by T. C. Edge
Hybrid
The Enhanced, Book Two
T. C. Edge
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
What’s Next?
This book is a work of fiction. Any names, places, events, and incidents that occur are entirely a result of the author's imagination and any resemblance to real people, events, and places is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 2016 T. C. Edge
All right reserved.
First edition: January 2017
Cover Design by Laercio Messias
No part of this book may be scanned, reproduced, or distributed in any printed or electronic form.
THE ENHANCED SERIES:
The Enhanced (Book One)
Hybrid (Book Two)
OTHER BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR:
THE WATCHERS SERIES:
The Watchers Trilogy:
The Watchers of Eden (Book One)
City of Stone (Book Two)
War at the Wall (Book Three)
The Watchers Trilogy Box Set
The Seekers Trilogy
The Watcher Wars (Book One)
The Seekers of Knight (Book Two)
The Endless Knight
The Seekers Trilogy Box Set
1
There are different depths of silence.
It isn’t merely a single definition of a period of time with no sound at all. That’s what I used to think. No longer.
Some silences are so deep that you wonder if they’ll ever be broken. You wonder if your words would actually interrupt them. Right now, if I were to speak, would my words materialise? Or would they just get swallowed up by the depths of this long, lingering quiet?
Zander stands before me, his own tongue tied up behind his lips, his eyes seeming to lock in place as they search me. Search for any reaction on my face, in my eyes, in the internal mechanisms going on inside me.
My heart rate and rate of breathing and the almost imperceptible shivering of my limbs. All things that Zander can see and read.
All things he can feel.
He awaits my voice, though, and a break to my sudden onset of muteness. I hardly register the passing of the moments that turn to long seconds, and the seconds that turn to minutes.
For several of them, it seems, I just stand there, letting his words settle inside me. Looking at this boy of my age – exactly my age – with the same eyes as me, and the same genes, and the same DNA.
This boy with the same parents.
I look at him and he just looks back, and in my head the reality begins to dawn.
I have a brother.
I have a twin.
I’m not alone after all.
I want to question it. To query this most absurd of revelations. To shake my head and display the most pronounced frown I can manage, and then turn away and await some sort of further explanation.
But I don’t do any of that.
Instead, I just look at him, and let the truth settle. Let it permeate my mind and colonise my thoughts. Let the silence do its job for a time, and hold back my disbelieving, questioning, doubtful self from storming to the fore.
And as those seconds pass, and the silence grows more profound, I find my mind filling with no doubts at all. Instead, I merely look at him and know that everything he’s told me makes sense. That he is my brother, my twin, my blood.
He is my family.
I break the silence and the still. I move towards him, closing the short gap, opening up my arms and wrapping them around him. I bury my head into his chest, and his arms gently coil to my back.
And then, as I hold him tight, I finally allow a whisper to slide from my lips.
“I have a brother…”
Now his words come, along with a tightening of his grip.
“Yes, Brie…you do. I’ve known about you for so long. I’ve pictured this moment a thousand times before.”
I hold his words in my head, and lock them away deep, saving the memory of this moment. A moment I never knew would come. A moment I can never have expected.
And yet, now that I know, a moment that feels right. As if a part of me has been missing all my life, something I was never even aware of until now.
Now, it all makes sense.
Yet as I hold him, my mind begins to swim with further questions. Questions about his past. Questions about my – our – parents.
I pull away from him, and fix my hazel eyes to his once more. I don’t need to speak, or fill the room with the questions that bound around behind my eyes.
Zander knows. He offers a faint smile, and begins to speak himself.
“We were separated,” he begins, turning his eyes back to the shimmering lights of the High Tower, so far away in the distance and fading into the green mist. “Our parents split us up to protect us. You were passed onto Mrs Carmichael. I was given to another guardian…” He winces, his shoulders dropping, and a shallow sigh falls from his lips. “She was the only mother I ever knew. She was killed.”
I reach out and take his hand for comfort.
“Was she…like Mrs Carmichael?” I ask softly. “I mean, was it an orphanage?”
He shakes his head, and firms up his gaze.
“No. It was just the two of us. Linda and me - that was her name. She knew our father, and he trusted her to take me in.”
“What happened? You say she died?”
He nods and briefly shuts his eyes, before opening them up again and continuing.
“I was just 12 years old,” he whispers, searching the empty space beyond the window. “She used to keep me in her small apartment as much as possible. She told me how dangerous is was outside, told me all sorts of stories to keep me hidden away. I never knew back then what I was. I was just like you, Brie, my powers suppressed by the drugs she gave me, my life so simple. But I was just a boy, curious of the world. The stories she told me only made me more inquisitive.”
