by A. G. Riddle
David released Shaw and reached for her. He looked into her eyes for a moment, then opened his mouth to say something. Shaw’s fist connected square with David’s face, sending him below the water. Shaw dived after him, but Kate regained her composure and fought her way between them.
“Boys, boys!” She pushed at each of them, putting herself between them.
“You’re protecting him?” David spat.
“He saved my life,” Kate said.
“He threw you off the ship.”
“It’s uh, it’s… complicated.”
David stared at her. “Whatever. We’re getting out of here.” He unslung one of the tanks from his back and pushed it toward Kate. “Take this.”
Kate motioned to Martin, Chang, and the other scientist. “What about them?”
“What about ’em?”
“They’re coming with us,” Kate insisted.
David shook his head. He started putting the tank straps around Kate’s shoulders.
She pulled away from him and swam to the men. “I’m not leaving Martin and the others behind.”
“All right, the three of you,” he glanced back at Shaw coldly, “four of you can share a tank.”
“Kate, I need to speak with you. It’s urgent,” Martin said. He could barely keep his head above water.
The European scientist spoke up. “I will not need to share the oxygen. I can cross alone.”
All heads turned to him.
“I am an extremely strong swimmer,” he said, explaining.
David tossed the other tank to Shaw. “Right, well you all have a committee meeting to sort it out. We’re going.” He took Kate by the arm.
“Wait,” she said. “Martin has been injured. He’s sick. You take him, David.”
“No.” He swam to her. “I’m not letting you out of my sight. Not again.”
She heard Shaw groan in the background, but time seemed to stand still. She felt herself nod.
“For God’s sake,” Shaw said. “I’ll take Martin. You all take the scientist; he won’t take much oxygen anyway.” He motioned to the European scientist. “And you… can swim strongly I suppose.”
The European ducked under the water. Martin protested, but Shaw had him, and they were under. David put the face mask on Kate, and they dove, but she fought to get to the surface.
“What?” David asked.
“Chang.”
David looked over.
Dr. Chang was treading water. “I thought you were going to leave me.”
He saved Martin’s life, Kate thought. “We’re not going to leave you.” She motioned to David. “Take his hand.”
“You overestimate my comfort zone.”
“Oh please!” She grabbed Chang’s hand, tightened her grip on David’s, and the three of them dove.
Kate took the first turn with the oxygen, then Chang. David seemed to need less than the two of them.
Kate couldn’t see Shaw and Martin or the other man. The space below the fire seemed to stretch on forever. Through the mask, she looked up. The fire above the water was beautiful, like nothing she had ever seen. A flower of orange and red, blooming at the top of the water, expanding, receding, like a time-lapse photo.
Chang paddled beside her. His eyes were closed. There must have been gas in the water.
David led them on. He wore fins on his feet, and his powerful legs propelled them through the water.
Finally, the field of fire ended, and Kate saw the black night above the water. David guided them upward, and he and Chang gasped for air as they broke the surface.
Kate held an arm up to block the bright lights that blinded her. Another ship floated just past the fire. A white yacht with black windows. It was three stories tall. She knew there was probably some nautical term for “three stories,” but that’s what it looked like to her: a three-story white condo building with telescoping decks at the front and back.
David pulled her and Chang toward it. A towering black man stood at the back of the boat. He reached into the water, grabbed both of Kate’s arms, and pulled her effortlessly into the boat.
Kate peeled the backpack off as the African lifted Chang up by one arm and deposited him beside her.
David began climbing up the ladder. “Are we the first?”
The African nodded.
David stopped, grabbed the face mask from Kate, and was halfway back down the ladder when a head popped out of the water.
The European scientist.
“Did you see the other two?” David called to him.
“No.” He wiped the water from his face. “My eyes were closed. There is gas in the water.”
Kate thought he was barely winded. She desperately wanted to talk to David, but he was gone, back into the black water.
Seconds passed that felt like hours.
“I’m Kamau.”
Kate turned to him. “Kate Warner.”
His eyebrows rose quickly.
“Yeah, I get that a lot.” She turned back to the water.
Another head surfaced. Shaw. Martin wasn’t with him. Kate walked to the rail. “Where’s Martin?”
“He’s not here?” Shaw spun himself in the water. “He freaked out, thought he was drowning. I thought he swam ahead of me. I couldn’t see a bloody thing.” He dove back below the surface.
Kate stared at the wall of flames. If Martin had come up in the middle…
She waited. She felt a blanket being wrapped around her shoulders. She murmured her thanks without turning to see who had placed it.
Two heads broke the water, and one man pulled the other to the boat: David—leading Martin.
Martin’s head was badly burned, and he was almost unconscious.
David carried Martin aboard and laid him on a white leather couch in the saloon. Chang raced over to Martin and began assessing his wounds. Kamau set a first-aid kit down, and Kate began rifling through it.
The water parted again. “Do you have him?” Shaw called.
“Yes!” Kate shouted.
The second Shaw reached the ladder, David shouted to Kamau, “Get us out of here.”
Kate and Chang continued to work on Martin until his head was properly bandaged, and his breathing stabilized.
