Allie's War Season Four

Home > Suspense > Allie's War Season Four > Page 82
Allie's War Season Four Page 82

by JC Andrijeski


  “I would simply like to talk to you, Esteemed Bridge,” he said. “...I won’t harm you. I promise you I won’t. I could not, in any case...I am not even really here.”

  I stared at him, lost in those amber-colored eyes.

  “Would that be all right?” he said, his voice strangely young-sounding. “For us to talk?”

  “Why in the hell would that be all right, Terry?” I said, my voice hard.

  “Peace,” he said, holding his hands higher. “Nothing up my sleeve.” He tugged back the cuffs of a bright green shirt, one by one, to demonstrate. The same shirt, a near metallic, highlighter green, contrasted sharply with the dark red of his hair, and his pale skin next to those sharp, amber-yellow eyes, the rust-colored but expensive-looking tie. He really looked like he had the day I first met him, only his hair was down, instead of in a clip.

  And he looked less...hard, somehow.

  “Promise.” Terian smiled coyly. “Peace, sister. I wish you no harm. Nor am I here to represent Shadow in any capacity. Only myself. He does not even know I am here...”

  I let out a disbelieving snort.

  Even so, I’d realized by then that I was staring at a hologram.

  He wasn’t really there, like he said...even though I could feel whispers and tastes of his light, which made little sense to me through the construct. I could see the blurred edges of his body, in any case, and from my sight, I knew his image constituted something akin to a virtual reality program. The fact that he’d somehow hacked our electronic security system was still bad news, of course. But a physical breach would have meant supernatural powers beyond even the mythological ones I’d read about with Wreg in our Code classes.

  It would have meant magic. Real magic.

  I said the words aloud anyway, maybe to convince myself. My voice echoed strangely in the small room, especially with all of the organics silent.

  “It’s virtual,” I blurted. “You’re really not here.”

  “Why, yes,” Terian said, that smile still toying at the edge of his lips. “I believe I said that, didn’t I? Not real. Not in the really real sense. An electronic communique only...”

  His eyes shifted down my body then, telling me––as if I needed telling––that, real or not, this transmission definitely went both ways.

  “Gods,” he murmured. “It will be most distracting if you insist on talking to me like that, however, Alyson dearest. I would be lying to say I was unaffected. Truthfully, I am quite uncomfortable with the pain of wanting to fuck you right now. I never let myself believe for even a second that I might catch you in such a delicate position...”

  My jaw hardened to granite.

  “Do you think I could masturbate, first?” he queried hopefully. “Before we talk. Just spread your legs a little wider, if you would, sister...I can handle the rest.”

  Grabbing hold of the bed sheet, I jerked it roughly over my body, turning slightly to my side as I did. Once I had myself more or less covered, I raised the headset I still clutched in the same free hand, fitting it awkwardly over the opposite ear I usually wore it in.

  “Alyson...dearest! Wait! Wait!” Terian called out, holding up a hand. He let out an involuntary-sounding laugh, one that came across as almost friendly. “...I am only teasing you, my love. I swear it...and I promise you, I am telling the truth about my motives. I am not here for Shadow. I represent only myself in this.”

  I didn’t bother to answer that obvious lie, but finished attaching the link to my ear.

  “Please hear me out, Esteemed Sister!” he said. “Before you call Revi’!”

  Just then, the breach alarm went off.

  The sound grew quickly deafening in the small space.

  It forced me to cover my ear with my only free hand, wincing, even as I sent the command to switch on the organic headset. I was still trying to think about how he could have gotten in, hoping I could even hear whoever picked up on the other end of the line, when suddenly, as if another switch had been flicked...

  The alarm shut off.

  So did the headset.

  I stared at Terian, fighting to make sense of this new development.

  Given that no one had broken down the door to the tank’s cell yet, I had to assume that Terian himself had turned the alarm off somehow...and shut off the organic headset...which startled me, I admit.

  It also came a lot closer to that whole “magic” thing I’d been thinking about earlier.

