by Sarah Noffke
“And yes, if you can find the blueprints for the GAD-C, then get them. Take pictures of everything with your phone. I want as many details as possible,” Mika said.
“And if you knew my phone wouldn’t work in the Institute then why didn’t you tell me or build me one that had super reception?” Kris said, not caring that this would piss him off further. He was already livid; it was kind of cute.
“Your job is not to check in with me when you find out every piece of information. Learn as much as you can and don’t return to Olento Research until you have information on teleporting. That’s your job. You don’t need a special phone for that, you need dedication,” Mika said and ended the call.
She had kept thinking he’d come to appreciate her and her sassy attitude, that she’d soften him somehow, but maybe that was too lofty of a dream. Mika didn’t care about anyone but himself and appreciated nothing but perfection. Kris stared down at her invisible body and smiled. She thought she was pretty perfect just the way she was.
Chapter Twenty-Two
“The second werewolf sighting happened in Salt Lake City.”
- Lucidite Institute, Werewolf Project File
“One hundred and three,” the nurse said, pulling the thermometer from Orion’s mouth.
“Do I have an infection?” Orion said, staring at his bandaged hand. The piercing, overwhelming pain was more of a nagging throb now, thanks to a shot of morphine. He hadn’t wanted to drag himself, bleeding and crying to the hospital, but then the sweating and vomiting set in and he had no choice. Actually he didn’t make it all the way to the hospital—he passed out on the sidewalk to the emergency room—but he knew from his previous employment as an orderly that this happened all the time. They kept surveillance on the walkways around hospitals for this reason.
“I’m sure you do, but the doctor is going to have to be the judge of that. He will be in to see you in just a moment, as soon as he reviews your blood results,” the nurse said, making for the door.
Blood results! Oh no, Orion thought. That’s right, when he’d been mostly out of it they’d withdrawn blood, right after stitching him up. Actually everything had gone wrong since the beginning. He’d given them his full name, which no doubt made it so they could pull up his medical history and probably log him into the system. But the pain, it had been too much. All Orion wanted was for it stop. The pain in his heart and head was battling to win against the raw ache in his bleeding hand. And they had so many questions for him. How had he lost his fingers? Did he have them so they could be restitched onto his hand? Did he have a next of kin they could call? The questions just made him retreat further and then he’d said it. The two things he wasn’t supposed to say.
“My name is Orion Murray. They made me into a werewolf,” he remembered saying. The person withdrawing blood paused, but then only shook her head. The nurse tending to his bandages simply smiled.
“You’re safe now, Orion,” she said, before turning around and exiting the room.
And now they knew his name and had his blood results. It was going to get worse. Most assuredly it was going to get worse. The bad people would find out about this. Or maybe it was the government behind this that made him into a werewolf and he’d just walked right back into their waiting arms. Orion knew only one thing with certainty, so much so, it pressed the anxiety away. He had to get away.
With his good hand he pulled the door back to find a sterile, empty hallway. To the right, he heard nurses conversing at a nearby station. He ducked his head down low and slid out into the hallway, tiptoeing down to the next corridor. His knowledge of hospitals told him the exit was up ahead, maybe just around another hallway.
“Orion, is that you?” a voice he knew so well said.
He turned to find the one person he couldn’t see right then staring back at him, her soft pink mouth gaping open. “Veronica,” he said, dropping his head with shame. He realized then he was cradling his hand, which had already bled a bit through the gauze and bandages. They’d said he’d need to stay overnight, but now he knew that wasn’t going to happen.
“What did you do to yourself?” she said, and there was the pity. He wanted her to believe him. To believe in him. As his psychiatrist she knew him better than anyone else. She knew he wasn’t a liar. Maybe she’d believe him now.
“I was trying to stop the werewolf,” he said. “I cut off my fingertips just when the claws came out and it worked. They are gone.” Orion held up his bandaged hand, like she could see how victorious he’d been. “Isn’t it great?” he said with a laugh that also resembled a weep.
“Oh, Orion, you’re mutilating yourself again. We need to talk about committing you, getting you the help you need,” Dr. Roland said, taking a cautious step forward. “The hospital called me and I already set up arrangements on the way over here. You don’t have to stay for long, just until we get your medicine schedule back to normal. This is chemical. It’s not you. We can fix things.”
She always knew the right thing to say. We. We can fix things. She was going to take care of him again, look in on him daily. They’d have their talks every afternoon like they used to. And when he had a bad night, threw things and yelled at the staff, she’d come by the next morning to make sure he was all right. Everything was going to be like it used to be. Everything was going to get better.
Then he noticed how soft her skin was around her jaw. His eyes slid down her throat and then landed on her chest where two perfectly rounded shapes peeked slightly out of her navy blue blouse, begging for his full attention. Orion shook his head. He’d never looked at Veronica this way. Never felt this lustful draw to her. What they had was real and not based on physical attraction, although he hoped that would come for both of them later.
