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Authors: Devon Monk

BOOK: Crucible Zero
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I strode back to where Abraham was assembling a long-range rifle and scope that Foster had handed him.

“Are there rules about mercenaries not killing their fellow mercenaries?” I asked.

A spatter of bullet popped out again, and Abraham turned his back toward the fire. He simultaneously reached out and pulled me closer to his chest, using the width of his body to block the bullets.

I breathed in the scent of him, copper and smoke and leather. His arms tightened against my back; the rifle pressed down my spine, a cold counter to his heat. For a moment, no longer than a heartbeat, I turned my cheek against his chest and closed my eyes tight, wishing I could hold him forever.

The bullets paused and I released Abraham, though his arms were slow to loosen from around me.

I was trying to step away when the bus jerked. I grabbed hold of his waist and shoulder to keep my footing, my fingers curving around his neck, brushing stitches and skin . . .

He inhaled sharply and exhaled on a slight moan.

My touch, skin to skin, made him feel. And right now he felt me, the curve of my thigh braced inside his, my hips pressed against his groin. And I knew he wasn't feeling pain.

“Sorry,” I said, stepping back. I wasn't sorry for touching him. Wasn't sorry he wanted me physically, just like I wanted him. But there wasn't any time for that. There wasn't any time for us.

His hazel eyes searched my face, burning with a hunger that plunged into deep shadow. He licked his lips and briefly closed his eyes. When he opened them again, they were flat, cold, and empty of emotion.

“Mercenaries don't follow rules,” he said, answering my previous question. He released me and drew his gun, turning to tug open the hinged window, the rifle tucked against his shoulder. He set his stance wide to take the buck and sway of the vehicle. The back of his jacket was ripped. Bullets, or maybe just shrapnel from the shots. He'd been shot. While trying to protect me. That hadn't just been pleasure he'd felt at my touch.

“Matilda,” Quinten called out. “Get down!”

I crouched. Quinten bent low between the seats, his gun out the side window, returning fire. Which meant the mercenaries weren't just behind us anymore. Foster strode up the length of the bus to the door. He shoved it open, then hung on to an overhead bar with one hand and leaned out. The ammunition belt was draped over his shoulder as he held a machine gun that must weigh a hundred pounds in one hand.

Left Ned swore up a storm over the noise, gripping the wheel tight, while Right Ned kept one eye on the rearview mirrors.

I drew my gun and slid on my knees into the seat behind Quinten, just as Foster let loose a deafening spray of bullets.

Quinten and I ducked as casings littered the floor of the bus, rolling and clattering between the seats.

My quick glance out the window had given me a glimpse of two men and a woman on motorcycles, driving through the scrub and rough of the rise to our left, while we careened down the twists and turns of the ragged concrete and dirt road.

Foster leaned back inside to reload, and I sat up and popped open the window.

“Matilda,” Quinten said, “don't!”

I took aim and fired on the rider nearest us, who was about half a car length to the rear. Hit something—maybe his leg, maybe the tire—sending him veering off to the right. His bike bucked and flipped end over end, taking him along with it in a tangle of metal and bones.

The other riders didn't pause to worry about their buddy. They fired at us.

I ducked back in and down between seats again.

“Nothing laser guided?” I asked Quinten.

“What?”

“Their guns? Do they have trackers? Laser-guidance systems?”

“They have anger and skill and want to get paid. They don't need anything else.”

“Shit!” Left Ned yelled. “Hold on.”

The vehicle leaned hard, throwing me out from between the seats. I thumped my head into the seat across the aisle, and everything lurched the other way. Then an explosion pounded through the bus, knocking the world sideways hard.

Too much happened at once. The world went upside down. I was thrown like laundry in a washing machine, hit everything, and tasted blood as the vehicle lurched and flipped, rolling with an enormous amount of noise down the hillside.

It took forever.

It took an instant that never ended.

And then the crashing, grinding, tumbling pain stopped.

8

There's something causing these rifts in time. If I can find that, track these ripples, maybe I can find you, Matilda. Before he kills you.