  Even as I thought it, my light snaked out, examining his virtual shape in more detail. I went over every aspect of it that time...at least, every aspect that I could feel...and noticed for the first time that, whatever this virtual apparition consisted of, it didn’t appear to have breached the Barrier construct around Tank-Squared itself.

  Meaning, though I got tastes of Terian’s light, Terian’s light wasn’t actually in the room...nor did it appear to be reaching mine, at least not directly. In fact, when I scanned the virtual apparition, it felt as flat as Revik’s voice had earlier, over the comm.

  So the flickers of his light had been virtual, too. An electronic approximation only. I wondered how he’d managed such a thing...and found myself thinking I’d have to talk to Dante about it later, see if she could pull off something similar for us.

  However Terian had done it, though, it was a trick. It was a neat trick, one I’d never seen before, but the fact that it was a trick weirdly reassured me.

  Terian always had inexplicable light, even for an Elaerian.

  He was also a bit of a tech genius in his own right, according to Revik.

  Once I finished my examination of the nature of his transmission, I clicked out to find him smiling at me again, his eyes focused on my wrist cuffed to the wall. Using a subvocal to try again to turn on the earpiece, I frowned when it didn’t work, even as I pulled the thin sheet tighter around my body with my free hand. At the same time, I coiled my light closer to my body, too, shielding in reflex maybe, or maybe from some less-conscious memory from when Terian held me in D.C.

  Just then, the headset flared suddenly back into life, emitting a low tone.

  I triggered it with my mind, and immediately, Balidor’s voice exploded into my ear.

  “Alyson!” he said. “Alyson! Gods! Are you inside?”

  “Check the construct,” I said. “I don’t think they’ve cracked it, but check––”

  “We are checking it,” he said. “Gods damn it...what is happening?”

  “Terian,” I said, frowning at the virtual version of him standing in front of me. “Some kind of electronic signal. It’s pretty sophisticated, however he’s done it, but still only a transmission as far as I can tell....physical, not Barrier, but two-way. He’s alone. Claims he’s not here for Shadow.”

  “Can you get out of there?” Balidor said.

  Ruefully, I glanced at my chained wrist before returning my eyes to the image of Terian.

  “Not at the moment, no,” I said.

  Terian chuckled, but I focused on Balidor’s voice.

  “Have you tried to bypass the locking mechanism?” the Adhipan leader said. “You should be able to override it, if you simply––”

  “I can’t do that right now, ‘Dor,” I said, feeling my jaw harden as I glanced at my cuffed wrist a second time. “Look. Don’t worry about me, okay? I’m not in any immediate danger. Find the hack...get Dante.” My mouth hardened. “And get my fucking daughter out of harm’s way. I want a squadron on her. Minimum. Your people, ‘Dor...no one else. Does Revik know?”

  “Not yet, no, but––”

  “Good. Don’t tell him until you have to. If he comes down here, tell him to keep an eye on our daughter. She’s top priority...I mean it! That’s an order!”

  I could practically feel Balidor’s frustration through the link.

  “Allie, Lily is fine!” he burst out. “It’s you we’re worried about! We have your daughter, all right? We have access to every tank but yours. Where is your husband?”

  �
��How the hell would I know that?” I said. “I’m not in the construct, remember? Can’t you feel him out there?”

  “No.”

  Biting my lip, I shrugged with one hand, not taking my eyes off Terian, who had folded his arms now, and appeared to be waiting for me to finish speaking to Balidor. He all but tapped his virtual foot as he watched me look at him.

  “Well, I can’t help you, then,” I said. “I’m going to talk to him now,” I added. “...Terian. I’ll find out what he wants.”

  “What? No! Alyson...no! I insist you not engage with––”

  Unhooking it from my ear, I lay the transmitter down on the bed, keeping the channel open so the others would have a record of everything said, in case Terian had already cut out the room’s surveillance capability, too. Of course, in some ways, I was kind of hoping he had stopped the surveillance feed, given how I must look.

  I could still hear the faintest whisper of Balidor shouting through the link where it lay next to my thigh. At least my body was mostly wrapped in the sheet now.

  “All right,” I told Terian. “Talk.”

