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Theta Waves Box Set: The Complete Trilogy (Books 1-3) (Theta Waves Trilogy)

Page 7

by Thea Atkinson


  "What he was planning to do was kill you."

  "Yes. Yes, I understand that. But, I would never have been in that position if you hadn't brought me there."

  He started to peel back the blankets and she remembered his nudity from the night before, that he admitted to not wearing underwear and she averted her gaze hurriedly.

  "Don't worry, Minou," he said. "I found some pajama pants after you decided to crawl into bed with me. Wouldn't want you to think I took advantage of you."

  "I didn't crawl--"

  "Are you sure?"

  She thought about it. "No," she admitted. "I don't remember much."

  He hooked his legs over the edge of the bed, and she could see that he did indeed have pajamas on. His chest was bare though, and she had to bite her bottom lip to remind herself that this man had abducted her. He stretched as he stood, raking his fingers through his hair.

  "I want to leave," she said.

  He placed one palm against the wall, leaning against it, considering. "I suppose you can do whatever you like."

  "You won't stop me?"

  He shrugged. "It's a free country."

  "I don't have any clothes."

  "Then I suppose that makes it a little difficult, doesn't it?"

  She ignored that. "And I have one smear that you took from me. I want it back."

  "That I can't do."

  "You will."

  "I won't. You spent almost 48 hours coming down from the last batch. You're clean. You should stay that way."

  "It's not your decision to make."

  "Of course it isn't," he said. "But I didn't go through all of that just to give you your poison right back." He went over to the dresser beneath a window and rattled a drawer, pulling out a fresh pair of jeans that he stuck his legs into. Pulling them up, he said, "You can leave if you want to, but you should know that there'll be more of me. And this time it won't be a lowly mayor sending a Huntsman after you."

  "He can't come after me anyway," she said. "You--"

  "I killed him, yes." There wasn't a note of contrition anywhere in his voice. "I had to. But that doesn't mean we got off Scott free."

  "No one cares about a little thing like a murder, anymore."

  "You'd be surprised," he said. "On the streets, maybe. Results of cheating husbands and wives, perhaps. All sorts of reasons to take another life; all of those are acceptable, I suppose. But not what we've done."

  She eased herself down on the chair, on the very edge, unsure. "And what is it that we've done?" She fixed her narrowed gaze on his. "Especially when I've done nothing. When it's you who did the killing."

  He laughed at that. "You've done the worst. Do you really think I'm working for the mayor?"

  "But he's supposed to be cleansing his district of zealots. That's what he said. That's why I was there. He hired you to arrest me."

  He pulled a spruce colored T-shirt over his head that made his eyes seem all the more green when he regarded her.

  "Seven months ago a man began spouting things about being able to change things. About his soul evolving. About the fact that maybe things weren't finished here like we all expected."

  A dark suspicion crept along her spine. "How long have you been watching me?"

  He smiled. "You first saw me four days ago." The way he said it, the very focused way he watched her face, she knew it was a lie.

  "How long?"

  "Come on, Theda. You know how long." He had the grace to look uncomfortable.

  Her mouth went dry. "My first trick. You knew him."

  He nodded. "Your first was the Beast's son."

  She noted the use of the past tense. "Was?"

  Ezekiel nodded. "A zealot is a zealot. He killed him. But not before He tortured information out of him. Or should I say, had information tortured out of him." The smile returned, but this time it snaked over Ezekiel's features in a way that made her spine tingle in realization and revulsion.

  "You killed him."

  He spread his hands to his sides, palms up. "What choice did I have? It was him or me. A man doesn't say no to the Beast."

  "And now it's you or me, I suppose." She was off the chair without even realizing she stood, backing toward the door. His re-vision stole back into her consciousness, and she felt again so clearly a sense of panic that she couldn't breathe.

  He was next to her in moments, before she could twist the handle of the door or bolt down the steps. His hand was on the small of her back, pulling her toward him, making her hips meet his. His other hand had found a way to capture her fingers, pulling them forward so that her palm met his chest. She could feel the thudding of his heart.

