ENTANGLED

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  “Where were they taking you?” She looked up from tying a strip around Longmore’s mouth, and he suddenly realized he’d only punched Longmore’s lights out, the orderly wasn’t under with a shot from the syringe gun.

  “Get back.”

  She flinched at his hard, flat command, but did not move. She looked up at him. Steady and pissed off.

  “I only punched him, he isn’t under—”

  “Yes, he is.” She went back to securing her knot. “I gave him a shot straight after you hit the deck.” She didn’t look at him, just rose up to fix the last gag, this time on Morris. She seemed reluctant to touch the stocky orderly.

  Nate blew out a breath. Tried to think. Tried to get his mind in the game. “I don’t know where they were taking me. I thought they were delivering me to some transportation waiting at the entrance.”

  “Well, some transportation sounds just what we need, right now.” Her hand trembled a little as she bent over Morris. She stared down at him, then she stood and let go of the sheet strip. It scrunched into a ball in midair, and an unseen force pushed down Morris’ jaw so it could fit inside. A strip of cloth wrapped around his face and his head lifted up, and at last she bent down and tied the knot, as if not trusting her power to tie it hard enough.

  “You don’t like Morris.” The orderly was not someone he came into contact with often, but Nate knew instinctively he enjoyed his job way too much.

  She didn’t answer, but he caught the quick flick of a look she sent him.

  “What did he do?” He had a sudden urge to give Morris a gook kick in the nuts.

  She shook her head. “Nothing.” Then she stepped away from the entangled men and looked directly at him. “It’s what he plans to do that worries me.” She shivered, a full tremor, from neck to lower back. “If he gets his hands on me after this,” she waved at the trussed heap, “I’ll wish I was dead.”

  “He isn’t going to get his hands on you.”

  She gave him a look of such deep pity, it took his breath away. Man, he was getting in way over his head here.

  “To get back to our situation.” Nate stood, and was happy the world didn't tilt. He really did only get the smallest dose of the drug. “I need to go back into my section.”

  Her mouth fell open. “Go back?”

  “Left someone behind.” It had been why he’d fought the orderlies in the first place. Thanks to Giles, he knew they were planning to ship them out, but he’d thought it would be together. Giles would not last long on his own, the shape he was in now.

  “You know someone else here?” She sank down onto the window sill, where she’d been when he first saw her, her eyes wide with surprise.

  “Yeah.” What was it about this woman? She was breaking his heart.

  “I’ve been here nearly three years,” she whispered. “And you’re the first person who wasn’t a doctor or an orderly that I’ve met.”

  And then he knew. This was HER. Good old Doc Greenway’s secret weapon. “We have to go,” he said, his eyes moving from her to the door.

  If she was who he thought she was, they would be coming any second now.

  Chapter Two

  She hated they were going deeper into the facility, rather than out, but she also could not bear the thought of leaving others behind. Others just like her.

  As she ran, one or two steps behind Nate, she noticed a camera up ahead and she blasted out a pulse of power. Not quite the top of what she was capable of, she sensed, but close to it.

  Ahead and from behind them, she heard pops in quick succession, camera lenses blowing out.

  She felt the quick, hard tug as some of her energy drained.

  “What the hell?” Nate stopped short so fast, Kel ran straight into the back of him. “What was that?”

  “Just me.” She stepped back, but he grabbed her arms, jerked her closer.

  “That was one creepy sensation.”

  She shrugged. Shook his hands loose. “Sorry.”

  He stared at her, then blew out his breath. “Well, warn me next time, will you?”

  She nodded, but he didn’t wait for her to respond, he was off down the corridor again.

  She did not follow him, and after a few steps he sensed it and turned.

  “What?”

  “Who is Giles? Who are you, for that matter?”

  He shifted from foot to foot with impatience, and she suddenly realized he didn’t have a scratch on his face. He’d had a swollen cheek, bruises and cuts from his fight with Evans and Longmore, but now, his skin was smooth. He looked too good for a man who’d recently been beaten up.

  “Look, ma'am – Kel – can I tell you as we go? They’re not going to let you go without a fight, so we need to get moving.” Again, he didn’t wait for her answer, he turned and ran, and she had no option but to follow.

  “Well?” She panted a little as she asked the question, but she was keeping up.

  “What do you want to know?” They reached the door through to the testing rooms, and Nate punched in a code on the keypad.

  She’d been about to blow the door, and had to pull her power back. A strange feeling, like the way her stomach dropped and then caught up again on a rollercoaster.

  He shot her a look, and she realized he’d felt it.

  “Sorry.” She put her hands up. “I had no idea you knew the access codes.”

  “Giles gave them to me.”

  “Oh. And how does Giles know them?”

