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Snowburn

Page 41

by E J Frost


  brushes by me. A vise closes tight around my

  left wrist and drags me upwards. Kez is

  screaming as we surface. “It’s an orclas! Get

  to shore! Go! Go!”

  I stop worrying about whatever’s on my

  back. Ignore the pain and hideous sense of

  movement inside my right shoulder. Strike

  out with my arms and legs. Stab the water

  with my hands. Pummel it with my feet.

  Swim harder than I ever have before. The

  idea of becoming some sea monster’s supper

  motivates me like nothing else.

  Kez keeps pace with me, whether

  because she’s a better swimmer than I am or

  because she’s got the strength of fear, I don’t

  know. Her frantic splashes and gasps for

  breath match my own. She comes out of the

  water a step ahead of me as we reach the

  gravel beach. Reaches back and grabs my

  wrist again. Drags me after her as she

  struggles through the shallows to collapse

  onto the wet sand.

  I sink to my knees beside her. My head’s

  spinning. Everything feels disconnected.

  There’s pain and that weird sense of

  movement inside my shoulder but it’s distant.

  Fuzzy. Like the wheeze of my breathing and

  the shush of water over the gravel.

  Kez sits up slowly, pale skin showing

  through rents in her shadowsuit. Looks like

  she’s been through a shredder. What the hell

  happened? She puts her hand out, lets it rest

  on my thigh. Skin on skin. I look down in

  vague surprise. My suit’s torn open from my

  hip to the top of my boot. The skin beneath is

  dotted with blood, streaked with abrasions

  that I never felt.

  “Snow,” Kez whispers. My good kitten.

  My careful kitten, who said she’d never slip

  up and never has.

  I meet her eyes. They’re full of tears. As I

  watch, one spills. Another line of salt water

  dotting her cheek. I reach out to wipe it

  away, but nothing happens. My right arm

  hangs at my side like a lump of wood.

  Useless.

  “Kitten,” I say. My voice sounds odd.

  High and far away.

  “Just stay still.” She climbs to her knees.

  Moves her hand from my thigh to my left

  shoulder and uses it as leverage as she peers

  behind me. I hear her breath catch. Her

  whispered, “Oh, God.”

  I grope behind me with my left hand. Find

  that I’m still clutching my kukri and set it

  down before I slice myself open.

  As I drop the blade, something flops

  wetly by my thigh. The end of a tentacle;

  suckers gripping at the air. Dark blood oozes

  from the severed end onto the gravel.

  “Kitten?”

  She sits back on her heels. Cups my face

  with her hands. “There’s a tegli attached to

  your back. I can’t see its head.”

  I nod numbly. Nothing she’s saying makes

  sense.

  “Snow,” she says. “Can you hear me?”

  “Yeah.” I can hear her fine.

  Understanding her, that’s something else.

  “We need to get you to a medcen. Right

  now. You’re bleeding a lot.”

  I nod, then shake my head. No medcen.

  “DNA,” I say slowly. Try to force my

  thoughts into a straight line. “One way trip.

  Back to slam.”

  “Fuck. Right, let’s go.” She grabs my left

  arm and yanks on it as she climbs to her feet,

  sliding in the loose gravel. I grunt. What

  she’s doing hurts. But it’s still a distant,

  disconnected pain. So I pick up my kukri and

  rock slowly up from my knees to my feet.

  Stare blankly across the dark beach. Then

  I’m on my knees again without understanding

  how or why.

  “Snow!” Kez shouts and I want to tell her

  to be quiet, careful. The way she’s been with

  my name. Until we’re far away from the dock

  and Erin and anyone else who might do us

  harm. But I can’t seem to get the words out,

  and she’s pulling at me again, yanking on my

  arm, until I struggle to my feet. She drags my

  left arm over her shoulders and the distant

  pain focuses into a hot knife that twists round

  and round in my shoulder.

  “Fuck, kitten—”

  “Come on! Stay with me. We have to get

  to the night market. It’s just on the other side

  of the port. Come on!”

  I stumble after her. One foot in front of

  the other. One step after another. The pain in

  my shoulder spreads until it’s everywhere.

  Working out from my bones. Working in

  from my skin. A solid white-hot inferno. I

  can’t keep my eyes open against it anymore.

  Then there’s blackness and a sense of falling

  and Kez’s voice harsh and high with fear and

  then there’s nothing. Not even pain.

  Chapter 24

  Why is it that beauty never lasts, but pain,

  that bitch’ll come back for round two every

  time?

  Pain wakes me. Sharp, hot, piercing. I’m

  back in K-G. The needles and the nausea and

  the blank-eyed men in their chameleon suits,

  never the same from day to day. Different

  interrogators but the same questions. Over

  and over. But I don’t know the right answers.

  I tell them the truth, but it’s not what they

  want to hear. I went where I was told to go. I

  fought when I was told to fight. I killed who I

  was told to kill. That’s all I know. That’s all

  I ever knew.

  Pressure joins the pain.