He licked his lips, suddenly wanting to taste her. Needing to feast on her. The thought sent Orion back three steps until he knocked into a wall. That wasn’t him. It was the wolf. The wolf. That’s right. Things couldn’t be the same as when he was a resident of the mental institution. The werewolf would destroy all the good that came from being there.
“Stay away from me!” Orion said, grabbing a gurney and launching it at Veronica. She slid to the side, shoving it away with a look of horror.
“Orion, it’s okay. I’m here to help. Please let me help you,” she said, pushing her hands down in a calming way.
“No! You can’t help me. No one can. I’m a monster and I’ll only hurt you,” he said, and backed to the side until he found the hallway wall. Behind him, down the corridor, he heard voices. Frantic voices that were aware of the commotion. The wolf heard them say things that angered it. Restrain. Stop. Sedate.
Orion tore his focus back on Veronica, the woman he loved. The one he couldn’t have. She took another step toward him as the footsteps behind him grew louder. He swung his head in that direction to see two large men in scrubs headed his way. He knew what their jobs were. Without another hesitation he dashed toward Veronica, pushing her down hard when she reached for him. Then he sprinted for the exit, his hand now bleeding from knocking into something. Still he didn’t stop running. He had to get away. That was the only way to save the woman he craved, the one who would forever think he was crazy.
Chapter Twenty-Three
“The second time the werewolves changed, they exhibited fangs, claws, and hair growth. It is assumed that the fangs and the claws took time to grow in.”
- Olento Research, Canis Lupus Project File
The grass under Zephyr’s leather shoes was soggy. He had never liked carnivals. It was a place to lose money and get sick on sweet or fried food. Why any hard-working American would seek a thrill on a ride that was reconstructed at every carnival location, and faulty in numerous ways, was beyond him. Most people wanted to die, he usually concluded. Why else did they eat the things they did or do the things that were most likely going to kill them? And yet, he loved people and found that his mission in life was to protect a population who was constantly seeking to destroy them
selves.
“You can’t come on Ferocity grounds. This is a closed area,” an overweight man said, hurrying over to them, buttoning his pants and fastening his belt as he did.
Zephyr was about to make up a phony excuse when Rox flashed her badge. “FBI. We have business here,” she said and hurried past the man with the red nose.
“If this is about the twins, I can explain. What they do away from Ferocity Carn—”
“Where is Connor Luce?” Rox said, and Zephyr was distracted by her tone. She sounded different. Professional. She sounded unlike he’d heard her before. No one would look at her blonde hair and mounds of makeup and mistake her for a “valley girl,” as he often thought of her. She sounded like an FBI agent, and more than that, she had authority in those short words.
“He’s…” the man said and trailed away. “What do you want with Connor? That’s who you’re here for?”
“Where?” Rox said, her words clipped.
“He’s in sleeper row. In one of those trailers,” the man said and pointed at a line of semis at the back of the carnival. They could barely be seen over the booths and rides, which were currently shut down since the carnival wasn’t set to open for another few hours.
“Which one?” Zephyr said, striding forward, making his way to the area.
“How am I supposed to know?” the man said, tugging up his pants as they made to fall to the ground.
“Use your X-ray vision,” Rox said, still using that voice, the one that Zephyr enjoyed, respected.
“Okay,” Zephyr said, turning on the power that he owned. Immediately the area around him transformed. The rides and booths weren’t solid, but rather frameworks that he could easily see past. The things behind them, objects, structures, people, all took shape. And then the things behind those things were visible. Using his X-ray vision nauseated Zephyr. That was why he employed it sparingly and also because it drained him, making him feel like he needed to sleep for days. As they approached the back of the carnival grounds he was able to tap into the semis, seeing their contents. A few of the closest contained men, sleeping in bunks, but their build didn’t resemble Connor’s. How strange to sleep in a truck, like a horse being transported to a show. The only thing about it that made Zephyr more comfortable was the vents he spied along the top of the truck. At least these men, these vagabonds, had proper air circulation in their boxes.
The next truck contained more men, their skeletons telling Zephyr what they were doing. Lounging, playing cards, smoking. And then he saw one man in an empty semi, lying flat on his back. That shouldn’t have told Zephyr anything, but the object embedded into the guy’s ear was the clue. He had a large gauge earring in his left ear, just like Connor.
“He’s in here,” Zephyr said, pointing.
Rox jumped up on the back of the semi, pulling down on the lever and opening the door. The stench of mold and sweat spilled out of the truck, like trying to escape its prison.
“You saw him in here?” Rox said, squinting through the dark space. Bunks lined one wall and compartments the other. Nothing about the back of the long semi was tidy. Clothes and trash littered the floor so it couldn’t be seen.
“Up there,” Zephyr said, pointing to a top bunk.
“Has Connor done something wrong? He’s my newest member and also my biggest moneymaker,” the fat man said. “Maybe we can figure out a way to resolve this problem between the two of us. Maybe some cash will make you all drop your investigation.”
“That’s not going to happen,” Rox said, high stepping so she was even with the top bunk. “Oh, good, he left a tiny bit of heroin for you if you want to score a high.”
