Rook (Bridge & Sword: Awakenings #1): Bridge & Sword World

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Rook (Bridge & Sword: Awakenings #1): Bridge & Sword World Page 32

by JC Andrijeski


  He faced the others.

  “Get him ready to be moved.” His eyes darkened as he stared around at faces. “I’ve decided my friend will survive this ordeal. You will make certain that he does.” His voice grew cold as ice. “If he dies… you all die.”

  33

  WOLF

  I LIMPED DOWN a darkened aisle, head low. I’d picked the movie theater because it was dark, and close to where the crew stairwell let out on the first floor deck.

  Now that I was here, it felt like a bad choice.

  I felt eyes on me. I was too conspicuous.

  I reached a side exit and grasped the door handle, giving a bare glance at the romantic comedy playing on the big screen. I opened the door, wincing when it struck me that the light on the other side would make my outline visible to every person sitting in the theater.

  I needn’t have worried. The attack didn’t come from behind.

  Strong hands grabbed me, yanking me roughly through the opening before my eyes could adjust. They swung me around, slamming my back against the wall. I heard the door close behind me with a bang as I gasped for air.

  The seer turned me around before I’d caught my breath.

  He pressed my chest into the wall to bind my wrists. Writhing a hand free, I jerked my elbow back, slamming him in the cheekbone. I felt a flash of pain off him, then missed his face a second time when he moved liquidly out of the way. He gripped my hair, smacking my own face against the wall, stunning me.

  I kicked backwards. I caught him in the knee the first time, forcing him to step back. I got him in the inner thigh the second time, narrowly missing his groin.

  He grabbed my leg and deliberately bent my hurt knee the wrong direction.

  I screamed. Before I could get very far, he clamped a hand over my mouth, shoving me to the floor. I fell hard to the deck, sucking air.

  It happened so fast I couldn’t move at first.

  Standing over me, he reached over his shoulder, pulled out a black metal rod. An arc of current sparked from one end.

  Staring up at it, I choked. “Jesus.” Gripping the floor with my fingers, I tried to crawl away. He kicked me in the stomach. I crumpled, gasping for air, and he lowered the prod.

  Before he could jab it into my back––

  Shots echoed in the small corridor.

  Two volleys followed, one after the other, barely a breath between them.

  I flattened myself to the deck, flinching as bullets pushed air over me. The guy who’d been on the verge of hitting me with a cattle prod lay sprawled on his back.

  I glanced at his face. His eyes stared up at the ceiling next to where part of his head was missing from a direct hit with a bullet; his chest wasn’t moving. He lay there, and I could practically feel the light leaving him.

  He was dead.

  Down the hall, another seer lay on the floor, one I hadn’t seen, though he must have stood there, watching as I failed to fight off the first guy. He lay on the floor too, holding his chest, making choking sounds. I stared at his blood-covered hands.

  Then I turned.

  Briefly, my heart lifted. I wanted so badly for it to be him.

  But the man who lowered the gun had two different colored eyes. His full lips curled into a frown as he released the empty magazine from the still-smoking Berreta, replacing it with a fresh one. Locking it into place, he motioned for me to get up, holding out a hand.

  “Come on, love,” Eliah said. “No time to get teary.”

  I tried to comply, but my knee wouldn’t cooperate. I got halfway up before it crumpled, and I let out an involuntary cry.

  Walking closer, Eliah slid a shoulder under my arm, still holding the gun. He brought me to my feet, then through a side door marked “Crew Only.”

  I stumbled onto a metal, mesh deck that started just past the door.

  “Where’s Revik?” I said.

  Eliah gazed down a fork in the corridor, surrounded by exposed pipes. He paused only long enough to glance at me.

  “Sorry, love. He's gone.”

  I felt the world gray, like it had in Vancouver.

  My breath stopped. I forced it back, biting my tongue until the lines sharpened.

  “Gone?” I bit my tongue harder. “What does that mean?”

  “Hush now, love.” His voice dropped to a murmur. “I’ll tell you everything. But you have to be quiet now. Or we’re dead.”