  The doors opened with a swoosh, and they stepped through into the main room. She smelt the familiar lavender air freshener with a caustic undertone of disinfectant. It was always deserted when Kel was brought here. It was deserted now. But there was an empty feel about it. No one waited behind one of the doors of the test rooms this evening.

  “Giles reads minds.” He had already skirted the curved reception desk in the center of the foyer.

  “And what do you do?” She guessed, but was curious to hear what he said.

  “I heal.”

  They’d reached the far side of the room, and the second set of doors. Kel waited for him to tap in the code, peering through the glass to see if there was anyone on the other side.

  It was clear.

  And it was unnerving. Could they really be alone? After all the years she’d plotted her escape, tried to work out which way to go, how many she would have to take out to do it, would it be as easy as simply walking out?

  No way.

  “I just want to tell you something.”

  She flinched as the sentence popped up in her mind. Reverberated like some kind of urgent warning. This was new. Before, it had always been just before she fell asleep. But right now, she was as wide awake as she had ever been.

  She realized Nate was looking at her, a frown on his face, and she lifted her shoulders, loosened them like a boxer. “Can you heal others, or just yourself?”

  “Others, too. That’s why I knew so many of the inmates.”

  Ah. Well, how convenient for Doc Greenway. No embarrassing calls to the hospital. Just call in Nate if the orderlies went too far, or someone got sick.

  He had stopped staring at her like a lab specimen, and was jogging with a clear sense of where he was going, and she had to put on a burst of speed to keep up with him.

  “You only want to get Giles out, no one else?”

  He reached a t-junction in the passageways and waited for her. “You, me and Giles are the only ones left here. And I was being shipped out.”

  She stumbled, but he was moving again.

  There were only three of them left? How could that be? She’d never seen any others, but she’d heard them moving down the corridors, heard the murmur of voices behind other test room doors.

  When had they been moved?

  Nate was pounding on a metal door halfway down the corridor. “Giles.”

  “Nate?” The shout from the other side of the door was muffled.

  Kel walked to join him, wondering what door they had here. Her
s had been an electronic lock with a bar across the front. If the bar was lifted, unless a specific code was punched in, a second steel door came down in front of the first. Not impossible for her to lift, but time consuming.

  And by then, Greenway and Co. knew what she was up to. It was the best they could do to keep her in. It had worked for three years. She’d only tried to escape four times. Just thinking of the consequences she’d suffered made her stomach lurch in fear.

  She took a look at Giles’s door. It wasn’t electronic. It looked like a simple deadbolt lock. No codes for Giles to read from the minds of his keepers.

  She flipped it, and the door clicked open.

  Nate stepped back, his gaze on her face, and something hot flashed in his eyes. Goosebumps danced along her arms.

  “You're handy to have around.” His voice sounded a little deeper than it had.

  Before she could respond, the door swung fully open. Giles stood, stooped, in the doorway.

  Kel forced back a gasp.

  He looked around the same age as Nate, just a couple of years older than herself, but his lips were cracked and dry, his skin too pale, with dark rings under his eyes. He was wasting away. His scrubs looked as if they would fall from his hips and his t-shirt was loose on his thin frame. She could see he had once been as muscular as Nate, and even though he was clearly very ill, there was something about him that made her think they had been together in the same team. The army or the marines or something. They had a way of standing.

  “You’re right.” Giles flashed her a grin. “Special forces. Glad I haven’t completely lost the look.” His voice was raspy.

  She blinked. Smiled back. “Can I shield my thoughts from you?”

  “Maybe. If that was you, earlier.”

  “It was,” Nate interrupted, impatient.

  She looked across at him, but his focus was on the way they’d come, as if he expected to see reinforcements at any moment.

  “Kel, do you want to keep the syringe gun, or give it to Giles?”

  They had taken the two guns with some drug still left in them. The full one off Evans, and Harvey’s, which she’d partially used on Longmore. Kel shrugged. “If we’re in this together, it doesn’t matter which of us has them, but Giles looks like he won’t be able to evade as well. You can take it.” She handed it over.

  “Thanks.” His hands were too thin, the bones showing as he grabbed the silver weapon. He closed the door behind him, and gave Nate a sidelong look. “You do bring the nicest surprises.”

  Chapter Three

  Giles was leaning on Kel, playing the 'poor me' sick card for all he was worth, his arm draped over her shoulders, and Nate was almost sorry he’d come back to save his ass.

  As soon as the thought formed in his head, he looked up and saw Giles giving him a sly grin. It looked all the more macabre on his too-thin face.

  “Will you stop it? Jeez. I want to kick your ass when you’re like this.”