  "Once I saw it," he murmured. "Once I saw it all, I couldn't go back. I couldn't let them do to you what they planned." His eyes were searching hers and she felt trapped there, pinned by the force of the emotion in his voice.

  "If you saw it all, then you know what happened to you."

  His eyelids fluttered closed, remembering. "I do. I forgive you. If there is such a thing as forgiveness in these times, I forgive you."

  She twisted out of his arms. "Forgive me? You've got it all wrong."

  "Do I?" He looked confused. "I saw her, felt her pain, knew her desires. How can I have it wrong?"

  Theda stared at him. She wasn't sure now what he'd experienced and that made her question the whole vision. She always brought her johns straight to the life that was the core of their being. The life that caused them the most pain, created the most resonance in them because that was the ride that would earn her the next trick. Despite the fact that it was the only crime in new Earth, that she risked her life with each trick, she walked it with them, knew it with them, lived it with them. It had always been about earning enough to survive, never about caring what happened to them after. She thought with the god gone, evolution was impossible. She never once took the time to think those tricks were the ones that enabled the greatest change.

  She hung her head, thinking back to Ezekiel's re-vision, letting the memories of that lifetime wash back over her, feel the pain and anguish. She'd not given it much thought before. This last re-vision she'd been so close to the memory that it felt like her own. It felt familiar, too familiar. It had only been the generous amount of godspit in her system that enabled her to cushion herself from the resulting damage.

  She stepped away from Ezekiel, this time thinking she really would run. "Good, God," she said, forgetting for a moment that the word was enough to prove guilt of religion mongering. "You were her; you were Cathrin."

  He nodded. "I thought you understood that."

  "I should have," she said. "But it was too close. Too familiar. It felt like my own."

  "Theda?" He reached for her, trying to wrap his fingers around her elbow but she danced away.

  "Theda stop; tell me, why didn't the mayor see it?"

  Her mind reeled, trying to process what had happened to her. Why she would think it was her own past she'd seen. "What?" she asked, distracted. "What do you mean?"

  "I mean the mayor saw nothing when his finger was in your mouth. That's why he made me do it, remember?"

  Still pacing, flapping her arms because the question was immaterial at the moment. She had more pressing things on her mind. "The godspit. I had too much in me; there's no way he would see anything because I wasn't conscious enough."

  She'd been conscious enough for Ezekiel's, though. The remembrance created a pain so visceral, she thought she could poke at it if she pressed into her sternum hard enough. It was too close. Too close to merely be a walk-through.

  She started to spin in place, thinking she needed to get out, thinking she needed to find some godspit to reel her back in from this freefall, to give her the good old sense of grounding that only ecstasy could offer.

  She felt his hands on her arms, but she shook him off. She didn't want to look at him right now. She didn't want to think about anything. She didn't want to think about the fact that if that lifetime had been so familiar, sh
e must have been part of it. She'd seen her own life as well as his.

  And if she wasn't Cathrin in his re-vision, then just who the hell had she been?

  Chapter 10

  Dragon

  Theda didn't know who she'd been in the lifetime that she read for Ezekiel, but she knew who she was now, and that chick didn't like the feeling of freefall, of being out of control, of suddenly caring. It had been 48 hours or more since she'd taken her last godspit smear, and since then, she'd been abducted from her grotto beneath the bridge, charged with religion mongering in a post-apocalyptic, god-hating world, and been forced to provide a vision for the man who stood in front of her to prove religion mongering was exactly what she'd been doing. This man, Ezekiel, was attractive in a gut-wrenching sort of way, she had to admit that, but he was also the one completely responsible for the predicament she was now in. He had stolen her last smear and dragged her to this place somewhere in the western end of the city after killing her would-be executioners in the capitol building. He'd bathed her with and without her clothes because she'd been too far gone into withdrawal to rid herself of the blood from the murder and the accumulated filth that comes after a bunch of months without access to a shower. He'd been tender about it, sure, even respectful, as though he had some decent molecule somewhere in his body. But then he'd made her sleep on the floor next to his bed like a common dog.

