28
“A
nabel.” Greaves’ voice was edged with menace. “You’re overdoing it.”
Anabel wrapped another round of duct tape around Miles’ wrist, and ripped it off, wrapping it tightly around the chair back. “I know this guy,” she said, in her husky, ruined voice, and jolted to her feet, rocking. “I know his tricks. He’s a filthy, dirty, tricky bastard.”
Whap,
she backhanded him on the side of the head.
“Stop!” Greaves snapped. “I want to speak to him, not beat him.”
Anabel panted, eyes white-rimmed. “He deserves it. What he did. Chaining her in the dark. Fucking her on the floor. Pig. He deserves to have his parts cut off in chunks while he watches. He deserves to—”
“Stop!” Greaves’ voice resonated with a massive pulse of coercion.
Anabel yelped, and dropped her duct tape and knife, clutching her temples. Whimpering.
“Go to the back of the room,” he said.
She did so, shuffling. Thudded to her knees, and then onto her face on the carpet, hard, as if she’d been kicked from behind.
“Sorry about that,” Greaves said. “Anabel’s very stressed. I gave her an assignment that cracked her ability to tell fantasy from reality.”
“You do seem to specialize in that,” Miles observed.
Greaves gave him a cold look. He managed to refrain from saying anything else sarcastic about the state of Anabel’s mental health. A guy who was duct-taped to a chair should curb the snark. If possible.
He glanced over at the guy lying at the far side of the room on a cot. Shriveled, skeletal, hooked up to machines. “Who’s that guy?”
“My son,” Greaves said. “He’s been like that for years.”
“I see.” It seemed politic to change the subject. “So. Telepathy. Coercion. Two things you’ve got going for you. Are there more?”
In answer, Miles’ chair rose up into the air, twirling gently as if he hung on a rope swing. Higher, and still higher. Six feet off the ground. Then eight. The room had old-fashioned, sixteen-foot ceilings.
“Telekinesis, too,” Miles said. “Cool.”
Greaves gazed up, arms folded, eyes bright and expectant.
“Is this the part where I’m supposed to be all impressed and intimidated?” he asked. “Clue me in, here. I don’t want to fuck this up.”
Whoosh,
he dropped like a stone.
Crash,
the chair legs snapped like toothpicks beneath his weight, leaving him sprawled and gasping, air knocked out of his lungs. Still taped to the splintered remnants of the chair. He tried moving his legs, his arms. Didn’t seem to be broken.
He shook his legs free of the taped chunks of wood, but when he tried to get up and wiggle his bound arms loose from the detached chair back, a force shoved on his chest, pressing him back down. That pressure, plus his own weight, crushed his bound hands against the back of the chair.
Yow.
That sucked.
“I’m going to teach you some manners before we are through,” Greaves said, walking slowly over to him. He stared down at Miles.
“If that’s what you need to do.” Miles stopped struggling. There was no point in it. It was like having an elephant sit on him.
“You didn’t expect that, with your shield?” Greaves looked smug. “I can’t get inside your head, but I can manipulate your body mass.”
“That’s great,” Miles said. “Are you through? Or do you need to show me more of your junk? You’ve definitely got my attention.”
“My other abilities are harder to classify,” Greaves said. “I have a whole array of talents. And I’m sure you do, too. Time for you to show me your junk, Mr. Davenport. Go on, impress me. What have you got?”
“Not too fucking much, or I wouldn’t be duct taped and flat on my back, hanging out with losers like you.”
Greaves made a dismissive gesture. “Bullshit. I felt your energy when you punched me with it yesterday.”
Miles shook his head, the only part of his body he could move. “I can’t do that when I’m shielded,” he said. “And I don’t know how to control it. It was beginner’s luck.”
“It’s a matter of training and practice.”
“Yeah, most things are,” Miles said. “But I’m not that interested. I don’t get a thrill out of jerking people around. And unless I need to lift a refrigerator by myself, who cares about telekinesis?”
“That’s just inexperience talking,” Greaves scoffed. “You haven’t grasped the possibilities yet. I can help you do that.”