  He waited for me to acknowledge him, shaking me until I nodded. Moving fast, he brought me through the narrower of the two passages and down several flights of stairs. I let him support most of my weight as we passed through a few more sets of doors to emerge in the main storage bay of the ship’s stern. Still holding me up, he led me through a long, towering row of boxes and covered crates, between one-seater forklifts and bolted-down vehicles being transported to Anchorage and the Russian coastline.

  He stopped at a low ramp that ended in a massive roll door.

  Leaving me by the pulleys on one side of the segmented metal sheet, he jogged to the bottom of the ramp and hit a red button. I gripped a segment of wall in my hands and just watched as the roll door opened, gears grinding, with a rattle of rusted chains.

  Churning ocean roared through the gap.

  The opening sat low enough in the water that curls of spray shot up the sides of the ship, wetting the deck and me along with it. Wind and spray plastered my shirt to my skin. Pale light framed the clouds, illuminating edges.

  Unbelievably, it was nearing dawn.

  Eliah looked at his watch. He held one of the chains by the roll door, swaying slightly in the motion of the ship. He caught my eye, smiled reassuringly.

  “You all right there, love? That knee looks like it smarts some.”

  “Where’s Revik?” I said, loud enough to be heard over the wind.

  He hesitated. Letting go of the chain, he walked over to me, digging a hand into the front pocket of his dark pants. Once he had whatever it was, he held out a hand, motioning for me to take what he held.

  “Go on.” He motioned for me to hold out my hand until I did, palm up, under his.

  Something cold fell into it.

  I focused on the silver ring.

  He didn’t have to tell me where he’d gotten it.

  “I’m sorry, love,” he said again.

  I stared at the ring, unable to make my mind react.

  “He was ambushed. Five of them, at least. It looked like they tried to save his life after they shot him down. They probably wanted to bring him in alive. But he was dead when Chan and I finally broke through.”

  When I didn’t speak, Eliah caught hold of my arm, his eyes serious.

  “Allie. Love. I know this is a shock. I know it. But I need you to focus right now. Put him out of your mind. Just for now, okay?” When I still didn’t answer, he shook my arm lightly, forcing my eyes up to his. “If it gets down to the wire, you and me, we might have to jump. Now I know you’re wounded, but you’re a seer, so that’s not as bad as it sounds. You’ll live, easy. But it’ll hurt. And that cold’ll be something you remember to your grave.”

  I stumbled when he released me, catching hold of one of the hanging chains.

  The wind tore at his words.

  “There, now, love. I’m sorry, I truly am. But we can’t fall apart. Or we’ll end up like him. Then his sacrifice would be for nothing, right? You can hold it together for him, can’t you? Just a few minutes more? Then we’ll be in the clear.”

  I stared over the side of the ship. The water churned, white foam and dark blue beneath an overcast sky. It looked like liquid ice.

  Eliah blew on his hands, checked his watch again.

  “We can’t wait much longer, love,” he said. “Why don’t you—”

  The rhythmic thud-thud-thud-thud of helicopter blades erupted low over the water, making both of us jump. I heard Eliah curse as one set of propellers joined another, then another, until a fleet of dark gray Apaches was passing by and over the cruise ship, riding ov
er the light of first dawn. The sight was so surreal, all I could do was stare, watching them go by like a fleet of metal hornets. Eliah grabbed my arm just as they were nearing, pulling me into shadow behind the lip of the square opening…

  …And I find myself with him, inside his mind.

  Flashes fill the Barrier sky.

  Lightning cracks downward from overhead clouds. All over the ship, bursts of staccato charges fall, plummeting around military helicopters as they fly past in formation, shining with a faint silver light. The bursts don’t come from the helicopters, but from the metallic cloud ceiling above, falling like bombs.

  I’m still staring upwards as a light-bomb falls from almost straight overhead.

  Eliah grabs me with hands of light, pulls me away to narrowly miss being hit by a second bomb I hadn’t seen.

  A net, he tells me. They are looking for you, Bridge. And for me.

  Looking for you, I repeat numbly.

  I wince from a sudden, sharp pain at the back of my neck.

  Eliah stares at my hand clutching that pain, at my fingers rubbing my own neck in reflex.

