Read The Stolen Online

Authors: Celia Thomson

The Stolen (22 page)

BOOK: The Stolen
6.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

As a kid,
Brian had known there were secret rooms in the Order of the Tenth Blade's chapter house. As he grew older and advanced in the Order, some were revealed to him.

But he knew there had to be more.

And if the Tenth Blade was in fact holding Chloe's mom, they would probably keep her in some area Brian didn't know about.

As a kid, he had made incredible drawings and plans of where he thought the other rooms might be. While many of these floor plans were lost or had been destroyed by his father, a few had survived, stuffed into boxes of memorabilia and report cards. As soon as he got home from Chloe's house, he dug them out and pored over them, trying to remember what he could, picturing the old Victorian with eyes closed, estimating area and distance. When he had done as much as possible, he paid a visit to the house.

Mrs. Chung let him in, smiling and kind and looking exactly the way she always had from the first day he had been there. She was tiny but perfectly erect, grandmotherly but formally dressed, like the maitre d' at a fancy Chinese restaurant, her hair always up in elaborate pins. Whit Rezza might own a security company that constantly invented and sold the latest computerized systems, but in the end, few things could beat the watchful eyes of a
human
doorkeeper, one who was polite but firm with strangers, friendly with guests, and much better equipped than a computer to pick up the emotions of those who came in.

“Is everything okay, Brian?” she asked, looking as though she still wanted to pinch his cheeks.

“I'm having a sort of crisis of faith, Mrs. Chung,” he sighed, telling her part of the truth. It was easier—and made it less likely that she would detect what he was up to—than an outright lie.

“Oh, I don't know about all that, but I'm sure it will be fine.” She always claimed not to know what went on in the house whenever anyone—even members—tried to talk to her about it. She stood by the line that it was a private club. Brian doubted that she was really quite so innocent.

“Thanks, Mrs. Chung,” he said as she took off his coat and went to hang it up somewhere.

Brian was well aware that cameras and monitors might be anywhere—he even knew where a few were. So
he made his movements random—first to the library, where he said his hellos to a few of the older members who were sitting around reading or napping. He flipped through the latest
Sports Illustrated
—besides the dedication to violence, it really was, after all, an ordinary private club—and eventually rose, asking if anyone wanted tea or coffee. No one did.

He went to the kitchen, counting his steps, and poured himself a full cup of coffee to give himself an excuse for walking
very slowly
. Then he proceeded down the hallway to the stairs, counting his steps and trying to determine the length of the staircase.

While Brian did all this, he tried not to think of Chloe, partly because he was afraid it would affect what he was doing. And partly because it was too complicated to think about.

Five, six, seven, eight … About eight and a half paces to the stairway
.

He had first been assigned to track her over a year ago; because of her adoption records, they had suspected that she was a Mai. He had tracked others before her, ones who already knew their heritage, and while it was never up to him to kill them—or decide to kill them—they always seemed different enough, alien enough for him to think of them as not quite human. Even discounting their greater strength and agility, they moved strangely, for one thing. Sometimes they cocked their heads when smelling for something, which made them
look entirely animal. Late at night Brian had once caught a flash of a female Mai's face as she raced through a pool of streetlight and saw the catlike slits in her yellow eyes.

Chloe was just a normal high-school girl. Well, not quite normal. She was on the edge of the social crowds but never resentful of them. She had an amazing attitude toward work—Brian had seldom seen someone her age so committed to a crappy job. At least half the time Chloe showed up early at Pateena's and often stayed late to help the manager close up, without complaining or demanding overtime.

The Tenth Blade ordered him to get closer, to get a better reading on her and how close she was to discovering her background. He did as he was told.

He'd arranged their first “accidental” meeting at Pateena, the place where she worked. Liking her instantly was unavoidable: Chloe was funny, passionate, gorgeous, and had a spark of
something
else Brian couldn't put his finger on. Energy, verve, something that made him want to go everywhere with her, do whatever she was doing, not be left out in case he missed something great.

But he'd never counted on her liking him back.

Or having to decide how much to tell her. Or having to choose between betraying her or his father and the way he had been brought up, all the people he had known since he was a kid, the way of life he had always lived. In the end, he'd made a half-assed decision to come to her rescue at the bridge when she was fighting
the Rogue without telling her anything beforehand. Not that she'd really needed his help.

And he'd screwed it all up again anyway. While there
were
Tenth Bladers waiting in the Marin Headlands for her to go running by, he hadn't
really
had to throw the shuriken so hard into Alyec's leg to stop them from going that way.

He
knew
that Alyec really wasn't the cause of the trouble—that one way or another Chloe would have realized she was different and, even worse, if she'd done it alone, the Order of the Tenth Blade would have simply killed her.

But the other boy could kiss her.

While Brian was forced to walk a strange tightrope with Chloe between friendship and something more, Alyec had no such difficulties. He was free to pursue any level of relationship with her, without having to worry about dying from it.

Brian was on the third floor, in a small complex of secret rooms where the
real
library was and where he was pretty certain there were
more
secret rooms, ones he didn't know about. He did a few quick calculations in his head and noticed how the decorative architecture was confusing, with excessive paneling and wainscoting, bookshelves set up in mazelike arrangements, lots of extra crown molding, cornices, and other random decorations.

A flash of something on the floor caught his eye. Brian bent over and picked up what could have been a
gum wrapper. It was actually a silver earring. It looked expensive, patterned, and faux ethnic—and far too modern for anything Edna Hilshire would wear.

