Trance (25 page)

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Authors: Kelly Meding

Tags: #Dystopia, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Romance, #Science Fiction, #Young Adult, #Adult, #Urban Fantasy

BOOK: Trance
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“I can’t honestly say it won’t affect me,” I replied. “I know
it will, and I want to believe I’ll still be able to make the tough calls.”

“You can only believe it until you’re faced with it, and then you’ll know for certain. I hope you’re right.”

So did I. “Thanks, Doc.”

“Where are you headed now?”

“I’m going to call a meeting.”

“Oh?”

“Yeah, the whole team, plus you and the agents. Everyone at the same time.”

His thick eyebrows furrowed as he failed to hide his curiosity. “Some sort of announcement?”

“Something like that.”

I left before he could ask me to elaborate. I had to meet Gage in the conference room and see what he’d dug up. Until I verified my suspicions, I’d keep my accusations to myself.

To Dr. Morgan’s great consternation, we held the meeting in Ethan’s room. Gage felt as strongly as I did about doing this in front of everyone, which crammed eight adults into a small ICU cubicle. Grayson and McNally seemed twitchy, and for good reason, according to our research. I bit back my flaring temper and focused on Gage while everyone settled in. More silver had crept into his light brown hair, collecting above his temples and in his eyebrows—more than had been there yesterday. It gave him an air of physical maturity that better matched the sum of his experiences.

“What’s this all about, Trance?” McNally asked.

“The truth about our powers,” I said.

She blinked. Grayson tensed. Ha!

“What do you mean, Catalepsia?” Marco asked.

I started with my first vision in the rest stop bathroom and continued into the most recent nightmare. McNally listened with more intensity than anyone else in our audience. She stood by the wall, hands folded over her stomach, eyes drilling holes into me. I couldn’t decide if she was finding fault in my words, or planning her rebuttal. Ethan listened through a haze of pain medication, with an occasional tap from Renee to keep him focused. William and Seward seemed equally curious, while Marco sat in a chair with a wholly blank expression. Grayson continued to fidget, not as good at body language control as McNally.

I ended with the dream-woman’s accusing stare. “She knew the fire wasn’t an accident. They were murdered.”

Everyone, with the notable exception of the pair of federal agents, was stuck between confused and mystified.

“You’re having visions?” Seward asked, perplexed.

“Apparently so, yes.”

“Have you ever had them before?”

“Never. Not even when I was a kid.”

“Utterly fascinating,” McNally said.

“Fascinating, huh?” I said. “So MHC had no knowledge of these two people who burned to death in a fire last Thursday at one fifteen in the morning? Two people who, for the last fifteen years, have been living in Fairview Center, a chronic care facility in Santa Barbara? A facility that also happens to receive a healthy, monthly government stipend?”

Grayson’s skin went the color of paste. He looked petrified, while McNally hadn’t lost her cool or her posture. Neither of them spoke. They didn’t even look at each other. I thought back to my earlier conversation with Seward. These were supposedly people who’d fought for us? Bull. Shit.

“T, what’s going on?” Renee asked.

I ignored her. Gage handed me printouts of newspaper articles and financial reports. I waved them at the agents. “You want to see the hard copies so you know I’m not bluffing?” A lump of emotion—anger, confusion, betrayal, and fear all rolled up into something impossible to swallow—clogged my throat. “Were you ever going to tell us the truth?”

Grayson’s head snapped toward McNally. She held my gaze a moment longer, then met his. Her resignation collided with his trepidation, and a silent argument was held. When she once again met my accusing stare, her steely eyes were rimmed with … regret?

“Does knowing the truth change those years we stole from you?” she asked.

The tension level in the room quadrupled as my fellow Metas clued in to the enormity of our conversation. Tears stung my eyes as the last hope I’d had of being wrong about this shattered. “You took our powers away,” I said.

“Not directly, but we were responsible for hiding the truth from the world,” she replied with a hitch in her voice. “You have to understand, Trance, what was happening back then. The country was falling apart around us. People were terrified of Metas, and the Rangers were losing the War. Dying one after another in horrible ways. The fighting had
localized to the Northeastern states. The president’s advisors were urging him to consider extreme measures, including blanket bombings of New York and New Jersey, and when some of us at the MHC heard that—” She swallowed. “It would have been genocide. The casualties were unthinkable.”

