That’s when it hit him. The house was silent.
Not the sleeping in on Christmas Day kind of silent. The empty, nobody lives here kind of silence.
No Ozzie racing across the hardwood floors, his claws making that funny clacking noise.
No Rossi.
He abandoned the bags and prowled through his house as if it belonged to a stranger. Finally reached the bedroom. She’d left her note on his pillow. Had she even seen the irony in that?
RYDER. WE BOTH KNOW I SUCK AT GOOD-BYES, BUT I PROMISED YOU I WOULDN’T GO WITHOUT ONE. SO HERE IT IS.
DON’T TRY TO FIND ME. IT’D BREAK MY HEART—THERE’S NO WAY IN HELL I COULD EVER GIVE UP THE FIGHT IF THERE WAS ANY HOPE OF SALVAGING ONE MORE MOMENT WITH YOU.
EITHER WAY WE BOTH LOSE.
I DON’T REGRET A SINGLE MOMENT, ONLY THAT I CAN’T GIVE YOU MORE. BUT I WARNED YOU, THIS STORY CAN’T EVER HAVE A HAPPY ENDING.
TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF, STAY SAFE, DON’T GIVE UP THE FIGHT—THERE ARE TOO MANY INNOCENTS WHO NEED A SOLDIER LIKE YOU KEEPING WATCH OVER THEM.
LOVE,
ROSSI
He crumpled the paper in his fist. Sank onto the bed and ran the palm of his free hand over his face. What had she done? Where had she gone?
Was she even still alive? Was this a goodbye or a suicide note?
He smoothed the paper over his knee and read it again. And again. Until tears blurred his vision, and all he could see was her face, head thrown back, hair flying loose, fiddle tucked under her chin, her entire being suffused with joy.
The moment he had first fallen in love with her.
He set the note back on his pillow, then moved it across the bed to her side. He stood, shrugging off the heavy feeling that weighed on his shoulders like a corpse’s shroud.
He prowled through the room, searching for anything she’d left behind. Nothing. Except the spare toothbrush leaning up against his on the bathroom sink. He ended up at his dresser, hoping to find a hair clip, a comb, anything valuable enough that she’d return for. Nothing.
He looked in the mirror, saw a haggard man who’d clocked too many miles and witnessed too much heartache. Nothing there, either. Fury and frustration blossomed, billowing through his chest with each breath, racing through his veins until he could no longer contain it. He swept his arm across the dresser, sending the random detritus of his life flying to the floor, the crash of breaking glass the only sound except for his ragged breathing.
Turning back to the bed, he stared down at the note, the blue ink scrawled across white paper going in and out of focus like an abstract painting.
The morning light danced through the curtains, reminding him of a child’s delight, opening presents on Christmas morning, crystalizing every pen stroke into clarity. And he realized what she hadn’t left behind.
She’d left the note, but kept his pendant. That had to mean something.
She’d made her choice, and he respected that.
But it didn’t mean he was going to let her go alone into the dark. Not without a fight. Definitely not without hope.
This wasn’t over. They weren’t over. Their story had just begun…
<<<>>>
IT WAS THE
hardest note I’d ever written. Even harder was waiting for Flynn to return after delivering it.
Devon and I were huddled in what appeared to be a classroom inside the underground bunker, my new home for the time being. A map of the city, including the tunnels, was spread out on the desk between us.
“I’ve got good news and bad.” Flynn’s voice startled both of us.
Devon hid it well, barely a flinch as he raised his head casually, as if he’d known she was in the room before she spoke.
Me, not so casual. After everything that had happened tonight and not having taken my meds in hours, my nerves were so brittle they felt as if they’d shatter at a high-pitched mouse squeak. I whirled and jumped, fists raised.
Flynn merely grinned. She tossed a backpack—mine—to the floor, followed it by skidding a bag of my meds across the desk to me. Then, gently, she set down my violin case.
“No one’s left watching your place,” she said, “except cops. There was some kind of bomb scare or something. Your family’s safe. Your uncle got your message, said he’d take care of getting your mom and sister out of town.”
I slumped in relief, leaning my weight on my palms braced against the desktop. It took all my strength to ask, “And Ryder?”
“Left your note. No one is watching him, not yet anyway.”
My breath escaped so fast my knees buckled. I tried to hide it by sliding into one of the student desks, but knew I was fooling no one.
“What’s the bad news?” Devon asked impatiently. He was coordinating his men to secure all the tunnel entrances.
“The hazmat emergency at the abandoned warehouse down at the wharf is all over the police scanner. They called in all the off-duty cops and firemen to respond.”
“We expected that,” I said. “It’s not bad news.”
“It is when I found two men watching the front and back of your doctor friend’s house. And one of them was a cop. Who should have been anywhere but there.”
“Louise’s house?” I turned to Devon. “We need to get her and her family down here where we can protect them.”
He frowned in thought. “No. She’ll be safe enough for now. I’ll send some men to keep an eye out. But if they’re watching her, there’s a good chance Tommaso had time to tell his people about the children. They come first.”
“How are we going to convince nineteen families to abandon their lives and move down here? And how are we going to treat them once they are here?” They both looked at me. “I’m not a researcher. We need Louise. Her husband can help as well. He’s a biostatistician, consults for the CDC.”
“We have to prioritize,” Devon said, sounding like a general at war. Or an ER doctor performing triage during a mass-casualty event.