  Clamps? Vises? No, this is soft. Pressure

  on my cheeks. Against my mouth.

  I open my eyes.

  Kez’s big blues stare back. She blinks,

  her eyelashes so close I’m surprised they

  don’t brush my corneas.

  “Shh,” she says. Kisses me again.

  I lick my lips. Taste her. And the sharp

  copper of fresh blood.

  “Where—?”

  She shakes her head. Pulls back a little

  and slides something between my lips. I suck

  on it. Fresh, life-giving water floods my

  mouth. I close my eyes and gulp it down.

  Another sharp jab of pain jolts me. I have

  a brief view of Kez sitting next to me in a

  small space defined by hanging plaz sheets.

  Then darkness is pulled across my vision

  like a curtain. “Kezra,” I whisper, as the

  darkness sucks me down.

  “No!” Her sharp shout snaps me back to

  consciousness. “Don’t you say my name like

  that!”

  I blink. Focus on her face. “Like what?”

  “Like you’re telling me goodbye.” She

  cups my face in her hands. Her fingers are

  bloodstained. “Stay with me.”

  I chuckle weakly. “Okay, kitten.”

  “Don’t you think about leaving me. I’ll

  follow you wherever you go,” she says. Her

  little face is as set and ferocious as her tone.

  “You do have first
-class stalkin’ skills.”

  “Fuck you. Stay awake and tease me for

  the rest of your life.”

  “That’s a deal.” But darkness keeps

  chewing away at the edges of my vision, no

  matter how hard I push it back. “Where are

  we?”

  “You’re in Gray’s Grotto, Mister Snow.”

  Man’s voice. Behind me. Older.

  Authoritative. There’s a tugging sensation,

  inside my back, and a wave of pain so deep

  and hard it turns my guts liquid. Fuck.

  “You Doc Gray?” I grunt. I’ve never

  heard of Gray’s Grotto, but grottos are local

  slang for chopdocs: underground

  hospitals/pharmacies/head-shops for those

  who can’t afford legit medical care. Or who

  need something a legit medcen won’t supply.

  “That I am. You, on the other hand, are

  not Mister Snow. Or not Sandringham Snow,

  son of Rhesa and Sothfe Snow, born on

  Irroth on seven-four-eighty-four.”

  I tense, but Kez catches my face in her

  hands again. Holds my eyes. She wouldn’t be

  holding me, looking at me so calmly, if we

  were in danger.

  “You’ll be able to pass more easily for

  Mister Snow before we’re done here. But

  first I have to get the rest of this tegli out of

  your shoulder.”

  My head spins as the tugging in my back

  gets harder.

  “Almost there.” The chop doc sounds

  like he’s gritting his teeth. “Try to stay

  awake.”

  “Okay, Doc.” I hyperfocus. Take in the

  tiny details of Kez’s anxious face. The pores

  in the pale skin between her brows. The

  golden flecks in her blue irises. She has a

  white scar the size of a freckle between the

  corner of her left eye and the bridge of her

  nose. I try to reach out and touch it. Discover

  that I’m strapped down. I grunt in irritation.

  “Try to stay still,” Kez says. She strokes

  my cheeks. Looks into my eyes. All this eye

  contact would be hot if I wasn’t strapped to a

  fucking autodog slab while a chop doc digs a

  sea monster out of my shoulder.

  I hear a deep sigh behind me and a clatter

  of chitin against metal. The grinding pain in

  my back eases to a dull, deep ache.

  “That’s it,” the chop doc says. “Let’s turn

  him over and get this boneset into him.”

  Kez reaches down and loosens the strap

  around my chest. I shift, getting ready to roll.

  Grab the edge of the slab with my right hand.

  Lightning shoots through my right

  shoulder. So hot and sharp I swear I can hear

  it sizzle under my skin. I blink, trying to clear

  my eyes. Feel the hard edge of the table

  against my cheek. It’s nice and cool. I rest

  my face against that coolness while the

  lightning wipes away sight and sound and

  thought.

  I’ve always been a light sleeper. An

  instant-waker. Comes from being an orphan.

  Never really feeling safe. But when I have

  Kez in my arms, I sleep deep. Wake slow. I

  don’t know where I am or how I got there,

  but down deep in that reptile brain that’s

  done such a good job of keeping me alive all

  these years, I know I’m holding Kez, so I

  wake slow and gentle as a baby.

  My eyes focus on a fuzzy dome beside

  me. A scrubby forest dotted with the stumps

  of dead trees. I blink a couple of times.

  Reach up and brush my fingertips across that

  strange landscape.

  “How’re you feeling?” Kez whispers

  without turning over.

  “What the fuck happened to your hair?” I

  ask.

  She blows out a breath. “You nearly die

  and that’s the first question you ask?”

  I rub the ragged wisps tucked behind her

  left ear between my fingers. Her hair’s soft,

  but it feels abrasive against my fingertips.

  “Answer me.”

  She sighs again. “My vcom wasn’t

  enough to pay the chop doc. So I sold my

  hair.”