He swings his eyes from the window, and drifts back towards the fire. Scooping up a glass of whiskey, he sucks down a long gulp, settling his voice.
I watch him from the side of the room, allowing him the space to reflect, to draw up the painful memories of his past.
“One day,” he continues eventually, “I escaped and went out into the streets. I’d barely ever been outside. It was all new, all exciting. I’d never felt a thrill like it.”
He shakes his head, and I note his jaw clenching. Through gritted teeth, his story resumes.
“I got lost. I was…stupid. Somewhere in the northern quarter, out on those dark streets. For hours I wandered, not knowing where to go, or what to do. And then, around one corner, she was there…” A smile builds on his face, quickly dowsed. “She found me, and paid the price. A man came from the shadows. He tried to take her purse, but she wouldn’t let him. He had a gun. He…he used it.”
He cuts himself short, turning his eyes to the back of the room, where the light of the fire barely penetrates. I move towards him, silently drawing in with soft eyes.
“I’m so sorry
,” I whisper, hardly knowing what to say, or whether to say anything at all. “It must have been terrible.”
He doesn’t nod, or shake his head, or offer any other reaction. He merely continues to look into the shadows, as if he’s staring at the memory, playing out before his eyes.
“After the funeral, I had nowhere to go,” he says. “I felt so…angry. Like I’d never felt before. I went out there again, looking for the man who ruined my life, who took hers. I didn’t care about what might happen. I had nothing left, no one. For weeks I lost myself to the northern quarter, to the darkness. And without my medication, my abilities began to develop. Slowly but surely, I changed. And that’s when the Nameless found me. That’s when my new guardian took me in.”
“Lady Orlando?” I whisper.
He nods, and turns back to me now, sucking in a deep breath.
“I’ve been part of this cause ever since. I was nowhere, just an angry, lost boy drifting through a sea of shadows. She gave me purpose, gave me a new path to tread. A path that eventually led me back to my old home, lying empty after Linda’s death. I needed information, Brie, just like you did. I needed to know what she knew, who my parents were. And that’s when I found the picture of us both. That’s when I knew I had a twin.”
He draws his eyes to mine now, and doesn’t turn away. Setting his mind back to the future, turning away from the painful past.
“I knew I’d find you one day, Brie. I just knew it…”
The pain in his eyes subsides, only lingering back in the depths now. A smile dawns on his lips, bringing one to mine along with it.
But my mind continues to boil with questions, bubbling to the surface and threatening to spill.
“Our mother,” I say quietly. “What do you know about her?”
His expression dampens again, his smile deflating.
“You said she was a Savant,” I continue. “That she lived in the High Tower. What else do you know?”
I feel my heart clenching as I look at him. He begins to slowly shake his head.
“I’m sorry,” he mutters. “I only know what she was, not who. I found the picture, nothing more.”
My chin drops.
“I don’t understand. How do you know what she was if you only had a picture? How did you even know the picture was of you…and me?”
“It was in a file with my name. There was a note attached to it. It said: Anthony’s family.” He looks upon the quizzical expression that spreads across my face. “Anthony…that was my name before I came here, before I joined the Nameless. I wanted to lose it forever, forget my past. And the powers I have, Brie, they came from a gifted Savant,” he says. “Our mother must have been a Mind-Manipulator, and so she must have lived in the High Tower…”
“That’s all you know?” I ask, cutting him off. “You don’t know anything else? There was nothing else in the file?”
“What else is there?” he says. “It doesn’t really matter now.”
“Doesn’t matter?! Don’t you care who they were, or what happened to them?”
“Of course I care. But it won’t change anything, Brie. I’ve thought about it for years, and I always come to the same conclusion – our parents were killed because of who they were and what they did. They were killed by their own people, people who are doing the same to countless others. This isn’t about our parents, Brie. It’s much bigger than that. This is about every person out there in Outer Haven. They’re all at threat.”
I don’t offer a response. I avert my eyes, turning them to the window again, and the fading lights of the city, disappearing into the growing nightly mist.
His words come again, softer this time.
“I’m sorry,” he says. “It’s just, I’ve lived this war for years. For you, all of this is new. Knowing more about our parents won’t bring them back. Trust me, Brie…it’ll only prolong your pain. I learned that long ago.”
A long breath escapes me, slowly seeping through my nose. Still, my eyes linger on the darkness outside the window, on the High Tower, almost entirely hidden now behind the mist. A glowing beacon at the heart of all of this.
A place with all the answers.
My mind ticks on, and Zander falls silent behind me. That’s where they want me to go – to the High Tower, searching for answers. Searching for the truth about what the Consortium are doing. Searching, perhaps, for a way to foil their plot.
