Blood Colony (30 page)

Read Blood Colony Online

Authors: Tananarive Due

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Horror

BOOK: Blood Colony
5.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Lucas said.

Hank grinned. “What would happen if you exploded into a million pieces?”

“Let’s just hope to God I never find out,” Lucas said.

Cal glanced at the wall clock, uneasy. He webbed his fingers to comb away hair from his ears. “I’m glad you’re alive and kicking, Doc, but this isn’t a social visit.”

Hank’s grin faded, and he stepped away from the bed. Nita took Cal’s pale, freckled hand and clung hard, raising their linked hands to her bosom. Her eyes were mournful.

“What’s going on?” Lucas said.

“We need help,” Cal said.

“Are they treating you badly?” Lucas said.

Cal glared. “Is that a fucking joke?”

Jared excused himself past the Duharts to bring Lucas a sandwich on a plate. “Sorry,” Jared said to Cal. “Protein helps him heal.”

Lucas was grateful for the diversion. If the Duharts were about to ask him to help them escape, he wasn’t ready. His mouth sank into the sandwich, and he nearly tore off half of it in one bite. The eggs were hot enough to scald his tongue, but he didn’t care. Lucas chewed fast and swallowed. “Where are the twins?” Lucas said, his mouth still half full.

“With Abena,” Nita said. “Just for a few minutes, so we could talk.”

“Let’s talk, then,” Lucas said. “What happened while I was out?”

Cal and Nita glanced at each other, fortifying each other with their eyes. Nita held Hank close with her free arm, as if to protect him.

Cal took a deep breath. “We’ve decided to go through with it, Doc,” he said.

“Go through with what?”

This time, Nita spoke. “What they did to Justin. The…memory wash.”

“We want to get it over with,” Cal said. “We’re leaving today. Right now.”

Lucas’s throat sealed itself, and suddenly the smell of the food made him sick to his stomach. Lucas studied their faces. Their eyes were set with resolve, even Hank’s.

“Jesus,” Lucas said. For several seconds, he couldn’t shake a coherent thought loose. “What they did to O’Neal was a
punishment
. You thought it was cruel.”

“Not if it means we can get the hell out of here,” Cal said.

Lucas glanced at Hank, whose face was still pudgy with baby fat. Hank was only fourteen! A memory wash would wipe away his life.

With an effort that made his arms tremble, Lucas propped himself against the wall. He couldn’t lie down for this conversation. The Duharts were so scared that they weren’t thinking straight; it was a perfect storm of irrationality.

“Cal…Nita…can we talk about this with Hank out of the room?”

Cal shook his head. “Hank was gonna’ help me shoot my way out of here last night,” he said. “If he’s man enough for that, he’s man enough to have his own say.”

Hank nodded. “I’ve already decided, Uncle Luke.”

“Cal, I know Teka knocked you out last night,” Lucas said. “Maybe you’re still recovering. You can’t expect your mind to just snap back—”

“Don’t piss me off, Doc.” Cal gritted his teeth. He hovered above Lucas, lowering his voice. “You’ve missed a few news bulletins. The Department of Homeland Security’s looking for them. Terrorist talk. The Africans are suited up like they’re going to war.”

“We weren’t sure before, especially about Hank…,” Nita said, her voice cracking. “But we are now. Help us get out while we can, Lucas. Please.”

When his sight started to dim, Lucas stuffed the rest of his sandwich into his mouth. He didn’t taste anything. He was near fainting. He could barely follow Cal and Nita.

“…they got Justin on a plane home,” Nita was saying. “That’s all we want. They can send us to our house in Antigua—”

“Anywhere but here,” Cal said. “We’ve all got ID cards and passports. We should be able to travel, if we leave right fucking now.”

“We’ll figure out the rest,” Nita said. “We’ll be all right, Lucas.”

Lucas raised his hand, trying to shake his head clear. “Just…slow down.”

The door to the unit slammed, and they all turned around, startled. Lucas thought Yonas or one of the immortals had entered without permission, but instead, Jared was gone. Of course. He’d gone to find Jessica. The plan wouldn’t have a prayer without her.

“Doc, every minute lost gives them more excuse to hold us,” Cal said. “There’s some kind of High Alert in the works on the I-10 corridor. Checkpoints.”

“What happened?” Lucas said.