Brian quickly thought about all the other female members of the San Francisco chapter. Only two of them had access to this room besides Edna. Sarah-Ann never wore jewelry, except for a
Sodalitas Gladii Decimi
pendant, and Tyler always had a pair of simple diamond or pearl studs.

“What are you doing here?”

Of course. Of course Dickless would see me come in and follow me here. He was probably monitoring the security cameras
.

Brian didn't turn around immediately, pretending to continue looking for a book.

The excuse he'd originally been going to use was that he had lost a knitting needle somewhere—his hobby amused some chapter members and annoyed some others, who thought it was unbecoming and housewifeish for a member of the Order of the Tenth Blade. Like flash camouflage, his answer would probably amuse or annoy an interloper, completely disarming any suspicion.

But Richard had a real grudge against him and still thought that the two were competing for Whit's affection and eventual leadership of the Order.

“Richard,” Brian said formally, only turning around after he pretended to be done with whatever he was doing. “How are things going for you?”

“What are you doing here?” Richard repeated. His
eyes were black and intense, and his hair was black and intense, too. He sneered so much, it looked like he was constantly trying to stop a runny nose.

He was also smaller than Brian, which suited Brian just fine. Brian walked up to him as close as possible without making it an actual insult, looming over him.

“Not that it's any of your business, but I am experiencing a crisis of faith,” Brian said, with just a touch of excitement in his voice to make it seem more real. “I wanted to read through the Sidereal Codex again and think about the vows.”

“Don't you think it's a little late for that?” Richard demanded, retaining his sneer but obviously accepting the excuse.

“Remind me to tell the others that you're the go-to guy for spiritual support,” Brian said, rolling his eyes and walking away.

“You can't just
leave
the Order,” the other boy spat after him in a final attempt at ruffling his feathers.
“Nobody
just ‘leaves the Order.' It's for
life.”

“Whatever,” Brian called back.

“Even your father knows that, Brian. He understands the rules and lives by them. He'll do what's right. For all of us,” he added.

Brian kept walking, but the smile he could hear in Richard's voice left him feeling cold.

“Get anything yet?”
Alyec needled.

“It would be a lot easier to ‘get' a scent if you weren't wearing so much cheap cologne,” Kim growled.

“It's not cheap! It's Eternity, by Calvin Klein!”

Chloe winced, fingering one of her mom's rings that lay next to the sink. The whole thing would have been funny if her mom's life wasn't at stake. Alyec seemed to rub
all
of Chloe's female friends the wrong way, not just Amy.

The three had escaped the mansion with little attempt at covering up their trail; with Kim's superior hearing and smell, they'd managed to eventually evade the two kizekh who had followed them. Alyec had crowed in triumph, but Chloe wasn't so sure it really had been just that easy; perhaps Sergei thought it was safe enough for her with Alyec and Kim.

Closer to Chloe's house Kim had detected two seemingly random people who, on closer inspection, were making fairly regular circuits of the area around
the house. The three Mai simply waited until there was a break and dashed in.

“This is where you live?” Kim asked. Normally the girl was immediately down to business, but she seemed genuinely interested in Chloe's life before the Mai. She moved her head back and forth, taking in
everything
in the living room and kitchen, eyes wide at the coffeemaker, the little TV on the counter, the garbage cans, the books on the coffee table….

“Yeah. Pretty sweet, huh?” Alyec threw himself down on the couch, making it clear that
he
had been there first and was much more familiar with the territory.

“This is where I found the … uh, ‘clue.'” Chloe opened the fridge and showed her the hummus. Kim came forward to smell it, then buried her nose in her hand.

That had been fifteen minutes ago.

While Alyec made the occasional derisive comment and Chloe looked around for other, obvious out-of-place things that only she would be able to notice, Kim moved around the rooms, sometimes upright, sometimes on all fours, trying to catch a scent. She spent an inordinate amount of time with her nose close to, but not touching, objects, sniffing them—and Chloe couldn't quite watch. It was too inhuman.

“Here,” Chloe said, slipping in between Kim and Alyec, who were glaring at each other.
I'm glad I have such great, supportive, helpful friends,
Chloe made herself think.
But maybe I should have brought only one of them
. She reached
into a cabinet over the sink and pulled out a full bag of gourmet coffee beans—another sign her mother hadn't been there in a while. Normally she would have been through a “tasting”-size bag like that in about a week. She broke open the seal and held it under Kim's nose.

“What's this for?” Kim said doubtfully.

“They have little dishes of coffee beans out in fancy perfume stores and things like that,” Chloe said, shrugging. “To clear your head of all the previous scents. I thought maybe you could use it for the same thing.”

Kim looked at her without blinking but took a deep whiff. Then she wrinkled her nose and did the cutest little wheezy sneeze Chloe had ever seen a human—
Um, almost human
—do. She put her nose to the air again.

“Huh, it works,” Kim said in wonder, and got back to work, taking the bag with her and glaring at Alyec.

“Hey,” Chloe said, remembering something. “How come the night you were teaching me how to do all those things you reeked of gasoline, not CK?”

“Sometimes the Tenth Bladers use dogs,” he said, making little ears on the sides of his head with his hands. “Gas covers the scent. Also to keep you from recognizing me. No one knew if you were going to freak out over everything. Like if you would suddenly start talking about all of this to your mom or the press or whatever—my name wouldn't be part of it.”

BOOK: The Stolen
6.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Harmonized by Mary Behre
The Laws of Evening: Stories by Mary Yukari Waters
The Tyrant's Daughter by Carleson, J.C.
Banged Up by Jeanne St James
Battlemind by William H. Keith
Moonlight and Ashes by Sophie Masson
Dark Surrender by Mercy Walker
Half World by Hiromi Goto