Read The Awakening Online

Authors: K. E. Ganshert

Tags: #Fiction

The Awakening (35 page)

“If you are underage,” Cap’s silver-eyed gaze does not leave mine, “return to your room immediately and wait for my instruction.”

Slowly, the room begins to clear. Ellen and Declan obey first. A tearful Rosie, then Bass, Jose, Ashley and Danielle. Jillian lingers, shooting glances my way, before she, too, obeys orders. Link stays.

“It’s time to return to your room,” Cap says.

“He’s alive.”

He paws his face, the palm of his hand scratching against the stubble on his cheeks. I can tell he doesn’t know what to do with me anymore.

“We can still save him.”

“Luka is gone.” The lifeless words belong to Gabe.

“Why?” I practically spit the word. “Because you couldn’t get your sister back?”

“Tess.” Cap says my name like a warning.

But I don’t care. I don’t care if I hurt Gabe. I don’t care that I’m disobeying orders once again. I don’t care about anything but the boy down the hall. Luka isn’t gone. At least he wasn’t an hour ago. I have no idea how much longer my declaration will hold true. And therein lies the crux of my insanity. I’m standing here trying to convince these people that he’s alive while every breath I take draws him closer to death.

Link gently takes my arm. “Come on. Let me take you to your room.”

I jerk my elbow away. “I’m not leaving him.”

Cap pushes out a terse breath. “We have more pressing matters at hand.”


More pressing matters
? He’s being tortured. Right now, at this very moment. And we’re standing here letting it happen.” What can be more pressing than that? Yet as soon as the question comes, I know Cap’s answer. As captain of this ship, he has to make decisions for the collective whole. It’s what he’s always doing. He has to think strategically, and if that means sacrificing one for the sake of the rest, then that is what he will do. I absolutely hate him for it.

Link pulls me away.

“He’s going to die.” I try wrenching my arm free, but his grip is surprisingly strong. “Do you hear me? If we don’t get to him right now, he will die!”

Link pulls me further away.

“Gabe!” I turn wild eyes on him—my last hope. If anybody knows this kind of agony, Gabe does. “Please. Help me. Luka is alive. I swear to you, he’s alive. We can’t leave him here!”

Gabe does nothing but look away from my manic pleas.

And Link drags me out of the room. He circles his arm around my waist and pulls me away while I scream and flail, not strong enough to resist, tears running like scalding heat down my face. Rosie stares out from the crack in her bedroom door, her eyes big and wide in her face. Link murmurs words of comfort I do not hear. He holds me until I’ve stopped thrashing. Until the wild thing has crawled back inside and curled into a whimpering ball.

“Listen.”

All I can do is shake my head. I should have listened a long time ago, but not to Link. I should have listened to Luka, who never wanted to go on our mission in the first place. And yet, I insisted. I ignored his reservations. “It’s my fault. He’s there because of me. He knew something would go wrong. But I wouldn’t listen. I went and because I went, he had to go, too. And now he’s being tortured.” His scream grows so loud and sharp in my mind that I wince. “You have to believe me. Please believe me.”

“Xena, look at me.” Link takes hold of my face and tips up my chin so that I have no choice. His caramel eyes are steady and familiar. “Listen to me. If Luka is still alive. If the other side is holding him hostage, it’s because they want
you
.”

“I know that.” And I will gladly trade places.

“So you know what that means.”

Another hot tear tumbles down my cheek.

Link catches it on the pad of his thumb. “They aren’t going to kill him. If they kill him, they loose their leverage.”

“I know that, too. But I also know what I saw. If it continues for much longer, he won’t be Luka anymore.” My chin trembles. “Please, Link. We can’t leave him.”

Link’s steady resolve solidifies. “We won’t.”

Those two definitive words do more to calm me than anything else he could have said or done.

“I have an idea. Let me run it by Cap.”

Chapter Two

Molten Lava

“T
wenty minutes,” Cap says.

I slide onto one of the six dental chairs in the training center and fidget with the hemp bracelet around my wrist. It belonged to Luka. He insisted I wear it in case it offered even a hint of protection. “What if she’s not sleeping?

“Then we will have no choice but to leave this place and disband.” The look Cap gives me is clear. This is as far as he’s willing to take this. If Link and I cannot locate Claire, if we cannot find out whether she truly defected or simply left out of shame, then he will have to make decisions I will not like. “Do you understand?”

I swallow and look away, my head incapable of nodding.

If not for Fray’s precarious situation, if not for Clive scheduled to arrive tomorrow, I’m positive Cap never would have agreed to Link’s plan. Thankfully, Cap doesn’t want to leave. Disbanding in the dead of night without a plan in place is not his style.

“Twenty minutes will be enough to learn what we need to learn.” Link attaches a prob to my left temple. Usually, he attaches two. One that sends electrodes to the part of my brain that is most active during sleep. Another that brings me to the dojo—a shared dream space Link created for training purposes. But we’re not going to the dojo tonight. We’re going to find Claire and we can’t wait for sleep to take us in our beds. Time is of the essence.

