by K. M. Ruiz
She felt Kerr dig his power into her mind so hard and deep that for a moment all she saw was brightly colored spots. I’ll keep you hidden, Kerr said, and then he was gone.
Kerr hit the hallway running, telepathy spanning the damaged mental grid for the only minds that mattered to him. He found Jason and Quinton first, their tangled thoughts weak and getting weaker. He couldn’t find Lucas, but the Stryker merge still held against Nathan’s focused attacks. Lucas was alive—somewhere—and all Kerr had to do was find him. But with all the telepathic power in the world tangled up in everyone’s mind, Kerr only had one chance.
Using his empathy, he skimmed through the ravaged and dying minds around him, fighting the overwhelming urge to vomit in midstep as the horrendous feeling of hundreds of people dying overwhelmed him. He had to fight to regain his balance and continued running down the lower-level hallway, his footsteps echoing against the metal walls.
He felt Kristen first, her dysfunctional power like a hole in the mental grid that threatened to swallow Kerr’s sanity. Keeping his distance would have been the smart thing to do, but he didn’t have time to think about his safety, only about what needed to be done. Kerr snapped a telepathic psi link between them, Kristen’s thoughts swirling through his mind.
I need Lucas, Kerr said.
He can’t hear you, Kristen told him, the usual manic cheer gone from her mental voice. In its place was some emotion he couldn’t identify, not in the context of her power. Kristen wasn’t the sort to feel fear.
Then find me a telepath who can link with me.
Kristen gave him to Samantha, and Kerr almost lost himself to the merge. He had to claw his way back to a balanced mind, with Samantha dragging Kerr behind his shields to keep him from getting sucked into the pulsating mass of power that was the merge. Samantha was barely managing to hold it together, and he could sense the brittleness in her mind.
Make it quick, came Samantha’s strained voice. It echoed, as if she was speaking from far away.
We’re almost ready. Start clearing the field.
Understood.
He could feel her pulling away, layers of his shields peeling off as the magnitude of power bruised his mind. Kerr still reached for her. Wait! I need a teleport.
Visual?
It wasn’t her voice alone this time, but dozens. Stryker telekinetics reached for him with their power through the psi link while others sought to hold off the Warhound merge. Through them, Kerr felt the strikes that Nathan was orchestrating against the apex, Lucas succumbing to agony, even if he could no longer feel it. Samantha was a conduit between the Strykers and her brother, with the Strykers giving Lucas their powers while still struggling to understand how it all worked. Their lack of knowledge was crippling him.
We need a visual, the voices said again.
Kerr struggled to come back to himself, to keep his focus, reaching for the familiarity of a mind he would know anywhere. Years spent hiding behind Jason’s mental shields meant it was simple for him to slide into the microtelekinetic’s thoughts, to look through someone else’s eyes and see where he needed to go.
Samantha’s telekinetics saw through Kerr’s mind and out through Jason’s eyes, their resolve coalescing into a teleport that broke through the telekinetic shields surrounding the Command Center. Kerr arrived in the command room with a heavy stumble, nearly falling to his knees, surprising everyone. Kerr tightened the psi link between himself and Jason, calling out a warning.
Jason—shield!
Kerr got his balance back and slammed his fist straight into Nathan’s face, even as Lucas struck at his father’s mind. The physical attack briefly broke Nathan’s concentration, head snapping back from the blow. It was enough of a distraction for Jason to slide his telekinesis around them in the strongest shield he could create. He was just in time.
The sudden tearing shock that ripped through the command room rode the back of an electrical storm. It exploded out of every terminal, ripping through the metal structure of the building itself, burning through everything it could. Half the Warhounds in the command room died, burned beyond recognition by electricity surging under psion control.
[FORTY-THREE]
SEPTEMBER 2379
PARIS, FRANCE
Threnody descended into the depths of the Command Center. She wasn’t the telepath and Kerr wouldn’t remain undiscovered for long, not with the core of the Warhound merge in the levels high above them. They both knew it, Lucas had known it.
