Read Allie's War Season Four Online
Authors: JC Andrijeski
“We can talk about that later,” I said, shaking my head. “I would need to be out of here to look at that. It’s just an idea at this point.”
“But you think they can help with this?” he said, pressing slightly with his voice. “Having all four of us in one place again?”
Hesitating, I gave a nod.
“In what way?”
“Revik,” I said, holding Lily tighter. I sighed. “I think I can do enough to get you and Lily free of the immediate problem with the Dreng. But you’ll both be light dependent on me. Like... really light dependent. I’m not sure what the actual effects of that might be.” Hesitating, I clicked softly. “I think with Terian and Cass, we might be able to do more.”
“What kind of more?” Revik said.
Giving in, I gestured in a seer’s shrug. “Like real independence. For Lily, anyway.” I gave him a faint smile. “You might be stuck with me, baby. Sorry.”
He just looked at me for a moment.
Then I saw him let that go, too. I knew I wasn’t off the hook in terms of explaining; the conversation felt postponed, but definitely not off the docket.
Even as I thought it, Revik nodded slowly. Then, looking up at me, he hesitated again. Once more, I saw that conflict flare in his eyes.
“Allie, don’t take this the wrong way, but how do you know you can do any of this? I’m not asking for me, but for Lily. Did you see this in a dream, too? You seemed to know what you wanted to do before we even came in here. Or is it from what...” He trailed, coloring a little as he glanced at the wall speaker. He looked back at me. “...Is it something to do with last night? With why your light is different?”
I blinked, a little stumped.
Looking down at Lily in my arms, I felt a corresponding flicker of doubt. It was there and gone, and once it began to dissipate, that warmer certainty continued to pulse.
“I have no idea,” I said truthfully. “Does that matter to you? Do you want me not to do it?”
Funnily enough, my answer didn’t freak him out. It might have freaked me out, if someone said that to me under the circumstances. But instead, it seemed to stump him.
Then it made him laugh.
Clicking at me, he shook his head, still smiling. “No. It doesn’t matter. We seem to be running on prophet’s fumes these days, anyway, love.”
I thought about his words and frowned.
As usual, he’d noticed something that had been bothering me, although I hadn’t yet put a name to it, or even noticed it consciously. It didn’t seem to bother him, though. Well, not like it bothered me... maybe because he was more on the outside, looking in. Or maybe because he didn’t have the baggage I did, around dreaming of nuclear attacks on Asia and not trusting my biological mother who never even bothered to let me know she existed until a week ago.
Even weirder, in looking at him, I could tell that my words had reassured him somehow.
I was still studying the expression on his face when he leaned back on the couch, resting his head on the back cushion.
Watching my face, he motioned towards me expressively with his hands.
“Hurry up, wife. I have big plans for tonight.” That smile still ghosted his lips as he quirked an eyebrow at me, his expression deadpan. “By my calculation you owe me a birthday present. Several, in fact. I fully intend to collect.”
I couldn’t help laughing at that.
And yeah, I was pretty sure he didn’t mean the painting.
22
BULLSHIT
I WRAPPED MYSELF around him, even in sleep, even when I woke up too hot, confused about where I was, pieces of my limbs numb from the awkward way I lay on them and around him.
He did the same to me, which both reassured me and made it worse.
We had been talking for a lot of the night... not only having sex. I think the talking part was my fault, although he had a lot of questions, too.
We had a lot of sex.
I’d finally asked him, point blank, about Dalejem. Not only about what he’d said around needing to get out some of those feelings with Ullysa. Not even about what had come up when he’d been with her. I also asked him why things still felt weird around the two of them.
Or, I don’t know––unresolved, maybe.
Revik, as had been his tendency since everything went down between us that night, had been honest. Maybe too honest.
He told me he’d been in love with Dalejem. He told me he loved him still.
When I reacted to that, he only clicked at me, telling me I’d misunderstood.
“You know what I mean,” he’d said, a little exasperated.
“Not really, no,” I said.
“I mean, when you love someone... when you really love them... then you always kind of love them,” he said, that impatience still audible in his voice. He switched to Prexci, the seer language. “There’ve only been three people I felt that way about... romantically, I mean. Dalejem was one of them. My first wife was another. You are the third, Allie. And I have known you for the longest... and have loved you for the longest... and by far the most intensely and in ways that I feel the most deeply. Do not pretend you don’t understand that about me! Saying I love Dalejem does not make him a threat to you... or to what we have.”
I’d nodded, not saying anything at first.
“You loved Jaden,” he said, his voice harder.
I gave him a look, but only acknowledged his words with a gesture, not elaborating.
I didn’t want him to shut down again, not now that we were finally really talking. Anyway, I knew what he meant. I even agreed with him about love, about how it never really went away... but I didn’t like it very much, truthfully.