  “I appreciate that,” the virtual Terian said, rocking on his heels. “And I know my words mean little to you at this point, but I vow to you, Alyson, I mean no harm to you or your mate, in coming here. I certainly mean no harm to little Kani, or to––”

  “Kani?” My face grew abruptly hot. “If you’re referring to my daughter, Terry, then I’d advise you to keep your damned mouth shut about––”

  “Calm yourself, Alyson! Calm! Please!” He held up his hands again, his voice and face submissive that time, openly pleading. “I will not talk about her again...I will not. It was an error to mention her, I see that...I am sorry.”

  Taking a breath when I didn’t speak, he continued in a more subdued voice.

  “Esteemed Bridge, I waited until the sensors showed your mate to be absent, on the off-chance I could convince you to hear me.” Taking a breath, he said, “Can you please try, Alyson? Can you try to hear me on this? It is very important...a matter of life and death.”

  I stared up at him, fighting back my anger.

  Even so, I felt a flicker of confusion course through my own aleimi as I stared at him.

  Was I looking at Terian? Or Feigran?

  The last time I’d talked to Revik, he seemed to think Shadow had killed Feigran, for all intents and purposes. He told me Shadow ripped the mind and light of the being, Feigran, back into a few dozen fragments, the way Galaith had, all of those years ago.

  Which should have turned Feigran back into the far more deadly Terian.

  Even as I thought it, Terian raised his hands, making another nervous peace gesture in the air. As he did it, he made his body posture even more submissive. I couldn’t help being somewhat disarmed by the display.

  He certainly was acting a lot more like how I remembered Feigran.

  Of course, my brain didn’t shut off entirely. I knew I couldn’t trust him, whoever he claimed to be. I knew I couldn’t believe for a second he wasn’t here for Shadow. But the urgency in his voice and expression still managed to surprise me, if only for the newness of the tactic.

  As if sensing or seeing some flicker of my thoughts, Terian held his hand higher in that peace gesture, his mouth curling into a faint smile.

  “Ah, good,” he said. “Thank you, Esteemed Bridge...thank you.”

  “Don’t thank me,” I said. “Just talk.”

  “I really do mean you no harm,” he said. “It is just that...I have had such trouble trying to decide what to do with this information...”

  “You still aren’t talking,” I said, irritated.

  Terian smiled, making a vague gesture towards me with one hand.

  I saw a flicker of what might have been confusion in his eyes, or perhaps distraction. I couldn’t read him, either, given the walls of the tank, but I found myself staring at his amber, cat-like eyes anyway, wondering what the hell I was seeing. His mind appeared to go even further off-track as I watched.

  I continued to stare at his face as he looked over my body, not angered so much as confused. Did he really want to talk to me? If so, he had to be aware that his window was swiftly closing. Balidor would already be trying to break in. Once Revik got involved, it would be over in seconds, rather than minutes.

  I wondered if maybe more of Feigran lived in the old Terian than we’d realized. I also wondered if maybe he was as much Feigran as Terian now, whatever game this was.

  Even as I thought it, a pained look came to those amber eyes.

  That time, it looked less contrived.

  “Gods, you do look delicious.” His virtual eyes focused intently on my cuffed wrist. “My compliments to Revi’, for his good sense in taking full advantage of that fact...I must say, it’s long overdue. Tell me. Did he only do the one cuff so he could turn you over easier? Or does he want your hand free for some other reason? Perhaps to give you options while you suck off one of his subordinates...presumably as he fucks you from behind?” His eyes flickered down me once more, even as those amber eyes slid further out of focus, growing almost thoughtful. “I would have tied all four limbs, if it was me...but then, I’m a traditionalist...”

  I felt my jaw harden more.

  “Really, Terry?” I said. “Really?”

  “I do apologize, Alyson...I told you, I find your current state...distracting.”

  “So you’re just wasting my time, then,” I said, clicking at him. “Or was this just a test? A way of seeing if you could break into our systems...?”

  “No, no,” he said. “I planned this, sister. I planned it.”

  Again, his eyes seemed to phase out, but with less of that sex-pain look on his face.

  I found it maddening, staring at him, without being able to read a damned thing.

