Allie's War Early Years

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Allie's War Early Years Page 37

by JC Andrijeski


  Still, whoever they were, they had a lot of trust to think that the Org would honor the parlay, given that they’d stolen property from us already... not to mention the fact that Terian and Varlan’s team outnumbered the approaching group by more than three to one even on the ground.

  Varlan’s team counted out at sixteen, including me, plus Terian, plus eight guards that accompanied us from the camp. So just in physical numbers alone, the Seven’s lackeys were screwed once they crossed Terian’s wing lines, and essentially allowed us to cut off their exit.

  That didn’t even include the firepower we boasted from the network.

  It was a risk I would never take.

  It was also one that could backfire badly, particularly if they didn’t truly have anything with which to negotiate... meaning, anything that Galaith actually wanted. Of course, I assumed they must have something Galaith wanted, or at least something he thought he wanted, or Galaith wouldn’t be honoring the parlay in the first place. He would have just told Terian to chase them down. We’d already nearly caught up with them already.

  All of this ran through my mind as I waited with the others.

  Maybe that was why I didn’t notice the time passing until I got a secondary ping at the edges of the construct.

  Whoever they were, they were almost here.

  I found I was nearly holding my breath when the group of seven seers finally broke into the clearing. Well... they melted in, moving the way seers did when they went from disguising their numbers to revealing the truth of them slowly.

  As they did, I got the signal to ditch the infrared.

  Three of the seers in my pod ignited yisso torches right as I clicked mine off.

  I slid the goggles up my face to my forehead as I blinked against the greenish light of the torches, feeling my muscles tense as I fought to adjust my eyes to the regular visual spectrum so I could make out bodies and faces.

  At first I only saw three shapes standing at the end of that clearing.

  I didn’t recognize any of them.

  The oldest had to be at least three hundred years, unless he’d aged poorly. He had a strange face––handsome, but more like a human’s face than a seer’s, with European features and gray eyes. Those eyes weren’t gray like my own, but more of a cloudy-sky kind of gray, bordering on blue, a touch of steel living in their intensity.

  Something about his face caused me to stare, above and beyond the human-like features. I didn’t get any pings off his light, nothing that would indicate a sight-rank much above average for a working infiltrator.

  Even as I thought it, however, Varlan sent around a ping followed by a quiet whisper, indicating the same, gray-eyed seer with his light.

  Have a care, friends, Varlan murmured. That is brother Balidor.

  I stiffened, staring first at Varlan, then back at the gray-eyed male.

  I never would have imagined such a thing, not from that seer, whose only seeming abnormality was his complete inability to be physically distinguished from a human. Such a build would make him an effective infiltrator, sure, but I found myself wondering how he could be the head of the infamous Adhipan with such unremarkable light.

  Do not underestimate him, Varlan continued, a bare whisper in my mind. His aleimi is entirely shielded... what you are seeing is a projection of light, and not his own. I am quite sure he can hear me speak these words, Varlan added, softer still. ... even within the confines of our construct. Even with Central actively attempting to keep him out...

  I swallowed, not answering that time, not even in my own mind.

  I no longer doubted Varlan’s assessment, though.

  Neither did Terian, apparently, for when I glanced at him, I saw him staring at the gray-eyed seer warily, his light now sparking with criss-crossing, fast-moving lines that made it nearly impossible for me to pick out even a whisper of his thoughts.

  I found myself fighting to remain still, clenching my hand around the end of my rifle as I tried to decide if I should move closer to the new seers. I was still trying to decide, chafing against the silence, when the other four in the alien party appeared, melting into the range of the yissos one by one, their faces impassive.

  That time, I felt a stronger ripple go through Terian’s light.

  It was strong enough that I looked at him, jumping a little.

  When I looked back towards the other side of the clearing where that gray-eyed seer stood, I did so right as the four new seers emerged into full light. Three males, one female. With the three who already stood there, that made a four to three split, male to female, which was unusual enough in the West for me to think they must be Asian in origin.