“And Esme?” Flynn asked.
Devon cleared his throat, focusing on the map for a long moment. His hand tightened into a fist. “She’ll move down here as well. I’ll have to stay up top, keep an eye on Kingston Enterprises. Plus, that way they won’t know we know they’re behind the children’s illness.”
“They’ll know someone knows,” Flynn said. “Nineteen families are going to go missing.”
“Not if they aren’t the only ones,” I said. “We can create some kind of emergency, have the Tower evacuated. Insert our people to talk to families as they leave, see if they or their children have symptoms. The ones who do can come down here.”
“Merry Christmas for them,” Flynn said wryly. “What do you think, Devon? Gas leak?”
“Good idea. If they’re stretched thin, watching the families in the Tower, a mass evacuation will tie up their resources. Who do we have that we can trust to interview the families? My guys, they aren’t equipped for that. Plus, I don’t want anyone to know we’re hiding people down here. Right now, all my guys know is that I’m expecting some valuable cargo I don’t want the cops or the Russians to know about.”
“Father Vance and the other nuns at St. Tim’s,” I suggested. “They can stage the evacuation area through the church. It makes sense the Tower residents would go there. And the nuns who worked with Sister Patrice have medical training, enough to interview the families and send the possible patients down into the tunnels.”
He shook his head. Not naysaying my idea. There wasn’t any better plan, given our limited resources and need for secrecy. More like wondering exactly how much crazier our lives were about to become. “I can get a few of my mother’s old friends from the Tower involved. No one ever notices little old ladies, and they are all wizards at logistics, feeding, sheets and beds, shit like that.”
“You already have all that down here, right?”
“Yep. Thanks to Daniel and his paranoia, we have supplies to last us years. It’s maintaining secrecy that will be the difficult part. I’ll have to think on that. Meantime, doc, here’s a list of everything Tommaso’s people ordered from Kingston Enterprises.” He slid a sheaf of papers over to me. “I figure you can tell what was for research and what they might have used to make a cure.”
“How can you be so certain there
is
a cure?” Flynn challenged him. “Tommaso never said.”
“There’s no way in hell anyone would let this disease loose without a treatment,” I told her with more certainty than I actually possessed. But what was the use of fighting if we didn’t have something to fight for? “Not unless they were trying to end the world. Prions are the closest thing we have to a zombie apocalypse scenario. There’s no protection against them.”
“And these guys are not madmen,” Devon said. “This is an expensive operation. If they wanted to turn fatal insomnia into some kind of pandemic, they didn’t need to invest so much. No, trust me, there’s a profit motive here.”
“How the hell can anyone profit from making a bunch of kids sick?” Flynn asked.
“Once we figure that out, we’ll be halfway to figuring out who the hell these people are. In the meantime, we need to get those kids to safety, secure this facility, set up surveillance on the men watching Louise, set up a research lab and a treatment area—”
“Do you have all this equipment down here?” I tapped the list.
“Just about everything. I can get you anything else you need from up top.” He took a deep breath, gathering his strength. The list of what we needed to do right away was overwhelming. “The kids come first. Guess it’s time for a gas leak. Maybe a broken water main instead? More dramatic and will take longer to fix. Yeah, I like that.”
He glanced at each of us in turn. Our little war council of three. Only, we had no clue who we were at war with, where they were, or what they wanted.
“I’ll liaise with Father Vance and handle the families,” he continued. “They’ll listen to me. In the meantime, Flynn, you’re in charge of securing things down here.” He turned to leave. I followed him to the door.
“How can I help?” I asked. My words dragged. I needed my meds.
“I’d tell you to get some sleep, but—”
“That’s not going to happen.” I tried a smile, but it faltered and died. His expression turned doubtful. I was more a burden than an asset, I realized. Except for my fugues and what they could do. “Daniel,” I said. “Maybe—”
I couldn’t finish. The thought of having Daniel’s entire life inside my head made my stomach revolt.
Devon laid his hand on my shoulder, a general acknowledging a soldier’s sacrifice. “Maybe. But not until we have Louise here to monitor you. We can’t risk losing you, Angela. If they want you so badly they would kill just to observe your abilities, then you’re our—”
“Best bet for a hostage exchange. Trade me for the cure.”
“No. It won’t come to that. I won’t let it.”
“I’ll do it. You know I will. Like you said. I’m dying anyway. What do I have to lose?” Except Ryder. But I couldn’t be with him, not now when Tommaso’s people could use him like they did Jacob. For the first time, I was glad we’d kept our relationship secret.
“No.” Devon gripped both of my arms. Tight. I met his gaze. “What I was going to say was that you’re our best hope to fight them. As soon as we have our people protected, it’s our turn to go on the offensive. We find out who they are, what they want, and then you and me, doc, we’re going to end them. Whatever it takes. Can you live with that?”
I didn’t answer right away. Whatever it took included using me as a weapon. Like what he’d threatened Tommaso with, what I offered to do to Daniel.
Whatever it took meant me violating everything I believed in.
But that was another life, my old life, the life they’d stolen from me. I was starting a new life now. One with no rules.
Sister Patrice’s voice rang through my mind. The same words that had started all this three weeks ago when I held her heart in my hand.
Save the girl,
she told me.
Save them all.
“Yes,” I told Devon. “I can live with it.”
<><><>
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