  Then, unexpectedly, he grins, his eyes shining with moonstone light.

  Well, he says. That’s good news, at least.

  When I look down, I find I am gripping the silver ring so tightly it digs into the skin of my palm. Through the Barrier, I gaze down the length of the ship, no longer caring who sees me. I am looking for him, trying to see his body. I need to see it. I need to know it’s real.

  I let myself fall deeper––then deeper still.

  Without warning, he is there.

  Revik lies broken on a patterned carpet, his neck at an odd angle. A metal collar circles it, and the skin there twitches, dancing under a coarse electric charge.

  He is covered in blood. His chest isn’t moving.

  We’re losing him! A doctor kneels beside him. Goddamn it! He really will kill us. Did you see his face when those eyes lit up—?

  Eliah grabs my arm.

  Turning me towards him, he punches me right in the face.

  I GASPED, CLUTCHING a chain hanging from a roll-down door in one hand, the ring in the other, the ocean wetting my back. My jaw hurt where he’d hit me, and my skin felt flushed, almost fevered. I faced Eliah, who held my wrist to keep me from going over the side.

  He gave me an apologetic look––but I knew.

  That hadn’t been the past.

  Which meant everything he’d just told me had been a lie.

  “You’re him. Terian.” I stared at him, gripping the ring. “You did this.”

  His different colored eyes widened in surprise.

  Then he broke into a slow smile. At the end of that smile, he let out a low chuckle. “Alyson, m’dear. I must say––I am endlessly impressed by you. So many surprises.”

  When I tried to jerk away from him, his grip on me tightened. He slammed my back against the edge of the roll door, his different-colored eyes warning. He held up a finger, unholstering his gun. I watched him aim it at my midsection, his voice stern.

  “Hush now, my lovely little Bridge,” he said, warning. “Just relax. The fighting part is over.” His smile returned. “Anyway, you should be thanking me. You have no idea how much more interesting and fun your life will become after today.”

  The man who’d killed my mother smiled at me, reaching cautiously for my arm. Once he had a grip on my bicep, his thumb absently caressed my skin. I stared at the gun he had pointed at me until his grip tightened painfully, forcing my eyes up.

  “I suppose it’s fortunate I met you before you were fully trained,” he said. “How on earth did you find Galaith…?” Clicking his tongue in amazement, she shook his head, still smiling. “I really am just so very impressed. How I wish I could have seen what you and Revi’ might have become. Together, I mean. In your full bloom, as it were.”

  I tried again to yank my arm away, but his fingers gripped like talons, pulling me closer. Without warning, he forced me back into the metal wall a second time, ramming my spine into a sharp protrusion on one of the beams.

  I gasped, the wind knocked out of me.

  “You know,” he said. “You’ve put me in a bit of a bind, dear heart. I really had hoped to be out of here before der Fuhrer showed up. He was quite fond of your mate.” Terian/Eliah sighed, gazing out over the water. “I suppose I’m in for a bit of a spanking for that. I’m afraid your dear Dehgoies isn’t long for this world. And I really had hoped I’d get the package deal.”

  I threw myself at him.

  I grabbed his hand with the gun, trying to force the barrel towards his face. I don’t know if I thought I could do it without being shot, or if I just didn’t care anymore.

  There was a loud sound in my ears.

  Eliah jerked forward, nearly into me, as if sharply pushed.

  When I looked up at his body, he had a bleeding wound in his chest. The gun left his fingers, clattering to the deck like a broken toy. I watched the red expand over his blue sweater in a numb confusion, then looked around and past him for the source, knowing it hadn’t been me.

  I focused on a high pile of wooden storage crates right as Chandre stepped from behind them, raising a gun towards my face.

  “Move away from him! Allie, step back!”

  Eliah burst into a laugh.

  “Move away!” Chandre said, louder.

  When neither of us moved, Chandre fired a shot past our heads that clanged when it impacted against the metal hull.

  I don’t think I even flinched.

  Eliah ducked his head, then grinned around at Chandre. When I released him, taking a half-step back on the ramp, Chan aimed the gun directly at my face.

  “Stay where you are!” she said.