  But that made sense too, if they were Adhipan.

  All but the one leading the second group carried rifles, but older, less-modified models than what I and the other Org operatives wore. The guns of these newcomers looked positively ancient, in fact, in comparison to what I carried in my hands, and I realized that one of them actually carried an unmodified M-16, a relative pop gun compared to the plasma rifles worn by Terian and myself and most of the others. Their guns looked shabby even compared to Varlan’s ultra-modified antique.

  Even the gray-eyed one, the one Varlan ID’d as Adhipan Balidor, carried one of these relics, gripping it in two hands without aiming it at any one of us specifically.

  The seer who didn’t hold a rifle slid between Balidor and the female seer who stood beside him, so that he was nearer to me and the others than the rest of their party. The newcomer just stood there for a moment, scanning faces, assessing.

  He was tall. Taller than me.

  Even though he now led the group and didn’t carry a rifle, he held the wariest expression of the seven. His angular face remained solidly set in an infiltrator’s mask, his movements considered... borderline graceful as he came to a stop in the middle of the clearing, a few yards ahead of his armed contingent.

  He definitely moved like a fighter, I thought.

  I realized as he approached that he did carry a rifle, too, but he wore it slung over his back, rather than gripped in his hands. Even his sidearms remained in their holsters, as if he’d deliberately left his hands empty to make his intentions for negotiation clear.

  I distinctly got the impression that the way the other six seers flanked him, they were there to protect him, not the reverse.

  Now that the tall, black-haired male took center stage, I only gave those other seers, even Balidor, a passing glance.

  My eyes returned swiftly to the man with the empty hands.

  I didn’t need to be told who he was.

  If nothing else, I recognized pieces of myself in that face and body, enough to know why Varlan and Terian both reacted to my features and build.

  The clear eyes were different than my gray ones, though.

  Nearly colorless, they seemed to shine with their own internal light, like a cat’s eyes, or some kind of nocturnal predator. Despite his relatively peaceful presentation of himself, I had no trouble identifying him as the most dangerous seer in that group, even more than the gray-eyed Balidor with the misleading light. He may have presented himself as vulnerable, but I could feel a deeper charge in the background of his aleimi, even apart from the way he carried himself... even apart from the way he sized up our group, staring hard at Varlan before his eyes shifted back to Terian.

  Terian held up a hand to the rest of us, as if feeling our interest in the black-haired male, and warning us against getting too close.

  As for Terian himself, I felt those sparks of reaction in his light intensify.

  Terian may have known this was coming, but his shock was apparent.

  I could feel that seeing Dehgoies in the flesh, standing in front of us like he was, unbalanced Terian in some fundamental way, even going so far as to render him briefly silent.

  For what felt like a long time, the two of them only stared at one another.

  I watched the measuring and scans and assessments flicker back and forth bet
ween their living lights for what felt like a long number of seconds. Dehgoies’ guard dogs stood slightly back while it occurred, their postures taut, those ancient rifles still gripped in their hands. Even so, they seemed to be waiting for this part to be ended, too.

  Strangely, to me anyway, it was Dehgoies who spoke first.

  “I am told you agreed to this,” he said.

  His voice was deep, tinged with a European accent, something Germanic-sounding to me. His tone remained as wary as his eyes, as the clear tension behind his stance, as he gave another quick scan around the clearing, adjusting his weight between his feet.

  When Terian didn’t speak, Dehgoies made a vague but somehow expressive gesture with one hand.

  “Terry?” Dehgoies said, his voice slightly sharper. “Is this true? Did you agree to act as go-between for Galaith on this thing?”

  Again, the amber-eyed seer didn’t answer.

  Dehgoies glanced around at the faces of the others in our group.

  His eyes paused briefly on me then, right as he seemed as though he might speak again. He blinked at my face, then took in my height and body in another swift, appraising glance. Focusing back on my features for a few seconds longer, those clear eyes slid back towards Terian then, holding a whisper of knowing that I found made my jaw clench.

