Unforsaken (17 page)

Read Unforsaken Online

Authors: Sophie Littlefield

He hung up without further comment. Mustache lowered his hand from his ear and I realized he’d been listening in, patched into the call. Already he was dialing another number. “Code black,” he muttered.

Prentiss took a deep breath and shut his eyes for a moment; when he opened them, his placid expression was nearly restored, and he managed a brief smile.

“I’m terribly sorry, but I have been called away on an urgent matter. Hailey, Kaz, I leave you in Dr. Grace’s capable hands, and we’ll speak again tomorrow.”

“Is she all right?” I demanded. “Prairie, is she all right?”

The General didn’t answer.

J
ASMINE
, R
ATTLER THOUGHT
. She smelled like jasmine, the first white blooms of spring on the shrubs that still grew along the edges of Trashtown, long after the person who’d planted them had died and been forgotten.

He closed his eyes and let himself remember: a long-ago July morning, before the sun scorched the sky, chasing Prairie into the hedge. He just wanted her to stop screaming, so he hooked a foot around her leg and sent her facedown in the dirt under the jasmine hedge. He slid down next to her, rolled her over, saw the scratches on her tearstained cheeks, held her wrists so she couldn’t lash out at him. He wanted to make the tears go away, wanted her to stop screaming so he could just tell her what was inside him, the way she made him feel, but he didn’t know the words.

So he’d ground her hands into the dirt and made her cry harder, all the while breathing in that spring-bright smell of jasmine.

But they weren’t kids anymore. They were grown, and Rattler was a man, and she was his woman and she
would
mind him. His hands were in her hair and he seized a handful and yanked hard enough to jerk her head back.

“Hush your mouth,” he growled, but she hadn’t said anything. She just stared at him, her green eyes throwing sparks, her lip curled in a sneer that let him know she wasn’t half broke yet.

For a minute he felt rage rise in him and he wanted to break her, devil be damned, right here in a dried-up wash somewhere in central Illinois. He didn’t know this land, didn’t know who owned the tidy white barn a quarter mile away, the row of black walnut trees, the hound baying at the end of its chain.

What he did know: the blood on their clothes had been spilled by his own hand. And he’d spill more if more bloodshed was what it took. He’d do anything for Prairie and for the life they were meant to lead.

It had been almost too easy to take out the ones who’d had her locked up. His spinning eye showed him the way, told him what to do. He shot the first man right through the door. The other didn’t have time to get out of the chair. But Rattler didn’t notice the beat-up mess of a woman in the corner until she came at him like she was hungry for the bullet,
dragging her chained-up chair behind her. Rattler didn’t want to shoot a Banished, but she wouldn’t stop and she wouldn’t stop, no matter he told her to stay back.

That messed him up. He hadn’t wanted to shoot her, and as she gurgled her last breath, Rattler felt his rage at Prentiss growing stronger. The man kept taking what was his, and Rattler’s wrath was a living thing now, a hungry beast that would tear his enemies limb from limb, that would roar so loud that everyone in Gypsum would hear. The ground would disappear in a lake of blood before he let Prentiss win.

He raged and he beat his fist on the wall in that fancy hallway, and that was how the last one got away, a fast-moving thing with long curly hair. She darted out the door and down the hall and disappeared into the stairwell, and Rattler could catch her easy, but then he saw Prairie through that door the curly-hair one left open. Prairie with her pretty mouth open a little like she was saying his name, Prairie with her fancy shoes and her fancy hair he wanted to mess up with his hands, Prairie who knew him like no other. He let the curly-hair one go. He took Prairie because Prairie was his, and they rode the elevator together, and when it stopped on the other floors, Rattler stared down every man or woman who wanted to get in the little box with them. The box was not big enough to hold him and his feelings. The world was not big enough to hold him and Prairie and his feelings.

But first things first, which was why he’d pulled off the road for a little talk once they’d got good and far out of
the city and night had come down to hide them. A talk and then a night’s rest, that was what they needed.

“Now, before I give you this, girl,” he said to Prairie, “you git to thinking on what you’re gonna do. ’Cause seems you and me got the same goal here, least in the short term. We’re going after Hailey and the rest. We work together, we might just save that little bastard child and them Polacks. You shoot me down, they don’t stand a chance.”

Prairie still said nothing, but she gave him the tiniest of nods. Slowly, reluctantly, Rattler eased off her, slid his hands from her hair, leaned back in the driver’s seat.

Then he handed her his favorite gun.

He watched her settle it into her hands. It looked good on her, warm steel shimmering silver. When she lifted it and pointed it at him, he allowed himself a smile. She was brave, a natural hunter. The blood ran as thick in her veins as it did in his.

“Now listen well,” he said as she raised the gun until it was inches from his crazy spinning eye and sighted down the barrel. “I seen water. I seen more dead before tomorrow’s done, and I seen you by my side. Mind me well, girl, and do as I say.”

He turned away from her then and eased his seat back, fixing to get his sleep. “And put that thing down. You know you ain’t gonna shoot me—not tonight, anyway.”

P
RENTISS AND
M
USTACHE HURRIED OUT
of the cafeteria as alarms sounded elsewhere in the building. Several other staffers abandoned their lunch and followed, barking orders into cell phones.

Dr. Grace stared at us nervously. She and Kaz and I were alone in the dining room now. “Everything is fine,” she said uncertainly. “I’m sure they will be back soon. Meanwhile, why don’t we, um, take a tour? I can show you the recreation facilities. We have a gym, sauna, a volleyball—”

“I don’t care about any of that. I just want to see Chub,” I interrupted.

