Dead Radiance (36 page)

Read Dead Radiance Online

Authors: T. G. Ayer

"Aidan?"

A stricken look haunted his face—no surprise after having almost met a bullet in the face twice in so many weeks. "Yes, I'm here. What do you need?"

"The Bifrost. It's our only way out."

He nodded and looked at Hugin. "Alright, Blackbird. Let's get out of here."

I desperately wanted to laugh as Aidan helped me get back on my feet, imagining what Hugin would think of his new nickname. The world spun around me and all I could think of was Mead.

"I think I need some Mead before we use the Bifrost. Who knows how the traveling will affect me."

Aidan obliged and I soon downed half a bag of Mead. Some part of my consciousness screamed at me not to drink too much. Aidan would need the rest. I tried to think. How many had he used, how many had we brought? My head hurt. Too hard to think.

A few moments later I felt better, breathed easier. Even the world righted itself a little. I let go of Aidan's arm, and stood on quivering legs.

"Can we go now?" I asked.

Aidan choked back a laugh. Another bullet ricocheted off the wall. "Yes, ma'am," he said.

We stayed within the shadows of the dumpster. Aidan wouldn't dare to risk his life again by checking who had shot at us. We both concentrated hard, thinking of Greenland and the Professor.

Then we stepped forward, knowing they would see us once we moved out of the shadows. Why did the entrance to the Bridge have to be out in the open? Especially when somewhere out there Worthington and his partner were trying to terminate us.

We held out breaths and prayed. Everything slowed down, to the point that I heard the pop of the bullets disengaging from the barrels, the whoosh as they sped through the air, heading straight toward us.

A low hum surrounded us and I was pulled forward, sucked into a strange vortex of air currents.

 

Chapter 38

 

I stumbled as my feet hit solid ground again. I whirled and turned, panicked when I couldn't see Aidan. But the thwack of his heels hitting the ground beside me was a comforting sound.

I looked around, absorbing the biting air as it fought its way into my skin, right into my bones. I shook with the cold, despite my armor still maintaining the warm temperature of my body. Aidan shivered beside me. Thank heaven we hadn't ended up standing in the icy snow or on a lonely glacier out in the white wilderness. No. I thought.
Thank you, Bifrost.

Each trip on the Bifrost was slightly different. My trips with Fen were blink-and-you're-there, yet this one felt like a ride on a little tornado. Tornado! In that pain-filled moment I recalled my first trip on the Bifrost. From Ms. Custer's front yard. Had there really been an entrance to the Bridge right on my doorstep all this time?

A violent shiver pulled me out of my thoughts. We stood in the middle of a passage marked with sealed doors at regular intervals. A metal door, set with a large window, guarded the end of the passage. Beyond the door snow swirled, so thick it was impossible to say if it was twilight or high noon.

Biting agony forced its way into every conscious brain cell. The pain hadn't worsened, but it hadn't lightened either. I hoped the Mead had done some good. My palm went to my ribs, where heat radiated out of my body like flames in an overactive furnace. My hand came away with blood. Not the thick, pulsing surge it had been beside the dumpster, rather a steady dribble that, hopefully, meant I was on the mend.

Wings flapped and fluttered, and Hugin made an appearance, for once not the picture of calm. Black feathers fluttered to the floor as he landed on Aidan's shoulder. Shocked, Aidan almost dusted him off, but caught his hand at the last minute. He stared at the bird out of the corner of his eye, standing stiff and uncomfortable with his new burden.

"You okay?" I asked the perturbed creature.

"Yes, although it is not every day I get shot at," he answered.

"Yes, I agree. Not a usual occurrence for us either." I forced the words out as adrenalin vacated my body in one sweeping rush.

I staggered against the wall, sliding slowly to the ground, unable to stop my descent. Aidan crouched beside me, pulling my coat forward to look at the wound. Soon I found the half-pouch of Mead stuck in my face. I drank, again filled with guilt. As yet I hadn't felt a significant change to my condition other than the halting of the bleeding.