  “A new pet, Terry?” Dehgoies said.

  Terian let the barrel of his rifle drop, right before he slung the gun over his shoulder, so that it mirrored roughly how Dehgoies wore his.

  As he did it, something in the energy of the exchange shifted.

  The tension didn’t dissipate exactly, but something about it changed tenor.

  “Something like that, yes,” Terian said, his full, sculpted lips smiling faintly. “Do you approve, Revi’?”

  “Is it for my benefit?”

  “Not entirely, no.” Terian’s smile grew more wry. “He’s quite... accommodating.”

  “I’m happy for you,” Dehgoies said, giving me another dismissive look. “...For both of you.”

  “Oh, no need to chime the bells yet, old friend,” Terian returned smoothly. “There’s always room for more to play, yes? Back in the day, we could have violated him together. He would have liked that, I think...”

  There was a silence.

  A glimmer of disgust touched that narrow mouth.

  Dehgoies didn’t speak though, or lower his gaze.

  Terian seemed to see the reaction anyway, and smiled wider.

  He aimed that smile at me, then looked back at Dehgoies. “...He gets a bit possessive, though, Revi’,” he added. “You’d have to fuck him a lot, Revi’, to get him over that. Until you broke him, maybe, got him to say uncle. I think he’d like that, too, though, Revi’... he likes a little pain with his sex. Not as much as you do, of course, but then... not many do.”

  That time, Dehgoies averted his gaze, his hands tightening by his sides.

  Terian chuckled, clicking at him in mock surprise. “Holy gaos. Did you just blush, Revi’? What the fuck have they done to you, my friend? Are you celibate these days, too? Or do you only fuck Council-approved whores? Assuming there are any who would even deign to touch you, given your unsavory past...”

  Dehgoies didn’t answer that either.

  I got the sense Terian had touched a nerve somehow with the remark, though.

  The tall seer’s narrow mouth hardened slightly, as did something in those clear irises.

  Even as I thought it, Dehgoies averted his gaze again, glancing at the seers standing just behind him, pausing on the middle-aged male with the human-like face and those strangely riveting gray eyes.

  Terian took another step forward, looking over Dehgoies in a sweeping appraisal of his own.

  “You really do look... housebroken,” he said next. “What happened to your light, my friend? Is it true that they stashed you away in Himalayan ice caves after they cleansed your mind? Forced you into penance to account for your sins? I wouldn’t have believed it, myself, but all I can feel on you now is the stink of kneeler’s mantras and incense...”

  He paused, as if waiting to hear if Dehgoies would answer.

  After a few more beats of silence, Terian went on.

  “...Clearly they feel they’ve brainwashed you sufficiently by now, though, yes?” he said, his voice holding some anger that time, a contempt that hit out with his words. “They wouldn’t have let you venture out of your little cage at all if they didn’t, now would they, Revi’? So what did you promise them? Did you promise to behave? To be a good boy, and not to go anywhere or do anything without their permission? Is this group here to protect you, Revi’? Or to make sure I don’t corrupt you with the stink of common sense?”

  Dehgoies’ angular face didn’t change.

  I found myself staring at the tall seer anyway, wondering how he was reacting to this tirade. I could hear the genuine emotion in it, but I wondered if Dehgoies could. I’d heard before that seers brainwashed by the kneeler’s cults couldn’t really hear those who spoke to them from outside of that cloying light.

  I myself still couldn’t penetrate whatever shield protected Dehgoies’ light. Whoever had created it, they knew what they were doing. I couldn’t help wondering if it had been Balidor himself, the gray-eyed seer standing behind Dehgoies, holding that antique gun.

  Why was Galaith even negotiating with these clowns?

  Why didn’t they simply take custody of Dehgoies and the rest of them? Demand to be taken to the pregnant female? Surely they would trade their beloved Balidor for some seer traitor’s brat, no matter how well-ranked its mother might be?

  Terian gave me a brief glance then smiled humorlessly, clicking in a harder anger.