“Bombing two states,” Seward said. He seemed on the verge of vomiting.

McNally nodded. “Yes.”

“Who were those people?” I asked. “The man and woman who died?”

“Your investigative reporting didn’t give you their names?” Grayson asked. His first contribution to the conversation and it was sarcasm. Nice.

I lifted one shoulder in a half-shrug. “Your people weren’t a hundred percent incompetent. We couldn’t find any records, other than John and Jane Doe. Very original.”

“Because they don’t exist,” McNally said.

“On paper?”

“Technically, at all. No identification, no fingerprints. They were both Metas of a power level we’d never seen before. Their minds had been joined together by a machine designed by scientists who’d spent years studying them. Together they created what was called an energy sink. They were able to collect MetaHuman abilities and store them away.”

“Where the hell do you find people who can do something like that?” William asked, his deep voice barely above a low growl. “Who studied them?”

McNally took a few breaths, gearing up for some sort of
confession. Her façade of cool collectedness was cracking, and a tiny part of me wished I hadn’t done this so publicly. The majority of me enjoyed her discomfort. “About a week before that day in Central Park,” she said, “a man came to the MHC office in Burbank. He gave us the name O’Bannen and claimed to work for a specialized research and development firm based in Virginia. They had a branch in Los Angeles, and he told us about a project he’d been developing for his firm involving a pair of Metas whose extreme psychic abilities ran toward the telekinetic end of the spectrum. He’d helped them develop a machine they called a Warden—a way to harness their abilities and remove them from other Metas. O’Bannen offered them as a solution to the War.”

“And you took them,” I said, disgusted by the idea of bartering with human life.

“Not right away. To do so enslaved them both, you understand, even though O’Bannen assured me they were willing. The cost benefit was difficult to justify.”

“Cost benefit?” William said. His hands were clenched tight. “Did you ever talk to them? To the Metas? To see that what you were doing was strapping two people to a machine and letting them rot?”

McNally flinched. “Yes, we met with them. And whether or not you believe me, the truth is they wanted this. They believed, and made us believe, that this energy sink was the only way to stop the Banes and end the War. No one knew how long it would last, only that it was a temporary solution. It was the only one we had. We debated it for days. It wasn’t until they sent you children to New York that we accepted
the offer. O’Bannen assured us it would only affect the Banes, but he was wrong. The Wardens were unable to differentiate between the adult Banes and you children. Even then, I didn’t honestly believe it would work, but it did.”

She glanced at Grayson. He continued staring at his feet, an expression on his face I could only describe as constipated.

“As per our agreement with O’Bannen,” McNally continued, “we took over the Warden’s care. We transferred their equipment to Fairview. I did a little private digging afterward with my partner, Agent Anders, but O’Bannen was, as expected, an alias. No R&D firm in the country would claim him, especially not the two with branches here in Los Angeles. For a long time, I waited for him to show up and demand recompense for his generosity. He never has.”

For several minutes, the steady beep of Ethan’s pulse monitor was the only sound in the room. It was almost too much to process. The answers I’d wanted for more than half my life had just been handed to me, and I couldn’t seem to collect my thoughts.

“Why did you hide it from us?” William asked.

“As I said before, we thought it was the best way to protect you children.” McNally seemed on the verge of bursting into tears. Or punching Grayson in the eye for staying so silent. “We thought your powers would be left intact, but they weren’t. I can’t say I would change the decision given the chance, because I’m not certain we were wrong. But for what little it’s worth, I am sorry.”

Renee snorted.

“What about the fire?” Gage asked. “Did Specter kill the Wardens to release our powers?”

“It’s a possibility,” McNally said. “However, their existence was a closely guarded secret. Seven people in the world, including the former president and his chairman of the Joint Chiefs, knew about the Warden and the Metas who powered it. Only three of us in the MHC knew its location in Fairview.”

“Who are the three?” I asked.

“Myself, Alexander, and Agent Anders. He died almost three years ago.”

“From?”