“He’s going to be fine,” Chang said. “I can take it from here, Kate.”
David took Kate by the arm, leading her belowdecks. His hand was tight around her bicep. She was soaked and utterly exhausted, but seeing him, knowing he was alive, somehow exhilarated her, gave her an indescribable rush.
He closed the door and latched it.
“We need to talk,” David said, still facing the door.
56
Northern Morocco
Dorian awoke to a searing pain in his side.
He rolled over and screamed in agony. The motion only intensified the pain. Whatever had hit him was still in him, digging, moving around his insides like a hot knife.
He ripped his helmet off, then bent over to see what had him.
The tree limb had speared him all the way through just above his pelvis, where his upper body armor ended. He gently unstrapped his body armor. The motion sent a second wave of pain through him, and he had to pause. He tossed the armor aside and pulled his undershirt back.
The limb was just a few inches from his side. Had it been farther in, it might have gotten his liver.
He gritted his teeth and methodically drew the wooden shard out.
He inspected the wound. He was bleeding, but he would be all right. Right now he had bigger problems to deal with.
Even in the night sky, he could see three columns of smoke rising above the trees, the remains of the helicopter fleet burning.
Ceuta had no air support—it had all been deployed to southern Spain, but whoever had taken the base obviously had plenty of ground troops. Would they send them?
He got to his feet.
Screams—from the crash site. His instincts took over. He grabbed his helmet and body armor and ran towa
rd the burning wreckage.
The helicopter had set fire to the forest, and it burned violently, a wall of flame Dorian couldn’t see through. The screams grew louder, but Dorian couldn’t make out the words.
He donned the body armor, then the helmet, and ran around the perimeter of the fire, looking for a way through. On the other side, the fire wasn’t as thick, but he still had no clear line of sight to the helicopter. He thought he could make it through.
He drew his sidearm and tossed it on the ground, along with the spare magazines. He also placed his satellite phone on the ground. He tucked his hands in the armor and stepped to the edge of the blaze. The boots, suit, and helmet were fire-resistant, but there were limits to how much heat they could take, and then there were the parts of his body that the armor didn’t cover.
He drew a deep breath and raced into the fire. His feet pounded the ground. The burn was overwhelming. He held his breath, and… broke through the fire, into a small clearing. Dorian saw it now: three of the helicopters had gone down close to each other and their fires had joined, creating the ring. Each of the helicopters was in full blaze. Dorian wouldn’t get anything from them, and the screams hadn’t come from anyone inside.
Another wave of screams erupted. Dorian spun and found their source. The pilot’s black Immari armor made him almost impossible to see against the dark earth and pitch-black night, even through the light of the fires.
Dorian ran to him. The man’s leg lay at an unnatural angle, and there was a deep cut up the side. The man had already tied it off at his thigh, and that had saved his life, but Dorian wasn’t sure that was good news. The man had been able to crawl from the burning helicopter, but he couldn’t run or so much as stand.
“Help!” he screamed.
“Shut up,” Dorian said mechanically from behind his dark helmet. What to do? The man had lost too much blood already, and there were no medical supplies. Dorian automatically reached for his sidearm, then remembered he had left it beyond the fire. Put him out of his misery and move on. The enemy will be here soon, searching the area. He’ll get you killed. But Dorian couldn’t do it, couldn’t bring himself to leave the man, to leave one of his own soldiers to the fire. He bent and took the man’s arm.
“Thank you, sir,” the pilot said, panting.
Dorian paused for a moment, then stood from the man, walked over to his helmet and returned with it. “Keep this on. We’re going through the fire.”
Dorian braced himself for the pain as he hoisted the man onto his shoulder. The wound in his side raged, cutting him, jabbing him. It felt like he was ripping apart.
He ran to the edge of the flames, drew a breath, then moved into them. He charged on more slowly this time but with every ounce of energy he had.
When he cleared the fire, he threw the man to the ground and collapsed himself. The blaze was moving the other way, with the wind. They were safe for now.
Dorian was breathless, and he wanted to puke from the pain. The agony was total. He couldn’t even identify where it hurt. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw the gun, magazines, and phone lying there. He could end this man’s misery if he could reach it… Dorian tried to push up, but the pain and exhaustion met him, holding him against the ground, forcing him to lie still.
The pilot crawled over to Dorian and began doing something. Dorian tried to shove him off, but the pilot fought him back. Another jolt of pain surged up his legs. The man was torturing him. Dorian tried to kick his legs, but the man threw his body across them. The pain swelled, moving up Dorian like a wave. It would drown him, was drowning him. The woods faded.
When Dorian awoke, it was still dark, but there was no fire at the helicopter crash site, only smoke. And pain. But he could move again. Beside him, the pilot lay asleep.
Dorian sat up, grimacing with every move. His feet. They were a burned, mottled mess. The unlaced, melted boots lay close by. The bottoms were smooth where the rubber had turned to liquid, flowing onto and over his feet. The pilot had removed them, likely saving Dorian’s feet. How long would it have taken the melting rubber to cool? If the boots had stayed on, Dorian may have never walked again.