That only made him snort, right before he rolled, naked, to his back.
“Says the woman who just spent two nights with her ex-,” he’d muttered under his breath.
I frowned. But I really didn’t want to argue about Jaden, so I didn’t answer.
When the silence continued, Revik switched back to English, his voice exasperated enough that his German accent worsened.
“He is not a
threat
to you, Allie,” Revik said. “I love him, yes. But it is more of a warmth I feel for him now, a nostalgia. I do not know him anymore. I do not want to sleep with him. Even if I
did
want to sleep with him, I would never again do anything to threaten my life with you and Lily. I would think that would be crystal clear, too.”
When I didn’t say anything, he exhaled, looking up at the ceiling.
“It was a different kind of love, anyway,” he said. “One I needed at that point in my life. I do not need that now. And if I did, I would get even more of that with you. I already do. I have since we first became involved.”
“What do you mean?” I’d said, looking at him through the half-light.
Clicking softly, Revik threw up a hand before he let it fall to the mattress.
Even so, I could feel him thinking, trying to answer my question.
“He accepted me,” he said, speaking Prexci again. “He was probably the first seer I met, apart from Vash, who didn’t give a fuck what anyone else thought. He saw past the ex-Rook thing. It was sexual, yes... but the lack of judgment around my past, the refusing to cave to dogma around Code and the old families...
that
made me fall in love with him.”
Still thinking, he frowned up at the ceiling, his eyes narrow.
“More than that. It was like, I don’t know... permission. To learn my own mind and light, apart from what others told me to be. I needed that, too.”
Turning his head, he met my gaze, his clear eyes reflecting light.
“He was also kind-hearted,” he said, his voice faintly accusing. “He was compassionate towards me. You’d
like
him, Allie, if you gave him half a chance and didn’t insist on seeing him as a threat. I don’t understand that, Allie... I really don’t. How could you see anyone as a threat with me? Especially now?”
Resettling his head on the pillow, he stared back up at the ceiling.
“I was only seeing him for a few
weeks
before Kali took him,” he grumbled, switching back to English. “I was a totally different person back then, anyway.”
I nodded to that, too.
I understood. I really did.
But I was still struggling with it, truthfully.
I knew that fear lingering around him and Dalejem wasn’t rational. But then, his lingering fear around me and Jaden wasn’t rational, either. The truth was, we’d
never
been all that rational with one another, not when it came to that kind of thing.
I could tell he wasn’t hiding anything from me, though.
It didn’t even feel like he was hiding anything from me unintentionally. I could feel my fear as fear-only, but I still couldn’t entirely shake it. I didn’t know if that was a light thing, something from my past, a lingering distrust from problems we’d had before, or if it was just the “normal” hyper-possessiveness and paranoia that most seers had to struggle with when it came to their partners.
Either way, I’d lain back on the bed, like him, and tried to let it go.
It felt so different, being in here those first few nights––meaning, in a bedroom outside of the tank. When we’d left the tank that first time, after I’d broken all of those structures I found in Lily and Revik, tying them to the Dreng, everyone had been holding their breath, not only me.
And not only Revik, who was more afraid for Lily than he tried to show.
He held her hand so hard she kept wincing and complaining, and of course his fear and doubt brought up the same in me, until I started questioning myself all over again, wondering if I’d just killed them both... or consigned them to live the rest of their lives locked up in a cage.
Then we were all just standing there, in the security station, holding hands.
Balidor stood there too, along with Wreg, Jon, Tarsi, Yumi, Neela, Varlan, Kali and Uye. I avoided Kali’s eyes, but I saw her smiling, and saw tears on her face before I managed to look away. I saw Uye wiping his cheeks, too.
Balidor more looked wary, as did Tarsi.
Jon looked worried.
Wreg just beamed at me, his dark eyes dancing with light.
He gave Revik an equally expressive scowl, showing he still hadn’t forgiven him fully for whatever he thought had happened between us.
Most of the others looked weirded out by me again. Like maybe I’d gone back to being the Bridge more than Allie in their eyes, despite how hard I’d tried to get them past that b.s. over the last few months.
Despite Revik’s expressed wishes earlier in our quadrant of the tank, we didn’t get much time alone that day, either. Instead we spent most of it having our light poked and prodded by every seer on the infiltration team, along with Kali, Uye, Wreg, Loki and a number of others with high sight ranks on the military side.
Balidor warned us that none of us three could risk going into one of the tanks without the other two. He confirmed that I had replaced entire structures in Lily’s light with my own, and that I was doing the same for Revik, only to a more extensive degree, since it involved structures that existed much higher up in his light.
I knew they had a good chunk of the infiltration team looking at Menlim’s network too, waiting for a reaction to what I’d done.
But that reaction never came.