You’ll only get one chance, he’d said back in Toronto. Make it count.
She planned to.
Threnody ran down the hallway, counting down the seconds in her head. She held a gun in one hand and the remote detonator in the other. She kept her weapon out of sight when passing people. Most were talking frantically into personal comms, too focused on the emergency to pay her any attention. Psionic interference, she thought. She could distantly feel Kerr through the psi link, his concentration a pressure in the back of her skull that faded in and out. It made her ears ring. She swallowed to make them pop as she dodged into an access stairwell.
Threnody’s knees started to ache with every impact her feet took on the way down to the bottom level. The schematics Samantha had stolen were downloaded into the datapad hanging from Threnody’s tool belt. Threnody had them memorized, the layout pressed indelibly into her mind. She had one goal and it lay at the very bottom of a support pillar—where the generator room Lucas had teleported them into on their way to pick up Novak in Antarctica was located.
She slammed her way out of the access stairwell, stumbling into a short hallway. The alarm seemed louder down here, the flashing emergency lights hard on her eyes. Threnody looked up and came face-to-face with a pair of soldiers blocking her way. She didn’t think the soldiers were a quad since there were only two of them. The door she needed was located right behind them. Threnody headed for it, acting as if she had every right to be there, but one of the soldiers grabbed her arm.
“What do you think you’re doing?” the man snapped.
“Do you hear that alarm? Do you know what’s happening out there?” Threnody said. “I’ve been ordered to do a manual check of the generators.”
“A manual check was done an hour ago.”
“Now the brass wants another one. You can help me with it.”
She spun, lightning quick, slamming her elbow into the man’s throat hard enough to crush his trachea. She dropped the remote detonator and shoved him against the wall, one hand pressed over his mouth and nose, cutting off his air as she shoved her electrokinesis into his body. With her other arm, Threnody aimed her gun and fired twice, one of her bullets finding its mark in the other soldier’s face. Quinton was a brilliant teacher. She would never reach his level of expertise with firearms, but he had ensured she would survive a gunfight.
Breathing heavily, Threnody bent to pick up the remote detonator and headed for the door that led to the generator room below. She stepped on blood, feet skidding on slick wetness. When she reached the door, she discovered it was locked. Threnody smacked one hand against the control panel, frying the system. The door shuddered in its casing and she had to wrench it open, muscles straining against the weight. Her goal was within reach, the one place in the heavily shielded structure where she could start a chain reaction and guarantee it would affect the entire Command Center.
Threnody squeezed through the opening and stumbled onto a cramped landing. Several flights of stairs led down to the confines of the generator room. She started down them and was two steps up from the generator-room floor when she caught movement out of the corner of her eye. A lifetime of training saved her from getting killed, but not from getting shot. Pitching herself over the metal railing, Threnody took the bullet high in her right thigh instead of in the chest.
Threnody landed hard, heartbeat pounding loudly in her ears. She managed to keep her grip on the remote detonator. Adrenaline masked the agony in her body, long enough for her to get a shot
off at the two soldiers advancing on her position. One soldier took her bullet in the shoulder.
“Wasn’t fucking thinking,” Threnody gasped. “Two soldiers don’t make a goddamn quad.”
She smacked her bare hand down on the floor and called up her power. Bright blue electricity erupted from her skin, the metal the perfect conductor. The two soldiers died almost instantly, their nervous systems overloading. They collapsed as the alarm changed pitch. For one frantic moment, Threnody thought the Warhounds had located her.
A merged telepathic strike exploded on the mental grid. Her shields nearly didn’t hold. Only Kerr’s telepathic maneuvering saved her. He shoved her thoughts further beneath static human minds so hard that her vision swam, or maybe it was the blood loss. She could sense the rest of the Stryker merge behind Kerr’s mind, the power crackling across the mental grid. Threnody rolled onto her back, gasping from shock and pain. She pressed one hand over the wound in her leg, blood flowing over her fingers.