An untouched pair of boots lay just beyond Dorian’s charred set.
Dorian glanced over at the snoring pilot again. He was barefooted. Dorian held the boots up to his feet. A little small, but they would do, depending on how far he had to go. And he needed to find that out.
He crawled over to his sidearm and sat phone. He glanced again at the pilot and considered his next move. The area around the gash in the pilot’s leg already showed signs of infection.
Dorian punched the phone.
“Fleet Ops.”
“It’s Sloane—”
“Sir, we’ve—”
“Shut up. Put Captain Williams on.”
“General—”
“Captain, why the hell am I stranded in the woods inside enemy lines?”
“Sir, we’ve sent two rescue missions. They’ve shot them both down. You’re deep in their firing range.”
“I do not want to hear how many times you’ve failed, Captain. Send a topographic map to my phone with an overlay of their firing radius.”
“Yes, sir. We think Ceuta may be sending ground troops to your location—”
Dorian held the phone out and studied the map, ignoring the captain. From his location, Dorian thought he could reach the nearest rendezvous point outside Ceuta’s firing range in about three hours. He glanced at his burned feet. Four hours was more realistic. It wouldn’t be an easy trek, but he could make it.
The pilot let out a snore that caught Dorian’s attention. He looked over, annoyed. What to do? The gun and magazines loomed just beside him, silently presenting the solution.
His eyes drifted away as his mind explored alternatives. Every other option he considered was met with a single thought, cold and final: Don’t be a fool. You know what must be done. For the first time in Dorian’s life, he had a face to put with that voice: Ares. He knew it now. For the first time, he could feel his own thoughts, his true thoughts, the person he was before the first outbreak, when his father placed him in the tube. This moment was a microcosm of every difficult decision he had ever made: a struggle between what his emotional, his human self wanted to do, and that cruel, cold voice. Ares. Ares was the drive that had lingered in the background, unseen, prodding Dorian, shaping his thoughts. Dorian had never been fully aware of the struggle within him until this moment. Ares cried out again: Don’t be weak. You are special. You must survive. Your species is depending on you. He is another soldier lost to our cause. Don’t let his sacrifice cloud your judgment.
Dorian raised the phone to his face. “Captain, I just sent you some coordinates.”
He looked at the pilot, then at his burned feet—feet he could still walk on.
“Sir?”
Dorian’s mind rocked back and forth like a tiny ship on rough seas. The voice was firm now. This world wasn’t built for the weak. Dorian, you are playing the greatest chess game in history. Don’t risk a king to save a pawn.
“I’m here,” Dorian said. “I will be at the extraction point in…”
Don’t—
“…eight hours. Be advised, I have another survivor. If we’re not at those coordinates, the rescue team’s orders are to move into the woods and search for us on a heading bearing four-seven degrees.”
And like that, the voice was gone, silenced. Dorian’s thoughts were his own. He was free. He was… different, or was he the person he was always meant to be? The voice in his ear interrupted his reflection.
“Copy, General. Godspeed.”
“Captain.”
“Sir?”
“The girl in my quarters,” Dorian said.
“Yes, sir. She’s here—”
“Tell her… that I’m all right.”
“Yes, sir, I’ll see to it—”
Dorian ended the call.
Dorian fell back to the ground. He was hungry. He neede
d to eat, needed his strength, especially with the extra weight he had to carry. He would have to hunt.
In the distance, he heard a low rolling rumble. Thunder? No. It was the beat of horses charging through the forest.
57
Somewhere off the coast of Ceuta
Mediterranean Sea
For the better part of the last hour, Kate and David hadn’t done any talking, and that made her very happy. They lay there, both naked, in the sheets of the king bed centered in the wood-paneled master stateroom.
It felt almost surreal to her, like they were lying in a luxury hotel room, as if the world outside had only been a bad dream. She felt safe and free, for the first time since… since she could remember.
Kate’s face rested on his chest. She loved listening to his heart, watching his body rise and fall with every breath. She traced her finger around the red burn marks on his chest. It looked like he had been branded. “This one is new,” she said softly.
“Cost of a wooden horse in this screwed-up world.” His voice was serious.
Was it a joke? She pushed up and looked him in the eyes, hoping for an answer, but he didn’t look at her.
He was different somehow. Harder. More distant. She sensed it when they made love. He was not as gentle as he had been in Gibraltar.
She returned her head to his chest, half-hiding. “I had a dream about a wooden horse. You were drawing—”
David pushed her off of him. “I was at a drafting table—”
The shock gripped her. She nodded, hesitating. “Yes… a veranda looked out on a blue bay and a forested peninsula—”
“Impossible…” David whispered. “How?”
Martin’s words echoed in her mind, We believe the Atlantis Gene is connected to a quantum biological process. Subatomic particles transmitted faster than the speed of light…
Kate had given David a blood transfusion, but that couldn’t have changed his genome, couldn’t have given him the Atlantis Gene, yet there was some connection between them. “I think it has something to do with the Atlantis Gene—it activates some sort of quantum biological link—”