“Speaking as a monkey, I’m out of the loop,” Cal said, a bitter glint in his eye. “But it sounds like somebody tipped them off. I’m betting it’s got to do with Caitlin and Fana.”

“Then they’ll make sure we’re all taken somewhere safe, Cal,” Lucas said. “They’ve kept themselves hidden for more than five hundred years.”

All civility fell away from Cal’s voice. “You’ll either help us or you won’t.”

“Fine. Right,” Lucas said. “But there’s got to be another way. Let’s stop and…think.”

Cal lifted Lucas’s shirt again and pressed his hand against Lucas’s abdomen, prodding. “Lucas, my rig rammed into you at a good twenty miles per hour, maybe more. Probably broke half your ribs and did God-knows-what to your insides. You flew in the air like a rag doll and ended up hugging a tree. But now you’re as good as new.”

Lucas nodded. “That’s right, Cal. And you’ll have my blood whenever you need it. I’ll convince Jessica to let all of you undergo a Ceremony to have your own. That’s a vow.”

Cal blinked, moved. “And it’s a mighty generous offer, Doc.”

Nita was shaking her head. “No,” she said. Her voice skated at the edge of a sob. “Lucas, I was a history major. The history books are nothing but records of the punishment inflicted on places where riches are found. Salt. Gold. Cotton. Diamonds. Oil. What you’re walking around with in your veins is all that and more. It’s a blessing. But—”

“We can’t afford it,” Cal said. He sighed, rubbing his son’s close-cropped hair.

“They took
twenty years
from Justin,” Lucas said. “What about that price? You don’t want to remember your time with your children? You want to throw away how you watched Hank grow up from diapers? You want to deny your own son his childhood memories?”

Cal’s eyes burned into him. “We’ve known each other a long time, Doc Shepard. Maybe we haven’t always seen eye to eye on politics and race, all that. Remember how you used to always say you grew up in a different Georgia than me? Look me in the eye and tell me you don’t understand a man wanting his family to be free.”

Cal was right: Lucas couldn’t hold his friend’s gaze. He would do the same thing for his family, and Cal knew it.

There was a knock. The door cracked open, and Jared stuck his head in.

“Uncle Cal?” Jared said. “I’ve got Aunt Jessica out here. And…Teka.”

Cal looked wild-eyed, and he seemed to shrink. The sudden shift in Cal’s body language told Lucas how invaded Cal felt after last night’s mental manipulation. Cal stared at the table. “These are your people, Doc,” Cal said quietly. “Say what you need to say.”

“Just watch your temper, Cal. Promise me.”

“Promise,” Cal said, although his teeth were glued tight.

“I’ll get you all out of here,” Lucas said and waved his son inside. If he blew it again, Cal and his family might not survive.

Nita accepted an apologetic, tearful hug from Jessica but quickly gestured for Jessica to sit at the table. Jessica and Nita had grown apart over the years, and it showed. Nita no longer trusted her. Teka looked distracted, but he sat too.

Jessica gazed at Lucas with horror as he explained what the Duharts were willing to do to be released. After he finished, the room was silent for a long time.

Cal sat strangling a cloth napkin while he fought his temper and his nerves. Jared stood over the table, transfixed. Teka listened with his eyes closed, a million miles away.

“An extraordinary request,” Teka said finally, his eyes still closed. His face showed no emotion. “And extraordinarily ill-timed. The effort alone…”

Blood crept into Cal’s face in splotchy red spots. Lucas knew that Cal would rather punch Teka through a wall than engage in polite debate about his family’s future.

Lucas’s voice cleared. “Then let them walk away free and clear, without restrictions. Like they tried to do last night.”

Jessica gave a long, pained sigh, shaking her head. She squeezed Nita’s hand. “When Fana comes back, I’ll get you out on your terms,” she said. “I just need time.”


When
Fana comes back?” Cal said, finally breaking in. “Don’t you mean
if
?”

“Jess, it’s too late,” Nita said. Politely, she slipped her hand away from Jessica’s. “No more promises. If we give up the memories, how can you say no?”

“How can I sit by and watch friends do that?” Jessica said.

Cal laughed grimly. “There’s plenty you sit by and watch, Jess.
Plenty
.”

Lucas swung his legs over the side of the bed. “They have a right to go, and we don’t have a right to stop them. When we agreed to stay here, none of us knew all the facts.”