  Oh, yeah; needing a godspit fix was an understatement.

  "I don't know what the hell is going on," she told him as she faced him where they stood in a top floor bedroom of Bridget's apartment. "But I want no part of it."

  She didn't care if this lover, friend, or accomplice of his named Bridget was awake down below puttering in the kitchen, if breakfast with bacon and sausages and scrambled eggs was waiting for her down there, or if Ezekiel passed Theda over the entire cache of godspit that he kept in his pocket--because she knew he had one; he'd taken them all from her friend Ami when he'd abducted her from the survivor station--and one of the smears was even hers, damn him. She was getting out of here. Getting the hell out of Dodge. Blowing this Popsicle stand and any other clichés from old Earth that she could think of.

  "It's too much, all too much." She made a move for the bedroom door, thinking out there in the streets was about as safe as inside an apartment where her bounty hunter could watch her day in and day out, but she felt him hook her elbow, pulling her backwards to his side.

  "You're not going anywhere," he said.

  "What are you going to do; Taser me like you did Ami?" She choked on the name, Ami, the one who gave her free coffee and free godspit to get her through her nights. The man who kept trying to coax her into a decent life and a decent bed, hoping she would join him in helping the unfortunate adjust to their new environment. The one who did truly seem a decent man in this world of ruin. The one Ezekiel had left lying incapacitated and vulnerable, damn him.

  "I could Taser you," he conceded, twisting his booted ankle about so she could see the butt of the weapon sticking out. "If I have to."

  "He was a decent guy and you left him good as dead."

  "Ah," he said. "Your young admirer. He was a dealer. You know that, right?" Ezekiel gave her a short shake. "I left him on the bed like you asked me to before you fled the scene like a criminal." He chuckled humorlessly, holding up his index finger to indicate he'd just thought of something. "Wait. You are a criminal."

  "Still. He didn't ask for that."

  His gaze fell to her mouth and lingered there, making her squirm. "I left him alive, at least," he said.

  "Until the Beast's men find him. That's what you said when we left the capitol; that he was as good as dead." She stared sullenly down at his boots, wondering when he'd had time to put them on.

  He jerked on her elbow, dragging her toward the bed.

  "You can stall all you want, pretending you care about that lovesick fool; you're not leaving," Ezekiel said to her, squeezing into her elbow just enough to make her wince.

  "The hell I'm not."

  He shook his head. Charcoal colored hair fell into his eyes as he loosened his hold and tried to ease her onto the bed. "Be smart, Minou. They'll find you. Just like I did."

  She resisted. She didn't want to be calm, sit prissily on the bed. She wanted out.

  She struggled to remember everything he'd told her back in the capitol building, before she'd been forced to see him through a vision that even now made her tremble. It was a difficult task; the copious amounts of godspit she'd ingested over the last couple of days had begun to play with the time line, but she was sure he'd told her he'd been watching her for months, trying to gain the evidence he needed to prove that she was religion mongering.

  "They might find me, but they won't know anything." She resisted the urge to stick her tongue out at him. "You didn't know anything for months."

  "You've got it all wrong, Minou. I knew right away."

  "And you let me ply my trade for seven months? I doubt it." All her struggles did no good; he somehow wrestled her onto the bed without effort.

  "I didn't just watch you for seven months." His lips took on a regretful twist, and he seemed to have a hard time holding her eye. "I gathered information on you."

  She gave him a wary look. "Gathered information? Does that mean you delivered it?"

  "Yes, it does."