I handed the pouch back to Aidan, experiencing a moment of clarity in which his pale skin shone bloodless and blue-veined, in which purple and blue blotches riddled the center of his forehead, forming a neat circular pattern around the bullet hole that had killed him. The slope of his shoulders screamed out the true state of his weakness.

Soon I was well enough to rise. I felt as if the rest had done more than the Mead, and I was beginning to wonder at its effectiveness. Better keep a closer eye on Aidan, just in case. I teetered on numbed legs, holding on to Aidan until the dizziness vanished.

I figured we'd start at the first door on our right, and I grabbed the handle.

"Be careful. We have no idea if we're even in the right place. Let's have a peek first before we go barging into a room full of murderers," Aidan said. He grinned, knowing he sounded severely paranoid, but he had a point.

I placed my ear against the door, but it was well insulated against the cold and thus against sound too. I opened the door and allowed it to move toward me, leaving it slightly ajar. Voices filtered toward us. Two speakers. A woman and a man. I looked at Aidan.

"Does it sound like her?" I whispered.

He nodded. We slipped into the room and the door closed behind us in a soft whoosh. Hugin took off, leaving Aidan's shoulder as he walked over to a desk overflowing with papers and photographs and maps. The bird landed on the top of the nearest cabinet.

The two occupants, deep within their conversation, faced a white board filled with notations and plastered with a number of maps. They were discussing ice shelves and separations.

"Professor Wayne?" Aidan spoke.

She turned, eyes reluctant to leave the board, auburn hair flickering in the crude fluorescent light. When her glance came to rest on Aidan her eyes widened. "Aidan? What are you doing here?"

My eyes narrowed as I turned my own gaze on him. Seems I'd missed the part where Aidan mentioned he and the Professor knew each other personally. Probably met at one of the many digs he'd been on.

"I know we're interrupting but I have to speak to you," Aidan said. "It's very important."

The man scowled. "Elisabeth, this ice shelf isn't going to wait while we babysit a bunch of kids." The tone of his voice matched the frigid weather, and he stared at us as if teens were freaky, yet-to-be-understood creatures. His forehead was a mass of creases, a stark contrast to the smoothly combed hair sitting on his head like a skullcap. A cold impatience gleamed in his black eyes and I could almost read his mind. How long would it take him to have security throw us out into the snow?

"Never mind, Henri. I can handle this. I'm sure it won't take long, and please let me know if the ice shelf should move in the next ten minutes, will you?" The Professor smiled, dismissing him smoothly. Henri left the room in a huff, not bothering to look at us as he shoved his way through the door. Unfortunately for him, he couldn't slam the vacuum lock door.

"Sorry, Aidan, Henri believes he's on a tight deadline." Her smile was affectionate and I understood in that moment that she had no idea Aidan had been killed.

Aidan shrugged. I moved to stand beside him, and the Professor's eyes widened. From the shock in her eyes and the flush on her cheeks, it was supremely clear that she recognized me. But who did she recognize? Dr. Halbrook's progeny or the Valkyrie they'd unearthed?

"Who's your friend, Aidan?" she asked, cautiously, as if one breath in my direction would cause me to disappear in a puff of snow.

"Professor Wayne, this is Bryn Halbrook."

She blinked and frowned. "But I just spoke to you on the phone a couple of hours ago. I haven't even called the charter yet." She walked back and forth, not quite wringing her hands, but it was close enough. Surely, this was the part where a normal human being would faint or cry or throw a hysterical fit at the unreality of it all. She approached Aidan and asked, "How the hell did you get here this fast?"

Aidan shrugged his shoulders again, pursed his lips and said, with an Oscar-winning air of nonchalance, "We used the Bifrost."

"You used what?" Her eyes narrowed.

"The Bifrost, the Rainbow of the Gods. The bridge between worlds," I answered.

She opened her mouth. Closed it. Then she looked from him to me and her eyes narrowed. "Is this some kind of prank?"

"No. No, I'm really sorry. Aidan's not telling you everything." I gave Aidan a nasty look. We didn't have time to waste with dodging reality. "I know what my father did. With the DNA from the dig site."