“No,” Zephyr said in a hush, grabbing the back of his neck. Drugs. That was Connor’s shortcoming. His vice. And he’d thrown himself back into the downward spiral.
“He’s passed out and his pulse is weak. I think we need to take him to a hospital,” Rox said, jumping down from her high place, her tone even and not at all morose.
Zephyr turned to the man still standing at the edge of the semi. “We’re done with you now. We’ll be taking Connor.”
“But he’s—”
“I suggest you turn and walk away right now unless you want the FBI investigating your shady business and thoroughly ruining you,” Rox said.
“Okay, fine. Take him, just leave me out of it,” the man said, holding up his hands and backing away.
When he was out of earshot, Zephyr turned to Rox. “No hospital. He’s a werewolf on heroin. I don’t think that’s an option.”
“Well, he needs medical attention. I’m pretty sure he’s in a drug-induced coma,” Rox said.
“Then the people who are most likely going to be able to save him are the ones who have a staff of doctors and healers. Dream travel to the Institute and generate. Tell the medical staff to meet me at the submarine,” Zephyr said, climbing up to the bunk where Connor lay, his eyes partially open, but rolled back in his head. He was pale and smelled of the sickly sweet drug he’d consumed in what appeared in fatal amounts. Pulling him by the shoulders, Zephyr managed to drag Connor off the bed and drape him over his shoulder. “I’m taking him to the Lucidite jet. We will just have to hope he can hold on until I can get him to help.”
Chapter Twenty-Four
“The third werewolf sighting happened in Los Angeles and was the first violent incident related to the case. A woman was murdered in a parking lot and reported her attacker was a werewolf, just before she died.”
- Lucidite Institute, Werewolf Project File
“I don’t see why we have to keep practicing this. You already made me pass out,” Kaleb said, staring at Adelaide’s hand resting on the conference room table.
“For starters, my hypnosis worked on you because you have a monkey brain, and therefore I need to keep practicing. It may not work on people who actually have the wherewithal to finish high school, you loser,” Adelaide said.
“You really know how to make an outsider feel included, don’t you?” he said, scowling at her, but a lightness in his expression. These two could go on like this for hours and often did.
“And secondly, I was successful at hypnotizing you with an object, which is step one. However, the more difficult practice is to hypnotize with an empty hand gesture,” she said, drumming her fingers on the table in a rhythmic pattern.
“So besides making someone pass out, what else is the purpose of all this, Little Red?” Kaleb said, his eyelids growing heavy suddenly.
“It can subdue an enemy, open the doorway for implanting information or behaviors, and also grant me access to someone’s subconscious. It depends on the level of hypnosis,” Adelaide said, and suddenly tensed. Something was wrong! Something was really wrong! She spun to the side, then turned the other direction. The tabletop was empty, but that wasn’t right. Had she left her book in her room? That was unlikely. She’d lost it! Again she scanned the area, knowing the book had just been beside her—and then she spied it. The mischievous grin plastered on Kaleb’s face.
“The only human known to be blessed with the ability to stop time and you use it for fucking pranks. You’re such a bloody child,” Adelaide said and extended her hand. “Give me my book before I make your eyes bleed through hypnosis.”
“I don’t take you as the violent type, so no,” Kaleb said, pushing back and reclining in his chair, his dark brown eyes too delighted from his dumb trick.
“Give me my book now,” Adelaide said, her words a harsh whisper, and laced into them was the mind control she had honed with impressive efficiency. Like her father, she only employed it sparingly, but now was one of those necessary occasions.
Kaleb’s eyes suddenly dulled and robotically he reached into his jacket and withdrew the leather-bound book before depositing it in Adelaide’s long fingers. Later he would wonder why he’d suddenly been so compliant. He’d be slightly confused, but because she’d learned how to tap into people’s heads, like one gracefully tiptoes unnoticed across a floor, he would
n’t suspect what her gift was.
The running feet at Adelaide’s back could only belong to one person. High heels made a dragging sound when one ran in them. She stood at once and spun to find Rox racing around the glass partition.
“Well?” Adelaide said, trying to sound cold, professional, like a boss expecting a report, appearing not worried that Connor could be dead.
“Connor is on his way back via the submarine,” Rox said, taking in a few quick breaths. “Dr. Parker will be on it to treat him. I just made the arrangements.”
“Treat him? Is he okay?” Adelaide said.
Rox now regarded Adelaide with a sideways, skeptical expression. “Your news reporter saw Connor and his location, but did she by chance see his condition, because you didn’t mention anything?”
“I didn’t find it necessary,” Adelaide said, wondering if that was true. Her agents needed pertinent information when in the field, but she’d withheld it and she wasn’t sure why. Maybe denial…
“Right, well then you know that he’s overdosed,” Rox said.
Adelaide bent her head down so she was regarding the carpet, which didn’t seem to mind her look of fury. “No, I didn’t know the extent of his condition.”
“Well, then you’ll want to know that he’s locked in a coma, it appears anyway, but I’m no doctor,” Rox said.
“What can I do?” Kaleb said, standing at once, his eyes buzzing with adrenaline.