“Fuck,” she breathed. “Fuck, that hurts.”
Numb fingers fumbled at her tool belt. She unclipped all her tools and yanked the belt free. Methodically, Threnody wrapped it high around her thigh. She pulled the belt as tight as she could to form a tourniquet, choking back the yell that threatened to rip out of her lungs. Teeth tore through the thin skin of her bottom lip, slicing it open. Blood filled her mouth. She swallowed it, gagging on the taste. Lying there, the metal floor electric-warm beneath her, Threnody tried to breathe.
“You can do this,” she told herself, voice raspy and hitching from pain. “You have to.”
Threnody rolled to her good side and reached for the handheld laser saw nearby. Gripping it, she got her left knee under her and shoved herself to her feet, using the railing to take her weight when she stumbled. Putting weight on her right leg almost caused her to vomit.
“I fucking hate getting shot.”
She hobbled forward. It was hot down here, despite the specialized shielding in place to keep out the radiation taint in the ground. Sweat trickled down her back and neck. She looked around, seeing only machinery beyond the walkway railings. She limped down the length of one generator, looking for the control panel.
When she found it, Threnody set the remote detonator on the floor and gripped the laser saw in shaky hands. She used it to cut through the metal paneling and let it clatter to the floor. She pressed a hand to the side of her head as pain throbbed through her temple. Kerr must have sensed her discomfort because he strengthened her shields with his telepathy. Threnody let him do whatever he needed to keep her under everyone’s radar. Taking a deep breath, Threnody stared at the interior of the control panel.
For the first time in years, she thought of Atlanta. Of the scorching summer heat and the muggy feel of the air. Of the acid storms and the churning hurricane that came to shore when she was only three years old. She remembered the night when her natal shields broke in the middle of that screaming storm of wind and rain and ocean salt. How she accidentally fried the generator that supported environmental controls for two blocks of slum tenements, too young to comprehend the damage she had inflicted. Her first use of electrokinesis forced dozens of families out into that raging storm when air no longer flowed through the packed rooms.
Threnody remembered how everyone else in that storm died and how she didn’t—saved by the Strykers Syndicate and destined for a life of slavery.
Except Lucas had shown her another way, and maybe it wasn’t the best way or the right way, but it was better than how she’d lived under the government’s control. Freedom always came with a price. This was hers, and she would pay it.
Panting, Threnody stuck her hands into the cavity before her, wires and motherboards scraping against her bare fingers. She was elbow deep in a piece of the sealed Command Center’s complicated wired interior, fingers wrapped around what was, essentially, a computerized nervous system.
It could die.
“One chance,” she whispered.
Threnody hoped she had given Kerr enough time to do what needed to be done. She hoped he had saved Jason and Quinton. Closing her eyes, Threnody tapped into her electrokinesis.
Electricity exploded from her nerves with no restriction, bursting through the Command Center. Threnody poured everything she had into the overload she was desperately trying to create. She didn’t have lightning this time to fall back on, just sheer desperation.
A deep, cracking groan echoed through the structure, the generators shuddering as they overloaded and died. Electricity burned through the wiring embedded in the walls and floor of the Command Center. Threnody’s electrokinesis pushed the damage further, tearing through circuitry until it found the command room itself with explosive, deadly results.
[FORTY-FOUR]
SEPTEMBER 2379
PARIS, FRANCE
Kerr stared through the too-bright electric power as it crawled over Jason’s telekinetic shield. Nathan’s rapidly swelling face stared back at him from behind Gideon’s own telekinetic shield. Around them, humans, telepaths, and empaths fell over, bodies jerking through electrocution. Kerr could sense both Sercas trying to restructure the Warhound merge through those deaths.
“Kerr,” Jason said weakly as Quinton helped him sit up. A thick red stain was spread across his chest, tiny bone shards sticking to his torn skinsuit.
For a second, Kerr ignored him, reaching through a different psi link for Threnody. He shoved aside the pain, whispering apologies into her mind even as he pulled a visual for teleportation through her eyes.