  “Kick someone else’s ass instead.” Giles tipped his head towards the foyer, and Nate took notice.

  “Someone coming?”

  “Someone coming, in a panic, because their little treasure is out of her cage.”

  “You said something like that before.” Kel looked between them.

  “Later.” Nate stepped in front of her as he tucked the syringe gun into the waistband of his scrubs. He’d use his fists first. The syringe was too precious to waste until they had their victims down.

  He signaled to Giles, asking how many. Two skeletal fingers were raised.

  That was okay odds, with a little help from his friends.

  He felt a ripple in the air, that weird, creepy spider-web feel of Kel pulsing her power out, and he shot her a look over his shoulder.

  “Radios,” she mouthed back at him, holding her pinkie and thumb to her ear.

  Giles lifted a hand to his head, as if the sensation gave him a splitting headache. Maybe it did. He shouldn’t feel glad about that, but he did.

  He had no claim on Kel whatsoever, but something in him wanted to tell Giles to back the hell off.

  “Um. Gotcha. But there are two guys with dart guns coming.” Giles even whispered like an old man on his deathbed now, making it impossible to do anything but feel sorry for him.

  He was really such an asshole.

  Two men came round the corner at last, and Nate sized them up. He’d seen one of them before, Jenkins, but the other was new, or maybe he was the driver of the truck brought to ship Nate out. He was built like a tank, whoever he was.

  Nate widened his stance, blocking Kel and Giles with as much of his body as he could, and then started moving forward.

  But something was wrong. They weren’t paying enough attention to him. Their eyes were moving beyond him, and they were scared.

  “Where is she?” Jenkins lifted a dart gun, trained it at Nate’s chest, and he stopped, still making himself as large a target as possible.

  Jenkins eyes kept moving, although his arm was rock steady.

  Nate couldn’t help himself, he looked over his shoulder, saw Giles leaning heavily against the wall. No Kel.

  Giles gave a minute lift of his eyes to the ceiling.

  Forcing himself not to look up, Nate faced forward again. “Who are you talking about?” Anything to jerk them around and waste a bit of time.

  “Don’t fuck with me, Halliway, or I will fuck with you. Where is Kelli Barrack?”

  “Kelli? Pretty name.”

  “Goddammit, tell me where she is or I’ll make sure you don’t just get shipped out, you freak, I’ll make sure you’re buried in the facility grounds. You and your buddy here.”

  “He isn’t bluffing,” Giles said. “He really means it.”

  At that moment, Kel dropped from the ceiling like a parachutist in a jump, arms and legs spread, coming down hard on the heads and shoulders of the two men. Harder than gravity alone could explain. She was putting some force behind her descent.

  They went down with a shout, and Jenkins shot off a dart as he fell. Nate felt the rush of air as it flew past his arm.

  Then Giles, faster than Nate would have thought, was on Tank Man, depressing the trigger, leaving Jenkins for Nate.

  He pulled out his gun and gave Jenkins a nice, hefty dose, catching the orderly’s gaze as he placed the syringe against his neck. He gave him his happiest smile.

  Kel was hovering just above them, still in the spread-eagled pose, ready to drop again if needed. When she saw they were done, she lowered herself gracefully, touching down beside him. He could see the strain on her face. Keeping herself suspended had cost her.

  The shock of what she'd done – the control and power he sensed coming off her – almost canceled out his temper. Almost. He counted back from ten. She’d gone off and made her own plan. Without a word. Even if it had worked, he couldn’t protect people if they didn’t stay put.

  “Spur of the moment thing?” he asked her lightly.

  She nodded. “Yep.” Then she smiled, a flash of brilliance so bright it blinded him, made him blink.

  His little lecture died on his tongue and slunk away.

  “They really have been bastards to you, haven't they?” Giles was still crouched beside Tank Man, but he rose to his feet, holding the wall for support.

  Kel had gone still, like she was listening to something in her head – just like she'd done earlier, in the lobby. Her teeth gripped her lower lip so hard Nate wondered if she would break the skin.

  She didn't answer.

  “That's a pretty good block. I can't read you at all.” Giles' voice was soft, but it jerked Kel out of whatever thought held her. Giles looked as gray and wasted as the wall he leaned against, a concentration camp survivor.

  She moved over to him, offered him her arm. There was a tenderness on her face, and Giles looked away, with no smart comeback. Then she turned back to Nate. “Now what?”

  He tried to ignore Giles’ hand on her delicate wrist. “We need money, and clothes.
I say we take the risk those two were the last. Break into admin and see what we can find.”

  “They were the last two, but they called Greenway. He’s probably called a couple of others who are off-duty. Jenkins was hoping to have us all back in our cages by the time the doc showed.”

 

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