  “You must know they’re going to break in here any second,” I said, when the silence stretched. “...And shut this little game of yours down? Are you really just here for new jerk-off material? If so, I sincerely hope it was worth it, Terry...because, believe me, it’s going to be the last look you get for a good, long time.”

  His smile turned predatory again. “Not quite.”

  “Gods,” I snapped, clenching the sheet tighter to my chest. “Are you going to tell me, or––”

  “You remember now, don’t you?” Terian said, as if the last few minutes of conversation hadn’t taken place. “Your dreams, Alyson dear? You are like me sometimes, are you not? Not like the mother...not like her, with the headaches and the screaming and sweats...but sometimes, yes? Sometimes, you are like me? We talked of this, yes? In New York?”

  Wrapping my arms around the sheet, I stared up at his face.

  “What are you talking about, Terry?” I said. “You mean the bank heist?”

  “Terry, you see? You call me Terry, Alyson. That is just so...so Revi’. It gives me a hard-on, just hearing how entwined the two of you are. Even now, when I––”

  “Everything gives you a hard-on,” I said through gritted teeth. “What were you talking about just now? What dreams?”

  “The dreams about China,” he said simply, looking at me again with those lion-like eyes. “The one where Beijing is on fire. You know the one, Allie...” He smiled at me. “I read it off you. In New York. I read it off you in D.C. It fascinated me, even then, and I didn’t dream back then. I didn’t dream at all...I never dreamed, not even about sex and rainbows...”

  I felt something tighten in my chest.

  I’d been having that dream about Beijing for years. I’d been having it since before I knew I was a seer, since before Revik...or Vash, or any of this. Those dreams had been one of the reasons I half-believed Revik when he first told me who and what I was.

  I tried to keep my reaction off my face, but I must not have succeeded.

  Either that, or Terian was doing that odd, Feigran thing of seeing past sight-restraint collars, and past Barrier isolation tanks.

  “Ask Elephant,” Terian sai
d. “She can tell you. She can explain. You will see her soon.”

  I stared at him again, but this time, I couldn’t hide my interest.

  “Who is Elephant?” I said. “Do you know, Terian? Who she is?”

  Elephant was one of the intermediaries named on the Displacement Lists. Like Stanley, me, Revik, Terian himself, Maygar...Galaith. I only had her name and her title...and her birthdate and birth place...and the fact that she was supposed to be active now, too.

  Elephant had been one of those seers no one could identify.

  “The first one,” Terian said. “She is the first...” He hesitated, then gave me what might have been a nervous look. “How is Jon, Alyson? Is he well?”

  I gave Terian a hard look. “You need to stay away from Jon, Terry. I mean it. There’s no room for compromise on that one. Especially now.”

  Terian nodded, but I saw his throat move in a swallow.

  A kind of sadness touched his eyes, even as he nodded again.

  “What do you want, Terry?” I said, my voice hard still. “Really? Why are you here?”

  He met my gaze, and that time, I saw fear in his eyes.

  “Find me, Allie,” he said. “I need you to find me. You’ll need me soon...it can be a truce. A happy partnership. Rainbows and puppies. But I’m dead if you don’t find me. You’ll kill me. You’ll kill me when you fix Revi’. When you fix the little girl...” He winced, as if hearing his own words. “Please, Alyson. Please. He’ll kill me. He’ll kill all of me this time, before you can fix the little girl. You have to find me, first!”

  “Find you?” I said, bewildered. I fought to catch up, to process everything he’d said. “Don’t you know where you are, Terry?”

  “I need you to find me...you and Revi’. The Four. We need the Four. You need me, too...”

  “Terry,” I said, clicking at him. “You’re not making sense. What are you talking about?”

  He smiled at me. I saw those cat eyes shimmer in the dim light of the room, even as he raised a hand to his face, pressing his index finger against his lips in a shushing gesture.

  “Quiet,” he said softly. “Daddy can’t know...”

  “Daddy?” I said. I’d sat up straighter on the bed, feeling my interest perk, in spite of myself. “Who is Daddy? Do you mean Menlim, Terry?”

 

‹ Prev