I rest my head against the chair and squeeze my eyes tight, praying with every ounce of faith I have that Claire will be asleep. Finding her now, figuring out what she’s up to, is the first step to saving Luka.

“All right, we’re both attached.” Link has taken the chair next to me. He grabs my ice-cold hand and gives it a confident squeeze. “You can push the button in ten … nine …”

I squeeze my eyes tight and focus on Claire, the betrayer. I imagine her the first time I saw her, when Luka and I first came to the hub. Her white-blond hair loosely braided down her back. Her regal beauty. The way her nose turned up in the air without trying. The shock of discovering her down here, in the hub, after having studied her file for days.

“Six … five …”

The grating way she flirted with Luka. The victorious feeling of taking her down in the dojo. The hateful look in her eyes when Cap announced he would be training me.

“Three … two …”

Her foot reaching out to trip me as we battled inside the walls of Shady Wood. Her look of triumph when I fell.

“One …”

Wind whips at my hair. I’m no longer laying in the training center; I’m standing beside Link outside a familiar home. I’ve been here before—with Luka—when we were searching for Claire Bedicelle, one of the patient files Dr. Roth left behind.

And there she is, standing on the front stoop of her childhood home, pounding on the door while trees bend beneath the force of the wind. The blood in my veins turns to molten lava. My hands curl into tight fists.

Link sets his hand on my shoulder. “We’ll learn more if she doesn’t know you’re here.”

He’s right, of course. As much as I want to shove my fist in her face, now’s not the time. I duck behind a row of emaciated bushes and strain to hear above the wind.

“Please Mom! It’s me.” Claire glances up at the ominous, swirling sky and pounds harder. “Please open up.”

“Claire?”

She whirls around, her icy blue eyes wide with panic, her face streaked with tears. “Link?”

“What are you doing?” he asks.

“I-I’m trying to get to my parents, but they won’t let me in.” She wipes at her cheeks. “How—how did you get here?”

“How do you think?”

The wind loses some of its strength.

Claire looks up at the clouds. They no longer swirl as threateningly as they did seconds ago. She peels a strand of hair from her lips. “This is a dream. You’re spying on me.”

“I’m not spying. I’m checking.” He holds up his hands, as if to show her he means no harm. “You left without telling anybody. We’re all worried.”

I grit my teeth. Not one part of me is worried about her. She’s been bad news from the beginning. I should have realized the danger I was putting Luka in, the danger I was putting everybody in, by going on such a high-stakes mission with Claire on the team.

Her chin trembles. “I never meant for Luka to get hurt.”

“But Tess—you wanted
her
to get hurt?” Link’s question is gentle. Unaccusatory. Everything opposite from what I feel.

“I just wanted things to go back to the way they were before she came. I-I wasn’t thinking. I made a mistake. I shouldn’t have done it. All I want is my mom and dad, but I don’t think they want to see me.”

Liar. Lies. I don’t believe a single note of her remorse.

“Have you told anyone about our location?” Link asks.

“No. I would never do that. But I couldn’t stay. Nobody wanted me there. Not even you.”

Link shifts his weight. His back is to me, so I can’t see his face. I have no idea if he’s falling for the act or not.

“I would never put you in danger, Link, never. I just want to go home to my parents. That’s all I want.” She turns around and beats the door with her fists, begging the wood to let her inside.

*

“She didn’t defect.” Link peels off his probe and swings his legs around so his feet hit the floor. “She’s not going to give our location away. She just wants to get to her parents.”

Cap looks from me to Link, waiting for me to verify.

I don’t deny it, even if I don’t believe a word of Claire’s sob story.

Cap rubs his forehead.

A glance at the clock tells me it’s four in the morning. Two hours have passed since I saw Luka, bound and tortured. I’m so desperate to get to him, it feels as though a hole is burning a wide path through my heart.

Cap looks at Non and Sticks, who stand inside the small room. “What do you think?”

“It buys us some time,” Sticks says. “At least until Clive arrives and Fray is gone.”

“And Luka’s back,” I add.

Nobody listens.

“Non?” Cap asks.

She slides her hands down her head, flattening her bushy hair to the sides of her face. “Gabe’s standing guard above ground. If danger arrives, he’ll be able to alert us in time to carry out emergency protocol.”

Emergency protocol? I don’t know about any emergency protocol. We’ve certainly never practiced an emergency drill during my time at the hub. But of course there would be something in place. Cap would have thought of that.

He rubs his knuckle along his bottom lip, then pushes out a breath. “You two can return to your rooms,” he says to me and Link. “We’ll stay for now.”

Link’s plan worked.

Cap doesn’t think Claire will betray us.

He believes we’re safe.

I don’t.

But I’m willing to risk the safety of everyone at the hub if it means getting Luka back.

*

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