Read Allie's War Season Four Online
Authors: JC Andrijeski
He has to find Allie’s child. Cass has her. Cass and Shadow... they have his child...
He tries to control his light, his mind, to prioritize... but when he raises his head, he finds himself looking at a different set of eyes.
He blinks down at a different face.
Briefly, he is lost. Beyond lost.
Ripped from his moorings.
That mind-numbing relief he felt, that cautious joy, what encased him in a kind of dull disbelief of hope and love... it turns on him without warning, flipping into something equally intense but completely devoid of light. It turns, darkens... spiraling down into a broken part of himself, something damaged, a sick, mind-fucking wave that lives deeper than anything he’s touched in himself since he was a child.
It’s like someone took a gardening trowel and cut his heart out of his chest.
He stares down at a face that isn’t his wife.
He takes it in, understanding suddenly, knowing he’s been deceived, that they’re toying with him again. Laughing at him. Laughing at how easy a mark he is, even after all these years, even after everything they’ve taken from him already.
Dark brown irises stare up at him humorously, from a face more oval and smaller-mouthed than his wife’s. Black, straight hair fans the pillow instead of Allie’s dark brown curls, shocking red dye riding up the ends like flames, stark against the white sheets and the black walls.
Cass grins at him, her hand still on his cock, and for a moment he doesn’t pull away. Some part of him can only stare down, even now, and will it to be Allie, his wife.
“I told you,” she chides softly, making a pouting face. “You don’t need her, lover.”
He feels the pain in his heart worsen, grow darker.
“Aw,” she says, pouting more. “Where’s your sense of humor, Revi’?”
For a long moment, he can’t speak at all. When he does, the voice is bereft. Quiet, too quiet... he barely recognizes it, it’s been so long since he’s heard it. But he remembers it as his.
“You don’t want to see what I can become,” he says.
Cass’s grin widens. “Oh, but I do! You have no idea how badly I do. You just made me sooo wet, saying that... even beyond all of your nasty little thoughts earlier...” Cass chuckles, grinning wider, her free arm cushioning her dark head. “So Allie was finally going to give it up for you, huh, big guy? Let you lock her up, enact all your dirty, fucked-up little fantasies? Wonder if she knew just what she was signing on for?”
His tone doesn’t change. “You’re wrong, Cass. You’re wrong about me.”
She slides up against him, pressing her breasts against his chest.
“No, I’m not,” she tells him softly, caressing him deliberately with her palm. “Come on. Let me in. Share those fantasies with me. It’ll be fun...”
He knows they’re in the Barrier. He knows that now, but her touch feels physical, immediate. It makes him recoil, bringing a sharper wave of disgust and nausea, again evocative of childhood, of being Merenje’s plaything, of being turned on and confused and repulsed and afraid, even as he wanted desperately to kill himself.
His pain worsens, along with that disgust, some of it now aimed ritualistically at himself. Logic doesn’t live here, but habit. Habit so deeply ingrained he can’t even see it, unless he’s forced to look at the consequences.
Gods, he wants his wife.
He can’t survive without her. He’ll just fall apart in increments instead, piece by piece, losing everything that finally made him a person.
“Aww, come on,” Cass murmurs. “Is it really that bad? Remember, you weren’t exactly celibate before you met her.” Giving him a knowing smirk, she writhes sinuously against him. “I know
I
haven’t forgotten your talents, big guy. I know what turns you on. I wonder if Allie really knew, as much as you pretend she did...”
The rage that rises in him is beyond what he can feel.
It rips away the last fragment of his control, the last fragment of the man he once was, who he tried to be, for Allie, at least. He has his hands around Cass’s throat in seconds.
All he can think is that he will kill her.
He will fucking
kill
her if it’s the last thing he does.
In the end, it was the only thing he was ever truly good at.
Cass laughs, watching his face in delight as he crushes her windpipe under his bare hands. Tears pour from his eyes, blinding him. He is lost, swimming in a different, more hollow-feeling disbelief. More grief lives there than he can feel.
He submerges only a fraction of it behind that blinding rage.
They’ll never leave him alone. Never. They always find a way in, a new piece of his heart to pulverize into powdered glass. Cass is just the latest manifestation of that.
Still, Cass enjoys it, he knows.
She gets off on it. She gets off on what she can do to him, how she can make him feel.
He’d once loved Cass, almost as a sister.
Almost like his own sister, whom he barely remembers now.
He’d loved her, he’d let her in, because his wife loved her.
He hears the taunting lilt of Cass’ voice, feels it reverberate through every inch of his aleimi, even as the rage turns suffocating, beyond his capacity for reason.