Kaz caught my eye. He shook his head subtly and I followed his gaze to the ceiling above the door. Mounted in the corner was a tiny security camera. I glanced around the rest of the room but didn’t see any others.

Dr. Grace was shaking her head. “You know that is not possible, not without Prentiss on-site. But I’m sure he’ll be back by tomorrow, and once things are back to normal, I can suggest a visit. Perhaps you can observe me working with him.”

Kaz mouthed something, but I couldn’t make out the words.

“Um …,” I said. Dr. Grace looked at me suspiciously. “Have you been spending much time with Chub?”

“I am his principal contact, yes,” Dr. Grace said. “I am in charge of his testing, as well as his daily regimen.”

“When you say testing …,” I said, trying to keep her talking. Kaz had a plan, and I needed to keep Dr. Grace from noticing. I forced myself to look curious. “What exactly are you looking for?”

“Well, as you undoubtedly already know, Chub is a high psychic with a strong tendency toward precognition,” she said, her features relaxing as she warmed up to her subject.

Kaz raised his glass to his lips and drank the rest of his tea. As Dr. Grace talked about Chub’s abilities, he slammed the glass down on the edge of the table, smashing it into several pieces. He catapulted from his chair, picking up the largest shard and pressing it against Dr. Grace’s throat, wrapping an arm around her neck so she couldn’t move. He gripped the glass so tightly that it cut into his own flesh, and blood ran down his arm in glistening red rivulets. It was just like what had happened with Jess, and I froze at the memory.

“Lock the door, Hailey!” he said, and I snapped out of it, forcing myself to move. I threw myself at the heavy glass
door, pushing it shut. There was a loud click as it latched into place. Through the door I saw the cafeteria erupt in commotion as staff raced toward us, weapons drawn.

“Here’s what’s going to happen now,” Kaz said, talking fast. “I’m guessing that door is reinforced and it’ll take a few minutes for anyone with the right code to get down here.”

“But, Kaz, we can’t—” I stopped myself before I said it:
Can’t leave here, not without Chub
.

Kaz stared deep into my eyes and said, “Trust me, Hailey.”

Only once before had anyone said those words to me. It was the night Gram was shot. Prairie and I were careering across a moonlit field in her old Volvo, pursued by Gram’s killers in a much faster car. Until that moment, I’d never believed I could trust another human being, but I closed my eyes and did my best. And we survived.

Now, for the second time ever, I put my life in someone else’s hands.

“Open this door!” one of the men yelled. His voice was only slightly muffled by the glass.

“I’ll kill Dr. Grace!” Kaz shouted.

I knew that it was a bluff, that Kaz wouldn’t take a life unless he was defending himself or someone he loved. But he looked convincing. The sharp piece of glass had grazed the tender skin of Dr. Grace’s neck, and her blood trickled down and mixed with Kaz’s, dripping to the floor as he held her immobile.

The men outside conferred in whispers.

“Empty the cafeteria,” Kaz ordered.

The guards hesitated; then one barked a command and the remaining diners filed out, followed by the kitchen staff.

“Now set your weapons against the wall and lie on the floor,” Kaz yelled. “When we come out, we will take your guns. You will not get up. You will remain where you are and order the hallways to be cleared. We will take one of you with us, and if we see anyone as we exit the building, we will kill both you and Dr. Grace. Do you understand?”

The shorter guard, who seemed to be in charge, shook his head. “No way.”

“I said I’d kill her,” Kaz roared, jerking Dr. Grace around so that the guards could see her terrified face.

“Then do it,” the guard said. “The outcome is the same either way. You’re screwed.”

Of course.

Dr. Grace’s life was not a big enough bargaining chip. They would rather let her die than risk losing the two of us, a Seer and a Healer. After all, we were the keys to all the work they were doing here. No matter how brilliant Dr. Grace was, they could always find another scientist.

They couldn’t find more Healers or pureblood Seers, and they knew it. More important, Prentiss knew it, and I had no doubt he had communicated his priorities very clearly. Life here was not sacred.

Kaz’s gaze met mine and I knew he had reached the same conclusion.

“If you’re going to do it,” Dr. Grace said, her voice shaking,
her eyes squeezed shut in fear, “please make sure you kill me clean. If you don’t …”

It was a moment before she managed to complete her sentence. “If you don’t finish me, they’ll turn me into one of them.”

I knew it was true. They wouldn’t waste a dying woman. They would force me or Prairie to turn Dr. Grace into a zombie.

That was it, the end of hope. As Kaz looked at me with terrible regret, the shard of glass clattered to the floor.

He didn’t need to tell me that he wouldn’t—couldn’t—kill Dr. Grace. But the way she sagged against the wall with relief made it clear that she hadn’t been sure.

Outside, the two guards smirked. We had played our last card. Now they knew our limits, and we were no longer a threat to them.

I thought of Rattler, so far the only one of us Banished to stand up to Prentiss and win.

I wondered who was the greater evil: Prentiss, who thought nothing of creating and selling human killing machines, or Rattler—my father—who wanted to turn us all into a twisted kind of family in which love was laced with fear and tainted with spilled blood, whose destiny came from a cursed patch of earth in Ireland.

Rattler was a killer. But his life and his history were bound forever with mine. In that moment I couldn’t help being glad he had seized Prairie from Prentiss. At least now she had a chance.

Dr. Grace crossed her arms tightly over her chest and
pressed herself into the wall as though she wanted to disappear. The taller man, who had a thick drawl and a Texas Longhorn tattoo on his forearm, tapped his gun against the glass. “Open this door.”

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