  "That doesn't mean anything. They can't prove anything because there's nothing to prove. I'm not a religion monger. I don't go about telling people that god cares. That they can save their souls. It's all too late for that. We all know that." She was on her feet again, waving her arms frantically by now, unable to contain her sense of impotence. Nothing was making sense. She knew that the Beast wanted to rid the world of any spark of religious fervor, but really, what was the point. The god had come and gone. There was nothing left in the world except debauchery. Everything else seemed a moot point.

  "You don't get it, do you? They don't want proof."

  "Then what was all of that back in the capitol building?" She poked him in the chest with her finger. "Tell me that. If they didn't want proof then why did they force me to read for you?"

  It had been a horrific reading, one she'd been forced to perform tied to a chair. The vision was so familiar as she walked through it that she felt as though the life she'd led him through was her own. Just thinking about it made the panic rise again. Witch trials and torture and executions without proof. If not for the highly erotic part of the beginning of his vision, she would swear history was trying to repeat itself. The erotic part: well, that made her peer up at him surreptitiously. If he'd been the Cathrin woman in the vision, she'd been pretty damn promiscuous; it made her wonder if the soul he'd been still had a taste for ménage. Her face burned at the thought and she had to hide it behind the back of her hand as she pretended to wipe fury from her expression. She caught sight of her finger and remembered the feel of his in her mouth as he bled onto her tongue.

  "Let me see you where you cut yourself," she said, grabbing for his arm, intending to examine the point of the finger he'd cut when he'd slipped it, blood and all, into her mouth and against her tongue, bringing on the vision.

  He put his hands behind his back and she wrestled him, twisting his wrist. "Let me see it," she said. "I bet I can do it for you again. Maybe this time I'll find an even better lifetime for you. One where you're the zealot and you're the one being hunted."

  "What am I some kind of Pixy Stix?" he growled, pulling away from her and inspecting his fingertip.

  She straightened up and faced him, chastened but unwilling to appear so. "You were plenty willing back at the capitol building."

  "I was doing what I was told. What I was paid for." He sighed, stepping an easy arm's distance away.

  "And what the hell were you paid for, except to abduct an innocent young woman?"

  He sighed, rolling his eyes as if he wanted to debate the point of her innocence, but instead said, "A test."

  "And I failed it, I presume.
"

  "Quite the opposite. They wanted to know if you could truly see. They wanted to know if you were the girl responsible for the new zealots. But it didn't matter what the result was. They were going to kill you, anyway. Too many people believe in your little trick to let you go."

  For a moment, she thought of the hunger the woman in his vision had felt for the two men she shared, the reason she ended up with a pouch of gunpowder around her neck, and tied to a cross. She had to remind herself that Ezekiel had been that woman. She remembered the pain he'd endured at the hands of a trumped up witch trial. But it was the other players in the vision that had her attention as she looked at him. She'd been one of them, of that she was certain, but the reality of it, that she had no idea which one, was the real reason for the panic. She'd have to stop thinking about that. That way, lay madness. Hell, she wished she had a godspit smear. She studied her toes, wiggling them on the carpet.

  "It's not a trick," she admitted sullenly after a long moment and peered up at him to see his reaction.

  His eyes locked on hers and something in his posture softened. "I know," he said.

  "What I do has nothing to do with religion, either." She took a step toward him, thinking for some strange reason that if she could convince him of the truth, that she could convince anybody and then this whole mess would be over. She could forget about that vision. She could pretend she'd never had it and move on.

  "I just need to eat," she said. "I told you. I told them. I'm just trying to survive. Surely they'll understand that."

  He spread his arms. "Look around you. Religion destroyed the world long before the god came. It's not about evil or good anymore. Those things have gone."

  "I know," she mumbled. It was true. The notion of good and evil was an antiquated one that proved to bring the world to near destruction for its entire existence. The Holocaust of the god's return proved to be the closest Earth had ever come to extinction and yet here they still were. The Beast wasn't about to let it happen again.

  "But you're wrong," she said. "You can't just set the clock back. We're not Neanderthals. The Beast can't stop us from believing what we want. We have sentience."

 

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