Authors: Blake Northcott
Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Superheroes, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Post-Apocalyptic, #Superhero, #Dystopian
I squinted my bleary eyes at the fiery sphere breaking the horizon
, sending a ripple of orange lights streaking across the inky water. Sunrise came quickly.
Too
quickly, as it often does for borderline insomniacs like myself. If I’d had an opportunity to sleep it had now passed me by, and this light show was my alarm clock.
Exhausted, I shuffled through my pockets in search of my medication. I popped the caps and swallowed a handful of multicolored pills, choking them down just as I heard rustling from the sleeping quarters. A door squeaked open, and footsteps padded across the steel floor. I pressed the caps back onto the bottles and jammed them back into my hoodie before my pilot emerged, yawning with an overhead stretch.
Karin joined me in the passenger bay, barefoot, and still clad in her yellow pyjamas. She asked what our strategy was. Strictly speaking I didn’t have a ‘strategy’ to find Brynja – the chain of islands that span the Caribbean are in the thousands, with the Bahamas home to five hundred just on its own. I’d memorized a chart of statistical probabilities that I threw together in the early hours of the morning – that would serve as our guide. Using public access real estate records, I was able to determine which islands had been purchased or leased in the last year, which narrowed my search significantly. From there it was just a matter of making educated guesses; relatively low price ranges, the amount of seclusion they provided, and if the realtor had deleted any property information from the holoforums after the deal closed. I’d narrowed my field down to thirty-seven possible locations. Better than a thousand, but it would still require some leg work to search each island individually.
After the gang rolled out of bed and had been sufficiently caffeinated we got to work. Karin took the transport off autopilot and assumed control. She circled each private island from a distance, allowing us to scan the areas for possible traps. If the coast looked clear we’d land somewhere secluded and search the perimeter on foot, trying to catch a glimpse of my elusive friend. Scanning, searching, flying to new locations...it was a task that could’ve taken a week or more – time we certainly didn’t have. But luck, if such a thing existed, seemed to be once again on my side: twelve hours and three islands into our search my wrist-com chimed, loud and piercing, amplified by the metallic walls of the passenger bay.
Holo-forum request from ... Brynja.
“Guys, it’s her.” I called everyone over as the high-pitched ping continued, motioning to the text floating above my wrist. Sensing the urgency in my voice, Gavin, Peyton and McGarrity rushed to my side. Karin quickly followed, racing from the cockpit with a half-eaten sandwich in-hand.
With a quick voice command and a tap of the screen I accepted the request, and a holo-forum winked open. It was the woman I hadn’t seen in close to a year, but who had never escaped my thoughts for more than a day. With her face washed clean of make-up and a bright smile stretched across her lips, Brynja’s striking resemblance to Peyton seemed a hell of a lot more striking. If there weren’t a sweep of bubblegum-blue hair draped over her shoulder, the differences between the two would have been microscopic. And although the curl of her lips was trying to convince us otherwise, Brynja’s eyes reflected a sadness – a weight that overwhelmed her.
She waved, leaning in towards the camera. “Hey guys. It’s nice to see all of my friends again...and you too, Steve.”
McGarrity scoffed, scrunching his face into a dismissive scowl. Brynja ignored it.
“Are you okay?” I asked.
“Yup...down here in paradise, living the dream.” She held up a pink cocktail, topped with a curling straw and a pastel-colored parasol. “I’ve got the beach at my front door, sunshine year-round, and an unlimited supply of these babies. Can’t complain.”
Her sunny disposition persisted, but I was far from convinced. We were playing a game of show and tell, and nothing she was telling me matched what she’s was showing; the sorrow that strained her voice, or the tension around her pale features.
“We’re in the area,” I said. “We need to talk.”
“I’ll send you my coordinates,” she offered without missing a beat. “I figured you’d be looking for me after what happened in London. But Matt...I need something from you.” She took a deep breath before continuing, suddenly flicking her eyes towards Peyton. “I’d like you to come alone. Just for a few minutes, before the rest of the gang comes down.”
“What?” Peyton shouted, pushing her way past Gavin to get a better view of the hovering screen. “No way. We
all
come down, or no one does.”
Brynja rolled her eyes with such an exaggerated motion that I could practically hear the gesture through the com. “Come on, princess. You
really
think I have something to do with these attacks?”
“We don’t know what to believe,” Gavin said, placing a comforting hand on his sister’s shoulder. “But we’re not going to assume anything at this point.”
“Relax,” Brynja sighed, already sounding drained from the conversation. “Just five measly minutes to chat with Mox. No coms, no monitors –
that’s
the deal.”
McGarrity blurted out a caustic laugh. “’The deal’? And if we refuse to play your stupid game what are
you
gonna do about it, B?”
“What I do best,” she said plainly. “I’ll become a ghost. Phase out, disappear. I might not be able to pass through objects anymore, but I can make myself scarce...I bet it’ll be another year before you catch up with me again.”
McGarrity scowled, looking more perplexed than usual. And that was saying a lot.
“And Steve,” she added with a lopsided smirk, “
you
of all people should know that betting against me is a bad idea.”
“You cheated,” he screamed, grabbing two fistfuls of his dishevelled blonde hair. “I don’t know how, but I
know
you did it! You ganked that jet from me and I want a rematch!”