She narrowed her eyes. “Agent Anders was my partner for nine years, Trance. He had cancer, and he was two years retired from the ATF when he passed away. And now you know the truth. I’m sorry you had to find out like this.”

“Like this or at all?” Renee snapped. Her cherry-red lips were pursed so tightly they almost disappeared, and deep frown lines marred her smooth blue forehead. Strangely, she seemed the angriest person in the room.

“Like this. Our investigation into the fire points to arson, but there are no witnesses, and the security cameras were compromised.”

“Convenient.”

“More likely on purpose. If I knew anything else I would tell you.”

“Such as why I’m dreaming about this Warden?” I asked. “And why I got back some bastardized version of my grandmother’s powers?”

“Yes.”

“What if I asked you to give me a theory?”

She considered the question. “Then, my theory would be linked to your visions. You say the female Warden understood they were being murdered. Without knowing just how her energy-sinking ability worked, I’d postulate she sent the strongest telekinetic power she had out to the body most able to host it. This new power is very similar to your grandmother’s, Trance, and powers often run in families. The Warden sent the signal and you received it. In theory.”

Damn her, the theory made sense. A lot of sense, especially the family angle. My dad’s father had had powers almost identical to my original Trance ability. Janel’s mother had also been an ice manipulator. And the whole thing worked with Seward’s theory about my body’s inability to properly channel the energy.

Another uncomfortable silence filled the ICU as we each sat with our thoughts. Good intentions didn’t excuse what the MHC had done to us. And it certainly didn’t save us from what was happening now.

“O’Bannen knew about the Warden,” Gage said. “Even if he didn’t know about Fairview, it’s a fair bet he had some way of tracking down the machine he helped build. No one’s that generous without an ulterior motive.”

“You’re right,” McNally said. “However unlikely a scenario, it’s unwise at this point to disregard anyone as a potential suspect.”

“Including yourself?” I asked.

She looked startled for a moment, then nodded. “Myself included. As difficult as it is for all of you to hear, the only
person any of you can possibly know for certain is innocent is you yourself.”

Once again, I found myself hating her for being right. I knew I hadn’t set the fire, but I couldn’t know for absolutely certain that Gage hadn’t done it—Santa Barbara and Bakersfield were only a couple of hours apart.

No. Timing aside, I knew in my gut that Gage hadn’t done this. No matter the secrets he had bottled up inside, being a killer and conspiring to give all our powers back just wasn’t in him.

It wasn’t.

I batted away the tiny niggle of doubt that McNally had suddenly planted, frustrated I’d even let myself go there. We needed to get back on track.

“What’s your plan, Trance?” Seward asked, as though he could read my mind.

“Nothing’s really changed,” I said, even though a lot of things had, indeed, changed dramatically in the last ten minutes. “We’ll still do the interview, and we’re still going to find Specter. Any new thoughts on locating him?”

Ethan raised his hand. “Bait,” he said.

“What kind of bait?”

“Me.”

Twenty-three
Missteps

Y
ou want to be bait?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“Forget it.” I held up my hand before Ethan could argue. “Even if you could bait him, we have no way of trapping him once he’s inside you.”

“Maybe we do,” William said. He stood just behind Renee and kept curling the ends of her long hair around one finger—a gesture both nervous and possessive. “His powers are telekinetic in nature, and what’s that except electric brain signals? Could your force field keep his mind trapped here and leave his body vulnerable?”

It was certainly an out-of-the-box suggestion. We were all starting to look at the limits of each others’ powers and consider how to best use them to our advantage. “I don’t know, William,” I said. “I’ve never tried it before, and I don’t know how long I can maintain a force field. It might not be long enough to find his body, and who knows what he’d do to Ethan in the meantime? It’s too big a risk.”

“So’s doing nothing,” Ethan said.

“You are six hours out of major surgery, buster, you are in no shape to act as bait. Given your physical condition, Specter might not even come for you. He wouldn’t be able to get you out of bed.”

“He got Janel up.”

“True, but still, no.”

“You got a better idea, T?” Renee asked.

“At present? No, but I am not putting Ethan or anyone else in a position to die, because that’s what will happen. Everyone Specter has inhabited and we’ve fought has died. It isn’t brave, it’s suicide.”

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