  “You what?” I half-sit and feel pain lance

  through my shoulder. “Fuck, didn’t he close

  me up?”

  “That tegli chewed a hole as big as my

  fist in your back. And cracked your shoulder

  blade. We had to pour newskin into you. It’s

  still setting, so don’t move around too

  much.”

  I lie back and run my hand over her head

  again. Feel the fuzzy nubs that are all that’s

  left of her dreadlocks. I like the texture. And

  the graceful length of her neck that’s left

  bare. I trace the long scar that Ma Quaak

  gave her with my thumb.

  “You get a good price?” I ask.

  She shrugs. “You didn’t die.”

  That is a pretty good price. “Yeah.”

  “And he threw in a new set of

  fingerprints.” She scratches at the fuzz, pulls

  at one of the stubs until it begins to unravel.

  “The monofilament was more valuable than

  my actual hair. That’s what paid for most of

  it.” She’s silent for a moment. Then she says

  quietly, “It’ll grow back.”

  I blow a warm breath across her bare

  neck. “I like it. Just as it is.” Let my eyes

  travel slowly up that pale, sweet length. I

  love how vulnerable it makes her look. I lean

  in and run my lips from the knob at the base

  of her neck to her nape. She shivers,

  wriggling her soft ass against me. “I really

  like it,” I murmur into her skin.

  “An hour ago you were almost dead.”

  She reaches back and prods my hip. “So

  don’t get any ideas.”

  “I’m feelin’ better.” I mouth her nape.

  Sweeter than the sweetest awril. “I know

  who I got to thank for that.”

  She rolls over, props herself up on one

  elbow and looks down at me. A frown draws

  the skin of her forehead into furrows. Her

  eyes and nose are red, like she’s been crying,

  or is about to. “I’m so sorry.”

  “You’re sorry for savin’ my life?” I cup

  her face. Her soft skin feels good in my

  hands. Feels good to move without pain. I’m

  sore, and I’m going to be sorer when the

  derms I can feel stuck to my shoulders and

  neck wear off, but it’s the pain of skin and

  muscle healing. I’ll take that kind of pain any

  day.

  She shakes her head. Kisses my palm.

  “My sister shot you. Twice.”

  I consider that for a moment. Maybe

  someone snuck up on me during all the noise

  of the bowship’s departure, but I doubt it.

  And they wouldn’t have tossed Kez’s

  backpack into the drink if they had. Yeah,

  I’m pretty sure Erin shot me. Twice. But now

  that the worst is over, I’m having a hard time

  hating her for it.

  “We’re even,” I say finally. “I’ve been a

  shiv in her side since the star
t of the run. She

  was just gettin’ her own back.” Strange thing

  is, I respect her more now than I did before

  she shot me. “I’m not goin’ after her, kitten.

  An’ I’m sure as hell not gonna hold it against

  you. So why are you apologizin’?”

  She shakes her head again. “I can’t

  believe this happened. It’s bad enough I’ve

  had to sell practically everything we have

  and we still don’t have enough to pay for the

  hover tomorrow, much less a place to sleep,

  and I’ve dragged you through all this and

  then my sister shot you—!”

  I chuckle and pull her down so she’s

  tucked against my chest. I stroke her bangs

  back from her face. Kiss her until she stops

  protesting. Until the red of her nose and eyes

  fades to her usual soft pink flush. Until she’s

  kissing me back despite the fact we’re just

  curtained off from what I can clearly hear is

  a busy medcen with just a few thin sheets of

  plaz.

  Finally, I run my fingers down the back of

  her neck and tickle her until she giggles. No

  sound is as good as the sound of her laughter.

  “So you sold everything we got, huh?”

  She sighs. “Pretty much. The suits were

  trashed after that orclas hit us. They weren’t

  worth more than a few credits. I kept your

  boots and your big knives.”

  “You coulda sold the kukris.”

  She shakes her head against my shoulder.

  “They’re special. I don’t know anything

  about knives, but even I can tell that.”

  I kiss the tip of her nose. My smart kitten.

  “Besides, we might need them. Tiv’s not

  the safest place.”

  That’s the truth. The Cloud Cities are all

  extremely unfriendly to outsiders, but the

  ports are dangerous to boot. The kukris will

  probably come in handy if we’re spending a

  night sleeping out in Tiv.

  I take a deep breath, relish the absence of

  pain. Stretch. My right shoulder twinges in a

  way that says I shouldn’t fuck with it for a

  while, and the rest of me’s stiff and sore, but

  that’s all. I smile down at my kitten. “You

  ever sleep rough?”

  “Not recently. And when I did, I haven’t

  really slept. Just found a place to wait out

  the night. It’s not safe for a girl.”

  Also the truth. I think of Joh, the kid who

  crawled into my bed on Enlyoss. Wanting

  protection from the night-monsters. I gave

  her one night of safety, mostly from myself. It

  wasn’t enough.

  “You’ll sleep tonight. We both will.” I

 

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