  I couldn’t help wondering if he was hitting the blankness of that same wall.

  His fingers tapped at the top of the gun he wore in a gentle cadence, his eyes never leaving Dehgoies’ face.

  “Come now, Revi’... tell me,” he cajoled, his voice still holding that harder edge. “Confess your sins to me this time, brother, since you never bothered to tell me anything before you left. Is it really true? Are you a believer again, Revi’... like you were back when we found you in that shithole in Berlin? Are you truly ‘in penance,’ as the rumors tell me... or is this just another act to save your worthless skin?”

  I found myself watching Dehgoies after Terian said it, but that narrow face never moved.

  Clicking at him softly once more, Terian shook his auburn-haired head.

  “...Gaos. I confess... it bothers me, brother. It troubles me greatly to see you like this. I never thought I would have to witness the day that you became such a hypocrite again. You always had an enormous capacity for self-deception, of course, but this...”

  Terian shook his head again, trailing in his words, almost as if he couldn’t quite express what seethed through his light.

  Then, as if shaking it off, Terian rested both of his forearms on the barrel of his gun, focusing more intently on Dehgoies’ face.

  After a few more seconds of staring, Terian’s lips curled into another smile.

  “Gods,” he murmured. “But they haven’t taken all of you, Revi’, have they? Not yet. I can still see you there, brother, even under all of that kneeler crap. Tell me, did they really think they could take a poisonous snake and turn him into a fluffy bunny rabbit?” Terian’s smile grew wider, even as those amber eyes shone in the light of the sparking and hissing yisso. “How long do you suppose this transformation of yours will last this time, Revi’? How long before those appetites rear their ugly heads? Before the hunger to have them sated grows too much for you? Your new friends may think they know you, brother, but I do know you. I know you far better than they ever will... better than you perhaps know yourself...”

  Again, Dehgoies didn’t speak.

  I felt him flinch that time, though.

  It was there and gone, scarcely a whisper, but something in Terian’s words had touched him, even if he quickly deflected that feeling from his
light.

  Terian must have felt it too, because that smile once more teased the edges of his lips.

  He straightened a second later.

  When he spoke next, his voice had turned business-like.

  “So what’s the parlay, Revi’?” Terian said, his tone sounding almost bored now. When the other didn’t answer him, it shifted to an open impatience. “What is it that your kneeler masters have to say to us, old friend? What would you like to plead for, on their behalf... ?”

  “Galaith agreed to this,” Dehgoies said, his voice wary.

  Terian laughed, holding up his hands to the rest of the Org operatives, a mocking sign of peace in seer sign language.

  “You are quite safe, Revi’... quite safe. Do not worry, my brother.” Terian grinned, motioning once more around the clearing, the gesture expansive. “None of my people will shoot you, I promise. Tell me your new friends’ concerns and wishes... I won’t bite.”

  Dehgoies glanced at the gray-eyed seer once more, who had moved so that he now stood nearly at Dehgoies’ side. He’d done it so silently that I hadn’t noticed the motion, not even through the strands in my light.

  The gray-eyed Balidor also hadn’t stopped staring at Terian the entire time they’d been in the clearing, I realized. I wondered again about Varlan’s words. Could this really be the famed Ahdipan Balidor, who had reputedly taken down Syrimne d’Gaos?

  Why would they risk sending him on such an errand, if so?

  Either way, I still couldn’t feel anything on that male’s light. Obviously, whoever he was, he had some relationship to Dehgoies, although if it was master or servant, I honestly couldn’t tell, even with Terian’s goading.

  Dehgoies returned his stare to Terian then, right before he placed his hands on his hips. The movement was oddly precise, like all of his previous movements, and strangely vertical in nature, as if he’d scripted each micro-movement that took him to the new position.

  His clear eyes appeared unreadable once more, densely focused.

  “Fine,” Dehgoies said, making another of those graceful yet oddly precise gestures with his hand and fingers. “You need to back off, Terry. Now.”

 

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