—W.Y.

T
he first thought that ran through my head was that I was alive. The bus had fallen off the side of a cliff, and yet I was still breathing.

I inhaled, moaned a little at all the parts of me that hurt. My head especially. I could feel the matted, sticky warmth of blood in my hair, and yet a corresponding cold on the rest of my skin, like someone had just dunked me in freezing water.

The second thought that went through my head was
Quinten
.

Was he alive? Neds, Abraham, Foster? I opened my mouth to say something, but the only thing that came out was a choked cough.

“I've got you,” Abraham's voice filtered down from the light spearing through shadows above me. I blinked to try to make sense of . . . well, everything. Didn't do me any good.

His hand stretched toward me, and I reached up for him. He grunted a little at the impact, but carefully, and gently, considering the circumstances, lifted me up out from where I'd landed behind a set of seats that had come unbolted from the floor.

He pulled me against him, and I could feel his muscles bunching as he wrapped his arms down beneath my butt and carried me across a space that I still couldn't piece together, his breathing a little hard, his body warm against mine.

“I'm going to lift you up to Foster,” he said.

“Quinten?”

“Haven't found him yet. But I will.”

Then he pushed me upward, extending his arms with a grunt. A new set of hands reached down around me, even wider and larger than Abraham's hands.

“Relax,” Foster said. “You are safe.” He pulled me up out of the vehicle, and the world spun so hard, I thought I was going to lose my lunch.

I didn't want to go into another timeway. I was in no shape to face crazy, gun-wielding Slater or anyone else who might be waiting for me there.

I tucked my head against Foster's chest and waited for the scent of roses. But the scent never came and the world never shifted. Maybe the dizziness was just a head wound.

What kind of a life was I living that a head wound was the preferable option?

Foster carried me to wherever safety might be, and when he stopped, he lowered me to sit with my back against a tree.

“This is loaded.” He handed me a handgun. “The mercs are still out here.”

The mercs! That fear brought a shot of clarity through my veins, and I took the gun with one hand and wiped the blood out of my eyes with the other.
Definitely head wound.

“Just go get Quinten and Neds,” I said. “I'm all right.”

Foster pressed his big hand on the side of my face in such a kind gesture, I was surprised by it. Then he turned and walked away.

I took stock of where, exactly, I'd landed. Tree above me; brush around. I could make out the spindly radio tower to my right.

I didn't see the road, and since I was too dizzy to stand, I didn't bother looking for it.

Instead I controlled my breathing, working hard to use my ears and eyes to sense if anyone was coming my way.

Soon I heard footsteps, heavy and steady. Foster. He worked his way up out of the ravine to my left, his arm around Neds.

Neds both looked a little banged up, and I noted his left arm was tucked up against his chest, as if moving it would cause him great pain, but they were both conscious. A massive bruise had already spread across Right Ned's face. “Wait here.” Foster handed Neds his other gun, glanced at me, and then walked back down to where the vehicle must have come to rest.

Neds were standing, though both of them were pale as sun-bleached sheets.

“What happened?” I asked, squinting up at him.

“They shot out the tire.” Right Ned's voice was strained. “I couldn't keep it on the road, and when we came around the curve, we rolled down the hillside.”

“Did you see Quinten?” I asked.

“Woke up to Foster slapping my face, then dragging me up here to you,” Right Ned said. “Abraham still alive?”

“Yes.”

“Figures,” Right Ned said without any heat.

Left Ned was being uncommonly quiet. I glanced over at him. His eyes were a little dazed.

“Are you okay?” I asked. “Both of you?”

“We'll live,” Right Ned said.

“If we don't get shot,” Left Ned whispered. “Or eaten.”

“We're going to be fine.” I placed my palm against the tree and pushed myself up carefully, as if I were balancing on a trapeze in a high wind. It was slow and not very graceful, but I managed to stand without vertigo pushing me over.

“Are you okay, Matilda?” Right Ned asked.