  I held up my hands, but my mind remained indifferent.

  “Kill him,” I said. Tears ran down my face, but I barely felt those, either. “Please, Chan. Kill him. Do it now.”

  “What are you doing with him?” she demanded. “Why did you leave the cabin?”

  I didn’t answer.

  Chandre fired off another warning shot, and I felt it whiz by my head. I continued to look at her, as if my mind lived somewhere far away.

  “Just shoot him, Chan. Please.”

  “Do not mistake me for him!” Chandre warned me. Her voice rose, coming out emotional now, angry. “Do not mistake me for your husband the Rook, Alyson! I don’t kill simply because you tell me to. I demand an answer! What are you doing with him?”

  “I do believe I’ve made her angry, Chan.” Smiling, Eliah pointed from where he held his hands above his head, indicating my face. “Look at her! If I didn’t know better, I’d think—”

  “Shut up!” The hunter aimed the gun back at Eliah. “Get away from her, you piece of shit! We know what you did.”

  “He’s not Eliah.” My voice sounded strangely calm. “He took his body. He’s not real, Chan. Whoever Eliah was before, that person is gone.”

  Chandre rounded the gun back on me.

  “You too, Bridge! I would just as soon shoot you as well. For all I know, you were in on it. For all I know, this is you starting your fucking war.”

  Eliah laughed louder. “Are you crying over Dehgoies, too, my sweet, sweet, Chandre? I would never have guessed!”

  “Eight of my people are dead! Three of them had mates, families. Dehgoies at least carried the karma of such a death. That, and a hundred times over. What did my people do to deserve such a fate?”

  I stared at the other woman, feeling her grief, her anger, even her fear. I wondered at her ability to feel so much. My own body felt like stone.

  I couldn’t see through the light in my eyes but the woman’s outline shone there anyway, a shadow with two hands gripping a Desert Eagle I recognized from a different set of long, white fingers. Chandre took another threatening step in our direction, stopping when I didn’t react, or change expression.

  After a pause, she exhaled, pointing the gun at Eliah without taking her eyes o
ff mine.

  “Gods,” she said to me. “You’re even starting to look like him.”

  Under my feet, the deck trembled, just before I heard a hollow booming sound that shook the metal.

  Eliah lost his balance on the edge of the open doorway.

  I saw my chance.

  Without thinking, I lunged towards him, helping gravity and the shaking metal under our feet.

  It didn’t take much. He’d been standing too close to the rim.

  Before I could think about what I’d done, he was falling, and I tumbled with him, tangled in his limbs. I groped backwards for the metal chain…

  But it slipped through my fingers. I watched it go, staring back for a hovering instant where it occurred to me I wouldn’t be able to get free of him.

  I plummeted through freezing wind and spray. I was sure I would die in those few seconds it took to fall. I’m not certain I even cared. I was numb to everything but his hands on me and the deafening roar of water.

  I hit the dark surface and it was like being thrown onto a thousand, razor-sharp blades.

  Tossed downwards, Eliah and I were ripped apart.

  I felt his hands clench then leave my skin. A curl of wake threw me upwards and I surfaced, gasping.

  Not far from me, another body slammed into the water. Then another.

  I fought to keep my head above the white foam.

  My leg hurt so badly I could barely force myself to breathe. Next to me, a dark head surfaced, and I backed away, using my arms. I recognized Chandre, braids plastered to her head. Another head breached next to hers. In confusion, I stared at the face of another of the Seven’s Guard that I recognized.

  I tried to paddle backwards, but I could barely stay afloat. My legs wouldn’t cooperate. I looked down the lines of the ship at the ship’s wake and saw what looked like another person, their face white above dark water. I watched the body struggle against the current. The white foam sucked him downwards, pulling him inexorably towards the lower stern and the propellers. It was Eliah.

  Seconds later, he disappeared.

  “You’re fucking crazy, Bridge!” Chandre yelled.

  I tried to work my arms faster, to get away from her, but Chandre swam after me, groping for my limbs. “Bridge! It’s okay! It’s okay, Bridge!” Once she had ahold of me, her eyes followed mine down the length of the ship’s wake.

 

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