“Help me?” Miles peered up at him, perplexed. “Why on earth would you help me? What the hell do you want?”
“A couple of things. The first is just for you to join my cause, Mr. Davenport. I need people like you. I have enhanced dozens of talented people, but psi-max only goes so far. A potential like yours is one in a million. I could teach you to control and guide huge masses of people, all at once. You could be a vital part of my plan.”
“Your plan,” Miles said. “Yeah, I’ve heard about it. The one where everybody dies?”
Greaves waved that away. “Not at all! You’ve been listening to Lara, and she doesn’t know what she’s talking about. The virus doesn’t have that effect. We’ve tested it extensively!”
“Virus? So you’re a bioterrorist, then?”
“No, you idiot,” Greaves snapped. “Shut up and listen. You’re like me, Miles. There are just a few lingering energy blockages keeping you from your full potential. I could break through them, and set you free.”
Miles gazed up at the guy, struggling for breath beneath that weight. “Free to what?” he asked. “For what?”
“To exercise your full powers,” Greaves said, impatiently.
“Yes, I get that,” Miles wheezed. “But to what end?”
Greaves just stared. “You’re deliberately missing the point.”
“Bigtime,” Miles said.
Greaves sighed. “This virus has been under development for many years. The toxin that it produces is health-enhancing. It lowers aggression, raises seratonin level. In the prison populations where we aerosolized it, there were amazing turnarounds. Violent incidents dropped almost to zero over the course of just months. Cases of rape, suicide, drug use, even cigarettes and overeating went down. Even the prison staff’s lives transformed. There’s nothing this substance does not improve.”
Miles grunted. “Sounds like heaven.”
Greaves frowned. “I need people like you, Miles. I would of course administer the vaccine to you, and to a limited number of other people, of your choosing, if you would rather keep them unaltered. Though the truth is, you would not be doing them any favors by withholding this gift of peace. They remain who they are . . . just better.”
Miles dragged in another painful breath. “I’ve been told that I’m wanted for rape, kidnapping, and murder, thanks to you.”
Greaves waved his hand. “Fixable. In any case, the world will soon be very different. The rules will change, because I will be the one making them. But there is another thing that I need from you, even more urgently.” He paused for dramatic effect. “My son.”
Miles floundered mentally, coming up blank. “You mean
him
?” He jerked his chin in the general direction of the comatose guy.
Greaves licked his lips. “Your shield is the key. It’s almost exactly like his. Let me inside to read your memories of how you built it, its inner workings, and I’ll be able to understand how he generates his.”
“You still won’t get in,” Miles said.
“Lara did,” Greaves pointed out.
“That was because I created a hidden door specifically for her,” Miles said. “You can be damn sure your son did not do that for you.”
“Just let me in. I’ll decide for myself what’s relevant and what’s not.”
Miles groped frantically around in his head, like a rat in a maze for a way through this. All he could think of was
stall, stall, stall.
“So what’s in this for me?” he asked.
Greaves smiled. The pressure lightened on Miles’ chest, allowing him to fill his lungs. He did, with big, rasping gasps of relief.
“You mean, besides power and fame, and a place on the center of the world stage? Noble and meaningful work? Mr. Davenport, open your mind. I can give you your life back. And I can give you Lara.”
miles? update?
hey baby Miles responded.
She burst into tears, seeing letters appear on the screen. you ok?
4 the moment. he wants me 2 help him rule zombieland. & wants me 2 give him his son back. bad scene
can u pretend?
not if I open my shield. cant lie 2 a telepath.
Despair gripped her. There was nothing to say, nothing they could do. She said the only thing that came into her mind. I love you.
I love you, too. No shortcuts, no abbreviations.
Lara huddled on the floor of the vault in the dark in a tight ball, hands around her head. It was a yoga pose that was supposed to calm her, but it didn’t. Never worked in the rat hole, either, but she was stubborn. She wanted to keep talking to him, to milk every second of contact, but it was unfair to fracture his concentration.