“Knock on the head is making me dizzy,” I said. “I'm fine. Keep your eyes and ears open for mercs. They must have seen us go over.”

“They might think we're dead and leave,” Right Ned said.

“Are they that sloppy?” I asked.

“No,” he admitted.

We waited. The road was above us. Foster had climbed about three-quarters of the way up the hillside and left us on a ridge that jutted out a bit, with plenty of bushes to offer us some camouflage. The wind through the bushes and trees rattled and hissed, and a distant bird or two called out, but I didn't hear the buzz of the motorcycles. Why weren't they coming toward us to finish the job?

An unsettling answer came to me. “Did any of them have scopes? Sniper rifles?” I asked.

“Don't know,” Right Ned said. “I was too busy crashing a bus.”

I gave him a wan smile.

The wrenching sound of metal twisting rang out from below us. I hazarded a glance that way, but looking down the hillside made my head swim.

“Are they okay?' I asked.

Right Ned looked down, while Left Ned kept an eye on the horizon.

“Foster is braced on a broken tree outside the bus,” Right Ned said. “I don't see Abraham or Quinten. Wait—there's Abraham. He has him. I don't think he's conscious.”

The wind shifted, bringing with it the low rattle of engines approaching.

“Shit,” Left Ned whispered. He shifted the gun in his hand, but still wasn't using his left arm.

I scanned the rise, which was probably about twenty feet above us. The angle of the overhang might be enough to keep us hidden from the casual glance, but the mercenaries were hunting us.

There was nothing casual about this.

Foster was making a bit of noise getting Quinten up the rise. He finally made it to the little outcropping where we were standing.

Quinten was draped over Foster's shoulder in a fireman's carry. Unconscious. There was a lot of blood on what I could see of him, and a lot of blood covering Foster's hand, which held him secure.

“Is he alive?” I said, horror twisting my stomach.

“Yes,” Foster rumbled. “We must treat him.”

My duffel had, miraculously, remained draped over my shoulder. I had Evelyn's little sewing box in there and some bindings, but no other medication.

“He said we have to do it fast,” I said. “That wounds go bad quick nowadays. You need to let me stitch him up. Put him down, Foster. I need to look at him right now.” I was talking too fast, my voice rising with each word.

Panic. Even though a small, reasonable part of my mind knew panic would not help anything, I was shaking, my heart racing.

Foster kept walking up the ridge, carrying Quinten, right on past us.

“Foster,” I said. “Don't. They're coming!”

Abraham powered up the cliffside, resting a moment on the outcropping. Quinten's heavy trunk and bag were in one hand, and more gear was strapped across his back and chest and in his other hand.

He glanced up after Foster, then at both of us. “Stay here. I'll put this down and come back for both of you.”

“Quinten's hurt,” I said, rather unnecessarily, since Abraham was the one who had pulled him out of the wreckage.

“Mercs are on the way,” Right Ned said.

“I know,” he answered, starting up the hill. “We'll take care of that too.”

I watched the path Foster chose up the hill—a diagonal that sent rock and dirt shifting and rolling down the hillside with each step. I could do that. I could make that climb. There were small bushes I'd be able to use as handholds, and it wasn't far.

“Let's go help Quinten,” I said to Neds.

“He'll come back for you, Matilda,” Right Ned said. “No need for you to fall down the cliff going after him.”

“I'm not going after him. I'm going to help Quinten,” I said, securing the gun. Climbing might not be a good idea, but climbing with a loaded weapon in my hand was clearly a stupid idea.

“All right,” Left Ned said. “Show us what you can do, Tilly.”

I met his challenging gaze, and couldn't help it. I smiled. “I like that name, and I like you using it. Also, be prepared to be impressed.”

I took a step, holding my breath against the sway of the world, then took another, following Abraham's route.

It was not easy. My head rushed with heat and pain; my arms and legs shook; and, if I wasn't very, very careful about how I shifted my gaze, how I turned my head, everything rocked and reeled.