I have no choice but to accept. There’s no turning back for me now. I’ll go to Inner Haven again. I’ll court an Enhanced if I need to. I’ll do it all, for Zander, for Tess, for Drum and Mrs Carmichael. I’ll do it for all the people who are set to suffer under the Consortium’s rule.
I’ll do it for them all. And while I’m there, I’ll seek out something else too.
Zander may have turned his mind from them, but I won’t.
I need to find out what happened to our parents. I need to find out exactly who they were. And if Zander can’t provide the answers, I’ll have to go and find them myself.
I turn to him again, and stand tall and straight, my spine fixing and chest filling with a full breath.
“You want me to go to Inner Haven,” I say. “You want me to be a spy.”
“It’s what the Nameless want,” he whispers.
“Then I’ll do it. Tell Lady Orlando that whatever she needs, I’m in. I’m hers to command.”
He inches closer, those Hawk-eyes of his diving into mine and surging beneath the surface. I can’t tell if he’s reading my thoughts, seeing right through me, or just peering closely as a brother who’s just found their long lost sister might.
But there’s a clear measure of concern there, a questioning look that draws three words from his lips.
“Are you sure?” he asks.
Before he even speaks, I’m nodding.
“Go get Lady Orlando,” I repeat. “I’m in.”
A gleam of pride flashes across his eyes, yet that worry remains. I suppose that’s only natural, given the danger this mission will invariably place me in.
But that’s the very reason he brought me here. So he turns, and moves off towards the heavy wooden door, and quickly disappears into the short corridor leading into the main hall of the church.
Leaving me alone, contemplating just how swiftly my life is changing.
And soon enough, it’ll be more than my life that’s changing.
It’ll be me.
2
When Zander returns to the room, with Lady Orlando in tow, they find me with a fresh glass of liquor in my hand.
I stand by the fire, my mind all at sea, the glass hovering close to my lips to deliver little sips any time a fresh spark ignites the need for one. And with everything I’ve seen and heard this evening, those sparks are coming thick and fast.
The noise of the door opening is enough to make me jump. So lost am I in my thoughts that the sudden creak sends my heart pulsing and eyes darting to the opening.
I guess I’m still on high alert after the firefight back at the black market, my body and mind yet to settle.
As Zander shuts the door, Lady Orlando swoops towards me like a bird of prey zeroing in on its quarry. She lays her hands down upon my shoulders, and begins to nod as her dark grey eyes burn with an inner glow.
“Thank you, Brie,” she says. “You’re a very brave girl to come here, and to agree to what we’re asking.”
“I’m not brave,” I tell her. “I’m just doing what’s right.”
“And that is bravery,” she retorts with a smile. “To do what’s right, even in the face of danger. You could quite easily go back to your life, and no one would blame you for it.”
“No,” I say, shaking my head. “I couldn’t.”
She withdraws her bony digits from my shoulders, but the little smile remains. Across the room, Zander appears to be arranging a table and chairs. Stacked up against the wall, he unpacks them, laying out a small, circular table and three simple wooden chairs, each with a plump little pillow on to
p for comfort.
Lady Orlando leads me over and sets me into a seat, before taking one herself. Zander occupies the third.
“I guess I get to choose a name now, don’t I?” I ask as I settle into my chair.
“Well, on this occasion, perhaps not,” says Lady Orlando. “You will be maintaining your current profile as it is, so it’s best not to get confused by code names and the like. Anyway, Brie is a lovely name, don’t you think?”
I shrug.
“I’ve never really thought about it.”
“I think it’s nice,” suggests Zander. “And it suits you.”
I consider that Anthony actually suits him too, and there was no need for him to change his name when he came here. Then again, after what he went through, perhaps leaving his old name behind was something he had to do.
“Is Lady Orlando your real name?” I ask, turning to the frail leader of this cause.
“What do you think?” comes her swift reply.
“Probably not, no.”
She nods. “My old name has no relevance to me now. It goes hand in hand with my old life. They’re both dead.”
I stop short of asking what her real name was, or even about her old life. Somehow, now doesn’t seem the time for such things. The sudden sternness of her expression is enough to hold back the queries in my head.
Instead, I allow her to turn the attention back on me.
“I want, one more time, to confirm your commitment to this operation, Brie. You will be attending a bachelor ball. You will be courted by our man on the inside. You will then be transitioned into Inner Haven, where you will utilise your new standing, and new abilities, to operate under the radar and, hopefully, complete your mission.”
I open my mouth half way. She stops me from speaking with a quick lift of her skeletal hand.
“The mission will be dangerous,” she continues methodically. “It will be difficult. And if you are caught or discovered, it could be fatal. I’m not going to mince words here, Brie. You deserve to go into this with your eyes wide open. Usually, I would never ask someone as callow as you to perform such a task, but this is an opportunity we cannot pass up.