“All right guys,” I cut in, “that’s all in the past. I don’t care what happened between you two, but I’m interested in getting some information about
current
events.”
“Then come down here,” she said swiftly. “
Alone.”
“We don’t have to listen to this crap,” Peyton fired back. “We have all the resources in the world. We can figure out who’s behind all of this, and deliver them right to the White House’s front door if we just—”
“I know who has the jet,” Brynja interrupted.
Her words sucked all the oxygen out of the passenger bay.
I exchanged glances with Peyton, Gavin and McGarrity, whose faces had been drained of color.
“Five minutes?” I confirmed.
She nodded in agreement.
The holoscreen blipped off and was replaced with a series of coordinates; the longitude and latitude of her exact location, just twenty miles from where our transport was hovering.
Peyton had nothing to say about my decision. She didn’t need to because I knew exactly what she was thinking. She thought I was being reckless and stupid, and she also knew I was going down to the island alone whether she liked it or not.
Karin offered a me reassuring pat on the shoulder. “We’ll be watching from the ship, boss. We won’t have ears on you, but we’ll have eyes...cross your hands above your head and I’ll drop. I can be on the beach in thirty seconds.”
McGarrity balled his hands into fists and started bouncing from one foot to the other. “No doubt, son. We’ll come rushing out with guns and swords blazing!”
“Take it easy, Braveheart. This won’t be a shootout,” I assured him. “Or a swordfight. This will be a discussion – a very civil discussion.
Trust
me.”
Karin began inching her way towards the bulkhead where the arsenal was hidden. “But you’re taking a gun with you...right?”
I squinted hard, pinching the bridge of my nose. “Guys, just please—”
“Non-negotiable,” Gavin interrupted. He breezed past Karin and popped open the weapon case, pulling a pistol from the rack. Holding it by the barrel, he extended the handle towards me and refused to break eye contact until I accepted it. After a moment of hesitation I snatched it from his hand and tucked it into the back of my jeans, concealing it beneath my t-shirt.
“We’re a
team
,” Gavin said, his voice hardening. “And yes, you’re the leader, but this isn’t a dictatorship. These are life-and-death decisions we’re making here, and you can’t make them all on your own. Sometimes you have to let us in.”
“He’s right,” McGarrity said. “Except the thing about you being the leader. I always kind of saw
myself
as the leader, and you guys as my...well, I don’t wanna use the word ‘sidekicks’ because that sort of cheapens it, but—”
“Thank you,” I said flatly. “We’ll sort out the official rankings if we make it out of this alive.”
After a short walk I arrived at a clearing in the trees, but it wasn’t a naturally occurring formation; it had been meticulously cleared away by excavation equipment and beautified by landscapers. Set back from the coastline across a manicured lawn was an estate; a palatial three-story monstrosity that looked like a Beverly Hills mansion on steroids. As I studied the ivory structure I heard someone approach from behind, and I knew it was her before I turned.
I wasn’t expecting a hug, but I felt that a sharp backhand across my cheekbone was a little harsh, especially considering everything we’d been through together. Brynja’s shot was perfectly placed, and hard enough to knock me off balance. My foot lodged in the sand and I stumbled, bending forward at the waist.
Brynja lunged and, reaching over my back, yanked the pistol from my jeans. She held it up by the barrel and crinkled her nose. “Are you
kidding
me with this bullshit?” And with an overhand toss my gun spiralled through the air, splashing into the Atlantic.
“First of all,
ouch.”
I massaged my stinging face, brains still scrambled. I think Santiago’s punch back in The Fringe had left me concussed, because Brynja’s shot took a lot more out of me than it should have. “And how did you know?”
“How do you
think
, dumb ass.” She pointed to her head with both fingers, raising her eyebrows. “I read thoughts, remember? You came strolling down the beach and all you could think about was the big fat gun sticking out of your pants.”
I snuck a quick glance at her powder-blue bikini, trying to suppress a smile. “Well now it’s not the
only
thing I’m thinking about.”
“Oh grow up. You think
this
is scandalous? I’m European – I sunbathe topless.”
After a quick moment of recovery I glanced back at her waterfront property. “That’s pretty crazy.”
“Not really,” she scoffed, “You spend
way
too much time in America, Mox. Not every country is full of dusty old prudes. Most of us are just fine seeing boobies while we’re hanging out on a beach.”
“No, I mean...” My eyes flicked towards her beach home, and then back to her.
I could see the heat rising in her pale cheeks. “Oh...we’re not talking about my boobs anymore.” She quickly cleared her throat, glancing at the sand beneath us. “Yeah, well, as far as houses go, it’s not bad I suppose.”
I noticed someone making their way down the flagstone walkway from her mansion towards the beach. It must have been a servant. An elderly woman in a white linen frock approached, balancing a tray on her palm. She was toting a pair of halved coconuts topped with sliced oranges and tiny straws.
If I
was
walking into a trap, it was the strangest scenario that I could have ever imagined. I’ve seen a lot of movies, and I don’t ever recall the hero being drawn into a dastardly plot that involved sipping Piña Coladas by the beach with a bikini-clad woman.