I heard Neds starting up after me, and one time when I miscalculated a grab for the branch in front of me, I felt his hand press against my back to steady me.

“You got this,” he said.

I would have thanked him, but all my air was currently being used to feed my starving lungs and racing heart.

I couldn't hear the engines over the pounding in my head. But when I took the last step up the hill onto the level shoulder of the street, I wanted to fall down on my knees and not move for a week.

Instead, I took stock of our situation.

Foster and Abraham had set everything they were carrying down the road a ways, off to one side under a fir tree. Foster knelt next to Quinten, and had amazingly produced a blanket of some sort to drape over him.

I started that way.

Abraham turned, saw me. His eyes went wide, and then he shook his head, walking toward me.

“I told you I'd come back for you,” he said once he was near enough. His eyes took in my face, flicking up to my head, where I knew blood matted my hair. The blood down the side of my face was dry, so I assumed the bleeding had slowed or stopped.

“You're injured,” he said.

“I know. I can feel it.”

“You . . . feel?”

Oh, right.
He didn't know that about me. “I'm just full of surprises,” I said.

The rumble of engines finally registered. They were coming our way. Close now.

I pulled my gun and turned my back toward Abraham, expecting the mercenaries to round the bend in the road and be on top of us any second.

Abraham reached out from behind me. His hand slid down my arm, and he wrapped his fingers gently around my wrist, lowering the gun slightly. He had stepped so close, I unconsciously leaned back into him to steady my stance.

“Take care of your brother,” he said, his voice low and intimate, his mouth tipped down by my cheek so that he might kiss me if I turned even just a fraction of an inch. “I'll take care of our company.”

I nodded, felt the rough of his stubble interrupted by the silky smoothness of his stitches against my cheek, the scent of him bringing back memories of things I wanted so badly, I ached.

“Go,” he said gently.

I lowered the gun and he stepped back an inch. I turned and made my way to Quinten as quickly as my unsteady head would allow.

Foster was standing off the side of the road over Quinten, but had taken the time to unpack a couple of items: an ax and a wicked-looking machete.

He shifted his grip on both, gave me a short nod, and strode over to where Abraham stood in the middle of the road about thirty yards or so from me. Neds had just made the rise in the hill and he hesitated, then chose to walk my way, pulling the gun from where he'd had it tucked in his belt.

The engines were growing louder. I knelt next to Quinten and assessed the damage. Broken nose, scrapes on his face, and bruising. His cheek was split. I ran my fingers over his head. Deep cut there. That wasn't good.

Then I checked his neck, which seemed okay, and pulled off the blanket to get his jacket and shirt open enough that I could look for breaks and cuts on his torso. Torso looked relatively fine—bruised, though. Most of the blood I'd seen on Foster probably came from the gash on Quinten's thigh.

“Okay,” I said, watching his breathing, which was even and clear. “This isn't too bad. We can take care of you, Quinten,” I said. “You're going to be fine.”

I pulled the duffel over my head and held still while a wave of nausea rolled over me, then unzipped the duffel and pulled out the sewing kit. “Do we have any antibacterial?” I asked Neds. “Anything to coat those scrapes to keep them from getting infected?”

Neds crouched down, opened Quinten's bag, and handed me a metal can with a screw-on lid. “Use it sparingly,” he said. “It's strong.”

“Got it.” I used one of the cotton wraps as a rag, retrieved a canteen of water, and cleaned Quinten's head wound as best I could. I'd always been competent at stitching up the beasts on the property, and Grandma and Neds and myself back in the day. But right now, even with my hands shaking, they were more than competent. They were brilliant, practiced, knowledgeable.

It was like I'd somehow become even better at tending wounds overnight.

Which I supposed was partially true. Evelyn had had a fine hand with stitching, and I was certain she had used her skills to look after the injured. She must have been downright amazing at it, and the muscle memory remained with me.

Thank you, Evelyn,
I thought as I unscrewed the lid on the container and sniffed at the pearly blue contents. It smelled of licorice and lemons—a lot like the scale jelly I remembered.

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