She hated feeling helpless. She wanted to strike a blow, make a move, but even her psychic gift was a passive one. She couldn’t attack, stab, throw, read, push, or bully anyone with it.
She thought of Geoff, and a half-formed idea tickled her mind, along with a shiver of fear, hope, dread. Possibility.
Geoff had helped her. He had proven to be an ally of a sort. And he wanted something from her, if she could figure out what it was. If she could just change the cards on the table. Something. Anything.
She tried all her tricks, but at long last, it was the image of Persephone’s swirling vase that got her vortex going . . .
. . .
into the otherworld, to the phantom town square. No place else to go anymore. All roads led to this ghostly deathtrap. She wandered through, trying not to look at the charnel scenes. No evidence of violence or conflict. Even cars were correctly parked in legal parking places. In one car, a corpse in the driver’s seat still had a pink blouse adhered to its ribcage, and there was a . . . oh, God, no.
Too late. She’d seen it, and she could not unsee the tiny, smaller body curled on the corpse’s lap. The car seat in the back. The woman had parked the car, and then never roused herself to get out. The toddler had crawled up into the front seat into her mother’s lap to die.
Lara stumbled on, hand pressed to her mouth. She wanted to run from her horror, but there was nothing to run from. Everything was dead.
The flash of movement caught her eye, that pale candle flame of a head, bobbing like a will-o’-the-wisp. “Geoff!” She sprinted after him.
She rounded the corner. Geoff stood there, waiting for her. Still in the ragged pajamas, but they were tighter on him. His skin was covered with goosebumps in the chill. He was older today, maybe seven or eight.
“I know who you are,” she told him. “You’re Greaves’ son. You’ve been hiding behind your shield for seventeen years.”
Geoff’s eyes went big. He backed up, as if she’d threatened him.
“You have to help us,” she pleaded. “You’re the one who showed me this nightmare. We have to stop it, and you have to help!”
Geoff kept backing away, looking frightened. She didn’t see the shift, it was so seamless, but suddenly he was younger, much younger, three maybe, the ragged pajamas hanging loosely. He held the dingy teddy bear again, thumb in mouth. Big, huge, scared eyes.
It pissed her off. “Oh, stop that shit! Don’t try to manipulate me. There’s no time for that! I need help, not more jerking around.”
Geoff’s face crumpled, as if he were about to cry.
“Grow up!” she yelled.
The angry look in his eyes said it all. He’d never had the chance.
Fair enough, true enough, but now was not the time to ask her for empathy and compassion. “What the hell do you think you’re doing in there?” she yelled. “In a dream, in your head? What the hell have you being doing for seventeen years? Sulking? What the fuck, Geoff?”
Geoff jerked back, and he was abruptly twelve again, tall, and angry. She suddenly saw the resemblance to Greaves, in his regal posture, his jaw, the way his pale eyes flashed.
“I need you!” she yelled. “We both need you. You have to help us. Make a move, strike a fucking blow! It’s not enough to waft around looking wounded and ethereal. You have to get off your ass!”
Geoff’s face twisted with anger. He lifted his arms and gestured sharply, as if he were flinging something invisible at her—
The blow knocked her right out of the vision, jolting her painfully back into the smothering darkness.
It occurred to her that with the light off, the fan had been turned off, too. No air was moving. The vault was airtight. She had clearly felt the change in humidity the moment she had stepped outside. Which meant she probably had fifteen feet squared of oxygen left to breathe.
She blew out a slow lungful of carbon dioxide, and curled into a ball again. All things considered, smothering to death in the vault was a better death than some of the others she could ponder.
The words rang between them.
“You can’t give me Lara,” Miles said. “She’s not yours to give.”
“She certainly was yours to take, wasn’t she?” Greaves said, his voice faintly taunting. “Did you give her a choice?”
Miles felt bile rise in his throat. “That’s between me and her.”
“Is it?” Greaves tutted gently, under his breath. “There’s no delicate way to say this—but that passionate love and devotion she feels for you? It was pharmacologically induced, Miles . . . by me. It will pass, as she detoxes. Six to eight weeks is standard, I think.”