nasty when he finds out,” I finished.
I got up and went down to the bunker.
Our boots on the metal stairs sounded like the echo of doom all the way down. Gus had run for it. God damn him. I tried to force myself to calm down. Thinking about how Mutter would react when he learned Gus was gone made me jumpy, which made me angry.
I stomped into the briefing room with Keisha trailing behind me.
Peep, April, and Mutter waited around the table. Mutter was tapping his fingers on the tabletop. He wore that styling undertaker black suit of his, a satisfied smile on his smug face.
“Nice of you to join us,” he said. He sounded pleased with himself.
We sat.
Mutter raised an eyebrow. “Where is Blender?”
“I couldn’t find him,” Keisha said. I could see she was fighting to stay calm. I was doing the same.
“Oh, really?” Mutter pursed his lips. He sighed, and the air around us sighed in reply. “Ah, well. Little men have a bad habit of getting lost. Well, we won’t wait on him.”
“Aren’t you concerned?” I asked him. “We need Gus.”
“No, we need people who are dedicated and focused. Gus is neither. He is a useful piece to have in reserve, but is not essential to the plan at all.”
I didn’t get Mutter shrugging off Gus's absence. “But we don’t know where he went?”
“He no longer matters.” That was the end of it. Just like that. It was crazy, but I sure wasn’t going to push it.
Mutter ran us through the operation again. Keisha would need to cut through at least one door in the lower levels, and I needed to move a tree with my power. A redwood.
“Trees are tough,” I said. “They take a lot of energy to control.”
Mutter smiled thinly at this. “I have faith in you,” he said. April smirked at me.
Bitch.
He ran us through the timetable. April had brought a black bag filled with Support badges, radios, stunners, all kinds of gear. How the hell did they get these items? Support kept them under lock and key.
“These the real deal?” I asked her.
“I wouldn’t be wasting your time, Vine, if they weren’t.”
Vine. Very funny. Not even Keisha called me that anymore.
“The name’s Mat.” I hefted the stunner. It was light in my hand. Pointed it at April. “Shall I test it?”
Her sneer became a grimace. “Amusing.”
“Children, please, no fighting,” Mutter said. “Time for breakfast. You are dismissed.”
“Y
ou’ve already eaten?” I asked.
“Don’t worry about us,” Mutter said, including April with a sweep of his arm.
Peep followed Keisha and me up to the farmhouse.
“You see Gus?” I asked him as we entered the kitchen, trying to keep my voice as casual as possible.
“No. Not since dinner last night.”
“You think he’s run off?”
He shrugged. “Possibly. He’s always been unstable.”
Coming from Creepy Peep that was ironic. “You’re not worried?”
“What? About him.” He snorted. “Of course not. He’s weak. More risky if he’s around.”
I didn’t get that attitude. Gus could have been an assassin. Okay he was a spy and a thief, but being practically invisible was a huge advantage
Still worried about what might have happened to Gus, I couldn’t eat. Keisha just picked at her food.
“Children, you need to eat.” Mutter stood in the doorway. “You’ll need your strength later today.” My heart raced.
Keisha and I forced ourselves to eat.
He watched us for a while, then left.
Peep got up and went after him, leaving Keisha and me to clean up.
That would have pissed me off before, but I couldn’t stop thinking about Gus.
“I just don’t get him, taking off like that,” I said to Keisha after we’d finished.
She gave me a long, searching look. “Girl, really? This is Blender we’re talking about. The weasel, that’s what you call him, right? He runs off like all weasels.”
She went upstairs, leaving me staring out the back door window at the river.
I wandered the grounds, went back down to the river. A meadowlark sat in a willow branch out on the half-submerged island, singing a happy song. I only half listened.
If Gus had run back to Support, now would be about when they would swoop down on us. My mission would be over before I’d accomplished it.
I sat there, brooding. Time passed. The meadowlark flew off. A big freighter went by out on the river. No Support. I went back up to the house.
Peep told me Mutter wanted me down below.
Mutter had me try on a Support “men in black” outfit. “Needs to be taken in a bit,” he observed. “I can manage that.”
The Empowered Series (Book 1): Empowered (Agent) Page 19