’Port here, Jays, Kerr said as he pulled Jason into the psi link and shared the visual, then added a second one of the storage room below. Don’t worry about me, I’ll be all right.
You lying son of a bitch, do you really expect me to leave you behind?
You don’t have a choice. You’ve only got enough strength left for two teleports, three if two of those are short, and one of those ’ports has to get you and Quinton to London.
Kerr—
Jason. Kerr drowned out his partner’s thoughts with desperate words, seconds ticking away as the spark of Threnody’s power faded. I knew when Kristen broke your shields Quinton would come first from here on out. He has to if you’re going to live.
Kerr could feel Lucas and the merge at the far reaches of his mind, the mental grid lighting up with the thoughts of those who had survived the battle so far.
A hand grabbed at Kerr’s leg, fingers twisting around his uniform. He knelt down, prying Jason’s hand free and gripping it hard in his own.
You don’t have much time. Kerr looked over at Jason, at the blood on his face and the panic in his partner’s eyes, and smiled gently. You’ll have to learn to follow someone else after this, Jays. Don’t hate them because they’re not me. Now go.
I could stay, Jason said. I’m the one Nathan wants.
That’s not how this works. You know that.
Slowly, Jason nodded, eyes filled with pain and regret, his mind brimming with countless thoughts and emotion that washed over Kerr. Jason never looked away as he teleported out, taking Quinton with him, his hand disappearing from Kerr’s clenched fingers. His telekinetic shield stayed standing.
Kerr turned and pressed his hand flat against the invisible power of Jason’s telekinesis, the hard, layered shield all he had left now. The psi link that connected him with Jason was a faint spark at the bottom of his mind.
Nathan’s diminished merge was already regrouping and stabilizing. Those dark blue eyes didn’t look away from Kerr’s face as clarity returned to them.
This ends here, Nathan said, his words riding a wave of desperate power.
Of course it does, Lucas said, slamming into and through Kerr’s mind with enough force to black out the world. But you’ll never see the Ark, Nathan. You’ll never see Mars Colony.
Kerr’s strength flowed through the Stryker merge, filling the cracks and smoothing out the jagged edges that had been torn into it. Lucas let him mend what Sa
mantha couldn’t, giving up more and more space as other minds extracted themselves from the merge. First one, then two, then a dozen psi signatures disappeared—not dead, but teleported out, carrying Strykers who weren’t kinetic-oriented with them. Kerr kept his hand pressed hard against Jason’s shield, the support grounding him as Warhound telepaths dug hooks into the merge and his own mental shields.
The Stryker merge kept growing smaller, seemingly beaten into submission by Nathan’s. Warhounds started to outnumber Strykers on the mental grid. Kerr felt the strain of the merge start to build up in his own mind as Lucas transferred more and more control over to him. The weight was something he could handle better than Lucas at this point, having been inactive during the majority of the battle. Out of every ’path-oriented psion in the Stryker ranks, Kerr was the only one left who could take Lucas’s place.
I thought I could pull you out, Lucas said.
I know, Kerr said. But the future always changes.
It’s not supposed to.
Maybe. But you did. And I don’t blame you for that.
It was Kerr’s job now to keep Nathan’s merge anchored in this moment and to Kerr’s mind. If those connections broke, they would lose this fight and all the rest waiting to start in the coming years.
Kerr held up as best he could, but against a Class I triad psion with years of practice under his belt, it was only a matter of time before Kerr started to buckle. He struggled to shore up all the Strykers’ shields until those, too, started to disappear.
I can’t hold it any longer, Lucas said, thoughts a fractured, broken mess. Kerr could barely sense Samantha or Kristen in the maelstrom that was Lucas’s mind.
Kerr did what he was trained to do, what he had promised to do. He stood his ground.
Let me have the rest of the merge. Jason’s telekinetic shield was still solid beneath his touch. Gideon kept hitting it with merged telekinesis, but couldn’t break through. Don’t worry about me, Lucas.