“Come on, Revi’,” she whispers. “You don’t need her. I can give you anything you need. We can raise your little rugrat together...”
Revik screams at her, a lost, broken sound, beyond anything he can feel.
HE JERKED AWAKE.
Panting, fighting to breathe, sick beyond what his body or mind can handle.
His hand hurt, throbbing at the end of his arm, the bones splintered-feeling, even though they removed the makeshift cast weeks ago...or was it months?
His leg hurt. His head.
Gods, he wanted to die. Why won’t they just let him die?
For a long moment, he can’t do anything but breathe. The body has its own ideas about life and death and now Revik’s fought mindlessly to survive, to ride through the pain, which felt worse than anything he’d experienced, anything he can remember, even from way back, when he was a kid––which, given his childhood, said a lot.
It felt worse than the last time he thought Allie died.
He heard panting, groaning, barely suppressed cries. A choking sound, a fighting gasp to cry, to express emotion beyond expression, to beg...to scream, maybe.
It took him another moment to realize those were his, too.
The room loomed dark over him, suffocating despite the high ceilings he could feel with his endlessly scanning and probing light. He felt a breeze on his skin from the open window, but the trapped, claustrophobic feeling didn’t lessen.
He felt lost, locked away, underground and forgotten.
She’d left him. Like all the others, she left him in the end.
He fought to free himself, to sit up. Even now, in this much pain, his mind calculated odds, the distance to the ground from the second story of the Victorian house. He might break his leg if he jumped. Or maybe he’d just be outside, running in his bare feet, running across the grass, maybe to the park where he brought her once, where he nearly kissed her when she half-tripped and fell into him, looking up at him with those glowing, jade green eyes when he caught her arms. He’d never had any self-control around her. He’d wanted to kiss her so badly that night...even as he cursed her for hammering him with questions while he was trying to save her life, to outrun the people who wanted to take her from him, even then.
He wanted to go back to that place in the park.
He wanted to go there, and remember.
He can’t, though. He can’t move.
Hands held him on more than one side. Wreg. Tenzi. The other set might be Balidor...or maybe Jorag. Balidor, who fucked Allie while Revik pined over her, writing her love letters and sending her flowers and trying to get her to come back to him. Jorag, who only wanted to fuck her, who looked at her ass and her light whenever he thought Revik wasn’t watching.
He wanted to kill them briefly, too. He couldn’t hold onto that, either, though.
The pain obliterated everything. It killed everything in him.
He let out another heavy sob, fighting to breathe.
He feels their lights around him now, feels them trying to soothe him, to comfort him, calm him down...maybe to control him. They pull him into the Barrier as they do it, inside the warmth of the construct over the Victorian house on Alamo Square in San Francisco. They fight to disengage his limbs, to surround him with the light of the Ancestors. They try to give him any small taste of what they
can’t
give him...of what no one can give him, ever again.
They’re probably afraid of the telekinesis, he thinks.
Some part of his mind remains logical, even now. His abilities had come back. They’d started to heal, even as his wife faded in front of him, more dead than alive with every passing day. Balidor had been confused by that, by how fast those structures healed above Revik’s head, how quickly it all seemed to happen, once Allie had been broken, once their child had been taken from her.
They feared him again.
They were afraid he might burn the house down, or maybe start killing all of them...which actually wasn’t such a crazy fear, given the fucked up things he’d just been thinking. But it hurts to think about that, too, and not only because their deaths wouldn’t solve anything.
He doesn’t want to kill his friends.
He doesn’t want to kill the people Allie loved.
He wants to kill that fucking bitch who hurt his wife. Who stole his child.
He wants to rip her throat out with his bare hands. He doesn’t care any more what Allie would have wanted, not when it comes to Cass herself. He won’t spare Cass in any way for who she once was to his wife. He knows that Shadow got to her, that Shadow is using Cass to get to him, but the thought has no meaning to him. Not anymore.
It is too late for apologies. It is too late to hope for any kind of redemption.
He wants his child, the last thing Allie gave to him.
He will get his child, and then he will kill every single person responsible for what happened to his wife. The world ending doesn’t matter to him. The disease, the Displacement lists, whatever human or seer civilization they would rebuild after he’d gone.
None of it matters to him.
Not anymore.
He doesn’t know how long he lays there, gasping, staring up into the darkness of the high-ceilinged room, but he can still feel hands on him, light in his.
He feels all of them around him, he feels them trying to reach him, but he’s never felt so utterly alone.
3
HEART OF STONE