Her mouth formed a silent "O" and she sat down slowly. It was a risk to mention it, but how many people knew about what my father had done? If Aidan's father had found out, how did I know who else knew?

Her next words just confirmed my fears. "You know about that?" She whispered the question in a voice so small it bordered on a squeak.

I nodded.

"Who told you?"

"You won't believe me even if I told you." My response was dry.

"Young lady, I don't have time to mess around. If you expect my help, you need to be straight with me." Suitably chastised, I nodded.

I took a step back, opened my coat and allowed the glamor to fall away.

Professor Wayne rose to her feet. Her face was strained as she whispered a name.

"Brunhilde!"

***

"Dear Lord, is this real?" She looked at Aidan and promptly sat back in her chair, so shocked her legs folded, unable to hold her weight. My wings glimmered and fluttered at my back.

But not before she saw the blood.

"What happened to you?" She rose, surprising me with the speed with which she reached me.

"It's okay. We were shot at when we used the Bifrost to get here." I waved her off.

"You need a doctor. I can get a medic to see to you, patch you up."

I shook my head, desperate to change the topic. "I'm fine, it's healing. The bullet went right through and the bleeding stopped ages ago."

I'd tried to make her feel better but it seemed I'd done the opposite by revealing my apparent mortality. I dropped the glamor back, more adept and comfortable with the skill now. I pulled my coat closed.

But the professor was no longer looking at me. She stared, shocked, at Aidan instead. She'd seen Aidan in his battle gear when I dropped the glamor.

I sympathized with the Professor. Although she'd spent her lifetime chasing after artifacts, it would be hard to find an archaeologist who truly expects a mythology to be real. Everyone knows myths are called myths because of the very nature of the stories. Farfetched, sketchy, too magical for the modern techno-kid to accept.

"Professor? You okay?" Aidan went closer to her, and she flinched, staring at his chest.

"What are you wearing?" she asked, her hands and voice shaking.

"He is
einherjar
. It's his armor," I answered. Aidan looked helplessly me at me. Things had gotten pretty out of hand in the past few minutes.

The Professor took a deep breath, gripping her hands together in a twisted fist, taking a few staggered breaths. "Both of you, sit." She was one cool, professional woman and I decided I could learn a lot from her. "Coffee? Chocolate?"

"Anything." We answered in unison, both not caring very much what we drank as long as it was warm.

She rang for coffee and steepled her fingers, looking over at us, eyes still wrinkled with worry. And waiting. "Right," she said. "Start from the beginning."

Aidan cleared his throat and began to tell his tale, from his mission to find Halbrook's mutant child to discovering me alive and well in Craven.

"Bryn wasn't an animal to be terminated," he said, the skin on his face tight.

The heat pump sputtered weakly, reminding me of the cold blanket of air that hugged me tightly.

"Terminated? What do you mean?"

"My father wanted me to infiltrate the foster home and determine the extent of Bryn's mutation, and to recommend termination if it was true she was part Valkyrie. He believed it was a threat to humanity if she was allowed to live." Aidan paused and threw a warm glance in my direction. "I didn't agree with him. I admit I went to Craven under his instruction, but I'd only paid half an ear. For me it was an opportunity to get away from him. To be able to study the book without his constant interference."

"What book?"

I fished in my satchel and handed her the leather-bound volume. She nodded. "Ah yes. I understood that your father had procured a copy of this volume."

"I was also worried for Bryn's safety," Aidan said. "Something strange was happening to her." He paused and only continued when she raised a questioning brow. "Bryn can tell you."

I cleared my throat. "I was about five years old when I began to see people who glowed. A strange golden aura around them. I spent most of my childhood seeing a psychiatrist who made it his life's work to rid me of my psychosis. When I moved to Craven, I discovered that the glow really meant the person was going to die. Aidan was there when one of my little foster brothers died. I was helpless, distraught. But after Aidan left, something weird happened." I didn't miss the look of remonstration she threw him. "I was taken to . . . a strange place."

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