When Teka looked squarely at him, Lucas felt a chill, a sensation of being physically touched. “This crisis has grown much bigger than the handful of people in this room,” Teka said. “And certainly bigger than the whims of three mortals.”

You mean three monkeys,
Lucas couldn’t help thinking.

Suddenly, Teka’s voice filled Lucas’s head:
I CAN ALLEVIATE THEIR FEAR
.

The effect of hearing Teka’s voice so clearly while Teka only stared silently from across the room was so disorienting that Lucas shook his head hard. Jessica gave Teka a discreet glance, then she looked at Lucas. She had heard Teka’s voice, too.

Lucas shook his head. “If it’s worth saying, say it in front of them,” he told Teka.

A wince of irritation passed across Teka’s lips. Teka turned to Cal. “I offer you peace of mind until Fana’s return,” he said. “I will soften your mood. Without your fear to hamper you—”

Cal suddenly let out a yell, and he lunged from his chair, wrapping his arm around Teka’s neck. Cal’s weight threw Teka’s pinewood chair backward, and it cracked beneath them on the floor. The bump toppled a drinking glass, which broke inches behind them.

“Cal, no!” Lucas yelled. From where he sat, he couldn’t tell if Cal had snapped the Life Brother’s neck in half.


Stop it!
” Jessica said, leaping to her feet.

Cal’s arm swung, and he punched Teka’s face as he choked him. One punch. Two.

“Don’t you fuck with me, you sonofabitch!” Cal said through a spray of spittle. He punched Teka a third time; the blow was hard. Teka groaned.

All sound seemed to vanish as Lucas lurched to standing. He grabbed Cal before he could hit Teka again, but Lucas couldn’t unwind Cal’s arm from Teka’s neck without help from Jared. Cal was still panting and cursing when they pulled him near the bed, and Cal might have yanked free of them if his burly son hadn’t come and hugged him around the waist. Cal bucked with such fervor that he was a challenge even for three.

“Dad, quit it!” Hank said.

Cal finally stopped fighting and hung limply. He was exhausted from his outburst, breathing in harsh gasps. “What’s wrong, asshole?” Cal taunted Teka. “Didn’t see that coming?”

Teka lay on the floor, holding his throat, his bottom lip split and bleeding. Droplets of blood stained his white tunic, near the complex pattern embroidered on his collar to signify his station as the Highest Teacher. Jessica knelt beside Teka, offering her arm to help him stand.

“Forgive him, Teka,” Jessica said, her head inclined almost in a bow. “He’s very upset.”

Lucas had known the Life Brothers would come, but the sound of the door slamming open against the wall still made his heart drop. Fasilidas and Yonas ran into the room with batons pointed like guns, and for a grim millisecond Lucas expected to witness a slaughter like the one he had seen at Jessica’s clinic in Botswana.

The Life Brothers’ faces were angrier than the faces of the white gunmen. Those had only been mercenaries carrying out their work; the Life Brothers were enraged. Fasilidas’s bright, youthful smile was gone, and a glint in Yonas’s eye made Lucas wonder how they had ever mistaken him for a docile caretaker.

Cal was ready for them, swaying from side to side, his eyes ready to fight to the death. Lucas prayed that Hank wasn’t about to see his father killed.

“Teka, he’s under duress,” Lucas said. “That won’t happen again.”

Fasilidas and Yonas had their eyes on Cal, but they each grabbed Teka’s arms to lift him up. When no one spoke, Lucas realized that the Life Brothers were communicating silently.


Get out of this room,
” a gravelly voice said, but Lucas couldn’t tell which of the men had spoken. A blink later, he realized that the voice had been a woman’s.

Jessica’s fists were clenched at her sides, elbows locked as she glared at Fasilidas. Lucas’s heartbeat rattled in his eardrums as he waited to find out if the Life Brothers were willing to defer to his sister-in-law, or if they only pretended to.

Other books

Out of Towners by Dan Tunstall
Cronicas del castillo de Brass by Michael Moorcock
Think! by Edward de Bono
Dead In The Hamptons by Zelvin, Elizabeth
Dreaming a Reality by Lisa M. Cronkhite
The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson
Hidden Deep by Amy Patrick
The Lost Bird by Margaret Coel
Fountain of the Dead by Scott T. Goudsward
The Probability Broach by L. Neil Smith